NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 63 
MISS CAHILL --- Dressmaker 
Is at Magnolia for her 15th season, 
and will welcome old patrons as well 
as new at her room in Mrs. Hunt’s 
Dry Goods Store. 
FULLER ST. Tele. 454 MAGNOLIA 
MAGNOLIA 
The second boxing and wrestling 
exhibition of the season will be held 
at the Men’s club Thursday evening 
of next week. Admission to club 
club members only. Several inter- 
esting matches have been arranged. 
A vaudeville entertainment has been 
proposed and is under consideration. 
The vaudeville program last year was 
such an unqualified success that the 
club is encouraged to give another 
such entertainment as there are so 
many talented members this year. 
There are now 144 club members and 
the tables in the restaurant are nearly 
filled; five single rooms and two dou- 
ble rooms are left to accommodate 
the August rush. Bowling is as pop- 
ular a sport this year as ever and the 
weekly cups which have been offered 
seem to stimulate the interest. Fred- 
erick A. Smith was the winner of last 
week’s contest. Three other matches 
have been played by the Men’s club 
team this week, two with Manchester 
teams and one with Gloucester. The 
dances with Carey’s orchestra are 
very well attended. 
Miss Barrett of the Women’s club 
is entertaining her sister from Bos- 
ton for a week or ten days. 
Rey. Prof. Henry Wilder Foote of 
the Divinity school of Harvard Uni- 
versity will be the speaker at the 
Union chapel Sunday morning. Ser- 
vice begins at 10.45. 
Mrs. Inez Milholland Boissevain, 
the suffrage leader, is complaining 
that the press is inclined to ridicule 
the suffrage movement. There is 
truth in this, but the newspapers are 
hardly to blame. How else is a move- 
ment to be treated when a Rhode Is- 
land branch endorses the English 
militant movement, and another state 
branch declares it is horrible and 
should be frowned on? Now about 
the situation where Will Irwin and 
other suffrage assistants declare that 
it is time that all the “Bunk” talk 
about home and childhood be driven 
out at once and for all, while the 
Massachusetts branch, in contrast, de- 
clares it wants the vote simply to im- 
prove the home. An editor, who day 
by day as a part of his work, is obliged 
to note all these contradictions is 
hardly be blamed if he gets to the 
joking stage over the movement as a 
whole. 
Poultry and Game 
Eggs and Butter 
fruit and _ Berries 
The Best Quality 
Beverly Farms 
James B. Dow 
JAMES B. DOW & CO. 
BREWER’S. MARKET 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
bd 
Meats and Provisions 
Orders will be Collected Every 
Morning and Promptly Filled. 
Mass. 
John H. Cheever 
COAL AND WOOD 
We are now prepared to deliver coal at short notice to all parts of Man- 
chester and Beuerly Farms. 
Beach Street 
Manchester 
Rev. Dr. Walter S. Eaton, the pas- 
tor of the Village church, will deliver 
a sermon on “The Gospel of Cheer- 
fulness” at the morning service, which 
begins at 10.45. The music by Chas. 
J. Cooley was a great addition to the 
service last Sunday morning and the 
church is equally fortunate in secur- 
ing as soloist this week, Mrs. James 
M. McCutcheon, of New York, who 
is spending the season at the Mag- 
nolia Inn. Mrs. McCutcheon has a 
fine contralto voice and has had 1 
wealth of experience in church sing- 
ing. She will be accompanied by 
Frank Bennett, organist. In the even- 
ing Rev. Dr. Eaton will preach on 
“The Certitudes of Religion.” 
HOW TO LIVE 100 YEARS 
_ Is the Name of a New Book 
Eugene Christian, F. S. 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 an'y 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 
Oak Street 
Beverly Farms 
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 
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. 
Not Firty-Oneé PER CENT 
“The Braggsbys take a great inter- 
est in their children, don’t they?” 
“Yes; but not a controlling interest.” 
A STANDING GRUDGE 
“Why are Americans always in- 
clined to take a poke at an English- 
man?” 
“Tt’?s in their blood. You see, the 
English settled this country once, and 
our ancestors settled the English 
twice, afterward.” 
Not in It 
“Have you see Miss Plumpley in 
her new bathing suit?” 
“No; but I have seen large portions 
of her protruding from it.” 
