18 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
MAGNOLIA 
Mr. and Mrs. Bertram Forbes 
spent a few days this week with Mr. 
and Mrs. Frederick Dunbar. Mr. 
Forbes has just returned from a fish- 
ing trip. 
Mrs, Walter S. Eaton returned 
Tuesday from a visit with friends 
in Brookline. Dr. and Mrs, Eaton 
are again at home at the parsonage 
after a brief stay at the Magnolia 
Inn. 
Mr. and Mrs. John V. Carr spent 
the week-end at Newburyport where 
they were guests of Mr, and Mrs. 
George Deane. 
Mrs, K. B. Sherman of Manches- 
ter was a Sunday guest of Mr. and 
Mrs. Arthur Kehoe of Englewood 
Road. 
About a dozen Magnolia {people 
attended the ‘Teachers’ Lecture at 
City hall, Gloucester, last Friday 
afternoon. These lectures are in- 
creasingly popular among Magnolia 
people and are quite well patronized. 
The friends of Sylvester Height 
will be very pleased to learn that his 
condition is improving, although he 
is still at the Eye and Ear Infirmary 
at Boston. It was feared that Mr. 
Height might lose the sight of both 
eyes as the result of a painful ac- 
cident which he recently encounter- 
ed, but he is improving steadily and 
there is every indication that the in- 
jury will be no worse than the sight 
of one eye being slightly impaired. 
Raymond Symonds has been the 
only one of the local hunters to shoot 
a fox and he has a splendid red fox 
skin as a souvenir. Fox hunting is 
a favorite pastime now. Frederick 
Lycett has purchased a splendid fox 
hound. 
The Ladies Aid society of the Vil- 
lage church gave a supper at the 
Women’s Club house last evening, 
which wias largely attended. Misses 
Elizabeth and Jennie Brown, Miss 
Dorothy Story, Miss Beatrice Story, 
Miss Abbie May and Mrs, Helene 
Sherman Kehoe waited upon table. 
The supper was followed by an en- 
tertainment and dance, which was 
greatly enjoyed. 
Rev, Walter S, Eaton will preach 
at the Village church Sunday morn- 
ing on “Family Religion.” In the 
evening Hon. Arthur K.- Peck of 
Brookline, who has delivered two de- 
lightful lectures here before, will give 
an illustrated address entitled ‘‘From 
the Azores to the Bay of Naples.” 
Frederick and Irving Eaton are at 
home for a few days from Worcester 
Tech with their parents at the par- 
sonage. 
First Class Groceries and Kitchen 
Furnishings 
P. §. Lycett Magnolia 
Avenue, Magnolia» 
Telephone 63-2 
MAGNOLIA MARKET. MARKET 
LAFAYETTE HUNT, Proprietor, 
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, HAM, POULTRY, VEGETABLES. AGENTS FOR 
DEERFOOT FARM CREAM AND BUTTER. ORDERS TAKEN AND DE- 
LIVERED PROMPTLY. 
Telephone Connection. 
Magnolia, Massachusetts. 
Also Hunt’s Market, 172 | URMEnas icant Aiadamaabect em Street, Cambridge. 
J, 
—_J. MAY 
Real Estate and Insurance Broker 
Shore Road, Magnolia, Mass. 
Sole Agent For The Gloucester Coal Co, 
Telephone 26-2 Magnolia. 
Mrs. Frank Davis of Gloucester 
entertained her aunt,. Mrs. Susan 
Lock of Gloucester the first of the 
week. 
Rufus Stanley is able to conduct 
his milk business again after a ser- 
lous attack of the grippe. 
TALKED ON Prison LIFE. 
There was a large attendance at 
the Village church last Sunday even- 
ing to hear Rev, George T. Stebbins, 
D. D., who has been chaplain at the 
Charlestown State Prison for miany 
years, speak upon “Prison Life.” At - 
the outset the speaker gave some in- 
teresting figures concerning criminal 
facts in Massachusetts. There were 
155,100 arrests in this state last year 
and 30,000 men, women and minors 
were sentenced to the penal institu- 
tions of Charlestown, Concord, Sher- 
born, ete. 
Dr. Stebbins has a broad-minded 
sympathy for the men with whom he 
comes in contact in his daily work. 
Concerning this he said in part: 
“There is not one man behind the 
bars who is altogether bad and there 
is not one here among you who is 
altogether good. Let your impulses 
govern you, unchecked, for six 
months and see how near to the pris- 
on gates you come. There is not a 
prisoner in Charlestown State Pris- 
on, be he murderer, rapist, forger or 
Notary Public 
M. KEHOE 
CARPENTER - and - BUILDER 
Jobbing Promptly Attended to 
SUMMER ST. MAGNOLIA 
thief, who has not the making of a 
first class saint, nor is there one here 
tonight who has not the makings of 
a first class fiend. Let us all, there- 
fore be charitable in our judgment 
of our unfortunate brothers, 
“Criminals are recruited from two 
classes of homes. ‘There are the 
children who have hot griddles 
thrown at them, who are thrown 
out into the streets on cold winter 
nights because they have not been 
able to steal enough money to satisfy 
greedy parents, who spend their 
nights on the boilers of the press- 
rooms in our big newspaper offices 
and in the corridors of our office 
buildings. There are, too, children 
from good homes, who have been 
given every chance for education and 
training but they have never been 
able to develop their best because of 
their unwillingness to be guided by 
older and wiser people. 
“One young man who was brought 
to me confessed that he had become 
what he was because he had no sand. 
(Continued to page 20) 
