NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
May 11, 1917. 
Puppies from six weeks up. 
Show Dogs and Bitches always 
Bred from the best 
blood .of England and_ the 
United States. 
PRIDES HILL KENNELS 
on hand. 
Property of 
Q. A. SHAW McKEAN 
Wictre- Haired 
Fox Terriers 
The kennel man—Harry Hardeastle 
—will have prices and full author- 
ity to sell. 
coming. 
The kennels and dogs for sale can be 
seen at any time, 
Telephone Beverly 410 when you are 
PRIDES HILL KENNELS 
PRIDES CROSSING - 
MASS. 
the first to arrive. Dr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Mixter have 
not yet arrived to stay at their Galloupe’s Point house. 
The “Strode” is such a homey place and always has the 
warmth of spirit pervading it which is characteristic of its 
owners. They are due to arrive shortly for the summer. 
The George €. Brooks’ of Bay State road, I was glad to 
note, have braved the ironies of fate and have come to 
their summer home on Puritan road. They tell me the 
Brookses are always the last to leave for Boston, and 
among the first to return in the spring. “Sea Bend” the 
fine estate of Mr. and Mrs. Ludwig Eisemann is open for 
the season, the family having come down from Boston, 
where they spent the winter.. This estate commands one 
of the finest views on the Swampscott shore 
Newcomers on the Little’s Point shore this season 
will be Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Mills of Brookline, who have 
leased the “Grass Head” place for the summer. Mr. and 
Mrs. F. H. Wick, the owners, have occupied it in former 
seasons. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ward, with their inter- 
esting children, Florence, aged seven, and Richard, just 
five, have come to their Tupelo road home for the sum- 
mer. In Lawrence is their town home, where Mrs. Ward, 
as Miss Alma Oswald, was one of its most popular so- 
ciety girls. 
Kverything is so pretty and green and bright through 
these fine roads which skirt the shore! Occasionally one 
loses sight of the blue sea, only to come to view with 
ereater strength upon the broad stretch of Atlantic ave- 
nue, Phillips Beach. Once Phillips Beach station was so 
sleepy in the winter that even the station agent got lone- 
some, but not so in these days. Phillips Beach is becom- 
ing more and more a place of permanent homes of many 
of Boston’s business people. Of course their is still a 
large quota of its summer folk, who shut up their pretty 
villas for the winter, including Mrs. Charles Edmund 
Back Bay Residences 
Longley of Pawtucket, who has a beautiful estate on 
Atlantic avenue at Ocean avenue. Mrs. Longley has 
sent word to her caretaker that she will soon arrive for 
the summer and preparations are apparent about the place. - 
The Maurice J. Curran house just across the street from 
the Longley’s, which has been in the hands of the builders 
for the past year, will soon be ready for occupancy. The 
Currans are very charming people, who have a winter 
home at Andover. They have been coming to Phillips 
Beach for several seasons, renting each year. Miss Mar- 
guerite, who along with her other accomplishments is a 
finished equestrien, makes a fair picture when in the 
saddle. 
On Phillips avenue, curiosity prompted me to inquire 
who was building what appears to be the beginning of 
quite an elaborate sandstone house. I was indeed glad to 
learn that Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Donnelly of Boston and 
Nahant, who have a very fine estate at Ashville, N. C., 
will occupy the new house when completed. Mr. and Mrs. 
Donnelly are still in Ashville and are due to arrive in 
Boston in a few days. 
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew W. Preston of Boston have 
been at “The Arches” their spacious Phillips Beach es- 
tate for the past month. At the “Dorrich” opposite lives 
in the summer, Mr. and Mrs. Preston’s daughter, Mrs. 
Eugene W. Ong, who with Mr. Ong and their attractive 
children, Mansfield, who is about seven, and Richard 
Preston nearly five,-tend to brighten the artistic surround- 
ings of that particular section at Atlantic avenue. 
The Preston hotel will not be formally open until 
about the middle of June, but in the meantime, many pre- 
parations are going on at this popular hostelry, and Mr. 
Sherrard is most optimistic of a banner season. -Reser- 
vations are very encouraging, and many of the former 
patrons of this hotel will return. 
Sea Shore Estates 
POOLE & BIGELOW 
70 KILBY STREET 
Suburban and Country Estates 
BOSTON 
Farms 
