Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 24 May 1890 — Page 3

5/Av

a

DUSTERS

ARE THE BEST.

100 styles, prices to suit alL YFJC ATBM & SONS, PHILADELPHIA.

Sold by all dealers.

In tube prints, brushes French tisue paper three thousand useful household articles at 5 and 10 cents.

10

quart milk bucket,

10

122 W, Main St., Opp. Y. M. C. A.

C. 0. CARLSON.

DRY GOODS.

New Goods.

We are prepared this spring to show

the people of Montgomery county

one of the largest and finest lot of

carpets and floor coverings ever in

this city. In order to accommodate

our large and increasing trade and

sunply the demand for fine artistic

carpets we* have lately enlarged our

carpet room so that it now includes

the full extent of ©ur building, giv

ingus abundance ol light and plenty

of room to show one of the largest

and cheapest lots of carpets ever open

od in town. We have many ditfferen

patterns now open and new

arrivals every day. Call and see.

We have got the prices and patterns.

You can find all the latest styles in

Lowell and Hartford extra supers

which are warranted the best carpels

ma inde the U. S. Our line of ta

pestry brussels were never so com

plete. Can show you handsome

brussels at

50

cents per yard. Rag

carpets in abundant profuoio.i. C-n

ton mattings fiom

20

cents ap. A el

vet and Smyrna rugs, door mats for

50 cents. Felt crumb cloths, Bird

sel's carpet sweppers, every one

warranted to sweep cleanly and take

the dirt up cleanly or money refund

ed. Oil cloths, lace curtains and

window shades. Call and look

through our stock.

Campbell Bros.,

Robert Heard, an English youtb, lias been sentenced to six weeks hard labor for kissing

a Kirl.

Encklen's Arnica Salve.

BThe best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains corns, and all skin'eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded.- Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Nye & Co.," drugs. N-17-i

DRUMVENNESS—LIQUOR HABIT 111 all the World There is but one (.'ure, Dr. Haines' Golden

Specific.

It can be given in a cup of tea or coffee without the knowledge of the person taking it, effecting a speedy and permanent cure, whether the patient is a moderate drinker or an aichoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been cured who have taken the Golden Specific in their coffee without their knowledge, and today believe they quit drinking of their own free will. No harmful effect results from its administration. Cures guaranteed. Send for circular and full particulars. Address in confidence, the GOLDEN SPECIFIC Co., 185 FL— -street, Cincinnati, 0. .r_

HONOR TO THEIE NAMES.

WOMEN REFORMERS AND PHILANTHROPISTS OF FRANCE.,

Theodore Stanton Writes Entertainingly of Marin Deraismes, Mme. Emile de

cents.

10 quart dish pan, 4 quart coffe pot Silver knives and forks Good broom China fruit plates and saucers 10 cts. Buffan embroidery, laces, stockings. Full line of jewelery in rings, brestpins, bracelets and all the latest novelties. Full line of sheet music of the latest out. Do not fail to call at the new 5 and xo cent store, as it will save you money.

10 cents 10 cents 10 cents 10 cents,

Morsier, Isabelle Uogolot, Mme. Grless-

Traut and Others.

[Copyright, 18U0. by American Press Association.}

MME. MAIUA DERAISMES.

PARIS. April 20.— IN this letter I propose giving your readers some little account of a few of the chief women reformers and philanthropists of France, a numerous and noble body who will bea* comparison with tjie radical and charitable women of even the United States, where these two classes abound.

Perliape the most interesting, and certainly one of the ablest, of the French female reformers is Maria Deraismes. She is an excellent and witty speaker and endowed with mnch oratorical power. Tall, with a large, commanding figure, a fine expressive face and a strong voice, Maria Deraismes "thinks on her feet" in a manner surpassed by few men. I have heard her at banquet tables, in mblic halls, on the lecture platform and drawing rooms, and on every occasion she has proved herself to be a ready, eloquent and charming speaker.

But Maria Deraismes is not simply an orator. She is a clever writer, an energetic journalist, an enthusiastic Maeon and a painter. The walls of her handsome apartments, where she lives with a widow sister who adores her, Mme. Feresse-Deraismes, are adorned with portraits and landscapes in oil, painted in her early womanhood and youth. More than one newspaper contains trenchant articles from her pen, and she has presided over an excellent journal as editor-in-chief. She is perhaps the only female

05',8®?

itm

Mason in France, being a member of the

EMILE DE MORSIER.

lodge of Le Pecq, the little town near Paris where the latest Rembrandt was recently found.

