She $m fetteei. A Journal fcrthe People. Devoted to l he Interests of Humanity. Independent In Politics and Religion. Mtve to all Live Issues, and Thorone.hly Radical in OppoMngand KxposlBC the "Wrongs oi the Mae. OorreJriomleiits writing over assumed slgna tures must make known their names to the Editor, or no attention trill be given to their communications. ELLEN DOWD, THEPAEMEE'S WIPE. Entered, aeeonllnt; to the Act of Congress, In tlie year 1ST!, by Mrx. A. J. Dunlwny, in the Of fice of the librarian of Consress at "Washington Clly. fllAITKR XIL Summer was over, and autumn, re joicing in peace and plenty, Mailed over all the landscape. The bright green color of the summer foliage gave place to sober hues of russet brown, and as the (lava wore on, and the pure and bril liant sunlight of October came to play upon the air, bright gold aud gorgeous amber tints vied with scarlet tinges and variegated shades of gray -and purple, that radiated from forest, hillside, plain and dale, The great and sudden trial that had transformed Ellen from a free and bright and joyful girl into a defiant, restless and exacting, excitable woman was ever upiermost in her vivid imagina tion. Instead of the genial companion ship ot trees aud birds and flowers and animals, which had been to her child hood such a keen source of delight, she now seemed to delight in their destruc tiou. From a gay, kind-hearted crea ture, who would not willingly torture a housefly, she had grown into a morbidly cruel sportsman, and following her own wild will, had taught the binls and squirrels of the D'Arcy estate to dread her as their most deadly enemy Grandfather D'Arcy, after Ellen's de termination to submit to the engage ment, which so singularly set his mind at rest, appeared perfectly contented. His wife, clearly perceiving that he was afflicted with a monomania, which her wifely heart excused with duo benevo lence, calmly awaited tho course of events and prayed in secret that some avenue of escape might yet be opened for hor daughter's child. It seemed that her prayers were answered, for Ellen at last grew tired of her cruel sport. "Grandmother, this is October 1st," said she, coining in from the fields with a brace of wild birds dangliug at her side. "I threw my rifle over the cliff, aud it was all I could do to help going over after it. Even Grundy, here," pat ting the head of her canine companion for whom she had gradually acquired much affection, "is getting tired of de stroying life. I've lUIled my last bird." "What are you going to do now, dar ling?" "I'm going to be kitchen and dairy maid, ma'am." "Hut your grandfather. What will he say?" - "Grandfather may think and act and talk as he pleases. He is under contract to grant me perfect freedom for the next four years. But two mouths of my pre cious time are gone already," and the poor girl sighed hopelessly. "When will you begin this work, my dear?" "Now. Any time." "But you'll get very tired of it." "I get very tired of myself." "Well, do as you like ; but I think a day or two of kitchen work will satisfy you that It is not such occupation as is best suited to your taste." "I'll risk it." Aunty Harris was busy in the fruit house. Great barrels of sunny apples lay awaiting their turn to be peeled and placed upon the slats to diy. Vegetables in another department were ready to be carefully assorted beforo being packed in the cellar for winter use. Seed stores for coming gardening purposes were yet to be properly arranged and assorted. Certainly there appeared to be work enough for half a dozen pairs of hands. "Aunty Harris, don't you want an apprentice ?" "Why, child," pausing in the act of peeling a Rhode Island Greening, "who wants-to become my apprentice?" "Your humble servant." "Arc you really in earnest?" "Try me and sec" "How long do you want to work?" "Until you pronounce me a faithful and efficient housekeeper, perfectly able to work for myself." "But, child,, it isn't at all likely that voiCll ever need the business, even if you do learn it." That's ray affair, Aunty, not yours. Just look at grandmother! She de scended from decayed. English aristoc racy, you know, and will not assimilate with her New England neighbors. She is aud always has been as helpless as a baby. Now, I want to get able to take care of myself." "As heir to the D'Arcy estate you will always be able to live without taking care of yourself." "Aunty, would you accept the D'Arcy estate with the incumbrance which I shall be compelled to take with it?" "What incumbrance?" "That old singing, grinning ghoul, whom my fastidious grandfather has chosen for my mate." "I would if I'd agreed to." "That settles it, then. I did hope you would aid me." "Appeal to your grandfather, child." "Appeal to the his Satanic Majesty! Grandfather is as mad as a March hare " "Then I don't see that you are