M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER - and - BUILDER 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
\ 
MAGNOLIA 
Try Manchester Laundry for 
Quality and Service. Always at your 
call—Tel. 85 Manchester. adv. 
Rev. Dr. Eaton will have for his 
Sunday morning subject, “After Va- 
cation, What?” The usual evening 
service will be held at 7 o’clock. 
W.-+S. Warren, manager of the 
Oceanside Hotel, who has been here 
since the first of March, is leaving 
Sunday for a well-planned vacation 
trip to California. 
The Men’s club seems to grow 
more popular with every passing 
week, and the number of bowlers has 
now become almost more than the 
alleys can accommodate, Candidates 
are being tried out for the bowling 
teams which will meet as last year. 
The two ladies’ nights, Wednesday 
and Saturday, have lost none of their 
favor and some clever bowlers are be- 
ing put into condition for the teams 
which will be formed later. 
Revs., We So Bh atones en awand 
Mrs. Eaton and Mrs... Frank Loud 
were the Village church delegates to 
the annual meeting and institute of 
the Gloucester District of Massachu- 
setts Sunday School association, held 
Wednesday afternoon and evening at 
the Baptist church at Manchester. 
Among others who spoke were Ham- 
ilton $. Conant of Boston; Rev. W. 
T. Woodin, secretary of the Con- 
necticut Sunday School association; 
Rev. C.-T, -Chase of “Lynn; Miss 
Katherine Bourne of Foxboro; and 
Rev. A. G. Warner of Manchester. 
Other Magnolia news on page 20. 
ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SOCIETY 
FOR THE PREVENTION OF CRUELTY 
To CHILDREN. 
The 37th annual meeting of the 
Massachusetts Society for the Pre- 
vention of Cruelty to Children was 
held in the Society’s rooms, 43 Mt. 
Vernon st., Boston, Tuesday, Nov. 9, 
at 3 o'clock, Lieutenant Governor 
Grafton D. Cushing, the president of 
the society, presiding. 
C. C. Carstens, secretary and gen- 
eral agent, reported the forming of 
six new branches during the year lo- 
cated at Newburyport, Salem, Glou- 
cester, Framingham, Fitchburg and 
one at Hyannis covering the Cape 
Cod district. During the past twelve 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Groceries and Kitchen Furnishings 
All S. S. Pierce Co’s Goods sold at their Prices 
P.S. Lycett retephone 1637 Magnolia, Mass. 
Nov. 12, 1915. 
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. 
———J. MAY——— 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Telephone 426R Magnolia. 
SOMETHING 
NEW! 
“RANANA WALNUT” TREES 
Perfectly hardy any- 
where in U. 8S, Large 
bunehes like bananas, 12 
\ to 15 Almoend-shaped nuts 
<—~\ 'n bunch. Rapid growers. 
re SJatly bearing. Enormous 
\} -roeps. Large and _ deli- 
‘YY ious meat. 
Ready for planting now. 
Trees 50c. Payment on receipt of 
tree. Carriage Free. 
Mail orders to 
Cedar Bridge Nurseries, 
Brookville, N; J. 
Eacu Nut 
1Y2 In. Long, 
months the society has dealt with 
4481 families “and 12,023 children 
have received its protection. 999 
cases were prosecuted in court on be- 
half of 2786 children. 
John H. Sturgis, treasurer, in his 
annual report stated that the work of 
the society in the central office and 
1&8 branches had cost $86,056; $39,- 
000 had been received in contribu- 
tion; $16,390 in income from invest- 
ments and $25,000 in unrestricted be- 
quests. The Society closed its year 
with a deficit of $5,426. 
Two new directors, Miss Susan 
Lyman and Charles E. Cotting, were 
elected. The following directors 
were elected to serve until November 
1918: Albert F. Bigelow, Mrs. Louis 
M. Clark, Miss Elizabeth P. Cordner, 
Mrs. Joseph S. Fay, Jr., Miss Kath- 
erine Fay, H. Bradlee Fenno, Mrs. 
Notary Public 
lL. Carteret Fenno, M. Graeme 
Haughton, Miss Marion Russell, 
Michael J. Sughrue and Mrs. Lever- 
ett S. Tuckerman. 
“THE PEASANT Grru’ AT SALEM 
THEATRE Next Monpay. 
An attraction of more than pass- 
ing moment on account of its sucess 
in New York last season is Edith 
Thayer in the little Polish operetta, 
“The Peasant Girl,” which will be at 
the Salem Theatre, Salem, next Mon- 
day night, Nov. 15. Miss Thayer 
followed Emma Trentini in the title 
role at the Forty-fourth Street Thea- 
tre and has just started a tour of the 
larger citites of the East. Manager 
George Blumenthal, who has been 
with Trentini for years, has supplied 
the dainty little star with a large 
chorus of pretty girls and manly men, 
a special orchestra under the direc- 
tion of Paul Yartin and the follow-_ 
Frank 
ing well known principals: 
Deshon, Almon Knowles, Peggy 
Brannon, Edward Beck, Eugene 
Roder, Stella Thomas, Stanley Henry, 
Constance Grant, Jack Polen, and 
others. 
Seats for the engagement are now 
on sale. 
“No Shooting” signs for sale at . 
the Breeze office,—cloth, 20c each; 
cardboard, 10c, 
ee ee ee 
