HOW TO BE DAINTY. Jt (tun lily Which Unlim a liirl Ay. year More C'hnruiliiu Thau Thoae Arouuil Her. Daintiness is that indefinable qual ity in a girl which causes her to ap pear inore charming than those around Lcr; it is an attribute that is seldom inborn, but the result of culture. She is certain of making a good impression where others ignominious!}- fail to do 80, a fact which causes jealousy and makes those who are not dainty look on with envious admiration and wish that they too possessed the subtle AMERICAN WOMEN IX THE PULPIT. Women as ministers is the subject of an Interesting article in the Chautauquan by Rev. Anna Howard Shaw. Dr. Shaw writes without any feeling in the way of resentment against the churches that ex clude women from their ministry. She is merely telling facts. By the beginning of the twentieth cen tury Dr. Shaw believes there should lie at least 2,000 women preaching the Gospel in the United States. D is claimed by the United Brethren 'hat it was their denomina tion that ordained the first woman in the Christian ministry. She is Rev. Lydia Sex ton. Miss Sexton was given holy orders in 1851 and worked .n the church as a minister nntil IMHJ. Hut it is generally accepted that the first ordination of a woman was that of Antoinette Brown, who was graduated from the theological school at Oberlin in 1850, but who was refused a license to preach. Of women ordained by the Congregational de nomination attention is called to Rev. Annis Ford Eastman, n >w assistant to Rev. T. R. Beecher in Elmira. There ar« but three ordained women in the regular Baptist church—Mary C. Jones, cflthe state of Washington, ordained in 1882; j ]■ ! ;;nrdained women preachers. The Presby terian church refuses to allow women to en ter its ministry, but accepts the work of women in all other departments of church Work, The Methodist Protestant church hits charm. Daintiness, however, though 112 not inherited, is the outcome of habit. A girl is dainty because she lias been accustomed to give thought and time j to being agreeable to others. Thus ; it comes natural to her. Her wealth j vi hair, always so glossy and carefully j trained, owes its satiny appearance to the fact that she brushes it regularly ; uiid frequently, aud not solely when j the feels in a mood to do so, or when j she desires to look extra nice. Her j pretty, soft hands, with their slicll-j like pink nails, are always in dn im- | maculate *oudition, for it is her hubit ' end pride to keep them spotlessly j clean. Her person appears to shed | around her a fragrant perfume, deli-] cute, yet quite perceptible. This sub tle fragrance comes from her dainty 1 way of putting her dresses into draw- j rrs which contain sachets of sweetly- J En tiling powder, the scent from which seems to be a part of herself.! —Chicago Times-Herald. An l*"*CM»ll«*nt A Berlin civil court in a suit brought j by a dressmaker for the payment of j an expensive dress, to which the dei fense was that the dress did not fit, after making the defendant wear the ■ garment in court, decided that she shorn! not pay; on the ground that! v hen a dressmaker asks as much as 1 250 marks (iflii!) for a dress, the price I Lu.pliek that the fit shall be perfect. ! THE GIRL'S ALLOWANCE. It ■■ Her KIKHt and, at the Sam* Tiuir, Tfai'Un Her Ihe Proper l'a« of Money. "Every self-respecting woman, be she maid or wife, hus a n.-itural and intense dislike to ask her father or husband for every penny she needs," says Edward Uok, writing in,the La dies' Home Journal, on "Giving Allow ances tp Girls." "Nor is the feeling lessened by the fact that the money can be had for the asking and is al ways given ungrudgingly. It is the asking which women dislike. They justly recoil from it, and men ought to understand it better than they do. It should be said that the husband who refuses to give his wife a regular allowance is rapidly becoming the ex ception. But there are still too many fathers who withhold an allowance from their daughters. If it be true that the average girl has no idea of the value of money, how will she ever pain a better knowledge of its worth j ordained several women, and women are admitted oil equal terms as lay delegates to I the general conferences. Dr. Shaw herself !is a graduate of the theological school of the Boston university, and on being rejected as I a i inister by the Methodist Episcopal church she was ordained for the Methodist j Protestant church in Tarrytown in 1880. The Methodist Episcopal church, although it never ordained women, licensed them until ' 1880. Even this concession was then re pealed. Women, however, have acted and now aet as evangelists and missionaries in the Methodist Episcopal church. Con spicuous among these workers is Elizabeth W.. Greenwood, national evangelistic super intendent of the \V. C. T. U. Dr. Shaw says that it was the life desire of the late Frances E. Willard to be a minister, but her church would not permit it. The first Universalist woman minister was Olympia Brown, ordained in 1803. Augusta ' J. Chapin is the only woman who was ever given the degree of I). D., although many have earned it. She is a graduate of Michi gan university, and Lombard university honored her with the degree in 1893. Aman- | da 11. Deyo was ordained in 