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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 7

Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 7

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Chicago Tribunei
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Chicago, Illinois
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7
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nmrTJ? ffTrm a en hmi witvu' "arvvrra a tt ir i-vs-r 30, 1903. 7 ffl SOCIETY WORLD. AMONG THE BOOKS. SPRING COSTUME OF KNICKERBOCKER TWEED. REDDING OF MISS BERTHA B0GTJE SET FOR APRIL 8.

riTVWRTnr a a n-v GEORGE C. COOS; HAS ACTION. 66 On Purpose35 Rattllnar Romance Bollt Arsaad Cob-federate Soldier of Fortune, Who Kaponaea Wnnlnar Cmase of Maximilian Gllmpsea of Many Historical Peraoaaajre and Hack Klarht-lnar and Iatrlarae A Heroine Won in Spite of Great Difficulties. 1 The In-er-seal Package, in which Uneeda Biscuit are packed, was not an accident It was made for a purpose Your Purpose It made that you miHt bay biscuit just as they left the oven; that you could always depend on getting them fresh and good. Our Purpose WH Be Married to Mr.

James Etr ins Bennett Bt the Home of Her Par-eats, 235i Michigan A venae Fare-well Reception to the Rev. Mr. ana yir. Thomas J. Mason Given at the Residence or Mr.

and Mrs. i. M. yjie wedding of Miss Bertha Bogue, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

C. H. Bogue of 2359 Michigan avenue, to Mr. James Ewing Bennett will take place on Wednesday, April 8. Only the relatives will be present.

The wedding of Miss Mary Losey Graff, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Graff, to pr.

Charles P. Pinkard, will take place April '25, It will he quietly celebrated at the reside of the bride parents. 4907 Madison ivnue. jjiss Moore of 3504 Rhodes avenue gave a luncheon on Saturday for Mis Winifred Siott. whose wedding to Mr.

William Mc-XnigM Stoker will take place April 14. The guests included the briderhalds. who are Miss Helen Parker of Reading. Mise Louise Underwood. Miss Nellie McPherson, and Miss ElUabeth Gooding.

A farewell reception was given to the Rev. Mr. nd Mrs. Thomas J. Mason Friday even-lug at the residence of Mr.

and Mrs. O. Connell. 54W Cornell avenue. Mr.

Mason has beeen called to Trinity church, at Ashtabula, 0. A large number of the members of St. John's and Christ Reformed Episcopal churches were present. Mr. and Mrs.

L. Krebs of 3137 Groveland avenue announce the engagement of their granddaughter. Miss Stefanie Waldman, to Mr. Louis Sobel. At home Sunday, April's.

Mr. and Mrs. H. I. Parker of 36 North Sacramento avenue announce the engagement of their daughter.

Miss Estelle Marguerite Parker, to Mr. Frank C. Steen. Mrs. Alfred W.

Hoyt will be at home with Mrs. John Hemphill Coulter after April 1, at 177 East Forty-Seventh street. The Washington Irving club will present the Merry Wives of Windsor at the Hull house auditorium Friday evening. BETTER TIMES IN PROSPECT FOR THE PUBLIC LIBRARY. If you would read a rattling novel of love and fighting, and nearly everybody does like that sort of fiction these days, you could not do better than to read Roderick Taliaferro," by George Cram Cook (the Macmillan company).

We do not place Mr. Cook, but tf this Is his first novel, which Is to be presumed, he has displayed an invention and imagination and a mastery of detail of which none need be ashamed. From the first page to the last the action Is rapid but coherent. Many as are the situations into which he plunges his characters, there are few which are unnatural. Inconsistent, or superfluous.

Roderick Taliaferro (Tulliver). a young soldier of fortune, at the close of the civil war, in which he served with the confederates, goes to Mexico, penniless but with good health, some experience as a soldier, and a romantic temperament. He espouses the ill fated cause of Maximilian, falls In love with the beautiful daughter of a grand house (and she with him), enters 'the army, and wins his bride in spite of a villainous rival, the opposition of papa, and the bans of the church. In spite of this commonplace plot Mr. Cook has made a tale not only of absorbing interest but of considerable character.

