NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 19 
THE WITCH HOUSE 
310 1-2 Essex Street Salem, Mass. 
ANTIQUES OF ALL KINDS 
SPECIAL! Willard banjo clock 
Four Georgian Sheffield candle sticks 
Original Wedgwood tea set 
ARBLEHEAD’S summer colony is plunging into 
the season of 1914 in good style; a large major- 
ity of the regular cottagers are already domiciled 9n 
the mainland or at the Neck, and the hotels, in most 
cases, are open or preparing to receive guests. Plea- 
sure yachts are beginning to dot the harbor and the 
causeway leading to the Neck is a busy place during 
certain hours of the day. 
Things are beginning to show signs of life at the 
yacht clubs, especially on the last week-end, when the 
Corinthian and Eastern clubhouses accommodated many 
guests. The concerts at the Eastern Yacht club start 
on July 9 and continue every Thursday night after 
that date. The schedule of the Eastern for this sea- 
son promises some good water sport. The season starts 
on Saturday, June 27, with an open regatta for yachts 
not over 46 feet rating. The annual cruise will start 
on Thursday, July 2, when the yachts will rendezvous 
at Newport. The following day a 37-mile course will 
be laid out for the craft from Newport to Vineyard 
Haven and on Saturday comes the race from Vineyard 
Haven to Mattapoisett, a distance of 25 miles. Sun- 
day, July 6, the fleet rests at Mattapoisett. On Mon- 
day, the 6th, the racers will make the distance between 
Mattapoisett and Newport. The annual regatta As 
scheduled for Tuesday of the same week, when the 
candidates for the America cup will compete, this be- 
ing the first race to count toward selection. On Wed- 
nesday the course lies between Newport and Block 
Island, 17 miles ‘‘as the crow flies.”’ The closing day 
of the cruise is marked by a race from Block Island 
to New London, 29 miles. The annual dinner will come 
at the latter place at 7 o’clock p.m. At Marblehead 
on Monday, August 3 is the open regatta for yachts 
not over 46 feet rating. On Saturday, August 29, 1s 
the regatta for yachts not over 46 feet rating. The 
races of June 27 and August 3 count for the champion- 
ships of the North Shore in the P. R. sonder, Boston 
Yacht club, 2nd rating; Bar Harbor 31 feet, Marble- 
head 17 feet and Manchester 17 feet classes. Howard 
W. Bracken of Marblehead, David H. Coolidge of the 
Hotel Somerset, Boston; and James M. Abbott of Lowell 
have been proposed for membership in the Hastern 
Yacht club. The officers at the Eastern for the present 
season are as follows: Herbert M. Sears, commodore; 
Maximilian Agassiz, vice comm.; Chas. K. Cummings, 
rear comm.; Oliver Ames, fleet capt.; James A. Burgess, 
see’y. 
The Textile club of Lowell will hold its annual 
outing at the clubhouse of the Corinthian Yacht club 
tomorrow (Saturday.) <A luncheon at the club and a 
trip along the North Shore will be included in the day’s 
program. The ‘‘Italia,’’ the P. class boat of the Corin- 
thian fleet, owned by George Lee of Brookline and 
Beverly Farms, went on the rocks off the postoffice 
float on the inner harbor last Saturday, but was got- 
Raw. NICHOLS 
Antiques 
eoeeve oeee 
73 1-2 Federal Street Salem, Mass. 
ten off. easily without damage to the craft. A new 
road to the entrance of the Corinthian clubhouse 1s 
planned to replace the present thoroughfare, which is 
im. rather) poor, condition» at’ present. The.” first 
racing of the season by the Corinthian fleet 
comes on Saturday afternoon of next week, an open 
race. The remainder of the season’s schedule is as 
follows: Saturday, June 20, July 4, 11 and 18, open 
races; Saturday, Aug. 1, open, ommitting P and Bar 
Harbor 31-footers; Aug. 5, 6 and 7, midsummer series, 
open; Saturday, Aug. 8, open; Saturday, Aug. 15, open, 
small classes; Saturday, Aug. 22 and Sept. 5 open; 
Monday, Aug. 7, open; Saturday, Sept. 19, 10 a. m. 
erand handicap (open). 
The Oceanside hotel, Marblehead Neck, is the mee- 
ca of early season motorists who seek the beauties of 
the Marblehead shore when they are in their finest form. 
Among the motor parties over the last week-end there 
were: Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Luke, R. M. Luke and two 
daughters of Buffalo, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Smalley 
of Boston; Mr. and Mrs. John Sturgess and sons of 
Dayton, O.; Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Blair of Boston, 
with Judge Prescott Keyes and Mrs. Keyes of Con- 
eord; Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Bowman of Boston; Mr. 
and Mrs. F. G. Schipper of Newton; Mr. and Mrs. 
Frank Richardson of Worcester; Prof. F. C. Allis and 
Mrs. Allis of Amherst; Mrs. John Holmes McLeod ot 
Boston and son John H. Jr., Harvard, 714, with the 
latter’s room-mate, Arthur S. Harris of Winchester, 
also in this year’s graduating class at Harvard. Sea- 
son guests at the Oceanside already arrived include W. 
A. S. Kendall of Memphis, Tenn., who returns for a 
a sumer at Marblehead after 20 years’ absence from 
this section and Miss B. M. Wright of Orange, Conn. 
Mrs. J. J. Wood of Gardner is at this hotel for a brief 
sojourn, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. G. Renwick of Cambridge 
plan to return to the Oceanside this season; they were 
guests here last year. 
The Ocean-Manor at Marblehead Neck will open 
for the season Thursday, June 25. The house, which 
has been known as the Nanepashemet for some years, 
will not be recognized as the old hostelry, as the 
changes, both in the exterior and interior are such that 
a practically new hotel is the result. Re-modelled and 
re-furnished throughout, it will be one of the best ap- 
pointed hotels on the upper North Shore and because 
of its close proximity to the ocean, its general excellent 
location and the comparative nearness of Marblehead 
to Boston should be one of the hotels to have a suc- 
cessful season. Advance bookings for the opening 
weeks augur well for the Ocean-Manor. G. Paul Brack- 
ett, formerly of the Rock-Mere, on the mainland at 
Marblehead, is the manager. <A garage which will ac- 
commodate more than a score of cars is one of the 
fixtures of the Ocean-Manor, 
