Home Quarrels. The home should never be the scene of a quarrel. A man cannot afford to quarrel with his wife; it is undignified. A woman cannot afford to quarrel with tier husband ; It is unladylike. Parents cannot afford to quarrel In the presence of their children ; It gives them wrong views of life, and weakens their respect for home. Every quarrel leaves an ug ly scar, no matter how well It may be patched up. Small differences must oc cur In every household, but they can hardly be called quarrels. To quarrel with the person who stands nearest and dearest to you Is to put a strain on love that In the long run snaps it There is no sadder sight than to see two people who have grown so used to bickering that they do It almost me chanically. When a man and woman make up their minds to tread life's patn togetner tuey should make up their minds to make It as sunny a path as possible, and to avoid all the stum bling blocks to happiness that they pos sibly can. Marriage Is the best thing tn the world, but It cannot be Improved by quarrels. A quarrel brings out the ugliest, meanest side of a person's na- , ture, and surely no one can find virtue iu anything that does that Embroidered and lace-trimmed lin gerie blouses will be worn, but it 18 no longer necessary to have always the most expensive sort of waist. For the morning, for Instance, with a plain skirt, a decidedly severe model waist has Just recently come Into vogue. This summer, for tennis and golf, when it is played, the regulation tailor-made bod Ice will be smart once more, for the rBtiff cuffs and collar on waists of rath er heavy material are so infinitely more sensible thun the blouses that have been fashionable during the last cfew seasons, that Us return to favor was Inevitable. . ' The bottom of a silk skirt will be Improved by Interlining the hem with flannel rather than lining. Crinoline should never be used, as It would cut through too quickly. Heavier skirts that are to be finished with many rows of stitching should have flannel basted on the wrong side as deep as the stitch sing will be, then skirt and Interlining are stitched in rows, huvlng an easy tension on the machine ; the hem Is then turned up and lightly hemmed down, or If very heavy, sew a bias strip of lining to the raw edge of the bem and sew the other edge of the lining down to the skirt WUdom'i Wlae Whispers. Women abuse men merely to appear original and Independent A man Is at his best when he has a purpose. In being agreeable. Men dearly love to be referred to as an authority on odd questions. The man most austere In business Is usually most genial In private life. A man talks about dress as though be felt ashamed of the conversation. Men want to be regarded as capable ef pointing out the errors of others. Few women hnve the capacity for carrying dates and events In the mind. Women like to talk of the days when they had beaux galore even If they tiever had them. Every woman wants the world to give to her the consideration she thinks belongs to her sex. . When a woman reaches a conimand bag position she regards marriage as the next best thing. Bedroom Drapery, For country house bedrooms that are furnished In colonial style no fabric approaches more closely the old-time dimity, of which our foreinothers made their bedspreads, than the fleece-lined or other heavy striped or barred piques found on the modern counter. These material are used by decorators who are given carte blanche In carrying out their schemes for bedspreads, bureau and stand covers, etc. The edges of all the pieces are scalloped and but ton-holed or are finished with a nar row white cotton fringe. "Bonds" for Matrimony. How manners and customs change in a generation 1 In talking with Con gressman Green the other day, he re called the fact that his mothor and father were married in Massachusetts and his father was required to give a bond of $125 before the ceremony could be performed. If this requirement were enforced at the present time, and every young man who desired to enter the blessed state of matrimony had to prove that he was possessed of $125 spare cash. It Is to be feared that many of our young people would have little left to purchase a . housekeeping equipment, says the National Maga zine. In those old days, they regard ed marriage as something more than a pastime, and entered upon It as a real and serious responsibility. There Is much variety In the shape and style of coats for spring. Madeira work, which is much like the broderle anglalse of last summer, is coming In on the new waists. For school wear serviceable brown or blue linens trimmed with stitching and a black or red tie are very smart Tight-fitting coats, buttoned simply down the front, some rather long, oth ers short will be worn with severe tal lored costumes. For best