Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 5 October 1894 — Page 2
THE DAILY JOURNAL.
ESTABLISHED IS ISST.
Printed Every Afternoon Except Sunday.
THE JOURNAL COMPANY. T.H. U. MCCAIN, l'resldom. J. A. GKKENE. Secretary.
DAILY-
A. A. MCCAIN. TROHM
One yew Six months Three months Per week by carrier or mail
WKKKLYOne year ,. months ......,...,. Three months
Payable advance. Sample copies tree. Knteied at the Vostoftiee at Crn^ torJsv lUe.
Indiana as second-oluas matter.
FRIDAY, OCTOKER 5, 1894.
WK
notice with pleasure that Mr. Rrooksliire is looking very sol cum these cold autumn days.
THK most frightful thing to Democrats. now to be fouud in the world, is what they call the dead corpse of MeKinlevism.
SOME great American statesmen have to go abroad for applause and dinners, ltut men lik* Melvinley and Harrison can get both at home.
THK new Democratic tariff menced "opening the markets of the world" by closing Cuba to American Hour, a tariff of S-1.50 per barrel having been imposed there since McKinley reciprocity was repealed.
Ei.WOOD special: All our factories are busy, and conditions are favorable for a good winter's run. There are but few idle men in town now.
$t truidilc
is
The yratt-\
the Imr U-JJC±.
Those for
tunate enough to have employment at all scarcely make enough to supply themselves with the common neeessar-
ies of life. During the prospe times of two and three years ago the men could take vacations occasionally, work just when they pleased and have plenty to live on. Now it requires constant labor to make a living, and not a very good living at that.
St'I.I.IVAN I'LILOIT: Brooksbire heads his speech which he had printed and folded as a supplement in the Democratic papers here last week. "Congressman E. V. llrookshire on the Warpath." The warpath this demagogue is on is war on the farmers' hay, wheat and wool and the coal industry. The new tariff bill has lowered the price of hay, cut the price of wool down to twelve cents and reduced the wages of the miners per cent, lie also voted to pop a duty of to per cent, on sugar in the interest of the sugar trust. Mr. Itrookshire is responsible to the extent of his vote for this tariff law of perfidy and dishonor, and the voters of Sullivan county will have a chance in live weeks to say whether or :not they indorse him for the position he has taken against their interest.
THK Republican press is doing the Democracy a real favor in publishing Cleveland's letter to Wilson and Catchings. These letters show with what deep disgust and contempt the President regarded the little coterie of alleged Democrats and a Republican Senate that stood in the. way of genuine tariff reform. They simply expressed the opinion of loyal Democrat^ eve rv where. —-4
r(tux-Xcii:x.
If C'levelahd's letter to Wilson and Catchings are such good campaign literature for the Democrats why were they eliminated from the Democratic Campaign Text Hook'.' The bill passed by the "alleged Democrats" is the bill that the -1
njux-Xai-H
now so loyally
defends from day to day. I"p to date it has not condemned a single schedule in the bill, even going so far as to maintain that a 40 per cent, duty on sugar is the correct thing as it says it has cheapened the article, thus turning its back on the old Democratic cry that the "tariff is a tax," and that the "cost of an article is increased by precisely the amount of the duty." If the President showed a deep disgust and contempt for the alleged Democrats this disgust and contempt has not been shared by the
Artjux-Xars,
LIFE'S USES.
Man looks into the darkness throuKh his tears, And life stHcrs but tangled sUein Be looks lidown the dreary path or year*.
All blinded by this tearful rain.
.likOO
This problem of existence seems ^h--: Too much for him to understand And so he trembles in the dark,
Hut. toui'Ues God's ritfht hand.
Ho feels the hand that lifts him higher, At last he sees the light He hears a voice that says: "Aspire,
2.50 1.25
And thou shall know the ri^ht."
