16 
MAGNOLIA 
Rev. Dr. Walter S. Eaton will 
preach a Christmas sermon at the 
Sunday morning service at the Vil- 
lage church, service beginning at 
10.45. In the evening Edward H. 
Frye of Boston will read Edward 
Everett Hale’s best known work, 
“The Man Without A Country.” 
Mr. Frye is a very fine reader and 
every one always enjoys hearing him, 
and the story which he has chosen 
needs no comment. The service will 
begin at half-past seven o’clock Sun- 
day night and will continue to begin 
at this hour through the course of 
concerts. The Colonial String Quartet 
of Boston, which played at the 
church last Sunday evening, furnish- 
ed, many thought, the finest musical 
program ever given at the Village 
church. The new piano was found 
to be all that has been hoped for it. 
Miss Lillian Dennett of Gloucester, 
spent Sunday in town with Miss 
Martha Burke. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dunbar and 
son are to close their cottage here 
this winter and to live at West Glou- 
cester where Mr. Dunbar is em- 
ployed. 
Bertram Forbes of East Glouces- 
ter was a guest of Mr. and Mrs. 
Frederick Dunbar, Saturday. 
Miss Ella Harding of New York 
was in town over the week-end at 
the home of Mr. and Mrs. John J. 
Burke on Western ave. Miss Hard- 
ing has a summer shop here. 
Miss Susan Lycett and Miss Mar- 
tha Burke attended the Toy Party, 
which the school teachers of Glou- 
cester gave Monday evening at the 
High School. 
A pretty party was given at the 
home of Mrs. Theresa Knowles, 
Magnolia ave., Tuesday evening, for 
Miss Marion Scott’s birthday. The 
house was attractively decorated 
with laurel and Christmas greens. 
About twenty-five were present and 
all enjoyed to the fullest the games, 
music and dancing. Refreshments 
were served. 
A surprisingly large number of 
substances, ranging all the way from 
the condensed fumes of smelters to 
the skimmed milk of creameries, have 
been tried or suggested as means of 
preserving wood from decay. Most 
of them, however, have been found 
to have little or no value for the pur- 
pose. Certain forms of coal-tar cre- 
osote and zinc chloride are the most 
widely used wood preservatives. 
It is sometimes easier to do the 
proper thing than the right thing. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
First Class Groceries and Kitchen 
Furnishings 
P. S. Ly cett il Telephone 63-2 
Avenue, Magnolia 
MAGNOLIA MARKET 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor, 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, VEGETABLES. AGENTS FOR 
DEERFOOT #ARM CREAM AND BUTTER. ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
Telephone Connection. 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. 
M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER - and - BUILDER 
Jebbing Promptly Attended te 
SUMMER ST. 
MAGNOLIA 
Witt Leave GLOUCESTER CHURCH 
The Rev. Charles H. Williams, 
who as been pastor of the Trinity 
Congregational church, Gloucester, 
for the past eight years, has received 
a call from the Second Congregational 
church of Oberlin, O. He has the 
matter under consideration. 
The Uinta mountains of Utah, in- 
cluded with the Wasatch, Uinta, and 
Ashley national forests, should be- 
come a favorite recreation region, be- 
cause of the many small lakes within 
depressions scooped out by glacial 
drifts. Seventy such lakes can be 
counted from Reid’s peak, and one 
particular township, 36 miles square, 
contains more than a hundred. 
No man can be popular unless he 
has learned to keep his troubles to 
himself. 
In his effort to be known as a good 
fellow many a man shows evidence of 
overtraining. 
MANCHESTER, 
EguaL SUFFRAGE AND BELGIAN 
RELIEF 
The Manchester Equal Suffrage - 
League held its December meeting at 
the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Ra- 
bardy, on Tuesday evening, Dec. 8th. 
This meeting was chiefly devoted to 
Belgian Relief work, and a goodly 
number of knitted articles, made by 
the members and their friends, were 
brought in, also mittens and_ stock- 
ings purchased in the “shopping dis- 
trict” of this town. A big bundle has 
since been sent up to the Belgian 
Committee in Boston, and Mrs. 
Washbrook of West Manchester is 
still collecting little garments, etc., for 
Belgian children. The Suffrage 
League is making a specialty of the 
children’s things, and members of the 
Manchester Woman’s club are knit- 
ting for Belgian soldiers, so that Man- 
chester is certainly contributing well 
to Belgian Relief. The new commit- 
tee room at 426 Boylston st., Boston, 
is a very busy place, receiving articles 
for the “Christmas Ship’—the “Har- 
palyce”—which will sail on Christmas 
Day. 
The Manchester Equal Suffrage 
League will have a Christmas party 
immediately after Christmas Day. 
Beverly, * - - - 
The Leopard Moth Larva 
The most destructive of recent pests to 
shade trees of New England. 
We 
successfully combat this insect. 
R. E. HENDERSON & CO. 
have men especially trained to 
Foresters-Entomologists 
Mass. 
