Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 January 1894 — Page 10
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TIIE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, "WEDNESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 10, lSDl-WELTF PAGES.
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Spoken worda of love were abundant Curing the courtship. They come ca-lly from the heart and lips. As time wears on this fountain of love seems to dry up; the tender look, loving words and kind caress seem to be forgotten. Not that husbands cease to love their wives they would work their fingers to the bone for the mother of their children but the honeymoon is over, cares press hard and close, and they forget the kiss they used to give, or that a word or look of praise would be of untold value to the weary wife. She has had her petty grievances and needs the tender caress more now than when there were no pains, no hard work, no "bridges to be crossed." Be gruff to the world If necessary, be gruff anywhere, but leave it outside the threshold of homo. Let the home be a place where consideration for each other Is never outrirvWT T 9 t v f a' a lr Viae ViOCn hard it will cheer and rest her to know you appreciate her efforts to make home attractive. You had a pet name for her when you were winning her; don't drop it now; the mere mention of that name will bring a glow to her cheek and a li?it to her eye. You think perhaps I should be all content. To know so well the loving place I hold Within your life, and so you do not dream How much I long to hear the story told. Think for a moment, husbands and wives, what it would mean to you if death should enter j our home and hence- j forth one must walk alone. The cry would rise to your lips, "Why did I not iiftener speak of my love?" It isn't the things you do, dear. But the things you leave undone. That gave you the tit of a heartache At the setting of the sun. I remember a wif? saying to me, "My husband never notices the things which I d or my successes in oorkir.sr: it's the failures and the things that, for lark of strength. I leave undone, v,hi h attract his attention and call forth comment." Home should l? the place where expressions of tend itiC.-s c -ine without reserve, shyness or fear of ridicule and where hearts can bo sure of each other. When they cease to te true It Is home no longer. It m-y still afford htltcr, but it is like a hollow it of fruit. The home should he so precious that a man ca:j feel that this one spot is ever open to welcome hin. Kach member of the home circle has a work to do. All must be thoughtful, considerate and Kma. it is tne united ciiorts oi a.i mat , make home the doan-st spot on earth. ; I have as near neighbors a man and wife who have liv-d together fifty-five yars, and he tt-lls me, "Wife and 1 have never had since the- day I a quarrelsome wend promised to love and cherish her." It Is beautiful to see an aged, gray-haired couple loving and tender. 'Tis like a flower-bordered walk ', from Mav to November. The asters are I as lovely as the early blossoms. Kach In their time have their beauty. Minneapolis IIousekeep?r. Women mad Mleplcrnn. "What is th? next most common complaint among women to melancholia ?" reflected the doctor. "Well, a good many cf thtm couplain of sleeplessness. . Of course, that is sometimes an aecom- ' panlment of real disease, but th?re are numerous cases cf it in my experience . where it Ls a separate and distinct ill." , "How do I treat it? Oh. I usually begin by asking: Questions. I ask my pa- j tients whether they have unusual wor- i Ties -which they li" awake o' nights to ; think over. I inquire if they make a j practice of going to exciting plays or read exciting books before they yfk their downy couches. And you have no j Idea how many won. on regard an even ing's entertainment as a miserable fail ure unless it is full of excitement. They go to gee morbid plays cr they rcael exciting books a!l evening and com? to me the next morning to know why they don't sleep! Why. excitement is as much a foe to slumber as a guilty conscience is. "Then I find out what kind of physical food they take b. fore going to bed whether it i a harmless cracker or two er a rest-disturbing Welsh rabbit or i fried oysters. Of course, if they persist j In foolish evenimr fe:ixt-s whether m:ite- ! rial or literary, I can't do anything with j them. But if they assure m that noth- j lng more thrilling than Maria Edgeworth s tales and nothing more Indirestible than graham crackers form ! their bedtime banquets, I am willing to take them in hand. "I tell them to take a very hot he.th. or at least a hot footbath, before eoing s-i Ka TV, -w-01 nl... ..n.SnVI.. I
