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“DOES jEVERY WOMAN WANT TO MARRY ?”~THE
OLD, OLD QUESTION,
statesmen, preacher and ]e ;urer,
er she may send,<^?iob)e husband
thy son.
Which, 'think ye, my kind .1
spires more respect, ^'rs. U'. J.
‘ rs - Lease? You 'heed not answer
"'hat every one will say.'
One in her sphere has been aiding
noble husband to 'become -;t
most man in ail Amertc.i. while‘Y
bas herself mounted.
10 carry off the f'k'C *
helped her busbar^A;
What is the resui
est glimpse of heaven granted to
„ that domestic circle which her
fe trstfned to intelligence, virtue and
Vh- her gentle influence pervades,
ich her radiant person is the cen-
in*"'Hfc'why seek for more influence
ulk) , W ield? Why ask £or ™ or . e
nd mf„„ now nossess? Be satisfied,
^is't ie in V perverting your natures?
OF TWO
earned
Home Picture-Husband, Wife, Children
OUR COR
RESPONDENT TAKES EXCEPTIONS TO A
RECENr ARTICLE IN THE SUNNY SOUTH
AND GIVES HER REASONS
TERSE LANGUAGE.
I was not very' f avorabIy impressed with
a recent article in" " ltle Sun ny South, 'headed
as above. j
It spoke largely women being more en
lightened now tha* any previous age of
the world. This v»J' iTer Seenjs to think that
<ucy understand r>
ore clearly than they
r « “the peril of the eon-
t. tide went on to say
now.” They have be-
- y are actually “afraid
' s and horrors of matrl-
t, their celibacy becomes
source of complete satis-
hey feel the pleasure
said a spectator in a thea-
a tragedy on tilth stage.
have ever done b.
jugal relation."
“The girls,” the
“are so much wh<
come so wise tlu.t
of wedlock.”
er and as the „ a *
raony are uc.oV • 1
more and more t.
faction.” That
which it has been
tre derives from
They witness the trials and agonies of
ers and contrast them with the comfort and
security of their Swn aloofness.”
Yes, this must, indeed, he a sweet pleas
ure, to watch the agonies of unsuited
couples.
If, as this writer seems to think, every
marriage was a failure, it ought to inspire
a true woman with the determination
show the world that there could ‘be one
happy heme for the happiness of a home
depends mostly upon the wife. If the hus
band is tyrannical, peevish and cruel (as is
simetimes tlie ease), still there may be a
happy home.
A mother wit'll eager, 'happy children clus
tered around her to hear some story, or to
. say evening prayers, is one of the purest,
holiest pictures human eyes ever beheld.
What must a spinster feel, when, behold
ing such scenes as this (and, thank God.
they are beautiful). If she is a true woman
she feels her life is incomplete. No woman's
nature is fully developed until she is a ,
SCORE MILLIONS TELLS HOW HE
IT IN AN OLD INTERVIEW.
Power and Perseverance,
CAME TO THIS COUNTRY A POOR^ SCOTCii BOY,
and learned telegraphy, then with
his BROTHER BOUGHT A FOUNDRY.
MANY TIMES A MILLIONAIRE.
mother. Mothers are the sweetest, most
perfect beings on earth. I think no one will
deny this. The gray-haired man still re
members the tenderness of mother.
This writer says: “Women fill every de
partment of industry. They have embraced
the professions; they do whatever man does,
and often do it equally as well.”
I think I voice the sentiments of every
true woman in the land when I say a wo
man may not; herself mount -the rostrum as
Voltaire and Piron were enemies. To
their embarrassment they met one day at
the country house of a friend. Piron got up
early, went to Voltaire’s door and wrote
upon it the word, “Hogue.”
At breakfast Yoltaire smilingly said to
him: “I thank you for showing your inter
est in my welfare by leaving your card at
my door this morning.”
When Andrew Carnegie was fifty-six _,ears
of a~e he visited San Francisco and was en
tertained by the University Club,
he made many interesting state hav9
cerning himself and his past • ^
these personal reminiscences, but th Y
,nd Mr-
| and bus had many e *'* er '’ n , r chapters in
‘ would be pleased to ha\
\ his eventual life. The Sunny South.
lQ.ta Ga-r makes this request.
the "Frisco dinner alluded to Mr. a
4 uegle^aid that although there were many
• fiic-vCifbie of e-jsceptlonAlly large wealth, he
thought tfe, lit Id an unusually good one tor
men of energy and pluck.
“Yet, after all,” said rhe. “it isn’t the man
who does the work that makes the money.
