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Patrolman Byron Bullock has been 
on a trip by water to Baltimore and 
Washington the past week. Officer 
Stoops has been on day duty during 
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Playground Instructor McCarthy 
left Monday for St. Albans, Vt., 
where he has a position for the win- 
ter as physical director at the Strana- 
han Memorial club. 
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Manchester 
Tel. 73-R and W 
Frank Crombie and Wade A. 
Brooks attended the Great Council 
session of the Red Men in Boston 
this week, as delegates from Conomo 
tribe, I13. 
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Roy, who 
were wed in Beverly, a fortnight ago, 
are living at 58 Norwood ave. Mr. 
Roy is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Jasper 
hoy of Pine st. His bride was Miss 
Martha Ayers, daughter of J. C. 
Ayers of Beverly. 
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Flectric Co. 
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| 21 SUMMER STREET 
| 
Telephone 168W 
T. A. LEES, Manager 
Oct. 27,1916. 
IDEALS OF THE PILGRIM _ 
Benerits To Later GENERATIONS — 
CAME From Him, Says SPEAKER 
MERICA owes thanks to the Pil- 
grim for four great principles 
which are fundamentals of American- 
ism—freedom of religious worship, 
love of truth, democracy and love of 
learning. These were points em- 
phasized by Rev. Charles A. Hatch, 
pastor of the Manchester Congl. — 
church, in his sermon on Sunday eve- | 
ning on “Cotton Mather and a Trip 
to Revere Beach.” 
The subject was chosen in obser- — 
vance of Tercentenary Sunday, which 
was celebrated by Congregational 
churches throughout the country in 
anticipation of the 300th anniversary 
of the landing of the Pilgrims at Ply- — 
mouth Rock, which will be held in 
1920. 
“The outstanding characteristic in 
the Pilgrim was his determination to 
follow the dictates of his conscience,” 
said Mr. Hatch. “In England you ~ 
see him suffering torture in prison, 
you see him in exile and setting forth 
to a new and strange land in search 
of freedom of worship and always 
you see that unfaltering determination 
to follow the dictates of his con- 
science. He has been criticized be- 
cause he did not allow others that 
same freedom to follow the dictates of © 
conscience. You hear it said that 
Roger Williams was banished from 
the Massachusetts Bay colony because 
he advocated freedom of religiotts 
worship. Roger Williams was ban- 
ished because he was the most med- 
dlesome, irritable and troublesome 
man ever found in any community. 
“The Pilgrim was a great lover of 
truth. Of all the characters of the 
Pilgrim band the most noble was the 
saintly John Robinson. © Standing 
with the open Book in his hand he 
was wont to say to his little band, 
‘There is a time coming when God 
will give jis more light upon His ~ 
Word.’ We Congregationalists, as 
their descendants, take pride in the 
fact that no church, barring possibly 
the Unitarian, welcomes new truths 
so eagerly . 
“One of the legacies of the Pilgrim 
to following generations has been his 
ideal of democracy. In no country is 
free speech enjoyed to such an extent 
as in America; nowhere do rich and 
poor mingle so freely. The equality 
of the laymen and the pastor was a 
result of the Pilgrim’s democracy. 
That splendid instrument, the Con- 
stitution of the United States, reflects 
clearly the influence of the Pilgrim’s 
ideals of democracy. Our New Eng- 
land town meeting is handed down to 
