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Star Tribune from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 17
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Star Tribune from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 17

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Star Tribunei
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Minneapolis, Minnesota
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17
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THE MINNEAPOLIS TRIBUNE: SATURDAY DECEMBER 10 1932 MORNING EDITION PAGE SEVENTEEN tjoines women's sorority. A pro Sorority to Gi0e gram of talks is planned following the dinner. PAY CHECK By ROB EDEN SOCIETY Breakfast Party Pi Omicron QivesBenefit Bridge Party ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL church at Nineteenth and imes avenue north will hold its parish dinner and bazaar Thursday In the crypt of the church. In the evening, there Sunday at House will be bridge and 500 for those who Schools Name Honor Students CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR.

The trip to Hillcrest took an hour on the utreet car, and it was nearly 8 before Fleur reached the town. Eight fifteen when she walked from the station through the dimly lighted atreets to the sanitarium nd found herself confronting; Miss Nash. wish to play. Mrs. Hilda Aase General Chair 9 MRS.

C. F. HAGLIN OF MOUNT Curve avenue will leave the latter Alpha Delta Theta Members Plan Affair Ruth Bur-meister Is Pledge. man Other Officers Assist at Affair. part of January for Hollywood, where she will spend the remainder of the winter.

"Why, Miss Bennett! Did you come to see your father?" t. FIeUr ad' an1 if Miss Nash rcfu8cd ner 8he didn't know what was going to do. She had counted so on seeing; him. She needed him tonight as she had never needed him before. Miss Nash hesitated.

Miss Bennett did look tired there was something strange about her eyes. They lacked their usual luster. "You know we never admit visitors at night, Miss Bennett. It's MR. AND MRS.

C. F. VAN LIEW. MEMBERS OF ALPHA DEL-ta Theta sorority will have a waffle breakfast Sunday morning at the chapter house. Miss 3103 Humboldt avenue south, will entertain the members of the Ambrose Kelly post and auxiliary Sat Ruth Burmeister of Winona is urday evening at their home.

Cards will be played. Alpha Delta Theta's newest pledge. rZiy VrZPK ill if fz? MRS. HILDA. AASE, PRESI-dent of Theta chapter ot PI Omicron sorority, was chairman of arrangements for the benefit bridge party given Friday evening at the Curtia hotel by th chapter.

During the eve-ning- a program of specialty dancing: and sinking numbers wan given. Assisting Mrs. Aase were- the officers, Miss Inez Davis, secretary, and Miss Elsie- Cra, treasurer, and the Misses Alice Baker. Jean Johnson, Winifred Halfyard and Alice E. Jackson.

Blue and gold, the sorority MR- AND MRS. ALBERTO PRAMPOLINI of New York city are MRS. EUGENE CARSTATER had charge of general arrangements for a bridge and bunco party expected to arrive from the east to given by the Minnesota Dames for members and their husbands Friday evening at 8 o'clock at Shevlin hall spend the Christmas holidays aa guests of Aflrs. Prampolini's mother, Mrs. Martin F.

Kennedy, 797 Lin-wood place, St. Paul. MR. EDWARD SULLIVAN. PRES.

on the University ot Minnesota colors, were used in the decorations campus. Assisting her were Mmes, Richard H. Earhart. R. J.

Stewart with yellow chrysanthemums. Harold O. Soderquist. Kenneth E. ident of the Alternate Tuesday Dane MISS MCRII.L Wright and F.

A. Zinter. ing club, had charge of the dancin party held Tuesday evening at the Plaza hotel. was elected prenident of the Pep-O-Rettes club at a meeting held Wednesday evening at her home. CENTRAL HIGH.

WASHBURN HIGH. Muriel A. Peterson. Elizabeth M. Lohren.

