Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 20 May 1895 — Page 4

Fill

OUR TRADE

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And Still Another Invoice.

This week, with the promise more next week.

Ami we have made arrangements with the best factories to send lis

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So that we can guarantee our latest styles in footwear the

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Ours Is The Only Shoe Store County.

Straw Hats and Summer Underwear

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MONUMENTS!

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J. B. PTJSEY.

411. Main St. Greenfield, Ind.

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I A N S

ONE GIVES RELIEF

WOMAN'S WORLD.

VRS. JAMES SADLIER, WHO HAS

CURED THE LACTARE MEDAL.

The Chicago Audubon Society—The Girl* of Today—She ?,!ii! os It I'ay—Dr. I'.irkluirst's Views on Woman Women's

Wajcs—A Groat Victory.

On Lactare Sunday, the mid-Sunday of Lent, Most Rev. Archbishop Fabro of Montreal, on behalf of the University nf Notre Dame, Indiana, presented to Mrs. James Sadlier of his congregation the Lactaro medal, awarded annually by the universitj" to somo American Catholic layman in recognition of distinguished services to the church or tho

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mm

\v

MIN. JAMi:S SADI-IKR.

country. Tho medal is in a manner tho American counterpart of tho Golden Rose, which tho pope sends every Easter to one of tho Catholic sovereigns of Europe.

For many vears Mrs. Sadlier has been bool each of which points v/ritm moral. At tho tr.no sho commenced writing tlio majority of Catholics in this country were Irish, and all of he? books treat of Irish lifo. Sho has written and translated something like (0 works, and ail of them have found wido sale. Mrs. Sadlior's maiden name was Madden, and she camo from Ireland. She is 75 vears of ago.

The Chicago Audubon Society. Tho up to date woman may havo po-

likes, but tho Chicago Audubon society insists she shall not indulge in dead birds. This fashionable adornment is emphatically declared to bo thoughtless cruelty. In a word, the object of this comparatively now and unique organization of men and women is tho protection of birds. To this end a monthly meeting is hold at tho Athenreum.

So extensive has become tho killing of birds for feminine fashion that the subject is attracting widespread attention among ornithologists. Tho Chicago Audubon society, however, claims to be the only organization formed for tho condemnation of the use of birds for millinery purposes.

At tho regular meeting hold yesterday afternoon tho Rev. Georgo Pratt read a paper on "Amateur Ornithology," followed by musical numbers. The audience was mado up mostly of women who practico what they preach by not wearing birds in their bonnets, though they indulge in ostrich plumes on tho plea that this does not necessitate the killing of tho bird. "There are 8,000,000 birds slaughtered annually in tho namoof fashion," said Mrs. E. Ireno Rood, president of tho society "As an organization wo proposo to be instrumental in tho protection of birds and in timo introduce such bills in tho legislature. At present wo aro much interested in tho bill now pending which relates to tho gamo lavs of Illinois. "Tho Chicago Audubon society iff. I believe, tho only organization of t^m kind in tho United States," sho continued. "Thcro was ouo in New York, but it has disbanded."

Tho society numbers 4-1 members and was organized several months ago. Chicago Times-Herald.

Tlio Girls of Today.

That tho American girl is making rapid strides in tho direction of a higher degree of physical perfection is shown by the work going 011 in tho gymnasiums of schools and colleges devoted to her education and in the outside clubs organized for athletic purposes. Every form of athletio culturo is now enthusiastically practiced by young women. They aro riding with tho hounds, they aro on the tennis courts, they aro fencing and bowling, they aro riding horsoback and bicycles, they are rowing boats and sailing yachts, and thoy are tho admiring patrons of dog kennels and horse shows. They havo not invaded the prize ring because they are not brutes. Yery few of them have organized with ball clubs ur football teams, for thore is a point where womanly dignity must stop, though one of tho leading agitators for female physical culture in England is a zealous advocate of football as a ladylike accomplishment.

In all this there is groat hopo for the new woman. Tho girls of today aro likoly to become the new women of the new century. If they oxpoct to hold their own on torms of anything like equality with mon a high degree of physical health and strength will bo one of their chief requisites. But whether they do or not physical culture will not bo a drawback. Clear heads, sound lungs, strong limbs and forms after tho Venus do Milo order will add to their attractivenoss as well as to their happiness. As it is probablo populating tho earth never will go out of fashion, it will bo a gain all round if tho coming generations aro not handicapped in tho raco. by tho physical misfortune of horedity. —Chicago Tribune

She Makes It Pay.

A young woman in San Franciaeo, or rather California, for the state if* her

field Gf operations, is making a good living and is having a great deal of fun as a Traveling photographer. She embarked in the life because she was tired of the city, and she had so little knowledge pertaining to her occupation that when she attempted her first picture—that of two young men who wished to preserve themselves to posterity on a load of hay —she didn't know enough about her camera to get the plate exposed, but she soon conquered all these tniies and has made a reputation ior good pictures, V'liich insures a cordial welcome whenever sho returns to a field previously visited. She travels in a buggy, starting out in the early spring, and returning when sho feels liku it.

