NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
- Ginger Ales, etc. 
45 
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. 
“a Fresh Eggs, Butter and Cheese, 
Gasolene, Motor Oil. 
He 
Strietly 
Mineral Waters, including Apollinaris, White Rock, Poland. 
SUNDAY CLOSING AT 
: MAGNOLIA POSTOFFICE. 
General Delivery and Lobby Will 
Be Open Sunday, June 18th— 
Notification Must Be Made 
for Carrier Mail. 
Commencing Sunday, June 18th, 
the Magnolia station postoffice will 
be open from 11.30 to 12.30 o’clock. 
The general delivery window will 
be opened to accommodate the trav- 
eling public (such as are not served 
by carrier during the week) and the 
lobby will be opened to permit box- 
holders to receive their mail through 
the boxes. 
pects urgent mail to arrive on Sun- 
day, he may receive such mail 
through the general delivery wim 
dow provided that he notifies the 
rk in charge in writing on the 
: previous Saturday before 8 p.m. 
Notification of his intention to eall 
on Sunday will be absolutely neces- 
_ Sary in order that the mail may be 
Separated before the hour for open- 
| ing the general delivery window. 
_A patron may also rent a post- 
office box and receive his 
therein on Sunday, even though his 
: mail during the six working days 
May be delivered by carrier. 
| The closing of the carriers’ de- 
livery window on Sunday will en- 
| able every carrier in the Glouces- 
ter postal district and many clerks 
to have Sunday as a day of rest, 
with the exception of those who are 
engaged in collecting the mail from 
| street letter boxes. 
__ The special delivery service will 
be maintained as at present, and col- 
lections will be made in the after- 
noon on Sunday from street letter 
boxes. Clerks and carriers who 
may be required to work on Sunday 
If any business man ex-’ 
mail - 
will be given compensatory time off 
during the following week, equal to 
the number of hours they work on 
Sunday. . 
Hotel Mail will be delivered as 
usual. 
Charles D. Brown, postmaster ; 
Fred 8. Lyecett, clerk in charge. 
Magnolia Station Post Office. 
Gloucester, Mass.— On and after 
June 15th: 
Mails Arrive Mails Close 
8.00 A.M. 6.40 A. M. 
11.15 A.M. 9.40 A. M. 
4.00 P. M. 12.45 P.M. 
7.00 P.M. 5.30 P.M. 
8.00 P. M. 
. Registered mail closes 6.40 .a. m., 
9.40 a.m., 12.45 p.m. Office opens 
6.30 a.m.; closes 8.00 p.m. 
Sunday — General delivery win- 
dow and lobby opens 11.30 to 12.30. 
Out-going mail cleses 5.30 p.m. 
Fred S. Lycett, Clerk in Charge. 
B. F. Keith’s Theatre. 
Still another sensational novelty 
is announced for B. F. Keith’s the- 
atre, following ‘‘Consul.’’ This 
time it is nothing short of a most 
remarkable kangaroo, who puts on 
the gloves and engages in a boxing. 
contest with two sparring experts. 
The Boxing Kangaroo furnishes one 
of.the most novel entertainments 
seen on the stage in many a day, and 
it is of a character that will appeal 
to all classes, especially the young 
folks. On the same bill will be an- 
other star attraction, Eddie Laon- 
ard, the famous minstrel man, prob- 
ably the most imitated entertainer 
on the stage. -His famous ‘‘Boolah’’ 
song has become a elassic, and on 
this occasion he will present a num- 
ber of new songs that are especially 
a MAGNOLIA AVENUE, Next to the Men’s Clubhouse, TELEPHONE 63-2 
written for him. Still another big 
attraction will be Mae Melville and 
Robert Higgins, ‘‘the thin feller who 
can’t stoop,’’ and Miss Melville is 
one of the funniest character come- 
diennes now before the _ public. 
Other features will be Linton & 
Lawrence, in a musical comedy 
called ‘“The Piano Shop’’; Arthur 
- Whitelaw, the monologuist; Martin- 
netti & Sylvester, knockabout come- 
dians; the Misses Marian Merrill 
and Louise Hilton in their operatic 
production, ‘“‘The Maid of Cinni- 
bar’’; the Bert DeVoie Trio of wire 
walkers; and others yet to be an- 
nounced. 
MAGNOLIA. 
Mrs. George Doucette and _ in- 
fant daughter of Beverly, were the 
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jabeth Dun- 
bar on Sunday. 
On Wednesday afternoon a spir- 
ited horse driven -by one of the firm 
of Sandberg and Donert of Man- 
chester, and left standing near the 
Magnolia Station with only a very 
small child on the seat, became 
frightened at the 5.22 train pulling 
into the station and ran away de- 
molishing the carriage and giving 
the child a bad scare and_ severe 
shaking up. Fortunately, the child 
was thrown out of the carriage be- 
fore. the horse reached the woods 
into which he plunged—over-turn- 
ing the earriage and becoming en- 
tangled in the brush. Luckily a 
number of men were at hand and 
the animal was caught before any 
further damage was done. 
There is only one way to be 
happy and that is to make somebody 
else so, —Sidney Smith. 