Jane Speakea. Jack Clayton. MISS NELLIE CURTIS, 211! Grand avenue, and Miss Evelyn Ros-coe are in charge ot arrangements Other officers elected are Miss for a dinner and initiation to be con Dolores Schuld, secretary-treasurer, and Miss Dorothy Charest, social ducted in the main dining-room of TO HOLD FOOD SALE. The Social club ot Levi Butler Woman's Relief corps will hold its annual bazar and food sale Satur day at the T.W.C.A. on Fremont avenue north and West Broadway.

chairman. Following the meeting bridge was played. Members pres the Francis Drake hotel, Tuesday evening, December 10, by members of Alpha Iota Omicron, national ent Included the Mioses Cleone P0le' tier, Charlotte La Brash, Gail Tr mont, Be.madette Flynn, Mary Dal-sin, Catherine Short, Peggy Donv van, Mary Noonan, Eunice Dickenson and Kathryn Gorman, 1 lie ir'''-', ''At i I ''K MISS WILMA LIGHTNER OF Welcome, is in charge of the sale of Christmas seals at Hamline university. Other members of the committee are Miss Annette Strand, DIXIE FLYER ROUTE to FLORIDA Travel in Luxury this scenic way Through a land teeming with historic Civil War interest, battlefields, mon uments, and homes. Scenic splendors, historic landmarks, luxurious comfort, and delicious southern cooking oa the dining cars of these trains, make the Dixie Flyer Route to Florida the ideal way to begin your winter vacation.

"Couldn't you break that rule tonight? I must see my father. I won't stay long, I promise you, but I want to see him. I have to aee him." Her lips quivered helplessly. The mere sight of him would help, she thought. If Miss Nash would only let her look in at him she'd be satisfied.

Til see if he's asleep." The nurse walked down the corridor, opened a door quietly, then beckoned to Fleur. "He's awake, reading." "Now, if you don't stay any more than 10 minutes you may see him, but don't bother him much I know you won't, but I'm warning you all the same. He's so much better that Dr. Hanford is afraid of a relapse if he's worried." "I won't worry him. And he really is a lot better!" "He was up for two hours this afternoon." Even in the week since Fleur had seen him, she could detect a change.

Her father was better. His eyes, that whiteness gone from his face. The sun baths had done that, she supposed. His voice stronger when he spoke to her, strength in the arms he put around her. His lips warm against hers.

She stayed in the shelter of the arms for some time. That was what she wanted. Someone to hold her close. She could hear his heart beating as she clung to him. "This is a surprise, Fleur." She wanted him never to let her "Anything the matter, dear?" he asked anxiously.

"Nothing. She couldn't worry him, Miss Nash had said. Well, she hadn't intended worrying him. It was only the sight of him she wanted, the feel of him she needed. She was stronger already.

The strange coldness that she had had all last night and all of today was Coing." "Sure!" "Quite sure." She drew away and forced herself to smile so that he would be sure, too. "You're better, aren't you?" "Better, I'm almost well Miss Nash tell you I was up for two hours today! I would have been up all afternoon, but she came and made me go back to bed. I'll be out of here in no time now. Better every day. "I can read now without having.

the type blur and my head blow off that's a lot Hanford's still an old erandfather about letting me do things, but he's ultracautious, that's all." The time when he could speak only in whispers, when his eyes were like lead, and his skin gray. When he could do nothing but lie in his bed and look at the white She touched the furrowed forehead tenderly, and smoothed the hair that was now pure white. He was too young to have white hair. Only 53. That was young, wasn't it? Middleaged, then.

"Tom Dorin bring you over!" he was asking. "No, I came on the street car." A stab of pain when he mentioned Tom's name. "Seems like a nice boy to me, Fleur, and I know decent fellows when I see them." She had brought Tom in on her last visit and introduced him to her father. "See him a good deal?" "Yes." "He's in love with you, or did you know!" Had her father'a eyes caught that in Tom's short visit! For Tom had been in the room only 10 minutes, when Miss Nash had come to chase both of them out. "I know That's what made it so hard.

