32 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
—_—_ — 
Lamp and Candle Shades 
Dolls, Toys, Fancy Goods 
THE DOLL HOUSE, EAST GLOUCESTER 
BAst GLOUCESTER’S social center, Hawthorne Inn, 
will have presented this Friday night in the Casino 
a play, “Miss Keith of Chicago,” given by the girls’ club 
of Gloucester—a branch of the Mass. League of Women 
Workers. The club, consisting of about 140 members, 
with club rooms in the Bradford building, Gloucester, was 
organized three years ago by Miss E. M. Heller, an artist 
from New York who has been coming to East Gloucester 
for over 20 years. She is also president of the visit- 
ing nurse organization in Gloucester and keeps in close 
touch with all the work of her philanthropies while ab- 
sent in the winter time. The club has various evening 
classes, gives two dances a year, two theatrical perform- 
ances and sent five delegates to the national convention 
which met in New York this year. Once a year the 
members have a picnic supper at the Rockport vacation 
house of the state league. The play that the girls will 
give tonight has been written by Miss Alice Chase of 
Cambridge, where it has been presented several times with 
great success. ; ; 
In place of the customary lawn fete the ladies of 
Eastern Point, Bass Rocks and Gloucester will give a Thé 
Dansant at Hawthorne Inn casino, Saturday afternoon, 
August 29, from 4 to 6, for the benefit of the parish house 
of St. John’s Episcopal church in Gloucester. The Im- 
perial orchestra will play. The patronesses are Mrs. John 
Clay, Mrs. J. H. C. Cooper, Mrs. EK. B. Currier, Mrs. 
Davidge, Mrs. D. S. Greenough, Mrs. John Greenough, 
Miss Gavit, Mrs. John Hays Hammond, Miss Hammond, 
Mrs. E. D. Hubbard, Mrs. W. R. Harcourt, Mrs. A. G. 
Leonard, Mrs. Fred T. Hall, Mrs. H. S. Hall, Mrs. Lam- 
bert F. Kippen, Mrs. J. Murray Kay, Mrs. A. Simpson 
Lyle, Mrs. D. Randall-Maclver, Mrs. Loren H. Nauss, 
Mrs. Charles S. Nauss, Mrs. W. B. Olmstead, Mrs. A. 
Wilder Pollard, Mrs. John A. Radcliff, Mrs. S, A. Ray- 
mond, Mrs. R. C. Rathbone, Mrs. Charles Scott, Jr., Miss 
Sinkler, Mrs. Stephen Sleeper, Mrs. William Sheafe, Mrs. 
Richard C. Steele, Mrs. Charles Stewart, Mrs. George E. 
Tener and Miss Wheeler. 
A party of Eastern Point people at Y® Burnham 
House tea room in Ipswich the past week were the Tener 
family and their guests of Sewickley, Pa., and Miss Ethel 
Talman of Wilmington, Del. 
Henry Plympton Spaulding will hold an exhibition 
of recent work in oils and watercolors at his studio, 
“Wawbeek,” Grapevine Road, East Gloucester, on Wed- 
nesday, Thursday and Friday, Aug. 26, 27 and 28. adv. 
The Beachcroft hotel arrivals are Mrs. T. G. Sullivan 
and son, New Brighton, Staten Island; Miss L. S. James, 
Miss Elizabeth James, Wehawken Heights, N. J.; John 
L. Gilmore, A. A. Kerry, Montreal, Can.; Benj. E. Apple- 
ton, Boston; Mrs. Alice B. Farwell and daughter, Somer- 
ville; Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Farrow, Somerville; L. B. 
Jennings, Boston; A. V. Buchanan, Omaha; Mr. and 
Mrs. H. S. Huckins and son, Plymouth, N. H.; Mr. and 
Mrs. F. P. Condit, Westfield, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. A. E. 
Rowley, Overbrook, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. D. Carey, Ash- 
land, N. H.; K. A. Burke, New York; J. G. and E. M. 
Kiorboe, New York; Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Sylvester, Kala- 
mazoo, Mich. 