She is fearless and needs her cool courage occasionally when she strikes a lonely stretch ot country. An all day's travel sometimes brings her to a place where she can get neither bed nor board. Then, as night approaches, she puts

011.

tho rato of #20 a ton, and ront in tho vilest purlious must bo paid at a higher ratio upon tho invested capital than is asked on Fifth avenue? If j'ou and every other man and woman could bo brought to realize these things and to ponder thom a little, would they not cease to be? Surely it must bo our ignorance, not our hard heartedness, which permits them now."

The "Piccadilly."

This is a delightfully becoming hat, known as tho "Piccadilly." It will suit almost, any face and can bo worn on almost any occasion. It is mado in a very flno cream straw, lined with black straw

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and smartly trimmed with a wido band and big bow of black satin ribbon, surmounted by a full black paradise osprey and intermixed with bunches of buttorcups, somo black and somo golden yollow. ......................

A Great SufTrago Victory.

Full woman suffrage in south Australia is an accomplished fact. Tho telograph announces that Queeu Victoria has signed the bill, and it has becomo a law. Moro than 1,000,000 squaro miles of territory with a fertilo soil and temperato climato, a country destined to support a population of hundreds of millions at no distant day, is dedicated for ever to equal rights for women. This is tho greatest single victory tho cause has evor gained.'

Women are"niade voters in 'a r'ogiou larger than tho combined aroas of New York, Massachusetts, Maine, Connecticut, Now Jersey, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Is-

S.-

011

a man's hat, kept for such occasions buttons up a long black alpaca ulster to increase the masculine appearance, sees that IUTST revolver is in good working order and rides

The sum of 500 in

tho bank, with tho memory of many pleasant adventures, is the result of three years of this nomadic picture tak- 1 ing.—San Francisco Letter.

Ir. l' irkhurst's Views on Woman. The greatest thing a woman can do is to do tho tiling that sho was specifically endowed and ordained to do, and that is to bear children and train them for the uses and service of the world they are born into, and only such worn on as are morally or intellectually incompetent to appreciate the full denotement of this, or who have greater ambition for aggressiveness or conspicuitv than they have for fulfilling their mission, will bo inclined to resent this statement of tho case as an indignity, writes the Rev. Charles II. Parkhurst, 1. 1)., in Ladies' Homo Journal. -I have yet to bo convinced that any very considerable number of these aro disposed to resist nature's intentions for them, but tho actuating impulse of those who do is doubtless a passion for some sort of celebrity and an impatience at the seclusion and tho restraints which femininity, so construed, imposes upon them. They are not content to bo known only in their children, and that is

0110

great reason why their chil-

dren aro so littlo known. If Jochebed had had her head full of theories about an enlarged sphere for women and had gono about Egypt stumping for femalo

litical bees in her Sunday bonnet if sbej enfranchisement, the littlo hero of tho pected to begin.—Now Vork Letter.

bulrushes would probably havo shared tho fato of tbo other malo children of tho period and tho lawgiver of Israel never havo been heard of.

Women's Wages.

From an article on .tho prevailing poetry in New York, which appeared in The Century Magazine, read carefully this paragraph: "Can you appreciate tho unspeakable danger, moral as well as physical, involved in the fact that among tho 100,000 women in our city who earn their living and often the living of children and men, too, tho average wage, not the lowest, but tho average, where some aro paid pretty well, is only 60 cents a day? Have you tried to understand the tenor of lives like those of seamstresses, I who get from 20 to 85 cents a dozen for making flannel shirts and .$1.50 a dozen for making calico wrappers? Or to fancy how it must feel to labor for such pittances in cold and semidarkness from 4 in tho morning until 11 at night? Or to estimate their purchasing power, when coal must bo bought by tho

t-

land, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina,

Georgia,

Florida. Alabama, Mississippi, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Kentucky, Tennessee, West Virginia and tho Indian Territory.

This act commits to full woman suffrage the government of a territory much larger than the United States from tho Atlantic coast to tho Mississippi river, and fiom tho Canada frontier to the Fit .rid a kiys.

Another interesting fact is that this victory is tho result of experience with partial woman suffrage, which has existed in south Australia for many years. —.Boston Woman's Journal.

Women In Miiiue.

The suffragists of Maine may bo congratulated upon the substantial gains they have made in tho laws. Although tho municipal suffrage bill which passed tho house was defeated by four votes in tho senate, tho legislature of 18'Jo will bo remembered as tho legislature which passed tho law giving to mothers equal authority with fathers in the custody of their minor children and tho caro of their property, and, further, as the legislature which gavo to widows an abso.1 luto right of dower in tho property of tho husband, similar provision being mado for the widowers. It has also been decreed that where husband and wifo livo apart tho courts may require tho husband to make an allowance to his wife without a divorce being granted

Welcomed Her Statistics.