The next ablest female orator, if not the equal of Maria Deraismes, is Mme. Emile do Morsier, Swiss by birth, who speaks English with great ease and who is in correspondence with many leading female reformers both in the United States and England. One of her best friends is M. Yves Guyot, minister of public works, a man of broad views on all subjects, who, since he has been in office, has aided Mme. de Morsier in many ways in her efforts to advance her various reform enterprises. •Last summer there were two international women's congresses held in this city, one with Mme. Maria Deraismes as the prime mover, and the other with

Mme. de Morsier at the head. Through the good offices of M. Yves Guyot, Mme. de Morsier's congress was taken under government patronage, and, for the first time probably in the history of the world, a great government gave an official stamp to a congress devoted exclusively to the interests of women. Mme. de Morsier was very proud of this result, and with good reason, for it made an impression here and has already done much good.

After Mme. de Morsier, the most active member of this congress was Mme. Isabelle Bogelot, the intelligent and

MXK. ISABELLE BOGELOT.

philanthropic lady who represented France i" 'ho international woman's congri".- Washington in 1888. Mme.

V-

i'.-vutcs her energies espe­

cially to i:.i' uiiulioration ot the condition of lv':i .:i' prisoners, and is thepres-

THE CKAWFORDSVILLE WEEKLY REVIEW.

St. Lazare female prison in this city. Mriie. Bogelot returned from the United States delighted with all she saw and astonished at tVw way in which American women manage their own affairs, conduct meetings and perform so many other duties supposed here in France to be the exclusive privilege of men. Many of the admirable features of last summer's congress were suggested by what

Mme. Bogelot saw at Washington, and she never wearies in singing the praises of American women to hpr French sisters.

Among the many peace reformers should be mentioned Mme. Griess-Traut, an Alsatian by birth, who has known personally many of the radical English women and who reads English with perfect ease and can speak it with considerable facility. She is a subscriber to several of the English and American women's journals and keeps her French co-workers informed of what steps of progress are being made in the AngloSaxon world. Mme. Griesa-Traut is a delightful old lady who keeps actively to the fore in all that concerns her sex. Her husband, who died a few years ago, seconded all his wife's efforts and worked hand in hand with her in all their reform labors. His death was a grievous loss to her, but has not lessened her ardor in the various movements in which they were both so deeply interested.

Another indefatigable reformer is Mme. Louise Koppe, editor of a little monthly called LB Feinme et l'Enfant. Her chief efforts are directed towards extending the rights of married women and protecting children from cruel parents, and in improving the laws concerning boys and girlB in the mines and factories and in guarding girls from the pitfalls which surround them.

Mme. Pauline Kergomard has done much good work in this department of philanthropy. She is the founder, and was for along time the soul of an admirable society for the protection of children. Mine. Kergomard is related to the famous Reclus family, and has much influence in official circles, from the fact that Bhe iB a member—the only woman, in fact—of the Superior Council of Public InstructioB, a body much resembling the New York State Board of Regents. Her election to this council was a great victory for the advocates of woman's progress, and Mme. Kergomard in« shows herself an able and useful member of this important educational body, which counts among its members some' of the most celebrated savants of

France.

WOMAN'S WORLD IN PARAGRAPHS.

Wliich Tell More Fll)» to tlio Other, Husbands or AVlves? Some gentlemen had a discussion at their club the other night about the white lies it is necessary for a husband to tell his wife. All agreed that such lies were necessary to make the domestic wheels run smoothly. Women, they said, could never be made to see things from a man's standpoint. Little matters that were nothing at all to a man became crimes in the eyes of a woman therefore it was necessarj- for a man to lie to his wife occasionally. This set me to wondering which lied to the other more, husbands or •wives. Looking at the matter from behind the scenes

PRETTY POKER PICTURES

LAURA B. STARR WRITES OF A MOST DELIGHTFUL ART.

It Will Be Foand Best to Bo This Work on an Easel Two Tasteful Designs.

Some Detailed Instruction for Those

Who Are to Do tlie Work.

[Copyright, 1890, by American Press Association.] It is far more comfortable to do poker pictures on an easel steadily fixed and a mn.nl stick than on a table, for the fames of the burning wood or leather will be found, sometimes, to be very painful to the eyes.

After the outlines are sketched and the

v-". *£3«

LEATHER PORTFOLIO WITH BURNED II* DESIGN. lights and shadows settled, the irons should be placed in a good cinder fire when they are red hot they are taken out and all the darkest parts burned in, the lighter shading being worked as the irons cool. The drawing should be stumped in as in a chalk head, and lines avoided as much as possible, or a spotty effect is produced.

If a head, size 14 by 12 inches, is being done it will take about two hours to roughly shade it in after that the details, such as the eyebrows, nostrils and mouth, may be worked in by sharp touches with the smaller irons. Now the background must be burned in with the poker and an appropriate tool, working toward the outline until it stands out in full relief. This is a tedious process and takes several hours before it looks a dark brown even color, which is only obtained by rubbing the poker constantly over the inequalities.

4

our side, 1 should say it was about even. I believe wives tell their husbands quite as many falsehoods as husbands tell them, but about far different things. Women deceive their husbands mostly in money matters or in things which concern their family affections. If a wife is held to a strict account for the money she spends, when she wants more than a certain sum she tells the bread winner it is for groceries or a dressmaking bill. Then she takes it and makes a present to her dear mother, whom the husband hates, or pays a gambling debt for her brother, or gives it to her grown son or daughter to spend in extravagance which the father does not approve.