duce the moet deliriously drowsy senea- I ln to allow for shrinkage Oh. dear! tlons. Then I bid them open wide their i hy d'dn' IJ.spe,aV "r'hen J ad. tn? windows, for fresh air is a great aid to chance?. Good mind to go back. No, I healthy slumber. Then when they are ! von,V Fhouldn t get a bit of satisfacsafe abed I charge them not to let their I tlon' and so on- M , . minds think of anything cenncted with ' Th drängest part of the whole busithe daily routine. I try to make them ! ne?8 of omen's carelessness in this dipicture to themselves long, even stretch- action lies in the fact that if each sh.op--,f nmiri .iti th rr-o ei!hi t vtf would take a stand for reform we
bloom, or the calm of the quiet sea. If ' only they can get firmly before their minds lome quit, soothing Image, they are saved and will be asleep before they know iL "Drugs? Oh, T bl!ev ir mind cure for mwt women's injomnlit." Exchange. Dining rrith the Queen. Dming with the queen does not seem to be an exhilarating function. A woman was has ben there describes the routine, which never varies. The visitor i conducted Immediately to her room. Therj she remains until a quarter of an hour before dinner, which is at 8:45. Punctually at that minute the queen enter, and the company proceeds to the oak room, where dinner ls served. There is co general conversation. If the queen and her family sp-ak together, it U in undertones. After dinner the queen addresses every guest briefly and retires. A young attach'' sent from a foreign court and thus entertained givt a still more Kloomy - iew of the queen's hospitality. For three hours previous ho was confined to his room, not daring to walk through the corridors. At the rendezvous before dinner no one spoke to him. At dinner two guests conversed across his shoulders without noticing him. After dinner no one addressed him. The next morning, expecting a "ecial lntervl?w. he was ushered into the presence of a private secretary and In a few words curtly dismissed. He did pot bang the castle dors as he left, but he was a red hot socialist all the way to town. Pall Mall i;ud&et. Lump Require lnch Care. The wise man who made the Interesting remark that It required a gentlewoman to make a drinkable cup of coffee might have gone on and claimed that It required a patrician to keep lamps m, order. The ordinary F-rvant cannot do It. Khe regards anything beyond filling the oil tank as a work of supererogation. Occasionally entreaties may prevail upon her to trim the wick, but she always does- that with the scissors, which Ls the worst possible method. Th lamps Fhould be wiped with the sharp edge of a visiting card or with a poker, heated redhot and passed over the wick. This last method Is a little troublesome, but It removes the charred part evenly. Wicks used for a long baae, even whan they do not become very
phort, grow thick and" are apt to give forth unpleasant odorl They should be renewed once a month at least. In duplex burners one wick fhould bi trimmed in the opposite direction from the other. Rmind wicks should be trimmed toward the center. Burners should be wiped free from bits of charred wick and drei of oil every day. Every now and then they should be boiled In strong soapsuds, to make them perfectly clean. When they have been used a long time, they need replacing. Hardware. "Xo mt nome. The little phrase "not at home," used in the conventional sense, simply means that one is not at liberty to receive her friends or acquaintances. It does not mean that she is out of the house, and it is so understood by people accustomed to society. When the maid bars the door to a caller with the information that the lady In "engaged" and cannot J 'me flown- in'- caiie.r' " " very sensible lady lnaea. is api m that he has had a rebuff. "I'll not take the trouble to go to her house again very soon," she thinks, and probably says, as she walks disappointedly away. f Of course if the phrase "not at home is crudely taken and regarded as a falsehood bv the utter?r and by the rcrson who h'-ars it. it lowers the moral tone of both. But this is not what is intended when it is used. The gentlewoman who is "not at home" is understood simply to be "not at home to visitors," and thus she has thrown up a. fortification for the fhiv around the ooem she is writing or i the picture she is painting, the child she J is nursing, the g vn she i making or the dessert she is concocting. 