NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 25 
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Among the recent arrivals at their cottages on Mar- 
mion Way, Rockport, are: Edward H. Clarkson and fam- 
ily of Newburyport; John J. Mosely and his daughter 
of Boston; Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Dillaway, ibs and “Miss 
Dillaway of Melrose; Mr. and Mrs. W. Addem of 
Reading; and Mr. and Mrs. William M. eae and 
children of Brookline. Mr. Morgan’s brothers, Jesse and 
Fred L., will occupy the Kerr cottage on York avenue, 
just off Marmion Way. Mrs. George H. Corey of Mal- 
den has also opened her cottage on York Ave. 
Mrs. Chas. H. Woodbury and Miss Constance Wood- 
bury of Allston have arrived at their home on Briarstone 
Rd., Rockport. 
_ €. D. Wheeler of Brookline is at Land’s End; Chas. 
IL. Parker of Jamaica Plain is on Marmion Way; Mrs. 
Theresa Scott of Philadelphia has a cottage on the Head- 
lands. 
Prof. J. H. Wood of Cambridge; H. M. Jenkins; 
Thomas Ryan and D. F. Rearden of Boston are also in 
Rockport cottages for the summer. 
The Rockport hotels are showing the results of the 
warm weather and are rapidly filling up. The Cape is 
proving more and more popular each year as a summer 
resort and this should be an excellent season for Rockport 
hostelries. 
Guests who have come early and will remain for 
the season at Straitsmouth Inn, Rockport, are Mrs. A. 
B. Robins and Miss Jennie Robins of Louisville, Ky.; 
Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Gidney of Malden; 8. Shepherd, 
Miss Elizabeth Cabot, Miss B. A. Allen and Miss K. R. 
Wildes of Boston. Among the 50 guests who are spend- 
ing a week or more the most recent arrivals are Miss 
F. L. Carpenter of Cambridge; Miss C. M. Smith of Bos- 
ton and Miss Virginia Wick of Youngstown, O. A 
feature of last week’s holiday at the Inn was a dinner 
given by Morgan Bros. Creamery of Boston to 65 of 
their employees. The latter presented a loving cup to 
their employers and closed the day with a ball game. 
Turks Head Inn, Rockport, opened Thursday of this 
week with prospects of an exceptionally busy season. 
Sea View Farm, one of the quiet boarding houses in 
Rockport, also opened this week. 
Guests for the summer at the Manning House, Rock- 
port, include Miss Effie A. Merrill, Waltham; Mrs. Anna 
P. Pratt, Worcester; Miss Stella L. Wood, Minneapolis, 
Minn.; H. B. White, New York; and Abel Millard, Brad- 
ford. Present bookings at the Manning would indicate 
a prosperous season. 
The Headland House, Rockport, has the following 
guests registered: Mrs. J. F. Streeter of Waltham for the 
season; Mrs. John P. Marshall, Boston; G. I. Paynton, 
Medford; Annie G. Howe, Medford; Miss Frances Pres- 
ton, W. Medford; Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Baker, Boston; 
Mrs. Helen W. Rogers, Boston; Mrs. Howard M. Brown 
and daughter, Miss Mollie, of Rock Cities Valls a Nien: 
The Granite Shore, Rockport, opened this week, 
showing many improvements, the most noticeable of 
which is a fresh coat of paint on the exterior. The book- 
ings for the season were never better. Among the guests 
there are Herbert F. Jaquith of Wenham and Walter E. 
Peck, Manlins, N. Y., musicians of note who are here 
indefinitely. Rev. F. W. Bartlett, a retired minister, just 
returned from officiating in Vermont the past winter, and 
Mr. and Mrs. FE. Ondeslys of Boston, are at the Granite 
Shore. 
Rockport Lodge, the only vacation house in the state 
conducted by the Mass. Women Workers’ association, 
opened this week for its eighth year. The association is 
composed of about 30 social center clubs throughout the 
state. The one in Pittsfield is the largest, having over 
800 members. Members from all over the state find the 
Lodge a delightful retreat in which to spend their vaca- 
tions, and the matron reports many girls coming for the 
summer, 
Mrs. Charles S. Webster, Miss Lizzie Garlick and 
Vim FE. Todd are at Mrs. Webster’s summer home, Glen- 
ledge Cottage, Halibut Point, Pigeon Cove. Mr. Web- 
ster, whose law practice detains him at his office in Wor- 
cester, comes down for the week-ends. 
P IGEON COVE is not backward in its summer sea- 
son. The cottagers on the point are mostly down for 
the season and the hotels are showing an encouraging 
life for the season of 1914. 
The palatial, Hotel Edward opened last week, when 
the management entertained the school children of Pigeon 
Cove in the beautiful grille room and parlors. Owing to 
the late completion of the hotel last year all of the suites 
were not furnished. ‘This is being done now with rare 
colonial reproductions. The individuality of furnish- 
ing, the color schemes and cretonne hangings throughout 
the house are striking features. An added sanitary pre- 
caution of this year is a screened court-way surrounding 
the kitchen, thus giving plenty of air and affording double 
screens for the windows. The following guests are 
registered at the Edward: Mr. and Mrs. Winthrop Bar- 
nes, Boston; Miss Marion Long, Framingham; Miss 
Helen S. Spring, Wellesley; Frank W. McLanathan and 
Ernest H. Gannet, Metheun; Mrs. Thos. Denny and 
family, chauffeur and maid, New York. 
Guests for the season at the Ocean View Hotel, 
Pigeon Cove, are Miss E. T. Wandell of Washington; 
Mr. E.. J. Dillaway and family of Malden; Mrs. Frances 
R. Lybrand of Washington and Miss Isabella H. Ellison 
of Boston. Among the guests making a stay of a few 
weeks there are Miss Florence EF. Wheeler, librarian of 
the Leominster library, and Mrs. C. J. Langdon of EI- 
mira, N. Y., who is accompanied by her daughter Dr. 
Ida Langdon of Bryn Mawr, Pa., who recently received 
her degree. An interesting affair of the past two weeks 
has been the honeymoon of Prof. and Mrs. H. M. Wris- 
ton of Middletown, Conn. Friends of the couple did not 
know of their whereabouts until they returned to Spring- 
field, the bride’s home. She was Miss Ruth Colton 
Bigelow.. About 80 ministers of the American Baptist 
Missionary convention which has met in Boston the past 
two weeks will spend the coming week-end at the hotel. 
Prof. and Mrs. Douglas Crawford and the latter’s 
mother, Mrs. Katherine Tyre of Andover have arrived 
at their cottage in Pigeon Cove. 
NNISQUAM is qualifying this season as one of the 
busy resorts of Cape Ann. ‘The Yacht club which 
is really the social center of the place, opened this week 
with prospects of a busy summer. Just across the water, 
one-half mile, is the Wingaersheek beach, with its fam- 
ous sand dunes rising like snow-topped hills. The Inn 
at Wingaersheek, noted far and wide for its clam-bakes 
and fish dinners served under a tent on the beach opened 
Sunday. Plans are underway for a special celebration 
to be held on the Fourth. It is easily reached by ferry 
from Annisquam. 
Hotel Brynmere is well filled with guests. Miss M. 
W. Howard of Cambridge is spending the season there, 
also Mrs. DeWitt H. Parker of Ann Harbor, Mich. She 
will be joined late in the season by Mr. Parker, who its 
now engaged in the summer school at Michigan univer- 
sity at Ann Arbor, in the department of philosoply. He 
is also writing a book this summer on metaphysics. 
Additional Cape Ann Resort news on page 35. 