Loving Tom, and Tom loving her. She musn't let her father talk any more about Tom. She couldn't etand it. Quickly she groped for a new subject. "Who sent the fruit and that package of books!" On the table were an enormous basket of fruit and a dozen books mostly detective novels.

"Gary Crewe. Nice of him, wasn't it! He called yesterday, too, but Miss Nash wouldn't let him in." Fleur looked from the basket of fruit to the books. "Do you like Gary, father!" "Like him! Why, I suppose so but really I've never thought of ft before. Why!" "No reason at all." A dangerous subject, too, for if she continued, she'd be telling him that she was thinking of marrying Gary. And she didn't want to do that "You haven't told me vet what you think of Tom Dorin," he said ROOSEVELT HIGH.

SOUTH HIGH. Elaine Markuson. Alice Hollison. Lucille Guidinger. Stanley Lofsnes.

versity avenue northeast, tied for valedictorian, and Helen Ratay, 2727 Grand street northeast, salutatorlan. North high school selected its hon or students six weeks ago. Howard Selection of valedictorians and aalutatorians of January graduating classes are reported at six Minneapolis high schools Friday. Students receiving the first and second scholarship rankings were: Central, Muriel A. Peterson, 3931 First avenue couth, valedictorian, and Elizabeth M.

Lohren, 3011 Portland avenue, salutatorlan. DIXIE FLYER Leaves Dearborn Station. Chicago. Thirty-first avenue south, valedictorian, and Alice Hollison, 2531 Chicago avenue, salutatorlan. West, Olga Kuchynka, 2S58 James avenue south, valedictorian, and Nancy Wamsley, 3217 Humboldt avenue south, salutatory n.

Edison, Florence Pearson, 1021 Eighteen and One-half avenue northeast, and Nicholas Puzak, 2510 Uni L. Daniels, 2304 Vincent avenue north, valedictorian, and Ethel Stein- daily Tia CAE. I. 10:30 P. M.

to Jan. 4th (10:55 P. M. befiinnin man, 1601 Newton avenue north, salutatorlan. Marshall high school will not report selection its honor Jan 4th).

Sleepers ready 9:30 P. M. students until next Tuesday. DIXIE EXPRESS Leaves Dearborn Station, Chicago, via C. E.

I. 12:50 noon until Jan. 4th (12:05 noon beginning Jan. 4th). Sleepers Chicago to Jacksonville; observation cars Chicago to Jacksonville.

Coach and dining car service. Connections at Jacksonville for Miami and East Coast points, Tampa, Sarasota, St. Petersburg and West Coast points, affording second morning arrival after leaving Chicago. Washburn. Jane Speakes.

4S01 Aldrlch avenue south, valedictorian, Observation car, dining car and coaches. Sleepers Chicago to Jacksonville. Beginning December 14th Minneapolis, Mr. Harry Kirby, St. Paul, and Mr.

Richard Carlson, Farmington. Miss Anne Simley is the faculty member assisting. Six men were formally initiated into the Beta Kappa fraternity at a dinner Thursday evening. Thirty-five members were present at the ceremony, which waa under the direction of the house officers, who are Mr. Harold Gregory of Cambridge, arkon; Mr.

Robert Myers, Augusta, guard; Mr. Howard Grlnager, Welcome, chancellor; Mr. Charles Olnen, Nashwauk, deputy arkon; Mr. Gale Clawson, Groton, S. treasurer; Mr.

Edward McLean, St. Paul, scribe. Initiates are Mr. Havard Archerd, fit. Paul; Mr.

Donald Benton, Willmar; Mr. Wright Brown, Litchfield; Mr. Ernest Knudson, Jackson; Mr. Gordon Ditz. Fairmont, and Mr.

James Cantelon, Warroad. "Realism In the American Novel" was dlKcuxwd by Miss Lohva Wakefield of Willmar. and a review of "Mary's Neck" by Booth Tarking-ton was given by Helen Thompson of St Paul at a meeting ot the Philo Browning Literary society Tuesday evening in the home of Mrs. P. E.

