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BREEZE 45 
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> North Shore Breeze | 
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Volume 9 August 4, 1911. Number 31 
: Carpe Diem. 
‘‘Seize the Day.’’ Pluck it. It is 
yours for the having and the keep- 
ing. There is, however, a difference 
between seizing the day because 
there may be no tomorrow and liv- 
ing today with all its joys or bear- 
ing with the day with all its pain 
because there are other days coming 
out of eternity to us. All eternity 
comes in days and man’s eternity is 
wasted by days—then seize the days, 
they are life. Life is made up of 
days and life is lost and won by 
days. The wise man knows the 
value of a day—the fool never 
awakens to its great import—for he 
is blind. Today has everything to 
do with yesterday and tomorrow; 
for it is the link between the future 
and the past. Hach yesterday has 
been a today and each tomorrow 
must be lived as today. Yesterday 
was lost or won as a today. In a 
sense tomorrow never comes and 
the good and evil of the yesterday 
and of the tomorrow is the work of 
a today. 
The Hebrews have a_ motto, 
‘‘a day’s work in a day’’ and back 
of it there is a helpful philosophy of 
life. Life is to be lived day by day 
then live out the day plucking its 
joy as fruit from a vine and bearing 
its sorrow. The pain. bearer and 
sufferer and those who wait with 
dread anxiety for the passing of an 
old day and the breaking of-a new 
day will find strength in living onc 
eae G. E. WILLMONTON ees 
-Atterney and Counsellor at Law- 
day at a time in implicit confidence. 
The day’s work in its day. Then 
rest. ‘‘Learn to labor and to wait.’’ 
The day’s pain in its day and wait. 
A day’s anxiety in its day and then 
hope. So in deepest anxiety we find 
that “‘sufficient unto the day is the 
evil thereof.’’ But when apphled to 
prudenee the principle seems to 
break down, but does not. ‘‘Come 
now ye that say today or to- 
morrow we will go into the city 
and spend a_ year there’ and 
trade and get gain whereas ye know 
not what shall be on the morrow.’’ 
This apparent failure of the help- 
ful principle reveals another secret 
that each day must bring its own 
joy and he who postpones the real 
pleasures of life never gains them. 
What is more heart rending than to 
behold the millions of men who 
dangle before them the glory of a 
romantic future, lotus eaters are 
they, and the happiness and _ pleas- 
ure that is to be theirs at some far 
off day never comes. When the 
children are settled? When the 
competency is won? When the ship 
comes in? These never come! The 
day must bring its own measure of 
eood wine and that day must be 
found while laboring on the march 
or it never comes. Carpe diem. 
There is a nugget of purest gold in 
the dross of many a poor day. Yes! 
there are good days and bad days 
but let the light of good days illu- 
mine the bad days, but never let the 
gloom of past days rob the real joy 
hidden in today. Carpe diem. Ho- 
die mihi. Pluck the day. Today for 
me. Man will bear with fortitude 
and courage the evil days, day by 
day and redeem the joys of the good 
days, day by day. Yet today is rich 
because there is. a tomorrow 
freighted with hope. It alone en- 
riches the experience of today. It 
makes today a part of a whole of 
which the past and the future are 
contributing parts. Because there- 
fore, each day is but a part of a 
whole if there be shadow or sun- 
shine we know that in the whole life 
each day will have had its true 
share in making the whole life beau- 
tiful. If you take the eanvas of a 
master painter and separate a tiny 
square of light or shadow you can 
obtain no vision or understanding 
of the moving genius which inspired 
the artist. No more can one day’s 
joy or sorrow make or mar life nor 
can you eall the experience of one 
day, life. In the picture of a com- 
plete life we will learn that even the 
wicwren,<._ | Willmonton s Agency 
SCHOGL AND UNIGN STS, MANCHESTER OLB SGUTH BLBS,, Boston |* 
‘interest in Manchester 
shadows have contributing values 
to the beauty of true life and in the 
formation of character. Carpe diem 
bear the pain. Eeize the joy. Work 
while it is day and redeem from 
eternity your own life day by day 
by day’s work in its day. 
The New Bath House. 
The new pavilion at West Beach, 
Beverly Farms, has surpassed the 
fondest wishes of its projectors and 
the public who expected to be bene- 
fitted by the publie service rendered 
by the Board of Managers. The 
public is usually a silent appreciator 
of its benefits. This undisputed and 
undeniable success at Beverly Farms 
raises the question as to what Man- 
chester has been doing. Is it not: 
time for the Town to launch a simi- 
lar project? There were problems in 
the way at West Beach which Man- 
chester will not have to meet, that 
have been solved by the integrity 
and shrewdness of the business men 
of that enterprising Ward of the 
City of Beverly. There ought to be 
a way to suecess for Manchester. 
The beach is unexeelled in many 
ways and it is a neglect of a trust 
that the Town does not rise to its 
opportunity and place on the shore a 
bath house not. unlike the success- 
ful institution at West Beach. The 
West Beach corporation solved the 
problem. Nowhere on the Massa- 
chusetts shore was there a suitable 
structure to reproduce. Doing pion- 
eer work they have developed a type 
of bath house that is bound to en- 
dure. The building is protected 
from the sea, is beautiful in its lines 
and not the least of its merits, the 
building is not high. This is the 
season of the year in which publie 
should — be 
awakened. It cannot be many years 
hence before Manchester must do 
something. Why not now with the 
same publie spirit and suecess as 
characterized the movement at West 
Beach? 
The Express Question Again. 
The national unrest concerning 
the express monopolies will never be 
abated until the Parcels Post has 
become a national institution. The 
bill introduced at Washington by 
Representative Campbell of Kansas, 
is only another indication of the 
growing national objections to the 
privileges enjoyed by the large ex- 
press companies. The smaller com- 
panies suffer with the public. Mr. 
Campbell’s bill has an_ erratic 
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