(From our X, York « WAKENING [enix {s 41 pee ent ne sponi-at i gl the principal serve fies of Mre, Marr BK. T. Chapin. Miw, Chapin la 2 resident of i wry bait she ix sa firmly cons! vines "that there sre i many ideals to New York whieh are take} ing a long winter nap that «he makes n trip th the great city every week atid spends at least two days In disturblug the slumborers, Where she (ings has pevor awakened brand new sie Juni whe way ba perfectly wn andi any ideals wh had whe Me Rome ones Sa far she lias been extremely succes ful. She i wud, for Instance, that it | in perfecily cass to hold Lssbands wid wives together, when they "re in danger of drifting apart, if awakened, "1 coulds't count for sou the great | number able to bri of married pairs 1 have been g together again when they that they had no longey said Mrs time enough- haven't gone beyond all ~[ of this kind in wiildh complete happiness canna be re. stored." Mra. Chapin "nt means were guile fove for each othey "If only ny Chapin I have tin if thing Rope before | know anything about it am jnre hope ie Go case it a woman of independ + has for years been en gaged in spreading the doctrine of new thought "We eall it 1 " she explained to 2 caller wio was much interested in ler | work, "but what it really is is simply practical Christianity," My spler vila Chapin is a tall, strong woman, Hy proportioned, She exhalas | 3 Her maguificent blagk eyes, | sombre at timed and again smiling, tell | of the story of her succéss in winning | her hearers to her way of regarding a problem, | Hey influonce is not exerted solely for | Rockefellers, Fathet and Son, | Are Versatile with Good Advice = Ot mang years, white the drills were heating theit rhythmic way into the earth in search of gushing oil wells, and the machivery of business was grinding busily in the transformation of oil into gold. the voice of the Hocke- fellers was s¢ldom heard in public, but in recent years, especially since the elder John D. Rockefeller retired from busi- ness and his san and namesake went into it, the policy has changed and thoo- | 'sands of persons in various communis their ideals end be = | to central truths. te be®aric of furly and womey of sta tion whose fdedin, pinned a hit he the wiunllold experiences of Ule: she prov prose' 16 pill up OUT of the mire, She eattios ber meskag® to souls froth 'he reighborbood of the Delmont Hotel. here elie stapes Wheh che in In Net | York, Jo the Bowery Lodging Hotes, + where she frequently spends an evening reaming a feiv ideals for the "down rad ¢ tute" and agais te the gathering of nawuhase, sehete she [a wolcome by 44 eazhusiastie gn audience as thet whic) [= J her on Sunday evenings in Berk. ing Lyconny. ix : : "Althopgh Loam 8 New Thoughter, 1 | lave ame Tory conse "ative fens an jhe viabjeet of marriage." sald Mrs, Chdpin iu «peaking of the interest wich a re cent address of hem off the subject of marriage had dd, "1 da not betler Ar divores atally 18 eotly possible, I am sure, to regwaken the love for each other with which husbatid and wife be gan their maevidd fe if the right meth- nre nsed, { "So much {8 being $9id about the re lationship of meh and women thar for any ong to say mere on the sohject may | | s#em th he taxing human patieace." she | said "So nouch 'that is disgusting, callow, i | | stupid and vicious has been uttered op { | Unis subject that a normal, well balance) | human being might well conceive a prejudice against any one who <hould | attempt to say anything further, The | | Sibjeet, ns a phase of so-called feminism, | ix controversial, and | try usually 1s avoid controversial subjects amid stick However, in all the welter of talk some flings so greatly ueed saying that 1 am, going somewhat | against my fudlindtlon' 10 speak on he subjeet. : : "To say 'that 'mien' und' women « antagonistic or to do anything to create antagonism blasphemes life and any ! sweetness and holiness there is dn lite. | "In its sex relationships the life of | | that Lopes 1 { eherislies also the ideal of m~egcredness af tiers and person that shall Pmeage | ~ homayity has come a long way fect stil) drag. They linger in the dying past awd, dragging, cause hs to ! stumble. "We haltiagly grope wand, but we have an ideal. Although Some ameng are hardly conscious of it we do, nevertheless, have an ides). "The ideal is of a perfect monogamy a love and union that shall endure through two joint lives. This ideal, at the very least. we have. That same something in the hearts all of shall not wholly die. our way for us of ts forever. "When most we are convinced of that theh most' of owr hearts ave lifted up liad it Terepliad, 1 T liad vot saved. i There Is my secret, and | advise you al) | to save every eit you .con." { He is always interested fo the finan: | cial methods of others, even when they | are of un small scale. When lie was in Augusta one widtéf a. wouian came to shamy Lis little gracddaughter's bair, { As she was goiag away Mr. Rockefeller | asked ber in. 3 kipdly way. if she yas | gotting ~n well, ao, "1 am beginhing to get a pretty good business," she replied. "Are you saying