Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 28 March 1891 — Page 7

rAKE

s. s. s.

f#Br

FOR

beZEM A.

I

jiy Utile four year old girl had sa l«rtnsvatcd case of eczema. The best llbvsicisuiB treated her, without any I lood reeulta. A "Ingle bottle of 8. 8. 8. I fared her sound and well. This wai

years ago, and ah. ha. had no I tnrn of the disease sinoa and heralda

I

perfectly rmooth and clean. James K. Henry, Detroit, Mloh. on Skin disease* mailed fres.

Swift Spedflo Co., Atlanta, Q*

a.d. lofland,

beal Estate, Loan, Insurance.

GOOD NOTES CASHED.

•not Main street, with W.T.Whlttliigtou

iseases

of

Women

AND SUHGKHY.

I

Lonm-t*110" room* over Smith's druj rt South Washington Street, Craw rfivllle, Indiana.

ETTER. N

[PEOLSTEIMN

-MATTIIESSES-

tcBNITOBE Repaired and Packed for Shipment. 3E0RGE R. RICE, Joel Block, 112 West Pike Street. but-nl-town work solicited

Drs.T.J.and

Martha E.H. Griffith

Office ""d nig South Oreon street Kcsldonce Aire. Dr. Griffith gives special attention fcbroalc and Surgical Diseases of I women, Children, and Obstetrics. •Dr. Griffith, a general practice.

CONSULTATION FBEE.

PIANOS

and ORGANS

|CL£iA'£0, TUNED and REPAIRED. Or PACKKD.

JOHXT M. MACY, Mo. 71S Month Green Street.

The Creamery.

FRESH CREAMERY BUTTER. BEN HLK

BIUSII, can bo found at Henry Sloan's,

GusTruitt's and VanCleave & Houle'

ban's.

The Buttermilk wagon is in cbargo of B. P.

Snvilcr. 10 cents per gallon.

IJUUUIVA vivw.j

17 NASSAU STREET, New York,

BANKERS,

FOR WESTERN STATES, CORPORA• TIOXS, BANKS AND MERCHANTS. ISTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS, A.VD LOANS NEGOTIA TED.

For a Disordered Liver

Try BEECHAM'S PILLS. 25cts. a Box.

OF AXJXJ DRUGGISTS.

MOSEVS'BLOOD SEARCHER

Mnk?s a Lovoly Comploxion. Is a plcnihd Tonic, and euros Boils, J'impfe ^cr°ful^f Mercurial and all Blood

I 111

and In

np-V

JDiwascs. Sold by your Druggist, Sellers Medicine Co., Pittsburgh,Pa

A

THE

SCHOOL OF MUSIC,

WWW UNIVERSITY, GREENCASTLE, IND.

IoSii1" ^'""ofortc. Organ, Voice, Violin, 11 ki"! Li®111?

In"r,im«"».

I Gideon, ?iK''

I lur tin.

Harmony,

yll°ru»

and OrchcMra.

i'V!?AUnlvcrnliy"UnlitdurinKto

Ve?,

I,ny n,l!

'ho ncliool

I Uk I »2.00 »2.f.O pur I tuto'nl r! ®,ct"-t0 tl-00 per week. l'oaitlons

fur

worthy graduates

^'Particular!), uddrem, l'rof. JAMES n. HOWK. Dean.

Mrs. M. C. Thayer.

(Of liullHimpolis.)

Treats nil Discuses with

I to- C' I. Thatcher's Magnetic Shields.

(not electric),

Rheumatism and all Nervous Diseases easily cured. Curved spines and hip diseases of childwi. a specialty. Will be at the «utt House until March 21. -Can Give the Best of

Reference-

ii1sH-R!fF8 ELKOTRIO BELT

HALF PRICE.JfiiMDUP.

mmfuri CCEB8 BHIUMATIM, HICUiQU, LITER, BID* ISKTand exluurtUnir nerrooa |DI8EAH»of botbeczea. 100 'degrees ot Electricity.

_L GuaraRteed'-". .s.wsi

ll

JttCnUCBILTIn the WOULD. KlMtri* with Male Dolts. Pamphlet free. t. REMOVED to 180 WABUH A^CHIOAGO,

Chicago Investments

F2r

s,lfu

ln^estmont«

apply to

TDKE

&

ALLEN-

Ntt y'lPW'v

Real Estate

mib°?,n!'uRooms 29 and 30 Montank Block, 115 Monroe Street, Chicago, Ills. Nut iL'iT'rM

l0n

10/'J'™"1

J* OIIKU. First

Ij°«nn c'

Murray, tf. 8.

0°®% uj.iivjui.* "aprl l0t

BRIGHT EASTER STYLES

Which Make the City Streets Glad and Gay.

