Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 21, 1894, Page 11

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20 -4 HOW TO EDUCATE CHILDREN | cndt “Fie Sesiiea: roposcs " Tode e Too Mush Obedisaos Mvkes Pasets Tastss A | the customn in Babyionia to perfame & f Real Men and Womea. s it s 0 t in’ Persin a CHILDREN COMPARED TO UN FRUIT arly used nding round t i I " t " a id They Should Not e Expected to Act t a grea : in the World —Fominine Facts oy . and Fixin I o (B. C. 93 1 mie { L . i ' A« a W ¥ tovote,but throu and his powers of observation, thougnt | tide of politics in and reason should be put into action as | soon as they develop. Faculties, like | hen, 100, put suffrage in the han fingers, will atrophy if never used.” | of women and you give them a deadly But don't u teach you hildren ent, with which thev would d ¢ asked stherly, | stroy the saloon power. To this fier st | who strews our land with b nw hat depends on what you call obedi- | female suffrage would prov ent,” replied her neighbor. “For the | man's noose. And what stands between first few yea e 1d ias to followan- { woman and suffrage? What deprives other's will, but as early as possible he | her of her sacred right? One little should be rhi to rely u pon him- | word in our constitution—" self. My children isobedient | ibath CaaviStantin to m sause 1 never command them | to strike the one 1 “male"” out of the to do anything. Our relutionship is such | eonstitution will be an act of momentous that there can no que consequences, lifting one-half the peo- ence or disobedience betwe | ple of the state from more than there is betwe: | of disfranchiseme your husband. We talk thir new dignity dnd hon daughters added gether calmlyand opportunities and respect in the worl clashing, because 1respect securing for the pariahs of society, the uality and do not try to for most mournful figures in our eiviliza- “You are right T be | Rl ulated Mrs. M , “*but such meth- | ohts mme more at times ods mean h It is like teach- | clubman in the c m ing in a kin n after being accus- | of the New York Tribune. than to lis tomed to hear lessons from a text boo to the unsophisticated chatter of very hese new fangled notions may be ‘ young people. At Deimonico well enough in some ways, but it is by | Gay I happen to sit nextto a their fruit I jndge them,” observed ) party of this season’s debutantes, and Stanastill, who continued, mnly: | glthough thei versation could not “D. nice, lovable, ed children?” sponded Mre ich methods mak: -spoken, well-mann they do not,” r Freelance, emphatically. It is not per fect children we are aiming for, but able, intelligent, well rounded men and women. You don't expect apples in June to have the sweetness, rosiness and | juice of the matured fruit. Why should | you expect children in their immature Btate to be nearly taunitless?” | npared to either sauce piguan tic salt, it was nevertheless very amusing and seasoned my solitary chop quite to my liking for | the time being. One of their topics in- | terested me as presenting rather a novel exemplification of the influence of mind over matter, for I had not bef con- sidered (never having had the occasion to do 89) just what the physical effect of shyness would be on the system. In the perhaps b o, re “‘My boys are not very agreeable, I | first place they all declared that it was are quick at their [ quite too dreadful to feel shy, and rfully helpful to both | ggreed that of all sensations it was | their father and mvself. They > good | ghout the worst. boys, t00, even if they do not show much | ¢ feel it down my back,” declared a reverence for what you call sacred | tall, handsome brunet'e, who looked as things,” Mrs. MotLerly observed in her she might be a veritable Amazon on eweet, sarions way asion. ‘It is exactly like the cold “1 think the spiritual side of h trickle of ice water down my spine.” *It nature being highust and holiest, affects me in the stomack nghed a normally constituted boys and girl yretty little blonde. ‘It gives me ex- last attribute to develop. 