Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 26, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 December 1892 — Page 7
Uov "10 TEE GOOD."
How a Rich Man's Christmas Giving: May Beach the Deserving:.
Commander Booth Tells IlowJlonfjOlvM to Charity Need Not Be Wasted—A Comparison Between Personal Oversight and a Mission'# Method.
I COPYRIGHT, 1ft#.
If I had 8150 for Christmas charity ."what would be the best way to give it— by personal contribution or through the aid of a mission? A rich man said to me: "I would give enough to do some good down in the slums if I knew half of it would reach the deserving poor. Charity ought to be made more accessible and then your dollars would pour in."
I admit that there is some truth in this, but I claim that there is a mission whose officers receive only one dollar a •week, and whose girls, dressed in slum jUniforin, can stop a street fight and •walk along into the worst dens of our (northern and western cities. It is 'through these girls, who have won the
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OK Tim HI.I'M AND SMKIjTHR BRIGADE.
confidence of slumdon, that rich men's charity nuiy reach the people who deserve it with 1 he waste of less than one per iviit.
For example, ten dollars given to an impostor or an inebriate, who will immediately spend it in drink, or the same amount spent on new clothing for the children of parents who will, within half an hour, have pawned it, does more harm in the increase of vice and pauperism than would altogether withholding the amount.
Thousands of dollars are given annually in this and other of our large centers which are productive of results that amount to little more than a bagatelle so far as efficient benefits are concerned, though often productive of irremediable harm, and this because the good such money would have effected falls short of reaching those in real poverty and needing help. The donors of such large gifts would be wonderfully enlightened if they would take the trouble of following up the gold and silver they have sent before them, and finding out how far its inllueneo had penetrated.
Strange that so many Bhould be perfectly satisfied with having given the money without troubling themselves as to its direct purpose or usefulness! It is as though sotne laid aside a certain percentage and said: "This I will give away to appease my conscience. The giving is just as praiseworthy to me, the glory just as great, so long as I give, whether it be carelessly flung from a generous hand orcarefully given {from a generous heart." Lot us then ue careful to what end we give our jnone}'. 11 is not for me to say that $150 would be best spent in the Salvation Army. That would appear as though I were underrating other, institutions, and this is furthest from my intention but I may, without fear of egotism, state that there is no organization known to me, after traveling round the world, that so actually and systematically makes as much of the funds given to it as does the Salvation Army. Particularly is this so In connection with two branches of work which come most closely into touch with the greatest need, in which,
OSS WAY TO KKACH THEM.
1 believe, all knowing anything of out inissionary euterprise are especially in-iercsted—-via., the New York "Foodand (Shelter" and "Slum" brigades.
I can say this confidently, becaute during the post twelve months the of-, •fieers in connection with one Shelter Wigade alone have found employment •for tV4 men, have provided bed* for 14,SW men. besides providing meals for, nearly 24,000 men ami women.
Turning to those engsiged in the very heart of slumdom in this city alone our -women during the year have visited no less than »-s,* families they Jjave entered with their War Crys afld consecrated influence it.W9 saloons and 1.840 places of dlsrep end have personally dealt with persons on the streets and in places of uloriuad vioe.
These energetic and .elf-sacrificin|? women have sat up and stitched ®»4$" garments and have received into their patient eare and constant and loving •watchfulness d,S84 fcabes that their orerWrdened fathers and mothers might
have a chanoe of gaining some livelihood. But figures would leave my reader* with the tale half told, for no words within our reach could explain the heroic and merciful efforts of these women in sitting up with the sick through the long hours of the night, in washing filthy bodies and in caring for the weak and dying.
Nor must it be forgotten that many hundred of our field officers are engaged in similar work throughout the country among the poor and low in connection with their corps.
Now it will be at once apparent that as the officers engaged in this Saviourlike mission enter the lowest dives and the most vicious abodes themselves, daily and nightly, on their errands of mercy, they are as a natural sequence the most likely to know who are really needing help and deserving.
Living in their very midst as neighbors they can very readily detect the professional swindler of charitable people, while at the same time they are able to administer the help for which the sincere languishing soul cries, and consequently they are scarcely ever deceived.
Oh. that we had the help that is within the power of some to give us at this very Christmas time, when hundreds of men are pleading at our shelter doors for admission, and when the voices of these unpitied, gaunt-faced applicants would move the heart of a stone!