frocks for the little girls a fine white material daintily trimmed with good embroidery of valenclennes lace is the very prettiest of all. Silkier and more attractive than ever are the new cottons, though "cot ton" la no longer evidence , of their cheapness, for these will make very dressy gowns. Unl ie will be the woman arrayed la the latest Importation In English suitings, which Is a huge check, three Inches square, alternating white with some pale color like lavender or brown. Children's frocks are made of the prettiest stripes and plaids imaginable, linens In rainbow-striped coloring and the most brilliantly tinted small plaids being used, with white embroidery trimmings. . References to Age. It has come to be a piece of rude ness to question one on age; it Is tact ful to Ignore the delicate subject alto gether, and accept what Is offered by word of cnouth or appearance. Women as well as men are as old as they look and seem these days, these days, and If we can manage to dress In a fash ion that has no hint of age about It we can pass muster among the keenest eyed. The Stoat and Slender. Nothing is prettier and more becom ing to a fair, slight woman, with a pret ty complexion than white; but white gowns must be carefully avoided by her sister of too ample charms. Black Is the color for the stout woman, especlal- DAINTY BOLEROS iy If she be of the black-eyed aud black- haired type. A black gown win make her look slighter than anything else, while pale blue, light gray aud nearly every shade of red will make her "too, too solid flesh" most undesirably self assertive. A subdued shade of blue, he liotrope and olive green, with black, may all be advantageously worn by the stout woman. Mora Woe for Man. An excited man writing In London Truth, announces with an exclamation point that "it appears that the halo-like arrangement which decorates the wom en of the time is formed by wrapping the hair around a frame! How much more of their geueral appearance Is cre ated by frame contrivances?" he asks. The editor tries to reassure him by saying that while man Is necessarily ignorant of the secrets of the modern woman's surface composition, this cir cumstance need not throw him Into a panic. Since beauty Is but skin deep It may be hinted that it really makes lit tle difference whether that little be of wire, wool, buckram or "rats." Too Particular. The overparticular housekeojierg should not be too severe In keeping the bouse In order. Let It be kept L1CUU UUU I ( DU lUUb 11V VUU "til . suffer discomfort for lack of these things; but it has been observed that "a home Is not rightly governed and quite falls In Its true mission when conducted In a spirit of combat even against dirt Cleanliness does not stand ' ..it i I a l ! nexi 10 goaiiness wueu gaiueu ui a constant expense of nerves and tem per, at the cost of every other com fort" Keeping; Dresses Fresh. One of the nicest ways of keeping dresses especially evening ones fresh is to sew throughout the lining tiny perfumed silk sachets. Any odd bit of silk does for this purpose. Make the sa chet about one Inch square. Put In a layer of soft white wadding. Into which has been sprinkled some sachet pow der. Sew up and tack firmly to vari ous places In skirt and bodice. This gives the delicate elusive fragrance to your frock which Is rather hard to at tain when liquid perfume is used. It also has additional benefit of keeping away destructive moths when the gar ment Is laid aside for a time. Green Silk with Black Velvet Hare u Pattern nt.gr. The woman who is furnishing a sewing-room will find the pattern bag a necessary article. A simple but com modious one is made of a square yard of green denim, on which are two rows of pockets of the same material and deep enough to conceal the patterns AND BERTHAS. entirely. All edges and the tops of pockets are bound with red tape and brass rings are stitched on at the cor; ners by which to hang It on the door or wall Each pocket has the name of Its contents worked on It in red embraldery cotton aprons, underwear, coats or shirtwaists. , ' New Kind of Work for Women. Some genius has constructed a ma chine that it is said will do away with the stenographer and the office boy. This machine Is partly a phonograph, through which the man talks, and his message Is then automatically written out by a typewriter attachment Well, there Is the consolation that it will take women to make the parts of this ma chine, and possibly the work will be more congenial than the stenographic work. Woman Kills Wild Beasts. Mrs. Carl E. Ackerly, wife. of the member of the Field Columbian Mu seum, went with her husband to the wilds of British East Africa, from which they have Just returned. Some of the finest specimens of native ani mals which they brought home were killed by Mrs. Ackerly, who