Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 March 1894 — Page 10

10

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 7. 1891 TWELVE PAGES. OMAN n n o0o

AND

HOME

EFFECT OF A GOOD LUNCH.

A. CLKVKH I.ITTl.K VOl SHOW'S A WAY TO VI , MAN'S HEART.

Thit Fr lipid "Thnnk Yon" Kngllwh Home Mnnnsrrinent Ilrlen Cioulil'n thnrille-The Love That Kills The Mrnin of School Children ceil CoinpnnloiiH.

"I sui'pose," said a clever little woman, "that I gr?t to go to the theater more than any woman of my acquaintance, means being equal. You pe. It's this way: One nlpht John wanted me to to the play. nrl of course I accepted, for I dearly love the play. After the theater was over John was steering me straight for tha restaurant. 'No, John, said I firmly; 'we can't afford It. The play was treat enough. Let's be sensible. We had a pond dinner, and we are nt starving'.' " 'Oh, hang the expense'.' said Mr. John. 'We might as well round off with a bit of supper." IU:t I wouldn't. As John siys, 'I stood pat. We went on home, fr when 1 man is hungry he doesn't think much of the virtue of economy. In fact, he said by my pigheadednoKS I'd spoiled all the evening, and he'd 'be dine: siiuizzb'd whatever that may mean if he'd take me out apain in a hurry. I kept my temper, as I was grateful for having seen so beautiful a play, and said nothing. "Well, when we pot home, John threw tlif hedrooin door open with a bang, and there in th middle of the floor was my sewing table with as dainty a lunch as one could wish. AVe had had a leg of mutton fer dinner, and I had shredded Horn-1 of it, chopped up a couple of shallots fine and added two cold potatoes cut Into dice and covered with mayonnaise made after 'Catherine Cole's prize recipe. Then there were a few olives and somf dainty slices of bread and butter, all on a white doth, with chairs drawn up. and as cozy as could be. John was simply delighted. Since then he often asks me to pr to the theater, for he says he can stick me for a supper that taMes better than any hot bird and cold bottle that he could order down town." "What else do yiu have for those suppetrs?" inquired a curious wife, who had never had the happy thought of playing lv-stess for only her husband. "Well, one night I made before starting and I never let John know what we are going to have a nie dish of oyster soup. I sent for 1." cents' worth of oysters and rents' worth of milk. I took the juiee of tli" oysters, scalded it. added the hot milk and finally plumped the oysters in. 1 had seasoned it with plenty of butter, pepper and sauce. Then I poured it all into a yellow howl and set it away. That nitrht when we got home I doused it all into a saucepan and heated it up over our prate tire, put some broken crackers in the bowi and poured it over them, ft made a tiptop supp-r for poor people, who, in polng to the theater, want to cat their

cake and have it too." Xew Orleans I Picayune. '

structlve and swaying power of child companionship. Such a iover as this ougnt not to be Ignored or slighted by any parent who would d most and. best for his child's wise training. SundaySchool Times. Helen ioiildn f hiirlllrn. Miss Helen Could. If she lives lng enough and if she docs not marry and get a husband and family to spend her money, will g upon record as the most charitable woman in the world. As a young woman she has already earned that title, and If there are any among the older ones to compete with It it is because circumstances have favored them or their gifts have grown during the years they have been giving. Miss Gould keeps no account of her gifts, but works secretly as If afraid to let her right hand know what her left is doing. It is difficult to find out all the charities of a youner woman who works so secretly. One knows of them only as they come accidentally to light sometimes the little, sometimes the large or are told by grateful persons who are benefited. There is a story, but it comes from a good source, that Miss Could is sometimes driven to economizing even with her $15,000.000 and her $t;,itn) a month. She gives away such colossal sums that occasionally she has to choose between this thlni? and that. On one afternoon every week .Mips flould orders out her carriage and directs the driver to take her to a certain dry goods st"re, when she alights and buys flannels, dress goods, trimmed hats and hosiery and bed linen. On other days she orders supplies of simple household remedies, which ate a hardship to do without, for wile distribution. Thoj-v trips cost her many hundreds of dollars, for a very large check is required to cover them. X. Y. l'ress.

