32 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Tennis has been the chief diver- 
sion in society along this section 
during the week and will continue to 
be all next week and until finals in 
the tournament at the Essex County 
club, on the club courts, the Mag- 
nolia Lawn Tennis association on the 
Oceanside courts and the Myopia 
Hunt club (to be started Monday) 
shall have been decided. Society 
matrons and maidens, members 
of foreign embassies and_ their 
families and persons prominent 
in every walk of life are either 
watching the play every day or 
are taking part. Dinners, lunch- 
eons and teas are in order, and 
many cottages along the North 
Shore are filled with guests. The 
heroine of the tennis tournaments, as 
usual, has been Miss Eleanora Sears, 
who began by winning the cups in 
the tournament at the Montserrat 
Golf club, two weeks ago. Then she 
started in to mow down her op- 
ponents in the tournaments at the 
Essex County club and at Magnolia, 
playing at one place in the mornings 
and at the other in the afternoons 
and winning with no seeming exer- 
tion. At the Essex County club, 
Miss Margaret Thomas of Boston 
will meet the winner of the match 
between Mrs. L. M. Cuthbert and 
Miss Sears in the women’s singles 
and in the mixed doubles finals. 
Miss Sears and F. I. Emery will 
meet Margaret Curtis and DeFord 
Beal. The young women who have 
appeared in these tournaments rep- 
resent the leading families all along 
the North Shore. On the Oceanside 
courts these young women were 
seen in the tournament during the 
week: Mary Josephine Amory, 
Edith Deacon, Lucy Blair, Alice 
Thorndike, Susan Thayer, Ellen 
Morse; Mrs. Richardson, Miss Johns: 
ton, Helen Penhallow, the Misses 
Cozzens and Colbert, Miss Solari, 
Miss Stevens, Miss Wadsworth, Miss 
Britton, Effie Bagnell, Miss Dutcher, 
Mrs. Q. A. Shaw, 2d, and Margaret 
Walker. At the Essex County club, 
in addition to many who played. in 
the matches at the Oceanside, were 
Miss M, Lovering, Mrs. E. K. Arnold, 
Miss Grace Monks, Mrs. L. M. Cuth- 
bert, Miss M. Thomas, Lilly Sears, 
Miss N. Thayer, Mrs. Rosamond 
Auchincloss, Miss Phelps, the Misses 
Munn (Carrie and Gladys), who also 
were in the Oceanside meet, Mrs. 
Ames, Miss M. Curtis, Leslie Bradley, 
Miss MacInnes, Miss Prescott, Miss 
L. Wright, Miss Wharton, Rosa- 
mond Eliot, Helen Fitch, Edith 
Sigourney. One of the surprises at 
Magnolia was the defeat of C. Sher- 
ban Penhallow, jr., of Jamaica 
Plain, the first winner of the Magno- 
lia cup. Penhallow was beaten by a 
fellow clubmember, F. B. Taylor, of 
Brookline after hard fought sets, 
which were most. spectacular. Two 
hours had passed before the young 
men shook hands after three sets 
had been necessary to defeat the 
former Harvard player. Both play- 
ers are members of the Noanett club 
of Jamaica Plain. 
This noon Miss Sears and Miss 
Susan Thayer won the Magnolia 
doubles tournament by defeating 
Miss Helen Penhallow and Miss 
Helen Morse, 6-2, 6-0. There was a 
big gallery on hand for the match. 
The cups were presented after the 
match by Reggie Kennard. 
—_xXx— 
It is expected that the laying of 
the corner stone of Beverly’s new 
$100,000 Y. M. C. A. building on 
Cabot street, will be one of the big 
events of the year at Beverly, in as 
much as President Taft has consent- 
ed to lay the corner stone. 
The Baltimore School of Art 
Needle Work is to told an exhibi- 
tion and sale at Brownland Cottages, 
Manchester, today and Saturday. 
This is the sale inadvertently adver- 
tised to take place at the Masconomo 
House. The sale will be continued 
Monday and Tuesday at the North 
Shore Grill, Magnolia. 
Miss Dallett and Morris Dallett, 
jr., have joined the Philadelphia Dal- 
letts who are season guests of the 
Oceanside in Gables cottage. 
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander S. Porter, 
jr., of Boston and Cobb avenue, 
Smith’s Point, Manchester, have de- 
parted from their beautiful estate 
and are crossing for their annual 
European sojourn, sailing Tuesday 
of this week from New York to re- 
main until October. Their little 
daughter, Sally Porter, remains in 
Manchester until September, when 
she will be taken to her grand- 
mother, Mrs. Edward Wigglesworth, 
who is in Jackson, N. H., for her an- 
nual two months’ sojourn. Mrs. Por- 
ter is a niece of Mrs. W. Xcott Fitz 
of Smith’s Point. 
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Taylor, jr., 
of South Carolina have as house 
guests, Mr. Taylor’s brother, Dr. 
Taylor, and his sister, Miss Taylor of 
Columbia, S. C. 
John B. Schofield, owner of the 
Masconomo Hotel property, Man- 
chester, is due in Manchester tomor- 
row. 
AT THE HOTELS 
E. D. Mulford of Elizabeth, N. J., 
is one of the recent arrivals at the 
Oceanside for an indefinite stay. 
George H. Watson, jr., of Morris- 
town, N. J., has joined other mem- 
bers of the family who are in the 
Flume cottage, Oceanside, for the 
balance of the summer. 
L. D. Dozier, of St. Louis, who is 
one of the Rye Beach summer colony, 
was at the Oceanside for luncheon 
Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. William 
- Bagnell, of St. Louis. 
A large automobile party to the. 
Oceanside for luncheon Thursday 
included Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jemi- 
son, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jemison, 
E. S. Jemison, and Mrs. L. HL 
Morrie all of Birmingham, Ala. , and 
Mrs. G. H. Pendegast, of Boston. * 
Another Oceanside luncheon party | 
was made up of Mrs. T. W. Carter, 
St. Louis, Mr. and Mrs. William Se 
Stribling, St. Louis, and Mr. and — 
Mrs. H. S. Bradley, Worcester. ve 
Mrs. Appleton and daughter, Mi { 
Florence Appleton, of , Cambridge, 
who were at the Oceanside two sea- | 
sons ago, were down the North Shore 
last Sunday and lunched at the hotel, — 
spending the afternoon with friends" 
at Manchester. | | 
O, My! Guy ’em! x 
Awake! Ugh! The dawn discovers me 
fright 
Without the puffs of brown I lost last — 
night 
While riding in a motor with some 
friends. 
I am indeed in a most awful plight. j 
And wher the ’phone rang those wh 
stood before : 
The hotel desk heard an unearthly roar 
Of laughter. But HE later sobbed: 
Ah! Every puff that from our heads wi 7 
lose 
For you to laugh at but inspires the mu 
In some vain jingler’s head. ’T were — 
not so bad 
If he were not so nosey after news. 
But Ssst! I have a clue! Perhaps a cat — 
Mistook my puff for the most common rat, — 
And scooting down the road _ past 
Coolidge Point i) 
Was followed by a dog when tempted: — 
‘§8catl?? ; 
‘¢Perret’’ indeed is gone—a collie, brown— 
My puffs in fact are gone—of color brown. 
I wonder if the dog has seen the cat 
Who chased a ‘‘rat’’ and got my puffs of 
brown? 
A hair perhaps divides the false and true, — 
So speed dog ‘‘Perret;’’ it is up to you 
To overtake the cat and find my ‘‘rat.”” 
For then dog ‘‘Perret’’ we will find you 
too, 
—B, Gay. 
