Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 18, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 October 1895 — Page 7
WOMAN'S WORLD."'
.'WOMEN PREACHERS IN DIFFERENT PARTS OF THE COUNTRY,
"Women ud Philosophers—The Kmpress of Germany on Women—Mr*. Booth and tke New Woman—Harriet Hoamer at
Homo—The Sophomore* Were Whipped.
The woman who wishes to wear bloomers may have as easy a time in Sail Francisco as in New York, but apparently the woman who wishes to preach is not so kindly looked upon. "Conservative" San Francisco chills the women who dare to disobey St Paul and are heard in the churches, while Boston and Brooklyn, and even Hew York itself, treat thera kindly.
Compare the co?c of the Rev. Mr. and the Bev. Mrs. Sprague of San Francisco and that of the Rev. Mr. and the Rev. Mrs. Wright of Brooklyn. The Spragues are Unitarians. The Wrights are Universalists. Mrs. Sprague is described as charming, petite, well groom-
REV. AUGUSTA E STETSON.
ed and eloquent. Mrs. Wright is equally commendod. But while Mrs. Wright is houored by Brooklynites and preaches to large congregations, "conservative" San Francisco has forced Mrs. Sprague to resign, and she and her husband will seek some less conservative field in which to save souls, probably Wisconsin, from which they came.
Mrs. Sprague is not the first woman preacher whom the Californians have frozen. The'Rev. Eliza Tupper Wilkes was assistant minister at the Unitarian church in Oakland until the active hostility of the women of the parish and lack of funds to pay her salary banished her.
When the far west is treating its women preachers in this fashion, it is pleasing to see how the extreme east acts. Here in New York is Mrs. Au-
#gusta
Stetson, the regularly ordained
pastor of the Christian Science church, Whose influence is widely felt. Her congregation is composed of men and women of culture and intellect, and there has never been shown during he eight i?years of her ministry any disposition to oust her because of her sex. On the contrary, the constant increase in her influence and the scope of her work is remarkable. When she began to preach, her congregation numbered but 16 persons, tmdJierpnlpi turns an inverted dry goods box. Now she has always as nmuy as 500 in her congregation, and it is still growing.
Another New York woman preacher is Mrs. Laura Lathrop, also a Christian Scientist. The Rev. Pliebe C. Hanalord, too, belongs to New York now and has served at various places in the «ast during her long ministry.
Boston has numerous women preachers, mainly of the Universalist and Unitarian churches. Among them are the Rev. Mary Whitney, who has charge of a Unitarian chnrch at Soinerville the Rev. Mary Eckly and tho Rev. Mabel McCoy. At Qreenpoint, N. Y., there is a successful woman preacher in the person of Mrs. C. L. Jackson. At Union Springs, N. Y., is the Rev. Elizabeth Conistock.
Tho nikldlo west lias a large number of women preachers. The Rev. Florence Hullook of Chicago, the Rev. Mary Morehend of Wyanet, Ills. the Rev. Margaret Elliott of Arrowsmith, Ills., and the Rev. Ella Niswonger of Elliott, Ills., are among them. They arc all honored and successful.—-New York World.
Women and Philosophers.
Edward vou Hartniaun, whose "Philosophy of the Unconscious" has been of late years the loading fad of metaphysics, has been delivering himself bf his •opinion on the subject of the new woman in away that is in these daya, to say the least, decidedly daring. He believes that the chief cause of our present day evils is the higher education of women, and ho would "put an end to this system with one stroke and set our daughters back to the level of education with which our grandmothers were satisfied." He has no use whatever for training which renders woman too refined and cultured to perform "her natural and social duties—nursing and Jboosework."
According to this philosopher of the Unconscious, every woman has failed in itho performance of her duty if she has t»ot become the mother of 11 children— "two before the twentieth year, five in cthe twenties, three In the thirties and one in the forties that every true woman ought to do all her own housework, with the occasional assistance of a charwoman for the roughest part of it, and that "maidens cannot learn too early" •what is their proper task.