under any obligation to obey a mad man." Across Ellen's earnest face there sud denly flashed a gleam of gladness. "Do you really think, Aunty Harris, that I could honorably escape from my eiigaccment?" " 'Tain't for me to say, honey. I have my own notions about such things ; but VOLU31E 1. I've been in the employ of this house nigh on to forty years. I couldn't think of calling the acts of my employers into question. No doubt they are doing what they think is best for you." ' "Aunty Harris, set mc to work. I must be busy, or I shall go mad!" "Well, honey, I won't deny that there is plenty of work to be done ; and in order to make it pleasant-like, so that you may be broken into the kitchen harness by degrees, Til give you the management of tho seed stores. The old man gathered all the seeds in their season and put them in these sacks and on those blankets and iu boxes here aud there. I'm getting old and stiff-like, and don't get through the work like I did once. Dear me! When my little children long since dead and gone were all clinging to my knees, I could keep up my work a great deal better than now. There's watermelon seeds on the boards yonder four varieties, They're to be labeled and put up in pa per sacks. These things must all be made secure before the corn Is marketed, for the mice will be troublesome after that. There's the muskmclon, cucumber and tomato seeds, dried in their own juices to make 'em perfect ; they must be cleaned and 'sorted and mind, don't mix 'em. Here's radish pods, long red, fall white, and the like; they musn't be mixed, mind you, for seeds amalgamate like men and animals. Here's pea pods and bean pods, ever so many varieties. There's cabbage pods and kale and mus tard, waiting to be crimoived out. Here's onion sets, onion seeds anil seed onions for next year. And here " "Stop, Aunty Harris, do ! I'll never be able to remember half you tell me unless you give shorter lessons. I am deeply interested, though, and believe that I shall like farming first rate when I've once thoroughly mastered the busi ness." 'I thought it was housekeeping you wanted to learn, honey." "It suits me better to call this work farming, or farm gardening." "Well, go on ; let's see how much of this kind of work you will be able to get through with tills week." To Ellen's surprise, her new occupa tion deeply interested and delighted her. For a week she arose early and worked diligently all day long, and when Sat urday evening settled in tranquility over that quaint old farmer mansion, Ellen's delight over her achievements was genuine. All along the shelves were ranged neat rows of nicely labeled seeds. The rubbish and litter were con signed to the manure heap at the back of the great barn, where the delighted chickens scratched it into fragments in search of straggling tid-bits. The dirt floor of the seed room was carefully swept, and Ellen was better contented and really happier than she had ever been. Steady, honest, industrious labor, whether of brain or body, is ever the best remedy for humanity's imaginary or real woes. The man Harris, who, with his wife, had been a life resident of the D'Arcy estate, was suddenly stricken with pal sy. It was a severe trial to the indus trious and honest old man to be thus af flicted in the midst of his u.;fulncs3,but It was a yet greater trial for his faithful spouse, and a great loss to the always well-ordered farm. Old Mr. D'Arcy was absent at the State Legislature. For many years he had been an active and enthusiastic pol iticiau, and paid little heed to the man agement of his really fine estate; and now, when politics could not conven iently spare him, lie would not leave his public post, but wrote home, advis ing his wife to employ a new farm hand to take the long well-filled post of honor as menial and manager. "Grandmother, let mc go to the vil lage to hire a farmer," said Ellen. "I can ride old Betty; Grundy can go alon; for company, and I shall enjoy it so nmci." "What? A young girl like you to go out on suclt business?" was the surprised reply. "Why shouldn't I thus co out. I won- iicr. uesKlcs. I'd like to know vim ! here to go if can't? Aunty Harris can't leave her husband, aud you are not able to leave home. I am well and strong aim actually feverish from the want of some kind of excitement to start my stagnating blood." "But, my child, how will you manago this business v" "I'll go to the intelligence ofllec and make the proper inquiries.'" 