NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MANCHESTER, MASS., FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1909. 
: he al het hiatetetlatiratiatnd: 
w : w 
‘ 4 Suoriviy Notes 4 ¢ 
President Taft, Mrs. Taft, their 
daughter Helen and two sons, Robert, a 
Yale Senior, and Charlie, ‘‘the boy of 
the White House,’’ will arrive in Mont- 
serrat Sunday morning at 8.54 o'clock in 
their special Pullman the “* Olympia.’’ 
They leave Boston at 8.17 o'clock, at- 
tached to the regulartrain. From Mont- 
-serrat the family will be driven by’ auto- 
mobile to their home on Burgess Point 
where everything will be in readiness for 
their arrival.. Rev. B. R. Bulkeley, the 
Unitarian minister, will conduct services 
in the First church in Beverly at 11 
o'clock, but as the President leaves on 
Monday morning at 8.55 o'clock for 
Norwich, Conn., thence tothe Lake 
Champlain tercentenary celebration, it is 
likely that he will not leave his summer 
home on Sunday. Nor will he conduct 
any official business before leaving, as the 
executive offices have not yet been sup- 
plied with furniture. Mrs. Taft is an 
Episcopalian. She has been in ill 
health and will probably remain at Bur- 
gess Point with her husband and not at- 
tend services at St. Peter’s Episcopal 
church. Among the congregation of 
the First church in Beverly, where Pres- 
ident Taft will attend services, are Miss 
Katherine Loring, and Miss Louise Lor- 
ing of Boston, Robert D. Evans and 
family of Boston, Miss Anna Jackson, of 
Boston, the William Endicotts of Bos- 
ton, and Mrs. John C. Phillips of Mo- 
raine Farm, North Beverly. 
wow 
Justice Oliver Wendall Holmes of the 
Beverly Farms summer colony, who 
went to England as a delegate to the cen- 
tenary of the birth of Charles Robert 
Darwin, was among those honored by 
the university with the degree of Doctor 
of Science last week. 
wow 
Col. and Mrs. Harry E. Russell have 
returned to Manchester after a delightful 
hunting trip to Middle Dam, in the 
Rangeleys. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bemis 
of Beverly Farms accompanied them. 
The usual good luck which Col. Russell 
has encountered was met this year, as 
well as by the other members of the 
party. hy oth 
ww 
J. H. Lancashire and family of Michi- 
gan are atthe Hood cottage, Norton’s 
Point, Manchester, for the summer, 
: At the foiels :: 
With the Fourth of July hard at hand, 
the Oceanside has prepared itself for a 
record-breaking patronage. So far the 
season has been a bit backward, but the 
schedule of guests to arrive today, tomor- 
row and Sunday exceeds any prospect 
the hotel has ever had before. 
Mrs. G. Walker Kelley of Barnstable, 
came down to Magnolia Wednesday and 
is a guest of Mrs. Alfred Tucker of Bos- 
ton at the Oceanside Hotel. 
Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Hobbs of Bos- 
ton have engaged rooms in the Sea Crest 
cottage, Magnolia, for the summer and 
moved in Wednesday. 
Prof. Allen R.-Benner of Phillips 
Andover academy is at the head of a 
company of students now spending a few 
weeks at the Oceanside. In the party 
are J. W. Twitchell, Pittsburg. Pa.; J. 
D. Thompson, East Liverpool, Ohio; 
W. H. Woolworth, jr.. New York 
City. 
Miss Edith F. Meacham of Cincinnati, 
O., R. D. Meacham and F. S. Meacham 
of Cincinnati, O., arrived at the Ocean- 
side Wednesday on an auto tour through 
New England. From here they will go 
on Sunday to Montreal, where they will 
sail for Europe, to be gone the remainder 
of the season. 
Mr. and Mrs. H. Carpenter of New 
York City passed through here Tuesday 
on a motoring trip to Portland, Me. 
They stopped at the Oceanside. 
General G. L. Andrews, U. S A., 
retired, and wife of Washington, D. C., 
are at the Oceanside for the season. 
THE WEATHER. 
Do not groan about the weather; 
It won’t make much difference whether 
You are pleased with it or not. 
You can’t stop it, if it’s raining, 
And you know all your complaining 
Will not make it cold or hot. 
Better take it as you find it: 
If it’s bad, try not to mind it; 
Just enjoy it, if it’s good. 
Fair and foul days bring their measure 
Equally of joy and pleasure, 
If you live them as you should. 
So, then, do not sit repining, 
Though the sun may not be shining, 
Make your sunshine all the time. 
Banish all your melancholy, 
And you’ll find your life so jolly 
You'll be glad you read this rhyme, 
—Somerville Journal. 
The Essex County club will be the 
scene of a brilliant gathering of North 
Shore people next Wednesday afternocn, 
July 7, for that afternoon will mark the 
formal opening of the season ‘there. 
That is, the first of the series of Wednes- 
day afternoon band concerts will be given, 
and on that afternoon, also, there will be 
a house warming of the enlarged club- 
house. The Essex County clubhouse is 
now one of the finest in the country, 
having undergone many changes and _al- 
terations the past winter, and many mem- 
bers and friends of members will see the 
improvements next week for the first 
time. Fn e- 
Ww Ww 
T. Howard Lewis and family of New 
York City have moved into the T. M. 
Clark cottage on Blossom Lane, Man- 
chester, for the summer. Mr. Lewis 
is the manager of the Mutual Life Insur- 
ance Co. of New York. 
Ww Ww 
Mrs. A. P. Peabody of Boston, whose 
country home is at Ipswich, has taken 
the Bliss cottage at Magnolia for the 
summer, and has already been there sev~ 
eral weeks. 
wo ow 
Misses Margrette and Rosamond Otis 
of Boston, daughters of Dr. Walter J. 
Otis, have been guests the past week of 
their uncle, F. Blackwood Fay and 
family, Smith’s Point, Manchester. 
wow 
At their beautiful summer estate on the 
tip of Smith’s Point, Monday, Mr. and 
Mrs. S. Parker Bremer had a party of 
some half-hundred children from the 
Emmanuel House, Boston, for the day. 
The young folk left Beston on the 9.35 
train and were met at the Manchester 
station by automobiles. At the Bremer 
estate they had a most enjoyable outing, 
Mr. and Mrs. Bremer giving them a 
royal good time. ‘They left for home 
on a late afternoontrain, and it is safe 
to say most of them will never forget 
their good time by the seashore and the 
feast of good things given them on their 
outing to Manchester. 
Ww W 
Mr. and.Mrs. James S. Lee of 12 
Brimmer street, Boston, having let their 
cottage at Magnolia, will not come to 
the North Shore again this summer, but 
will spend July and August at Naples, 
, . 
