M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER - BUILDER 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
and - 
MAGNOLIA 
Susan Lycett is the bookkeeper at 
Hunt’s market. 
Leo Wolfe has a position with the 
Gloucester Ice Company. 
Rev. F. J. Libby of Exeter, N. H., 
was in town Wednesday to ioe aiter 
the Men’s clubhouse of which he is 
the manager. 
Mrs. John Dodge, who has beer 
very ill with pneumonia, is now out 
of danger and on the road to coni- 
plete recovery. 
Mr. and Mrs. John E. May are re- 
ceiving the congratulations of their 
friends upon the recent arrival at 
their home on Western avenue of a 
baby girl. 
The many friends of Jonathan May 
are glad to see him home again ates 
an absence of two weeks at Milford, 
N. H., where he went for much-need- 
ed rest and change. 
Eleanor S. Duckett of Oxford, O.., 
one of the professors in the Western 
college for Women, is one of the re- 
cent arrivals at the Women’s club- 
house. 
A number from here plan to at- 
tend the dance in Manchester Town 
hall, Thursday evening, July 11,~un- 
der the auspices of the “Preparedness 
club.” A banjo orchestra will furn- 
ish the music. 
Among the guests at the George 
Adams house are Mr. and Mrs. Bus- 
ley and son; E. O. Parker and Mrs. 
Parker, his mother; Albert R. Lewis, 
New York City; Fred K. Garcelon, 
and Miss L. M. Munger, Boston. 
Among the recent arrivals at the 
Magnolia Inn are the following: Mrs. 
E. A. Fletcher, Belmont, Mass. ; Mrs. 
G. W. Roope, Eugene and Clarence 
Howell, Maria C. Waldo, Gertrude 
C. Fisher, Gertrude E. Frothingham, 
Eleanor Jones, Boston; Mr. and Mr>. 
L. H. Brown, Worcester; Col. and 
Mrs. Edward Haskell and Miss Has- 
kell, Newton; Mrs. L. B. Kuppen- 
heimer, and Mrs. F. K. Friedman, 
Chicago; S. J. Patterson, New York 
City; Mrs. E. M. Crocker,, Cincin- 
nati, Ohio; Clara Widger and Bar- 
bara W idger, Swampscott; Mr. and 
Mrs. FE. Si Foster and son Edward, 
tnilip Boone and Joseph Adams, 
Winchester, Mass.; Dr- and Mrs. 
John C. Dodge, Detroit, Mich. 
SPRAYING, 
and INSECT WORK 
BURLAPPING, 
CEMENTING, BOLTING 
June 23, 1916. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
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 4637 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. 
i IVEASY: 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Telephone 426R Magnolia. 
A dance. will be held at the Men’s 
clubhouse Saturday night. 
Ruth Scott and Mary Boyd, who 
are seniors in the Western College 
for Women at Oxford, Ohio, arrived 
home Monday night, coming by the 
way of Washington, D. C., that they 
might visit its many places of inter- 
est. Magnolia is justly proud of 
some of her young people who are 
making good use of their opportun:- 
ties, and others should be inspired by 
their noble example. 
There will be no services in the Vii- 
lage church next Sunday morning. 
A union service will be held in the 
Union Chapel Sunday, at 10.45 a. m., 
and it will be conducted by the pastor 
of the Village church, Rev. Dr. Wal- 
ter S. Eaton. The usual evening ser- 
vice will be held.in the Village churcu 
at 7.30 o’clock, and ue subject of the 
pastor’s sermon will be, “What is a 
Christian Church?” Prof. Brackett’s 
organ recitals preceding the sermon 
are greatly enjoyed. 
A work-room to prepare surgical 
dressings has been opened at the 
Oceanside Annex and this work wall 
be carried on every week-day, except 
Saturday, from 9 a. m. to 2 p.m. All 
dressings when completed will be sent 
to the main Surgical Dressing Com- 
mittee in Boston for sterilization and 
shipment to the Allies. Fhis good 
Box 244. BEVERLY, 
Notary Public 
work is in charge of the following 
public-spirited women: Mrs. W. H. 
Coolidge, Mrs. E. M. Binney, Mrs. 
E. B. Richardson, Mrs. George i. 
Willett, Mrs. G. L. Hamilton, Mrs. th 
C: Converse, Mrs J. C. Ellsworth, 
Mrs. G. E. Carter, Miss E. Burrage. 
Mrs. George F. Willett, Coolidge 
Point, Magnolia, is the treasurer, All 
the women of Magnolia are invited {9 
join in this work. 
Early Monday morning Harold 
Dunbar was summoned to Gloucester 
to join Company G which left Wed- 
nesday for Framingham. It is not t9 
be wondered at that his parents are 
worried and anxious and so are other 
parents whose sans have responded 
to the President’s recent call for sol- 
diers in this crisis with Mexico. 
Would that there might be some way 
to settle this trouble without going to 
war, the outcome of which no one is 
wise enough to prophesy! Has the 
world gone war-mad? It would seem 
so. 
Don’t you find gardening 
did exercise? 
Yes, for the man I hire to do the 
digging. 
a splen- 
The trouble with the helping hands 
that are extended ‘ that there isn’t 
anything in them. 
Rees HENDERSON 
Telephone. 
