16 
NORTH SHORE. BREEZE 
MAGNOLIA 
Miss Elizabeth Foster of Bar Har- 
bor, Me., is visiting Mrs. Lafayette 
Hunt. 
Edna Symonds, Dorothy and Doris 
Malonson are visiting Mrs. Ray 
French of Everett. 
Our public school has been closed 
this week, but next Monday morning 
school work will be resumed. 
Susan Lycett, who is _ teaching 
school near Westfield, spent the week- 
end with her parents on Magnolia 
ave. 
Mrs. Bertha Wilson of Somerville 
has been the guest for the past two 
weeks of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sy- 
monds. 
Master Samuel Emerson is work- 
ing for Rufus R. Stanley on his farm 
an example that other boys might 
well imitate. . 
John Lycett, who has spent the 
winter in Cambridge, has returned to 
Magnolia and is working in P. S. 
Lycett’s grocery store. 
Some residents of this village were 
seen. working in their gardens last 
Sunday. Such labor is now legal, 
but is it necessary and wise? 
Services will be held in the Village 
church Sunday at 10.45 a. m. and 7.30 
p.m. Dr. Eaton will preach both 
morning and evening. Communion 
will follow the morning sermon. 
The Ladies’ Aid society has pre- 
sented the church with a new flag and 
it will hang back of the pulpit to in- 
spire in all who look upon it the senti- 
ment of patriotism of which we can- 
not these days have too much. 
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Foster and 
Mrs. Charles Hoysradt motored to 
Chebacco Lake Wednesday to see the 
Upton club of Boy Scouts, who are 
camping there this week. The camp 
is large and comfortable and the boys 
are greatly enjoying their outing. 
LARCOM THEATRE, BEVERLY. 
May 7, 8—Francis Nelson in “One 
of Many.” Second chapter of “War.” 
Fatty Arbuckle in “The Butcher 
Boy.” Travel picture. 
May 9, 10o—Anita Stewart in “The 
Glory of Yolonda.” Second of 
QO. Henry stories, entitled “The Green 
Door.” “The Great Secret.” Pathe 
News and a comedy picture. 
May 11, 12—Sessne Hayakawa in 
“The Bottle Imp.”. “Pearl of the 
Army.”  Pictograph. “Ham = and 
Bud,” comedy. 
When you think of painting think 
of Tappan, 17 Bridge st., Manches- 
ter. adv. 
TREE PRUNING 
Everything in Forestry 
May 4, 1917. 
Groceries and Kitchen Furnishings 
All S. S. Pierce Co’s Goods sold at their Prices 
Legal Trading Stamps with all Cash Sales of Groceries 
P.S. Lycett telephone 4637 Magnolia, Mass. 
MAGNOLIA MARKET 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, VEGETABLES. 
DEERFOOT FARM CREAM AND BUTTER. 
AGENTS FOR 
ORDERS TAKEN AND DHE- 
LIVERED PROMPTLY 
Telephone Connection 
Magnolia, Massachusetts — 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge 
JONATHAN MAY 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Telephone 426-R Magnolia 
WENHAM 
Wednesday is the date for the 
spring session of Essex South Asso- 
ciation, the meeting being held at 
10.15 and 2 in Swampscott. 
Rev. Mr. Cutler’s history of ‘The 
Old First” met with so cordial a re- 
sponse from the public that, within 
five weeks of its date of issue it pass- 
ed into a second edition. 
On Thursday the teachers of the 
Sunday School will eat supper to- 
gether, and follow it with a confer- 
ence about their work. With the 
teachers are included the administra- 
tive officers of the school. 
Wenham’s church is certainly of 
the “open” class. Last week, for in- 
stance, there were five services on 
Sunday, meeting the needs of various 
classes and ages; and during the week 
the scouts used the building.on Tues- 
day, the Ladies society on Wednes- 
day, the Y.. P. 8. C.-K. ‘held°a’ busi- 
ness meeting and social on Thursday, 
and the Junior Endeavorers met Fri- 
day for games and to make surgical 
dressings, followed the same evening 
by the choir rehearsal. Upwards of 
half the population of Wenham make 
use of the building for some religious 
or moral purpose during the average 
Notary Public 
winter week; certainly here is no 
structure “standing closed during six 
days of the week,’ as is sometimes 
charged of churches. 
Hon. Sanford Bates, of the Massa- 
chusetts Senate, will address a social 
service forum Sunday evening, the 
subject being “Patriotism.” The hour 
will be 7 o’clock. At the Congrega- 
tional church Sunday morning the 
minister, Rev. F. M. Cutler, . will 
preach, and administer the Com- 
munion sacrament. Sunday school at 
noon. © Junior 'C, EK. at 5s 
K, ated: 
30oy scouting is generally recog- 
nized as possessing high moral value ; 
but until the war broke out, no one 
realized that the scout training is also 
susceptible of cash valuation. When 
however, the older boys applied for en- 
rolment in the naval reserve, they 
were given ratings far above other 
applicants solely because of their scout 
experience. Four young men, con- 
nected with the Wenham troop either 
now or in the past, are second-class 
petty officers with pay ranging from 
$38.50 to $44 per month together 
with board and clothes, while ordin- 
ary apprentice seamen receive only 
$17 to $21. It pays to be a “good 
scout.” 
R. E. HENDERSON 
BOX 244, BEVERLY, MASS. 
Telephone. 
