April 30,. 1915 
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MR. BUSINESS MAN? 
in the Breeze for the next six months. 
The engagement of Miss Ruth Gaston to John Ken- 
neth Howard is of interest to North Shore people inas- 
much as the Howards summer at West Manchester. Miss 
Gaston is the elder daughter of Mr. and Mr. Wm. A. 
Gaston of Boston. Mr. Howard is the son of Mrs. Wm. 
H. Howard of Boston and San Mateo, California. The 
wedding will be on the afternoon of the 26th of June, 
at Trinity church, Boston. 
Oo BO 
‘Mrs. Clarence Moore expects to occupy her country 
place near Kensington, Md., for a few weeks after clos- 
ing her house in Washington. The greater part of the 
late summer, however, Mrs. Moore will spend with her 
mother, Mrs. FE. C. Swift, at Swiftmoor, Pride’s Cross- 
ing, where a number of house peres of their mutual 
friends, including many from Washington, are already 
being arranged to extend through the warm season. 
“The residents along the shore are waiting with 
much expectation for the coming spring edition ‘ofthe 
‘North Shore Breeze.’ It is understood that the publica- 
tion, which embodies the ‘Reminder,’ will have much in 
it of interest to Swampscott people and many attractive 
photographs will be found among its pages, illustrating 
Swampscott and its real value as a summer resort. The 
‘North Shore Breeze-Reminder’ is more popular in 
Swampscott perhaps because of the fact that Mr. Gra- 
bow, of the New Ocean house at one time published 
the paper.” —Swampscott column in Lynn Evening News. 
The right to think, to know, and to utter is the dear- 
est of all liberties. Without this right, there can be no 
liberty to any people; with it there can be no slavery.— 
Wendell Phillips. 
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ah NORTH ‘SHORE INSTITUTION | 
WITH 11 YBARS OF CONSISTENT Need Be AND PROGRESS BEHIND IT 
ARE YOU HE MAIN OBJECT 
NG F the Norra Snore Breeze is the dissemination of reliable and 
ADVANTAGE OF timely information that most materially concerns the strictly  self- 
NITPIRG respecting class of permanent North Shore readers and many others 
fe OPPORTUNITIES who have property or kindred interests in this section, but reside else- 
AND where during six or seven months of the year. 
The worthiness and topical importance of its news service and re- 
POSSIBILITIES lative editorial comments, is accompained by a consistent representation 
PRESENTED BY of advertisements and reading notices. 
THAT The North Shore Breeze feels honored and proud to be welcomed 
into the homes of hundreds of the richest and best known people of the 
INSTITUTION country,—not only in the summer, but every week in the year. The 
paper will be eleven years old next month, and its growth in this 
eleven years has been consistent and healthy. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder ni 
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W. H. Lerned & Sons, the well-known dealers in Butter, Cheese and Eggs, of Faneuil Hall Market, 
Boston, are looking for retail as well as wholesale trade along the North Shore this summer, and 
they think they can best acquaint North Shore people with that fact by taking a quarter page space 
WS 
DOES THIS SUGGEST ANYTHING TO YOU, MR. BUSINESS MAN? 
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REALTY VALUES EXCEL 
It is quite generally understood and frequently ad- 
mitted by the well informed, that there is less land suit- 
able for house lots and fewer estates for sale on the 
North Shore than in any other locality bordering upon the 
North Atlantic seaboard. The decrease in the number 
of realty transfers from year to year has been apparent, 
and the advanée in prices has been marked, invincible, 
and unyielding to kindred influences. Depressions in 
stocks, bonds and other securities seem to have no more 
effect on North Shore land values than does the meteor- 
ological elements have upon the rock of ages. It ts 
therefore logically safe to predict that the time is not 
far distant when it will be practically impossible to pur- 
chase a North Shore estate at any price. The sale of 
even small properties is now announced with such infer- 
quency that when one does occur, it is the principal topic 
of conversation among realty men for indefinite periods, 
and the fact and details of the sale are recorded by his- 
torical societies, not omitting a biographical sketch of the 
purchaser and his or her family. However true this may 
be there will be at least one more “for sale’? announce- 
ment published in the next Friday’s issue of the Breeze. 
It is at Pride’s, and comprises seven and a half acres of 
land and an eighteen-roon house. To describe this estate 
as beautiful might seem verbose, as every piece of 
property on the North Shore is already known to be 
magnificent. —F. M.C. 
GARDNER STORMS Daniel’s Den! 
Where the press is free, and every man able to read, 
all-is safe. Our liberty depends on the freedom 
of the press, and that cannot be fmieed without being 
lost—Thomas Jefferson, 
