Me 4 
4 
SEP eae aMhme tr R le et 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 15 
— 
Real Estate Service 
My endeavor is to so conduct the North 
Shore Real Estate Business as to earn the 
support of my clients. Any suggestions 
as to how I can better serve you will be 
fully considered. : : : : 
D. A. McEACHERN 
11 Pleasant Street - Gloucester 
TELEPHONE I61 M. 
Shapleigh of Brookline; Miss C. EF. Batchelder of Lynn; 
Mrs. Alex Crawford and Miss M. L. Crawford of Lynn. 
The Mailman house, East Gloucester, is keeping open 
until the last of October. Guests arriving there the last 
few days include Brayton Byron, and Mrs. W. C. Byroa 
of So. Bethlehem, Pa., and Edward S. Byron of Crooked 
Lake, Fla.; Miss Grace Pratt of Deerfield; Miss Louise 
Hastings of Brookline. 
Beek PORT hotels are showing the results of the after 
Labor Day migration and but small contingents of 
vacationers are left in the summer hostelries of that place. 
The cottagers in most cases are staying down for Septem- 
ber, although but few plan to remain on the shore much 
later. 
Turk’s Head Inn, Rockport, closed this week, Tues- 
day, for the season. It had practically a full house over 
Labor Day, including many motor parties who came to 
the Inn for one of their famous “motor dinners.” 
Straitsmouth Inn, Rockport, is remaining open until 
the 22nd. Several guests there plan to remain until the 
closing date. Guests at the house now for short stays in- 
clude Mr. and Mrs. James Cleaves of Medford; Walter 
A. Davis of Boston; Miss Hilda Justin, and Mrs. Edwin 
L. Harrington, both of Philadelphia; Mrs. R. A. Flanders 
and Miss Constance Flanders of Brookline; and Mrs. 
Shinn of Boston. 
Manning House, Rockport, will not close its doors 
for some time yet, probably not until the 15th of October. 
Meanwhile there is quite a houseful remaining through 
the next two or three weeks. Guests there include Mrs. 
George Sheldon and Miss Frances Sheldon of Lincoln, 
Neb.; Andrew Wright and Robert Wright of Brookline; 
Alice G. and Grace E. Cusick of Brookline; George Payne 
and Miss Cecilia Payne of Freeport, L. I.; Mr. and Mrs. 
Robert J. Taylor and Miss Alice F. Taylor of Watertown ; 
and Misses Alice F., Anne and Margaret Turley of Brook- 
line. 
The Granite Shore hotel, Rockport, is keeping open 
indefinitely, as long as the guests in the house are desir- 
ous of staying on the Rockport shore. This house was a 
busy place over Labor Day and the week-end and has a 
number of guests there for this month. 
No date has been set for the closing of the Headland 
house, Rockport, and it will remain open indefinitely. 
PIGEON COVE hotel guests are “staying on” well and 
are enjoying the mild September weather at this 
popular resort. The cottagers, also, have not commenced 
as yet to leave for their winter homes and the colony is 
quite as busy as before Labor Day, which in many places 
sounds the death knell of the season. 
Hotel Edward at Pigeon Cove, Rockport, had prac- 
tically a full house over Labor Day and the week-end and 
has retained many of its guests for longer stays. Every- 
one who has visited the Edward this season has been 
charmed with the house and the steam-heating plant has 
proved a popular adjunct these cool evenings. J. B. 
Pevear of Cincinnati, president of the General Electric 
Co., is at the Edward with Mrs. Pevear for a stay, and 
has been entertaining some friends there the last few 
days. Judge Quill of Beverly, his daughters Ruth and 
Mary and their friend, Miss O’Brien of Boston, spent 
Labor Day at the Edward. A motor party to come to the 
Edward last Friday night for the week-end and holiday 
included Mrs. Frank W. Eddy, Mrs. W. O. Mundy, Miss 
Frances Eddy, and Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Bunny. They 
left on Monday evening. Thomas F. Maguire of Port- 
land, Me., entertained over Labor Day at the Edward, 
H. L. Jones and E. T. Breslin of Springfield. J. E. Full, 
director of the Copley-Plaza hotel corporation of Boston, 
together with Mrs. Full and daughters Frances A. and 
Virgninia L., have been spending a few days at the 
Edward. Other guests there include Mr. and Mrs. L. T. 
Drake of Boston, who came to the Edward on Labor Day 
on their way to the mountains; J. F. K. Herrick and C. FE. 
Perry of Springfield, Ill.; Mr. and Mrs. EF. A. Strout and 
daughter of Concord; and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Grandi- 
son of Boston. 
The Ocean View, Pigeon Cove, is keeping open until 
the 15th of this month. Among the guests who are 
staying until that time are Miss E. T. Wandell of Wash- 
ington, D. C.; Mrs. F. H. Elliott of Lowell, Miss Sarah 
W. Pyle of Wilmington, Del.; Miss Edith Russell of the 
same place; Mrs. Bernard Shields of New Orleans; and 
Miss Althea Robinson of Birmingham, Ala. 
Yearly subscription to North Shore Breeze, $2.00. 
YSTERY ISLAND has been very popular the past 
week as the season draws to a close,—tennis and 
bathing parties, picnics and dancing. Mr. and Mrs. Jake 
Rogers returned from a ten days’ cruise on the Maine 
coast with Mr. and Mrs. Chilly Ayer of the Hamilton 
colony. Among those registered at the “Casino” during 
the past week were James S. Proctor of Brookline; Roger 
FE. Hall and John Lodge of West Newton; R. G. Warner 
and Wilfred Wallace, 2d, of Boston; Miss Marcia Taylor 
of Manchester; A. F. Redway, J. W. Cummings, J. Wy- 
man Flint, Jr., T. P. Brooks, Francinne Lanimore, Van 
Duzer Bruton and William W. Nolan, all of Cambridge; 
W.E. Brooks of Melbourne, Australia: Maurice E. Mc- 
Laughlin of San Francisco; J. C. Parke of the British 
Isles; James P. Stearns, 2d, of Brookline; Louis Me- 
Namara of Boston; Edgar C. Fulton, Jr., of Hartford, 
Conn.; D. A. Hartwell of Louisville, Ky.; Pelham W. 
Bogert of Newport; Joseph Suart of Newton; “Pip” Mor- 
gan of Westbury, L. I.; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Bramwell 
and party, of Boston; Coburn Smith of Brookline; Mrs. 
Clarine- Lucas, H. G. Barbee, Mrs.. Lucy Gill, J. F. 
Riordan, Mr. and Mrs. Wolcott Johnson and family, Mrs. 
Thomas Russell, Miss Barbara Russell, Miss Fenno, 
Brooks Fenno, Jr., G. B. Perkins, Miss E. W. Cruft, and 
Miss Twichell, all of Boston; Roy Bristol of the U. S. S. 
Cummings; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lee and family of Phil- 
adelphia; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Blakie of Magnolia; Ken- 
neth Lewis of Beverly Farms; Miss Frances Kammerling 
of Brookline; George McKay of Marblehead; Nathaniel 
S. Simpkins of Beverly Farms; Alex Cochrane of the 
Myopia club; R. H. Knight and S. L. Marshall of Man- 
chester; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sanders, Mr. and Mrs. 
B. D. Shreve and family of Salem; Mr. and Mrs. Law- 
rence Percival of Marblehead, H. A. Fabian of Dedham. 
ONE OF THE INTERESTING TURNS in European events 
is the request of the workmen of Russia for an interdic- 
tion on alcoholic drinks. 
