Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 22 June 1893 — Page 2

Daily Journal.

THE

JOOKNAL

COMPANY,

T. H. D. MoCAlN, President. }. A.GREKNK, Secretary, A. A. MoCAlN. Treasurer.

THB DAILY JOCHNA1*

By matt, vo* ftnnum *S'55 By mall, »ix month...™— x.o« By mail, three month!

By oarrior, pet weak

1

THK WBKKLT JOURNAL.

Three months JO 8il months

•i*2?

THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1893.

PURGING THJS PKMSIOK LIST.

Tbe kenda of pensioners are beginning to drop and they will soon fall as rapidly as th« beads of fourth class poetmasters. Cases like that of Andrew J. Huffman, of Hamilton oounty, will be of frequent occurrence. Hoffman [served from the breaking out of the war until July, 1865, and while with the Eighth Indiana Oavalry, under Gen. Stoneman, he had four horses shot under him. Near Columbia, Tenn., one horse was shot from under him, and in the fall Huffman was pinned to the ground and was stepped on by the horse in the rear, one hoof striking him on the left groin and the other in the center of his abdomen. The injury resulted in double hernia, one complete. He now wears a support at all times for the complete hernia and a truss for the incomplete when he has any lifting to do. On the 15th inst. he was notified that his pension had been ont off, and on the 19th inst., at Noblesville, he was Bgain examined, the examining board telling him that the marks left by the corks of the horse's shoes were plainly visible. The board made a reportthat the injury still exiated. Mr. Huffman made no application for pension until 1874, when he was rated at 64 per month, dating back to 1865. And this is the way the Cleveland administration has begun to "purge the pensiou list."

A KELIOIOOS paper speaking of the Sunday opening of the World's Fair says:

Sunday opening of the World's Fair la beyond doubt. 'The end has been reached. The white city, as It Is named, wlll.be as noisy on Sunday as on a week day.

This is what might be called zeal without knowledge,to speak of it in no harsher terms. The quietest place in Chicago is on the World's Fair grounds. And when the machinery is silent in the Manufacturers' building, as it will be on Sunday, the quiet and good order that will reign there, even with 100,000 people on the grounds, will be a lesson to the most exacting cnurchman.

MOHUGH, of Tippecanoe, must be a bad bird when even the Indianapolis /Sentinel hasn't the stomach to swallow him. Here area couple of squibs from that paper which indioate its state of mind:

Oh Lafayette! Lafayette! Thou who stonest the cranks, and sendeat MeHugli to the legislature! Thou are a lulu bird with a long tall.

We would suggest to the State printing lHard that the proper title for the volume containing the acta of 1803 would be "The Acts of McHugh."

THE police foroe of Fall River, Mass. oomBumed a whole year, not to find out who murdered Mr. aud Mrs. Borden, but to prove that Lizzie Borden was the murderer. They invented a theory and sought the discovery of facts to fit. They permitted ail other olews as to the real murderer to slip through their fingers, and the result is that the tragedy will forever remain a mystery.

EX-PKESIDENT HAIIUSON says that every man, woman and child in the country should be encouraged to visit the World's Fair, "for there will not be in a generation to come, and perhaps never again, such a scene." Now let the railroads reduce their rates, and the people will do the rest.

IF Bishop Merrill, of the Methodist church, thinks he can induce

Bny

of his

flock from attending the World's Fair by withdrawing the church exhibit and issuing a boycott proclamation, he is greatly mistaken. Tbe Methodists of Crawfordsville are not built on such a narrow foundation.

INDIANAPOLIS Journal: When Joshua Jump gets his commission as internal revenue collector, the senior Senator's attitude in regard to the Sherman uilver law will be so much in harmony with that of the President that he will find eloquent words in which to denounce the measure.

IN the scramble for the oilioes the Chicago platform seems to have been lost in the shuffle. You can scarcely got a Democrat to even mention the question of smashing tbe tariff.

Ton main lack of the present administration is lack of statesmanship.

MABBIAQE U0EH8EB. Mason B. Thomas and Annie M. Davidson.

Vanda.lla Excursions.

To Pittsburg and return June 23d and 24lb, good to return including June 28th, 1893, one fare, $11 round trip, account Knights of St. John.

To Terre Haute July 3d and 4th, good to return Jnly 8th, one fare for tbe round trip, account Sons of Veterans and Terre Haute Rifles.

