MAGNOLIA 
Miss Edna Symonds was at home 
over the week-end with her parents. 
Miss Symonds is employed with Miss 
Wilson, a Boylston street, Boston, 
modiste this winter. 
A great musical treat is in store 
for those who go to the Village 
church Sunday evening. Leon Mus- 
canto and his famous family of three 
daughters and two sons will furnish 
the entertainment. They play the 
violin, ’cello, flute, cornet, organ, etc. 
Mr. Muscanto was for many years a 
leader in musical circles in St. Peters- 
burg, Russia, and a conductor in the 
principal music houses there. For 
the last ten years of his stay in St. 
Petersburg, Mr. Muscanto gained 
fame as conductor of a military band 
of world-wide repute. The program 
given Sunday night will be, perhaps, 
the best of the whole winter’s series 
as Mr. Muscanto and his family are 
of the few really famous artists, whom 
we are privileged to hear. The mas- 
tery of two instruments by each of 
the several members of the family 
enables them to delight their au- 
diences with diversified selections. 
The sale given by the Ladies’ Aid 
society at the parsonage Wednesday 
afternoon netted $35.00, whch will be 
used for the needs of the church. 
Dr, Eaton ,the pastor of the Vil- 
lage church will give a report of the 
National council at Kansas City, Mo., 
at which he and Mrs. Eaton were 
delegates. 
The Village church appointed the 
pastor, Dr. Eaton, and George A. 
Upton, a prominent church member 
as delegates to the council’s installa- 
tion of the pastor-elect of the North 
Beverly Congregational church. 
Mayor Foster RE-ELECTED 
Mayor Harry C. Foster of Mag- 
nolia received the mayorship of Glou- 
cester for the second time in last 
Tuesday’s election. His re-election 
to a second term came after one of 
the most exciting campaigns which 
Gloucester has seen for some time. 
Mayor Foster defeated his nearest 
opponent, Percy W, Wheeler, by 231 
votes. The remainder of the candi- 
dates, Representative Henry A. Par- 
sons, Alderman George EK. Merchant 
and Edward H. Quigley were left be- 
hind in the race. The no-license ad- 
vocates, while not victorious in their 
fight for a dry town, gained much 
over the previous year. The vote for 
license was 2069 against 1813 “no” 
ballots. Ex-Mayor Isaac Patch was 
one of those elected to the _ school 
committe. Mrs. Ernest S. Curtis 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
First Class Groceries and Kitchen 
Furnishings 4q 
Avenue, Magnolia 
P. S. Lycett paegore Telephone 63-2 
Dealers in 
H. W. BUTLER’ & Som | 
LOAM, GRAVEL, WOOD AND COAL 
TEAMING AND JOBBING 
TELEPHONE CONNECTION 
MAGNOLIA, MASS. 
MAGNOLIA MARKET 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor, 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, 
DEERFOOT FARM CREAM AND BUTTER. ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
Telephone Connection, 
Telephone 26-2 Magnolia. 
was elected as the woman member of 
the board with Wm. H. Jordan as 
the third member, 
B. F. Kerru’s THEATRE 
Paul Armstrong, author of “Alas 
Jimmy Valentine,” ‘The Romance of 
the Underworld,” “The Deep Pur- 
ple,” “The Escape,” and many other 
powerful melodramas has again ven- 
tured into the vaudeville field as a’ 
playwright and producer, this time 
with a one-act satire entitled “Wo- 
man Proposes.” ‘This little comedy is 
based upon an idea brand new to the 
stage. The author, Paul Armstrong, 
thinks it is high time the truth were 
known about just how men who really 
have an idea of marrying, suddenly 
find themselves wedded and settled 
down. In fact, this play is a terrible 
expose, in that it explodes the an- 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. 
VEGETABLES. AGENTS FOR 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
M AY———— 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent For The Gloucester Coal Co, 
Notary Public 
M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER BUILDER | 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
- and - 
cient belief that man proposes mar- — 
riage. In this comedy, we find that 
woman does it, gently sometimes, fre- 
qently with great brutality, and al- 
ways with telling effect. Mr, Arm- — 
strong’s play calls for eight players, — 
headed by Ruth Allen, and is brimful — 
of laughs from start to finish. ‘The — 
Avon Comedy Four, just returned 
from Europe, will make their first 
Boston appearance in two years; and 
Trovato, the eccentric Philipino wiz-— 
ard of the violin, will offer a won- 
derful medley of popular and classi- 
cal airs on his instrument, 
