16 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MAGNOLIA 
The minstrel show given last Fri- 
day evening at the Women’s club- 
house drew out a record attend- 
ance. The proceeds went towards 
the camp fund, and amounted to 
nearly $20. The young men and 
women who took part in the enter- 
tainment are to be congratulated, 
not only for the good singing and 
acting, but also for the masterly 
way in which the program was pre- 
pared and carried out. Gilbert 
Crispin did much to make the affair 
a success, and Mrs. H. C. Foster, 
who prepared the second part of 
the entertainment, ‘‘The Magic 
Mirror,’’ in which members of the 
Foster club participated, added 
materially to the excellence of the 
program. ‘‘The Magic Mirror’’ 
was read by Miss Ellen Dagle, of 
Gloucester. Miss Edna Symonds at 
the piano and Ernest Lucas, who 
gave a violin solo, were both great- 
ly appreciated. All the solos in the 
minstrels were good, as were also 
the choruses, and William Knowles, 
as interlocutor, was a _ success. 
There were some clever local 
‘knocks,’’ all of which scored hits. 
Following is the program and the 
east of characters: 
Opening Chorus, Company 
A Hundred Years from Now, 
Leighton Symonds 
T.Miss You Most of All, 
Miss Edith Height 
A Grand Old Girl, 
Miss Maybelle Sampson 
Michigan, Company 
I Love the Ladies, 
Leighton Symonds 
‘Star-Spangled Banner,’’ Company 
““The Magic Mirror’’ 
The Rich Woman, Jennie Brown 
The Country Girl, Rose Nelson 
The Up-to-Date Woman, 
Beatrice Story 
The Ball-room Girl, Mrs. J. V. Carr 
A Sylph, Mildred Commerford 
A Suff, Maybelle Sampson 
The Brunette, Elizabeth Brown 
The Housewife, Dorothy Story 
The Nun, Ella Commerford 
The Fairy, Alice Swanson 
The School Teacher, Gertrude West 
His Bride, Susan Lycett 
Carey’s orchestra furnished 
musie for the dancing which fol- 
lowed until 12 o’clock. 
Mrs. Pearl Atherton, of Blue 
Hill, Maine, is spending the week 
with “Mr. and) /Mrs.7 Oscar 7@P: 
Story, Magnolia ave. Mrs. George 
Corporon, of Dorchester, also was a 
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Story for the 
Groceries and Kitchen Furnishings 
All S. S. Pierce Co’s Goods sold at their Prices 
P.S. Lycett telephone 37 Magnolia, Mass. 
MAGNOLIA MARKET 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor, 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, VEGETABLES. AGENTS FOR 
DEERFOOT #ARM CREAM AND BUTTER. ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
Telephone Connection. 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. 
Telephone 426R Magnolia. 
M. KEHOE 
CABPENTER BUILDER 
Jobbing Promptly Attended te 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
- and - 
week-end. 
Miss Edith B. Briggs, of Newton 
Centre, was the reader at the vil- 
lage church Sunday evening, giving 
some of the dramatic Bible scenes. 
Mrs. John V. Carr was a guest 
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Silas 
Dion, of Lanesville, Sunday. 
We regret to report the illness of 
Mrs. C. Brown, of the Mallard 
house who is sick with the grip. 
“Help Wanted’’ at the Empire 
Jack Lait’s New York and Chi- 
cago success, ‘‘Help Wanted,’’ js 
coming. After making the most 
phenomenal theatrical run ever 
known in Chicago at the Cort 
Theatre, ‘‘Help Wanted’’ will be 
presented by the Malley-Denison 
Co. at the Empire, Salem for the 
entire week of March 22d, with the 
same scenic accessories that have 
been smashing all records of the 
present theatrical season. The 
management promises this to be 
one of the finest plays and produc- 
J. MAY —— ee 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Notary Public 
tions yet presented by this company 
this year. 
“The Natural Law’’ at the Cort 
John Cort, by arrangement with 
Messrs. Leffler and Bratton, is pro- 
ducing a new three act drama of — 
the present, entitled ‘‘The Natural 
Law,’’ at the Cort Theatre. Charles 
Sumner, the author of the play, has 
taken for his theme a situation from 
everyday life which involves in 
particular three people, a woman 
and two men, thus giving us again 
the irresistible triangle that is al- 
ways of interest. There are other 
characters, of course, in the play, 
whose being is quite essential to the 
well-doing of the story. Ruth Stan- 
ley is a painter, searely out of her 
teens. Mr. Cort will present a 
most attractive company of players 
in the interpretation of every one 
of the various characters. The cast 
includes Howard Hall, Carl Eek- 
strom, Otto Kruger, Austin Webb, — 
Helen Holmes, Teresa Maxwell 
Conover and Maggie Hallowell 
Fisher. 
The mind that is cheerful in its 
present state will be adverse to all 
solicitudes to the future, and will 
meet the bitter occurrences of life 
with a placid smile——Horace. 
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