NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 47 
The Up-to-Date Department Store 
Mu of the North Shore 
Butman & French 
Twenty-five 
Departments 
Three Floors well stocked with depend- 
able merchandise. 
Free delivery as often as desired. 
Special effort to cater to the wants of our 
summer visitors. 
Post Office Square, Gloucester, Mass. 
P IGEON COVE’S new hotel, the Edward, is setting 
the pace for the other summer hostelries in inaugu- 
rating the popular Thé Dansant on Saturday afternoon 
of this week, which has been meeting with much success 
at other hotels along the North Shore. ‘Tea will be served 
from four until six as usual, with the added attraction 
that guests will have the opportunity to go through the 
maize of the various trots and the much discussed tango. 
Tea, dancing and daylight will be the combination at the 
Edward with a comfortable dancing space and tea served 
at tables. 
Mrs. M. L. Lawson of Passaic, N. J., is registered at 
the Ocean View, Pigeon Cove, for the month of August. 
Mrs. A. C. Howard and Miss Dennett of Brooklyn, N. Y., 
are season guests at this hotel. Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Wilt- 
su and daughter, Esther of Cortland, N. Y., are here 
for an indefinite stay. Among the other season guests are 
Miss M. Pattison and sister, Emma of Albany, N. Y.; 
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Pierce, an artist of note, of 
New York city; Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Brummett and 
daughter, Alice and J. L. Brummett, of Boston. Miss 
Sara A. Saunders of Brockport, N. Y., and Mary P. 
Rhoades of Syracuse, N. Y., are here for a two weeks’ 
stay. Francis W. Qua, Esq., and wife.of Lowell were 
registered at this hotel over the week-end. 
Mrs. Frederick Hibbard and son, Frederick Hibbard, 
Jr.. who have been stopping at the Hotel Beachcroft, 
East Gloucester, are enjoying a week’s auto tour along 
the coast of Maine. They are stopping with friends at 
North Haven. Launch excursions along the North Shore 
form one of the popular diversions for guests at the 
Beachcroft. A party which enjoyed the trip along the 
coast to Marblehead and its many places of historic inter- 
est was made up of the following guests: Mrs. Richard 
4| Har{well, 
4q Lathe te 
Gift Shop 
9 Cuesrmur Sr. 
GLoucesrer Mass. 
SPECIAL SALE 
WHITE AND GOLD 
ENGLISH CHINA 
Cups and Saucers - 55c set 
Large Plates - - - 49c set 
Oatmeal - - - - 49c set 
Sauce Plates - - - 38c set 
HARTWELL’S 
9 Chestnut Street, - GLOUCESTER 
Look for the sign, ‘‘ Hartwell’s Gift Shop”’ 
Compton and daughter, Mrs, Mildred Wood and _ niece, 
Miss Cornelia Wood, Mrs. Harriet Hagar, Miss Lucy 
Hagar and Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy and daughter. Mrs. 
J. R. Reed, who is summering at the Beachcroft, is on a 
visit to Beverly with friends this week. 
Mrs. James A. Baker of Houston, ‘Texas, is seriously 
ill at her summer residence, Souther cottage “M” at Bass 
Rocks. 
Recent guests to arrive at Straitsmouth Inn, Rock- 
port, include Francis E. Curtis of Detroit, Mich.; Miss 
Mary H. Dana of Brookline; I. Yamayuchi of New Vor 
Miss Marian Hyde of Melrose; Miss Eloise Taylor of 
Boston; Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Thorndike, with L. A. Ryder 
and Howard Stetson. Guests at the Inn enjoyed a danc- 
ing party last Saturday evening, many of the summer 
colony from. Rockport and Pigeon Cove attending. Sun- 
day guests at Straitsmouth included Mr. and Mrs. David 
S. Lynch, who came to Rockport from Beverly in their 
yacht; Miss Mary Clark, Mrs. E. G. Murray and B. W. 
Nichols and Mrs. Nichols of Boston. 
NORTH SHORE BLUE BOOK 
HaANpy Pusiication, Just Out, More ComPLete 
THAN EVER. 
The North Shore Blue Book for 1913, published by 
the Boston Suburban Book Conipany, has just made its 
appearance and is more complete and up-to-date than ever. 
It contains a complete list of the summer residents of the 
principal resorts along the North Shore from Nahant to 
Rockport and also includes the season guests at the prin- 
cipal hotels. 
