SEX RELATIONSHIP. A CALM AND DISPASSIONATE VIEW OF “THE WOMAN QUESTION.” The Fut»re of a Nation’s Prosperity De . pends In Great Part on the Marriage Re lation-Lessons Drawn From the History of Ancient Greece and Rome. The rights and wrongs of women are now debated with a vigor and virulence which increase every day. Those who demand for women not only all the priv ileges which men possess, but also con tinued ezeinption from their responsi bilities. would carry the principle of fe male emancipation to a point which has aroused opposition on the part of many who in every great question of the day are admittedly leaders of the party of progress. While the contest rages as to whether women are to know, say and do everything that the coarsest of men can, or, on the other hand, be kept completely in the background, people are apt to for get what is really the crucial point of the whole question. They forget that the position of wom en, and of men, too, for that matter, is inseparably bound up with the rela tionships between the sexes known as marriage; are apt to forget the impor tance of that relationship not only to in dividuals, but to the state; are apt to forget that too rigorous a subjection of women may bring us near to barbarism, too great an emancipation may lead to that corruption which has so often in the world's history been the outcome of a civilization which has not placed due restraint on the passions and impulses. The prosperity of a country depends on the proper maintenance of the rela tions between husband and wife quite as much as on its outer strength, and however great and powerful a country may seem to be, if these domestio rela tions are unhealthy, if the wife has not her place in the social polity, that coun try is rotten to the core, and its complete decay and demoralization are inevitable. Speaking generally, there are four as pects or ideals of the status of the wife —four ways in which her position is re garded by men. There is the method of the barbarian, that of the oriental, that of western civ ilization, that of corrupt civilization, which last is practically the degraded form of the third. The barbarian re gards his wife as a mere slave—a squaw to cook his food, carry his burdens, sub mit to his ill usage. The oriental sees in his wife a plaything to gratify his pas sions. to bo kept in the strictest seclu sion, and to be treated altogether as a brainless being: regarded by him, in fact, so far as any respect is concerned, much as the squaw is regarded by the savage. From the third point of view the wife’s position is very different. True, she is the mother of her husband’s children; true, she has duties to perform which her husband would disdain; true, her husband is the head of the family, and she bears his name. But with all this she is looked upon as her husband’s equal, is the sharer of his counsels, his intelligent partner and has a right to ex pect from him the fidelity which in the case of the savage or the oriental is so one sided. The credit of placing this view of mar ried life before mankind has been claimed by Christian writers for their religion. But although we must admit that Christianity has done much to im prove the position of woman, yet the high ideal which we have termed that of western civilization existed in a very strong degree in ancient Greece, still more strongly among the Romans and the nations of western Europe, whom they conquered and civilized long before Christianity was preached, and the noble qualities which we admire in those races may often be directly traced to the in fluence of wives and mothers. But high as is this ideal, history shows that there are dangers which threaten those societies where it prevails; dan ger the outcome of that very civilization which it has done so much to perfect. Luxury, prosperity, too great liberty, want of mutual respect and continual striving after new sensations are too apt to destroy that wholesome state of things which has been the palladium of every great nation, and we too often have ex amples of the fourth ideal, which, though springing from the third, is so distinct from it that it deserves to be classed by itself. Where a .wife is no longer con tent with taking her share in the battle Of life, no longer content to recognize the fact that there are things which it better becomes the woman to do than the man, and vice versa; when she insists on aping and sharing the follies and vices of the man, on casting from her that modesty and reserve which are woman’s greatest charms; when she spurns maternity and domestic duties as trivial or monotonous, then indeed the marriage state must fall into disrepute; then the fatherland must surely suffer. It was this which led to the unspeak able horrors of imperial Rome; it was the unsexed women, their profligacy only equaled by their audacity, who were re sponsible as much as Nero and Domi tian themselves for the downfall of Ro man civilization. Otho and Silius would have been impossible but for Poppcea and Messalina. In latter times, too, and even in Christian countries, where the marriage tie was in theory held so sa cred that if duly celebrated it could only be dissolved by death, we have seen a state of things as bad.