NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
13 
“NORTH SHORE GAINING MUCH NOTORIETY FROM VISITING 
COLLEGE GIRLS.’ 
‘Parties This Year Largest 
Young Women From 
of the Annual Visitations. 
Every State in Union, Hawaiian Islands 
List Includes 
_ and Canada. 
By Mary Tayior FAtt. 
The sun god has been good to the 
college girls and has given them 
ideal weather to become acquainted 
or renew acquaintance with the 
North Shore. They had a smiling, 
palmy welcome to her shores, and in 
regulation regalia—hatless, sailor 
blouse, short skirts and walking 
shoes have tramped, sailed old ocean, 
visited every interesting place on the 
shore, bought postal souvenir cards 
galore, and can tell and have written 
home volumes of» the charm and 
beauty of the coast resorts. 
So don’t worry how lonely has 
been Helen of Dakota or Nan of 
Wyoming, because she has not been 
home this Easter vacation, for she 
has acquired more. education regard- 
ing the North Shore, where Presi- 
dent Taft summers, where diplomats 
and the wealth of the nation congre- 
gate and where artists and littera- 
teurs of note rendezvous. She has 
had the most delightful time imagin- 
able, for their Boston college friends 
have the Easter North Shore fever, 
too, and likewise jom their college 
friends, who come from more re- 
mote points and enjoy acting as 
euides to points of interest more 
familiar to them. 
Some of the girls have never seen 
anything but a prairie schooner. 
But during their visit to the Shore 
they have sailed every day in Glou- 
eeter harbour and have seen real 
schooners of all descriptions and 
have proven the most daring of sail- 
ors. The rougher the sea, the more 
joyous the pleasure! At Rockport, 
the usual large number of girls have 
been housed in two cottages con- 
nected with Straitsmouth Inn and 
have sailed and rowed all over 
Sandy Bay Harbor. 
At Pigeon Cove there has been a 
large party and there has been a 
small party at the Stanley cottage, 
Magnolia. 
The largest parties have been at 
East Gloucester and comprised stu- 
dents from Dana Hall, Wellesley col- 
lege, from Simmons college, and a 
few from Bradford academy; also 
young men from Boston colleges, 
teachers of the faculties and Dean 
and Mrs. Hodges of Harvard col- 
lege. , 
At Hotel Harbor View, East Glou- 
cester—Dean and Mrs. Hodges of 
Harvard college, Cambridge; Esther 
sf 
R. Randall, Oak Park, Ill.; Mary V. 
Libbey, Williamsburg, Pa.; Gertrude 
Ames, Oklahoma City; Gladys M. 
Corinslo, Alturas, Cal.; Mrs. Albert 
Berenson, Elizabeth and Senda Ber- 
enson, Boston; Ray Berenson Perry, 
Cambridge; Helen Cudahy, Wash- 
ington, D. C.; Etta Parkinson, Sarah 
Parkinson, Mt. Carmel, Ill.; F. H. 
Stegmaier, H. L. Crocker, R. Wheel- 
er, Hallie M. MeKee, Boston; May 
Sper, Fort Smith, Ark.; Allene Pow- 
er, Paris, Ky.; Elizabeth M. Conant, 
Perses Conant, Portland, Me.; Alice 
Cumpson, Buffalo, N. Y.; Anna $ 
Kent, Wyncote, Pa.; Fanny H. Loos, 
Norbeth, Pa.; Miss Thompson, [lar- 
riet Hinchliffe, Rockford, IIL; 
Dorothy D. Bridgman, St. Paul, 
Minn.; Marion <A. Mason, Cam- 
bridge; Dorothy M. Hazeltine, Sa- 
lem, Oregon; Helen K. Winchester, 
Grand Rapids, Mich.; Mirriam Car- 
penter, New Rochelle, N. Y.; Harriet _ 
Stryker, Susan Stryker, Catherine 
Hunter, Duluth, Minn.; Mayes Mar- 
tin, Denver; Mabel H. Williams, 
Redlands, Cal.; Emily Miler, N. Y.; 
Margaret Simpson, Hawaiian Isl- 
ands; Lorraine V. Milliken, Pitts- 
burg; Ruth Worden, Montana, Helen 
MeVay, Los Angeles,” Cal.; Lena 
Brooks, Casper, Wyoming. 
