(fctlwtitar fnr JJmutanj. 19 17 



January 1, Monday. The Church Committee will meet 

 at 8 p. m. at Miss Silver's. 



January 3, Wednesday. The Massachusetts New- 

 Church Woman's Alliance will meet in the Vestry of the 

 Boston Church at 2.30 p. Hi. Mr. Feri Felix Weiss 

 B. Sc., United States Immigrant Inspector, Port of 

 Boston, will speak on "Immigration, and Uncle Sam's 

 Sieve. " Mr. Weiss is an author and well known linguist 

 and an authority on Immigration. This will be an unusual 

 opportunity to hear one of the best equipped men in the 

 Government service, on one of the most vital questions 

 before the public at this time. A most cordial invitation 

 is extended to men to attend this meeting. 



January 5, Friday. The Ladies' Aid will have a supper 

 party in the Vestry at 6.30. Tickets, 25 cents. 



Entertainment: Readings by Miss Bonina Gerve 

 Boronti ; singing by Mrs. May Shepard Hayward, accom- 

 panied on the piano by Miss Evelyn Caler ; Mr. Starling 

 violinist. 



January 7, Sunday. Services at 10.30, conducted by 

 Rev. Earle C. Hamilton. Sunday School at 11.55. 



January 10, Wednesday. The Matrons' Club will meet 

 at 2.30 p. m., with Mrs. Malcolm E. Nichols, 60 Grover's 

 Avenue, Winthrop Highlands. Mrs. Woodward will give 

 a resume of the chapter on "Interest" in "The Individual 

 m the Making," and Mrs. Chalmers will describe home 

 life among the Japanese. 



All who find it convenient are to meet at Revere Beach 

 & Lynn depot (Rowe's Wharf) at 1.45. Get off Winthrop 

 train at Winthrop Highlands, walk through depot, up 

 Crest Avenue, keeping to left to the house, next to' the 

 Leighton House. 



Let us begin the New Year by making this a large and 

 interesting meeting. 



January 12, Friday. The Fraternity will have its regu- 

 lar monthly meeting at the Vestry at 7 45 p m 



Bible Class to meet as near as possible at 8.15, or as 

 soon as the business meeting is finished. We earnestly 

 request that all members and friends will do their best to 

 make it a success. 



We will take as our subject this year the Harmony of 

 the Gospels, dividing the Gospel of Matthew into five 

 parts, taking this month the first three chapters of Mat- 

 thew. Mr. Stiff will be the leader. 



January 14, Sunday. Services at 10.30, conducted by 

 r . Sidney Mayer of Fall River. Sunday School at 1 1 .55. 



January 19, Friday. The Ladies' Aid will meet at 

 10 a. m. at the Vestry. 



January 21 Sunday. Services at 10.30, conducted by 

 Mr. H. Uurand Downward. Sunday School at 11.55. 

 _ January 26, Friday. The Fraternity will have a jolly 

 time for young and old, at 8 p. m. Every one welcome. 

 Bring your friends and have a good time. 



January 28, Sunday. Services at 10.30, conducted by 

 Rev. Wm. F. Wunsch. Sunday School at 11.55. 



Our Society has recently lost one of its earliest and 

 most esteemed members, Miss Mary A. Ingell who 

 passed to the other world November 28, 1916 Uniting 

 with the Church in 1877 she has always been devoted to 

 its interests. Quiet and unobtrusive, she was efficient and 

 helpful, and many a good cause has been assisted by her 

 generosity. She was a woman of the highest type of 

 mind and character, and one whom it was a privilege to 

 call one's friend. To know her was to love her. 



Inc.ixi. — At Milton, Mass., Nov. 28, 

 1910, Mary A. Ingell, aged Til years. .Miss 

 Ingell was one of fifteen who became 

 members of the Roxbury Society under 

 the Rev. Abiel Silver on April 1, JNT7; 

 and the last 39 years have witnessed her 

 firmness in loyalty, her unflagging cour- 

 age, and her quiet devotion to its wel- 

 fare. She fulfilled to a singular degree 

 the Biblical injunction of Matt. vi. ,'! : 

 not only in alms, in the sanctuary and 

 in spmpathetic hospitality, but in serv- 

 ice to the lowly where the gift bore the 

 mark of human appreciation. The left 



hand was kept in extreme ignorance of 

 the beneficent generosity of the right. 

 Assimilation to the conditions of the bet- 

 ter land will be easy to her; she had 

 breathed much of its atmosphere whili 

 here, and had striven conscientiously 

 for conformity to its laws. 



The Rev. Julian K. Smyth, who had 

 known her, while here for 16 years, as 

 a parishioner, gave fitting and heartfelt 

 tribute at her obsequies ; and he reached 

 the many persons present of other faiths 

 through his simple setting forth of the 

 New-Church view of that normal transi- 

 tion to another life which is called 

 death. v.. r <s 



VI, «f/6- 5 



