14 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
GLOUCESTER DAY PAGEANT. 
Afternoon Military Parade, Pageant at Night. 
Transportation Arrangements. 
With Gloucester Day but four days 
off and the preparations for the coming 
of the President, the big naval and mili- 
tary parade in the afternoon and mam- 
moth presentation of ‘* The Canterbury 
Pilgrims’’ at Stage Fort Park at night all 
but completed, there is every indication 
thatthe event will easily,bethe greatest ev- 
er held on the North Shore, both from a 
social and other points of view. 
A good deal of inquiry has been made 
as to the general program for the after- 
noon and evening and the preparations 
for transportation of the great crowds 
which will attend on that day. Promptly 
at 1.30 o’clock in the afternoon the mili- 
tary and naval parade will start, moving 
on Main street. It is expected that over 
- 3000 men will be in line made up of 
sailors from the battleships which will be 
in the harbor on that day, the Boston 
Lancers and other military organizations. 
The parade and the events connected 
with it will be in progress until 4.30 
o clock. ‘The evening program, com- 
prising the pageant at Stage Fort Park 
will begin promptly at 7.30 o’clock. It 
will Jast until 10.30 0’ clock. 
In order to handle the large crowds, 
the Boston & Maine has arranged for an 
elaborate schedule of special trains. Be- 
ginning at 9 o’clock in the morning, 8 
special trains will be run from Boston to 
Gloucester. Beginning at 11 o'clock at 
night, special trains, limited in number 
only by the the demand in traffic, will be 
started from Gloucester for Boston. 
These trains will connect with the trains 
for Portsmouth, Newburyport, Ipswich 
and all points east. The trains will leave 
every eight minutes. Reduced rates 
will prevail. 
At the present outlook success is as- 
sured. The demands for seats has been 
so great that the seating capacity has twice 
been enlarged and it is known now that 
over 21,000 spectators will see the pa- 
geant. 
The judges of the pageant is published 
in these columns exclusively for the first 
time: 
J. H. Chapin, art editor Scribner's 
magazine; Charles Rann Kennedy, dra- 
matic writer; Mrs. Charles Rann Ken- 
nedy, celebrated actress; Mrs. George 
Tyson, Boston; Mrs. John L. Gardner, 
Brookline; Madison Cawein, Louisville, 
Ky., leading poet; Frank W. Hamilton, 
D. D., President Tufts College; Augus- 
tus Frauzein, Bar Harbor, portrait painter; 
Miss Cecilia Beaux, East Gloucester, 
portrait painter; Prof. Henry Schofield, 
Harvard University; . Prof. George P. 
Baker, Harvard University; Miss Viola 
Allen, actress; Miss Margaret Anglin, 
actress; Prof. A. P. Andrew, financial 
expert; Miss Elizabeth Hammond, Glou- 
cester; Henry ©O. Walker, Boston, 
artist; Charles Geofly, Philadelphia, 
sculptor; Robert Underwood Johnson, 
New York, artist; Mrs. Adelaide Cole 
Chase, New York, portrait painter; John 
E. D. Trask, director Pennsylvania 
Academy Fine Arts; Edward H. Clem- 
ent, editor Boston ‘Transcript; Mrs. 
Walter Damrosch, New York City; 
Arthur Fairbanks, director Museum Fine 
Arts, Boston; Louis Evan Shipman, 
Windsor, Vt., artist; Elliott Snow, naval 
constructor, Navy Yard, Boston; Edward 
W. Redfield, artist; Edward C. Tarbell, 
Newcastle, N. H., artist; Louis St. 
Gaudens, Windsor, Vt., sculptor; Mrs. 
Lucie Fairchild Fuller, Windsor, Vt., 
artist; Mrs. Percy Mackaye, Windsor, 
Vt.; Mrs. Eric Pape, Annisquam. 
Those who have boxes in the various 
sections are given below: 
Section A, Box 1, Mrs. Lucy E. Eddy; 
2, Edwin G. McInnis, Manchester; 3, 
Mrs. Charles R. Hayden, Magnolia; 
4, J. Sloat Fassett, Grape Vine Cove; 
5, G. Percival Chick; 6, Frank E. Da- 
vis; 7, Cliffurd Corliss; 8, Mrs. Thom- 
as Gaunt, «Land’s. End; 9, C. J._R. 
Humphreys, Bass Rocks; 10, Dr. Gor- 
don Morrill, Magnolia; 11, The Ocean- 
side, Magnolia; 12, Walter F. Osborne, 
Harbor View; 13, Louis B. Pulcifer; 
14, Charles H. Law, Land’s End; 15, 
William M Lane; 16, Edward W. 
Smith, Magnolia; 17, Isaac Patch, East- 
ern Point; 18, Dr. William J. Hale; 
19, E. B. Chandler, Bass Rocks; 20, 
John J. Burke, Magnolia. 
Section B, Box 1, Mrs. Edward C. 
