26 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Ux orth Shore Brevze » 
EEE | 
Published every Friday Afternoon. 
J ALEX. LODGE, Editor and Proprietor. 
Telephones: Manchester 137, 132-3. 
Knight Building, Manchester, Mass. 
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Address all:communieations and make 
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Entered as second ¢lass matter at the 
Manchester, Mass., Postoffiee. 
VOLUME 8 June 24, 1910 NumBer 25 
June 25—July 1 
SUN FULL TIDE 
Rises Setaw1° a. Mae P.M. 
25 ‘Sa. 4 8 Teroeel li e259 12355 
26 Su. 49 y foe) I es 1< 37 
27 M. 49 7 25 T55 Peles 
PRTG 9 9525" aks 317 
29 W. 4 10 725s) e837. 4 09 
30 Th. 4 10 vie? *e) 433 5 05 
1 Fr. 411 ia AA, owes ht 6 01 
Flower Show Next Week. 
The annual Rose Show of the 
North Shore Horticultural society 
will be held-on Vine street, Beverly 
Farms, near the railroad station on 
Wednesday and Thursday of next 
week. An exceptionally fine ex- 
hibition will be made and the large 
society tent will be filled with a fine 
display in all classes, and will be 
well worth the patronage of the peo- 
ple of the North Shore. 
The society is making a departure 
in holding its show this year at 
Beverly Farms. The shows have al- 
ways been held at Manchester, and 
for the last two or three seasons, the 
large tent used for the xhibition has 
been pitched on the lawn near the 
Essex County elub-house. As many 
of the members of the society, as 
well as exhibitors are from the Bev- 
erly Farms and Beverly section of 
the North Shore, it seems fair to all 
concerned that the exhibition should 
be held in this new location at least 
once this year. 
The show will open to the puble 
at 2 p.m. on Wednesday and will re- 
inain open continuously until 9.30 
p.m. Thursday. Admission 25 cents, 
after 5 p. m., 10 cents. 
Make known your wants in the 
classified adv. columns of The 
Breeze. 
1 
CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION. 
Founding of the Congregational Sunday School at Manchester Observed 
Last Sunday. 
The services at the Congregational 
Church, Manchester, Sunday, both 
morning and evening, were in recog- 
nition of the founding of the Sunday 
School one hundred years ago. Spe- 
cial music was rendered at the 
morning service and the sermon 
was preached by Rev. Charles H. 
Williams of Gloucester. Two former 
pastors were also present and took 
part in the services. They were 
Rev. E. P. Tenney and Rev. Geo. E. 
Freeman. Mr. Tenney compared the 
reading of the Scriptures to the 
reading of the daily papers at the 
present time and lamented the fact 
that the Bible was not more widely 
read.: He held up the pages of the 
Boston Transcript, illustrating the 
volume of the reading in the Serip- 
tures, showing how three times the 
size of the paper which he held in his 
hand represented the entire old testa- 
ment. He thought the Sunday school 
ought to do more in haying the Bible 
more widely read. He was afraid the 
Bible was read by little ‘‘snips’’ at a 
time, while it ought to be read more 
profusely. 
Rev. Mr. Freeman’s remarks were 
of all the more interest from the fact 
that he preached at Manchester 50 
years ago and took an active part in 
the exercises held at that time in 
connection with the 50th anniversary 
of the founding of the Sunday 
School. One of the effeets of the Sun- 
day Sehool, he was afraid, was the — 
taking of the family altar from the 
home. This work was now left to 
the Sunday School. In his youth, re- 
ligious instruction was part of the — 
family life. The Sunday School he — 
thought was responsible with doing — 
away with this. % 
Rey. Mr. Williams gave some in- 
teresting statistics _relative to the 
position of the Sunday School in life | 
today. He showed that of number 
of members uniting with churches, — 
the greatest number came through 
the Sabbath School. The Sabbath — 
School should lay the. foundation — 
in our religious life, he thought. — 
There is need of making a more 
strenuous effort to get the young ~ 
people of the Sunday School -into— 
the church fold. The great time for 
discipling for the work of Jesus— 
Christ is in the ’teens. If he had his — 
way, he said, the children would — 
unite with the church when they had ~ 
attained the age of nine to twelve 
years. Z 
The member of the school as they. 
entered the church in the morning — 
were each presented with a badge. In %. 
the evening, a concert program was_ 
earried out by the children. Remarks — é 
were made by Superintendent Sabin ~ 
and two former Superintendents — 
Professor N. B. Sargent and O. Te 4 
Roberts. 
pit ye 
Summer Train Arrangement. 
The summer time table of the Bos- 
ton & Maine went into effect last 
Monday. The term Portland Divi- 
sion is now used instead of the old 
-and familiar term Eastern Division. 
Every train on the division has re- 
ceived @ new number. There are 15 
trains a day from Boston and 10 
trains on Sunday. There are 32 
trains a day on the Gloucester 
branch and 20 on Sunday. Bes: les 
these, there is a Saturday afternoon 
special and the subseriber’s private 
train which goes up and down the 
branch daily except Sunday. Sever- 
al expresses have been added. There 
is also a train which is express to 
Boston from Magnolia, leaving there 
at 8.14 in the morning, and on the 
return trip, the train leaves Boston 
at 5 p. m. and does not stop until it 
reaches Magnolia at 5.42. There is 
a Sunday train leaving Gloucester at 
8.08 p. m. and running express t9 
Beverly. The usual 3.20 train from 
“Boston now leaves at 3.25 and runs 
ter leaving Manchester, and going in 
” 
express to Beverly. The schedulal 
between Manchester and Boston is — 
as follows: = 
To Boston 6.24, 7.27, 7.58. oe 
935 1084-1 133: 412.41, 130: 3.00 ag 
3.16 (Saturdays only), 4.19, 5.19, 
6.38, 9.06 and 10.10. Sundays 7.33, 
8.33, 10.20, 1.30, 2.27, 4.41, 6.18, 7.54) 
9.08 and 9.48. 
2.10 is Saturdays only), : 
5.17, 6.02, 6.23, 7.21, 8.07, 10.23 an 
12.14... Sundays . 9.07, 10.56, 11.57.55 
1.32, 3.07, 5.22, 6.54, 8.12; 9.39 anda 
10.40. i 
The arrival and departure of 
trains from other North Shore towns 
ean readily be computed from the— 
above as the trains arrive at Mag- © 
nolia approximately five minutes af- — 
the other direction, trains arrive 2@ 
West Manchester, Beverly Fa 
and Pride’s Crossmg about p 
seven and eleven minutes respective- 
ly after departure from Manchester, 
