Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 10 February 1893 — Page 2

DAILY JOURWAL.

THE OCRS Ali COMFAN\, T. H. 1$ MCCAIN, President. j. A.GKEKNR. Secretary.

A. A. MCCAIN. Trcrtsuror.

THIS DAILY JOURNAL,

By mall, per annum By mall, six wwntb By mall, t!irte months By c&rrlor, par weot

THE Boston Traveler

.15.00 .. 2.60 .. 1.30 10

THE WKKKLY JODKNAL.

Throe months Slxmontlis—One your

... 40 fir. ..11.26

FRIDAY, FEB. 10, 1893.

of

ATTICA Lcilger: Senator Seller, Montgomery oonnty, hns introduced in the lmi'.ana legislature nn act for the preservation of the health of wwien. Another Sellery compound!

Bays

a soap man­

ufacturer was asked why he confined himself exclusively to newspaper adver tising. His answer was: "People who don't read the newspapers are not apt to wash.''

THE funeral sermon is bocouiing one of the has beens. At the obsequies of Hayes, Blaine, Butler and Bishop Brooks, Bible readings, prayer and sacred mnsic were the only exercises. It is to be hoped that the custom will become general of omitting everything of the nature of ji sermon on such occn-

THE foreign commerce of the United States for the year 1S92 was enormous in volume. We exported $938,000,000 worth, and imported articles valued at §870,000,000. The balance of trade, SG'i,000,000, was in our favor. The to tftl volume of our foreign commerce was $290,000,000 more than the average annual total for the ten years preceding.

TJIE appropriations of the present session of Congress will aggregate 8531,000,000. The total of last session's appropriations was 8507,000,000. The aggregate of the appropriations made by this Congress will therefore be SI,'038,000,000. Verily, this is worse than 'the billion dollar Confess" concerning which the Democracy raised such a howl.

THE House yesterday passed a bill permitting the saloon keepers of Indianapolis to keep open until 12 o'clock at night. Just why the saloon keepers of Indianapolis should have more privileges than the saloon keepers of Crawfordsville cannot reasonably be explained. Perhaps Mr. McAllister who voted for this discrimination can give a satisfactory answer.

THE Democratic majority in the Legislature are having a parrot and monkey time over the question to restore to the Governor the power to appoint the officers of the benevolent, penal and reformatory institutions. They have now divided into Matthews and anti-Matthews factions and it is war to the knife and knife to the hilt. The Matthews faction refuses to go into caucus on the apportionment bills until the restoration bill is disposed of. The Senate has already passed the bill and the Matthews Democrats are sanguintf- that with the aid of the Republicans it will pass the Honse if they can succeed in bringing it to a vote. It begins to look as thong! both factions had burned their bridges behind them and that there would be no retreat. The situation is an interesting ono and will be watched py the Repub licans with a good degree of satisfaction.

TuE.Devnocratic Chicago Herald com rr.enting on the selection of Judge Ores h.im by Mr. Cleveland to be his Secretary of Slate, says:

The high and higher tariff policy of tbe Republicans, under the lush of Mc Kinley, was the cause which led Judge Gresham to finally separate from the party to which he always belonged. has become -a Democrat. Ho will gi into office with the tacit understanding and agreement that his futnre affilia tions r.re to be Democratic and nothing else. That his appointment became necessity on the part of Mr. Cleveland and that its acceptance becamo a neces sitv on the partof JndgeGresham, with out reference to the even's of the late Presidential campaign, IB evident from all the circumstances. His appointment is a master stroke of good politics and good sense. .Tudge Gresham •will b. only Go years old at the expiration ol President Cleveland's term of oflica. useful, safe, conservative and fruitful foreign policy will place its author at tin head of all the candidates for a Presidential nomination in 1896. The

Democratic candidate may be Gresham But the Herald does not explain how the Judge was willing to accept the nomination at Chicago in 1888 and stand upon the platform which

This Date in History—Feb. 10,

l670~Wniiftui Congrcve, noct and dramatist* born: dust 172y. !6StV-S»r AVilliatn Dugdalc, historian and Rn» tUjuary, died born 1WV». 1GS9—Isaac Yo*»iuss famous scholar of Lcydcn, died Iwrn 101S. ITG5— Montesquieu, French Juris!, Author of the ''Spirit of l.a\vs," died born UiSV. 176S—The Frcnch and Indian war ended by treaty at Paris. 1791—Rev. Dr. Henry TL Milman, historian and editor of Gibbon, born died 1540—Queen Vfctoria married. —Ucverdy Johnson, statesman, diod In AnnapoHs, Md» born 17W. 1883—Marshall Jewell, postmaster general, died in Hartford bom 15515. 1S&7—Mrs. Henry Wood, author of "East

Lynne." died born KvX\ ISW—James Redpath, Irish Nationalist and author. died In New York from injuries caused by a horse oar.

