EAST GLOUCESTER 
William L. Price and Lewis G. Larus 
of Richmond, Va., are registered at the 
Harbor View House for the month of 
August. Mr. Larus is prominently con- 
nected with one of the largest tobacco 
manufacturing companies in the south. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. Wood Poinier, Miss 
Poinier and Miss Elizabeth Woodruff of 
Newark, N. J., are at the Harbor View 
House for the remainder of the season. 
This is the ninth season that the Poinier 
family has spent on the Gloucester shore. 
Henry Bollman of Cambridge and St. 
Louis, Mo., is registered at the Harbor 
View House and is taking an active part 
in the tennis tournaments just started on 
the Harbor View courts. Mr. Bollman 
was graduated from Cornell university 
Jast spring. He was one of the expert 
tennis players of the university squad. 
Mr. and Mrs: J. M. Green and Miss 
Lucile Green of Trenton, N. J., have 
taken rooms at the Harbor View for the 
remainder of the summer. Miss Lucile 
is a devotee of the golf stick and is often 
seen on the Bass Rocks links. 
Mrs. A. J. Gray and Miss Margaret 
Gray of Philadelphia are guests for the 
month at the Harbor View House 
Major R. L. Banks, U.S. A., of Al- 
bany is a guest at the Hawthorne Inn. 
The Inn has had an unusually large pat- 
ronage of army and navy folk this year. 
Maj. Banks is one of the latest arrivals. 
Mrs. C. H. Van Brunt, Miss Carrie 
and Miss Jessie Van Brunt of Boston 
make up a touring party motoring from 
Boston to the White Mountains. They 
-spent the early part of the week at the 
~ Hawthorne Inn. 
Judge Phillips of Kansas City is at the 
Hawthorne Inn for the season. The 
Judge has been a frequent visitor at East 
Gloucester for the last several years. He 
thinks there is no place like the Glouces- 
ter shore. 
Among the guests at the Hawthorne 
Inn this week are Mrs. E. K. Cole and 
son of Port Royal, S$. C.; Mrs. F. L. 
Snow of New Bedford; I. D. F. Lans- 
ing, E. W. Visscher, Albany, ee 
Mrs. B. Franks and child and Mrs. L. 
Sonbrand, New York City; C. E. W. 
Grinnell, Boston. — 
A pleasing social event at the Haw- 
tho-ne Inn this week was a birthday sail- 
ing party given by Lieut. Commander G. 
F. Cooper, U. S$. N. and Mrs. Cooper 
for their son Lowell who passed his 12th 
birthday Monday. A large party of 
friends enjoyed athree-hours’ sail around: 
the harbor and some distance out to sea. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
25 
TRS 
BASS ROCKS 
Bass Rocks is enjoying the busiest sea- 
son it has had in years. , The hotels are 
filled, so that applicants for rooms are 
turned away daily. The cottages are 
filled from Eastern Point to Long Beach 
and there is an activity about the place 
that predicts that Bass Rocks is to be- 
come another Magnolia. 
ALONG THE CAPE ANN SHORE 
ROCKPORT 
Among the week’s arrivals at the 
Ocean View House was Charles E. Hib- 
bard, ex-Mayor of Pittsfield, Mass. He 
and N. B. Sargent of Haverhill are mak- 
ing a short stay at the Cove. Mr. Hib- 
bard is a prominent attorney for the New 
_ York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad 
Company. 
(Courtesy Who’s Who Along the North Shore) 
EDWARD ROTAN’S RESIDENCE, BASS ROCKS. 
In a society way the Thursday evening 
dances at the Thorwald and the Friday 
evening band concerts at the Moorland 
are the biggest things going. There has 
been no entertaining at all this week at 
either of the hotels, the guests seeming 
to prefer beach and bluff and fishing 
stream to anything in doors. 
Hotel trade this week was largely tran- 
sient. Among the early arrivals at the 
Thorwald were Mrs. Lewis Sperry, Miss 
Elizabeth Noble and Miss Alea S. Roe 
of Hartford, Ct. This is their first sea- 
son at the Basses. They are greatly 
impressed with the beauty of the spot and 
will likely return for coming seasons. 
Mrs. George H. Russell, Miss Alfreda 
Russell and Miss Marion Russell, repre- 
senting one of the first families of Mil- 
waukee, Wis., are guests at the Thor- 
wald for the remainder of the summer. 
At the Moorland this week are Mrs. 
E. L. Hersey, St. Paul, Minn.; John 
A. Gray, Syracuse, N. Y.; L. B_ Runk, 
Mrs. Herman Harper, Mr. and Mrs. 
B. Wolff, Philadelphia; P. W. Chase, 
W. E. Chase, Malden; Mr. and Mrs. 
Clarence L. Hall, Hartford, Ct.; Nel- 
son W. Pickering, U. S. N., Washing- 
ton, D. C.; Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Bleak. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Downing, Mr. and 
Mrs. Thomas Murphy, Virginia Mur- 
phy, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Gordon, 
Boston; E. C. Mulvey, Worcester; 
Susan M. Pomeroy, Haverhill. 
About all the Pigeon Cove summer 
colony are in their cottages for the sum- 
mer and the influx of all save the transient 
guests and the 10-day vacationists has all 
but abated. The transient guests con- 
tinue, however, to come and go, and the 
hotels and many of the cottages where 
rooms are let by the week repert an un- 
usually busy season. Atthe Ocean View 
House, applicants for apaitments have 
been turned away during the last week. 
The Glen Acre Inn is having its usual 
large patronage but still more guests are 
coming. Among those expected within 
the next few days is Lieut. Com. J. R. 
P. Pringle of the United States Naval 
Academy at Annapolis who, with his 
wife and daughter, is coming to the Glen 
Acre for the month of August. Com- 
mander Pringle was formerly on the bat- 
tleship Maine. 
Frederick J. Brand, president of the 
Boston Board of Aldermen, and Mrs. 
Brand were guestsof Charles E. Hoyt and 
Miss Emily Hoyt of Dorchester at the 
Ocean View House over the week-end. 
Mr. Brand is a likely candidate for the 
office of Mayor of Boston. 
Arrivals of the week at the Glen Acre 
were Miss Marion Blood, Miss Clara A. 
Blood, Worcester; Mr. and Mrs. George 
E. Thomas, Providence; Miss M. H. 
Crawford, Miss §. P. Baham, Philadel- 
phia; Mrs. Fayette Smith, Greenfield ; 
Miss Mary E. Pettis, Washington, D. C. 
