50 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
June 23, 19-16. 
I. O. O. F. MEMORIAL SUNDAY 
FRATERNAL ORDERS GATHER AT SER- 
VICE IN MANCHESTER CONGREGA- 
TIONAL CHURCH. 
Members of Magnolia lodge, 149, 
I, 0. O. F., and Liberty Lodge of 
Rebekahs assembled at the morning 
service at the Manchester Cong!. 
church in tribute to the deceased 
members of the local lodge of Odd 
Fellows, last Sunday. Members of 
Ocean Lodge, Gloucester, also at- 
tended. A strong sermon touching 
on the principles of Odd Fellowship 
was délivered by the pastor, Rev. 
Charles A. Hatch. During the 
course of the service the names wer2 
read of the members of Magnolia 
Lodge who had passed away during 
the last year, _ They are John O. 
Ober, Charles O. Howe, Charles H. 
Rust, Robert Baker and Larcom W. 
Story. 
“We are all in sympathy with this 
big order which has its fundamental 
principles based on the Bible,” sail 
Mr. Hatch. ‘The story of the Good 
Samaritan is associated closely with 
the principles of the Order. If | 
were director of a motion picture 
company I would not delay in put- 
ting that story before the public.  !t 
is a gripping, dramatic story. ‘There 
are two classes of people today. 
Those who pass by on the other side 
and those who spend their time and 
substance healing and relieving the 
afflicted. 
“We ourselves are apt to be ‘priests 
and Levites’ and pass by on the other 
side. We tell our friends that we 
cannot bear the sight of another's 
suffering, yet across the road from us 
is a neighbor whose heart is yearning 
for sympathy and we pass him by. 
One reason for this is prejudice. We 
hear people say ‘I make it a rule never 
to give to a beggar.’ Better to give 
the ten cents to the beggar who may 
spend it for drink, as we fear, than to 
become like the priest and the Levite. 
Then again, we are apt to lay the 
biame on the fallen. We see a young 
man drinking himself to death and 
say that he should have known bet- 
ter than to have started. Are we do- 
ing anything to help him? When 
we see people in poverty are we not 
apt to say they never had any business 
sense anyway? 
“Most of us are sentimentalists. 
We read a book that brings tears i9 
our eyes at the suffering of a fictt- 
cious character, and the person who 
lies beneath our very eyes we pass by 
on the other side. Next to the sen- 
timentalist the idle curiosity seeker 
excites our contempt. Worse 
than the sentimentalists, in fact, are 
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the ‘slummers,’ the people who visit 
the poor sections of the cities and 
frequent the lowest dives to satisfy 
an idle curiosity. The social settle- 
ment worker is a Levite posing as a 
Good Samaritan.” 
Mr. Hatch mentioned the work of 
St. Francis of Assisi, Jane Addams 
and others as examples of the real 
spirit of good samaritanism. 
“America should become the Good 
Samaritan of nations. She should 
send countless supplies of medicine 
and food to the suffering nations at 
war rather than build huge battle- 
ships to create further international 
jealousy,” said the speaker . “If you 
Odd Fellows and Daughters of Re- 
bekah create a love of mankind you 
are doing the work of Christ and are 
playing the part of the Good Samari- 
ten 
BEVERLY FARMS 
James Deveau has been added to 
the staff of artists at Peter Gaud- 
reau’s barber shop in Central square 
—making a third man, which means 
“no waits.” adv. 
Louis Hamburger, a student at the 
Boston University, has secured a 
position at the Hutchinson estate for 
the summer. 
Rev. Neilson Poe Carey has been 
joined by his mother, Mrs. Geo. D. 
Carey of Baltimore, and next week, 
his sister, Miss Margaret C. Carey, 
will come on to spend the summer at 
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I thought you were going to com- 
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Special rates to weekly patrons 
“Give three reasons for saying ta 
earth is round,” confronted Sandy 
on an examination paper. ‘My teach- 
er says it’s round, the book says it’s 
and a man told me it was 
round.” At his high-school entrance 
examination the physiology pape- 
asked ‘How many times does your 
pulse beat a minute?’ | Sandy put 
down his pen, opened his watch on 
the desk beside him, grasped his pulse, — 
and calmly counted.—Century. 
Taxi—Phone Manchester 290, adv, 
