ls 
M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER - and - BUILDER 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
MAGNOLIA 
met with 
for 
The ae Aid society 
Mrs. Walter S. Eaton Thursday 
their regular sewing meeting. 
A delightful meeting of the Whist 
club was held Tuesday afternoon 
when Mrs. Edward Symonds of 
Magnolia avenue was the hostess. 
Mrs. Josephine Brown Halliday of 
New York is visiting her mother, 
Mrs. Christine Brown, at the latter’s 
home, The Mallard House, for a few 
weeks. 
Mrs. Wm. B, Smith of Boston has 
been visiting Mrs. D. C. Ballou. Miss 
Eleanor Ballou has gone to Boston 
with Mrs. Smith for a few days’ 
visit. 
There was a large attendance at the 
evening service of the Village church 
last Sunday evening, when John B. 
Bisbee gave an illustrated lecture that 
was very enjoyable and instructing. 
The stereopticon views were especial- 
ly good. 
The communion service will be held 
at the Village church Sunday morn- 
ing directly following the morning 
service. Rev. Walter S. Eaton will 
deliver the sermon at the latter. His 
subject will be “The Soul’s Thirst 
for God.” 
Rev. William H. Ramsay 
the speaker at the Village church 
Forum next Sunday evening and 
there will probably be an exception- 
ally large audience to hear a speaker 
of such excellence. Rev. Mr. Ramsay 
is especially well known and admired 
as a forum speaker and his subject, 
“Walt Whitman, the Poet of Democ- 
racy,’ offers delightful possibilities. 
The speaker himself, is a man whose 
interesting, varied life has helped him 
to the broad understanding, which he 
undoubtedly possesses, of human life 
and nature. He was born in Ireland 
of thoroughly Scotch parents, but, 
nevertheless, has been aptly called, an 
America: without an hyphen. 
will be 
BLYNMAN CLUB SHOw. 
Everybody in Magnolia is still talk- 
ing about the Blynman club minstrel 
show and entertainment. It surely 
was the occasion of a most enjoyable 
evening for everybody that attended 
—and most everybody in Magnolia 
did attend. It was a grand success in 
Forestry 
Experts 
Box 244, Beverly, 
NGRIP HS POR Beep Rh ieee 
March 3, 1916, 
Groceries and Kitchen Furnishings || 
All S. S. Pierce Co’s Goods sold at their Prices 
Legal Trading Stamps with all Cash Sales of Groceries ~~ «s)) 
P.S. Lycett eleshone 4637 Magnolia, Mass. 
MAGNOLIA MARKET | 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor, 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, VEGETABLES. 
DEERFOOT FARM CREAM AND BUTTER. 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
AGENTS FOR 
ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
Telephone Connection. 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. 
J. MAY——— 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Telephone 426R Magnolia. 
every way. 
Those who took part in the play 
were: Roy Hunt; Ernest Lucas, as 
Dick de Symthe, the new leader from 
the city “don’t-ye-know”; Wm. Com- 
merford, Toby, the cook with noth- 
ing to cook; Samuel Emerson, as 
Skinner, the fisherman; Victor Nel- 
son, as Beaner, the hunter; Leslie 
Wilkins, as Archer, the friend of de 
Smythe; Wm. Edwards, the famous 
(?) flute player; Donald Story, as 
Sanford: Fred Gardner, as Merton; 
Charles Gardner, as Stuffy, and Egna 
Swanson, as Daffy Dan, a wandering 
minstrel. 
The minstrel show followed. Gil- 
bert Crispin acted as interlocutor and 
Leighton Symonds was soloist. Those 
in the circle were Myron Story, Les- 
ter Dunbar, John Burke, Jr., Abbott 
Howe and Ernest Emerson, clowns; 
Paul Foster, as» Policeman mate 
Tracey Hoysradt, as Wampum Willy 
Henry Sampson, as_ Bridget Casey: 
Bobby Hoysradt, Walter Harvey and 
Ralph Lucas, as crows; Tracey Hoy- 
sradt, Jack Adams, Teddy Parsons 
and Fred Swanson, as Indians. 
Between the acts, Miss Ellen Dagte 
read the “Story of the Blynman club” 
in rhyme, while the music by Mr. 
Atherton, violin, and Miss Edna Sy- 
monds, piano, added much to the en- 
joyment of the evening. Candy was 
R. E. Henderson 
Mass. Telephone 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
*. 
My OE Salle lS Ng Some a 
tal 
Notary Public 
pr 
sold between acts by Edith Height, — 
Alice Swanson, Mildred Conmneeiaadl 
and Dorothy Wonson. 
JUDY O’GRADY’S PAGE : . 
(Continued from page ye " . 
surprisingly common one) and a 
friend or two who would be only too — 
glad of the opportunity to help her 
and at the same time, themselves. If 
her housetleaning takes six days tole 
do alone, it will take three workers | 
only two days and will have the add- 
ed adv antage of a comfortable place 
in which to eat and sleep while she 
is repaying the kindness. Co-opera- _ 
tion is becoming more and more ex- 
ploited in housekeeping and why not — 
in housecleaning ? In any event, the 
housecleaning system should have 
this one virtue, although all others — 
go by the board, something definite — 
which has been laid out for: the cays . 
work should have been accomp lished 
at the end of the working day, for r 
only so can a woman greet her. fam- 
ily and retire with a calcu steath 
fast mind. ‘Then, 3} : 
“The cares that infest the day 
Shall fold their tents like the 
And, as silently, steal away.” 
‘Yaxi—phone Manchester 
Leopard Moth_ 
2 4 % 
VV ng eH e aaee ~ er 
