14 
MAGNOLIA 
Miss Molly Brown, who returned 
home Saturday from a visit with rel- 
atives in Nova Scotia, is ill witn 
grippe, 
Miss Gertrude Smith of Boston 
has returned home after a short visit 
with Mr. and Mrs. Dennis C. Bal- 
lou. 
Miss Viola Dean of Somerville 
was a guest of Mrs. P. 8. Lycett, 
Magnolia avenue, over the week-end. 
A number of Radcliffe girls spent 
the week-end at Magnolia Inn and 
proved themselves devotees of the 
out-of-door life by their long walks 
in all kinds of weather, 
Rufus Stanley is confined to his 
home on Magnolia evenue by a sev- 
ere attack of the grippe. 
Mr. and Mrs. Bertram Forbes 
(nee Miss Rouie Brown) of Glou- 
cester, were in town Monday visit- 
ing Miss Brown’s mother, Mrs. Mar- 
ia Brown. 
Miss Alice Jones of Gloucester has 
been a recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. 
Harry Foster. 
Mr. Rowe, who for over thirty 
years has kept a livery stable here 
and has conducted a carriage route 
to the station, observed his eighty- 
third birthday at his home Sunday. 
He entertained old frends from 
Gloucester, Somerville and Boston in 
honor of the event. Mr. Rowe is 
a wonderfully active man and still 
drives his carriages to the station 
every day, no matter what the 
weather is. He attributes his con- 
tinued strength and activity to his 
out-of-door life and to the fact that 
he has never used tobacco or alco- 
hol. 
Mrs. John MacKay, who has been 
at the Carney hospital, Boston, for 
treatment for some weeks, returned 
home Monday. 
Mrs. Carol Webber of Gloucester 
has been in town this week as the 
guest of her mother, Mrs. Henry W. 
3utler of Magnolia avenue, 
Misses Helen and Harriet Stan- 
ley have closed their cottage on Sum- 
mer street at what is known as Stan- 
ley’s corner for the winter, They 
are making a long visit with a cousin 
in Wellesley Fells and will not re- 
turn until the late Spring when they 
open the cottage. 
The marriage of Miss Clara Les- 
lie Butler, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. 
Henry Butler, to John Henry Rob- 
inson of Beverly will be observed 
at the home of the prospective 
bride’s parents on Magnolia avenue 
tomorrow evening. <A large recep- 
tion will follow the ceremony, after 
home here. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor, 
First Class Groceries and Kitchen 
Furnishings 
P. S. Ly cett ype Telephone 63-2 
Avenue, Magnolia 
MAGNOLIA MARKET | 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, VEGETABLES. AGENTS FOR 
DEERFOOT FARM CREAM AND BUTTER. ORDERS TAKEN 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
Telephone Connection. 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. 
AND. DE- 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
J. 
M AY——— 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent For The Gloucester Coal Co, 
Notary Public 
Telephone 26-2 Magnolia. 
which the bride and groom will leave 
for a brief wedding trip. They will 
make their home at Beverly, near 
Mr. Robinson’s parents. Miss But- 
ler is very popular among Magnolia 
people and has always made her 
She has been employed 
as a bookkeeper by the firm of Mor- 
ley, Flatley & Co. of Manchester for 
some time. Mr, Robinson is also in 
the employ of the same firm as a 
stone mason. 
Mr. and Mrs, Lafayette Hunt and 
son, William Hunt, and Miss Eliza- 
beth Brown are among the Magnolia 
people who are planning to attend 
the Military Levee at Gloucester 
this evening. 
Misses Ruth Scott and Mary 
Boyd, who have been spending the 
Christmas holidays with Miss Boyd’s 
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Boyd, 
of Summer street, returned to Ox- 
ford, Ohio, Tuesday. They are at- 
tending the Western College there. 
Quite a little disturbance was 
caused in Magnolia Wednesday after- 
noon. Passers-by the Sunset House, 
one of the summer hotels here which 
is closed for the winter, were alarm- 
ed to hear howls of a dog issuing 
from. the cellar. A number of by- 
standers gathered about the place 
and finally one young man gained 
entrance to the place through the 
M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER BUILDER 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
- and - 
cellar window and found a dog in 
an old cistern. The dog, if one may 
judge from his frame of mind, had 
not enjoyed his involuntary confine- 
ment and gave his rescuer a most 
unkind welcome, but he finally crawl- 
ed out of the window and _ trotted 
off toward home looking wholly un- 
aware of the disturbance he had 
caused. 
“A SUMMER IN NoRWAY.” 
“A Summer in Norway” was the 
subject chosen by the speaker at the 
People’s Forum last Sunday  even- 
ing, Mrs. Arthur K. Peck of Brook- 
line spoke on her own personal ex- 
periences there and of the life of 
the native people as she observed it. 
Her vivid descriptions of the peas- 
ant life were very interesting. The 
stereopticon views which accompan- 
ied the lecture were the finest of 
their kind and added greatly to the 
address. Many showed the Nor- 
wegian farming methods including 
the peculiar manner of haying, the 