Ackerman, 4743 Fifteenth avenue south. Dr. Dorothy M. Mc-Ghee was the faculty guest present. Hostesses for the evening were the Misses Margaret Lilllco and Kathryn Ackerman, Minneapolis, and Lillian Johnson, Truman.

The English club meeting will be held Monday in the manor house. Mrs. Virginia Alwin of New Vim is president of the club and Miss Ethel May Ackerman, instructor in English, is the adviser. Thursday a meeting ot the Quill club, creative literary organization on th Hamline campus, will be held in the manor houso. Mr.

Kenneth Erickson of Kt. Paul is the president and Dr. T. P. Beyer is faculty adviser.

A new "Greek Letter" club has been organized by 14 freshman girls. sleepers to St. Petersburg leave Chicago Sundays, Tuesdays, Thursday! and Fridays; to Tampa and Sarasota Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays with arrival on the West Coast several hours earlier than former schedules. Connections at Jacksonville for Miami and East Coast points. DIXIE LIMITED all-Pullman deluxe train will be reestablished for the winter season ef i "lNICOLL1T fective January 4th, leaving Dearborn Station, Chicago, via C.

E. I. 2:30 P. M. on Mondays, Wednesdsya and Saturdays, with club and observation cars, dining car and sleepers through to Jacksonville, Miami and at.

Petersburg. and Jack Clayton. 105 West Minnehaha parkway, salutatorlan. Roosevelt, Lucile Guidinger, 3901 Nokomis avenue, valedictorian, and Stanley Lofsness, 4458 Thirty-fourth avenue south, salutatorlan. South, Elaine I.

Markuson, 3313 the manor house refectory Sunday afternoon, under the auspices of the off-campus social committee of freshmen girls for their mothers. "Catholicism in South America" waa the subject of a talk given by Mr. Hays P. Archerd at a meeting of the Oxford Fellowship in the home of Mr. and Mrs.

Hays P. Archerd, Hewitt avenue, St. Paul, Tuesday evening. Mr. Milton Schroeder of St.

Paul, president of the fellowship, presided at the short business meeting. MISS JULIA LUBICK. DAUGH- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lubick, 1504 Eleventh avenue south, will celebrate her birthday anniversary Saturday evening when she will entertain a group of her friends at a card and dancing party at her home.

The guests will include: The Miueif Mnnn Prnc Mircun Jowoh SchpffmsB rr Ati tll-tilttnti Uurt tenia, Cuirn mi Iht Gulf Cit. wnflRrfinOs rr. louis 1 VsWvAMviue pressing her hand lovingly. Fleur was glad Miss Nash knocked then, and she didn't need to answer. "I've let you stay half an hour, Miss Bennett, and my patient hould have been asleep long ago.

We keep early hours here." Fleur and the nurse walked down the hall together. "You see the change in him, don't you!" Miss Nash asked. "He is murh better so much better that we are beginning to have trouble with him. He's inclined to overdo. "I had a bad time trying to get him in today after his walk.

He isn't entirely well, yet, you know, and Dr. Hanford is afraid of a relanse." Skip ymr car mni travel i cmftrt train, A ii abaut aur acanamicml plam. Rtimcei Ktani Trif Fartt and Stteial Lam Short Limit Fartt Nam in Efftct Daily. Address Inquiries to H. E.

Parter, Ocnl Al't, Pim'r Dep t. L. N. R. room 1141, 105 W.

Ad.m. Cht cmo. W. S. Snodell.

Nor. Pyi'r As't. N.C A St. L. room 800.

105 W. Adian Chicago. or C. T. Fimley.

N. W. P. St E. I.

1026 Metropolitsa Life MioneipolU, PhoM Genert 2462. (Him: t- ncuri:" CcVEl LdN St. Members of Shota" club innurte the Misses Harriet Smith Winifred Hermann, Errnatrude Kng son. Roberta McLean, June Ellis. Lillinor Kent, Harriet Toung and Warione Ironside of St.

