NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 75 
A nt ty] WERE F. C. POOLE, 7 Centre Street, Gloucester 
Upholsterer and Cabinet Maker 
Furniture made to order 
and Upholstered 
Lele2s3 Daperies, Cushions and Interiors 
correctly executed 
Now Open For the Season 
THE WILLOW COTTAGE 
Raymond St., Magnolia, Mass. 
Miss. M. G. Walsh, Prop. 
Centrally located, near Beach. 
Everything homelike. 
Transients Accommodated 
‘ Reasonable Rates 
Board by the Day or By the Week 
Special Arrangements made for 
Supper Parties to Order 
Telephone Connection 
MAGNOLIA 
The spring conference of the Essex 
South association of Congregational 
churches was held at the Second Con- 
gregational church of Peabody Wed- 
nesday. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Upton, 
who were elected as delegates from 
the Village church of Magnolia, were 
unable to attend and their places were 
filled by the pastor, Rev. Mr. 
Eaton and Mrs. Eaton, who 
gave a report on the national council 
which was held at Kansas City, Mo., 
last fall. Mrs. Eaton’s paper was on 
“The National Council’s Message to 
the Women of Our Churches,” and : 
Dr. Eaton spoke on the “New Em- 
phasis on Evangelism.” 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Walker Hannable is the new clerk 
ee. W. Hardy & Son’s store, Hale 
st. 
Miss Ruth Hardy, who is a train- 
ed nurse at the Faulkner Hospital, 
Jamaica Plain, is home for a three 
weeks’ vacation. 
The Green Box Circulating library 
in Neighbors Hall block, rear of the 
postoffice, is open to the public and 
has on its shelves a fine assortment 
of the latest books. The Library is 
a very attractive and popular place 
and Miss Frances Connolly is in 
charge. 
On Wednesday, Willard B. Pub- 
licover observed his 47th birthday in 
a pleasant way. When he went 
home at night he found a number 
of friends had gathered to help him 
celebrate the event. A pleasant hour 
was spent at dinner and later in the 
evening many others joined the 
party. The evening was spent most 
delightfully with music and in a so- 
cial way. 
MANCHESTER SEA FOOD CO. 
F. H. DENNIS, Manager 
Residence, No. 5 Lincoln Street 
Tel. 296M 
ALL KINDS OF SEA FOOD 
Fresh - Smoked - Salted - Canned 
Market, 48 Beach Street 
Tel. 188W 
Edward S. Knight 
FLORIST 
Everything for the Garden. Flowers for all occasions 
ESTABLISHED 1884 
40 SCHOOL STREET Tel. 10 MANCHESTER 
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, | 
Mr. and Mrs. William T. Fowler 
of Ellsworth, Me., have been visiting 
friends here the past week. 
Several Beverly Farms young men 
have recently become the owners of 
motor cycles. 
“The Village Post Office,’ a hum- 
erous play, including many local hits, 
will be given in Neighbors hall on 
Thursday evening, June 4th. It is 
being presented under the auspices 
of Preston W. R. Corps. The en- 
tertainment will be followed by danc- 
ing. 
Hyndman Peak, Idaho, the high- 
est named peak in the state, is more 
than 12,000 feet high. Several un- 
named peaks near it are of about 
the same elevation. All are on the 
divide between the Sawtooth and 
the Lemhi national forests. 
More than 858,000 young trees are 
being set out this spring on national 
forests in Utah and southern Idaho, 
and the season is reported as _ parti- 
cularly favorable to their successful 
growth. 
ANTI-SUFFRAGE NOTES 
BY MRS, HENRY PRESTON WHITE 
The bi-monthly meeting of the 
educational and organization com- 
mittee of the Massachusetts Anti- 
Suffrage association will be held at 
headquarters on Wednesday after- 
noon, May 20, at 4.15. 
Mrs. Frank Foxcroft, chairman of 
the Cambridge branch, will present 
the negative side of the suffrage ques- 
tion at a meeting of the Tuesday club 
of the Maple Street church at Dan- 
vers, on Thursday evening, May 21. 
Zentaro Kawase, professor of for- 
estry at the itnperial university of 
Tokio, Japan, has been making a tour 
of the national forests of this coun- 
try to learn the government’s meth- 
ods of selling timber and of refor- 
estation. 
The Canadian government is using 
Indian fire patrolmen to protect the 
forests of northern Manitoba, 
