18 
MAGNOLIA 
Harold Dunbar has a position with 
Frank E. Davis. 
Mrs. Henry Brown is visiting her 
daughter Mrs. Loring Cook of Bos- 
ton. 
Services will be held in the Village 
church Sunday at 10.45 a. m., and 
7.20y). ml. 
Irving C. Eaton returned Tuesday 
night from a business trip to Niagara 
Halls LINO TY 
A Whist Party will be given at the 
Women’s clubhouse next Wednesday 
evening, May 3. 
J. A. Nettles of Skagway, Alaska, 
is spending a few days as the guest 
of Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Ballou. 
Evidence of interest in gardening 
in this village is seen around several 
homes. Flowers, doubtless will be 
scarce, but vegetables in large quanti- 
ties will be needed. 
The Upton club of Boy Scouts 
leaves next Monday morning for 
Chebacco Lake, where they will camp 
for the week. Dr. Eaton and Layton 
Symonds, the assistant scoutmaster 
will accompany them. 
The Sunday evening entertainments 
given in the Village church during the 
winter have on the whole been well 
attended and greatly enjoyed. All 
the lectures and concerts have been of 
a high order and the thanks of the 
community is the least that can be 
given to the good friend of Magnolia 
who has made them possible. And 
through the generosity of the same 
good friend the Men’s clubhouse has 
been kept open all winter for bowling 
and pool. The club has been in charge 
of Charles Hunt, whose courteous and 
obliging ways make him a “good fel- 
low” with all its patrons. Surely this 
little village has many privileges and 
opportunities that are denied others 
that are much larger. 
With age we learn that we are un- 
der more obligations to our children 
than they are to us. 
TENEMENT TO LET? 
F you have a vacant tenement 
which you would like to have 
rented, now is the time to adver- 
tise it. The Breeze receives 
frequent inquires about renting 
apartments at this season. 
It costs you just two cents a word 
for the first insertion of your 
advertisement in the BrreEzgE, and 
and one cent a word for each 
further insertion. 
Re) Lol ey 
Forestry 
Experts 
Box 244, Beverly, Mass. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
April 27, 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. 
LIVERED PROMPTLY 
AGENTS FOR 
ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
Telephone Connection 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge 
Magnolia, Massachusetts 
_ 
JONATHAN MAY 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Telephone 426-R Magnolia 
REGARDING NEGRO INSTITUTIONS. 
The United States Bureau of Edu- 
cation has prepared a report entitled, 
“Negro Education in the United 
States.” The facts presented in this 
report have been collected by a per- 
sonal investigation of 790 institutions 
described. In a communication to the 
advertising and charities endorsement 
committee of the Salem Chamber of 
Commerce the United States Bureau 
of Education stated that they were 
especially anxious to receive the 
names of persons who had been re- 
ceiving appeals for aid from negro 
schools so that they could be furnish- 
ed with a copy of the report, as many 
of the alleged educational institutions 
for the negroes were found to be 
fraudulent and unworthy. Further 
details with regard to the matter can 
be obtained, by interested persons, on 
application to the Chamber offices in 
the Peabody Building, 126 Washing- 
ton st., Salem. 
Beginning May 1 the price of the 
BREEZE at news-stands will be ad- 
vanced to 10c a copy. Subscription 
rates will not change—they will re- 
main $2 a year, $1 for 6 months (paid 
in advance). 
R. E. Henderson 
Telephone 
Notary Public 
New InNsIGNIA EXPECTED SOON. 
BS & 
The new insignia for use on cars 
volunteered for service will be ready 
for distribution in a few days. The 
insignia will be a red card about four 
inches square. In the center is a blue 
circle with the legend “Massachusetts 
Public Safety Committee, Enrolled 
for Service.” Below in a white field 
is the State seal in blue. When the 
cars go into active service they will 
be provided with a white burgee with 
the state seal in blue and the words 
in blue, “Public Safety committee.” 
This flag will give the cars the court- 
esy of a right of way on the highways. 
It is said that the North Shore sec- 
tion has responded most liberally to 
this call for use of cars. 
Did you ever notice that the size of 
trouble depends on whether it’s com- 
ing or going? 
“There is no telling’? would be an 
appropriate motto for a sewing so- 
ciety—if the members would live up 
to it. 
The true test of civilization is, not 
the census, nor the kind of crops, but 
the kind of man that country turns 
out.—Emerson. 
Leopard Moth 
Works: ss 
