N QO 
Be Tay 
SHORE 
BREEZE 19 
‘‘food’’ for thought in the Chan- 
cellor’s statement, ‘‘that the Ger- 
mans must be prepared to pay for a 
great economic development and 
the better standard of living with a 
higher cost.’’ No one wishes a low- 
ering of prices at the expense of 
lowering standards of existence. It 
looks as though many selfish inter- 
ests would favor an increase in its 
revenue and rebel at increased 
charges, the revenue of other inter- 
ests. Is it not true that even today 
a man ‘‘might live’’ more cheaply 
if he would, but it is a sign of civ- 
ilization that a man is not content to 
exist. The ‘‘high cost’’ has come to 
stay because of the advanced ideals 
of the people as well as for other 
economic reasons. 
‘* Dairy Sanitation ’’ 
The statement issued by the State 
Board of Health concerning the out- 
break of typhoid fever in Attleboro 
in August attributes the cause to a 
defective drainage system in a Re- 
haboth dairy. Every milk consumer, 
and this must mean every one, ap- 
plauds the courageous stand made 
by the board. 
“‘The practical conclusion con- 
cerning this outbreak is that a more 
careful supervision of the farms sup- 
plying milk for public sale is imper- 
ative. With suitable State super- 
vision of milk production, such out- 
breaks as this one might be _ pre- 
- vented.”’ 
Such regulation will prove advan- 
tageous to every milk producer and 
be of vital importance to every con- 
sumer. The State has only begun 
the great work and the day must 
come when the producer can afford 
to assume the expense involved in 
sanitary cleanliness and scrupulous 
cleanliness. 
The Old North Church 
Bishop Lawrence’s announcement 
at the Episcopalian club that the his- 
torical North Chureh will be ren- 
ovated is received with joy by ev- 
ery loyal American. Every Boston- 
ian and in truth every inheritor of 
the labors of the early colonists is 
interested in the preservation of 
these old historical land marks. The 
proprietors and descendants of pro- 
prietors have steadily maintained a 
Only thoroughly trained 
competent servants (male 
or female) supplied. Re- 
ferences personally and 
carefully investigated. 
SOBSFifth Ave., 
close corporation and only after a 
long wait Bishop Lawrence has suc- 
ceeded to a pew right. Bishop 
Lawrence’s interest in this old 
church has resulted in an increase of 
the number of proprietors. This 
movement is a source of satisfaction 
to every one and will assure the 
preservation of the ancient edifice. 
YMCA? 
An excellent opportunity pre- 
sented in Manchester for public ser- 
vice is the often discussed YMCA. 
Tiere is the opening for an interested 
person to perpetuate his name and 
do the community a great good. 
Magnoha has its Men’s clubhouse 
and Beverly its YMCA. There is 
every reason why Manchester can 
and should have a puble social in- 
stitution of this nature. 
The young Seattle suicide left the 
note, in verse: 
‘“The needless throbbings and yearn- 
ings 
That hope unsatisfied brings 
The weary longings and burnings 
For never to be better things.’ 
On its very face despair is written 
and the wrong attitude toward lfe 
revealed. Life is not a longing and 
a wishing but a struggling and a 
working to make ‘‘the  better’’ 
things. 
, 
The admirable policy, followed in 
Manchester for years relative to 
sidewalks, has been the envy: of 
many other municipalities. The pa- 
per comments upon Manchester’s 
well-kept streets and _ systematic 
sidewalk program are satisfying. 
The systematic laying of sidewalks 
here has proven itself beyond the 
dreams of the advoecators. 
The sane, careful and persistent 
campaign of Lieutenant Governor 
Frothingham has been productive of 
great good. He won last year with 
an encouraging vote. Every day 
the Governor is losing and the re- 
publican party is gaining. The next 
Governor of Massachusetts will be 
Louis A. Frothingham. 
There will be no recall of Mayor 
“‘Witz.’’ His party do not wish it 
and his opponents fear it. The re- 
MISS WILD 
Registry Office 
Telephones 8822, 8823 Madison Sq. 
N. E. Gor. 3ist St. N. Y. 
eall if it failed, would mean four 
more years of Mr. Fitzgerald. It 
looks as though no recall will be a 
real recall—two years hence instead 
of four years. 
Every one will acknowledge the 
superiority and intelligence of wo- 
men, but nevertheless, the rampant, 
itinerant suffragette is doing more 
to delay the true cause for woman’s 
rights than any organized attack in 
opposition. 
The Unitarians have taken Wash- 
ington. With a Unitarian President 
and a Washington convention of the 
Liberal Faith, there is a_ striking 
contrast to the early tumult of the 
transcendental days in New Eng- 
land in the fifties. 
There ought to be legal means of 
restricting newspapers from. ex- 
ploiting amateur detective work by 
unscrupulous reporters. It is equal- 
ly desirable that a more careful rec- 
ord of the sales of poisons should be 
made. 
With a war imminent in Tripoli 
and an insurrection rampant and 
successful in China, it is evident 
that the days of millenium peace 
have not yet arrived. 
A good lieutenant governor will 
make a good Governor. 
SOCIETY NOTES 
Mrs. Russell Sturgis has closed 
‘“‘Sunny ‘Waters,’’ her Manchester 
cottage on Masconomo street, and is 
settled at her Boston residence on 
Clarendon street for the winter. 
The Harrison K, Caners are clos- 
ing their North Shore summer home 
at Manchester this week but though 
leaving the shore, Mr. and Mrs. 
Caner will be frequent visitors to 
this section during the winter as 
their oldest son is in Harvard and 
the three other boys are at St. 
Mark’s in Southboro. Mr. and Mrs. 
Caner will spend more or less of 
their time for the next week or two 
with their sons. They will be in 
Cambridge Saturday for the Brown- 
Harvard game and on November 8, 
the big game of the fall will be 
played at St. Mark’s. Their Phila- 
delphia home is on Walnut avenue. 
Special attention given 
to out of town orders. 
