hose Ger- ving ‘She anks erial later on lis- Testa- h she ts her Then clock n hour ps the ham’s ellent, talker 1g life. Amer- ing ad- n: The tilated. om the two to current ss the Night- all the ht’ It ome to erature 5 to 60 3. The is con- 1attress high as o as to ntal, or he side. 2d. | to try 1d then ers the n many he wife med to a coffee merable troubled ation, at , attacks t fright- and my at coffee last my arranged no more and he itulated. ad tried ause, as ot made to give ed it ac- e pkg.— tes after g a dark » Snappy . When d it was cts in me ed it—all ould not Several 1 I drank s a day, husband 0 drink nt is so 1e color— dit where / We are Jo., Battle Road to e’s a Rea- r? me. A new They of human Se SR EE * U. L. Longacre, of Pennsylvania. Filipina Wins Medical Prize. ‘At the commencement of the Wom- en’s Medical College in Philadelphia, Dr. Clara A. Marshall, dean of the col- lege, announced that the Agnes B. Robinson-Mesner prize in anatomy, given on competitive examination to a student of the second year, Was awarded to Senorita Olivia Salaman- ca; a Filipina, of Cavite, Luzon Island. Honorable mention was made of Elsie ' Embarrassing in : Society. The most embarrassing thing in so- ciety is the finger bowl. Every one is embarrassed who attempts to use one. The women come nearer to us- ing them gracefully than the men, but even the women’ do not entirely suc- ceed, although they assume a careless manner in washing their fingers, indi- cating that at home they use finger bowls every few minutes. There is a certain awkwardness about finger bowls which no one can deny. Many a. man has refused to attend a party through fear of finger bowls. The next time you are out, notice if all the guests do not look at the particu- lar person who is using ‘a finger bowl, as if they would say: “We have them at our house, but he doesn’t have them at his house.” A good many people dislike society, and it is believed that they are afraid of company, but the truth is: It’s finger bowls.—Atchison Globe. What! Women Shun Notice? The Anti-Publication Society is busy in Washington these days, and one by one the old-time lovers of publicity the falling into line. Mrs. Herbert Parsons is head and front of the movement in the capital, and she bas- es her objections to appearing in print on the strictures against her book. ‘Mrs. George P. Wetmore has long objected to public notice, and now come Mrs. William Boardman and her daughter, Mrs. Murray Crane, Mrs. Herbert ‘Wadsworth, Mrs. Dewey, even Mrs. Chauncey Depew. It ap- pears that if Washington were to have something like the Court Jour- mal of London and other capitals abroad, it would be all well enough to give details about teas, dinners and general assemblages. Put the liberty of the press is what these women re- sent, and the comments made about the absence of such guests and the presence of others. Mrs. Parsons was annoyed because the lists of guests at Jittle Sunday night gatherings in her home were given the public. Well she might be, for there were surpris- ing combinations even for these days when strange things are made imper- ative by the political condition. Now about twenty of the prominent official and resident hostesses are pledged to keep their names -and the names of their friends out of print.—New York Press. Kansas Women in Office. The appointment of Mrs. Levi Coop- er as Probate Judge of Mitchell coun- ty by Gov. Hoch and the discussions that resulted from this appointment have developed the fact that nearly every kind of office in the state ex- cept state offices has one or more woman occupant. Mrs. Cooper is the only woman in the state who is serving as Probate Judge. However, there is one woman County Attorney in Kansas. Miss Oala Heimline is serving her third term as County Attorney of Seward county. kb Western Kansas has had several women County Attorneys, but the cus- tom never appears to have become popular in the eastern part of the state. In Norton county Kate John- son has just completed a term as County Treasurer. There are half a dozen or more County Registers of -Deeds in the state, and probably thir- ty women County Superintendents of Schools. So far as is known there are no women in Kansas serving as clerks of the district courts or County Com- missioner. However, several have served as Mayors of cities. In sev- eral instances there have been women candidates for State Superintendent of Public Instruction, but they were not elected. The Socialists at their recent con- vention in Topeka nominated a Gir- ard woman for State Superintendent in spite of a strong speech made against it by her husband.