JORDAN PUT HIS FOOT IN IT ie Woman Question. One Wants Her Work led into Man's. She Must Progress Upon the Lines as the Sterner Sex. A Bright Woman Some Pert Things. rdan' remarks to the young h igh School class of 1903 tIed considerable comment. At at of the president of the PoWaity Club and with the peri tth writer, we give some exa a let, written by a resident *io is neithe a suffragist ior e mmber of the Political b. As Dr. Jordan has proi he did not discuss the suffrage lomentloaed the ballot more indifferenee or dispar4wii probably feel that the mntse aei more appropriately tW were those of Miss Miller, i "Th Ti'es. The of today points out the atmpt of any man to set eti s of men, delnl What Dr. Jordan t C4hef duly Iordained i' From the letter we ' remarksto the one of them has,through her professional labor, been able to provide a home for others. I was quite indignant and doubtless many others were, and it may make converts to your cause. Outsideand away from the question, as you regard it from your club view, there was another rppellant fea.ure in Dr. Jordan's remarks. I feel that there was a decided inappropriateness in it,as it was a mixed class-and if it had not been, the instinct of wifehood ard motherhood is supposed to exist in every girl's nature and she does not require the promptings of exortation to incite her to fulfill her mission, all things being in keeping with it. They all know the things he suggested,. if they do not,they will develop in due. process of time and circumstances. Woman is man's co-worker, he cannot do, without her. Where his work leaves off and her's begins is a line no human being can define for they shade into and supplement each other more or less as ope or the other is stronger or weaker, IAs in the artistic world the more delicate shades are often those which make the | 0etona of the work. The subtle and interlacing takes place id of either. far too late, to attempt anto any one sphere ol a God-given right to