10
fl 00 50 25
Oh human soul in darkness bound, Thv chain shail drop uv.ay. And Heaven shall prove Its wondrous sound
When sins of earth decay:
And you shall ^row to know that life Was shaped by "good and ill. And that the soul climbed to the li^ht
Hy climbing up life's hill.
So trusting, toil, and tolling, trusts: Ci1n« to our Father's hand. And from the weakness of thp dust
You'll reach the belter land. —Demorest's Monthly.
if
it is to be judged by the zeal it has displayed in defense of "party perfidy" and the "communism of pelf."
AnoVTthe only issue the Republicans have this year is an extract from a letter of President Cleveland in which he roasts recalcitrant Democrats. Well they needed it and got it.—
0011,00(1
A njux-Scirs
Upsides the letter of President Cleveland in which he denounced the Senate bill which is now a law, as the culmination of "party perfidy and party dishonor," the Republicans also refi to the speech of Chairman Wilson in which he stated that the bill put
into the pockets of the sugar
trust, the speech of Ilourke Cochran in which he denounced the bill as a •worse measure than the McKinley law." the speech of Tom Johnson in which he said that the bill "instead of being in the interest of the people was in the interest of trusts," the speech of Senator Hill, the greatest leader in the Democratic party, in which he characterized the bill as "a violation of
Democratic pledges and principles." the speech of Senator Mills in which he said that there "were not a thousand voters in the United States who approved the bill," the speech of Senator Jones in which he told how the bill was traded through without regard to principle, public policy, pub1 'interest or public morals, the speech of .Senator Gorman in which he told how the President approved the work of the Senatecadjusting committee, the bargain that had been made with the Louisiana Senators during the campaign of 1H'J2, and so on without end. The a President refused to sign the bill, and after the House surrendered he wrote to Con' r"ssmau Catchings condemning it as the "communism of pelf." The Arijux-Xciin knows that 'the Republicans have an abundance of material furnished by Democrats.
E 1 O A O A
How tho Man That Receives It Must Suffer.
Th* Thrlillnjj Story Told 1J British Soldier—A Horrible F.xporicncr That Wlilt«.ncl Ilia Ilalr Through
Years of Tort urr.
I "I wonder what sort of a sensation it is to be bitten by a cobra and know
has com- that one must die in a bn!f hour or so?" drawled out ('apt. Gordon, as he puffed lazily at his cheroot on the veranda of the One Hundred and Ninth hussars' mess at Fy/.abad.
It was after the mess dinner and the regimental baud had bagged their instruments #nd gone silently away iuto tlie hot stilling night. Half a dozen officers were reclining in "long-sleeved chairs," their feet upon the arms and "pegs." with plenty of ice. standing in long glasses like grim sentries, to keep the demon thirst away. "Well. I know exactly how it feels," chipped in liings—liings, "the stoic," as he was called—with an earnestness
rous that fairly took away Gordon's breath.
Yes." added the new speaker. "I have 'been there,' as fliey say, but language cannot convey the full horror of the feeling. It was years ago, when 1 first came out to join, and we were stat.ioued in Hurmuli. 1 was on special cUity out in the jungle, and where we were located was the snakes' paradise. Hardly a day passed that we did not kill one or more either in or about the bungalow. It was a continual cry of: 'Samp liai, sahib' (a snake, sir), with a regulurelearingout of all the servants. "It really seemed that all the poisonous snakes ill India had agents doing business in that part. Immense boas, sleepy, devilish karaites, vicious asps and adders, and now and then a cobra, chock full of tight. No man thought of putting on his boots without giving them a good shake first, and even clothes were inspected at arm's length. "I received a rare shock one day—a sort of preliminary canter to the cobra episode I am about to relate. I had just finished my bath and was pulling my banian over my head when a huge centipede lost his hold inside of it and rolled down my back, l.'gh! it made my flesh creep to look at the loathsome, poisonous thing. "Another time I found a cast-off skin of some poisonous snake on the edge of my bed just outside of the tnonjerie (mosquito curtain), that had been probably slipped off' while 1 slept. "You will understand that fresh out from home, as I was. all this sort of thing crept into my dreams: sleeping meant one long, continuous nightmare. The bungalow was the usual style of things in Hurmah, bamboo and leaves. It was raised-^prne seven or eight feet from the ground on posts but this only seemed to tempt some unwelcome guests to climb up and nest in the leaves of the thatched roof.
