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Long Islandward, for here is the 
first great American highway for 
the new modern conveyance of the 
twentieth century that gives the man 
of means an independent mode of 
travel that until now has had no 
adequate route to demonstrate its 
feasibility as private transit. 
The New. Yorker seeking homesite 
or situation for landed estate via his 
ereat high speed private motor car 
will turn Long Islandward, for the 
East river alone has its great bridges, 
and Long Island alone, its great Mo- 
tor Parkway as an artery for the 
opening up of a section there that 
will become world famous as the 
homes of the millionaire lords of the 
American metropolis and all those 
even of moderate means with a love 
for country life combined with all 
the advantages of the city so near at 
hand. 
Speeding through the breadth of 
the Conifers, filling the lungs with 
this resinous elixir, it will not be 
long before the inestimable value of 
this spin will be apparent to many 
as a daily tonie, especially for men 
of incessant nerve’ strain who will 
welcome this rare region of rest and 
natural advantages, until every piece 
of available acreage on either side 
of this unique highway will be ab- 
sorbed; is being absorbed now in 
anticipation of a rush to buy up this 
land for private parks and make this 
a home region unparalleled for the 
owners of this unexcelled mode of 
travel—the motor ear. 
Send for It. 
Daniel Low & Co. of Salem have 
just issued their 1910 spring and 
summer supplement which will be of 
unusual interest to readers of this 
paper. The booklet is splendidly il- 
lustrated, showing hundreds of ar- 
ticles of jewelry carried by this well 
known firm, giving the prices, ete. 
The firm has been in business for 
‘ over 40 years, longer than any other 
firm selling jewelry by mail, and 
their mail order business in solid 
eold and sterling silver is the largest 
in the country. They will be pleased 
to mail a copy of their regular cata- 
logue or of their summer supple- 
ment free on receipt of request by 
mail. 
At last Teddy Roosevelt has found 
something of which he stands in 
awe. The press dispatches say he 
stood in awe for several minutes in 
front of some of the productions of 
the old masters in the art galleries 
in Holland. It is a safe bet that his 
awe did not last long. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
WASTES OF AMERICAN PEOPLE. 
One of the Causes of High Prices. A Timely Opinion by Well Known 
Manchester Resident. 
By Mas. Henryl. 
IIE shortage of crops and high 
prices of cattle feed are 
among the principal causes 
for the present high prices. 
We hear a good deal about the cor- 
porations being responsible for the 
increase on all kinds of goods. 
I was talking with a senator the 
other day about high prices. I told 
him if he would look in the swill 
pails he would find one reason for 
high prices. There is enough food 
thrown away by the average house- 
hold to feed a man, and this. waste 
is one of the causes. 
There is a notion that the world 
is getting worse; it’s an awful: lie. 
Do not try to put your troubles 
upon some one else. We can all 
economize and by economy procure 
those things which we most want. 
The man is a goose who goes and 
buys a piano before he has the mon- 
ey with which to pay for it. 
We must remember and keep our 
TH1aGinson. 
mind upon the waste of public offi- 
cials. If we allow the Government 
to become extravagant we know it 
will sooner or later come from the 
taxpayers. 
If a man goes around with money 
in his pocket he is ‘inviting some 
one to hit him on the head. Banks, 
good substantial banks, have been 
built and managed efficiently for 
the deposits of the working people, 
and they are the proper places for 
keeping money as you accumulate 
Ate 
A great deal has been said against 
the corporations. They are not bad. 
Many of our railroads have failed 
several times, and it is no easy thing 
for a man to invest his money in a 
proposition and have to wait years 
before it shows any return, and with 
always the possibility of losing it. 
The greatest happiness comes to 
us by doing something for somebody 
else. This we should remember. 
Has Your Telephone Been Installed? 
Many North Shore people suffer 
much inconvenience every summer 
by not having their telephone in- 
stalled before opening their. cottages 
for the season. The telephone com- 
pany is necessarily overwhelmed 
with work at this season of the year. 
Many new lines have to be run to 
cottages or lines have to be recon- 
nected in houses or poles have to 
be installed on estates and on pri- 
vate ways. All this necessitates 
much work. In some cases applica- 
tions have to be made to the towns 
or cities for pole locations and these 
applications are necessarily held 
over for hearings, causing a loss of 
two or three weeks in some Gases. 
We therefore urge readers who 
contemplate having telephones in- 
stalled or having changes of any 
kind made, or having their telephone 
connected for the season, to attend 
to the matter, at the earliest date, 
so that the system can be in working 
order without the least inconveni- 
ence to patrons. The order may be 
given at any central office at any 
time, whether the thange is to be 
made on the North Shore, at Bar 
Harbor, Dublin, N. H., or where not. 
The company is ready and willing 
to také such orders at any time in 
order to expedite matters and make 
their own work easier and to make 
matters more convenient for cus- 
tomers. Give your order to the oper- 
ator on your line today whether you 
live in Brookline, Boston, Cam- 
bridge, or where not. 
Persons Who Sponge from News- 
papers. 
In a recent editorial the Chelsea 
Record has the following which all 
newspaper men will sanction: 
‘“‘There .are more persons who 
sponge from newspapers that from 
any other source. When a man 
comes into the world he receives a 
free ‘ad’; when he dies his bad 
debts are overlooked by the chari- 
table editor. All during his life he 
asks and receives favors from the 
newspapers. If they speak well of 
him the flattering notice is received 
in silence. If his acts are criticised 
he talks of a suit for damages. He 
desires favorable mention and he de- 
sires it often. In fact some men 
have an idea that a newspaper is run 
expressly to keep them before the 
public, and that, too, without money 
and without price.’’ 
Wm. Jennings Bryan says he is 
not a candidate for the presidential 
nomination in 1912. But then, wise 
men sometimes change their opinions. 
Riches have wings. But poverty, 
though slower on foot, can generally 
overtake them when they start to fly. 