In these opinions the good German .metaphysician but repeats the ideas for .Schopenhauer, Spencer, and, in fact, •those of about all the philosophers of the world who have been anything but complimentary to feminine aspirations in «the way of "higher culture." Now let 'the philosophers beware. For ages they vbave constructed the theories mid theologies of the world, and mankind has stood fay and let tbern do it But if they icurat in keeping woman to her "natural and social duties—nursing and ihoamwork"—-she will rise in her wrath
I
&Msm
and either write a new philosophy to suit herself qpr else sweep away the whole business of metaphysics as profitless speculation and idle vaporing. But as she is hardly patient enough to construct out of one idea a complex system which shall explain the universe, she will be forced to adopt the second alternative, and as the new woman generally accomplishes what she sets out to do, the world tuay yet by her means be relieved from the plague of philosophy which has afflicted it for centuries,-—St, louia Post-Dispatch.
The KmpreM of Germany on Women.
The empress of Germany recently said to an interviewer: "If it is necessary for women to earn their daily bread by their own exertions, it should be made a fixed rule that this is only in case of absolute necessity. I am for the higher development of woman. Art and artistic work would find in her an expert handmaiden. But it is my opinion.woman only fulfills her vocation properly when she becomes a wife and wise mother. I am well aware that besides the weaker among us there are also stranger natures, too strong to tolerate the oontrol of a still more powerful will over them, but these are exceptions. My ideal is a wife who is a helpmate to her husband and strengthens him through the happiness which she prepares for him in the quiet family oircle after his hard struggle for existence. "I am against female intrusion into manly professions. If it lay with me— but so weak are we in spite of outward power—I would permit no woman workers in manufactories or in business offices. In the school, in the hospital, the infirmary, on the stage, in the concert room, in the atelier, those are her rightful spheres of activity. Embroidery, fine sewing, all descriptions of female industries find in me the most enthusiastic supporter. Still, may women ever bear in mind that no more beautiful calling, no nobler destiny is offered than the holy and all important task—the foundation of every flourishing state—the moral and physical education of her children. "Do you know," her majesty added laughingly after a pause, "according to my judgment the mother of the Gracchi ranks far above George Sand and Rosa Bonheur. It is certainly a great thing to obtain material independence for woman, but I think it will be a greater if we exert ourselves first of all to secure for men, at an earlier age than is at the present day the case, the independence which will permit them to marry
SOOn-
Mrs. Booth and the New Woman. Mrs. Ballington Booth has been repeating, in a lecture on "The New Woman," a great deal of that adverse criticism of which we have heard so much from a great variety of sources.
Inasmuch as the career of Mrs. Booth illustrates a type of woman utterly unknown to a previous generation, it would not bo unfair to argue that in her wholesale denunciation of the new woman she might unconsciously be framing an argument against the Salvation lassies, of whom she is the leader.
But it is the prerogative of woman to be inconsistent, and when wo find one of the very newest of new women inveighing against the now woman we can afford to treat it as a case in which the permanent instinot of the sex has asserted itself as superior to the influence of an impulse.
It may, however, be useful as well as timely to call attention to one important respect in which the new woman differs from her censors. A story is told of the Princess of Wales that in answer to the question as to what was her favorite occupation she replied that her farorite occupation was "minding her own business." This story seems applicable to the present situation.
Ii» contrast with the vast and varied volume of advice, reproof, critioism, censure, scorn and downright abuse poured out against the new woman we do not recall an instance in which the objects of this attention have retaliated in kind. The new woman does not seem to be,addicted to the habit of carping or nagging at her elder sisters. She seems rather to resemble the Princess of Wales in iudnlgiuK in her favorite occupation of "minding her own business," and really her selection is one which might be commended to her censors.—New York World.
Harriet Kosaier.
At a luncheon given in her honor at her native place, Watertown, Mass.— and it is worth recording that it was the Woman's club of the place that originated the idea of a reception by the residents to their distinguished townswoman at this late day of her fame— Miss Harriet Hosmer said in answer to her introduction: "I cannot fail to appreciate the courtesy you have shown me today, but as I stand here the days are brought back to my mind when I was not considered an ornament to society. Indeed as I mention the fact myself it seems aa if I could see many before sue who are prepared to bear witness to the fact "I have been many times asked about my girlhood days in Watertown and the mad pranks I used to play. I have been asked if it was true that I was expelled from school, if I was nearly killed on a handcar which I started myself, if I was nearly drowned in Fresh pond in my own sailboat, if I really climbed through the great wooden columns which stand in front of the town hall, getting through by that sheer pluck which has carried me through life. To all these I answer, Yes.' I was not expelled cmce, but three times. "Indeed I am not ashamed of toy early pranks, and the happiest da/s I have are whei\ I think of the days spent in Watertown and I laugh at the jokes 1 played on the good people of the town—jokes which amuse me more now than they did others then, I fear. "I have been led by my destiny far from homo, and fear more than 40 years have lived on foreign shores, but each rear the old home becomes more dear me and I become more and moil
oonvinoad that the place where one la born is the only place one can really
The Sophomore* Were Whipped. The girl students at Lake Forest college, Illinois, made up their minds that they would introduce some of the lively praotices which they had heard were in vogue in our eastern institutions of learning. So when a company of fresh students appeared on the soene last week the sophomores set out to toss the newcomers in blankets, feed them on pap, put them to bed and sing them to sleep. The hour fixed upon was Saturday night, when the "freshies" were on their way to bed. They had all reached one end of the hall when twice their number of sophomores appeared at the opposite end, whioh curdled the blood in the 80 freshmen's hearts. They were armed with pillows, and they marched down on the oowering enemy, determined to capture them.