It’s the man who gets other men to do jt.
“1 remember that not long after my arrival
in this country from Scotland I was a tele
graph operator, and had news reports to
send and copy. I for a while mr.de six
copies of the report for a dollar a week.
“The man above me, who was boss,” said
Mr. Carnegie, closing one eye shrewdly,
“didn’t do any of t'he work, and he got $10 a
week. That is the difference. It was some
thing not to be lost sight of, and I made
up my mind not to forget it.”
Mr. Carnegie sat in an easy chair, now bolt
upright and again reclining gracefully. Its
said he had pretty well outlined what he
thought politically and he could not say any
thing in addition, as 'for some days ihe had
not been a very close reader of tne papers.
“This government,” said he, "is a success,
and it does not make any difference what the
hopes or wisnes of princes and crowned
heads may be, it will always be a success.”
Asked to give a true story of his struggle*
since coming to America, the king of iron
wife could never 'have made "he:
as she was in his greatness.
Women wield
c
never will or can wield as state-,;
ers, lawyers and physicians.
Now. if a woman’s husband is
she should be well enough acqu'
the Scriptures to aid him in prer
sermons; if ihe is a lawyer she h
his silent partner. Just so in eyA
mont—she should be his partn, ■
For any one to say the conju- j)
horrible, terrible and is to " '
maidens as if it was an ogre
ulous. and when a-^naiden d
rimony, to pat herself on <th
say, "Thou hast done well
what God intended you
most rank infidelity.
Oh. my countrywomen! p
and think to what all this
your mad rush to the ro.=tJL P -~ h
and the stage stop'"one “
what you are doing wi
so dear to every heart.
You are leaving it to
crown that when it is
brow will become a cro 1
The day will come r
in bitterness that you
and sweet, to seek for
rightfully belong to bus]
Woman finds her
home. This is not fletio
and what will 'beconu
there are no more good,
ers, but instead up.naturu,
down-town club or off leh
ing. while children are
leered first by moth,
What kind of men an
make who are netrlec
They will grow up
respect for "womankin
alays inspire.
The happiness an’
depends uporvwyves
iluenee is unbounded.
Deity can compreherv
A good wife is to
endurance. A bad on 1
ness and despair.
A\ oman ministers af (the fountains of life
and happiness. ’She fills to overflowing the
cup of life with soul-refreshing waters. Her
delicate moral sensibility is ohe unseen pow-
ertheless, I
have four good broths, a nchl'
ed father and a tender
'ombined. have taught their daugfi-
Jsister to honor and revere noble
ind whenever any one assails man,
I am at once indignant, and if I
teid the pen as Napoleon did the
would soon have all those who dis-
?i'th me conquered.
r Tr my honest belief that God has im-
1 rted in every maiden’s heart- the desire
5 make a ihappy home for a good husband.
I* 1 believe every woman that does, not marry
!af either disappointed in love or has never
M p J; her ideal, and is to 'be pitied more _than
ultjisured.
A
ESTHER.”
Itperation
elocuted
fright cf
ta’, di
Chat’
ings are
over
_ Tic p<. ....« .-
are turning o'f
covering -for rut" ’
er kinds of goods An
ner and finding ready-
n the work of th
ear that it is said
ontemnlation the
't-'JUtdies.
?s extent. J~
courage, hope
is confusion, weak-
N0 BOTTOMLESS LAKES.
:st body of fresh water
Bake, Oregon. Only
excee
^ OJitT 400 feet deeper. Until re-
A asserted Crater Lake was bot-
soundings have shown its
’ijtfpt.i to be 2,000 feet. It is five
nearly circular, and oc-
'.yptfer of an extinct volcano.
,~v, -v ever been known to exist
;U Yakf ‘ Recently a club of moun-
’with headquarters at Port-
ashington a request that Cra-
h A.<ftocked with trout, and the
arts are going to find out
ehtine Is practicable. It is easy
■JutLtrout in the water, but the
if mere is sufficient food in the
nourfi^them after they are there.
tow small gauze nets over j
' ours of the day. Animal-
the gauze, and from its
it can be ascertained if
-nourishment,
eries of experiments will
to ascertain the temper-
:er at various depths. Xo
s have ever been taken of
0 far down. With-this end in
uipment of self-registering
tnd supplementary appartus
will be taken along and let down by 'sound
ing lineS. There are very few places in
the lake where the depth is less than 1,600
feet, and no lake on the western hemisphere
approaches this.
COLONEL FRED GRANT, SON OF GENERAL
GRANT.