1es- jual Add . ber me bso- are- ned Seat ises and- dle, of a ‘orn and ould hen” ally cam STVe be also °* Suc- [ores es that over face the rom doe- | he to hou- and try ie is ee. nced rites > ular orn- ding fee . and e of and - ving Pos- ions vhat my . OD not y to tum re a ‘am- ood, rood Rea- . ttle 1 to new Chey man “In the water. name of the wisher. Eligible to Parliament. In Holland, where qualified women have long had municipal suffrage, the committee on revisson of the consti- tutiof has reported in favor of giv- ~ ing women proportional representa- tion and making them eligible to Parliament.—Woman’s Life. “ Paper for Engaged Couples. In Switzerland there is a newspaper especially for engaged couples. Ag- ents all over the country collect par- tlculars concerning young people who have become engaged to be married, and their’ names, addresses, and par- ticulars ‘of their social position appéar in this weekly journal. Every girl whose name is thus mentioned re- ceives the paper for one year free, the subscribers to it being - chiefly tradespeople, who send advertise- ments of their goods to those whose . names ‘are so published. —Tit-Bits. Swimming as Lung Exercise. Opera singers -have .taken ‘to sea bathing ass a means of cultivating their lung power. Through the rwin- ter they are compélled to take breath- ing exercise every day to increase the capacity and the strength of their lungs. They must train themselves {n regular breathing. One of them discovered ‘recently that steady, sys- tematic breathinz is essential to swimming, and especially for floating Now the singers are taking swimming lessons, because they not only get plenty of fresh air in their lungs and strengthen ‘their constitutions, but they also get an unusual training in breathing. The plan Has worked so well that several of the prominent singers have adopt- ed it for daily use.—New York Press. A Good-Wish Rose. A clever idea was carried out at a recent “shower” for a bride-to-be. In the invitation each guest was request- ed to send in, prior to the party, a wish fer the bride, The hostess made a beautiful large white paper rose, and before: putting it together she wrote on each petal a wish and the As is usual in most cases, some of the guests forgot to send in a wish, but brought one with them, and others wrote them af- ter they arrived. For this purpose a large paper rosebud had been made, into which the wishes were slipped, and the bud twisted up again. The guest of honor was charmed with the rose gnd rosebud, and said that she should alwavs keep it as a pleasant reminder of her friends whom she was soon to leave for a new home in a distant city.—Woman’s Home Com- panion, Sure Cure for Jars. ‘When symptoms set in for an out- break of conjugal jars—which may happen sometimes in the best regulat- ed familles—it is a capital plan for husband or wife to go &&f on a soli- tary holiday for a few days, to lei the clouds blow over. If two persons start jangling and getting on one another’s nerves, an “absence curd’ works Wonders, says Philadelphia Ledger. Both have time for reflection and repentance. So if -you and the husband are irritating one another like mild mustard poultices, g0 and stop a week with friends. Don’t discuss your grievances with the hostess; calm down, forgive and forget, and stay away till you can re- turn in love and kindness. Short separations taken at the right moment would save thousands of hot- tempered young couples from drift- ing to the ranks of the “unhappily married.” 1 ose fn £79 A New Kind of “Rat.” 1 ‘There is now a new way of stuffing the pompadour. It is cooler and healthier than the present way of wearing a rat of hair, human or other- wise, under one’s own hair. Whoever invented it no cne knows, but her imitators are springing up ail over town. She makes the “rat” of fine silk ma- line just the color of her hair. She uses a good deal of it and crushes . it into the required size. To keep it from losing its shape and springing out over head, she cov- ers it with a plain piece of the maline basted together. She arranges this on ber head with invisible hair pins, and combs her own hair “over it. 3 Its advantages are these: it is not artificial. it is sanitary, for it is not heating and doesn’t deaden the hair under it. : It can be arranged into any, shape and it doesn’t fade. It can be renewed each week and its cost is slight.