It has been sometimes difficult for me to control my feelings upon learning of some worldly persons paying for a single banquet or for floral decorations what would supply a year's lodging for a score of the unhoused and destitute multitude who apply nightly to these shelters, and I confess to having sometimes felt the flush of shame rising to my face when hearing of some fashion follower spending for one jewel that which would enable the heroic and self-sacrificing women of our Slum brigade to carry food to scores of families who are eking out a miserable existence on food which they would scarcely consider fit to throw to their pet dogs. If the dream of the equal distribution of wealth is Utopian, I venture to hope, in the light of this dire need of my fallen brothers and sisters, that the day is near at hand when in reality some whom God has blessed with abundant means will assist these1 workers who measure out in prayerful
REACT FOR WORK.
conscientiousness and with common sense judgment each quarter intrusted to their charge.
I can confidently assert' that out of 9150 handed to the heads of our "Slum" and "Shelter" brigades not above $10, possibly not mora than $5, would be appropriated to the individual support of those who carry forward this merciful mission
Read the following, which I have just received, from the representatives in their own language, of the above-named branches of work. I will, without alter-' ing, let them speak for themselves:
A young girl scarcely in her teens was found crying near our Shelter onei day and when questioned by one of our workers as to what was the matter said' that she was unable to go to work for food as her mother and father both lay at home sick and her three little brothers were all crying for something to eat.
She was sent home for a basket and pitcher, both of which were filled, one With food and the other with soup. Some time later in the day our Shelter officer visited the house to see if the story were true.
On entering the rooms that were called "home" the scene that met our officer's gaze was heartrending. The poor father—in the last stages of consumption—lay on a broken down bed in one corner, and the mother, exhausted by starvation and overwork, lay on the other side of the room. The young girl who had been earning nearly 13
at
week, had been obliged to stay at home' to wait on her sick parents, and thus5 all means of keeping soul and body together seemed shut off.
Hearing the little ones cry for bread so often had wrought upon the father's feelings until he had repeatedly risen from his couch and made attempts to go out to work, but had failed and now they were in danger of being turned out of the rooms because the rent was due and there was no money with which to pay it.
Although a little out of the ordinary, our shelter officer paid the rent and daily siw that they were provided with food. As the father grew worse he was finally moved to the hospital, where we still continued to visit him, he professing conversion until he died. When dying he made mention of the kind words of prayer that had helped make him a better man and told his little girl they were "such sweet words of prayer."
The mother recovered and all are now
(in
fair circumstances Visiting one afternoon a dark, noisome alley, it was rather hard to get up a flight of narrow, winding stairs. When we got up we knocked and went into a little room, whose walls had once been white, bdt n*]? were almost black, and whose dirty windows were broken and staffed with paper and rags. Facing us as we entered was an
old table and on it a dry crust. Turning to our left we saw, sitting on an old bench, a poor man in the last stages of consumption trying to get as close as he could to a little stove, so broken that he could only use a little wood in it. Looking into his pinched face I tried to say a few words of kindness, •but it was hard to keep back the tears while I spoke to him, for my heart took in so much at a glance of what he must be suffering. In a few minutes I said, looking around: "Where do you sleep at night?" for there was not so much as a bed. He answered: "On that," pointing to an old broken mattress doubled up in the corner, "and fcome one else shares it at night."
We sang of Jesus' love and prayed, Which he enjoyed very much, as a smile tcame over his poor white face. We visited him continually, brought him beef .tea and milk gruel regularly and at'tended to his room each week. One day jhe told the Slum officer of the only way he had of getting the rent. Every Saturday he bought a case of bottled beer and 6old it to his neighbors Sunday morning, the profits on which paid his rent. He was too sick to work and had too other means of getting his rent, but knew he must give this up before he icould get saved. He said he would do Jt that day, and did, and got saved and ireally accepted Christ. The Slum officer (promised Him he should not want for jfood and she would also pay his rent, and did for months, as his sickness was (lingering. We bought him a little cot io sleep on and did what else we could during his last days on earth. We found he had a brother living and hunted him up. Although himself very poor he took the dying man .to his house just before the end came.
