NORTH SHORE BREEZE. 
15 
Oliver T. Pen nerts and Dee cret 
Samuel L. Wheaton left on an after- 
noon train for a holiday of a day or two 
in New York City. 
Mrs. Wm. Day of Gloucester was 
the guest of Mrs. Frank H. Dennis on 
Lincoln street, Thursday. 
Charles O. Lee has sold his Maxwell 
car to F. P. Wonson of Gloucester. 
Work will be started next Monday, it 
is planned, on the construction of the 
new concrete standpipe on Moses Hill. 
The stationary engine has been set up at 
the foot of the hill, and the steel and 
concrete material is being hauled to the 
top on the railway built up the side of 
the steep hill. 
J. Milford Crombie moved into the 
Bigwood cottage on Pleasant street last 
Monday. 
Miss Adele Sjolund entertained a num- 
ber of her girl friends at her home on 
School street, Thursday evening in hon- 
or of her sixteenth birthday. <A delight- 
ful evening was spent in playing games, 
and a very dainty lunch was served. 
The young hostess received a number of 
useful gifts. 
The engagement is announced of 
Chester H. Dennis, formerly of this 
town, but now of Chestnut Hill, to Miss 
Elizabeth J. Fleet of Boston. 
John Scott, the popular manager of 
R. Robertson Co.’s branch office at 
Manchester, is still on the dangerous list 
at the Beverly Hospital, where he was 
taken last week. He was very low a 
week ago with typhoid fever. ‘This de- 
veloped into pneumonia and other com- 
plications arose, which made his condi- 
tion most hazardous. Hopes for his re- 
covery are entertained, though his con- 
dition is yet critical. 
The moth suppression work has_ been 
started, a large area at the Manchester 
Cove section being gone over the past 
few days. 
On the front cover of AZotor Boat of 
Feb. 25, appears a _ picture of the 
Mahdeen II, Alfred C. Needham’s trim 
auxiliary yawl, with party on board. 
Mrs. Alice Cressey of Beverly was the 
guest of Mrs. George P. Dole, Nor- 
wood avenue, Thursday. 
A large delegation from Wonosquam 
tribe of Rockport will pay a visit to Co- 
nomo tribe of Red Men _ next 
day evening. The ‘‘traveling book,’’ 
“talking leaf,’’ will be brought by 
the visitors for the local tribe to pass on 
to some other council later. It is ex- 
pected the visitors will arrive on the 6.31 
train and most of them will depart on 
the 10.20. A full attendance of local 
Red Men is expected. A collation will 
be served. 
Wednes- . 
To Build New and More Sumptuous 
Hotel Than Colonial Arms. 
The Gloucester Times is authority for 
the statement that from the ashes of the 
ruins which marked the complete de- 
struction of the Colonial Arms hotel, 
which was laid waste by fire, January 1, 
1908, will shortly rise a grander and 
more up-to-date structure for the accom- 
modation of people who delight to come 
here for the summer months and _par- 
ticipate in the pleasures which the place 
affords during that time. 
While the plans for the new structure 
have not been as yet perfected, the main 
idea of the promoters of the new enter- 
prise is pretty well defined and it is their 
purpose to make a radical departure from 
the style of architecture, building, mat- 
erial and all other of the component parts 
of the Colonial Arms hotel. 
‘The purpose of those interested is to 
provide something entirely different from 
anything which has ever been attempted 
in hotel architecture and construction in 
this section and probably in the whole 
country. 
The main hotel will be after the Vene- 
tian style of architecture, and some even 
assert that it will border upon the Vene- 
tian palace type, but the men interested 
in the matter say that this is putting it a 
little too strong, although they admit that 
Venetian modes will be followed. 
The hotel proper will occupy the site 
formerly occupied by the Colonial Arms 
hotel, and will probably rise four stories 
high. While the Colonial Arms hotel 
was built in the form of a crescent, with 
the concave side fronting upon the water 
and the piazzas almost over the water, 
and the convex side facing to the south- 
ward or inland, with its handsome main 
entrance and porte cochere, the new 
hotel will have the same relative position 
as to front and rear, but instead of being 
crescent in shape, will have severe 
straight lines, two large wings, jutting 
out at right angles from the central figure 
and actually extending out over the wa- 
ter. 
Stout piers of durable material will be 
laid in the water to support the structure 
above the surface. Besides these struc- 
tures over the water, there will be piaz- 
zas and sun parlors in the center of the 
court formed by three sides of the build- 
ing, for the accommodation of those who 
have an eversion to being directly over 
the water, and by those varied attractions 
it is planned to satisfy the tastes of all the 
guests. 
The main hotel will not be so large 
and of course will not cover so much 
ground as the Colonial Arms _ hotel, but 
to meet this deficiency, so far as the ac- 
commodation of large number of guests 
is concerned, the gentlemen behind the 
movement have another plan by which 
they think the guests will derive greater 
} VALENTINE’S 
MARKET 
Specials © Saturday 
Native Fowls 20c lb 
Legs Spring Lamb 18c Ib 
Legs Winter Lamb 15c Ib 
Fores Lamb 12 1-2c Ib 
Small Hams {4c Ib 
Lean Pork Roasts 14¢c lb 
GHOICE LINE VEGETABLES 
Gelery, 18c; Lettuce, 10c 
Spinach, 25¢c; Radishes, 5c 
Squash, Sc 
Large Oranges 20, 25, 30, 35c d. 
2Oc doz 
28c doz 
Kimball Bidg., Opp. Postoffice 
MANGHESTER 
Telephone 206-3 
Fancy Large Lemons 
Fancy Brown Eggs 
satisfaction, and more homelike sur- 
roundings, which appeal to somany peo- 
ple who desire hotel life, yet would like 
to have the publicity attached to such, 
eliminated so far as possible. 
It is planned to have erected some 20 
or 30 cottages, in the immediate vicinity 
of the hotel, which will meet the require- 
ments, providing families or parties with 
great privacy, with their own parlor, sit- 
ting room and bath room, and if occas- 
ion requires, their own dining room, al- 
though it is planned to have the main 
dining hall in the main hotel. 
The entire ground has been gone over 
and measurements made, and it is well 
known that there is plenty of room there- 
abouts to carry out this plan of a large 
hotel with its surrounding colony of 
dainty and attractive cottages. 
The main hotel and the smaller struc- 
tures will be constructed of cement and 
the fittings and everything connected 
with them will be as near fire-proof as 
human ingenuity and skill can make 
them, thoroughly modern and up-to-date 
in their fittings and appointments, yet 
the style of architecture will be varied as 
to the cottages, so that they will not have 
an air of sameness, which is so_ distress- 
ing to the artistic eye. 
George O. Stacy, the proprietor of 
the Hawthorne Inn, and who built the 
Moorland and Colonial Arms, is the 
moving spirit in the new enterprise, and 
has associated with him several well 
known business men and financiers who 
can be depended upon to carry the plan 
to a successful issue. 
It will be impossible. to have the hotel 
and cottages completed and ready for 
occupancy this’season of 1909, 