—Philadelphia Ledger. Afternoon Wedding Gowns. A toilet; which has become distinct- ive, is one which is called the after- noon wedding costume. The wedding is preferably at five o'clock and gar- ments for that hour are difficult to plan. Mrs. Taft attended the Leiter- Williams nuptials in a gown of pale blue dimity sprigegied in white flowers, with edging of vellow lace. Her hat was white chip whreathed in ragged robins with loops of baby blue vel- vet and numerous bows of golden brown chiffon. When Miss Winefred Mattingly became Mrs. Porter, her - dings and the up-to-date woman dots on cousin, Mrs. Robert Treat Paine, of Boston, were a distinctive gown of cream batiste elaborately embroidered in edelweiss, every inch of the cloth being covered with the flowers and foliage. Her hat was also of the ba- tiste, similarly embroidered, with two long drooping plumes. Mrs. New- berry, who has been in Washington during the long season, wore a dain- ty wedding costume of pale gray lawn built on cream satin, with touches of heliotrope on the corsage, at a fash- ionable nuptial service in St. John's. There is a simplicity about the make up of the correct gown for church wed- is careful not to get her robe in the class of frilly things.—New York Press. Brain Waves to Cure Tipplers. It must have been several decades ago that the first woman . crusader against whisky sat in her home and thought and thought and thought how she might bring drinking men to the path of sobriéty.” What pained her most, was that she had no way of sending forth her good counsel to the multitude. Ah! had she only. started as a crusader in this, the day of tele- pathy! ‘Recently, when an Episcopal clergyman argued against local op- tion in Aurora, Ill, before four thou- sand hearers, a little band of women who believe in the powers of telepathy sat in the audience and sent out thought waves in an endeavor to con- fuse’ him in His arguments. They were representatives of a newly or- ganized woman’s auxiliary to the Au- rora local option organization. Imag- inative and enthusiastic workers for local option proposed that an attempt be made to influence the mind of the speaker through the mysterious channels of thought, and several vol- unteered for the trial. What they ac- complished is known only to them- selves. But telepathy is to be a force until the voters decide the liquor question. The leaders say they will have the power of the united, beseech- ing thought of 8,000 women reaching out ‘to grapple with’ the doubting minds of men who would look upon the wine when it is red.—New. York Press. : G2 as Problem Solved in Panama. Pure food, like charity, begins at home, the club women of America were told by Mrs. Mary H. Abel, of Baltimore, addressing the Federa- tion’s biennial convention at Boston. “The occupants’ of your- kitchen, who listen to your instructions about germs, do not believe a word that you. say,” said she. “The average woman needs a course in marketing more than in cooking, and not so much to learn the cuts of meats as to have her eves open to conditions of clean- lingss. Even a few women im any town, by holding stanchly together, can accomplish wonders in the clean- ing of markets and provision stores.” And on the same subject Mrs. E. R. Richards, of Boston, said: “I have come tc the conclusion that nine- tenths of human illness is caused by food and that six-tenths of the TMine- tenths are caused by unclean foods. “The dsrger comes back to the housewife both for her lack of care in her own domain and her lack of social conscience, which demands cleanliness on every hand.” =~ Miss Helen Boswell of New York, organizer of the Canal Zone Federa- tion, of Women’s Clubs, talked enter- tainingly. She was sent to that coun- try to arrange a social life for the women, and formed a federation of eight clubs. “In each of these clubs,” said Miss Boswell, “the servant prob- lem and that of domestic science gen- erally have been well nigh solved.” Miss Alice Parker, speaking on play-ground work, declared play a ne- cessity and not a luxury. ~ Fachion Notes. The ends of the ruff hook under the left ear, beneath a bow. Elbow-length gloves in a pale ocher or deep buff are stunning. A note of relation is seen in a cloth coat lined with foulard like the dress with which it is worn. Feather boas, whether of short os- trich tips, marabout or coq, are still much worn and in every -hue, The new chamois gloves are very smart. Though called natural, the tones really run from cream fo deep ocher. wz i The wise woman seeks her boas, riches and rffs with an eye to the hat which they are destined to ac- company. . Of all accessories to the feminine toilette, few are of more importance than those employed for the dressing of the neck. A soft shade of green cotton is effec- tive for the embroidered edge and a collar of pink-and-white striped linen. The sides of the crown are covered by a wide, full, loose puff of net through which a wide scarf of pidk radtum is run. Made to accompany lace and lin- gerie stocks are seen ties in infinite variety. Many voung girls affect the solid color Windsor ties. With the stmplest of runabout traveling mohair, serge amd Hnen tumes, short embroidered muslin are worn in connection with the linen collars. and cos- ties stiff THE PULPIT. THE REV. J. E. ADAMS. Subject: Man's Part in God's Plan. Brooklyn, N. Y.