Pike County Democrat, Volume 28, Number 16, Petersburg, Pike County, 27 August 1897 — Page 3

== pp t ht §ike Countg Jrnwrrat ■L MeC. STOOPS. Ui(m »Btf PtaprUtor. J»k¥kRRBURO. - - INDIANA. COMPLETE FUSION. n elvira Flora froercke. (Original.) MRS. NEU8TADTER was a thorough business woman and cared for the ■on tire correspondence of a large importing house. M rs. Olha usen was a perfect housewife and looked carefully after the social interests of her husband and herself. Mrs. Neu&tadter was a worker in women's clubs and for political advancement. Mrs. Olhausen was "a believer in the homemaker, and woman as the inspirer and helper in man't political advancement. Mrs. Neustadter always worshiped in the "Chapel of Nature." This meant a hammock under two shady trees, a pillow under head and a spicy novel in her hand. While Mrs. Olhausen trotted off every Sunday, prayer book in hand, to the morning service. One made bargains with the washerwoman as to the menditsg, the other ; darned her husband's aocks. One j •corned needlework as frivolous, the i other embroidered the daintiest things j of silk, muslin or lace. One found the •weetest music lay in eloquent sentences that fell from the lips or flowed j from the pens of the great female reformers. The other played upon the j piano and sang most sweetly. *Yet each loved her husband, wa^ed firmly in the path she considered right ] —each was fond of pretty dress, of books and flowers.

Their husbands were very much alike. Two fairly educated, pleasant young Germans. Fond of the pood things of life and disposed to look favorably’ on «]] men, providing their dinners were good and their beer well cooled. Each wai proud of his wife in a patronizing sort of way, considering a certain amount of affectionate attention her just due, yet taking instant alarm if the wife’s conduct bordered on the poetic or effusive. They would have become the w armest friends, only somehow the wife of each looked slightly stubborn if intimacy was suggested. So they smoked an occasional pipe together and sighed in a puzzled way. attributing the difficulty to w omen’s queerness. One dark, clear night, a night 1hat clothed . hills and meadows in sable shadows, a night when every flower seemed to send forth redoubled fragrance and the stars shone brilliantly, we sat in quiet enjoyment of the picture before us. Way off to the north lay the great twin cities. New York nud Brooklyn, their lights sparkling like fireflies, and stretched across the dark expanse dividing them a twinkling of lights making them one. Vrs. Olhausen spoke gently: “The giant of earth gives a diamond necklace to the queen of night.” We all thought this very pretty. We were becoming used to Mrs. Olhausen's romantic and figurative expressions, when an odd little sound came from a dark corner. It was a half laugh, half sneer, and we recognized the owner before words came. “If the lights went out on Brooklyn ■bridge it would mean that the Giant of Earth had taken back his gift and the Queen of Night would be weeping Tainy tears?” ”Ah, uol 1 fancy not. Queens, you kuow, do not weep or .complain in public. lhey have loo good training.” Instinctively a stir went through the ' group. These was a sound of some one moving restlessly. The neutral young man whispered: “That was a clincher 1 told you she’d balk.” Mrs. Old ucver let the smallest slip of tongue or manner on Mrs. New’s part • pass unobserved. Did she say: ”Ob. see how beautifully that brig looks with its sails spread." Mrs. Old would look over the landscape—the water view—and find the 'vessel a “brigantine.” Or if Mrs. New Appeared w ith a bunch of flowers in her belt and asked:

“Aren’t these bluetts pretty?” Mr*. OKI would declare that "ehickory” was one of the loveliest wild flowers. And once Mrs. New said the water dried up “quick" on the sandy path. Mrs. Old •freed with “very quickly." Poor Mrs. New so often defeated, declared to her husband that Mrs. Old was « most disagreeable creature—"a regular know-it-all." “Yes, she is very achmart, my dear; I haf learned many tings from her already." On the other hand, Mr. Old remarked the beauty of Mrs. New’s hair, whilst his wife was braiding her scanty locks. This was hard! But she conquered a symptom of hysteria and calmly remarked: “Yes! I wonder if her peasant ancestresses raised hair for the Berlin or Dresden barbers?" After that night Mrs. Oihausen arrayed her wits in materia! order to meet her advancing foe. It was a continuous skirmish; advance, retreat; advance, defeat. They became a pivot for household gossip, and we abbreviated the»r nvu**s to Mrs. New and Mrs. Old to facilitate cur constant discussions of them. Even the neutral young man made his usual daily inquiry: "la it neck and ne^h tod*/r l / Crocs purposes ruled. The boating and bathing, tennis and croquet, were second in attraction to watching these opinionated women. At breakfast Mr. New looked pale •ad ill. It was so strange to miss his j healthy color and cheery smile thstj 0mm was a general chorus of inquiry. I

