i The Sioux County Journal, VOLUME VI. HAKKISOX, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1894. NU3IBEK 41. TALM AGE'S SERMON. HIS GREAT DISCOURSE ON WO MAN'S WORK. ' Ko IMerc to Work A SI ratine l ine of BlH-ctl,IIIIxI.rt Woman Do What She t!n Do Well-'Ihe Dreau Alt.rui.Uv. of blrUou or Dl.lioui.r. Hon of the Shirt. 'Rev. T. lie Witt Talmage, who is now on hi round the world .ourney, ebone an subject Sunday "Martyrs of the Needle," the text being Matthew xix, 2-4, "It is eanior for a camel to go through the eye of a needle." Whether thin "eye of the needle" be the small j(ate at the Bide of the tip entranced the wall of the ancient city, as is generally interpreted, or the eye of a needle such atj ig now handled in sewing a garment I do not say. In eliber case it would be a tight thing for a camel to go through the eye of a needle. Hut there are whole caravans of fatigue and hardship go in through the eye of the sewing wo man's needle. Very long ago the needle was busy. It was considered honorable for women to toil in olden time. Akvxander tho Great stood in his palace showing uar mentH made by hit own mother. Ttie finest tapestries at Iiaveux were made by tho yueen o. William tho Con queror. Augustus, the Krajror would not wear any garment except those that were fashioned by some member of his royal family. So let the toiler everywhere bo respected! Tho greatest blessing that could have happened to our tint parents was being turned out of Kden after they had done wrong. Adam and Kve in their perfect state, might have got aioDg without work, or only such Blight oroplovment as a perfectgarden, with no weeds in it demanded. But us Boon as they had sinned the best thing for them wus to be turned out where they would have to work. We know what a withering thing It is for mun to have nothing to do. Good o'd Ash bel Green, at fourscore years, when awkod why he kept on working said, 'T do so to keep out of mischief." We see that a man who ha a large amount of money to start with hits no chance. Of the inoiipaml proiero.is and hon orable men that you know, '.in i had to woric vigorously a:- the is-giruiing. l(Ut U'oniiui I'nhappr But I am now to tell you that indus try is just as important for a woman's safoly and happiness. The most un happy women in osir communities to-day are those who have no engago nionts to call tbnm up In thu morning, who, onco having risen and break fasted. .loung through the dull fore noon In s:ippers down at the heel and with disheveled hair, reading the lust novel, and who, having drugged through a wretched forenoon and taken their afternoon sie :), and hav ing spent an hour and a half ut thoir toilet, pick up their rarJ iwi and go out to make i alls, and who i a.- thotr evenings wait ing for somcliod y to come In and breas: up the monotony. Ara bella Stuart never wa. imprisoned in to dark a dungeon as that. Thero is no happiness in an idlo woman. Jt may lie with baud, it may be with brain, it may tie with foot, but work she must or be wretched for ever. The little girls of our families must Vie started with that Idea. Tho turso of our American society is that our young woncn are I night that tho first, second, third, fourth, li:th, sixth. 'vent:i, tenth, iiitieth, thouftan-.itu thing in their life is to get someone to take care of them. Instead of that, the lirst lesson should Ikj how, under tiod, they may tuko euro of them selves. The simple fact is that a ma jority of them do have to take caro of themselves, and that, too. after hav ing, through the false notions of their parents, wasted the years in which they ought to have learned how suc cessfully to maintain themselves. We now ami here declare the inhumanity, cruelty, and outrage of that father and mother who pass their daughters' into womanhood, having given them no facility for earning their livcllhool. Mine, de Stael said, "It is not these writings that 1 am proud of, but the fact that I have facility In ten occu pations, in any one of which I could make a livelihood." Klrhm lluva Wings. You say you have a fortuuo to leave them. U inan and woman, have you not learned that, like vultures, like hawks, like eagles, riches have wings and 11 v away? Though you should be Biiccossltil in leaving a competency be hind you, the trickery of executors may swamp it in a night, or some el ders or deacons of our churches may get. up a fictitious company and Induce your orphans to p it their money into U, and if it te hmt prove to them that it was eternally decreed that that was the way they were to lose it, and that it went in the most orthodox anil heav en I v style. Oh, the damnable schemes that pro-fe-.