NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 37 
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fHntel Edwar 
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Hotel de Luxe 
9 Pigeon Cove 
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Steam Heated 
American and European Plan 
Exqnisite Cuisine 
—————— 
Loblolly Cove camp entertained ex-Gov. Dix of New 
York state last week. He and his famliy are spending 
the summer at East Gloucester. 
Granite Shore hotel has among the recent arrivals 
J. F. Cleaves and family, Malden; Miss Lily W. Jewett, 
Roslindale; Miss M. E. Stewart, Miss Beatrice Stewart, 
Medford; Miss Cassie Brown, Roxbury, k. he Burt, 
Providence; Henry J. Thompson and family, Malden; 
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Muir, Springfield. 
Straitsmouth Inn arrivals are Miss Eleanor Atken- 
son, Indianapolis, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Woodman, 
Lowell; Miss J. Niven, Miss Alice Hodgson, ‘Loronto ; 
Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Stauffer, St. Louis; Miss Amy W. 
Stone, Boston; Miss Alice W. Tallant, Philadelphia. 
The Green Parrot tea room and gift shop, 17 Mt. 
Pleasant street, Rockport. Flower receptacles a special- 
ty. adv. 
IGEON COVE is centering its social life around the 
hotels and pretty little Marie Antoinette tea room. 
Mr. and Mrs. John Lawrence of Pittsburg are spend- 
ing their honeymoon at the Hotel Edward. Mrs. Law- 
rence is Sen. Flynn’s daughter. Another party, who find 
this hotel an attractive place is Asa C. Russell and daugh- 
ter of Lowell, and Clinton P. Russell, a son, from Dallas, 
Tex. Other guests of recent arrival are Mr. and Mrs. 
David Roberts, Miss E. A. Roberts, Moorestown, N. bee 
Miss A. E. Maxfield, Amesbury; Miss Edith Flinn, Miss 
Florence Harper, Miss Electa Harper of Pittsburg, and 
their friend, Miss Dorothea Dutcher of Magnolia; Mr. 
and Mrs. C. W. Hall, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Harding, 
Newton; F. FE. Payne, C. A. Payne, New Haven, Conn. ; 
Mr. and. Mrs. E. H. Stevens, Boston; Mr. and Mrs. CELAS 
Jarrett, Boston; Rev. and Mrs. Fred W. Jackson, Glen 
Ridge, N. J.; F. L. Meares, Seattle, Wash.; Miss E. W. 
Mears of Wilmington and friend Miss Ellen Chase of 
3rookline. 
Ocean View guests at Pigeon Cove include: Rev. 
and Mrs. ‘I’. A. Emerson, I. W. Russell, Miss Mary Rus- 
sell, Wellesley, and James Clark, a friend from Pemerkee, 
Wis.; Mrs. M. M. Cunningha'n, saltimore; Miss Cunn- 
ingham, Great Falls, Mont.; Miss Alice DeShazer, Balti- 
more: Mrs. Wm. D. Marsh and son, Northampton ; Mrs. 
M. E. Richards and daughter, New York. 
Clifford House arrivals are Mrs. C. S. Reynolds, C. 
A. Reynolds, Edna Reynolds, 5. F. Woodruff and Miss 
Fanny Brainard of Brooklyn, N. Y. 
The Lantern Shop of unusual gifts, near the Hotel 
Edward, Pigeon Cove, is now open. adv. 
Marie Antoinette Tea Room and Gift Shop, Pigeon” 
Cove. adv. 
Yachting, Tennis, Swimming and Golf may be enjoyed at Pigeon Cove. 
Directly on the Oceanfront 
Special Saturday Night Dinner in Grill Room flgeee Dancing 
fe ae hotels are entering upon the month of 
August with good prospects. A new gathering of 
people will be seen at many houses; the July guests in 
some cases are changing for other resorts and their places 
are fast filling up. The Overlook, Grand View, Bryn- 
mere, By-Water-Inn and Wingaersheek, across the water, 
are all popular places. 
This week a rare treat was given in the village hall, 
when Arthur Rowe of New York read Maurice Maeter- 
linck’s “Aglavaine and Selysette,” under the patronage of 
Mrs. Lyman Gale and Miss Annie E. Fisher. 
Saturday afternoon tea and dancing were held at 
the yacht club; Mrs. George Andrew and Mrs. William 
Rice poured. ‘The first pop concert of the season was 
held in the evening and had a large attendance. Mem- 
bers of the summer colony gave a pleasing program 
Miss Virginia Wainright gave a musical in the An- 
nisquam village hall Wednesday afternoon. It was a 
very delightful affair and attended by many from all the 
nearby resorts. One of the patronesses, Miss Marie E. 
D. Grellaud, entertained her guests at tea in the Barn- 
acle tea house afterwards. The guests were Mrs. Geo. 
Lee of Beverly Farms, Miss Florence Lee, Mrs. Jordan 
Seatles of Baltimore and Mrs. Russell Reade of Boston. 
The Sally Summers Salad and Sandwich shop and 
tea room is now open under the management of Miss 
Bertha H. Mann, formerly with the Women’s Educa- 
tional and Industrial union of Boston. adv. 
Agencies at 
NEW YORK 
CHICAGO 
PHILADELPHIA 
PA PITTSBURG 
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| UNGLAZED HARTFORD 
-P ORO NEW HAVEN 
YONKERS, N. Y. 
SPRINGFIELD 
1 WORCESTER 
}PROVIDENCE, BR. I. 
ORANGE, N. J. 
GUANAJUATO 
Mexico 
HUSICIANS. 
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