NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
19 
es GEES ZA Ge CED 
. East Gloucester. 
Saturday, June 18, the season at 
the Eastern Point golf club will be 
inaugurated.. The links are in fine 
condition for lovers of the sport, 
having been rearranged and length- 
ened 200 yards. Provision has been 
made again this season for the serv- 
ing of afternoon tea and luncheons, 
which are such an annual feature on 
the club-house veranda and in the 
grove adjoining. The club-house 
grounds are one riot of color, and 
flowers of vivid hue add much to 
the picturesque surroundings.  Er- 
nest Dean, the English supervisor of 
the club and links, is a popular and 
capable chargé d’affaires, having 
been, associated since early youth 
with the English turf and farm 
lands. His father was a pensioner 
of the late Queen Victoria, having 
served her at Windsor. Mrs. Dean 
and her daughter Lillian, make ideal 
~ hostesses at the club-house and their 
English teas and lunches are justly 
famed. They are again settled there 
for the summer, after several 
months’ sojourn in England and 
Scotland. 
Recent arrivals at the Beacheroft 
inelude Mrs. Lybrand, Washington ; 
Miss Marks, Boston; Mrs. A. Wen- 
dell of Roxbury. 
Mr. and Mrs. George M. Doe of 
New York, who are on an auto trip 
in this vicinity, stopped at the 
Beacheroft. 
The Fair View has a number of 
guests registered for the season. The 
euests include Mrs. G. J. Kenderline, 
Mrs. C. R. Bolles, E. C. Bolles, 2d, 
Sarah C. Sower, Mrs. C. W. Duane, 
Miss Duane, Philadelphia; from 
Baltimore, Misses Caroline D. Nor- 
ris, Una M. Devries; from Chicago, 
Mrs. W. V. Mae Gill; Mr. and Mrs. 
John H. McKiel, New York; Miss ©. 
I. Ireland, Cambridge; Miss EH. L. 
Chaloner, Boston. 
ach Binet neat 
Merrill Tall’s first guests were 
due today and the hall is looking 
most attractive and hospitable for 
their reception. 
Phone Gonnection 
OGULISTS’ RX FOR GLASSES FILLED 
Over Waiting Station 
Cape Ann Resorts. 
The Land’s End colony is to have 
another fine summer residence, that 
of Mrs. T. Harrison Garrett of Balti- 
‘more, mother of John W. Garrett, 
secretary of the American Embassy 
at Rome. It will be near the sum- 
mer homes of James E. Cotter, of 
Ifyde Park and Arthur Hale of Win- 
chester. The view from the locality 
of the cottage is most commanding, 
with Thatcher’s and Milk Islands in 
the foreground and Boston Bay in 
the distance. 
Charles A. Nelson of Newton has 
an attractive new summer cottage of 
wood and stone under erection on 
the Headlands, which will command 
an excellent view of the outer har- 
bor, as does also the fine summer 
home of Treasurer Blunt of the Bos- 
ton Journal corporation, which is 
nearing completion. Beside a com- 
modious dwelling, this estate im- 
cludes finely graded grounds and 
terraces, tennis courts, artistic and 
cobblestone walls. 
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Fauley, west- 
ern artists of prominence from Col- 
umbus, Ohio, after a season’s ab- 
sence in Europe, have again settled 
in Rockport for the summer, and 
have taken a building on the water 
front for a studio. 
Cottagers who have settled in An- 
nisquam the past week include the 
families of Irving Pevear, Arling- 
ton; George Danion, Melrose; Mrs. 
A. J. Roney of New York, in the cot- 
tage of her son-in-law, Melbourne 
Hardwick, the noted Boston artist, 
who is abroad with his wife. 
Turk’s Head Inn will open June 
22. Mrs. Garrett of Baltimore, who 
summered there last season, is hay- 
ing a cottage erected at Land’s End. 
The Headland Ilouse is open for 
the season. 
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Winsor of Wes- 
ton, have opened their cottage on 
Adams road, Annisquam, and Mrs. 
C. B. Richards of Brookline has 
opened her cottage at Norwood 
Heights. 
ey 
° «Along the Cape Ann Sbore.. ° 
CE OS GETS ET th Oi 
Bass Rocks. 
Miss Katherine Rotan, Bryn Mawr, 
1910, was president of her class, 
which college had President Taft as 
a commencement speaker this year. 
Miss Rotan has joined her parents 
at Grapevine Cove for the summer, 
The Bowler family of Worcester 
have arrived at their beautiful es- 
tate at Grapevine Cove. 
Mrs. Fannie P. Robertson of New 
York has opened her estate near 
Grapevine Cove. 
Frederick C. Rockwell and family 
of Hartford, after five seasons’ ab- 
sence in California, are occupying 
their cottage on the corner of Bass 
avenue and Nautilus road this sea- 
son. 
Mrs,. Henry C. Carter and family, 
and sister, Miss Timms, all of New 
York city, have opened the Carter 
cottage for the season. 
Alexander Nelson and family of 
Baltimore were due this week at the 
cottage they recently purchased on 
Haskell street. 
I. D. Weston of Dayton, O., has re- 
cently acquired land here, on Win- 
dermere road, from the Souther es- 
tate. 
Cape Ann Resorts. 
Congressman Ernest W. Roberts 
of Washington and Land’s End, 
Rockport, is urging Rockport as the 
headquarters for the U. S. Atlantic 
fleet of warships. Rockport has 
been added to the itinerary of the 
fleet by See. Meyer, and it is likely 
the town will have them this sum- 
mer. 
Prof. John Marshall of Boston, 
who is prominent in the Hub’s musi- 
eal circles, both public and edueca- 
tional, is soon due with his family at 
his Knowlton’s point cottage, Rock- 
port. Prof. Marshall recently sue- 
eeeded Arthur Foote as organist at 
one of the leading Boston churches. 
Ile is a composer of note also. 
The MeMillan cottage has been se- 
eured by R.-L. Putnam, and J. C. 
Stinson of Germantown, Pa., have 
the Reynolds cottage, No. 2, on Para- 
dise Chiff. 
Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by the Latest Improved Methods 
EVERETT A. FLYE 
The best equipped optical office in the city 
OPTICIAN: 
120 Main Street, Gloucester, Mass. 