— seemed pleased to bare our general sympathy. Not so Ms wife! She suggested, quite openly and with acid intonation, that he had better remain home; if he was sick that was the place for him. Poor man! He grew a trifle paler and gazed attentively at the piece of watery toast that lay on his plate, while his wile strode forth with a manly tread. In a moment she returned. Her sailor hat was well adjusted to her shapely head. In one hand she carried her neatly-rolled umbrella, in the other the Woman’s Journal. She paced up to her husband’s side, touched her lips lightly to his brow and said: “Good-by, dear! If you are not bet ter by 12 o’clock, send for the doctor, by all means.” Having performed her wifely duty, this manly young woman left the room. The following Sunday we lounged about, weak, listless and fretful from the intense heat. The women were wearing the lightest and coolest of lawn morning gowns. The men were in flannel or linen, white and fresh from the laundry. We were too indolent to talk | or to read. The sun scorched where it touched, and a fine veil of steamlike vapor rose from the blue waters of the I bay. dimming the opposite shores like an autumnal haze. AtLhalf-past ten exactly down came Mrs. Old. dressed in gauzy black lace and looking cool and j fresh. Her dainty little bonnet and prayer book made evident her destination. “By Jove!” exclaimed the neutral young man, “she has pluck. Wish I was ready; I’d go. too." “Pish!” came from Mrs. New’s hammock. And the neutral young man went a shade grayer*as she adjusted her pillow and turned over a ne^ page of “Papa’s Own Girl.” At dinner conversation was at a discount, fans being the only active things I seen or heard. Mrs. Old abd New sat opposite each other, smilingly, seeming on the beat of terms. Our genial host, with a view of Itarting a topic, turned to the church-goer, asked for the text, and if the sermon was a good one. “The text,” responded Mrs. Old. with the air of one about to unfold a long story, “was from the Epistle to the

IN THE CHAPEL OF NATURE. Ephesians: ’Wives, submit yourselves uuto your husbauils. Husbands, love your wives.’ " ”1 suppose you enjoyed that,” retorted her vis-a-vis. “Yes, 1 did. No man or woman with a fair amount of common sense and intelligence could have failed to do so. it was a most scholarly address; placing the vexed question of female supremacy in public life completely at rest and—” “How dare you say that!” flashed from across the table. “There is no such thing as placiug female progression ami supremacy at rest!” “Pardon me.” replied Mrs. Old, “1 was addressing our host." and she turned her shoulder slightly more towards the aggressor. “Your rector said that the question of woman’s advancement in j>olitical and professional life was downing aud discouraging men who need the breathings of hope and courage from their homemaker at the home lireside." “Women, 1 tell you, have their rights, and. if necessary, will fight to malnain aud protect them," almost screamed the excited Mrs. New. “It is of woman's rights that the dear old man spoke most forcibly. He said that women were, in many respects, far in advance of men by nature. That •11 education should be given them

freely and fully, if they wished to accept it. The broader, nobler and more cultured the woman's mind, the more able she to rear wise, noble sons and keep the husband true to the highest path of life. He said the woman doctor muy become a skilled practitioner, the female lawyer plead eloquently and wisely, the public speaker (in skirts) may command audiences and control thousands—women are capable of this —but in gaining it they Insensibly lose the sweetness of their nature!. This contact with the lower elements of life I must coarsen her. and once the purity ! is gone she ceases to hold that high j place where God placed and man would I fain keep her. She may accomplish 1 all that man has donej yet she lose* more than double its value. She loses the angel that the Creator placed with- \ in her. “When the Father placed man and then woman here on earth, man stood first to meet the elements and do battle for her; while she was to comfort, soothe, to cheer and make the home. Public women have no time—if inclination—to make the hom«i. Men cannot do this. What then is tp become of the children? Can there be a more miserable creature than a homeless child? “Look well on the picture! Take it to your hearts! Study it! This wonderful progression against God's laws may end in degeneration pitiful beyond words!” “His peroration." continued Mrs. Olhav.sen to her wrapt listeners, “was most beautiful. He advised strong women to use their power in helping thotr weaker sisters; to work for purity, \ f ■'