During the dry weather they lived in the ground iti holes which a mistaken scrt of providence provided for thetii and when the big rains set in they were drowned out and came to th* bungalow as a nice dry place to live in. "One hot, sweltering night I was laying in a state half asleep and half heat stupor, when I suddenly became aware that a dark, tkit object, in which gleamed two spots'of malignant light, was moving up along my right legjust between it and the moujerie. 1 could just see it over my limb and tin blood in my veins simply froze with horror as I realized that it must be either a cobra or a karaite. The body of the serpent was evidently in the bed ami the hj,-ad elevated just enough to watch my face. A queer constrictive sort of feeling shot up and down my scalp and the hair, stood out straight
I am sure. "There are no words in which I can convey the slightest idea of the full measure of loathsome horror which took possession of me and turned me siok with the intensity of its dreadful ness when I recognized that was shut up in that curtain with, and complete ly at the mercy of one of those death dealing fiends. I dared not move muscle—to call out meant death, for were he aroused, either bv fear or an ger, he would deal out death to the nearest living object with the rapidity of lightning. My hand was lying down beside my thigh and already 1 could feel his cold, slimy body moving ove it. If my blood was frozen before, this chilled the very marrow in my bones
UCni
I could see very little, by the light of the flickering lamp which hung in th veranda opposite njy door, beyond that flat, swaying head, set like a fiend toy with those devilish flaming eyes. "I felt that I could not stand it nine longer. I should become a raving maniac if something did not happe soon. I almost wished that he would strike and end the dreadful suspense I knew that he would not voluntaril leave the bed all night, and would most probably coil himself up on my chest and remain there. One year, twi years, ten years, I lay thus, with the brute drawing his interminable length over my hands—yes, ten years! for next day I was ten j-eurs older and my hair, wh'eh was black when I went tc bed, was as gray as it is now. "Then I must have moved my hand for the fiend struck—without warning and with such devilish rapidity that 1 saw nothing, only felt the sharp, lance like thrust in my thigh. With a rush my blood, which had been standing still in my veins, I think went tearing through my body again, and before my horrified cry had ceased to ring through the bungalow, I was standing on the floor clear of tho wrecked moujerie. As I sprang from the bed when he struck I felt his body co hurtling over my head up against the pillow as I threw up the arm he had
is iii»
*,*n. -4Rahgio
"lirown-
lirown' as he was
called then, because he used to wear a silver bangle on his left wrist that some girl had given him -was calling from the next rooiu 'Who is there? who is there?' and the whole bungalow was soon in a turmoil. Cold drops of perspiration rolled down my forehead, and my face was like the face of a dead man, lirown said, when I went into his room where he had a light, 'Have you seen a ghost?" he asked.,
Worse than that,' I replied. '1 have been bitten by a cobra.' 'Nonsense, man,' ho ejaculated, 'you have been dreaming,' but his face was ashy pale now, too. 'Here are the marks of his fangs,' 1 said, as 1 bared ray thigh and there, sure enough, were too tiny punctures and a drop of blood oozing from one. "There could be no doubt about it now—his light had swept away the last vestige of hope. All that remained to do was to make a futile effort to stay the deadly poison. Already I could feel a peculiar twitching sensation where the lines run from the nose down past the corners of the mouth, and there was a dull, tugging sort of pain in ray heart, a feeling as though the blood was being forced through it at an increased pressure. My head was dizzy and my eyes hot and blurred, and it was with the greatest difficulty that I could keep my mind from wandering. I could hardly articulate a word, and when 1 did manage to speak I would say what I did not mean—using the wrong word. It was evident that the poison was beginning to paralyze my brain, and already 1 felt an almost unconquerable desire to lie down and go to sleep. "Hy this time lirown and the others were thoroughly awake to the seriousness of the ease, and bad started in to do all in their power to save me.