But the freshmen mustered up spunk before the sophomores were upon them and fought for their lives. In the thick of the scrimmage half a dozen freshmen made a flank movement and came down on the enemy in the rear, A panic seized the sophomores, and a moment later half of them were captives and were being given the treatment they had designed for the victors. Some difficulty was experienced in inducing the sophomores to swallow canned condensed milk, and the songs that were sung to them were not so much in the naturo of lullabies as they might have been. The sophomores woke up on Sunday sadder and wig@r girls.—Buffalo Courier.
Three D*a Clnb.
A woman's club has recently been organized that will delight the heart of every man in Christendom. It will be of greater benefit to him than six months in a rest oure or a trip aoross the Atlantic. Though countless women's clubs are being formed throughout! the country for the discussion of interesting subjeots, it is only recently that there has sprung into existence what is known as the Three D's club, to whioh one's eligibility is the negative qualification of possessing the ability to suppress all mention of those questionable and boring subjects which come under the fourth letter of the alphabet—namely, domestic affairs, disease and dress.
Who is not weary of the woman who has no resources of entertainment but. these tiresome themes? She is everywhere, and she talks only of this threadbare "trinity" of topics as if there were no clever new book, no delightful collections of pictures and no practical discoveries in the realms of science. It is only fair and just to appreciative women that those who will confine their interests and conversation to the topics which are tacitly tabooed by the well bred should be blackballed in clubs where more considerate women have banded themselves together for the common pleasure of taking a view of the world outside of the necessarily "circumscribed orbit in which the three d's have sway.,"—Brooklyn Citizen,
A Beautiful Wedding Preset One of this season's brides received on her wedding day the completion of a set of dinner napery that began to be hers some time ago. On her sixth birthday an aunt, whose hobby was table linen, gave her a beautiful dinner napkin. It was of heavy fine satin damask, as handsome as could be got, and the initial of her surname was embroidered upon it. Each succeeding birthday brought her a corresponding one, till the dozen was completed two years ago. "When you are married, you shall have the cloth," said the aunt, and she got it, owning now a set of which a princess might be proud.—New York Times.
Picture Costumes.
At a recent reception in a Paris salon the hostess requested each guest to come in a gown or costume which should be the wearer's idea of what should bo fashionable. Nearly all of the grandes dames present appeared in "picture" costumes, such as Marie Antoinette, La Pompadour, Duchess of Devonshire or Gainsborough, and now it is quite likely that in 1896 "picture" costumes in America will be tho fashion at country house fetes, .watering places, festivals and tho like, even if some of the "picture" effects do ngt^ appear upon th| promenade.
They Found a Way.
Some of tho women of Allegan have determined to have a kindergarten. The school directors would not establish one in connection with the public schoo|s, so the women appealed to charity onft' secured enough money t6 hire a teacher and rent a room. The room was not nice enough to suit them, so they papered and painted it, and it is said they did their own carpenter work. There was not a man on the job. These are all now women.—Allegan (Mich.) Dispatch.
A few drops of,ammonia or a little borax in the water used for washing the face will prove an excellent remedy for an oily complexion. After using dry the face very gently and dust it with powdered oatmeaL
Teaballsare finding a rival in the little teapots now sold, which are provided with a perforated cup to hold the leaves. When the decoction is brewed, this little vessel is lifted out to prevent oversteeping. __________
When velvet gets crushed from pressure, bold the parts over a basin of hot water, with the lining of the material next the water. The pile will soon rise and assume its original beauty.