—In the Ross Street Presbyterian Church, corner of Wilson street, the pastor, the Rev. John Erskine Adams, preached Sunday morning on ‘‘Man’s Part in God’s Plan.” The text was from Ro- mans 8:28: “And we know that to The Apostle Paul has been called a fatalist. Perhaps, in late years, he has been the object of more dis- cussion and criticism than any other New - Testament writer. Preacher and pew alike have striven to under- mine his system of theology. They have sought to avoid many of the fundamentals of his faith. They have told us that it is high time we should come into a larger concep- tion of the ethics of Christ’s life; and a lessening sense of the im- portance of His death. They say that much of His writings was for the Jewand couched in such figurative language that the Jew alone could nde ang and appreciate, and ac- cordingly, He dweltatlength upon the typical “and " sacrificial BS nanan tbe upon the practical and ethical. And in the chapter from which our text is taken we seem to have presented the horrible doctrine of predestina- tion, a doctrine which by many is ac- cepted as synonymous with a fatalis- tic ®reed ' which eliminates man’s free agency and @ubjects all things to san incontrovertible and change- less law of necessity. I wish to.show you, if possible, to-day, how different was Paul’s conception of our rela- tion to God and God’s relation to us. Let us not doubt that Paul had absolute convictions that in all things God’s will ; would be accom- plished. But let us not doubt, also, that he had absolute convictions that men must become co-workers with God in the out-workings of the di- vine plan. There was one. occasion when he fully illustrates - these truths. It is" when, as a prisoner, he is being brought to Rome. to stand before Caesar. This is the message of . revelation to him. In this. he gees the will of God. With this pur- pose he has nothing to do. He may not. modify it nor. change it. He resigns himself to it. Nothing can prevent its accomplishment. It is God’s will that he should come to Rome. But shipwreck threatens. The ship on which he is captive is overtaken with disastér. Fog, storm, darkness, danger, all. seem to indi- cate the! defeat of “the divine plan. It seems as if all on board must be destroyed. And again, the divine will is manifest. Paul is assured of safety for himself and all on board that ship. But what does he do? Does he, in view of this assurance, make no effort to avoid the dangers and overcome the difficulties? Does he meekly resign himself and his shipmates to the inevitable? By no means. He becomes a co-operator with God in the fulfillment of His purpose. He heartens all on board that ship. He feeds them. He as- sures them of safety; but of safety only as they use every precaution, as they overcome treachery; as they strive with all courage and persis- tence to save themselves and® their ship. He says to the Centurion and the soldiers who had him in convey, when the : fear-stricken seamen would have sought escape in a small boat: ‘‘Except these abide in the ship, ye cannot be saved.” In other words, he couples human endeavor, courage and skill with divine prom- ise and protection. © And so, deliver- ance is wrought. All things were to work together for good; but in that result one of the essential fac- tors must be human courage and fidelity. The sun shines to-day for me, for all the world. That is cer- tain. Nought we can do may pre- vent its shining. But it only shines for me as I open my eyes to receive its light.” It is in my power to keep my eyes shut, if I will. Paul declares in this chapter that nothing can separate us from the love of Christ; neither tribulation, distress, persecution, famine, naked- ness, peril, sword, principalities, powers, things present, things to come; none of these things shall in- terfere with the keeping, saving power of God's love, in Christ. And vet, we hear him on another occasion fearing, lest, having preached to others as a minister of God’s grace, he himself might be a castaway. He lives again, he says; yet:not he, but Christ in him; and still he is using all the powers of determination and will to keep his body under, to re- strain it; to make it perfectly re- sponsive to the control and ordering, of God. To Paul, this life is a con- stant struggle; a warfare against principalities and powers, with wickedness enthroned; it is a race in which, if he would win, he must strain every nerve and stretch every muscle and lay aside every weight, and the sin which so easily besets; he must run with patience, with per- sistence, looking to Jesus. That gives us the idea exactly. Use. all your own power, locking to Jesus, as your example, inspiration, stimu- lus and strength. If he wrote the letter to the Hebrews, and whether he did or another of the saints is immaterial, the principle is the same; he made out a list there of men and of women who were in God’s keeping, and yet wrought, achieved, suffered, triumphed, through the exercise of dauntless courage and of splendid faith. And so we are led to say that Paul's