NORTH SHORE BREEZE 19 
| aan 
$5 --5.Mlong the Cape Ann 
BASS ROCKS. 
_ The Thorwald presened a festive scene on the holiday, 
~and the numerous flag-bedecked auto parties thatstopped 
there for dinner made the scene a most animated and 
gay one. The dining room was handsomely decorated 
with the national colors and a special dinner was served. 
There was a souvenir of the day at each plate, adults 
receiving miniature flags, while the children received 
Teddy Bears and boats as mementoes. 
‘There were one hundred and fifty guests registered, 
including family auto parties numbering 22, consisting 
of Mrs. Susan A. Ballou, Mrs. L. B. Swett and L. P. 
Fahey of Woonsocket, R. I.; Mrs. W. I. Atwood, Ames- 
bury; E. W. Dodge, J. H. Higgins, Mrs. Trask and L. D. 
Cole, Newburyport. 
Maleolm Farmer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis G. Farmer 
of Boston, who were pioneer summer residents here, is at 
the Thorwald for the summer with his wife and Miss 
‘Barbara Farmer all of Phoenixville, Pa. The Farmer 
estate here was sold to Mrs. Hart of Cincinnati. Mr. 
Farmer, while a summer resident here was particularly 
active socially, and in baseball and summer athletic 
events. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Cutter and Miss E. F. Bisbee, 
Brooklyn; Mrs. W. W. McClench, wife of the president 
ot the Mass. Mutual Fire Insurance Co., Springfield, and 
sons and daughter are at the hotel for the season. Mrs. 
Francis Ware of Brookline is there for the tenth season 
and Miss Alice H. Chase, Haverhill, is another annual 
guest. 
Mr. and Mrs. Fred D. Paige, daughter Mildred and 
three sons of Detroit, are domiciled at the Thorwald. 
Other guests include Haar Haas and wife from Atlanta, 
Ga.; H. 8. S. Molson, son and maid, Montreal; Misses 
“Jane H. and Emily J. Valentine, Baltimore ; Miss John- 
son, Racine, Wis., Mr. and Mrs. C. Edward Moral and 
- Miss Betty Merrill, Syracuse, N. Y. 
An auto party from Boston included C. E. Brien, I. M. 
Derrington, T. Bolton, A. M. Merrill, Boston, and Col- 
~ burn Pinkham, Brooklyn. 
Recent families to settle in their cottages were Arthur 
~M. Cox of Manhattan, formerly of Brooklyn. Mr. Cox is 
-& member of the New York Woolen Co. manufacturing 
_at Plainfield, N. J.; Dr. James S. Green, Elizabeth, N. J , 
and Mr. Hugeley of Winchester, who has secured the cot- 
~ tage of E. H. Cutler of Springfield on Atlantic avenue. 
li. B. Chandler and family of San Antonio, Texas, have 
- also arrived in their handsome summer home. 
At the Moorland on the holiday were registered some 
_ 265 guests, who partook of a special dinner. An elabo- 
rate booklet menu of buff, bearing a black and white 
sketch of Independence Hall and a portion of the de- 
-claration, tied with navy blue silk cord and tassel, was 
the souvenir of the day. There were fireworks in the 
- evening. 
Phone Gonnection 
— ee 
NOt es: 3 
CREM 6D ETETIRIAD OE I 
CAPE ANN RESORTS 
m s 
Lexas, 
End, 
of San Antonio, 
summer home at Land’s 
Francis Smith and family 
have arrived at their 
Rockport. 
Leonard G. Phillips and Mrs. Warren Phillips of 
Swampscott, large owners in Pigeon Cove summer re- 
sort property, made an auto trip to the cove recently. 
Storer F. Crafts of the Commonwealth hotel, Boston, 
has opened a resort on Annisquam Island and has 
brought several Boston families to the island, including 
James C. Douglass and Clarence Pratt, Waltham; 4. 
Henry Paige, E. L. Dolan, stock broker; Charles L. 
Seribner, shoe manufacturer, and others. Mr. Crafts is 
hoping to have a corporation put a big hotel on the 
island and is inducing Gloucester to fix up the old 
country road to the place. ¥ 
J. P. Bartlett and family of Brookline are at 
cottage, Adams Hill, Annisquam. 
Herbert Rawson and family 
rived at Annisquam, making the journey by auto. An 
unfortunate incident marred the trip. <A large rock 
being thrown by hoodlums from a high bluff on the 
Gloucester road and crashed through the top of the 
their 
of Arlington have ar- 
outo. To avoid a collision with another car, Mr. Rawson 
ran into a post and Mrs. Rawson injured her wrist 
quite badly. 
East Gloucester 
The hotels and cottages of the Gloucester shore are 
teeming with life. Hundreds of hotel guests have been 
pouring into town for the last ten days, and for the 
next two months Old Mother Ann, that stolid old face 
ot solid rock on the tip of Cape Ann will have all she 
can attend to in looking after the thousands of summer 
visitors from all sections of the country. 
Arrivals at tthe Hawthorne Inn the last week include 
K. P. Keech, jr., and family, Lewis E. Steiner, E. M. 
Vickery and their respective families of Baltimore; Mrs. 
F. W. Crocker, Boston; Mrs. F. P. T. DeHaas, Mrs. Rhoda 
Holmes-Nichols of New York; Mr. and Mrs. William H. 
Lytle of Baltimore; Mrs. Hughes and Miss Olive Hughes, 
New York; Mrs. Francis Wayland and daughter of 
Philadelphia; A. W. Buhler, the Boston artist anc 
son, Prof. Henry W. Buhler and daughter Dorothy; 
At the Harbor View for the season have arrived Mr. - 
and Mrs. Edwin Schenck of Baltimore ; Francis J. Oakes, 
jr., Brookline; Mrs. B. V. Prather and daughter of New 
York. 
A party of Wellesley college girls have been enjoying 
a sojourn at Harbor View. In the party were Caroline 
Wakefield of Uniontown, Pa.; Margaret BE. Suvdam. New 
Brunswick, N. J.; Emuly McFarlane, Cambridge: Sallie 
A. King, Pueblo, Cal.; Elizabeth Tompkins, New Bedford ; 
Bernice A. Fowler, Boston; Josephine A. Howey, Keene, 
N. H. 
his 
Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by the Latest Improved Methois 
EVERETT A. FLYE 
OGULISTS’ RX FOR GLASSES FILLED 
Over Waiting Station 
OPTICIAN 
The best equipped optical office in the city 
120 Main Street, Gloucester, Mass. 
