16 
MAGNOLIA. 
Dunton & Gardner the Boylston street 
(Boston ) picture and frame concern, who 
had a store in the Colonnade, Magnolia, 
last season will not return to the shore 
this year and have let the store, which 
they have on a lease, to the Grande 
Maison de Blanc of New York, who 
had one of the stores last season, and 
whose business will necessitate more 
room. 
New Organ Installed at Magnolia 
Church To be used Easter Sun= 
day for First Time. 
The Easter services at the Village 
church, Magnolia, will be of more than 
the usual significance this year fora hand- 
some new pipe organ presented the 
church through the generosity of one of 
the summer visitors, Mrs. Rebecca Cole- 
felt, will be used tomorrow for the first 
time. 
In addition to this the church has re- 
cently been improved within and presents 
a somewhat new appearance, so that the 
day will be a ““Joyous Easter,’’ indeed, 
all things considered. 
In the morning the pastor, Rev. F. J. 
Libby, will preach an Easter- sermon. 
One of Gounod’s anthems will be sung 
by the choir. There will be a short 
Easter concert in the evening by the Sun- 
day School to be followed by a lecture on 
NORTH EH ONES REZ i. 
China illustrated with 70 beautiful color- 
ed slides. A special collection will be 
taken for the starving in China. ‘The 
services will close with a distribution of 
Easter plants to the children. “These 
plants are the gift of. Mrs. Hayden of 
Boston, a gift she has made for several 
years. 
‘The organ is technically know as a 
two manual electric organ. It contains 
eight speaking stops and three of the swell 
organ stops are unified,—the gedackt, 
flute and dulciana, a feature, making said 
stops available on both organs, in fact 
making the organ equal to an eleven stops 
organ. ‘The case is of oak to match the 
church woodwork, and has anattached key 
desk. The front pipes are finished in 
dull gold, making a very artistic front. 
The organ is blown by a water motor in 
the basement. The builders are The 
Ernest M. Skinner Company, Crescent 
Ave., Dorchester, Mass., who are build- 
ing most of the large organs in this coun- 
try, including that of the Cathedral of St. 
John the Divine, New York, Columbia 
University, New York, College of the 
City of New York, Trinity Cathedral, 
Cleveland, Ohio, etc. 
“Coming Thro’ The Rye.” 
After a phenomenally successful tour of all 
New England, ‘‘Coming Thro’ the Rye,’’ that 
happy blend of mirth and music, returns to the 
Boston Theatre on Monday, April 8, for a 
limited engagement. This occasion will be made 
notable by a production which proved on its 
former visit to be singularly massive in the mat- 
ter of stage embellishments, and by a performance 
in which a company of one hundred people are 
employed. On the bills it is called “‘song play”’ 
which is, perhaps, altogether as suggestive as 
musical comedy, an appellation usually applied 
to vast productions of this character. ‘“Coming 
Thro’ the Rye’’ is the work of Geo. V. Hobart, 
a humorous writer of distinction, with music by 
A. Baldwin Sloane, who is responsible for many 
of the scores recently heard in musical plays and 
comic operas. Mr. Hobartis said to have e- 
volved a strikingly original story of deft construc- 
tion and admirable coherency, and to have devis- 
ed incidents and situations of the kind which 
evoke uproarious laughter without recourse to 
those slap-stick, unreal elements which are drawn 
upon by most authors of musial comedy to 
create laughter. 
In the performance ofthe piece 2re many 
persons who have achieved distinction in their 
respective lines of work. Frank Lalor, the 
principal comedian, has made a hit in ‘‘Coming 
Thro’ the Rye’? which has earned a place for 
him in the front rank of present day comic opera 
stars. ‘Thechorus numbers seventy-five, sixty 
of whom are known as the ‘‘beauty chorus.”’ 
They are pretty, sweet-faced, graceful girls who 
sing and dance and wear attractive costumes after 
the approved fashion. ‘The scenery and other 
effects are said to be unusally beautiful, and the 
ensemble generally is as complete and satisfying 
as anything of the kind which has been seen in 
this country. 
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Give us a call when you 
The Breeze. 
have some. 
— 
REMEMBER PARSON BOREM _ sss 
quick to see. 
to know if it wasn’t some other noise he hear 
few fellows who always want something for nothing. 
Business isn’t a procession-it’s a race. 
Band Wagon when it comes to Carriages. 
Style, Quality and Price will be a revelation to you. 
Claimed he took to preaching because the Lord called him. The deacon after hearing him wanted 
d. Reminds me that you never can satisfy those 
A brief message will tell a long story to the 
I am certainly seven blocks ahead of the 
“ONE HUNDRED?” different styles to select from. 
A word to the wise is better than the Ency- 
clopaedia Britannica to the otherwise. 
Carriage and Automobile Painting. 
R. C. BRUHM, 
a a A ol 
Wood Work, Iron Work, Trimming and Rubber Tires. 
THE CARRIAGE* MAN 
ROUNDY STREET, BEVERLY. 
Ss 
