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FURS ARE FANCIFUL
INDIVIDUAL CAPRICE . MARKS
STYLES THIS SEASON.
New Long Coats Especially Graceful
—Mixtures Sometimes Combined
in the Composition of the Ever-
Popular Stole.
In the matter of furs, which, until
recently, showed little variety, the
vogue for the picturesque is strongly
marked.
The new long coats, for example,
are made with rather full fronts,
gracefully draped around the figure
and held in place with knots of velvet
or satin ribbon.
Linings for the long coats are of
satin veiled with chiffon, or of richly
brocaded silks, often having threads
of gold or silver running through the
designs.
Small heads and tails of fur are be
ing used as motifs, under which the
garment fastens. Wide fichulike stoles
are finding favor in the eyes of fash
{onable women.
‘Three reasons why they are so pop
-ular are warmth, becomingness and
“the fact that they can be made of vel
-vet and fur or satin edged with fur.
The latter are made quite warm by
an interlining of lamb’s wool.
These long, scarflike stoles are ex
tremely supple and can be draped
about the shoulders with exquisite
grace. Often two furs are combined
in the making of these stoles. Others
are of velvet bordered with wide bands
of fur. They are always lined with
delicate satin, chiffon or brocade.
Ermime will be very much worn by
those who can afford such luxuries. It
will be made up both with and with
out the small black tails. Short scarfs
and shoulder wraps of ermine are
popular and it’ will also be used as
trimming for other furs.
The new fitchew fur is greatly in
demand. It resembles the American
skunk, but is of finer and softer tex
ture, darker and richer in coloring.
Moleskin is coming to the front
again and seal is always ~a good
choice. Muffs of fur are made larger
than ever, perfectly flat like a pillow,
or with a curved end made to throw
over the hands. This is to be a “fur
season.” If you have any old furs
packed away in camphor, bring them
out, have them remodeled and glory
in their soft warmth, knowing the
while that you are following the
fashion.
Birthday Candles,
For the birthday cake where the
number of years of the recipient can
not be expressed in candles one can
dla should be used for the multiple of
ten, which indicates the decades lived,
and as many other candles as are
needed for the single number. But if
it is wiser to avoid any ‘discussion of
years a single large candle in a large
candle holder may be used in the cen
ter and candied rose petals or other
candies may decorate the edge. There
are large candle holders for the pur
pose, which come in various flower
shapes. At a children’s party, to make
a change from the usual birthday
cake, there were individual cakes iced
with white and decorated with colored
bonbons, and a candle stood in the
center of each in a flower-shaped
SHOULD BRING GOOD FORTUNE
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Since horse-shoes are popularly sup
posed to bring good luck, the watch
holder shown in the accompanying
sketeh should bring good fortune to
its owner.
It is intended for hanging upon the
wall by the of the bed, and it is
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Afternoon costume In plain. and
striped velvet trimmed with marabout
and silk cords.
holder. The cake came to the table
on a tray looking like one large cake.
The children were delighted when
each received a candle. = ;
Sandals Up to Date.
The revival of classic dancing and
its attendant styles in costume is re
sponsible for the appearance of a mod
ern sandal intended for everyday
wear. It hails from Paris, whence
come most of the bizarre fashions. It
is an original boot, which at a little
distance has almost the effect of a
neatly laced sandal. It is carried out
in gray suede and crossed at intervals
with finely stitched straps of thin kid,
giving the effect of the Directoire
stripes used in dresses. The boot is
not divided into uppers and toe-caps,
but is made without seams, so that
the lines of the stripes are uninter
rupted from beginning to end.
a piece of stiff cardboard is cut out
in the required shape, and this is
smoothly covered with light grdy silk,
on which the seven “nails” have been
worked in silk of a .darker shade of
color, and it is then edged all round
with silk cord. At the top, in the cen
ter, a small brass ring is sewn, by
which the holder may be suspended
from a nail in the wall, and beneath
this a large dress-hook is attached,
upon which the watch may be hung.
There are, of ccurse, many other
pretty combinations of color in which
this little holder might be carried out,
and when made for use at home, in se
lecting the colors of the materials, the
color of the wall paper upon which it
is to hang should be taken into consid
eration, in order that they may match
and harmonize.