He has given in Roderick and Felise a pair of lovers who would charm any admirer of romance. We get glimpses of the Empress Carlotta, whose reason was just, beginning to give way, of the weak yet noble Maximilian, a prince and a gentleman in spite of his inherent defects of character; of Juarez, of Diaz, of Mlramon and Lopez, of hero and spy, of loyal and traitorous generals, of the inside workings and downfall of the pinchbeck empire erected by the cupidity and It vas made that ve could preserve and deliver to you the best biscuit in the best condition; protecting them against moisture, dust and germs; so they will reach your table in their original, clean, wholesome and nutritious farm. How veil it has answered all purposes is shown by the sale of more than 200,000,000 packages. All 1 I I nMRWMHHsWsWMsssW of Napoleon the Little. We see the NATIONAL BISCUIT COM PANT Prince and Princess saim-saim, uazaine and his wife, and many other real personages.

As to action, there are a dozen plots to undo the hero laid by De Castro, the villain; there are bull fights, and battles, sieges, ambuscades, fights in the open and between walls, the treason exposed, and the hero changing clothes in prison that he may escape. The style of Mr. Cook Is good. He writes excellent conversation, his dialogue sparkles with wit. his pathos is well timed, and moving and love scenes are adorable.

There are some spirited pictures In the book. SUGGESTED BY ZOLA. Lees and Leaven Contains Some Matter from Real Life. Directors Hope to Resume Full Service Next Fall, but Are Waiting on Neces-, sary Funds Smile at "Tramp" Idea. The tailored effect evinced in this costume 1s strongly indicative of the return to simple form for actual street service.

The boucle and knlckerbocker weaving In worsted effects is also a novel idea. Fringed ornaments, braided finishes, and the new hat of rough straw effects with berriea are noteworthy. Is truth stranger than fiction? Zola seems to find it so, and so does Edward W. Towns-end, the author of Lees and Leaven," the new novel of New Tork life which McClure, Phillips Co. have just brought out.

POTTERY Mr. Townsend and his critics have split upon the reality of events in certain chapters of his book, especially in the chapter, A Man's Face in the Dark," which pictures NEWS OF THE THEATERS. vividly a policeman's brutal treatment of a seafood man," from whose basket the arm of the law has filched a boiled lobster. The stock company 'Is a commendable one. Mr, critics claim tfiat Mr.

Townsend's scene is too Murphy makes the colonel an essentially likable old braggart, and Mr. Long, as the brutal to be true, and thereby hangs a tale to Entile Zola's comment on certain phases of New York life. assisting comrade. Is satisfactory. Miss Reals, as the widow.

Is attractive personally and makes of the part all that is possible. and Miss Browning is particularly winsome as the unknown ward. There is a comedienne Standard "Flowing Glaze "Sea Green and "Iris" "Tiger Eye and "Mat Glaze Attractive original designs, never duplicated, superior for Wedding Gifts RoyaJ Copenhagen Art Porcelains. Rozenberg Faience. Extensive Assortment of Unique Wa.res, new a.nd attractive MBNS 'ORESSlNftsSOOM of unusual neatness of method and charm of HIS FRIEND THE LIAR.

A Farcical Comedy in Three Acts. BT ASHLEY MILLER. Presented at the Bush Temple of Music, Chicago, by the Players' Stock Company. March 9. 1903.

The cast: Cl. Dare John Daly Murphy William G. Raft H. C. Long Dick Dare Ashley Miller Selby Crewe Howard C.

Hickman Quick N. Bright John I. Gleason Timothy Tlpp J. Edwin Brown Mrs. Grayce-Wynne Grace Reals Prudence WUe.

Ethel Browning Eunice Dare Aileen May Alice Edna Summerfleld Sua Anna Jerome manner in this little woman, and watching her is productive of pleasure and satisfaction. Mr. Gleason. as the silent youth, does some good work, and Mr. Hickman, Miss May.

Mr. Miller, Miss Summerfield, and Miss Je rome complete a cast which Is generally ade When Mr. Townsend was a newspaper man one of the biggest pieces of reporting he did was the famous Lexow committee's investigation of municipal corruption In New York. His daily reports of these proceedings were sent by a justice of the Supreme court of New York to Emile Zola, who was a friend and correspondent of the justice. Commenting on Mr.

Townsend's account of two Instances of police brutality which were especially heinous. Zola wrote: These being facts, your novelists will not have to engage their powers of Invention for the exhibition of human brutality, the like of which I have been condemned for daring to imagine." The Instances spoken of by Zola were incorporated in the book, and the point of the story is that they are just the ones to which the critics take exception. Notice the size of1 this room on the Standard Pullman Sleeping Cars on the new electric lighted "Grea.t Western Limited" every night between Chicago, SL Paul and Minneapolis. Four men can dress with comfort at the same time. All toilet conveniences and two drop-tables for grips underneath the dressingtables.