That I'rlalil "Thank Ion." Tt is to b- regretted wholly in the Interests of her se that the wom.in who thanks a gentleman for surrendering to her his seat in the cr.rs does not

speak up baldly and cheerfully and ns j if she really meant what she said. It j lias been k-ng maintained by our foreign I

erities that th- Knglish language lacks llexibility, nice shades of meaning, the Cuality of expression, compared to other tongues. Hut fifter careful observation at home and abroad I am satisfied that the lack of expression is rather in the Knglish speaker than in the language. There are an infinite number of shad- s of which this little "Thank yon" is susceptible, h.s any one about town knows. It may be uttered in such a way as to cause the bl.x-d to tingle with indignation. It can be said with such grace and sweetness that the recipient will carry the memory of it as the niemor of some delicious perfume or beautiful picture or sympathetic, strain of music. Kr su -h a reward as this thousands of men have suffered uncomplainingly, have endured lh tortures of the innuistion, have fought, bled and diM upon the battlefield. It would seem a. very simple thing, but the graces and politeness and gentleness uf speech which distinguished the women of the c hivalrie age are now almost wholly unknown. When women talk of the decay of chivalry in man, they forget that men are what women make them. Men are the exact reflection of their mothers and sisters and wives. Through the history of the men of the past we have accurate knowledge of the character of the women of that time. As it is imiKssihle for the fountain to rise higher than its source, so Is H impossible for men to rise higher than their mothers, their sweethearts, wives and sinters. X. V. Herald.

The I.o e That Hills. It is not enough that wives must feel that they have the love of iheir husbands, writes Edward W. H"k, in the I-adies' Home Journal. They should know it and be bM it. Thoughtlessness and a misunderstanding of th nature of women are at the bottom of all this unexpressed Io c. There is plenty of love abroad in this world, and a great part of it lies in the hearts of our American husbands. Rut it shouldn't lie dormant. When it ds. it is the love that kills. It should reach expression. It should be given voice and as often and as warmly as the heart dictate?, A good wife can stand a tremendous quantity of love all that any man can give her. The danger lies rather in not giving enough than in giving too -much. It is not an unmanly thing for a man to love his wife, although one might readily believe so from the way some men go about it. Neither is it sickly, maudlin nor sentimental for him to show it. Rut even if it were all these and more, what T it? VYh Iihs a prior claim to a husband's love, and who a better right to know it? What is it that men do for their wives that is at all an equivalent fr what wives do f ir tli-Mr husbands? rmvM" for them? That's a duty ainl nothing more. In sonic things it is well that we should go a little further than the duty line. The more husbands remain lovers the better it will br for the wives of our land. It is tieexpressed 1vo "f a husband thai makes a wife radiantly happy, and nothing else can take its place.

trimming about the dress, except folds of the same material or crape. To use cut jet is atrocious, and even dull jt is in bad taste. A recent widow, done up in yards of crape and "bombazine," with the shelf crease yet in it. stuck to her diamonds, wearing two-carat stones in her ears and five of the same kind at her throat. Through the folds of .ie enveloping veil they shone like glow - rms. Oricf like that is a shrieking sham. X. Y. Telegram. American Women. Of all the gifLs which nature has lavished upon woman, one of the most chara'teristie is adaptability. Few women Jn Eurj possess in th same degree as the American woman the faculty of identifying themselves with their medium of changing: country, climate and surroundings with so wonderful suppleness. More perfectly than others, she accommodates herself to circumstances while she preserves her individuality in a strange surrounding. Whenever we tn"et the American woman and we meet her everywhere, in the ranks of the Knglish peerage and of the highest European aristocracy as well as in more modest conditions we are struck with that marvobus adaptability in which wise men see the signs of the superiority of a race or of a species. Topular Science Monthly.

FASHION NOTES.

