(RES EEE EEEEEE 33233232233235 
€ 
“in p32552322a22ccccceeceecee#™ 
George Wigglesworth and family are 
not closing their house at Milton and 
ing to Manchester until the very last 
‘of this month. On the 29th of June 
Mr. Wigglesworth is having the mem- 
bers of his class at Harvard (1874) down 
to Manchester for the day in connection 
with the 35th reunion anniversary of the 
claas. The married son, Norton, and 
family are to occupy the small cottage on 
the estate this season, and Mr. and Mrs. 
Philip P. Chase are to have the Pickering 
house. 
ww 
_ Jj. L. Loose and family of Kansas 
‘City are among the arrivals of the week 
at Magnolia, where they are again occu- 
-pying the Underwood cottage. 
d Ww Ww 
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney L. Hutchinson 
of Philadelphia, who recently bought the 
Preston estate at Beverly Farms, are still 
in Europe, though they are returning 
very shortly. The extensive improve- 
ments and alterations in their new sum- 
mer home are being pushed along and it 
is planned to have the place ready to turn 
over to the owners by July 1 at the latest. 
wow 
Mrs. F. Gordon Morrill has arrived 
at her cottage at Magnolia for the season. 
Her son, Dr. F. Gordon Morrill, jr., 
and his bride of a few months, will join 
~ Mrs. Morrill later. They are now in 
~ Cleveland, O. . 
- \ 
a 
Mi. and Mrs. Harrison K: Caner of 
** Felsmere,’’ Manchester, have their 
son George Colket Caner home from St. 
Mark’s school, Southboro, after a serious 
illness with typhoid fever. He has been 
confined in the hospital there for some 
weeks and was able to return home last 
Friyay. The young man is fifteen years 
old, but stands six foot in his socks, 
_ weighs 175 pounds, and ought to make 
4 a prize for any varsity football team when 
he enters college. 
wo ow 
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Treat Paine, jr., 
will not be at their Pride’s Crossing es- 
tate, ‘* Pinethwaite,’’ this season, as they 
are in Europe. Mr. and Mrs. R. T. 
Paine, 2d, of the Coolidge’s Point col- 
ony, now in Europe, are returning the 
fast of this month. 
: wow 
: Mrs. Francis A. Lane of St. Louis ar- 
rived at her residence on University 
Lane, Manchester, yesterday. 
t  Suricty Nutes 4 ¢ 
: At the fintels : 
This is the great day of the year at 
Magnolia. The Oceanside opens today 
—and that always means a big stir, an 
impetus to business and a general pros- 
perity throughout the town which lasts 
all round the year. When the Ocean- 
side closes one season, Magnolians be- 
gin-looking forward eagerly to the day of 
opening for the next. 
The Oceanside is not the geographical 
center of Magnolia—but it can well 
spare that honor, because it is the center 
of everything else. There is no kind of 
an activity about the whole town worth 
a potter's paddle that does not start or 
end at the Oceanside. To Magnolia 
and the towns about it, the big hotel is 
what London and Paris are to the whole 
world—the centers of business, fashion 
and pleasure. Only at the Oceanside 
all is quiet enjoyment, —rest to mind and 
body, flavored with cool  sea-breezes, 
and with the noise and jar of the mod- 
ern city absolutely lacking. 
That is why Magnolia’s streets are 
alive today when they were well-nigh 
deserted yesterday. Many guests arrived 
this morning, many more are scheduled 
to arrive tomorrow and Sunday and by 
another week, hundreds of guests from 
New York to Frisco and from Winni- 
peg to Colon will be journeying north, 
south and west by boat and rail, bound 
for the Oceanside. ; 
And the big hotel is spick and span 
from cellar to garret ready to receive its 
patrons. No sooner has a guest arrived 
at the door than one of a score of polite 
young men is at hand to answer queries 
and care for the luggage. From that 
moment until he gets aboard the train for 
the home-going at the end of the season, 
each patron has the benefit of a perfect 
system on which Manager Phenix and 
his aides have worked for months, look- | 
ing to secure every convenience and ac- 
commodation for their guests. 
Some of the early arrivals at the hotel 
today were Mr. and Mrs. E M. House 
and Miss Janet House of Austin, Tex., 
Mrs. John M. Gilkeson and maid of St. 
Louis, Mo.; Miss Margaret Gummey 
of Philadelphia; Burton Crawford of 
New York; Mr. and Mrs. F. E. War- 
ner, George E. Carter, J. W. Gum- 
mey, Mr. and Mrs. David Loring and 
Miss Loring, Clarence G. Croll, Mrs. 
A. Plummer and Mrs. Chester Guild of 
Boston, 
ber, .tomorrow. 
1 arian en pide ene ad lect aha pital: 
Ww - Ww 
¥ # Surivty Notes < & 
Ww 
Wy ssassasszazaccecececeecet™ 
SSS SSSSSSSSSSESSSCSSSESSCeSee 
Gardiner M. Lane is throwing open 
his beautiful summer home ‘““The Chim- 
neys,’’ at Manchester, to the em- 
ployes of the firm of Lee, Higginson & 
Co., of Boston, of which he is a mem- 
A special train will 
convey the party from Boston to Man- 
chester for the half day’s outing. An 
old-fashioned clam bake will be the main 
feature of the occasion. ‘Fhis will be 
held on Dana’s Beach, and a_ baseball 
game will be another feature. 
WwW Ww 
Nelson S. Bartlett, having leased his 
town residence at 272 Marlborough 
street, Boston, is to make Manchester 
his permanent residence, and will live 
here the year around, thus adding anoth- 
er to the growing colony of Bostonians 
who maintain their residence here in 
winter as well as summer. 
: wow 
Mrs. Reginald Foster and children 
have arrived at their summer cottage at 
Coolidge’s Point, Manchester, for the 
summer. Mr. Foster is motoring in 
Europe, but will return before the sum- 
mer is over. 
wow 
The Cummings Cottage on Engle- 
wood avenue, Magnolia, has been let for 
the season to Asaph Churchill and family 
of Milton who are expected down during 
the coming week. 
W WwW 
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford D. Sawyer of 
Dartmouth street, Boston, are to occupy 
the Foster cottage on Summer street, 
Magnolia, this summer. Mrs. W. 
Kennard of Bay State Road, Boston, 
with her sons Victor and Reginald Ken- 
nard, are to be at the Kirby cottage near- 
by. ae Bh 
Ww Ww 
The first racing event of the season on 
the Manchester Yacht club’s schedule is 
set for next Thursday, June 17, at 10 
o clock,—a race for one design.and son- 
der class. 
Ww W 
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Kennard of St. 
Louis, Mo., are im their cottage on 
Fuller street, Magnolia, for the season. 
They came last Tuesday. 
W W 
Mrs. L. S. Ayers and family of In- 
dianapolis are expected at the Ayers’ 
summer home on Lexington avenue, 
Magnolia, tomorrow for the summer. 