For such as these we gladly live and spend our lives, and it brings joy. Now, we wish it distinctly understood by all that there is nothing we have a stronger objection to than the pauperizing or demoralizing of those classes whom this organization specifically seeks to relieve and reclaim. We deem it infinitely preferable for a man who applies to us with an empty stomach, after having been supplied with food, to be put to work at once that he may have some opportunity of earning sufficient means for securing his next meal, and, consequently, we hold that money given to the Salvation Army is used in the best possible manner for the immediate relief of suffering humanity. The Slum brigades and the Food and Shelter depots, in which our men and women officers are engaged, afford magnificent facilities for preventing this pauperizing and demoralizing of such people.
Need I add, in behalf of the thousands who walk shelterless and hopeless upon the cold streets of this great dark city, that we need more Shelters and Slum posts and Rescue homes, and that •we need them now? Any help given ,now would enable us to lessen the suffering which reigns in many demoralized homes and with many homeless (Ones. Are there no hearts in our rich icities who will practically respond to 'the facts here given? Let us not forget that many deserving men and women are never heard from until starvation has pressed them beyond recovery and startled the readers of the daily press. Of one thing we are increasingly confident—that any help given will bring not only blessing to the poor, needy ones, but will rebound in multiplied blessing to those whose hearts have been touched to respond.
Yours faithfully, on behalf of the unprotected and unrescued of our cities,
A TWILIGHT HOUR.
It Was Only the Stillness of the Eventide He Broke. It was evening.
Softly came the summer zephyr from the shadows sleeping \in the valleys, cooling as the breath' from scented fans, yet with no touch of chill.
The lowing herds, now silent on the 'lea, lay resting in the fragrant fields of (gently waving grass, where daisies •nodded kisses to the red-lipped clover.
The dusky air, low lying on the •shaded hills, rose purpling to the sky about their tops, and here and there far off in the stilly distance, twinkled one or two lone stars, the first to come, and they stood there blushing near the dark blue curtains draped above the threshold of the night, uncertain yet if they should enter now or wait until the gay and glittering throng in which they moved had come to bear them company.
The song of birds was stilled in every ibush and tree, and every warbling throat was tucked away beneath a tired wing.
The hum of insects, resonant all day, had hushed itself amid the quiet leaves, and every fluttering tinsel wing was restless till the morn.
The lazy stream had seemed to stop and now no longer babbled to the flowers which grew upon its pretty banks.
Above, below, beyond, the soft delicious stillness of the bed-time of day pervaded the air and touched the earth and floated to the sky.
They sat there in the gloaming, be and she, and watched the silent shadows creep slowly out from those dim hiding spots in which no man can find them in the day.
Suddenly they heard a crash as if some one had struck a heavy timber with an ax and shivered it. "What's that man breaking?" he inquired with a start"The stillness of twilight hour," she murmured softly, Mid the man passed them on his way to the woodshed with a stick of kindling on his shoulder.— Detroit Free Press.
Sore to Be OCCBHIKL
Mr. Dashing—Ah, where is your beautiful charge, Mrs. Mayflower? Mrs. Mayflower—Dear mel I think if she is not declining your brother in the conservatory, yon will find her accepting your father on the veranda.— Puck.
CHILDREN'S COLUMN.
*Hf A Braco of Imps. Cutduta pasteboard satan. Fix him up xi the edge of a book in front of a white screen, arrange two lighted candles as shown in the screen, hold a goblet of water
in the position indicated, and you will have a nice little homemade show that will make the baby smile.—St. Louis Republic. .,
A Wedding of Long: Ago.
A queer wedding was solemnized in the month of October, 1784, in Ateatia, The Prince of 'Nassau-Saarbrucken gave his twelve-year-old son in marriage with a lady of high nobility, a Countess von Montbarre, eighteen years old. It was stipulated that the young lady should return to her parents until the prince became full grown. Splendid festivities were carried on at the wedding. The whole neighborhood, and especially all the princely courts, were invited. The chases, excursions and banquets lasted three days. Thg twelve-year-old boy shed tears from morning till evening, and was furious to be the object of general attention and curiosity. He avoided his bride and pushed her away when she came near him.
At the ball he refused to dance with his spouse. They had to threaten to beat him if he continued to cry, and promise him candy if he took his spouse to the minuet dunce. Ilis father undertook to console him by showing him a lur picture book in vj^jch was illustrated wsVi'ling procession^1As soon as he saw it i,v v-losed the book and exclaimed angrily: uonH want to know anything about weddings. They are too tiresome, and here in the picture the bride with the long nose looks just like mine."—Troy Times.
Raising Watches.
