Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 8, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 18 August 1894 — Page 3

WOMEN or CANADA.

THEY ARE GOOD HOUSEKEEPERS AND ARE FAMOUS FOR COURAGE,

lome Are LKcnr bat Nooe of Them Csrei Mach For Politic*—They Go In For Outdoor Recreation and Frequently Meet

With Thrilling Adventure*.

Canada 1B a land of happy home

It Is often objected that the Canadian -woman Is too much absorbed in her house hold duties that she lays aside her music and other accomplishments after marriage and does not continue to '"improve her mind." There is truth in the criticism Iiimited means and many responsibilities sometimes compel the sacrifice but, on the other hand, some Canadian women are notably good housekeepers and find time for mental culture. Canadian girls now attend the university extension courses.

The Canadian woman has not yet mode many contributions to literature. The works of Agnes Machar, of 8. F. Harri son, of Sara Jeannctte Duncan, author of "A Social Departure" and other bookstand of Lily Dougul, author of "Beggars All' and •'What Necessity Knows, have earned reputations beyond the borders of tho Do minion. Tho Canadian girl is permitted more freedom and independence than her Knglish cousin, and, like her American neighbor, she uses this freedom without abusing it.

Tho native Canadian Is generally faithful servant. Such servants often live many years with one family. A woman had been cook In a family for more than 20 years. She was dying in Toronto her old mistress was living in Winnipeg, "Are you happy?" asked her nurse. am comfortable. You hovo been very kind, but I long to see tho face of my dear Mrs. P. before I die." A telegram was sent to Winnipeg, and tho mistress set out at onco tq give her old faithful servant that last consolation.

The Canadian girl at home knows how to enjoy herself. In winter sho goes to skating, snowshoeing, sleighing und to bogganing parties, and sho delights in dancing, music and private theatricals. In summer she rows, rides and swims. Sho spends much time out of doors at picnics and In "camping out." A married woman must accompany tho camping party as chaperon but, if possible, the girls choose one whoso spirits, have not boon much weighted by household cares. Tho fact that the girl must sometimes do her share of tho work of a household does not interfere with her amusements. Sho disposes of her work and is free for her play.

Sho cin often "swim liko a Ash." A young man and his betrothed were on a vessel thot took fire. While tho girl looked for means of encnpo for hersolf and others, the man dashed past her and leaped overboard. As he sprung he exclaimed, as if sudddenly reminded of his responsibilities, "Joan, you can swirnl" Joan swam. Sho struck out boldly for tho shore and arrived there. Tho young man met •her and offered hitf congratulations. They were roceived coldly—so coldly that ho wont, hotolward to warm himself, Joan is still singlo. Tho man was not a Canadian.

Tho girl is generally bravo and sometimes recklossly venturesome. A girl of 16 years excelled as an oarswoman. Ono day her fathor, returning from his office, saw a crowd on tho bank of tho lako and wont to ascertain tho causo. In tho distance was a dark lino that suggested an outrigger cutting its way through the rough water. "Why did you lot her havo it?" asked an excited young man of tho builder, who had boats for hire. "Sho said sho must have it, and ovory ono knows that what Miss Audrey says sho will have she do hove!" 'Miss AudreyI" Tho fathor shuddered. Was it possible that his young daughter, Audrey, was two miles from shoro In an outrigger—a frail shell In which a practiced oarsman only would bo comparatively safo In that rough water? Audrey toaehed tho shoro safely. Sho was disturbed by hor father's anxiety, but greeted him with apparent unooncorn. "I had no idea that I should oauso a sensation," she said. Hanlan's sister rows an outrigger, and If any other woman can why shouldn't I?" But tho adventurous spirit of youth Is now subdued and transformed to a force which often enables the sedate matron to copo with many difficulties.

