~~ 
a 
eS hE A RD eS, SEIS Cll Pe CEES gl 
June 11, 1915 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 23 
1868—BELL’S SPICED SEASONING—1915 
Nearly Fifty Years the Favorite 
1912, BE. R. Grabow Co., Managers of Hotel Exr- 
pire, Hotel Tuileries, Boston; Hotel Titchfield 
and Myrtle Bank Hotel, Jamaica; New Ocean 
Fouse, Swampscott, Mass., write: ‘‘We take 
pleasure in endorsing BELL’S POULTRY 
DRESSING, which is the only one we use in all 
our hotels, and cheerfully recommend ae 
nent in club life in Indiana, Chicago and Detaoltay 5 
prother’s family, Col. and Mrs. George M. Studebaker of 
South Bend, arrived early in the month for their sixta 
season at their beautiful home “Breaknolle,” at Little 
Boar’s Head. Here Mrs. Studebaker spends a long and 
pleasant season and her home is always the hospitable 
rendezyous for many prominent westerners in their trips 
to the coast. Over the Fourth she will entertain Mr. and 
Mrs. Joseph D. Oliver of South Bend who are planning 
an extended motor trip through the cast. Col. Charles 
Arthur Carlisle of Indiana, who with his charming fam- 
ily spent about ten seasons on the North Shore with 
homes at Gloucester, Magnolia and later at Swampscott, 
will doubtless spend part of this season with Col. and 
Mrs. Studebaker, notwithstanding the fact that Col. Carl- 
isle is the Business Man’s candidate for Governor of 
Indiana on the Republican ticket, and is making a vigor- 
ous state-wide campaign under the slogan “More Business 
and Less Politics.” Mrs. Carlisle is a sister to the Stude- 
baker brothers who have their homes at Rye. In the 
west the Col. Studebakers live at “Tippecanoe Plaee;~ 
the home of the late Clem Studebaker, in whose time 1 
“was the scene of a great many gatherings of national 
importance. Mrs. Clem Studebaker of “Tippecanoe 
Place” always spends part of the season at Rye with her 
sons. © 
The E. G. Eberhart family of South Bend and 
Mishawaka always spend the greater part of the season 
at the Farragut House. Their daughter Miss Myrna, 
who is attending Vassar college, will also be with them. 
ALONG the New Hampshire and Maine coast, just out- 
side the immediate North Shore region, but with the 
North Shore as the pivot about which they all revolve, 
are many western families already settled for the season. 
At Biddeford Pool, Me., are some of Chicago’s most 
noted society leaders. Mrs. C. Morse Ely of go9 Lake 
Shore drive who is so prominent in all of the social and 
philanthropic life of the city has rented her Lake Forest 
house to try a summer there. Also, the Charles Gar- 
fields have given up their house in Lake Forest to go to 
the Pool. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gillette of North Stare 
street, will occupy their cottage at this delightful resort 
during the summer. ; 
At York Harbor, Me., is where Mrs. Bryan Lathrop 
of 120 Bellevue place has her summer home. Here she 
will be joined for a while this summer by Mrs. Thomas 
Lindsay of Boston, who visited at the Lathrop home im 
Chicago the past winter. Added to Mrs. Lathrop’s many 
philanthropies has been the recent request of Paderewsk1 
that she organize the Chicago movement for the relief of 
the Poles. 
At Bar Harbor, Me., is the beautiful home of the 
Robert Hall McCormicks of Chicago. The various Me- 
Cormick. families live in the heart of that noted region 
of the city known as the “north side” to which the charms 
of the lake are continually luring so many of the seem- 
ingly south siders, once the most fashionable part of the 
a McCRAY REFRIGERATOR 
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= ia The Wm. G. Bell Company 
NEW ENGLAND AGENTS 
20 South Market Street, BOSTON 
Pasa 
Fruits, Vegetables ana Hothouse Products 
Special attention given to Hotel, 
Club and Family orders. 
Isaac Locke Co., 
97, 99, and 101 Faneuil Hall Market 
BOSTON, MASS. 
city. Mrs. McCormick is a sister to Mrs. Charles Thora- 
dyke Parker of “Cotshabbie” in the Wenham colony. 
Mr. and Mrs. L. Hamilton McCormick of the Virginia 
hotel, Chicago, will spend part of the summer at Bar 
Harbor. They have spent the last ten or fifteen years n 
England where their three sons were educated, but are 
now planning to. remain in Chicago. The Harold Me- 
Cormicks. who. are so prominent in connection with the 
grand opera life of Chicago will return from Switzerlansl 
in July and go to their Lake Forest home where they 
will be busy with grand opera till the season opens. 
The Countess Gizycka has taken a house in New- 
port for the summer while her mother, Mrs. Robert W. 
Patterson, will occupy the countess’ house in Lake Forest. 
Mrs. John Marshall Clark of Lincoln Parkway has 
opened her country home at Marion, Mass. Her daugh- 
ter, Mrs. Cecil Clark Davis, the artist will join her later 
in the season. 
Many Chicagoans have discovered the beauties of 
the Berkshires around Pittsfield, Lenox and Stockbridge. 
At Pittsfield, Mr. and Mrs. Cobb Coleman have an ex- 
tensive estate, “Highland House,” which they are making 
an almost permanent home. Their neighbors are the 
Frederick Wests, Mrs. Henry W. Bishop and her daugn- 
ter, Mrs. Spenser Turner. ‘The “Blythewood” estate be- 
longs to John A. Spoor, and “Tor Court” to Warren 
Salisbury. The Misses Buckingham have a pretty place 
at Lenox. Mrs. W. W. Augur and her daughters of the 
north side also are in the Berkshires. 
The Franklin MacVeaghs of Chicago and Washing- 
ton-are spending the season at their home in Dublin, N. 
H. At Newcastle, N. H., is where Mrs. Samuel E,. Bar- 
rett of 1412 Lake Shore drive is spending the summer. 
The Charles L. Binghams of the Chicago Beach 
Hotel spend their summers at Intervale, Ne GF Barty 
this spring, they announced the engagement of their 
daughter Eleanor Elizabeth to John Albert Proctor of 
Boston. The wedding will be a September event at the 
summer home of the Binghams. 