Hrown was a sort of amateur surgeon, and always carried a small apothecary establishment with him. I saw him whip out a lance and look at me in a questioning way. 1 nodded, and in an instant he had the piece surrounding the bite out and his lips applied to the gaping wound. "Here, gentlemen, is the scar," and Rings displayed an ugly looking cicatrice that bore unmistakable testimony to the heroic course of treatment Brown had adopted. "Young Jialston brought ine a peg, in desperation, that would have made one of those Iiengalie liaboos who punish a bottle of bazaar brandy, at a single sitting, yell with anguish. He admitted to me afterward that Baloo, the .bearer, had told him to give me a strong dose of red pepper and whisky, for it had cured a brother of his once.
He had tasted it himself and it was simply liquid fire diluted with whisky, but to me it was only as water. 'Giving me a dose of permanganate of potassium. Brown placed me in tho hands of two Sepoy orderlies, witti triet orders to keep me going, swearing that he would shoot the tirst man that let me stop—for to rest for an instant meant certain death.
Now, lads, let's kill the devil,' he said, when he had done all he could to save me "we shall lind him coiled up in the bed waiting for another victim.'
At these words a sudden fury took possession of me and I said: 'Let ine be in at the death—I will kill him before I die myself.'
Grabbing the lamp and a stout-stick I rushed into my room, followed rather cautiously by the others. I flashed the light on the bed, holding the stick poised aloft for a quick, strong blow, but there was no object there to vent, my fury upon. Then I remembered that I had thrown him up over my head when I jumped from the bed. Telling lirown to throw the pillow over with a quick movement, I held the lamp in lhy left hand and stood ready to give his cobrasliip his quietus with a powerful blow.
Quick as a flash the pillow was jerked to the other end of the bed and there was a rush of a dark brown body, with the devilish eyes gleaming like two baleful sparks. The stick dropped from my nerveless grasp and I tumbled to the floor in a heap. It was only a rati
The perspiration broke out all over my body ami I was as limp as a rag. The. nerves, strung up to the tension that they had been, suddenly gave way and I could only sob out, hysterically: 'Let him go—don't kill him, please!' "I could hear Brown's deep-drawn 'Thank God" and in the general sense of relief the rat was allowed to escape. "That is how it feels to be bitten by a cobra," concluded liings, "as near as I can describe it."—Detroit, I-'ree Press,
JVruliar Qualification*.
Great Editor—I advertised for a private secretary, whose chief duties would be to sit in the ante-room and keep poets, bores and other undesirable persons at bay. The position requires something of a diplomat well as a fluent linguist. Vou would not do at all.
Ricketts (who stutters a trifle) TJiat's wh-wh-where you make a mum mum-mistake, squire! As sns-sus soon's a bub-bore cuc-euc-came it: I'd bnjr-bnjr-bctfin to tell a 1-1-long s-s-story, and before I'd gug-tfujj-got half way through, bub-bub-between whu-wh-what I'd sus-sus-sny and w-what I'd tried to sus-sav, I'd have him cuc-cuc-complctely tut-tired out. I ain't rnum-mum-mueh of a dud-diplo-mat, perhaps, "but as a 1-1-linguist I'm t\ cuc-euc-cnution.— N. Y. WorAd.
ATTKND Hisehof's dress goods sale They otVer great bargains in line, goods.
It May Do As Mucli Fur V»»».
Mr. Kred Miller, of Irving. Hi. writes that he had a severe Kidney trouble for many years, with severe pains in his back and also that bis bladder was aiVeeted. He tried many so called Kidney enres but without, any good result. About a year ago he be linn the use of Kieetrie Hitters and found relief at once. Electric Hitters is especially adapted to cure of all Kidney and Liver troubles and often give almost instant relief. One tria will prove our statement Price only r»0c. for large bottle at Cotton & Kifv Progress Pharmacy.