Knglish Home Management. An Knglish periodical, Woman, gives. Jn an article to young housekeepers, a daily time table for the arrangement of the servants' duties Jn a. household conlasting of husband and wife, in which two servants are kept. A specimen is submittal : 5:40 a. m. Light kitchen tire, fill k-t-tbf, etc. I'.nish up dining room and lay fire. Sweep hall, polish door brasses. 7:30 KitubAU breakfast. S Clean ge-ntl-man's 1m - its-. Sri.") prepare dining room breakfast. S:15 Send up breakfast. Wash kitchen, wip larder shelves. 9:3') Clear dining room breakfast. Wasü up breakfast things. 19 Tak'" ordr.; for the flay. Clean knivef.' 11 to 12 (See table of special duties). 12 to 1 p. m. I'repar; Inn hcfn fr,r o'clock. 1 :2o Kitchen dinner. 2 Wa-h tip. Tidy kit-hen. 3:15 to 4::;0 (See tabk- of special fluties . 4:30 Kitchen tea. Ti Prepare late dinner. 7:30 Dish 11 p 1 inner. 8 Wash up dinner I hing and all saucepans, ttc, u;d in the preparation of dinner. 9 Kitchen supper. 10 Go to bed. The "special duties' r?fr to Fitndry ecupatlotis. such as her own mending, cleaning servants' rooms, ete., to be done on different days. Xow, has the millennium -ome over in London, or is this only a ase of belling th? cat? It. would b the very exceptional American cook who would thus fro through her day with one ye on the clock. The table Is interesting besides as showing the lifference in work: In English and Arrberiean households.

Children eed Companion. Any observing parent will testify that, 011 more than one occasion, his child has come to him with a new interest in a thought or theme, inspired by the words or example of a young companion, to the Furprise of the parent who had before sought in vain to excite an interest in that very direction. All that thi parent had said on the subject had been of no value In comparison with that which had been said or done by the child's companion, as another self. Again, there are few parents who hive rot found to their regret that their child has received lessons and Impulses directly opposed to all the parental counsel and purposes through a brief and comparative! unnoticed companionship that ought to have been guarded agrinst. And these are but illustrations 'of the in-

Mrnin of 'hool on American (irl. Dr. Mitchell deliberately maintains that, for all the best purposes of female society, it would be better that American girls were not educated at all untli they are seventeen than that they were overwrought as they are at present. They study seven fir eight hours a day when two or three would be sufficient to keep their intelligence in training, and all for what? To spend their after years mi a sof;i or in a sickroom and to be a burden instead of a help to those who ;ire dearest to them. It is a tremendous saying, from one speaking with authority, that as much domestic unhappiness is caused in America by nervousness among women as by dram-drinking among men. Yet such is Ir. Weir Mitchells verdict. He holds that every girl ought to bo examined as to her nervous tcmperaim-iit when about to go to school, and at frequent Intervals afterward, that leisure, exercise and wholesome meals ought to be insisted upon, and that studies ought to be compulsorily diminished, or discontinued altogether, the moment the well-known signs of overstrain appear. If girls are maintained in normal nervous condition until they are seventeen they may study almost as hard as thv please afterward without imperiling their woman's life. Rut let thero be no mistake about it. Overwork and unnatural worry from eight or nine to seventeen mean ruin and wretchedness from seventeen till early death. McCIure's Magazine. Aclinic n nn Occupation. Mrne. Jane Harding', that beautiful and conscientious artiste, does not believe in pursuing art for gain. She is not rich and never expects to tie, although she puts a high market value on her talent and is IndefatlPftble In her work. Annie

Tlxley was worth $:?40Hi when she dle.j. j

Sh had been on the stage about twenty years. Sh not only made money, but she made good investments, lived well, supported an entire family, stepfather and hu?land included, educated her halfsisters and stepsisters and gave a great deal to the common cause humanity. The first hing she did when success came was to study. She was a chi d when she went on the stage, and contact with the world enabled her to appreciate her defects. She took tip English and tiouetfo tirst. She studied grammar, physiology and literature. ;ml later music and Frencii. Annie pj.y was a selfmade woman, and her life, if it is ever written, will show what a girl can do who has pluck and ambition. Exchange.

Sleepia- Arrangement. A 1 Vouch doctor urges that we have been sleeping in the wrong position indefinitely. The pillow belongs properly under the feet and not under the head. To tuote him. unless the head be lowthe brain is not pruperlv "irrigated with blood." Then he goes on to show how the right habit may be gradually acquired, six weeks being a good limit for making the hange without discomfort. Discard the pillow tirst for a few nights, then do without the bolster, too. There will still be a slight rise in the mattress, which soon must be eliminated and a level sition secured. Finally, put the pillow' at the foot of the bed. and there you are. One of his arguments is that if nature

