22 ~-NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
Sept. 29, 1916. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
Dr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Graham of 
Ellsworth, Me., have been among the 
visitors at Beverly Farms the past 
week. 
Edmund L. McDonnell is the own- 
er of a new 1917 model Ford car. 
Charles Belfry has also purchased a 
Ford during the past week. 
Elisha S. Pride, who has recently 
sold his home at Pride’s Crossing, 
where he has lived practically all his 
life, will build a house for his occu- 
pancy upon a lot he owns in Com- 
mon lane. 
Among the recent real estate trans- 
‘fers in this vicinity is noted that by 
Elisha S. Pride of land and buildings 
on Hale st., Pride’s Crossing, to Alice 
C. Kent of Boston. The land is roo 
by 345.4 feet. 
The people of Beverly Farms are 
interested in the Beverly High school 
football team which will play its open- 
ing game at the new athletic field to- 
morrow. Quincy High school will be 
the opnosing eleven. 
At Tuesday’s session of the Su- 
perior Court in Salem Lilly Drink- 
water of Beverly Farms was granted 
a divorce from George Drinkwater 
on the grounds of cruel and abusive 
treatment. The case was not. con- 
tested. 
CopLEY THEATRE, Boston. 
The ideal towards which the man- 
agement of the Copley Theatre is 
looking is the establishment of a per- 
inanent repertory theatre in Boston, a 
theatre for all the people who love 
the drama. 
To provide the best in drama, pre- 
sented by the best players obtainable, 
and at the most reasonable of “popu- 
lar” prices, this is the means whereby 
the management hopes to bring about 
that long-cherished dream of a thea- 
tre that shall be to Boston much the 
sort of instutional influence that the 
Comedie-Francaise is in Paris. 
The Henry Jewett Players, who 
will comprise this permanent reper- 
tory company, will inauguarte a sea- 
son of modern, classic, and romantic 
plays at the Copley Theatre on Mon- 
day evening, Oct. 2. This company 
has been selected with careful dis- 
crimination, its members being play- 
ers whose training and records in 
many prominent companies, both in 
this country and abroad, bespeak their 
competence. 
“Women seem successful in busi- 
ness.” : 
“They have advantages. A woman 
can keep a set of books and a card 
index in her head.”—Louisville Cour- 
jer-Journal, 
TUNIPOO INN 
BEVERLY FARMS 
MASS. 
MOST attractive rooms, modern conveniences, large verandas, near 
West Beach, yachting, bathing and fishing, best motor roads in 
State, 36 trains daily, 40 minutes from Boston. 
The TUNIPOO is 
the first INN ever conducted at Beverly Farms. 
Telephone Beverly Farms 8210 or write P. O. Box 1126 
Automobile parties accommodated. 
Afternoon tea served. 
HEALTH TALK 
From UNITED. STATES HEALTH SER- 
VICE DEPARTMENT. 
wiar profiteth a man that he gain 
the whole world yet lose his 
health ? 
Naturalists say that long ago the 
prehistoric waters were infested with 
a species of enormous shark which 
finally became extinct by reason of 
the workings of its voracious appetite. 
Thus Nature eliminates the over-fed. 
The desire of ease of life and 
plentiful diet is universal and is the 
great stimulus of man and animals 
alike. When man becomes greedy 
and takes more ease and food and 
drink than is his share, Nature dis- 
cards him. 
In the race for power and place, 
for ease of circumstance and relief 
from the stimulus of hunger, the 
todern man is apt to forget unless he 
is careful of his body he will soon be 
made to suffer for the infraction of 
Nature’s inexorable physical law. 
With the loss in body tone comes an 
equal loss in mental acuity and the 
brain which for a time was able to 
operate despite the complaints of an 
cver-fed, under-exercised, self-pois- 
oned body, stops working. 
Statisticians have discovered that 
the mortality rate of persons in the 
United States over 45 years of age is 
increasing. The strenuous life of to- 
day is not alone responsible for this. 
Lack of health-giving exercise, super- 
fluity of diet, lack of restoring sleep, 
over-stimulation, the high pressure of 
the race for power, wealth and posi- 
tion, plus physical neglect, these bring 
early decay. The goal is reached, 
—wealth is amassed,—honor, position 
and power are just being grasped 
when the apple of accomplishment 
turns to the ashes of dissolution. The 
brilliant mind becomes clouded, the 
steady hand is no longer accurate, the 
eye which once gazed fearlessly on 
the whole world is dimmed and it is 
not long before the final break up oc- 
curs. All of this was entirely pre- 
ventable. 
Other things being equal it is the 
man who leads the well-balanced life 
who lasts the longest, whose work to 
the end is uniformly the best, he who 
neither over-works nor over-plays, 
neither over-eats, over-drinks, nor 
over-sleeps, he who maintains a stand- 
ard of simple healthy diet in modera- 
tion, who offsets mental work with 
physical recreation, who is as honest 
with his own body as he is with his 
own business. When success comes 
to such an one his physical and men- 
tal condition is such that he can en- 
joy in peace of mind and contentment 
of body the fruits of his labors. 
The regulations of U. S. Public 
Service state: “It is the duty of of- 
ficers to maintain their physical as 
well as their professional fitness. To 
this end they shall be allowed time 
for recreation and study whenever 
their official duties will permit.” Tf 
the Government regards it as essen- 
tial that its sanitary experts shall be 
safeguarded in this way, is it not 
equally important to every citizen that 
he similarly maintain a high standard 
cf physical integrity? 
EMPIRE THEATRE, SALEM. 
The strong and powerful dramatic 
play made famous by Edmund Breese 
“The Master Mind” will be given by 
the Empire Players next week. Our 
versatile leading man, Julian Noa and 
our angelic leading lady Miss Marian 
Ruckert, are both trying to convince 
Manager Katzes that they are real 
actors and are very desirous of de- 
ironstrating their individual ability. 
They are to be given their chance in 
“The Master Mind” and patrons of 
the theatre are assured a rare treat 
in this wonderful play made famous 
by Edmund Breese. 
Miss Ruckert the leading lady will 
have her turn to make good, in the 
exacting role originated by Julia Ar- 
thur in the latest and last season suc- 
cess “The Eternal Magdalene” that 
will be played at the Empire within 
a few weeks. 
The rabies epidemic which is car- 
ried by infected coyotes is spreading 
eastward in Utah. Rabid coyotes are 
common in the entire western part 
of the State, and one has been killed 
within thirty miles of Salt Lake City. 
“How dreadful it must be,” ex- 
claimed Mrs. Twickembury, “to be 
sailing along quietly and suddenly see 
a peristyle pop out of the water.”— 
