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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (July 12, 1914)
SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JULY 13, 1914. NWl y -TffABLE OF'SuSANAIAD fiE DAUGHTER. AND 7J U&AND-iJAU5rc; SiNL rtvounc- TNO G3AMD. Coal-Oil lamps, and the Civil War had tutlon of Learning. All she had to do beyond. Including the Battle-Axes and , .. vi wiih ONCE there was a full-blown W Id Peach, registered in the Family Bible as Susan Mahaly. Her Pap divided WW collecting at a Toll-Gate and defend- jng me miiunr, y" - . . ..in. TA..Mlnn . .f AnHV Jackson. The family dwelt in what was then regarded by Cambridge, Mass., as the Twilight Zone of Semi-Culture, viz., ku " Pniintv Pennsvlvania. Susan wore t.insey-wooisey irom Monday to Saturday. She never had sn.nn wore Llnsev-Woolsey from tampered with her Venus de Milo Topo- ttaf Women had Nerves. . - ,h, hd a onH Ehp rtlrt nnt f-Ven SUSPeCC - ""V ,Tt: . of the Turn- Fore-Arm like a Member of the Turn verein. She knew how to Card and Weave and Dye. Also she could make Loose Soap in a kettle out in the Open Air. Susan never fell down on her bait Rising Bread. Her Apple Butter was always AL It was commonly agreed that she would make some Man a good House keeper, for she was never sickly and could stay on her Feet sixteen hours at a Stretch. Already she was beginning to look down the Pike for a regular Fellow. lown tne anaaflj ior a icguiai . , . u . i- isan the Tjirs of seven- teen who failed to get her Hooks on some roaming specimen of the Oppo- Bite uenacr wa.a hi uan6 w whispered about as an Old Made, Cell- .it.. r;ender was in danger of being bacy was listed with Arson and Man ... . ,.i . 1 w... slaughter. Rufus was destined to be an Early . . n i . i. umU lift a Victorian Rummy, but he could lift a Saw-Log and he would stand without being hitched so Susan nailed him the third time he came snooping around the Toil-Gate. third time he came snooping around the Toll-Cate Rufus did not have a Window to hoist or a Fence to lean on. But there ' . - . . ttr.i.h orrivp.q nnn De- Kini tO get LUggjr. Susan thoutrht she was playing in ... i Luck to snare a Six-Footer who da mf.; "and could i- . . - . . . a utT.it'rinTPP wnn out-wrastle all Comers T i ne xinis oi ronw 0.110. r. MISS ANNA JUPP has a better knowledge of the downtown New fork working woman than any one else In the city, yet she was born and brought up on a Vermont farm. She has an experfs knowledge of the Inside workings and requirements of huslness offices, yet she never saw one until she was over 20 and she has never worked but six months in any office save her own. She has her linger on the pulse of New York business con ditions and feels Its fluctuations and moods, yet she seldom has time to leave her desk in her busy downtown offices. She is a master psychologist, yet she never went to college. Miss Jupp Is the young woman who stands between the employer and the mploye for a large number of busy business men in New Tork City. Such men as John D. Rockefeller and such concerns as the estate of John W. Gates are on her list, and some thous ands of young women and men who earn their living in New York offices are on her books. The busy men reach her for the most part by telephone quick, laconic messages they give, hurry calls for help of the right sort at the right time and the workers pass through her office at the rate of aome 300 a day. Miss Jupp does not rest. She sizes op the requirements of the business man from his hurried call and from her experience of New York offices, and she sixes up the applicants for work by a few questions and by close, keen observation of a thousand details of dress, diction and gesture as they file by. Miss Jupp's early ambition was to oe a missionary to India. Her child ish dreams never wandered to such a matter-of-fact locality as New York. That city, to be sure, lay on the way to India, but that was all. The reason for this early ambition was that Miss Jupp came from a family of famous missionaries up in Vermont, and some Ksrsr?K:wT: aTTs. --tr-rtBj"ir;r.f cr--r;'.'";, "rHHHf - :r:::;: 3fS rrg? . - - - A tTTRT. FROM THE MOUNTAINS WHO CONQUEREDNggTYORK ' ! " . rr- A la f 4 Ji Relatives of the Young Couple staked Relatives of the Ttoung coup them to a team of Pel tew. a Muley Cow a Bird Dog of veVtke Divide toward the perilous . , tlllnov. - it was a Hard Life. As they trundled It was a Hard Life. As they trunaiea slowly over the rotten Roads, toward ;I , Z Promtse. thev had to sub- slst largely on Venison. Prairie ChLen. 