Unhappy Jane.
“Poor Jane is in despair.”
“What's the matter with Jane?”
“Why, she has just begun to real
ize that she’s too fat for an actress
_;!‘“not fat enough for a prima don
;“,¥ ‘,i; "k 3.\ I Sl TA i
Close Fellowship
5
Chnstian Life
By Rev. Washington Gladden
Columbus, Ohio
TEXT—Behold I stand at the door and
gnock, If any man hear My voice .and
open the door I will come in to him and
be with Me.—Revelations 3:20.
The companionship here suggested
between the divine and the human is |
intimate and famillar. The figure is
that of a social meal together. And"i
the great friend represents himself as
taking the initiative. He does not
force his companionship upon us. The
divine reverence for the human per
sonality is one of the great trutha]
which it-has taken the world a long
time to learn, but we are beginning
to understand it. “We force no doors
in friendship,” says Dr. King, “but,
like the Christ in Revelation, we
stand reverently at the door without,
to knock. And only if the door be
opened from within may we come in
to sup with our friend, and he -with
us.” But it is only the most inti
mate of our friends who venture to in
vite themselves to supper. . - :
:Is it not a beautiful relation be
tween the divine and the human that
is thus advocated? But what we have
learned of God from Jesus Christ
-makes it easy to accept this sugges
tion. We are sure that if. Jesus should
come to:'Columbus. the people who
loved. him might expect to have him
drop in any evening to supper, and
they would not be at all embarrassed
at hearing his familiar knock at the
door. No formalities would be called
for in his case. He would know how
to make himself at home. *“And he
that hath seen me,” he said, “hath
seen the father.” That is the kind of
triendship that the great friend wish
' es to-maintain with all of us.
‘ “But the text is a parable, as is the
‘supper of which we are soon to par
take. What is the deeper fact to
which these symbols bear witness?
It is a communion, a sharing of the
divine life by the human life. We are
partakers, Paul says, of the divine
nature. In some way he lives in us,
and we in him.
Let us not conceive that this 1s a
mere mystical impressionism. But
what is clear? When the great friend
comes .in to sup with us how we shall
be aware of his presence? It will be
something” more than a pleasurable
thrill of spiritual excitement. The
guests that:he brings with him will
'be good thoughts, generous wishes,
definite direction of life toward defi
nite objects. Now all these move
ments of mind are realities. A thought
is just as-real as a stone or a tree
or a breeze. So is a wish or a pur
pose. !
These are all realities. We are
more sure of them than of anything
else. The fact-that you cannot weigh
them in scales or measure them with
a yard stick is no proof that they are
not real. It is in these realities that
God comes into our lives. He desires
to share our thoughts, to enoble our
wishes, to guide our purposes. And
he can do this for us. The human
mind is made to be irradiated with
the divine thought, as the diamond is
made for the light. The central forces
of our lives are these thoughts and
wishes and purposes of ours. What
we habitually think about, what we
habitually wish for, what we habitual
ly choose and prefer, that are we. And
the man who wants to have the truth
of God in his mind and the purity
and love of God in his purpose can
have the inspiration that will make
his life diivne.
This, I suppose, is the kind of com
munion that the text offers us, and it
is the substance of this that we ought
Boys can merit the loss of God’s
favor. Very early a boy shows the
depravity which may be in him. All
boys may be interesting but all boys
are not good. Many of them increase
in meanness with .their increasing
years.—Rev. C. B. Mitchell, Methodist,
Chicago.
Shipwrecks, -
Not all wrecks occur at sea. Some
are taking place daily around us in
life, as sad and terrible as any ever
witnessed on the briny deep.—Rev. R.
B. Peery, Lutheran, Denver.
e e S,
i - _Money.
The higher needs of the soul can
not be satisfied with money.—Charles
B. Mitchell, Methodist, Chicago.
g e e
The man who knows God best is the
one who trusts him most. .
se s e
The higher a man climbs the more
it hurts him to fall. - -
WT L £
it may be right to fast, but it is
e e ) 8 |
to be thinking of as we sit nere be
fore this table. It was to bring men
into this relation with the great friend
that Jesus lived and taught and died
When any man has learned to realize
this great friendship it is Well- for
nim. All things are his—lifé, death,
things present, things to come.. =
ALCOHOL IS NOT NUTRIMENT
Depressing Agent Cannot Logically
Be Regarded as Food, Declares Dr.