—Westminster Review. _ , Mustaches and Beards. Englishmen only a generation ago had such a detestation of mustaches and beards that the practice of shaving all hair off their face down to their mutton chop whiskers was all but universal. From one extreme our clean shaven fa thers plunged into the other, and beards and mustaches rapidly became the fash ion. The fashion has of late years again been modified. Beards are less common, but the mustache is cultivated in Eng land as widely as on the continent.— London Standard. Memories of 1871. On the last week in May each year the French socialists are accustomed to cel ebrate the “bloody week,” which wit nessed the downfall of the Paris com mune in 1871, the killing of 25,000 of tho inhabitants and the exiling of 50,000 others. As early as 1880, under the lead ership of Gambetta and the moderato Republicans, a general amnesty was voted, with only five or six exceptions, to the participants of tho commune. It is significant also that many of the mu nicipal regulations which the commu nists demanded were afterward granted by the chamber of deputies. “Bloody week” began on Sunday, May 21, when the Versailles troops entered Paris by a breach in tho fortification wall which the national guards had neg lected to defend. They came in by the Bois de Boulogne, and terrible street fights continued daily until on tho fol lowing Sunday, May 28, Marshal Mc Mahon was in full possession of the city and declared the commune at an end. On May 23 the Versailles troops cap tured the Central Market halls and threatened General Bergeret, who was stationed at the Tuileries. He was forced to retire, blowing up and burning the Tuileries as he left, but managed to save the Louvre, which some of his fol lowers wished also to destroy. The fighting was mostly done by national guardsmen against heavy odds and re sulted in fearful slaughter; hence the week has obtained its name.—New York Herald. Where Pianos Are Taxed. Pianos are taxed in Elizabeth and some folk I know are very wrathy thereat. I think that by taxing pianos Elizabeth has placed itself in the very van of En lightment with the big E, for mark, aft er all, it is not the instrument but the player thereof that must pay the tax. If the principle that warrants the tax is faulty in any particular, it is in the fact that the tax is not graded according to the skill or want of skill of the player. Had I my way I would tax certain pianos in this city $100 a year, and there are others that I would report to the board of health as nuisances that cried to heaven for abatement. If Paderewski would come to town with a piano or to play on an instrument already here, I would exempt it from taxation. I bless without mental reservation that law giver whose wisdom devised the tax upon pianos. He should have a monument beside which the figure of Liberty in the bay would be but a pygmy. He has perhaps the maledic tions of half the piano torturers in town, but “I honor him for the ene mies he has made,” for the pianists he has suppressed. I contend, however, that the tax should be assessed not ac cording to the value of the instrument, but according to the skill of the player. The method I suggest would be most equitable, it seems to me, and would go far toward meeting all the expenses of the city government.—Elizabeth (N. J.) Herald. Theory About Bee Stings. It is a fact not generally known that if one holds his breath wasps, bees and hornets can be handled with impunity. The skin becomes stingproof and hold ing the insect by the feet and giving her full liberty of action you can see her drive hes weapon against the impene trable surface with a force which lifts her body at every stroke, but let the small est quantity of air escape from the lungs and the sting will penetrate at once. I have never seen an exception to this in 25 years’ observation. I have taught young ladies with very delicate hands to astonish their friends by the perform ance of this feat, and I saw one so severely stung as to require the services of a physician through laughing at a witty remark of her sister, forgetting that laughing required breath. For a theory in explanation I am led to be lieve that holding the breath partially closes the pores of the skin. My experi ments in that direction have not been exact enough to be of any scientific value, but I am satisfied that it very sensibly affects the amount of insensible perspira tion.—Science. All Things to All Men. The late Mr. Broadwater of Montana had the misfortune to be bowlegged, which suggests an anecdote told of Sen ator Sanders of that state. The senator has always been opposed to Major Ma ginnis of Montana and has been in the habit of critcising his course with con siderable western freedom. “The trou ble with Major Maginnis,” he said on one occasion, “is that he is all things to all men. With a Republican, he is a Republican; with a Democrat, he is a Democrat; with a Presbyterian, he is a Presbyterian, and, by Jove, with Broad water lie is bowlegged.”