eh ec 
8s: Beverly Harms :: 
an ee ahaa: 
Mrs. Allen, mother of station 
agent Wm. L. Allen, on Wednesday 
ned to her home at North Ber- 
wick, Maine, after a pleasant stay 
here ‘of several weeks. 
George Hopkins, who has been 
one of F. P. Gaudreau’s barbers 
ince last spring, has on account of 
the » closing of the busy season, con- 
eluded his duties here and has gone 
to a new position at Keene, N. H. 
_ Mrs. Wm. R. Brooks is accompan- 
ing her mother, Mrs. D. W. Preston 
ol a latter’s visit to Atlantic City, 
N. : 
_ The employees at the local rail- 
1 oad stations are earning their wages 
these days for the trucks are daily 
pi led high with baggage outward 
bound. 
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_ Baptist Church, Beverly Farms. 
The pastor will be away on his va- 
cation the next four Sundays. Rev. 
E . Grattan Dockrell will preach 
next Sunday, Sept. 25. Rally Sun- 
day of the Bible School. Mrs. Henry 
W. Peabody wil! address the school 
on ‘the pageant at Anessa 
B. F. Keith’s Theatre. 
Through arrangements entered 
into Monday between B. F. Keith 
and Claude Grahame-White, the av- 
jator, Bostonians will next Saturday 
at the Harvard Aviation Field, have 
an opportunity to see a demonstra- 
tion of aerial navigation under con- 
ditions different from any which 
have obtained since this form of 
§ peor became popular all over the 
world. In fact, it is the idea of both 
Mr. Keith and Mr. Grahame-White, 
to give a popular demonstration for 
the thousands who were unable to 
‘see the flights on the Aviation field 
last week at close range. On that 
oceasion Mr. Grahame-White was a 
competitor in numerous events and 
‘was unable to do many things with 
his airships that he would have 
liked to have done. He now pro- 
poses to give, on what he considers 
the best aviation field in the world, 
a demonstration of the possibilities 
of aerial flights that will prove real- 
ly sensational, most of the work be- 
ing done on the field itself. While 
he will make some high flights and 
‘perform such feats as stopping his 
motor at a height of about 1,000 
feet above the field and gliding 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MAGE +E. 
29 
McCARTHY 
HAIR DRESSING AND SHAMPOOING, MARCEL WAVING, 
MANICURING, HUMAN HAIR GOODS. 
ELECTRIC, SCALP AND FACIAL TREATMENTS. 
119 Main St., opp. Waiting Station 
GLOUCESTER 
Appointments by Tel. 217-4. 
J. C. SHEPHERD MEAT & GROCERY CO. 
141 AND 143 MAIN STREET, GLOUCESTER. 
Beef, 
Pork, Mutton, Ham, Poultry and Fine Groceries. 
Fruit and Vegetables. Flour, Tea and Coffee a specialty 
We roast our own coffees daily. 
a bras bop HANN AFORD 
Postoffice Block * 
REAL ESTATE 7 
Summer Estates for Rent 
AGENT for GLOUCESTER COAL CO. 
Telephone 74 Magnolia. 
Property Cared for 
: Magnolia, Mass. 
MAGNOLIA : : 
down, within full view of the people, 
a great part of the work will be 
done directly within the enclosure. 
The exhibition will begin about two 
o'clock in the afternoon and be con- 
tinued until five or six, and in that 
time Mr Grahame-White with both 
his biplane, and the famous Bleriot 
monoplane, will perform ail the feats 
possible in aerial navigation. 
Great Mechanics Fair. 
It has been well said that a person 
who is lax in his gaiters is very apt 
to be lax in his gait. Never before 
has the matter of neatness and com- 
fort in footwear reached such per- 
fection. This is largely due to the 
great general advance in human in- 
telligence and artistic taste, not as 
much as material progress, for, be- 
cause of the use of machinery, the 
finest grades of shoes have been 
placed within the reach of lean pur- 
ses. The greater part of this move- 
MAGNOLIA MARKET 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, VEGETABLES, &c. 
Agent for Deerfoot Farm Cream and Butter 
Orders taken and delivered promptly 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 eae St., 
Connected by Telephone 
MASS. 
Cambridge 
ment toward perfection has been 
made the past ten years, a decade 
which has witnesed the practical ex- 
tinction of the ‘‘ecobbler’’ with his 
lapstone, awl and waxed ends and 
also that of the small shops by the 
country roadsides with their crude, 
clumsy foot or hand power machines 
and the establishment in their place 
of the modern, clean, well-lighted, 
highly organized factory employing 
thousands of skilled workmen and 
machinery of marvelous speed and 
accuracy. A shoe-making plant of 
the very latest type will be one of 
the big features of the great Mechan- 
ics Fair to be held in Mechanics 
Building, Boston, from ten o’clock ' 
in the morning until ten o’clock 
at night, from Oct. 3 to Oct. 
29. Over 3,000 square feet of floor 
space will be devoted to this single 
exhibit. Sixty machines, with the 
necessary crews, will be busily en- 
gaged all the time. 
