M. KEHOE 
| CARPENTER - and - BUILDER 
‘Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
Se 
MAGNOLIA 
Mrs. Walter S. Eaton will enter- 
tain the Whist club next Tuesday at- 
ternoon at The Parsonage. 
Miss Harriet Prindle of Vermont 
is a guest of her friend, Miss Marion 
Story, for a few days. She came 
Wednesday. 
fr. and Mrs. H. C, Foster were 
Thanksgiving guests of Mrs. Foster’s 
mother, Mrs. Wonson, at the latter’s 
home in. Essex. 
Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Malone of 
Boston have been here for a week 
visiting Mr. and Mrs. James Wolfe, 
Western avenue, Mrs. Malone was 
Ada Wolfe. 
Irving Eaton, who is at Mass. 
Tech. this year, came home from 
Boston for the week-end. Frederick 
Eaton came on from Worcester to 
complete the family party. 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Brown 
entertained a party of friends and 
relatives for Thanksgiving Day. 
Among them were Mr. and Mrs. Wil- 
liam Joseph of Manchester. 
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Robinson 
and baby of Montsertat came to 
Magnolia to spend the holiday with 
Mrs. Robinson’s parents; Mr. and 
Mrs. H. W. Butler, at theit home on 
Magnolia avenue. 
The usual morning service at the 
Village church will be conducted 
Sunday by the pastor. The evening 
service will begin, as usual, at 7 
o'clock, but beginning with the first 
Sunday in December, the fifth, the 
service will not open until 7.30 
o'clock. 
The regular meeting of the Foster 
club was held at the home of Mrs. 
Foster last Friday evening. Work 
has been started on Christmas bags 
for the French Emergency Wounded 
Fund. These bags will be sent to 
the soldiers in the armies of the 
Allies, they will reach the hospitals 
and camps by Christmas and will con- 
tain articles of mecessity and a few 
little luxuries. The membership of 
the Foster club has been increased 
and everyone is enthusiastic about the 
work. Plans are being made for a 
play, which will probably repeat the 
success of that of last year. 
SPRAYING AND 
INSECT WORK 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Groceries and Kitchen Furnishings | 
All S. S. Pierce Co’s Goods sold at their Prices , 
P.S. Lycett teiesione 1537 Magnolia, Mass, 
Nov. 26, 1915. 
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. 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
———J. MAY——— 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Telephone 426R Magnolia. 
The first of the series of the winter 
course of lectures and concerts at the 
Village church will be held Sunday 
evening, Dec. 5. It will be an organ 
recital by Professor C. E. Saunier, 
who comes to Magnolia very highly 
recommended. Master Fowler, boy 
soloist, will be the singer for this 
date and his well known work will 
add much to the program. Albert R. 
Lovejoy of Boston will be here Dec. 
12th. As a reader and impersonator, 
he has gained an enviable reputation, 
and much enjoyment will undouhi- 
edly be derived from his evening at 
the church. He reads from the 
works of James Whitcomb Riley, 
Eugene Field, Robert Service, and 
many other well-known writers. <A 
delightful program of Southern 
plantation songs and negro stories is 
promised for the 19th, when Miss 
Judith Hampton Lyndon will be the 
artist. A Southerner herself (her 
home is in Washington, Georgia}, 
Miss Lyndon has a keen sympathy 
for the black race and its idiosyncra- 
sies—a sympathy which she has made 
a considerable part of her work. 
These pleasant evenings have this 
year, aS in years past, been made 
possible through the generosity of 
one whom the Village church 1s 
happy in possessing for a friend; and 
R. E. Henderson 
Notary Public 
arrangements will be made to bring 
over the people from Fresh Water 
Cove as before: 
Mrs. Della Cook of Somerville ts 
making an extended visit in Magnolia 
with her friend, Mrs, Effie Foster. 
Miss Mary Sargent, who has been 
quite seriously ill at her home on 
Summer street, is a little improved. 
Mr. and Mrs. Jabeth Dunbar have 
had as recent guests, Mr. and Mrs. 
Samuel Brown and family of Salem. 
Mrs. William Smith returned to 
Boston Tuesday after spending the 
wek-end with Mr. and Mrs. D. ©. 
Ballou. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Davis 
spent Thanksgiving at the home ot 
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Haskell, West 
Gloucester. 
Wuat Dip He Mean? 
“It must be a terrible thing to be 
paralyzed,” said the female of the 
species, as they passed a man in a 
wheeled chair. as 
_ “Yes,” answered her male compan- 
ion absently. “It makes a fellow feel 
so tough the next morning.” 
Hope it’s true, as reported, that 
radium will cure blindness. Price of 
li 18 enough to make persons open 
their eyes. 
244 
BEVERLY. - MASS. 
‘Tel 
ephone 
