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SOCIAL DOINGS 'I·". Miss Olga Ness Was Given a Pleasant Surprise at Her Home Here Last Night Miss Olga Nass was pleasantly sur prised at her home, 168 Paterson street, last night, by a number of her friends. The evening was spent In gimea and Miss Mande Shaver, of Drifton, Pa., rendered several vocal selections. Mrs. Daiey Curry presided at the piano. At a late hour the guests were ush ered out on the lawn .where refresh ments were served, after which they left for home. Those present were: Mrs. Daisy M. Curry, tie Misses Florence M. Lon aeth, Olga M. Nass, Nellie Jensen, Bertha Tausls, of Metuchen; Marion Sullivan, of South Amboy, and Maude L·. Shaver, of Drifton, Pa.; Messrs. Francis and William Bartow, Conrad 8chrlmpe, Chris. Arneson, Tony Bram and Charles Hay, of Pottsville, p*~ Mela Dance Given by the fiaritan Yacht CM Was a Delightful Affair. In spite of the warm weather, a large number of members and friends gathered at the Raritan Yacht Club fcouee last evening to participate in a ▼ictrola d un ce. Refresh meats were •erved and the dancers depressed themelave* a* having spent a delight ful evening. Rnfns R. H asking head ed the committee on arrangements. Several other social affairs have been arranged for the remainder of the month. The next semi-annual Auice of the club will be held next Friday night, the members of the houRe committee being in charge of the arrangements. Λ card party will t>e beld Friday evening, Jnly 31. fltewark Singing Society to he Guest ot Frem Singers at Bonhamtown Tomorrow. The monthly outing and basket party of the Singing Society Frem will be held at the itonhamtown Pine Grove tomorrow. The affair is for the members and their families, who will go out from here early in the morning by automobiles and trolley. Members of the Newark Singing 8oclety frem will be the gueste of the local society. There will be games, and refreshments will be •erved. Christian Eodeayor Society to Hold Cake Sale July 25. Arrangements are being made by /tie Chris tien Endeavor Society of the yiret Presbyterian church for a cake •ale to be held at the chapel from 2 ;·» B"*P«ilock Saturday atteraoon, July' ÏST Varied klndB of home-made eakes will be offered for sale. fieorge Schenck Returns from Tropical Geeflfry, George Schenck, of 94 Market •treet, returned last night on the Mayaro from Trinidad, where he has keen engaged since May building ft pile driver for the Perth Ambory Dry Dock Company. Mr. Sclienck, who Is a Lincoln fireman, brings back some interesting stories of his t'Ay in that tropical country. Camp at Keansburg. Mieees May and Ruth Larsen, Ruth and Bessie Warren and Roue, S^ena and Dora Goldman will leave ilonday for Keenshurg, where they1 -will camp for two months. The Tarty will be chaperoned by Mrs. James Warren. License to Wei. Licenses for marriage were issued *t tho city hall yesterday to Walter Marks and Frances Ziegler, and to Jlteve Bodnar and Anna Bodnar. PERSONAL Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Hanson, of ■Kearny av-enufi, sail today from New iTork at 12:#Ό «'clock for a trip Abroad. Mr. and Mrs. Hanson will upend the greater part of their time tn Parie. Mr. and Mrs. John Larson, son Harry, and William Welleir, of Oak •treet, start today to spend their va cations at St. James, Long Island. ■· Miss Celia Kaufman, of South Am .feoy, is spending the day at the home «f her cousin, Miss Theresa Kreiel •heixner. Morris Lo-bel, of 3 54 State street, Is «pending the day at New York «ity. Walter Ζ « oyer, of Madison ave nue, Is spending the afternoon at Hoboken. Miss Gertrude Walters, of Jeffer mi street, has returned home after making a three weeks visit with irientls at Rahway. Mies Agnes Becker, of Smith •treet, has been spending the past ■week at Somerville. Martin Nolan, of Washington •treet, returns home today after ■pending a week's vacation at Atlan tic Highlands. Miss Elizabeth Petty, of Cranbirry, ..fas Teturr.