high resolves, noble charity, rather than public commendation, and at the end of a well-spent life to be received into the arms of God with the words: ‘Well done/ “Do you know,” said Mrs. Old, with tears of real feeling trembling on her lashes, “that sermon made me resolve to use pen and voice against woman's suffrage and women in public life.” Mrs. New had risen, and, trembling violently, was striving to control her voice to speak. She was deadly pale, and her brown eyes had paled and narrowed to a gleaming bronzelike bar that one sometimes sees in cloud-color-ing before a tempest. Her husband tried to quietly draw her to her seat. She was unbendable as steel. She had evidently taken the quotations as a re* flection on her and her life. Very unwisely beginning a defense by offense. “You!” said she. glaring at Mrs. Old, “You, who know not what you say. How dare you attack your own sexl You agree to obey your husband—as— as a superor?” “Yes! That promise I made at the marriage altar, and 1 must keep my vows.” “Then you are not better than the imbecile! You are a weak, willing slave! You hug your chains! Their clanging is your music! If you would obey that man,” pointing to Mr. Old, who was placidly helping himself to more cream, “you are not a woman! No! I love my husband. I would work for him—if he were sick I would nurse him”—here we all thought of Mr. New's kick day, and smiles were on every face—“but obey him, never! And you who say these things are no honor <o your sex.” Here we bad all instinctively risen, for the scene was getting warlike. The men, though silent, looked angry, and there was a fear in my heart thut things had gone too far. Mrs. Olhausen never looked so well; slightly pate, from the insult, she preserved a calmness of feature that was admirable, add her answer came like ice drops. “We differ in qur opinions, and may never be friends. You express your ideas freely. 1 reserve my judgment of you. 1 repeat. 1 shall use my pen and \oiee ever in opposition to this new position of women, trusting that a few loy^l ones may in time abate this feverish epidemic—this temporary aberration of the female mind.”

She swept from the room like a queen, and we followed. A murmur of admiration. and a subdued whistle from the little neutral man could be heard midst the frou frou of female drapery. After a day or two peace spread her wings again over us all, to the exclusion of excitement. Another day came when Mrs. New told of her father’s death. We had been bating, and were rallying her on her evident terror of the water. She told us how her mother, she. and her tiny sisters, were on the shore, watching the husband and father as he swam and dived. They were so proud of his strength, so amused with his merry pranks. Finally, w hile they were laughing, clapping their hands and j shouting to him, he gave a deep plunge, ! and when he came to the surface he struggled—they thought it fun—aud while they laughed, he disappeared. Mrs. Old was looking off to sea. A tender sympathy glowed on her face. l*er* hups this was not lost upou the speaker, who went on: “We lived in tiermany. My mother was only a gentle mother—and a Huus frau—that was all. My father’s brother had our little money to invest. He soon possessed hiuiseif of it, and we were homeless—penniless. Every man's hand was against us. My | mother fought a hard, bitter fight, clothing and educating us at the cost of health—almost of life,. Finally, by her persistent effort, she saved enough to bring us to this country, and put us iu a way to earn an honorable living, without man or boy to iieip her!” The poor, sad story. None seemed to feel it more deeply than Mrs. Olhausen, w ho stole softly toward the house, with head turned from us, silent as were wo all. Bathing always makes me drowsy. The still air, comfortable hammock and warm salty breeze sent me off into a sound sleep. The hum of voices aroused me. and 1 realized that the afreriirmn shadows had lengthened, and that 1 was uu eavesdropper. Mrs. Newstadter was stauding by the old horse-chestuut tree, gazing over the water, her face full of bitter and sweet memory. Mrs. Olhausen came up beside her, bolding out to her late enemy a bunch of fragraut red roses,

saying, soitiy: “The ‘old* woman comes to the ‘new’ one, to ask her forgiveness, she has misjudged her.doubted,opposed her, she acknowledges herself wrong in many things. Can she be forgiven Out went Mrs. Neustadter’s arms, and her girlishly eager voice said: “Oh, my dear, forgive me! 1 perhaps would have thought and felt as you, had my ancestors been like yours—my girlhood guarded as yours was and all trouble and evil that men do smoothed aw ay from my path. We are both right —and both wrong." Here came the sound of sobs from two voices. And looking up, to my intense surprise, I saw those two locked in a loving, close embrace. The fusion v as perfect. You could not have told the new woman from the old, to have saved your life. —The seed vessels of wild peas and beans, when dry, open and curl up with a sudden snap which expels the seeds sometimes to a distance of 12 to 20 feet* Indications of this habit are seen in the cultivated varieties, the seedpods of which often curl with a snap when opened. —A placard over a Georgia bridge reads as follows: “Any person driving over this bridge faster than a walk shall, if a w hite man, be fined $5, and, if a negro, receive 25 lashes—half the penalty to be bestowed on the informer." —The army worm has cost America ore than the revolutionary tsar.