The Stream of Life*

Like small streamlet on ii mountain side. A white tilivuil plunciiiK in the summer sun, Ughtly down leaping with a joyous saving, So passes liappy childhood's playful hour. Noxt, through green dells and "neath o'ershudowing crags The growiug stream with heedless flow winds on: Now Kindly lingering round some glowing isle That sullies with heavenly beauty and allures With promises of ierpotual delights Now fiercely dashing down some rough cascade. Where rushing waters split on hostile rocks. Spouting aloft the iridescent spray Drifted in sunless clefts hy swaying winds. So pass the years of youth. Our riper age Is like the broadened river's stately inarch. Whose current slackens, yet admits no pause. But passes field and coppice, tower and town. Not wholly 'scaping from defiling stains. Yet tolling onward restlessly. Adown Its smooth yet ever sliding stream wo haste. Nor murk the progress of its quiet Sliced, Till, faster rushing as it nears the end. It sweeps us onward in resistless course Through the torn rapids of disease and pain. Till, plunging down the cataract of death. We glide into a vast and unknown spuce— The boundless ocean of eternity.

waB

drawn up by McKinley. Neither does it explain how the Judge waB willing to accept the nomination at Minneapolis in 1892 and stand upon a platform which endorsed the McKinley law. That he has become a Democrat goes without saying, but other reasons must be found for his change heart. The Herald co gently states them in the closing part of its article. The tempting offer, in con nation with his intense personal hatred o' President Harrison, to become the

Democratic candidate iu 189C had more force than tho "high and higher tariff policy of the Republicans."

1£. W. REAM, dentist, fills teeth wilt out puiQ by the nse of "Dr. Hale's Pain less Method," for which he has secured the exclusive right of Crawfordsville an Montgomery county. Office over Barn hill, Homaday & Pickett's. d7-7 w4 25

Walter "W. Skoal.

A Miracle of Love.

1 knew a man who seemed soulless thing, A hopeless plodder in a dreary way. Careful in nothing, save that day bv dav I?is humbte task its small reward might bring. His world was girdled by a narrow ring

Of common duties, knowing not the sway Of pains uud pleasures moving finer clay. So dull content reigned as his chosen king.

But one day Love came knocking at his heart. With mighty passion, fearing not defeat. And, like a man awakened out of sleep, He felt new life through all his being start—

A noble impulse, new, and strangely sweet— And walked where stars in mighty orbits sweep. -George E. Day.

ELECTRIC SPARKS.

Anew electric invalid chair has storage batteries under the seat. It can run at the rate of eight, miles an hour and will last for 50 miles.

An clectric.nl engineer who has laboriously figured on the subject says that 125 miles per hour is about as fast as we can travel oy rail by electricity.

A Yankee of the name of John Beattie has applied for a patent on a contrivance to prevent that whirring sound in" the telephone wires that parallel trolley wires used for street car purposes make.

On the arc lamp electric discharge takes place between two pieces of hard conducting carbon separated from each other by an interval which is kept as nearly as possible constant by automatic devices.

In the glow or incandescent lamp a filament of carbon inclosed in a globe exhaust ed of air ly a mercury pump serves as a path along which the current passes. Th» resistance the electricity meets with in passing through this filament is sufficient to raise the latter to incandescence.

lie Attended I-afayette's Funeral.-

P. J. Lippett is a fine looking old gentleman of Washington city, whom his friends address as "general" because of his sen-ice in the

r. .1.

i.ipri-.TT.

20,1834. He was

born in 1815 and at the early age of 17 secured a good appointment in the navy, which was the occasion of his being in France in time to makethe acquaintance of Lafavette and uttend his funeral.

Reassuring. $!, si:

Host (a trifle nervous about the effect of his guecc's wooden leg upon the polished floor)—Hadn't you better come on the rug, major? Vou might slip out there, you know.