^d .home after spending •everal days with relatives in Perth ;A*nboy. *" Edwin Laubanch, of Madison ave nue, will leave tonight for a short visit witli friend* at Catasaqua, Pa. John K. BTyan, of Water street, is on a business trip to Montana. Arthur W. Bryan, the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Bryan, of Water street, is seriously 111 at the city hospital. Miss Nettie Bennett, of Dorchester, Mn*s., anil Misses Yetta and Sarah Miller, of this city, accompanied by Edward Miller, enjoyed a trip up the Hudson to West Point Thursday. Mrs. Harry C. Fegeiy, William Hanson find Math Hanson went to New Trok this mornig to see Mr. and Mrs. John β. Hanson off for Europe. Miss Laura Steele, of High street, will leave today for Nova Scotia on a visit. William T. Morgan has gone to Somerville after «evera 1 weeks here in the interest of the Order of Owls. Mrs.., Wilbur La Roe, βX Kearny avenue, is spending a few days at Oak Ridge with Misa Bertha Jennings. AN IRONICAL SUGGESTION. "Onr country pine· will hare to be painted," said Mrs. Curarox. "Yea," replied her husband. "And the era8· will have to be mowed, and the barn needs a lot of fixing op." "Yes." ""And the plumbing ts out of repair and the roof leaks. There βτβ so many things to be done that I think you ought to b· on band to overaee the work." "All right." "I hope you're not annoyed." "Not annoyed; only punted. I can't understand how I let you persuade ma to p-atc that place 'Idle-Ease.' " Rubbing It In. "Why does that lady grin so every time she sees yooî" "She knows I'm only getting $10 a week." "But why the grin?" "I was engaged to her osoe and broke It off, and she afterward mar ried a millionaire."—Louisville Cou rier-Journal. Dead. "Do you want to be let In on a dead sure thing?" 'Nope, whenever I am Introduced to a dead sure thine I step back and give my plaoe to the undertaker." ONCE ENOUC Ί. I I ι—5» Miss Homeletgh—Perhaps yon won't believe it, but a strange nan tried to Un me once. Miss Cutting—Really! WeH, he'd have been a very strange man tt he'd tried to kiss you twice. fiteteaman and PeWttelan. The statesman can explain all tztiçks By just a passing glance at *em. But, owing to shrewd politics, Ha seldom gets a chance at "am. Formalities. "Wbat'e the trouble about that salute?" asked the Impatient warrior. "There's a alight delay. A search Is being made." "You iaven't mislaid the oannon, have you?" "No. But w» can't find oifr hand book of etiquette." Mean. Tir. and Mrs. Brown are an Ideal married couple," said Mrs. Gabb. "She write· me that they are unspeakably happy." "What are they? Deaf imites?" growled Mr. Gabb. Correct. "How should the new warden of a state prison begin a letter of Uianks to the governor for his appointment?" asked the Boob. ""I now take my Pen In hand," re-' plied the Cheerful Idiot. POINTED PARAGRAPHS Even an old aoa3i has been known to generate dry wit. Many a chap catches on who doesn't know how to let go. Love yourself as yeu Ao your neigh bor and see how far you'll get There are more ways of spending money than there are making it A woman's eyes sometimes Indicate a lot jot swear wards she dare set utter. Bran a poor actor can Baalue a bit with the audience by breaking a tot of dishes. Good People To Deal ι We Tr«at You Right T" «DUT THEY DONT HEAR By GRACE GOWDY. The girl who likes to tark dropped the slice of lemon iato her tea, medi tatively. "It's perfectly wonderful," •he mused, "how deaf & man grow· After he's married. "When he's Just engaged," she went on, "he can hear his adored one's faint est whisper tn a boiler* factory going full blast, but afterward—honest, I've Been women who had to chloroform their husbands and tie them hand and loot before they could get the wretches to listen to something that It was aV •alately accessary to tell them' "There's my brother Edgar. Now, be'· a perfectly good brother and al ways bought me exactly as fhm candy and flower· as he gave the girl Ire happened to be In lore with, and nat urally 1 think a great deal of Mm. Τ never saw anything lfka the devotion be beetowed open Mae while they were engaged. It we· what ywu might cal! oppressive to the innocent by stander. 