12 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
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Miss Marie Lee was down from 
Chestnut Hill to spend the week-end 
with Mrs. Gordon Means, at’ Beverly 
Farms. 
The new Cuban minister, F. C. 
Justiz, has arrived to succeed Minis- 
ter Velez. The latter summered at 
Manchester last season. 
Mrs.. Desmond Humphrey, the 
well-known English authoress is to 
be a special guest at a breakfast 
given by the Professional Women’s 
club. of Boston. Among the pat- 
ronesses of the theatricals to be giv- 
en for their new eclub-house, is Mrs. 
Adele Lingard of Boston, a North 
Shore summer resident of Annis- 
quam, who purchased the beautiful 
estate, The Pines, famous as the sum- 
mer home of William Dean Howells, 
when he summered on the North 
Shore. The Pines has been frequent- 
ly opened for lawn fetes in aid of 
the Addison Gilbert hospital of 
Gloucester, of which Mrs. Lingard 
is an honorary. member. 
The following cottages at Magno- 
lia have been rented for the season 
f GEC CEE EE CECE 322322552 3333) 
through the agency of Jonathan 
May: the C. E. Hoyle cottage to 
Charles A. Bovey of Minneapolis; 
the H. H. Newton cottage to J. Win- 
throp Tewksbury of Bay State road, 
Boston; the Foote cottage to Mrs. J. 
T.- Clarke of Jamaica Plain, who 
had it last year; the Joslyn cottage 
tos Dr Perey Musgrave of Washing- 
ton, who had it last year; the A. O. 
Wilkins cottage to Mrs. K. B. Ar- 
mour of Kansas City, who had it last 
year; the L. J. Knowles cottage to 
Miss M. Moyea Newell, of New York 
city, who is at present in Japan. She 
was here two or three years ago, oc- 
eupying the Williams cottage with 
a Miss Sheldon. 
An enterprising exchange has a 
long catalogue of work for rainy 
days; but, then, who wants to work 
on rainy days? 
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To Keep Open the Year Around. 
The Essex County club will open 
for the season next Saturday, April 
30, and it is a pleasing bit of news to 
announce that from this date, the 
club will be a year-around elub; that 
is to say, instead of opening for the 
summer season as in the past, the 
club will be open the year around. 
This innovation was tried the last 
winter, a steward being kept on 
hand .to take care of the parties who 
might arrange to come to the club 
for week-ends or anytime during the 
week. This proposition met with so 
much favor that the managers have 
decided to keep the club open the 
year around in the future. 
The Shopping Center of North Shore. 
It is apparent that Magnolia is to 
be the shopping center of the North 
Shore the coming year. The new 
block built since last season by Mr. 
Smith of Germantown, Pa., contains 
five stores and every one of these 
have been let. Following are the 
tenants: Miss Alice Swift, bric-a- 
brac, lamp shades, ete.; Max Litt- 
fine laces and embroideries; 
Madame Clement, lingerie; Miss Em- 
ma R. Rice, milliner; Ovington Bros., 
decorators. <All of these firms are 
from New York. 
Rees & Rees, the dyers and elean- 
ers, will open ‘their braneh at Mag- 
nolia about the middle of June. 
They are to occupy the store they 
had last year in the Donehian build- 
ing. 
Miss Stearns has rented all her 
stores in the Colonnade. Drecier & 
C'o., of New York, will have the store 
they occupied last year; Huyler’s 
will return; the Grande Maison will 
also return, and Frank Bros., of New 
York, shoemen, will share part of 
the fourth store with another con 
cern. 
Many stories are like ashes: when 
thoroughly sifted there is not much 
left. 
There is a difference 
hoodo and a who don’t. 
between a 
_ nection 
uot Suriety Notes 2 y- 
ee ee . 
East Gloucester. 
Proprietor George O. Stacy of 
Hawthorne Inn will have his first 
houseboat the coming eason in eon- 
with the inn, having pur- 
chased the derelict lumber chooner, 
George E. Prescott, of Jonesport, 
Me., which met her fate off Thateh- 
er’s Island during last February’s 
storm, in which the captain and 
crew lost their lives. She was 
brought in this port, raised and 
docked, and recently sold at publie 
auction. Mr. Stacy was. the pur- 
chaser for $305. The boat being in 
fine condition, built throughout with 
oak and in fine repair, can be nice- 
ly transformed into an up-to-date 
houseboat. 
Miss A. Gorton of the Eastern 
Point colony, will spend the coming 
month in Jacksonville, Ill, with a 
school friend, with visits en route 
to -Chieago and Buffalo, ‘N. ~Y. 
friends. The tenant of the Gorton 
cottage is due May 15, and Mr. and 
Mrs. Nathaniel L. Gorton will go to 
Essex for a sojourn and the Gorton 
family will probably register at 
Hawthorne Inn for the summer as 
has been their custom. 
Others registered at the Harbor 
View were: Clarence W. Lieb and 
Wm. G. Lennings of Colorado 
Springs; Donald S. MeCreery of 
Denver, and Mr. Bollman, Harvard 
collegians; Granville H. Norcross, 
Mrs. Edwin R. Sheak, sr., Mrs. Ed- 
win R. Sheak, jr., Mrs. Christopher 
Rh. Eliot, Misses Abigail A. and Mar- 
tha M. Ehot, Helen and Mary Pea- 
body, Mary F. Underhill, Boston; 
Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Saxe, Brookline; 
Miss Marion C. Eliot, St. Louis; 
Ruth Purves, Harrington, Va.; Mrs. 
J. KE. Smith, Miss Marjory E. Smith, 
Miss Dorothy Dewey, D. F. Edwards 
and wife, Edna F. Sehry, Atlanta, 
Ga. 
Breeze Subscription $2 a wear 
H. J. GAY ELECTRIG GO. 
Successor to Clark & Mills Electric Co. 
HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL STYLES OF.s6.8% 
G. E. TUNGSTENS and EDISON LAMPS 
POSTOFFICE BLOCK 
8 & 
Everything Electrical 
MANCHESTER, MASS. 
Telephones: Store, 146-5; Residence, 24-5. 
