20 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
April 23, 1915 
( Sante NPnsve Ls eet SORE DT 
TEL. 12, i] hy [4 
2% pst cent Saving in Fuel 
JOHN F. SCOTT 
PLUMBING AND HEATING 
»y, AGENT FOR SPENCER MAGAZINE BOILERS 
Ga'! for Demonstration and Circulars 
-OVERHEAD EXPENSES REDUCED 
LOWEST ESTIMATES ON ALL WORK ON REQUEST 
Na 
112 PINE: STREET, 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA, 
MASS. 
H. Higginson, Pras... ; 
Boats stored for the winter. 
ment of Launches. 
a2) RN Fi 
RT A OST EASE I ET ER IS 
8 
ROUOME 
: a 
Request. 
Office: 
21 SUMMER STREET 
ORHORORO KOKO LOKRORBOBOLOLOLOBOLOBOe 
OM 
MOOMNOONROONS MWLOOWS 
Tue Cort THEATRE, Boston 
It has. been a long time since Bos- 
ton has received a: musical attraction 
with an equal amount of hearty ap- 
preciation.,as it bestowed on ‘A 
Modern, Eve,”’ which. had its premier 
at the Cort Theatre on Monday 
evening of. Jast week. “A , Modern 
Eve” is, full of: new songs and con- 
certed numbers. of the singable, mov- 
ing kind that are pleasing the people 
of musical Boston.and yicinity in an 
unusual. degree... There;.are fifteen 
musical numbers in the new operetta, 
and the ones that. have been accepted 
with most. favor are, “I’m Waiting 
for You,” “When Love Flies Through 
the Window,” “A Quiet Evening at 
Home,” “When the Madame Goes 
Away,’,.“Is the Girl You Married 
Still the Girl You Love,” and “‘Good- 
bye Everbody.” The latter is the 
theme song of the piece, and has 
made such a great impression that it 
is safe to say ‘no song of a similar 
W. B, Calderwood, Supt. 
920 SOOUHOOUMOOUHOONHOONH ° 
ELECTRIC LIGHT and POWER 
Estimates.on Cable Construction Furnished on 
a =~ 
MMOOMNOOMMNOONME 
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eet FENTON CO),  Nanchester-by-the-Sea 
MASS. 
ay Marine Railways, Boat Builders 
Paints, Oils Varnish, Cordage, and all kinds of Hardware constantly on hand 
Yacht and Boat Repairing ‘of every description, Yacht Tenders always in stock. 
We carry everything appertaining to the 
Spray Hoods Made to Order. 
towed in and out of ‘channel, free of charge. 
equip- 
Boats hauled on our railways, 
Telephone 254 Manchester. 
9,99,2. 
ove 
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Electric Co. 
Telephone 168W 
A. LOVERING, Manager 
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kind has equaled it since the “Merry 
Widow” waltz. 
7A 
MADAME EMMA CALVE AT B. F. 
Keity’s THEATRE 
The world’s most famous ‘“Car- 
men,’ the renowned grand opera 
singer, Madame Emma Calve, will 
make her vaudeville debut at B. F. 
Keith’s Theatre the week of April 
20th for a positively limited engage- 
ment of one week only. Madame 
Calve is the climax of a great array 
of headliners booked at this famous 
playhouse this season. Never be- 
fore has there been such a galaxy of 
stars, and Calve is by far the greatest 
and highest-salaried entertainer ever 
seen in vaudeville. Madame Calve 
will be paid the largest weekly salary 
ever known in vaudeville. She will 
offer a program of operatic selec- 
tions, including the famous “Haben- 
era” from “Carmen.” 
PARENT-TEACHER MEETING — 
One of the finest, if not the finest, 
of the meetings of the Manchester 
Parent-Teacher association was heid 
at the John A. Price school ‘Tuesday 
evening when J. Franklin Babb of 
Haverhill addressed the meeting on 
“The Educated Man” to the delight 
and profit of his audience. Seldom 
has the association been able to 
secure a speaker so eloquent and so 
original in ideas and expression as 
Mr. Babb, and the large audience ap- 
preciated the address. The first 
principle of education, Mr. Babb 
said, is -inculcation. With the things 
learned from books must be ‘honest 
thought, if a man is to have a true 
education. If a man’s gleanings from 
his books are not practicable, they 
are not educating; he is merely an 
echo, not a thinker. The speaker 
made it plain that he had no intention 
of disparaging books, which —are 
an ope gate to genius, and through 
which we gain an appreciation of 
literature, music, pictures, -mathe- 
matics, et cetera, and appreciation 
precedes appropriation. 
The second requirement for an 
education is experience, and the most 
valuable experience is the wuncon- 
scious kind. The experience in sor- 
row and trouble as well as in joy and 
happiness that is taught in the wor!d 
tends to inculcate kindness, truth, 
sobriety, and_ sincerity, which are 
necessary to education. The man 
who plays the game, who pretends to 
be pleasant when he is ugly; shakes 
hands with and congratulates a fel- 
low man, when he is, in truth, jeal- 
ous, is the man who is truly success- 
ful. In this world we get what we 
give. Concerning this, Mr. Babb 
said in part: “If you right here in 
Manchester complain that the peopie 
in our town are critical, you are 
yourself a critic; if you cannot trust 
those about you, you are unworthy 
of trust; if you find people censori- 
ous, you are yourself a fault-finder. 
When I take a new parish and one of 
my neighbors comes to call on me 
with a long face and says, ‘Mr. Babb, 
as one who has an interest in the 
church and as one of your neighbors, 
there are a few things I feel it my 
duty to tell you about the people of 
your parish,’ I always remark to Mrs. 
Babb, ‘Put her name down. She is 
the one we'll have to watch.’ ” 
In speaking of observation, which 
Mr. Babb mentioned as the next 
fundamental in education, the speak- 
er told of an incident in a district 
school, where he endeavored to bring 
out the best in the boys by talking to 
them of the things which he thought 
they would know, such as the num- 
