NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 43 
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| SUSAN I. CUSHMAN 
Swedish Masseuse 
Engagements at the homes of patients Telephone 8085 
35 STATE STREET MARBLEHEAD 
Manicuring 
ARBLEIMEAD and the Neck are starting up again 
in the summer colony after a slow ten days, the 
latter because of the weather. Now, with sunny skies 
and real summer weather the upper shore is coming 
back to its own. The hotels are showing an appreciable 
gain in the number of guests and the yacht clubs are 
gaining in liveliness. 
Monday’s band concert at the Corinthian Yacht 
elub, Marblehead Neck, brought out a large number of 
the members and their guests, about 150 hearing the 
Salem Cadet band in attendance. The assembly was 
the first one of any proportions so far this season and 
indicates that the coming social events on the club eal- 
endar will be even more largely attended as the season 
advances. Among those noted at the tables for dinner 
were: Charles Goodwin, with a party of seven guests; 
K. E. Richards, with a party of nine; Ralph Anthony, 
with six; George Brown, with nine guests ; Commodore 
3B. Wheelock, with seven; Herman Parker, a charter 
member of the club, who entertained four; Wm. H. 
Joyce, with five; F. J. Fawcett, with seven; and T. B, 
Tlallett, with six. A large crowd is expected at the 
regular dinner-dance at the eclub-house tonight. This 
feature is gaining in popularity each week and many 
reservations have been made for this week’s party. 
The last boats of the Hastern Yacht club fleet which 
has been in Newport and vicinity the past two weeks 
straggled in Wednesday, late on account of the bad 
weather of last week. The annual cruise was highly 
successful, and practically all of the members went 
down and enjoyed the ten days’ trip. The 8th Regi- 
ment band of Lynn gave the concert at the club last 
night and there were many guests present for dinner. 
The ‘‘Kalinga,’’ the yacht of W. C. Forbes, commis- 
sioner in the Phillipines and the successor of former 
President Wm. H. Taft, is in Marblehead harbor, while 
Mr. Forbes is spending a short time in and around Bos- 
ton. Another boat which attracts considerable atten- 
tion in the harbor is the ‘‘Chanticleer,’’ the schooner 
of E. C. Fitch of Boston, another Eastern craft. [x- 
Senator Aldrich’s yacht, the ‘‘Nivana,’’ left the har- 
bor on Tuesday for Providence. The Senator has been 
spending the past two weeks on the North Shore, divid- 
ing his time between Marblehead and the home of his 
son, W. T. Aldrich, in Boston. 
Joseph Jacobs and family, of Brookline, who sum- 
mer on Spring st., Marblehead Neck, motored down to 
Narragansett Pier, R. IL, last Saturday and returned 
Sunday night. 
When motoring along the shore ’phone for one of our 
SPECIALLY PREPARED DINNERS. 
Chicken, Game and all the fixin’s 
Tel. Nahant 8207 
Surroundings always cool with the delights of country and sea 
Fish, 
HOTEL TUDOR—NAHANT a 
Mr. and Mrs. Wendell M. Weston of Winchester, 
who are stopping, as usual, at their Ocean ave., cottage 
on Marblehead Neck, enjoyed a motor trip to Provi- 
dence this week. Their cottage, ‘‘Surf Rocks,’’ adjoins 
the Oceanside hotel. 
Mr. and Mrs. O. Wettlaufer, whose cottage is near 
the lighthouse on Marblehead Neck, have been enter- 
taining Mr. Allen, Technology 717 the past few days. 
Mr. Allen sails for his home in Glasgow for a five weeks’ 
vacation trip before returning to his studies. 
The Oceanside Hotel, Marblehead Neck is one of 
the few hotels which can claim a full house at this sea- 
son of the year. Although this house is not among the 
largest on the shore it accommodates many visitors to 
the Marblehead shore and at present enjoys the distine- 
tion of having practically every reservation taken. 
Things are much alive in the social way at the Ocean- 
side. A pop concert held there Wednesday evening 
from eight to eleven was attended not only by the 
guests of the house, but by many of the cottagers as 
well. The grounds about the hotel and the spacious 
tea room in the rear were brilliantly illuminated and 
presented a pretty picture. Dancing was enjoyed dur- 
ing the evening, every other number. The Oceanside 
tea garden was the scene of a debutante tea tendered 
Miss Sylvia Spaulding of Nashua, N. H., by her mother, 
Mrs. W. E. Spaulding, last Saturday afternoon. The 
guests included Miss Esther Gibson and Miss Madeline 
Cutter of Nashua, Miss Florence Willowby of Win- 
chester, Franklin Wyman of Fitchburg; Hamilton Lane 
of Boston; Harold Jackson, Brown 715, of Brockton; 
and E. F. Mattison, Brown 716, of Providence. An en- 
tertainment was given at the Oceanside Tuesday even- 
ing in aid of the Salem fire relief fund. W. J. Hull of 
Baltimore is at the Oceanside for his annual visit; he 
intends to remain through July. Mrs. F. H. Thompson 
and daughters Ada and Harriet of Fitchburg have 
returned for July. Other guests for stays of a few 
weeks include Gen. and Mrs. T. 8. Peck and daughter of 
Burlington, Vt.; Miss Ethel Williamson, of New York 
eity; Mr. and Mrs. V. E. Willmott of Lowell, Miss 
Monges of Philadelphia, for the season; Mr. and Mrs. 
K. H. Forbes, Mrs. J. C. Forbes, Mr. and Mrs. M. P. 
Forbes and James C. Forbes of Methuen for the rest of 
July; Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Clark, jr., of Newton, who 
are spending their honeymoon on the North Shore; Mr. 
and Mrs. Wm. G. Renwick of Weston, at the Oceanside 
last year; and Mrs. W. R. Russ of Boston and her 
daughter Gladys of Wellesley. Many entries have been 
