38 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
— 
GLOUCESTER’S LEADING HOTELS 
HAWTHORNE INN, _ EASTERN POINT, 
Delightfully Located on the Harbor 
THE MOORLAND, BASS ROCKS, 
Right on the Broad Ocean 
Gi JOUCEST ER DAY celebration was the great event 
of the season and was a splendid success at Stage 
Fort Park, where thousands of people gathered to 
witness the ek and attractions and the finely dec- 
orated booths on Tuesday afternoon. In the evening the 
illumination and grand fireworks display was particularly 
beautiful. Among the notable guests’ were the Italian 
ambassador, Count V. Macchi de Cellere, Countess Cel- 
lcre and John Hays Hammond. Secretary of the Navy 
Josephus Daniels was expected but. was detained at 
Washington. The, fete was .a rendezvous for many 
political candidates. Governor David I. Walsh graced 
-the occasion by his presence, others being the Hon, Sam- 
uc] W. McCall and Lieutenant-Governor Cushing, candi- 
dates for the Republican nomination for Governor; Wil- 
liam Shaw, eee candidate for Governor; the Hon. 
Guy A. Ham, and the Hon. Calvin Coolidge, candidates 
for the Republican nomination for Lieutenant-Governor ; 
the Hon. John N. Cole and District Attorney Michael A. 
Sullivan; Mrs. Ralph McDaniel, Essex County advisor 
of the Suffragists. All these notables gave brief speeches 
in, the: late afternoon. 
‘A big society event of the North Shore will be the 
Italian Festa to be held at the summer home of Mrs. 
John Hays Hammond, on Lookout Hill, Gloucester, 
\ednesday afternoon of next week. Delegates who are 
coming to Boston to attend the Governor’s conference 
have been invited by Mrs. Hammond to attend the fete 
and thirty Governors are expected to come here on one 
ot the big United States battleships. The entertainment 
will be given under the patronage of the Italian ambassa- 
dor and: Countess Dolores Macchi di--Celleré- sand. the 
program will include some of the best musicians of the 
country, such as Marcia Van Dresser of the Chicago 
Crand Opera, Elvira Leveroni, the Metropolitan and 
Boston Opera prima donna, and Harrison Bennett, late of 
the Wagner festival at Bayreuth. Maria Paporello, the 
prima ballerina of the Boston Opera will also perform. 
The Festa is for the benefit of the New England war 
relief fund and the list of patronesses is headed by Mrs. 
George von L. Meyer and Mrs. William F. Draper. 
There is special interest in the fete all along the shore 
and a large attendance is assured Mrs. Hammond and 
all those who are laboring so earnestly for this very 
worthy cause. 
| 
Hartwell’s ini" China & Gift Shop 
— PRICES RIGHT. — 
High Grade China, Glass 
and Kitchen Novelties 
Har well 
ties Ws 
Art Lamps and Shades made 
to order and repaired 
Giff Shop 
- 9 Cwesrnur Sv. 
Shefield Plate, Baskets and 
Hall’s English Lacquered 
Tinware 
ae Chestnut St., :: :: Gloucester, Mass. 
The Salad Bowl at 90 Middle street, Gloucester, still 
continues to be the fashionable rendez-vous for the so- 
cial set on the Cape for afternoon tea. Mrs. Fitzwilliam 
Sargent of Ardmore, Philadelphia, entertained at tea on 
Tuesday Miss Jean and Miss Theodora Lily of Haver- 
ford, Pa., who are summering at Hawthorne Inn. Miss 
Longstreth of St. Louis, who is a guest at the Moorland, 
entertained a party of five at tea early in the week atethe 
Salad Bowl. 
FAST GLOUCESTER. This section of the North 
Shore is now crowded with tourists and still the peo- 
pie come from all sections of the country. East Glou- 
cester stands alone in its unique and exquisite beauty. 
When once the summer visitor stays for a time he longs 
to return. The summer hotel business on_ the Nortn 
Shore began here and there are still some of those people 
stopping in the vicinity as they did in the pioneer days, 
never tiring of the ideal surroundings and the health- 
giving atmosphere of the place. Every year there is 
added to the list of summer residents at East Gloucester 
people famous in art, literature, music, science and the 
political life of the nation. The general response at the 
hotels at present is “Everything taken—you will have to 
wait for a few days until some rooms are vacated.” Pri- 
vate homes are now profiting by accommodating the 
overflow. 
Burleigh Parkhurst, the Boston artist, has taken the 
Taylor studio on Mt. Pleasant avenue and 1 is located there 
with his family. The cottage was formerly owned by 
Falph Henry Barbour, the author, who came to East 
Gioucester for some seasons before purchasing property 
‘n Manchester. Mr. Parkhurst has been coming to East 
Gloucester for some years and formerly stopped at the 
Harbor View. Mr. Parkhurst is author of “The Painter 
in Oil,” a book published two years ago in New York, 
and which is filled with valuable information. Mr. Park- 
burst is conducting a summer painting class here. 
Miss Lotta Crabtree, the noted actress, famous in 
the “old Museum” days in Boston, is enjoying the season 
at an Eastern Point.cottage. Miss Crabtree is the owner 
of the Hotel Brewster and other valuable real estate in 
Boston. She is very much interested at this time in the 
“twilight sleep” movement and in the founding of a 
hospital for that treatment in Boston. 
The S. K. Ames family of Melrose is occupying the 
attractive new residence built for Mr. Ames during the 
pest winter and spring at Eastern Point, near “Sunset 
Kock” and the Beach boulevard. The interior work was 
completed several weeks ago. 
A military whist party was arranged for the Beach- 
croft guests on Wednesday evening. 
Recent guests at the Beachcroft include: Mr. and 
Mrs. Newton B. Hall, Mr. asd Mrs. Carl A. Palmer, 
Cleveland, O.; Dr. Mary J. Cochran of Pittsburgh, Re, : 
Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Bancroft, Mr, and Mrs, E. A. Her- 
bert, New Britain, Ct. 
Miss Elizabeth Sparhawk-Jones, the well-known 
artist of Philadelphia, is making her annual visit at the 
Fairview Hotel, Eastern Point, accompanied by her 
mother, Mrs. J. Sparhawk-Jones, 
August 20, 1915, 
