14 
MAGNOLIA 
The Ariona Trio of Boston furnish- 
ed the musical program at the Vill- 
age church last Sunday evening and a 
large number attended. Next Sun- 
day evening at 7.30 o’clock S. Eugene 
Farnsworth of Boston will give an 
illustrated lecture entitled, “From Old 
Nuremberg to the Inn Valley of 
Tyrol.” Mr. Farnsworth is a fine 
Baler and his travels are well worth 
hearing about. 
Rev. Dr. Walter S. Eaton will oc- 
cupy the pulpit at the church Sunday 
morning at 10.30 o'clock, preaching a 
New Year’s sermon. After the ser- 
vice communion and a reception to 
new members will be held. 
The annual Christmas concert, 
which was given at the Village church 
Christmas Eve under the auspices of 
the Sunday School, was very enjoy- 
able and a large number turned out to 
hear it. There were recitations by 
Winifred Burke, Arthur Ericson, 
Helen Gardner, Junior Burke, Doris 
Malonson, Mary Burke, Mona Height, 
Victor Nelson, Dorothy Harvey and 
Robert Hoysradt; piano solos by 
Abbie May, Laura Abbott, Elizabeth 
Abbott and Ella Hoysradt; exercises 
by Sunday School classes taught by 
Russell Lucas, Miss Edna Symonds, 
Mrs. Willard Boyd, William Knowles 
and Miss Clara Corren, and an exer- 
cise by Samuel Emerson and William 
Edmonds; songs, “Merry Christmas 
Song,” “Hear the Bells of Christ- 
mas,” “Heavenly Ole. ibe Christ 
Child’s Lull aby,” “The Gift of Love, : 
“Shine, Christmas Star” and ‘“Christ- 
mas, Farewell” by the school; and 1 
violin solo by Ernest Lucas, accom- 
panied on the piano by Miss Mary 
Boyd. After the program the pre- 
sents were distributed from the large 
tree by Charles Hunt acting as Santa 
Claus, each member of the Sunday 
School receiving a book and a box of 
candy. 
Miss Stella Gardner returned to 
Boston Christmas Day after a two 
weeks’ visit with her brother and sis- 
ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph 
Gardner. 
George H. Crocker, of Harvard 
College, spent part of his vacation 
with Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Brown 
at their home on Magnolia avenue, 
returning to Boston, Wednesday. 
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gardner have 
closed their cottage on the corner of 
Norman and Magnolia avenues and 
are occupying rooms in the F. H. 
Davis cottage on Magnolia avenue for 
_the winter months. 
A daughter was born to Mr. and 
Mrs. Frederick Davis, December 18. 
The Breeze $2 a year postpaid, 
NORTHVS ROR Eo Se Bae 
First Class Groceries and Kitchen 
Furnishings 
Pp. Ss. Lycett Magnolia Avenue, Magnolia 
Telephone 63-2 
/-MAGNOLIA “MARKET | 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor, 
il 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, VEGETABLES. AGENTS FOR 
DEERFOOT ®rARM CREAM AND BUTTER. ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
Telephone Connection. 
1 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
| 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. 
M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER BUILDER 
Jebbing Promptly Attended te 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
- and - 
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Doucette and 
daughter Rosaline, and Harold Dun- 
bar of Brighton spent the holiday and 
week-end at Magnolia at the home of 
Mr. and Mrs. Jabeth Dunbar, Mag- 
nolia avenue. 
The home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas 
H. Hunt was very attractively dec- 
orated for the holiday season and won 
many comments on its festive appear- 
ance. Its situation on the hill made it 
a sight to be remembered with its 
greens and with candles burning in 
the windows Christmas eve. Mr. and 
Mrs. Hunt entertained Miss Reba Ar- 
rington of Medford, Mrs. A. W. 
Brownell of Franklin and the latter’s 
son, Roger Brownell of Worcester, 
over the holiday and week-end. 
Mr. and Mrs. John V. Carr spent 
Christmas Day and the week-end with 
Mr. and Mrs. George Carr at Glou- 
cester. 
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Allen and 
family of Manchester were guests of 
the Jonathan Mays, Western avenue, 
for Christmas. 
Misses Beatrice and Dorothy Story 
spent Wednesday in Gloucester as 
guests of Mrs. Walter Nelson. 
Thomas Abbott returned from 
Connecticut to spend Christmas with 
his father and his brother-in-law and 
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Howe, at 
their home on Englewood road. 
Other Magnolia notes on page 16. 
“THE CHRISTIAN” 
THEATRE 
Hall Caine’s wonderful romance of 
English life, “The Christian,” is at- 
tracting crowded houses to the big 
Boston Theatre. In the long history 
of this famous playhouse. it is safe to 
say that no attraction seen there has 
created more talk and favorable com- 
ment than the mammoth Vitagraph- 
Liebler production of “The Christian,” 
as presented by Earle Williams, Edith 
Storey, an all-star cast of 3,000 play- 
ers in eight parts and over 500 scenes. 
It is upon a scale impossible upon the 
stage of any theatre, and some of the 
scenes, notably the great mob scene in 
the London slums, where Glory 
Quayle and John Strom narrowly es- 
cape death in the hands of the infuri- 
ated populace, are upon the greatest 
scale imaginable. ‘The Christian” is 
presented continuously every week 
day from ten a. m. until ten-thirty p. 
m. 
AT Boston 
Beverly, - e 4 ns 
The Leopard Moth Larva 
The most destructive of recent pests to g 
shade trees of New England. 
We 
successfully combat this insect. 
R. E. HENDERSON & CO. 
have men especially trained to 
Foresters-Entomologists 
Mass, — 
