50 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and 
Dver’s Auto Depot 
THomAs DEROSIER, Prop. 
AUTOMOBILE REPAIR SHOP 
Supplies and Sundries 
Autos to Rent by Hour or Day 
COR. PINE AND BENNETT STS. 
MANCHESTER, MASS. 
Telephone 169 
_. has opened for the season her 
HAND LAUNDRY 
72 Pleasant St,, Manchester 
Tel. 326 W 
First Class Work Guaranteed 
| ~ MRS. MARGARET LEE 
Miss Margaret M. McNamara 
Manicuring, Scalp Massaege 
Marcel Waving 
24 Norwood Avenue, Manchester 
Telephone 164 
In Memnriam 
The North Shore has lost a lover— 
and its waves like many a heart are 
sad upon its shore. No common lov- 
er, dumb and mute before the beauty 
of the thing he loved, but one who 
knew as only genius can the way to 
spread that beauty through the land. 
How well he has done his God-ap- 
pointed task his own fame and the 
fame of this his inspiration-place 
stand mutual sponsors. He gave to 
thousands, beauties native here, but 
foreign to their eyes, so sensed and 
rendered that even we who think we 
know and love them stand rebuked 
and awed before his work, realizing 
the imperfection of our sight and 
understanding. 
In the permanent collection of that 
great gallery in our national capital 
known as the Corcoran Gallery of 
Art, the waves of the old North Shore 
are forever surging in all their might 
and mystery as seen by him “in the 
glittering moonlight.” 
And is it not significant, that when 
in the year 1900, Mr. Rehn felt called 
upon to select for exhibition in the 
historic Paris Salon the only picture 
of his save one, he ever sent across 
that mighty ocean he knew and loved 
so well, he sent a little canvas that 
must because of its size have seemed 
like a postage stamp upon the huge 
walls of the Salon—just a view of 
piling white clouds and blue, blue 
water, entitled, “A Northwester in 
Gloucester Harbor’? And lo! France 
sent it back to him medalled with 
honor—a tribute to his genius and the 
coast he so largely had made known. 
Rome knows him by his “Sunset 
Revelry” across that self-same har- 
bor—and that is all, abroad. 
But in this his own country, where 
his many honors are too well known 
to need recital here, the words spoken 
over him in his studio at Magnolia, 
amid the solemn hush of death and 
iriends, by his neighbor for more than 
twenty years, (the Rev. Dr. Charles 
ae i or Rolin 
Wadsworth of Philadelphia) will find 
an echo in every city where a canvas 
from his hand abides, bearing elo- 
quent witness to their truth: 
“He so loved its beauty, and had 
for so long observed its scenery that 
he had made Cape Ann peculiarly-his 
own. Its spirit seemed to be identi- 
fied with his spirit. He was in touch 
with its lights and with its shadows, 
with its storm and with its calm. .The 
sea-shell holds in its inmost recesses 
the music if the great deep; and so 
he seemed to hold in his heart the vi- 
sion of the ocean and the shore. In 
him reared the white foam of the 
cresting wave, the curving swell of 
the ‘long moon-silvered roll,’ the 
tumultuous joy of the breakers as un- 
der the lash of the gale they came 
rushing and crowding towards the 
shore. In him were also the reflec- 
tions of its more peaceful beauty, the 
sheen of the moonlight upon the heav- 
ing breast of the great bay, the glow 
of the sunset on inlet and cloud, the 
benediction of the wild roses, the 
weird charm of the lonely sand-dunes, 
the stretch of the beaches, the sweep 
of the meadows, the noble uprise of 
the hills. He had taken all these 
things into his heart and he gave them 
back again interpreted on the canvas 
in his rare paintings. He seemed like 
the Spirit of the region, the High 
Priest ministering at the shrine of its 
beauty and Magnolia will lack its’ de- 
votee now that he has gone.” 
So with this tribute merited, a 
blameless life and the love of all who 
knew him, on the sixth day of July at 
four in the afternoon, he put down 
his brushes wet with the commingled 
colors of the spray, and went for a 
walk, little dreaming that his work 
was finished. An hour later, he had 
passed to the Great Beyond. 
Small wonder is it, that the North 
Shore mourns, and that the waves are 
sad upon its shore. 
Homr Mave 
“He said my face is my fortune.” 
“Well, you deserve great credit, for 
you’ve made it nearly all yourself.” 
attacked 
. Ne ‘a . , : 
Reminder 
For Sale 
Black pony, perfect beauty ; fine 
actor in harness or saddle; 
-weight 700; very gentle, 4 years 
old. Will be shown any day 
after 2 p. m. 
A. P. THISseer 
Beverly Farms, Mass. 
Telephone 150 
ConTROL OF THE ARMY WorRM 
When detected, all efforts should be 
centred on keeping ‘the worms out of 
crops not yet attacked, and confining 
their injury to as small an area as 
possible. As a barrier to their pro- 
gress, either make a dust furrow of 
road dust and place around material 
liable to be attatked or plow a deep 
furrow ahead of the worms’ line of 
march. Put poisoned bran mash in 
this furrow. ‘This should be made of 
1 lb. of paris green, 25 lbs. of midd- 
lings or bran, moistened with a quart 
of cheap molasses and 1 gallon of 
of water. 
The best way to kill them in large 
numbers is to spray crops which they 
have not yet attacked with a heavy 
dose of paris green, 2 lbs. to 60 gal- 
lons of water. This strength will not - 
burn the leaves, but in order to be ef- 
fective the crop or strip of grass 
which is selected must be sprayed co- 
piously. Paris green is better than 
arsenate of lead for this purpose, be- 
cause it washes off more easily, and 
so will not injure the feeding value of 
the crop. Where a town is severely 
with the army worm, the 
farmers should combine and use a 
power sprayer, as much more effec- 
tive work can be done in this way. 
Get the local moth superintendent to 
co-operate by loaning the town spray- 
er, where there is one. 
STATE BoARD OF AGRICULTURE. 
136 State House. 
Tue Presipent’s HEALTH 
Considerable speculation surrounds 
the health of the President, since it 
has been reported time and time again 
that he has been obliged to rest from 
his labors on account of sickness. As 
a matter of fact, the President is a 
very well man, but like most peopie 
who have spent their lives in studious 
pursuits, he is subject to frequent 
slight indispositions, which have never 
been serious. 
“Why don’t women dress sensibly ?” 
“Tf they did, half the industries of 
the world would go to smash.” 