Mailman House arrivals are Col. and Mrs. Tutwiler, 
Philadelphia; Mrs. L. L. Davies, Boston; Mrs. Anna H. 
Burrill, Concord. 
See 
| JENNY WRENN, DOLL’S DRESSMAKER 
. Jones of Clearwater, Florida. 
THE BARNACLE, Annisquam 
Gitt Shop 
AFTERNOON TEA 
Open Every Day Except Sunday 
LUNCH 
Hawthorne Inn arrivals are Arthur F. Bennett, Rox- 
bury; Miss L. H. Mackenzie, Boston; Mr. and Mrs. Z. 
A. Van Houten, Passaic, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. B. H. 
Hemenway and family, Watertown, Conn.; Miss G. B. 
Bliss, F. $. Bliss, Hartford, Conn.; Mr. and Mrs. bias 
Retting, Wm. J. and Mrs. J. Clark, Grand Rapids, Mich. 
Charles F. Rice, Somerville; Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Matt- 
hews, New York; Mrs. C. Wagstaff, Miss Howe, New 
York; Mrs. L. L. Sturges, Short Hills, N. Joe: Mirshr: 
L. Blake, Worcester; Miss S. F. Wilson, B. L,. Phelps, 
Fast Canterbury, N. H.; Miss Ethel R. Pyser, New 
York; N. P. Rice, Somerville; Geo. W. Baldwin, Rut- 
land; Mrs. N. E. Cooke, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. J. Cooke, 
Mrs. J. F. Emanuel, Philadelphia; Miss Jane N. Baldwin, 
Pougkeepsie, N. Y.; Miss A. E. Shaw, Springfield; Miss 
M. Lord , Augusta, Maine; Mr. and Mrs. F. Fales, Miss 
IF. H. Fales, Port Washington, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. R. - 
O’Brian, New York. 
Mrs. George A. Hibbard, wife of the late ex-mayor of 
Boston is spending the latter part of the season at Haw- 
thorne Inn. 
Last Sunday over fifty tourists stopped for dinner at 
the Hawthorne Inn. 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Plympton Spaulding of “Waw- 
beek” are entertaining Mr. and Mrs. Edward Haskell 
Mrs. Jones was Annie C. 
Williams of Ashvilie, N. C. 
Mrs. Alice Fischer Harcourt, who has been spending 
the summer at Hawthorne Inn with her sister, Mrs. Mar- 
tin Hollinger, and who intended staying late in the sea- 
son, has been called to New York to rehearsals for the 
new play in which she will appear this winter. Her 
sister has left for New London. 
at the Inn. 
Miss Virginia Smith is having wonderful success 
with the social dancing feature of Hawthorne Inn. Ex- 
hibitions in the hesitation waltz, the maxixe, the Lulu 
Fado and other popular dances are given weekly. Last 
Friday the audience acted as judges and awarded the 
prize to Miss George and Mr. Fennessy for the best danc- 
ing in the ‘half-and-half. Mr. Struebing and Miss Smith 
will give an exhibition of the same dance this Friday. 
Miss E. M. Heller of New York and East Glouces- 
ter has been entertaining at her cottage studio Miss E. C. 
Low of Brooklyn, Mrs. M. W. Whitmore and Mrs. Wm. 
K. Draper of New York. 
New arrivals at the Delphine are George G. Williams, 
Boston; Mr. and Mrs. Geo. L. Parmly, East Orange, 
N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. George Bowers and son, Alton, 
Lowell; Misses Marie and Elsa Wildprett, Pawtucket ; 
R. I; Misses Irene M. and A. Edith Rogers, Camden, 
N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. Alfred V. Churchill, Mrs. A. H. 
Evans, Worcester. 
Merrill Hall has had several additions to its clientele 
the past week. i 
The Inner Harbor House is preparing to keep open 
through October. 
One of the prettiest exhibitions of the season in Fast 
Gloucester was the one held in a few of the hotels by the 
Higgins Art Co. of Bath, Maine, the past week. The 
most noticeable views were of Salem doorways, Ports- 
mouth scenes and interiors of old New England rooms. 
New York millinery, No, 1 Eastern Pt. road. ady, 
Mr. Harcourt is still - 