SHARE OF WAGE-EARNERS. Where the Working Matt Cornea In ra the Dingle; Tariff. If the wage-earner does not organize to protect his own interest who will do it for him? The republican party’s reply to this question, asked by a reverend preacher, will be that organization on the part of the wage-earner is unnecessary for the protection of his own interests because those interests are entirely protected in tariff legislation. But assuming for a moment the potency pf tariff legislation to provide higher wage for the American artisan, the particular manner in which the artisan is to be protected and to gain his higher wage through the operation of the tariff law is faulty. The tariff duty on bituminous coal, not laid, the republicans will explain, for the benefit of the mine owner, but for the benefit of the mine operative, was increased in the Dingley bill by 27 cents a ton, just as the glass schedule and all other schedules were increased to the McKinley rates. But the tariff law leaves the interests of the laborer, for whose benefit, it is said, this tariff in its protective features Is mainly laid, in the hands of the employer. It does not oompel the employer to keep books and make sworn returns showing the amount gained to his business by the protective tariff nor the amount of such gain paid to employes in the protected industries. It has resulted that the so-called principal beneficiary of protection, the laboring man. has not had his due share of the profits of protection. These have been secured to him in part only by hfs own organization. He cannot trust those beneficiaries of the tariff that the tariff maker trur.ts. The tariff maker says in effect to the captains of industry: *‘\Ve charge you to see that labor gets the buik of fhe profit we give you in this bill, a profit arising from our use of authority to legislate for the general welfare. We intrust the general welfare partly to you. We expect you to use it to the advantage . of labor, which is our main concern.” Then the tariff maker goes off and foolishly rejoices in the work he has done, never having taken adequate rteps to see that the captain of industry lias performed his share of the com

pact. So it is that even if the tariff for protection is the true policy it is not self»ffective in the protection of labor. It leaves the interests of labor in the hands of the greedy persons who procured the legislation, the g-rcat captains of industry who “‘ho",” as the expressive phrase is. all that is in it for themselves and leave labor to get what it can only through its own organization. And it is to such organization that labor in the protected, interests owes the fact that it has had any other than lining wage. The captains of industry have not made a fair divide of the profit of tariff taxation.—Chicago Chronicle. THE REAL PROMOTER. Education Alone Will Drln*t Prosperity. It has always been admitted that the wages of skilled labor were higher in the United States than auywhere else in the world. The McKinleys and Dingleys have always insisted that they deserve all the credit for this happy state of affairs, and that the attempt to credit it to the superior skill and intelligence of the American workman was both silly and unpatriotic. Now comes the nonpolitieal Massachusetts bureau of statistics of labor with exhaustive and undoubtedly accurate tables of comparative wages that leave the McKinleys and Dingleys without a leg to stand on. The Massachusetts bureau, after compiling the wages in 99 occupations, finds: 1. That there are wider differences between the wages paid for the same kind of work in various parts of the United States than there are between the wages of the United States and of England'or the continent. 2. That in the United States the workmen of Massachusetts receive the highest wages in every class of occupations —in those that pay poor wages at best no less than in those that offer labor the largest returns. The first proposition shows that the chief cause for differences in wages cannot be tariffs, which of course operate Equally upon protected manufactures everywhere. The second proposition shows that whatever this chief cause is It helps the workmen of Massachusetts more than it helps those of any other

State. What then is this chief cause? The statistics of education undoubtedly furnish the clew to it. They show that Massachusetts gives each of her inhabitants seven years* schooling1 of 200 days each, while the average for the United States is 4 3-10 years of 200 days each. Further, while the average wealthproducing power of each man. woman and child in the United States is 40 cents a day. the average wealth-pro-ducing power of each man. woman and child in Massachusetts is 73 cents a day—nearly double! Education is the true advance agent of prosperity.—N. Y. World. -Democrats need not look beyond the Fourth Indiana district for renewed courage and fresh hope. The unmistakable evidence is there of democratic buoyancy and harmony which augur party unity and victory. The democrats of the Fourth Indiana district have demonstrated that the party's oldtime fighting spirit baa returned. .Now let democrats everywhere catch step rad march resolutely oq to the glories of victory that ay-art them this year, next year and in 1890.—St. Louis .Republic. -As an evidence of how the tariff bill affects values and that there is a dawn of prosperity, the republican papers are printing tables to show that the trust stocks have increased in value over S200.000.000.—Peoria Herald.