To Montreal, Quebec, July 4th to 8th, inclusive, to return ipcluding September 15, 1893, one fare the round trip, account Y. P. 8. 0. E. meeting.

Holiday tickets sold July 3d and 4th, at one fare for the round tiip, within 200 miles, good to return including July 5th, 1893.

ANCIENT EARTHQUAKES.

Convulsions of tbe Earth Which Have Killed Thousands.

China and Italy th. Countries Moat Af. fllotod by tbe Awful Upheavals— Whole CltlM Completely

Overturned.

At Pekin, China, three hundred thousand persons were buried in a moment In 1602, and one hundred thousand again in the same city in 1731. The earthquake at Lima on October 28, 1840, extended to Callao, and eighteen thousand persons perished. This convulsion, which spread along the coast two hundred leagues, befrau about 10:30 o'clock at night. The noise, the shock and the ruin took place in the space of only four minutes. The day being one dedicated to St. Simon and St. Jude, the people of Lima attributed to the ageucy of those saints the fact that only eighteen thousand persons perished out of a population of fifty thousand. Vast quantities of gold, silver and jewels were buried among the seventy-four churches and the fourteen monasteries. The public fountains were buried, the statues of the Spanish kings crushed and the streets barricaded with fallen houses. Callao was utterly destroyed, and even its very shape was changed by huge heaps of sand and gravel. At the moment of the earthquake the sea rose mountain high and rolled on till it buried the city and destroyed everything except the two great gates. Of the five thousand inhabitants only about two hundred escaped by clinging to timbers and pieces of -wreck.

The most tremendous earthquake of modern times, according to the Chicago Herald, was that of Lisbon, of November 1, 1755. The people had risen as usual that morning, and looked out upon Belem and the Tagus, the little villas among the olive groves, the orange trees, the bull ring, the hospitals, the convents and the shops. In the seven-ty-flve convents and forty churches of Lisbon the bells had tinkled and the early prayer had been Baid. The birds were gayly singing their matins in the suburban gardens of Alcantara and Campo Grande. The blue sky gave no omen of evil, and the river lay for mile after mile smiling in the golden sunlight. Suddenly the city fell to pieces like a children's tower of cards. Hoofs crushed in, arcades gaped in two, towers fell, steeples snapped, palaces tottered, walls were leveled. The air grew black with rising clouds of dust and was filled with the crash of ceaseless destruction. At the same time, as if the terrors of the apocalypse had broken at last on Lisbon, the sea, agitated to its depths by the awful convulsion, rose and spread over the shore. One of the quays also opened its dark jaws and swallow ed, in an instant, six hundred persons who had taken refuge on it. In a minute or two more fresh calamities fell on the unhappy city, for, the fires being hurled down among the fallen timbers, conflagrations broke out in several parts of the city. To add to the general misery, thieves and murderers, escaping from the shattered prisons, plundered and robbed indiscriminately. One of these villains confessed to setting fire to the Indian house and another u» burning the ruins in seven places. The earthquake continued with gentle, intermitting tremors, felt even on the ri rer, for eighteen days. The first greas shock convulsed the earth for five thousand miles, overturned many cities and never halted in its tremendous march till it reached

Scotland. The year 1755 was very wet and rainy. The summer was unusually cool, and during the forty days preceding the earthquake the weather was clear, but not remarkably so. On the day immediately preceding the earthquake a remarkable gloominess prevailed, but on the morning of the fatal day the fog was dissipated by the sun. There was no wind nor the least agitation of the sea, and the weather was remarkably warm. This great earthquake of Lisbon, which in a few minutes swallowed fifty thousaud persons, had a precursor- in 1581, when in the same city fifteen hundred houses and thirty thousand persons were destroyed, and several neighboring towns ingulfed with all their populations.

DIMINUTION Oh THE INDIAN.

With film Will Alio Pass Away a Lot ol Scouudrels. Much melancholy literature, prose and verse, has been indulged in about the decay of the Indians how they arc fading away like the mist on the mountain, the snow on the plain a mere handful left of once mighty nations, and this feeble remnant the white man is driving into the Gulf of Mexico, the Pacitic ocean or some other deep water. This diminution of the Indian census if a sad truth, but there remains the consolation that, with the disappearance of the Indians, will disappear the worst lot of scoundrels, white and mixed, that ever cursed the earth.

