i 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
BASS ROCKS 
- The Moorland Hotel opened June 
15, and the first guests to register 
were Gen. L. H. Carpenter and Miss 
‘Mary H. Carpenter, annual guests 
‘of long standing from Philadelphia. 
~The Quaker City was also represent- 
ed by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Grubb, 
Eleanor D. Grubb and J. H. Grubb, 
hg jr. 
T. A. Thomson, retired navy of- 
ficer, wife and three daughters, 
Mary J., Eloise and Eleanor of Aus- 
tin, Texas, are to be joined later by 
the latter’s brother, a member of the 
Navy Rifle Team. The Thomsons 
are here for the season. 
Mrs. Charles A. Webb and _ three 
daughters, Elizabeth P., Katherine 
D. and Elizabeth K., of Baltimore, 
who have summered here several 
seasons, have taken the Baker cot- 
tage near the Moorland. 
Mrs. W. T. Hyatt, Misses A. and 
N. E. Hyatt and Miss G. F. Merrill 
of Brooklyn are at the Moorland un- 
til the first of July. 
Honeymoon trips by auto, with 
the Moorland as a stopping place, 
are giving very pleasant experiences 
to Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Weller of 
> Rochester, N. Y., and Mr. and Mrs. 
Rene 
J. H. Barker of Glen Falls, N. Y. 
Mr. and Mrs. H. lL. Brewster and 
Rev. Henry Motte, pastor of the 
 Chureh of the Holy Communion, are 
other New Yorkers at the hotel. 
S. Worcester Sargent, Harvard, 
1910, of Haverford, Pa., and Bass 
Rocks, dined the following party of 
_ elassmates at the Moorland reggntly : 
Brie A. Lingard of Boston and An- 
% Graves and Wm. D. Plumb. 
nisquam, Lewis Flanders, E. P. 
W. FE. Parker, a prominent Law- 
rence resident, and Mrs. Parker, 
Moorland guests of long standing, 
have returned this season and bring 
a new Pierce car with them for auto- 
ing along the North Shore. Their 
daughter, Mrs. A..T. Hamilton, and 
two little sons from Chicago, are 
with them, also bringing their car 
and chauffeur. 
Phone Gonnection 
OGULISTS’ RX FOR GLASSES FILLED 
Over Waiting Station 
the Cape Ann 
CAPE ANN RESORTS. 
A new summer residence at Land’s 
End, Rockport, now being occupied 
is that of George F. Babbitt. It is a 
fine addition to the colony in the 
vicinity of the fashionable Turk’s 
lead Inn. 
John Graham Moseley, the ship- 
ping merchant of Boston, and a pio- 
neer summer resident of Marmion 
Way, Rockport, has domiciled his 
family in his attractive cottage. 
The Rockport summer residents 
have arrived in force the past week 
and all along the Headlands, on Mar- 
mion Way and to Land’s End there 
are signs of summer activity. Mr. 
and Mrs. Wallace Jones of Cam- 
bridge and Washington, D. C., are at 
their Headlands cottage. The J. L. 
Robinsons of Cambridge are also 
here for a temporary visit. In the 
same section are Mr. and Mrs. 
Arthur MacLean, who recently re- 
turned from Bermuda. 
Charles H. Dillaway, jr., of Mel- 
rose, treasurer of the Lincoln-Dilla- 
way Co., Boston, has opened his Mar- 
mion Way cottage. George W. Har- 
vey of Forest Hills has also arrived. 
W. H. Gallison, the artist, and 
wife are at the Lane boarding house. 
Mr. Gallison has recovered sufficient- 
ly from his severe illness to enable 
him to be here again, after a year’s 
absence. 
Miss L. C. Thatcher of Roxbury 
has opened her cottage at Land’s 
End. 
ten. Wm. A. Pew, jr., and ‘family 
of Salem opened their cottage the 
10th, and another Salem family to 
settle here is that of E. J. Fabens. 
They are located at the Shoreview 
cottage, Marmion Way. 
The Paradise Cliff colony has been 
enlarged by Mrs. Fannie Law of Cin- 
eimnati, 
Bostonians who have recently set- 
tled in their Annisquam cottages are 
F. P. White and Francis Strater of 
Brookline; Mrs. O. W. Spencer, 
Boston; Wm. Stone Booth, Cam- 
bridge, who has the Lord cottage. 
Bhore.. | Y 
w 
pret eg ccnaer ae eR 
EAST GLOUCESTER 
A new member of the coterie of © 
artists in this section this season is 
Fred J. Waugh, a New Jersey artist 
from Upper Montelair Thighlands. 
He has spent much of his time abroad 
with his family and maintains a spa- 
cious studio on his New Jersey es- 
tate. Mr. Waugh has secured the 
Oakes cottage on Rocky Neck and the 
Oakes studio on Rocky Neck ave- 
nue. Mr. Waugh’s household in- 
cludes his wife, little son and daugh- 
ter, Mrs. Waugh’s ‘mother, Mrs. 
Bonne, and the latter’s - daughter, 
Mrs. Vandyke of Philadelphia. 
Mrs. Sarah Rogers and family of 
New York have settled at the Wal- 
lace estate on Rocky Neck avenue 
and the Wallace family have remoy- 
ed to their small cottage. The same 
method is employed by the John 
Mehlman family whose tenant of last 
year, Mr. Blake of St. Louis ts the 
oceupant of their large residence. 
Rocky Neck is making rapid 
strides in popularity and the major- 
ity of owners of homes there rent 
them or open them now for summer 
accommodations for the overflow 
from the large hotels. At the pil- 
erim House have ben. registered 
Ethel H. Schwartz, Plymouth, Pa.:; 
Harriet Phillips, Troy; Alice J. 
Burnham, Rochester, N. H.; Helen A. 
Tracy, Hartford. 
George W. Cable, the author, of 
Northampton, who* gave much Hter- 
ary .distinetuon' to Rocky Neck by 
his sojourns with his children at the 
Pilgrim House, has announced the 
engagement of his daughter, Miss 
Luey Leffingwell Cable, and Henry 
Wolf Bikle of -Philadelphia. - Mr: 
Bikle is the son of Dr. Philip M. 
Bikle, dean and professor of Latin 
in Pennsylvania college, Gettysburg. 
The wedding will take place in the 
early autumn. Miss Cable,. bride- 
elect, made many friends during her 
Rocky Neck sojourns. 
The Belmont Monopoly Club of 
3elmont, 14 gentlemen, registered 
June 17 at Hawthorne Inn. They 
journeyed here in automobiles. 
Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by the Latest Improved Methods 
EVERETT A. FLYE 
The best equipped optical office in the city 
OPTIGIAN 
120 Main Street, Gloucester, Mass. 