is aa ex pert In the use of the rifle. tils Life Work. "Do leave those Georgia 'crackers,' my boy, and come home. Your sisters need you, and It's high time you left the starved life you're leading and came back to your place here." . Stephen Phelps read and reread this paragraph In his college chum's latest letter. There had been many such let ters from bis friends and his family during the four years he bad spent in Georgia, and of late they had become more frequent and Insistent His thoughts went back to the time when he had arrived there, just out of college, to recuperate from a nervous strain, and Incidentally to look after his father's business Interests. It had Indeed seemed a lonely, "starved" sort of existence that he was entering upon. He remembered vividly his first im pression when he found, himself sur rounded by suspicion and hatred be cause of his Northern connections, in the midst of Ignorance and lawless ness, In what was known as the dark est corner of Georgia. The situation held something of a challenge for a nature like Stephen Phelps', and his first determination was to show his fearless disregard of threats by going unarmed and unat tended among the people. His bearing awakened interest at once, and com manded a sort of qualified respect As he learned more of their barren, un taught uncared for lives, he came to understand why these folk were suspi cious and ignorant, why life was held cheap and law despised. Here, too, was a challenge for Ste phen Phelps. It seemed that his was not the only starved life, and he deter mined to win these people to a better sort of living. He asked their advice, and took It; he discussed bis plans with them, and little by little his honest friendliness won their confidence. In spite of deep prejudice, they entered into his plans for industrial work, for Improved hous ing, and even trusted to his newly es tablished "Yankee" school their un taught children. With more and more enthusiasm he threw himself Into the work he had undertaken; he made new plans, he worked early and late. Of course there were for him occa sional visits to the Northern home, when he gave himself up to the pleas ures and activities of his old "set" for a time, and listened to fine business offers and to many pleadings for a per manent stay. But each time that he returned to Georgia the new look of hope and life In the faces of "his people" warmed his heart and seemed worth many a gay dinner and theater party. . "Come down and see for yourself why I am needed here," Phelps replied to his friend Makepeace; "then you'll understand my decision to remain." Then he planned to do still better for his people. He moved his own piano Into a large hall over one of the new storehouses, and gav6 an invitation to a Sunday afternoon service. The music attracted many ; the man more. People came by the hundred to listen to this young man of splendid optimism and unselfish life, who talked to them sim ply and earnestly of the leve of God and the brotherhood of man. Life had a new meaning for them all a mean ing and a fulness which was not lost even when Stephen Phelps laid down his wxrk. ' "He's a great loss," said a friend to Makepeace, as they walked up the ave nue. "Splendid fellow I Too bad to have thrown himself away and lost these five years In that forsaken place." "Have you ever been down there?" asked Makepeace, rather shortly. "No." ' "Well, I have; and I'd be obliged if you wouldn't repeat that remark. I used to think that way myself, but when i a seen tne worn ne accoan pllshed and the change he'd brought about through all that region, and the love and devotion of those people to him, It made his life seem about as full and worth while as some of ours." "Why, of course," apologized his friend. "You see, I didn't understand." "Oh, that's all right," said Make peace; and then he added, diffidently, "It says something somewhere, you know, about 'he that loseth his life shall find it,' and somehow It seems to me Phelps found his." Youth's Com panion. Looking- Beyond. Whatever be your condition or call ing In life, keep In view the whole of your existence. Act not for the little span of time allotted you tn this world, but act for eternity. Look beyond the narrow limits of earth, to the scenes of that eternal world to which you are going, and ever aim to do what will promote your best Interests, ten thou sand ages hence, when all the riches and honors of earth shall have vanish ed away. Then shall you rise superior to every false, unworthy principle of action, and attain the true dignity and happiness of intelligent beings. ; Then shall you be safe amid all temptations, and happy amid all trials. Rev. R. S. Johnson. A Text that Vindicates Itself. Here Is a text which can be proved or disproved a text that need not re main among