18S6. Phebe A. j Hanford was ord.iined at Hingharn, Mass., ! in 18(58. Another Cniversalist woman min ister is Kev. Florence Kolloek-Crooker. She was a minister in Chicago for 14 years. She | is now at Troy, N. Y. Among Unitarian women ministers the j oldest and best known is Mary A. Sa fiord. . Her work has been broadcast in lowa. Her ablest lieutenant was Elinor Gordon. Caro line liartlett Crane has made the church at | Kalamazoo noted throughout the country. I Ida C. Hultin, ordained in 1886, has been for six years preaching to one charge in Moline, 111. Marion Murdock has had fine success ! with Cuity church in Cleveland. Her asso ciate is Florence Buck, both graduates of Oxford university, England. Eliza Tupper Wilkes has founded churches in several west ern states. She wis ordained in 1871. Emma M. Uooth-Tucker is mentioned as one of the ablest women pre icheisin the country. Dr. Shaw closes her article with a strong appeal for justice to women who feel cubed ou to preach the (JosptJ. I | unless she is given the opportunity? ! Oar girls must be educated in money ; matters, and there is no surer method j than by giving them money of their own to spenu; a regular weekly or ! monthly allowance given them to j cover certain regulated expenses. It is only natural that at the start a ! girl will spend foolishly. To meet this | inevitable experience the amount of I the allowance should be accordingly i regulated. After awhile, however, ; when she gets accustomed to the hand ! ling of money, she will learn its value i better and be more judicious in spend | ing it, To give a girl an allowance is j not a privilege, but her right. To i withhold it is to do her a serious ! wrong, and likewise is an injustice to i the man whom she will marry and whose money she will be intrusted with to spend wisely. She should have experience before she reaches that point, and that experience can only ] come, to her from her father in an al lowance of her own while she is his j daughter in his home." Nevada Woinmi I.nwjrr, Miss Gertrude G. Grey has been ad mitted to the bar of the supreme court jof Nevada at Carson < ity. We are in formed, says the Legal News, by those who witnessed the examination that i Miss Ijrcy's answers to the .'!() quest ions propounded to her were exceptionally I gccd. She is the second woman to be | admitted to the Nevada bar. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1898. CORN SHOCKING TOOL. It la n Temporary Hinder to Hold tb« liuiicU TiiKfther While It In 111-111 II Tied. R. B. Amstutz, of Birmingham, 0., gives the readers of the New York Tribune the benefit of a device which he has tried with gratifying results in shocking corn. Be says that one difficulty that is experienced in tyir.g with twine is that the shock is apt to be bound too loosely, and then it will not stand well. Be aims, there fore, to provide a way for getting a pood squeeze on the bundle before tying. Mr. Amstutz says: "Take an old broom handle a foot shorter than the length of twine "to be used. At one ' CORN SHOCKING TOOL. end make a hole through which you can put a strip of leather, whereby to attach a piece of rope to the stick. The rope should be about four inches shorter than the twine. A quarter inch rope is the best size. At the out er end of the rope fasten a ring just big enough to slip over the stick eas ily. In use proceed as follows: Take the handle and ring in one hand, reach around the shock, pass the ring into the other hand, and then slip 1 lie butt end of the handle into the ring. Now, shove the ring along the handle down to the leather, turn the handle out away from the side of the shock, and it will stay there while you deliber ately put the twine around and tie. Throw the handle back, release the ring, and goto the next shock." Mr. Amstntz believes that he is the orig inator of this device, but he is willing that others should use it without charge. \V*orl )JBUI modesty impels them to shrink from g exposing themselves to the question* g / and probably examinations of even g J their family physician. It is unnea g j I IM essary. Without money or pric* g .111 llwV- vou can consult a woman, whoa* 112 fm -7~* knowledge from actual experi- M 1 ence is greater than any local M physician in the world. The fol ' lowing invitation is freely offered; accept it in the same spirit: MRS. PINKHAM'S STANDING INVITATION. Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, read and answered by women only. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman; thus has been established the eternal confidence be tween Mrs. Pinkham and the women of America which has never been broken Out of the vast volume of experience which she has to draw from, it is more than possible th at she has gained the very knowledge that will help your case. She ask# nothing in return except your good-will, and her advice has relieved thoxisands. Surely any woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if she docs not take advantage of this generous offer of assistance.—LydiaE. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mas*. " The present Mrs. Pinkham's experience in treating female ills is unparalleled, for years she worked side by side with Mrs. LydiaE. 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