2465 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE Bot ae 
Board of Health Ordinance 
All boats propelled by explosive engines 
and used on any salt waters within the 
Town of Manchester shall be provided 
with an underwater exhaust or muffler, 
and such underwater exhaust or mufller 
shall be so constructed and used as to 
mufiie the noise of the explosion ina rea- 
sonable manner, and no such boat shall be 
used on said waters so as to exhaust ex- 
cept through such underwater exhaust or 
mufiler. 
BOARD OF HEALTH, 
Fred K. Swett, See ’y. 
Manchester, Mass., June 15, 1910. 
FOURTH OF JULY CELEBRATION. 
MANCHESTER. 
The committee having in charge the 
celebration of the Fourth of July heartily 
extend to all, an invitation to participate 
in the various yours as arranged for the 
day 
it is especially nesir ou that every lodge 
and club in Manchester should enter float 
or other feature, or march in a body in the 
morning parade. 
Very respectfully, 
F. G. CHEEVER, Chairman, 
ALBERT CUNNINGHAM, Sec’y, 
LOUIS O. LATIONS, 
HOLLIS L. ROBERTS, 
WALTER R. BELL, 4 
JOHN F. SCOTT, 
R. L. CHEEVER, 
Committee Fourth of July Celebration. 
Branch Bakery 
50 Central St., Manchester 
WARD’S BREAD 
DRAKE’S SPONGE AND POUND 
CAKE 
CURTIS CAKE 
SUNSHINE BISCUITS 
Gingerale and Tonics 
ICE CREAM PARLOR CONNECTED 
Telephone 11-4 
DRESSMAKING | 
MRS. MARY M. LANE (formerly with 
Mrs. Annie Obear of Beverly Farms) 
would like engagements by the day or 
week. House Dresses, Shirtwaist Svits, 
Children’s Dresses, and Ladies’ repair 
work a specialty. 96 SCHOOL STREET, 
MANCHESTER. 
FOREST WARDEN NOTICE 
This is to inform the public that I have 
been appointed Forest Warden for Man- 
chester by Mr. F. W. Rane, State Forester, 
and I have appointed the following as my 
deputies: 
M. E. GORMAN, 
NATHAN P. MELDRUM, 
JOSEPH P. LEARY, 
LORENZO BAKER, 
JAMES SALTER, 
JACOB H. KITFIELD, 
WM. YOUNG, 
FRED’K BURNHAM, Forest Warden. 
Pearls from Palestine 
Che Sower. 
Marr, xi1:3-23. 
This is the story the Lord Christ told 
In the days of old: 
Behold! 
A Sower went forth to sow; 
And lo! 
O’er all the plain : 
He seattered the golden grain. 
Some seed by the wayside fell, 
And sooth to tell, 
The fowls of the air in an hour 
Did the seeds devour, 
So that no more they could be found. 
Some fell on stony ground, 
And, having no depth of earth, 
Quickly they sprang into birth ; 
But because the soil was dry, 
When the sun was hot and high, 
The were scorched in the noontide ray 
And withered away. 
Some seed did fall 
Where thorns grew thick and tall. 
Thin were the blades and few, -: 
And, choked by the thorns, they grew, 
But bore no fruit at all. 
Some feel on goodly soil 
And rewarded the Sower’s toil, 
Covering the fertile plain 
With a wealth of waving grain, 
Thirty, sixty, a hundred fold. 
Thus did the Lord unfold 
The truth of the tale He told: 
The seed is the Word, 
Which, when our ears have heard, 
Cometh Satan with subtle art, 
And from the heart— 
Like to a thieveth bird— 
Taketh the Word, 
Lest we the truth receive 
And so believe. 
They on the rock are they 
Who hear the word with gladness, but straightway 
Having no root, 
Can bear no fruit, 
And, through temptation, fall away. 
And these are they that.sprung .... 
The thorns among; 
Hindered by life’s affairs, 
And choked by earthly eares, . 
No fruit unto perfection can they bring. 
And these are they who in good soil do spring: 
Who into honest hearts 
Receive what God imparts, 
And bring forth fruit more precious far than gold,: 
Some thirty, sixty, some an hundred fold. 
