‘fine state of perfection. 
on another page. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
1] 
: At the fintels :: 
Continued from page 5 ’ 
in which the contestants will play will be 
determined by drawing. ‘This year the 
Oceanside has five superb courts in place 
of two and the tournament can be run 
off much more quickly than in years gone 
by. 
Under the management of Joseph H. 
Collins and J. Henry Coulter plans for 
the annual horse show are coming to a 
A complete 
list of the events with the judges and 
conditions of the contests will be found 
Messrs. Collins and 
Coulter predict that this year’s show will 
far exceed its predecessors in recent 
years and that it will be one of the most 
fashionable events ever held at Magnolia. 
All information regarding the show may 
be had by addressing Mr. Collins. 
Mrs. L. G. Griffith, one of Kansas 
City’s social leaders, is at the Oceanside 
for the season. 
Prof. I. L. Winter of Harvard spent 
Sunday with his wife and children who 
are at the Oceanside for the summer. 
Among the Washington people arriv- 
ing at the Oceanside this week was Mrs. 
C. H. Poor and Mrs. M. P. Maus. 
They have come to Magnolia for many 
seasons and declare there is no other 
place like it. 
A prominent Cleveland family regis- 
tered at the Oceanside the last week. 
Mrs. William Edwards, wife of General 
Edwards arrived Saturday, accompanied 
by her daughter, Mrs. Charles Otis of 
Cleveland, and Mr. Otis. They came 
from Cleveland in two big automobiles, 
bringing a small retinue of servants with 
them. Gen. Edwards will come on later. 
They are at the Oceanside for the season. 
Frank E. DeLong, Charles F. De- 
Long and Miss Dorothy DeLong are 
members of a prominent Philadelphia 
family now registered at the Ocanside. 
Mrs. B. F. Chase of Providence has 
been staying at the Aborn during the 
week as a guest of Mrs. R. S. Northam 
of the same city. 
Miss Lucy Jenkins of Winchester is 
at the Aborn for a month, the guest of 
her sister, Mrs. John W. Suter. ‘The 
Rev. Mr. Suter is rector of the Church 
of the Epiphany, Winchester. 
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Gunn and 
family of Toronto, Ont., and Mrs. S. 
R. Roberts of Toronto are at the Aborn 
for the month of August. 
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. English of Den- 
ver, Col., are at the Oceanside fora 
short stay. 
Commodore and Mrs. E. J. Chap- 
man of Ontario are at the Oceanside for 
the season. 
¥ # Socieiy Notes 4 y 
Sy 9325322202 322cecceeececeee™ 
Mrs. S. Parker Bremer and Mrs. 
William Lowell Putnam will serve as 
judges of the water pageant to be held 
at Manchester on Thursday evening, 
-Aug. 12, under the direction of the 
Manchester Yacht club. There will be 
a procession of decorated boats, canoes 
and floats, open to all yacht clubs and 
residents of the North Shore. ‘The en- 
tertainment committee of the club, under 
whose charge the affair will be run, con- 
sists of William L. Putnam, John H. 
Storer and James Means. ‘The _ harbor 
front and cottages along the shore will be 
illuminated that night and it is expected 
that the scene will be well worth seeing. 
Six prizes are offered— $35, $25, $20, 
$15, $10 and $5, respectively. 
Miss Helen Longyear left Manchester 
this week fora visit of several weeks 
with her sister, Mrs. Alton P. Roberts, 
at Marquette, Mich. 
The Siamese embassy is occupying the 
Williamson cottage at Eastern Point, 
Gloucester, for the second season. The 
members of the embassy include Am- 
bassador Phra Ratanayapti, Edward Lof- 
tus, first secretary of the legation and 
Mrs. Loftus, and the attaches, Nai 
Cheun, Nai Terr and Nai Jajaval. The 
‘ 
latter two are ‘‘student attaches.’’ Phra 
Ratanayapti is really the charge d’ affaires, 
as the minister, Phra Akharaj Varad- 
hara, is absent. 
Mrs. Franklin T. Pfaelzer and young 
sons returned to Brownland Cottages, 
Manchester, Tuesday, after an automo- 
bile trip down the South Shore to Marion, 
on Cape Cod. They were away several 
days. 
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Boardman 
are being showered with congratulations 
on again becoming grandparents. A 
little boy arrived in the home of their 
daughter, Mrs. Winthrop Murray Crane 
and Senator Crane at Dalton at noon 
Tuesday. This is the second. child born 
to Senator and Mrs. Crane, their first 
son, Stephen, being born in 1907. Mr. 
and Mrs. Boardman are having a few 
friends with them over the week-end, at 
Windclffye, their Manchester home. A 
dinner party will be given tomorrow 
night at which covers will be placed for 
fourteen or fifteen. 
The tennis tournament which occu- 
pied the boards at the Montserrat Golf 
club courts last week was brought to a 
close Saturday with some brilliant play. 
The big feature of the afternoon was the 
finals in the mixed doubles, in which 
Miss Eleonora Sears and N. S. Bartlett, 
jr., pluckily defeated Miss Lucy Blair 
and C. M. Amory with a score of 6-4, 
6-4. 
FP ER EP LTO 
3 At the tavtela :: 
One of the most pleasing entertain- 
ments of the week at the Oceanside was 
that given Wednesday evening by the 
Actor's Child League of New York 
City. Under the direction of Miss Nel- 
lie Whipple, the travelling manager of 
the troupe, the children put on a very 
pretty show. © For the most part it was 
made up of child songs and folk dances, 
but every piece was carried out witha 
cleverness and grace that showed long 
and carefultraining. The Child League 
will always be welcome at the Oceanside. 
The League is a society organized in 
1907 to care for and educate the children 
of touring players and to assist, in every 
other way possible, the orphan and needy | 
ones. At present the headquarters are 
at 14 West 104th street, New York 
City. Miss Whipple, the present di- 
rector of the children, was for 15 years. 
director of the Dorothea Dix Hall, a 
similar organization in Boston. 
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Furst of 
Newburgh, N. Y., stopped at the Ocean- 
side early in the week on a touring trip 
through New England to Poland Springs 
and the White Mountains. 
Mr. and Mrs. John Philip Souza, jr., 
of New York City are at the Oceanside 
for the month of August. Mr. Sousa 
is a son of the world-famed bandmaster 
and composer. 
F. K. Seggerman and family of New 
York City are at the Oceanside for the 
season. With them as their guest is E. 
L. Young of Jersey City. 
Miss Hattie E. Blair of Brockton is 
spending a week at the Oceanside as a 
guest of Mrs. W. F. Robinson of Bos- 
ton. Mr. Robinson is a director of the 
First National Bank of Boston. 
Alfred G. Phillips, -jr., of Philadel- 
phia 1s spending the summer with his 
sister, Miss Elizabeth Phillips, at the 
Aborn. Mr. Phillips is a student in 
Technology, Boston, which he attends 
daily. 
At the Hesperus this week are Mr. 
and Mrs. George H. Wheelock of Kan- 
sas City. They are very prominent so- 
cially in the west. While at Magnolia 
they are guests of Mis. E. W. Smith, 
also of Kansas City. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Rike of Day- 
ton, Ohio, are at the Oceanside with 
their family for another season. ‘They 
are living in the East Cottage as guests of 
the Oceanside. Miss Virginia Rike, a 
favorite among the guests at the Ocean- 
side, is their daughter. “They also have 
two sons with them, David R. Rike and 
Master Baird. Late in the season, the 
Rikes will be joined by Dr. and Mrs. 
H. W. Farnham of Chicago. 
