NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 43 
/ A new feature this season Motor Over to Superior service of afternoon Z 
of especial interest to North = tea ices and refreshments Y 
hy ; : Yy 
7 Shore motorists, Commands Che (reas Ora Garden Dinner served on the open ] 
Z supérb view of yachting and AT MARBLEHEAD NECK A la Carte ‘Sarvide including 7 
Z Reroplané courses Near the Lighthouse and adjoining ‘‘Questenmere’’ Estate Lobster ] 
The Olde 1640 Tra Room and 
2 CROCKER PARK ifte Slimype MARBLEHEAD 
AFTERNOON TEA 
Exclusive Sale of Mary Elizabeth Candies 
~ aes | 
Vf ARBLEHEAD and the Neck has emerged from a 
fairly lively June to two weeks of weather which 
has been rather averse to enjoyment in the open. Nearly 
everything which made outdoor life a pleasure has been 
sacrificed because of the cool and sunless weather; but 
this fact has not deferred the regular members. of the 
colonies there from coming to their summer homes and 
enjoying themselves in other ways. Considering the wea- 
ther the hotels have been booking many guests and the 
next ten weks are promising enough. 
Mr. and Mrs. Fred McQuesten of the Neck 
colony will entertain a party of friends at their charming 
estate, “Questenmere,” on the tip end of the Neck over 
the coming week-end. Among the guests expected are 
Mrs. J. H. A. Currier of Newburyport, her son Ross, and 
daughter Dorothy. Master Ross has been a student at 
the Middlesex school the past season and plans to return 
in the fall. Other guests of the McQuestens will be. Dr. 
and Mrs. William ‘Warren of Wheaton college, Norton, 
Mass., where Mr. Warren is a professor. The McQues- 
ten gardens attracted the attention of many visitors to 
the Neck over the Fourth and week-end. Just at this 
time, when everything green has been spared the rays 
of the sun these gardens are perhaps the prettiest on the 
Marblehead shore. A number of quaintly carved figures, 
in grotesque position, add a “different” touch to the gar- 
dens, at the same time adding to their prettiness. 
~ Joseph Jacobs, who is summering on Spring st., Mar- 
‘blehead Neck, entertained over the Fourth of July and 
Sunday his father, Charles Jacobs and his sister, Miss 
Lillian Jacobs, both of Brookline. 
Mr. G. Wright motored up from his Connecticut 
home on Tuesday to spend a few days with his daughter 
and son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. H. N. Stevenson, who are 
summering on Ocean ave., Marblehead Neck. He left 
for his home today. 
Mrs. Wm. H. Sherman, who is spending the season 
at her cottage near the .Oceanside, Marblehead Neck, 
entertained a score of her friends on the Neck at her 
home last Friday at a garden party. The grounds were 
tastefully decorated for the occasion and a delightful 
luncheon was served in the open. 
The first of the dinner dances at the Corinthian Yacht 
club was given last Monday evening, when about 125 
guests were entertained at dinner. In view of the incle- 
ment weather, this was an exceptional gathering and in- 
dicates that the weekly affairs of this kind to be held 
the rest of the summer will be even more popular. Next 
Monday evening will come the first of the summer band 
concerts, with the Salem Cadet band in attendance. This 
aggregation of musicians is always popular at the Corin- 
thian and the largest attendance of the season is looked 
for. ‘The dinner-dances will be held on Friday of each 
week the rest of the season. An open race is scheduled 
for the off-shore course for tomorrow (Saturday) after- 
noon at 2.15 o'clock, 
S 
Gi 
_ HOTEL TUDOR—NAHANT 
When motoring along the shore ’phone for one of our 
_. SPECIALLY PREPARED DINNERS 
Fish, Chicken, Game and all the fixin’s 
Tel. Nahant 8207 
Surroundings always cool with the delights of country and sea 
The annual cruise of the Eastern Yacht club has 
held the attention of its members the past few days and 
most members have been active in the races at Newport 
and vicinity. The cruise ended yesterday with the race 
over the 29-mile course from Block Island to New Lon- 
don. Tuesday’s event, the annual regatta, held at New- 
port, which is usually held off Marblehead, but as in 1903 
was run off at Newport, was to enable all the clubs to 
take part at the same time as the prospective cup defend- 
ers, the Defiance, Vanitie and Resolute. The cup de- 
fenders sailed in a special class. .The racing honors on 
Monday, from Mattapoisett to Newport, went to the 
schooners Enchantress, Sea Fox, Vagrant and Alice, the 
sloops Avenger and Edjako II. and the auxiliary schooner 
Fedalma. The cruise has made things unusually quiet 
at the club house on Marblehead Neck. ‘The second band 
concert of the season was given last night, by the 8th 
Regiment Band. 
The Oceanside hotel, Marblehead Neck, has had a 
prosperous July so far, and advance bookings for the re- 
mainder of the season look surprisingly well. E. F. Mat- 
tison, of Providence, R. I., and a member of the class 
of 716, Brown university, is winning laurels as a swim- 
ming instructor at the Oceanside. Included among the 
guests who intend to remain there for July and the season 
are: Miss S. B. King and Miss Elizabeth Wright of Bos- 
ton; Mr. and Mrs. Philbrick of Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs. 
Albert I. Couch and Mr. and Mrs. Walter S. Couch of 
Lawrence; Miss Helen P. Tufts of Boston; Mrs. S. P. 
Bryant and daughter of Cambridge and Mrs. G. L. Hes 
of Sioux Falls, S. D.; and Mrs. Wm. Spaulding, Miss 
Spaulding and Miss Gibson of Nashua, N. H. The Ocean- 
side tea garden is proving a popular place for motorists 
and the cottagers on the Neck and is an innovation for 
that section which is being generously appreciated. 
The Ocean-Manor, Marblehead Neck, is showing the 
effect of the change of management. Already there is 
a vast difference at this house, not only in the appearance, 
both in the exterior-and interior, but in the general man- 
agement of the place. Patrons will find a general im- 
provement in the service and the appointments of the 
house. The name is not the only new distinguishing 
mark. New furnishings, new baths and a thorough reno- 
vating of the entire house have made it one of the cosiest 
of summer hotels on the North Shore. This, with its 
ideal location on the Marblehead race course and facing 
the open ocean, is attracting many vacationers to the 
Ocean-Manor. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Crocker, who have 
been enjoying a short stay at the Ocean-Manor, sailed 
for Europe Wednesday, where they expect to remain for 
about six weeks; afterward they will probably return to 
Marblehead and the Ocean-Manor for a stay extending 
into the fall. She Crockers’ two children, Miss Katharine 
and Master N. H., accompanied them on the trip across. 
Tuesday evening is the regular time reserved for the de- 
votees of dancing at the Ocean-Manor and two enjoyable 