'If Mae was at one end of a ball room η feet long and Bflgarr aft the other surrounded by a cordon rrt men and Mae chanced to whleper to her partner that she believed eh· bad dropped her handkerchief, 1 give yoa my word tint Edgar would plang» through that mass of men Instantly am though be were tha locomotive draw ing the H-hour special to New Tort And before Mae's partner had time to stoop Edgar bad recovered the hand kerchief, presented Ή to her and anx iously lntprtred whether there wasn't something else be could do tor Iter, all before the dead and wounded that marked the tumultuous progress through the ballroom had had tfaaa to pick themselves up and dust them selves off! 1 w iwsmww «.mi. u^m in ferred from what 1b known μ acute hearing. He always was leaning aox loiualy forward and saying: "Tea—what did you say, dear?* Afraid he migbt misa something, you ne*. "Well, they've been married two year» now, and he*» Just as much In love with her aa ever, but ΓΠ tell you wîiat happens when 1t I» neceesary for Mae to comnnmlcato something to Edgar. The scene is after dinner and Edgar ha» the newspaper. Bays Mae: "'Edgar!' Then she repeat· the name three time». Then from behind the paper comes a sound like Saya Mae, 'Edgar, the queerest thin* happened today. The man who was to bring your new euit of clothes <Mtv Bred a pound of_ prunes instead!" Thrilling silence from behind the pa per. Mae takes a deep breath. 'Ed gar,' she says, 'the tailor's man left a pound of prunes today Instead of your new suit!' " 'Jemima!* explode» Edgar at Oris Instant, 'listen to thle.' Then he reads something aloud from his newspaper. "Half an hour later when he goes to put on his new suit and finds a pound of prunes Instead be raves and wants to know why on earth Mae couldn't take enough interest In his atfalrs to tell him! "Why:, there's a deep ocean rumble all over this broad land of wives tell ing things to thelT husbands who aren't listening. It's « substratum on which are built all the conversations and all the dally deeds that are done! Hue bands are being told that the gas bin is overdue and that It looks as though Willie was coming down -With the measles; that mother Is coming for a six months* visit and that the new velvet gown from Celeste is mined, that the cook has left, or mlee have eaten the best bindings on the library shelves, -or the White's dinner party hi postponed, or that Uncle Hiram had a stroke of paralysis yesterday—end do they hear? They do not ψ "They go bHssfufly on In their calm, peaceful, unltstenlng mental attitude, and let the dear creatures babble fran tically, Imploringly, beseechingly. "The only time they came oet of their trance Is when they find the gas man has turned off the gas or discover mother's trunk in the guest room and then they demand to he told why. The wise wife does not burst Into teare and Insist that she has already told her husband 18 times—she says meek ly *Yee, dear, tt 1s my fault, and I should have informed yoii'—and then goee downtown and charges something perfectly awful on' that month*· dry .goods bill. In revenge. He doevnt know It's revenge—he calls It eztravaeaaee, hut that give· Mm something te talk abort and keeps him aroused, «· it's for his own good. "Do you know what I'm «eAag to do 'When î «et a htwbattdT' asked th· girl who Hk«« to talk. "Wlna I bave «ome thlnp to tell Mm I'm gain* to eend him telegrams, collect, to his office !" Philippin· Trad· School·. In keeping with the program of th· bureau of education to enoourag· pu pils and teachers to produce articles of commercial value, the division su perintendent of schools at Aibay, In the Philippines, has requested the teachers to encourage the pupil· to «pend tholr vacation in the household Industry centers established In their towns. Acoordlng to th· Dally Con