Gloucester Section 
NORTH 
EAST GLOUCESTER. 
The Eastern Point Golf club has 
inaugurated its season. The players 
are already on the links in goodly 
numbers and enjoying the pleasures 
and attractions of the clubhouse. Mr. 
Edward Loftus, Englisn secretary to 
the Siamese ambassador, is here 
again this season and his presence 
means much for the social and golfing 
interests of the club of which he is the 
prime mover. Already the member- 
ship of the club for 1911 includes 
many representative members of the 
East Gloucester colony :—the Siamese 
legation, W. H. Taft, E. U. Rathbone, 
A. Wilder Pollard, John McKee of 
the Fair View hotel contingent, Mr. 
Cullom, a new-comer from Alabama, 
who has the Edward Eliott cottage 
this season, Nathaniel Bloom from 
Hotel Delphine, Hon. J. Sloat Fassett 
of the Grapevine Cove colony and W. 
Jay Little. The locality of the club- 
house is given a very imposing air by 
the completion this year of W. H. 
Taft’s beautiful stone and concrete 
summer home adjoining the concrete 
mansion of Gen. Anson Mills of 
Washington. ‘lhe exterior and in- 
terior adornment of the house is very 
attractive and no expense has been 
spared to beautify it. The family 
party includes Mr. and Mrs. Taft, two 
married daughters and Miss Taft, all 
of Arlington. 
John Clay and family of Chicago 
have arrived at their charming cottage 
“Finisterre”’ on Quarry Point, East- 
ern Point. Their friends the Arthur 
G. Leonards are back also in the 
Calef cottage. 
J. Murray Kay and family of 
Brookline, veteran summer residents 
of Eastern Point are again loyal to 
this locality and are at their summer 
home on Quarry Point. 
Another Brookline family to recent- 
ly arrive at the former Barwick cot- 
tage, Quarry Point, and who were 
there last season, are the John H. 
Procters. 
Wm. Sheafe and family of Boston 
have arrived at the Lewis cottage, 
Fort Hill avenue, Eastern Point. 
J. H. Tingley and Miss Tingley of 
Philadelphia, annual Mailman ees 
guests have arrived. 
SHORE 
ROCKPORT. 
Turks Head Inn, Rockport’s large 
and fashionable hostelry at Land’s 
End, inaugurated its season yester- 
day. 
The house warning at Maj. Walter 
Hale’s handsome new bungalow near 
Straitsmouth Inn on June 17 was a 
delightful occasion. The handsome 
structure of wood and concrete was 
brilliantly illuminated and numerous 
colored electric lights adorned the 
piazza. Maj. and Mrs. Hale received 
the large number of invited guests. 
Fears’ Orchestra of Rockport fur- 
nished music for dancing. A fine 
collation was served. 
Charles H. Dillaway and family of 
Melrose have arrived at their cottage 
on Marmion Way. 
Judge and Mrs. Edward F. Johnson 
and family of Woburn, who have 
been making week-end visits to their 
attractive summer home on “The 
Headlands,” arrived permanently this 
week. Harold P. Johnson, Esq., and 
family also make up the family circle. 
Kenneth S. Johnson, a son, now of 
New York, is a popular member of 
the Harvard College contingent on the 
North Shore. 
The Headlands colony has likewise 
been enlarged by the Guy Leavitts of 
Brookline. 
Mr. Resser of Kansas City has the 
Nelson cottage at Rockport, this sea- 
son. 
Miss Dorothy Seamans of Brooklyn 
and Smith College joined her parents 
at the beautiful C. W. Seamans es- 
tate, Pigeon Cove, this week. 
Dr.. and Mrs. De Benneville K. 
Ludwig of Philadelphia have arrived 
at “Rockledge,” their Pigeon Cove 
summer home. 
The Misses Edith G. Putnam and 
Ruth Putnam of Washington register- 
ed a few days at the Ocean View 
House, Pigeon Cove, before opening 
their cottage in that locality. There 
brother is prominently connected with 
the Congressional Library in Wash- 
ington. Other guests who have re- 
cently registered at the hotel are Miss 
E. T. Wandell, Washington; Miss D. 
W. Reiners, Brooklyn; Mrs. Mary 
W. Haynes, C. Belle Haynes, Spring- 
field. 
BREEZE 
BASS ROCKS. 
Mrs. Arthur Foote and Miss Kath- 
erine Foote, wife and daughter of the 
noted Boston composer, are at The 
Moorland for their annual June so- 
journ. 
Dr. and Mrs. H. C. Jones of Balti- 
more have arrived at the Moorland 
for the season. Dr. Jones is a mem- 
ber of the faculty of Johns Hopkins 
University. 
The navy set of Washington is 
represented at this hostelry by Ad- 
miral Cromwell and family and 
Commander and Mrs. W. Kilburn, 
the latter a+ daughter of the 
Admiral. They are there for the sea- 
son. 
L. P. Macomber of Boston, who 
spends each week-end at the hotel, had 
as guests over the last week-end Beals 
C. Wright, the noted tennis player, 
and Ensign Van Meter of the U. S. S. 
‘Tarpon. 
Miss Eloise Thompson of Austin, 
‘Texas, who takes an active part in the 
social life of the hotel is back accom- 
panied by her mother, Mrs. Thad A. 
Thompson. They will be joined July 
Ist by Mr. Thompson and the other 
Misses ‘Tho mpson. 
Philadelphians, who will make The 
Moorland their summer home and 
have already settled are Mrs. J. H. 
Grubb, Miss Eleanor T. Grubb, Mrs. 
D. Tl. Hopper and Miss A. D. Hopper. 
The, Thorwald opened ‘Tuesday. 
The first guests to register were Mrs. 
uy. T. Bennett, John C. Bennett, Mem- 
phis, Tenn., Mrs. Ruth C. Moon and 
family of the same -southern city. 
Mrs. Frederick Chapman, Woodstock, 
Vt.; Wendell H. Lawson, Miss A. T. 
and John H. Lawson, New York, all 
for the season. 
Miss Louise Cooper of Mt. Vernon, 
Ohio, who was recently graduated 
from Bradford Academy, has had a 
house party of ten young women and 
men friends at the summer home of 
her parents, Mr.and Mrs.° C. 
Cooper. The proverbial and abund- 
ant hospitality always provided in this 
home circle was greatly exemplified 
on this occasion. 
The golf clubhouse a leading social 
centre here, opened for the season last 
Saturday. 
