38 IN’ O R-1An 
SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
June 15, 1917. 
Four Times the Sureness - 
Four Times the Savings . 
with 
Diamond | 
oats Tire s 
motordom. 
ness. 
security in driving. 
much in first cost. 
are driving and saving on four. 
Saueegee 
Tread 
For Automobiles, Bicycles 
and Motorcycles 
PERKINS & CORLISS 
MANCHESTER, MASS, 
The Diamond Squeegee 
Tread is an old resident of 
For years it has squeegeed 
the roadway to non-skid sure- 
You should use four Dia- 
mond Squeegee Tread Tires on 
your car—for two big reasons, 
You have four times the 
You save four times as 
Get Diamond Squeegee 
Tread Tires—red sides and 
black treads—and realize the 
life and strength and service 
insured by expert workman- 
ship and pre-eminent knowl- 
edge of rubber compounding. 
Start today with one Diamond, if 
that is all you need, but keep on 
until your set is complete and you 
Jiamond 
Tires 
ak 
SVN aN: 
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HEA le 
SU: He i; | 
Tt TI 
| HOH Al 
ALA {UL ie 
inay friy fini 
wee € Hy, Ly 
err cTrm . TEM, 
Pc iy 
Black Tread 
—Red Sides 
\ 
Every Diamond Tire 
must deliver full value 
in service. If evera 
Diamond Tire fails, 
a cheerful, willing 
adjustment will be 
promptly made. 
THEATRE. 
CopLEy 
Another big week of thrills and 
laughter is assured at the Copley 
Theatre, Boston, where the Henry 
Jewett Players will continue in the 
great war success, “The Man Who 
stayed at Home.” This play, which 
touches a vital spot in the heart, has 
taken Boston by storm. It transports 
audiences from convulsions of. laugh- 
ter to tense, breathless silences, and 
promises to make a record-breaking 
run at the Copley. . For two years 
a great battle between 
London to 
this story of 
master spies played in 
crowded houses. 
“Say. pa, won’t you buy me a 
drum ?” 
“No, [’m afraid you'll disturb me 
with the noise.” 
“No, I won't, pa; 
when you’re asleep.” 
PH only drum 
$1 for 6 
The Breeze $2 a year, 
months, postpaid. 
WHAT COUNTS 
There may not be much in the things 
that you say—its the way that 
you say them; 
The kind of the games that you play 
doesn’t count, it’s the way you 
play them. 
In palace or cottage, in office or 
ditch or wherever you’re working, 
The test of your manhood is answer- 
ing this, 
Are you striving or shirking? 
And Life at the best only gives back 
again to you that which you give 
It; 
So high life or low life means noth- 
ing at all—it’s the way that you 
live it. 
—Philadelphia Evening Ledger. 
Many: Brrps DESTROYED IN MAY BY 
CoLD, HUNGER AND THEIR 
E,NEMIES. 
. In Massachusetts the month of 
May has been so cold and wet that its 
equal has not been known for more 
than thirty years. The insect-eating 
birds arriving from the South found 
both the foliage and the insects that 
feed upon it undeveloped. Such 
birds crowded into the woods in great 
numbers, and not finding their na- 
tural food upon the trees they sought 
it on ploughed fields, grounds about 
houses, gardens and orchards, going 
to the ground for food which could 
not be obtained upon the trees. Here 
many were killed by cats. 
Many people fed the birds in the 
usual manner, but they had no insect 
food to give the warblers, which came 
about houses and barns, picked flies 
from clapboards and compost heaps, 
and even penetrated into houses after 
food, but many of them could not 
find enough to sustain life and died 
of starvation and exposure. 
Such a phenomenon as this has not 
occurred at this time of the year for 
many years, The early nests of 
robins were mainly unprotected, as 
the leaves were not developed, and 
where the eggs and young were not 
destroyed by storms, many more than 
usual were found by crows, cats, and 
other enemies. Some of the early 
swallows and martins failed to sur- 
vive the cold storms of April. 
Anyone who has any information 
in regard to species destroyed, or any 
facts bearing on the case is requested 
to correspond with the writer, at 
room 136. State House, Boston. 
Epwarp Howr Forsusu. 
State Ornithologist. 
It is not what the best men do, but 
what they are that constitutes their 
benediction to their fellow men— 
Phillips Brooks, 
