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Show . AN OFEN SiiltssiON. The Members of the NiioDteenth Century Club and About Thir -,) r Inrited Frienat Enjoy Themselves Eip-lat Royally. The Nineteenth OeMituiy club varied the usual order of thlaga iast evening by an open session to Tplhich some thirty ot its friends were iolvited. The program pro-gram was entirely a T hanksgiving one and was begun by ap. ad jreBB by Miss M. F. French. Then f 5Uowed a poem by Mrs Corav. A song very appropriate to a woman's club, "The Three Olp Maids of Lee," was the text numboi?, and it was veiy beautif ully render 3 pw-Mias Thompson. Thomp-son. ' ' fa pit.' A select reading 1 Miss Alice Kellogg Kel-logg was much eajoled by the guests' as was also Miss Moorli's selection from "Bitter-Sweet" ft--- Miss Jennie Frencln delighted her hearers with a vocl solo," and the literary part of tl a entertainment closed with an instv mental duet bv Mrs. Ross and Mios B 'He Monahan. Delicious refreshing its.all suggestive of an old fashioned Ti aaksgiying, were eerved,'and riurinErtre'r consumption Miss Belle Monahan, Provo's talented little pianibt, played jome very beautiful beauti-ful selections L. , The remainder "of t the evening waa devoted to a conyersaz.one some of the topics of which were "Turkey and Greece (V)," "Men's Clubs vs. Wo Tien's Clubs," (including broomsticks, rolling roll-ing pins and all sorts of clubs,) "Neckties "Neck-ties and Other Tied," "Cooking vs. Iu-telect," Iu-telect," "When a Man's Single;" etc., etc. Much of the credit for the success of the eyening is- cue to Mrs. V. II. Monahan, tha lacy in charge of the whole, and Mrs. 21. M. Kellogg, at whose hospitable ho:ue the session was hjid. i |