Better times are in prospect for the public library. The directors hope to reopen the central buildings evenings, Sundays, and holidays next fall. AH departments will then, it Is believed, be put back on the basis on mhich they were operated before the appropriation for the current year was made. Pally deliveries will be resumed in all portions of the city. The working force, reduced one-third last year, will be brought hack to its former strength.

The restoration will be made possible by the return to the appropriation of former years, but will not be put in effect until funds are available. "Things are shaping around so that the. library will, we hope, be in better shape." Director John W. Kckhart said yesterday. 'Through the summer months to come there will be little demand for the downtown reading room and so it will still be kept on the present schedule, but in October we will endeavor to reopen it evenings, Sundays, and holidays.

In all departments we hope to return to the former footing." Mr. Eckhart said the charges of Mrs. Warren Springer that the reading room was patronized chiefly by loafers and tramps was the expression of some one who was "dreaming." "Ail yesterday afternoon I spent in the reading room," he said. I never saw a jSner class of patrons in the library." Z. P.

Brosseau, another director, said: "The trouble is that the county clerk's office ami the county collectors charge the library fund for collecting its share ef the taxes. Our fund is stripped by the politicians through whose hands it passes." BOETHIA IN ITS NEW QUARTERS. "ociety of Helpfulness" Moves Into the Residence at 335 Chestnut Street. The Boethia. organized three months ago by Miss Mary Ellen Burroughs as a society of helpfulness," has just moved into Its cIud quarters, a plain but roomy frame dwelling at 335 Chestnut street, and the management expects to have in operation within a short time classes in ste'nography.

dressmaking, physical culture, cooking, music, and art. The society has thirty members, whose ages run from 12 to 19 years. Most of them live in the neighborhood. Their dues are Scents a month and they pay a small price for each lesson. Of course, we could never make the society self-supporting on that basis," said Miss Burroughs, but we hope to accomplish much good.

Yesterday I visited a tobacco factory, where 4X) girls are employed. It's hard to reach that kind, but we hope to be able to do it through music if we can cure a piano." quate. The comedy was preceded by a one acter that bore the terrifying and tongue twisting title of The Chameleonization of Mrs. O'Hogan." It is a weak attempt at a satire on society ambitions and conditions, and was made effective only by the Jolly comedy work done by Carrie Clarke Ward in the leading role. ESTABLISHED IS3S XTW.

AND air comp 118 and 120 Wabash av. Tickets onsale at City Ticket Office, 115 Adams St, or Grand Central Station, corner Fifth Ave. and Harrison St, Chicago. Baedeker's Southern Italy. The fourteenth revised' edition of Baedeker's Southern Italy and Sicily has Just been Imported by Charlea Scribner'a Sons.

It forma the third part of the Italian guide book of Baedeker, and ia one of the moat Interesting and important of th whole aeries. Besides describing fully all of southern Italy and Sicily, there are also directions for excursions to Malta, Sardinia. Tunis, tha I pari islands, and to Corfu. The volume contains twenty-seven, maps and twenty-four plana. Uncle Hank at tbe Capital.

"Around the Capital with Uncle Hank." by Thomas Fleming (the Nutshell Publishing company), is a book of which there is not much to be said certainly not much for the dignity of the reading matter. The marginal Illustrations, however, which present well executed pen sketches of all the more promliwnt members of both houses Two new plays were presented for the first time on any stage yesterday afternoon at the Bush Temple of Music by the Players' Stock company. The second and more important of these, both in manner and matter, was a farcical comedy by Afihley Miller, one of the members of the Bush Temple organization. It is entitled His Friend the LJar," and despite the slowness of movement that characterized it. kept the audience at the matinee well entertained.

The scene is laid at a seaside resort, the time beJng the present. Col. Dare, who is one of the gueets of the hotel In which the piece plays, has a fondness for impressing his fellow guests by telling extravagant stories of his adventures during the civil war stories which few of his associates believe, even his son and daughter, who are with him, doubting the veracity of his reminiscences. The one person who has faith in him and his prowess is a young widow. Mrs.

Grayce-Wynne. whose favor he is particularly desirous of winning. A man by the name of Crewe, who also Is a suitor for the widow's hand, expresses his doubts as to the truth of the colonel's boasting, and Mrs. Wynne, in friendly interest. At the German Theater.

