NORTH SHORE BREEZE 17 
AT THE HOTELS. 
The most brilliant social function of the summer at 
Magnolia and one of the largest attended affairs of the 
season was the Oceanside ball Wednesday night. Not 
only did the hotel guests at Magnolia attend in large 
numbers but the cottagers from all parts of the North 
Shore, and their guests were very much in evidence,— 
more so than at any previous function of this nature. 
The party was made more exclusive than in former 
years by the management, inasmuch as admission could 
be obtained only through tickets. The large dining room 
had been cleared and the room was very tastily deco- 
rated with festoons and streamers of red, white and blue 
bunting. About 750 persons were present. Miss Helen 
Taft was among the many who motored over from along 
the Beverly and Manchester shore. She was a guest of 
the Ex-Governor Baxter family of Tennessee. The gowns 
and toilettes were very beautiful. Among those noticed 
were: 
Mrs. Caroline Bonnell of Youngstown, O., white peau 
de sole. 
Mrs. A. Hatfield, jr., of New York, white satin. 
Mrs. H. S. Downing of Brookline, white satin and 
lace decollette, diamonds. 
Mrs. A. K. Stearns of Detroit, Paris gown of black 
chiffon over blue satin. 
Miss Stearns, white net over satin. 
Mrs. Dyer of Detroit, white satin. 
Mrs. W. W. Harper of Boston, black lace, diamond 
necklace. 
Mrs. A. B. Dewey of Chicago, chantecler gown. 
Miss Lois MeGinley of Pittsburg and Manchester, blue 
satin, diamonds. 
Mrs. William Bagnell of St. Louis, lavender satin, 
pearl necklace. 
Mrs. Ormond Powers, formerly Miss Marguerite Gum- 
mey of Boston, white satin. 
Mrs. George C. Miller of Buffalo, 
spangled net. 
Miss Dorothy Bradley of Brookline, white chiffon 
bordered with hand-painted flowers. 
Mrs. E. P. Richardson of Boston, flowered chiffon. 
Mrs. C. L. Holt of Boston, blue chiffon over white 
satin. 
Mrs. J. Harrington Walker of Detroit, old gold lace 
gown and diamonds. 
Mrs. A. D. Cook of Boston, pink chiffon. 
Mrs. J. J. Weil of Elmswood, N. J., white satin, hat 
to match. 
Miss Charlotte Lane of Washington, white lace. 
Miss Harlow of Salem, white lace. 
Miss Phoebe Adams of Washington, white lace and 
roses. 
Miss Florence Adams of Washington, gray spangled 
net over gray satin. 
Miss Julia Culbert of New York, yellow satin and 
diamonds. 
Mrs. George Carter of Brookline, white satin, point 
lace and diamonds. 
Mrs. George L. Andrews. of Washington, white satin 
and diamonds. 
Mrs. Mabel Hume of Philadelphia, white net over 
white satin. 
Mrs. C, E. Phenix of Boston, blue satin, point lace. 
Mrs. E. P. Rowe of Boston, white peau de soie. 
Among the other handsomely gowned women present 
were Mrs. Finlay A. Barrett of Chicago, Mrs. H. More- 
head of New York, Mrs. Joseph Welsh of New York, 
yellow satin, 
Mrs. John W. Anderson of Chicago, Mrs. A. “H. Morse 
of Boston, Mrs. D. C. Sheperd of St. Paul, Mrs. C. L. 
Tolle, Miss Isabelle Wadsworth of Philadelphia, Mrs. 8. 
S. Wheeler and Miss Olive Speyers of Philadelphia, 
Mrs. J. C. Kerr of New York, Mrs. Morris Dallett of 
Washington, Mrs. Charles H. Bond of Hartford, Mrs. 
