Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 14, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 September 1896 — Page 6
I
WOMAN'S WORLD.
'HISS KIRS1NGER, THE CHAMPION SWIMMER OF PATERSON.
Hair to Be Worn High—Woman's Burt In the National Campaign—Wise Women Marry Late—Swinging the Arm*. Wew Silk Wateto—She Does Not Edit
There were a number of men and •women in
Rauchfuas'
helpless girl, and several strong swimmers did their beet to reach her in time to
give aid. Among the farthest away, and swimming away from her at the moment, was Miss Bertha Veronica Kirsinger, but tho hand that first clntched the sinking girl and bore her safely to the float was Miss Kirsinger's. Men who had esteemed themselves good swimmers had been distanced in the xaoe.
This is by no means the only feat tftat has entitled Miss Kirsinger to be considered the local naiad queen. She is the only woman who has ventured to cross the falls basin to the edge of the cataract whirlpool, and a few days ago •he went through a test of endurance soch as few umateur swimmers of either sex would care to attempt Accompanied by two boats—one containing Miss Annie Lister and Miss Kate FarTar, the other her brother, Alderman L. Kirsinger, and Eugene Levy—Miss Bertha started from Lister's boathonsc, above the falls, to swim to Lincoln bridge and return, a distance of two
MI88 BKKTilA KISSINGER.
miles. The course she was compelled to take to evade grass and weeds in the stream probably made the distance actually traversed nearly one-third greater and the current was sufficiently strong to make the swim to the bridge a hard one.
That portion of the feat was, however, successfully performed in a few minutes over an hour. Then without leaving the water she returned to the starting point and was within less than 100 yards of Lister's float wheu cramp attaoked her left lop and she was compelled to accept hor brother's aid from the boat. She had been in the water two hours and fifteen minutes. Prom her point cf view the achievement was incomplete, and sho contemplates making before the swimming season ends another attempt to aocompliah the long swim without aid from start to finish.
Below tho falls is her favorite place for natatory exercise. Outside the artificial basin it is 40 or 50 feet deep, and in one spot is popularly supposed to have no bottom. Only the strongest, bravest and most self reliant swimmers venture there, but that is Miss Bertha's favorite field, its dangers making it tho most free. Again and again she had tried to dive to the bottom, but that remains one of tho tilings yet to be aooomplished by anybody but Tom Strong, who went down in July last and got the body of a man who bad died of some kind of fit in the water.
Mixs Bertha V. Kirsinger is a member of the Paterson Turn Verein gymnasium and the best all around female athlete in the city. Sho learned swimming three years ago and took to the ozeroiso so naturally that in five lessons she beoame an expert. Her elder si*, tars, Elvira and Anna, are both good swim mere.—New York Sun.
The Hair to Be Worn High.
Prepare to pile your hair high on top of your head as a fitting accomplishment to tho revival of trailing gowns. The easy and almost universally becoming fashion of a low, loose figure 8 will be permitted for bouse wear and for those numberless undress occasions cherished by all women who love comfort better than dinners and balls. But for full dress occasions, for dinners and receptions, for elbow sleeves and low necked waists, dignified mountains of high piled locks are to prevail This mode of dressing the hair has its advantages. The woman who indulges in it may raise her inches by At least one. It is the mode best fitted to carry buckles Mid aigxets, feathers and bows, flowers and pins. It will appeal to many of the fair sex, white there will still be many others who will cling to their own pet fashion though all the world oppose it
For those of the fair sex who choose to oontinue on the old lines, the pompadour mode is the one that will be most in vogue. It will be a favorite fashion because it is booomlng to most faces. The batr may be drawn tight and straight with good effect from young, trash fat**. For older ones a soft, flaffy, loose effect will recommend itself.
The style known as Victoria, brought into fashion and held there by the qoeen, will be chiefly worn by old ladies. Its soft, curling ftrmt, drawn softly from a straight part on either side of tbe faoe, and dressed neither too km
lfr!?
swimming basin,
below the Passaic falls in Paterson, one afternoon about a fortnight ago when Miss Maggie Sullivan was seized with cramps and' uttered a shriek for help. The basin is only ten feet deep, bat that is more than enough to drown a
nor yet too high, but just where the bonnet will rest best and easiest, will appeal to most women who consider themselves old enough to be oomfortable and commonplace. 7
The soft, single, coquettish curl, falling with apparently oarelees effect- just over the right shoulder, is distinctly borrowed from Marie Antoinette's day. Charming accompaniments of this pretty fashion ate the Mercury wings that fin ish the side combs and .stand out as effective backgrounds on either side of the softly waving pompadour.