'The very thing to do, I really be lieve," said the grandmother, speaking slowly: "but, Ellen, dear, how came you to think of such a thing?" "I got information by leannug, ma'am. Do you understand ?" Grandmother D'Arcy smiled. "I believe that is considered a good way to get information, dear; but shall trust you to demean yourself as a lady as heir to the D'Arcy estate." "Wliicli. would be a very pleasant heirship to contemplate if it were not for the singing, grinning ghoul cf an in cumbrance which hangs over it. Under the circumstances, I confess that I'm ashamed of the D'Arcy estate!" and El leu tossed her long bright locks defiantly and stamped her little foot with empha sis. God knows, mv darling, that I did 1 not thus encumber your prospective es 3?OTtTX,A3VI, tate. Yet, after all, I do not know but that it is best that you should be settled in mind as to who shall be your hus band. It will prevent many wild fan cies and cause you to settle down like a good, sensible woman." "Grandmother, do you love mc?" The question was earnest, Impassioned, al mort pitiful. "Certainly, darling; far better than my own existence." . 'Then I beg that you will never more attempt to mock me by a cruel jest about my coming fate." "I did not mean to mock or jest, ray dear." "Well, don't talk any more about it, then. Let me enjoy my present freedom in peace." The old lady sighed and made no fur ther comment. Old Betty, the gentle, patient animal that for near a quarter of a century had been on hand at the barn-yard for every emergency, was soon saddled by Ellen's dextrous hands, and off. went the twain, witii Grundy trotting by their side, as though personally responsible for the safety and good behavior of the creatures in his charge. The road lay through a rocky defile, where the grand old woods, arrayed in ail the gorgeous glory of the full-ripe autumn, sighed in solemn happiness. A squirrel nimbly ran across the road, and Grundy, giving chase, soon drove it into a tree. "Now, if I had my gun!" Then, quickly recollecting her resolve, she added, "No, never will I take another life in wantonness. That squirrel crossed the road in front of me. Aunty Harris would say that such an incident augured bad luck. "What a silly, superstitious notion! But, dear me, yonder goes a deer! There, it's bounded across the road! More signs of bad luck. Back, Grundy, back! What a splendid garb of broxVn red fur you have donned for the autumn, you nimble, fleet-footed darling! There, it's disappeared In the bushes! Up, Betty ! . We'll not iret to town very soon at this gait." Thus Ellen soliloquized, uuconsoious that a sudden storm had risen in the south aud west, that was now over spreading the very zenith. The coming darkness and near-by growling thunder awakened her from her reverie, and vig orously applying the whip, she out-rode the storm, aud dashed into the village and up to the intelligence office, whore a boy took charge of her steed and hur ried away, just as enormous hail stones began to burst in pieces on the pave ment as they came crashing down. A man with a shining bald crown, which somehow disagreeably reminded her of another shining pate, which she resolutely struggled to forget, stood at a high, dingy desk, with a pen behind Ids car. Another man, of not very prepos sessing appearance as to either dress or address, lounged in an ofllec chair and chewed an enormous quid of tobacco, from which he every few seconds col lected an accumulation of filth, which he ejected into a box half full of stench and saw-dust. For a few moments the falling, crash ing hall stones deadened every other sound, but the violence of the storm was soon over, and Ellen was able to make known her errand. "Sir," addressing the melancholy man with tiic shining pate, "I want to hire a farm hand one who knows all about the chores on a well kept, well-ordered farm, where apples are to be gathered, cows milked, fences repaired, and so on." The melancholy man grinned a ghast ly smile. "Are you a farmer, Miss?" 'That is not your business, sir. Can you furnish such a man as I require?" "Fortunately you are just in time. Here is a man who wants employment. You can make your own terms with him." "Sir," turning to the stalwart, broad- shouldered fellow, whose vital forces were rapidly oozing out with his saliva, 'are you a thorough-going, scientific farmer?" . I guess I be, Miss. I don't know no other business except farmlu' an' team- in'." Can you give a certificate of honesty and capabiiity?"- "Nobody ever asked such a certificate of me, Miss. I have these big broad hands aud shoulders. I can do anything that's needed, but I don't want to be boshed by a woman. Be you the boss?" "Yes, sir." "Well, then, I guess I won't suit." " ery well. I can do the work my self." r "l)u tell! but you arc gritty! I guess I'll try t, jest fur luck." -u presume you wouldn't suit me, sir." "It is your only show, ma'am," said the melancholy man. 'The California and Oregon excitement has taken off all the surplus men." "What are your terms, sir?" 