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Another meeting, a social one, had for its subject:
_Tea_. Paper, "Tea Culture"; "Tea in literature"; reading, "The Boston Tea Party," by Holmes; reading from "Cranford," The Tea Party; toasts, presented by members, drunk in tea.
A program for the year on Domestic Science begins each month with a roll call, answered by Helpful Hints. Here is one meeting:
_Roll call_: Helpful Hints on Vegetables and Soups.
_Paper_: Furnishing a Dining-room.
_Paper_: Furnishing a Bedroom.
Discussion of certain recipes (read aloud).
Practical demonstration.
Another meeting was even more interesting:
_Roll call_: Helpful Hints for the Kitchen.
_Paper_: The Evolution of the Modern House.
_Paper_: The Woman Who Cleaned Atlanta.
Notes on Meats and Deep-fat Frying, by members.
Discussion: Made-over Dishes.
Practical demonstration.
_Discussion_: Use of b.u.t.ter subst.i.tutes.
A charming yearbook has come from Flatbush, Long Island:
_The Ocean_. Importance of the Ocean; Life in the Deep; Sea Animals; Whales and Whaling; Turtles and Tortoise Sh.e.l.l; Sharks, Sword Fish, Sea Serpents; Modes of Fishing in Various Countries; The Sponge; Pearls and Pearl Diving; Sea Gardens, Sea Weeds and Mosses; Sh.e.l.ls; Superst.i.tions and Folklore; Coral; Birds of the Sea; Phenomena of the Ocean; Influence of the Sea on Poetry and Music; Marine Painting; Deep Sea Explorations; Evolution of Sea Craft; Famous Navigators; Pirates; History of the Battleship; Naval Heroes; Polar Explorations; The Life Saving Service; Light-houses and Beacons; Roll Call, answered by Fish Stories.
A new idea from Tacoma, Washington, is a Query Club. The members write on slips of paper the questions they wish answered and the president gives the slips to a committee of three to prepare the answers for the next meeting of the club.
A club in the West doing practical work reports:
It has the promise of a city market.
It has made a study of the state pure-food laws.
It has personally inspected dairies and ice cream factories, and studied the state laws of weights and measures, and had lectures on them.
It has had a weights and measures exhibition at the state fair, and is working on a new weights and measures law.
It has written to the Secretary of Agriculture for valuable bulletins on household economics, to be distributed among the women of the state.
A club in Illinois which has addresses before it made by "ministers, doctors and school superintendents," as well as papers by members, has studied these topics:
Pure Food; Juvenile Courts; Industrial Homes; The School as a Home; The Home as a School-Maker; Books by Age and Temperament; The Psychology of Success and Failure; Environments: natural, civic, esthetic and ethical; The Psychology of Occupation and Dress; Playgrounds, Games and Systematic Recreations; Woman's Place in Civic Improvement; The Conservation of Health; and, What the People Have a Right to Expect of the High School. Other clubs will find these may easily be expanded into many interesting sub-topics, and many of them may be used as suggestions for practical work in the home town or city of the club.
A Kentucky woman's club, meeting fortnightly all the year round, has for its current subject Rome and Italy. The meetings open with a roll call, followed by from two to four papers, sometimes varied with readings, music and discussions. For the responses at the roll call such themes are suggested as: Something about Italy; An ancient Roman and something about him; Quotations from Shakespeare's "Coriola.n.u.s"; Something About statuary you have seen; Quotations from Marcus Aurelius; Quotations from or about Petrarch; Quotations from "Romola."
The themes for papers are; Italy in Roman Times; Legends; The Eternal City; The Romans; The Republic; Early Literature; Early Art; Michelangelo; Italian Opera; Statesmen; Master Minds; Philosophy; Naples; Growth of Ecclesiastical Power; Dante; Humanism; Italian Art; Italian Musicians; The Renaissance; 1492 and Its Triumph; A Battlefield for Aliens (modern Italy, 1530-1796); Patriots; Sicily; Modern Romans.
One meeting is given to an annual reception.
A club of three hundred members in the East is divided into standing committees, each member being on as many as she chooses. They are: Literature, music and drama, art, science, sociology, home and social relations, education, and hospitality.
One year this program was presented:
_Education_. Address: The function of story-telling in modern education, with ill.u.s.trative stories.
_Music and Drama_. Address by an actor-manager: Behind the scenes; Music.
_Art_. Address: j.a.panese arrangement of flowers; Music.
_Home and Social Relations_. Society; Early colonial life; Southern society; Intellectual society; Society to-day (four papers).
_Sociology_. Two addresses: The Probation Court, and, the Children's Court, both by officers.
_Literature_. Address: Lincoln and the people; Music.
_Science_. Address with lantern slides: The wild birds and how to attract them.
A club in Pennsylvania prefaces its year book with these ten commandments:
1. Thou shalt have no other clubs before this one.