'Mrs. will not be at h.-me until after 3 or 4 or 7 p. m." is merely a variation of the form, signifying at what hour Mrs. will be disengaged. The only reilly needful thing in tha mattor Is to have everybody understand and adopt what a few have adopted and found convenient and courteous a conventional phrase to indicate that the occupations f the house cannot be thrown over for the pleasure of a conversation with friends who may lind another occasion for calling. To a multitude of overwearied women. Interrupted until serious pursuits become impossible and nerves and health break down, this little phrase, if accepted as coin current, would prove a boon. Harper's Bazar. nll-ni11iiK Children. Every mother who has attempted to combat nail-biting in hr child will be ! interested in the recent investigations ; upon the subject by a distinguished French physician. He recognizes it as a disease and cads It onychophagy. Furth(,r hp ftnds lt an irm.riu.fi affliction, . .... . an llT,PaI1,nnr " " . dence: of a latent nervous degeneration, j The percentage of girls so afflicted is . much larger than that of boys, in one mixed s'-hool examined the proportion be- ', ing 52 per cent, for the former and 20 j per cent, for the hitter. j The usu.il remedies suggested of local , applications or tying the hards he pro- I nounces useless. Looking upon the Iis- i ease as a nervous disorder, he advocates i the careful and continuous treatment that is necessary in such affections great attention to food, exercise, sleeping habit, ventilation and all hygienic Jieerssities that will tend to build ut und strengthen the nervous system of the child. This: will probably remove th? ciuso, but not the habit, for which be employs his own treatment, es follows: "(1) To create a counter irritant and thus to transform by outward excitation the u?ionseii us act into a conscious one. (J) To creats a counter automatic impulse. (.) To strengthen the resolution of the child." He adds to these the treatment by suggestion while in hypnotic sleep. The results of this Investigation have been received, with rruoh interest everywhere, and a careful study is being made of the new disease. Her I'oint of View jn y. Times. t loirly Shnrrd S n m n. Do you purchase your gowns readymade? and if so, hrwe you ever noticed the peculiar trick of the seamstresses in shaving down the seams? They are trimmed as closely as if women never grew fat and garments were never given a tubbing. We women are long-suffering creatures. We grumble among eur selves over trade idiosyncrasies, read the riot act to a chosen few, but when i the PPf-r time arrives to proclaim our woes we are as still as mice. I saw a woman pay down the sum of j2o for a plain tailor-made costume, with 0 . . tKla 1 never a word about this defect. Once she was outside, however, she commenced to fret. "I a.m dreadfully afraid I have blundered. I know those seams are not goshould soon have material and to spare. One does not want bulk, but simply com fort. How quickly six complaints a day would travel to the ears of those responsible for defects, and how soon we would note the deference paid by merchants to our wants and desires! Philadelphia Inquirer. A Girl's Uemt Studies. I feel convinced, and this feeling Is based upon careful inquiry, writes Hdward W. Bok in the Ladies' Home Journal, that four principal branches of study, with one or two of the arts, are sufficient for a healthful absorption by any girl of average mental capacity. And if I were asked to outline these particular studies they would consist: (1) Of a thoroughly P'nglish course covering analysis, grammar, composition and rhetorie; (2) history; (3) literature, and (4) mathematics. And add to these, as accomplishments, the study of music first arid art second, and a girl has a sufficient course of study before her, with a due regard for her physical welfare Where other branches of study are deemed best or necessary lt is wiser to substitute rather than to add. Afraid to Trost n Safety Van It. There is a lady of great wealth and keen business instincts in Alleghany City who ha3 one striking peculiarity. She
Is continually haunted by a dread of I Lows and rosettes are liberally inter-lnirp-lars flmniinUn? almost tn a mono- I mixed.
