50 
Ladies’ Specialty Shop 
372 Boylston Street, - Boston, Mass. 
veranda. ‘The other dates arranged for these concerts 
are August II and 25. 
Latest Thorwald arrivals include: Mrs. Clara Rose 
Dana, Mrs. Edgar C. Norris, Master Edgar R. Norris, 
Syracuse, N. Y.; Mrs. Walter A. Hardy, Mrs. George E. 
Hardy, Fitchburg; Dr. and Mrs. Edward Schon’s, St. 
Paul: Mr. and Mrs. C. Burnham, Mrs. M. ©. Bearns, 
Miss Helen Gregory, Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Bellamore, 
Master D. Kendall, Mrs. George H. Kendall, New York 
City; Miss Ruth Judkins, Glens Falls, N. Y.; Mrs. Ed- 
ward C. Wentworth, Hester Wentworth, Chicago, IIL; 
Mrs. Jessie Norman, Mrs. Ramsey Furness, and chauf- 
feur, St. Joseph, Mo.; Mrs. Percy Owen, Percy Owen, 
Jr., Detroit; Arthur Gerry, Worcester; J. A. Home and 
wife, Mrs. Paul C. Fisher, Philadelphia. 
Families occupying Moorland cottages along Atlantic 
road, Bass Rocks, are: The F. D. Ladlams and the Han- 
cocks of New York, the Grays of Syracuse, the Golds- 
boros and McLanes of Baltimore, the C. 5. Deweys of 
Lake Forest, Mich., and the Hills of Boston. 
Late Moorland arrivals are: Mrs. I. T. Merrill, Mrs. 
Stella L. Colburn, Toledo, O.; Charles M. Williams and 
wife, Mrs. J. A. Boynton, Lowell; Helen Colbert, Mar- 
garet Martin, Washington, D. C:; A. H. Taber, Boston; 
Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Ferro, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Prince, 
Elkins Park, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Corcross, Spring- 
field; Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Mirick, Worcester; Thomas 
B. Dor, Lowell; V. S. Parmenter and wife, Mr. and Mrs. 
J. M. Portmore, Framingham; L,. W. Ballou, Woonsocket, 
R. I.; Mrs. Francis H. Purnell, Baltimore, Md.; George 
S. Howe, wife and daughter, Mrs. E. L. Leigh and daugh- 
ter, Detroit, Mich. 
In the men’s best ball foursome, par handicap, 18 , 
holes, played July 22, on the Bass Rocks golf links, Joseph 
\V. and Hildreth Meggs won the cup, the score being 10 
up on par. It was truly a wonderful exhibition of play- 
ing eclipsing anything before played of this nature on the 
local links. 
One of the leading tournaments in this season’s 
schedule is promised for Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 
and Saturday, of next week, when a handicap mixed 
foursome match competition for both men and women 
will be held, 18 holes each day. Cups have been offered 
for the winners. 
In the Women’s tournament held at the Bass Rocks 
links from July 18 to the 21st, Miss Mitchell and Mrs. 
Burney won, 5 up and 4, in the foursome. 
Mrs. Compton and Mrs. Edgar have taken their de- 
parture from Bass Rocks, where they were stopping with 
Mrs. H. W. Wellington and are now in New York state. 
The Arthur M. Cox family of New York is occupy- 
ing the Cox cottage on Bass Rocks road. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
t 
, 
July 28, 1916. - 
Keita C. Chamas Annmures “oem 
Blythedale, Eastern Point Rd. 
Near Hawthorne Inn Casino 
East Gloucester, Mass. 
WHERE SHE IS SHOWING NEW AND UNUSUAL STYLES IN WOMEN’S 
MORNING, AFTERNOON AND EVENING SUMMER GOWNS, SPORT SUITS 
AND COATS, SILK FIBRE AND WOOL SWEATERS, BLOUSES IN VARIETY 
OF STYLE AND MATERIAL, BRASSIERES, CAMISOLES AND NECKWEAR 
Mrs. Gelston Whittemore of Audubon road, Boston, 
her sister, Miss Annie H. Foss and brother, Arthur D. 
Foss, both of Jamaica Plain are located at their comfort- 
able summer home on Decatur street, Bass Rocks. 
Mrs. Charles D. Fisher of Baltimore, Md., ‘arrived 
recently at her pleasant cottage on Haskell street, near 
Beach road, Bass Rocks. She has her car and chauffeur 
with’ her. 
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander C. Nelson (Sallie T. 
Fisher) and daughter, Sarah Charlton, of Roxton, Md., 
are located at their cottage on Haskell street, near the 
Fisher cottage. Mr. Nelson is a stock broker of Balti- 
more. 
AST GLOUCESTER.—The women of Eastern Point 
are finding tinre to do some good work in aid of the 
war sufferers, aside from the social duties of the week, 
and on every Wednesday and Friday, the Red Cross War _ 
relief circle meets at “The Ramparts,’ the summer home 
of Mrs. S. A. Raymond. 
An item of interest to the Eastern Point colony espe- 
cially, where A. Piatt Andrew is a resident, came recent- 
ly over the cable from Paris and states that the long ex- 
pected split in the American Ambulance Corps neutrality 
has come. The field section under A. Piatt Andrew of 
Gloucester, has broken away from Neuilly and established 
itself in separate quarters, with separate repair shops, 
parks and officers. It even has its treasurer and its funds 
unconnected with those of the Neuilly hospital. Official 
announcement of the separation has been made. It is 
reported that for a long time there has been extremely 
unpleasant conditions in the hospital, owing to the way in 
which George Washington Lopp had been allowed by 
Lawrence V. Benet, chairman of the executive committee, 
to dominate the hospital affairs. After Lopp had beaten 
his wife and step-daughter, and after his wife had sued 
him for divorce, Andrew’s friends urged him to take the 
field section away from the hospital. Opportunity for 
this action came when Lopp and Benet were forced off 
the transportation committee of the hospital after the 
arrival on this side of Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt. The 
transportation committee being thus disrupted, Andrew 
took the field section away: from the hospital before any 
new means of control could be organized. Mr. Andrew’s 
action is received with pleasure and is entirely in accord 
with the ideas of the real leaders of the American Am- 
bulance; also that Robert Bacon, former Ambassador to 
France, who is the head of the American Ambulance, is 
cognizant of and satisfied with the action of Mr. Andrew, 
who is now the active head of the organization in the 
field of action. 
Mr. and Mrs. John Clay of Chicago are entertaining 
for the remainder of the season, John Forrest of Dixon, 