Charles E. deM. Sajous.
On the long debated qum,tion of
classing alcohol as a food substance,
Dr. Charles E. deM. Sajous, profes
sor of therapeutics in Temple univer
‘gity, delivers the following opinion
(Monthly Cyclopedia and Medical Bul
letin, July, 1910): : ¢
“If alcohol were a food, large doses
would " prove more profitable to the
organism than small ones, but the re
verse is the case; large doses in
hibit all activities that would be en
hanced by a liberal use of food. The
debilitating action of alcohol on the
nervous system, for example, has been
demonstrated- by Bunge, Schmieder
berg, Ach, Kraepelin and others,
while Dogiel found that it markedly
depressed both motor and sensory
nerve centers. It does this not only
with nervous tissue but with all tis
sues. A depressing agent cannot log
ically be regarded as a food.”
Temper Talk.
JA girl does not look pretty when
hdr face is convulsed with rage. Her
lover will not forget how she looked.
Nor does a man look dignified, nor
does he, as a rule, talk sense, when
he is rowing with his sweetheart.
Some day, after they are married, per
haps, she will remember what a -vul
gar. fool he made of himself, once:
‘upon a time, and she will remind him
of it. And then he will be very sick
and sorry for himself.
. So don't get angry. It is never
' worth while, i -
1 And it isn't a bit clever, either.
' Any monkey will chatter if it |is
teased. Any cat will spit if its tail is
trodden on. . :
~ Try to be more human than a
monkey or a cat. Try to smile when
you feel like scowling, for when you
'scowl or frown it leaves wrinkles
which can never be removed by treat
ment of any kind, and it is not worth
while to spoil the beauty of the face
} for a scowl.
| Famous Men on Drink.
' Some remarks by famous men about
drink:. & g ; : £
The mother of sins.—Southey.
Stupifies and besots.—Bismarck,
A scandal and a shame.—Gladstone.
Traps for workingmen.—Ear] Cairns.
- The devil in solution.—Sir Wilfrid
t Lawson.
A huge nuisance and misery.—Lon
' don Times.
Liquid fire and distilled damnation.
—Robert Hall.
Devilish and destructive.—Lord Ran
dolph Churchill. : "
The nation is being throttled by the
trafic.—Lord Rosebery.
A poison in politics as well as in so
ciety.—Sir W. Harcourt. |
The mother of want and the nurse
of crime.—Lord Brougham.
God’s Good Pleasure.
Nature's forces all co-operate in the
accomplishment of her great tasks. If
only human ferces could thus co
operate for the highest ends of human
good, how different the world would
be! It was the mission of Jesus in
this world to bring into harmonious
co-operation all human forces,- under
the direction of the Divine will, for
the attainment of man’s highest wel
fare and happiness. “For it was the
}good pleasure 6f the Father that in
him should all the fulness dwell; and
through him “to reconcile all things
unto himself, having made peace
through the blood of his cross;
through him, I say, whether things
upon the earth or things in the
heavens.” :
Being a Boy Again.
If 1 were a boy again I would want
to grow in favor with God. and grow
a character which would prove the
most valuable asset in the walks and
ways of this world, and which would
be of unending and infinite worth amid
the eternal riches of the skies.—Rev.
C. B. Mitchell, Methodist, Chicago.
' Extremes.
We must be sensible in life’s ac
tivities. Too much religion is as fool
ish as too much pleasure.—Rev. C. F.
Reisner, Methodist, New York city.
Sabbath desecration and false no
tions of personal liberty embarrass
‘those who would maintain a regard for
the American Sabbaty.—.Rev. George
E. Davies, Presbyterian, St. Paul.
" The man who allows himself to
feel mean will soon look that way.
When there is nothing we can do,
there is much that God will do. '
;A:.?i‘% glon- (hat costs pothing .is
Knees Became Stifi
Five Years of Severe Rheumatism
. The cure of Henry J. Goldstein, 14
Barton Street, Boston, Mass., is another
- victory for Hood’s Sarsaparilla. This great
medicine has succeeded in many cases
where others have utterl({ failed. Mr.