There are 25 women in Chicago who are practicing lawyers, and 16 more will soon be admitted to the bar.
Queen Victoria dislikes electricity. fpw does not want even electrio cooking stoves in her palaoea.
One-third of the appointive offices
vrmnmut an held by women.
in
|0B LITTLE FOLKS.
NOT MUCH FUN*?
Butaf a Kin*, Young Alfonso Can't Eomp and play Llka Other Boy*. If there is anything a healthy, active boy hates, it is being watched all the time, "A feller can't dQ qpthin when nurse is always round," more than one energetic little American has sputtered after being dragged ont of the water because the vigilant nurse thinks be will splash liis pants. And poor little Alfonso XIII, king of Spain, undoubtedly feels much like other growing boys this matter.
Young Alfonso is over 9 now, but he is watched and guarded as carefully as he was when he became king, a mere baby in a cradle. Alfonso doesn't like being watched either. He thinks he is old enough to go in swimming without having a nurse along to see that he doesn't get into deep water. Poor boy, nobody has taught him how to swim, so that be has to paddle along the shore and wonder why he can't jump around and have fun as other boys do.
Most every boy thinks he would just like to be a king for awhile and order everybody to do things for him, but they would soon get tired of the situation. Just think, no fun at all such as American boys have, for him. He can't, in the first place, have any playmates, for no boys in Spain are supposed to be good enough to associate with him, and what fun can a fellpw have with no boys to play with? He has, to be sure, two sis-
NBW PHOTOGRAPH OF ALFONSO XIII.
ters, but they are older, and what boy of 9 cares to play with dolls with a couple of girls? He has one advantage, however, with his older sisters that many boys would like to have. They ean't "boss" him. All he has to say to them is, "Remember that I am king," and they have to bow down and beg his forgiveness. That in itself is some compensation for being a king.
The worst part of his life is that he has to be dressed up nearly all the time. It would never do, you know, for anybody, even for his mother, to see him— the king—in soiled olothes or with dirty face and hands. So he has to be washed a score of times every day and has to put on a clean suit of clothes at least three or four times a day. When he exercises, he goes to a room with one of his teachers, who shows him how to swing dumbbells and Indian olubs, and how to draw himself up on the horizontal bar. He never plays any outdoor games after dark, though, of course, he would like to at times. A king's life is too preoious to risk his taking oold by being out in the damp night air. He goes to the theater, though, as often as be wants to, and that is something that many an American boy would like to do.
He is a soldier, and that's how he gets most of his fun, for he has a small army of boys in Madrid, where he lives in winter, and he frequently marches at the head of this army and sometimes drills it. He knows a good deal about marching, for he has been instructed by the best teachers in the world. He never tires of learning new points about army life, for he has been taught to know that sqme day he must direct the armies of h\a kingdom. He is the generalissimo of the Spanish army and the grand master of all the military orders of the kingdom. His names are Alphonse Leon Maria Francisco Pascal. He does not know his last or family name. Kings don't have any—in theory.—New, York Press.
Weight In Football.
The greatest danger, apart from those which arise from the abuses that all lovers of this manly sport condemn, comes from inequality in weight of the players. Men should never be allowed to play with boys nor big boys with little ones. The rules which require the average weight of teams to be given in tiie challenge may often be nullified by the challenging team having two or more members so much heavier than the-'others that the average does not fiiirly represent the players. By this means teams composed mainly of young and slender boys meet antagonists whose bulk* alone creates serious danger.— Brooklyn Eagle.
A Charming Girl Qneetu
The little queen of the Netherlands entered upon her sixteenth year a few weeks ago, and in honor of the occasion, but to the great regret of ber subjects, introduced a momentous change—she began to wear her hair in the fashion of young women! Queen Victoria describes the queen as the "most charming girl in
the world. Getting Acquainted* •-*, I got acquainted very quick
With Teddy Brown when be Moved in the bouse across tho street* The nearest one, yon seu. I climbed and sat Upon a post
To look, and so did he. I stand and stared across at him* he stored back at me. I s'poaed he wanted me to speak.
I thought I'd try and see. I ndd "Hello!" to Teddy Brown. Be said "Hello!" to am. —Exchange.
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Sept. 18 to Dec. 31,1895.
