HONORED DEAD. 
(Continued from Page 2.) 
enlarge the army or introduce mili- 
tary rule oppressively among us. 
And they will stand there not only 
to oppress the oppressor, but they 
will stand there to inspire the hum- 
ble and peace-loving youth of the 
land. They will say to the workers 
in the shop and factory and on the 
farm, ‘Not in the seried ranks of 
professional warriors, but in the 
sound and incorrupt and loyal citi- 
zenship of the land lies the nation’s 
strength. They will encourage 
men to be efficient in the arts of 
peace, knowing that efficiency in 
these will be the best preparative 
for the moral demands of righteous 
war and the restraints against un- 
righteous aggression. 
“They will say to the people of 
the land, your grand army, like the 
kingdom of heaven, is within you. 
Your country is not in your broad 
acres, your waving fields and your 
splendid buildings, and still less in 
your battleships and armies, but in 
vour hearts to love and to endure 
the sufferings for righteousness 
sake. 
“That is the lesson the volunteer 
soldier of the Civil war has brought 
to our people. ‘Dhat is his great 
legacy. His flags may turn to dust 
again, as they surely must. They 
are perishable stuff. But his honor 
and his fidelity, his response to a 
great heart of humanity, his steadi- 
ness in the long years of discour- 
agement, and his growth under the 
privations of a war that he thought 
at first would be ended in a month, 
and that dragged out into years,— 
these can never perish from a grate- 
ful country’s memory. Nor shall 
we, their children, and their chil- 
dren’s children suffer them to be 
forgotten. They must soon, in the 
natural order of events, pass away 
from the earth. 
“The last name will soon be gone, 
and the list will be a roster of the 
dead. But their memory shall never 
perish and their valor and lessons 
of their devotion and courage must 
remain as the dearest and most 
priceless possessions of the nation 
they gave their lives to maintain.“ 
Decked the Graves. 
After the exercises in town hall the 
parade formed and marched to the 
various cemeteries and decorated the 
graves. There were more than 100 
in line, made up as follows: 
Platoon of Police 
Chief Peabody, Sergt. Andrews, Officers 
Lee, Lomasney and Lucas. 
Manchester Brass Band, 25 pieces, L.M. 
Blythe, leader. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
13 
Camp 149, S. of V., L. W. Floyd, Com. 
POStG7 GA Rw Bethan tanley, 
in Command. 
Brigade Drum Corps. 
Camp A. E. Low, U.B.B.A., Compan: 
ies A and B, 
Captain H. C. Swett. 
Carriages with Disabled Soldiers. 
There were in the line 28 members 
of the post. James H. Rivers, the 
post adjutant, was officer of the day. 
After marching to the Summer 
Street, Union and Rosedale ceme- 
teries, where 66 graves of departed 
soldiers and sailors were decorated, 
the Post held its services at the vacant 
lot, commemorated to 16 brave soldier 
boys who never returned from the 
war. 
From the cemeteries the procession 
marched to the town wharf, where the 
members of Allen Relief Corps joined 
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services in memory of the sailor dead, 
which were very impressive. Thence 
the procession went to the chapel, 
where a spread was in readiness, pre- 
pared by the W.R.C. 
The appearance of the Boys’ Brigade 
in the line was something new, but 
the boys were highly complimented 
on their appearance. They marched 
like experienced soldiers, with true 
military precision, and they regarded 
the matter in a serious, not a playful 
manner. The one incident of the day 
was the fainting of Archie Houghton 
at Rosedale cemetery, due to the 
fatigue of the march. He joined the 
ranks again and finished the parade. 
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