IT pays to trade at the Rig Store.
quart Itotllr. $
"ttoyal Ruby*' Rye Whisky is a rye that's pure, old and mellow. Eleven years' storage in wood before bottling gives it a smooth, oily and a learn tit tiv'eTv'trnai'iinU'e.l to (jivf tlavor. 'I'h.? connoisseur always calls
A NARROW ESCAPE!
How it Happened.
The folhv.vine remarkable evont in a lady's f.s.vvUl interest he reader: "Fora longtime I hud a .'terrible pain at my heart, whii-h liutr»:«! almost incessautly. 1 had no appoint nd euui'l not sleep. 1 would ho compelled ua :'i bed ami V.eleh gas from my stom•ht.isiill thought every minute would bo i.iM. There was a feeling of ojpre*.sli»n hi.\trt, and 1 was afraid to draw a tU-.bKs'i t.ii. jl couldn't sweep a room vhhii.down and resting "but-, thank :vi. by the help of New llearl Cure all that vniist ami I fcoi hko another woman, Rel)e New Heart Cure I had t::ken iikut^nt so-ealled remedies and been tivaiiid dolors v. Hhout any beneiit until 1 was dl.sci nni-red and distrusted. My hushand v.i^U'Muo a bottie of lr. Miles* New Heart si.l
r.'.\
Sold bv all drusrcUt*'. A
Harvest Excursions.
VI A
BiG FOUR ROUTE
VERY LOW RATES
SOUTH.
Jn
Tickets good returning tweuty fdavs from date, of sale.
O. MCCOHMICK. Pas*. Traffle Man*
't£i
-September -i.'lb. October vd.October
1
'Jtb. November th and De-_ eember Ith.
Tieke'.Q will be sold from points on the IMg Four Koute to point* in .Alabama, Florida. (Kv/rjrbi, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, innith Carolina and Tennessee.
West, Northwest and Southwest.
September ~"lb and October VUb. To points in Arizona, Arkan«?:s«, Colorado, Indian Territory, Idaho, low.t, Kansas Manitoba Minnesota, Missouri, Montana. Nebraska. New Mexieo, North Dakota. South Dakota, Texas. Ctah, Wyoming and Oklahoma Territory.
Ou Oct. 2d. Nov. 'ith and Dec. Itli. To points in Kfiitueky aud Virginia. bVSept. lHth, Oct. lTlli and Nov. 1 it'll".
To points in Miehi^an.
us
happy to say I never reirroTted
us I nuw hnvo a splendid appetite ahd I weighed 1~" pounds v.hen 1 l: "taking 1 he remedy, and now 1 weijrh O' j! fc'-j-SiTert.'my ease has been truly marw-'N-1 surpasses any other lueuirine 1 t.ikon or any hrnetit 1 ever iv.physicians."— Mrs. •••t,tsvi!!e, iJM.. eviober 12. lM'ri. •Or. '\MireV New Heart. Cure is sold on a eo •'.»} a ran tee by ail druggists, or by the I .kr. iiSes Medirai Co., Elkhart, Ind., on reeeipi of prireVwl PC'- bottle, six bottles£5. express prepaid. This preat discovery by an eminent sjv« ia1Ujt in heart- disease, contains neither 0iiai»jd nor mft'eruu3„druge*.
(20)
For tickets mid full information a^to Rates. Routes, and Stop-Over •V^^. '. Privileges, call on
c:i:)U*11: R. ROBINSON./ Agent Rig Four Rov.te.
D. H.
Aim NY-
CterrnVi.-.-ST
It is Not Necessary
To send to Chicago or Indianapolis feu* Copper Plate Engraved Cards. Incitations. Announcements and the like, therefore
Don't Do
It
Hut leave your order for this class of work with Ti'.r. .lut:i:N\u. Co. Our prices correspond with city prices and we save you trouble, postage and express charges. Call and see samples.
