42 NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
ee 
PENS I 
DEALERS IN 
LOAM, GRAVEL, WOOD AND COAL 
TEAMING AND JOBBING TELEPHONE CONNECTION 
MAGNOLIA, MASS. 
eee sn Se 
a a OB SN TE TE OSE SEIT I ED, 
John T. Commerford fl ’ 
Carpenter and Builder is : 
Jobbing Promptiy Attended to 
MAGNOLIA - - MASS 
A. M. LYCETT & SON 
PHARMAGISTS——— 
Magnolia ~ Mass. 
es KEHOE BROS. 
Prescription department al- 
ways under supervision of a Carpenters z and = Builders 
Registered Pharmacist. _ Only 
purest Drugs Used. 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to j 
Summer St MAGNOLIA | 
‘MINERAL WATERS 
By the dozen or case 
See ; i Gorham Davis, Prop. Frank H. Davis, Mor 
Quality, Premere and GORHAM DAVIS, 
Fuller Green Livery and Boarding Stables, 
CHOCOLATES Gloucester and Magnolia 
= First-class Stable for Boarders All the latest stvies ol 
CIGARS Cerriages, with safe horses and careful ives; furnishes 
3 promPtly. Auto Garase, Electric Carriages re-charced 
...lmported and Domestic... 
Also Cigarettes 
Tele; hone ; 
‘TOILET .ARTICLES — Magnolia Wagonette Line- 
Try Our A. J. ROWE, Prop. 
ICE CREAM SODAS Carriaves to Let by day, week or season 
and COLLEGE ICES Auto Garage Connection 
- Norman Avenue, : Maenolia 
Real Estat ‘ 
Jonathan May 7° sen | 
Magnolia Real Estate a Specialty 
Fire Insurance on Buildings, Automobiles, and Personal Property. | 
Also Baggage Insurance against loss by any cause while traveling in & 
‘the United States or Canada, or in any part of the World. Care of # 
Estates a Specialty. 
Notary Public Justice of the Peace 
ae he 
CARPENTERING All Jobbing Promptly ‘Attended to PAINTING { 
HARDWARE, LUMBER, GLASS 
eR Ne 
OFFICE AND SHOP. SHORE ROAD (LOBSTER LANE) MAGNOLIA, MASS. f 
Telephone 26-2 Business Established 1874 
i debeh hat keke heel slat na 
3 : € 
$ x Maguolia X 
2 € 
a 
AMALIA RAL LALA AAS 
Mlle. Rosa Chollet of Washington, 
D. C., is visiting her aunt, Mrs. H2th 
Hannaford. 
Mrs. Jean M. Perreard of Wash- 
ington, D. C., is visiting Mr. and 
Mrs. H. L. Hannaford. 
A grand ball will be held in the 
Men’s club-house next Wednesday 
evening, August 31, the proceeds to 
eo to a fund for the proposed new 
Catholic church. Get every one in- 
terested in this project, and make 
him feel that he has been one of the 
first to lay the foundation for last- 
ing memorial for future generations. 
The social part will consist of 
dances for old and young, the fa- 
yorite Virginia Reel not being for- _ 
gotten. Chane’s orchestra will furn- 
ish music and an up-to-date program 
will be carried out. 
The subject next Sunday morn- 
ing at the Village church will be 
from the fourteenth chapter of John: 
“The Eternal Life in God.’’ The 
subject Sunday evening will be 
‘‘The Temperate Life.”’ 
George B. Stevens, organist at 
Trinity Congregational church in 
Gloucester will exchange with Prof. 
Krumpeln next Sunday evening at 
the Village church. His program for 
the opening half-hour will be: ‘‘Twi- 
light’? from Symphony; ‘‘In_ the 
Woods,”’ Raff; ‘‘In Paradisum,’’ Du- 
bois; ‘‘Pastorale,’’ from First Sona- 
ta, Guilmant; ‘‘Invocation,’’? Guil- 
mant. 
Professor Krumpeln will give the 
last free recital of the season in the 
Village church, Thursday evening, 
Sept. 1, at 8.30 o’clock. The pro- 
gram will be as follows: ‘‘Overture 
to William Tell,’’ in four movements 
(1. Solitude of Alps; 2. The Storm on 
Lake Lucerne; 3. The Alpine Shep- 
herd; 4. The Victory Over the Aus- 
trians); ‘‘Intermezzo,’’ Hollins; 
‘‘Sault d’Amour,’’ Elgar; ‘‘Festive 
March,’’ Henry Smart; ‘‘Pastorale,’’ 
Louis Bon Lebel; ‘‘Barecorale,”’ 
Sterndale Bennett; ‘‘Sweet Dreams 
of You’’ (new), Isadore Greenberg; 
‘¢ Adieu,’’ Schubert; Grand Military 
Parade, ‘‘The Massachusetts Coast 
Artillery,’? Krumpeln. All are cor- 
dially invited. 
The second illustrated lecture on 
the Pilgrim’s Progress will be given 
this evening in the Village church. 
All are invited. 
Mrs. Fred Dunbar is gaining 
steadily and will leave the hospital 
next Sunday. 
arte 
a 
