12 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
THE WITCH HOUSE 
310 1-2 Essex Street Salem, Mass. 
ANTIQUES OF ALL KINDS 
SPECIAL: A rare old Lowestoft tea set with blue 
border and Adam decoration—very unusual. 
Vee Ee summer colony has already tak- 
en on an early summer life which is encourag- 
ing for a busy season. Some of the hotels are open, 
all of the yacht clubs have opened and are entertain- 
ing members, and many of the cottagers on the mainland 
and on the Neck have arrived for the season. All that 
is needed to put things in full swing is a period of 
warmer weather, and that will be inevitable with 
about two week’s advance in the calendar. 
The Corinthian Yacht club on the Neck has been 
open for two weeks and many members are availing 
themselves of the opportunity of enjoying Marblehead 
at its best during the early summer. There are about 
a score of new members at the club this season and 
everything promises to be very busy from now until 
Labor Day. The first dance of the season will not 
come until Monday, July 6, and the first band concert 
the following Monday evening. The first open race 
will come on Saturday afternoon, June 20, at 2.15 
o’elock. The Corinthian members are considering hay- 
ing a smoker and musicale every Saturday evening. 
Mrs. A. H. Vinal of Boston is today entertaining a 
party of ladies at the club house at luncheon and a 
trip about the shore. Next Wednesday, June 10, the 
members of the Boston Paper Trade association will 
hold forth at the club on their annual outing, coming 
down from the city on a specially chartered steamer. 
This organization has made the Corinthian its head- 
quarters for the past few years. The racing schooner, 
Princess, chartered this season by John G. Alden, has 
been in Marblehead harbor just off the club house the 
past few days. 
The Eastern Yacht club at Marblehead Neck open- 
ed last Thursday, the pleasant weather of the past 
week inducing many members to spend a day on the 
shore. Naturally there was a good assembly at the 
club on the holiday last week and the new tennis 
courts were busy all day Saturday. There is an in- 
novation at the Eastern this year which should please 
tennis enthusiasts of the club in the fact that Otto 
Glockler, a professional tennis expert connected with 
the Boston Athletic association, has been engaged for 
instruction purposes this summer. He is already at 
work on the courts. During the past winter the ladies’ 
restaurant at the Hastern has been remodelled and the 
adjoining room made into a reception room. 
A novelty for Marblehead Neck will be found this 
summer in the rustic tea garden being constructed at 
the Oceanside Hotel. The situation is an ideal one, 
situated as it is close to the water’s edge, quite near the 
lighthouse on the Neck. This will be of especial in- 
terest to motorists as the Oceanside property com- 
mands a splendid view of the yachting and aeroplane 
courses. It is no strange sight now to see the new Bur- 
gess-Dunne hydro-aeroplane skimming above the light- 
house and making the turn above the roof tops of the 
F.W NIGH Os 
Antiques 
eeece eoeee 
73 1-2 Federal Street Salem, Mass. 
Oceanside. The tea garden will offer an afternoon tea, 
with a menu of ices and other refreshments. Chicken and 
shore dinners will also be served on the open piazzas 
of the house. ‘he Oceanside entertained many motor par- 
ties over the holidays, among them being a party, the 
guests of H. L. Odell of Jamestown, N. Y. Mr. Odell 
had covered 1,000 miles in a five-day trip from James- 
town. With him were B. C. Davis, Asa Ashworth and 
C. D. Melhwich, also of Jamestown. Other motor 
parties included Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Noyes of George- 
town; Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Fuller of Springfield; Mr. 
and Mrs. R. White of Boston; Mr. and Mrs. W. D. 
Preston, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Wharton, all of 
Boston; B. E. Kile and daughter of Providence; A. P. 
Cudy and party of Worcester; and Mr. and Mrs. An- 
thony W. Robinson and daughter, Rachel G., of Haver- 
ford, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Hall of Baltimore will 
spend the season at the Oceanside. Mr. and Mrs. EH. M. 
Cook of Fall River are there for June. Mr. and Mrs. 
D. M. Blair of Boston are spending this month at the 
Oceanside. Dr. W. B. Thompson of Fitchburg is a sea- 
son guest there. 
Ocean-Manor is the new name for the former Hotel 
Nanepashemet at Marblehead Neck. G. Paul Brackett, 
whose father is the proprietor of the Rock-Mere at 
Marblehead, on the mainland, is the new manager 
of the house and has made a good start by 
having the house thoroughly renovated inside 
and out. New furniture has been installed all over 
the house and many new bath rooms have been added. 
New dormitories for the servants have been built the 
past winter. Ocean-Manor will open Thursday, June 
25. 
Mr. and Mrs. Fred and Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. 
MecQuesten have moved down to their summer estate, 
‘‘Questenmere,’’ at Marblehead Neck for the season. 
Situated on the tip end of the Neck, on the ocean side, 
the MceQuesten grounds are probably the prettiest on 
the peninsular. The estate is quite near the Corinthian 
Yacht club. 
Mr. Patterson of the firm of Smith-Patterson, Bos- 
ton, has bought a house on a property which was for- 
merly a part of the McQuesten estate at Marblehead 
Neck and will summer there. 
Philip Wadleigh of Haverhill, whose summer home 
is near ‘‘The Churn,”’ is at Marblhead Neck for the 
season. 
Among those to arrive at their summer homes at 
Marblehead Neck the past few days are: Frederick P. 
Valentine of Newton Center; Mr. and Mrs. Andrew 
Raeburn of Brookline; Charles H. Farnsworth of Cam- 
bridge at his cottage on Harbor Ave.; Mr. and Mrs. 
Franklin P. Gowing of Brookline on Harbor Ave.; E. 
A. Shuman of Boston on Spring St.; F. A. Semons of 
Salem; W.S. Bigelow of Elizabeth, N. J.; J. H. Child 
of Brookline; and James B. Noyes of Brookline, 