It was noticed, says the Kansas City Star, that at a recent payment of government money to Indians at An&darko, the Indians came many miles in the bitter weather and suffered indescribably in the camps to draw their money, and that whisky peddlers und gamblers reaped nearly every cent of it in a few hours. So it was it the beginning and so it will be as long as an Indian lives a "ward" of the government when the last Indian is laid in his grave it would be a boon if the last Indinn robber were hung above the humble sopuleher.

A Plucky Act.

This illustration of the pluck of Admiral Sir Arthur Cumming, lately deceased, is given by a London paper: When a lieutenant on the South American station, half a century ago, he boarded a slaver, and, through his boatman losing hold of that vessel, he found himself unsupported on board a ship the deck of which was crowded with hostile Spaniards. Without hesitation ho shot the helmsman, seized the wheel, ran the slaver up in the wind, and, pistol in hand, kept the entire c?ew at bay until his boat waa once more alongside. "Gentle as the Summer Breexe." "I'd rather take a thrashing any time than a dose of pill," groaned a patient to whom the doctor has prescribed physic. "I'd as lief bo sick with what ails me now, as to be sick with the pills." "I don't think you've taken any of tho pills I prescribe, or you wouldn't dread the prescription so," laughed tho doctor. "I never use the old, inside twisters you bavc in mind. I use Dr. Piorco'B Pleasant Po' leu. They always make me think of a part of an old hymn— mild and lovely,

OeDtle as the summer breeze.

Tbe best thing of the kind ever invented. No danger of their making you sick You Will hardly know yo I've takon them. I wouldn't use any other in my practice."

This Date In History—June 22.

1633—John Fisher, Wshop of Koch ester, beheaded in the

Tower born 1469.

15S7—Nicolas Machlavel (bettor known as MachlAvelU), Italian statesman who redueetl intrigue to a science, died born 140). 1T14—Matthew Henry, English biblical commontAtor,died born 1062. 17S7—George II became king. 1748—Thomas Gay, author of "Saudford and

Merton," born died 17S0. 1791—Louis XVI, king of Prance, while trying to fly from the country, was arrested at

Varennes.

lSOO-Emile de Girordin, Journalist, red republican aud speculative writer, born in Paris died 1881. 1816—Second and final abdication of Napoleon

Bonaparte.

1 SSI—The obelisk put in place in Ceutral park, New York. 1884—At 9 p. ra„ in Smith's sound, Captain

Schley's command reached and rescued Lieutenant A. W. Greelv and 0 others, only survivors of the Greely expedition to Lady Franklin bay. 1800—The now constitution of Brazil went into effect.

Nobility,

Truo worth is being, not seeming, In doing each day that goes by Borne little good, not iu the dreaming

Of great things to do by and by. For whatevor men say in blindness And spite of the fancies of youth, There's nothing so kingly as kindness

And nothing so royal as truth.

We get back our mote as we measure— Wo cannot do wrong and feel right. Nor can we give pain and feel pleasure.

For justice avenges each slight. The air for the wing of the sparrow, Tho bush for the robin and wren, But always the path that narrow

And straight for the'children of men.

Tls not In the pages of story The heart of Its ills to beguile. Though ho who makes courtship to glory

Gives all that ho hath for her suiiie, For when from her heights ho has won her, Alas, it Is only to prove That nothing's so sacred as honor

And nothing so loyal as love!

We cannot make bargains for blisses. Nor catch them, like fishes, in nets, And sometimes the thing our life misses

Helps moro than tho thing which it trets, For good lieth not in pursuing, Nor gaining of great nor of small, But just in tho doing, and doing

As we would be done by, is all.

Through envy, through malice, through hating— Against the world, early niul late. No jot of our courage abating—

Our part is to work uiid to wail. And slight is tho stiug of his trouble Whoso winnings are less than his worth. For he who is honest is noble,

Wliatev er his fortunes or birth. —Alice Carey. A Veteran Editor.

John RusseU Young, who recently repiguetl the position of fifth ntiditor of the Reading railroad, was managing editor of the New York Tribune under Horace Greeley, succeeding Charles A. Dana and preceding Whitelaw Reid in that position. He nest edited The Standard,

JOHN RUSSELL YOUNG.

as long as life could bo kept in it, and then took a place on the New York Herald, and in the capacity of correspondent for that paper made the tour of the world with General Grant, with whom ho was on a very friendly footing. President Arthur was also a great friend of his, and to this friendship he owed his appointment as minister to China, in which post he made a good record.

