NORTH SHORE BREEZE | ll 
EAST GLOUCESTER 
Mr. and Mrs. John Clay of Chicago concluded their 
stay at ‘‘Finisterre,’’ their beautiful Eastern Point es- 
tate, on Tuesday of this week and will spend the aut- 
umn and winter in Scotland, where they have a fine 
state also. Their friends, "Arthur G. Leonard and 
fa mily of Chicago,who have a cottage near them have 
taken their departure from Hast Gloucester. 
_ The Siamese minister and legation attaches will not 
eave Hastern Point for Washington until well along 
Bs October. Other well-known families who prolong 
‘their stay at the Point for a number of weeks longer 
are those of J. Murray Kay of Brookline until the 
middle and possibly the last of October; Gen. G. C. Reid 
until December 1; Gen. Anson Mills, January 1, and 
other late sojourners will include Dr. and Mrs. James 
H. Knowles, Miss Caroline Sinkler and Miss Cecilia 
Beaux, all of Philadelphia. Departures from the Point 
on Monday, October 3, will include the families of John 
Greenough and John Duveen of New York. Mr. Rath- 
bone, who is now owner of the Gorton estate occupied 
by the Duveen family, will remove there Monday from 
Hawthorne Inn for an autumn stay. 
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gale of New York and Eequador 
have been among the autumn guests in East Gloucester. 
They stopped at the Beachcroft, which closes today. 
‘Mrs. Heavens and daughters of New York closed their 
‘season’s stay at the Beacheroft this week. 
_ The Misses Morrill of the Studio of Applied Arts 
returned to Boston today. 
_ Mrs. Francis Wayland and daughter of Philadelphia 
will be among the last guests to leave Hawthorne Inn, 
which closes tomorrow, as does the Mailman, Fair View 
and Delphine hotels. 
_ Dr. Morton Prince, who is still occupying the beauti- 
ful Henry Schurmann estate, on East Main street, was 
among the speakers at the ministerial Unitarian con- 
ference at Hotel Rockmere, Marblehead, held Monday, 
Tuesday and Wednesday of this week. 
The Eastern Point Golf clubhouse closed for the 
season today. 
BASS ROCKS. 
BASS ROCKS ‘ .Fessy| 
Winthrop Sargent and family departed for their 
home in Haverford, Pa., Tuesday of this week and 
Jerome H. Remick and family of Detroit are leaving 
the Stacey colonial cottage tomorrow. Miss Emily. 
MeGuckin returns to Brooklyn next Monday. Miss 
MeGuekin will have a new summer home erected here 
to be ready for her occupancy in the early spring. She 
has secured a site on the heights of the estate of the 
late Alonzo Day off Page street, familiarly known as 
the Day Farm, which adjoins the Souther estate being 
developed for the golf links extension. 
The new summer home of Arthur L. Spring of Boston 
is rapidly nearing completion. 
Dr. R. H. Follis of Baltimore and family party va- 
cated the Mendell cottage Thursday. 
J. S. Gilbert and family of New York will not leave 
their cottage until October 10, and Arthur M. Parker 
will not remove his family from Bass Rocks to Detroit 
until the middle of next month. 
Horace P. Beals of Lowell is having the grounds of ° 
his new cottage on Beach avenue enclosed with a hand- 
some stone wall with pillars. 
The latest sojourners, who will not leave Bass Rocks 
until Novembers 1, will be the families of Dr. Wm 
Jarvie of Brooklyn; Mrs. F. B. Dodge of Toledo, Ohio; 
James W. Newell and Edward Ellis of Brookline. 
The Bass Rocks Golf Tess closes for the season 
tomorrow. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Miss Dorothy Jordan and Miss 
-Eleanora Sears and her brother were 
among those who had the rare 
priviledge of‘‘flying’’ with Graham- 
White at the exhibition meet at 
Squantum last Saturday. 
Robert E. Hunter of Yale and 
Chicago won the individual cham- 
pionship of the intercollegiate golf 
_ association at the Essex County club 
last Satnrday, defeating F. C. David- 
son of Harvard by 1 up in 39 holes. 
‘This was the first time in the history 
of the association that the final 
round of match play at 36 holes was 
not decided before three extra ones 
had been played. The match was 
finished in the dark. 
Eastern golfers are gathered at 
Phone Gonnection 
Over Waiting Station 
OCULISTS’ RX FOR GLASSES FILLED 
the Myopia Hunt club today and to- 
morrow for the most important 
amateur golf competition of the year, 
held east of the Alleghanies. The 
matches are for the Leslie Cup. 
The Millis family of Pennsylvania, 
who have been in Manchester for 
their initial season as tenants of the 
James Means cottage, Smith’s Point, 
brought their very pleasant sojourn 
to a close on Thursday of this week. 
Mrs. Wm. F. Draper and Miss 
Draper of Washington and Smith’s 
Point, Manchester, are among the 
North Shore people, who are loyal to 
driving, and their handsome turn- 
outs are still conspicuous on the 
North Shore drives, as they are re- 
maining on the shore for the autumn. 
They will winter in Rome. 
Hon. Wm J Boardman and family 
of Washington are not leaving Man- 
chester until October 15. They will 
not settle in the capital until Novem- 
ber 1 The intervening weeks of Oc- 
tober will be spent in Dalton as the 
guest of their daughter, Mrs. W. 
Murray Crane 
Philip MeMillan and family are 
eoncluding their stay with Mrs. 
James MeMillan, at Manchester, dur- 
ing the coming week. Mrs. MeMillan 
now plans to remain at ‘‘ EKaglehead’’ 
until late October. 
WOOD SAWED 
By Machinery. 
Work Done Promptly and at a Sav- 
ing from the Old-Fashioned Way. 
S. Albert Sinnicks | 
North Street Manchester 
Telephone 139-13 
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. 
