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_ bor’s hall Wednesday 
well attended. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Miss Grace Quirk, who has been at 
the telephone exchange, has resigned 
to accept the position as bookkeeper 
at Campbell’s garage. 
Lawrence S. Cole, age 24, a well 
known young man of Centreville, 
passed away last Friday after a short 
illness from pneumonia. He left a 
large circle of friends to-mourn his 
loss. Funeral services were held 
Sunday afternoon. 
Joseph Linehan and family have 
returned to Beverly Farms for the 
summer. ‘They are again occupying 
the tenement in the Mrs. George S. 
Pierce house on High street. 
_ At the inter-class meet of the Bev- 
erly High school held on Beverly 
common Monday afternoon, two Bey- 
erly Farms boys helped the class of 
1915 win the meet. ‘They were 
Henry Wright, who won 3d in the 
1-4 mile run and Howard E. Morgan, 
Jr., who won 3d in the high-jump 
and also in the 100-yard dash. 
Dr. Edward T. Rogers of Boston, 
who was at the Farms last summer 
has returned for the season and is 
located at 10 Vine street. 
The baseball season will open in 
Beverly Farms on Memorial day fore- 
noon when the local team will play 
some strong out of town team on the 
playgrounds. 
Former Mayor and Mrs. Charles 
H. Trowt were reminded of the 31st 
anniversary of their marriage last 
Saturday by the good wishes of their 
many friends and neighbors. 
George Day who has been ill for 
a long time at the Beverly hospital 
is improving. 
Although a stormy night, the dance 
conducted by Clan Wallace in Neigh- 
evening was 
The Beverly Farms Firemen will 
hold their regular monthly business 
meeting at the West street engine 
house next Monday evening. 
Miss Jane M. Watson’s dancing 
class which has been meeting in Mar- 
shall’s hall Thursday evening, has 
completed this season’s course of les- 
sons. ‘The pupils will give an exhibi- 
tion to take the form of a carnival 
dance the date being set for the mid- 
dle of June. 
The cottage known as the George 
Stillman house, located on the Dodge 
Farm sold recently to H. P. McKean, 
Jr., is to be moved to a new location 
and improved. Edward Morgan of 
Hull street is the new owner and is 
moving the house to his property on 
that street. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
a7 
THE THISSELL COMPANY 
High Grade Food Products 
Post Office Building - 
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Beverly Farms, Mass. 
If one is busy call the other- 
MEMORIAL SERVICE AT BEVERLY 
FarMs LARGELY ATTENDED 
Members of Preston Post, G. A. R., 
the W. R. C., and the fire department 
attended last Sunday’s Memorial 
service in a body at the Second Bap- 
tist church, Beverly Farms. The 
church, which was crowdel, was dec- 
orated with many American flags. 
Seated on the platform were Rev. 
Clarence Strong Pond, the pastor, 
Theodore H. Holmes, commander of 
the G. A. R. post, Rev. William H. 
Rider, D. D., former pastor of the 
Universalist church in that city, Rev. 
Frank Parker, Rev. George M. Pres- 
ton and Mayor Herman A. MacDon- 
ald. 
The opening program was as foi- 
lows: Organ voluntary, Mrs. Arthur 
Harlow; Doxology, choir; invocation, 
Rev. George M. Preston; resporisive 
reading, conducted by Rev. Mr. Pond; 
hymn, “A Mighty Fortress is Our 
God,” congregation; Scripture read- 
ing by the pastor; prayer, conducted 
by Rev. Frank Parker of Wenham; 
“Nearer My God to Thee,” choir; 
reading of Memorial Day announce- 
ments by Commander Holmes; read- 
ing of the roll call of honored dead, by 
Mayor MacDonald; ‘‘Taps,”’ organ; 
Memorial prayer, by the pastor. 
The Memorial Day address was 
given by Rev. Dr. Rider, who took 
for. his subject, “Honoring Our 
Dead.” He said in part: 
“In memoriam of our Republic’s 
heroic dead we should remind our- 
selves of the unpaid obligations due 
the unifiers of our country, and to 
continue, under God, their hallowed 
loyalty. More than this Holy pur- 
pose we have come in lofty faith to 
recall all who have gone in advance, 
a little while before us, through the 
gateway that leads up to God’s father- 
land, where life is a larger summer. 
“Memorials to the dead should be 
inspiration for the living. In these 
callous commercial days when mater- 
ialism counts for so much, there is a 
much needed lesson in this day. Alas 
that custom has clothed death in such 
somber robe that we hasten to forget. 
“Thanks to Memorial Day and this 
Memorial Sunday we are leaving 
much of that and are selecting the 
most berutiful retreats for the ashes 
of our departed, are making our bur- 
ial places attractive with flowers and 
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Our Prescription Department is 
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trees, where the birds may come 
and where little children may go with- 
out fear, charmed by the tender beau- 
ty of our family lots, unfenced, open 
with only a footpath between, all in 
one field on God’s acre, the Germans 
call it. 
“It is not enough to set this day 
apart and give the National Memor- 
ial over to pastime and unproductive 
games, else do away with the 30th of 
May, if we lack patriotic devotion, 
and concentrate in the Sabbath pre- 
ceding such religious and patriotic ob- 
servance as shall tell the world that 
the dead are not forgotten. 
“The names of our honored dead, 
like the names of those who died to 
set us free, can only adequately be 
honored when we carry out their de- 
sires.” 
Breeze subscription, $2 a year. 