1 have little | aotly'the sensation that you have in a patience with unripe piety of any de- k very swift elevator whea it makes that scription,” said Mrs. Freelun horrid little ‘lift’ rjust before 1t stops on *It consoles me to hear you say 80,” | going down.” * nk dizziness is the continued Mrs. Motherly. was really | worst,” interpoluted a third healthy troubled for a time about Jack. He ab- | specimen. “Whenever 1feel shy every solutely refused to go to Sunday school, | thing swims before me, and 1 feél ready | because he had to study catechism in- | to drop. stead of bible lessons, “He told me it | “I really am the shyest of all of you," was the first time in his life he had ever | been required to rn dogmatic state ments by heart—you know he attends a model school—and that the mere fact of having to say ‘I believe thus ai ' im- mediately made him disbelieve it “There! That's an example of the ten- dencies 1 condemn. A properly brough up child shouid believe whatever astor or master tells him to,” ac Mrs. Standstill, triumphantly. exclaimed a black little creature, amid the derisive lau, | ter of her companions, who evident | had their own opinions on the s | “It is just because 1 am roovercome with | it that 1 do the things I do: it affects me | that way. 1 am so utterly miserable | that a horrible feeling of recklessness | comes over me, and I have a wild de ‘ to shock the stately, stiff old ladies who yed, impisn-looking h- look at me so disapprovingly. But it is “Well, I am dev Iy thankful that | all shyness, 1 assu you. Iam really my children are not properly brought | just as timid and bashful as Maud there. up, then,” interpolated Mrs. Freelance. | whom every one considers such a sensi- “They are encouraged in every way 10 | tive young thing: only, you see, 1t affects think and act for themselves, subject | me differently,” she concluded, while the only to the eternal laws governing the } others exclaimed ‘‘Hear! hear!” wit universe.” | ironical emphasis. Mrs. Motherly gave the speaker a i quick glance of appreciative understand- | Kisses and embraces are s ing, then added reverently: May God give us mothers strength to known in Japan as tokens of affecti we except fact that Japunese he solitar) fulfill our manifc for they seem | mothers, like mothers all over the too much for humas udertade | world, lip and b ir @ ones b unaided.” | times. After babyhood there is no more v | huggicg or kissing. Such actions Among the docum which have | cept in the case of infants, are held tot been discovered is a tablet which may | highly immodest. Never do girls kiss be well called “‘the oldest dressmaker’s | ope another, never do parents kiss or bill in the worl t was the custom of Lembrace their children who have be- the Baby ings 10 prese come able to walk. And this rule holds temples se bes for the good of all classes of society, from 1he priests and priestesses | highest nobility to the humblest usually done every peasantry. Neither have we the least m Mr. Boscawer ndication throughout Japanese litera- don Queen, and ture of any time in the history of the of these lists in th race when affection was more “demon- The oldest hithert strative than it is today. Perhaps the of a king, about 14 western reader will find it hard even to several of a later period, imagine a literature in the whole course ment before us is far olde af whioh no ment { X on is made of kissing, stone, was discovere hand hand clasping is an temple the of totally foreign to Japanese us Cheides. This temple was ded ) | kissing. * * * You may see again the g 1 had a very and again fathers and sons, husbands priesthood attached to it. From the | and wives, mothers and daughters, meet- 6tyle of the writing, which is extremely | ing after years of absence, yet you will archaic, and from the curious system | probably neve > the least approach numerals employed, the tablet ca toa caress between them ey wil be of later date th 2800 B. C It con- | kneel down and salute each other and tains a of ninety-two vestments | smile, and perbaps cry a little for joy which were presented 1o the temple but they will neither rush into eac The 1 { the king is un her's arms nor utter extravrdinary e end of the | phrases of affecti the t)of the temple for | To the & \d student of po this lany of the | jeal science New Zealand is just now words are unknown to us. as they are, | most interesting part of the