The Major—Oh, don't be afraid, my boy. There is no danger. 1 have a nail ill the end of it.—New York Ledger. •What they are flood for. Brandreth'a Pills are the best mcdicine known. 1 -They are purely vegetable, in fact medicated food. 2—Tbe same dose always produces the same effect—other purgatives require creased doses and dually ceasa acting. a—'"hey purify the plood. 4—They invigorate the digestion and cleaDse the stomach and bowels. 5—Tbey stimulate the liver and carry off vitiated bile and other depraved secretions

The first two or three, doses tell the story. Tbe skin becomss clear, the eye bright,the mind active, digestion is restored, costiveness cured, the animal vigcr is recruited and all decay arrested.

Hrandrcth's Pilis are sold in every drug and medicine store, either plain or sugar coated.

EYK, ear and throat diseases only, Dr. Greene, Joel Block. Pitting of glasses a specialty.

Deserving l'ratne.

We desire to say to our citizens, that for years we have been selling Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Dr. King' New Life Pills, Bucklen's .Arnica Salve and Electric Hitters,and have never handled remedies tnat sell as well, or that have given such universal satisfaction. We do not hr-sitate t.u gaurantee them every time, and we stand ready to refund the purchase puc_\ If satisfactory results do not follow their use. These remedies have won their great popularity purely on their merits. Nye and Booe Druggists.

Children Cry for

Pitcher's Castorla.

THE ETHICS OF TIPPING.

ProsToss of ail AbuBO That Is Hardening Into a System.

The Practice Introduced Into This Country by Foreign-Born Walter#—In Furls the Amount Expected I* Five Per

Cent- of the l'rlce of the Meal.

Tipping, which has hardened into system in most of tho Atlantic seaboard cities and perhaps in all largo towns of this country, is born of tlia presence in the United States of professional foreign-born waiters, says the Philadelphia Press. Tho race of professional waiters in Europe is largely native to three or four small countries bordering the great nations and speaking several tongues. Switzerland and the duchy of Luxemburg contribute most to the corps of professional waiters. The men spenk several tongues, usually French and German, Dutch or Italian, and sometimes all four. A few add to the language which they have learned at home in childhood a smattering of English, and thus equipped these men go from one end of Europe to the other.

You find great numbers of them in Paris, some in London, many in Vienna, thousands in St Petersburg, and a few in all the cities, big or little, frequented by tourists. Some of them turn translators and you may see their signs all over Paris." They undertake to translate almost anything from any of half a dozen European languages. In this capacity they are wretchedly paid, and only a very proud man or a very poor waiter would consent to change the latter's employment for that of a trans la tor.

Many of these polyglot waiters have come to the United States, and they have brought with them their notion as to their natural right to receivo tips. A naturalized American, unschooled iu the ways of fashionable restaurants at home and abroad, cannot easily understand the attitude of the professional waiter toward the tip. Tipper and tipped in Europe view the tip in a different fashion from that of the un-Eu-ropeanized American.

Somebody has said that it is safe to" tip any Briton below the dignity of a bishop, but an American traveling in England found that it was well to draw the line as low as a dean. Mistaking one of the latter dignitaries for something less than he was. the American fumbled for a shilling after having received some courtesies at his hands, but paused when he saw his guide's face flush and took the hastily-prof-fered advice to put his coin in the poor box.

The colored waiter unspoiled by contact with great cities or summer resorts accepts a tip with a gratitude that makes the donor feel that it is more blessed to give than to receive. The European waiter's attitude toward the tip is as much beyond that of the unspoiled colored man as the hovering tenderness, the respectful yet sympathetic and half-familiar interest of the latter toward the person he serves is beyond the compass of the professional European waiter. The one receives tip as his simple due, the other accepts it as a gracious act of generosity.

The Parisian waiter especially re­

gards

Mexican war though his actual rank was much lower. He is noted as the last survivor so far as known of the many Americans who went to Paris to witness the funeral ceremonies of the Marquis de Lafayette, on May

the tips as a right- He not only knows exactly what to expect but he does not hesitate to remind a guest who scants the fee that something is yet due. The iron rule of Paris is one sou to the franc, or five per cent, of the price charged for the meal. In some fashionable restaurants there is a minimum of one franc, but in ordinary restaurants the waiter v.-lio serves a two-franc dinner expects two sous and no more. In some English Inns the custom has gone beyond this. The jjuest finds upon h's bill a charge of five per cent, for "service," and is still cxpected to tip the waiter.

