32 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER - and - BUILDER 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
MAGNOLIA 
Miss Ethel P. May has rented her 
‘Brown” bungalow to John Ruby for 
the season. 
A. R. Willard of Boston will occuay 
the Williams house off Magnolia 
ave. for the season. 
Miss E. C. McVickar of Provi- 
dence, R. I., has engaged through 
Jonathan May, agent, the Malonson 
house on Norman ave. 
The Shaw house on Norman ave., 
has been rented to Newcomb Carlto1, 
president of the Western Union Tele- 
graph Company, of N. Y. City. 
Mr. and Mrs. John Philip Koehler, 
who are occupying the “Gray” bunga- 
low on Western ave., are rejoicing 
over the birth of a boy on May 17. 
On Monday Mrs. D. C. Ballou, her 
three children and maid left for 
Skagway, Alaska, to join her husband, 
who is so well and favorably known 
in this vicinity. Last Friday night 
a party of Mrs. Ballou’s friends met 
at the Women’s clubhouse to say 
their “Goody-bye” to her. Edward 
Ballou has engaged a room at the 
Men’s clubhouse and will make his 
home there for the present. 
Rev. Dr. Walter S. Eaton will 
preach in the Village church next 
Sunday at 10.45 a. m. and at 7. 30 
p. tn. ‘The Recompense of Sactri- 
fice’ will be the subject of the morn- 
ing sermon. To this service the Mag- 
nolia veterans of the Civil War have 
been invited. In the evening the sub- 
ject will be, “A Hero of Modern 
Times.” Prof. Lyman F. Brackett 
will give an organ recital the first 
fifteen minutes of the evening ser- 
vice. 
Recently the writer heard one say, 
“Do you not love the trees? And 
does it not hurt you when you see 
them cut and mangled?” The bark 
on that beautiful maple tree on Mag: 
nolia ave. would not have been cut 
off by some careless or vicious per- 
son if he had loved the trees as does 
the writer’s friend. Who, in au- 
thority, will give this bleeding tree, 
that is a friend to us all, the attention 
and care that it now needs? Strange 
that anyone should ever, in the least 
degree, mar the beauty of this fa- 
mous and delightful village by tiie 
sea! 
SPRAYING, 
BURLAPPING, 
CEMENTING, BOLTING 
and INSECT WORK 
Telephone Connection. 
Telephone 426R Magnolia. 
W. who sonie 
Eaton, 
time since met with an accident, has 
practically recovered from his severe 
burns and is now visiting his parents 
at the parsonage, having arrived from 
the city hospital, North Adams, on 
Frederick 
Monday of this week. Mr. Eaton 
will return’ to Worcester, where he 
is employed as an electrical engineer 
by the Connecticut River ‘Transmiy- 
sion Company, early next week. 
The Men’s Club will open for the 
season Tuesday, May 30. There will 
be the usual dance in’ the evening 
from 8 o’clock to 11.30. Gentlemen’: 
tickets, twenty-five cents, ladies’, 
fifteen cents. Membership for the 
season will be one dollar as usual. 
The bowling allies, on which have, 
been installed “leatheroid” bed plates, 
will be opened for the season. Ladies 
welcome Wednesday and Saturdav 
evenings of each week. The restat- 
rant will open June.16. The club wi'l 
be in charge of Fred Dunbar until toe 
arrival of Rev. F. J. Libby about the 
first week in July. 
“They say,’ remarked the spinster 
boarder, “that the woman who. hesi- 
tates is lost.” 
“Tost is not the proper word for 
it,’ growled the fussy old bachelor at 
the pedal extremity of the table. 
She’s extinct.”—J/ndianapolis Star. 
Groceries and Kitchen Furnishings 
All S. 8. Pierce Co’s Goods sold at their Prices 
Legal Trading Stamps with all. Cash Sales of Groceries 
P. S. Lycett telephone 4637 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. 
J. MAY 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
AGENTS FOR 
ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
Notary Public 
Majestic THEATRE, Boston. 
“The. Birth: of: a Nation,’ thatule 
W. Griffith mighty spectacle, which 
was the forerunner of the elaborate 
feature photo-play productions which 
occupy such a conspicuous place on 
the “legitimate” stage today, starts on 
its 33rd week in Boston next Monday 
atternoon at the Majestic Theatre. 
It is given with all these picturesque 
and illuminating accessories which 
have always characterized its presen- 
tations in this city and every large 
city in America, and patrons still en- 
joy the advantage of that large sym- 
puony orchestra which furnishes «a 
adequate musical accompaniment so 
necessary to a perfect appreciatio1 
of the enthralling story which is told, 
although the prices are on a more 
popular scale than heretofore. 
The tnrilling and realistic scenes in 
“The Birth of a Nation” which dep‘ct 
the development and progress of the — 
United States of America as a na- 
tion, before the Civil War, during if, 
and immediately after it, during the 
reconstruction period furnish ideal 
subjects for dramatic presentation. 
Percy—I am tired of this life of 
ease. I want a life of toil, danger, 
excitement and adventure. Penelope 
—QOh, this is so sudden! But you 
may speak to my father—/rchange. 
R. E. HENDERSON 
oe Box 244. BEVERLY, MASS. 
Telephone, 
May 26, 1916. 
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