16 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MAGNOLIA 
Mrs. Harry C. Foster is is visiting 
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Foster at Win- 
chester. 
Dr. Eaton will reach in the Village 
church Sunday morning at 10.45 
o'clock, and at 7.30 p. m. Fred A. 
Boardman, “the all around the world 
newspaper man,” will give an_illus- 
trated lecture on “Life and Incidents 
in China.” 
Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Ganty of 
Skagway, «Alaska, who have been 
visiting friends in Magnolia and 
Gloucester, have just left for their 
far-away home, stopping on the way 
for a few days in New York City and 
also Buffalo, N. Y., where some of 
Mrs. Ganty’s relatives reside. 
Mrs. Ernest Newman died of 
pneumonia at her home on Magnolia 
avenue early Monday morning, leav- 
ing six small children, one of whom 
is an infant about a month old. 
Funeral services were held at the Vil- 
lage church Thursday afternoon at 
two o’clock and they were conducted 
by Dr. Eaton. The interment was in 
the West Gloucester cemetery. 
— 
Linco.N MEmortiAt UNIVERSITY. 
The educational center of the 
United States, and of the world, for 
that matter, will be transferred for 
three days, February 10, 11 and 12, 
to Cumberland Gap, Tennessee, where 
the borders of Kentucky, Virginia and 
Tennessee meet in the heart of the 
mountains. The occasion will be, 
perhaps, the most extraordinary cele- 
bration of Lincoln’s birthday ever 
held in this country and the gathering 
will be under the auspices of Lincoln 
Memorial University, located at Cum- 
berland Gap. 
Seven hundred mountain students, 
descendants of the old English, 
Scotch and Huguenots who settled 
there before the Revolution, will act 
as hosts in welcoming the great con- 
course of governors, senators, educa- 
tors, captains of industry and finance, 
congressmen from every state in the 
Union, publicists, editors, orators, in 
fact, the most representative array of 
American leadership ever brought to- 
gether on a similar occasion. 
Special trains under escort of gov- 
ernors of states will be run on through 
schedule from New York, Philadel- 
phia, Washington, ‘Chicago, Cincin- 
nati and Indianapolis, to Cumberland 
Gap. 
Arrangements for the celebration 
are in the hands of Rev. Dr. John 
Wesley Hill, the new Chancellor of 
Lincoln Memorial University. 
Forestry 
Experts 
Feb. 9, 1917. 
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 437 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. 
JONATHAN MAY 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
. 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Telephone 426-R Magnolia 
New York HIpPropROME. 
The Hippodrome has from time to 
time each season provided some new 
sensation or some innovation for 
amusement seekers, and each new 
star feature seems to call for some 
departure or present a new prodiem 
to be solved, since things at the big 
playhouse are always done on a big 
scale. And so the advent of the 
graceful diving Venus, Annette Kel- 
lerman, and her school of mermaids, 
brought the usual dilemma for R. H. 
Burnside, the general stage director. 
How were the swimmers to be safe- 
guarded against contracting colds and 
how were the mermaids’ clothes to be 
dried between the daily matinee and 
night performances ? 
The solution was found by build- 
ing a steam room at the foot of the 
run which leads from the huge stage 
at the Forty-third street side of the 
theatre. To this the deep-sea maidens 
are carried when they leave the “en- 
chanted pool,’ and one lady attend- 
ant is provided for each pair of swim- 
mers. 
POPULAR SCIENCE LECTURES. 
Arrangements have been perfected 
whereby the Massachusetts Institute 
of Technology through its Society of 
R. E. Henderson 
Box 244, Beverly, Mass. 
Telephone 
Notary Public 
Arts will give free popular experi- 
mental science lectures to the stu- 
dents of high schools in and about 
Boston. The first of these lectures 
will be on Tuesday, Feb. 13, at four 
c’clock in the afternoon in the large 
lecture hall under the dome of the 
Technology Library building at. Cam- 
bridge, the speaker will be Professor 
H. P. Talbot and his subject, ““Chem- 
ist and what it is about.” Professor 
Talbot is head of the department of 
Chemistry at Tech. The second lec- 
ture will be one month later, Tuesday, 
March 13, at the same place and hour 
and the speaker will be Professor 
James F. Norris of the Institute and 
his subject, “The ‘Chemistry of Fire.” 
Other announcements will be made 
later. 
These lectures are planned for 
high school pupils of senior or junior 
grade, but this need not prevent the 
attendance of others and pupils may 
apply for tickets even if they are not 
taking studies in science. 
“And the audience, my boy, were 
glued to their seats,” said the delight- . 
ed actor.” 
“That certainly was a neat way of 
keeping them there,” said the critic.” 
Taxi—Phone Manchester 290. adv. 
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