One day Willie came running to his mother with a little round black thing in his hand. He wanted to know what it was. "It is seed," said his mother. "If you should plant it in the ground, before very long it would begin to grow, and soon you would have some lovely flowers." "If you plant things, will they groiv?" asked Willie. "Yes," said his mother. She was very busy just then aud did not pay very much attention to what he was saying.
The next day bis mother missed her watch. She looked for it everywhere. At last she asked Willie if he liad seen it. "Oh, yes, mamma," he answered "it is all safe. I planted it in the garden, and soon we will have a lot of little watches." "Come at once and show me where you planted it," said his mother.
After some time they found it. It was covered with damp earth and very nearly spoiled.
For taking the watch without permission Willie spent half an hour in the closet. He does not think raising watches is a useful occupation.—AnnaTM. Talcott.
Her Name. ^.
"I'm lostedl Could you And mo, please?" Poor little frightened babyl Tho wind had tossed her golden fleece The stone had scratched her dimpled knees. I stooped and lifted her with ease
And softly whispered: "Maybe.
"Tell me your name, my little maid. I can't find you without it." "My name is Shiny Eyes," she said. "Yes, but your last?" She shook her head. "Up to my house 'ey never said
A single ling about it."
"But, dear," I said, "what is your name?" "Why, didn't you hear me t^ll you? Dust Shiny Eyes." A bright thought came "Yes, when you're good but when they blame You, little one—it's just the same
When mamma has to scold you?"
"My mamma neber scolds," she moans, A little blush ensuing, 'Cept when I've been a-frowing stones, And then she says," the culprit owns, 'Mehe table Sapphira Jones,
What has you been a-doing?'" —St. Louis Republic.
Games of Primitivo Itaces.
The games of primitive races are chiefly confined to children the business of life among uncivilized people is so hazardous and difficult that they can spare no energy for amusement. Even their boys and girls, with plenty of time on their hands, only find diversion in mimicry of adult occupations. The men of Australian tribes rely upon capture to obtain their wives, and so the lads, armed with miniature boomerangs and spears, play at carrying off the lasses,, Just as there is no more popular tof in our nurseries than a box of bricks, so the Eskimo children construct little huts of snow—the recognized building material in that community.—Blackwood's Magazine.
There are today more than 200,000 woman In the United States earning a living by professional and personal service outside that of mechanical labor or work in the shops.
For a best all black dress get the corkscrew repped bengaline and make with spangled jet vest and sleeves. Have a hat of black braided felt trimmed with wings and a velvet torsade.
The potent factors in women's temptations to drink are declared to be "doctors' orders," grocers' licenses, want of employment and "loneliness."
Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett says that she has made up stories ever since she can remember anything, and that since she was seven years old she has written them.
In France there are fifteen women among she thirty-six factory inspectors.
I feel it mv duty to say a few words in regard to Ely's Cream Baltc, and I do so entirely without solicitation. I have used it more or less half a year, and have found it to be most admirable. I have suffered from catarrh of the worst kind ever since I waa a little boy and I never hoped for cure, but Cream Balm seemed to do even that. Many of my acquaintances have used it withexeellent wwolte.—Oscar Ostrum, 45 Warren Ave., Chicago, 111.
Miles* K«rv« and tiw Mil*. Act on anew principle—regutaning: ttoellver stomach and new discovery.. Dr. men, women and mildest, surest! 60
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tfoMM, eta.
'At SPii
WOMEN WHO SELL TEA
GENTLEWOMEN OF DISTINGUISHED *V BIRTH IN BUSINESS. *4J'J
i, sW
In England Highborn Ladle# Do Not Forfeit Their Social Position if They Iteeage in Trade—How the Ladies' Tea
Company of London Manages.
A gentlewoman in search of an income furnishes a complex situation. Possessing the inherited belief that repose is h«p essential element, she yet faces the necxdaHgr to act, so that vary extremes have net. The position is tragic, and none the tedsao that it is the result of an artificial training.
It' has been curiously observed of late that the English gentlewoman is more ready to go into trade than the American woman of breeding is. This may or may not be because of the greater certainty of social position here. When a woman inheriting a title runs a millinery shop she does not by her act forfeit her title or the respect due to it, whereas with us social position in the fashionable world cannot be maintained without money, which if a woman keeps a shop obviously she is without.
However it is, English women of birth and culture have distinguished themselves in trade so far as to make the tendency quite worth remarking, and their experience worth the consideration of our own gently bred women who need to earn a living.