EYE, ear and throat diseases only, Dr. Greene, Joel Block. Fitting of glasses a specialty.

Allow me to add my tribute to the efficacy of Ely's Cream Balm. 1 was suffering from a severe attack of influenza and catarrh and was induced to try your remedy. The result was marvelous. I could hardly articulate, and in less than twenty-four hours the catarrhal symptoms and my hoarseness disappeared and I was able to sing a heavy role in grand opera with voice unimpaired. I strongly recommend it to all singers.—Wm. H. Hamilton, Leading Hasso of the C. D. Hess Grand Opera Co.

Health and Happiness.

Honey of Figs Is the queen of all catlmrtlcs syrups or pills. One anticipates its tuktmwith pleasure No other remedy sells so wel, or gives »uch satisfaction. It, acts gently on Inactive bowels or liver, rollovfs the kidneys, cures constipation, colds fevers, norvous iiclies. et :., and restores tho Uenuty of lietilUi. Ladies and children prefer it. Doctors und drujflflsts recommend It. THE FIO HONEY CO., of

CIILOTTRO,

make It. Try

IL

Ironic. Onlvone

entadose. Nye & liooe, agents- d-w 0-T

When Baby was sick, we gsre her Cutorla. When she was a Child, she cried for CaitorlL When she became Him, she clung to Caitoria. When she had Children, ibe save tbem Ciatoiia.

Eyes and Eats

have we that we may sec and hear brains that wo may reason and understand so there's little excuse tor much of the suffering that is to erated. Dr. Pierce's Goldon Medical Discovery is fust becoming the one recognized remedy for all diseases resulting from thin, iiupuro and impoverished blood. Indigestion .land dyspepsia, scrofu lous affections, liver und kidnoy diseases, sores and swellings, catarrh and consumption are blood affections. With purified, enriched and vitalized blood, they (lee as darkness beforo tho light! Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is the only guaranteed blood-purifier and liver invigorutor. Sold on trial! Money promptly returned, if it doesu't benefit or cure.

Pitcher's Castorla-

It Ojiens the Eyes

"My daughter is losing her sight," said an anxious mother, '-and Just ou tho eve of marriage, too! What shall I do?" "Ijct her got married, by fall means," responded •tho doctor, "marriage is a regular eyeopener." A man's eyes open pretty widely when ho finds his wife's charms disappearing. Health is the best frieed of beaul and the innumerable ills to which women are peculiarly subject, its worst enemies Experience proves that women who possess tho best health, use Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It is tho only medicine for women, sold by druggists under a positive guarantee from tho manufacturers that it will give satisfaction in every caso' oi money refunded. This guarantee lias been printed on tho bottle-wrappur, and faithfully carried out for many yeurs.

GREENWOOD.

Clem Duke has purchased a new gyMrs. N. H. Brown has returned from Sheridan.

John Brown has been doing some painting. Emma Stoner is sewing (or Mrs. Sarah Yannice.

J. O. Brown and wife were at the Shades Sunday. J. N. Vannice is having his buggy repaired and painted.

John Bonk made a business trip to Crawfordsville Monday. M. A. Stoner has the nicest lot of hogs in the neighborhood.

There is some talk ot Jennie Clahan teaching onr winter sohool. Mrs. Susan Conner is visiting her daughter in Boone oounty.

George Lollis and Landlord have purchased new Daisy cultivators. James Vannice attended the supper at Newt Hcstetter's Monday night.

The correspondent from Hog Heaven plowed for John Brown last week. This neighborhood is well supplied with hucksters and coal oil venders.

Josh Conner and family rode in their new surrey for the first time Sunday. Frank White, of Thorntown, called on his daughter, Mrs. J. Brown, Saturday'

Quite a goodly number from this place attended Children's day at Mace Sunday.

Bert Sparks and George Lollis have business over at Jamestown twice each month, always Sunday eveninge.

Vandalta Season Kates. To Chicago and return, all rail, $7.00 round trip.

To Chicago and return, rail and boat, 87.00 round trip. To the Shades and return, $1.10 round trip.

