Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 February 1894 — Page 10
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THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, "WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 28, 1 894 TWELVE PAGES.
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YOU MUST STAND ALONE.
OMC. HOVLr Iii: KQVirPEO FOR V.lNMMi TI1K1R WAY. Tl Third Strand TIic Ilf-tisrkecper' olil-n R Ii le Mother mid AVorW l ilting: Vp a Room Cbllr Alice (o Girl Care In Diphtheria. "That her hand may be given with dignity sho must le able to stand alone," vvreta Margaret Fuller of woman rij.ny years aso. To this k"-ynot have 'Vi? inspirations of tho fair s-x b?en ot f-ver since. Able t i-tand alone! Not, then, obliged to marry for the pake o a living:, or to escape the dreaded titl" of old maid, or for any other paltry reason. Able, alone ami unassisted, to win h-r way to fortune to make her name -respected, even without the magical prefix. "Mr?." A noble longing- enough, and one which not a few ambitious girte have fully realized. Recalling th.-? names of Miss Booth, Miss Alcutt, Miss Mitchell. Tr. Eodley and others like th'-m. d we once think .of the far famed sisterhood as so many old maida? Nay. Their achievement?? have lifted them and us to a higher plane of thought. We admire, respect and love them for their work and worth, and the question of marriage does not signify. Nevertheless the fact remains That happy homes are society's yafesruards, and that children properly brought up are the hope of the nation. "What is wanted that the youth of Franco be well educated?" asked the gpat NarK.Ieu. "Good mother?," answered a lady of the court. "Here." exclaimed the empi ror, "is a system in a word." We are familiar with tie anecdote and do not deny the truth which it teaches. Yet, in making the learned professions accessible to daughters' as well a3 ?on.-, i:x throwing wide the doors f art and literature fnr woman's entrance in v.-eieoming girls tu trades ani occupations undreamed of in the bygone days, when sewing and schoolteaching were thir only opportunities for earning a livlihood, have we not, H3 an able writer has recently pointed out, almost lost sight of the important relations which, in the natural course of vents, many of our girls are destined to bear toward th- world as wives and mothers? So far as wifehood and motherhood are concerned, modern education for girls makes about as much j-rovision for these contingencies as if they were the most unlikely that could ome to Eve's daughters, and as if a learned spinstcrho. I, with. perhaps, "the men all transported beyond the ea.s," were the normal condition of the coming woman. True, tii3re is in certain schools a feeble attempt me de at physical training, while sometimes a weak solution of sewing and cooking is introduced into the daily doses of knowledge. Such efforts in the right direction have been, thus far, tco spasmodic and fragmentary to be of much real use. That they are, made at all. however, betokens that the day is at hand when a girl's training shaJl be so evenly balanced that, whether the future hold for her a professorship in a. coli. ere or the itieenship In a home she shall be. well litted fur either position for "winning her way" to an honorable success. M. D. Sterling in Motherhood. The Third Strand. Tliore is no other proof so great of the good understanding that subsists between men and women as the voluntary relinquishment by men of powers heretofore unshared. It is the highest tribute that has ever been paid to woman, and yet one of the most unobserved, that not a school has ever been opened to her except by th voJy of men, nor has she buen admitted to any k-arned profession or to any enk. .g-d sphere in the line of honorable occi oation, except by men, nor has ary woman bc-n made a voter, in greater or less degree, either in church : state, save by the free permission of "creation's loid." They have clothed us with all the powers that they themselves posses, save in the highest ranges, ecclesiastical atui governmental. No magnanimity analogous to thU has 1 vn wit-n-ssed since history began. I Jut there sire two considerations which, on their own testimony, have moved men to this 1 siowniei.t of power upon the gentle eoj.irade at their side. First, men are conscious of being abundantly able to taky care of thersclves and iluir intort, and. secondly, they have learned by centuries of observation and experim , that, as a c!as.. women being the mothers of men nr if possible, more concerned to do them justice than they sire b do justice to themselves. Every woman is th daughter of a man, and very man is th son of a woman. In this organic law is grounded the unalter-;!.!