'Twenty-five dollars a mouth through the winter an' my horse kep'. I'll work cheap, jest to try it, but I'm techy about being bossed by a woman." "AS long as you do what I ask, sir, I sliall not bos3 you very much, but if you get obstreperous I shall not longer want you." "When will you want me?" "Now. To-day." "I'm ready." Fnr.K Srr.r.cir, Tr.tr. Vnxsa, Fbee People. OREGON, ; i- i Tho storm had now abated. The horses were brought and the two pro ceeded through the hail-riddled forest to the D'Arcy home. "You haven't told .me your name, sir," said Ellen. "You may call me Henry Jones. It's not my real name, but 'twill do for a farm hand." "Yon said you'd always been a farm er." i. "Have I contradicted it?" "No, but I am satisfied that there is some mystery about you. You Imitated the dialect of a genuine down-Easter when I first addressed you, and yet you forgot to sustain the character." "Well, Miss, I am not really what I seem. I tell you this 'pon honor, and yet I cannot tell you why I seek to hide my Identity. Will you accept my con fidence anil promise that you will keep this fact that I have thus revealed as a sacred, honorable secret?" "I will, upon one condition." 'I am curious to know whit that con dition can be." "That you at once and forever stop the use of tobacco, sir. It U degrading to your manhood. Give it up and I will be your friend as long as you deserve my friendship." Very little like mistress and servant did these equestriaus appear, as with their horses' heads close together, and looking earnestly in eacii other's eyes, they plighted vows of friendship that would have shocked Mrs. D'Arcy into a fainting fit could she have known of it. Death had visited the homestead dur ing Ellen's absence. The tried aud trusty Harris, to whose economy and foresight the estate was indebted for most of its thrift and prosperity, had yielded to tho final messenger and gone tho way of mortals. Aunty Harris made no loud lamentations. She went about her various avocations with her hand at times pressed tightly against her heart, while her blanched lip and check bespoke her bitter agony. Ellen relieved her of many of her most arduous household duties; and when the mortal remains of the companion of her life had been as signed to their last resting-place, good Aunty Harris did not seek, to make oth ers sad by recitals of her woes. (To bo continued.) COEBSSPOHDENOE. This department of the Nkw Noktii- wkst is to be a general vehicle for ex change of ideas concerning any and all matters that may lie legitimately dis cussed in our columns. Finding it practi cally impossible to answer each corres pondent by private letter, we adopt this mode of communication to save our friends the disappointment that would otherwiscnccruefroinourlnabillty toan swertlieir'queries. We cordially invite everybody that has a question to ask, a suggestion to make, or a scolding to give to contribute to the Correspondents' Column. 'To Carrie:" The lines are verv fair, but not up to tho requisite standard. The writer can do better. The public do notcaro for personal poems, unless they concern public celebrities. The lines may be appropriately preserved by you, In your own handwriting, to present to the child at her majority. She will prize them much more highly in this style than in the newspapers. Olive: Hope to hear from you fre quently. "Write short, crisp, terse arti cles. You have much more than average ability. Sylvia: Your letter has been neg lected through an oversight. Sorrv. Many thanks for kind words. Write often. N. E. L.: You have politic talent, but your work needs criticism and culture. We give your best stanzas, and thank you for (hem. Glad to sec you develop literary aspiration so early in life : "Fifteen to-day; my eager feet Upon tho chores of girlhood beat, Impatient for the ebbing tide To boar me down Its waters wide. Far In tho distance, rising there, I sec a gateway opening fair; All, 'tis the gale to womanhood. And many thus have waiting Mood." The other stanzas are not so good. You will better understand tciy, when, like yourmother, you shallliavctried the difference between imagination aud re aiity. C. A. H. : Your lines are fair in some respects, but pos.-css the Mine faults as those alluded to in reply to "Carrie." Young writers should always submit their efforts to some educated friend for criticism; that is, unless they should be, unfortunately,, situated as we were in our younger days, where they have no educated friends to consult. All such may come to us for counsel, and shall be always welcome. Other letters will be answered next week. Tho Unitarians have one ordained woman occupying one of their puIpiLs, aim arc ready to extenu generous nospi talitv to others who are qualified to en ter the profession, and are desirous to Idcntifv themselves with their denomi national interests. The cordial welcome which Mrs. Burleigh has received from Unitarians lias been most gratifying. She lias been received with most heart felt sympathy by tlie clergymen of her church, and