Paul: Eve Leror Hardman lyn Smith. Katherine Clement, Vir- "When do you think he can come out!" A year, Hanford had! a SALE Alberta Atkinson Molly Rnbbln Anne Minister Srlvia Oroll Ray Palllti Srlvia fried mm Erther Bllescu Molly Silver Lillian Sent Jfanftta 8chwrts Jeanetta Stanford Hirrr Shaolro Bernard Nurierov David Mlchlln Jack Sch-nk Arthur Mfltte Arthur Wua Al Piien Jack Silverman Max Wfxlfr Irvlnt Bchwara ginla Nelnen. Lucille Holmgren and Mildred Forster of Minneapolis, and Evelyn Furch of Comfrey, Dean Mary Beal Housel and Mrs. Ralph McGee, wife of Bishop McGee, will pour at a tea to be given in aid when Bennett was firt taken to Hillcrest, but couldn be a year now, with the progress he had made. "We were talking abcut that yesterday.

Dr. Hanford was here. He thinks Mr. Bennett will be able to leave Hillcrest in another month." "So soon?" "Yes, but not for home. Dr.

Hanford has some plans for him, I think. He wants him to go up into the woods for six months to com, plete the cure. Stay out in the open day and night. Symphony Concert Our $6.50 Qualities 940 pairs of smart shoes taken from our regular stocks. Styles for street, afternoon and evening wear.

Not all sizes in every style, but all sizes are included in the group. $8.50 QUALITIES $5.65 The Fi7gWeifu The sixth symphony concert by the Minneapolis orchestra, given Friday night in Northrop auditorium, was one of those exceptional affairs that occur only occasionally. It did not have the handicap of a soloist to break Its continuity and Ormandy, fresh from his triumphs In New Tork and was at his superb best. Rachmaninow's second symphony held the place of honor and our presumption is that this work has never been played in Minneapolis with such magnificent and significant splendor as on this occasion. We have felt Impelled to refer to the "Russian gloom," of this composition in times past, but Ormandy did not permit himself or his men any latitude in this respect.

Introspection there was, especially In the first and third movements, and it is here. If anywhere, that Rach-manlnow seems to dwell with pathos on the glories that should and were not Russia's. Ormandy rather clarified the atmosphere of anything approaching pessimism by his invigorating conception of the symphony as a whole: It developed under his leadership Dr. Hanford has some sort or a camp in western naaa, ana he wants him to go there. It's very rough and wild up there and when your father is stronger it will be the best thing in the world for him.

He'll come bark a new man. "So you see we've very encouraging news for you tonight You understand he hasn't told Mr. Bennett anything about this yet it is still a secret so far as he's concerned. We have to break the news to him gently because he's impatient to be back at work again. Dr.

Hanford will manage it, though. Don't worry." They passed through the empty darkened reception room, and Miss Nash fumbled in her pocket for the keys to the front door. It was locked at 9 o'clock. "Your father has been very sick, Miss Bennett Perhaps yoii didnt really know how sick he was. Dr.

Hanford did'nt tell you, but the first week he was here we didn't expect him to live. The, after-care in rases like his is fully as important as the hospital care. Good n'KhFleur heard the door close and lock after her. She hadn't known that her father was so sick his first week at the sanitarium. Not one of the family had been told.

All she knew was that Dr. Hanford was very grave when he talked of his patient. Even though the danger was past now, the knowledge that Heath had come so close was frightening. The heels of her slippers made clicking sounds on the pavement as she walked down the sidewalk swiftly. The visit had helped her, and the talk with Mies Nash afterward.

