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Newspaper Page Text
ipwzgmz&WiWJJ: 'Jw Q 9 need It. She is a girl who will have to depend upon her own strong in dividuality, as she has no moral or puritanical traditions to follow. I have always thought that conscience was only a condition of mind, pro duced by education and environment, and perhaps unconsciously Mollie has imbued some of this theory from me. "Mollie's mother, as you know, is a great stickler for form and I, on the other hand, only want the es sence of things. Consequently I am afraid we have made rather a mess of bringing up our three children." (Dear old Dad, who would have thought to see him quietly reading his evening paper, that he had had so many ideas on life and living7 Truly, I have always thought that he was the most prosaic even if the most lovable of men, and here he was showing a subtle analysis of those about him and an introspective con sciousness of self that seemed to me almost feminine.) I would give a good deal to know if Dick has any of this. Isn't it too bad, little book, that it is impossible for any one human being to show his real self to another? I presume Dick thinks he knows me perfectly, and I feel pretty well acquainted with Dick, thank you, but I know there are things in my soul Dick has never dreamed were there and I presume he is more a stranger to me than I am to him, because I have made a great er effort to seriously show him the kind of a woman I am than he has to show me the kind of a man he is. Not even marriage cements the souls of mortals. (To Be Continued Monday.) o o A PROUD BOAST Two Pullman porters, representing different railroads, met off duty and progressed from friendly gossip to heated argument Their quarrel centered about which one worked for the better road. Their claims, figures, and argument came fast and furious. At last the tall, thin porter settled the dispute-with these classic words: "Go on, man; we kills mo' people den you fellahs tote." o o WOMEN'S VOTES MEAN - GOOD DINNERS FOR MEN ttl-fi.'J.LiLoTXr&'S. St. Loujs, Mo. "Woman suffrage will mean better meals for the men of Missouri," is the promise the suf frage advocates are making to the voters who will act on the suffrage amendment next November. Mrs. John Livingston Lowes, presi dent of the St Lduis Equal Suffrage League, explains the connection be tween ballots and dinners by saying that wdmen voters will make food laws that will compel hotels and res taurants to serve better meals, and they will make cooking lessons in public schools compulsory so that the future housekeepers of the state will be cooks before they are "housekeepers. ' ' -" --LXLJmmlittlam