16 
MAGNOLIA 
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bannon, Lynn, 
spent the week-end at the home of 
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Boyd. 
The annual meeting of the Village 
church will be held in the church 
Wednesday, Nov. 1, at 7 p. m. 
A Whist Party will be held at the 
home of Mr. and Mrs. George Adams 
text Tuesday afternoon, Oct. 31. 
Mrs. John Howard Wilkins, who 
for the past three weeks and more 
has been quite ill, is slowly gaining 
strength. 
Mrs. P. S. Sanborn, who for the 
past two weeks has been visiting her 
daughter, Mrs. Fred 5S. Lycett, has 
returned to her home at West Acton, 
Mass. 
The usual services will be held at 
the village church next Sunday, with 
preaching by the pastor, at 10.45 a. m. 
Sunday School meets at 12m. There 
will be no evening service. 
Dr. and Mrs. Eaton returned Mon- 
day afternoon from Kearsarge, Wort 
where they spent two weeks resting 
at the Russell Cottages, an ideal spot 
for quieting nerves, gaining strength 
and meeting delightful people. 
This village seems very quiet now 
after. the busy season when the hotels 
were filled with guests, the streets 
with automobiles and the walks with 
pedestrians, and while the summer 
visitors:are missed, yet the beauties 
and attractiveness of the place remain 
to be enjoyed by those who make 
their homes here by the sea. And 
now, opportunity is afforded for the 
social activities of the all-year resi- 
dents that in the past have been many 
and varied. Such activities began 
Tuesday evening at the Women’s 
clubhouse with a “Witches Party” 
given by “The Lend-a-Hand club,” 
consisting of the following persons: 
Misses Ethel P. and Marjorie May, 
Mrs. Ethel Story, Miss Susie Sy- 
monds, Miss Marion Story, Mrs. Wil- 
son B. Richardson, Mrs. Nora Malon- 
son, Mrs. Raymond Symonds, Mrs. 
P. S. Lycett, Mrs. Ernest Lucas, Mrs. 
Bertha Marchant and Mrs. John E. 
May. 
Mrs. Exe—I make it a rule never 
ask another to do what I would not 
do myself. ° 
Mrs. Wye—But you would not go 
to the door yourself and tell a caller 
you were not at home.—E-vchange. 
A. W. Dodge, represented Wenham 
at the installation of Rev. O. H. 
Bronson last week, Mr. Cutler being 
detained by a funeral service. 
SPRAYING AND 
INSECT WORK 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Oct. 27,1916. 
Groceries and Kitchen Furnishings 
All S. 8. 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. AGENTS FOR 
DEERFOOT FARM CREAM AND BUTTER. 
ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
Telephone Connection, 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. 
WENHAM 
On Wednesday the Ladies Society 
will meet in the afternoon, and follow 
with a supper at 6.15 and an enter- 
tainment later. 
- Wenham ladies devoted the day 
Thursday to sewing in the interest of 
the Ladies Society at the residence of 
Mrs. Elbridge Dodge. 
The “village choir” of the Congre- 
gational church presented the drama, 
“A Rice Pudding,’ Wednesday eve- 
ning, and met with a cordial response. 
Wenham _ representatives turned 
out in numbers for the meeting called 
to organize a local scout council on 
the North Shore. Owing, however, 
to lack of response by other cities and 
towns, the formation of the council 
was postponed. 
An enjoyable and profitable hike of 
the boy scouts took place Tuesday 
afternoon, the lads going up the new 
Salem canal. Walter Ames, Milner 
Batchelder and Jasper Brown com- 
pleted passing their second-class scout 
tests. 
larger one at Pariama in at least one 
respect—its banks “slide” and its bot- 
tom “squeezes up.” The water has 
become very shallow at places. 
Social service will be emphasized at 
the Congregational church Sunday 
evening, when, at 7 p. m., Prof. E. L. 
Morgan of the Massachusetts Agri- 
cultural college, Amherst, speaks on 
“Community Planning.” Prof Mor- 
gan has made a specialty of this 
theme, and has been received with 
cordial approval’ wherever he has 
spoken. , Morning service will be held 
at 10.30 o’clock when an offering is 
asked for the charity work of the 
Beverly hospital. Sunday School at 
noon. 
R. E. Henderson 
Wenham’s canal resembles the ° 
BEVERLY HEALTH WEEK 
NEXT week will be health week in 
Beverly. A program of valuable 
lectures on health matters has been 
arranged under the auspices of the 
Beverly Hospital corporation. The 
demonstration, which will begin on 
Monday evening and will conclude 
Friday afternoon, includes a number 
of splendid exhibits. The program 
for the week is as follows: 
Monday, Oct. 30, 8 p. m. Dr. 
Arthur A. Brown, state district health 
officer, general lecture on Public 
health work (with slides); Dr. Eu- 
gene R. Kelley, director of the divi- 
sion of communicable diseases, state 
department of health, ‘“Communi- 
cable Diseases.” . 
Tuesday, Oct. 31, 8 p. m., Dr. Joel 
Goldthwait, “Posture,” (charts). 
Wednesday, Nov. 1, 8 p. m., Dis- 
pensary Day, Dr. R. N. Smith, 
“Tuberculosis in Children”; Sey- 
mour Stone, “Open Air Schools.” 
Thursday, Nov. 2, Mrs. Staebler, 
“Health in Industry,” 3.30 p. m.; Boy 
Scouts, Camp Fire Girls, 8 p. m.;. 
Edward H. Williams, “Milk” (with 
slides), 8 p. m. 
Friday, Nov. 3, 3.30 p. m., Miss 
May B. Dickinson, R. N., assistant 
to the director, division of hygiene, 
state department of health, “Infant 
Welfare” (with slides). 
The following exhibits will be held: 
Child Welfare; Public Dispensary, 
Public Health in Industry; Prepared- 
ness, Camp Fire Girls, Boy Scouts; 
Instructive Nursing, including demon- 
strative work; Schools; School Hy- 
giene; New England Industrial 
School for the deaf; Metropolitan, 
including First Aid Demonstration: 
Red Cross. ; 
244 
BEVERLY. - MASS, 
Tele e ; 
phon 