It Is a genuine pleasure to spend an evening watching a performance by the German company that appears every Sunday night at bowers'. The work of this sterling organization is so carefully balanced, so well rounded in detail, and so admirably ordered, that the impression afforded is that of a virtually perfect ensemble. And then the majority of the plays pffered are of a literary or dramatic worth such as is frequently sadly lacking in the pieces our native companies produce. The problem drama is met with now and again, but it usually has value from both constructive and subject viewpoints to commend it, and the comedies and farces presented are usually of a brightness and a substantiality that put to blush the frothy concoctions only too frequently encountered on our own stage nowadays. The patron is excellently amused throughout the evening, aud yet leaves the theater without the feeling that his intelligence has been left un- Kapla Leaf Route.

of congress, give to the book considerable Interest and value. APPEAL FOR ORCHESTRA FUND. Friends of Famous Musical Organization Speak at Meeting in Union Park Congregational Church. Absolute PURITY Fine 'BOUQUET Moderate TRICE appealed to during the time. tells the accused boaster of the charge and 4 METROPOLITAN BUSINESS COLLEGE Wbash-T.

and Monroe-st. Chictjo. Employs teacher of wide experieaoa. Practical, up-to-date methods. Finest equipment.

Broadest course ot study. Thirty years under the same management. We invite investigation of this, the foremost Commercial School in America. Students receive at any time. DAY and EVENING SESSIONS HAVE MADE TO DEMAND PLACE FOR PUPIL.

Father Will Take Expelled Daughter to Taylor School Today and Insist She Be Admitted. asics mm 10 prove nis stories. Associated with the colonel In all his heroic exploits is a brave comrade, Montclair by name, and an individual arriving at the hotel in response to the colonel's advertisement for a servant, is employed to impersonate the fictitious Montclair. The stranger is a clever rogue, and the fun arises from the trouble the colonel has in keeping his comrade telling the right stories at the right time, and in the right version. The son of the colonel is engaged to marry a rich girl whom neither he nor his father has seen, and her arrival and her desire to see what sort of a fellow her future husband is to be causes her to engage Montclair to announce her as his daughter, which serves in the last act to further complicate farcical conditions.

A mass meeting In the Interest of the endowment for the Chicago orchestra was held last night in the Union Park Congregational church. The audience was large and enthusiastic. Three addresses were delivered, by C. Norman Fay and D. H.

Burnham of the Orchestral association and by the Rev. Dr. A- A. Berle. The loss of the Chicago orchestra would be a blow at the cultural reputation of the city which years would not adequately repair," said Dr.

Berle. Dr. Thomas' work here and in America generally has been so monumental and so Important that lack of appreciation would be a great blow at Chi For prospectus, call, write or phone Central 81. 0. M.

POWERS. Principal. I Henry Reuse, whose daughter is said to have been expelled from the Taylor school because she failed to bring 15 cents as requested by her teacher, will take the child to the school this morning and demand that she be admitted. If Miss Belle Butterfield, the principal, declines to receive the girl wtthout the 15 cents Mr. Reuse says he will bring the matter before the board of education.

Mr. Reuse lives at 10023 Avenue N. Last evening the company presented for the first timei in Chicago a comedy by Albert Roderich entitled Der Liebes Contract The Love Contract It is in three acts, and a delightfully merry bit of good dramatic writing it proved. It is a piece that should be added to our English repertory, its subject being one that would please American playgoers, and the situations being such that little or no adaptation would be necessary. A young professor, Dr.

Romer, is at the house of a wealthy manufacturer (retired), and has had the misfortune to step on the train of the gown of the daughter of the house and tear it. He undertakes to entertain her at supper while waiting for the arrival of the seamstress who is to repair the damage, and before the tete-a-tete is ended has proposed marriage to her. She will not listen to a proposal, but enters into a contract with him that after a year of studying each other's characters she will consider the proposal. The act ends with word being brought to the father that the factory in which he has been interested is on the verge of bankruptcy, and he is all but penniless. The mother is a woman ambitious for social prominence, and when the news of the crash Is brought to her she urges her daughter to accept a Herr Reese, who is wealthy and who can enable them to retrieve the lost fortune.

