NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 13 
New York 
§ West Fortieth Street 
Newport, R. I. 
& HANAU SILVER 
TELEPHONE NO. 408 
cottagers are becoming settled for the 
A score or more families have arrived 
Machol. 
season. 
during the week, and within another fortnight practically 
the entire cottage colony will have been established. Mrs. 
William H. Scudder of St. Louis came on the latter part 
of last week. Misses Maude and Gladys Scudder will 
spend the summer with their mother. Mr. and Mrs. John 
H. Overall will also spend part of the summer here. 
Mr. and Mrs. E. Prescott Rowe of Longwood are 
established in the so-called Upper MacDonald cottage, 
Magnolia, for the summer. 
“Shore View,’ where Mrs. William Atherton and 
sons have spent the past year or so, has been opened the 
last week and the family is established for the season. 
Dr. Rossiter W. Raymond of Brooklyn, N. Y., is their 
guest over the week-end. 
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Closson of Boston have 
arrived at their studio at Magnolia. 
The Samuel Kennards of St. Louis are among the 
recent arrivals at Magnolia. Miss Fannie M. Faulkner 
of Boston has also just arrived at her cottage. Miss 
Helen O. Bigelow is another late arrival. Miss Elizabeth 
G. Houghton came down from town the first of the week 
for the summer. 
Dr. and Mrs. Charles Wadsworth and their daugh- 
ter Miss Isabella Wadsworth and their son Charles Wads- 
worth, 3d, whose winter home is at 5854 Overbrook Ave., 
Overbrook, Philadelphia, have arrived at Magnolia for 
the summer. ‘They have been entertaining Dr. Farring- 
ton Daniels of Minneapolis. 
Mrs. Frances A. Lane and daughter Miss Belle Lane 
of St. Louis, are at Magnolia Inn for a short visit. They 
have a cottage on University Lane, Manchester Cove. 
Among other guests at the Inn are Mrs. Whitmore Pres- 
Washington, D. C. 
1216 Conn. Ave. 
OLD AND MODERN SHEFFIELD PLATE 
FINE ENGLISH & FRENCH 
CHINA AND GARNITURES 
EXCLUSIVE NOVELTIES IN FURNITURE 
ANNOUNCE THE REOPENING OF THEIR MAGNOLIA, MASS. 
STORE FOR THE SEASON 
Philadelphia > 
16th and Walnut Streets 
York Harbor, Maine 
ESTABLISHED 1869 
A. SCHMIDT & SON 
Importers of 
ENGLISH, DUTCH, FRENCH 
LEXINGTON AVENUE 
ton and Mrs. M. S. Bolles of Boston who are to remain 
throughout the season. Mrs. John M. Gilkeson of Pasa- 
dena was here for a few weeks before going to the Ocean- 
side. 
Mrs. Ada Waelder and daughter Miss E. T. Wael- 
der of San Antonio, Texas, are registered for a season’s 
stay at the Oceanside. 
3% OD 
A wedding of interest to North Shore summer peo- 
people took place in Conway, Mass., on Wednesday of 
last week when Miss Sarah Gladys Chute, daughter of 
Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Edward L. Chute of Conway and 
Eliot Grinnell Mears, son of Rev. Dr. David O. Mears, 
of Albany, N. Y., and a summer resident of Essex 
for the past twenty years were married in the Congrega- 
tional church, of which Mr. Chute is pastor. ‘The cere- 
mony was performed by the fathers of the bride and 
bridegroom and was attended by persons from all parts 
of New England and eastern New York. The best man 
was Samuel Crocker Lawrence of Medford, a roommate 
of Mr. Mears in the class of 1910 at Harvard. The ush- 
ers were James Stoddard of Southampton, William M. 
Mason of Bangor, Me.,, both in the bridegroom’s class 
at Harvard; Thomas R. Goethals, son of Colonel Goeth- 
als, builder of the Panama canal; Edward Laurence 
McKinney of Albany and Thomas C. Stowell of Albany, 
all of the class of 1912 at Harvard. After the cere- 
mony there was a reception at Crescent Hill parsonage. 
After their wedding trip they will visit Dr. and Mrs. 
Mears at Orchard Home, Essex, for the remainder of 
the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Mears will be at home at 9 
Fuller place, Cambridge, after September 1. Mr. Mears 
is an instructor in the Harvard graduate school of busi- 
ness administration, of which he is also secretary, 
