NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
19 
Jj GED 9 GERSEMD (3 C2 
H .Hlong the Cape Ann Shbore.. ° 
EAST GLOUCESTER 
The Hawthorne Inn is having a very busy season. 
Proprietor Stacey says it is the best in his career as 
manager of this popular hostelry. There were a little 
more than 400 guests registered in the Inn and its vari- 
ous cottages Tuesday and the prospects for August point 
to an even busier month. 
There are many young people at the Hawthorne Inn 
this season—more than usual—and as a result there is 
continually something going on in the amusement line. 
At present they are very much engaged im a tennis 
tournament, thirty-two young men and women taking 
part. They are also arranging an entertainment to be 
given soon. The tournament was started Tuesday and 
the first round must be finished by Saturday afternoon. 
Cups will be awarded the winners and medals to the 
runners up. K. P. Hill of Cambridge, Harvard ’11, is 
in charge of the tournament. Those matched to play in 
the first round were: Ladies’ singles, Helen Potter of 
Kast Orange, N. J., vs. Lily Dunn, Baltimore; Louise 
Robinson vs. Agnes Cumnock of Boston ; Elizabeth Marsh, 
Providence, vs. Marjorié Pope; Sylvia Norman, New 
Orleans, vs. Helen Webber, Denver; Mildred Gillet, New 
York, vs. Miss Wayland; Mildred Bent, vs. Mrs. Ratche- 
sky, Boston; Pauline Pollard, vs. Betty Smucker, Phila- 
delphia; Sally Harris, Providence, vs. Peggy Overton, 
New York. Men’s singles—Howard Hart, Cincinnati, vs. 
Jack Dennison; Ned Barbour vs. Alex Barbour; H. 
Harrison, vs. Maleolm Hart, Cincinnati; Mr. Ratchesky, 
Boston, vs. F. Harrison; Allen Potter, East Orange, N. 
J., vs. Bill Hill, Brooklyn; K. P. Hill, Cambridge, vs. 
Stanley Smith, New York; Mr. LaDuke vs. Mr. Lowe, 
Mr. Knease vs. Horace Harris, Denver. Mixed doubles— 
Ned Barbour and Betty Smucker vs. K. P. Hill and 
- Dorothy Wemple (Phila.); F. Harrison and Elizabeth 
Marsh vs. Jack Dennison and Mildred Gillet; Stanley 
Smith and Marjorie Pope vs. H. Harrison and Helen 
- Potter; Mr. Lowe and Lily Dunn vs. Alex Barbour and 
Peggy Overton; Horace Harris and Helen Welles vs. 
William Hill and Sylvia Norman; Howard Hart and 
Agnes Cumnock vs. Mr. and Mrs. Ratchesky; Malcolm 
Hart and Cecelia Wayland vs. Mr..Knease and Mildred 
_ Bent; Allen Potter and Louise Robinson vs. Mr. LaDuke 
and Pauline Pollard. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Rodewald of New York, who 
have been touring New England by auto, were at the 
Hawthorne Inn Tuesday, after a morning’s run from 
Neweastle, N. Hl. They had been to Lenox, Manchester, 
Vt., Sunapee Lake, Bretton Woods, and other points en 
route, and from here they went to Boston. After a trip 
_ to Cape Cod they return to their summer home at Spring 
Lake Beach, N. J. 
Mrs. Auguste J. Kitz of New York city arrived at the 
_ Inn Tuesday for the balance of the season. 
| OGULISTS’ RX FOR GLASSES FILLED 
Pape 
BASS ROCKS. 
Prof. and Mrs. Louis.C. Elson are in Europe this sum- 
mer and their cottage is occupied by the Reesor family 
of Brooklyn. 
Sanford Whitwell, president of the Washington, D. C., 
Gaslight Co., and family are spending their tenth sea- 
son at Bass Rocks. 
The thicket land for the néw addition to the golf 
course is well cleared and extensive portions are being 
grassed. 
Miss Madeline Lewis, the talented actress starring in 
‘“‘The Man from Home’’ company, which had such a long 
run in Boston, and her mother, Mrs. Sam Williams of 
New York, are among the guests at ‘‘The Moorland.”’ 
Col. Edward Glines, who was one of Ex. Gov. Guild’s 
staff and also Mayor of Somerville twice, has been at 
‘The Thorwald,’’ Bass Rocks. 
Miss Timms of New York was due this week as the 
cuest of her sister, Mrs. Henry C. Carter at the Carter 
cottage, corner of Beach and Atlantic avenues. 
Dr. Silas Ayer and family of Boston are at their cot- 
tage and their wide acquaintance with the Bass Rocks 
colonists was the cause of much interest in the appear- 
ance of their clever son, Nathaniel D. Ayer, last week 
with his partner at Keith’s, presenting his original com- 
positions. He furnished songs for ‘‘The Newly Weds”’ 
and is also under contract with the Zeigfield’s for ‘‘The 
Follies of 1910 and 1911,’’ and under contract for a 
year with Jerome Remick of Detroit and Bass Rocks. 
Young Ayer is a Harvard man and was always promi- 
nent in the social and athletic events of Bass Rocks. 
A. L. Watson and family of New York, who are at 
The Thorwald, are relatives of Mrs. Clarence A. Sea- 
mans of Brooklyn, New York and Pigeon Cove, Mr. Wat- 
son being Mrs. Seamans’ father. Mr. Seamans is a 
member of the Remington Typewriter concern of Wycoff, 
Seamans & Benedict. Mr. Benedict and family are at 
Hotel Preston, Beach Bluff. 
Cape Ann Resorts 
Mrs. Elizabeth Cabot of Boston, whose new summer 
home will be located near the Reynolds’ cottage in the 
vicinity of the life-saving station, the foundation now 
being laid, is a guest of Straitsmouth Inn. 
Mrs. Elizabeth Cabot of Boston, whose summer home 
will be located near the Reynolds’ cottage in the vicini- 
ty of the hfe saving station, the foundation now being 
laid, is a guest of Straitsmouth Inn. 
A beautiful summer home of stucco exterior and of 
fine architectural lines is that completed for Francis 
Smith, a wealthy ranch owner of San Antonio, Texas, 
who has been a guest at Straistmouth Inn. The man- 
sion is located on a height among fine trees, opposite the 
summer home of General William A. Pew. 
Phone Gonnection 
' Over Waiting Station 
Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by the Latest Improved Methods 
EVERETT A. FLYE 
OPTICIAN 
The best equipped optical office in the city 
120 Main Street, Gloucester, Mass. 
