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entered for the tournament. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 13 
AT THE HOTELS. 
Although society has been kept busy with all sorts of 
sports and affairs of importance to a summer colony, 
all of the younger set at Magnolia are eagerly await- 
ing the tennis tournament under the auspices of the 
Magnolia Tennis association. The play will begin Mon- 
day and entries will be closed tomorrow night. It is 
hoped that enough will be entered so that play may be 
continued for at least two weeks. At the end of the tour- 
nament there will be a tennis ball in the casino and large 
‘pball-room at the Oceanside hotel, and as this will be a 
costume affair, it will be a pleasing change from the for- 
mal hops at which evening gowns and evening dress have 
prevailed. Under the direction of Reginald Kennard of 
Boston, the secretary of the Magnolia Lawn Tennis as- 
sociation, the tournament is an assured success especial- 
ly because of the many young women who will com- 
pete for the beautiful silver cups which are offered in 
addition to the Magnolia challenge cups for women. 
Girls prominent in society all over the country have 
In addition to these many 
others have signified to one or another of the committee 
their intention of playing. It is expected that Eleanora 
Sears who recently won the women’s challenge cup in 
the tournament at the Montserrat Golf club, will be 
among the young women who will try to keep the.cup 
in this part of the country. Alice Thorndike who was a 
runner up at Montserrat club is expected to appear in 
the tournament at the Oceanside and try and retrieve 
herself for the defeat at the hands of Miss Sears. Be- 
cause of this some excellent play in the women’s singles 
should result. Alice Sargent who has won a wide repu- 
tation on the courts is another likely entrant as is Edith 
Deacon who is very much in the minds of society at 
the present time. Miss Deacon has been a guest at the 
Francis Amorys at Beverly Cove, of Mary Josephine 
Amory, and played in the Montserrat tournament, al- 
though she did not seem to be performing as usual, 
losing in the first round. An attempt is being made to 
persuade her to show her real tennis ability on the 
Oceanside courts. But these strong players may have 
some difficulty in defeating the young women from other 
parts of the country, as many who are stopping at the 
Oceanside for the season have shown many signs of 
being desirous of taking some of the silverware—mean- 
ing the cups—home with them. And judging by the 
practice play, the cups may travel some distance. Near- 
ly five hundred dollars has been expended in trophies 
for the tournament and the cups are beautiful examples 
of the silversmith’s art. There will be cups for first and 
second prize in the women’s singles; a first and second, 
in the men’s singles, four cups each in the women’s 
doubles, the men’s doubles and the mixed doubles, in 
addition to the two big challenge cups. Miss Helen Taft 
2 and her brother Charley have been apprised officially of 
the meeting and if they return to Burgess Point in time 
they may compete, as both are good players. 
The dinner-dance at the Essex County elub tonight 
_ will be attended by many of the Oceanside contingent 
_and several parties have arranged for tables. 
Alan Corey, captain of next year’s Yale varsity base- 
ball team and a leading football player at the New Havy- 
eu university, is on a motor trip through Maine for a 
few days with an Oceanside party which includes Miss 
- Marguerite Johnston, and Miss Marguerite Sullivan of 
Detroit. 
Perey James Orthwein of the Yale varsity 
swimming team, who summers with his folks at Rye 
Beach, N. H., has been at the Oceanside for several days 
and will be at the Essex County club dinner-dance. 
Miss Rand of Minneapolis, who has been entertained 
by the popular daughters of former governor Baxter of 
Tennessee, and of the Oceanside each summer, has re- 
turned to her home, to stop en route with friends along 
_ the way. 
Wooster Lambert of St. Louis, who not long ago dis- 
tinguished himself as the hero of a most successful bal- 
loon descension into the Mississippi river from a point 
some 8000 feet skyward is somewhat of an all-around en- 
tertainer and frequently joins the orchestra as trap 
drummer and busies himself a bit on the piano to the Joy 
of large audiences. 
The arrivals at the Oceanside, Magnolia, include: R. 