For the classic profile and low forehead the long line of waving hair drooping low over the ears, just gathered in a loose knot, done how no one knows exactly, with arose crushed in at t! side and a few leaves following the line of the neck, will, it is to be hoped, in spite of fashion's decree still prevail— New York Journal.
Woman's Part In the National Campaign.
Woman, protected by the armor of irresponsibiMty, may be impervious even to the arrows of the present sharp debate and may oome out of a national campaign with an ignorance almost equal to her indifference. Man, who has thus armed her, can scaroely with consistency jeer at either her ignorance or her indifference. But even man is not always consistent, and his argument that women should not have the ballot because they do not know enough about politios is quite on a par, for logio, wi his time honored custom of laughing at a woman because she cannot run, while he enjoins on her the mandate, "Thou sbalt wear skirts."
There are excuses reasonable and abundant for the woman who wishes to nee them to defend her' ignorance of politics. But having inherited a bad constitution is no reason for remainir content with it, though it oertainly exculpates the victim. Women are not the ones to blame for women's past and present ignorance of politics, but they are culpable before the bar of their own intelligence if they remain ignorant
Questions of politios do not, like questions of literature and scienoe, belong merely to the realm of knowledge. Politics, like religion, is a matter of everyday life. A woman therefore must Understand political questions not merely to be intelligent, but also to be moral. The honor of the nation is the honor cf every individual, and the woman who does not oare for the national honor has not yet assumed all her moral responsibilities.
The cause of this uindiras'Id the broadness of life's duties is, of course woman's forced inactivity in politioal matters. But: the map sbp,ls up toa cell has no right to -stop walking. He may some day be whexe ha caauiee J^^ipabe to more purpose. Then let him pace his oelL Let women form campaign olubs and in private and publio discussion persistently contend for what they believe right Let them pace their oells vigorously enough, and the wardens will soon throw open the doors, and then brains used to exercise will find no difficulty in publio service^—Maude Thompson in Boaton Woman'8 Journal.
Wise Women Marry Late.
The strides whioh the movement among American women to secure for themselves an independent livelihood has made during the last two or three deoades are pimply astounding. Nothing oan illustrate this better than the following figures, which have referenoe to the number of women in the United States in each profession in 1690, the figures in parentheses being tho corresponding figures for 1870. In 1890 there were 4,455 female doctors (827), 83? female dentists (24), 340 female lawyers (6), 1,280 female preachers (67), 180 female engineers and land surveyors (none), 20 female architects (1), 11,000 lady painter* and sculptors (412), 8,000 female authors (169), 888 female jou nalists (85), 84,018 female musicians (5,785), 8,940 actresses (69S), 684 female tbeatr'oal managers (100), 21,l8f shorthand writers (7), 04,048 oierks, secretaries, etc. (8,106), 27,777 female bookkeepers (none).
Last yeai 1,806 women visited the universities, of whom 84 left them a? fully trained doctors and about a dozen respectively as lawyers, preachers and journalists. Of the above 1,805 female students 28.8 per cent have married. American women, however, do not, a* a rule, marry till they have completed their twentieth year, and of these 1,805 as many as 88? were still under 20 years. Of w"men who hold diplomas a? doctors, betveen 25 and 80 years, only 32 per cent marry of those between 80 and 85 years the number of those who marry has risen to 48.7 per cent of those between 85 and 40, to 49 per cent and of tboso above 40 years, to 54.5 per cent From this it becomes evident that women who have frequented universities, at least in America, marry much later than others. It is perhaps natural result of this circumstance that divorces are virtually a thing unknown among these late marrying women students.—New York Press.
Swtngtng the Arms.
The queer habit men have of regarding women as mysterious beings whose actions and modes of thought are quite incomprehensible was amusingly illustrated recently by a writer who wondered, through a column and more, why women, when walking, seemed embarrassed about bow to dispose of their hands. The custom of the sex of carrying purse, eerd oase, umbrella or other something was explained to be an effort to solve the question of what should be done with the hands. Most peculiar, so it was averred, and very unlike the habit of men!