any mouvey?' i "Not yet: I have a Tittle girl and my- | self to support and expenses dre heavy." | "Wall,' said Mr. Rockefeller, "vou should cave a little. Let me kuow the | nest time Fou come if you have dane] this." "1 couldn't thiuk of anything fo sas | but 'Yes, sir!" and 1 1ét some one else bave the job of shampooing his little | { JOHN row Coprright, 300, by Ges M. Pduondess On ties, but, clielly in New. York nud Cleve. | lapd, have beed edificd and instructed by the admoditions of the Rockefellers on various subjects. On the same day recently hoth father | and son indulged in lay sermons, Mr. Rockefeller, Br. popularizing his re- | yak Ly the distribution of 711 nice, bright)" uew pennies... The test was his i favorite one of "Work and Save" Mr. | Rockefeller hay preached so many of these in ihe last few years that he has | ouly to yo down a little way into his | memory aul tarh ap owe whenever he ces a receptive audience, On this ac | casion he drew glowing pictures of the | magic growth of & forthe road a penty. | "This little hoy can bny two papers for his penny aud double hiz eapital by selling them. In a he will | hase seven cents to give to the mission { canse," he explained t | i few days i To Young Girls. | To the gitls sistecn and cighteen | years old he made "the practical sugges: tion that they buy sowe cheap cloth and | embellish it with needlework, sell it aud | buy something better and wake at up | more elaborately, so that it can be sold at a higher price. Thus their pennies would develop inte qharters aud even into dollars in time, Several years 830 when asked what he considered the best method uf achiev jug success Mr. Rockefeller replied with three words, "Save, save. save! Unless you practise thrift," he added. "you can never become much, Lay aside every dollar you can, and after awhile vou will have enough to start in business" 1t sounds so simple that the man who conscientiously shaves ten cefts off bis lueh every day for a week is surprised to see that he has only sixty cents on saturday hight. A little more than a year ago a number of school teachers werd metfibers of a sleighinz party that was being enter tained by Mr. Rockefeller. Due young Woman, overcome by the magnificence of the ostaté as ther wore glidirg through it, sxeimed, "Oh. Mr. Rocke feller, how wemderful that you should bave ofl this®™ "1 arver shoul! have | souvenir. grandganghter's hair, for 1 did not dare { £0 baek nnd tell lim that 1 hadn't been ! able to save doy money." explained the woman afterward. { AS to the Sabhatk. Sermona for the very young are quite | in Mr. Rockefeller's line. His jdeas | abont keeping the Sabbath (ree from seq: | nlar entertainment are well known. One | Sunday when he was takicg a little stroll | after church service be came upon some boys playing. macbles, which gave occa | sion for a Grief homily. "Don't you | know thot il is wrong te play marbles on Sunday?" Aw there wae no prompt response Mr, Rockefeller 16d Low wrong it wan. Again. a scliool boy ssw Mr. Rockefgller's gloves drop from his aute- | mobile and picked them up to keep an a | Later his consciénce hurt lif | and be sent them back Mr. Rockefel- | ler in acknowledging the receipt of the! gloves inserted. the. hope that tle boy | would always be able to wake right de cisions where matiers of honor were con: cerned. Keep on playipg golf. ke frequently | { { i { preaches sermonettes on the value of be- | ing out in the open and of driving the | little ball overs the grees. Que day when | he was' particularly well pleased with | his success he advised the Rev. Drie | Bushnell, with whom he was playing. to | tuke a course in golf and get a real repu- | tation. "Then" chuckled Mr. Roc kefel- | ler, "Lwill play pou." . Should Learn to Forgive. In his most seriots mood Mr. Rocke | feller said to his congregation in Cleye- ! land at the conclusion of a talk on for- giveness :--" We must al} learn to for give: pot with a sullen heart, but fully and freely that our lives may be blessed." As Jobn D. Rockefeller has preached wost frequently. in Cleveland to persous counected with the church Le attends there, $0 his son bas used. from time to time. 'the foram of the Tifth Avence | Baptist Church Bible Class in New York for the admonition of bis hearers, He | has. however, oa occasion preached ia Carnegie Hall and 'ili other public places | in the Ewpire State. He is slightly more chiry of ddlivering his remarks | When the andience is limited to one or two persons than his father is. [lis ser- | wond are usually of a little greater | length that those of bis parent. and they seldom Lave the glimmer of buwor, or. | rather, of genlality.: that Nr. J. D. Rockefeller, Sr. lets play over bis re: marks at times, He is tways every i | rarGes v Life as a Stream. "let us think of HES as a stream and olrselves x wien Ia bosts op that strom" Be admopished ap audience | 'a geod Christian, {| more pla farder to teach the mind. Who last somue of wen, and the first BYOup is represent | #d by a man with oars who lies baek in Lis bogt and looks at the sky, letting his | boat drift. He is the type of man who is always saying that he is not ade quately paid and is computing the high | cost of living. class starts to pull upstream, but turns aud joins the pleasire seekers. third class is the man who keeps on pulling upstream and finally arrives." Our "There are three groups | The wan of ihe second | In the | ; at { | the { blasphemy I mentiobing ! ileal tr lhe Young "You young we up a feller sail tering sty what little business car preparatory {o business to ve your stand? 