She knew now what she was going to do. Instead of making for the station when she reached the main part of Hillcrest, she went into a drug store and sought the phone booth. It was occupied, so she took a seat at the soda fountain to to trace the struggle the dying man passed through until the final glorious transfiguration. Strauss in carrying out his pur-poses has hewn very close to the content of the poem, he has intensified it a thousandfold by his manipulation of his orchestral material, building un a tonal scene In the final rapturous climax that opens the very sates of heaven. Ormandy not only followed the experiences of the main figure in the poem: he also imparted to each scene a vividness that shed a luminous light on the Intentions of the composer, and this he accomplished by the deft manner in which he drew from individual instruments tonal qualities that served to accentuate every phase of development.

Turning from the grave and lofty to the gay and happy when one is at a high pitch of emotion Is no easy twk, but Ormandy accomplished this change quite happily in his interpretation of Enesco's. "Rumanian Rhapsody." This work is hased on several Rumanian folk tunes all of them jolly, which are woven Into an orchestral web that Is shot through with color. There is no attempt to do anything more than to provide a feast of healthy. Invig Styles: Materials: Pumpt Suede T-Srraps Kid Oxfords Crepe Ties Reptiles BLACK or BROWN ond Colors America's Wandering Legion into a noble expression of patriot-Ism, mobile in its fine and free expression of emotion. No movement surpasses the second in the rapid orating musical food and this has been achieved by an exhibition of changes from one extreme of emo A mm.

mi. Quaytees No Hooks No Snaps 1 No Fasteners Smart, good looking Outer Shoes, neat fitting wool fleece lined. Sizes 3 to 9. BLACK or BROWN Other Galoshes $1.49 ts $3.50 tion to the other. Ormandy kept a fine balance between these con orchestral virtuosity that tasks the ability of any body of players.

It was played superbly and made a fitting finale to a wonderful evening of music. JAMES DAVIES. trasting elements, making each a foil for the others, intensifying their power and effectiveness by his meth od of treatment. wait. Soon a nian came out and she went in.

Gary's number was familiar, so she didn't need to look it up. After she had put 15 cents in the slot for long distance, she gave it to central, then waited. "Mr. Crewe, please," she said quite steadily. "Mr.

Crewe is out of town." "Could you give me his address? Isn't it Campbell talking! It was Campbell, Crewe's valet "This is Fleur Bennett, Campbell." "Oh, Miss Bennett Mr. Crewe left not more than half an hour ago with Mr. Grove for Mr. Grove's lodge in Michigan. They're going fishing.

I don't think Mr. Grove has a telephone at his lodge. "When will they be back!" "Three or four days, I believe any message for Mr. Crewe when he returns, Miss Bennett?" "Yes, have him call me as soon as he gets back, will you!" Campbell said he would and mentioned that the trip had been planned hurriedly. Mr.

Grove had come to dinner and after dinner, am nt tViem decided suddenly to go fishing. It was a strange experience to listen to comnfent on the perform ance In the foyer during the inter mission, one hearer maintaining it Much is heard of the 'Forgotten Man.But what of the Forgotten Boy? By thousands they rove the country, without home and without immediate hope, tragic victims of a world upside down. Many of them are from families scattered by adversity. Their ages range from fourteen to twenty-three. They are intelligent.

Some got as far as college before the universe crashed. They ride the freights, east, west, north and south. They tramp and hitch-hike. They eat when they can. They sleep where they may in doorways, in charity shelters, in bums' hangouts.

A purposeless, forsaken army of youth, wandering here, wandering there, always moving, willing to work if only there were jobs, groping into a manhood utterly without prospect. The writer of this series is Daniel Robert Maue, winner of the Puliter Prize Fellowship in 1923-26 and a student of personality. He has crossed and re-crossed the continent with these boys, traveling as they travel, living as they live, to get their story and present their plight. Chase McLean GIFT SLIPPERSFor Wom was the finest orchestral performance ever heard In the Northrop auditorium, another preferred the en, Misses and Children 78 So. 9th St (MKDICAL ARTS HI IXi.) first movement, still another the sec 90c t0 $1.95 Three days, three weeks.