—New York Tribune. The After Dinner Speaker. The after dinner speaker must not talk nonsense and must not talk about noth ing. But he must seem to be original, no matter what leisure he may have giv en to get at the sources—the headwaters of his good things—and he must be bril liant, even though his brilliancies should have been carefully thought out in the dark. Wit is his province more than wisdom, although a dash of the wisdom may be tolerated if it is brought wrapped up in wit and humor, like the sword of Harmodius among the wreaths of laurel. —London News. Inclosing a Stamp. When you buy a sheet of postage stamps, do not tear off the blank edge. Instead leave it attached, and when you inclose stamps in a letter turn back a part of the blank paper, moisten it and stick it to the head of your letter. This act will call down blessings upon your head from the editor who is accustomed to receive his stamps loose and flutter ing, or, what is worse, irrevocably stuck to the letter.—Writer. Proof Positive. “Do you think that marriage is a lot tery?’ “Certainly not. Are not love letters allowed in the mails?’—Truth. THE IRRIGATION CONGRESS. An interesting and important congress will meet at Los Angeles, California, on October 10, to sif for five days. This is the International Irrigation Congress, the last ses sion of which was held at Salt Lake City in September, 1891, about 700 delegates being present. It is ex pected that the Los Angeles Con gress will be numerously attended not only from all parts of the Uni ted States, but from foreign coun tries as well. The people of the United States have only just begun to realize the importance of irrigation to this country. The available Govern ment land in the United States, outside of the arid regions, is al most exhausted. The time is nearly gone when Uncle Sam could give every man a farm. What is left is mostly in the so-called “desert” regions—those dry and forbiddiug streches of sage-brush and cactus covered land, which were long be lieved to be absolutely worthless but which w-ater, directed by sci ence, has in many cases transform ed into veritalbe Edens. It is to these regions that those of the ris ing generation who desire to follow^ Horace Greeley’s advice and “go west” must look for their indepen dent homes, where they may liter ally sit under the shade of their one vine and fig tree. If the man who causes two blades of grass to spring up where one grew before is worthy of honor, what shall be said of the man or men, who build flurishing cities, surrounded by smiling orchards and vineyards, in spots where a few years ago a jack rabbit would have starved to death? It is fitting that Los Angeles, the “City of the Queen of the Angels” should be selected as a meeting place for this congress, for in the section of which that city is the commercial center irrigating has reached its greatest development, and water, backed by American pluck and perseverance, has accom plished greater marvels than in any other section of the United States, perhaps the world. Here are Pas sadena and Riverside, beautiful and wealthy cities of some 10.000 inhabitants each, upon sites that 20 years ago where considered good for nothing but. sheep pasture. And Los Angeles itself is a good proof of the value of irrigation, for it has grown within a few years, from a sleepy semi-Mexican pueblo of 12,000 people to a live and beautiful American metropolis of 65,000 population, and this increase is due to the development of the surrounding country by means of irrigation. Assistant Secretary Reynold of the interior department has made a pension decision which will be welcome news to the large number of women who ministered to the wounded soldiers in hospitals dur ing the late war. They are to be placed on the pension rolls. The question arose upon a communicat ion from the commissioner of pen sions as to whether those women who superintended the diet of the sick and wounded soldiers were entitled to pensions under the provisions of the nurse’s act. As sistant Secretary Reynold holds that these persons are entiteled to pensions. Within the wide domain of news paperdom there are teachers and teachers, ranters and fools, and at times it is hard to separate the wheat from the chaff, the teacher from the ignorant gab-gifted, med dlesome ranter. There is a wide difference between the man who at tempts to teach the world that it is living wrong and the man who be lieves in turning the people into the right road with a stick of dyna mite. It is probable that the respon sibility for the loss of the'Vic tori a * .