by the press. She lias been Invited to preach the leading sermon before Unitarian Conferences, and some of the eminent Unitarian ministers of Boston invite her to their pulpits and await her coming. The Ontenst. BV 11E3. C. jr. STOWE. "Go, atone her to death!" said a maiden prouj. Ax an outcast fled from a piping crowd; And sho turned her steps to the Church, and there Bowed low as the minister knelt In prayer And he prayed thnt tne Lord of Hosts would coma To the widow's heart and the orphan's home And for all the powers that bo he pniyed, And aMress on tho sins of man ho laid. Bat where shall the outcast hide her shame? Must she turn to the sink or vice asnln? "Go, stone hor to death!" was the matron's cry. As she passed the suffering outcast by; And she hastened home where her daughters fair Moved round the room with a queenly air. And told how with shame she blushed as she passed The squalid form of the Trail outcast. "pp. stono her to death !" said the man of God ; bile's not nt to cumber the earth's ereen sod;" . . )c Craned for the sins or Adam's race. Ana forgot his own In hli prayer for craee. Go. stone her to death !" fs the popular cry. As tho rich and the powerful pass her by; sue j ; drank of the call and vinegar now Let tho crown or thorns be placed on her brow. What' the virtue worth that turns In scorn J1,'" "? hcart 'hat's with sin andsorrow torn? W hat's tho priestly robe, if Its folds enclose A heart that scotl's at the outcast's woes? ;"VnMen proud, with the heart so cold, Itemembcrthe Majrdalene ofoldT lias she welched what the lowlv Jesus said. As the doomed of old was before him led? Ami thejjauglity dame, who blushed as she The outcast frail, could she have cast The stone at her stitrerin idter t hero And nt night have bowed her head In sinless prayer? Could the cantlni; priest with his holy tone. Cast with thcslnles heart or hands tho stone? Oil, when will the spirit of Christ, as of yore, ItaUe the fallen up bid lhemln no more "Woman in Ancient Times. Mrs. Matilda Joslyn Gage recently lectured in AVashingtonon the "Women of Ancient Egypt," from a report of which In the Chronicle of that city, we gleam some interesting facts. Mrs. Gage is evidently a woman of extensive ream ng ana unusual research in the lore of recondite ancient history. Her lec ture was full of pith of rare instruction We regret tliat we have room only for a meager synopsis. At the marriage ceremony of the an cient Egyptians the husband promised to obey the wife in all things; yet no wife put her husband to death, or shut him into a certain suite of apartments; on the contrary husband and wife were always together in life, and in dcatli were deposited in one tomb. Tho employments of women were va ried. They engaged in merchandise, in marketing, in manufactures; and one important branch of the medical profes sion was entirely in the hands of wom en. Women are depicted on the monu ments counting tne threads of linen. sonic of which was of the exquisite line- It was known as the trovcit wind, ami 1 sought by the mightiest monarch. ' iip-i ni tnroniK rn rim cmi'iiM iha But the cookiu rif llm family was . done by men Even the notent Plm-1 - roali. with who: we dream of the fat and I the lean klnc wo are all so familiar, nvon he trusted not. his kitchen in the hands of a womau. Women attended social festivals and private feasts in company with their husbands. It was through (lip superior power held by women that thedaughtcr of Pharoah was enabled to preserve the life of Moses in defiance of her father, and to bring him up as her own son, destined to succeed that very Pharoah upon his throne. Women held high rank in the priesthood, two of the most .acred oillces belouging solely to them. me oiliest literature or tne world was the sacred sonits of Isis. which Plato deemed worthy or the Divinity. They continued in use until the second cen tury after Christ. The oldest library was the one at Thebes. Its presiding geniuses were two, the liord of the Li- urary, aim tne Jauy of Letters. It has been said women have written no grand poems, yet some proof exists that both the Iliad and the Odyssey were the work of a woman, Phemtaria" a priestess of Phitha in Memphis. They were deposited among the archives in the temple from which they were stolen by Homer. 