planet. no doubt, many of them techuical terms | Principles and theories are undergoing employed by the modistes of the period. | the test of practical spplication. What Some of the 1i however, are of par- | is known as “adult suffrage,” which ticular interest—those that can be | here seems a long distance ahead, is now tactorily decij 1. Among the items | almost as far behind. The women have are “twelve white robos of the temple, socepted their n dignity with en- eight robes of the house of his lady, te: collars of the house of his lady, ten pure | gold cullars, two white robes.” Oune | | thusiasm and are availing themselves of every opportunity to prepare themselves for their duties. & permanest Woman's | these very little girls being the ouly ” THE OMANA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY. JANT TARY_21. 1894-SIXTEEN PAGES IS THE s that are tions instead ad and for- Salmon 1y to the dom arion Ta | made san b tud stud, as ca y science, with | and in bier department. | * | o5 | the unexpected which alw »ens with children, as everybody | and. with his gaze still on the object of his interest, aske “Mamma, the next time Mrs. Blank has to be wound may I do it? "The consternation of the boy's mother was not shared by her hosts, and on its being repeatea 10 the | owner of the trumpet she promptly | | yielded the tempting stretch of flexible | Pipe to her small guest. From that mo- | ment his happiness was undoubted. In | | his hands the trumpet became a tele- phone, a fire horn and a half-dozen other delightful things, and it was with | reluctance that he relinquished it when the visit was done. *x An interesting anecdote of the late Mre. Lydia Maria Child is told by the daughter of Mrs. Lyman, the lady to whom Mrs. Child addressed h re- marks. Mr, Child wasone of the geninses | who “have soarings after the infinite | and divings after the unfathomable, but | never pay cash, always planning, never achieving, having mes for payir off the national debt, but never paying their own, devising steps to insure com- | petence to every member o the human family, but somehow excluding his own family.” Mrs. Lyman said: “Well, M Child, what is the latest thing that your husband is doing?” Mrs. Child replied ‘‘He is drawing gravel for the railroad.” Mrs. Lyman asked: “‘Now. how r do you think he is losing on the Mrs. Child replied. ‘“Well, as near 1 can estimate it I think he is losing ninepence (about 17 cents) on every load he draws Mrs. Lyman (loguitur): “‘Well, Mrs. Child, if your husband is | doing anything innocent, and is ¢ losing ninepence on a load, for heaven's sake encourage him in it!” » sC - do not include other "y The mother-in-law of the Mikado Japan has recently beenill. She of PREHISTORIC SIBERIAN GLACIER, YET DISCOVERED. in a housenold whore there bad b iren for a long . taxcd his enter- Books, pictures, an opera glass, a pussy | | and more pre bly atiractive things | | were to be soon discarded, | | the child meanwhile keeping a fascina- | | ting ey= upon ar trampet which the | - M moth” deafness ef a member of the family ro- | am quired. Finally, he crept to his mother | bus THIS LARGEST ANIMAL % It’s About the Comparative Size of ur “TTAMMOTH” DISTRIBUTION o WORLD’S FAIR ART PORTFOLIOS ULEEIIEEESEITEEIIIREEEA IS VEELIERESEEEAREE S EARRE, the word for both, and all other attempts are Mouse-like ~— 55 &S SUPERB ART REPRODUCTIONS 2565 (FROM UNITED STATES GOMERNMENT PHOTOGRAPHS), Affording a Complete Pictorial and Descriptive History of the WORLDS COLUMBIAN EXFPOSITION These Views Are the Most Artistic, the Most Accurate, and in every way THE BEST DON'T MISS Securing Every BACK Number. DON'T MISS Obtaining Every FUTURE Number. FREE ERNMESE & B S PR ERIIESEISTRTIGD NG Other styles in proportion, ber Bring or send 8 coupons of different dates, from page 2, with 10 cents, to address given below, and you can secure any Portlolio during the week of its lssne ss in your letter, but be sure to state plainly the particular Portfolio you desire, giving its o In sending Send or bring coupons, stc., to ART PORTFOLIO DEPT., THE OMAHA BEE, OMAHA, NEBRASKA. I The Festner Printing Company, with marble edges, for §1.00. 