8Qua,l. Black Bass. Berries. .r, wim Hnnev Thev carried tnelr : " ZJZLI own Coffee. Arrived at the Jumplng-Off Place they settled don among tne Jammed together a little two by twice t-ohtn with the Plue running up the lHSK-KatS. KUIUS neweu uu. r, looked onerv enough to be M Birthplace of almost any Success- j American. n-H a 11 nnVi a! cc Moo.,ito waiting auc rtiiwa..-w m-w for the Pioneers. In those good old Chills-and-Fever davs. no one ever blamed it on the Female of the Species. Those who had the Shakes allowed that they were being jarred by the Hand of Providence. When the family ran low on Quinine, all he had to do was hook up and drive 50 miles to the nearest Town, where he would trade the Furs for Necessities such as Apple Jack and Navy Twist, utu o . v. - - and nosslhlv a few Luxuries such as Tea and Salt. On one of these memorable Trips to w..w Sentiment with reckless Prodigality the Store, a Mooa wnicn cuniuiiwu seized upon him. 1 1 i. .Kill him He thought of the brave Woman who - was back there in the lonesome Shack, Iha Prairift Wrtlve aWV from shooing the Prairie wolves away irom the Cradle, and he resolved to reward her. With only tnree tuns oi oione r under his Wammus. he spread his Wild- With only three Ullis oi stone rwee under his Wammus. he spread his Wild- Cat Currency on tne counter anu pur- chased a b uock, w.an j.a-a-w ents. a sniny coat ut ......, - ,uo.uet of Pink Roses on the door. .22!JC.taE - ... j, MonaueL oi rum nusco w t. .w.. : It on tne wan. aiongoiuo ut t.. iu.n.j. T.r, j 1 that oho hart mar- Wing, and vowed that she had mar- ried the Best Man in the World. vv mo- nnn ijv cii tjiai. oua iau t . . T 1 sVkat f .Df rwany a-a, aa. --rkr-i. vv9vvwr " ... k i x it I,.,.! nt'itti T-u-i arr( mnr- A fnP fla lit HI LB. 1VU VvUi-UO-vu - . . . . . 4 Dab I 'nrp in I fl AU3LMBII . v t - A Real Romance of the Business World, in how achievement in that family always meant a missionary's career. When Miss Jupp was about 20 she went down to New York to visit friends. She was a wholesome, eager young country girl and her eyes opened In wider and wider astonishment as the wonders of the great city were revealed to her. She made up her mind once and for all that she would never go back to the farm, that she would stay In New York for the rest of her life, and with this determination visions of mis sions and India vanished forever. Since then Miss Jupp has found that there is Just as large a field for missionary en deavor in the busy streets of downtown New York as there is ln India. Of course, reasoned Miss Jupp, if she were to remain in New York she must do something to earn her living. She had no right to expect a family with whom she was not living to support her. So Miss Jupp studied stenography and learned to finger the typewriter keys. She had no special ambition ex cepting to earn a living and to earn it in New York. Miss Jupp had friends in a downtown office building and when she finished her course at the business school she made the office of these friends her headquarters. It was Summer and there were vacancies ln many down town offices occasioned by Summer va cations, so she made an office-to-office canvass through the building where her friends had their office and managed to get enough work to keep busy. It would have been very encouraging to Miss J-upp in those days if on finish ing her assigned work at one of these offices her erstwhile employer had said