NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
LOYALTY IS THE, PRICE OF 
FREEDOM. 
[Continued from page 1.] 
“He has planted the hills at. our 
backs and houses the sea at our feet, 
and everywhere our lines have fallen 
with us in pleasant places; we are 
ever enjoying a goodly heritage. Cit- 
izens indeed are we; citizens of no 
mean township ! 
“The price of continued freedom is 
not an outpouring of public moneys in 
the so-called development of national 
industries, in the subsidizing of inter- 
ests capable of looking after them- 
selves, but its summation hes in the 
word ‘ Loyalty.’ 
“ Loyalty is the breath of our na- 
tional being. Every citizen is the 
nation’s head. Our freedom withers 
at the approach of Tyranny and cor- 
rupts when touched by Treason’s 
tainted breath. But loyalty to the 
nation is only another description of 
loyalty to the home. 
“Loyalty is born in the cradle, im- 
parted to the child in the touch that 
soothes its sleep and finds its apothesis 
in the Thanksgiving Day reunions, 
where love sauces every dish and 
kindness anticipates each best dessert. 
‘“‘Loyalty to the home, to the cul- 
ture of the children, to the sacred 
obligations of divinities, to the moral- 
ity and religion taught by Jesus Christ 
and affirmed and re-affirmed in treaties 
signed in the blood of our reverend 
ancestors, is the inestimable price we 
must pay to continue the residence 
amongst us of the spirit of American 
Freedom.” 
An Apostle of Loyalty. 
“A most illustrious apostle of loy- 
alty has just answered the summons 
of the eternal lawgiver. 
“The Hon. George Frisbie Hoar 
leaves a record of unblemished loyalty 
to the interests of Massachusetts, 
whose welfare and ideals he had ever 
close at heart. 
«The rugged escarpments of New 
England’s coast are discernible in the 
indefatigable opposition with which 
this distinguished senator ever con- 
fronted what appeared to his manly 
heart unjust or false. 
“There is no fulsome flattery in - 
the avowal that the departed states- 
man was the good genius of American 
citizenship, and in him our highest 
conception and grandest interpreta- 
tion of civic righteousness lie framed 
in the gold of autumnal maturity. 
‘‘ He will be remembered for that 
depth of wisdom which was more than 
opportune sagacity ; for that breadth 
of scholarship that blended the beams 
of a strong intellectual presence with 
the sparkling waters of ancient learn- 
ing. 
‘‘He will be remembered longest 
for that rich quality of citizenship 
which made him easily the Dean of 
contemporary legislators and the not 
unworthy colleague cof Washington, 
Lincoln, Webster, Sumner and Mc- 
Kinley. 
BAPTIST CHURCH, MANCHESTER. 
_ “We have conjured from the ob- 
livion of the tomb the forms of those 
who paid the price of that Freedom 
which justly we esteem our dearest 
heritage. 
«They have lost none of their in- 
herent nobility since, with dirges and 
tears and flowers, we laid them to rest. 
in the soil they loved. Their faces 
bear that expression of fidelity still 
that made so handsome features 
rugged from the toils of war and 
darkened by the winds and rains and 
sea. 
‘With crowns of love we adorn 
those brows where abide the -blood- 
stain and the scar. Their eyes with 
holy fire bear down upon us and their 
swords are lifted high fo where one 
stands whose presence exhales an 
infinite Peace. He is the inspiration 
of men to loyalty. He is bravest of 
the brave. 
‘Let us twine the standard of the 
free about the emblem of our Lord, 
and may our national freedom be 
earth’s grandest type of that eternal 
freedom purchased by the Son of 
God.” 
MANCHESTER, 
Miss Amy Robertson of Beverly 
was a guest over Sunday of her 
brother Alex. Robertson, Bridge 
street. 
Miss Mary White was home from 
Brookline, where she teaches, and 
spent Sunday with her family on Cen- 
tral street. ; 
William Pawley of Salem, D. D. G. 
M. W., paid his first official visit to 
North Shore Lodge A: OF UP We 
Tuesday night. 
Archie Greenough, engineer at the 
pumping station, is enjoying a two 
week’s vacation with friends in and 
about Boston. 
Mrs. Lydia Dunn, 88 years old, is 
quite ill this week at the hcme of her 
son, Bridge street. 
Cyrus Killam has been on the jury 
of the Superior Civil court which has 
been sitting there this week in New- 
buryport. 
Mrs. George Freeman and daughter 
Talma, of Detroit, have been guests 
for the past few days of Mr. and Mrs. 
A. B. Dunn, Bridge street. Mrs. 
Freeman is a sister-in-law of Mrs. 
Dunn. 
Sewing machines at Dyer’s. * 
Things you Ought to Know. 
The ‘* Dunlap Percolator’”’ is the most economical coffee pot on the market. 
It makes a guaranteed saving of 33% per cent of the coffee ordinarily used. 
It saves the use of eggs entirely. The rancid cloth or muslin is eliminated. 
It is the only coffee pot made that makes coffee wiTHOUT Boiling or Scalding the coffee 
grounds. . 
No steam or aroma escapes from the “ Dunlap Percolator.” 
It is the most sanitary pot known. 
every time it is used. 
Coffee. Call and see it in operation. 
‘*The only coffee pot that pumps.” 
It makes delicious coffee 
It works wonders with Cereal 
F. S. THOMPSON, JEWELER, 
164 Main St., Gloucester, Mass. 
LAE AN DIR EAS ecu @ Cr 
HEATING AND SHEET IRON WORK ogo 
STOVES AND COOKING APPARATUS 
HARDWARE AND PLUMBING 
117 to 121 [lain Street, 
= GLOUCESTER 
. 