-ed Christians will outrage in -until God puts his lingers into the collar of the hyiiocrite's rois! and rips It clear d.wn to tho bottom! You have no right because you are well v t, to con clude that your children are going to Ini as well o.b A man died, leaving a Jurire fortune. His son fell dead in a Philadelphia grog shop His old com rades came In and said as they lient over his corpse: "What Is tho matter with you, i ogirsoy'' Tho surgeon, standing over him, said: "Husn up: he is dead." "Ah, ho Is dead!" they said, "i omo, boys, lot us go ami take a drink Jn memory of poor l-oggsoy!" Have you noth.ng better than money to leave your children:' If you have not, hut send your daughters Into the world with empty brain and unskilled hand, you are guilty of assassination, homicide, regicide, Infanticide. There are women toiling In our cities for 13 ami r4 per woeic who were daughter of merchant princes. These sulTcring one now would bo glad to have the crumbs that onco fell from their fath er's UUa. That wornout, broken shoe ' that she wears is the lineal descendant ; of the 1- gaiters in which her mother I walked, and that torn and faded calico i hail ancestry of magnificent brocade that swept Broadway clean without any exj ense to the street commission ers. Though you live in an elegant residence and fare sumptuously every day, let your daughters feel it is a dis grace to thern not to know how to work. 1 denounce the idea prevalent in society that, though our young women may embroider slippers, and crochet, and make mats for iamjw to stand on with out disgrace, tho idea of doing any thing for a livelihood is dishonorable. It is a rhame for a young woman be longing to a large family to be ineffi cient when the father toils his life away for her supisirt. It is a shame for a daughter to be idle while her mother toils at the washtub. it Is as honorable to swoop house, make beds, or trim hats as it is to twist a watch chain. Society is to bo reconstructed on the subject of woman's toil. A vast ma jority of tho-e who would have woman Industrious shut her up to a few kinds ol work. My judgment in this matter is that a woman has a right to do any thing she can do welL There should Ixi no department of merchandise, me dian. sm, art, or science barred against her. If Miss Ilosmer has genius for sculpture, give her a chisel. If Kosa Bonlieur has a fondness for delineating animals, let her make "The Horse Fair." If Miss Mitchell will study as tronomy, let her mount the starry ladder. If Lydia will be a merchant, lot ber sell i urpie. If Lucretia Mott will preucti the gospel, let her thrill with her womanly eloquence the CJuaker meeting house. The Toll of tbe .Ncedl-. It is said If woman is given such op jHrtiinlties she will occupy places that might be taken by men. I say, if she have more skill and adaptedness for any position than a man has, let her have it: f-ho has as much right to her bread, to her apparel and to her home as men have. But it Is said that her naturo is so delicate that she is unfitted for ex hausting toil, i ask in the name of all past history what toil on earth is more severe, exhausting and tremendous than that toil of the needle, to which for ages she has been sub,ectt.d? The battering ram. the sword, the carbine, the halt cax, have male no such havoc as tho needle. I would that these liv ing soj.ulchcrs in which women have for agi'S been burled might lie opened, and that some resurrection trumet might bring up these living corpses to the fresh air and sunlight. Go with, me, and I will show you a woman who, by hardest toil, supports her children," her drunken husband, her old father ana mother, pays her house rent, " always has - wno!e?6ie food on tho table, and when she can get some neighbor on the Sabbath to come In ami take care of her family appears in church wit h hat and cloak that are lar from indicating the toil to which she is sub ccted. Such a woman as that has Uidy and soul enough to lit her for any position. She could stand beside the ma orlty of your salesmen and dispose of more goods. She could go into your wheel wright shops and lieat one-half of your workmen at making carriage We talK alsiul woman as though we had resigned to her all the light work, and ourselves had shouldered the heavier, But the day of judgment, which will reveal t ho sufferings of the stake and inquisition, will marshal before the throne of God and the hierarchs of Hen. iti the martyrs of washtub and needle. Now, I say, if there lie any prefer ence in occupation, let woman have it. God knows