I 
MAGNOLIA 
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Foster of 
Winchester were in town over Pat- 
riots’ Day as guests of relatives. 
Mrs. Ralph Gardner and _ little 
daughter, Helen, spent the holiday 
in Boston visiting friends. 
Jesse Mullen of Malden was a 
guest of his sister, Mrs. John Mac- 
kay, over the week-end. . 
Carl and Henry Seaberg of Bos- 
ton, who spend the summer at Mag- 
nolia, were in town Monday. 
John Morrison of the Coolidge 
estate is again at Magnolia for the 
summer season. 
Mrs. Elizabeth Rees entertained 
Miss Marian Spane of Boston over 
the holiday. 
Miss Amy Lycett spent Saturday 
in Lynn as the guest of Miss Anstice 
Locke. 
Mrs. Rufus Stanley has had Miss 
Gertrude Aldrich of Boston as her 
guest for a week. 
Colby Staples was a guest of his 
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George -Sta- 
ples, Monday at their home on Mag- 
nolia Ave. 
Mrs. A. P. Story entertained Mrs. 
Walter Nelson of Gloucester at her 
home on Magnolia Ave. the latter 
part of last week. 
Miller Foster of Wakefield and 
Mrs. Frank Cutter of Lexington 
have been recent guests of Mr. and 
Mrs. Lafayette Hunt. 
Miss Olive Chane returned Sat- 
urday from a visit with her bro- 
ther and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. 
Daniel Chane of Manchester. 
Misses Martha Burke, Marian 
Story and Marjorie May made up 
a theatre party attending two per- 
formances in Boston Patriots’ Day. 
Mr. and Mrs. Philip 8. Lycett en- 
tertained Miss Viola Dean of Som- 
erville over the holiday and week- 
end. 
Leon Foster has been having his 
car overhauled and repainted and 
a truck body put on in readiness for 
the rush of the busy season. 
Irving Eaton has returned to 
Worcester Tech after spending a 
few days with his parents, Rev. and 
Mrs. Walter S. Eaton, at the. par- 
sonage. 
Mr. and Mrs. Selden Jacobs and 
a party of friends motored from 
Waltham Sunday to spend the day 
with Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. 
Brown, Magnolia Ave. 
Mr. and Mrs. John Abbott had as 
their guests over the week-end and 
holiday, their son-in-law and daugh- 
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Howe, 
and children of Boston. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
First Class Groceries and Kitchen 
Furnishings 
P. Su Ly cett side fiLida Telephone 63-2 
Avenue, Magnolia 
MAGNOLIA MARKET 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor, 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, VEGETABLES. AGENTS FOR 
DEERFOOT fARM CREAM AND BUTTER. ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
Telephone Connection. 
| 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. | 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent For The Gloucester Coal Co, 
Telephone 26-2 Magnolia. 
A number of Magnolia young peo- 
ple attended the dance at the new 
armory, Gloucester, Monday even- 
ing. Another party attended the 
minstrel show given by the Knights 
of Columbus at the City hall. The 
game between M. I. T. and Glou- 
eester High drew a number of Mag- 
nolia students in the afternoon. 
Talks on Sunny South. 
Rev. Walter S. Eaton, Ph.D., ad- 
dressed the Forum meeting at the 
Village chureh Sunday evening in 
place of Prof. MacWaters of Bos- 
ton University, who was unable to 
keep his engagement here. Dr. Ka- 
ton chose for his subject ‘‘Remin- 
iscences of the Sunny South,”’ a 
very practical and interesting talk 
based on his work in the negro 
schools there and on other exper- 
iences in Florida and Alabama. Dr. 
Eaton’s first school was near Jack- 
sonville, Florida, and it was here 
that he first gained insight into the 
character of the negro. The best 
known characteristic of the black 
man is a distaste for work, but as 
this is also true of the white man 
of the South, it may be laid more 
to the climate and atmosphere than - 
to the race. The negro is extremely 
sensitive, emotional and in many 
eases, keen of mind. 
The speaker gave an interesting 
——J. MAY——— 
Notary Public 
M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER BUILDER 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER sT. MAGNOLIA 
- and - 
incident in connection with a bril-- 
lant young student of Talladega 
college at Talladega, Alabama. Dr. 
Eaton delivered the baccalaureate 
sermon there upon this occasion 
and one of the graduates was a 
young negro of only about twenty 
years of age. He delivered an ora- 
tion, the most brilliant and most 
eloquent which Dr. Eaton had ever 
hear before or has heard sinee. A 
few years later Dr. Eaton attended 
a meeting at Tremont Temple, Bos- 
ton, and this same young negro 
spoke again from the same platform 
as Lyman Abbott and other noted 
men, and spoke so well that he was 
given more applause than any other 
speaker there. Again, after a long 
period, Dr. Eaton opened the Bos- 
ton Herald one morning and saw 
the picture of the same man who 
had won the highest honor that Yale 
offers to undergraduates. Grover 
Cleveland became interested in him 
and Theodore Roosevelt’s sister of- 
fered to send him abroad for fur- 
ther study but, refusing all offers 