It didn't matter when Gary came home, now that she had made up her mind to marry him. Her mother was right She had been selfish, very (Continued Monday.) Every type and style of Gift Slippers in kid, felt, satin and crepe also warm, wool lined slippers. cers are Mrs. H. V.

Fletcher, presl All Sues ond, while a third championed the! cause of the third. The point of the whole matter Is this: It regarded as an entity, as perfect an1 example of orchestral expression we are likely to hear In the Northrop or any other hall, judged from either the standpoint of technical proficiency or noble expressiveness. A striking rendering ot the Strauss, "Tod und Verklaerung," opened the second part of the program. This is programmatic music based on a poem by Lenau and we may assume, I think, that there is no music, ot this description that more nearly tells a story than this. At least with knowledge of the poem to enable one to follow the develop, ment it requires little Imagination Mrs.

Giles Will dent: Mrs. M. B. Goldstein, vice presl dent and historian: Mrs. A.

P. No- lander, secretary and treasurer. Oth Give Book RevieWl er members include Mmes. Noel van Tilburg. O.

J. Holberg, A. O. Llnd qulst, K. R.

Halvorson, A. B. Allen and H. A. Chrlstensen.

THOMAS H. DEVINE DIES. Pueblo, Dec. 8. (P) Thomas SALE $4.40 and $5.00 Enna Jettick Shoes (DISCONTINUED STYLES) Hume Devlne, 72, prominent Colo' WOMEN'S HOSIERY AND LINGERIE DEPARTMENT tft Suggestions.

Special for Saturday Our Famous $1.00 Stetson Hose 2 pairs $1.50 Our 65c Standard Special Silk Hose. .2 pairs $1.00 Women's $1.50 Dull Knit Gowns, full length. $1.59 to $1.95 Pajamas (Broadcloth-Rayon) Read This Series Daily Starting in This Edition Monday December 12 rado attorney, died B'rlday. He was vice president and general counsel for the American Beet Sugar company and general attorney for the Colorado branch of the Missouri Pacific railroad. Active In Republican politics, he served as a member of the national committee during the Tatt administration.

Dec. 10-16th VISITORS WELCOME THE JOY STUDIO Dancing A Dramatici 09 Marquette Strapt Ties Pumps PaUnt Ltathar Brown Sutd Brown Kid Black Kid 3 Mrs. G. F. GUIes will give a review of "The Fountain" by Charles Morgan, at the next meeting of the Resume Book Study club, to be held January 3 at the home of Mrs.

J. W. Btrudwick, 4909 Bruce avenue. Meetings are held by the club the first Tuesday of each month at the homes of members. Mrs.

A. O. Ofstie was hostess at the meeting held last Tuesday when a Christmas program was given. Mi s. H.

A. Dahlqulst read a tmpC on "Christmas Customs In Other Lands" and also gave a review of "Lark Ascending" by Mazo DeLaRoche. Mrs. Ofstie sang, accompanied by Mrs, R. .1.

Jordan, and gifts were exchanged. Mrs. Jordan was the assisting hostess. Luncheon was served at 1 o'clock. The rluh was organized tost April with the reading and reviewing of books by modern and standard authors as Ha object, and has become affiliated with the Minnesota State Federation and the Fifth District Federation of Women' Clubs.

Offi $3.95 Blanket Robes (Broken Sizes) $1.95 Sixes 3 to 9, AAA to in the lot not all sixes in each style. The Tribyra WOMEN'S ALL RUB -XMA8 CARDS -3c EACH A Lara Assortment Other Cards 5c i $1.00 pouch Ens MARQUITTI AVI. $5.95 All Wool Flonnel Robes Solid two-tone shades $4.95 Corduroy Pajamas High shades $3.95 MM BER SNAP FASTEN ER OVERSHOES THE HOME NEWSPAPER Warm lined, black er brawn.

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