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the choice too" long, of course, but at any rate she married the RIGHT MAN for the man a woman wants is ALWAYS the right man once she has reached the age of 20 and has learned to keep her eyes open in that noontide glare of romance. We should have the greatest re spect for any woman who marries the man she wants and none at all for her who takes the one she doesn't want because of social or financial reasons. The elderly Miss Coppell who mar ried her chauffeur is infinitely a bet ter human being than the young so ciety girl who crushes her love for a poor young man in order to make what her mother and her friends think is a desirable marriage. o - o VOCATIONAL SNAPS I , i "I've got an easy job. I get $10 a week traveling with a temperance lec turer posing as a horrible example. "Huh, I got a softer job thansthat. I get $12 a week for being" a good example and all I do is just sitting around a cider mill being a good ex ample." "A good example? Doing what?" "Showing the cider I ain't work ROMANCE OF MINISTER AND YOUNG GIRL FAILS The love of a young girl for a min ister, who left his wife and home for her, has ended in sorrow for both, ac cording to a story told by Mrs. M. G. Holland, head of a private detective agency, who worked on the case. Mrs. Holland says that the Rev. John Norris, formerly a Presbyterian pastor in Pittsburgh, is the man. He is 54 years old. The story runs that Norris fell in love with Alice Trescott, a young girl of Pittsburgh, several months ago. Shortly afterward he left the eastern city and came to Chicago, where he opened a luxurious furnished flat at 5442 Michigan av. When everything was ready the girl got permission tq,come here and "visit some girl frienSs." When she got here she was installed in the Michigan av. flat as "Mrs. Prescott." He was known as "Mr. Prescott." Saturday detectives walked in on the couple. Serious action was averted when the girl was induced to leave the man and go back to Pitts burgh. She left for home last night o o GIRLS' JOB BUREAU OPENED "Jobs Wanted." This phrase is the latest to be adopted by the Chi cago Women's Club in a campaign which started yesterday to obtain work for thousands of disappointed women who applied for situations at the employment bureau in the Ste vens building. Because of the crowds attracted the office was closed at noon. More than 300 applications had been taken and those in distress were given work at $1 a day making Red Cross bandages. "This is a tragedy," said Mrs. Ben jamin Carter, one of the directors. . "We need more offers from employ ers of women. We need more jobs to give." o o Harry Karras, 279 L'oomis, flirted ing." 1 with two policewomen; $25 and costs. Tjmfafa4PT rrft ft tmmmmmmm