DK QR ean aise ECO). Re 
in this roo; he fills the bottles and applies the sanitary 
cover, which is held in place with a metal band and e- 
liminates any possibility of milk being contaminated dur- 
ing subsequent handling. 
Finally the sealed bottles are packed in special cases 
covered with cracked ice, and held in the cold room at a 
temperature of 40 degrees until delivery. 
BREEZE and Reminder | 23 
Hote, Brunswick CuHancrs HAnps. 
Negotiations for the transfer of the lease of the 
Hotel Brunswick, Boston, by Herbert H. Barnes to Fred 
E,. Jones, formerly of the Buckminister, have been com- 
pleted and Mr. Jones took possession June I. 
Herbert: H.: Barnes has been associated with the 
Brunswick for about thirty-five years. In 1879 his uncle, 
Amos Barnes, became manager and for many years the 
firm name. was Barnes & Duncklee. Ejight or ten years 
ago Mr. Duncklee retired and the hotel was operated 
until recently by Amos Barnes. Herbert H. Barnes suc- 
ceeded his uncle at the latter’s death. Amos Barnes said 
that when he took the Brunswick in 1879 “the country 
round was new made ground, the hote! was built in a 
sand desert and many of my acquaintances prophesied 
failure’in such a risky undertaking.’ The Brunswick, 
in former ‘times entertained many men of National fame, 
among them Grant, Arthur, Blaine, Cleveland and Har- 
rison. 
The Brunswick property is assessed on a valuation 
of $1,000,000, and 1s owned by Frederick Ayer of Lowell. 
Mr. Fred FE. Jones, the incoming manager, is welt 
known as a pleasing type of the good sturdy New Eng- 
land landlord, who impresses his guests and friends with 
a sense of sincerity and dependability. 
Among the prominent names registered at ‘lhe 
Brunswick Hotel, Boston, is that of ex-United States 
Senator Eugene Hale of Maine. 
YACHTS CHANGE HANDs. 
The Hollis Burgess Yacht Agency has sold the 31- 
foot waterline auxiliary yawl ‘‘Consort,’ owned by 
Robert Treat Whitehouse of Portland, Maine, to E. N. 
Potter of New York for use at Dark Harbor, Maine; the 
26-foot waterline yawl “Colleen,” owned by Professor 
George E. Russell of the Massachusetts Institute of 
Technology, to Professor Yandell Henderson of Yale 
University; the 35-foot motor boat “Dhila,” owned by 
James E. Marrett of Portland, Maine, to Norman Irving 
Black of Providence, R. I.; the Manchester Yacht Club 
17-foot One Design Class knockabout ‘“Friscan,” owned 
by A. H. Bowditch of Boston to I. Howland Jones of Bos- 
ton; and the motor boat “Big. Dig,’ owned by Arthur P. 
Homer of ‘Boston to A. Francis Breed of the Corinthian 
Yacht Club, Marblehead. 
The same agency has chartered the 9o-foot power 
Yacht “Viator,” owned by Merrill Hunt of the Eastern 
Yacht Club, to. Arthur: B.- Childs; Boston. © “Viator” 1s 
one of the finest large power yachts on the Atlantic coast, 
and is now fitting out at Neponset. 
Manager Coulon of the Westminster Hotel, Boston, 
is pushing preparations for the opening of his roof gar- 
den. Watch for the date. It will be one of the season's 
events. 
Man thinks, and at once becomes the master of the 
beings that do not think.—Buffon. 
CELEBRATED FOR COUNTRY HOUSE OR CLUB USE 
Clicquot Club Ginger Ale 
BEST AND PUREST OF DOMESTIC BEVERAGES 
FOR. SALE FOR EXCLUSIVE TRADE ALONG THE NORTH SHORE AT 
SHELDON’S MARKET 
TEL. 67 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA, MASS. 