sular Report, the Lejrte trad· school has wrested from Ilollo the distinction of being the juost advanced trad· school in the bureau of education. Work In the Leyte trade school dur line the paat year amounted to 111,142, oat of which |2,67J was paid to the pmtUa lor their work. One pupil earned J118 daring the year, and two ather boy* earned |7S each. BEADS H'W,SH—Carl, fourteen years old, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Welsh, of Roosevelt, yesterday afternoon after a lingering illness. The boy had Ijeen an Invalid for eleven years. The funeral will >e held tomorrow afterneea from the borne ef JjJe parents, 1ST Kahway imnui, Berne e vet t. at t o'dedk. iBterieal will taUam in Jtaeadai· WHY NOT DINE AT THE PACIE8 NOOSE During the Hot Summer Tabic D'Hote Dinner Sundays 75c 12-30 TO a.3oP. M. 6 TO S P. Π Week Days Lundi er η or Dinner 50c Menu for Sunday JULY 19I»1 Assorted Relishes Uttle Neck Claims, h. sh. Cream erf Chicken Consomme Maridoine Halibut au bleu "Rissolee Potatoes Span iA Omelette Smoked Beef Tongue Cream Horseradish Sa»ce Spring Chicken, Maryland Prime Ribs of Beef an jus Mashed Potatoes Potatoes Maître d'hôtel New Wax Beans Succotash Combination Salad Home-made Pineapple Pie Cabinet Pudding Watermelon Ice Cream Cheese and Ccackers Coffee Saturday Evenings a la Carte after β o'clock, Music GLEANINGS Blesaed ere the happiness maker·. Who brine· snnshine into the Hfe of another has sunshine In his own.— DerW Starr Jordan. Blessed are they who know how to ahlne on one's gloom with their cheer. —Henry Ward Bawdier. Λα my Hie today has been deter mined by the way I lived my yester day, ao my tomorrow Is being deter mined by the way I live my today.— Ralph Waldo Trine. The world wcmld be better and brighter If people were taught the duty of being happy as well as the happiness at doing their duty. To be happy ourselves is a most effectual contribution to the happiness of oth er·.—ttr John Lubbock. QUAKER QUIPS He Jeirts best who best Jests. Wlgg—"Cloaetlut believes in making 11 go as tar as possible." Win— "Huh, Cloaeflst Isn't satisfied unless it comes tack and brings another Aflu With It·" Blobbe—"That FBttow BJenes has more money Chan brsdns " Biobhe— "Why, he harrowed Hve cents froe me Tor carfare hi at night." Blobbe— "Wen, that proves it" "At any rate, the mas who has Is better than the one who merer Wee/· nwW the Wise Ocy. "Tes. but the man who mmm lilsa la at least spared the aadrtlflcatJon «t knowing what he cant do," ratified the Simple Mug.—Philadelphie "Record. Cotffleh *nd Cream. Pick «ρ and snaV without briBIng a pint of salt ttsh for each lour puaiii· to he aerecd. fiaeld one qua·* Of Bilk to double boHac, with bettor atas ot •mall egg, and when art belling point add one rounding taUeepoonful floor carefully blended In cold milk. Β an egg can be spared heat it well.and add It ' with (he Sour to the hot milk. Drain fish and stir into the cream. Add aalt If neceaaary. Haw ready two hard-boiled eggs and a tableapuon ful of parsley. Boor codfish and cream onto a large platter. Around the edge place strips or ring· of the hard boiled egg whites. Orate the yolks over the whole. Sprinkle with pap rika and chopped parsley and aarva with mealy baked potatnne —* But w3mb a mania auto aMa up * may werry htm mere tku wben Ma wife does likewise. H a fflrl bcrwB to a young man three ooniTiitlTe ter· b· 1» -oert&in .aba is In love with him. The «ore birthday· m woman has celebrated the eaaler It la 1er ter to torgat In what year aba **i born. CLASSIFIED AOS. R»c«lwl to Uti ftr OmBhafln LOST—Gold pin between Oak atreet and National Bank. Beware re turned News office. 