An Ohl Soldier .Made H»p|y.
'•1 Hiring my tetin of service in the army I contracted chronic diarrhfea." ays A. E. Rending, of llalsey, Oregon. 'Since then I have used a great amount ofme..icine. but when found any that would give me relief they would injure my stomach, until Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was brought to 1113' notice. 1 ued it and will say it is the only remedy that gave me permanent relief and no bad results follow." For sale by Nye Rooe. U1 X...VVajihin^ton St..opposite court hoir-is.
llt'jtr Itiii'r idle). II nil.
For dairying, fruit growing and agriculture unsurpassed. One hundred and twenty thousand acres now ready for cultivation. All under Rear Kiver canals. Abundance of water at lowest, rates. Lands adjacent to two railways and overlooking the great Salt Lake, which assures. a genial and healthy climate, mild winters. delightful summers, the ideal place to build a home.'
lu ra-fnU.
acre
We again remark:
t-If
V..:
Irrbjaiul rrnfi,
20 to 40 acre tracts £:io per
in tnt yearly juiymvnts:
perpetual
w«ter right. £'2."o round trip from Chicago Oct. '•. Send 2 cent stamp for illustrated pamphlet toC. F. Spilman. Cravyfordsville. Ind.
Htirkk'n'tt Arnica Salve.
The best salve in the world for Cuts Rruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands. Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or 110 pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 2D cents per box. For sale by Cotton & Rife's, the Progress Pharm acy.
A quarter (nt:irj HM.
For a quarter of a century Or. King's New Discovery has been tested, and the millions who have received beneiit from its use testify to its wonderful curative powers in all diseases of Throat, Chest and Lungs. A remedy that has stood the test so long and that has given so universal satisfaction is no experiment. Each bottle is posi-
1
mom
for it. Ouality guaranteed. Roynl .d to be the most reliable for Coughs I Wine Co.. Ciiic.\iio_ AND I.i-'.xiN.i ni.v,
THK scrofulous taint wVieh mav'hnve Wen in your blood for years, may be thoroughly expelled by fciving Hood's Sarsaparilla a trial.
a|)d fol(ls
v. I*or sale by Nye A l.ooe. drn^f- dr-no- store. I.ar^e .size "Hie. and Sl.no.
Ui
Hi
Ut
relief, or the
'. jn be refunded
,v ..... It is admit-i
Trial txittles free at Cotton
Risriioi-'s silk sale will he largely attended and with good results. The best time ever wtVcred to buy a silk frock.
Black Dress Goods Sale.
|We are agents "for Priestley's Hlack (ioods.J '25 pes All wool Novelty Rlack Dress Uoods, and 40 inches wide, regular vtlue SI.00 to $1.:)") per yd, in this sale we make, price for choice. •»'.,c a yd 20 pes.extra fine quality. Novelty weave
Rlack Dress Ooods, width
THE BIG STORE.
10
An Epidemic Of Enthusiasm
That's what it is. It broke out last week v-hen we made our fall announcement and placed on sale our new fall stock at about 20 per cent less than same quality of goods were ever ollered in a regular line of merchandise. Every reader of our ad. came to see us. Everybody passing stopped. Some folks thought it was a mistake— wrong placards over the goods. Others didn't stop to ask any questions, just quickly said: "I'll take eight yards of that."i "Give me that pattern," etc., etc. It was not "just a bit of luck" on their part. It would not be "just luck" on your part. There is no "just luck" about our business. Everything we say, everything
bargains are pi\ meditated, are natural results of certain causes. Those causes are strict adherence to our business principles, viz: Close watch over the markets, careful buying that we may not have undesirable goods to oiler, ujing of first hands for cash selling for the very least we can, believing in the motto, "Large sales and small profits'*/ and last but not least, thoroughly advertising our offerings, and then always having just what we advertise. In this way we have gained the -confidence and good will of almost every man, woman and child in Montgomery county and many in adjoining counties, which enables to do the largest business in this section and that in turn not only enables but compels us to buy more goods than all our competitors and we buy them cheaper. Therefore it is not "just luck" but results of sound business pritir ciples that enables you to buy goods of us cheaper than from any house in the county.