1307 Howard St., will bind these books, leather back and corners, embossed sides attended by 423 physicians, but in sp of that she pulled through. In connec- | ones whom fashion, at the moment, per- | the view of those sitting behind them, a [ tute School of Stenography and Type- tion with the illness of lhis illustrious | mits to wear them. There are, it scems, | circumstance not altogether unknown in | writing. lady the Buddhist pricsts have been | gepsitive nerves about the eyebrows | New York. Suddenly a malevoice from | The Baroness Burdett-Coutts is ssid iming that it was caused by the in- | which are weakened when the hair is | the pit exclaimed, in a tone of patbetic | to own the finest flock of goats in Eng- troduction of railroads into the king- | Jong enough to rest upon them. These | remonstrance: ‘‘Ladies. now you nave | land. dom. Their argument was a very power- | perves directly concern the sight, and | got the franchise. you might really take | S ful and convincing oge, 100, in their own | that important function is more your hats off.” Whether the suggestion | _ The queen of Denmark, in her | estimation. since it showed conclusively | tampered with by this constant, produced any other result than th year, is one of the fluest harpists iz | that when there were norailroads in t slight weight of hair. evitable roar of laughter iy 5 - 5 | kingdom the empress was in gooc ] % 4 ARy g | Mme. Sarah Bernhardt is about to | health, and after the introduction o | And - suothor physician inveighs | butit ola ooy Ft T an et s ARG 1 o healt : 3 A od against another practice, which has | Women in the theater that realized that | T - 1rs hich wi railroads she became ill. They were | 284105 B00U el t0 be permitted tovote did not make life's | Volumes astonished that any one should dispute | serious_ effects, that of roses entirely thorn The duchess of Cl is an en- | 80 logical a pronosition. The Buddhist T SR ey ? oo BAR{aet Al mBta ik i | priests ave pot_singular in_this mode of he pronounces very injurious. Tt is told of Hannah More that she had | Africa hunting s argument. Inthe United States nourly | jionq of aliowing the optic nerves the | 8 good way of ng tale bearers. It | The empress when she all our political controversics ure made | pevfoot rest affonded by darkuoss, the | 18 said thut whenever she was told | travels, takes with ward- tributed 10 & cause which as yet hus not | HOM With the nesult of causing the ““‘m:. r’;h‘ 18 be tras ‘Jx e 6ffbot/was Lelang Starford univers though Ealedy 3 ‘ brain and the rest of the nervous sysiem | and ask if this be true.” The efloct was | oply in its third year, has already near]y | » to suffer. 26 udiorousty Baln 1€ 1816 { 90" students, of whom over one-thifd i Ay | Ly was tuken aback. stammered 0ut | gro givlg | One hears agreat deal about feminine | 4 A 'y h d that ce | Nek o T At A | extravagance in dressand its deterrent | , The woman canvasser is a pic atement. But | . An establishment has been start d in effect upon marriageable young men | feature of English politics not yet fa- | 4o" 000q lady was inexorable; off she | 1:ovdon where 1 0 UPPIOG | who shrink back in terror from the altar | Mila7 In this countey. At oneof the @450k 1he scandal monger to the scandal- | b¥ the morning ¢ the day. W the | when they consider what it costs to dress | Fécent elections the women canvassers, | j o4 1o make inquiry and compare ac- | ®RPloyer prefe ; | girl according to the dictates of | Who really love the beat and burden of 3 (00 TS Ak hat anybody | Mrs. Potter Palmer of Chicago has | modern fashion. T efore it is inter- | the ¢ n_}‘ received l’.lflfl reward in this | ocor g'sen e ventured to repeat a | & penchant for Mexican and duchesse | esting toread of a cortain Miss Phraser's | World, for the day before election the | ooy Haunal More. One | laces. She probably owns one of the | new gown, made in the year 1676, which | \eading liberal paperin London pald 8 | you)q° 1) Lie hod of treatment | finest assortments of these delicate ¢ | cost ¥1,676, and of which it is recorded: | ‘nl_xfiw-'}r: u»nl,:...