June 22, 1917. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 21 
The Cape Ann Resorts 
ASTERN POINT.—AII the hotels are now open in this 
section of Cape Ann, for the season. There are some 
arrivals daily and cottagers are gradually coming along, 
but slowly, in comparison to last season, due, undoubtedly, 
to the disagreeable weather and the backwardness of the 
season. Hawthorne Inn opened last Friday and several 
guests registered, while a large number of transients visit- 
ed the hostelry. A party of Massachusetts Technology 
students came down on Saturday night, from Boston to 
spend Sunday, but the terrific downpour of rain inter- 
ferred with any outdoor pleasure. 
“Mrs. Frances Wayland, of Summerville, S. C., who 
has been a guest at the Hawthorne Inn for a great many 
seasons has arrived from the south and is registered at 
the Inn for meals, although she is stopping in the small 
cottage on the Patch estate, Eastern Point road. 
Dr. and Mrs. B. Farquhar Curtis of Scarboro-on-the- 
Hudson and Miss Anne Aspinwall Curtis of New York 
City are at “Windover,” the Curtis estate at Eastern 
Point. 
Mr. and Mrs. William Steele Grey of New York 
City, have arrived at “El Nido,” the Grey bungalow at 
Eastern Point, near the golf clubhouse. 
Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Oakes of Brookline are de- 
layed in their arrival at Eastern Point, for the season, 
owing to illness in the family of Mrs. Oakes. 
The Sleepers of Boston, are occupying the attractive 
cottage, “Beauport,” Eastern Point. 
Mrs. J. C. Spalding and daughters, Miss Grace M. 
and Miss Elizabeth C. Spalding, of Brookline, are in Fast 
Gloucester for the season, occupying the MacCready cot- 
tage, Grape Vine road. 
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffries Wyman, son and daughter, of | 
. Boston have arrived at the cottage of the Wonson estate, 
Eastern Point, for the season. 
Mrs. L.. M. Brumback of Kansas City, Mo., has ar- 
rived at her studio bungalow near Bass Rocks. 
Col, James Fordyce and family of St. Louis, Mo.., 
are occupying “Orchard Heights” cottage, the Davis estate 
on Mt. Pleasant avenue. The location is very attractive. 
ANNISQUAM—Mr. and Mrs. Clarence A. Hight and 
Mrs. J. B. Coyle, mother of Mrs, Hight, have arrived 
at “Lookout Hill,” the Hight estate, Annisquam, for the 
season. ; 
J. S. Lee and family of Boston are spending June 
and July in Annisquam, occupying the lower Graves cot- 
tage. 
The Taylors of Worcester are occupying a cottage at 
Diamond Cove, Annisquam, for the season. 
| Advertising 
is the foundation of all 
successful enterprises. If 
your advertisement were 
here, it would be read by 
hundreds of visitors to 
the North Shore the 
coming summer. 
OCKPORT.—The Barber Erwins of Chicago have 
taken a lease of the Colby cottage, Land’s End, for the 
season. 
Mrs. S. E. Wyman of Cambridge, has taken the 
Poole cottage, “Edgemere,” on Rockport Headlands, for 
the season. 
U. S. Assistant Treasurer Charles B. Strecker and 
family, are occupying their. Land’s End cottage, for the 
summer. 
Miss Eleanor B, Stoney of Brooklyn, has taken a 
lease of the C. B. Wheeler cottage, Land’s End. 
Mrs. Gay of Brookline has taken the No. 3 Tregony 
3ow cottage, Land’s End, for the season. 
C. F. Coombs: of Newton will occupy the Fracker 
cottage on Rockport Headlands, this season. 
' : tne > 
Breuitivs 
“Poverty of thought is worse than poverty of 
pocket.” 
Them as ha’ never had a cushion don’t miss it— 
George Eliot. 
“Cupid’s little dart will often do more damage than 
the biggest gatling gun.” . 
The definition of a Pessimist was once given as a 
person who fletcherizes his quinine pills. 
“Tf you always get your own way there is one thing 
you must give up—the idea that you will ever be popular.” 
A man should keep out of his life all that insults and 
hurts the soul, and he should hold the interests of others 
as dear as he holds his own.—Benson. 
There is something mysterious about a woman’s fancy 
work. It seems to have all the soothing charm of the 
tobacco-plant, without its inconveniences.—Henry Van 
Dyke. 
“Then,” she smiled. ‘Well,’ said she, to conclude, 
“a woman’s ‘knittin’ is a real comfort, and, as I told you 
in the beginning, I always believed in looking on the 
cheerful side.”—Boston Herald. 
The sovereign voluntary path to cheerfulness, if our 
spontaneous cheerfulness be lost, is to sit up cheerfully, 
to look around cheerfully, and to act and speak as if 
cheerfulness were already there—IWuliam James. 
Make yourselves nests of pleasant thoughts, bright 
fancies, satisfied memories, faithful sayings, treasure 
houses of precious and restful thoughts, which care can- 
not disturb, nor pain make gloomy—houses built without 
hands for our souls to live in—John Ruskin. 
We are learning that a standard of social ethics is not 
attained by traveling a sequestered pathway, but by walk- 
ing on the thronged and common road where all must 
turn out for one another, and at least see the size of one 
another’s burdens.—Jane Addams. 
Far better is it to dare mighty things to win glorious 
triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take 
rank among those poor spirits who neither enjoy much 
nor suffer much, because they live in the gray twilight 
that knows not victory nor defeat—Theodore Roosevelt, 