to her: "Miss Jupp, we do not want you to leave. We have discovered marks of ability and business sense that will make you invaluable. You have a great future before you and we want to take an active part in that future." But no employer said- that. Either they ware not very shrewd, or, as Miss come along with a Rush ana nsar- tier had retreated away over into Kan. sas' , , ... In the very Township where, of late, ... . . . ,, j ... ... , the Beaver had tolled without Hln- drance and the Red Fox dug his ho e unscared, people were now eating Co e Oysters and going to see East Lynne. Hiram was in rugged Health, having defended the flag by Proxy during the recent outcropping of Acrimony be- tween the devotees of Cold Bread and the slaves of Hot Biscuit. The Substi- tute had been perforated beyond re- pair at the Battle of Kenesaw Moun- tain, proving that Hiram made no mis- take in remaining benino: to tena. store. Tar Tonni. mnvprf in where she could hear the Trains whistle and be gan to sport a Cameo Brooch, she could barely remember wearing a Slip and having Stone Bruises. Hiram was Near, but he would loos en up a trifle for his own Fireside. The fact that Jennie was his Wife come aiung vmu a. "ub -u.o ranged primitive conditions. The Fron- The fact that Jennie was his wire Frances was not a popular girl, on "er L,,c gave her quite a Standing with him. 0(7.1.7.0 0 so those their Romance ripened Into Acquaint He admired her for having made such . t ht tnelr wav lnto tho ancesnip. ., hr T.lfe. v-- They dwelt in a two-story r ra.uo with countless Dewdads and Thingum bobs tacked along the Eaves and Scal loped around the Bay Windows jpea arouna tne doj ...v. , . The Country People who came in to see the Elgntn wonaer 01 me nii used to stand in silent Awe. breathing through their noses. Out on the Lawn, surrounded by Geraniums, was a Cast-Iron Deer which seemed to be looking at the Court House in a startled Manner. It was that kind of a Court House. In her Front Room the daughter or gusan w(nderful Wax sprlnk,ed with Diamond Dust; what-Not bearing Mineral Sped- t TTmnt nnni tho dauehter of mens. Conch-Shells, and a Star -Han- also some Hair-Cloth Furniture, ven I I .. .1 unliflliltai'AH With Sand. . h th. Rlafik silk suppei y - - -" "- " ,7 and paid for the Crayon Enlargements of her Parents, Jennie did not have tne Face to bone ,.m for anyth ng rnor. out sne rongeu .u suspected. o,r, vnt a ree-ular Jennie was a Soprano. No : . Regular Th J, d often used (or augmenting . . the Grief at a Funeral H.rv.cecsme from a point about two inches above the Right Eye. ' She had assisted a atM tc do things to "Juanita. and sometimes tossed out little Hints about wishing n ,.). she could practise was . t,.t. - PraCt.1Ce: . than Vina T'nman mil KIP II I 11 1 CCU the Bark on a Sycamore, he liked to have other Women envy the Mother oi his Children. When he spreao nimseu ttysas Plaster, he expected a Fanfare of Trumpets. . It took him a long time to unwina the String from the Wallet, oui ne would Dig if he thought he was boost- lng his own Game. Rv stealthily short-weighting of tne j country Trade and holding out on the ... rn-Ai. .mil hnliiitir Ollt On the Assessor, he succeeded in salting away numerous Kopecks in one corner or tne ..u... gafe W while in Chicago to Duy uio .....tc. stock, he bargained for two days and finally bought a Cottage Melodeon, with . . . 1 I . tne stool mrown m. Jennie would sit up and pump for the stool tnrown in. Jennie would sit up and pump for W0UrB at a time. mw ... i. aBe .; "" x - r.ze ... t..c """-"J I the year 18 86 fl!?!iil5SSBT.n: T .v. ..., mi tbore was some x.. inc .x - - - ' " ZZt. , W.m ,nn .Ten inucm Uo."B". - -- nio hnrt knocked the Town a Twlste Tr"" UJL!":n' T . nle inc. unu i nuv-vu w - when she came home from the Female illr- n-anr nc HoniTS fl. n fl IOI HE " Jupp admits, her own stenography was not of the first order. At any rate, she received no such invitation to tarry. In those days and it wasn't many years ago there were very few op portunities for a woman to secure em ployment in New York. There was one agency conducted in connection with one of the large typewriting manu facturers and that was all. Miss Jupp THE BUSY MEN BEACH HER FOB was iuun a. - .