-faith that cheers me on my way while I seek to multiply the topics of interest ani thought letween men and i women that home life may be enriched ti::d home happiness rendered more sta-T'-le. Therr arr three strands in the itout cable that binds together th members of an ideal home religion, affection .-lr.d intellectual sympathy. Th first and second have held their own throughout the ages past the third this age is formins and no truer or more enduring tie has ever yet been forged. Frances K. Willard. I'ittlng Ii iv Room. The side walls lighter than the floor, or floor covering, and the ceiling lighter than the side wall, is the rule used by i decorators in fitting up a room. One j coloring in varying' shades is often chown for the color scheme, and the cGJitruSt i3 introduced in the furniture, pillows, pictures, vases and other (hJcts necessary to the comfort or beauty Kit a room, i'lain surfaces are artistic for floor COverMg, though to the housekeeper they are often objectionable, hecaunf thty show dust more plainly than a surface covered by some sort o a pattern. When a patterned carpet or ru? is used, let it be covered with anything except natura.! looking flowers and leav, which one dislikes to tread upon, which will not be ignored, and which draws on"a mind from the really attractive things In a room. Those who dislike walls with plain fufacc.s, which eertainly are monotonous and unattractive unless the gpaci are frequently broken by pictures, should select covrlngs having the lighter color for a bdckround, rattern! with m. medium cr darker fhade of the eam-i color. As the hangings form a part of the wall, they should alo hf fomwht lighter than th; Coor covering. X. Y. Mail and Kjrpresa. fare la Oiphtherln. As diphtheria is so vry serious a diöwhenever a child seems languid and miserable, fretful and depressed, without apparent cause, examine the throat carefully, write-? Elizabeth Rohir,9rn Scovll in Ladies' Home Journal. If it is swollen and covered with patchy of gray membrane looking like slate pencil dust, send for th doctor. It Is h ways safest to have medical advice when tlr throit Is affected. T'ntil tT- doctor comes keep the child in bed. If the throat Is painful, procuns
a lump of lime, pour ccU water upoa it. J
When the efferesence subsides, strain of the clear water and apply it to the throat with a brush or tswab. If the child is old enough, the throat can be gargled with the limewater. Inhaling the steam from a pitcher of boiling watr sometimes gives relief. The neck may be rubbed with warm oil and bound with flannel. Milk, either hot or cold, should i given every two hours. The cold milk may have the white of an egg shaken with each cupful. Strong beef tea can lv given, and the doc tor may order Stimulant. The strength must be supported by nourishing liquid food.
The Houarkeepcr'n (golden Utile. "Liberality but not waste" should be the housekeeper's golden rule by which she Insures comfort anil plenty in her household and good service on the part of her domestics. Uut it is impossible to accomplish this most desirable residt without active personal supervision of every detail. Tf women would only look t'pon their housekeeping as a man considers his business, in the light of an imperative and daily duty, to be accomplished calmly and as a matter of course, putting up with the unavoidable trials and disagreeable complications as the necessary concomitants of every organization, they would worry 'ess and accomplish far more. Jt is foolish either to moderate or to magnify domestic duties, and house mistresses are very apt to do either the one or the other, whereas thev should look upon their household affairs simply in the light of i important and legitimate business belonging to their department, and one which it behooves them to manage well. A clever wonian has expressed this idea capitally in these sentences: "A woman Is generally Inclined either to fret under her duties or shirk them if she can. She sees man triumphantly pursuing his vocation and thinks it is the kind of work he does which males him regnant, whereas it is not the kind of work at all. but the way in which and the spirit with which he does it." If mistress and servants could only be brought to consider waste as unbusinesslike, and system, not as the tyrannical rub? of a stern mistress, but Just as much a part of the household machinery as a man's laws and regulations in his olHce, th-re would be no need of friction, and their relations with each other would be much pleasanter. N. Y. Tribune. 