NORTH SHORE BREEZE 13 
‘ Along the Cape Ann SHOE... 
GED GED GENRES €F2 CATED 
EAST GLOUCESTER 
Although departures are many there is a strong ten- 
dency to linger here and enjoy the autumn in full 
measure. 
Mrs. Albert Lewis of Jamaica Plain is at her cottage 
next to the Beachcroft for her annual autumn stay and 
has been entertaining her step-daughter from New York. 
Her son, Charles renews his studies at Harvard next 
week, 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lunt of Boston, Hawthorn Inn 
guests of long standing, are at the Inn for September, 
after a ten weeks’ sojourn abroad. 
dudge and Mrs. W. S. Grey of New York have closed 
their cottage, as have W. Beach Olmstead of Pomfret, 
Ct., and family, their. summer home off the Eastern 
Point boulevard. 
The family of F. F. Flagg of New York, vice-presi- 
dent of the American Express company, have vacated 
Mrs. Anne A. Curtis’s cottage, ‘‘Windover.’’ Mrs. Wal- 
lace Griffin and family of Baltimore have coneluded 
their stay at the Wonson cottage, Paradise Point. Miss 
M. N. Shepherd of New York, who had the Gate Lodye, 
has returned to the metropolis. 
Gen. and Mrs. Anson Mills are remaining at their 
concrete mansion until December. 
Louis A. Hermann and family of New York coucluded 
their stay at the Eliott cottage, Grapevine Cove, Tues- 
day of this week. 
Nathaniel L. Gorton, who recently sold his Eastern 
Point estate to R. C. Rathbone of New York and Haw- 
thorn Inn, plans to erect another summer home at the 
Point. This will be the third summer home Mr. Gorton 
will have had erected at this resort. 
Merrill Hall has closed for the season. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. Jay Little are planning to have 
another cottage erected on one of their Eastern Point 
lots during the winter. 
The Eastern Point Golf club house will remain open 
until October 1. Golf and afternoon tea parties con- 
tinue to be very popular there. 
September arrivals at the Harbor View include: 
Clary Ray, the Washington artist, who was at the 
Moorland, Bass Rocks; Mrs. F. H. Pratt and family 
of Bennington, Vt.; Misses Marion McDonald and F. 
M. Whipple, Brookline; Mrs. C. R. Eastman, A. C. Hast- 
man, Cambridge; Mrs. T. C. Brainerd, Miss Brainerd, 
Montreal. ° 
Congressman and Mrs. J. Sloat Fassett of Washing- 
ton and Elmira, N. Y., whose beautiful and costly sum- 
mer home at Grapevine Cove has been closed this sea- 
son, have arrived home from their summer’s trip 
abroad on the White Star liner Zeeland. Mrs. Fassett 
declared $3,300 worth of goods and the Congressman 
$2,000 in custom dues, the largest for many months paid 
at the Boston Custom House. 
Phone Gonnection 
pile 
BASS ROCKS 
There is much social activity here these lovely 
autumn days among the late stayers,; despite the daily 
departure from summer homes. Among the recent hos- 
tessses of the bridge club were Mrs. James W. Newell 
for last week, and Miss Millicent Jarvie, who enter- 
tained Tuesday afternoon. Wednesday evening, Mrs. 
i. B. Sargent of Cincinnati was hostess for the gentle- 
man’s night of the club. The ladies have been contest- 
ing for a cup, which will be presented to the player 
winning the most points this season. 
Last Sunday, Mrs. Edward Rotan was hostess of a 
dinner party of eight covers. The guests ineluded Dr. 
Wm. Jarvie, Mr. and Mrs. Winthrop Sargent, Mr. and 
Mrs. Lewis Lillie of Philadelphia and Eastern Point and 
Mr. and Mrs. George Rotan. Mr. Rotan, sr., has re- 
turned to Waco, Texas. 
On Tuesday afternoon, Mrs. Arthur Maxwell Park- 
er’s handsome conerete villa on Souther road was 
opened most hospitably for a tea in honor of Mrs. 
Parker’s aunt, Mrs. Goodwin of Detroit. 
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Farnsworth have returned from 
Europe and were here for a few days before going to 
Tennessee. They rented their cottage here this season. 
Miss Georgiana Dodge and her sister, Mrs. Mills, en- 
tertained for a few days this week, Miss Armes of Lex- 
ington, and Miss Norton of Toledo, Ohio. 
Arthur M. Cox and family are leaving their summer 
home tomorrow and will make the journey to New York 
in their autos. 
Among the departures from summer homes have been 
the families of Chas. May, sr., of Brookline; Granville 
M. Stoddard, Worcester; Mr. Hugely of Winchester and 
Mr. and Mrs. Wier, Lowell. Mr. and Mrs. Hugely, sr., 
went to the mountains from Bass Rocks, but Mr. and 
‘irs. Hugely, jr., went to Winchester. E. H. Cutler and 
family of Springfield, who own the cottage which the 
Hugely family occupied, have arrived for an autumn 
sojourn. 
Robert Laidlaw and family of New York departed 
from their Bass Rocks cottage today. 
Although the Moorland’s formal season closed Mon- 
day of this week twenty guests remained until today, 
dining tables being arranged in the hotel lobby, and 
the informal stay was much enjoyed and the accommo- 
dation much appreciated. 
East Gloucester 
Onda II, the yacht of John Greenough of New York 
and Eastern Point captured second prize, a cup, in the 
Gloucester Yacht club’s season’s championship races, 
first class, and in the second class the Privateer owned 
by A. Wilder Pollard of Brookline and Eastern Point, 
took the first prize, a cup. 
Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by the Latest Improved Methods 
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. 