THE STAR OF PtNQLEVISM. Price* •* the Iacreue Cater the Hew Tariff. Consumers are thus early learning that under the Dingley bill they are confronted by a bard, tangible condition and not a mystical, intangible theory. The price* of all the necessaries are) going up without the least promise of an increase in the income of the wageearners. New York grocers have advanced the price of sugar six-tenths of a cent a pound. This is just a starter. From this increase the sugar trust will reap a reward of $25,000,000, as the Dingley bill intended it should. There has also been an advance of from ten to twenty-five per cent, on all woolen goods. The new law has caused an advance in the price of hides, and an increase in the cost of boots and shoes from 30 to 50 cents a pair will follow. In brief, an advance soon of prices all along the line may be confidently looked for. The upholders of the Dingley bill cannot deny the facts of increasing prices, and they try to justify the measure and the party’s action in imposing it upon an already overtaxed nation by contending that it will ultimately result in raising the wage scale by the bare force of the necessities of wage-earners, and also in multiplying the opportunities for employment. This is the veriest rot. The McKinley bill did not raise wages or increase labor’s opportunities. On the contrary, the industrial history of that brief period shows that wages decreased under the McKinley bill and that more trusts were formed than during any other corresponding time in the nation’s history.

The sole and only business purpose of trusts is to control production by smothering competition That proposition is too axiomatic to require argument or illustration. The rates of the McKinley bill were on an average ten per cent, lower than the rates ot the Dicgley bill. The latter meosurv will be proportionately a greater trust breeder. There is no sentiment in business. ^ will embrace its opportunity 4o cheapen its operations and increase its profits. This means an era of higher prices during the life of the Dingley bill than were ever known in this country in time of peace and when all of the productive energies of the nation were vigorous and eager to be allowtvl full sway. Speaker Heed very correctly and succinctly summarized the causes of republican defeat under the McKinley bill once by declaring that “it was the women shoppers who did it.” When the American people again get a whack ! at the republican party Mr. Heed’s quick perception and ready wit will have another opportunity for display. As he views the wreck the thought is bound to suggest itself to his mind that the greed and rapacity of trusts havf caused it.—St. Louis Republic. SUCCESS OF DEMOCRATS. Favorable Signs In Severn! Important Staten. The prospects for democratic success in Ohio and Iowa a re growing brighter as the active opening of the campaign approaches. Republicans are frightened at the outlook, and are whistling to keep their courage up. The record of the republican party since it went into power is such that its leaders fear to face the : j>eople. TheiV fostering of trusts, their j gifts to combines and1 their subservi- j euoy to monopolies make a precarious j platform on which to stand before the j people. Add this record of corrupt legislation i to that of the republican party on the money question and the burden will'be too great to bear. In the words of the New York World: “The republicans have sown broadcast the seeds of new discontent. Democracy has but to be true to itself to reap from this sowing i an abundant harvest.'* Of course, the world is opposed to j bimetallism, but it sees the downfall of the republican party in its slavish obedience to the behests of the trusts and its disregard for the welfare of the people. Success in Ohio and Iowa for the democracy would be a tremendous victory, because all the powers of corruption would enlist themselves in behalf of republicanism. Defeat would t carry with it discouragement to the democratic forces, for the real battle is before them in 1898, and1 victory then will m£an a conquest in 1900, carrying with it freedom, happipess and prosperity for the nation.—Chicago Dispatch

PARAGRAPHIC POINTERS. -When prosperity returns^ will not (be through the custom house, but through the "golden harvest fields."— Indianapolis News. *-The trouble with the farmers' pockets these days is that no matter bow much is poured into them as the result of the harvests it always runs out through the holes made by the tariff.—Chicago Chronicle. -Extravagance grows with what it feeds upon. It becomes a power in legislation that is almost irresistible. The new tariff bill will not supply revenue sufficient to meet such expenditures. Its promoters admit this. Mr. Aldrich and Mr. Dingley have finally agreed that the deficit for this year will be not less than $30,000,000. The chances are that they have underestimated this deficit.—Louisville Tost. -The Hanna system means tbatall responsible public offices shall be pur* chased by aggregated wealth for incumbents who will loyally serve their masters; that neither honor nor oaths nor the direct specifications of the law shall count for anything where the interests of aggregated- wealth are concerned; that even crime itself is to be treated with respect if committed by men who count their wealth by millions and whose conspiracies against need are for the gratification of greed— N. Y. World.

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