'Mother and Work." "Women should not attempt." sajs an eminent woman physician of London, "to carry on a profession after marriage. I mean the women of the tipper and middle classes who go into the professions. It is not necessary that they should be the breadwinners; that duty should devolve upon the husband, and I am confident that the rismg generation would be healthier and stronger in every way if the mothers would exert themselves less. I look anxiously at every baby that comes under my notice In the hope that I shall find some improvement in the type, some increase in stamina, compared with the generation that has preceded it. but instead of this there is only steady deterioration observable. This deterioration is practieularly noticeable among the children of very active mothers. The cleverest and most highly educated women, the women who take the most active part in public affairs, have the most weakly and punny children. "Another thing, women are going into too active forms of exercise. When a young married woman tells me that she is captain of a cricket eleven or of a foot ball team, I can onlv say I am perfectly aghast. Women must place before themselves the alternative to earn their living, to exercise their faculties, and to gratify their ambition in a professional career, or to become g.od wives and mothers. And if they choose the domestic life they must recognize that they must sacrifice their personal happiness and ambition in the future happiness and success of their children." Child Advice to a ("Irl. George W. Childs once said to a girl from the West, who went to him with letters and the hope of getting sufficient Influence to do something in the arable field of journalism: "Little woman, if you can do something, go ahead and do it. The world is hungry for something new. It is an omniverous creature, but it wants a change constantly. Keep a.s cpuiet as you can. Keep out of men's way as much as you can, for It is trespassing to. go on private property. Keep yourself in good health, in good spirits and good clothes, and don't try to be a good fellow or one of the boys. Save half cf your earnings. Go to church, lie agreeable, but reserved, and If some honorable man offers you his name and his protection give it all up, marry him and devote your energies to home making. "The business world is no place for a woman. It is a rough place, and people have to get rough to succeed in it. I know hundreds of gentlewomen in business, but they always seem to me like going fishing In a dress suit and white gloves. Exquisite fabrics are not intended for rough and ready wear." Irofeloiinl Darner. A lady suggests this plan for those of the poor who wish to help themselves. She said: "Some of the joor women of the town could make very good wages if they would do 'darning.' You understand what I mean? Even- large family has a ouantiiy of stockings and socks that need darning, and iriany of the richer class hate this work. I do, for one. Well, if a woman expert in such work would apply for the position of darner to several families, she would get customers and would make a good living. There are hundreds of families in which such work could be obtained. Then there are young men who board and who have dozens of iairs of dilapidated socks. They would gladly turn them over to a repairer. When one considers how much stockings and socks cost, how much the average matron, or others who can afford to pay for the repair work, hate to do the darning, and how much time could be saved, it Incomes apparent that the plan is a gocd one. A hosiery repairer could make more money than two dressmakers." Columbus Dispatch. Children' Kn tiller. Rime parent compel their children to eat against their will, as when they come to the breakfast table without an appetite, or have lost it in prosp?ct of a visit or a ride, or for the sake of "eating their plates clea.n" in discouragement of wasteful habits. Unless we arc thirsty we cannot drink the purest spring water without aversion, and as for eating when there is no appetite it is revolting a.s any one may prove to himself by attempting' to tako a second mal In twenty mlnutrs after havlurr eaten a regular dinner. The appetite, the hunger. Is e-xclted by the presence of gastric juice about the stomach, but if there i no gastric juice there can b no hunger, no appetite. a,nd to compel a child to swallow food when It is d'starteful is an absurdity nnd a cruelty. Hall' Journal of Health. Elim Arcbard Tonnor. Mr. Eliza Arc hard Conner's sermon to young women, which won the prize among more than 1,00 submitted, was elaborated under th following bends: "Uo som useful work, and do Jt with enthusiasm. Lay up some money. He sincere. Be helpful to thers. i3e neat. Btand by your own mx. Uphold forvernicra tfce purity, difrnity and worth