her trials are the soberest. By her acuter sensitiveness to mis fortune, by her hour of anguish, I de mand that no one hedge up her path way to a livelihood. Oh, the meanness, tho despicabiiity of men who begrudge a woman tho right to work anywhere, in any honorable ca ling! I go still further and say that women should have equal compensation with men. By what principle of justice is it that women in many of ourcities get only two thirds as much pay as men, and in many cases only hah. J i lore is the gigantic injustice - that for work equally well if not better done woman receives lar less compensation than man. Start with the National Govern ment. For a long while women clerks in Washington got '.nm for doing that which men received 1,)0. One Grim Alternative. To thousands of young women in our cities to-duy thero is only this alterna tivestarvation or dishonor. Many of the largest mercantile establishments of our cities are accessory to theso abominations, and ftom their lare es tablishments thero are score of souls being pitched oil into death, nd their employers know it! Is thero a God' Will there be a judgment? I tell you. if (hid rises up to redress woman s wrongs, many of our largo establishments will ho swul lowod up quicker than a South Ameri can earthquake ever took down a city. God will catch these oppressors be tween tho two millstones ot I lis wrath and grind them to pow.ier! I hear from all this luud the wail of womanhood. Man has nothing to an swer to that wail but (latteries. Ho says she Is an angel. Shu Is not. Shu knows she is not. She Is a human be ing, who gels hungry when she has no food, and cold when she has no lire. Give her no more llatteries; glvo her justice! Thero are about 00.0UU sewing girls In New York and Brooklyn. Across thu darkness of this night I hear their death groan. It is not such a cry as comes from those who are suddenly hurled out of life, but a slow, grinding, horrible wasting away. Gather them beforo you and look into their faces, pinched, ghastly, hunger struck! Look at thoir lingers, needle pricked and blood tipped: Seo that premature stoop In the shoulders! Hear that dry, hacking, merciless cough! At a large mooting of these women hold in a hall in Philadelphia grand speeches were delivered, tut a needle woman took the stand, tbww aside her faded shawl, ana with her shriveled arm buried a very thunderbolt of elo quence, speaking out the horror of her own experience. Stand at the corner of a street in New York in the very early morning as the women go to their work. Many of them baa no breakfast except the crumbs that were left over from the night before or a crust they chew on their way through the Btreet. Here they come, the working girls of the city! These engaged in beadwork, these in flower making, in millinery, enameling, cigar making, bookbind ing, labeling, feather picking, print coloring, paper boxmaking, but, most overworked of all and least compen sated, the sewing woman. Why do they not take the city cars on their way up? They cannot afford the 5 cents! If, concluding to deny herself something else, she gets into the car, rive her a seat! You want to sea how Latimer and Ridley appeared In the fire. Look at that woman and behold a more horrible martyrdom, a- hotter fire, a more agonizing death! Twenty-four Ccntt Day. One Sabbath night, in the vestibule of my church, after service, a woman fell in convulsions. The doctor Mid she needed medicine not so much as something to eat. As she began to re vive, in her delirium she said gasping ly: "Eight cents! Eight cents: eight cents! I wish 1 could get it done! I am so tired! I wish I could get some sleep, but I must get it done." We found afterward that she was making garments at 8 cents apiece, and that she could make but three of them in a day. Hear it! Three times eight sure twenty-four! Hear it, men and women who have comfortable homes. Some of the worst villains of the city are the employers of. these women. They beat them down to the last peony and try to -cheat them out of tfiat. The woman must deposit a dollar or two before she gets the garments' to work on. When the work is done,, it is sharply inspected, the most insigni ficant liaws picked out, and the wages refused, an 1 sometimes the dollar de iiosited not given back. The Women's 1'rotoctive Union rejiorts a case where onoof thesfi jxior souls, finding a phv.:e where she could get more wages, re solved to change employers and went to get her pay for work done. The employer savs, "I hear you are going to leave me.'" "Y'cs " she said, "and I have come to get what you owe me." He made no answerf She said, "Are you not going to j ay me?" "Yes." he said, "1 will pay you," and he kicked her down tho stairs. How are these evils to be eradicated? What have you to answer, you who sell coats and huve shoes ma le and contract lor the .