| For Board of Education To The Ratepayers : I respectfully solicit your vote for member of the Board of _-| Education. 1! will devote all the time I can possibly give should I be elected. i MRS. ALICE WHALE FOR Alderman Be ®VE To The Electors : For 5 years I have been a member of the City Council WM. E. and again solicit your support. I refer you to my past record,,. and assure you of a continu- for _ ance of my earnest endeavor -- to promote the city's interests. ALDERMAN TH O S . oS for. | Boe Re-Elect | Your Vote and Influence will be appreciated next Monday. I wish to assure 3 the electorate that the city's interest will be mine should I be given an opportunity of serving you as ] ALDERMAN, 1932 | Ex-Ald. W. GRAHAM | Will Take Pleasure To The Electorate The Welfare of the City will be my sole objective should you choose to elect me as ALDERMAN FOR 1932 Your vote and influence is respectfully solicited. OL. KERR VOTE FOR LIEUT.-COL. olph M. Trow FOR Member of Board of Education, 1932 RE-ELECT R. A. McDONALD To the Council of 1932 A renewal of your confidence is again respectfully solicited. I assure the electorate of my willingness to give the same time and thought to all matters that will promote the city's advance- ment in the future as I have in the past. I have served on the following Committees : 1929__Member of the Board of Works. 1930---Chairman Market, City Hall and Relief. 1931--Chairman of Relief. in serving the city should the electorate see fit to elect me as a member of the 1932 COUNCIL This is the first time I have Your Voteand Influence is respectfully solicited FOR Ex-Alderman AHL 1932. '| Should I be elected will do my best to serve you. = submitted my name for your - consideration and solicit your support and influence. | HARRY R. Respectfully yours Having lived in Romeo Ward for 24 years I wish to serve the city as Alderman For 1932. If elected I will do allin my power to promote the city's welfare. MILTON J. GOETZ PETER WAHL gos te Se a wae Se ee me cs See k iM, ee een ar ge eg a a ee Ea epee Le os ein OM Reet Sn Sy dhe THE MIRROR = ee, fe RS é or : e % ope kc eee ena se ty caesar ee CUPID'S CORNER Address all letters to Miss Ina St. John, Mirror Office. Answers will appear the week following your enquiry. Oh what a tangled web we weave, When first we practise to deceive. * * & Dear Miss St. John-- I am rather old for Cupid's Corner. But I do need some outside opinion of my problem. We are wealthy now (though my husband started at the bottom). Our only son is soon to be married. He has made his own way so far. The | firm he is employed by want him to} open a branch in Vancouver. This | means a decided advancement for | him. If he does not accept they will | not like it. And as a matter of fact he | does not make enough to support a wife. His fiance is quite willing to go. But why should we be separated from our only child when we have a large well furnished home and plenty of money for two families? I want to do what is right for us all. What would you advise, Miss St. John? UNCERTAIN. Answer: Looking at the matter from your own view-point Uncertain, it is a hardship to see your only son swall- owed up in a distant city, particular- ly when' money is no object. But you must consider your son's interests. Do you want him to '" 3e all ambition-- never to amount tv anything in his business? He will be a finer man if he makes his own way. Consider how proud you will be if your son suc- ceeds on his own merits, as his father did before him. Then too, his future wife favors the change. They will be happier climbing the hill together than to be carried up by his parents. Don't make your son a jellyfish or you may live to regret it. Ina St. John. * * * Dear Miss St. John,-- Why is it that women never see a fellow unless he is good looking? I am an awkward clown, but my broth- re is tall and handsome. Even our mother dotes on him and expects me to wait on him. I have a heavy line of work but I am expected to cut the grass or shovel coal while he plays around. He has a white collar job but has to have part of my money to dress on. The girls fall for him but they never notice me." What is the reason? DI°GRUNTLED DICK. Answer: No one understands favoritism in families Dick. It is a sad condition of affairs to see a mother love one child more than another. However there is one consolation. You have heard the story of the ugly duckling that grew to be a beautiful swan. In the same way a young person who is "on his own" from childhood de- velops a strength of character that the pampered child "never" achieves. And that is the best asset there is. As to the girls, that is all wrong. As a matter of fact most girls dislike self- satisfied men, and the handsome ones are apt to belong to that class. So cheer up Dick, your troubles may be blessings in disguise. Ina St. John. Dear Sally: We met the Wharton's last night as we were coming home fromthe show. She's the town critic. I'll tell the world 1 was glad 1 was wearing a new dress from a (Extract from Mary's Letter) O3 ONTAR "ROR NICER THINGS" Donaldson WM. Y. For Alderman 1932 A PLEASURE TO BE YOUR SERVANT IN THE CITY'S AFFAIRS Re-Elect N. R. FIEBIG © FOR Alderman 1932 Capper Member BOARD OF EDUCATION 1932 AT. 7 ria b MAYOR MOORE To the Council of 1932 RE-ELECT FRANK INGRAM For Alderman I have served the city as alder- man for anumber of years and am again willing to continue in office should the electorate be willing to re-elect me for the the coming year. : Your Vote aia luftuence Respectfully Solicited. » Silverwood's "Smoother Than Velvet" Ice Cream All Flavors--Bricks, Alaska Bon Bons and Dixie Cups