had intended the head to lie raised in occupying a reciimhent osition th" human lxxly would have been differently formed. I.enther Cap Condemned. For several seasons past there has been a rage among small boys for russet leather Tain O'Shanters. These caps are very English and everlasting. They come in black as well as brown leather, to match the leggings worn with kilts and little breeches, and cost about $:'..".".. The coni'iination is pretty enough, but the caps have been condemned by th" medical profession and the professional nursery maid as injurious. Aside from a tendency to precipitate a race of baldheaded babies, the head is heated to a degree to which so delicate an organ as a child's brain should not be exposed. Life is hard enough for the modern man without u-ing a leather Tarn o'Shantcr to handicap his childhood. X. Y. Commercial. Aple Merl iija ne I'ltilfllnu. Two cupfuls of slewed apples stewed evajMira.ted apples will do one-half cupful of sugar, three eggs, the yolks and whites separate, a teaspoon ful bitter almond, a teaspoonful of cinnamon and nutmeg, mixed. If the apples are not hot. heat them, add sugar and spice and butter and the yolks of eggs slowly. I'.eat well and pour into a buttered baking dish, bake in quiek men ten minutes. Meanwhile beat the whites of the three eggs to a stiff froth, add two tablespoonfuls of sugar, and beat again with egg-beater, add teaspoonful of bitter almond, draw pudding to oven door.

spread quickly with meringue, bake ;t, delicate- brown. Serve hot or cold with cream. X. Y. World.

This illustrates a princess costume, than which there is perhaps no style more suited to the display of rich fabrics. In this in.tance: the material used is mauve French camel's hair and mauve moire. The yoke and lower sleeves are of the moire. The closing is effected invisibly along the front edge of the left

j front seam. Th" bottom of the skirt is J trimmed with a broad bat:d of the m ;ire. I and at the neck is a close-fitting stand- ! ing collar of the same. A very pretty i effect, is pro.iuepi j,y three hrettoles of ; graduated depth, which outline the round

yoke at the lu.k, pass over the sh"ulders

and are in lud-'il in the side front seams. Reautiful reception gowns in velvet, satin or brocade may be made up .ift uthis model, and Persian lamb, ln-e insertion or lcaid wrought in nn cbib.-rate design will supply suitable dcorati ut.

A reign of popularity is predicted for a new sh'V for evening wear; it has a pointed to- and a deep flap secured by a rounded buckle. A pair i shown in heliotrope brocade, the buckle being of amethists which match tin- color ,,f the material. Another sho for evening wear has a strap over th- instep, the top of the shoe being embroidered in silver, into whi h green-tintf d stones have beii introduced. It can ! mad in any color of satin, that in light applcgreen being esje dally attractive.

DiK'iitV ml IIjihiip- of Work. I'nless a woman has a family to rear or prop! rty enough to make her independent the power of earning a livelihood is essential to her dignity. If --h" is making a home and rearing children she is doing the noblest kind of W -rk. To think f 1 one moment that she is being supported does her position great injustice. Rut to the childless or lvm -b-ss women, i f whatever age. a life of inactivity brings melancholy, discontent and premature decay. There is nothing, after disease, disgrace and helpless poverty, so fatal to the enjoyment of life as a want of occupation or the lack of a worthv outlet for the faculties. Detroit Xcws. DKTMI.S OF llt EMS.

The ginghams were ih-v r more attentive. They ate fine in texture, perfect in coloring, with narrow stripes of black of white corded lines. Sonic hae tiny embroidered figures between the stripes. The pinks, light blues. helio-

I tropes and grays ar- specially pretty. I towns of fifty-cent organdies are to

! be made up over foundations of taffeta

glace silk, which s lis for about Sl.r.n a yard. They m- overburdened with lace and inoij-e ribbons with long ends are much in evidence.

j The sash is again in fashion. It is broad and it is narrow. It ties in the j back or at the sirle, but it has a pl.u e ! on everv modish gown.

Ueeoming Arcmitrlrü That Are laile to Nrrie n Moat Ireful I'nrpoie.

Tt is jut now- the trimmings of the dres and the details of the toilet that engage attention f-r the most part rather than new shapes and cuts. Many arc th" ways of enriching the corsage. Among them figure, of course, fichus, bows and sleeves and plastrons of different and rich material".

I tler alal. J Cut the white stalks of celery into j pje. a half inch long. To cvt ry pint of , thes. pieces allow a half pint of mai;-

I naiso dressing. Oust the celery lightly

with salt and pepper, mix it with th-1 dressing, heap it on a cold plate, garnish with while tips of the celery and servo immediately. Do not mix the celery and dressing until you are ready to use the salad.

WOMAN'S TRIALS. SOME LHJHT OX THE SUBJECT. So Mauj SuiTer Without Knowing UI17. 3Iuch Can He AvoHed.