'llic world best knows Ec-vnt throuirh her architecture. Much of the glory of Egyplaln architecture was traceable to women. In eacii of the three great pe riods the Pyramid, theTemple.and the Obelisk period her work is found. Mlietnird of the great pyramids, winch was more elaborate than'thc others, and of greater scientific structure, was the won: oi uucen rseitkan, Known m His tory as tho "rosy-cheecked and fair haired queen of Egpyt." The two great obelisks before theTein plc of Karnak, tho lanrcst ever erected of one stouc, were placed there by Queen .mcusis oi tne eignteetnn tiynasty. Her reign of twenty-two years was the period of Egypt's greatest lircliitectual glory. She was also a great warrior. It is thought she drove the shepherd kings out of Egpyt. The monuments record the events of her reign, and over the whole of Egpyt remains of her worksare still found. Egyptian queens are de picted upon the monuments wearing the triple crown in sign of their ecclesiasti cal, civil and judicial power. All creat oillces. nriestiv. legislative. judicial, mouarchiai, were open to women, aud to tins fact is due tlic per manence and long continuance of that government, anil from the same reason arose hei fame for wisdom. Woman's power in Egypt was not a surreptitious and irrepressible one, arising from fer vor, but was recoznlzed as iiilierimr in her from birth, ami consequent upon her ueing a component part oi Humanity. Whiting ox Newspapers. The fol lowing is the act of Congress In relation to writing upon newspapers or other pe riodicals sent by mall, and mav bo of in terest to many who have fallen infn flm habit: "If any person shall inclose or conceal a letter or oiner thing, or any memorandum in writing, in a newspa per, pamphlet or magazine, or make any writing thereon, which he shall have delivered into any postoffice, or to any person ior tliat purpose, in order that the same may be sent fno of i..f r postage, he shall lorfceit the sum of S5 for every offense and the letter, news paper, package, memorandum or other thing, shall not be delivered to the per son to whom it is directed until the. amount of single letter postage is paid for each article of which the letter is composed." Silver Cake. Whites of one dozen eggs; flour, five cups; white sugar, one cup: butter, one cup; cream or sweet milk, one cup; cream of tartar, one tea spoon; soda, one lialf teaspoon; beat and mix as in Gold Cake. Bake in a deep pan. A Woman on "Woman's Fashions. BY r.VNJTV FEEX. hen I say that the street dress of tne majority oi respectable women of New lork to-day is disgusting, I but feebly express my emotions. 1 say the respectable women, and yet, save to tliem who know them to be such their appearance leaves a wide margin for doubt. The clown at a circus wears not a more stuniiimr or narti-colored cos tume; in fact, his lias the advantage of uemg suincieniiy "taut" to use a nau tical phrase to interfere with locomo tion; while theirs what wifli disfii-Mi-ic humps upon their backs, and big ro settes upon their sides and shoulders. and loons, and folds, and linMnii5. ntifl clasps, and bows upoii their skirts, and striped satin petticoats, all too short to hide often clumsy ankles and more colors nud shades of colors heaped upon one poor little fashion-ridden body than ever were gathered In one rainbow and all this worn without regani to temper ature, or time, or place I sav this presents a spectacle which is too dis heartening even to be comical. Oni cannot smile at the young girls who are, one day Heaven lieln th pill tn lio wives and mothers ! I say to myself, as I see the throat and neck with only the protection of a gold locket between 'itself and tho cold autumnal wind. Wives and mothers I say. as I see them ruin ing their feet and throwing their ankles out of shape in the vain endeavor to walk on their heels like corks, fastened Jar into tho middle of the sole of their SVa.Vd ihose boots M hiRl "Pon the 1? ,ekaml, so tightly buttoned Sim? U'.thaJ dreulatlon is stopped, and violent headaches follow. Wives ami mothers! I say, as I see the heating and burdensome pannier tacked on the most delicate portion of a woman's frame, to make still surer confirnwui ;,,-oi;.i;. ... What fathers, husband, brothers, lovers", can be thinking about, to be willing i tue women tiiey love and respect should appear in public, looking like women whom they despise, is a marvel to me. Why they do not say this to them, and shame them into ti decent ap pearanceif their glasses cannot effect it I do not know. Oh, the relief it Is to meet a lady, instead of a ballct-mrl ! Oh, the relief it is to see a healthy, lirm- stepping, rosy, broad-chested, bright eyed woman, clad simply with a dress all of one color, and free from bundles and tags ! I turn to look at sucli an one with true respect, that she has the goon sense anil contains aud srood tasti- to appear on the streets in a dress befit ting tne street; leaving to those poor, wretched women whose business it is to auvcrtise tneir person, a free Held with out competition. If I seem to snonlr harshly, it Is because I feel earnestly on t,lis s",,jt. I had hoped w''nen of 1S72 would have be, mat tne en worthy ,u 1,10 ,mv ,H which tney live. I had imw lint ..II 1 , i 110!1, that all their time woul uinu not ".avc b.cen stnt 1,1 keeping up with the uiKiiiien-uii eiumges oi iasuion, loo ugly, too absurd for