TheBe details are slowly taking form in Philadelphia, New York, Boston. Chicago and a few other cities. Time was when a malignant waiter went unfeed, but now the fee has become so much a hard and fast rule that any neglect not serious enough to justify an appeal to the head waiter is entirely overlooked. The minimum fee is higher in American cities than abroad, perhaps in part because all labor is better paid here than in Europe, and again because the tipping system is still something less than a matter of course here, and some persons omit the fee. The hard and fast rule of percentage is gradually fixing itself upon the restaurants of large cities &nd ostentatiously large tips have disappeared or are disappearing. It has long been literally true that head waiters demand a share in the tips of their subordinates and that all waiters are paid low wages at fashionable restaurants because they are expected to live on tips.

Women waiters find that they receive comparatively few tips from men, just as male waiters dread the appearance of an unescorted woman in a restaurant. Gallantry makes an American hesitate to tip a woman, as he hesitates to yield his traveling bag to be carried on the shoulders of a slender girl up the sleep, rocky stairs of Capri. Some men who visit restaurants where the waiters are women have hit on the scheme of tipping in a lump at Christmas, and doing it very quietly.

One feature of the tipping custom has thus far made small progress in the United States—that of leaving a gratuity under one's final plate after dinner at the house of a friend. A young man at a reception at an interior city confessed, however, that in order to be served by professional waiters hired for the occasion guests found it necessray to tip.

Ijneer Mall Service.

The dromedary parcel post service in the German territories of southwestern Africa has given results better than was expected. The dromedaries are adapted to the climate, are not affccted the prevalent cattle diseases, are not made footsore in stony regions and do not suffer extreme thirst when deprived of water for a weelt. They travel, each carrying a weight of two hundred and •fifty pounds, as fast as an ox team. $100 Howard $IU0.

The readers of this paper will be pleased to leant that there is at leustone 1 raided disease that science has beunablo to euro all its stages, und that is Catarrh. Hull's Catarrh Cure is the only positive euro known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure istaken eternally, actine directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying tho foundation of the disease, and Riving the patient strength dy building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work Tho proprietors havo so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hun-

AII*A Un«H fA« .»« 4%

9

cure, dress

Send

(or

list

of

RXililABIiX!, PROMPT ACCOMMODATING I

WILLIAMS BROS.

Plumbing and Natural Gas Fitting a Specialty.

125

N

South Green St.

Opposite Music Hall,

OTICK TO STOCKHOLDERS'

The regular annual meeting of tho stockholders of tho l'eoplu'ft N•*tur*l Ci*w Company of Indiana was hold on thettrstday of Scptontbor, lsy*. and was adjourned to the second Monday in J'Ybruary, 181K4. Notice Is hereby *rlven that said inoottiw will be held at the oitteeot'the Company. No. 1VZ S. Oieeti street.! In tho City of Crawfordsville, on Monday, l4eb ruary 1SWI, at 10o'clock a.m. A full at-1 tcndance Is requested. W. p. UlSUHON,

a

\Yhr

Secretary.

MONOJSROUTE.

*orTH

bilious st&to

NORTH

1:0'3a.m„...„.,Nl£hl Mall (dally)......... 3 l4a.ir 1 '25p.m Bay Mall (dally) I :^op.n .. Way Freight 2:40p.m 9:00a.m..

BIG 4—Peoria Division.

EAST

WEST

9:00a.m KxpreVs-MaiL: 9:00a.ni OOa.m Kail uiftily) 12:44a.m 5:18p.m(dally) Mall—Express l:30p.m

Mall—Expre»s~ 6:48p.m

YANDAL1A.

SOTTTH IZUU/NMA. SOUTH I 5 20pin Express 6:19 in

Mall..

