48 -NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
June 2, 1916, 
nT, | 
M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER - BUILDER 
and - 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. 
MAGNOLIA 
MAGNOLIA 
Miss Catherine McAulay of Attle- 
boro, spent the week-end with friends 
in this place. 
Mollie Brown of Boston is  visit- 
ing her sister, Mrs. Frederick Dun- 
bar, on Magnolia ave. 
Last Friday Jonathan May left for 
Milford, N. H., where he is resting 
after a very busy season. 
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Bill have 
arrived from Hartford, Conn., and 
are now located in the Dickinsoi 
Cottage off the Shore road. 
H. H. Newton of Revere has re- 
turned to Magnolia for the summer. 
Mr. Newton is employed at the North 
Shore Swimming Pool. 
Miss Alice G. Divver of Dorches- 
ter has engaged for the season the 
Norman Cottage on Norman ave., 
where she will conduct a tea house 
and gift shop. 
H. H. Halladay of New York City 
is located for the season at the Mal- 
lard House. Mr. Halladay is one 
of the managers of the Ovington 
Brothers’ branch store on Lexington 
ave. 
Tuesday afternoon an_ exciting 
baseball game was played near the 
village church between the single aid 
married men. The single men won 
by a score of 20 to 25, The umpire 
was Charles Hunt. 
Rev. Dr. Walter S$. Eaton will 
preach in the village church next Sun- 
day ‘ati.1I045 a.m: atid i%g0..p.cm- 
Morning subject: “The Model 
Preacher ;” Evening subject: “What 
is tit to; he a~Christian?%) sProf:7by- 
man F. Brackett will begin his usual 
Sunday evening organ recital prompt- 
ly at 7.30 o'clock. 
Hon. Harry C. Foster, having 
passed the civil service examinations 
in Washington, D. C., last week, left 
this Monday for Seward, Alaska, to 
take full charge of the construction 
of the first forty miles of the new 
government railroad that is to ex- 
tend from Seward to Fairbanks, a 
distance of a thousand miles. Mr. 
Foster will have 2500 men under him. 
That Mr. Foster should have been 
chosen for this important position is 
most gratifying to his many friends 
in these parts, who wish him great 
success in this new enterprise. 
SPRAYING AND 
INSECT WORK 
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. 
AGENTS FOR 
ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
Telephone Connection. 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. 
Telephone 426R Magnolia. 
J. IMAY 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Notary Public 
Marion Symonds of Boston spett 
the week-end with her mother Mrs. 
Elizabeth Symonds on Western ave. 
Albert Clay and family of Brook- 
line have moved into the house re- 
cently occupied by D. C. Ballou oa 
Magnolia ave. 
George Ballou” recently arrived 
here from Skagway, Alaska, where 
he has spent most of the win- 
ter, which he reports as having been 
son are not only bright with the 
Oceanside and Aborn hotels, but also 
with the smaller boarding houses,— 
The Mallard house, the Sunset and 
the Magnolia Inn. All the rooms at 
the Mallard house are engaged and 
the following persons have arrive] ° 
at the Magnolia Inn for the season: 
Mrs. Douglass Fisk and Miss Lois 
Fisk of Minneapolis; Miss Thelma 
L. Wertz of Pinehurst, North Caro- 
lina; the Misses Margaret and Helen 
Decker and Miss Cora Stevenson of 
Minneapolis ; Miss Phoebe Lee of 
Kingston, Pa.; ,Mrs. Guy Met- 
calf and daughter of Providence, R. 
I.; Mrs. C. F. Fox and Miss Mar- 
garet C. Fox of Oganez, Pa.; Mrs. 
William.J. Peck of Ardmore, Paz; 
Mrs. Alfred S. Rossin of New York 
City; Miss Eleanor Chandler and 
Miss EK. H. Fitlow of Bryn, Mawr, 
R.E. Henderson 
that will represent your 
business, promptly and 
accurately done at the 
Breeze Office 
Manchester, Mass. 
Pa.; and Robert W. Morse, Boston. 
BEVERLY, - NAS. 
ephone 