the uncertainties. With jay whole heart I believe It X have never known It to fall. I have acted upon It when the answer has gone ab solutely against my Inclinations; when the way seemed clear In other direc tions and when I have bad to give up the most tempting prospects. Yet the text has vindicated Itself. - My loss has been my gain. If we do not test the text In this spirit we cannot test it at alL The text Is everything or it Is nothing. It Is not to be trifled with, taken ud and laid down, admired as poetry and neglected as discipline. "Ye cannot serve God and mammon." Joseph Parker. ' My Refngre, My Defense. God is my refuge, my defense, My Shepherd and my King, My strength, my strong Deliverer, Of whom I love to sing. And God Is my Salvation, too. My Fortress strong and tried. Beneath the shadow of His wing In perfect peace I hide. God is my Rock forever sure ; Here may I always rest ' Beneath this shade in love secure. No harm can me molest God is the glory of my' days, And of His grace I'll sing, Who gave for me His only Son, My Prophet Priest and King. -Alice N. Kendall. Only Belle-re. Be not downcast if difficulties sur round you In your heavenly life. They may be purposely placed there by God to train and discipline you for higher developments of faith. If he calls you to "tolling In rowing," It may be to make you the better seaman, and to lead you to a holler trust In Him who has the vessel and its destinies In hand, and who, amid gathering clouds and darkened horizon, and crested billows, ever murmurs the mild rebuke to our misgivings: "Said I not unto thee, that If thou wouldst believe, thou shouldst see the glory of God?" Rev. John R. Macduff. Christ the Friend. The devout heart yearns after a per sonal God. Its Instinctive desire Is for a Father and a Friend a loving eai Into which Its sorrows may be poured, a loving heart on which its weariness may rest This deep-felt want of our natures Is most fully met In the per son of Jesus Christ For here Is One whom, while we reverence and adore as God, we ca nthlnk of as clearly and love as simply, trustingly, tenderly, as the best known and loved of our earth ly friends. Rev. R. S. Medley. LESSON IN POSTAL WAYS. Superiority of Foreign Service to That In America Is Asserted. In New York It takes two hours to send a special delivery letter from Har lem to Twenty-third street. In Berlin, through the rohrpost a letter can be sent a similar distance In two minutes. It would be advantageous to all peo ple if the statesmen of the world, fore going for a season their provincial boasting, would convene In Interna tional session and exchange Ideas re garding the world's progress. I was impressed with this fact when I had occasion In Budapest to send a regis tered letter. Instead of having to wait for a clerk to copy the superscription and hand me a receipt I had simply to show the letter properly stamped and then drop It in a mechanical con trivance which Immediately issued a receipt card automatically dated and numbered.' It makes the system of registering a letter in Hungary as simple as drop ping a piece , of mail in a leter box is In America. I desired to test this in novation and so I mailed a letter In Budapest addressed to myself In a hotel In Munich. Two hours later I took the train to the Bavarian capital, and the day after I arrived In the hotel I received word that there was a registered letter for me at the post office. ' The German system of postal money order is far superior, It seems to me, to the American. You hand the money into a German postofflce, give the ad dress of the person to whom It Is to be sent and walk away with the re ceipt That ends your responsibility. The government carries the money to the house and even to the room of the addressee. Hardee Rolee in Apple ton's. Helping; aa In-valid. A trained nurse mentions as among the little things that help make an in valid feel comfortable and rested the frequent brushing of the hair and bath ing of the hands and face. "I don't know what It Is, whether these actions just divert the invalid's mind or really do effect some physical change for the better, but they certainly help the sick one to get through the day. Eau de cologne and the various toilet waters are very refreshing when added to the water or used Independently. I once heard a man say that if he couldn't both wash his hands and face and comb his hair In the morning when he got up he would choose to comb his hair. It would wake him up better. He felt something of the same sense of physical comfort as the average convalescent or Invalid." He Knew. Professor Mr. X, is there anything in your experience which qualifies you to speak so confidently on the subject of sweatshop labor? Mr. X Well, I spent four hours in a Turkish bath once. Cornell Widow. As a man gets