I2:4(»p.m

ITtLS

PILLS

DI

... 12:40 vm

CURE.

fciick Headache and rcliava fill tho troubles Iv.cltiont to

ot

tho

Gyatorn.

liver and regulato the bo cared

Mieli as

Dizziness, Nausea, Irowsiaoas, Distress uifoc dating. Pain iu tho Sido, Whilo tlioiricosfe remarkable success has boou shown iu curing

SICK

Be&cl&che. yet Cartor*3 Little Llror Pills r.iL fiqually valuable iu Constipation, curing and pre* venting thi8ftnnoyingcompl:».Int,wliilotheyalso corroclaUdisordcrsoxthe »toriBcU,PtinmKt.*tUi

JlkCJIlE

2s the bane of

BO

itinuy

(!"*/'its a ffoo-1 iti tho Fair clt should jvrit-- at once for 1'rospc.nus of the famous Metropolitan nilMncsn College, l.hlcago. Bnusualfarmtii-srorpl-^lTtKRrs'i-.iates.I'.staWlslied 20yeara. (X".T:

I night,

Even if they 0213

Aebathey would boalmos^rlecSera fo (Ik Buffer from cental iini tout fe:-v^ nat6lyth®irgoodued»docsKOfceudhvr«V4at-J't.'uj.-ic. vhoono© try them will find these little piilr able in Romany ways that they will not by vril |tjig to do without titL-m. i'ut after allslok

TLIAT

here

IR Ocr-

we make our great bo'.^.t, Ov i^llacuroii. v.hiU others do not. Carter'-a Little Liv?r I-iiis f«re ^rry toII zi-.s-very easy to tr.ko. 0_o or two pUls They are strictly artOo Jjot i— purge, but by their gcutl^ tctirA ploaSo c.11 v. use them. In vialsnt 25 A YiVo for 1. by druggists everywhere, or. .: .•!!: by itu-.'l.

CARTER CO, New Ycr'u

SMALL PILL. S?MU nn« SMALL PBISi

''-VN AMN-S%

1

.1 -1. FrinclpaL

'c. 3 riz "t

BIRECT LINE To all points

North and South—Chicago and T^ouisvUl Through Route to Western Points. Solid:Pullman Vestibule Train Service

BETWEEN"

Cbicago-LouisviUe. Chicago-Cincinnati CrawforilBville Time-Table: NORTH— BOOTH i: 14 am 3:02 a rr 25 pm 1:25 pm

H. S. WATSON. Asjcnt.

IIME TABLE I 1

FOR THE NOUTH

No. 52, Ex. Sun, 8:16 a.m. for St. Joseph No. 54, Ex. Sun. p. m. lor South Bond

FOK THE SOUTH.

No. 51 Ex. Bun. 0:44 a.m. for Terro Haute No, 53 Ex. Sun. 5:20 p.m. lor Torre Haute

For compjntotime curd, piving- all train* and stations, and fo* full information as io ales, through ears. eu-,t a klross

J. C. HUTCHINSON, Agent,

Crawfordsville, I ml.*

Cleveland, Cin cinnati, Chicagu

Routo. !& St. Louis R. E

Warner Sleepers on night trains. Best mod ern day eoaolteson all traius. Connecting with eolld Vestibule trains

umrd eliU-H. TBAJKS AT ORAWFOKDSYTIiLK, C./INU Wu:jT.

No.Omai).., 9:00 a* wo.7 mail M.../ -.12:40 a No. 17 mail 1:30 No. 3 BxprGf* 8:48p

OOJMJ EAST.

No.12 Mall (d) 2:00am No 2 Express... f» 00 a No. 38 Mall....— I l5pm So.?? Mail 5:1N ptn

Agents Wanted on Salary

Or commission, to handle the New Pxitont Chemical Ink Erasing Pencil. The quickest and greatest selling novelty ever producedo fir*so* Ink thoroughly In two HecondB. No abriiS on of paper. Works liko tmiKlo- 200 to 300 per cent profit- One ujfont'fl sales amounted to W20 In six days. Another, t'32 in two hours. Previous experience not necessary. •For terms and lull particulars, address, The Monroe tirosnr Mfrr Co. LaCrofao.Wls. 445

QUE DOLLAR

EVERY HOUR

is easily tmrned by nnv one of wither

ri •. I well adapted to them. rite at once and see for 1 drod Dollars for any caso

ihat it fails to

testimonials, Ad-

P.

J.

CBBNET Si

Co.. Toledo,O.

Towels.

1000 Pa'id Towols 2 1-2 cts, leach. 1000 Linen Towels 5c. each. 1000 Large Tow Is5c. each. 1000 Linen Huck Linen121-2 lets. each. 1000 Linen Knotted Fringe I Towels 19c. each. 2000 Fancy Towels, regular 140 cent qualities, at 23 cents each.