-outhern and Weiptii markets? What hlo is there, Wn panares, what redemption? Some say, "Give women tho ballot." What ef fect such ballot might have on other questions I am not here to discuss, but what would bo tho ellect of female suffrage upon woman's wages' I do not believe that woman will ovor get justice by won an'n ballot. Indeed, women oppress women as much as men do. Do not women, as much as men, I eat down to the lowest figure the woman who sews for them? Are not women as sharp as men on washerwomen and milliners and inantuii makers' If a woman asks a dollar for her work, does not her fe male employer ask her if she will not tuko .) cent? You say, "Only 10 cents' difference," but that is some times the difference bet ween Heaven and hell. Women have often less com miseration lor woman than men. If a woman steps aside from the path of virtue, man may lorgive woman, never! Woman will never get justice done her from woman's ballot. Thfi l-'iniiilnK Nwurd. Never will she get it from man's bal ot. How, then.' God wih riso up for her. God has moro resources than wo know of. The Darning sword that hung at Kdon's gate when woman was driven out will cleave with its terrible edge her oppressors. But thero is something for our wo men to do. Let our young people pro pare to excel in spheres of work, and they will be able after awhile to get larger wages. If it bo shown that a woman can in a store sell more goods in a year than a man, she will soon be able not only to a-k but to demand moro wages, and to demand them suc cessfully. Unskilled and incompetent latsir must take what is given, ."skilled and competent luhor will eventually make its own standard. Admitting that tho law of supply and demand reg ulates theso things, I contend that the demand for skilled lalsir Is very great aud the supply very small. Start with the Idea that work is hon orable and that you can do some one thing better than any one else. He solve that. God helping, you will take caro of yourself, if you are after awhilo called into another relation, you will all tho bettor bo qualified for it by your spirit of solf reliance, or If you are called to stay as you are you can bo happy and solf supporting. Her Frei-klcN nil llr Sinu What will become of this godless disciple of fashion? What an insult to hersox! Her manners are an out rage upon decency. She Is moro thoughtful of the attitudo she strikes UK)n tho carpet than how she will look in the judgment; more worried aliout her freckles than her sins: moro in terested in her bonnet strings than in her redemption. Her apparel is tho jsxjrest art of a Christian woman, however magnificently dressed, anil no one has so much right to dress well as a Christian. Not so with the god less discinlo of fashion. Take her robes, and you tako everything. Death will come down on her some day and rub tbe bistre off her eyelids and the rouge off her cheoks. and with two rough, bony hands scatter spangles and glass beads and rings and rlblions and lace and brooches and buckles and sashes and frisottes and golden clasps. Tho dying actress, whose life had been vicious, said: "The scene closes. Draw the curtain." Generally tragedy comes first and tbe farce afterward, but in her life It was first the farce of a useless life and then the tragedy of a wretched eternity. Compare the life and death of such a one with that of some Christian aunt that was on e a blessing to your house hold. 1 do not know that she was ever offered a hand in marriage. She lived ' single, that untrainmeled she j might be everybody's blessing, j Whenever the sick were to be visited, I or the poor to be provided with ! bread, she went with a blessing. She could pray or sing "iiock of Ages" for any sick pauper who asked her. As she got older there were days when she was a little sharp, but for the most part auntie was a sunbeam just the one for Christmas eve. She knew bet ter than any one else how to fix things. Her every prayer, as God heard it, was full of everybody who had trouble. The brightest things in all the house dropped from her lingers. She had pe culiar notions, but tbe grandest notion she ever had was to make you happy. She dressed well auntie always dress ed well but her highest adornment was that of a meek and quiet spirit, which, in the sight of God, is of great price. When she died, you all gath ered .ovlngly about her, and as you carried her out to rest the Sunday school class almost covered the coffin with japonlcas, and tne poor people stood at the end of the alley, with their aprons to their eyes, sobinng bitterly, and the man of the world said, with Solomon, "Her price was above ru bles," and Jesus, as unto the maiden in Judaea, commanded, ' say uuto thee, arise!" A Ring' Ant obiography. 