It is indeed quite true that the sexes on the street manage their hands and arms after different fashions, but unlikeness in this particular is artificially produced, as the wondering writer could easily have ascertained if be had taken the trouble to investigate. Men of high and low and all intermediate grades swing their arms as
That beautiful,
S
they walk.
natural
and
oomfortable
1
f"
ii
4 U'tisfef
1
movement is not permitted to a woman or girl with any pretensions of good breeding. Don't swing your arms is among the earliest of the appalling long calendar of "don'ta" prepared exclusively for girls. Iu fact, among the very awful sins that conservative people charge against the bicycle girl is that when off her wheel "she strides along and swings her arms." What she should do, according to these censors, of course, is to glue ber elbows to her sides and to take ladylike steps. However, athletics is likely more and more to claim the homage of woman and it is more than possible that ere long convention will permit her arms to swing as freely as do those of her brother, and when that time arrives one*more woman "mya teiy" will be dissipated.—Vogue.
New Silk Waists.
Now ihat the shirt waist days lire over one would naturally suppose that the band necktie, so closely associated with it would also take its departure. But this fal.' this chic little necktie has taken anew lease of life owing to the popularity o* the changeable silk waists.
These waists are the present substitute of the cotton shirt waist and are made in exactly the same design. In addition to this, they are worn with stiff linen oollar and cuffs. They do not button dowr the front, but are made to be fastened with studs.
The newest oome in a variety of color combinations. Changeable golden brown and green silk makes an effective waist also deep blue shading into a soft olive green. "the majority of these silk waists are made without lining, but for wear during the cooler autumn days they may be bought not only lined, but as stiffly boned as an ordinary cloth bodioe.
The neckties to be worn with them oome in as great a variety as the waists them solves. The latest are of black, dark brown or deep blue silk, with a band of bright color near the end. Oo oasionally the band is of plaid silk instead of a plain color. Entire plaid silk neckties will also be much worn with these changeable silk waists.
A novel feature of the new silk theater waists is the unique way in whioh they are to be trimmed with buttons. The latest French models are made with the wide crush bolt, whioh is usually of velvet and fastened with five medium sized buttons, each button differing in oolor and design. The effect, though odd, is exceedingly pretty if the buttons are well selected.—New York Letter.
She Does Not Exist.
There is really no such person as the new woman. She is nothing but a suppositious fad, a figment of the masculine imagination. She has no real existence unless in remotely isolated individual cases. Generioally she does not exist any more than the rampageous mother-in-law, the Vassar bred housekeeper and her deadly oookery, the flirtatious and designing tpyewriter and all the other items, singular and collective, of the professional caricaturist's stock. in trade. The whole world is moving on together. The new woman on hor bicycle today is no more "new" than was Di Vernon on her horse of old. The new woman who now seeks mastery of all the arts and scienoes is no more "advanced" than was her great-grandmother, whose modest intellectual aspirations so shocked good Mrs. Malaprop. When the world comes to see fully, as it will, that all the movements of the day which so disturb some timorous souls are nothing but uniform and harmonious social evolution toward that which is best and perfect, it will wonder how men oould ever have been so foolish or so unjust as to make so vast a pother over the burlesque Frankenstein of the new woman.—New York Tribune.
Miss Clara Stnrgta.
Miss Clara Sturgis, the editor, business manager and publisher of T6m Watson 'b People's Paper of Atlanta, Ga.. is described as a pretty but not new woman. She is opposed to woman suffrage. She writes columns of matter for the paper each week, selects the editorials and articles written in the interest of the Populist party and brings out a oarefol weekly resume of the party's fight throughout the country, in addition to keeping the books of the concern. Prior to aooepting the position of general manager of the Our Publishing company Miss Sturgis' experiences were limited to the management of a small boarding house owned by an invalid grandmother.
To Women Who Bide a Wheel.
To women who ride a wheel I would say never ride without knickerbockers the same color as that of your cycling dress. They are an absolute neoeesity and should be well fitted, and don't wear a white skirt If you cannot have one to match your dress skirt, do have at least a dark one. Wear leggings, and never display even an inch of stocking, and dou't wear a flower trimmed hat
Ladies'Home Companion.
Do not exclude the sunshine from your rooms, or they will not be healthy. To air a room properly open the window both at the top and bottom. The pure air will come in at the bottom and the impure will go out at the topi
Though not as choice as embroidery, linen is now sometimes marked with indelible ink in a fashion so artistic that it looks like etching, as the crests and letters of any size in any text are dooe to order.
It is noted that the women of tho royal families of Europe are on the average much stronger mentally and physically than the men.
The state conventions of all four political parties in Idaho have indorsed the woman suffrage amendment.
In Bavaria a woman cannot appear in public on a bicycle unless she has xrtilloatt for
iciency.
®ii
TEKRB HAUTE SATTJKDATIEVENrNGJMALL, SEPTEMBER 26, 1896.
11
A SPACE SAVER.
Screen Recommended to IHrellem In Flats May Be Used Anywhere.
