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Show 8 'tJHe THE HEW BOOK STOHE CUUB NOTHS. Is the Place to Order BOOKS, FIJ4H STATIONERY, CAIili Spefcial IfiG CARDS, HIAGAZIHHS. Smith & lontgomeryCo. 218 S. Main St , Salt liake City. Blaeksmith Shop UARKET 73 STREET, Between Third and Fourth South, and West Temple and Main Street. Horse Shoeing, $1.00. Tire Setting, 50c. U. W. Press Club, Dr. Orielle Curtis. . Dr. E. R. Shipp Reapers Club, Utah Sorosis, Alice Reynolds. S. L. Womans Club - 8. L. Monroe. Authors Clnb, . Mrs.. Lizzie Wilcox. Mrs. Lana A. Savage. Cleofan, Ladies Literary Club: Mrs. Emma J. McVicker, Mrs. Blanche S. Lewis, Mrs. LeolineW. Brown, Mrs. AdeliaM. King, Mrs. Fannie P. Morrison, Mrs. OliveS. Y. Dart, Miss Lnln K. Hempstead, Mrs. Agnes Vincent, Mrs. GeorgionaR. Girard, Section Claiimen f All other work at lowest prices and satisfaction guaranteed. u. w. P. c. A. M. SURBAUGH, DEALER IN American Watcliss, Clocks and Jewelry. Repairing of Fine and Complicated Watches a specialty. No. 10 McCornick Block, Salt Lake City, MISS 5. L. MONROE. STUDIO. Beautiful Line of Decorated China in New and Elegant Designs, hsoecially Suitable for CHRISTMAS. Reasonable Prices. A A Choice Exhibit of. PATTERN HATS J . & JL . MoKerness, Physicians and Surgeons Soap Is the Purest and Best Made. Guaranteed Not to Irritate or Born the Most Delicate Skin. MRS. M. E. RANDALL, Accent, 410 Constitution Building. Whitehead Sham Carpet Cleaning Co., Feather Renovating, Mattress Cleaning, Carpets cleaned by Carpets our new machine will prove we are the ed. l. people, S. WHITEHEAD, Office: . 210 W. Third South St. Prop. lotted us; we must not even pause to KODAK HEADQUARTERS. JOHNSONS PHOTOS. 46 S. West Temple Mrs. A. E. Westenhaver, Corset Parlors and Art Needlework. Beautiful New Stamping Designs. Full line of Embroidery Silks. Lesson in and drawn work . 175 W. em-brod- ery Stoat ladies corset work a specialty. its March meeting again pursued its restless wanderings in search of knowledge among foreign countries and, this one evening, rested for a brief time in sunny France. Mrs. Lawler led us through the enchanted scenes of Paris, bright, cheerful Paris, so filled with gaiety and merriment and frivolity, and yet with so pages; we many dark blood-stainesaw the palace of the Louvre, the grim Tuilleries, the Champs Elysees, the beautiful statue of the Venus de Milo, and, with truly feminine delight, we reveled in the good things of the Bon Marche. Then, with a shudder and a tear over the dreadful massacre of the Huguenots and the horrors of the revolution, we turned that dark page ta walk for a while with Mrs. Miller in the footsteps of some of the noted The brilliant names men of France. enrolled on that list are too numerous to permit of mention in the space al-- 05 Boat Birat South St. Re-Fitt- The Utah Womans Press Club at d And Millinery Noveltie?. UMmmm. Correspondents to the Review. ... - Co-o- p. review. Second South St beet. honor him whose genius gave us brave Jean Val Jean, nor yet to cast one laurel on the head of Louis Pasteur. . Neither can we linger long with the Noted French Women, so ably brought back to our memories by Mrs. Wilcox: Joan of Arc, the warrior virgin of Orleans, the fair, unhappy Marie Antoinette, Josephine and Madame de Stael, whose peerless mind and unswerving love of liberty make her first among French women. But however delightful it may be for us to recall the noted ones of the past, as members of the Press Club, we feel that we must strive to make fresh foot prints for ourselves, and, with these brilliant examples of other times before us we must live up to the present. Emerson gives us, as lifes best direction, his oft quoted, Hitch your wagon to a star: translated literally the feat he advises is a wee bit diffi-- ; cult; but the attempt involves, at least, the selection of some particular star toward which we are to strive. What is true philosophy in individual efforts is also applicable to club work. The thought has come to me many times that in our Press Club we are wasting our energies by making bur study desultory and fugitive. This is emphatically the age of clubs; there are Shakespeare clubs, historical clubs and literary clubs. Just what is the precise mission of the Press Club? The hero of nursery fame could bend his gun a circle and fire all round the hill, and out of 5 and 20, 10,000 could he kill, but are we the practised marksmen that can repeat the phenomenon? The domain of the newspaper, the is not to make a repress of hash of encyclopaedic research concerning famous men and women who have glorified the past, nor to condense historic pages into papers detailing events of buried centuries, but it is to make vivid the incidents ot ; to-da- y, to mould and shape present opinion, to stimulate love of fatherland and discuss living issues. If this be not the objective point at which we aim then the Press Club is a notable misnomer. The country needs clubs whose function it is to think in the living present, vastly more than it needs clubs to delve in the annals of other countries and other times. to-da- y, Never in the history of the world,: have there occurred crises affecting every land and every nation, as now. ; The earth trembles with premonition of a general cataclysm, a universal social and political earthquake. It is time that every thinking soul should have distinct convictions and a courage that will support those under any and every circum-.- . cpn-victio- ns , |