7374-7-18-2t $15.00 In Gold and all expenses to the cou pie th&t will be mar ried cm the Dknai Stage ! Apply to N£3) JL MOLLES Ditma* ^,m*SÊÊÊtmι ΦΜ, -? . α Ό' SUFFRAGE, FOR AND AGAINST STFFRAGfi To th-e Officers and Members of the New Jersey Association Oppoeed Lo VYomias Suffrage and it: Brandies: Mauy statements not only unfair te the suffrage workers ol this state, out misleadimg; -as to tie tacts they purpart to give, having recently been made by persons repTeseeting your association, either In public meet ings or in Lhe press, we desire to take this method of asking wtoetlwr the executive board erf your argani naucra authorizes such uiifair state ments as those detailed and replied to beiow. Because we deprecate the practice of Mrs. G. D. Goodwin, Miss Mary McKeen, Mies R. A. Lawreuoe and othere ef attributing all aorte orf inflanimajtor.v statements *o a "lead ing suffragist," **a promtaeet Ball rage worker," etc., at least o»e bmm Is attached to each statement men tioned below, although they iiave all bean repeated many times by many anti-suffrage speakers la many parte of tie state. 1. Suffragist» are werkio* tor fasaisiun and aord«ii«n. Speaking before the legislature last winter and alee at meetings in Trente®, Elizabeth, Plainftold and other places, Mrs. C. II. Uliplumt stated that, "In a list of publications issued hy the National Suffrage As sociation ar article entitled 'Bond women,' by Lkora Marsden is speci ally recommended far reading by be ing given three stars of praise, this being the highest number of stars of praise given to any publication." She went cm ση to eay that "Bond women" adrocatefl «eenoaric inde pendence for wives and mothers as well as for other «'omen, making the deduction that eu Crag lets favor chil dren being raised in institutions, while their mothers fellow bueiaees or professional careers. m » UimbOi VA 1«V1 . Il β|μ VW· ·» gru» hcations referred to is not published by the National Suffrage Association, but by the College Equal Suffrage League (which is plainly stated on Its coper) and was compiled at the request of the president of the league, who is also president of Bryn Mawr College, Mise M. Carey Thom as. It Is not a list of recommend ed suffrage literature, but a bibliog raphy including all books, plays, pamphlets and magazine articles con tained In the Congressional Library of the United States In Washington, which refer in any way to the ad vancement of women, and contains practically every thing written on both sides of the wooiaai question from Mate's .Republic, 38Ό B. C. to the present day. From one to seven stars appear before all books which, in the opin ion of the editor, state the case "they present in a clear ond lucid manner. Over seventy too oils mentioned In this bibliography «re given from four to seven stars. Mrs. Oliphant also quoted exten sively from W. L. George, blandly Ignoring the fact that both he ana Miss Marsden are anti-euffragists. Tftey are asarchists and -are as much -opposed to rotes tor men a* to rote· for women. MIbb Kmma Goldman Is another distinguished anti-nnfra gist In the same class, and it wuld be fairer to hold the anti-saffra £hUs responsible for their utter ances than it is to connect the sulf raglsts with them, tar all three of them have tooth written and spoken of the women of the country wast the vote and that ninety per cent are opposed to woman suffrage. The itettaeariee define a sultra glst as one who either has <er de sires to obtain the right to vote. Over four million women are now en titled to vote lor President of the United States. These women con stitute twenty per cent «f .the women of the country of voting age. and if we' add to them the millions en rolled suffragists in the nan- suf frage gTowth in New Jersey, that cent will be a modest estimate of the woman suffragists of the coun try. Airs. Oliphant stated at Jobstown after I had given statistics of suf frage growth in New Jeersey, that having written to our association and naked the number ef its mem bers, and having receivfed no reply, she Intended to go on quoting the figures which J had stated were in correct. 