conception of life was that of al- liance with God. He was destined of divinity for high achievement. This Is not pride, it is not egotism, save of the right sort. All great men have lived and achieved under this conception and in this thought. The men who have done things have themselves called of God for achieve- ment. They are in the divine plan; they are also agents in its carrying on and out. Under this impulse, David went forth from the sheep- fold to the sceptre. With the an- ointing oil of the prophet upon him, he waged his battles against the Philistines and conquered. Under them that love God all things work. lngsther for good.” * Mr. Adams said: ; ruin; done them because they have known. — ————— Sr TR Tw Ne a EER this impulse, .Savonarola “Fehieyed. Under, this * impulsé ° John Knox: «| wrought, ~ defying throngs and dev-. AN ELCQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY | ils.. Lincoln and Washington were the men they were, and did the: things they did because they were allied with God, and through their | personality expressed the divine pur- pose and power. It was because of their certainty that God was above them and in them, and that right would triumph, that they went stead-’ ily forward to accomplish the high mission of their lives. We are told” by Plutarch that Julius Caesar, on a night of storm, crossing a channel in a light, open boat, quieted the alarm of the oarsmen who were with. him by telling them: “Pluck up your courage; you carry Caesar.” This great’ Roman believed in his des- tiny. '- A secret presentiment bade him believe that he was born for a notable career. He had: power, he had resource, but above all, a pro- found belief: in his star. The man who has not such a faith is to be pitied.” 5 SY We all need such a vision.: With’ out it we perish. Aspiration is in-| spiration. .Let us not be deterred. from building our castles, though they are in the air. Perchance God will help -us- lay the foundations. under them and make therm real and- strong and permanent. The man’ who says: I must and, God helping: me, I can, is the man who has’ con fidence in himself to do somethin that no one else can do, and ‘that: otherwise’ will remain undone. = | 3 How wonderfully God holds ter- rific energies in leash and under con: tro subject to the gradual outwork-| ing of Hjs perfect idea for the chil+] dren ‘of men. In thef‘realm of nature. all things work together for good.” The sun, which has in it heat suffi-7 cient to consume our little world in: a fragment of time, nurses to a ful- ler life by its gentle caress the ten- der lily and the modest. violet. It touches them and evokes their deli- cate aroma; it puts the roses into the cheek of the child and the song into the throat of the nightingale as it soars and sings to the clouds. It is true that so well do we understand the constructive forces of nature, that it furnishes but a trite subject for our consideration. But ufder- neath all physical manifestations and phenomena, let us believe there is moral purpose. Nature is God’s great temple in which His voice is heard. Jt was through nature’s sub- limity that David realized man’s dig- nity. Abave all nature, next to God, stands man. And for him all phy- sical forces are in harmony and work together for his good. And as with nature, so in history. As in the roaring of the seas and the clash of .the elements the ..atmos- phere we breathe is cleansed and we ehter into more vigorous life. So the wars, which seemingly spell the crumbling of nations, which spells corruption; through all storm and revolution, through shock and tempest, God is leading the sons of men out into larger life, and bringing: pon the brighter and better day. i And, finally, human experience testifies to the same truth. We are told that on one occasion Nappleon was shut up in an island of the Danube, hemmed in by the Arch- duke Charles. He was able to maip- tain himself there, but he sent word to Italy and Spain and France, and he ordered “his” marshal with such minuteness that every day’s march was perfect... All over the north of France, and from the extreme south of Spain and Portugal, ‘the corps were, all of them, advancing, and. day by day coming nearer and near- er. - Not one of them, on the march, had any idea what was the final pur- pose, and why they were being or- dered to the central point. But on the day the master appointed the head of the .columns appeared in every direction. Then it was that he was able to break forth from his bondage. and roll back the tide of war. “How like our life, as it moves on, to the command of the Master. Its forces seem confused to us, wi‘h- and cohesion, ofttimes antagonistic. Joy and sorrow, health and sickness, prosperity and “adversity—all march in tHeir appointed paths and to their appointed ends. But at last we shall see behind them all the one will and the one power, and we shall be able to say on the day of final emancipa- tion