In tho early spring of tho year of the northwest rebellion a young married woman, who had boon brought up in a luxurious home In Ontario, was alone in hor prairie cottage with two babies. It was necessary for hor to convey some Information to a household four miles away, and there was not a white woman between her and that, house. Sho harnessed hor horse and not out with her babies. There wos a bridge over a small lako or pond, but an Indian stood on It. She thought the horse Would shy at him, so tried to drive across tho pond, supposing the ico would boar the weight. About tho middle the horse broke through. Ho extricated himself, overturned the sleigh, got loose and ran off. Carrying both children and wading tit rough snow waist high, the young worn an made her way to her destination.

For from being disheartened by her od ventures, she said: "Of course I wos anx lous about tho horse and the children, but I had to sit down In the snow and laugh when I wondered what my friends at home would think if they could see mo with one baby hanging round my neck and tho other tucked in my skirts."

Despite the rigors of winter and the heat of summer, tho Canadian woman has generally a good constitution. She suffers less from dyspepsia than her American neighbor, for sho takes more outdoor exorcise and Ices pie and hot bread, but she is not so robust in appearance as her British cousin, As a rule, unless she is personally interested in some statesman, she takes little interest in politics and is not as well informed on political questions as the English woman or the American. But, though not a politician, she is a patriot. She has a strong family attachment to the mother country and to existing relations and looks with disfavor on any suggestion of severance.—Ne\v York Tribune.

SQMM Yoar fimotios.

If women only knew it, they waste a groat deal of strength by undue expend! tore of emotion on malt occasions. Part of the training of our young girls should be along lines of self repression. In the way of theqntet manner, the restrain**! speech, the tranquil expression of face and tho tv poseful carriage of the body. Apart from the lack of good (MM displayed, women often wear themselves out by too lavish a display of feeling* One may feet acutely without tearing pulsion to fatten, and It would be wiser for motb«n to inculcate on growing children a wholesome self restraint,

pil|^l|pljf •y -^,

life.

Dresses In 1840.

Dinners «~3re handsome and very social, the talk delightful, but the balls were sparsely furnished with light and chairs. Tho illumination was of wax or stearin candles, which used to send down showers of spermaceti on our shoulders.. Dress was very much plainer. I remember my father calling me to him one evening, as I was dressed for a ball, and saying "Well, my daughter, yon look very nice. How much have yon cost met" I said, "Five dollars." I had on a tarlatan dress of white, which I had made myself, and a camellia in my hair, which somebody gave me. One hundred dollars a year was considered a handsome allowance for a young girl to dress on. I am afraid I have never looked so well since. Certainly my costumes have never cost so little. An old lady onco showed me a brocade dress which 6be said she had worn since General Jackson's time.

Women did not throw away or alter dresses then as now. They bought good stuffs and wore their dresses carefully. Very pretty bright chintzes and what we called mousseline delaine were our spring ouilts, and always white dresses of cambric and muslin. The jewels worn by Mme. Bodisco and Lady Lytton Bulwer were great curiosities to us simple people. —Lipplncott's.

Women'* Pen Name*.

It is a curious fact that nearly all women who become distinguished in literature under a nom deplume have done so under names that were either masculine or had no sex suggestion. Nobody could tell whether or not Currer Bell was a man or woman. In fact, there is reason to believe that Charlotto Bronte ofc the title page would have handicapped "Jane Eyre. George Sand, too, won an audience that would havo been impossible to Aurore.Du dovant, as did George Eliotone that would havo whistled Mary Ann Evans quite down the wind. Coming nearer our own time, there is John Strange Winter—who is, in private life, Mrs. Stanard—and John Oli vor Hobbs, the sensation of at least a Lon don week, who is really Mrs. Perry Cragle Then, in our own country, we havo Oc tavo Thanet, known to her friends as Miss Alico French, and Charles Egbort Crad dock, whom all the world has heard of, though only about half of It would recog nizo her as Miss Murfree.—Philadelphia Ledger.

A Poem From Her Life.

A southern girl who recently celebrated her twenty-llrst birthday was presented with a souvenir album, which hor mother had lovingly prepared. On tho fly leaf was written: '"To my darling on her twentyfirst birthday. A poem from her life.' Tho album contained portraits of tho girl from her earliest infancy through each year of childhood and early womanhood, Every feto day was represented by the cos tumo worn at that spocial time. Her school life was marked by tho little girl In apron and sunbonnot, carrying a primer and slate, just entering the school room, and each successive yoar, to tho day of graduation, when In hor dainty white gown sho stood among the June roses Then camo two years of travel in foreign lands and finally the dress of the debutanto on tho threshold of life's pleasures.