1 have had the files in our ntftee searched and there Is »o euch letter among them. Miss Laura Osgood of the Plalnfleld anti-suffrage organi Catien asked me for figures as 'SU Vttl jucwtrainuiy WILIlUi X UWJl several manthe ago. 1 am .glad to state for the benefit of Mrs. Oliphant that we sow have over thirteen thousand members, organizations covering ninety cities and towns and enrolled suffragists in over Tour thousand cities, towns, townships and boroughs throughout the state. These Bgures do not inch] de the fif ty or more hr&ntihos of the Women's Political Union ef New Jersey, or tile Equal franchise Society with thousands of members. MRS. E. F. FEICKEKT, President N. J. Woman Suffrage Association. In her report at the annual meet ing of the auti-tsuffrage association, in Trenton, May 11, Mrs. Lowthrop, state chairman of literature, said, as qaofted In the papers. "Now .comes the demand for the ballot, for the right to sit on jurie*. for the right to do mTHtary thrty,, for the right to hasten the day off socialism if they can, the right, H they see fit to overthrow the syartem ol marriage xad abolish the home us it now stands sad the family as a unit in the community. That in 1914 is the demand of a growing faction of the suffrage party. That is what the much-need word "femin ism' means. There is no getting away from the fact that woman suf frage and socialism arc indtsseiubly linked. It is a state of affairs recog nized by «v«ry serions student αϊ palitioa.1 and social conditions today. All socialists favor woman suffrage because they know what It means t· their ewe·.** axe wary sweeping asser tbfeaa. The troth is that mo fao tiam at ττχ ef the Hta|( oiga^ia tions ts vaefctaf (or each ends, at foe I tag far trrn» tweatr to «wertatf ι for women. Many socialists are in favor of j woman suffrage, as are also many ; Republicans, Democrats, Progres sives and Prohibitionists. Woman I suffrage is not the special property of any political party. It Is also a iact that many socialists are not in favor of votes for women because the record at the women voters shows that they are apt to be ultra conservative rather than radical. In the elections of 1912 Milwaukee elected seven socialist candidates, the highest number elected in any American city, and also gave the largest majority against woman suff rage of any city voting cm the ques tion. 2. Married women will lose their present privileges when they get the vote. Mrs. A. F. Jamiesou, in an anti suffrage symposium recently pub lished in the Newark Evening News, stated that married women will lose the privileges which the Taw now gives them when they get the politic al rights they are seeking, and added that an amendment had been made to the suffrage bill in New York state last year removing all special privileges from married women in the «vent of thier obtaining the suffrage. She went on to say that if the suffragists knew anything oï lég islative procedure they would know that an amendment would be passed before the main motion to which It had been moved. In regard to this Mrs. Catt, wh.o is In charge oi the legislative activi ties of the suffragists in New York state, writes: "A bill was introduced by an anti suffrage member to the effect stated, via.: to remove all the so-called priv ileges of the married women after the suffrage bill was passed. It was of course lost in committee, and was cmly a piece of bluff. Ν. B.— It was a .separate bill and not an amendment, so that the reflection upon women's lack of knowledge' ef legislative procedure was without foundation.·" 3. Mormon support. Speaking at Jobstown a few weeks ago Mrs. Oliphant acid It was no wonder that suffragists were hope ful of accomplishing a good deal at Washington, as they could count up on the votes of "thirty-two senators elected by the Mormon votes of the equal suffrage states." Rather pe culiar figures, considering that wo men only have a voioe In the elec tion of senators in nine states, with two senators apiece. And since when have California, Colorado and Kan sas, to name the three largest equal suffrage states, been considered Mormon states? 