‘ 10 ; he unticing and | Lo 18 be g sure ¢ for scandal broideries in the world | “It frights Sir Carr Scroope, who is | successful exertions of the sixty ‘women R Mrs. Ormiston Chant has this fine | much in love with her, from marrying | CLVassers who had been working on “It is & curious paradox,” says an ex- | thing to say of the rican woman her, saying his_estate will scarce main- | B8lf of the ministorial candidates. | ) gy~ that the large | *“Her good humor u difficulties is tain her thes.” | “They went in wrota the special vor- ves small things, detai surpassed by nothing 1 have seen Verily there is Hothing new under the | Tespondent, *where the mere male can- [ (7508 S0, Yo, detuis [N b RS AR AR | sun. Not in centuries has there been | Tanar had 1C“’“'fl“_‘(‘f"r‘;7’-‘l’ failed, N | his tendencies, while he whe | Ganarali it mfarat - paiz | made & gown soresplendent as thatworn | they came ou ot Oter | gre small delights in colossal oy e i e S A b by the Med ] 1een, whereon were whom a persuasive woman ocannot get 2 g S Satantat ¥ . - R . licis queer 0 e tiar t aa e, Danads S0 | evory. soit )stenta she has gat together a splendid | embraidered 3,200 pearis and 3,000 dia- | th o ot i FATRMNON A TRMOL | )y 1508, majestic estates, | collection mo! 1d what belle in the last cycle | 9 all human ment."” The chief | oy {a) ipon & great scale. | B = has been arrayed so resplendently as | Fequisites for this sort of work, it would | Fi0 7)o g lurge and perhaps | _ OBly two women Eug and ?.mi‘;.,‘b that Mme. de Montespan, who wore at g | 566, 8re & robust constitution, an in- [ ¢ 7 % ishes, while that of the large- | Tight to append the mystic letters M. F, great court festival ‘s gown of gold ou | fatuation for politics and a distinct eall | }y5Ged man is small and precise.” This | H: 10 their nam Tho 0ue 1s Mos ‘ gold, embroidered in gold, bordered | for the work. . is true of s0 prominent an exawpie as | CNE8PE, Who is master of the Bentley | with' gold, and over that gold frieze s President Cleveland, who, a large man | Pack: WIib ber, Coug 1ior a8 Wb/pper-in stitchod with & gold mixed with a cer- | From New Zealand comes an ar with large bands, writes with remark- | While the Comtesse de Parls is master of j tain gold which makes the most divine | and suggestive story of an occcurrence | able fineness, and & page of Lis script s | tbe Woodnorton hunt stuff that bas ever been imagined.” | which took place since the recent elec- | destitute uf unnecessary lines. The Amsterdam court of appeals b | tion, when women enjoyed the right of — decided thata yo nau who in the A physician advises mothers to discard | franchise. It seems that some of the Femione Afuirs. | street kissed, agui v will, a young bangs even for their smallest daughters, | laaies seated in the stalls of & theater Edns Eaglefesther, a young Indian | lady who was a stranger 10 him, commit- were wearing bats which interfered with | girl, is o graduate of the Drexel Iun 1 ted no offense mgaiust the law, inasmuch . ‘“‘as to kiss a person cannot be an offense because is in the nature of a warm < of sympathy. Fushion Notes, The independent waist is still an ime portant feature of the modern toilet. Corsages of white chiffon with bands of sat much admired for evening wear, Novelties in hosiery will constitute one of the factors in the fortheoming fancies of fashion Skirts of striped materials have the seams arranged so that they form sharp e are d rufile of velvet, lined the edges of many long capes. Many a last yeur's sealskin has been brought up to date by new sleeves of a‘ flerent fur A fine striped velvet that is both shot and moired isu novelty among spring dress fabrics Bayadere stripes of old rose and faint u lustrous grounds of green appear ( fawn- nong the black stockings are those covered with minute gilt stars that are warrgnted was ble. Young girls wear short, tight-fitting Hungarian jackets of dark blue or Lary re for walking Stately-looking brocades made u with cat taste and elaboration appear W rule among evening gowns. woar satin or woollen mature women sae of Venetian brown a ruddy tinge appears among some of he handsomest fabrics of the season A double reversible shot silk has & mauve ground with a pa en pot on A dark green broche s hot with trefoils in turg New shades of water and mt black, these colors give & distinct vogue. le ik & ha green osier, ( in

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