G. Il. Hopkins of Baltimore, Mrs. J. G. Baldwin of Bos- 
ton, Mrs. Wilham Palmer. Among the cottagers were 
noticed ,.Miss Ruth Anthony and Miss Polly Wood of 
Beverly Farms; Mr. and Mrs. George F. Willett and 
Miss Willett of Coolidge’s Point; Mrs. W. R. Nelson and 
Miss Laura McCarthy, a niece of Col. Nelson, of Mag- 
noha; Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin Tenney of Manchester 
Cove; Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Coolidge and Miss Isabelle 
Coolidge of Manchester; Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Munn, jr., 
Mrs. C. A. Munn, Miss Carrie Munn, Mrs. B. R. Huff. 
and Mrs. Cobb, from Manchester; M. Montagliari and 
wife of the Italian legation; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Yates, 
Mrs. John C. Howe and Miss Helen Fitch, West Man- 
chester; Mrs. Junius Beebe and Miss Lucia Beebe of. 
Boston; Miss Dorothy Hancock, George von L. Meyer,. 
jr., Hamilton; Dr. Kidner and ladies of Beverly; Misses. 
Marie and Elizabeth Lee, Beverly Farms. 
— K— 
Arrivals at the Oceanside, Magnolia, this week in- 
clude: H. C, Adams, Philadelphia, Pa.; Mrs. John Stew- 
art, Miss A. C. Stewart, Miss N. Stewart, Miss E. H. 
Stewart, Richmond, Va.; H. H. Hall, New Orleans; Mr. 
and Mrs. Clinton M. Hall, New York; H. T. Chittenden, 
Oakdale, L. I.; Miss E. F. Risser, Rome, Italy; George L. 
Harlman, Pittsburg, Pa.; A. T. Kelly, New York; Mrs. 
Alice E. Donaldson, Miss Donaldson, Buffalo, N. Y.; Mr. 
and Mrs. G. Smith, Miss Anna Cady Smith, Schenectady ; 
Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Watch, Miss Kaufman, Miss Cogs- 
well, Portsmouth; Mrs. R. D. Kaine, St. Louis; Miss 
Esther L. Blair, Pittsburg; Mr. and Mrs. William E. 
Tucker, Englewood, N. J.; Mrs. Lloyd P. Stykes, New 
York; Miss Elizabeth P. Lewis, Philadelphia; Mrs. Paris 
J. Clark, Miss Elizabeth Sherman Clark, The Misses 
Todd, Guy Forbes, N. Y.; Miss Edith Walker, Staten Is- 
land, N. Y.; J. F. Carter, A. J. Hepburn, N. Y.; Mr. and 
Mrs. Charles B. Rice, Danvers; Mr. and Mrs. George 
Stafford, Stamford, Conn.; K. D. Loose, Boston; Rev. 
and Mrs. R. S. W. Wood, N. Y.; Miss B. Stewart, 
Martinsburg, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ackerland, Cincin- 
nati; H. Nelson, Cleveland, O.; Mr. and Mrs. W. H. 
Conant, Washington, D. C.; Miss Rainsford, N. Y.; Mr. 
M. Martin, jr., Rye, N. Y.; Miss Emily P. Gould, Jerome 
Pendergast, New York; Miss Irene Cramps, Philadel- 
phia; George Ely Garretson, Cleveland; W. P. Snyder, 
jr., Charles A. McClintock, Pittsburg, Pa.; J. H. Wender, 
New York; Mrs. J. C. Hutcheson, Miss Rosalie Hutche- 
son, W. Palmer Hutcheson, Mrs. Sinclair Taliaferro, Miss 
3ettie M. Taliaferro, Thos. 8. Taliaferro, Houston, Tex. ; 
Stephen Gray, Ipswich, Mass; Mrs. Henry M. Booth, 
Englewood, N. J.; Harry A. Blackwell, St. Louis; Mr. 
and Mrs. A. W. Armour, Chicago. 
—_—x— 
Mr. and Mrs. C. F, Jenkins, Dr. and Mrs. W. W. 
Speedman and A. H. Jenkins of Philadelphia arrived at 
Magnolia Tuesday for the balance of August. They are 
living at Sea Reaches, one of the Hesperus cottages. 
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Travers of Richmond, Va., very 
charming people, have returned to Magnolia for the 
balance of the summer. They are stopping at the Hes- 
perus. 
Baron Alex de Stael Holstein of St. Petersburg, ar- 
rived at the Hesperus Wednesday and will remain here 
several weeks, 
