NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
<2! 
SOCIETY NOTES. 
The Oceanside at Magnolia, will 
open for the season on the 15th of 
June—two weeks from yesterday. 
The management is now preparing 
for the opening and a small army of 
workmen and mechanies are busily 
engaged getting things in readiness. 
There has been an unprecedented 
call for apartments this year and 
everything points to a very busy 
season. Two families have already 
arrived and are occupying cottages 
in connection with the hotel. They 
are the Gilkersons of St. Louis and 
the George Carters of Brookline, the 
latter arriving today. 
Brownland Cottages Opened. 
The Brownland cottages at Man- 
chester opened for the season this 
week, and as usual Manager Gilman 
reports a ‘‘full’’ season, as ev- 
ery apartment has been engaged 
throughout the summer. 
Miss Fanny <A. Smith of New 
York, will spend part of June here. 
Mrs. Ogden and daughter of New 
York will also be here for June. 
Robert Gould Shaw, 2d, and family 
will spend June at Brownland. 
They will then go to the mountains, 
returning to the North Shore in 
September, probably to their new 
summer home in Hamilton. Mr. and 
Mrs. George P. Sanger of Boston are 
the first to arrive at Brownland. 
Others who will return are the 
Misses Fabyan and the Misses So- 
hier of Boston, Miss Annie Bradford 
of Philadelphia, Mr. and Mrs. Fred- 
erick Burlingame of New York, 
Thomas B. Gannett and family of 
Cambridge, Dr. W. W. Gannett of 
Boston, whose wife and daughter 
will be abroad most of the summer, 
Harry M. Sill and family of Phil- 
adelphia, Mrs. R. F. Greeley and 
daughter, Miss Marion Greeley, 
Mrs. Charles T. White and Miss 
Gertrude White, F. T. Pfaelzer and 
family and R. G. Shaw and son, all 
of Boston. The latter will not ar- 
rive until July. Joseph Dorr and 
family will be new comers to 
Brownland this year. 
Keep your house and your belong- 
ings clean. Let the blessed sun, the 
greatest physician in the world, get 
all through you and all about you. 
yet your full share of the free air 
of heaven. ‘‘Eat to live and not live 
to eat,’? as a sage philosopher of 
the long ago tells us. Keep your 
house clean in which you live and 
keep the ‘‘house’’ in which your life 
lives clean, and all will be well. 
H. BAKER, TAILOR 
The Breeze Building, 33 Beach St. 
Manchester, Mass. 
Invites your patronage for anything you may desire in 
the line of Tailoring. Hehasa large line of samples from 
New York and Boston Wholesale Houses of Latest Styles of 
goods for 
SUMMER SUITS AND OVERCGOATS 
He also does Cleansing, Pressing, Dyeing, Altering, etc. 
His Prices are always Satisfactory 
Telephone Conn. 
TRUBLY ROAD FARM DAIRY, WENHAM 
MILK and CREAM, Fresh Eggs 
P. 0. Address, Manchester, Mass. 
S. K. PRINCE. Prop. 
THE BRITISH TAILORING COMPANY 
SANDBERG & DONERT 
HABIT MAKERS 
Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailoring. All classes of Work a Specialty 
Cleansing, Pressing, Dyeing, Remodelling 
Latest Patterns and Paris Fashion Styles. 
This is owr second year here and a long list of satisfied customers is our best recommendation. 
Please notice the location: 
Guaranteed Satisfaction to All Customers. 
46 Beach St., Woodbury Building, Manchester, Mass. 
Telephone 179 
Young Doctor — Why do you al- 
ways ask your patients what they 
have for dinner? 
Old Doctor—It’s a most important 
question, for, according to their 
menus I make out my bills.—Slovo. 
Subbubs—I’m going off on a hunt- 
ing trip tomorrow. 
Towne — Game, house or cook ?— 
Boston Transcript. 
A lie will travel faster than the 
truth, but it will not be the first 
to arrive at the destination, because 
it must double on its tracks so often. 
‘Are you girls going to have a 
daisy chain at commencement?’’ 
‘‘T should say not. We are going 
to have an orchid chain. There are 
‘none bu rich girls at our school.’’ 
—Washington Herald. 
Politeness is good nature regu- 
lated by good sense.—Sydney Smith. 
“She is the light of my life.’’ 
‘Well, in that hobble gown and 
that big hat she does look a good 
deal like a parlor lamp.’’—Louisville 
Courier-Journal. 
Our age is but the falling of a leaf, 
A dropping teary, | 
We have no time to sport away the 
hours, 
All must be earnest in a world like 
ours. 
‘“‘It was very romantic,’’ says the 
friend. ‘‘He proposed to her in the 
automobile.’’ 
““Yes!’’? we murmur encouraging- 
ly. 
‘‘And she accepted 
hospital.’’—Life. 
him in the 
