NORTH SHORE BREEZE ) IT 
W. C. LANGLEY & COMPANY 
BANKERS AND BROKERS 
19 Kilby Street, Boston 
Iembers of New York and Boston Exchanges 
10 Wall Street, New York 
SUMMER BRANCH OFFICE 
OCEANSIDE HOTEL, MAGNOLIA, MASS. 
Our office is equipped with a direct wire to Boston and New York and we offer every facility for the 
execution of orders in all markets. 
We cordially invite you to use this office in the transaction of any business that you may have during 
the summer months. 
MAGNOLIA HOTEL NOTES. 
Despite the intense heat of the past week there 
has ever been a cool breeze at Magnolia Point, and the 
well shaded verandas of the hotels have offered a cool 
and comfortable retreat for the hundreds of guests who 
kave come here for the summer. A cool and refreshing 
breeze from the ocean, a few hundred feet away, has 
made the nights especially comfortable. 
The Oceanside is enjoying the best season in its 
history. The house count from day to day is ahead of 
the weeks of previous years by a large percentage. As 
usual the patrons of this well known and popular re- 
sort come from all parts of the country and include 
the best people from these places. Oceanside guests 
are always of the ‘‘select and exclusive’’ class and are 
permanent rather than transient. Many of the patrons 
oi the hotel and their families have been coming to 
Magnolia for the past twenty or twenty-five years. 
The Hesperus under the management of Mrs. Fran- 
cis is enjoying another good season. The house has a 
splendid booking for the entire season. At present prac- 
tically every room is taken up into late August. As will 
Le noted in another column the arrivals of the last week 
brought many of the best known families in the country 
here. 
The Aborn and Green Gables Inn are also having 
a busy season and both will be overcrowded within the 
next week. 
Arrangements are being made for the Oceanside 
tennis tournaments which will come in early August, 
probably, the exact date to be announced in a future 
issue of the Breeze. This is always one of the big 
social as well as sporting events of the summer on the 
North Shore and attracts young people from all parts of 
the shore. 
The horse show and gymkhana sports will be held 
on the beach as usual this summer and from present talk 
and indications it will be the ‘‘biggest ever.’’ Already 
inquiry is being made as to the plans for this event. 
The exact date has not yet been scheduled. It will be 
apnounced in the Breeze just as soon as it is decided. 
Miss Isabel MeGowan of Indianapolis called upon 
Miss Natalie Brush, one of the popular young women 
stopping at the Oceanside and dined with her Sunday. 
J. Harry Rowland of Baltimore, joined his family 
at the Oceanside over the last week-end The Rowlands 
lave apartments in East Flume cottage for the season. 
Mrs. Charles Ghems and daughter Miss Anita 
CGhems, of Louisville, Ky., came to Magnolia Sunday, 
and have ‘taken apartments at Overlook, one of the 
Cceanside cottages for the balance of the season. - 
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon P. Kiser of Atlanta, Ga., are 
at the Oceanside for a few weeks’ stay. 
Miss Georgiani Solari of New York City, has re- 
turned to the Oceanside for another summer. She is in 
the Fuller cottage. 
Mrs. George W. Watts and grandson George Watts 
Hill and Miss Wolington have joined other members of 
the Watts and Hill families at the Oceanside for the 
summer. They come from Durham, N. C. 
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Warner of New York, and Mr. 
and Mrs. Julius F. Janes of Cleveland, constituted a 
motor party that spent the week-end at the Oceanside. 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Everett and Richard M. and 
Henry C. Everett, Jr., are at the Oceanside for the 
season. They register from Boston and came to Mag- 
nolia last: Saturday. 
L. B. Fletcher, resident partner of the firm of W. 
(. Langley & Co., who have a branch of their stock 
exchange in the Oceanside for the summer, has come to 
the Oceanside for the balance of the season. Mr. 
Fletcher is the junior partner of the firm and is the 
last member to be admitted to the floor of the Boston 
stock exchange. 
The Oceanside orchestra composed of some of Bos- 
ton’s best known orchestral players, has been giving 
some delightful concerts in the porte cochere of the 
Oceanside on the afternoons and evenings of the last 
week, and also at the beach from 11 to 12, being joined 
at the beach by the orchestra from the Hesperus. Cot- 
tagers as well as hotel guests may be noted among the 
large crowd gathered for these musical treats. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Magnolia claims Miss E. C. MeVickar of Providence 
as a summer resident this season. Miss MeVicker, who 
is a sister of the late Bishop Wm. N. MeVickar, for 
several summers enjoyed the attractions of Pride’s with 
ker late brother and his family. She has the Rabardy 
and Knowlton cottages at Manchester Cove, on the 
beach front. 
oOo 90 4 
The arrival in Manchester of the Thomas Taylor, 
Jrs., of South Carolina, has caused a pleasant inter- 
change of visits between Mrs. Taylor and her mother, 
Mrs. Oliver Ames, Sr., of North Easton. Mrs. Ames 
was the guest of her daughter over the last week-end. 
o°Oo9O 4 
The Myopia hunt elub will begin its polo program 
on July 17 and the matches will continue through July 
24. Some of the fastest polo teams in the country are 
expected to participate in the tournament. 