Atlanta Constitution.

Schoolteachers In England.

The English village schoolteacher has a harder thno of it than tho American girl in a similar position. Her salary never exceeds $800 a year and is oftener about $200, and for this stipend sho is required to teach an ungraded school and frequently to keep tho schoolhouse and its sanitary appointments clean and in order as well as teach in the Sunday school and play the organ for church services. Her field of labor Is often a burn which is too dilapidated for its original use, cold and penetrated by all tho winds of heaven. And tho young woman who is placed in the humiliating position is generally acollcgo graduate of oultivatton and refine ment.—Journal of Education.

Don't Outdress Your Guests.

In reoolvlng guests at one's own home a lady should remember not to outdress her guosts, but to wear a loss elaborate toilet than whon attending a friond's entertain ment. It is well to have a oostume or tollot for every occasion, a houso dress to replace tho street gown, a quiet dress for church and a plain ono for attending club duties or any business matter. Girls who work In offices as typewriters or clcrks are best dressed whon devoid of fluttering ribbons, laces or unnecessary ornaments of any kind. For bad weather a short, leather faced skirt Is convenient. The time, place and occasion should suggest tho dress.

Frenchwomen Wear Becoming Hats.

"I havo been watching tho Frenchwomen," said a lady on her travels. "I havo been remarking tho differences. It is won derful what a difference may bo caused by a very little difference. Now, I have made a discovery. I first remarked, as everybody elso might do, that Frenchwomen wear much more becoming bonnets than our women, and that all classes dress their hair more attractively. That is quite undeniable. And the reason—this is my discovery, the credit of which I will keep for myself—Is that their heads area little smaller than our heads, and thattheir hair grows lower on the forehead."

Baby*» Play fing.

It Is a very unwise mother who during her little one's creeping days falls to supply herself with that greatest of nursery comforts—a ploy rug or "creeper." This practical floor covering comes in so many attractive shapes nowadays that there is no trouble in selecting something to amuse baby as well as protect him during bis rambles on all fours from contact with stray pins, tacks, etc. A creeper can be easily fashioned at home from some bright material, or squares of white cotton, finished with pen and Ink sketches of animals, birds, etc., or bits of outline work done In red linen thread.

Washing Silk Stockings.

White silk stockings should be washed in a strong lather of castile soap or any good white Foap and warm water. Lay the stockings in the lather and rub the soiled spots gently with the bands. Then rinse them very thoroughly to tree them from all soap. Wring them dry in a cloth, turning them Inside out. When they ore almost dry, stretch and rub them In the hands to make them smooth and bring In shape, hot do not Iron them.

Miss Wittanft Idea.

Miss Frances Wlliard says: "The American girl—God bless her—who starts out to earn a living will never get honest pay for honest work nor the pononal freedom of a free American laborer until she Is organised. It Isn't, suffrage, it isn't nxdety, and it isn't anything that will help her tat organization."

ftf MAXIM'S FLYING MACHtlNE.

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MATT,, AUGUST 18,1894.

12

An Otherwise Successful Trial Spoiled W ^§f^ut| Surplusof Lifting Power.

Maxim's flying machine has

gained considerable notoriety the past week. On Tuesday the in ventor,jvith two assistants, in a machine weighing 8,000 pounds, succeeded in flying 500 yards. The experiment ended in an accidetofc because the machine insisted on flying higher than Maxim wished. It started along the track, bnt broke loose from the check rail, which was intended to hold it within a few inches of the ground, and when the enginetayshnt off steam it dropped on the turf.

The machine, with it^ four side sails and "aeroplanes" set, is 100 feet wide and looks like a huge white bird with four wings instead of two. It is propelled by two large two bladed screws resembling the propellers of a ship. These screws are driven by two engines which, itf proportion to their weight, are the most powerful ever made. They develop one horsepower for every two pounds of their weight The boiler is of novel design. It consists of many tiny tubes through which is a forced circulation of water.

