Pee ee ee ee ee eee Oe 
Tuesday. 
BASS ROCKS 
The week beginning today will be a 
big one at Bass Rocks. The Moorland 
opens tomorrow and The Thorwald next 
Both have exceptionally 
heavy bookings and it is probable that, 
_ by a week from today, hundreds of peo- 
ple will be seen about the rocks and 
walks of the Basses where everything 
now is deserted and solitary. 
At the Moorland, Manager Parsons 
has been busy for several weeks “fixing 
up’ for the coming of his guests and to- 
day everything is in order. Guests re- 
turning this season will find many im- 
provements, but nothing has been done 
to mar the delightful rusticity of the 
place. Workmen have been busy all 
spring on the tennis courts and these are 
now in perfect condition. 
The Thorwald has been undergoing 
similar changes. It has a houseful of 
guests coming on its opening day and 
workmen are busy putting on the finish- 
ing touches before they arrive. 
prospects for a remarkable season at The 
Thorwald are very bright. 
_ The cold weather of the last week has 
kept many cottagers who expected to get 
“to the shore before today from carrying 
out their plans. A few arrived this 
week, however, among them Mr. and 
Mrs. Edward B. Sargent of Cincinnati 
who are now at their cottage on Harbor 
Road. 
Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Chandler of San 
Antonio, Tex., arrived early in the week 
at their cottage Casa Del Mar, on Beach 
Road. 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Farnsworth 
have opened their cottage “‘ Coahoma’”’ 
and are in it for the season. Mr. and 
and Mrs G. R. Farnsworth are also in 
their cottage on Nautilus Road for the 
summer. The Farnsworths come from 
Memphis, Tenn. 
Hugh C. Ward of Kansas City, Mo., 
has engaged the Rockwell cottage on 
Bass avenue for the summer and is ex- 
pected there with his family next week. 
Mrs. Ellis Mendell of Brookline is at 
her cottage on Atlantic avenue for the 
summer. 
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. R. Humphreys 
of Andover, Mass., arrived at their cot- 
tage on Atlantic road early this week. 
SQUABS 
Why not buy your Squabs direct from the Aviary? 
Don’t 
send to market for Squabs when you can get them killed to 
order. Our customers say * Your Squabs are delicious.’ Send 
us 75C for a pair and try them; you will want more. 
Telephone or write, 
R. R. GOLLEY, South St., Rockport 
The - 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE. 
ALONG THE CAPE ANN SHORE == 
EAST GLOUCESTER 
While many newcomers arrived at 
East Gloucester during the last week, 
few of them were cottagers. Most of 
them were hotel guests, bound for the 
Hawthorne Inn, the Harbor View House 
or the Delphine. 
All around Eastern Point, however, 
servants are opening up the cottages and 
putting them in order for the coming of 
tenants. ‘The yzrds, too, are filled with 
workmen busy on the lawns and _ hedges 
and laying out walks and drives. When 
the hot weather comes, there will be no 
prettier piece of summer-country on the 
New England coast than that around the 
Point, from East Gloucester to Bass 
Rocks. 
While June is not considered a good 
hotel month, hotels at East Gloucester 
are exceptionally lively with transient and 
season guests, a fact taken as a positive 
assurance of a big summer's trade. 
Considering that all the East Gloucester 
hotels opened earlier than the other ho- 
tels along the Shore, the beginning of the 
season has been remarkable. 
The Harbor View House is alive with 
college girls. With classes ended for 
the year at Wellesley, many of the girls 
have come down to the quiet hotel on 
the harbor to prepare for examinations. 
Ever since the hotel opened on April 1, 
every week-end has seen a party of col- 
lege girls down at the Harbor View and 
many of them have registered there for 
the entire summer's vacation. 
At the Hawthorne Inn, a large num- 
ber of new guests arrived this week for 
the season. Amongthem are: Mr. and 
Mrs. H. H. Platt, New Rochelle, 
N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Louis S Fiske, 
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Wolff and Mrs. 
Mary Miller of Philadelphia; F. L. 
Eames and Miss Eames, Brooklyn, 
N. Y.; Mrs. M. B. Morgan and Miss 
A. M. Morgan, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. 
Kelsey, and Mr. and Mrs. Alex. Hutch- 
ins, andD_ T. Dickinson of Cambridge; 
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley R. Miller, Win-_ 
chester; Dr. John W. Meyer, La Porte, 
Ind.; H. H. Ames, Westfield, N. Y.; 
Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Scherer and family 
of New York City; Mr. and Mrs. W. 
C. Lewis, Everett; Miss Ann M. Stev- 
ens, Dorchester; Miss K. S. Ives, A. 
W. Buhler and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. 
J. S. Lowell, R. T Craig, J. M_ Rob- 
blee, H. R. Laite, Miss M. T. Hersey 
and F. C. Small of Boston. 
Breeze Subscription $2.00 a year 
after July 1. 
ROCKPORT 
While the Glen Acre and the Ocean 
View House at Pigeon Cove and the 
Straittmouth Inn at Gap Head have 
bigger booking than for many years past, 
the cold, backward season has made new- 
comers along the Cape Ann shore very 
scarce up to the present time. Atallthe 
cottages from Pigeon Cove around the 
cape where rooms are to let for summer 
resorters, rooms have been taken at any 
price, but as yet, very few of the sum- 
mer tenants have made their appearance. 
The Ocean View House at Pigeon 
Cove will not open until next week, but 
some of its guests have already arrived. 
Among the early arrivals are Mr. and 
Mrs. Osborne Leach of Danvers; Mrs. 
E. A. Douglas and daughter, Miss Elsie, 
of Philadelphia; Mr. and Mrs. C. A. 
Perkins of New York City; Miss May 
Frawler of Boston; Miss F. M. Colby, 
Miss Ellen M. Sawyer and Miss Martha 
E. Sawyer of Cambridge; and Miss A. 
C. Balch and Miss E. M. Crandell of 
Troy, N. Y. 
Mrs. H. M. Dunklee, who has had 
the Ocean View for many years, isthere 
again this season and announces many 
improvements to the house as well as 
new furnishings throughout. The sev- 
eral cottages connected with the house 
have all been engaged for the season and 
this, with many other signs, predicts a 
more lively summer at Pigeon Cove than 
there has been for some time. 
Among the cottages opened this week 
was that of Mr. and Mrs. David K. 
Brewer of Brookline. The family is ex- 
pected at the shore within the next few 
days. 
The Straitsmouth Inn at Gap Head 
has been open for some time. Mrs. E. 
S. Wilkinson, the manager, reports a 
large number of bookings for the season 
and some of her guests have already 
arrived. During the winter many im- 
provements have been made to the house, 
but it still retains that outward appearance 
of a bleak, sea-shore home, with all the 
cosy warmth and home-likeness inside 
which such a home affords and which 
have delighted so many guests in seasons 
gone by. 
FAULKNER 
SECRET SERVICE BUREAU 
LICENSED and BONDED 
88 Tremont St., BOSTON 
Seventh floor, Tremont Temple 
‘For 16 years has made investigations in 
U.S. and Canada. Highest reference from 
pusiness and professional men. 
W. S. FAULKNER, Mgr. 
Night and Day ’Phones 