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Trains marked thus (P) have Parlor Cars Trains marked thus (SV have Bleeping Can. Trains marked thus (B) have Buffet Car. Trains marked thus (V) have Vestibule Can. Trains marked (D) have Dining Car. Trains marked thus (t) run Sundays only. Train* marked thus run dally. All other traiua run daily, Sundays excepted.
•V-A.lSrXD^.IiI^u X.H5T23.
MAIN LINE.
ASLBXVM from thje cast.
No. 7 Western Express (VS) 1.30 a No. 158t Louis Mall* ........ 10.00 am No. 21
St. Louis Ex* (PDVS) ... 2.28 rat No. 8 Mall and Accommodation 6.45 na No. 11 Fast Mall* 9.00 No. 5 St. Louis Limited* (MV8D). 10.00 a aa
XOEAVX JPOB TH* WXST.
No. 7 Western Ex*(V8) 1.40 a No. 15 St. Louis Mall* ...... .10.15 am No. 21
Bt Louis Ex* (PDVS) 2.33 pm No. 18 Eff. Ace 4.05 No. 11 Fast Mall* 9.04 No. 6 St. Louis Limited*(MV8D). 10.06 am •BBXVB TOOK THB WEST. No. 12 Cincinnati Express *(S) 1.20 am No. 6 New York Express *(V8). 3.25 a No. 14 Effingham Ac 9.90 am No. 20 Atlantic Express (DPVS). 12.32 No. 8 Fast Line 2.05 TO No. 2 N. Y. Limited*(DVS) 6X5pm
IiXATB
FOB THX KAST.
No. 12Cincinnati ExpressMS) 1.30am No. 6 New York Express (v») 8.30 am No. 4 Mall and Accommodation 7.80 am No. 20 Atlantic Express (DPVS). 12.87 No. 8 Fast Line 2.40 No. 2N. Y. Llmited*(DVS) 5.10pm
MICHIGAN DIVISION.
UEAVB FOB THB NORTH.
No. 52 St. Joseph Mail 6.20 am No. 64 South Bend Express 4.UU ABBXVB FROM THB NORTH. No. 51 Terre Haute Express 10.5 am No. 68 Terre Haute Mall 7.00 pm
PEORIA DIVISION.
IaBAVB FOB NORTHWEST.
No. 75 Peoria Mail 7.06 am No. 77 Decatur Accommodation 8^5 ARRIVE FROX NORTHWEST. No. 78 Decatur Accommodation 11.00 am No. 76 Peoria Mail 7.00
G. & IE. I.
IaBAVB FOB NORTH.
1
No. 6 AN I^m*(DV&8) .5.00 am No. 2THAChEx 11.20am No. 8 Local Passenger 3.35 pm No. 4EvACEx*(S) 1130pm
ARRIVE FROM NORTH.
No. 8 Ch fc Ev Ex*(S) 5.20 a No. 9 Local Passenger 915 am No. 1 Ch A Ev Ex 3.00 pm No. SCAN Llm»(D /AS) 10.12 ta
IE. & T- H.
NASHVILLE LINE.
LEAVE FOR SOUTH. ,fV
No. 8 Ch A Ev Ex* (SAP) .... 6.28 am No. 1 Ev. A Ind Mall* 8.16 No, 5 Ch AN Llm* (VAS) 10.17 No. 7 Ev Accommodation 10.20 a
ARRIVE FROK SOUTH.
No. 6 Ch A Nash Llm* (VAS) 4.45 am No. 2 HA East Ex* 11.15 am No. 4 Ch A Ind Ex* (SAP) 11.10 No. 80 Mixed Accommodation 4.45
333. 3c X.
LEAVB FOR SOUTH. CXf
No. 88 Mail A Ex 9.03 am No. 49 Worth'n Mixed 00 pin ARRIVE FROK SOUTH. No. 48 Mixed 10.16 am No. 82 Mall A Ex 8.15 pm
O. C. O- & I.-BICJ 4*
GOING EAST
N0.86N.Y., Boston A Cin. Ex. dally 1.82 am No. 4 T. H., Ind. A Cin. Ex 8.00 am No. 8 Day Express A Mall 8.06 No. 18 Knickerbocker Speolal* 4.81
GOING WEST.
No, 86 St. Louis Express* 1.82 am No. 9 Day Express A Mall* 10.08 am No. 11
Southwestern Limlted*8DPV.1.88 w» No. 6 Mat'.oon Accommodation 7.05
C. & E. I* R. R.
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