With us women of advantages turn by choice to mental occupations, the school room being the great resource. In New York city alone there are numbers of lovely women, members of old families of generations of .refinement, who, with the natural shrinking from trade given them by their training, are dragging out unsatisfactory lives as teachers in private schools they are screwed down in salary by the principals, on the pica of oversupply of teachers, to scarcely enough to keep body and soul together.
The attention of such women is called to the ventures'of Englishwomen in trade, and especially to an interesting department which I am about to describe. It really is worth our women's while to consider whether the apparently superior gentility of the teacher's work is worth the sacrifice of an independent career and possible accumulation of income.
The venture of which I speak is a tea company controlled and operated by gentlewomen. These ladies own one-fifth if a large estate in Ceylon, where they grow their own tea, and so do their own importing without- any middlemen. They do their own blending, packing, selling and all the drudgery incidental to the business. Their employees are a secretary and a waitress in the tasting room, both of whom are cultivated women.
The company is a limited one of seven shareholders, two of whom act as managing directors. These directors have mastered every detail of the business with a thoroughness parallel to that required of a nurse in a training school, and you can see them in the packing room of the establishment enveloped in big aprons and caps doing up their own packages—cot an easy matter folding a pound of tea into the regulation size pound papersl The tea will burst out and fly all over just when one Beems to have captured it, and it requires much practice to do it expertly.
The business of the company is conducted in a quiet suite of rooms, up two easy flights of stairs, in Bond street in the midst of the fashionable.shopping district. There is a secretary's office, a packing and selling room and a tasting room. Their sales, which are all retail, are made here to purchasers who come in,' and also throughout the United Kingdom by means of agents, who are ladies, and to whom they give a high commission. Indeed, the most vital fact concerning the company isthat though it has been in operation but four months it now employs sixty of these agents and is all but paying its expenses—a flourishing condition of affairs that indicates good management and a profitable market for tea.
Their special brand is the Ceylon raised by themselves, but they also blend other teas called for by the market. There are as many flavors as there are tastes for tea— a pinch more of Souchong for one a soupcon of Hyson for another—the variation is endless. Blending requires patience and experience, and is a skilled work in itself,, but it has been accomplished by the ladies, arid the result they have styled "The Ladies' Own Blend," and numbered one, two, three, etc.
A charming feature is t^e pretty parlors, where any intending customer may taste his tea before buying It—an advantage tho ordinary grocer does not supply. This room is thrown open to the public for "afternoon tea" at a small price a cup, with bread and butter. It is an odd and delightful experience to have in a public place your tray brought to you by a woman of culture." If your hand had gone into Jrour pocket for a fee you draw it out again with disgust at yourself and the world of eating houses outside that encourages such degradation, and you look with grateful pleasure at your waitress in her cap and apron and almost believe that Bellamy's millennium has come.
This, we reflect, is a gentlewoman waiting on us for wages—doing it perfectly and doing it without affectation, as any trained servant would do.
It shall be noted, however, that the policy of the company in employing only gentlewomen makes it easier to do such humble work. There is no contact with anything vulgar the environment is always refined.
The agents employed by the company are residents in towns and cities throughout the kingdom. They number among them a woman with a title, another who is an honorable, and many clergymen's wives. These ladies do not solicit from door to door, but they mention the matter to their friends who are willing to try the tea, and these mention it to others, and when such orders are sent in to the tea company they are accompanied by the name of the agent, or else the agent sends the order with the customer's address. A fashion with the agents also is to have tea tasting parties and invite all their friends and introduce them thus to the tea.
I ask again, in these early days of women's independent work, why should not women find the easiest road through trade? Nations have traveled this way, and intellectual life'has been the resulting crown. It is the history of men—why not of women?—London Cor. Chicago News-Record.
Graceful Definition ofsHatoie Maiden.
The Boston Transcript thus gracefully defines maiden ladies: "The undelivered packages at the express office. They were originally intended for somebody, bat the parties to whom they were addressed have never appeared, or else they had the wrong address, or the address somehow got obliterated. Often very valuable parcel*, which would have given great joy if they had been delivered to theproper oonAigcee."
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Can you think of anything more convincing than tho promise that is made by the proprietors of I)r. Sage's Catarrh Remedy It is this: "If wo can't cure your Catarrh, we'll pay you $500 in cash."
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