NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
A:WEEKLY: JOURNAL: DEVOTED-T0-THE:BEST: INTERESTS:OFTHENORTHSHORE 
Vol. II. 
Che Happy Life. 
No. 10 
(ADAPTED FROM SIR HENRY WOTTON.) 
1568 — 1639. 
BY JOSEPH A. TORREY. 
Flow happy ts he born or taught 
Who serveth God's all-perfect will ; 
Whose armor is divinely wrought, 
And truth his neverfatling skill; 
Whose passions not his master's are ; 
Who death doth never fear to face ; 
Who on the Lord doth cast hts care, 
And trusteth where he cannot trace ; 
Who envieth not whom chance doth 
raise 
To wealth, who never understood 
The false success that worldlings 
praise; 
Nor rules for greed, but rules for 
good ; 
From faction and corruption freed, 
Hts consctence ts his sure retreat; 
Whose state can neither flatterers feed, 
Nor ruin make him less than great, 
Who God doth late and early pray, 
More of His grace than goods to 
lend ; 
Who walks along the world's highway 
With man a brother, Christ a friend: 
This man is free from servile bands 
Of sin’s control or error’s thrall ; 
Lord of himself while God commanas, 
And having nothing yet hath all. 
2 | 
MANCHESTER, MASS., SATURDAY, JULY 22, 1905 
Three Cents 
a —= = 
ANNUAL GATHERING. 
“Ye Elder Brethren,” Manchester’s Unique 
Organization Met at Tuck’s Point, 
Wednesday. 102 Present. 
If there is any one day in the year 
in Manchester when time counts as 
naught it is the day of the annual 
gathering of Ye Elder Brethren, for 
then that uncontrollable article is 
taken well in hand, more than half a 
century is thrown asunder, and the 
boys of fifty, seventy-five and eighty 
years ago are carried back to the days 
of their youth. 
The gathering this year—the 27th 
in the history of that most unique 
organization—proved no less interest- 
ing, and more successful, if anything, 
than tn years past. 
Brighter skies or fairer weather 
could not have greeted the Elderlies. 
Though the day was warm, it was 
{Continued on Page 13.] 
FRANCIS M. WHITEHOUSE’S, MANCHESTER. 
‘‘ Crowhurst,”’ the beautiful summer 
home of Francis Meredyth White- 
house of Chicago, at Manchester Cove, 
is one of the most picturesquely 
located houses on the North Shore. 
Built close to the sea, in one of those 
sections of the shore where the ‘ bold 
and rock-bound coast’’ is at its best, 
it commands an exceptionally fine 
view of the ocean, while it is at the 
same time entirely surrounded by a 
magnificent growth of beautiful pines 
and oak trees, which are a peculiarity 
of this shore. It stands 80 feet above 
the sea level, with a 3800-foot terrace 
just below it, running down to the 
water’s edge. 
The above picture is reproduced 
through courtesy of the Boston Tran- 
script. 
