NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
In the corner of the garden 
a stairway of marble leads to 
a  perfume-haunted room 
ablase with patterns in inlaid 
stone. Beneath the chamber 
window is the lake, across 
the water is a_ thicket of 
bamboos, while beyond the 
nodding brake are the ever- 
encircling hills.” 
It is pleasant to drift to 
the lazy murmur of the re- 
volving water wheels—past 
dome and minaret, and not 
the least beautiful are the 
ghats where the Indian girls 
fill their brass vessels then 
poise them on the head grace- 
fully—or on the hip encircled 
by a bronze arm which rivais 
the glowing brass. Prettiest 
of all are ‘the saris drying, splashes of orange, red and 
purple with every other hade of gorgeous color 
‘*Look up, 
COLMMN aera. <4 
to drift to the lazy murmur of 
9?) 
*“Tt is pleasant 
the revolving wheels........ 
” 
ee ae wham eres Be -mrmmronsnnneten 
and there is a white balcony with slender 
9 
; | harmonizing beneath the rays 
4 of the mellow sunlight. 
— As I look back in my 
diary to the days which will 
never fade from my memory 
[ find this last impresssion 
recorded. “The lake be- 
came black, the palaces were 
radiant with opalescent lights 
—the sky was like a blood 
the 
red ruby sun was 
setting on Udaipur.” 
“Softly the feathery Palm- 
trees fade in the violet 
distances, 
Faintly the lingering light 
touches the edge of the 
sea, 
Sadly the Music of Waves, 
dritts- taint as. = 1an 
Anthem’s insistence, 
Heard in the aisles of a dream, over the sandhills, 
to me.” 
Steps with the saris drying, ‘‘splashes of orange, red and 
purple. ’? 
[Se 
“Fore’—to Summer Golfers 
HE, friends of golf are dull who fail to see the trend 
of the times, and doubly so if they fail to make pro- 
per provision for the future. 
The old and popular clubs are full, their membership 
and facilities taxed almost to the limit, but there are a 
few renaining smaller clubs that are the mainstay of sum- 
mer colonies ‘and offer every inducement of surroundings 
and opportunity for exercise, that need just the boost of 
this over-flow from the older clubs to place them in a 
strong position. 
Bass Rocks is an illustration of local spirit and en- 
terprise. The old comfortable links at Magnolia, incor- 
porated in 1898 and named from the local Cove, the Ket- 
tle Cove Golf club, are in a state of transition. <A little 
spirit will save these links to the North Shore and insure 
the future for some golfers for whom Essex and Myopia 
cannot possibly provide. 
Daily, weekly and monthly dues for playing are ar- 
ranged, a professional is in attendance, and proper people 
are at the club house to provide for the immediateaise 
of the links by proper applicants. 
Magnolia has the earmarks of a golfing center, es- 
pecially for the traveling golfer; all the incidentals and 
accessories such as a following sea dip, and a good lunch 
or dinner at the Grill, or Green Gables, are in evidence. 
Automobile parties from Rockport to Lynn are daily 
taking advantage of the Kettle Cove Golf links for a golf 
outing, and with pleasure to themselves and encourage- 
ment to the men who are attemping to keep these links 
open. 
If sufficient interest would focus there, before the 
land is occupied and it is too late, the real estate pur- 
chased and the links annexed to the Swinrming Pool, 
would have the unique proposition of golf links, tennis, 
sea bathing and club house combined in one with only a 
wicker gate and roadway separating. A locker house 
could be added to the present Swimming Pool club house 
with little expense. Already quite a lot of land has been 
secured by friendly interests, which is the key to this 
whole situation, and can be utilized at once. 
This is an era of city planning; why not 
handed country planning? 
a little forc- 
FRANK S,. CHICK. 
Magnolia, July 15th, 1914. 