Richardson, Magnolia; 2, S. Reed An- 
thony, Beverly Farnfs; 3, John C. Ab- 
bott, Lowell; 4, John Gott; 5, Charles 
D. Brown; 6, Henry Souther, Bass 
Rocks; 7, James D. Hawkes, Wingaer- 
sheek Beach; 8, D. B. Hodgkins’ Sons; 
9, Dr. William ' Jarvie, Bass Rocks; 
10, The Oceanside, Magnolia; 11, Wal- 
ter D. Denegre, Manchester; 12, George 
F. Willett, Manchester; 13, Miss Hough, 
Hawthorne Inn; 14, Charles B. Martin, 
Land’s End; 15, Henry H. Proctor; 
16, William E. Blanchard; 17, George 
E. Ryder; 18, Ezra L Phillips; 19, 
Myron C. Wick, Manchester; 20, 
Howard Blackburn. 
Section C, Box 1, John B. Lord, 
Magnolia; 2, The Daily Times; 3, 
Benj. A. Smith; 4, Geo. O. Stacy, 
Hawthorne Inn; 5, James M. Longyear, 
Manchester; 6, Miss Katherine P. Lor- 
ing, Pride’s Crossing; 7, Lincoln § 
Symonds; 8, Gen. Louis H. Carpenter, 
Bass Rocks; 9, Nathaniel Babson; 10, 
Mrs. Adelaide Lingard, Annisquam; 
11, Henry Schurman, Eastern Point; 
12, Frank H. Howes, Annisquam; 13, 
Dr. Thomas Conant; 14, Joseph O. 
Procter; 15, Prof. Charles F. Bradley, 
Annisquam; 16, James R. Somes; 17, 
Burnham Bros. ; 18, Mrs. H. H. Whip- 
ple, Andover, Mass;; 19, Mrs. Frank 
D. Bennett; 20, Howard G. Scammon; 
21, Seymour S. Hartwell; 22, Otis 
Haskell, Denver, Col. 
Section D, Box 1, John S. Wilson, 
Bass Rocks; 2, Miss Cecelia Beaux, 
Eastern Point; 3, Mrs. Thomas D. Rob- 
inson, the Delphine; 4, Capt. Henry 
G. Atwood; 5, Jeremiah Foster; 6, 
Charles F. Farnsworth, Bass Rocks; 
7, John A. Johnson; 8, Martin J. 
Whalen; 9, Rey. Francisco V. DeBem; 
10, Albert H. McKenzie; 11, Arthur 
B. Sewall; 12, William Kidd, Haw- 
thorne Inn; 13, Winslow L. Webber; 
14, Mrs. Frederick Allen and party; 15, 
B. B. Story, Essex; 16, the Hawthorne 
Inn; 17, William Babson and party; — 
18, H. P. Beals, Haverhill; 19, reserved; 
20, reserved; 21, A. G. Leighton, East- 
ern P.;22,Mrs. Tyson, Hawthorne Inn. 
Section E, Box 1, William A. Paine, 
Swampscott; 2, William W. Pagon, 
Hawtorne Inn; 3, Thomas J. Carroll; 
4, the Hawthorne Inn; 5, the Haw- 
thorne Inn; 6, William Casey; 7, Miss 
Bowdoin and party, Rocky Neck; 8, 
John Finnegan and party; 9, Capt. — 
Chas. Nelson and party; 10, Casper 
Whitney, New York; 11, Thomas 
Stott, Manchester; 12, W. G. Pierce, 
Bass Rocks; 13, John Clay, Eastern 
Point; 14, John J. Somes; 15, Charles 
H. Gamage; 16, Walter Henderson; 
17, reserved; 18, reserved; 19, W. S. 
Hat, Bass Rocks; 20, Miss Bacon, — 
Rocky Neck; 21, Mrs. W. P. Hamil-. 
ton, Land’s End; 22, Mr Gale, Bass 
Rocks. 
Section F, Box 1, Eric Pape, Anni- 
squam; 2, the Judges of the Pageant; 
3, the Judges of the Pageant; 4, Percy 
Mackaye, Windsor, Vermont; 5, Mu- 
nicipal Council of Gloucester; 6, Select- 
men of Rockport, Prof. F. C. DeSumi- 
crast of Harvard; 7, guests of the com- 
mittee; 8, Hon. Henry Cabot Lodge, 
Nahant, Hon. Augustus Peabody Gard- 
ner, Hamilton; 9, the Governor of 
Massachusetts, Hon. Eben S. Draper, of 
Hopedale, and Staff; 10, the Secretary 
of the Navy, Hon. George V. L. Meyer 
of Hamilton and family; 11, Eric Pape, 
Annisquam; 12, the Judges of the 
Pageant; 13, the Judges of the Pageant; 
14, Mrs. Walter Damrosch, New York 
City; 15, the Archbishop, William H. 
O’Connell, Bay View; 16, Mrs. Levi 
Lieter, Beverly Farms; 17, Robert Taft, 
Washington, D. C ; 18, John Hayes 
Hammond; 19, Henry C. Frick, Pride’s 
Crossing; 20, Mrs. William Boardman, 
Manchester; 21, A. Chester Beatty, 
Magnolia; 22, John Hayes Hammond; 
23, Jeremiah Foster; 24, Patrick M. 
Longan; 25, Fred W. Tibbetts; 265°. 
Miss Helen Tibbetts; 27, reserved for 
guests; 28, reserved for guests; 29, re- 
served for guests; 30, Mrs. Motler, 
Washington; 31, reserved for officers; 
32, H. Bert Knowles; 33, Oscar Le- 
veau; 34, Hotel Edgecliff, 