To Lake Masinkuokee and return, S.90, going Saturday and returning Monday.

To Lake Maxinkuckee and return, ten days, $3.85. To Lake Maxinkuckee and return, thirty days, $4.35.

To Ora or Bass Lake and return, thirty days, $3.95. Parties going to Chicago via St. Joseph and boat oan stop at Lake Maxinkuckee.

Berths are included for $7.00. Boat leaves St. Joseph at 3 p. m., making the trip across the lake and arriving in Chicago early in the evening. Most delightful.

J. C. HUTCHINSON, Agent.

Terre Haute and St. Joseph, Trams 55 and. SO. Taking effect Monday, June 12th, 1893, the Yandalia line will run daily except Sunday, fust trains 55 and 56, between Terre Haute and St. Joseph. During past seasons these trains have found great favor with the traveling public, and this announcement, there Tore, will be received as a bit of good news. These trainB will run about as they did last yeur, viz Leave Terre Haute at 1 p. m., arrive at St. Joseph, Mich., 7:30 p. leave St. Joseph at 2:40 p. m., arrive at Terre Haute 9:45 p. m. For complete schedule of Vandalia Line trains address any ticket agent of that line, or Chas. M. Wheeler, Traveling Passenger, Agent, Terre Haute, lnd.

A. H. HERNLEY,

Special Collector!

All kinds of notes and accounts promptly looked after. Settlements made aud all bust-

wiw,., uvkHLiiiciiw uiuuu nuu an uui ncss entrusted to his care promptly done. flee with J. J. Mills, 10'JS. Washington St.

a

Children Cry for

Of-

PA.UL J. BARCUS, M.D

Physician and Surgeon,

Offlcc: 111 West Main Street.

MONON ROUTE.

NORTH MWUIFU UVUlUi PQUT1I 2:20 a.m.......Night Express 1:02a.m 12:lfp.m Passenger (no stops) 4:17 a.m .-J:35 p.m .Express(allBtops) l:C8p.in .2:40 p.m Local Freight 0:00 a.m

zs BIG 4—Peoria Division.

0:07 a.m Dally (exceptSunday) 0:r0u.m. Dally 12:40a.m. 2:0.1 a.m Dally 8:47 a.m 1:05 p. in....Dully (except Sunday).... 1 :M5 p.m

VASDAL1A.

SOUTH uuvuuiai NORTH a .8:10 a P» 0:11) pm 2:33 ui rn Local Freight 2:33

A. C. JENNISON,

The Old I tellable

PIONEER ABSTRACTER Loan, Real Estate And Insurance Agent,

Over 121 E. Main St. Crawfordsville, Jnd

MONEY TO LOAN,

At 6 FEB. CENT.

On (rood mercantile und resident property in Crawfordsville.

C. W. WRIGHT.

WORM'S T-S^Wanhotel

11R

Three blocks from main entrance,

At) |)e«t of R. R. and street car service* rnirir.n Flrst-classcafe. RaieH,$lto$£50pcr Uull&Uv jjcruon, Write for circular.

Agents Wanted on Sakry.

Or commission, to handle i» Now Patent Chemical Ink Erasing Penoll. rhe quickest and greatest selling novelty e7or producodo Rrases ink thoroughly in two seconds. Nc abrasion of pupor. Works like niaglo. 200 tc •100 per coot, pro lit. One agent 8 sales amount* od to W20 In six days. Another, 1:32 In tw hours. Previous experience not necessary For terms and full particulars, address. Th«. Monroe Eraser MfirCo. LaCrowe. Wis. 445

WORLD'S FAIR, CHICACO.

•lAfPi Calumet Avenue and 29th Street.

Nil

I fcL a Fireproof} 244 rooms near Fair Grounds baths on every floor. American and European plans.

BANCROFT

VANDAL!A LINE

11

Children Cry for

Pitcher's Castorla.

TX1CB TABLB

8t. Joe Mllll South Beud Kxpi-egs St. Joe Special Local Freight

I I

NOHTH HOUND.

8:10 a, m. p. ui. 2:.'J3p

ID,

....2:33 p. in.

HOUTULODNL).

Torre Haute Kxpress Terre Haute Mail Southern Express Local freight

0:44 a. ui. 6:20 p. ui.

....8:10 p.m. 2:33 p.m.

For complete time card, giving all trains and stations, and for full infoimation as for ateu, through cars, etc,, address

In Silks.

