14 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
May 26, 1916. 
The Plumbing in the Annex to the New Ocean 
House, Swampscott, Mass. 
installed by 
I. We CROZIER 
Plumbing Contractor 
Back Bay 7226 Back Bay 6725 
Telephone, Brookline 1256 
HOUSE BUSINESS 
Q UPLAND ROAD, 30 WEST CANTON ST., 
BOSTON, MASS. 
BROOKLINE 
MARBLEHEAD resorters are said to be interested in 
having another “movie” house in the seaside town 
this summer. Going to the “movies” is a regular diver- 
sion for the summer folk and they. would lke a more 
congenial place to go. William L. Terhune of Phillips 
Beach, formerly of Clifton and prominent in the activi- 
ties of the Clifton Improvement association, is said to be 
the prime mover in the proposed theatre. The picture 
house, will, it is understood, be built and operated by a 
corporation formed under Massachusetts laws and nearly , 
all of the stock has already been subscribed, most of it at 
Phillips Beach and Marblehead. Last fall the project 
was put forth, but when the promoters and ‘owners 0: 
the land could not come to terms the venture fell through. 
* Vincent Astor was a welcome visitor to the Marble- 
head shore this week, when he came down in his yacht, 
the “Norma,” from New York especially to try out. the 
new aeroplane built at the Burgess Co. yards in that town 
for the New York naval militia. On Sunday last Mr. 
Astor made a successful flight, in spite of strong easterly 
winds; residents of the Neck saw him make 70 miles an 
hour through the air. Officers of the New York state 
militia, headed by Capt. Reginald L. Foster, witnessed 
the flight. The machine will be used for training pur- 
poses this summer in New York waters. 
William H. Joyce, chairman of the house committee 
of the Corinthian Yacht club, and Mrs., Joyce, are at 
their Neck summer place for the season. 
Oliver Hart Bronson of New Haven, who has ae- 
cepted the pastorate of the Tabernacle church in Salem, 
has taken the Cutter house on Harbor avenue, the Neck, 
for the season. He will reside in Salem in the fall. 
Mr. and Mrs. James P. Munroe, with their daughter 
Elizabeth W., are down at the Wheelock cottage on Nashua 
avenue, the Neck. Mr. Munroe is treasurer of Tech- 
nology. 
Summer residents who have arrived on the Marble- 
head Neck shore for the last few days include: 
W. Dittman, Cincinnati, the Weston house, Follett street ; 
Wendell L. Nichols, Brookline, the Ross Parker house, 
Nanepashemet street; Miss Elizabeth E. Dane, Cambridge, 
Dunlap cottage, Ferry street; Frederick R. Beebe, Wes- 
ton, the Cheever cottage, Highland avenue; Frank P. 
Munroe at Russell cottage, Highland avenue. 
Marblehead residents are interested over the coming 
wedding on Thursday; June 1, of Thomas Amory Lee, 
Harvard ’15, now a practising attorney of Topeka, Kan- 
sas, and Miss Mary:Helen Shirer, daughter of Senator 
and Mrs. Hampton Lafayette Shirer of Topeka. Mr. 
Lee’s great, great, grandfather was Col. William. R. Lee- 
George | 
~ 
>. 
JUST RECEIVED--Our New Spring Line of 
Quaker-Craft Laces 
From $1.50 pair to $3.50 pair 
Come In and Look Them Over 
ALFRED W. BEEDE Opp. City Hall, Lynn 
of Revolutionary war period and whose former home, 
opposite Abbott hall in Marblehead, is visited by many 
sightseers each summer. Mr. Lee was a guest of Mr. anil 
Mrs. Waldo P. Ballard at the Lee mansion last summer 
when he was writing an historical sketch of his famous 
forebears. 
A party of Wellesley girls spent the last week-end 
at the Col. Wm. R. Lee mansion. 
At the Rock-Mere hotel, Marblehead, today are 60 
young ladies from Bradford Academy, who will remain 
over Memorial Day. The girls came to this hostelry last 
year and were so pleased with their stay on the shore 
that they decided to come again this season. Miss Laura 
Knott, principal of the school, chaperones them. Many 
of the girls are from the far west and a trip to the shore 
in such delightful surroundings is a treat for them. Many 
of them come later in the season to the Rock-Mere with 
their parents. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. Graydon Stetson of Beacon street, 
Brookline, are going to Marblehead Neck for the season 
in mid-June and will be at Sea Gull cottage. The Stei- 
sons are putting their new boat, Abeona 3d, into com- 
mission the last of the current month and intend to spend 
much of their time in cruising. Mr. Stetson goes to the 
Plattsburg camp for the month of September. 
Miss M. Corinna Dana of the Tuileries, Boston, is 
to be at Marblehead Neck the coming summer, having 
leased the Burlen cottage. Miss Elizabeth Ellery Daua 
of Cambridge has also rented a cottage in that vicinity 
for the coming months, and Mr. and Mrs. Wendell L. 
Nichols of Summer road, Brookline, will occupy the 
Ross Parker cottage on the Neck. Mr. and: Mrs. Nichols 
1ecently returned from an automobile trip to Washington. . 
No education is more needed than the education for 
economy and the elimination of waste-—Christian Regis- 
NSH BS 
LIFTON always has its full quota of early summer 
visitors. True, there are now no hotels there to attract, 
but wooded streets, the wide, clear outlook into the sea 
and its accessibility to “town” and to the country clubs 
make it one of the most popular resorts. 
An idea of how families are coming to Clifton is 
shown by the following list of those most recently arriv- 
ing there: 
W.H. Dunbar of Malden, “Bellavista.” 
Ernest E. Nelson, at the Thomas cottage at Cliftoa 
Heights. 
R: M. Boutwell, for a short stay at the Heights. His 
cottage is leased for the season. to John D. Drum of 
Brookline. 
C. A. Phillips of Chicago for a short sojourn at Clif- 
ton Heights. . 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Habick of Roxbury, with 
their children, George E., and Henry J., at their Surf 
street cottage. 
W. W. Willis, president of the Chesapeake & Ohio 
Coal Co., at one of the Hunting cottages, the Heights. 
W. B. Jackson of Winnetka, Il., at the Lord cottage. 
