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Show The Deceased Wife's Sister. The "Deceased-Wife's-Sister bill" Society So-ciety of England, which is not a committee commit-tee to defray the bills of ladies who have had the infelicity to lose a married sister, but on the contrary, quite otherwise, is lST?tl0n t0urther the happiness of such ladies as have the felicity to be matrimonially admired by a deceased sister's husband, reports, this T sodety does that the bill to permit a widower wid-ower to marry his sister-in-law has a lar- ThLmTnty thaD -eVer in the Commons. There is no sense in the law which forbids for-bids such marriages. Poor Calib Jack. Sipsti I in De f th.e bright fellows eclipsed in the war, married four successive succes-sive wives out of the same family and after the regulation year of mouS for" JJf?UuW.f nt back to ask the old man for his fifth daughter. "All right, CaS, " said the four-ply father-in-law, "take woman "rG0d'86ake leave th |