• will rest w ith the late Vice Admiral Sir George Tryon, who went down with the ship. In time the blame will fade out of mind and it will be only remembered that ho died like a brave man at the post of honor and duty. Mistakes are not re membered when bravery pleads. Casabianca accomplished no good purpose, but nobody ever thinks of that, and the school children will keep on repeating forever the story of the brave boy who stood on the burning deck. That the Victoria was lost does not prove that Hear Admiral Tryon was not a good officer, it only shows that the best trained eye may make a miscalcul ation as to distance. Nothin" will O come of the disaster except a re minder of the old hymn, ‘-On What a Slender Thread Han" Everlast mg Things.” It is estimated that $05,000,000, 000 would cover the entire wealth of this country. It is also tear fully stated on fairly good author ity that 25,000 out of a population of 02,372,401, own and control more than half the available assets of the country and are absorbing the balance as fast as they know how. Here is another fact, worth stopping to consider: Every year the American people squander in strong drink $1,000,000,000, or one-sixty-fifth of the aggregation wealth of the country—a sum larger than that fooled away for tobacco, bread, shoes and several other nec essities combined. The person who lives to be sixty-five years of age will have seen, if he has kept his eyes peeled, every dollar of national wealth filtered through the coffers of the retailer in spirituous liquors. And in the face of this appalling fact, the red nosed anarchist will stand up to the bar, spend $(5.80 for drink and then grumble because the grocery dealer asks a profit of twenty cents on a sack of flour lie subsequently purchases on time after spending so much for coffin varnish that he might have strength of breath to curse the government for the down-trodden condition of those who labor by the sweat of their brow. There is just reason for fearing that so long as our people spend a billion dollars every year for harmful beverages, when water is so cheap, universal prosperity will continue to be some thing of an irridescent dream—at tainable, but not attained.-Journal Daily Drift. We Mean Business. The public is quick to appreciate an article of merit, and when the publish ers of The State Journal began offering their Semi-Weekly at only $1.00 per year, the same price that others ask for their weeklies which only give half as many papers, the subscription list doubled in a few months, and has since been growing with wonderful rapidity leaving the old-fashioned weeklies away behind. People don’t see any use in waiting a whole week for the news when they can get it fresh twice a week for the same money. Readers of The Semi Weekly Journal get 104 papers a year for only $1.00, which is less than one cent per copy, and they find the paper almost as good as a daily. If you have not yet tried this great paper, do so at once. It gives you the market twice each week, which alone is worth the price. Some of our special offers are: The Journal and either The Standard History of the United States, Stanley’s Adventures in Africa, Life of Spurgeon or Life of Harr^on, handsomely bound books, postage all paid, for $1.40. The Journal and Weekly New York Tribune both one year, $1.25. For $2.00 we will send The Journal two years and one of the above books free; for two new subscribers (your one may be one of them) we will send you any one of the above named books free: for $1.65 we will send The Journal and Tribune, and any one of the books. We mean busi ness and our offers are down to hard time prices. Send for a free sample at once. Address, Nebraska State Journal, Lincoln, Neb. The Greatest on Sea and Land ^ send 2-cent ' postugo stamp for a 100 page COOK BOOK I FREE. ) IT*’ pi Faro \ Kl sumptuous Sales J every day. See your dealer. 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Impaired Hearing .25 23— Scrofula, Enlarged Glands, Swelling .25 24— General Debility, Physical Weakness .25 25— Dropsy, and Scanty Secretions.25 26— Sea-Sickness, Sickness front Riding .25 27— Kidney Diseases.25 29— Sore Mouth, or Canker.25 30— Urinary Weakness, Wetting Bed.. .25 31— Painful Periods.25 34— Diphtheria, Ulcerated Sore Throat.. .25 35— Chronic Congestions & Eruptions. .25 EXTRA NUMBERS: 28— Nervous Debility, Seminal Weak ness, or Involuntary Discharges.1.00 32— Disensesof the Heart,Palpitation 1.00 33 -Epilepsy, Spasms, St. Vitus’ Dance... 1.00 Sold by Druggiatfl, or Bent post-pitid on receipt of price. Pr. Humphreys' Manual (H4 page*,} mailed free. HI MPIIKKYS’MKD.CO.,! 11 A IIS William St., New York. SPECIFICS. HUMPHREYS’ WITCH HAZEL OIL “THE PILE OINTMENT.’* For Piles—External or Internal, Blind or Bleeding; Fistula In Ano: Itching or Bleeding of the Rectum. The relief is immediate—the cure certain. PRICE, 50 OTS. TRIAL SIZE, 25 CTS. gold by Druggists, or sent post-paid on receipt or price. HC3IPII KEYS’ MED. CD., 111 & 113 William St., NEW YORK I RipansTabules. ► : Ripans Tabules are com [ pounded from a prescription t widely used by the best medi : cal authorities and are pre i sented in a form that is be [ coming the fashion every [ where. : Ripans Tabules act gently | but promptly upon the liver, : stomach and intestines; cure I dyspepsia, habitual constipa tion, offensive breath and head ache. One tabule taken at the first symptom of indigestion, biliousness, dizziness, distress after eating, or depression of spirits, will surely and quickly remove the whole difficulty. Ripans Tabules may be ob tained of nearest druggist. Ripans Tabules are easy to take, quick to act, and tors MLy ” fa'ir YOU' W/5NT The Best. TRY THIS. EXPERIMENTS ARE DANGEROUS. DEEAYS ARE DANGEROUS. TRY NO EXPERIMENTS. MAKE NO DEEAYS. < M5E OREGON kidney tea, IT WILL CURS YOU Of Back-ache. 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