—Kansas City Journal. \ " ‘Advice on Art. «What we should look for in art is those abstract qualities which appeal to the spiritual part of our nature by the lifting up of the senses. ‘The sub- ject of the picture counts for nothing. The modern impressionist seeks not to’ paint what he sees, but what -he knows to be there. The sign manual of modern painting is the effect of light on form, color, and texture,” said Charles H. Caffin, in his talk on “How to Study Pictures” before the Art Students’ League at Pittsburg, Pa. “The characteristic of this age,” he continued, “is intimate individualism in all forms of art, in music and liter- ature as well as in painting, and it is a mistake to attempt to revive the al- legorical pa >s of medieval times. I admire immensely the mural paint- n W. Alexander in the Car- the mailed figure which represents the city, and I find that many Pittsburgers resent the anachronism.” Mr. Caffin made the statement that art is no longer the handmaid of re- ligion; that it is no longer needed as such, though its appeal is as high as that of religion. “The appeal of Ruben¥ ‘Descent from the Cross’ is not in the subject,” said he,” “but altogether in the con- trast of light and shade. Many other artists have painted the same subject and have made no impression. The intense harmony of color is the secret of the beauty of the prize picture, ‘The Necklace, in the Carnegie art galleries.” i The influence of Japanese art, which seeks to express the pervading of nature by the spiritual, was dwelt on by the lecturer, who spoke of its influence on the work of Whistler. The paintings of George Inness were cited as examples of wcrx showing the same spiritual quality, which the speaker thought migkt be partly at- tributed to the Swedenborgian belief of the painter. This spiritual imag- ination essential to all great paint- ings was likened to the odor ex- tracted from the violet. Rest—A Wonderful Beautifier. The modern woman is wise. She knows that all the cosmetics, all the massage, all the beauty baths and physical culture in the world cannot do for fagged cheeks, hollow eyes, and fatigued, blanched face what rest: will accomplish. She does not go to a rest cure, because there is some- thing suggestive of invalidism in such a course and the very.thought makes. one a trifle blue; she takes the rest cure as she goes along. She rests when she reads, when she sews, when she makes her toilet; indeed, she has intermittent attacks of resting at any and all times. A whole train of evils follow in the wake of fatigue. When a woman is tired she usually worries, and no men- tal attitude is more disastrous to per- sonal appearance, personal happiness and personal achievement than worry and its twin brother—despondency. It is true that one may fret for many months without visible effects, but it is only a question of time when the dominating idea, the cause of the worry, which is often -fatigue, will master first the will, then brain, and finally the body. Ponder upon this, ye maids and matrons, and if an ap- peal to your complexion and its pres- ervation in a state of pristine fresh- ness does not move you, think of the ignominy of being voted a person of limited power as one certainly is who feazes over the minor grievances of life. Besides the brain, heart, and muscle which share the benefits of the rest cure, there is. the tongue, which also requires relaxation. “Give thy tongue rest occasionall” is whole- some advice. Fatigue is one of the greatest ene- mies of the human race, because it is the origin of one-half, perhaps more, of the hundred catalogued diseases that prey upon women and men. In- digestion is sure to follow a meal tak- en when one is over-fatigued. Five minutes of complete rest of body and mind @re none too much for the per- son of average health, taken if possi- ble, just before the midday meal. Do not eat when tired nor work when weary. It is a mistake to labor in un- fit condition; it is an error to rise at daybreak and imagine that every hour taken from sleep is an hour gained. 1t is foolish to give unnecessary time to an established routine of house- ' keeping when. it would be much more profitable spent in rest and recrea- tion. Hearty laughter is a relaxation, so are elevated thoughts, those of hope, beauty, trust and love.—New York Sun. Fashion Notes. There is an increase in the use of white crepe by those in deep mourn- ing. : Sleeves are growing moreand more bouffant on all frocks of sheer mate- rials. For evening there is no end to the filmy, glittering ornaments provided for the coiffure. For the old time chigox there is the long ostrich feathers that sweep down to the shoulder. Cream flannel with belt and tie of pale blue or bright red makes a good combination with. a dark blue skirt and-coat suit. A white rose with a few pendant buds somehow look just as dainty tucked among the fluffy rolls and puffs of blond hair. When ribbon embroidery comes to be used for the embellishment of fur coats, we must conclude that it is immensely popular. Jackets show a man-tailored finish. Oriental embroideries—Oriental in both coloring and design, are very much the vogue for trimming gowns. A bird of paradise with its delicate: ly waving feathers will coil around the head, pretty well covering it, of a fashionable woman at a. coming evening event. The effect of the graceful Watteau plait is given some of the new iple box plait w by the t cially the fe- yute to the ire; sbut-1 negie male figt allegorical waist line ck; this plait is very ; 5 1 ery the at at .AN ELOQUEN# SUNDAY SERMON BY THE PULPIT. DR. ROBERT J. KENT. Theme: All Fullness in Christ. Brooklyn, N. Y.