mania. Jewels of great price and cash of large amounts the always has with er. She will f ust none of her personal property away from her person. A speK inuy iiiairjua fvrt nn.i coil structed for her use, and this is always worn beneath her dress. Its contents in paper, diamonds and other precious stones seldom aggregate less than JSO.OOO. Yet nothing and no friend or relative can persuade her that the treasure is less pafe suspended from her waist than in a bank, fitrong box or deposit vault. Jeweler3 Weekly. AVhat Cared Her. A very beautiful pootety woman has for years Indulged herself in the reprehensible trick of hitir.er her nails. After a time she suddenly cured herBelf to the surprise of all her friends. One of them dared ask how the reform was brought abouL "To tell you the truth, was the answer. "I paid $5 to have my
hands manicured one day. and I rould not bria" mvelf to destro his -worK, SSilÄhSSt lapsed with the passage of tinie.-N. Y. Mail and Express. Mother. Mother does the most and gets the least pay. From the mother's pulpit is preached the bhortest sermons, but they do the most good. If there is but one Christian In the family let that one be the mother. Who first taught us to say "Our Father?" Mother. . The richest place without a mothers love is barren. A mother's love in the home is what sunshine is to the earth.-The Rev. Dr. Rockefeller in Ram's Horn. The Doch of Sutherland. The young duchess of Sutherland Is the only literary lady entitled to be called "Your Grace" in Great Britain. When a child Lady Milllcent St. Clair Erskin, as she then was, was an active contributor to the writing competitions in various young people's periodicals. Shortly after her marriage she went on a yachting tour, and on her return published a volume of travels. "How I Went Around the World in My Twentieth Year." London Tit-Bits. Prrfeoted ckn. rhysioal culture enthusiasts claim that a thin throat can be developed into the firm, round column every woman desires by regular exercise. The fingers are pressed lightly upon the muscles at the front of the throat and the head thrown forward, the pressure of the fingers serving the same purpose that dumbbells do in exercise of the arms and chest. The process is repeated backwards and sideways. Philadelphia Call. A Ciood Fnrnlture Polish. A good furniture polish may be made by putting equal parts of spirits of wine, vinegar and olive oil in a large bottle and shaking thoroughly every da j- for a week, when it will be ready for use. This polish should be applied to the furniture with a soft woolen cloth and thoroughly rubbed in. If the furniture is very dirty it may be rubbed clean with a wx.len cloth dipped in kero:cne. Ladles' Home Journal.
Exerol.ie. Mothers should encourage their daughters to do a few Swedish exercises every morning. The princes3 of Wales insisted on her daughter practicing these for a quarter of an hur every morning after they jumped out of bed, even when the girls were living on board their father's yach;. Their figures are graceful, and although Frincess Maud is very short she Ls beautifully proportioned. London Star. Prince Helen. rrincess Helen of Orleans is golden haired, blue eyed, tall and very lovely. Sno is a magnificent equestrienne and is a familial figure on many an English hunting field with her favorite horse, Choeolat. She swim? like a fish, shoots with unerring aim and is most skillful with the sculls and foils all this without sacrificing any of her dainty femininity or Farisian elegance. London World. To Clenn a White SlinwI. A white woob-n shawl or cape which has been soiled, but not spotted, may be dcinsed bv putting flour into a large ! pan and rubbing it very thoroughly into j the article to be cleansed. Vse plt-nty I of flour and rub thoroughly, but gently. ; Then ttike it cut of doors and shake till ' the flour is all out. It will take some ; time, but leaves the article clean. Ex change. I!or T!ir IIgnn. Sarah Bt-rnhardt was a dressmaker's apprentice. Adelaide Xf ilson began life hs a child's unrse. Miss Hraddon, the j nov list, was a utility actress in the provinces, Charlotte Cushman was the daughter of p-or parents, and the best contralto this country ever had up to a dozen years ago was a washerwoman's daughter up in Maine. Philadelphia Ducting. Don't take the duster and move the dust from the piano to the table, and the dust of the piano and the table to the desk, carrying the accumulation from one piece to another around the r -om. J The girl who does this fina'.ly tucks the diistcloth behind the bookcase. Shake the duster to free it from the dust of each single piece. Chicago Times An ItiKenioun Drrlof. An ingenious girl who hag been troubled by the persistency with which a certain hat, trimmed heavily on one