Toilets That^Ono 8ms an Onn Walks In the Light of IlroakliiK Sprlnc—Coats, Hats anil Ureases Tlmt Slilnn with

Silver and ilcum with (iolil,

|XPYIIIC IIT, 1891.1 'ii

Easter is here urnl full knowledge is upon us ns to what wo lire to wear and to see worn. In the light of breaking Bprlng we walk in the shimmer of silver and the shine of (fold. A soft luminous white gray seems to he the background for the world of clothes, and ugniujit it twinkle and flash jewels. Rod gold' is worn upon pray and green gold is •'brilliant. Clear yellow gold brings to heur upon it the light and the radiance of sunshine. Women wear gray wool with jonquils on the street in the house they put on gray silk with clasps of topaz.

There arc years when fashion runs to color and other years when fashion runs:to form. This year form is alight and aglow with «olor, and the result is Interesting to look on. Here is a visite in ifray cloth and lace that will explain to you what I mean. Look at the sleeves of it, long, drooping, and so full that they arc folded at the back and hung with frills and cascades of Velasquez lace most fantastically. Lace is cascaded in the middlo of the back with a reminiscence of Watteau. Look at tho shoulders of it nnd then consider that its color is slk-cr, and that though the black lace quiets it, is stirred and wakened again with the Hash of gold passementeries and galloons. With It Is worn a hat in gray straw, with trimmings of buttercups and black velvet ribbons.

Here is a second toilet that both for color and for form Is remarkable. Tho jacket is a duliuate gray blue satin, with yoke of gold tinsel and long hanging fringe of tinsel with lace ends. With every motion the heavy drooping threads throw out like suaslilno through rain. The sleeves are of Velasquez lace In black, with gold beads. The bonnet is such a bonnet we have not seen in years. It is made of gold tinsel glittering with cut jet, and It has a crown that tapers upward and Is shaped like a cone. It Is a high crown, totally at variance with crowns that have gone before. It reminds one a little of the

AN AFTERNOON OOWX.

pointed headdresses in the old volumes of Planchet. They say these crowns are to be tho fashion, and this may be a scout sent to look the ground over for next year. From the summit of it wave pale gray blue ostrich tips standing straight in air. There is a ruche at the edge of gray blue silk net and gold tinsel. Such shapes and such colors make the season interesting, but there is a little diflieulty when one approaches the question of choosing something to wear.

It is not a hard task to pick out things notable seen at the openings. A hat in pink and black further illustrates spring tendencies. A huge rosette in pink crepe is its only substantial portion. The crepe is crimped closely, and about half the rosette, its core or inner circle or petals, stands erect in the very middle of the crown like a cockade. The outer circles of petals lie flat and are themselves the hat, or all there is of it, save and except a gathered ruche of black lace which lies beneath the edge of it for a brim. At the back this lace turns up abruptly and stands in a fan or flare. The woman who assumes such a piece of headgear should be able to live up to it with a good deal of piquancy.

A capote in black jet is in somo of its features equally unusual. It has round, caplike shape, fitting close to the Jiead, and its frame is of jet-strung wires in lace-like openness and intricacy. About the face droop in scallops festoons of cut jet braid or jewels, like the bead strings of an Egyptian slavo girl's headdress, as you see her pictured in some of Alma Tadema's paintings. Tho jewels tinkle against .the orehead, they come down over the temples and the checks, and they partially cover tho cars. They supply the motif of tho bonnet and it lias other trimming but a knot of lace, giving a mistlike film above the hair.

Somo of the most carefully considered millinery trilles are hats for dress concerts and for matinees. One of these, bought a few days ago for a young gijl whom Sirs. Whitney has had staying with her, was a tulle cap of tho now tulle that appears as if sprinkled with gold. The frame of this hat, as of all luits of its kindred, was a wire strap of a little more than an inch wido. Over this for a crown was twisted several times double the jewel sparkling tulle. About it was banded an embroidery worked in jewels and gold. In tho folds of a tulle puff at tho back was prisoned a butterfly.

Rather more after the usual order of •prlng millinery offerings are pretty toques in black laco and jet with flowers or feathers for trimmings. Even Iheco re not always devoid of cccenWolty, 01 shall one say originality? When a woman—if you'll regard it as

sonfldential, I'll tell yon it was I, even [, myself asked yesterday morning for something "quiet," the milliner brought sut a bonnet thnt might be considered tor purposes of description in three sections. To fit about the face there was a band of ivy leaves in jet. lieliind this and, roughly speaking, concentric with it, was a thick fillet of pink roses without foliage. The two fillets of jet and of (lowers, were wholly separate, except as twists of ivy leaves joined thetn behind. Laid flat upon the rose wreath anil filling tin circle it inclosed was a scrap of black laee of heautful pattern. The bonnet was unique, it had classic suggestion, it was one of the most charming bits I have seen this spring, but for the genuine hush of real millinery quietude there isn't much use looking.

