56 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER - BUILDER 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
and - 
MAGNOLIA 
The public schools will open Mon- 
day, Sept. rith. 
Mr. and Mrs. William Joseph, 
Manchester, were recent guests of 
Mr.:and Mrs. Henry W. Brown, 
Magnolia ave. : 
Mr. and Mrs. Holden Williams of 
Boston are the guests of the for- 
mer’s mother, Mrs. Robert B. Wil- 
liams, 57 Magnolia ave. 
Rev. Laurence Hayward, minister 
of First Unitarian Church, Newbury- 
port, Mass., will preach at the Union 
Chapel next Sunday at 10.45 a. m. 
A dance will be given in the Men’s 
club this Saturday night and also 
next Wednesday night. The last of 
the moving picture shows for the sea- 
son was given Monday night. 
Services will be held in the Village 
Church next Sunday at 10.45 a. m. 
and 8.15 p. m. Morning sermon by 
Rev. Frederick J. Libby and the even- 
ing sermon by the pastor, Dr. Eaton. 
The communion will follow the morn- 
ing sermon. 
Rev. Dr. C. H. Williams, who with 
his family has been spending his 
vacation at his summer home _ on 
Agamenticus Heights, left Monday 
for Oberlin, Ohio.” For about a de- 
cade Dr. Williams was the minister 
of the Trinity Congregational Church, 
Gloucester. He is now the minister 
of the Second Congregational Church 
of Oberlin. His many friends in 
this village always rejoice at his com- 
ing and regret his going. Alas! It 
is not so with all mortals. 
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Dunbar and 
child of Hudson, who have been vis- 
iting relatives and friends in this vil- 
lage, left for Intervale, N. H., Tues- 
day, for a two-weeks’ outing. Mr. 
Dunbar is a young man of whom his 
many friends here are justly proud, 
for by faithful and hard work he 
has steadily climbed until at present 
he is manager of the Apsley Rubber 
Company, Hudson. To show their 
appreciation of his valuable services 
the company presented Mr. Dunbar 
with an expensive automobile and a 
most generous check and bade him 
take a long rest, of which he was 
much in need. There are other young 
men who might make good if they 
had a little more ambition. ; 
SPRAYING, 
CEMENTING, BOLTING 
and INSECT WORK ... 
BURLAPPING, 
Sept. 1, 1916. 
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 retesione 463~ 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. 
THE SUNSET HOUSE 
Miss M. G. Walsh, Prop. 
Magnolia Ave., Magnolia 
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 8586-W 
Mrs. Thomas Harvey, who with 
her daughter, Dorothy, and son, Wal- 
ter, has been visiting friends and 
relatives in Nova Scotia, recently re- 
turned home. 
Fall term at Lynn Branch Burdett 
Business College begins ‘Tuesday, 
September 5. Open for inspection 
and registration every day and eve- 
ning this week; also on Labor 
Day. adv. 
Miss Gladys Lott gave a delightful 
entertainment of songs and sketches 
of child life at the Oceanside Annex, 
Wednesday evening, the income from 
the sale of tickets being equally di- 
vided between Miss Lott and the 
Women’s club. Among those who 
contributed towards making the en- 
tertainment a financial success (and 
the club is now in need of funds to 
meet its expenses) are Mrs. Charles 
A. Potter, Miss Georgina Lowell, 
Miss Fanny M. Faulkner, Mrs. Hen- 
ry W. Farnum, Miss Mary A. Dob- 
bins, Mrs. A. C. Thornton, Mrs. J. E. 
Lancaster, Mrs. M. K. Rehn, Miss 
Margaret Corlies, Miss Elizabeth G. 
Houghton, Mrs. Otis Weld Richard- 
son, Mrs. Costello C. Converse, Mrs. 
J. D. Cox, Mrs. W. H. Coolidge and 
Mrs. L. Freeman Clarke. 
Box 244. BEVERLY, MASS. 
Mrs Jonathan May and daughter, 
Abbie, are in Milford, N. H., for a 
change and rest. 
Horst SHOW IN SPRINGFIELD. 
A horse show announcement of un- 
usual interest comes from Spring- 
field. It will be the first such event 
in the new Coliseum, which was 
especially designed for shows of this 
sort. 
The horses will compete from Oct. 
16 to 21 in an arena 200 by 100 feet, 
under a roof 65 feet high, surround- 
ed by boxes and theatre seats for 
6000 persons, and not a pillar or post 
in sight. This arena is declared to 
be 1014 square feet larger than Madi- 
son Square Garden, the home of the 
most famous horse shows in the 
country. 
While many of the best know ex- 
hibitors will be in evidence, this show 
will be notable for its utility features. 
The National Dairy Show manage- 
ment, which is conducting the affair, 
has offered inducements to owners of 
single and pair delivery horses, heavy 
drafters, single cart horses, farm 
workers, etc., to exhibit their pets and 
carry off liberal cash awards as well 
as ribbons. Though a six-day horse 
show has never been attempted ex- 
cept in the largest cities, the interest 
in this one already assures it of keen 
competition right up to the closing 
hour. 
Among the number of notes re- 
ceived by a teacher in excuse for the 
absence of children was the follow- 
ing: “Dear Teacher,—Kindly ex- 
cuse Minnie for having been absent 
yesterday, as she fell in the mud on 
her way to school. By doing the same 
you will oblige her mother.”—Cana- 
dian Teacher. 
R. E. HENDERSON 
Telephone. 