The daughter yields to what she '3 TVS Great Western Champagne the Standard of Jimerican Wines, Used in best homes for dinners and banquets The only American Champagne to receive GOLD JMEDAL at the Paris Exposition, 1900 PLEASANT VALLEY WINE Sole Makers Rheims, N. Y. cago's prestige and standing among the great The performance by the players of the cities of the world. The orchestra should be maintained; It should be suitably and appropriately installed In a building which is thoroughly representative of the cultural ambition of this city. The churches of the city owe it to themselves and their own effectiveness not merely on SAINTS' AJVD SINGERS' CALENDAR grounds of public spirit but not less on iifl grounds of the increment which will result in their own life and power to help and en on dap, March 30.

Sold by respectable wine dealers everywhere. i tcfceagee weewewow believes Is her duty, but Romer arrives on BOOKKEEPING AND SHORTHAND Students qualified in the shortest possible time and in the most thorough manner for positions that pay at once from $35 te $50 a month. Individual instruction. Spring; term begins April 6. Call or writs for catalogue.

AT A 18 TO VAN Ht KEN hTREET. YOUNG MEN Who desire good paying positions in railroad offices should take our course In Way Billing by the Touch System of Typewriting', under a practical railroad clerk. Morning, afternoon and evening classes. Call, write or phone Central 31. METROPOLITAN BUSINESS COLLEGE.

156 WABASH-AV. It the scene and urges the rights of his con To a house owner courage the achievement of this end." Dr. F. W. Gunsaulus.

at his service in Studebaker theater in the morning, also spoke of the orchestra. If we are going to permit this noble, educational, refining influence to bid us good-by, we will certainly lose a good angel, a harmonizing influence on the city's life." SUABIANS TO PRESENT PLAY. Society Will Celebrate Its Twenty-fifth Anniversary Today and To-. morrow. 'I CLASSIFIED I ADS.

IN TO SECURE EXSEETION ALL EDITIONS OF "The Sunday Tribune" CLASSIFIED ADS. MUST BE IN THIS OFFICE FRIDAY. a tract." The girl leads him to believe that she does not care for him because he is poor, but he sees through the deception and in two unusually neat acts torments her with his attention until he brings her to the point of confessing her love for him. The financial crisis for the father proves not so serious as had been feared, and even the mother is finally brought around by the bold suitor to sanction the match. The lines are bright and witty and the situations genuinely amus- The performance was of true excellence.

Sigismund Elfeld as the insistent lover was manly and vigorous, and compelling In his sincerity and good humor; Miss Gonia as the daughter was sweetly girlish, charming both in her kindly treatment of her lover and in her assumed anger; Adolph Schumacher was a big hearted, sympathetic father; Martha George the faithful presentment of one type of German woman; and Gustav Kleemann and Oustav Hartzheim admirable In smaller roles. Following the comedy a one act sketch of peasant life In Bavarian woodlands, entitled The Wild Toni." was given with spirit and finish by Miss Gonia. Miss Ganella, Mr. Schumacher, and Mr. Kleemann.

It Is a simple trifle, but with Its naive situations, its folksongs, and its dialect, is as refreshing as a whiff of nine scented air from the highlands in which Its scene Is laid. W. L. Hubbard. in YE SINNER.

John Scot, lasting fanatic. ABOUT a generation ago Dr. Tanner, as though he were doing something unheard of before, excited the country by his long fast; yet his performance was but the recurrence of an old phenomenon. John Scot of Scotland, famous faster, became conspicuous in 1538. The good qualities of tnis man were of small proportion and few, his learning was as little.

He was plainly destined to obscurity and inconspicuousness as far as hope of gaining fame, as far as good deeds or attainments were concerned. But he had a natural talent which by accident fell out of the napkin and made considerable show In the world before it spent itself, attracting the attention of the king and even that of the pope himself. A mere whim led to the performance which made John Scot famous. He was unsuccessful In a lawsuit and not being able to pay costs he fled for sanctuary to Holyrood house, where, out of mere discontent with life, he abstained from all meat or-drink for thirty or forty days together. This-act was sufficient to give him fame and made the king wish to put him to trial.

He consequently had him shut up in a private room in the castle of Edinburg, where no man had access. The bread and water which was put In for him was indi-minished. although he remained there thirty-two days. He went to Rome to see the pope, exhibited his power and was given a testimony under the pope's seal as to his ability to do without visible means of sustenance. He traveled about displaying this.

Returning to England he made speeches against the divorce of Henry VIII. from Catherine and got himself Into trouble. He was put In prison, where he fasted fifty days. The old biographer says: What his end was I read not." but It is certainly safe to hazard piess that his demise came seme time within the fifty days. YE SAINTE.

