50) NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
BAS ROCKS. ‘Ihe showery and unsettled weather has 
interfered much with golfing and tennis the past 
week. ‘Things have been rather quiet socially. On Tues- 
day evening there was a large audience at the Moorland 
Casino, when Wilford Russel, the English baritone, gave 
a very pleasing recital for the benefit of the hospital fund 
for the English sick and wounded soldiers. 
Among the Westerners spending the summer a 
Cloucéster are the E. W. Shields of Kansas City, wo 
have a cottage at 213 Atlantic Road, Bass Rocks. Miss 
Margaret Carter and Edwin Dunlap of Kansas City are 
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Shields at present. The party 
planned to start the latter part of this week on a motor 
trip to the White Mountains. 
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Booth, of Detroit, the former a 
prominent newspaper owner in the West, gave a delight- 
ful children’s party on last Friday afternoon at Hotel 
Thorwald, Bass Rocks, where they are stopping, in honor 
of the seventh birthday of their attractive little daughter, 
Virginia. The ballroom of he Thorwald was brilliantly 
decorated with flowers and greenery and music was 
rendered»by a violinist and pianist All the children of the 
hotel were bidden to the festivities and it was very interest- 
ing to see them in their fancy costumes as Indians, flower 
girls, baseball players, etc. The parents of the children 
were also invited to attend the party. The favors to the 
children were pretty baskets filled with candy. Miss Vir- 
ginia was the recipient of many handsome tokens of best 
wishes. Outdoor games were indulged in and the children 
had a happy time long to be remembered. A finely pre- 
pered birthday luncheon was served indoors for the chil- 
dren and the older folks were served to a buffet lunch. 
A dance on Tuesday evening at the Thorwald was 
an enjoyable occasion for the guests. Last Friday evening 
there was much pleasure for the ladies who were pardoned. 
for a misdemeanor. When a lady left her own partner 
and gently tapped the shoulder of a friend’s partner, she 
danced away with him. 
Mrs. S. M. Strauss and daugater, Miss Adele Strauss, 
of New York City, have arrived at the Thorwald for a 
sojourn. 
“Last Saturday evening the guests of the Thorwald 
e.thered in the music room to hear a lecture on “Wireless 
Telegraphy,” given by Arthur Nickerson, the wireless 
operator at the hotel. Mr. Nickerson brought down his 
apparatus from the tower to illustrate his talk. 
Mr. and Mrs. James Carey, Jr., of Baltimore, the for- 
mer an owner of the Carey Machine Company, are at 
the Thorwald for the season. 
Mr. and Mrs. Fred M. Andrews of Detroit are guests 
at the Thorwald. 
Rey. William Force Whitaker of Elizabeth, N. J., is 
at the Thorwald for an extended stay. 
Dr. and Mrs. L. C. Love, children and maid, of Mont- 
clair, N. J., are again at the Thorwald this season for a 
sojourn. 
Henry C. Brent of Kansas City, Mo., has joined his 
wife at the Thorwald for an extended sojourn. 
Col. John D. Hall, U. S. A. (retired), and wife, of 
Washington, are at the Thorwald, Bass Rocks. 
I. M. Wilson of Newburgh, N. Y., prominent in settle- 
ment work, and his nephew, Fred W. Banks, are at the 
Thorwald. 
T. M. Banks, Jr., and family, of Williamstown, are 
at the Thorwald. Mr. Banks is editor and manager of 
the Williams College Alumni Review. 
Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Porter, of Washington, Mr. and 
Mrs. George P. Berkey of Grand Rapids, and Mr. and 
Mrs.‘ James A. 
Mrs. George Worden of Detroit, are registered at Hotel 
Thorwald, Bass Rocks, for the remaindet 01 the season. 
Late arrivals at the Rockaway are: C. G. E. Speidel, 
Cincinnati, O.; Leland F. Shugart, Washington, D..C ; 
Miss M. L. Duyer, Somerville; Henry R. Church, Spring- 
field; Thomas Shugart, Jr.. New York; Edna E. and 
Caroline Affeld, Brooklyn; Mr. and Mrs. Seward Davis, 
Miss Florence W. Davis, Edmund TT. Davis, 2d, Seaward 
Davis, Jr., Montclair, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. 
Maynard, Donald B. Maynard, Worcester. 
Rey. Alfred Griffin, assistant rector of Trinity 
Church, New York City, is at the Harbor View for a 
sojourn. : 
F. M. Tibbott of Newtonville has joined his father at 
the Harbor View. 
MYSTERY ISLAND is having its share of gay parties 
from the Shore. The Saturday evening dinner- 
dances.are proving very popular, and all join in saying 
the orchestra is the best they have heard for dancing at - 
any of the popular places. Among the guests recently at 
the Casino were: Louis Benton, Mystery Island; J. €. 
Fairchild, Boston; Charles Harding, Dedham; Mr. and 
Mrs. W. Gordon Means, Beverly Farms; Lieut. C. De 
Chevalier, U. S. N.; Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Watters, Gal- 
loupe’s Point, Swampscott; Mr. and Mrs. George N. 
Towle, Mystery Island; Mr. and Mrs. Fred F. Rhoades, 
Oceanside Hotel, Magnolia; Mr. and Mrs. Harold D. 
Corey, Newton; Mr. and Mrs. George A. Dill, Phillips 
Beach, Swampscott; Mr. and Mrs. Carl T. Keller, Mys- 
tery Island; Mr. and Mrs. Jack T'wombly, Brookline; Mr. 
and Mrs. Joseph B. Henderson, Mystery Island; Mr. and 
Mrs. B. F. Pitman, Marion; Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Hodges, 
Marblehead Neck; Dr. and Mrs. Harvey P. Towle, Bos- 
ton; Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Jealous, Ocean House, Swamp- 
scott; Mr. Sewall Cutler, Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Cutler, 
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Howes, North Cohasset; Mr. and 
Mrs. Edward Page, Mystery Island; Mr. and Mrs. Henry 
Forbes, Swampscott; Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Fenessey, 
Mrs. George E. Plummer, Brookline; Mrs. Robert Dicker- 
man, Powder Point Hotel, Duxbury; Mr. and Mrs. Zenas | 
Sears, New Ocean House, Swampscott; Mrs. T. Clark 
Hollander, Benton Bradshaw, Brookline; T. C. Hollander, 
Mystery Island; Mr. and Mrs. Horace Bouker, Mr. and 
Mrs. Clarence M. Schultz, New York; E. P. Johnson, 
Lynn; Macpherson Kennedy, Jr., New York; Mr. and 
Mrs. H. H. Holton, Boston; Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Zerrahn, 
Milton; Mr. and Mrs. 
Kenneth Lewis, Mrs. Oliver Turner, A. Bliss, Tobias 
Palen, Beverly Farms; Alfred Codman, Boston; William 
Barron, Beverly Farms; Mr. and Mrs. John B. Mouton, 
Hamilton; Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Ayer, Miss Florence 
Mandell, Newton; Geoge ‘T. McKay, Marblehead; Mrs. 
Edward 5S. Brown, Mystery Island. 
She—Mr. Jones is a fine man; one of the few, in fact, 
that stand for real progress. He says he likes to see two 
t?ees where one used to be. 
He—He certainly lives up to that, and more, too. 
When I took him home last night he was seeing six or 
seven where one used to be! 
The watchmaker sells watches and the jailer watches 
cells. . 
When an old man marries a young woman, they both 
should have our sympathy. 
August 6, 1915. 
Hutchinson, South Hamilton; Mr. and -° 
Harold Plimpton, Marblehead; 
