NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 9 
place for tea tables arranged, while inside the rooms 
were most artistically designed. Soft colonial colors 
blend well with the green of the hangings. They may 
be nothing but common kitchen tables painted over and 
kitchen chairs dressed up with a new coat of paint 
but it is attractive all the same, and homelike, all the 
more so from the quaint designs that were worked 
out for this special purpose, each one of which 
has a meaning of its own. The house is patronized 
not only by the summer guests, but all the year round 
residents hold once a week card parties here. It is 
their tea house and through their patronage that they 
have been enabled to purchase a lot of land to con- 
tinue the work all the year around. 
‘““The Sign of the Crane’’ will give to Manchester 
a new impetus. It was started under the direction 
of Mrs. George Dean whose efforts in the playground 
field and physical culture work have been so success- 
ful. She will doubtless meet with a great success in 
her efforts here to open a home where the talented 
citizens of the town can send their choice handiwork 
and also provide homemade delicacies to meet popular 
demands. 
For the elite of the North Shore “The Grille” at 
Magnolia, meets a much needed demand. It gives a 
place where guests can be entertained in a most lavish 
manner and where entrance means an abundance of 
unusual teas such as cannot be procured at any other 
place. Little wonder that its popularity, its artistic 
interiors and its much more artistic exteriors cannot 
fail to attract the passing guest. 
With the coming of the tea house a different phase 
of social life has been opened up along the North 
Shore, a life which extends as far as Gloucester, Mass., 
New. York 
§ West Fortieth Street 
Newport, R. I. 
Washington, D. C. 
1216 Conn. Ave. 
where ‘‘The Barnacle’’ overhanging the water attracts 
not only tourists but the summer guests. There is 
no need to-day of boring ourselves with un-needed 
entertaining in our homes. For the tea house has 
come to stay and all we have to do is to visit one with 
our guests and enjoy to the utmost the tempting viands 
that the hostess supplies. 
The Hollis Burgess Yacht agency has sold the “ Her- 
reshoff” 30-foct waterline sloop “Wasaka” owned by H. 
B. Scattergood of Providence, R. I., to John J. Martin 
of Boston, who will use her for racing and cruising at 
Marblehead this summer. “Wasaka” was built for the 
late S. Reed Anthony of Boston and Beverly Farms and 
is one of the best boats of her size ever turned out by 
Herreshoff. ‘The same agency has sold the Lawley built 
30-foot waterline cruising sloop “Dorel” owned Dyer. 
James J. Minot, to Robert Treat Whitehouse of Portland, 
Maine; the Herreshoff 21-foot raceabout “Hazard” own- 
ed William Durant and Hubert Lopez of Boston to a 
menrber of the Boston Yacht club; the 21-foot waterline 
sloop “Quakeress” owned by J. W. Dammerall, Jr., of the 
Savin Hill Yacht club to I. R. Jones of Dorchester; the 
motorboat “Arab” owned by Frank W. Dyer of Boston 
to F. C. Hitchcock of Brookline; the Manchester Yacht 
club one-design class 17-foot knockabout “Solitaire” 
owned by Hugh G. Levick of Boston to B. T. Potter of 
Bristol, R. I., and the Corinthian Yacht club one-design 
class knockabout ‘‘Charette” owned by William T. Ald- 
rich of Marblehead, to Joseph B. Jacobs of Boston.. The 
same agency has charted the auxiliary yawl “Vashti” 
owned by Barton B. Hill of Lowell, to U. B. Grannis, of 
Chicago, and the auxiliary sloop “Hope” owned by M. G. 
Patten of Boston to Laird Bell of Chicago. 
Se ne eee ee eee EY 
SSS eee 
Philadelphia 
16th and Walnut Streets 
York Harbor, Maine 
ESTABLISHED 1869 
A. SCHMIDT & SON 
Importers of 
OLD AND MODERN SHEFFIELD PLATE 
FINE ENGLISH & FRENCH 
& HANAU SILVER 
ENGLISH, DUTCH, FRENCH 
CHINA AND GARNITURES 
EXCLUSIVE NOVELTIES IN FURNITURE 
ANNOUNCE THE REOPENING OF THEIR MAGNOLIA, MASS. 
STORE FOR THE SEASON 
TELEPHONE NO. 408 
LEXINGTON AVENUE 
