NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
11 
‘violence in the solution of the great 
industrial problems of the modern 
age. Let every man, as he marches 
in the parade of labor, or as he watches 
the marching hosts, resolve that his 
children shall have the education so 
freely given in our country, and thus 
help in solving the great problem of 
the world. 
Education and knowledge alone can 
give the necessary ability to cope 
with the organized and cultured forces 
of capital. 
Cost of an Automobile, 
It appears to be the fact that while a horse 
may “eat his head off,” a large sized able- 
bodied automobile is capable of chewing up 
-everything, from headlights to hind wheels, 
including the tag. Not infrequently it must 
have new tires, and a set of tires may cost 
as much as anew piano. Unless the owner 
has a stable the automobile must be housed 
in rented quarters. 
A machine of the larger type requires the 
professional care of an expert chauffeur, as 
well as occasional visits to the factory for 
repairs. In addition the possessor must 
hold himself prepared to satisfy its ravenous 
craving for “incidentals,” not to mention 
fines for fast driving. 
In estimating the probable future develop- 
ment of the automobile craze, therefore, it is 
well to remember that while the large-sized 
touring car, which now enjoys such popu- 
larity, is a great plaything for millionaires, 
itis apt to be an expensive investment for 
the man of moderate means. The trouble is 
that many of the latter, receiving small 
incomes and living in flats, are unable to 
resist the temptation to travel in the million- 
aire class. The humble flat tenant, paying 
for his machine on the installment plan and 
trying to forget about the repair bill, can 
look like Reggie Vanderbilt as he skims 
along the boulevards. 
The fact that a man rides in an automobile 
is no sign that his milkman is not getting a 
choice line of explanatory conversation in 
lieu of monthly cash payments. A general 
recognition of this fact might discourage a 
dangerous tendency.—Chicago News. 
Rather Seedy. 
A farmer nae a seeder for the sowing of his 
seed, 
*Twas a seeder made of cedar, and said I, 
“ Pray is there need 
Of a seeder made of cedar?” Said the farmer, 
“Yes, indeed ! 
I hev never seed a seeder, sir, that I’d con- 
cede the speed 
“To exceed a cedar seeder for the seedin’ of 
the seed.” 
—Life. 
Where the BREEZE can be bought :— 
Beverly News Co............... Beverly 
MELE Magaie de. hese s Fe ae <a > S 
NN sa «fk 5's Ube is 
BGI S., Gain ss ees 0 Beverly Cove 
ae a ae eae oe Manchester 
meme, RCRU'S Ge sk ws kaye <' ve oe L 
PAPCOD'S vice «nnn cee crews $$ 
Marshall’s Drug Store. ..Beverly Farms 
French’s Variety Store........ Magnolia 
Railroad Stations on the Gloucester 
Branch 
To get results, advertize in the 
‘NorTH SHORE BREEZE. 
COLLEGE EDUCATION. 
[Continued from p: 1] 
and results of college training, and 
find among college men their most 
congenial associates. 
But if a liberal course of study has 
been highly important to even the 
great men of the past and the present, 
it has become almost indispensable to 
the well-endowed and imspiring young 
men of to-day. Our country is no 
longer new. There are no Eldorados 
left. The vast mineral and agricul- 
tural resources that once lay open to 
the first comer have found claimants. 
Every industry known to man and 
warranted by the conditions of our 
zone has not only been introduced into 
the United States but is subject to 
the keenest competition. 
The times demand for leadership in 
business minds trained to think, to 
compare, to organize. Moreover, the 
standards of social refinement and of 
general intelligence have been so 
raised that only a good degree of 
knowledge and culture can enable one 
to take a creditable place among his 
fellows. And, besides all this, the 
astounding inerease in wealth has 
opened to the well-educated, both men 
and women, hundreds of new callings 
in which taste, refinement, and mental 
attainments command a_ premium. 
Said Senator Lodge, in substance, at 
the dedication of Clark College a little 
more than a year ago: Never before 
in the history of the world did college 
training count for so much. 