Hotel Rockaway, Rocky Neck—Dr. 
and Mrs. C. N. Mayo, Boston; Mrs. 
H. L. Keyes, Worcester; Ethel V. 
Stott, Detroit; Frances and Mary P. 
Hill, Buffalo; Marion Smith, Julia A. 
Drew, Amanda Brecke, Margaret 
Parmele, Minneapolis; Mary E. Metz, 
Wooster, 0O.; Natalie Wilhams, 
White Salmon, Wash.; Corrinne 
Searle, Omaha, Neb.; Frances Gray, 
Beattystown, N. J.; Gretchen Yoe- 
um, Tacoma, Wash.; Marguerite 
Karcher, Pierre, S. Dak.; Hazel V. 
Kramer, Gaylord, Mich.; Kate C. 
Keller, Pittsburg; Hester R. Davies, 
Philadelphia; G. Ruth Stafford, Mar- 
quette, Mich.; Helen Marsh, Ida 
Raah, New York; Elizabeth Gris- 
com Mardo, Worcester; Ruby M 
Gunn, Breckenridge, Minn.; Louise 
F. Brown, Ontario, Can.; Lueille EK. 
Clarke, Sarah P. Clarke, Los An- 
geles, Cal.; Ted Riam, Somerset, (= 
Clara Schmeider, Neb.; Helen Hom- 
er, Evanston, Ill.; Laurette I. Thom- 
as. Niles, O.; Justine L. Giddings, 
Wane, O.; Margaret Osbourne, Buf- 
falo; Alice F. Brown, Troy; Laura 
La Croix, Lynn; Rachel Clark, 
€leveland; Marion Shepherd, Cam- 
bridge; Mildred G. Sears, Brookline ; 
Edith Wise, West Newton; Mary E. 
Colt, Las Animas, Cal.; Christine 
Myrick, Springfield; Mary Kissick, 
N. Y.; Mrs. Willis F. Russ, Gladys 
Hale Russ, Boston. 
Pilgrim House, Rocky Neck—Ida 
Rauh, N. Y.;- Helen Marat, Hliz- 
abeth G. Marat, Worcester; Dorothy 
Weber, Esther. Crane, Northampton. 
The advent of the college girls has 
inaugurated a heretofore non-spring 
season, and has aided in bringing 
many other spring visitors not of ed- 
ucational circles. They put not a 
small sum of money in circulation, 
and indirectly have done much to 
increase the summer popularity of 
the North Shore, for marine life has 
ereat charm and novelty to the 
Western bred girl more familiar 
with prairies, mountains, and the 
tropical aspect of the Pacific coast, 
and who has always longed to get in 
touch with the traditional charm of 
New England. 
W. J. CREED 
=CATERER= 
and Private Waiting 
EAST CORNING STREET 
BEVERLY COVE : MASS. 
Telephone 765 Beverly 
Its Just Whats 
Os 
You. 
TELLS YOU ALL ABOUT 
THE VACATION LAND 
Helps you decide where to go, where to 
stay, what it will cost, and you surely 
SETTLE THE VACATION QUESTION 
when you send for this valuable guide r 
book . : ‘ 
«NEW ENGLAND 
VACATION RESORTS” 
Contains a detailed list of nearly two 
thousand hotels and boarding houses, 
giving location, showing routes and 
fares, and including a large tourist 
map of the entire system . 
IT’S FREE FOR THE ASKING. 
Other Publications descrip- 
tiveof andillustrating each section will 
be included for the cost of mailing. 
LET US KNOW YOUR WANTS TODAY. 
Address DESK 2 
NORTH STATION, BOSTON. 
Cc. M. BURT, G.P.A. 
& os Toy 
Rar AlN 