Fide, would slide over that ear, has invented an antidote, as it were. She pewed weights on the opposite Fide of the crown to preserve the balance and had no bother thereafter. Exchange. The Home of Mary Lyon. The home of Mary Lyon, near Ashfield. Mass., where she was born In 1797. is owned by the ML Holyoke association. The house is In ruins. There ls an acre of land. The Holyoke students and teachers make pilgrimages to it and keep it in order. Screenn for the nrer". A pretty nursery screen U made by covering the panels with any solid background desired black, red or brown and pasting pictures. One panl can be handsomely decorated with the pictures that made last year's calendar such a thing of beauty, illustrating as many of them do In such lovely fashion the procession of the months. The plethora ind e 1 in these days of really exquisite specimens of the lithographer's art makes a disposition of them after they have survived their brief present in current weekly, monthly or annual a real problem to those who d'slike to discard them wholly or keep them forever out of sight. Hospital scrap albums are a good solution of the dilemma up to a certain point, but there are more than enough in many households for even two or three of these. T. Y. Times. Petty Ac-cc.snnrieft t Dres. Painbow lis.se is employed for bows which fall over the bust. Plack net jetted and edged with trice point makes draperies for covering the front of the bodice. A fichu of black llsse with a white so. tt-il net with black lace edging, are also excellent. The bows, as a rule, diminish to a point toward the neck. Long bows formed of loops of ribbon are frequently piaceu in uvni oi ine lace, and choux Both black and white spotted net are largely used, and charming embroidery In c 11 Lr 4 ir.t.LJn.fl 1 I . it . . i d ,(j d - v,,urlf6a ' f;,vririte mhhr 1 1 From nifTerent Standpoint. "And this s the state penitentiary. i3 it?" inquired the stranger who was s'troij ling about the environs of Joliet. "It's , a pretty fine piece of architecture." j "It depends a good deal cm how you I are looking at it," replied the man spoken to, winking slyly at the bystanders. "Ah. yes, I suppose It does," rejoined the stranger. "How does it look on th inside?" Chicago Inter-Ocean. Weak Women. Mrs. Gumps "What do ycu think of this? Prof. Scraper says women make better violinists than men?" I Mr. Gumpps "Of course. Thev can't make bo much noise," N. Y. Weekly.
SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON.
LESSO II, First QrARTER, INTER. XA.TIO.L KRIBS, JAX. 14. Tet ef the I,eon, Gen. Ill, 1-15-Memory Xrrnvn, l.'Ll.V-T.oIden Text. I Cor. xv, 22Commentarr by the Rev. D. I. Stearns. 1. .Now, th serpent was more subtle than any beast of the field which the Lord God had made. And he said unto the woman, Yea. hath God said, Ye shaH not eat of every tree of the garden?" in the first two chapters all Is Perfect, and 'J.d walks with man. and man commuiK-s. with God. Now comes the Wicked one in the trulse of a serrvent full of hatred of God and man. Pee his aliases in Rev. xii. 9: xx, 2, and hl3 ena in Hev. xx, 10. He begins his work by insinuating that God does not love His children or Hft would not keep anything from them. 2. "And the woman said unto the serpent, TVe may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden." We cannot blame the woman for talking with him, for she probably had not hard of him who spoke to her through the serpent. "We know him and deserve to suffer if we hold any parley with him. See Eph. vi, 11; Ja 3. iv. 7; I Pet. v. 8. 9. 3. "Rut of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, God hath said. Ye shall not eat of lt, neither shall ye touch it. lest ye die." She both added to and diminished what God had said. Compare ..carefully chapters 11. 17, and let us give good heed to Deut. iv, 2; xii, 32; Jer. xxvl. 2. Our part is to be simply obedient and trustful and shun every insinuation and doubt. 4. "And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die." What a deliberate lie! When he speaketli a lie. he speaks th of his own, for he ls a liar and the father of it (John viii, 44). All liars shall have their portion with him (Rev. xxi. S). One would think that Puch an attack upon God wem Id have shown the wuman that she was dealing with an enemy of CJod. Hut what shall we say of professed friends of God who really teach that there is no hell and not even a devil? 5. "For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof then your eyes shall le opened and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil." This seems to have been his own ambition (see Isa. xiv, 141. and he will yet find a man wi'ling to be hli-d with it (II Thoss. ii. 3. 