viola 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
WAV & HOV, 
wzwiz Hssex Street, = = 
SA LEHM 
FALL and 
WINTER 
Hats to fit all faces. 
Prices to fit every. wallet. 
Sole Agents in Salem for the 
GOLD BOND HAT 
SPHINX HAT 
PREMIER HAT 
MALLORY make of HATS 
Special Agents for the Celebrated 
LAMSON & HUBBARD HATS 
Hats from 95¢e to $3.00—Soft or Stiff shapes. 
Golf, House and Knockabout Caps and Hats for 
23c, 45c, 89c, 95c. 
HATS 
Styles to suit all persons, 
SUITS and 
“; OVERCOATS WV 
WINTER SUITS 
and OVERCOATS | 
Remember, our stock is now complete. 
Men’s, Boys’ and Children’s Garments at 
PROFIT - 
{@-This sharing idea has made for us num- 
erous customers —and why? 
our Prices are Lower than anywhere else, the 
quality being equal. 
SHARING PRICES 
Simply because 
of pee Profits 
$8.2 
Large Sales 
upwards 
H A large assortment of Children’s Goods at 
& Sharing Prices. 
THE PROFIT-SHARING CLOTHIERS 
STOPPING AUTO ACCIDENTS. 
There Should Be Regulations Pre- 
scribing the Qualifications of 
Chauffeurs, and Officials to Sup- 
port Them. 
Judge Lambert Tree of Chicago, 
who had a cottage at Beverly 
Farms last season, says that. auto 
accidents will continue and grow in 
number until there is something to 
govern the qualifications of chauf- 
feurs. Speed regulations alone will 
not answer the purpose. The Chi- 
cago Tribune in commenting on his 
attitude has this to say: 
“Mr. Lambert Tree is right in be- 
lieving that speed regulations alone, 
even though severe and well en- 
forced, will never stop automobile 
accidents. If all chauffeurs were 
skilled, clear headed, and law abid- 
ing, such regulations would be ef- 
fective. But most people who run 
automobiles lack one or all of these 
qualities. Some of them are so in- 
expert or so easily lose their heads 
that they cause accidents when con- 
scientiously complying with the 
speed laws. Others are skilful but 
reckless and set the law at defiance. 
“It is remarkable how careless 
owners are as to the person to 
whom they trust their automobiles. 
The man who has a spirited horse 
for which he has-paid-$500 or $1000 
does not think of letting a weak and 
nervous woman or an incompetent 
or reckless coachman drive him. He 
fears that the animal would be in- 
jured or would run away and hurt 
or kill somebody. But, as Mr. Tree 
says, children barely in their ‘teens,’ 
hysterical women, and reckless or 
drunken men are allowed to drive 
$3000 or $4000 or $5000 automobiles 
along crowded city streets appar- 
ently with no thought that the ma- 
chine and people’s limbs and lives 
are thereby imperilled. 
“The automobile, as Mr. Tree 
points out, is really a locomotive, 
heavy, and capable of great speed. 
The steam railway locomotive does 
not run on a public highway crowd- 
ed with pedestrians and other ve- 
liicles, as does the automobile, but 
on a highway devoted exclusively 
to railway purposes. It runs. on 
strong steel rails, while the automo- 
bile is confined to no particular 
track and requires constant, skilful 
guidance. On a slippery street it 
may veer in any direction. But, 
while the locomotive engineer, be- 
fore he is intrusted with a fast pas- 
senger train, must have hada long 
experience as fireman and engineer 
on freight trains, men and women are 
allowed to run automobile locomo- 
tives when they have had almost no 
experience with them. 
“Self-interest and common hu- 
manity ought to prompt automobile 
owners to take more care to see 
that no one runs their machines who 
is not competent. Experience has 
proved only too conclusively that 
many will not voluntarily do this. 
There ought, therefore, to be regu- 
lations prescribing the qualifica- 
tions of chauffeurs and officials to 
enforce compliance with them. The 
child chauffeur, the weak, hysterical 
woman chauffeur, the incompetent 
or reckless man chauffeur, ought all 
to be driven off and kept off city 
streets. They are dangerous to 
themselves and a nuisance and a 
peril to others.” 
Unclaimed Letters 
Letters unclaimed at Beverly Farms post- 
office Oct. 26, 1905: Miss Mamie Brady, 
John J Bryne, John Baker, John E Buil. 
Caroline Donovan, John Donovan, John F 
Davey, Margaret Hartley, T Horan, Geo P 
Hall, Mrs B C Kendall, W W Kimball, F 
Kehoe, Miss Henry Moulton, Miss Nettie 
McLean, Mrs E C Perkins, James Richard- 
son, Miss Regan, Mme E S Stocker, Maggie 
Taylor, J H Wardwell. 
ELMER STANDLEY, Postmaster. 
A pleasant reminder of the pic- 
turesque North Shore—The Breeze 
—one year, one dollar. 