& o ---- Vco.SJiiiic anrl hp Would CUTl UD llKC ... Nose-Specs and he would curl up like , ' t . A Cuss frm Chicago caie to see tier every few weeks. . h k, His Trousers seemed to be chomng "' . . him The Pompadour was protected b of mp s u a theykind tnat Joe Weber helped to Remembrance. But in P au Fa, and a ,a ' de 1 e' i'uj ...;. r" Frances would oad accursed C.-y Chap into the high Cart . ,blt m up and down all the Residence 'ZlzltPlvery Front Porch sorne O" wag no lnterefited National Bank would peer ",0 ... In the First National Bank would peer out through the Morning Glories at the Pageant and then writhe like an Angle Worm. The Wedding was the biggest thing that had strucK tne lown since paugh stopped over on his way from Peoria to Decatur. , .. lUDrl thrnntrh tnurun ciii.fcu an - - -- the Windows. The Groom wore a Swallow-Tail. Most of those present had seen Pic- ... .. ' - T . 1 ITI-A- tures of tne JJress ouii. in t..o M cnmnanion. the Gentleman wear- lng one always had uuris. and n Wood-Engraving caught him in the act of striking a Lady in the Face and saying "Curse you!" xhe Feeling at the County-Seat was that France had taken a Desperate chance. Tne caterer with Colored Help in iir,i nin,rSc tv, i-n,v Punch suspected white Gloves, the ruby Punch suspected ,.ontain)l Liquor, tne Japanese Lan- tern8 attached to the Maples, the real ln lhe Veil, the glittering Array o( Pickle-Jars, and a well-defined u- mor that most of the imported Lshers 1 J 1 C!iiai, n- , - O t ;A ST 1 t 3 t O (1 she was so tranc.neo m n . V . T.V i many and many a day. Tne Bachelor of Arts grabbed off by the daughter of Jennie and the gran - aaugnter 01 gwf - Real Estate In the congested Business i-i.,if f Tnn which came into D t t T. which " ffort. Frank Chance. fforts of Frank Chance. - . . .... " '""UvT'.Hed h.m"Dear" no Frances alwavs called him Dear no matter what she happened to be think- ln at the time. Part of state street had been w shed on to willoughby. He was afraid to . , , . u, not k..uw.. s - t; V, a uo hn.'lf Q nr n ! VPO SH1K. YY1LI1 oU -j ' ' . . T, Br0W'nD! Ll,r!nhJ:": corner. He began to see that he would be falrly busy an hig nfe. jacking up Rents. Tno Ked-lirlcK fortress r-o watavas u. conducted Frances had Stone Steps ln .w..v Tra4e8 people at the rear. frnn t on1 a sacrpi n. n I I mil. '. I u I lunij willoughby and his wife had the higr. couragre of Youth and the Financial courage of Youth and tne r inancat Support of all the Money Spenders , statA street, so thev started in n , s t , &t 1?a.h T? nnm in on renoa uecoranuii. fi"" ..wi.. ... the House was supposed to stand for a Period. Some of them stood for a good deal. A few of the periods looked like Ex clamation Points. The young couple disregarded the Toil-Gate Period and the Log-Cabin Toll-Gate Period and the Log-Cabin perod but they worked ln every one of the Lou,es untll the GUt Furniture gave out- The delighted Caller at the House be- .,de th. like would pass from an East SS C.,r.d through an E. ia ww t.. Colonial Ante-Room Into a Japanese ei it. . garter rest ing n. " W wm Renaissance Drawing-Room to meet the ...11. rn WnstPss. From this exquisite Apart- wane aumc ul " ; t,-i mor rnral v than 1 Which Pluck and Grit and Native Common Sense Win Out went to this agency and through it se cured a few opportunities to substitute. Then when Autumn came on she went back and asked for a permanent posi tion. She waited for the permanent position to be offered to her. but she waited in vain. "The one thing that is needed in this great city," Miss Jupp concluded after waiting for a long time, "is an employ THE MOST PABT BY TELEPHONE. r- TTVa nrAa annn Frances soon began to hob-nob with the most delicatessen Circles, including Families that dated back to the Fire of 1871. She was not at all Dizzy, even when she looked down from the Mountain Peak at her yappy Birthplace. 