2) NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER - and - BUILDER 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
MAGNOLIA 
Miss Mary Boyd and Miss Ruth 
Scott left Monday for Oxford, Ohio, 
where they will enter the Western 
College for their Junior year. 
Lyman Butler is employed by the 
Perkins & Corliss firm driving one 
of their new gasoline trucks. 
Mr: and Mrs. Peter Welch and 
family have closed their cottage o1 
Norman avenue and have returned to 
Boston for the winter months, M>. 
Welch is employed by Miss E. G. 
‘foughton as chauffeur. 
Alvan Ford of Worcester, who 
was employed at Foster’s drug store 
this season, has a similar position at 
Wetherell’s drug store, Gloucester for 
a short time. 
The Men’s club will close tomorrow 
after a busy season. It is hoped to 
open the bowling alleys and_ pool 
room in December for the wia- 
ter months. The bowling teams, both 
for ladies and gentlemen, aroused 
great interest last year. 
The Womens oclabyechoses. ext 
Thursday for the season. The hot 
weather of last week brought an ta- 
expected number of transient guests 
for the week-end so that the house 
was as well filled over Sunday as in 
the height of the season. Miss Olive 
Caneron of Boston is at the club to 
remain until the closing date. Miss 
Perry of Washington is making a 
visit of indefinite length. Miss Mary 
S. Mulry, an instructor in the out-oi- 
door school at Elliott, Maine, with a 
party of friends made a three days’ 
visit at the clubhouse while taking a 
walking tour. In the party were Miss 
H. M. Mulry of Methuen, Mrs. Daii- 
icls of Dorchester, and Miss Tileston 
of Dorchester, a well known social 
worker of Boston. The party was 
well equipped for tranping . with 
khaki ‘“‘middies” and = skirts, knap- 
sacks, and a regulation army canteen 
kit. The whist tournament closed 
last Thursday evening and Mrs. 
Margaret Murphy held the high score, 
160. 
Reve vDre Walter “5:4 Baton. he 
pastor of the Village church will oc- 
cupy the pulpit Sunday morning and 
the topic of his sermon will be “In 
Fiis Steps.” The evening service will 
begin at 7.30 instead of at 8.15 and 
the subject Sunday night will be “The 
Awe 9? 
t 
Groceries and Kitchen Furnishings 
All S. S. Pierce Co's Goods sold at their Prices 
P.S. Lycett Telephone 437 Magnolia, Mass. 
MAGNOLIA MAKKET 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor, 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTO 
N, HAM, POULTRY, 
DEERFOOT FARM CREAM AND BUTTER. 
VEGETABLES. AGENTS FOR 
ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
Telephone Connection. 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Strees, 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
Cambridge. 
J. MAY 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Telephone 426R Magnolia. 
Notary Public 
CHAUFFEUR Diks From INJURIES. 
From injuries received Friday 
night when the automobile he was 
driving overturned on the Manches- 
ter-Hamilton road, in the township of 
Essex, Bernard Fitzsimmons chauf- 
feur for Henry W. Estabrook, a sum- 
mer resident at Magnolia, died at 
Beverly Hospital Saturday. Several 
companions escaped injury by jump- 
ing’ from the machine, which 1s said 
to be owned by Geo. Doucette of 
Magnolia. 
As the car which Fitzsimmoas 
drove approached a curve where the 
road is narrow; another machine 
loomed from the opposite direction. 
Both reduced speed and the one ap- 
proaching from the opposite direction 
stopped. Fitzsimmons tried to pass 
by, driving his car to the edge of the 
road. This tilted the car and it went 
over, pinning him underneath. His 
skull was fractured and he received 
other injuries. 
Rear Wisdom. 
Turkey—Look at the peacock 
stuffed up with his own importance! 
Peacock—Look at that turkey. Id 
rather be stuffed with my own import- 
ance than with sage and potatoes. 
Um-m! 
“T come from the Sahara Desert.” 
“Then I suppose you are accus- 
tomed to flat life.” 
BOSTON GRAND OPERA. 
Announcement is made by Mr, W. 
R. Macdonald, General Manager of 
the Boston Grand Opera Company 
and Pavlowa Imperial Ballet Russe, 
that the subscription books for the 
four weeks season at the Boston 
Opera House are now open at Room 
5, Steinert Building, 162 Boylston st., 
The opening performance will take 
place November 15th, and the same 
scale of prices will prevail as with the 
former Boston Opera Company. 
wii be divided into 
two series, of 12 performances each. 
Series “A” will inctude 
ances of Monday, Wednesday and 
Friday evenings. Series “B” will in- 
clude the performances of Tuesday 
and Friday evenings and Saturday 
matinee, 
By subscribing before Oct. 16th, 
the former box holders and seat sub- 
scribers of the Boston Opera Com- 
pany will have the opportunity of re- 
serving their accustoned boxes and 
seats, Applications for subscriptions 
will also be received from the general 
public and seats will be alloted as 
near the desired location as possible 
after October 16. 
7 easptetq 
- ti ~ VAIS 
TEAnS LAGE 
“What were you doing 
the photographer Si 
“Merely awaiting developments.” 
so long at 
Sept. 24, 1915. 
perfonin- 