It Pays to Trade at the Big Store.
We have watched the markets close enough to secure the following bargains in Dress Goods and Silks. They can not be duplicated and will not last long, so don't put
vour buying until next week, it may be toojate, come at once.
inches.
niade 'o sell at ?1.2.*» to l.:c per yd, in this sale T')c a yd 5 pes Fast RIaek all wool 50-iuch Storm "'Serge, regular S1.:»0 quality, in this sale just .half. «r.: 7."»c a yd pes Rlack English Cashmeres, worth
U5c. at.. v'.••• '..... R»c a yd
Colored Dress Goods Sale.
(We areagentsfor Frederick Arnold Henriettas] 10 pes Novelty weave Storm Serges. 50ineh in Navy. (Jreen and Hrown. regular price 8L50 per yd, in this sale we make the price ?5o a yd 5 pes Fine Camels' Hair Suitings,-Mi-inch
Rlue. (rolden Hrown and (Jreen, worth 1TM.) per yd, in this sale we say .VJc a yd 50 pes Fancy Novelty weave Illuminat- .. ed Dress Ooods, all leading shades. "\\oith •{5c yd. in this sale P.»c a yd 25 pes Fine English Cashmeres, all shades, at 15c a yd 50 pes AH wool Novelty Suitings in choice combinations and color effects, .worth 50 and 00c, at -V.*c a yd
Black Silk Sale.
pes Rlack Peau Me Soie and pes y.
Rlack Armures 2 1 inches wide, all silk .and worth £1.10 per yd. in this sale.. .'.KSc a yd 3 pes Hlack Satin Duehesss, regular v• 81.on quality, in this sale we name the* price 73c a yd 3' pes Rlack Armurcs. 20 inches wide and well worth 31.00 per yd. at ...(V.tc a yd
Cloaks and Furs,
As usual we are ready with the largest and best stock of Cloaks in the city and equal to any in the State. We shew the popular styles in Cloth Capes and Jackets, including the popular Golf Cape, and on fine and medium quality Fur Garments we are head and shoulders above competition. We carry no trash in this line, so don't buy until you have examined our line.
LOUIS BISCHOF
The Big Store,
127-129 East Main St Crawfor&sville, Ind.
vie
r» pes Rlack Ssitin Rhadamer, good quality and cheap at.fc, in this sale price will be fiOe a yd
Special.
pes Colored Satin Rhadamers, all new fall shades, worth SI.00 and 81.25 at. .O'.'c a yd
Miscellaneous.
Relow we mention a few items plucked at random from our stock. They are not leaders or baits thrown out to deceive but show the run of values at "The Rig Store:'' Fast Rlack Hose you used to pay 25c for arc 20c Ladies' Ribbed Vests you used to pay 35c for are 25c Fast Color Turkey Red Table Damask you used to pay 35c for are 25c Rest Table Oil Cloth you used to pay 25c for are 12}..e Cotton Rlankets you used to pay 75c for are 50c All wool Scarlet Rlankets you used to pay $2.00 for are SI.50 Van! wide (»rey Flannel you used to pay
HOe a yd for are 35c All best prints you used to pay 7c a yd for are 5c Heavy Canton Flannels you used to pay 10c' for are SV( The Rest Canton Flannels you used to pay 121. for are loe Uood Rrown Canton Flannel you used to pa3' 7c for are 5c Rleuched Muslin you used to pay 10c for are Sjc Rrown Muslin you used to pay »*4e for are 5c Extra tine 30-inch Shirting you used to pay S%e for are 7c
Et£
show you as