Mrs. Cleveland was on llroadwav for a few minutes this morning in a toque that one might be pardoned for looking at a second time. It was a rough black straw, with trimmings of ribbon loop

.-V Sl'KlNO HATS.

and a single, long-stemmed rose with two or three leaves standing nearly erect behind. This use of a single flower for garniture, much as one carries one jonquil in one's hand, one orchid at one's bosom or one violet between one's lips, is something characteristic of tho season.

The spring frock has a very long pointed waist and sometimes it has a straight skirt and sometimes it has paniers. It has queer fashion of letting broad frills of lace turn down in a straight line about its shoulders, even upon high-necked gowns. This fashion is a reminiscence of the days when the beauty of the curve was hardly thought of when yews, box hedges, dresses and garden beds were all characterized 1V the same angularity. No woman with any feeling for grace of line would so spoil her figure.

Jewel work, tinsel and embroidery are used with great profusion and elaborateness on draperies. An afternoon gown of faiut rose pink surah will stand excellently well for an example. On the back the shirt hangs in shawl folds, plaited on the right side. The. left is slashed to tho waist and laced across with narrow rose ribbons tied in bow knots with ends. The front of the skirt Is braided in a more decided rose hue, drawn to one side and held with a bow. In the meshes of the braid are set at intervals. gold beads and pink' pearls. The corsage is pointed, and from the shoulders to the waist run rose riblons. Between the ribbons the bodice is covered with Intricately wrought jeweled braiding. With this frock is to be worn a wide flat hat of lace straw faced with rose pink and trimmed with gold sprinkled tulle and pink plumes.

On the street are seen many "smart" tailor costumes. A tall girl was out this morning with long twigs of "pussy" willow thrust into her buttonhole. Her close-fitting coat of smooth gray cloth was of the three-quarter length, and was braided up and down the. front with huge bunches of violets tied with bow knots of gold. The violet embroidery was continued about the high Medici collar and half way up and down the sleeves. Her dr»ss was of rougher

GltAV SILK AXD LACE.

gray cloth, and her turban of gray straw with violets and gold ribbons. Another notable figure on the promenade was a slim blonde, English enough to walk well and too English to be graceful. She wore a gray homespun tweed, straight and plain and with it a short gray jacket with loose fronts that might have buttoned, but didn't, with large pearl buttons. Instead of buttoning it flew open to let me seo a "hunt" waistcoat of bright yellow cloth, doub-le-breasted and with daintily stitched revers, fitting exquisitely to the figure. A high standing collar, gray silk necktio and gray straw hat with a dandelion or two completed the outfit of this very correct young woman.

The third coat I noticed chanced to be of black lamb's wool, lined with apricot silk and richly braided. Nono of thaM garments were very high on the shoulders, for your true tailor cut is conservative. When with spring hats and spring coats and spring dresses the spring sun gets high enough to suggest tho carrying of tho great flowers of spring parasols, then, Indeed, will there be chances for observation.

ELLEN OSBOBN.

A LENTEN AMUSEMENT.

Tou May llo Kntrrtalnnd and Deluded, tf You Will. One of the popular amusements of the Lenten season for the fair devotees is the mind-reader, clairvoyant or for-tune-telling man, whichever you prefer to call him, and in this case you literally "pays your money and takes your choice."

Mr. .Mind-reader usually dwells in a seel tided collage by the stream of traffic, and the way into his parlor is often up a winding stair. Hut there is 110 danger of not coining down ngain. Madame, with her embonpoint and forty years, or her rose-lipped daughter in her seventeenth summer, are equally safe with the man of mysteries. Ho has eves and thought only tor the almighty dollar, which lie is to hocus poens out of their pockets into his. irst. you must go there by appointment. You may call and find your man star-gazing, but he will gravely ask you if you have an appointment. No matter how idle ho Is, he appoints an hour when lie has no engagement, and sees you and your dollars depart. If you suggest a sitting then, his eyes take on an interverted stare, and he assures you that lie cannot, in justice to himself or to you, grant you an interview. This deepens the mystery, and heightens your desire to test his occult powers.

When an appointee enters the hall of psychological science, the man—he is usually rather attractive—sits on one side of a center table, while his visitor occupies the opposite chair. lie closes his eyes, and there a profound silence. "Your father is missing—do yon know it?" says a voice that seems to fill the room.

