Peas ~vas OLIA 
7 
The monthly meeting of the Mag- 
nolia Fire association will be held 
next Tuesday evening. 
Tomorrow an Andover student will 
preach at the Village church both 
morning and evening. 
Mrs. Ina Cutter of Boston, accom- 
panied by a New York friend, spent 
Wednesday guests of Mr. and Mrs. 
Fo Crebant: 
Rev. Markham Stackpole and fam- 
ily, who have been spending the sum- 
mer at the upper Allyn cottage, 
moved back to town Thursday. 
Master Edward French of Charles- 
town has been spending the week 
with his grandparents Mr. and Mrs. 
Edward Symonds. 
Chisholm’s 
JEWELRY STORE 
Established for 32 YEARS at 
161 Main Street, GLOUCESTER. 
Particular Attention Paid to ‘Repairing. 
JONATHAN MAY, 
Real Estate and Insurance, 
NOTARY PUBLIC, 
MAGNOLIA. 
Tel. Con. 
Everything for the outfit of your Horses 
Carriage or stable; Auto Supplies, Trunk 
and Bag Repairing 
McCULLOCH’S 
183 Main St., GLOUCESTER, MAss. 
Telephone 
Magnolia Wagonette Line 
A.J. ROWE, Prop. 
Carriages to Let by day, week or season. 
Auto Garage Connected 
Norman Avenue, MAGNOLIA 
Gorham Davis, Proprietor Frank H. Davis, Manager 
GORHAM DAVIS, 
LIVERY AND BOARDING STABLES, 
Gloucester and Magnolia. 
First-class Stable for Boarders. All the latest styles of 
Carriages, with safe horses and careful drivers, furnished 
Electric Carriages re-charged 
promptly. Auto Garage. 
D. C. Ballou 
H. W. Brown 
Telephone 
121-6 Gloucester. 
D. C. BALLOU & CO. 
General Contractors and 
BUILDERS 
Y@- Teaming ofall kinds. Gravel, Turf 
Loam and Manure. 
MAGNOLIA, MASS. 
“ 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Mrs. John Symonds arrived home 
from Gardiner, Me., this week. 
Stanley Phelan, assistant agent at 
the local station, concluded his 
services there Sunday and returned 
to Boston where he is attending 
school for the winter. 
Still Another Daily Train for the 
Nerth Shore. : 
The winter arrangement of trains 
on the Gloucester branch will go 
into effect a week from Monday, 
Oct. 8. While it is not certain yet 
just what will be the time and ar- 
rangement of all the trains, it is 
pretty certain that one new train 
each way will be added to the serv- 
ice, and no trains will be taken off. 
The train now leaving Boston at 
7.10 A. M. and running as far as 
Beverly will, in all probability, run 
down the Gloucester branch, reach- 
ing Manchester about Io minutes 
after eight. On the return the train 
will leave Rockport a little after 
nine and will reach Manchester 
about 9.30 A. M. This train will be 
express from Montserrat, the same 
as the regular 8 o'clock train from 
Manchester now. 
In consequence of the above ar- 
rangement slight changes will be 
necessary in the time of some of the 
Boston-bound trains, and the trains 
leaving Manchester at 7.32, 10.29 
a.m., and the 6.42 p.m., will leave six 
minutes earlier. 
The trains leaving Boston at 2.15, 
5.30 and 11.24 p.m. will be express to 
Salem, and the 4.30 express to Mont- 
serrat. 
Another change will be in the 
running time of the 8.51 train from 
Manchester. This will leave all 
the stations 12 minutes earlier. 
This new train will prove a great 
blessing to many people who come 
to the North Shore in the morning, 
as there are now only two trains 
before the 10.45, one leaving Bos- 
ton at 6 o'clock and the other at 
8.17. This new train leaving at 
7.10 will be much appreciated. 
WHISPERINGS 
A crab apple tree in full bloom, near 
the automobile garage at the Essex 
County club, is sqgmewhat ofa curiosity 
for this season of the year. 
* * * * * 
A spray of blackberries, just ripe 
enough to eat, some of the largest and 
most delicious we have ever tasted, 
was brought to the office a few days 
ago by a Beverly Farms friend. They 
grew wild in a field near the Beverly 
Farms station, and are somewhat rare 
to be found at this time of the year. 
WHISPERINGS 
I have heard whisperings this week 
of the resolution made by a friend of 
mine, a member of the automobile 
fraternity. The resolution is that 
henceforth when he takes his horse- 
less vehicle out for exercise he will 
have a vehicle with a horse either 
follow or precede him on the trip. 
“Necessity is the mother of inven- 
tion.’ He has a peculiar car; pecu- 
liar because it always acts the same,— 
that is, something happens before he 
gets home. The other day,—Wednes- 
day, I think it was, he had a party of 
four friends out for a spin along the 
shore to Gloucester, where the party 
were shown the points of interest 
about that beautiful town, and thence 
the dumbanimal headed its nose home- 
ward through Manchester and toward. 
a neighboring town, where dinner was 
to be served. The chauffeur, by the 
way, was not in the party, and toward 
midnight, surmising trouble may be 
met with, mounted a bicycle and sped 
off to look for the car, expecting to 
find it stalled. Sure enough he found 
the car in very much of a balky mood. 
The crank or something another 
wouldn’t work. The party reached 
home in a carriage later in the night. 
Near-silk taffeta petticoats are much 
more endurable than the real silk. 
We have just received a new line. 
G. F. Allen. = 
Notice 
B. S. Bullock announces that he 
has closed his Ice Cream plant at 
Manchester for the season of 1906. , 
SPECIAL 
NIGHT 
SCHOOL 
OFFER 
SALEM COMMERCIAL SCHOOL, 
126 Washington St. 
To each of the first 100 persons 
who register for our night school 
work the tuition will be 
$20 
FOR SIX MONTHS 
three evenings per week—Monday, 
Wednesday and Friday, from Oct. 
1 to April 1. 
COME THIS EVENING 
AND REGISTER. 
