NORTH. Si ORE @B REZ 
M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER - and - BUILDER 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. 
MAGNOLIA 
MAGNOLIA 
Miss Eleanor Ballou. was the guest 
of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mes. 
Joseph B. Smith, at their home in 
Roxbury for the week-end. 
The high school fair at Gloucester 
was an attraction that drew many 
Magnolia people Tuesday evening. 
Miss Ella Commerford was on the 
Junior Booth. 
~ Mrs. Leon Foster entertained the 
Whist club at her home on Magnolia 
avenue, ‘l‘uesday afternoon. The 
next meeting will be held at the home 
of Mrs. Walter S. Eaton. 
Mr. and Mrs. William Malonsor, 
who have been living in Gloucester 
for the last few months, have moved 
back into their own cottage here, and 
the Blake family has returned to 
Worcester. 
The -friends of -Mr.- and Mrs. 
Frederick Dunbar will be glad to 
learn of the successful outcome of 
the operation which their son, Lester, 
recently underwent at the Children’s 
Hospital at Boston. The little fellow 
returned Monday accompanied by 
his mother, and will soon be about 
again as well as ever. . 
Mr. and Mrs. E.. W. Bill, who have 
bad the Dickinson cottage on the 
beach for the. last two seasons, re- 
turned to their winter residence at 
Hartford the first of the week. .. The 
3ills have had one of the most de- 
lightful tea houses and gift shops on 
the Shore, and have mide their se1- 
son at Magnolia a long one. 
The Lend-a-Hand club met last 
evening at the home of Mrs. Harry 
C. Foster on Western ave. Mrs. 
Raymond Symonds was the hostess. 
A large part of the evening was speuit 
in rolling bandages for the armies of 
the allies. This is in line with the ex- 
cellent work done by this club last 
winter, when they did a great deal for 
local charities. The local aid work 
will be taken up in January when 
the regular weekly meetings are to 
begin. 
The usual service will be held at 
the Village church Sunday morning, 
when the pastor, Rev. W. S. Eaton, 
Ph.D., will have for his subject, 
“Faith’s Adventures.” In the even- 
ing he will deliver an interesting talk 
or “Booker T. Washington and Per- 
sonal Experiences in the Sunny 
Noy. 19, 1915. 
Groceries and Kitchen Furnishings 
All S. S. Pierce Co’s Goods sold at their Prices 
P.S. Lycett relephone 1637 Magnolia, Mass. 
Telephone Connection. 
MAGNOLIA MARKET 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor, 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, VEGETABLES. 
DEERFOOT FARM CREAM AND BUTTER. 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. 
AGENTS FOR 
ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
J. MAY——— 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Telephone 426R Magnolia. 
Notary Public 
The address is quite oppor- 
upon the 
South.” 
tune, coming, as it does, 
heels of the death of the great negro. 
leader, and will doubtless prove au 
attraction to many on account, also, 
of the interest in Rev. Dr. Haton’s 
own months in the South. 
“EXPERIENCE” 
The second successful week of 
“Experience” the most wonderful 
play in America, begins at the Wil- 
bur Theatre next Monday night, 
November 22, and the remarkable 
popularity of this great drama is 
shown by the capacity audiences 
which have filled the Wilbur Theatre 
every night during the first week of 
the engagement there and the large 
demand for seats in advance. The 
engagement of “Experience” at ‘the 
Wilbur is announced for only three 
weeks more and it is interesting to 
know that it has been a decade or ten 
years since any attraction has played 
at three or more theatres in Boston as 
“Fixperience” has done this year and 
the sensational success of this modern 
morality play of today has made new 
history in Boston theatricals. 
The same magnificent production 
as was given at the Shubert Theatre 
and the Boston Opera House is seen 
at the Wilbur Theatre, and the same 
notable cast of players, while the 
prices are the same at nights and the 
Saturday matinees—s5o cts. to $1.50; Motion” 
and at the bargain matinees on Wed- 
nesday the seats are 25 cents to $1.00. 
“MAID IN AMERICA” 
With all its tuneful melodies, re- 
freshing gales of laughter, scenic 
splendor and gorgeous costuming, 
“Maid in America” at the Shubert 
Theatre has become a red-letter event 
on Boston’s busy amusement calen- 
dar, The elaborate production from 
the New York Winter Garden begins 
its third and last week with next 
Monday night’s performance (Nov. 
22nd). One of the chief reasons for 
the success of the piece is the wide 
variety of musical ensembles and 
song numbers. Dreamy waltzes, 
tantalizing tangoes, lively one-steps 
and whirling eccentric dance tunes, 
all blend into a_ carefully arranged 
melange that pleases from start to 
finish. In “Maid in America,” Flor- 
ence Moore returns to the scene of 
many vatdeville triumphs. Her 
laugh-making proclivities are height- 
ened to a degree and she is particu- 
larly delightful in her travesty work 
in the burlesque of “Anthony and 
Cleopatra.” Mlle. Dazie, of whom 
ii may truly be said there is no great- 
cr native dancer and pantomimist, has 
scored a hit of exceptional propor- 
tions. Her rendition of the solo 
numbers in the “Ballet of Color and 
shows her supreme artistry. 
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