R. Brown, Utica, New York; Mrs. George S. Black, 
George Palmer Black, Miss Ambler Black, Menta. Ohio; 
Mrs. E. B. Ryekman, Toronto, Canada; Mr. and Mrs. W. 
K. Jenks, Providence, R. I.; Mr. and Mrs. EF. D. Jenks, 
Los Angeles, Cal.; Mrs. David Kirk, Mrs. F. G. Vander- 
erift, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas N. Hawley, Pittsburg; 
Arthur Delroy London, England: Mrs. 8. B. Chritenden, 
Brooklyn; Mrs. Charles M. Thayer, Worcester; D. R. 
Gallagher, San Francisco; Denny Wheeler, Terre Haute; 
Miss Marion Weiller, New York; C. Coburn Darling, 
Princeton, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Cooke, Miss Dorothy 
Cooke, Cleveland; Mrs. K. li. P. Matthews, Nash Mat- - 
thews, E. R. Harty, D. O. Wickham, New York; Miss 
Marion Dodd, Boston; William D. N. Perrine, New 
York; Mrs. E. C. Marshall, Cambridge; Mrs. E. C. 
King, Germantown, Pa.; Mrs. N. J. Bowman, Phila- 
delphia; Rev. F. I. Paradise, West Medford; Mr. and 
Mrs. Francis H. Page, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lee, Brook- 
lyn; Alan Corey, New York; R. M. Brown, Thomas M. 
Clafflm, Boston; Mr. and Mrs. Lafayette MeWilliams, 
Chicago; A. F. Kelley, New York; Mr. and Mrs. E. L. 
B. Gardner, Ridgewood, N. J.; Miss Gardner, Prescott 
Gardner; Miss Dorothea Paradise, West Medford; Mr. 
and Mrs. J. F. Drayton, Middletown, Conn.; Mr. F. N. 
Mo\lin, R. 8. Moslin, Henry T. Wack, jr., Henry E. Karr, 
Baltimore, Md.; Mr. and Mrs. Emerson C. Gaylord, 
Chicopee; D. Russell Brown, governor, Providence, R. I.; 
‘Miss Mabel R. Brown, Miss Hope C. Brown, Percy James 
Orthweih, St. Louis; Carl Engel, Cambridge, James M. 
Hunnewell, W. E. Strong, Boston; Mr. and Mrs. John D. 
Fairchild, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Sydney L. Beals, C. W. 
Duffield, Boston; Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Carpenter, 
Miss Sadie A. Carpenter, Miss Louise Carpenter, Mr. 
Earl Carpenter, Washington; Miss Helen Andenried, 
Philadelphia; Samuel Cupples, Dr. A. J. Wagers, St. 
Louis, Mrs. William Willis, Columbia, M.; W. H. Van- 
derburgh, Minn.; Harrison G. Bridge, Providence; Mrs. 
J. R. Nicols, Miss Nicols, Mrs. Albert Wilson, Miss 
Leisa Wilson, St. Paul: Le R. K. Howe, New York; Fran- 
eis A. Shea, Miss Shea, Miss HT. EK. Shea, Boston; Alfred 
P. W. Seaman, New York; Mr. and Mrs. John W. Ander- 
son, Wendell Anderson, Suzanne Anderson, Boston; 
Mrs. Augusta J. Kitz, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Bennett, Mr. 
and Mrs. Loring Daniels, New York. 
Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Durphy of San Francisco, who are 
spending the summer season in an automobile touring 
the country are now in New England. During the trip 
along the North Shore roads they stopped for a few 
days at the Hesperus, Magnolia. Another Californian 
who was a recent visitor to the Hesperus was Miss Elsie 
Smith who is spending her summer in a tour of New 
England and the Provinces. She is from Fresno. 
W. J. Denholm of Worcester and C. I. Worcester of 
New York were recent Hesperus guests. Mr. Denholm 
was entertained by Dr. Dakin in the Villa cottage. 
