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 rooin in Mrs. Hunt’s 
Dry Goods Store. 
FULLER ST. Tele. 454 MAGNOLIA 
MAGNOLIA 
William B. Smith of Greenwich, 
Ct., has joined his family at their 
Raymond st. cottage and will be here 
for the remainder of the season. 
Mrs. P. Daley, who has been the 
guest of Mrs. Hugh Kelley, Raymond 
st., has returned to Providence, R. I. 
Rey. Dr. Walter S. Eaton will oc- 
cupy the pulpit Sunday morning and 
will preach on “Happy Surprises,” 
and in the evening his subject will be 
“Sin, the Troubler.” Charles John 
Cooley will sing at the morning ser- 
vice and will be accompanied by 
Frank D. Bennett. 
The annual fair will be given by 
the ladies of the Village church 
Wednesday morning, August 12, 
from 8.30 a. m. to 2.30 p. m. at the 
Oceanside parlors. Aprons of all 
sorts, fancy articles and home made 
candies will be on sale. Flowers may 
be purchased in the salesroom, which 
Mr. Warren has kindly loaned to the 
ladies for that occasion. Contribu- 
tions of fancy articles, flowers or 
money will be greatly apprecaited. 
and may be left with the president 
of the Ladies’ Aid society, Mrs. 
Frank Story, the treasurer; Mrs. 
Willard Boyd, or at the parsonage. 
The Village church needs some im- 
portant repairs and it is to this end 
that the fair is being held, about 
$500 being necessary. 
Miss Amy Lycett was a guest of 
her aunt, Mrs. Anstice Locke, of 
Lynn the first of the week. 
Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Story, with a 
party of friends, motored to Canobie 
Lake, N. H., Sunday. 
Mr. and Mrs. A. Townsend and 
Alfred Townsend of Nashua, N. H., 
were in town over Sunday. 
INDEFINITE 
“What times will this train reach 
Perkins Junction?” asked a traveler 
on a short line in Missouri. 
“There ain't no telling,” said the 
conductor affably. ‘‘Me and the en- 
gineer are going to get off down the 
road a piece and hunt rabbits for a 
spell.” 
Goop IDEA 
Maude—She’s such a quiet little 
person that I’m surprise d to hear she 
is wearing a diaphanous skirt. 
Edna—Perhaps she believes in the 
old saying that littie girls showll be 
seen, but not hearu. 
BREWER’S MARKET 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
M@eats and [Provisions 
Orders will be Collected Every 
Poultry and Game 
Eggs and _ Butter 
fiuit and Berries 
The Best Quality 
Beverly Farms 
Morning and Promptly Filled. 
Mass. 
James B. Dow 
John H. Cheever 
JAMES B. DOW & CO. 
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 
THe CoLoneL AND THE TREATIES 
When Colonel Roosevelt came to 
Washington two years ago and ap- 
peared before the committee investi- 
gating campaign expenses, he turned 
the plans of the Congressmen topsy- 
turvy. With this recollection in 
mind, the Senate Foreign Relations 
Committee is not particularly anxious 
to have the Colonel appear before it 
to tell what he knows and_ thinks 
about the pending treaties proposing 
to pay Colombia $25,000,000 for the 
partition of Panama. The Colombian 
promises to become a great political 
issue, because it not only carries the 
suggestion to repudiate the acts of 
the Roosevelt administration with 
reference to the independence of the 
Republic of Panama, but it opens 
wide the question of continuing the 
policy of secret sessions of the com- 
mittees of the Senate in considering 
treaties. ‘hose Senators who have 
been making a fight for public hear- 
ings upon all questions declare that 
there is no more interesting matter 
before the American people than sur- 
rounds, the affairs of the Colombian 
and Nicaraguan treaties. Although 
the Republicans always maintained 
this policy when they were in power, 
they are now practically unanimous 
in criticizing the Democrats for hold- 
ing executive sessions. 
HOWTO LIVE 100 YEAR 
Is the Name of a New Book 
Eugene Christian, F. 8. 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 
Oak Street 
Beverly Farms 
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 any 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 bly 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. 
He—Don’t you know her? She 
lives in your square. 
She—Perhaps so; but she’s not in 
my circle—Answets. 