older, he has more "hard days" to renort when he gets home at slant . GOOD toriesl A Berkeley bookseller, anxious to fill -an order for a liberal patron, wired tc God," by Canon Farrar, and to his sur prise and dismay received this reply: "No seekers after God in Chicago or New York. Try Philadelphia." The German Emperor's little daugh ter Is credited with this Incident She was tired of all the old games, so said to her playmates : "I know what we will do. Let's play at being quite poor people frightfully poor people who have only one or two footmen 1" One more Instance of the power of punctuation. Even a comma may play the very mischief. Not many years ago a distinguished graduate of Oxford decided to enter the Nonconformist ministry, and, to wear no sacerdotal garb. And he announced his Intention . in a manifesto containing the words, "I shall wear no clothes, to distinguish me from my fellow-Chrlstlans." That Ing-stock of the university and the Joy of the picture-shops, whose windows were flooded with Illustrations of the Rev. X. Y. Z. distinguishing himself from his fellow-Chrlstlans. The great Von Moltke never wasted words and despised anything that ap proached garrulity in others. , On one occasion he was leaving Berlin on a railway. Journey. Just before the train pulled out of the station, a captain of hussars entered the general's compart ment, and recognizing him, ' saluted with "Guten Morgen, Excellenzl" Two hours later the train slowed up at a way station. The captain rose, after sitting In silence during the journey, saluted, and with another "Guten Mor gen, Excellenzl" left the train. Turn ing to one of his companions, Von Moltke said, with an expression of dis gust, "Intolerable gasbag 1" . Some time ago the Osage Indians were called into council. It was In the Indian Territory and an election was approaching at which the noble red men would exercise that great privil ege, the ballot The Democrats pre pared a feast for them. They barbe cued beef and fed the Indians well. And the Indians were "for" the Dem crats. Then the Republicans Invited them to a barbecue, and they were "for" the Republicans. After It was all over the Indians met One of them addressed the meeting. "Democrat good ; feed Indian," he said. "Repub lican good ; feed Indian full." Then he continued: "Both good; Indian go home." Then they went One day the yardmaster asked an earnest employe at the roundhouse If he could run an engine. "Can 01 run an engine? If there's anything Ol'd rather do all day long it's run an en gine." "Suppose you run that engine In the house." "Oi'll do it" bluffed Pat, and climbed to the cab. He looked around, spat on his hands, grabbed the biggest lever and pulled It wide open. Zip I she went into the roundhouse. Pat saw the bumpers ahead and, guess ing what would happen, reversed the lever clear back. Out she went n again out again. Then the yardmas ter yelled : "I thought you said you could run an engine?" But Pat had an answer ready : "01 had her in three times. Why didn't you shut the door?" Biggest House on Earth. A gigantic globe tower, the biggest building In the world, Is In course of erection on Coney Island. It will be 700 feet high and 900 feet in circum ference. It will have eleven floors and 500,000 square feet of floor space. On these eleven floors there will be all sorts of things to amuse Coney's millions of summer visitors, but the star feature of them all will be the revolving restaurant and cafe, first of the kind in the world. If you are facing north when your oysters are served you will be looking west for the soup and south when the roast arrives. By the time the coffee ' and cigars come on you will be bf'J north again. In half an hour you w have traveled 900 feet around a grn circle, or thirty feet a minute. The ground floor will be an autom bile garage. Just 150 feet above th ground will be the pedestal roof gar den, 900 feet in circumference. When you get 250 feet in the air you will come to the aerial hippodrome. Here there will be a continuous four-ring circus. The main hall and revolving cafe will be 300 feet above the ground, circling around the great ball room. Another fifty feet and you come to the palm gar den In the air, a third restaurant stat uary, fountains and cascades, a seenle aerial railroad and all kinds of novel ties. At 500 feet you come, to the ob servatory platform, fitted with tele scopes. At 600 feet will be stationed the United States weather bureau and a wireless telegraph station. Very Sosplclona. "The bookkeeper has been married nearly six months now," said the Jur partner. "Welir replied the senior partn 4 "Well, he hasn't asked for a' In salary." ' j "Heavens! We'll have to ha)! Press. J a No man loves a woman . enough tu make him very grateful for the privi lege of kissing her hand.