NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
41 
P.S. LYCETT »& GROCER » MAGNOLIA 
ANNOUNCES that he is well equipped for the season of 1911 to supply his patrons at Magnolia 
and Manchester Cove with anything they desire in the line of Groceries and Kitchen Furnishings. 
carries a complete line of Staple and Fancy Groceries, and also the S. S. Pierce goods. 
He 
Strictly 
Fresh Eggs, Butter and Cheese, Mineral Waters, including Apollinaris, White Rock, Poland. 
Ginger Ales, etc. 
Gasolene, Motor Oil. 
MAGNOLIA AVENUE, Next to the Men’s Clubhouse, TELEPHONE 63-2 
MAGNOLIA. 
A. very commendable improvement 
to be made at Magnolia will be the 
macadamizing of the square. The 
work, we understand, will not be 
started until the last of May. Too 
bad it could not be started earlier in 
the month, before the season is on! 
“Hunt’s Home-made Sausages and 
Mince Meat” is getting to be popu- 
lar articles, much to the credit of our 
genial provision dealer “Fadie” Hunt. 
The articles, which are made in Cam- 
bridge, are having quite a sale, we 
are informed. More than three tons 
of the mince meat has been sold to 
the Harvard dining halls this past 
winter. It is of a very fine quality— 
nearer the kind that grandmother 
makes than any other. Dr. Wiley of 
the Food Inspection Bureau, Wash- 
ington, asks, “What is mince-meat?” 
Mr. Hunt is to forward him a sample 
of his in the near future. 
Frank R. Green, who has_ been 
identified with the Oceanside Hotel 
at steward, is now manager of the 
Forest Hills Hotel, Franconia, N. H. 
Mrs. Albert D. Dudley of Wor- 
cester has been a recent guest of Mrs. 
Joseph R. Crispin. 
Mrs. Helen Crispin 
spending a few days in 
Conn., on business. 
Augustus Macone has accepted a 
position with D. C. Ballou & Co., as 
mason. 
Arthur Cowan, the popular meat 
cutter at the Magnolia Market, who 
has been employed in Boston during 
the winter, has returned for the 
season. 
Abbott is 
Hartford, 
MAGNOLIA IMPROVEMENT? 
I have watched with interest the 
improvements which are in _ prog- 
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER 
Expert and satisfactory work executed for business houses, lawyers and _ individuals. 
Prompt and 
immediate attention given to all work. NO DELAY 
TYPEWRITER SUPPLIES FOR SALE 
LESSONS IN TYPEWRITING AND SHORTHAND 
AT REASONABLE PRICES 
MISS NELLIE M. LINNEKIN 
156 Main Street, over Cape Ann National Bank, 
Office Telephone 315-3. 
Cloucester, Mass. 
Residence Telephone 423 J 
ress along Lobster Lane and Shore 
Road, Magnolia, and there is no 
doubt with the beautiful approach to 
Lobster Lane, this will be one of the 
shore drives greatly admired by our 
summer residents. One of the fea- 
tures which will be especially admired 
is the lawn at the rear of the engine 
house, recently graded and kept in 
such beautiful condition by a flock 
of domesticated birds called the hen. 
This also adds greatly to the attrac- 
tiveness of the Beach from the fact 
that the high wire fence erected to 
keep the hens from scratching the 
lawn extends nearly across the public 
path leading from Fuller street to the 
beach, up and down which, our sum- 
mer ladies. and visitors have walked 
for many years. Now if there is 
room enough, and the crowd not too 
great, they can get a chance to peep 
through the meshes in this wire 
fence and look upon that beautiful 
lane provided by our city. You will 
often hear them quote this beautiful 
little verse: 
“Nobody has stolen our old blue hen, 
I wish they’d break her knee; 
She used to scratch but once a day— 
But now she scratches three.” 
I have also noticed that our board 
of health require a red card placed on 
houses where there is a case of 
Scarlet fever, or any very contagious 
disease, and I think this should be 
applied to our citizens’ houses where 
they are suffering from that terrible 
disease (hen fever), or that they be 
quarantined at the Magnolia Poultry 
farm until the fever is cured. 
The Magnolia Poultry farm is well 
located and will not trouble our sum- 
mer residents for some time to come, 
and I extend to the Magnolia Poultry 
farm corporation my best wishes for 
their success. 
A CITIZEN. 
B. F. Kertu’s THEATRE. 
Andrew Mack, the Irish singer, 
who has won wide popularity as a 
dramatic star, has been making one 
of the greatest successes of his career 
during the past few weeks on the 
B. F. Keith circuit, and he comes to 
Boston next week. Mack is not only 
a splendid singer with a wonderful 
voice, but he is a remarkably good 
story teller, and on his present tour 
he is winning new laurels in this di- 
rection. He will head an exception- 
ally strong bill, another feature of it 
which will attract attention will be the 
greatest of all fun makers, Jack 
Wilson, and his company in a new 
version of “An Upheaval in Dark- 
town.” Claude & Fanny Usher will 
be seen in their comedy sketch ‘“Fa- 
gin’s Decision,” introducing the fa- 
mous ‘‘Spareribs.” A novelty that is 
bound to attract a great deal of at- 
tention will be Rivoli, an Italian char- 
acter change artist who enacts an en- 
tire play by himself. 