toleration. It is because 1 want them to be something, to do something higher and nobler than a peacock inightaim at, that I turn heart sick away from these infinitesimal frip peries that narrow the soul and purse, and leave nothing in their wake but emptiness. Nor is it necessary, in avoiding ail this, that a woman should look "strong-minded," an the bugbear phrase goes. It is not necessary tliat she should dress like her grandmother in order to look like a decent woman. It is not necessary she should forswear ornamentation, because it were better and more respectable to have it confined to festal and home occasions and less to the public promenade. Sho is not driven to the alternative of muffling herself like an omnibus driver in January- or catching consumption with her throat protected only by a gold locket. Oh, I wlsii that a bevy of young and handsome girls, of good social position, would inaugurate a plain, ladylike cos tume for street and church wear. I say young and handsome, because if an old woman noes tins, tlielittlechits toss their heads and say, "Oil! she has had her days and doesn't care now and we want ours." Now that's perfectly natural and right, too, that you should have your youth; tliat you should, as girls say, "mane tue most or yourselves:" but In doing so don't yon think it would be well not to lessen or cheannn vonr- selves ? and I submit, with all deference to youruress-niakers and mammas, that every one of you who appear in public in the manner I have described are doing tins very thing are delilimr womanhood, and bringing it into deris ion and contempt, whether you believe it or not. Miss Sarah F. Smilie, a Quaker lady, is now interesting the people of Brook lyn in an unwonted degree by evening sermons, which she preaches in the Methodist, Presbyterian and other or thodox churches. Great crowds flock to hear her, and hang with pleasure and prolit on her words. Her age Is between forty and fifty. Although a maiden, she wears a matronly look, and her speech is full of motherly tenderness. TTnr nion is not of the kind called "inspira tional ;" it is not left to the moment. like most of the preachluir anions nun. kers. but is carefnllv nlmuii ivr..- hand; and though she takes no scran of paper into the desk, yet the oration smells of the lamp ; it gives evidence of i...wng ocen constructed with astute pains; it proceeds like the chapters of a story, or the links of a chain, and the CTuiuaaujiiies not only tlie logical and emotional, but also the constructive and cstuetic scn.se. Her favorite form of discourse is an allegory, built on some iiiciuresque text, as, for instance, tne Marriage .Supper. Sue carefully carries out tne ngure rrom the beginning to me end of the sermon, first vividly present ing tlie image with its outer details, aim then spiritualizing these one hy one. Her language is simple, chaste and fine reminding one of the good, old, unam bitious Enslish of the Pilgrim's, Prog ress. Her delivery is gentle, "nlmnas sioned, and quiet almost to a fault, but vcrv successful in passages of pathos niwf nnimal. Altogether, slio makes a .ii.Miri nf more than ordinary intel lectual and moral weight. Her ortho doxy is of a most evaugical and fervid tvne abounding with tlie name of f'lirist tirelessly reiterated after thn manner of St. Paul. This feature of her faith commends her to thousands of conservatives who, n tney were radical in theolozy. would fancy that tlio Hons to her public ministcrations aroc from her being a womau. 'Hi tmti. i- the time Is coming when two-thirds of ... V""1"1 puipus or the country will be occupied by women. Golden JlliS. A. J. U'ltVIHAl, Editor ana Proprietor OITICECor. Third aud Washington St. TKUMS, IN ADVAXCK: One roar.- 1.1 months.. Three months.. ADVERTISEM KSTS Tnrtl mi TtreLsnnrililp Terms. Gleanings, Over Oilf llllnilrrwl WHw nm ef ,,!..!. . law in America. If sneecli 14 dilAT. nnrl rllnnn. T . 1 now much is a dumb man worth? Vassar Collern is snnn f t.o,. r. t ancse Princess as one of its pupils. There is but one good wife in the world, and every happily wedded' man thinks he lias litr. The paths of Hon' which load to tli grave, are explained as allopath and homeopath. 1 Note for Darwin: Tn timn i , - i mul berry tree becomes ;i siHr mitni ..r, silk gown becomes a woman. I would rather mv tlanohtar cfim.M have a man without money, than money without a man. Themisloclee. Conundrvni for married men Why is a wito like a newspaper? Because every man should have one of his own. Vaccination has heon r!tt dogs from taking the hydrophobia. Buck-shot makes the bast vaccine virus. More than one hundred wornon Imhl post-masterships under our National Administration four of the number re ceiving $4,000 per annum each. An old minister the other thiv. .ist-mi a woman what could be done to induce ier nusuanu to aitenu ciiurch. "I don't know," she replied, "unless you were to put a pine and a iuir of -hi!:v in tho pow." It is a notable fact that Italy now fur nishes very few of the great sopranos who adorn the operatic stage. In look ing over the list Of entmp'ninnlift: nt tlm various onera houses nf 'Pi I form trw! America we see but few Italian names. 