er 
eT ent sg 
Lec p ee i 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
35 
worthy should find an asylum, a 
rock in a weary land, a shelter from 
the political storm of the old world. 
Let them come and find freedom, 
away from the nihilism and des- 
potism of Russia and Turkey, the 
militarism and imperialism of Ger- 
many, the anarchism of Poland and 
France, the eeclesiasticism of Eng- 
land and Italy, and the barbarism of 
Africa and the utmost isles of the 
sea, 
But here on the virgin soil of free- 
dom let the shackles of oppression 
forged in ignorance be broken by 
the omnipotent sledge of knowledge 
and righteousness. 
Assimilation is the great secret. 
The new-comers must not endanger 
the priceless inheritance of genera- 
tions of labor. They must be 
taught the American Ideals of self 
government and their individual 
debt and responsibility to their new 
fatherland. Then these new-comers 
and their children’s. children must 
think and thank God for what our 
father’s humble life in New Eng- 
land meant for them. It is one of 
the assurances of the future that the 
government of the people and for 
the people and by the people shall 
not perish in our land: that by the 
added strength of new life from the 
old world and maintaining the viril- 
ity of the old we may press forward 
to maintain the ideals of the nation. 
To Our Out-of-Town Subscribers. 
Many of our out-of-town sub- 
seribers living in the larger cities 
may wonder why the ‘‘Breeze’’ is 
now coming to them without the 
customary wrapper. In explanation 
we may,say that by a recent ruling 
of the postoffice officials, newspapers 
sending five or more papers to any 
city or town must send same tied or 
wrapped together in one bundle in- 
stead of in individual wrappers. 
Thus, the sixteen papers that we are 
sending to Cambridge, or the thirty 
odd that we are mailing to Wash- 
ington, instead of going in individ- 
ual wrappers, are now mailed tied 
together in a separate bundle for 
each city. 
A Popular Page. 
A well known publisher said re- 
eentky in the course of an address in 
New York City that there is no 
truer guage with which to meas- 
ure the popularity and consequent 
worth of a paper than its classified 
advertisement columns. We eall 
the attention of our readers and ad- 
vertisers to our classified adver- 
tisement page. The columns are 
overcrowded with small classified 
o--—€-—_€-E-—- <-> 
233-34 
> 
Che Problem 
Abolish privilege and _ ill-gotten pelf, 
> 
The Social Problem will 
We spend our life in clamoring for favor, 
resolve itself. 
Envious of wealth that’s earned by true endeavor, 
Raise open hands for gifts which they may throw us, 
And elenech our fists at all who are below us, 
Long to be dead-heads, rush for bargain counter 
And ride a free horse oft as we can mount her, 
Take frequent joy-rides with our friend the chauffeur: 
The fond ambition ours to be a loafer. 
When will mankind its selfish instincts smother 
} : 
Y 
Y 
ea 
advertisements. The ‘‘Breeze’’ has 
proven of great value to this class of 
patrons, especially, for invariably 
an advertisement in this column has 
brought desired results. We are be- 
ing congratulated almost every day 
one the results obtained through 
this souree. If you have anything to 
sell, to let, or want roomers, board- 
ers, or anything in this line pat- 
ronize the ‘‘Breeze.’’ 
American Products Demanded by 
the Farmers of Other Parts 
of the World. 
A hundred million dollars worth 
of manufactures of the United 
States are consumed by agricultur- 
‘ists of other parts of the world. 
This estimate of the demands which 
agriculturists of other countries 
make upon the manufacturers of 
the United States, while necessarily 
somewhat general, seems to be quite 
within the limits of faet judging 
from a statement just prepared by 
the Bureau of Statistics of the De- 
partment of Commerce and Labor, 
which shows the exportations of 
principal articles produced in the 
United States and passing direct to 
the agriculturists of other countries. 
This list includes mowers and 
reapers, plows and cultivators, other 
And live in love as brother should with brother? 
If each would work for all and all for each 
(For so doth Christ, our royal Master, teach), 
Obey the precepts of the heavenly school— 
The Ten Commandments and the Golden Rule, 
Be each to other’s fault a little blind, 
A little less than kin, at least be kind, 
The heavenly kingdom speedily would eome— 
The dawning of a glad millennium. : 
—Joseph A. Torrey. 
2-33 
agricultural implements, fertilizers, 
binder twine, barbed wire, sugar 
mill machinery, windmills, traction 
engines, harness and saddles, ear- 
riages and wagons, oileake and oil- 
‘ake meal, seeds and nursery-stock, 
as articles of which practically all 
of the exports are for agriculturists, 
while in addition to this, it may be 
assumed that a considerable per- 
centage of. the wire other than 
barbed, and nails, stoves, furniture, 
cutlery, pumps and pumping ma- 
chinery, sewing machines, tobacco, 
and mineral oil are finally utilized 
by the agricultural sections of the 
various countries to which the mer- 
chandise is exported. 
Agricultural implements form the 
Jargest single item of the exports 
distinctly intended for use of far- 
mers and planters of the world, and 
the total exports of this single 
group during the fiseal year which 
ends with next month will approxi- 
mate 40 million dollars in value. 
For the ten months for which the 
statistics are now available, the to- 
tal is 31 million dollars worth, and 
should the figures for the two re- 
maining months for which data are 
not yet in hand average as much per 
month as April ($5,476,510) the to- 
tal for the fiscal year would eross 