On Tuesday Maxim started with pressure of 310 pounds, which had risen to 820 when he had traversed 500 yards. These 500 yards were run at the rate of 45 miles an hour, the propellers making 500 revolutions per minute. The fuel used is gasolina The weight of the machine is 8,000 pounds, and the engines were giving a lifting power of 10,000. There was, therefore, a surplus floata tory power of 2,000 pounds. It was, of course, this surplus lifting power that did the mischief by throwing on the controlling axles a strain they had not been designed to bear.—London Letter.

CARNOT AND SEVEN.

Tho Strange Intertwining of the Number With Events In His Life.

An interesting discovery has just been made by a contributor to a Frenoh periodical, who has apparently a touch of superstition in his ftiaracter concerning numbers. Whether or no he believes in the mysterious and uncanny influence of number 18 is not stated, but he points out that the unfortunate President Carnot was throughout his life under the influence, so to say, of the figure 7.

He was born in 1887 and entered the Ecole Polytechniqne in 1857. He became president of the republic in 1887 by virtue of the seventh article of the constitution. On the 17th of May in the present year he presided at the centenary fetes at the Ecole Polytechniqne. He died in the fifty-seventh year of his age and in the seventh year of his presidency.

In the carriage in whioh he was seated when assassinated there were, inoiuding the driver, etc., seven persons, the crime being committed on a Sunday, the seventh day of the week, by Cesario, an Italian, there being respectively seven letters in these two words.

To conolnde this list of sevens, it is pointed out that M. Carnot's remains were laid in the tomb in the seventh month of the year and on the seventh day after the murder was committed. It might be added that Cesario came from Cette to commit it, and that the pronunciation of Cette and sept (seven) is identical.—London Standard.

THE DUKE OF YORK SCANDAL

It Is Persistently Revived and Finally Officially Answered by Wales. The story that the Duke of York some years ago contracted a morganatic marriage with the daughter of an English admiral has been persistently revived until at last it has called forth an official denial. The Prince of Wales' secretary wrote a letter to a private inquirer last week saying: "I am desired by the Prince of Wales to state that the report to whioh you allude is so obviously invented for the mere purpose of causing 'pain and annoyance to an innocent young couple that his royal highness has always declined to allow the story to obtain further currency by any contradiction from him. There is of course not the shadow of foundation for it, but it is none the less cruel and malignant."

A ratfier unsatisfactory denial from the archbisohp of Canterbury is also printed. Tho story continues to be circulated and believed. I have even been approached by the pretended possessor of the woeful secret, who was anxious for a consideration to arrange for an interview with the discarded wife at her residence, St John's Wood.—London Correspondent

Pressed For MacMthoa'a Memoirs.

The Marechale de MacMahon is being very much pressed to publish the mem oirs of her husband, of whioh four manuscript copies are in existence, and these are in the hands of the family. The memoirs cover the Algerian, Crimean and Italian campaigns and the war of 1870-1. It maybe hoped that the work will appear, as the memoirs are of the very highest interest and importance, but there must not be any editorial hacking. The memoirs ought to be printed just as the marshal left them. —London World.

One of Capid's Tricks.

Considerable amusement has been caused in Germany by the fate whioh has overtaken Herr Walter, the principal supporter and assistant of Ahlwardt, the notorious leader of the Anti-Semitic party in that country. Walter was recently seat to Amswalde, and there met

Hebrew named Miss Hermannsohn. Her dark eyes charmed the avowed enemy of her race, and a lew days ago their engagement was announced. As a result, Ahlwardt is to Hose his most treated lieutenant. Love is a stranc and mighty tiling.

jAo Down World.

Russia is an upside down world. Last year the people were starving. How they are cutting their wheat to feed to cattle. Want of railway communication is the reason ascribed.—Hardware.