15,00i' feet below. Willoughby turned out to be a satis factory Housemate. His Voltage was not high, but he always ate Peas with a Fork and never pulled at the Leash when taken to a Musicale. In front of each Ear he carried a neat A ma of Human Ivy. so that he could sneak UD at Meeting of Directors. iTntll the vear 1895. the restricted Side- whlskerg wa8 an accepted Trade-Mark commercial Probity. This Facial Landscaping, the Frock Coat, and a steadfast devotion to Toilet Soap' made him suitable for Exhibition . Frances became aimost fond of him. . ... Tr ,,,,rn i .! and 11 was a W she traced the Dope back through Swig get County, Pennsylvania, and discov ered that she was an honest-to-good-ness Daughter of the American Revolu tion. ' Willoughby could not ask a repre- - - r.innlnl Stock sentative of good old Colonial Stock to ride around in a sting y C oup. th a Coon Planted out on tne eather Seat. .pvrai He changed the Terms in verai peases and was enabled to slip her a ho' furpr'se " . ' "c" r " ' Avenue -o ns "e usual bowl i " 6"" bene"d to get some Fresh Smoke, she beheld a rubber-tired c or ,a drawn b, two 8Urmountd by lmported Turk. In ' , ... .. . . She was so trancift. that she went right over to wuiougnoy Kiss, after look- carefully for the ex- In. b u rather c - ... L. tn, ranees a.o.a 10 u. the next two weens, ana iu mi who remarked upon tne smartnes.of l"" " " the Equipage, she declared that tne ATon cho haH to nilt I1TI WUfl Caillf it Throbbing Heart even if he was an In- u "W T,... .,.nH.t Touna- whose Hab,i,ments seem. dripping downward. melting ana a came wearny irom omieiuum Tran pulled into Reno. Nevada. - - She seemed quite alone, except for a coup.e of Maids. After she had given Directions con- Wardrobe Trunks and wu motolfQ to a specially reserved Cottage at Hie cor- Liberty Street and Hope Avenue, y ghe g&t &t the otner sWe of r of Liberty Street and Hope Avenue, dow. It was easily worth tnat mucn. toaBy a, a contribution to scl Next day she sat at the other side of and she felt sure she could get It in enc(J, (2) Do you believe that a ma Table from a Lawyer, removing the without paying Duty. She had been . - - - - t.a.r are today . ..! V. a TaDle Irom a sawyer, iwuv'ws " poisoned Javelins from her fragile Per- hod,ne tnem up before tne snudderln shyster. shudderln& shyster. gne nad a Tale of Woe caicuiated to pulp a Heart of Stone. In blocking out the Affidavit, her sympathetic Attorney made Pencil Notes as follows: Her name was Ethel Louise, favorite Daughter of Willoughby and Frances, the well-known Blue-Bloods of the Western Metropolis. She had finished off at Miss Sniffle s excluBiv6 School, which overlooked the Hudson and the Common School Branches. After she learned how to enter a Bail-Room and while on her way to attack Europe for the third time, the Vlr crossed her Pathway. D..-.v. . - . she accepted him because hi. name t.. a , . i . . l- . . i i l- a i n k no- mn. jSXZtS - the water Into ChesapeaKe ay. ment agency for office workers: some place where a worker can make him self known and can be properly judged and some place where busy employers can turn for Just the right person." Miss Jupp knew that she herself would be a valuable asset to some business office and she knew that there were other wnmen In the same position. As soon as Miss Jupp realized that there was need for this sort of agency she had but one idea as to her future course that was to be an agent her self. So she opened her little office, paid the rent and fitted it up with her small savings. And she spent a great deal of her spare time opposing the arguments of her friends, who assured her that she was sinking money ln a ditch and that she couldn't do aught but fail. In the meantime, while she was wait ing for her clientage to materialize, Miss Jupp turned her own spare time to the work of a public stenographer. She did copying, mimeographing