4. Most women are opposed to ■suffrage. Mrs. Goodwin, Mrs. Oliphant, Mrs. Breese and pthers have repeat edly stated that only ten jer cent against woman suffrage. ANTI-SUFFRAGE The women and men of Ne-r Jersey are face to face with the issue of »bmb suffrage The legislature of' 1914 bas passed in berth houses a bill providing ter an amendment to the constitution nt the State grant Dog U» franchise to -women. This bill mast be paseed again by tfaa legislature of 1*3 5 before it cam come to the vote of the people as provided for in the State constitution which calls for & referendum. As a result of thji p&Htlcal situation, in .a little over a year the men of New Jersey may toe called upon to decide; toy tbe wot* whether or not "woman Kuffrage is expedient tor the State and for tbe individual. The New Jerscgr ,. Association Op posed to Woman Suffrage is com posed of women twenty-one years of axe ant over, organized to voice the Tret eat of the great majority off the women of U>« State against woman suffrage. We believie that in all matters of legislation the man's vote can pro tect the interests of women and chil dren, and, therefore, It is unneces sary and Inadvisable that the addi tional burden of political activity "be thrust upon woman. We are convinced that this burden of politics would seriously impair woman's work in tbe home and that many women and men, by not cour ageously stating their convictions, are really supporting the cause of .suffrage. * "V ι·»νν ·υ "WW lu » » J I UCUUlUU tuai suffrage is allied with Socialism, the direct menace to the laws and insti tutions «Γ our country, and that tt Is also a part of the feminist movement, which In its attacks upon the institu tion βί marriage, directly threatens the destruction of the home. This association is conducting a State-wide campaign of education and organization, so that every man may know the dangers of woman suffrage and vote against it. Id order to conduct this campaign it is necessary to have «et only your personal influence but your financial support, and we would earnestly urge that you contribute a sum. however small, to this patriotic cause. Contributions to be sent to the Chairman of the Finance Com mittee, Mrs. John Constable Moore, 1025 Watchung avenue, Plainfleld. Si. J. By order of the board. (Signed) GEGIIGIAN-NA S. B-REESK, President. PERSEVERE. My field may be twampy or «tony, my plow may be poor, my *lreagth*aail. the weather bad, but M hoehly as unto the Land 1 do ike best 1 can. aad look aet back, but keep light on, 1 am ao failure.— Mimc D. BdsetoL Evan. Gibbs—Does year wife ever scold when you have been out late at the otob? JMbhe—SewerJ She merely gets up at 4 o'clock the seat anoaohig aad practices on the piano, and I daren't TMrf· A· ||| |u| J GOLDBTI A Pc or Set off TmA ffear at Any Price There are a great many people wearing sets of teeth that are Β constant source of discomfort and annoyance. This i> always the caee when they don t fit P«r : ^pi they got these f eth at bar firm rat en—β po, tbey m find them a dear bar il Γ Β·'η· Some artificial teeth would be dear at but priée. This la not I the kind I make. I éo act quote 1 yt>u bargain rates, r, e i t h e are my n.-H.t «bargee high. I for· ΙιΗιΙιιλΤ ,™'1 teeth thai look uuiiitui weH weer ^ fit vaU at the lowest passible price for freed, darable work. I tit ink yoo*fl agree with me this is the better way. It makes friande and keeps Hwn. Con imitations always free. OR. BRADFORD, Dentist Office Hot»—8 a. m. to -9 p.m. Sunday*—9 a. m. to 1 p. n». SpTtzw Bltfg., Cor. Sail! I SUti St. PEHXfi AM BOT You -will be pleased If you get one of tbeve skirts. Rtrasian Tunic Piqi>e "Wash Skirts. TSxtra long tunic. Perfect for Summer wear. In .sizes .from 22 inch waist to 34 inch. They are the larft thing in Wash Skirts. Really Worth Double. Special Price $1.25 DAVID BASH 98 Smith St. WEST END PHARMACY. g, Kauam&oisa, -TrjMTWt·*. 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ΒϋΟΗΑΗ * «ο* ■ΑίπτΑκτ Timexan, }ΝΙΜ· MULBERRY ftEACtt SoBeld k Hlsrtnn, proa*. «KM JW.V «Μ*