1'lcklDg up from tbe sidewalk, tbe other uiorntDg, what appeared to be a gold ring, with empty claws showing the removal of a stone, the tinder took It to a jeweier on Eleventh street for inspection. He examined it :or a lew minutes urxler a magni fying glass, and said: "Yes, this Is a gold ring or I -I carats. The stone It contained was a .'.-carat diamond. It was worn a cumber of years on a slen der woman's third linger. Then It changed hands, and was enlarged by the Insertion of a piece of gold of in ferior alloy, and may have been worn on the third linger of a stout, woman or the little linger of a man. The diamond was removed by a clumsy hand, probably by a thief, who either accldcntly dropped the ting o' threw It away where you found It. 1 never saw the ring before, but plainly read its history by the same process of ob servation, analysis, and deduction that an Indian unconsciously employs In detecting the testimony of a forest iralL" I'tuliidolphia ltecurd.--. MiNplaoeil. It is a curious fact that success la sometimes won by those who have no enth siasrn ;or the profession they follow. Fanny Kembie was by no means fond of acting, and would gladly have left the stdge earile had not circumstances bound her there. A brilliant young violinist played one day for Mrs. i.ladstone, and the latter said to her. "Is there anything you care mo e for than yo St adiva us?" The young lady colored a little. "The violin Is not an absorbing pas- sioti w th rue," she epl.ed modestly. Perhaps you have artistic talent?" the hostess suggested. "indeed, I have not," was the honest response. "But, Mrs. Glad stone, I love to cook. I really be lieve I could make a chef, if 1 had the opportunity to p actice!" Too A in till lulls. Many people who talk with sim plicity and curre. mess become atotice unnatural and awkward when they lake up the pen. So it was with Johnny Bates. In the reading lesson there was a re'erence to some one who had "con tracted a colli," and the teacher called attention to the word "con tracted. To "contract a cold," he explained, "meant nothing more than to catch a cold." That a ternoon Johnny had to write a composition, and like a sensi ble boy, chose for his subject an ac count of a fishing excursion. On the whole, it was a pretty creditable per formance for a boy of Johnny's age, but the teacher was obliged to lai.gh when ho came to this sentence. "I fished half an hour, and con tracted live perches and one horn pout." , !cllnc(l. A servant-girl who was employed In a family In which there were sev eral children became very much ala rued when one of them tell ill with scarlet fever. She was for leaving at once. " ou need not be afraid, Hetty " said her in stress. "We have isolated the little boy, and you need not go near him. Moreover, adults rarely take the disease." An hour or two later Hetty was overheard saying to a fellow-servant: "Julia, what does 'isolated' mcun?" "1 don't exactly know," replied tho brilliant Julia, "but I guess it means that they have put him on ice." 'That must (be It. And what Is an 'adult?'" "1 don't exactly know that, either; but 1 guess It means a girl who works out," You hear a great deal about fate In the conversation of the shiftless. TitE lowliest roof Is often nearer Ilea Ten than the loftiest steeple. THE COMMERCIAL BANK, ESTABLISHED 1888. Harrison, at E BZIWSTU, President. D. H. ORISWOLD, Cashier. AUTHORIZED CAPITAL. $50000. Transacts a General Banking Busincrx CORRESPONDENTS! isromiw ExcoiN-an National Bans:, New York, U.rD Statb National Bank. Omaha, Fikst National Bank, Chadrosv Interest Paid on Time Depositee y DRAFTS SOLD ON ALL. PARTS OF EUBOPJB. THE PIONEER P h a r m a c y, J. E. PHINNEY, Proprietor. Pure Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oils and Varnishes. W ARTISTS' MATERIAL. School Supplies. Prescriptions Carefully Compounded Day or Night. SIMMONS & S1LEY, Harrison, Nebraska, Real Estate Agents, Have a number of bargaino in choice land in Sioux county. Parties desiring estate should not fail to call on them. School Lands leased, taxes paid for non-residents; farms rented, cto. CORRESPONDENTS SOLICKSDl Nebraska. G P. Corns, Vies- ty BRUSHES. to buy or soli real i A i :1 Va Al i C7