—In the Lewis Ave- nue Congregational Church, Sunday morning, the pastor, the Rev. Dr. Robert J. Kent, preached on “All Fullness in Christ.” The text was from Colossians 1:19: “For it pleased the Father that in Him should all fullness dwell.” Dr. Kent said: Jesus Christ is being better under- stood and better appreciated all the time. Paul had a truer and more glorious conception of Him thirty-five disciples who had lived in intimate fellowship with Him during His min- istry. Under the tuition of:the Spirit the beauty and grandeur of, His char- acter, the magnitude and igestimable value of His service to God and hu- manity grew upon men. The language of eulogy is taxed to its uttermost in describing the glory of His person and position. In the four verses im- mediately preceding the the text three statements of sublime signifi- cance are made. He is the image of the invisible God! The universe. was created by Him and for Him! He is the head of the church! Therefore in all things He has pre-eminence. That pre-eminence = has not been changed as the centuries have passed. While doctrines and theologies have held and lost the attention of men, their interest has been increasingly centred on the person of Jesus. Chris- tian experience is verifying the state- ment of the text that all fullness dwells in Jesus Christ. The word “fullness” by itself is an empty word; the “fullness of God” is glorious, but misty. It is when we take up one by one the qualities with which Christ was so richly endowed by the Father that we begin to appreciate the megn- ing of the text. Sa In Him is the fullness of power. It was the power of Christ that at first gained the eager aftention of men. We may. not fully understand the mighty deeds He performed; in the confusion of thought at the pres- ent time regarding the miracles \of the Gospels we may feel utterly per- plexed. But that a deep and abiding impression of power was made by the Master on the people of His day there cannot be the slightest doubt. That impression was voiced by the two sad- hearted disciples who journeyed to Emmaus and when the unrecognized Jesus asked them what things had come to pass that so deeply moved them replied: “Concerning Jesus of Nazareth, which was a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people.” The story that Mark has written aims to present Christ as the mighty worker; and John tells us that his purpose in writ- ing was toe picture Christ as the Son of God. The early Christian church was conscious of the possession of power, ‘of power which it derived from its in- visible but ever-present Lord. It saw it working in the regeneration of men’s hearts, in the reformation of their. lives, in the transformation of communities. Christianity was not merely a new philosophy, 2 new form of worship; it was the power of God unto salvation to every one who ac- cepted it. That power has not waned during the centuries. Christ'has been the conqueror. He has been the most magnetic personality in the world’s history. Men of all classes and con- ditions, the rich and poor, the prince and peasant, the learned and illiter- ate, the saint and sinner, have been drawn to Him. They have conse- crated heart and life to Him. In spite of the most determined and malig- nant opposition, the gospel of His kingdom has been preached through- out the world. Nothing could stop it. He has erected His judgment seat among men, and more and more the words, thoughts, deeds, the lives and cnaracters of men and nations are being brought to judgment! before Christ. There was a time when men supposed that by violence they could stamp out Christianity; Herod tried it and failed; the Jewish rulers tried it when they crucified Jesus and failed; Saul of Tarsus tried it and failed. Who would dream that it could be done to-day? Surely the vears have demonstrated that the fullness of power resides in Jesus. There is in Christ the fullness of wisdom. We do not class Christ among the learned men of the world.r He was not a writer of many books. Ee wrote nothing. We do not in- clude Him among the great philoso- phers of the ages. There is a philoso- phy of Christianity, but Christianity is not a philosophy. We do not find a wonderful versatility of knowledge in the discourses of Jesus. He did not talk of many things, yet the men of the early days, and the thoughtful men of subsequent generations, have been profoundly impressed with His wisdom. He knew the things of greatest concern to men; He knew them with a clear, searching intui- tion. He knew God, His character, His purpose, His plans. The Father had revealed Himself to Hig Son. He knew man, his joys and sorrows, his aspirations and temptations, his sin- fulness and his glorious possibilities. He knew the secrets of peace, of joy. He knew the things that give deepest and most enduring satisfaction; the bread of life, and the water of life. Jesus is the world’s teacher. One of His most precious titles is Master. Not only in the truth He taught, but less. By precept and parable and ex- ample He had taught the principles that lie