NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 55 
North Shore Grille Club 
Magnolia, Mass. 
Will open June twenty-seventh for the season 
of nineteen hundred and fourteen 
Edward Stone Wiltbank, President 
New Management 
New Features 
French Cuisine 
Unexcelled Service 
The Dansant 
Royal Hungarian Orchestra 
tion tennis doubles. There is always a great deal of 
interest in the mixed doubles tournament, which will pro- 
bably come this year during the first week in August. 
The golf course has been improved this season, one new 
hole being added and others materially changed and 
lengthened. The usual number of dances will probab- 
ly be held in the red barn, as the new clubhouse is not 
expected to be finished this season. 
There are few changes on the golf course of the 
Myopia Hunt club this season. There is one important 
addition in the bunker line. ‘This is at the sixteenth, 
coming down the hill to the green abreast of the caddie 
house. The other at the right hand corner of the new 
bunker is in a direct line between the tee and the mid- 
dle of the green. From that point the bunker runs to 
the left. The hole now is guarded in front by the new 
trap and by two hillocks, which means trouble for prac- 
tically any shot which does not carry to within ten 
yards or so of the green. To the right of the hillocks 
there is a bunker; there is another at the right hand 
corner of the green and one in the same relative position 
on the left. In back of the green, a bit to the left, 
is another. The green itself is sloping so that it is a 
par 3 hole, where par will come only through a perfect 
tee shot and the orthodox two putts, unless a player 
should have exceptional luck in getting his 3 by other 
methods. 
The East Gloucester Yacht club promises to have 
the largest 18-ft. class in knockabouts along the shore 
this summer. Its officers are enthusiastic, also, of the 
large number of new members who have presented 
themselves this season. Semi-weekly races will be held 
as usual, on Wednesdays and Saturdays, starting the 
last week in June and continuing until Labor Day. 
WAMPSCOTT’S summer colony will be made more 
accessible to tourists this season because of the 
widening and straightening of Humphrey St. from 
Monument Sq., near the Lynn Shore drive, to Fisher- 
men’s Beach and Puritan Road. The Shore drive has 
always been kept in excellent condition because of 
its being a part of the state highway, but the stretch 
of thoroughfare cited above has never been satisfying 
to motorists and for general traffic purposes. It is 
hoped that the work will be finished by July 1, when 
an excellent boulevard direct to Swampscott, Beach 
Bluff, Phillips Beach and Clifton will be the result. 
The work is being done jointly by the state, county 
and town of Swampscott. The Bay State Street Rail. 
way is also sharing the expense of the work done be- 
tween its tracks, and has secured a double-track priv- 
ilege thereby. M. McDonough of Swampscott is the 
contractor. The county commissioners, in their decree 
for the laying out of Humphrey St., provided for a 
uniform width of 70 feet in such a way as to widen, 
straighten and re-locate the street according to the 
plan prepared by the Mass. Highway Commission and 
approved by the latter in conjunction with the county 
commissioners and the selectmen of Swampscott. The 
damages are estimated by the commissioners at $83,- 
630, to be paid out of the county treasury. Some por- 
tions of the present highway are to be discontinued. 
The presence of a young girl is like the presence 
of a flower: the one gives its perfume to all that ap- 
proach it, the other her grace to all who surround her, 
—lL, Desnoyers. 