The sitter starts. "My father is dead," she says, reverently. "That is what I mean when I say missing. He met with an accident some time in his life and carried the scar to his grave. Do you know it?" "No-o-o," timidly from the startled fortune seeker. "Very likely, but it Is true. You have a sister who lives at some distance from you. She is married, but not happy. There is no love in the home "Oh, that is wrong." "I mean about there being no love in the family "My sister is very happy," interrupt, the sitter. "You think so, but it is not true. Remember what I tell you. She keeps it from every one, but there is a consuming sorrow in the household." "Tell me about myself," murmurs the sitter, who all tills time is on the anxious bench. "I am coming to that. You have a brother?" There is a note of interrogation in his volco. "Y-c-s." "I know you have. He lives in a distant state. He has a scar on one foot.

Do you know it?" "Oh. yes, that is true. How in the world diil you know it? He cut his foot with a hatchet when he was a small boy." "Of course. I knew I was right. Now let me give you a warning. Do not ride nfter a dark horse. I see a picture in which you are in a slight accident. You can avoid it by refusing to ride after a dark horse for three weeks." "Hut our own horse is dark," says the sitter, who dislikes an enforced pen ance of walking for the next month or two.

Then the keen psychologist studies her between half closed eyes. She is ambitious, generous, impulsive, a true friend, has good business capabilities, could do anything if not controlled by circumstances, makes her home very pleasant, is fond of music, bric-a-brac, etc., etc. Then comes in the mysterious and unexplained part, the hit and miss of the fortune teller, lie tells her the color of her husband's eyes, his temperament, liis business capabilities and the success lie has had in speculating, lie hits the truth seven times out of ten. The other three he does not explain fcs failures. The pictures are shown him, and if it is a mixed horoscope it is not his fault. "I have lost somathing," says an anxious woman. "I perceive that you have. It is not money."

This may be either an affirmation or a question. "No: it is something that I value very much." "I do not see that you wear it about you it is not a piece of jewelry." "No: it is a paper." "Ah!" lie looks at her from under sleepy lids. She is not the sort of woman to have had, or lost, a love letter. "It is a note—a business obligation." "How did you know? Who could have fold you. It was a note for several hundred dollars. Oh, can you tell me where it is?" "Yes. it is destroyed. I see it among a lot of scraps that are thrown away." "Oh, 1 am so glad. I was afraid some one had found it."

And madame goes away with a tranquilized mind and a wonderful story to tell in italics to her sisters at their next Lenten lunch. —Detroit Free Press.

Tlu* Influenco of 1'oetry.

The readingof poetry predisposes the heart to generous thoughts it teaches a young man what is noble in mankind it opens his mind to the reception of great hopes and unselfish ambitions. Never again can a man feel that rapture which falls upon a boy when, in the dusty atmosphere of a library, while tho motes dance as tho sun pours through the windows upon the leather backs of the books, while, outside, the carts rumble up anil down tho streets, he sits alone among tho books, poring over a volume of poetry. Then tho gates of heaven lie open for liiin to gazo within nay, heaven itself is close to him within his reach, and ready for the whole world should they but choose to step within.—Walter Reasant, in Harper's Bazar.

—Any Way to Get Away.—A couple of Frenchmen arc soon to make an effort to get to tins North Pole In a balloon. What strange things men will do when they are not happy at home.— Rain's Horn.

mm iggrif

C&HTA

iJl^" Made only by

•', -Y'. I,

I am laden vitb freight

Fcpm Hiegoldengate.

To

lands across fye Sea.

I carry sweet hope

WiEyAtfTA (LAUS

XX-ftlRBflNKjk_G0. CHICAGOL ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT

You Will Be Pleased

It you call at 124 East Main Street and we will be pleased to show you as fine a line of Boots and Shoes in ladies' and

as can be round in the State

5Keuy

124 East Main Street.

Aus Tomlinson. George Scaggs

When You Want

Groceries

Don't forget to call on

Tomlinson & Scag&s,

113 East Market Street.

KING OF THE TURF.

Decre's Gazelle 3-Wheel

Girls who use SAFOUO are

SAPOIilO

Turns a square corner either way. See our

Horse-Shoe Harrow,

The "slickest thing that has not been greased." We guarantee this to be the best spring-tooth harrow made and it has an angle steel frame. The Brown is the Only Parallel Spring Tooth Cultivator, and remember a spring-tooth shovel must be carried squarelyf

through the ground to do good work.

All kinds of tools, hardware and paints on hand at lowest prices. Examine our stock of Buggies before buying.

COHOON & FISHER

Is one

of

SOAP,

a cargo

dear as can be.

ULAUS

Sqj,

^rents'

LLBRE SOON we QuicrayraRRim

(be best

is used an hour is saved.

a charm

On floors,

For scouring pots, pans and metals it has

store-keeper does not keep it you should insist upon bis doing

known city luxuries and each time a cate

tables

1

and painted .work it

acts

lik*

no

always gives satisfaction and its immense sale all over the United States makes it an almost necessary article to any well supplied store. Everything shines after its use, and even the children delight in using it ia their atteT^ts to hslp around the house.

equal. If

your

BO,

as

it