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wd IRORTIRINTITI RAN MRMAE 
Paul Phenix left Tuesday for Con- 
ecticut where he is attending a pri- 
vate school for a two years’ course 
oreparing to enter Yale. 
Robert Boyd and son Willard 
rere among the number who attend- 
ec the Rochester Fair on Thursday: 
Mrs. Frank Webber of Gloucester 
was the guest of Miss Maud Butler 
on m Thursday. 
isses Amy and Helen Lycett are 
2m oying their annual vacations 
meth relatives in Lynn. 
Bt : Bonerly Harms :: E 
- Among those from the Farms who 
have attended the Rochester Fair 
this week have been, Mr. and Mrs. 
George F. Wood, Mr. and Mrs. H. 
Irving Dyer, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. E. 
Elliott. 
~ Miss Pearl Whitcomb of Newton, 
who has been a popular Farms 
school teacher, was in town this 
week visiting the school and renew- 
ing acquaintances. 
_ The Breeze joins with the hosts of 
friends of Herman A. MacDonald, 
the Farms young man, is extending 
hearty congratulations in his success 
of Wednesday evening in securing 
the Republican nomination for Rep- 
resentative. Mr. MacDonald carried 
his own ward, being high man. In 
the other wards of the city he was 
second. Mr. Saltonstall, was high 
man in all the wards excepting 
Ward 6. 
Miss Carrie Davis will resume her 
_ position at the Farms Postoffice next 
Monday morning. Miss Davis has 
been a sufferer for several weeks 
_ due to being run into by an automo- 
bile. She is now nearly recovered 
_ from her injuries. 
_ Letters. remaining unclaimed at 
the Beverly Farms postoffice week 
; ending Sept. 28: Mrs. C. C: Allen, 
Mrs. A. Anderson, Mrs. Wm. M. 
_ Baugh, Mrs. Newell Bent, Miss Grace 
Connolly, Miss Florence Connolly, 
W. Holman Cary, Miss Julia Clancey, 
Mr. A. M. Gulbertson, Mr. Walter 
Jackson, Mr. E. M. Perham, Miss 8. 
eA Patterson, Arthur Rhodes, Miss I. 
Reed, Dr. and: Mrs. B. F: Sturgis, jr., 
Mrs. W. Shaw, Mrs. Hope Slater, G. 
5 -F. Troutt, Miss. Mary Wilder. 
* - William R. Brooks, P. M. 
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ARAVA MARAT TAT NE 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
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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. 
HL. HANNAFORD 
Postoffice Elock ~ 
- Magnolia, Mass. 
2 REAL ESTATE.. 
Property Cared for 
Summer Estates for Rent 
AGENT for GLOUCESTER COAL CO. 
Telephone 74 Magnolia. 
MAGNOLIA - - 
THE GREAT MECHANICS FAIR. 
This Vast Exposition Promises to 
Surpass All Others Ever Held 
In New England. 
The vast Mechanies Building on 
Huntington Avenue, Boston, with 
every inch of its many hall nd im- 
mense basement actually bulging 
and throbbing with several hundred 
practical, working exhibits is all 
ready to receive its thousands of 
visitors. The doors will be thrown 
open at 10 o’clock Monday morning 
next, the 3d instant, and daily until 
and including Saturday the 29th 
instant, from 10 o’clock A. M. to 10 
o’clock P. M., excepting Sundays. 
This great- Mechanics Fair will be 
a huge hive of industry, a veritable 
city within a city with its various 
phases of commercial activity, 
its entertainments, its complete or- 
ganization and its multiplicity of 
fascinating. sights and sounds, Upon 
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 Eh 8 efoto 172 Exoaanes i, 
Connected: by Telephone 
MASS. 
Vamabeage 
every side will be found actual and 
complete. demonstrations of the 
making of things—just what a 
person wants to know about, and of 
genuine, extraordinary value to all 
classes of people. The various latest 
inventions of Thomas A. Edison will 
be magnificently displayed and the 
making of a shoe will be shown in 
every detail employing sixty ma- 
ehines and their crews of skilled 
workmen. There will be a model 
printing plant illustrating the get- 
ting out of a daily newspaper. 
The Art Loan exhibit of paintings 
and sculpture is valued at $1,000, 
000 and will be the greatest ever 
seen at any public exhibition in New 
England. The room of models will 
show airships and warships of var- 
lous types, miniature copies of 
buildings, ete. The whole of the 
basement will be occupied by an 
automobile exhibit with first show- 
ing of 1911 models, 