127-129

Our June Clearing Sale.

In Dress Goods.

35c

7SC-

In Other Lines.

Wash Goods Department.

500

EA5T MAIN STREET.

Those who took advantage of our sale last June know what this announcement means—but we do even better this year because we have a heavier stock of goods on hand—the unfavorable weather has prevented their sale before—we must clear them out. Hence great bargains will be found in every line of goods we sell—the following being merely a few examples.

Japanese Printed Silks in seasonable and desirable shades and styles. Three bargains at 39c, 49c, 69c, worth 50c, 65c and 85c.

Plain and fancy all-wool and half-wc-ol, 16 2-3C, worth 25 to

Plain and fancy in all wool and Mohair, 49c, worth 60 to 75c. Beautiful weaves in solid colors and combinations, 50c, worth

Extra fine novelties in French and German dress goods at 75c, worth $1.00 to $1.50.

In Hosiery and Underwear.

Ladies' and Children's fast black hose, 19c, worth 25 to 35c. Ladies' silk plated hose in fancy shades, 59c, worth $1 to $1.25. Ladies' gauze vests, 5c, worth 10c. Ladies fine lisle thread vests,

25c,

In Linens and White Goods.

worth

35c.

Unbleached Damask, 46c, worth 65c. Turkey Red Damask, 36c, worth 50c each. 50 dozen towels, white and colored borders, 22 1-2, worth 30 to 35c." 50 dozen napkins at 83c, worth $1 to $1.25. 100 pieces plaid and striped white goods at 13c per yd. worth 15 to 20c. 25 pieces plaid and stripe white [goods at 22 i-2c, worth 25 to 3SC-

Muslin corset covers, plain and trimmed, 9c. worth 20 to 25c. Ladis' muslin underwear, any garment, 25c, worth 35c. Ladies' muslin underwear, any garment, 50c, worth 75c. Children's lace caps, 17c, worth 35 to 50c. Children's lace caps, 37c, worth 75 to Boys' waists, 37c, worth 50c. Ladies' shirt waists, 49c, worth 75 to $1. Ladies,' leather belts, 17c, worth 25 to 35c. 75 silk umbrellas, large and small handles, 97c, worth $1.25 to $3.00 Foster 5-hook kid gloves, size 7^ to 8, all shades, 59c, worth $1 to $1.50. Ladies' driving gauntlet gloves, 69c, worth $1.50. Ladies' black silk mitts and gloves, 59c, worth $1. 25 doz. ladies' embroidered handkerchiefs, 25c eachf worth 35 to 50c. 32 inch printed China silk for diapery, 590 yd., worth 75 to$i. 500 yards embroidery flouncing, 59c yd., worth 85c to I$I. Madame Strong's corset waists, 97c, worth $1.25. Patent Medical French woven corsets, $1.75, worth $2.75. 5oo flat and folding Japanese paper fans, 10, worth if to 20c. 5oo embroidered mull ties, 10c each, worth i5 to 20c. Good quality pearl buttons, all sizes, 7c doz.", worth 10c. 20 white bed spreads, 73c, worth $1. Ladies' summer skirts, 25c, worth 5oc. Good prints, light and dark styles, 5c, worth 7c. 0,000 yards domets at 5c, worth 8 to 10c. Good brown muslin, 4c yd., worth 5. 100 pairs Nottingham lace curtains at $3«5o, worth $4.60 to $5. 1,000 yds. dotted Swiss for curtains at 25c yd., worth 35c. i5 pieces all chenille portieres at $4.97c, worth $6. 1,000 yds. curtain scrims, 10c, worth i5c. Ladies' percale suits, $1.75, worth $2.25. Ladies' gingham suits, $3, worth

$3.75.

Ladies' wool Eton and blazer suits,$4.60, worth $6. 20 ladies' spring capes and jackets, $2, worth $2.70. 1° ladies' spring capes and jackets, $4, worth $5 to $6.

Wouldtft it be an excellent idea to come in and see the two jollowing Bargains:

pieces Ginghams, Bedford Cords, Pongees, etc at 7Jc, worth 10 to X2^C. 500 pieces Ginghams, Satines, Pongees and other beautiful wash* fabrics at 10c, worth I2§ to, 20c-

IVe have an axe to grind hut the advice is good just the same.