SL John Climacus. abbot of Mt. Sinai. THIS one of the Saints John won for himself several surnames: Climacus, because he wrote a book called the "Climax, or I-adder of Scho-kstieus. because he displayed such erudition in this book and while young made such Progress in learning; and St.

John of Sinai because he was abbot of the monastery on bat mountain. He wrote his book his jMrty' rules describing the thirty steps of religious perfection at the request of another abbot named John. It contains many curioua afil instructive anecdotes concerning the monastic life of the period. In this he grant-his pen indulgences he would not have Riven his tongue; he loved to talk, but thought sin to indulge his loquacious propensities. At 16 he retired from the world and from brlHant future his exceptional gift of Peech promised, and put himself under the "eclioti of a holy monk, with whom he refined for nineteen years most fervent and unrelaxing in his efforts at self-mastery.

At of the holy man he retired farther to the desert and amid the complete silence the barren rocks disciplined his tongue. rowds resorted to him for advice and When was reported abroad, not out reason, that these visits gave him an for 'ndulging his weakness of ex-JT he condemned himself to a porous silence for a twelvemonth. St. John rart reeardeJ hy his monastic contempo- a second Moses on Sinai. for he tion1 lnt the mourtain of contempla- desc 63 'ith God face to face- and then fended to his fellows, bearing the tables 04 his Ladder of Pays to Advertise in Uhe Gribune.

Maybe you're going to paint your house and "don't believe in Devoe ready paint." We'll make you an offer: Paint half the house with lead and oil; the other half with Devoe ready paint. In three years the lead and oil half will be hungry for repainting; the Devoe half will probably turn water as well as ever. If you are not satisfied with the Devoe half, go to the dealer you bought the paint of and tell him to make good." He is authorized to. do whatever is right at our expense. If the lead and oil half isn't right try the same plan and see how you come out.

Good-Paint Deto, Chicago NEXT CLASS BEGINS APIUL 1. DAT AND EVENING. Metropolitan Business Goliep, 2 131 WABASH-AV. The Suabian society of Chicago will celebrate Its twenty-fifth anniversary by a banquet for men at North Side Turner hall tonight and by'a jubilee family entertainment at the same place Tuesday night. Three German singing societies, Harmonle.

Senefelder Liederkranz. and Schwabischer Sanger-bund, will contribute to the entertainment of the guests tonight. Eugene Niederegger, president of the Suablan society, will address the guests, and E. F. L.

Gauss will deliver the jubilee address. President Niederegger will welcome the audience Tuesday evening and William Rapp will deliver the oration. The feature will be the performance of a festival play, The Sliver Wedding," written for the occasion by Louis Kindt. The play represents the life, activity, and Influence of Suabians In their new home. Chicago.

Among those in the cast of the festival play will be John Lude, Mrs. Theodore Rail. Paul Feuerlein, Albert Palmer. Julius Gollard, Mrs. Theodore Backmann, Charles Reutter, Mrs.

John Daeuble, C. Efferenn, Mrs. L. Schnitzler, J. Klein, Mrs.

E. F. Frank. Miss F.lla Fleck. Miss Bertha Palmer, Mrs.

Minna Schmidt, Josie Stupe. Emil Gnoske. Julius Schmidt, and Otto Gerber. Diamonds are the best investment. Easy payments.

Lotus S2 6tM street ILFRACOMBE (ENGLAND). ILFRACOMBE HOTEL. All cood Americans stay thera befora thcr dt ASSOCIATION COLLEGE, Central V. M. C.

15 La Salle-st. DAY AND EVENING SCHOOLS. English. Commercial. Stenographic.

Technical Preparatory. Colics Preparatory. Students can enter at any time. Spring term. March So Jane tit.

19(10. 2.021 different men atndenta In IKt. kinderhurstVAKot: Wlllard Hall Weekly Fro arrant. TVillard ball noonday meetings this week will ba In charge of the following leaders: Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesdny. Dr.

M. M. Parkhurst; Thurrtv. Cbrist'an Missionary alliance; Friday, Mother Prindle; Saturday, the Gideons. Home and School for Tonne Children.

Opens fooklnK. Swlne. ltresamaklnaT. Millinery ferliool of llumntie Arts and Wlrnr Diiwtoni i Vlss Isabel llallard. Mlas lifinri tta liisaor.

Kegistration Marcn J40. 17 itta-aT near JklacUaoa. June 1st. S3 Brock-ak. BrooiUne, alas.

i.

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