and victory, as said Joseph of old, God meant it unto good, to bring it to pass. : So, let us go forth, renewing our courage as we renew our confidence that to them that love God all things work together for good. i Ty Advanced Thought. ; He cannot justly be charged with illiberality who “ddheres to that which i§.good” until a better is pro- vided. “A starving man who casts away a'foaf of bread because he im- agines & ten-course dinner ‘ahead even an’ agnostic would account a fool. -Why:give up our Christian faith, which has proved so good, sO long as only the vague and ghostly chimera’ of “advanced thought” is proposed - to take its place? Some of us knew that faith in Christ is a very real and precious and joyous possession, a comfort in- sorrow, a help in trouble, a spur to higher living, a source of assured hope for the life beyond; what has science, or human philosophy, or any of the thousand -and one vagaries of ‘free thought” to offer in its stead? A joyless life, a rayless future, a quenched soul—Nirvana!—The Ex- aminer. - . ————— How - Character is Made. One of the chief dangers of life is trusting occasions. We think that conspicuous events, striking experi- ences, exalted moments haye most to do with our character and capacity. We are wrong. Common days, mo- notonous hours, wearisome paths, plain old fools and everyday clothes tell the real story. Good habits are not made on birthdays, nor Christian character at the new year. The vis- ion may dawn, the dream may waken, the héart may leap with a new in- spiration on some mountain top, but the test, the triumph, is at the foot of the mountain, on the level plain. —Maltbie D. Babcock. His Eternal “Know.” \% E Ea— New York City.—The vogue of the sleeveless coat appears to be an ever growing one, ‘and: nothing prettier or better suited to the warm weather could be found. This one is simpli- city itself, yet drapes the figure with “Sg Boas Hug the Throat. The boa is dainty as possible, very small” but very ruffly, with pleated butter-colored lace mounting to the ears and chin in a thick ruche, a smaller frill pleated about the base of the throat, and a ribbon tied between bowed either in front or behind. : Neck Dressings. The latest innovation in neck dressing is the black ribbon stock, with bow at the back and ends that reach far below the hip line. These sash collars are worn with every kind of costume, from the simplest lin- gerie frock to the dressiest afternoon toilet. Five-Gored Under Petticoat. Close fitting underwear is abso- lutely essential to the smart fitting : gown, at. the present time and the |‘five-gored under petticoat makes a ‘| desirable feature of ‘the wardrobe. This .one can be laid in inverted pléats at’ the back or gathered as ‘liked, although the former method is to be preferred unless the figure is exceptionally slight. It can be made from lingerie materials and trimmed with embroidery or lace and it is also suited to flannel skirts. Also it can be finished at the upper edge with a belt or under-faced as liked. The skirt is made in five gores and when the frill is used it is arranged over the lower edge. The side gores N\ 2 Ph, li 0 Vis graceful lines and felds ‘and can be utilized for almost every- seasonable material. In the illustration it makes part of a costume and is made of buff linen braided with white sou- tache cembined with embroidery. In place of the soutache and the em- breidery applied trimming can be used if it iS desirable to lessen the labor of making. The coat is made in one piece, the only seam being that at the centre back. It is held beneath the arms by means of straps and can be closed with ornamental buttons and cord as illustrated or in any way that may be liked. : Chiffon on Straw. The novel trimming on a large Mi- lan straw was all of white chiffon, the upstanding part being quills made of folds of the chiffon with a line of satin for the stem. : Silver and Gold Touches. Plaids are fashionable for light- weight fabrics such as voile, etamine and gauze. The colors most employed are blues, delicate reds and browns fading into buff. Silver and gold trim many of the new gowns some- where and somehow. Coat Mystery. The shape of many of the choicest Christ did not huild His Gospel on | evening coats is a mystery to every a “grand perhaps,” but on the “‘eter- | one but the designer and maker. nal know." "—Home Herald. i are fitted by means of hip darts, so doing away with all fulness at that point. z The quantity of material required for the medium size is three and one- eighth yards of material twenty-sev- en or two and three-quarters thirty- six inches wide with three and one- half yards of embroidery seven inches wide and two and three-eighth yards of insertion to trim as illustrated; or one yard of additional material thir- ty-six inches wide if the frill is made to match. Hand-Made Trimming. it is tie gown with the hand-made | trimming that is considered smart.