18 
NiO Rel Miers HO) Riky- eBeR Bez 
M. KEHOE 
and - BUILDER 
CARPENTER - 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
a 
MAGNOLIA 
The fortnightly meeting of the 
Whist club was held Tuesday after- 
noon of this week at the home of 
Mrs Henry W. Butler, Magnolia ave. 
Mrs. Harlow H. Halliday (former- 
ly Miss Josephine Brown) left re- 
cently for New York city, where she 
will spend the remainder of the win- 
Le Ire 
“Falsehood” will be Rev. Dr. W. 
-S. Eaton’s subject at the Village 
church next Sunday morning. ‘This 
is continuing the series on “The 
Ethics of St. Paul,” which Dr. Eatoa 
has been giving for several weeks. 
Sunday evening, Magnolia people 
are to have an opportunity to hear an 
address on “The Settlement Move- 
ment” by an eminent authority, 
namely Albert J. Kennedy of South 
End House, Wheaton College and 
School for Social Workers (Sim- 
mons and Harvard). He will lec- 
ture here on the rise and development 
of the settlement movement in Eng- 
land and the United States, and will 
be without doubt one of the best 
speakers of the season, not alone 
from the standpoint of interest, but 
also of authenticity. Anyone who 
has heard this speaker upon any cf 
lis other subjects, especially, ‘“Neigh- 
borhood Organization and Social Re- 
form” or “Household Furnishing— 
Art and the Home” will realize what 
a treat is in store. Prof, Kennedy 
has written several interesting books 
in association with R. A. Woods, in- 
cluding ‘Handbook of Settlements,’ 
“Young Working Girls,” “The Settle- 
ment Horizon,” etc. He is one of 
those men whose life has been so 
hroad and sympathetic that he is par- 
ticularly fitted for his work. His 
college was Rochester and he later 
became connected with the Rochester 
Theological Seminary and Harvard. 
He held the South End House Fel- 
lowship from 1907 to 1909 and the 
chair of History and Art at Wheaton 
College in 1913 and 1914. 
W. T. CoivER oN WAR. 
There was a large audience at thie 
Village church last Sunday nignt 
when W. T. Colyer of London, Eng- 
land, gave a timely address on “What 
War Means in England.” Coming, 
SPRAYING, 
BURLAPPING, 
CEMENTING, BOLTING 
and INSECT WORK 
Jan. 14, 1916, 
Groceries and Kitchen F urnishings 
All S. S. Pierce Co’s Goods sold at their Prices 
Legal Trading Stamps with all Cash Sales of Groceries 
P.S. Lycett telephone 4637 Magnolia, Mass. 
MAGNOLIA MARKET 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor, 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, VEGETABLES. 
DEERFOOT FARM CREAM AND BUTTER. 
AGENTS FOR 
ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
Telephone Connection. 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. 
——J, MAY a 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Telephone 426R Magnolia. 
as they did, at a time when the whole 
world has only silghtly recovered 
from the first horror of the carnage 
in Europe, the words of Mr. Colyer 
made an undeniable impression on 
his audience. He said that tne pros- 
pects of world peace were very poor 
if they depended on the advocacy ef 
those who ceased preaching peace as 
soon as they were confronted by the 
reality of war. He was not afraid of 
the taunt of “peace. at any price.” It 
was always cheap and easy to talk 
war, but the blessing of peace would 
have to be paid for, like all the liber- 
ties and benefits already gained for 
humanity, by the pioneers who were 
willing to run risks for their ideal. 
One of the first things to be done 
was to make people realize what war 
really involved; and he used the con- 
ditions in England as an illustration. 
He gave instances of the inroads 
made, under the “Defence of the 
Realm” regulations, upon the rights 
of British subjects to life and liberty; 
he deplored the campaign of slander 
which is being conducted by certain 
sections of the British press and by 
certain capitalistic interests, against 
the British workingmen who have al- 
ready surrendered right after right 
in order that munitions of war may 
be manufactured at top speed; he 
showed how the depletion of the male 
+ 
Notary Public 
population must effect the position of 
women in society and in the labor 
market at the end of the war; 150,000 
men had already been killed in action, 
to say nothing of the scores of thou- 
sands of blinded and maimed humin 
wrecks who could never hope to sup- 
port a home in the future. The ques- 
tion of the population for the future 
was a very disquieting one, but it had 
to be faced; and some of the sug- 
gested solutions were degrading to 
womanhood and to the highest ideals 
of marriage. 
Finally organized religion in every 
country at war was being discredited 
hy the abandonment by the majority ~ 
of the religious leaders of the gospel 
which they ordinarily preached, and 
by a reversion to the idea of tribal 
gods. 
GRANADA. 
Granada, the last of the Spanish 
provinces on which the Moors retain- 
ed a hold, was freed from that alien 
race by the forces of Ferdinand and 
Isabella the same year America was 
discovered, 1492. 
Men do meaner things than wom- 
en; but women are more ready to say 
meaner things than men. 
The Breeze $2 a year postpaid. 
R. E. HENDERSON. 
Box 244. BEVERLY, MASS.: 
Telephone, 