4). We know that when He shall appear we shall 1h? like Him. f.nd then yh; 11 we know oven as we are Known (I .Mm Iii. 2; I Cor. xiii. 12). but this is t be reached by death and "bedi-t ce io Hiai, never In any other way fAcis iv. 12). 6. "And vh--n the wom m auv, etc., she took of the fruii thc-eof and did eat and gave also uiko n r husband with her, and he did out." This is the history of every temptation an i si;-!, the outward object, the inward co:v;i:iori,.n. th increase and triumph ,' m.-;. nate desire, the degradation and ruin i s-.-il. So with Achan. He saw; he ov-u'ii: took (Joshua vil, 21. Adam and K.e had everything and yet sinned. Christ seemed to have nothing, yet stood linn. 7. "And the eyes of them both av;:c opened, ami they knew that they were raked, and they sewed fir leaves together and made themselves aprons." This was an eye-opening that has left us blind by nature In ifce right direction ever since, as we need to be anointed and have our eyes opened to behold spiritual things (Rev. Iii, IS; Vs. cxix. IS). What a contrast between the garments of light which they Jot and these selfmade aprons! Fig leaves may well represent profession without reality (Math, xxi. ir). 6. "And they heard the voice of the Lord Cod, and Adam and his wife hid themselves." What a sight is this! God's dear children hiding from their loving1 Father and thinking that trees can covtr them. What fools sin makes C'f us, and how blinded must be the mind that seeks to hide from the only true friend: uch has been the pinner's conduct ever since, vainly seeking to hide from God. 3. "And the Lord God called unto Adam and said unto him. Where art thou?" From the fall to the -nd of the bilde story it is a God of love-set king lost and straying people and man in his blindnees hiding- or running away from God. What does your soul say in resj)ons9 to "Where art thou?" Mine replies, Lord, Thou knowest I am in Thee, and Thou art to me the Rock of Ages (Isa, xxvi, 4 margin). Once and for a long time I tried to hide from Thee, but now Thou hast me taught to hide In Thee. 1J. "And he said. I heard Thy voice in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked, and I hid myself." Here is the first fear in scripture, and It follows hard on unbelief and distrust of God. There will be no fear where there is confidence in God, for His perfect love casteth out fear (I John iv, 18): so that if our hearts can Fay, "Behold. God is my salvation," we should also add. "I will trust and not be afraid" (Isa. xii, 2). Some are afraid of the voice of God in His word because they prefer their own thoughts .and ways. 11. "And He said. Who told thee thou wast naked? Hast thou eaten of the tree whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat?" God of course kn?w the whole story, but before we can be forgiven there must be on our part conviction of s-in and confession of the same. This God would give to Adam and draw from him that He mlerht forgive him (see Pro v. xxviii. 13, and I John i. y. 12. "And the man said, The woman whom thou gavest to be with me, she pave me of the tree, and I did cat." Tills sounds very badly. Adam, thou hast fallen very far and brought us down with thee, for some of us have calked that way. Hut see the tin. lie lind.s fault with th" gift of God and lays the blame on her. Now see Jesus, who has taken ur"'n Himself all the guilt of His body, the church, and born4 it. that He might present htr to Himself without sjot (Kph. v. 27). 13. "And tht Ivord Cod said tinto the woman. What is this that thou hast done? And the woman said, The serlent beguiled me, and I did eat." She did not ak, as some do now, why God allowed the serpent to come to her, a fid why God did not keep her from falling-, but ehe makes confession and pleads suilty. And both h.iing now confessed the way is open for the revelation of Cod's salvation by race (Rom. iii. 19-24). 14. "And the Lord God Faid unto the serpent. Because thou hast clone this, thou art cursed alve all cattle," etc. What kind of a creature the serpent was before this and of what form we are not told. But it is evident he did not go upon his bvlly as now. Eve will tell us when we see her if it is worth while to know. 15. "And I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed. He shall bruise they head, and thou shalt bruise his heel." The Lord God speaks to the enemy in the serpent and in the first clause declares the woman's restoration to God and her hatred of the devil, all brought about by God Himself, who says, "I will put." Snupotert n Swindle. Policeman "III. then1, hayseed, what are you settln' there on the sidewalk fur?" Uncle Joshua "I'm waitin' for a man who wanted to take my watch to a Jeweler's to see If some dem scamp didn't swindle me on It." Chicago Record.
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