SOCIETY NOTES 
Mrs. William Lowell Putnam of 
Boston and Manchester is one of the 
speakers at the fifth convention of the 
Massachusetts Branch of the National 
Congress of Mothers and _ Parent- 
Teacher associations, which is now in 
session at Worcester as a delegate of 
the American Association for Study 
and Prevention of Infant Mortality, 
and her address will be on “Parental 
Care.” The convention is from Thurs- 
day the 15th, to Saturday the 17th. 
Oo 8 O 
The Francis M. 
numbered among the year-round col- 
ony at Manchester this winter. <A 
number of families have decided to 
keep their places here open all winter, 
—more so than usual. 
ox 
oe 
Dr. Geo. H. Washburn and family 
are closing their house at Manchester 
tomorrow when they will return to 
Marlboro st., Boston, for the winter. 
HOW TOLIVE 100 YEARS 
Is the Name of a New Book 
Eugene Christian, F. 8S. D., the world’s 
greatest Food Scientist, has just published 
a new book called ‘‘How to Live 100 
Years,’’ 
This book tells you what to eat accord- 
ing to your age, your work and the time 
of the year. It teaches you how to select, 
how to combine and how to proportion 
your food at meals so as to establish 
perfect digestion and assimilation of food 
and perfect elimination of waste. In 
other words, it teaches you how to cure 
all stomach and intestinal disorders by 
removing their causes, which is wrong 
eating. 
If you have indigestion, gas, fermenta- 
tion, sour stomach or anty such disorders 
after a meal, this book tells you how to 
put the remedy on your table at the next 
meal. 
Dr. Christian shows that all animals ex- 
cept man live about eight times as long 
as it takes them to get their growth. If 
man should do this he would live nearly 
200 years, but civilized man dies at the 
average age of 39. He begins to lose his 
teeth, his eyes and his hair, and drops 
into his grave only a few years after he 
is grown. 
Dr. Christian shows that 22 per cent. of 
all the human beings born into the world 
die before they are one year old. 25 per 
cent. more die before their fifth birthday, 
and more than half of the human race die 
before they are twenty-five. 
All other animals on the globe live 
eight times as long as it takes them to 
get their growth. Man breathes the same 
air, drinks the same water, lives under 
the same sunshine, but differs from his 
brother animals only in his eating, there- 
fore Dr. Christian shows conclusively that 
this appalling discrepency must be on ac- 
count of his eating habits and he has 
proved that his theory is true by curing 
over 23,000 people within the past ten 
years by teaching them what to eat and 
Stanvwoods will be 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
EQUAL SUFFRAGE 
The Manchester Equal Suffrage 
League held its annual meeting on 
Wednesday evening, Oct. 14, at Mrs. 
Leach’s Tea Room. After barely one 
year of life, the League was found to 
be in a strong and healthy condition, 
with many plans for the immediate 
future. 
The following officers were elected: 
—President, Miss Louie R. Stan- 
wood; vice-presidents, Mrs. Flora 
Hersey and Mrs. Otis M. Stanley; 
secretary, Mrs. George Silva; trea- 
surer, Miss Etta Rabardy; librarian, 
Mrs. Wm. J. Johnson. A vote of 
thanks was passed to Miss Florence 
Leach, the retiring secretary, who will 
probably be in Boston this winter. 
Miss Stanwood reported that a 
Suffrage League is just starting in 
Beverly, which will complete the 
chain of leagues along this shore. 
Jane Addams’ new book and other 
Suffrage literature may be obtained 
from Mrs. W. J. Johnson. 
The Manchester league announces 
a public meeting in the Town hall on 
the evening of Wednesday, October 
_ 28, (not 21) at which there will be a 
Suffrage speaker (Mrs. Pinkham of 
Colorado) and a Peace speaker also. 
Full announcements will be made in 
next week’s paper. It was voted that 
the collection at the Town hall meet- 
ing should be for Belgian relief and 
not for Suffrage work. 
how to eat. ‘‘How to Live 100 Years’’ 
gives the secret of his methods. 
This book does not disarrange or upset 
the family table. It teaches the house- 
wife what foods the meal should be com- 
posed of, so as to make them chemically 
harmonious and perfectly digestible and 
healthy. 
This book is beautifully bound = in 
vellum, and gold lettered. Send one dollar 
to Dr. Eugene Christian, 213 West 79th 
Street, New York City, and you will re- 
ceive this life saving book by return mail, 
and if it is not worth its weight in gold 
your money will be promptly refunded 
to you. 
OVER 65 YEARS’ 
EXPERIENCE 
TrRaveE Marks 
DESIGNS 
CopyRIGHTsS &c. 
Anyone sending a sketch and description may 
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an 
invention is probably entre Communica- 
tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents 
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. 
Patents taken thecdets Ee Munn & Co. receive 
special notice, without charge, in the 
Scientific Americat, 
A handsomely illustrated weekly. T.argest cir- 
culation of any scientifie journal, Verms, $3 a 
year; four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers, 
MUNN & Co,264 roadway. New York 
Branch Office, 62) F St., Washington, D.C. 
ANTI-SUFFRAGE NOTES 
BY MRS. HENRY PRESTON WHITE. 
Marvelous signs and omens of the - 
success of the suffrage cause are com- — 
ing out of Nebraska. Miss Jane 
Thompson, National Suffrage Organ- 
izer, has reported that victory is cer- 
tain in her mind. Her confidence is 
based on the wonderful fact that the — 
children in the state at the meetings 
ask for buttons. The significance of 
such a demonstration is hardly to be 
denied by mere facts or logic. 
“The so-called suffrage sweep,” 
said Mrs. A. T. Leatherbee of the 
Massachusetts Anti-Suffrage Associa- 
tion, when speaking at a recent meet- 
ing “has come about through the 
failure of the men to appreciate the 
significance of the question. The 
average man has had the feeling that 
it was ungallant to raise the issue with 
the women. Conditions are chang- 
ing and the effect is being felt. The 
fact that the vote is only incidental 
is being driven home. As a result, in 
New Jersey both political parties at 
their state convention stopped short 
of endorsement; in Rhode Island a 
similar position was taken; and in 
Massachusetts the Republicans passed 
the issue entirely, while the Demo- 
crats contended themselves with the 
plank of last year.” 
The suffragist city treasurer of 
Leadville, Colorado, has been found 
to be short in her accounts, and has 
been dismissed. Votes for men!— 
Boston Transcript, October 2, 1914. 
Massachusetts is a man-suffrage 
state, and Boston naturally a man- 
suffrage city. 
According to suffrage speeches, 
everything should really be going to 
the bow-bows. 
The Boston Board of Health has 
just announced, however, that the 
death rate of children under one year 
of age has fallen in Boston from 549 
in July 1896 to 139 in July 1914. 
Will suffrage advocates please 
notice. 
LauncH Cyus EL&cTs 
The annual meeting of the Man- 
chester Launch club was held Wed- 
nesday evening when. the following 
were elected: Edwin P. Stanley, com- 
modore; Fred H. Mosher, vice-com- 
modore; Richard L. Cheever, sec’y- 
treas.; David Fenton, measurer. 
Patronize home industry by havy- 
ing your printing done at this office. 
Subscribe for the Breeze, $2.00 per 
year, postpaid. 
