NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder Bai 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Bishop Lawrence will hold the ser- 
vice at St. John’s Episcopal church 
Sunday morning at 10 o’clock. Note 
the change in hour. 
“A Pageant in Dancing” by the 
past season pupils of Miss Jane M. 
Watson will take place in Neighbor’s 
hall next Tuesday evening; follow- 
ing the exhibition general dancing 
will be in order. 
FE. Douglas McPherson, center 
fielder of the Farms ball team, has 
been sent for by Earl Mack, son of 
Connie Mack, and manager of the 
Raleigh, N. C., team to play with 
that aggregation of ball tossers. It 
is probable that McPherson will ac- 
cept the offer. 
- A granolithic sidewalk is being laid 
in front of the store occupied by Miss 
Mary White on West st. 
There will be a public entertain- 
ment and dance in Neighbor’s hali 
Thursday evening, June 18, under 
the direction of the Boy’s club of St. 
John’s Episcopal church. 
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin R. Temple of 
Rockland, Me., have been visitors at 
the Farms this week. 
West beach is receiving its full 
quota of attention these warm days, 
especially during the afternoon. 
Of interest to Beverly Farms peo- 
ple is “The Sign of the Crane,” a 
tea house, food shop and woman’s 
exchange of which Mrs. George R. 
Dean of Manchester is the proprietor. 
The opening will be next Wednesday, 
June 17. It is located on Summer 
st., Manchester, near the old ceme- 
tefy. 
Joseph Donovan of Beverly Farms, 
who is at the present time, working in 
the government mint at Washington, 
D. C., played on the mint baseball 
team last Satuday and made three 
hits out of four trips to the plate. 
He also played an excellent fielding 
game. 
OPEN AIR CONCERT 
BY 
BrEvERLY Farms BAND. 
Beverly Farms, June 17, 19I4. 
ReveL L. Davis, Conductor. 
1. March, Under Arms Hayes 
_2. Golden Sunset, Waltzes Hall 
3. Baritone Solo, A Stein Song 
Mr. WiLttIAM MARSHALL. 
4. March, The Militiaman Blaine 
5. Selection, Maritana Wallace 
6. Schottische, Eyes of Brown Huff 
Pmacoveriure, « Petit” Thomas 
8. Serenade Moonbeams Huff 
9. The Rye Waltzes  MacLaughlii 
fo. Matrcie Otnicer: of the Day 
ReeB eri all 
Grand National. 
I. O. O. F. MEMORIAL SERVICE. 
Rev. Dr. RmeR SPoKE AT SUNDAY 
SERVICE 
There was a large attendance at 
the memorial service of Magnolia 
lodge of Odd Fellows and Liberty 
Rebekah lodge at the Baptist church 
Manchester, last Sunday. Rev. Wm. 
He Rider aD Dore lssexnewas tie 
speaker and he delivered a masterly 
address. Mr. and Mrs. Sargent of 
the choir of the Congregational 
church were heard in a duet and 
solos. The attendance was marked 
by many townspeople who. were not 
members of the orders. The mem- 
bers met in the lodge room at 4.30 p. 
m. and marched to the church in a 
body, where the service commenced 
at 5 o'clock. 
Rev. Dr. Rider took for his text, II 
Samilelar: cose aluvatin distressed stor 
thee, my brother Jonathan.” 
Rev. Mr. Rider said in part: “Loy- 
alty to the dead thus insures fidelity 
to the living. Recalling those with 
whom we have laughed and wept, in 
generous purposed mind, in- self de- 
nial, such a memorial should be an 
inspiration to greater service, as when 
they took the heart of Bruce in its 
silver case,—flinging it where the 
fight was fiercest, shouting, ‘O brave 
heart of Bruce, I folow thee!’ 
“No other trasmitted memory is as 
remarkable as that of a departed lov- 
ed one; the first of our race touched 
by grief over departed friendship 
realized faint or deep the emotion of 
this hour that moves us to gentle, sad 
assurance that our own are our own 
forever. When the stars dim the old 
earth melts in the sea and only life 
and love remain eternal as God. 
“Whether it is the colossal sphinx 
lifting its mute face from the shifting 
sands of the Nile; the nearby prya- 
mids; imposing tombs. of more im- 
posing kings; temples of marble 
whose sculptured freizes outline the 
glory of departed worth; all rejoic- 
ing in remembered fraternity, they 
alike reiterate in eloquent form the 
survival of that affection which made 
David the better king, the truer son, 
living the more regal life as he re- 
called Jonathan, his friend. 
“Whether it is the ancient legends 
of brotherhood, the Grecian-Roman 
inscriptions, more recent cathedrals, 
the bronze and granite shafts to our 
country’s defenders they repeat faith 
surviving in lives made better by re- 
membered dead. We obey the still 
small voices unheard by strange ears 
as we never follow the loud com- 
mands of civic or public orders. 
“What more becoming scripture 
than that far back story earlier by 
more than a thousand years than the 
most: fraternal of all scripture, reveal- 
ing in Christ a great elder brother of 
the race sent of God to teach us the 
lessons of man. That love of God 
cannot be apart from love to man. 
Read it again and again; this story 
of the man not afraid to tell of this 
affection, for he who has no sense of 
togetherness of brotherhood, while he 
may get on in his self content he 
misses the gladness of life. What is 
life, what citizenship, what country, 
Heaven itself but this togetherness? 
The United States is the Brother- 
hood of all its citizens: that is the 
very conerstone of our Republic, its 
genius, its glory, its mutual interest 
in all, by all, for all; it is the com- 
pact of all for the general good, the 
common man. 
“In this callous commercial age 
when men sell themselves for a mess 
of pottage, with its practical smile at 
Daniel’s love for Jonathan, such a 
service as this calls us back to that 
rugged ancestral spirit transmitting 
from generation to generation the fine 
qualities of manhood true to the part 
and by that loyalty true to the pass- 
ing present. 
“We must honor the Jew for his 
reverent regard for Isaac and of Ja- 
cob, for as a people we are lacking 
in this sacred veneration. We fancy 
it is effeminate. It is only the tender- 
est of the brave who dare show senti- 
ment. 
“Tf, as you look out upon life it 
seems as if selfishness is in the as- 
cendent, that society is unmindful of 
those unaffiliated with its cult and 
rank recall that for you David and 
Jonathan lived as brothers down 
through the long cycles of advance; 
these men always were souls knit to 
one another with more than triple 
links of gold. ‘Human love interprets 
the divine.’ ” 
Unclaimed letters at Beverly Farms 
Postoffice, June 10, 1914:—Miss 
Gena Anderson, Mr P.O. Bean, 
Miss Annie Carter, Mrs. Frank Duny, 
Miss L. Duncan, F. T. Flynn, Esqi, 
Mr. Adelord Paborieault, Leonora 
Jones, Miss Mary Kelley, Miss Mc- 
Curdy, Miss E. 'C. McGregor, Mrs. 
Tl’. K. Mitchell, Monsieur Aug. Ostan, 
Mrs. Porter Pollack, Frank W. 
Smith, Esq., Mrs. Harry. B. Sawyer 
and Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Sortwell.— 
Laurence J. Watson, P. M. 
Alterations including two large 
dormer windows in the roof have been 
made at the house of Wm. H. Ger- 
rish, Hale st. 
Patronize home industry by hav- 
ing your printing done at this office. 
