20 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
— 
GARDEN FURNITUR ARTISTIC, COMFORTABLE 
and DURABLE 
Old English Garden Seats, Rustic Work, Garden Houses, Rose 
Arbors and other Accessories for the Adornment and Com- 
fort of the Garden. 
Send for New Catalogue of Many Designs 
Garden Designers and Builders 
North Shore Ferneries Co., every: Ales tar avo 
THE dancing contest at the Oceanside last Friday, the 
closing feature of the popular Thés Dansants con- 
ducted there this summer by Miss Flora Voorhees, was 
won by Miss Madelein White, of the ladies, and Kenneth 
Seggerman of the gentlemen, both being won on number 
of points. They were not partners in all of the dances .Miss 
Ethel Morse and Jack Darragh won second honors, re- 
spectively. Others competing were the Misses Brainard, 
the Misses Richard, Mr. Nettleton, Chester Lockwood 
and Spencer Kennard. 
One of the numbers played by the Oceanside orches- 
tra last Sunday evening, to the delight of the large audi- 
ence gathered in the hotel lobby and parlors, was Percy 
Lee Atherton’s latest production, “Magnolia Belles and 
Beaux,” a waltz impromptu composed this summer since 
Mr. Atherton has been at Magnolia. This was the first 
time it. was played, and the reception which it was given 
must have been a pleasing inspiration to Mr. Atherton, 
who was one of the audience. 
One of the improvements which Oceanside guests will 
note when they return next year will be a new bath house 
at the beach. The foundations for this were put in last 
autumn, but it was not deemed advisable as the winter 
wore on and business conditions grew more depressing, to 
go to the expence of building the house for this season. 
It has now been definitely decided, however, to go ahead 
with the construction this fall. Work will be started 
within a few weeks. There will be 100 rooms, and the 
structure will have 100 feet frontage on the beach. The 
present old structure, the remnant of the big paivlion part 
of which was razed when the Swimming Pool was built, 
will be destroyed. 
Col. E. F. Ladd of Washington and daughter Mrs. 
Wm. T. McMillan’ and’son of West Point, N. Y., are at 
the Oceanside for a visit, joining Mrs. Ladd, who has 
been here all season. Mrs. McMillan will remain a week, 
but her parents will not conclude their stay until the 
hotel closes. 
George D. Wick, Jr., returned to the Oceanside last 
night joining his mother, and bringing with him for a stay 
Clinton G. Abbott of New York. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Hailman of Pittsburg, Pa., are 
among the recent arrivals. They came Tuesday to re- 
main the rest of the season. Mrs. Hailman’s mother will 
join them Saturday for a visit. 
Mrs. S. Y. Seyburn and Miss Seyburn of Detroit 
arrived at the Oceanside this morning to spend the bal- 
ance of the season. 
Gen. and Mrs. G. A. 
welcomed back to the Oceanside Tuesday. 
come to Magnolia much earlier in the season. 
remain until the hotel closes, 
Garretson of Cleveland were 
They usually 
They will 
Aockefellers 
Jo* Cigars 
LARGER AND BETTER THAN THE 
BEST YOU EVER SMOKED AT 
3 for 25c 
These and others of our well known brands can be had at the cigar stands 
in North Shore hotels and clubs 
IGH lights, low lights and crimson lights reflected the 
gaiety of the annual ball given by the Oceanside to 
their attendants in every line Tuesday evening. For the 
first time in years the ball took the form of a Costume- 
Party, suggested undoubtedly by that given for the hotei 
guests Saturday night. It was as attractive an affair as 
has been arranged in years. Pillars were wrapped in blue 
and gold, with a profusion of golden-rod caught in the 
folds, and red, white and blue overhung the whole. 
Quantities of evergreen and Japanese parsols finished the 
picturesque illusion. The same wonderful music that has 
inspired the whole North Shore all summer played for 
the dancers, and trots and waltses were never danced with 
more esprit-de-vie. Ice cream, cake and punch refreshed 
the guests, and the crowded ball room floor mirrored the 
enormity of the Oceanside organization of assistants. The 
hotel guests were almost as much in evidence, as lookers- 
on, as the employees and their guests. The biggest scream 
of the evening was Topsy, impersonated by Miss Ethel. 
MacDonald, the newstand girl. When she and Mr. Bell 
did the cake walk everybody went wild. Charles Shea, 
as Slivers the clown, Everett Grady, one of the tray boys, 
as Solomon Levi, and Charlie Hughes, the carriage man, 
as the scare crow, made the biggest hits of the evening. 
But then, everyone was good, and the party was by all 
means the most enjoyable ever given for the employees. 
Among those in costume were: Allen MacDuff, doll girl; 
Chas. Hughes, scare crow; Chas. Shea, Slivers the clown; 
sill Parks, Bill Meagher and George Tingley, clowns; 
Everett Grady, Solomon Levi; Frank Grady, Terrible 
Turk; Jack Holland, Jocky; Everett O’Neil, Chinaman; 
Joe Rogers, troubador; James Farley, Jack Downing, 
Albert Flanders, Sam Rostam, James McGivelly, cooks; 
Webster Hoagland, soldier; Arthur Linberg, cop; James 
Casey, cop; Joe Doucette, tramp; Ethel MacDonald, 
Topsy; Miss Shea, Java girl; Miss Smart, cowboy; Miss 
Marion Cahill, French band-master; Gertrude Quigley, 
Martha Washington; Gertrude Sweeney, cowboy; Celia 
Woods, suffragette; Mae McCaffery, gypsy girl; Grace 
McCaffery, Irish colleen; Joe Murray, Irish girl; Mae 
Flaherty, peasant girl; Mable Scott, Irish colleen; Alice 
MacGowan, nurse; Helen MacGowan, goose girl; Sadie 
Taft, co-ed; Nora Davenport, clown; Sadie Fay, nurse; 
Mae Davin, Indian; Mable Samson. American girl; May 
Connell, American girl; Angela Honan, Dutch girl; Irene 
Honan, Follies of 1915; Hit Hession, sweet sixteen: 
Gerturde Hession, powder puff; Mae DeCourcey, clown; 
Margaret O’Brien, dairy maid; Helen McCarthy, Indian ; 
Ruth Stone and Annie Chrisbo, Red Riding Hoods; Kittie 
Hurley, parlor maid; Ruth Desbrow, ballet girl; Mary 
Dulligan, bathing girl; Mary Powers, Transcript; Arthur 
Curtis, Desperate Desmond; Mr. Carr, minister’s son, 
