M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER - and - BUILDER 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
See 
MAGNOLIA 
John Perine, who has been ill with 
pneumonia, is now off the dangerous 
list. 
Christian Boyer, the gardener at 
the Oceanside Hotel, is confined to 
his house by a severe cut in the leg, 
which he received while chopping in 
the woods last Tuesday morning. 
Rev. Dr. Walter S. Eaton of the 
Village church officiated Wednesday 
afternoon at the funeral services of 
‘the late EK. Howard Doane of Wen- 
ham, who died at his home on Arbor 
street Monday morning. 
The Blynman club, composed of 
all the young boys of the village, 
were given a royal good time receni- 
ly when Mrs. Free entertained them 
at the Stanley cottage. Ice-cream 
was part of the attraction and music 
was the entertainment. . 
Miss Ethel May is the chairman of 
the entertainment committee that has 
charge of the supper-dance, a “Snow 
Party” which the Ladies’ Aid society 
of the Village church is planning to 
hold this Friday evening, Jan. 21, at 
the Women’s clubhouse. Supper will 
be served from 6 o'clock until 7.30, 
and dancing will be enjoyed until 12. 
Carey’s orchestra of Manchester is to 
furnish the music. This is the first 
party of the winter series that the 
Ladies’ Aid always gives and it will 
be a great attraction for the whole 
village. Proceeds are to be used for 
the necessary expenses of the church 
with which the organization is con- 
nected. 
Rev. Dr. Eaton’s subject at the 
morning service at the Village church 
will be “Grieving the Holy Spirit.” 
In the evening the Magnolia public 1s 
promised a wonderful opportunity to 
hear David Lowrie, the author -of 
“My Life in Prison” and “My Life 
Out of Prison,” give one of his fam- 
ous lectures,—that are not really lec- 
tures, but talks. Mr. Lowrie tells the 
people that come to listen to him (and 
they do listen!) about that part of 
our world that is as little known 
about by the average person as the 
wildest depths of Africa; the prison 
world he describes with a vigor and 
truth that could be gained in only 
" one way, namely, by living in it. He 
is a brave man, for he is doing and 
SPRAYING AND 
INSECT WORK 
NORTE" SH ORE Bier BE 
Jan, 21,1916. 
Groceries and Kitchen Furnishings 
All S. 8. Pierce Co’s Goods sold at their Prices 
Legal Trading Stamps with all Cash Sales of Groceries 
P.S. Lycett retepione 637 Magnolia, Mass. 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor, 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, VEGETABLES. AGENTS FOR 
DEERFOOT FARM CREAM AND BUTTER. 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
Telephone 426R Magnolia. 
kas been doing, the hardest thing in 
life, telling the world of his own con- 
tact with the horrors of prison. He 
was sentenced to San Quentin and 
was paroled five years ago. He took 
up newspaper work and wrote his 
first book, one that woke the people 
of California to the true facts about 
“The Sing Sing of the West,” and at 
the same time he established a unique 
institution, an employment bureau for 
paroled and discharged convicts. Two 
years later he was pardoned by the 
governor of California and since then 
he has written another wonderful 
book, has been associated with Thos. 
Mott Osborne, the warden of Sing 
Sing, in his prison reforms and has 
been lecturing before organizations 
of every imaginable description. His 
remarks about prisons and _ prison 
systems are likely to be a bit startling 
to the average listener, but Mr. 
Lowrie is quite the reverse of hysteri- 
cal, and tells his story calmly although 
with the emphasis gained from ten 
years in prison. 
“THE SETTLEMENT MoveMENT’.” 
For over an hour Albert J. Ken- 
nedy, the Forum speaker last Sunday 
evening held his audience spell bound 
by his instructive, interesting and elo- 
quent lecture on ‘The Settlement 
Movement.” Mr. Kennedy indicated 
R. E. Henderson 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 Prospect Street, Cambridge. 
MAGNOLIA MARKET 
—__J. MAY— 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent for the Gloucester Coal Co. 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
Notary Public 
some of the changes which accom- 
panied the downfall of the cottage- 
family system of industry in Eng- 
land and the rise of the factory sys- 
tem in the early nineteenth century. 
Among the most serious was the new 
way of life made necessary through 
the growth of industrial towns and 
cities. | Over-crowding on the land 
left to the tenement, and congestion 
weakened the human relationships, 
bred for the most part under village 
conditions, which once supported 
ideals and morals. 
The settlement movement repre- 
sents an effort, through study and ex- 
periment in select communities, to 
demonstrate ways and means for or- 
ganizing the average city neighbor- 
hood as a true village. The thorough- 
going application of the resources of 
modern civilization to the needs of 
every local. community and organ- 
ization of the citizens to secure this 
end, are fundamental motives in the 
new democracy. In these motives 
all communities, wherever located, 
inay have an influential part. 
The address was a revelation to 
irany present of the breadth and 
scope of the settlement work, and in- 
terest in Mr. Kennedy and in his 
work was keen. 
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