20 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
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The Boylston House opened this week on Marble- 
head Neck and has a roster of guests who are expected 
to arrive the coming week. 
The Glover Inn, on the mainland at Marblehead, 
the town’s newest. summer hostelry, promises to be 
popular with the summer contingent this season. Mana- 
ger Anderson promises the best of service and has a 
most delightful location for his hotel over-looking the 
harbor and Salem bay. Glover Inn is on what is becom- 
ing popularly known as Marblehead’s ‘‘aeroplane 
course.’’ The winged air craft may be seen hovering 
in the clouds in this vicinity almost daily. 
The Hotel Leslie is planning a busy season and has 
been the scene of many lively week-end parties the 
past few weeks. This is one of the few hotels on the 
North Shore which remains open throughout the year. 
Manager Brackett promises the same popular or- 
chestra of musicians from the Boston Opera company 
for the Rock-Mere at Marblehead this season, as in the 
past three years. This aggregation has done much to 
make a stay at the Rock-Mere a pleasant one. The 
orchestra will, as last year, be under the direction of 
Mr. Cuscaden, who is now at the Hotel Westminster, 
Boston. George N. Woodman of the Hotel Touraine, 
Boston, was a season guest who arrived there this week. 
Many improvements have been made at the Rock-Mere 
the past spring. <A steam-heating plant is one of the 
innovations which makes an early spring or late fall 
stay at the hotel one of comfort. Many new baths 
have also been added and the ocean front of the house 
has been beautified by the addition of large plate glass 
windows over-looking the water. The large dining 
room has also been re-furnished. 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Eaton of Pasadena, Cal., 
are located at their summer home, ‘The Moorings,” on 
Marblehead Neck for the season. They have been on the 
shore since May. 
D. D. Morss, treasurer of the Boston Chamber of 
Commerce, who in past seasons has been a regular season 
guest at the Hotel Nanepashemet, on Marblehead Neck. 
has bought a house at the Neck and leased it for a por- 
tion of the season, after which he is expected to occupy 
it himself. ' 
George D. Pushee of Weston is at the Bridge’s“ white 
house” at Marblehead Neck for the months of July and 
August. 
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Noyes of Bay State rd. Bos- 
ton, are occupying the ‘IT’. B. Ticknor house at Marblehead 
Neck. 
The attempt to obtain spring water for the ‘Questen- 
mere” estate on Marblehead Neck by driving a well has 
been given up after sinking the bore for 310 feet, most of 
the way through solid rock. 
Cottagers who have arrived at Marblehead Neck dur- 
ing the past few days include: H. V. Hunt of Peabody; 
Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Baldwin of Medford, who are 
at their cottage on Nashua place; Charles T. Russell of 
Boston, at the Bridge cottage on Flint st.; Mrs. R. M. 
Jacobs, who is a guest of her father-in-law, Joseph B. 
Jacobs at the J. B. Carroll cottage, Spring st.; Mr. and 
Mrs. J. Melville Hunnewell at Ocean ave. and Mr. and 
Mrs. Stevens of Bay State Road, Boston, at the D. C. 
Percival house, 
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WAMPSCOTT’S summer colony has begun to show 
itself both in the hotel and cottage section and two 
weeks will see everything in full swing until after Labor 
day. ‘The Hotel Preston at Beach Bluff will open on 
Saturday of next week, the 2oth, while the New Ocean 
House will open on Monday, the 15th. The Hotel Belle- 
vue at Beach Bluff has been open, as for the past few 
years, all winter, and has a full house at present. This 
house is peculiarly situated in that its season starts about 
the first of May. The Oakland House at Swampscott 
opened for the season last week. A special program has 
been arranged for June 17th at the ‘'edesco Country club 
and this will undoubtedly be a popular place for golfers 
and tennis enthusiasts at that time. 
Plans have been made to replace the barn on the 
grounds of the Tedesco Country club at Swampscott des- 
troyed by fire last week. Although the fire was quite 
near the men’s quarters the latter building was not dam- 
aged. ‘The usual series of band concerts and dances at 
the ‘Tedesco have been arranged for Wednesday evenings 
during the summer. The concerts will be from 8 to 10 
o’clock and there will be dancing until 10.45. The first 
regular concert and dance will be on Wednesday even- 
ing, June 24, by ‘Lurvey’s Cadet band? of= Tyan eA 
special dinner will be served at the clubhouse on the even- 
ings of the concert-dances. Arrangements have been 
made for a special dinner at the Tedesco Country club 
on the evening of June 17, when a cabaret performance, 
with the artists mingling among the diners, will be a 
feature. ‘Toy’s orchestra and vocal entertainers will be 
present to entertain at a concert during the dinner and 
for dancing, the latter to come from 8.30 to 11.30 o’clock. 
More than 150 reservations have already been made and 
it is expected that fully 300 will enjoy the hospitality of 
the ‘Tedesco clubhouse at that time. ‘The full tennis course 
will be open on the 17th. At the golf sweepstake held 
last Saturday on the Tedesco links, A. M. Blake was high 
man, with a score of 72. 
The New Ocean House at Swampscott, the center 
of the society life of that section, opens next Monday, the 
15th, under the same management as before, the E. R. 
Grabow Co. A decenniai dinner of the class of ’o4, 
Harvard, will be held there on the opening night. From 
Tuesday to Thursday of next week the convention of 
the Mass. Pharmaceutical Association will be held at the 
New Ocean House, with the annual dinner of the® society 
coming on Wednesday evening. Band concerts, fire- 
works and other features will make the convention one to 
be remembered by those attending. ‘The Luncheon club 
of Boston will hold a complimentary dinner to EF. R. Gra- 
bow, manager of the hotel, there next week. 
Guests of the Oakland House, Swampscott, will have 
greater facilities for dancing this summer, as a large new 
ballroom, 37 x 30 feet, has been added to the house. 
A number of guests are already enjoying the early sum- 
mer surroundings of Swampscott and vicinity at the Oak- 
land. Among them are Prof. and Mrs. James W.'Kim- 
ball of Tufts College. Mrs. Kimball is a relative of Nich- 
olas Longworth. With them are Mrs. Edith Schmidt 
and daughter, also of Medford. Others now at the house 
are Mr. and Mrs. Miller of Passaic, N. J.; Albert Cowles, 
of N. Y. city; Mrs. H. G. Brown of Brookline and Mrs, 
Mary Blaklee of New York. 