Sometimes sbe spends it for the church or her pastor. But she always gets the money somehow, and if she is afraid of her husband it goes down to expense accounts, which appear wholly open and innocent. A wife always deceives her husband where she is afraid of him. Yes, the falsehoods are about even on both sides. But is it not rather unfortunate that those who are supposed to be all in all to each other dare not trus* each other?

At a meeting of the London trades union councils in London in April a wo man was present as a delegate for the first time in the history of the organization. The lady was Mrs. Hicks, representing a ropemaker's union.

Mrs. Juliet V. Strauss is a promising and talented young woman on the editorial staff of The Rockvillo (Ind.) Tribune. She swings a vigorous pen and 6peaks her mind about things. Writing about how election day looks to a woman, she remarks: "If a woman could only dispense with her politics and take a perfectly impartial view of candidates and elections, she would get so much more good' out of them than by taking sides and allowing herself to get riled up over results. The actions of men on such occasions are enough to make a cow laugh, and the woman who does ndt at least smile at them is devoid of a proper sense of humor."

I don't know what it proves, or whether it provas ansifoing, but dentists say that women endure pain with far more pluok than men display. Men howl aloud with the pain the dentist inflicts, while women endure it with silent suffering.

Belva Lockwood has a law practice that brings her in more money than a congress)nan's salary has property in Washington worth $20,000. and a country pluce worth $5,000, all acquired in a comparatively short time from her, legal business. This is more than she would 'have had if she had stuck to Bchool teaching,

ilSI

Hi

The artist must have patience and not be easily discouraged, even though the picture looks a confused mass for the first few hours, which it is sure to do, until the high lights are scratched on with a penknife, when a good effect is at once produced.

The penknife is quite as important a factor as the iron by it any irregularities of outline are corrected and the high lights and gradations of tone obtained. It will also be found invaluable for worldng hair and fur. It must be clearly borne in mind that this work is a rough art, "and looks best when so treated consequently the panels should not be placed too near the eye.

A very effective frieze may be made for a library by using a series of portraits of prominent literary men of the day, burned in on sycamore panels and varnished. For a smoking room grotesque figures may be burned in, while chambers or dining rooms, in fact, any room may be made individual by appropriately decorating with one's favorite motto, legend or quotation, on panels, spaces above the windows, above a bookcase or door, wherever there is room for the lettering. This form of decoration is far simpler than the pictures, and the novice will do well to attempt this first. A variety is obtained by the shading and size and land of lettering.

on

The portfolio for stationery is made of stiff brown leather and tied with thongs of lighter leather tlie leaves of blotting paper are also tied in with thongs of the

LEATHER BLOTTING PAD WITH BURNED IN DESIGN. same. The design and quotation, "A letter may alter the plans we arranged over night for the slaughter of time," are burned in after the directions given. The blotter which goes with it is done in the same way. Tho leather is not susceptible to the same amount of work as the wood, atid it would be well to experiment a little before beginning a large piece.

In decorating a room which requires a quantity of bordering or a repetition of geometrical or other designs tho work may be greatly facilitated by the use of stencil plates cut in zinc these Bhould be nailed to the wood and the hot poker run over the openings. Great care must be exercised to keep the poker within the lines, so as not to melt the zinc.

Around piece, piano stool or top of a table might bo pokered with a zigzag border round the edge, burning the ground dark from the outside to the zigzags and filling the center with some radiating pattern.

A strip bearing an invocation to sleep might be pokered and hung above one's bed. Indeed the worker who attains any proficiency whatever in the art will find an endless variety of uses to which it may be dedicated.

LAURA B. STARR.

The Federation of Women's Clubs at its formal organization in Nov.* York decided that any club hnvii- hi net literary, artistic or sc.e: ..vurtmight become a member ot im sisterhood of societies. At the same time the "broadly human movements" may be recognizr-il. Organizations with purely educational, industrial or philanthropic aims will be not admitted. In adopting their constitution and conducting their sessions of several days the Federation of Women's Clubs showed a knowledge of parliamentary usage that would have done credit to any assembly. The women'r, club liaa been a wonderful

llfIS sat

CAS

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"OlMUrWU «o wen adapted to children th*| I CtttarU cores Colic. OoutipaUon, reeonwend it aawperior to any prescription I

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taMnmtome." 1 H. A, Aaosn, X.D., 111 So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y.

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GENTLEMEN

Who onjoy wearing stylish clothes are respectively Informed that our

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THE

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Consists of the lines formerly operated under the names of Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis & Chicago R'y ("Kankakee Line"), the Cleveland. Columbus, Cincinnati & Indianapolis, and Indianapolis & St. Louis R'y, ("Bee Line Route"), and with its connections now form direct routes of travel between ALL POINTS in|the

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Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.