10 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
June 22, 1917. 
NOTICE OF REMOVAL 
H. M. Bater begs to inform his numerous patrons that the business 
which for the last ten years has been carried on in Depot Square, Man- 
chester, has been removed to new premises, located at the corner of 
Pine and Bridge streets. 
OVERHAULING of every description. 
FOREIGN CARS a Specialty 
Expert advice on Magnetos, Generators, Self-Starters, Carburetors, etc. 
A Large Stock of Tires, Accessories, etc. 
BATTERIES RECHARGED 
Regent Garage 
Telephone 629 Manchester 
UCH interest is being taken in the three concerts to be 
given at Pride’s Crossing this summer in aid of the 
Essex County chapter of the American National Red 
Cross, preliminary announcement of which was made sev- 
eral weeks ago. All the concerts will be given on Sat- 
urday afternoons, at four o’clock. The first will be to- 
morrow—June 23d—at the house of Mrs. Bayard War- 
ren; the next on July 21, at Mrs. Oliver Ames’, and the 
last on August 11, at Mrs. Washington B. Thomas’. Mr. 
George Copeland has kindly volunteered to give the first 
concert—that of tomorrow at Mrs. Warren’s. Among 
other performers will be Mrs. John L. Saltonstall, who 
will play the violin; Mrs. Bayard Warren, who will sing, 
and Mrs. Hans Ebell, who will play Russian music. Tick- 
ets for the course, at ten dollars, may be obtained from 
Miss Harriett Dexter, Pride’s Crossing; Mrs. Henry C. 
Clark, Pride’s Crossing; Mrs. Neal Rantoul, Beverly 
Farms, and Mrs. Francis Higginson, Jr., Manchester ; also 
at the Red Cross headquarters, in the Mason block, Bev- 
erly, and at the door. 
f 4% 
lames J. Phelan and family of Boston will occupy 
the E. L. Wood cottage at Singing Beach, Manchester, 
this season, having leased it the past week through the 
Boardman office. They will arrive tomorrow for the sum- 
mer. Mr. Phelan is a member of the firm of Hornblower 
& Weeks, of the Boston stock exchange. 
“ } 
Mr. and Mrs. Toone Grey of Kansas City are 
among the recent arrivals in Manchester, where they are 
again occupying the Clarke cottage on Blossom lane. 
Their daughter, Miss Sallie Daggett is also with them for 
the summer. 
LAJ 
ro 
Oo 2 0 
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Hall and children of Boston 
have arrived at Manchester this week and are again oc- 
cupying the Cobb cottage on Masconomo street, Smith’s 
Point. 
os 
Mrs, J. L. B. Buck, wunnore formerly Miss Dorothea 
Dutcher of Milwaukee, in company with her mother, Mrs. 
Pierpont Edwards Dutcher, is at the Bull cottage at the 
corner of Hesperus and Lexington avenues, Magnolia, 
for the summer. Mr. Buck, who is with the Naval Re- 
serves, has been transferred from Fort Myer to Fortress 
Monroe. 
root Ce 
Hiram Walker of Detroit, eldest son of Mr. and 
Mrs. J. Harrington Walker, whose summer home, “Rock- 
ledge,” on the Shore road, is one of the most beautiful in 
Magnolia, has rented the Ford cottage and has established 
Mrs. Walker and the family there for the season. Mr. 
Walker returned to Detroit on Wednesday, having been 
called there on business, but will return to Magnolia at 
intervals during the. summer. 
CORNER BRIDGE AND 
PINE STREETS 
‘opening with most encouraging advance bookings. 
Mianchester 
CARS TO RENT 
HE, basement of the Unitarian church, on Masconomo 
street, in Manchester, will be open during the summer 
on Thursdays, from nine to ten o'clock in the morning. 
Any contributions of books and magazines of a non-sec- 
tarian character will be gratefully recived. On behalf of 
the Book Mission of the Manchester Unitarian church,— 
Dorothy D. Draper, chairman. 
2.5 
Mrs. John E. Lancaster of Worcester, has arrived at 
the Churchman house, Smith’s Point, Manchester, where 
she will be joined next week by her daughter, Miss Rosa- 
mond Lancaster, who is now visiting Miss Mary B. War- 
burton in Philadelphia. Her sons, who were with her 
at Magnolia last year, will not be here only for a short 
visit. Robert A. Lancaster, a Freshman at Harvard, has 
joined the Naval Patrol, and Jack is engaged in business 
in Akron, Ohio, and later expects to join the American 
Ambulance service in France. 
oO 82 O A 
Robert Gannett of Cambridge, was in Manchester 
over the week-end, a guest of his brother, T. B. Gannett, 
Jr., and family. Mr. Gannett is recuperating from an 
operation for appendicitis. Mrs. T. B. Gannett, Sr., who 
has been spending the last month or so at her home in 
Cambridge, after living at the Hotel Somerset, Boston, 
all winter, has arrived at her cottage on Blossom lane, 
Manchester, for the summer. 
The space between a man’s ideal and the man him- 
self is his opportunity—Margaret Deland. 
YE BEACH, N. H., is showing signs of considerable 
activity, despite the backward .season. The summer 
colony is settling as early as customary and the hotels are 
The 
Ocean View House will open tomorrow under the man- 
agement of Virgil DeWitt Harrington, who is well known 
to many North Shore people because of his connection 
some years ago with one of the dining halls at Harvard, 
but for the last ten years because of his management of 
the dining hall at Andover. He has also managed one of 
the hotels at the Isle of Shoals for a number of seasons. 
North Shore people motoring to Rye Beach will find Mr. 
Harrington a most genial host if they make the Oceat 
View House their headquarters. 
Col. Ned Arden Flood and Mrs. Flood are among the 
week’s cottage arrivals at Rye Beach. The Floods come 
from New York City, where they make their home at 
970 Park avenue. Their place at Rye Beach is among 
the show places of that section of the coast. They fre- 
auently motor to the North Shore for the day to call on 
friends or to attend social functions in which they have ~ 
an active interest. 
