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Show ART OF BEING NEIGHBORLY IS A THING OF THE PAST Chicago. March I. The woman of today, in the hnrry and turmoil of modern life. ha3 forgotten the art or being neighborly, the art that distinguished dis-tinguished her kindly, bustling grand-mo grand-mo her But It la not her own fault. It Is the fault of city congestion, nf -ss-ence of doctors and of hospitals. She Btlll has riie neighborly disposition, disposi-tion, but has lost tho opportunity to show it. 3 Those, at least, are the contentions or Mrs. George D. Broomell and Mrs. James L. Rowe. in communications to the Chicago Woman's club. Mrs Broomell is a native of tho hospitable New England hills. Mrs. Rowo is from tho west whero the spirit Is as strong. No moro, they declare, do we find the genial exchange of mince pies, of recipes and of a standard home cure which characterized tho dally lives of womon of early days. |