at the foundation of human- ity’s progress. Men who want to know what is best for themselves and for the world still sit reverently ‘at Jesus’ feet. In the discussion of the vital problems of the present age, men ask, What did Jesus say? For He dealt with. the things that most concern the heart and life, and, there- fore, He dealt’ with the questions of perennial interest. The fullness of love is in Jesus. Love divine is a tree that has many branches. One is compassion, an- other pity, another patience, another pardon, another sacrifice. The in- finite pity and comj on of God looked out through the eyes of Jesus upon deformed and unfortunate men. is to call forth what is best in‘ the years after the, crucifixion than. the |’ | soul-struggle;in the wilderness to the | stead of forgetting Him, men became more interested in Him. The eyes of in the way He taught it, He was peer-/ @garkened home, the saddened heart, ; and His ‘tears of tender sympathy flowed. A wise and wise-hearted man who is constantly dealing with youth- ful culprits has said that his own aim boys; to awaken a. sense of honor, manliness, a noble ambition in them. This is what Jesus did. Lave divine in Him reached down to sinful, bro- ken men in order to:lift:them-up and heal them. He awakened -hope and resolute endeavor. He made men feel that they could be pardoned and begin a new life. He took. them: by the hand, as He did the girl who the neighbors said was dead, but Jesus declared was asleep, .and said, “Arise.” And this fullness of.love found its crowning proof and glory in the cross; so that, when you speak of great love, you naturally, point to Calvary. ; J Now all these afid ‘many other qual- ittes- were united -in Christ. Other .men:have been great because of some one rare quality of personality; Jesus possessed" them all. Therefore, He has never ceased to interest the world. From the day He returned after-the banks of Jordan until He died on Cal- vary, He lived without seeking it in the public eye. -After His death, in- the world have never ceased to look upon Him. Theologies have come and gone; the church has had its ups and downs; but Jesus is always. the centre of interest. There stand on my library shelf two large volumes fresh from the press. They are a dictionary of Jesus, what He said and did. And they happen to stand along- side of a volume on “Jesus Christ and the Social Question.” It suggests the unfailing interest of thoughtful men in Jesus. They are never satisfied with what has been said and written regarding Him. There will be other dictionaries, other lives of Christ, in the coming years. And when great social problems are discussed, the question of the home, of work and wages, of capital and labor, of human brotherhood, men will turn as they do now to the Gospels to study afresh what Jesus said. Let there be dis- covered the merest fragment of some ancient manuscript’ containing in mu- tilated form some saying of Jesus and the .news of the discovery is tele- graphed‘ around the ‘world," and the fragment becomes priceless. How are we to explain this undying interest in Jesus? Not in any of the outward circumstances or conditions. of His life. How limited and meager it was! A life of poverty; a brief life; begin- ning in a manger, ending on a cross. A life outside the circles of’ libraries and great thinkers, outside the eircles of wealth and social position. The secret of its unique command upon the interest of men is given in the text: “It pleased the Father that in Him should all fullness dwell.” The hope of the world is in Him. To Him we bring our burdens and perplexities. To Him we come for comfort and strength. To be in vital | relation to Him is our highest privi- lege. Having Him as our personal Lord and Master we have life’s high- est prize. He is God's richest gift to the world. He is the clearest inter- pretation to humanity of the infinite wealth of love and wisdom and power of God. The divine heart beats in the bosom of Jesus; the divine voice speaks through His lips; the divine help is given through His service; the divine life is imparted through fel- lowship with Him. The leadership of the world be- longs to Jesus. The fullness of God dwells in Him to accomplish the eter- nal purpose of God; the establishment of the kingdom of love in human hearts. He has been equipped for the service of leadership. To Him has been given fullness of vision that He may see the way; fullness of power that He may overcome every obstacle; fullness of love that He may win men and make them follow Him. He who died on the cross will occupy the throne; the despised and rejected of men will receive universal praise and love. To hasten the day when all shall know Him, when the eternal purpose of redeeming love shall be fulfilled in the kingdom of Christ is our supreme duty. To that work we should consecrate our lives. It should kindle our enthusiasm. Jesus should be supreme in our thought and speech, our affection and devo- tion. May He be our leader! May we gladly, enthusiastically follow Him! . “The Men Did the Work Faithfully.” You cannot set the world right, or the