People who occupy flats resort to all manner of makeshifts, many of them bits of real ''ngenuity. The utilty screen is one of the contrivances which, while being an ornament to the room, is essentially useful. The outside of the screen may be deoorated in any way de-
IL
sired. The most durable and easily managed framework is made of bamboo, set together in slots, while a durable covering that will not readily soil is the dull oolored denims, either figured or plain.
The inside of the sfereeh may be covered with white oilcloth, the sort used oommonly upon the kitchen tables, so that when soiled it may be readily wiped off. On one side fasten hooks, upon whioh will be hung stockings or any small article of wearing apparel, to dry or to air after ironing. Another section of the screen will be arranged in bags, receptacles for dust oloths, cleaning oloths, eta, or any of the unsightly but necessary implements of household warfare.—Philadelphia Inquirer.
Women's Feet.
A Paris bootseller, who numbers among his customers the queens of many nationalities,has been giving his opinion of the feet of the female portion of different countries. He insists that the ladies of Madrid take the smallest shoes, Peruvians and Chileans coming next. American women, he also says, are noted for their dainty feet and the oare they take of them. According to him, the Russians have heavy, broad feet and the smallest size that ever fits any of them is a five. The empress of Austria requires a long, narrow shoe. The Empress Ergenie has a beautifully shaped foot, with an exceedingly higi instep, and takes a „small five. The queen of Spain hns very large feet, and so flat that a little padding is always inserted across the instep. Her majesty of Italy is extremely difficult to please in boots and shoea She favors perfectly flat heels and square toes and will always insist, for the sake of comfqrt, on having her ^ootsa size too large for her. English ladies, according to this authority, wear awkwardly made boots and shoes as a rule and are less careful of the appea- ance of their feet than the women of other nationalities.
Lively Mrs. Hobbs.
Lieutenant Colonel Thomas £L Maginnis (Pennsylvania national guard, retired) gives us interesting particulars of his grandmother, Mrs. Hobbs, to whom The Journal recently referred as one of the few surviving widows of peninsular veterans. He says: "She is indeed a most wonderful woman, of 102 years of age. I was in Europe two years sinoe and present at her one hundredth anniversary, and on that occasion she spoke to hundreds of poople, read numbers of telegrams (one from the queen and Duke of Cambridge). She reads five papers daily, as well as family prayer, and never uses eyeglasses. She is the widow of Captain Thomas Francis Hobbs, dragoon guards, who died of wounds received at the peninsula, where his five sons and my oldest brother were engaged. Mrs. Hobbs is my mother's mother, and my son's son, Thomas Hobbs Maginnis, third, makes her a great-great-grandmother, Captain Msginnis's son being the fifth generation. She is likely to live many years. She manages an estate herself and has nil her faculties."—Army and Navy Journal.
In the Isle of Man.
James Hodgson of Peel outlines the history of woman suffrage in the isle oi Man as follows:
Woman suffrage in parliamentary elections in this island was granted by the house of keys election, 1881. In the form originally intended, both owners and oocupiers were to have been allowed a vote. As a compromise it was arranged that the vote be restricted to female owners, as an experiment Experience soon showed that women were quite equal to exercising the rights conferred upon tbem, and that they used at least as much discretion in voting as members of the other sex. This was fully recognized by the house of keys election act, 1892, when women oocupiers were allowed to vote as well as women ownera.
For 14 years the women in the Isle of Man have enjoyed the privilege of the parliamentary franchise, and the quiet manner in which they have exercised their rights is perhaps the best answer to those who credit women with extreme revolutionary tendencies.
The New Skirt.
The new seven gored skirt differ* from the last season's shapes in being much teas flaring on the fronts and sides. The fullness flowing toward the back is shaped by
gores set "straig' fo
bias," with a bias seam down the LuJt The skirt measures about five yar's around the lower part and requires 4** yards of double width material. It fits th» hips snugly and can be made total loose from the lining or I seamed oo with each separate gore.—-New York
Poat^'W1v v- ^^1
a
Honing Jacket.
A matinee, or, rather, several matinees, is the first purchase a Frenchwoman makes when she orders her trousseau. Plain colored india silks in the very pale colors, made with long jacket and skirt and trimmed with yards and yards oi laoe, are always in fashion and exceedingly pretty. The skirts for the matinees are made narrower than the regular skirts, but they are always trimmed with flounces edged with lace, which flounces are put on half way up the skirtj reaching to just below where the jaoket ends. The jacket is made to fit quite loosely in front—in the back it must be tighter—and is trimmed with jabots of lace down the front and a ruffle edged with Jaoe around the bottom. The sleeves are of medium size and finished at the wrist with ruffles of laoe.