"Mantel Deeorti tlon. For the decoration of n mantel the following scheme has been recommended: First cover the wood or marble with heavy tinfoil. Take light sprays of smi-

lax and lay over the edge so that it '

drops about eighteen inches. Trim this even at the ends with a pair of shears. Purchase, several jxas of thrifty lycopodium the new golden variety is ery handsome for the purpose turn the plants out of the pots and place them fin th tinfoil, which cover entirely. Fit th plants together so that then will be one solid bed of lycopodium. On this flowers can be laid or vases may be stood. Th bed of moss alone is very effective. If sprinkled often it will remain beautiful 1 long time. This Is a very pretty way to decorate the mantelpiece for weddings or entertainments. Vases with eoleus. callas and poirtsettia look gorgeous rising from this g-olden tipped lycopodium. Home Journal.

ml t y-. - t IfA rffjf f mm

Prrionnt ritnrnii I. CaptlvatlnR. There is -a personal cleanliness that, with taste in dress and grace of manner, rivals and often outshines beauty. Trifles

like KlOFfy hair, white teeth, well-kept.

hands, a smooth skin, redolent of health, nweet breath, fresh linen and spotless garments go a long way toward making up the sum of personal attractiveness. All clean people are charming. but

charming people are never more charm- j ing than when they are radiant with j good grooming. It is some expense, but

a great deal of trouble, to be habitually and exquisitely neat. It pays, though, Immensely. Health Journal. Queer Monrnlnjf., Pome people have queer ideas about wearing mourning. When crape Is worn there should not be a suspicion of any

cr n s a t ; 1 : ; a n s 1 ti t r : r : . One of the most successful additions for transforming an ordinary morning rwn into ft guise suitable for eening consists of a. narrow front, reaching to th wai.t. of beautiful fine gauze, with wide ruffles on either side extending over he rhoulders. The collar is a. high standing on. and the whop; slightly embroidered. What a comfort this would prove on a cold evening, when a low bodice, or even a semi low bodice, necessitates much moral courage and ends often in . cold! It will be acceptable also, without doubt, to many good people who never wear low dresses, and thdr name is legicn. Low necked dresses, with long sleeves, are a Parisian freak, the effect, of which Is not pretty, besides leading people to think the wearer's arms aro long' and thin. Thick-ribbed silk or moire in form of flesves, frilled fronts and berthas makes dressy the day toilet, but it should be. If possible, not plain moire, but moire antique, with irregular water marks and patin spots or shot with shades of ruby or green, thus greatly brightening up a dress. As to plaited collars, frills and collarettes, they are numberless. Folds of velvet In emerald or turquoise blue Into which laee is daintily gathered represent a simple form of these garnitures, or they may be in peau de sole, satin lined and tied with ribbon.

Sri. HI. Til KI R LA UY rr.M'IT.r .j So many feel the cry life rnilied out, of them, Make r.n cheerful and happy.

determined to do so much before the day end, and yet : Let'ore the morning is very old, t he r .-..1 1 1 1. .

-Tf) yiC-hearing-down feelA4t r-s'l ,

"r' f pV ) ui attacKs i nein.

; . ....

the iiravesbini sinks hack in affright ; no

?. J matter how hard

frtrn.sgle, the

dutch " i upon

J. A' i,,pv

A.

r h.j 1

!

them, and they sink

f "''-H-:' into a chair, cr itiLr, Wh ' y.'lHl " Mi! why idiould 1

What can 1 do '.'" The answer is readv, vour cry his

been heard, and a woman i? able to restore you to health and happiness. LttUti ;. I'i)tl,l,(nn's Ye citable Compound will stop your torture and restore your courage. All your pains come from a deranged uterus or womb. It is the greatest of all rewards torereive mkIi letters as the following from Miss Louise Müller, who lives at 44 Michigan Ave., in Evanston, III. She says: As I have Used Lydia E. Finkhaui's Vo,tableConiponnl,an.(1 have thereby be

come entirely well, I am recommending all my lady friends to use it. I am sure itwill help them in all ease of womb trouble, leucorrhtra, irregular or painful " monthly per. iods." lam sure it is our best frif nd.

I am so thankful to Mr. Pinkham for the good she has done nie, that T wish every sick woman in America would write to her at Lynn, Mass., and get her advice."

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