of womanhood." Mrs. Conner has been doing excellent newspaper work for more than twenty years, and her raragraph!--about women are printed in the newspapers all over the country. She is a little woman with short gray hair and a sweet, soft voice which utters the most surprisingly caustic things against all manner of shams, false conventionality and unwoinanliness. N". Y. Sun. flrntilnur Fluid for lottilna. One for men's clothes that be housewife will lind valuable consists of a pint of odorized benzine, one-half dram sulphuric ether, one-half dram chloroform, a dram alcohol and a very little good cologne. If it is used for cleansing coat collars and outside garments, apply with an old piece of soft black silk. For neckties and it can be used on those of light colors as well as black apply with a piece of while silk. In washing soiled black goods put a tablej-poonful in a gallon of warm water. Twenty or .'." cents will pay the druggist for a (mart bottle of the mixture. The fluid is vouched for by Miss Helen Johnson of cooking school fame. What AVomen I.Ike in Men. Probably the best thing that was ever written on the interesting question, of what women like in men ir, summed up in the idea that women like a man who can be strong as a lion when ti-oub1e comes, and yet if one is nervous and tired can button up a shoe with an amount of consideration that is a mental and physical bracer up. They like a man who likes them, who doesn't scorn their opinions, who believes in their good taste, who has confidence in them and wit enough to realize that when one of the fair sex is slightly stubborn, persuasion is more powerful than all the argumenta in the world. Exchange.
Mr. Humphrey Ward. An English critic speaks of "Robert Elsmere" as not merely "an extraordinarily successful novel it was. as reflected in contemporary conversation, a momentous public event." The face of Mrs. Humphrey Ward, whose name one book sufficed to make known to the enti-e reading world, is full of interest. It is not disappointing there is that in the expression and features which indicates the wonderful power that created two masterpieces of modern fiction, and there is besides a certain quiet dreaminess of countenance which makes one marvel that this great strength can be held in complete repose. To Tell llolsery. Iloisory makers are sly. The value of a stocking or sock is below the ankle. If the heels and toes are not double, the article is not worth buying. It is economy in the long run to pay the difference and get a stocking with double soles that Is. for service. Now, one of the tricks f the trade is to splice and "clock" a stocking. The clerk holds her tongue. The customer is captivated by the decoration, and her toes and heels are bare after a day or two. It does not follow that a stocking is "full regular," as dealers say, because it is spliced. The splicing is a sham and a cheat, X. Y. World. A Co in pro mi sc Dinner Drc, A compromise dinner dress planned by an ingenious woman whose weak lungs prevented her from wearing a decollete gown was of black satin. A fur hem bordered the plain skirt, and a line of shallow scallops outlined in silver sequins was set on a little above. The yoke and full sleeves were of white; chiffon spangled with silver, and the satin waist was outlined around the corsage and over the shoulders with sequins. The high steck collar was of the satin. X. Y. Telegram. The Houdoir. Boudoir, which means literally to pout. Is only another name for one's private sitting-room. Mme. de Pompadour was the first to enjoy the luxury of such a cozy nook. The boudoir today must be typical of its mistress and Is furnished In colors to set off her style of beauty in crimson and gold if she is dark, in pink and white if she is fair. Portrait!! of celebrated beauties are supposed to be especially suited to dec-orate the walls. Detroit News. Utile Min 1'nlr. Eittle Miss Birdie Fair is not a fair little birdie, at least not in the sense of complexion. Like money, she has lots of good looks and to spare, but she Is as dark as a gypsy and has a bright, ruddy