Such a quantity of laoe as is needed to trim a matinee seems somewhat overwhelming when expense has to be considered, but there are a great many pretty, effective and quite fine laces to be bought now from 18 to 20 oents a yard. Silk linings make a matinee a most luxurious garment But again, if economy must rule, there are fine peroaline linings which will answer every purpose.—Exchange.
The New Fashionable Tint.
No man with half ay eye oan have failed to remark two facts as he take.' his walks abroad—the increase in the number of women with auburn or Titian hued hair, cud the decrease in the company of those who wear golden locks. The craze for peroxide of hydrogen more than on the wane, but the demand for henna is so great that while none, or next to none, was imported a couple of years ago thousands of pounds' worth is now annually brought into the country. Already the color has traveled across the Atlantia So generally have the chorus girls and soubrettes gone in for red ^hair that one of the theatric. managers has told a reporter that nearly every woman who has applied to him for an engagement has hair of the "sun set tint" He believes, indeed, that "ii a new oolor isn't forthcoming, there won't be a golden haired woman in the profession in a year's time."—West minster Gazette.
The Spanish Coiffure.
A pretty fancy in evening hairdress ing is the Spanish coiffure with tho tresses ooiled high at the baok of the head, and in and out of the Spanish comb is twisted a spray of some fine flower, like forgetmenot, soarlet cypress, white or pink star blossom, eta, or else a single brilliant, half 'blown damask or tea rose, and its foliago is fastened in the arching point of the oomb.
CLEEPY, DULL,
Janguid and morose, is the way you feel when your liver fails to do its work properly in .consequence you suffer from indigestion, biliousness, and dyspepsia. You have a "don't care" spirit and a "played out" feeling, and everything tires you.
To set the liver in action, purify and enrich the blood, and to strengthen and vitalize the whole system, take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. Having a peculiar tonic effect upon the lining
membrane of the stomach and bowels, il makes a lasting cure of all stomach, liver and bowel disorders. By increasing the blood supply, as well as enriching it, all the organs of the body are strengthened, and the nerves are fed on pure, rich blood.
Neuralgia is the cry of the starved nerves for food nervous debility and exhaustion, sleeplessness and nervous prostration are in most instances the direct result of a starved condition of the blood. The true way to cure these ailments permanently is to take the "Golden Medical Discovery," which was discovered and prescribed by an eminent physician, Dr. R. V. Pierce, at present chief consulting physician and specialist to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. If you want a medical opinion on your case, write him. It will cost you nothing.
A Book of 136 pages on Diseases of the Digestive Organs," will be mailed to any address on receipt of postage, six cents. It contains names, addresses and' reproduced photographs of a vast number of people
Discovery." "LIVER COMPLAINT." Climax, Kalamazoo Co., Mich. DR. R. V. PIERCE, Buffalo, N. Y.:
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Connecting with Vandaila Ry. at St. Joseph
Beginning May 251.h mid continuing untll about Sept.. 3CW,li. the steamers of this line will make two trips each way ttally (Imludlng Sunday) betwoen.St. Joseph and Chicage, on tho following senvdule:
Leave St. Joseph .. .4:30 pm 10:30 pm Leave Chicago—9:30am 11:30pm
Extra trips on Saturday leave St. Joseph at 8 a. m. and Chicago at. S p. m. Running time across the lake 4 hours. Trl-weo(kly steamers to Milwaukee leave St. Joseph Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings.
The equipment of this line Includes the side wheel steamers City of Chicago and City of Milwaukee, (the largest and 8nest west of Detroit), and tho newly rebuilt propeller City of Louisville. Service fl#st-class. Connections with all Vandaila trains. Tickets on sale at all Vandaila line stations. Chicago dock foot of Wabash avenue.
J. H. GRAHAM, President. Benton Harbor, Mich.
SUNDAY
ake specials
Commencing Sunday, July 19th, 181H5, tho "Lake Specials" will be put on. Leave Terre Haute 6.00 am Arrive at Marmont 11.00 am Leave Marmont 7.00 pm Arrive at Terre Haute 55
01
Rate to and from Intermediate stations one fare for tho round trip, going and returning 011 lake special.
Elegant parlor cars on this train, rate for any distance 35 cents. Terre Haute to Lake Maxlnkuckoe and return
$S).00.
For tickets, parlor car reserva
tion and reliable Information, call at city ticket office, 629 Wabash avenue, or union station.
GEO. E. FARRINGTON, Gen. Agent.
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