16 
NORTH, SHORE, BREEZE 
MAGNOLIA 
John Howard Wilkins spent the 
week-end with his son ‘at Somerville. 
The Whist club will meet at the 
bome of Mrs. Fred Dunbar on Mag- 
nolia avenue next Tuesday afternoon. 
The Ladies Aid society will give a 
whist party next Wednesday evening, 
Jan. 3, at 8 o'clock, at the Women’s 
club house. 
Fred Stanley of Woburn and 
Arthur Lycett of Yarmouth, Nova 
Scotia, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. 
Fred S. Lycett. 
A year’s subscription to each of 
the following magazines has been sent 
as a Christmas gift to the Magnolia - 
library by Mrs. William C. Chaplin 
(Margaret Curry) of Pittsburg, Pa.: 
Good Housekeeping, Literary Digest, 
Ladies’ Home Journal, Munseys, 
Travel and World’s Work. 
Last Sunday night the Village 
church was filled to. its capacity by 
children and parents who came to 
hear the Sunday. School concert 
which was voted a very great success 
and to see “Santa Claus” who was 
tot only generous to the children but 
who also amused them greatly by his 
odd ways and unusual manner. 
Dr. Eaton, the pastor, will preach 
in the Village church next Sunday at 
10.45 a. m. and at 7.30 p. m. Marion 
Franklin Ham will read from the 
Kinchin Stories, written by himself. 
The stories, told in Negro dialect, 
give striking pictures of the Old 
South, unlike anything to be found 
in the literature on this subject. An- 
other rich treat is in store for those 
who attend the meetings of the Peo- 
ple’s forum. 
Among those who came home to 
spend the Christmas holiday are, 
Clara Corrin, a freshman at Wheaton 
college; Russell Lucas, a freshman at 
the Connecticut Agricultural college ; 
Irving C. Eaton and his chum H. 5. 
McQuaid of Cleveland, Ohio, both of 
whom are seniors at ‘M. I. T.; Fred- 
erick W. Eaton of Worcester, Mr. 
and Mrs. Loring Cook (Jennie 
Brown), of Boston; Harold Richard- 
son a sttident at the Franklin insti- 
tute, Boston, and Mr. and Mrs. 
Harlow H. Halliday (Josephine 
Brown), of New York City. 
“How do you do?” said a lady to 
an acquaintance, not entirely used to 
English, whom she had not seen for 
a long time. “J am glad to see you 
again.” “Yes,” responded the other 
doubtfully, “but I cannot replace your 
face.’—Christian Register. 
Conduct is chrystalized character. 
SPRAYING, 
and INSECT WORK 
BURLAPPING, 
CEMENTING, BOLTING 
Dee. 29, 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 37 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. 
JONATHAN MAY 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Telephone 426-R Magnolia 
A SvuccessFuL INstiruTION—THE 
SALEM COMMERCIAL SCHOOL. 
The Winter Term at the Salem 
Commercial School will begin Tues- 
day, Jan. 2, with many new students 
in attendance. This famous school 
was founded in 1890. It has been 
under the personal direction of its 
present president since 1897. Over 
8000 young people have been grad- 
uated and placed by him. These men 
and womien, many of whom are in 
the foremost ranks of American busi- 
ness, are today calling upon the 
Salem Commercial School for train- 
ed assistants. 
Never has the demand for grad- 
uates so taxed the resources of the 
school as at present. The Salem 
Commercial School, today, has near- 
ly 400 different undergraduates in 
attendance in its various day and eve- 
ning classes. It maintains an Employ- 
ment department for the exclusive 
use of its graduates, and yet it can- 
not fill the positions that are offered. 
Any industrious young man of 
woman who will conscientiously com- 
plete any regular Salem’ Commercial 
School course can secure a first-class 
business opportunity immediately up- 
on graduation. 
It is a well-known fact that many 
Notary Public 
young people who do not respond to 
the ordinary systems of instruction 
cften become successful in business. 
Te these the Salem Commercial 
school especially appeals, because it 
is not so much like a school as it is” 
like a business house. Its young 
people are handling a great volume of 
Lusiness details, buying and selling, 
booking orders, billing, handling cor- 
respondence and banking, and keep- 
ing records of their affairs exactly as 
in any well-regulated business office. 
The School is open daily for visi- 
iors and for registration for the win- 
ter term. 
“Were you out in all that rain?” 
asked Mary. 
_ “No,” said the young woman, who 
likes to be correct, “I was merely in 
the portion of the rain that descended 
in my immediate vicinity.” — Stray 
Stories. 
“Pennypack brags that his business 
goes on like clockwork.” 
_“That’s true; he’s running it prin- 
cipally on tick.” — Baltimore Ameri- 
can. 
Most of our weakness comes from 
worry. 
R. E. HENDERSON 
Box 244, BEVERLY, MASS, 
Telephone. 