and circulating for the people in the office who had no stenographers or who wanted extra work done, so that from the first she was sure of covering office expenses. Her usual day was from 8 in the morning to 11 at night "There is no door to success in busi ness," said Miss Jupp the other day, "but long, hard work, and the only key to this Is physical strength and endur ance.' One thine Miss Judd never did as she sat ln her little office she never worried over the future, she never took thought for the morrow. She just did every day's work as it came along. She never dreamed of the time when, in stead of a half dozen applicants a day, she would have 300, or of the day when men like J. D. Rockefeller would ask her help to get an efficient stenog rapher. Miss Jupp's mind does not work ln that way. It goes ahead by seizing opportunities as they come, but never by dreaming of them before they come. About five years ago there was a ranean when sne wanted to take an Aparimeiu in ii 10. At Monte Carlo he scoiaea nor lu, borrowing 3000 Francs from a Russian went At Monte Carlo he scolded her for Duke at a Luncheon the day before and . Inrinrr The Lawyer said that Hubert was a Pup. beyond all Cavil Cairo, Egypt, yielded up another Dark Chapter of History It came out in the sobbing Recital . ..... . ! . I v,- uHVi a . . . . ,,,h that "uer. na P- " J;(00 prize-winning t-omerinn. ui.wv- ly related to thc famou8 Flfl. owned by tnB -ouuie o.Uv-b.. the Couute8S skldo0gan of Bllcarty. roranIan had com. between him and n,v.., o..,....n mor. and ,..,. o dav ln h, aI g, ht of the maJ. t," pyramlda he kicked Preciou. ever Uc yr.am.a":"..J . a..,. so nara ana riiiotru The Legal Adviser said Death was too g.ood tor BUch a Fiend. In Vienna, though, that was uh.r. he went so far that Separation became inevitable. Etne, nad decided to take an 180.000 Pearl Necklace she had seen In a Win- dow. It was easily worth that much, and ghe fe,t gurc she could get u (n ii a. linlv HVtal rl :i . I nPfln wnnoui p.i.i y. " very successful at bringing thing. Home She could hardly believe her Ear. She could hardly believe ner Ear. when Hubert told her to forget It and back up and come out of the spirit World and alight on the Planet Earth. He had been hearties, on Wm Occasions, but this was the first time he had been Mean enough to renlg on a mere side-issue .uch as coming across with the Loose CMW . Ethel was simply de-termlned to have that Necklace, dui tne uniee....B ........ tried to kid her out of the Notion. sun- Then he starter, in to " "-"- gesteo a s.uu., . -.. itiamonos as a .u,... t,....o.. cam. wise to the Fact that rt. had twitk . WL , ,. c-..,. ,y Dined out with a was. While she wa. put ing a o .y Htai n' r w lit- 1 1 . .' va aa to Taw. the Maharajah of Um.lopa.u. 1 a s. i hniitr ht tn nfiCK ftl'r. ""V had to be taken Against Odds great deal of talk ln Now York about the need of Spanish stenographers. Our business relations with the countries to the south of us were increasing and business men were every day calling for stenographers who could handle the correspondence connected with thns business. Some of these appeals came to Miss Jupp. Mis. Jupp has a talent for making the most of immediate op portunity. "You want Spanish stenographers: then I shall produce them." she said. And straightway she started a school for the teaching of commercial Span ish. She employed a Spanish lawyer, who was glad of the extra work, as teacher, and Immediately young men and women employed during the day time flocked to her office on certain evenings of the week to learn Spanish. Within a year there were many gradu ates from Miss Jupp's Spanish classes who were able to qualify as Spanish stenographers and thereby increase their earning power, some 25 per cent, The Spanish classes have dwindled now. There is almost no demand for Span ish stenographers. But while the de mand lasted Miss Jupp was able to gain from it a good business profit. The slump in the demand came imme diately