11 yon do as possible and merely k letter of va outract, You are not g to be asked to hecome partners in the Hm. Bat if you to il HEL you long Tor a position Wien the out belou live and act ucecording will aot live thject of being good with to the Church eam l ranted the opinion thy da the neeesksary wark. with, man should welfare, and gain, of what it cost others, bit must. choose good most good in the to belong tq the thers, and he not look ce pleasure regardless the life that medns the greatest Drink and Failure. Several times Mr. John PP. Rockefeller, Je., has axprested his conviction that the mon who drinks cannat succeed or make He has now spoken iy ou the mdtter. adding the cant Lint that great corpora tions «io wot employ men who drink, and as an iilustration of how men might get on if they lt aleabol alone, he testified that peither be nor Lis father had eve tourbed the stuff. Lest bis aearers might think that total abstinence would get them a lucrative | Job forthwith, Mr. Rockefeller went op | to paint ont that the best way to get a | start ia life is to jump in somewhere and very sig | lands you, In addition to preaching temperance. | Mr. Rockefeller laid emphasis necessity for social purity. no need for yonng men to sow wild omts: it is not worth while to sear the body in | It the Bivle | classbe of the city. the men's clubs snd the Young Mews Cliristian Assdeiation | wonld stand togother for pei.ooal pur ity, would practice it and have 'nothing to do with the men who did not try to ; lead clean Hves it wonld go along way toward solving the problem of the social 1 A Le asserteq. ineid ound a on 16 hookse ions of liberal ideals. ception of his political addresses, F {method of attack is always the same, jJust as Voltaire satirized Lelbnitz's opti- mism in "Candide," so Mr. than express his opinions direct}: his op may X ance during the | twenty years. do the best you can. wherever the job Franos Suing Ah hat Horas gaits Mr. France has a marvellous power of 2%- pression asleep under son the | breathing the "There is {Of Paris during t {Ing to the story of ond who has witnessed the scenes described ression, which he MRS. MARY E.T. CHAPIN. wen BY MIRE Se Though that fair drew is bigher (han the yet demouds, ot must regret when human conditions anything race We toad the imperfect vision of our morality lead to anything else. "Even thar monogamy whick least fur a continuance of love Tonks ind {union through two joint lives often does i baad, to our woe, often will fail of uNimert™ Vince the constience, Low. ver. awnkened™ othe sneredaess of Joining of the lives of wen mst fee) Hat jr ois on ao accaptanything less as an ond ef onesclves in any way Will minder 1g folfilnfent. "lt is almost wearisome (a caver sueh oll gronpd. even ta the extent of merely the the Yet it Vial ideal anil women, we igi og Frew L basis fo the shme hoy Spirit in this, our Ife an earth X from which his Bow utterly 1 rely to the as the bears to we ? FRANCE has been the true spirit of «(ly than any ot! h author. He wus g Paris eve: reets. Just as Ber 'assy, Mme sae An busy qhayvs Neaf ta r which he v arn Livy » Mon ved fo gaze ip 'Le 2 boy 1 I tows at the hooks and ts of an a: £ at things and of J color, a bookseller, imporiant i Throughout his life has remained his friend, | his master. The his novels cent and there Is scarcely] works into which the life of; is not infroduced. Franca's literarv ideal Is expressed iu! ime de Sylvestre Bonnard," one of} t novels. This 1s the story of an and hearing the th say so, nts ofl } of bookshop, of his most old savant who takes an irlerest iu wn! orplian g and rescue | whose motherr. he ofice loved | her from (li treaument. That | Yet round tils simple subject Ana- | tance weaves a. delieious littic | the cloak age the read 1 detect Mr. . He has always of his easy flowing! g evety now andi political opin. been champion But, with the one + * n co's 10 , destroys nent by ridicule, by showing up # foibles. This is the method employed ith "L'orme 'osler," and in series which fgeret ge history of be considered Whether he writes of FE vpt of Sicily, scent of its orange trees, or he Hundred Days. the beljeve that he is iisten. ts sultry sky; ader can almost This power of ex- possesses equally with r. Rehan, | Without it to wrilé history is Impossible he considers, { He believes in Ronan's famous phrei- "L'tistolre n'est qu CHE pauvre pete jStience confpeturate The one fact that {has sianifichnee for lum is the daily 1. jof the peop OT the age about which jwrites Tals ts whit constitutes the no. jelly and the value of his last novel, "Los {Deux au: Saif jn ahich he presents the levents in Pare during the Revolution os he considers all important. |. 