500

RI

Biooir.injftou and Peoria to and from ssour river, Denver and the Pacific coast. At Indianapolis, Cincinnati. Springfield and Columhus to and from tbo Eastern and

B*??

A

POX

in anv

purl of the couuirv, who i« willing? to work indii^trioiirtly at thi* oinploymmt which we furnish. The luuor lijrht and pleasant, and vou run no risk whatever. We lit you out coumiote.ao thut you can uive the busine^ a trial without expense io yourself. For lho*o willing to do a little work, this I* the grandest oiler made. You can work all day, or in ihe evening only. If you are employed. and have a few spare hour« at your diapo*al, utilise thorn, and add to your income,— our businc**'will not interfere at all. You will be amazed on the start at tin* rapidity and ea*e by which yon amass dollar upon dollar, day in and dav out.. Kven beginners are «uereKsdul from the first hour. Any one can run the business nonf fail. You should try nothing else until you *cc for yourself what you can do at the business whiiih we otfVr. No capital risked. "Women are (fraud workers nowa«lay they make as much men. They should trv this business, as It is

1 yourself. Address u. HALl.KTT & CO.,

Kox 8H0, Portland, Mo

LXISriElSr SA.LE3I

AHustlingBusinessis what we must do this month.

We did a big business a year ago this month. During our Linen Sale, like all good Merchants, we

must beat the record, and to accomplish this, Prices will be Slashed on our new and exquisite Line of Linens. To give good value means the Store lull ol Customers, and that's what we want. We will give

Value and Price that ought to fill our Store from early morn

Linen Crash.

10,000

Crash at

$2.

One thousand yards Outing Flannel, woith

yards all Linen

5c

yard, worth 8c.

Good Crash at

6c 7c

ioc per yard. Linens.

25c

gc and

Twenty five Turkishred table linens, warranted fast, at 19c. per yard.

Five pieces of bleached linens at

per yard.

See our table linens at

47c, 69c, 73c, 99c

Great values.

This is a Great Opportunity for Hotels, Boarding Houses, housekeepers, restaurants, barbers and others to avail themselves of this great bargain sale and anticipate their wants for six months to come. The above bargains must be seen to be appreciated.

We have the orize underwear, the ladies choice. The fine workmanship, combined with equisite Jac.es and embroideries, make it indeed very interesting to the many buyers. The sale goes on, as weli as our linen sale. Our Low Prices bring the people.

VANDALiA LINE [Special! Something New! Pillow cases and sheets, ready made, at same price as material would cost to buy.

son ville, etc. Re? below the immense bargains now offered:

Marseille Quilts at special low prices.

Five hundred pieces American Shirting prints, fast colors, at

One thousand pieces American blue prints, all colors, at

One thousand yards Crcpon dress goods, worth

One thousardyards dress ginghams, worth

SHLE!

Also

100

37c,

and up to

$1, $1.50,

10

10

Cloak Department

$10 Cloaks for $5.50 $15 Cloak for $7 50 $20 Cloak for $10 $25 Cloak for $12.50 $40 Cloak for $20. Take advantage of this

Great Cut Price Sale. All

till

Napkins.

50 dozen napkins 40c. per doz. 50 dozen Bleach napkins 85c per doz 25 dozen bleach napkins 99c per doz. 25 dozen bleach napkins $1.39 per doz.

dozen napkins as­

sorted, good values, from

$2,

75c

and from that up

any price you may want.

In Muslins we will show you all the standard

brands, such as Pequot, Pepperell, Lonsdale, Hills, Farwell, Hope, Fruit-of-Loom, Mas-

4

10

10

to"

12

1-2C per yard.

5

cents per yard.

cents, in this sale choice at 5cts a yard.

cts., your choice at

and 12 1-2, choice at

Great Bargains in All Our Departments!

You can buy Dress Goods at great bargains in this sale. Price our home-made comforts, and see low prices on our Blankets. We have too many odds and ends of childrefi underwear that are worth 50c, 75c and $1, we will close out in this sale, your choice, at 25 cents Mothers, take advantage of this real bargain.

good share of the bottom has dopped from some of the Prices in spite of the blizzard and zero days.

are

and

Prices.

LOUIS BISCHOF

East uyCain. Street.

5, 7

and

8

7

cents.

1-2 cents.

welcome to examing our

Goods