after tho beginning of the Mexican disturbances. "And as soon as our business with the Spanish-speaking nations resumes I shall be one of the first to feel it." says Miss Jupp. Miss Jupp's years of successful ex perience have made her an authority on the subject of the working woman and the office boy in New York especially the working girl. And here are some of the conclusions she has reached: New York is overcrowded with workers. There aren't enough Jobs for them. The big opening lies ln other fields and every week Miss Jupp see. girls who have had a bard time In the city going out to the newly-ooened sections of the West, to South America, mr i -. amI- HullHMjJ. fttl. ?" ou' After a Brute has lumped up an Aching Heart of a G prou Llne.. he c.nH hi P Taan. b fh- down on the Aching Heart of a Girl nl Tear, Fur Furthermore, there had been hnpelesi In all the time the were together, they never had been abl to agree on a Turkish Cigarette. The professional Home-Bis. trr esio Hubert la urt hat toylT Divorces. The Decree would b a I'lpe. i:thel ssld she hoped so and to ileas push It along, as she had quite r. Waiting-List. clock Moral: Rufus had n business ouy PRESENT ESTIMATES OF DARWIN. "Darwin. Science and Evolution" le the title of a highly Interesting collec- tlon of opinions coniriouien wm an- tth m hv icimer J Kneale. To emi nent representatives of science end of the great religious denomination. Mr. Kneale addressed the following ques tions: "(1) Do you believe the teach ings of Dsrwln In their general outline " - ioritv of Intellectual e.ider. are toaar r "r n"''e" , lh . e. From the nature of the replies on. m Mr Kn.,.. of m of ma . rvlnB lhm u n ,rr.concn.ble h,..tllity .clence and orthodoxy. For of ftf , prBfc repudiate Darwin end his tarhln and thfM ar. from Car(1n. patriarch of Con- stantlnople and from the metropolitan u. tws.1 ,d Jewish Moscow. Prote.tant nd Jewl.h oninlon rtnd. that Darwin", teachings are a persistent force and that they contain nothing hostile to rcllslou. m.hoJ, Tuttl, 0f th. Trotes- Fnl.cooal Church declare, that JSjKSPJSTS m.nr who hold th.t darwinian thrle. are - .,,., horl.. are - Buhop - - . . , Quayle ,2 dlstlnvulahcs btwwn rolu- - tlon and to Australia and to Panama and find ing there openings they did not dream of ln the big city. There is little room In New Vork for the uneducated office worker. New York business men are rnilnr to realise that there Is greater economy In employing a few well-educated stenographer, than a good m.ny In efficient ones. Rents .re too high and office space 1. too valuable In Man hattan to give room to the Inefficient But Inefficiency as an office worker does not imply Inefficiency In other lines, argue. Ml.. Jupp. The girl who would make a good milliner, a good dressmaker, a good housemaid, a aood cook, might make a wretchedly In efficient office worker, .he .hould try some other line of activity draae making, millinery or whatever It may be. Ml.. Jupp is herself a good exponent of her theory of efficiency. BLe found early ln life that .he would make better employment agent than stenog rapher, and she Is not only making an exceedingly good Income In her chosen vocation, but she Is one of the beat known bu.lness personalities In New York. MY -iv i i li - ill Hi l v..: Mary 8. Kdgar In the Survey. Budding tree and singing bird. Joy of Springtime seen and heard: All the wealth of all the year. Scattered by the wayside here. But oh. little sister of mine. In the shadowy place.. Where the wheel turn, and the .mall young fingers ply, I cannot forget that this Is yours, too. to Inherit The open fields and the stream, and the clear blue sky. Stirring sap and quickening sod Miracles revealing Ood; Prophets of His Fatherhood. Speaking from the field and wood. But oh. little sister of mine. In the shadowy places. Where shoulders droop, eyes dim and cheeka grow wan. 1 yearn for your hand, and a road tht laada to the open. To the commonwealth of the fields. njru'inlim otvnlutlnn t-rtne ac