14 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
of our stock at once. 
A sat I 1 YJ WERE F.C. POOLE, 7 Centre Street, Gloucester 
Owing to alterations to be made in the building we are forced to remove a large quantity — 
Unusually low prices. i 
Tel. 233 
Call and see our exceptional offering. 
wail surrounding the property of Miss Helen Burnham. 
The wall was considerably damaged, and the car was 
somewhat smashed. The car was a Ford, but as the 
nu nber plates were removed by the driver after the ac- 
cident it was impossible to identify the machine. The 
car is now at a local garage. 
[Pewice summer folk might be termed winter folk 
as well, as the majority of the families having es- 
tates there during the summer months remain on the 
shore until October and November, several spending 
Thanksgiving here. This accounts in a measure for the 
elaborate estates there, designed for permanence and with 
all the features of a gentleman’s country estate. Not only 
extensive and well kept floral gardens, but large crops of 
fruit and vegetables which are prize winners at the coun- 
try fairs are grown on these estates. Now, in the fall. 
of the year, everything about Ipswich is alive in the truest 
sense of the word. 
R. T. Crane of Chicago and “Castle Hill Farm,” Ip- 
swich, is on a business trip to Chicago and is planning to 
return to his summer home for some time yet. Mrs. 
Crane, her father, H. N. Higinbotham, and Mr. and Mrs. 
H. D. Higinbotham, the latter of Joliet, Ill, are still at 
Ipswich. Mr. and Mrs. Higinbotham occupy a cottage on 
the Crane estate. 
Ye Burnham House, on Linebrook road, Ipswich, is 
still open and catering to many motor parties for tea and 
luncheon. The tea room has numbered among its pat- 
rons this year many parties from the New Hampshire and 
Maine resorts, motorists who think nothing of coming 
down from Rye beach or York Harbor, Me., for a day 
on the North Shore. The Burnham House has proved just 
23 interesting an attraction for hundreds of tourists this 
year as it has in seasons past and many visitors will re- 
ember it as the “quaintest place on the North Shore.” 
The livestock of the Upland Farms, Ipswich, owned 
and operated by Frank P. and Frank D. Frazier of New 
York and West Manchester, took a good share of the 
prizes at the big fair at Syracuse, N. Y., last week. This 
exhibition is the largest of any in the Eastern states and 
there is such an exceptional exhibit of livestock there it is 
cuite a plum for an owner to capture a few “firsts.” The 
Frazier farm has attracted considerable attention during 
the last few months by reason of its model milk farm and 
dairy about a mile outside the town of Ipswich. With 
such an equipment as this farm has and the prize stock 
of Guernsies which are the pride of the farm it is not 
surprising that it is winning prizes at all of the fairs 
throughout New England. At the Syracuse fair Florham 
Monarch, the prize bull of Upland Farms, in the senior 
bull class, took a championship and a grand champion- 
chip. In the class for aged cows, Flora of Viniera and 
Hanbury’s Wickham Lady took first and second, respec- 
tively, the former winning a championship. Ultra Lady 
took a first in the two-year old cow class and in the class 
under two years old Florham Princess took a first, 
championship and a grand championship. Firsts were 
also captured in the classes of get of one sire, produce of 
one cow and exhibitor’s herd. The Syracuse fair con- 
tinued from Monday, August 31, to Sept. 5. The Hart- 
ford exhibition has been continuing all this week and 
closes tomorrow, Saturday. The Upland Farms herd will 
also exhibit at White River Jct., at the Framingham | 
fair and at Brockton the first of October. e 
B45t GLOUCESTER and Eastern Point cottage folk - 
are not accepting Labor Day as the “‘official’’ end- 
ing of the summer season. Many cottages are to be 
kept open through the month, with but few exceptions 
and it is only in the hotels that there is any appreciable 
falling off in numbers. 
_ ‘Hawthorne Inn, East Gloucester, is not closing early, 
—it is to remain open until the morning of the 22nd. 
Although practically all of the many social functions at 
the Inn are at an end, there are many guests there who 
find plenty to attract. Prominent among the guests who 
plan to remain until closing time are: Mrs. G. W. Gail, 
Miss Helen Gail and G. W. Gail, Jr., Mrs. C. E. Fobus 
and Mrs. A. G. Luscomb of Worcester; Mrs. A. L. Gif- 
ford and Miss Elizabeth L. Gifford of Tarrytown, N. Y.; 
Wm. A. Hill of Washington, D. C.; Morris L. Cooke of 
Philadelphia ; Henry R. Bowser of Richmond, Va.; Wes- - 
ley Broadway of Stamford, Conn.; Mrs. T. S. Gray and - 
daughter of Stamford; H. S. Howard of San Francisco; 
and Henry L. Davis of Germantown, Pa. 
Hotel Beachcroft, East Gloucester, will end the sea- 
son of 1914 about the middle of the month or shortly 
after. This house has been quite successful the past sum- 
mer and, like the other hotels along the shore, is prepar- 
ing for a banner season next year. Arrivals the past 
few days include Robert J. Martin of New York; Misses: 
C. L. and E. C. Pousland of Cambridge; M. F. Nicholl 
and FE. H. Lamson of Scotch Plains, N. J.; Miss Edna R. 
Gardiner and Miss Lydia G. Chace of Providence, R. I.; 
Franklin E. Johnson of Lowell; Miss Emily L. Crosweil 
of Boston; Mrs. Sally Wilson of Washington, D. C.; and 
Misses Grace C. and Harriet L. Davis of Albany, N. Y. 
The Harbor View hotel, East Gloucester, is keeping 
open this year until the middle of October and has a 
number of guests for autumn stays. Miss Helen Cudahy 
of the well-known Milwaukee Cudahys is making a short 
stay at the Harbor View. Instead of going into society, 
Miss Cudahy has taken up the study of nursing and has 
been at the Massachusetts General hospital, Boston, for 
sometime. H.H. Kaenper of Philadelphia, a German by 
descent, who is stopping at the Harbor View, tells some 
interesting experiences of his flight from Germany at the 
time of the outbreak of the war. Although he succeeded 
in leaving the country as early as August 5, it was not 
until he had been detained several times. Other guests 
include Grenville H. Norcross of Boston; Mr. and Mrs. 
George D. Lacy of Springfield; Arthur C. Sprague of 
Wollaston; Miss Mary Clatterbuck of Ogdensburg, N. Y.; 
Harold P. Littlefield of Cohasset; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur 
F. Hersey of Hingham; S. B. Wheeler of. Boston; and 
F. H. Decker of Providence, R. I. , 
Arrivals at the Fairview, East Gloucester, this week. 
include: L. W. Watts of Boston; Mrs. J. T. Gurney and 
Miss A. M. Catt of Boston; and Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. 
Reynolds of Worcester. 
Merrill Hall, East Gloucester, is closing the 15th of 
this month. Like most of the smaller houses, it has 
fared well this season and has had a houseful practically 
all summer. Among those to come there until closing 
time were; Mrs, J. A, McArthur of Lynn; Miss F. H, 