complexion, snapping dark eyes, a wee bit of a rosy mouth and an assertive little way about her which is very delightful Nobody can mistake that she has a will cd' her own and opinions as well. N. Y. Journal. A Hint on IJnHnsr. In one of the best known gymnasiums for women in this country the resident physician said in a recent interview: "Dust is almost as out of place here as it would be in the dissecting room. I am eagle-eyed for its appearance, and I am proud to say that the furniture is handdusted that Is, with a cloth. To the best of my knowledge and belief, a feather duster has never found admission here." Take Your Own Medicine. This would be a much better world If more people would take their own advice. Galveston News. THE WORKING GIRL 3Iiss Sal lie Palmer Giros Some Swrgestions to (Jirls About Backache, Faintncss, and Dizziness. tsrr.riAL TO OCH LADT keadeks. r DM you ever notice working girls on their way home from stores or factories ? Did you notice Low many of them had pale cheeks, dull eyes, and heavy steps? and did you wonder why they were not ruddy and bright? The story which Is told by Miss Sallio Palmer, of Nicetown, Fa., gives the reason for tills ead condition of many working girls. Sometimes their back and skies will nche terribly. They are faint and dizzy with pain ami weight in the lower pert of their stomach. They watch the clock, and wish that the day would end, as they feci so ill ami lired. Standing all day, week in and week out, they have slowly drifted into woman's great cnem)-, displacement of the womb. That, or sonic other derangement of the organ, causes irregularity or ftupensiori of the " monthly periods," bloating, flooding, Or nervOUS prostration. " Take warning in, time," fhe says; "Lydia E. rinkhctm'n Vegetable Compound is the surest and safest remedy in the world for you."
HOW TO REMAIN YOUTHFUL.
VIEWS OP AX AO(H ATE OF A3IEH ICAM.r.I) IIKLSAUTI-:. Sh- Tdl Ilov- Old Aut nncl II Wrinkle .May rir Combated "I,rt Uo the Worry nnl Frei" and Kollow On Hip rhysical Esprefsion of Thnt Iden. As a rul-, Delsarte ' and theosophy striko the uninitiated with terror. Fife seems too short to delve into their awful mysteries, and so to the average mind theosophy signiHes clever sleight of hand tricks, and Delsarte is ever associated with wabbling, wild-eyed women who pose in greenery yailery tea gowns and talk vaguely about "the cult." But when you hear a sweet-faced, softvoiced little woman in a dream of an ivory crape gown, with cunning little silk bowknota all over It and great, puffy sleevei that ugget the wings of Sandolphin. th angel of glory. ta,! downright sensible things about health and grace and the relation of the body to dress and how to keep from growing old and ugly and fat, and when she tells you this is "Americanized Dtlsarte" you begin to think that maybe, after all, there's somethii g in It, and that Francois Dekarte knew what he was talking about. Mrs. Fmily M. Bishop, who is the teacher and expounder of Dclsarte and physical self-culture at Hie great Chautauqua summer school, has been lecturing at Tratt. institute, Brooklyn, on these questions of so vital interest to women. For breathes there a woman with soul so dead who does not long to keep young and slim and attractive'. Mrs. Bishop, who is a striking illustration of the logic and good sens' of her precepts, is not a bit of a. faddist. She does not attitudinize, nor does she wear costumes calculated to give any selfrespecting scarecrow an attack of nervous prestation. She is a tiny woman, full of fire and dew a sort of unpatented physical dynamo. Her department at Chautauqua is the largest numerically and financially, having achieved twice the revenue ever secured by any special class of work there, and that, too, in spite of the handicap by certain limitations In the organization. I saw Mrs. Bishop at the close of one of her lectures and asked her. "How may women keep from growing old?" "Old age is going out of fashion." laughed the lady. "Seventy-five now, you know, is only considered a reasonable maturity. Old age is not the line;; on the face that are the caring of thought apd erudition nor the soft halo of white hair. It is rather the loss of elasticity of the body, of the power to do physical acts that were once, as play to us. If people will think old age and expect it they will not be disappointed. Many a woman of forty has the form and expression of a weman of eighty. We can keep our bodies young by systematic exercise. Muscles that are n"t duly exercised, you know, lose