times, but you can do something for the truth, and all you can do will certainly tell if the work you do is for tne Master, who gives you your share. And so the burden of respon- sibility is lifted. This assurance makes peace, satis- faction and repose possible, even in the partial work done upon earth. Go to the man who is carving a stone for a building. Ask him where that stone is going, to what part of the temple, and how he is going to get it into place, and what does he do? He points you to the builder's plans. This is only one stone of many. So, when men shall ask where aad how your little achievement is going into God’s plan, point them to your Mas- ter, who keeps the plans, and then go on doing your little service as faith- fully as if the whole temple were yours to build.—Phillips Brooks. ; God Watches Us Lovingly. |. . The thought of God's eye upon us is usually looked upon as a thought to strain and bridle us in the hour of temptation and carelessness; and so it is. But with our selfish love of forbidden things we miss what is meant not merely to restrain us, but to be the greatest.and most unfailing of our comforts. The thought that God sees us always is His great en- couragement and help to His children in doing right. His eye is not the eye of a judge and ruler only, but of a shepherd and father, the lover of the souls of men, th poor souls of ours and of our brett not sparing even His own Son for them. We are kb : watched by an ey nderness an sympathy deepe h that of any man on fering friend.—Ch A USEFUL AND DISTINGUISHED January she gave 2954 Ibs. of milk in duced 34.32 1bs. of butter. CITIZEN OF MASSACHUSETTS. Since 1904 she has been the champion butter cow of the world. Last 30 days. Once, in 7 days, she pro- —From Collier's Weekly. Life-Preserving Chair. One of the principal causes of great loss of life in accidents or disasters occurring on the water by reason of the collisions of vessels or from simi- lar circumstances results from the faith, mystically beautifully in form, and gray as some pale exhalation from the meuld of the ever-cloistered, the deeply re-forested past!” . Very fine, all must admit. But wouldn’t that paragraph have been meat and drink to the man who used to mark up Mr. Howells’ newspaper copy back in Bucyrus, Ohio! If How- ells the reporter had written that for the Bucyrus Blade he would have found it in the paper the next day about like this: “The cathedral, with flowers all around it, looks fine. It is four hun- dred years old and needs paint.”’— Galveston News. Novel Garment Holder. A New York inventor thinks it fact that the life-preservers provided for the use of the passengers are us- ually placed in some inaccessible po- sition where they cannot be obtained quickly by the excited persons. This is especially true on the usually crowded excursion steamers that ply between coast resorts. Instances are known where many, lives would have undoubtedly been saved if each pas- senger had had at hand a life-preserv- er at the time of the accident. It is manifestly inconvenient for each pas- senger to carry a life-preserver. Real- izing the above conditions, a New York man has designed and patented a combined steamer chair and life- preservery shown here. The steamer chair is in all practical respects simi- lar to the ordinary camp stool, but it is constructed to serve as a life-pre- server as well. The party using the chair will have always at hand a buoyant support in the event that it is necessary to thrust himself in the water. The chair is light and can be folded and readily carried from place to place, while as a life-preserver it is always at hand for use whenever the emergency requires.—Washing- ton Star. ? Boiling It Down. The Atheneum says of the follow- ing Howells paragraph that it is the best English sentence, perhaps, in any recent English book. Describing a certain ancient edifice Mr. Howells writes and the Atheneum quotes: “What, in the heart of all this blossoming, was the great Cathedral itself, when we came in sight of it, but a vast efflorescence of the age o would be advisable for every man to carry a coat and hat hook in his pocket. If thus equipped he need never worry whether or not he will find all the available hooks in the res- taurant: occupied when he goes to dine. This novel folding pocket coat and hat hook is shown in the accom- panying illustration. When not in use it can be quickly folded up and carried in the pocket, without incon- venience to the owner. When emer- gency demands it can be as readily brought into commission and attached to the molding or wall or any other convenient object close to the owner. In addition, being a private hook, the owner is saved the nuisance of having half a dozen other patrons of the establishment piling their hats and coats on top of his.—Washington Star. Electric haulage has supplanted animal power in the Comstock lode .and twelve of the mules which were brought to the surface had not seen f daylight for twenty years. CHANGED THE TOPIC. The Good Life to those ou Or His heart v who had lost the spr or ) had never know joy of life 2 them. He saw