36 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
Cathedral Plines Cea Room 
Goose Cove, Annisquam 
Quaint and Secluded - - - Not far from Main Road 
Afternoon Tea Scotch Scones a Specialty 
Luncheons and Suppers Served on Short Notice 
Cakes to Order Tel.1731-w Gloucester Old Pewters for Sale 
GLOUCESTER ELECTRIC CO. 
Electric Light and Electric Power 
can be had anywhere on Cape Ann 
RERSC 
Be sure and get your lamps from us as they 
will be proper for our circuits. 
Ethel Louise Paddock, A. Schille, J. 
Marion Monks Chase, Albert Felix Schmitt, 
King, Henry B. Snell, Walter L. Palmer, 
man, Curtis Moffet, Albert Felix, W. Lentz Weiss, Henry 
William Fosdick, 
James 58. 
Denys Wott- 
C. McCarter. This exhibition by artists who spend their 
summers on Cape Ann, will continue till the r6th and the 
gallery is open from 10 a. m. till 5 p. m., Sundays, 2 till 
5 p.m. Admission is free. 
ASS ROCKS.—A pleasant affair on Monday after- 
noon in which many Bass Rocks residents were inter- 
ested, was the bridge party held at the attractive summer 
home of Miss Mary B. Adams of Washington, D. C., 
located on Atlantic avenue. The party was ‘held for the 
benefit of the New England Fund for Relief of French 
Wounded. Mrs. Edgar Dixon of Paris was a prime 
mover in the affair. There were 60 people present. 
Prizes were offered and refreshments were served. 
British Consul C. C. Bayley and Mrs. Olive Bayley, 
of New York, have been stopping at Hotel Thorwald, 
Bass Rocks. 
Paul Wanship, sculptor, of Cornish, N..H., and wife, 
have_concluded their stay at The Thorwald, Bass Rocks. 
F. S. Reynells of Chicago, president of the Pullman 
Car Company has been motoring in this section and made 
a sojourn at Hotel Thorwald. 
Dr. T. C. Caspell Gilchrist, the noted professor of 
dermatology of John Hopkins University, wife and two 
daughters, have been guests at The Thorwald, Bass 
Rocks. 
“The Maker of Dreams” was the title of a Fantasy 
in one act presented at the Moorland casino recently, for 
the benefit of the Infantile Paralysis Society for Improve- 
ment of Conditions of the Poor, New York, $200 being 
the sum realized. The stage setting was the interior of an 
old English cottage. Mrs. Fitzwilliam Sargent was Pierot 
and Mrs. Edward D. Parsons, Pierette. Julia McKenney 
of Albany gave an interesting travel talk, followed by a 
fantastic dance in costume of black and white by Pierot 
and Pierrette. General dancing followed the entertain- 
ment. Miss M. R. Waterman of New York, teacher of 
aesthetic and folk dancing had charge of the dances in 
the play. Fruit punch and candy were sold during the 
evening. The affair was pronounced one of the most 
Sept. 8, 1916. 
The Trustees cordially in- 
vite the public to visit 
. THE HOME .. 
which is open for inspection 
every day in the week from nine 
in the morning until six in the 
afternoon. 
Donations of money, clothing, 
groceries, will be thankfully 
received. 
Sumner D. York, President 
Capt. James P. Gleeson, Supt. 
Home for 
Cape Ann 
Fishermen 
136 Eastern Ave. 
Gloucester 
enjoyable at the Moorland this season and there was a 
large attendance. 
The Bass Rocks golf clubhouse was the scene of a © 
brilliant gathering of ‘cottage residents and hotel guests 
on Monday evening, when the Bass Rocks Improvement 
association presented Silas Hibbard Ayer, Jr., in mono- 
logue. Seats at the club were reserved and all were 
taken. Mr. Ayer presented some of his own composi- 
tions as well as these of his brother, Nat. D. Ayer, who 
is scoring a success in London. Two selections from 
“Took Who’s Here” and “The Bing Boys Are Here” 
were of special interest, because both of these pieces are 
having a successful run at the present time in London, 
they being presented respectively at the London Opera 
House and the Alhambra, where they have been running 
for several months. Silas ““Hibby” Ayer, Cornell ’14, is 
clever in his work. He plays the piano in a way that 
makes one laugh for there is actually humor in the 
music. The artist is versatile and his Dutch dialect is 
clever. At intermission, there was an auction sale of 
original posters, the work of Thomas Mills of Bass Rocks. 
These brought nearly twenty dollars extra for the Im- 
provement association. Dr. Arthur N. Broughton was 
the auctioneer and there was much mirth during the ten 
mintues alloted to this part of the program. General 
dancing was in order after the entertainement. Among 
the well known society of the colony present were: Dr. 
William Jarvie and Miss Jarvie, Mr. and Mrs. C, C. 
Long, Mr. and Mrs. James Stuart, Mr. and Mrs. D. 
Chauncy Brewer, Dr. and Mrs. Arthur N. Broughton, 
Mrs. C. H. C. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wicks 
Brown, Mr. and Mrs. William B. Campbell, Mrs. E. 
Bradley Currier, Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Walker, Mr. and 
Mrs. Frederick N. Weir, Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Eaton, Mr. 
and Mrs. Edward Ellis, Miss Harriet Ellis, Miss Kate 
Ellis, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O.- Procter, Jr., Mr. and 
Mrs. E. B. Sargent, Mr. and Mrs: Charles Scott, Jr., Mr 
and Mrs. Willis Farrington, Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. 
Wilder, Mrs. James C. Farrell and party, Mr. and Mrs. 
Ralph Pope, Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Duprey, Mr. and Mrs. 
Raymond L. Royce, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Winthrop But- 
trick, Miss Claribel Egbert, the Misses Neff, W. T. Hum- 
ble and party, Mrs. Reeve Lewis, Mrs. Isaac Harter, Mr. 
and Mrs: John Newell, Dr. and Mrs. S. H. Ayer, Dr. and 
Mrs. George A. Webster, Mrs. C. G. Cooper, Miss Louisa 
Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. Sears B. Condit, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. 
Ostenpathy 
Dr. J. Oliver Sartwell 
Dr. Blanche B. Sartwell 
221 Essex Street, Room 39, Salem 
Tel. 1879-M Residence, Danvers, Tel. 416-M 
Treatments at office or patients’ residence 