Goldstein says: “I suffered from rheuma
tism five years, it kept me from business
and caused excruciating pain. My knees
would become as stiff as steel. "I tried
many medicines without relief, then took
Hood’s Sarsaparilla, soon felt much better,
and now consider myself entirely cured.
I recommend Hood’s.”
Get it today in usual liquid form or
chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs.
18 THE NAME
OF THE BEST MEDICINE
E —for COUGHS 5 COLDS
TREATED. Gi uick
nnonv lief, usually m:oee aw::
ling and short breath in a few days and
entire rel.ef in 16-45 days, trial treatment
FREE. DR. GREKNS SBONS, Box A, Atlants, Ga,
A POSITION FOR YOU
men and hogs to learn AUTOMOBILE BUSINESS
in our Machine Shops, and accept good position.
New cars for road lessons, Catalogue Free.
Charlotte Auto School, Charlotte, N. C.
WANTED FARMS fouine, Eeisose Aosios
able in price and terms, grvlng {ullfimcrlytlon. Ad
dress A, MACKALL, The Balfour,Washington, D.C,
Profitable goods are good friends
that we dearly love to part with.
For HEADACHE—Hicks’ CAPUDINE
Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or
Nervous Troubles, Capudine will relieve you.
It’s lignid—pleasant to take—acts immedi
ately. ql‘ry it. 10c., 25¢., and 50 cents at drug
stores. %
You'll generally always find that
the person who is most suspicious of
others, himself needs watching.
-‘Work, but don’t worry; work is -a
tonic, worry a poison; a day of worry
will bring more gray hairs than a
week of work.—Speed.
He Had None.
He—Don't you like to eat a peach
with the skin en?
She—No, it's like kissing a man
with a mustache—er—l think I hear
mother calling.
Tearful Palr.
“I'm the saddest thing there is—the
ghost of a lost love.”
“Huh! I'm worse than that! I'm
the ghost of a vanished bank ac
count!”—Puck.
: Expensive Possession,
A small applicant for Christmas
cheer was being interviewed by the
charity worker. -
“What is your father?” asked the
latter.
“'E’s me father.”
“Yes, but what is he?”
“Oh! ’'E's me stepfather.”
“Yes, yes, but what does he do?
Does he sweep chimneys or drive
'busses, or what?”
“0-0-w!” exclaims the small appli
cant, with dawning light of compre
hension. “No, ’'e ain’t done nothin’
since we've ’ad 'im."—London An
swers. !
TIED DOWN.
20 Years' Slavery—How She Got Free
dom.
A dyspepsia veteran who writes
from one of England’s charming rural
homes to tell how she won victory-<n
her 20 years’ fight, naturally exults in
her triumph over-the tea and coffee
habit: .
““T feel it a duty to tell you,” she
says, “how much good Postum has
done me. lam grateful, but also de
sire to let others who may be suffering
as I did, know of the delightful meth
od by which I was relieved. bos
“I had Ruffered for 20 years from
dyspepsia, and the giddiness that usu
ally accompanies that painful ailment,
and ‘which frequently prostrated mie,
I never drank much coffee, and coco@
and even milk did not agree with my
impaired digestion, so I used tea, ex
clusively, till about a year ago, when
I found in a package of Grape-Nuts tll;g
little book, “The Road to Wellviile." *
“After a careful reading of the book
let I was curious to try Postum and
sent for a package. I enjoyed it from
the first, and at once gave up tea‘in
its favor. : 5 o
“I began to feel better very soom.
My giddiness left me after the first
few days’ use of Postum, and my stom
ach became stronger so rapidly that it
was not long till I was able (as I still
am) to take milk and many other ar
ticles of food of which I was formerly
compelled to deny myself. I have
proved the truth of your statement
that Postum ‘makes good, red blood.’
“I have become very enthusiastic over
the merits of my new table beverage,;
and during the past few months, have
conducted a Postum propaganda among
my neighbors which has brought bene
fit to many, and I shall continue to tell
my friends of the ‘Detter way’ in which
I rejoice.” Name given by Postum
Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Read the little book, “The Road to
Wellville,” in pkgs. “There’s a rea.
ot i T , .