26 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER - and - BUILDER 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
MAGNOLIA 
Miss Anna Sampson is visiting her 
aunt at Hough’s Neck, South Shore. 
Mrs. William Simonds is ill at her 
home. Dr. Blaisdell is attending her. 
Mrs. Frederick Bickle, widow of 
Dr. Bickle, will be the matron at the 
Women’s club this season. The club 
will open for the summer on May 30. 
Frederick J. Libby will be the man- 
ager of the Men’s club during the 
coming summer. Frederick Dunbar 
will be his assistant. 
Cottages are renting better this sea- 
son than ever before and summer 
residents are coming to Magnolia, 
earlier in the season than in former 
years. 
Application for a club license has 
been made to the license commission- 
ers by the North Shore Grill club, 
Emile F. Coulon, president ; Nicholas 
D. Plakias, treasurer; Joseph P. Del- 
monte, secretary. Mr. Coulon is 
manager of the Hotel Westminste:, 
Back Bay, Boston. 
Next Sunday evening, May 14, the 
last of the lectures for the season will 
be held in the Village church at 7.30. 
o'clock. . Rev. Dr. L. L. Wirt of Wel- 
lesley Hills will lecture on “In the 
Wake of the War,” relating the ex- 
periences of a war correspondent at 
the time of the Lusitania disaster, ex- 
periences with the ambulance corps 
in France and descriptive scenes in 
the trenches. Dr. Wirt’s lecture will 
mark the close of an interesting series 
of lectures and entertainments which 
have been made possible through the 
kindness and generosity of a friend 
of the Village church. 
Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Walter S. 
Eaton were called to North Adams 
by the serious injury of their son, 
Frederick W. Eaton last Friday. Mr. 
Eaton, who is an electrical engineer, 
was at work with another young man 
at Station 5, just east of the Hoosac 
Tunnel of the Boston & Maine rail- 
road when the accident occured. No 
one is familiar with the details of 
what happened. The two young men 
were taken to a hospital in North 
Adams where Mr. Ryan, Mr. Eaton’s 
companion died. Mr. Eaton is suf- 
fering from painful skin burns re- 
ceived from the electric flare, but his 
condition is not dangerous. 
SPRAYING, 
and INSECT WORK 
BURLAPPING, 
CEMENTING, BOLTING 
Telephone Connection. 
Telephone 426R Magnolia. 
The Rev. Dr. Walter S. Eaton will 
preach at the Village church at 10.45 
o’clock Sunday morning. 
The Men’s club which has been 
opened evenings during the winter 
for the benefit of the Magnolia peo- 
ple is now closed. Charles Hunt, 
who has been in charge, receives the 
thanks of all for the satisfactory 
manner in which he has cared for 
the club and visitors. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Estimates for needed repairs to the 
West Beach pier have been asked for 
by the directors of the West Beach 
corporation. The structure is so much 
in need of attention that longer delay 
in repairing it might endanger its 
safety. 
Grorcr E. Core. 
George FE. Cole, a former Alder- 
man and a life-long resident of Cen- 
terville, died at his home, 139 Stand- 
ley st., last Friday afternoon, aged 
72 years. Mr. Cole was a shoemaker 
by trade, but retired several years 
ago. He served in Co. FE, 8th Mass. 
Volunteers, and also in the 2d Infan- 
try, unattached, in the Civil War. He 
was a member of Post 89, G. A. R., 
and of Bass River Lodge, I. O. O. ¥. 
In the year 1900 he served in the 
we Box 244. BEVERLY, 
Groceries and Kitchen Furnishings 
All S. S. Pierce Co’s Goods sold at their Prices 
Legal Trading Stamps with all Cash Sales of Groceries 
P.S. Lycett telephone 37 Magnolia, Mass. 
MAGNOLIA MARKET 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor, 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, VEGETABLES. 
DEERFOOT FARM CREAM AND BUTTER. 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. 
ees Vee 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Riek. HENDERSON 
AGENTS FOR 
ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
Notary Public 
Board of Aldermen from Ward “. 
He leaves 9 children. Funeral ser- 
vices were held on Sunday afternoon. 
JoHN Lyncu. 
John Lynch, a well known young 
man, died in Boston on Saturday of 
last week. He had been in ill health 
for some time. He was a painter by 
trade and had worked for Beverly 
Farms painting contractors for a 
number of years. He married Miss 
Katherine McDonnell, a Beverly 
Farms young lady, about two years 
ago. His wife and one child survive 
him. Burial was in Boston. 
JosEPH MADDALENA, 
Joseph Maddalena, son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Daniel Maddalena, aged 30, 
died in Boston, Wednesday morning, 
after an illness of about 15 months. 
He was a brother of Charles Madda- 
lena of Beverly Farms and had spent 
several summers here.” Besides his 
parents, a sister and two brothers, he 
leaves a wife, who was Miss Helene 
Richie. Funeral services were held 
this morning in Boston at the Cathe- 
dral. 
The Commander: “Well, if. that 
imbecile Gadgett hasn’t pressed my 
trousers ‘thwartships’ instead of fore 
’n’ aft!”’—London Opinion. 
Telephone, 
May 12, 1916. 
