I am a little doubtful if no 42 was ever a pub. Up to 1892 Kellys showed the premises as a shop. In Sept. 1892 Elizabeth Bryant was granted a licence to sell alcohol off the premises (an off-licence). From then Kellys only lists the premises as a beer seller. This could be an off licence or a beerseller (a pub only able to sell beer and cider on the premises). However even after 1955 Kellys lists it as a beer seller, and by that time it usually meant only an off licence. Most remaining beerhouses (to my knowledge) were actually named in Kellys by then, though I am not certain of it. The Censuses from 1900 and 1910 give no name, though this is not definite evidence either way. My instinct is that she ran the off licence and was not a bar manager as we would think of the term.