The earnest youth who makes a 
wise choice of his college may be as- 
sured at once of a reasonable breadth 
of attainments and of a good beginning 
in the subjects most closely connected 
with his particular lifework. Chemis- 
try properly taught and studied has a 
definite and valuable connection with 
the practical demands of life, whether 
in Medicine or the Arts; Mathematics 
and Physics with Architecture and 
Engineering; History, Economics, 
and Sociology, with Law and Busi- 
ness; the Ancient and the Modern 
Languages and their Literature, in- 
cluding the English Language and 
Literature, with scholarly research ; 
and each of these subjects, together 
with those not enumerated, with life 
and its manifold activities. 
Most colleges today give no counte- 
nance to the notion that a certain 
amount of barbarity, rowdyism, and 
vice are essential to student life. 
Rather they constantly seek to impart 
to their students the conviction em- 
bodied in the old proverb ‘noblesse 
oblige,”’ the conviction that great op- 
portunity means great responsibility 
—that the college student so far from 
being exempt from the ordinary obli- 
gations to respect the rights of person 
— 
and property, and to carry an unaf- 
fected courtesy into all the relations 
of lite, is under special bonds to de- 
velop and exemplify the best in man- 
hood and in citizenship. 
Pokteness. 
A maiden stood in a crowded car, 
A frown on her pretty face, 
As she looked around, both near and far, 
In vain for a vacant place; 
When a boy slipped down from his father’s 
ap, 
And said, in a manner sweet, 
Politely doffing his little cap,— 
‘Miss, won’t you take my seat?” 
—A.C.N. 
My Lady Rides. 
[FOR THE BREEZE. ] 
My Lady welcomes a ribboned cur 
To the carriage seat by the side of her. 
For that seat should a wayworn sister yearn, 
My Lady’s glance would be cold and stern. 
Should a ragged child for a ride beseech, 
She would spurn him aside with cruel speech. 
Strange that My Lady should prefer 
Companionship with a pampered cur, 
And deem herself by the touch defiled 
Of a sister woman or innocent child! 
—T; 
Beverly Schools. 
The opening of the Beverly schools, a week 
from Monday will see quite a number of 
changes since last spring. There have been 
several changes in teachers, some of the eld 
teachers having gone to other places, some 
having entered into the marital] relation, and 
still others having been transferred to ditfer- 
ent schools from those in which they taught 
last year. 
In the High school there will be three 
changes in the teaching staff. Leonard B. 
Moulton of Medford has been appointed 
sub-master and will have charge of the Eng- 
lish department in place of Miss Caroline C, 
Clark, resigned. Mr. Moulton is a graduate 
of Harvard college and has been for the past 
six years located at Medford where he has 
made an enviable reputation. 
Miss Laura M. Lundin will be assistant in 
Physics and Chemistry this year, taking the 
place of Miss Marie R. Ernst who has ac- 
cepted a position at Bridgewater. Miss 
Lundin is a specialist in Physics, Chemistry 
and Mathematics and has taken all the most 
advanced courses in these studies at the 
Mass. Inst. of Technology. She has had 
considerable experience in teaching and 
comes very highly recommended. 
It will be a great surprise to many to know 
that Miss Maudelle Germonde, who was so 
successful in her work in Elocution and 
Physical culture last year, has just resigned. 
Miss Germonde purposes to take graduate 
work this year. Her place has not yet been 
filled. 
In the grade schools, there have also been 
changes. At the Farms, Miss Honora 
O’Brien, a graduate of the Boston Normal 
school and recently a teacher at Attleboro, 
will take the place of Miss Fogg who has 
gone to Melrose. 
At the Hardie school, Miss Daisy Ray- 
mond, transferred from the South school, 
will take the place of Miss Elkins as teacher 
of the eighth grade. Miss Laura G. Man- 
chester of Castleton, Vt., and a graduate of 
the Normal school there, will take Miss 
Gould’s place in the sixth grade. Miss Man- 
chester has had experience as a teacher, hav- 
ing taught for the past two years at Saxton’s 
Corner, V., where she was most successful. 