'a 1Iving speciacie before the reader's ejes. 135m Very Simple Matter to Hold Hu and Wives Together If They Would Follow New Thought Doctrine." = tr AL KUPEAEE th olf Thess 8d Presson 6 mupiilost fF Wet difnpant From ofhet wxiatent whlch dA not Riel we oe rakes IM Era fenrfile alome | tal give : We then gan to Hace th Sauda of the fam thong! tha 'the tare « tegan i 'ensisl, al ta be § ih hare for the avid Bry unl. fe are helpless fife to ihe Llind iostinet "ot TY Loren firadinet ri ibis. at survive ta patertity Awd reufinie thi this hii rae onal Pe fate fuss fer iont (hint in men aed ty the ind in thsi on ue ay tikes each atler fla a "Fhey are «dl Wotirn de i thy Mmuahiaigs to Then the the Cin + ath Trem un Dine Youle polic ap Ent oF the treed physical bas gr ¢ thet in art. SO hCe hthink Ie ix itake: it nn @ of what is well peiasle have sori drift wilt proses in capt other apart." a Foti doen't think that a woman is trerous who poremits hee husband to get t diiuree so that be may marry « woman tug wi he het grown to ears wore than ik iat sacl' a wothan is gener said Mrs. Chapin, if sand mind ro hater she wil but | think Lustead ) SOLE ope «best tuing stand t within the Here i goad tor hen she will fing it so." 0 to the Bowery what dawn apd outs? say to my friends up women nre all alike ich enn } mtil men of id Lihg a tn re kg ose audience who is now éntitely fecigitugd. retuined to' his family, mak of hits PR al Vasoines becaure 1 believe in his power to do this. - Puch one bad wil the power within him, but be was noc awiiee of it. speak in different places | often different men in the audiences. and after wy address 1 seek them out and to then personally. 1 sdy to each one, * "an give up your drink and your dope if ou will, you can make a good and dedent man: all that de necessary for you to do is (0 tap the well of strength within ron. "1 speak to oi; newsboys the same way. EK 2 three vears iow I have been address. lug audiences of newsbogs down ton. These iittle chaps gre among my best friends, "1 tell then that in some one of the boys in that very room there Ry be an Avraham Lincoln or gu equally #onderful 1. who only needs to be developed perly to become the greatest man of day, TAO oue knows. I say, 'what is in we of us, what power aud what talent. It depends on each one of you what sort of men you will make, You cau all he what sou really want to be. [It rests with you. All that is necessary is for you ally want it and then to set ghout apping that well of power which is in you. Mrs. Chapin in her Boston home alco men end women and boys ani round Ler to preach her gospel of "power I, and by her per- alks with each one to awaken and ideals of a more lofty or effectual [ler house in Boston and her studio in New York are besieged by those who k Let \ rathers a0 aavice, any come to me to ask advice about problems which confront them on every hand. Marriage is not a specialty of mine, but it happens to have been among the subjects of a recent course of addresses I have been giving, and my re marks on the subject met with much But all who come, whether they are troubled about their marriages or hy some other thing, I say there is ielp for everyhody if ther will ouly hope and believe the favor to There is a great force about which We Kiow all too little which is waiting hitmagity to make use of it. It is ike electricity, which always existed. which was of no use to the world science fom the instr but | ment whereby it might be harnessed and ! used | 10 de i is | awakened to ul ie Mouy a the race ros i a ne t f urd in the Bowery Lodg "Hercules Strangling the Hydra' KEYSER ure of who of the ih SEIS. the old Gy This other force' has the human ur a dynamo. Al that he needs * to awaken to the fact that be ix A dypiamo amd that he has endless gifex abd endless power and he will be able to do as he wishes. He will be able to think things ont and to think them out When he.can do that he will fo longer he willing WW squander the hetter thing forthe less desirable. "For instapee, do you think that & man who was reall, awake abd able to think out would be willing fo set aside vile whionh he loved in his youth smi } + borne him childven for a tem- porary fauey which meaus only the ut- tractiveness of youth aud prettiness "That waald not he possible for a mun Wha could think straight. He would realize that surface attraction of this sort such a fittle (hing, such a passing. Unwiportant thing, in comparison with so touch that was (iver and bigger. It would not weight at all with him" being | stra * for Castlegould myth cobcerning that one of Hercules uhors in which be overcame the Hydes. The muscular figure of the hero as he ids on a rock in the water is strained Lolds the Hydra, whom he has don- his strength and whose six giving np streams of the pre- There is #1 tenseness and composition. which con" Court of Palms The og howl and figure, is hall feet tall. The basin is Lhe the Td Tor the fountain will it the ; exhibition of Architectural I . in New York ter model