24 NORTH SHORE BREBZE and Reminder 
“\ 
BOSTON SHOP: 
462 BOYLSTON ST. 
MISS COMER, CoirrEruse 
PERMANENT WAVE 
SOV MER Sito Re He COLONNADE 
MAGNOLIA 
June 30, 1916. 
AES 
Ca CGNs 
HAIR 
DRESS. SS TINGS 
Tclephone 548-W 
The first Saturday evening hop of the season will b= 
given in the ball-room of the hotel, Saturday, July rst. 
Miss Lillian Sanger and maid, accompanied by Miss 
Isabellé Grantham of Brooklyn, are among the receit 
arrivals at the Oceanside for the summer. These ladies 
have been coming to the Oceanside for several years. 
N: D. Maher of Roanoke, Va., has leased the house 
formerly occupied by the late Frank Chick on Norman ave., 
at Magnolia. Mr. Maher is a railroad man and was for 
many years a guest at the Oceanside. 
General and Mrs. George L. Andrews of Washington, 
D. C., are again at the Oceanside for the summer. Gen- 
eral Andrews is in his 86th year, but is very active an‘ 
enjoys life to the utmost. Mrs. Andrews was a former 
Salem, Mass., girl, the daughter of General Oliver, the 
author of “Federal Street.” 
Mr. and Mrs: Simon Patterson of Pittsburg are 
spending their honeymoon at Magnolia and are registere‘| 
at the Oceanside. 
Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Lockwood and son, H. W. Lock- 
wood of Washington, D. C., are located at the Oceanside 
for the summer. 
Thos. B. Hidden and neice Miss F. E. Hidden of 
New York are registered at the Oceanside for the montia 
of July. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Farish and child, Miss Laura 
Rice and W. M. Rice, all of Houston, Texas, compose:l 
a motor party which spent a few days at the Oceanside 
en route for a stay in Maine. 
William Carey Sanger of Sangerfield, N. Y., has 
been visiting his sister, Miss Sanger, who is a season 
guest at the Oceanside. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. Arthur Hull and daughter, Miss 
Phylis, and maid of Mt. Vernon, N. Y., are again at the 
Oceanside for the season and are domiciled in apartments 
in the Wilkins cottage. 
Notable among the arrivals at the Oceanside on 
Thursday were Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Chalmers and sister, 
Mrs. William Dandy, and maid, of Chicago. These 
prominent Chicagoians are domiciled at the Breakers cot- 
tage and will remain for the season. 
Mr. and Mrs. Fred F. Rhodes and daughters, the 
Misses Helen and Priscilla, and son, Whitney, of Brook- 
line, are recent arrivals at the Oceanside. They are in 
the Highland cottage. 
hotel Hborn and Cottages 
MAGNOLIA, MASS. 
H. A. Haskell, Proprietor 
WITHIN 100 YARDS OF THE OCEAN 
On the famous North Shore 
Dr. J. Oliver Sartwell Dr. Blanche B. Sartwell 
221 Essex Street, Room 39, Salem 
Tel. 1879-M Residence, Danvers, Tel. 416-M 
Treatments at office or patients’ residence 
Ostenpathy | 
Miss Theodora Willard of Boston, who with her 
chaperone, Miss R. D. Knowles, is summering at tae 
Oceanside, is a splendid swimmer, and spends a great 
amount of her time at the North Shore Swimming Pool 
where she displays great skill in the water. She is mot 
daring -and her high dives taken from the diving board 
are very thrilling. 
Mr. and Mrs.’ C. D. Sabin and daughter, Miss Eliza- 
beth, and son, Charles D., Jr., of the Hotel Plaza, N: Y., 
are at the Oceanside for the season. They are occupying 
rooms in the East cottage. 
Mrs. Otis Kimball and Mrs. M. A. Dyer, both of 
Boston, are notable arrivals at the Oceanside where they 
will remain throughout the season. 
Mr. and Mrs. L. Lecomte of New York are at the 
Oceanside for the season and have taken apartments in 
the Highland cottage. 
ERHAPS the most popular sport indulged in by the 
fashionable summer colony at Magnolia is that derived 
fron the saddle. A great many of these society folk may 
be seen any fine morning in and about the avenues and 
roads of this exclusive spot upon their favorite horses. 
No other summer place is quite equal to the North 
Shore for those who enjoy the thrill of the saddle. The 
inlying estates, as well as those more outlying, afford the 
most interesting bridle trails through a delightful country, 
which is always offering something new as to scenery and 
environ. These trails take the rider through the fine es- 
tates of some of the North Shore’s most prominent res1- 
dents, a great many of these places taking in chains of 
small lakes, beautiful and rustic, which on a warm day 
offer the refreshing breezes from off the tranquil waters. 
Miss Charlotte E. Maxwell of Boston, who is visit- 
ing Mrs. Margaret Bradley Purdy at the Fuller Home- 
stead, Lexington avenue, Magnolia, is a sister of Miss 
Anna Maxwell, director of the Training School at the 
Presbyterian Hospital, New York, who was chosen to go 
to France and make a visit to the military hospitals. 
Ysabelle—Why don’t you propose to Percy? He’s 
as good as gold. 
Lucia—Yes, but my motto is “Accept no substitutes.” 
—Chaparral. 
Village Square, Magnolia 
ne Ye ee gee 
e M. 
Real Estate and Insurance 
Furnished Summer Residences and Stores To Let 
Desirable Building Lots For Sale 
Telephone 463-M Magnolia 