Mis#®

Xoney liTight,

And when was it ever otherwise? The oldestman cannot'remember. People are grumblers—all grumble—ministers and laymen complain. Well, then, "times are dull, and -money is tight," bnt: haven't yon got enough to buy a bottle of SOZODONT, to keep your teeth clean, and mouth sweet, and help you enjoy lifeT

Money may be tight, but it is nothing to SPALDING'S GLUE. That's the tightest ihing out.

DEFYING THE DOG DAYS.

Mechanical Prooesses Employed to Make Winter Temperatxflre This Summer.

The effort to bring the advantages of refrigeration obtained by mechanical processes within the reach of small consumers has taken two directions—the production of small and inexpensive automatic machines and a system of supply of the refrigerant from central stations. The latter is now in suooessful operation at both St Louis and Denver.

In one of the St Louis restaurants, which the enterprising owner has decorated in a manner suggestive of the polar regions, pipes upon the walls are connected with the street line, so that in sweltering summer he can turn on the cold and-defy the dog days. An atmosphere of 12 degrees below the temperature out of doors has an enticing coolness.

Another example of the varied applications of the system to be seen in a cafe window daily is a display of eatables upon a heavily frosted tabla This attraction is secured by making for the top of the table a shallow closed tank completely filled with brine, through whioh are passed the pipes of a refrigerating coil. The brine, being cooled below the freezing point, gathers its snowy covering from the moisture of the atmosphere. Above it in the window are pipes curved to form the letters of the proprietor's nama They, too, constitute an expansion coil and glisten with a heavy, snowy coat In a drug storq an elaborate soda fountain exposes not the customary piotures of frostwork, but real frost The refrigerating pipes are ingeniously carried through this fountain in such away as to oool without danger of freeziug the various liquids and are exposed to view in places curved in fanoiful shapes and presenting a refreshing sight of dry white frost—W. W. Smith in Cassier's Magazine.

Cullom and Proctor.

There is a brisk competition between Senator Proctor of Vermont and Senator Cullom of Illinois as to whioh of the two looks the more like Lincoln. For years the Illinois* man has proudly claimed the distinction of most resembling the great martyred president of any one in Washington, and there has been none to dispute. But since Senator Proctor has shaved off his flowing beard there area new set of Linooln features in the senate chamber. Tho Vermont man is taller and thinner than his Illinois rival, and with his smooth face has a very marked Linooln look, so muoh so that Cullom is in danger of losing his laurels. A poll of the senate may be necessary before the question is solved.—Washington Correspondent

Duel Regulations In Russia.

New regulations have just been issued for the settlement of disputes between Russian officers. They provide for the appointment of a court of honor, consisting of offioers, which will determine the question whether a duel is unavoidable or not Should the decision be in the affirmative, aijy officer declining to accept the ohallenge will be dismissed from the servioe. A report upon duels between offioers is in future to be made to the minister of war, who, in oonoert with the minister of justice, may appeal to the emperor to stop any legal proceedings resulting from the hostile en counter.—London Public Opinion.

Nothing Strange.

Intelligent people who realize the 1m portant pare the blood holds in keeping the body in a normal condition, find nothing strange in the number of diseases Hood's Sarsaparilla is able to cure. So many troubles result from impure blood, the best way to treat them is through the blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla vitalizes the blood.

Hood's Pills are the best after-dinner pills, assist digestion, prevent constipation.

Relief in Six Hoarm.

Distressing Kidney and Bladder Diseases relieved In six hours by the "New Great South American Kidney Cure." Thin new remedy Is a great surprise on account of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain iu the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary passages in male or female. It relieves retention of water and pain in passing it almost Immediately. If you want quick relief this Is your remedy. Sold by W. D. Waggoner and all druggists, Terre Haute, Indiana.

THURMAN COAL AND MINING COMPANY.

BILL OF FARE TODAY.

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Office. 884 north Eighth. Phone, 188. GEO. R- THURMAN, Manager.

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JSAAO BALL,

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Before buying your new bicycle look the field o^er carefully. The superiority of Victor Bicycles was never so fully demonstrated as at present.'Our '94 line will bear the most rigid scrutiny, and we challenge comparison.

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