their shape, firmness and strength. Look at the dancer who at seventy-five lia.s the flexibility of a young girl. It is a well known fact that women who are actively engaged in literary, social and reform movements remain young longer than those whose lives run in uneventful, narrow grooves. This is not so much the difference in the kind of work, but Ihe difference in the thoughts back ot the work", for when one's thoughts are not given to general interests one becomes absorbed in self. Flexibility, the distinguishing characteristic of youth, may be preserved by certain physical exercises. Obesity, that foe of women, should not be starved awav, but routed by certain exercises. Above all, expel thoughts of iniirmitv and time." "Will you give some exercise for the mitigation of abdominal corpulency?" "Yes. Stand normally. Slightly but firmly contract the abdominal muscles Raise the arms laterally to the level of the shoulders, with the hands extended palms upward. Keeping ih arms and hands in this position, slowly bend the torso to the right side. After holding the position a moment, raise the tor-o to its normal poise; then let the arms sink to the sides as the breath is gentlv exhaled. Next inhale and raise the arm's as before, twist the torso to the right and bend backward in a direct line with the right arm. After holding the position for a moment, raise the torso, untwist it and then let the arms sink to the side as the breath is exhaled. These bending and twisting exercises develop flexibility, give a rounded contour to the waist and prevent an undue accumulation of adipose over the hips." "You have given an exercise to prevent adipose. Can you suggest something for wrinkled?" "One of the places where the marks of age are first seen," replied Mrs. Bishop, "is In the muscles of the neck. From lack of exercise these muscles become weak and flaccid. A very good exercise is this: Sit erect, keeping the head well poised and the arms and legs relaxed. Slowly turn the head until it is directly over the right shoulder; then bend it backward diagonally until the face is turned directly toward the ceiling, and then rotate the head around to the other shoulder; then slowly lift it and turn it forward and to the right shoulder agaJn. "This is an excellent remedy not only for wrinkled necks, but for nervous headaches and pain at the base of the brain." "What other advice do you give women with which to fight off old age?" "Stop worrying," promptly and emphatically answered the lady. "Many a woman fidgets herself nearly frantic uselessly stews, as they call it in remote rural districts. If women would but trust learn the beauty and the power of repose. Think how much nerve force is frittered away in little meaningless movement. tapping the feet, hitching the shoulders, drumming with the fingers, jerking the head, clasping and unclasping the hands, working the lips, contracting and elevating the eyebrows. The majority of women are in state ot chronic tension. Tension causes fatigue, Inability, self-consciousness, nervousness and insomnia, and these ills are enough to make any woman old and ugly before her time. The gospel of relaxation is the messag-e to be preached to the nervous, tense, hiph-strunsf American woman of today. There are many exercises to assist and accomplish this relaxation. The hands, being the direct agents of the mind, by their tens-Ion and restlessness report the mental strain and agitation. Therefore they are the first members to deal with. Lafc- the arms hang heavily at the sides and agitata the hands until they feel lifeless. Shake them forward and backward, .laterally and in circles, from each other and toward each other. "When the hands beconif relaxed, raise the arms above the head. Hold the position for a moment; then drop the arms like dead weights. There are many other exercises for relaxation of which Lhr re is not time to speak. But every exercise is s physical expression of the idea 'Let go! Let go the worrv and fret! Drop it now relax, rest!'" N. V. Herald. The Wn In Clenn Mrket. Household article- of nickel or nickel plate may be relieved of rust and benufully polished by rubbing over the metal a mixture of equal pari of linseed oil and beeswax melted together. Let this crating stand for twenty-four hours and rub off briskly with a poft cloth or chamois skin dampened with ammonia. It there are dep rust ftalp-;, a little t ripe 11 with diluted hydrochloric acid should be ixsed Instead ot the ammonia, -. .
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