1,lB "3 Mqiranof oi tins nationaltv now living and well known to fame are :itu.-iiu:i ami tjarioita I'atti. i c,,ert'vl"a" passing a boy weeping bitterly, halted and asked: "What is the ii Kuier, my mtie follow?" The boy re plied. "Before we hardly got enough to eat of any tiling, and now what shall u uo, ior lucre's ano thor one come?" "Hucli M.. ... ? i ..... muuriiuijj, ami wipe on tnose tears," said the clergyman, "and remem ber tliat Ho never sends mouths with out lie scuds victuals to nut. inlii tl mm " "I know tliat," said the boy, "but then he sends all the liinntlia tfl mil linncn and the victual to vours." A Neat Retokt. Adolphus Fitz melou was a smart young mau. It was his linn conviction that with the oppo site sex lie was irresistible. Onecvon mg Fitzmelon was at the opera, airtl in an adjoining box lie esnied a beautiful young lady without a male attendant. He nodded to his companions, and re marked tliat lie must make a conquest, bo into the adjoining box lie made his way and uncereninmniicK' c,...f.wi self by the young lady's side. Sho looked up in surprise. Adolphus smiled sweetly and begged pardon. He must have been mistaken. "Ho bad thmmiit. ecognized in her an old flpriimmt- ance. 1 She informed him mistaken. "Still," ventured Adnlnlma r i,n r don't intrude." 11 1 The ladv m.nfo no rmiU- t.m ,,,.'.,! her attention to the stage, where a scene iliujiiuij; in which sue was mucli interested. At lcmrth Adnlnlma n,i. drc&scd her again. Turning quickly she said: "You annoy me. sir!" and hnrliri!1ih eye Unshed. JIess mc!" cried Adolnlms. rim.-!n it- back with mock terror, "don't cat me!" The lady smiled a swent. !imiin smile, as sho replied : "Be not alarmed, sir. I am a Jcwes3, and my rclirion forbid mn tn nnt pork!" Unfortunately for Adolnlms. his friond heard the rejoinder, and lit is not likolv soon to hear tho last of his passage willi tne luveiy juwess. A writer in the Overland, mnsnnkinc tlie universe for arguments against woman suffrage, says: "We nave to consider the sad and terri ble fact, i lat according to the best sta tistical information, on-- out of every ton of the women inourcitiesis leading a life of shame." Now, if this fnet should bar the nine out of overy ten virtuous wom en from tlie ballot, we would lie pleased to have s:.;d writer dilate t-n the follow ing conundrums: As it U supo3ed to take sev'ocnl men to support one woman in a "life of shame," wnut proportion of the male sex are leadim? thn sumo lifv. and hence morally on the same level? vnu ii woi. t-n should be dei ied the bal lot been- jo one woman out of every ten is morally unfited Tor it, wherein, reason ing from tlie same premises, has man a better claim? But what lias chastity or morality to do with the question, any way? Who ever claimed this virtue in tne male sex as a precedent to the en joyment of political righu? And if not in uiiosex, wny m tne otiier? Admit ting that one-tenth portion of our wom en are morally disqualified to exercise political privileges, would not the nine virtuous tenths bring a largo and pre dominating accession of decency to the franchise as now administered, and therefore on the whole beagM.I thing for the State ? We might extend these co nundrums, but the above will suilice for the present. Jim Joc Mercury. Re t the Paper. How much more Intelligent and fascinating the majority of voung ladies would appoar were they to give a little more attention to news paper reading! We do not mean the Hash papers of the day, which are filled with matter that, if it does no harm, can certainly do no good, but to news papers those which make us familiar witii the present character and improve ments of the age. It is well enough to know something of the world's hisfnrv. bnt it is with the present we have mainly to deal, and we know nf nn mnre engaging trait in a lady's character than a fair acquaintance with tlie passing events. Every youmr ladv should have inintel itrcnt opinion nn rhftmnml. im- liticall and reliirious snhionts of the times, and tho best and only way to find this is to read good newspapers dil igently. Mrs. Jane Swisshelm preachcilreccntly in the Congregational Ciiurch, in Co lumbus, Iowa, on Women in the Church, particularly in the pulpit end of the church, giving the congregation an il lustration which added to the force of her arguments. In fact the women in tho pulpits, like the illustrat ions in our best pictorials, are a good deal mprc "tercst ing than the arguments adduced by the other sex for their being there.