Miss Jano L. Brownel!, tho Bryn Mawr fellow in political economy for 1893-4, mado an original investigation

bucket at into the growth and limitations of popu-

lations in the United States and took her master's degree with a thesis on "Tbo Significance of a Decreasing Birth Eato. It was published in tho annals of tho American Academy of Political and Social Science and has received wido recognition from political economists in this country and in Europe. Mr. Herbert Spencer has added a pago I to the fii'th edition of tho "Principles of

Biology" to welcome Miss Brownell's statistics as confirmatory of some views which ho put forth many years ago regarding tho laws of multiplication.

3!rs. rn^rtosi's Scheme.

Mrs. (?ov» rnor 2-Torton and 18 other women woll known in i-Tew York in various branches ol' philanthropic work havo undertaken to establish a co-opera- I tivo employment bureau for tho supply of its patrons with all sorts of help. Among tho ladies associated with Mrs. Morton in the schomo aro Mrs. Morgan Dix, Mrs. Arthur M. Dodge, Mrs. W. Seward Webb, Airs. Matthew Morgan and Mrs. John W. Minturn. I

New South Wales is about to join South Australia and New Zealand for woman sr.il'rago. Premier Reid has pledged tho government to establish it, though for the present it will not bo possiblo to introduco tho bill.

The Maine logislaturo has played the old familiar trick on the woman suffragists. Tho house of representatives passed the bill giving tho ballot to women, and tho senato promptly defeatod it.—Providence Journal.

T,

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d.

Tho bill changing tho law as to (lowwas drawn .by Judge Savage of Auburn and is said by lawyers to bo a particularly creditable piece of legislation in the care and skill shown in its framing. —Augusta Litter.

The Craze I-'or Crepon.

Women havo positively gono crepon mad. No new stuff can hopo for the slightest attention unless it has crepon characteristics to recommend it. Even cotton goods aro woven in humps and ridges and wavy undulations, and all tho silks and wools with any claim to popularity, and even tho airy, fairy chiffons—which might havo been supposed to be lovely enough in themselves—have crepon surfaces. Ribbons havo caught I the crazo and havo ridgo edges. So has veiling, and frightfully unbecoming it is, too, giving its wearer's features a blurrod, worry effect, as if they wero seen in a very poor mirror. When tho crepon craze reaches mackintoshes and overshoes, it will have attained its height, and its declino may confidently bo cx-

Yor

Helen Morris Lewis.

Miss Helen Morris Lewis, president of tho North Carolina E. R. A., was writing a note a few days ago in tho office of tho Edgefield (S. C.) Chronicle, when Lieutenant Governor Timmerman dropped in. Upon being introduced to Miss Lewis, ho told her that he, too, was a woman suffragist. The editor of Tho Chronicle says jocosely: "At this wo dropped heavily into our chair. Our jaws fell apart, and our e\-es popped entirely out of our head and rolled about pellmell on tho floor. Miss Lewis' eyes did not pop out—that is, not entirely—but they danced and gleamed and sparkled like all tho Pleiades on frolic. It was a pretty scene. Lieutenant Governor Timmcrman is a woman suffragist! Miss Lewis has scored ono—a big one—in Edgefield."

iJi

Unless you want to buy your Tiuware nt hard-time prices. We art. prepared to linike finy and nil kinds ot: Tinware!-

Rooliiiff.

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Mrs. Russoll Sago is one of tho managers of the New Vork Exchange For Woman's Work. Nearly 2,000 women send work every year to tho exchango, and last yoar $45,000 was distributed among its consignors.

Countess Rautzau was ono of tho 28 guests at tho luncheon given by Bismarck 011 March 25. Tho presence of a woman at a political gathering is a novelty in Germany. But tho world movos.

Bouillon spoons aro tho latest fad. In sizo tho they aro between a tea and an after dinner coffeo and havo round bowls.

Women of Cleveland havo formed a partj', tho object of which is to lcoep the 6chools out of politics.

There aro altogether over 113,000,000 tvomeu in India.

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TI10 Lost Vessel .Supposed to Lie Close to ll^utoii llurlor, Mich. Benton, Hakhor, Mich., May 20.— Big quantities of Chieora wreckage came ashore three miles north of hero today. Hundreds of people (looked to tho scene, where timbers fr.nu tho pilothouse, cabin furniture and main deck were gathered. Much had the appearance of boiiitr freshly broken loose.

Tho search will be renewed and tho lake will be swept from St. Joseph harbor northerly. Several mattresses came in at this point three weeks ago. It is now believed the Chieora lios in shallow water and not livo miles from home. Four tugs will search in this vicinity.