Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 15 November 1890 — Page 5
DRESS GOODS, MILLINERY, CLOAKS,
..gatmi..
All
Mail or Express Orders
THE OYERCOAT QUESTION
Is one that must present Itself to you very forcibly this weather and we believe we can solve it for you with credit to us and profit for you. Our stock is now complete. Oar itock exceeds all others in quality, variety and magnitude, it being so large that we cannot find room for it all on our counters, while the
PKICES RULE EXCEPTIONALLY LOW,
Ranging From Two Dollars to Eighteen Dollars. It is impossible to specify in detail our Mammoth Stock, but we quote the following as representative prices:
Full weight all wool Cheviots, fine quality Lining $ 8 00 FULL weight all wool Cheviots, best quality made 13 00 All Wool Cassimere Overcoats, silk faced, satin sleeve linings at (12 $18 and 15 00 Hawthorne Meltons in Blue, black and brown, elegantly made IB 00 Prince Charles and the Czar overcoat, form litters $10 to 18 00 Our cheap overcoats are 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 dollars.
These cheap overcoats are what other houses in Crawfordsville ask aad get from 25 to 35 per cent more money, have just bought 500 overcoats from a wholesale house in Chlcag® that failed and we paid spot cash for
them it a big discount. Therefore we cam save you Respectfully,
THE ONLY ONE PRICE CLOTHIER,
J. A. JOEL
CONER WASHINGTON AND MAIN STREETS.
The New York Store,
ESTABLISHED IN 1853,
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA.
A LARGE LINE OF
A Startling Reduction in the Price ot
N E W A S
50 New Markets at $3.50. Value, $8.50. 50 New Markets at $5. Value, $10 and $12,
Ohildren's School Cloaks.
All sizes, $3.00. Value, $6.50.
BLACK .UNDERWEAR.
LADIES' FAST BLACK
—Hi t®s STKINI6SSSJ6RSEY VESTS.
SPECIAL SALE OF HOSIERY.
100 dozen Ladies' Fast Hlack Cotton Ilose, 25c. pair regular 35c. poods, pair regular 4Tc. goods..
Receive Prompt approval.
from 1 to 5 dollars on your overcoat.
LADIES' UNDERWEAR, EMBR0IDERIED FLANNELS, BLANKETS.
A MAGNIFICENT OFFER IN
THE CRAWPJRDSVXLLE WEEKLY REVIEW.
A
1
fm,
Ladies' Fast Black Cotten Hose, 35c. pe
i"3f
attention. Goods sent subject to
GOODS STORE,
CRUISER'S FATE.
veed
to Corunna,
I
The British Torpedo Boat Serpent Founders.
45 AWFUL LOSS OF LIFE REPORTED.
Oat of 270 Human Being* on Board the Ill-Fatnd Craft but I'll re Survive —The Vestal Was Deemed
Dni*anrorthj.
STORY OF THK DISA-STKH.
LONDON, NOV. 13.—The British torpedo cruiser Serpent has foundered off the coast ot Spain. Out of a total of 276 souls on board only three war* •aired.
The Serpent was a twin-screw vessel of 1,770 tons and 4,500 horse-power and carried six guns. It went on the rocks during a storm Monday night.
it
A
a
distance of sixty
miles over mountain roads. The Serpent's complement was 170 officers
and
men. The others on board were going out to relieve men now on ships of the African btation. The vessel was lost
a point twenty miles north of Cape Finis terre. MADRID, NOV. 13.—An official telegram from Corunna says that the Serpent was wrecked off Cape Bucy, near the villago of Camarinas. There were 878 persons aboard, of whom only three were saved. The bodies of three ladies have been washed ashore. The Governor has ordered the authorities at Camarinas to render every assistance in their power.
The three persons saved from th« Serpent are sailors, who swim ashore at Camarinas. They express the belief that all the others on board were drowned, but only four bodies have been washed ashore as yet There is no telegraph station at Camarinas.
We
LONDON, Nov. 13.—Lord George Hamilton First Lord of the Admiralty, on rising to speak at a Conservative banquet at Acton Wednesday evening said he was sorry to announce that just before he came there he received a telegram that H. M. S. Serpeut was lost on the coast of Spain, and he feared there had been great loss of life. The Serpent, he said, was one of our best cruisers, and was a valuable vessel, with excellent officers and crew. He could not tell the cause of the disaster. The announcement paused a sensation and it was evident ^hat many of those present would hfive thought it proper to postj)tne the banquet, but- no action Hing taken to that end the entertainment proceeded, and after the guests had eaten and drank heartily,
Lord George Hamilton led off in the toasts with an unusually jolly speech, his rollicking humor provoking peal upon peal of laughter. Thw news of this affair soon reached the London clubs and excited much ad' verse criticism. It is considered that Lord Hamilton's conduct may cause scandal against himself and the Tories such as was aroused against Mr. Gladstone and bis political adherents by the alleged proscnce of the Liberal Premier at a theater on the evening of the day when Gordon's death was announced in the London newspapers.
The newspaper offices at Plymouth were besieged by crowds of people anxious to hoaf further news of the disaster. Among these were the sobbing wives and daughters of many of the lose seamen. It is stated that many ofthecrew^f the Serpent, before the Vessel started on what proved to be its last voyhge, expressed the fear that some misfortune would befall the ship. The relatives of the crew of the Serpent at Plymouth and the dock-yard people there are full of gossip about the lost cruiser. It is claimod that it was unseaworthy and that it broke down on all its trial trips.
Commander Ross is said to have been in the habit of treating his men with undue severity. Tho Serpent started last Saturday on its maiden voyage. It was commissioned for service in Africa last June but was detained by several mishaps to tho machinery. It and its consorts were cordially disliked by the Bervice. The Serpent had a bad record. It broke down more than once in the maneuvers of lgSb.
Lloyd's ai?ent at Corunna telegraphs: "It appears thai the Serpent was running for shelter into'one of the bays north of Finisterre. It is not known whether it foundered or grounded oft the fearful reefs that area continuation of the Oalician mountains. If it foutv dered nobody need be surprised but the Admiralty. If it grounded on the reefs it could not stand a minute's battering in a heavy sea." (The Serpent was a third-class cruiser of the type of the Archer, of which the Concord, Yorktown and Bennington are practically copies. It was provided with whitehead torpedoes, tubes •nd apparatus for firing. The Serpent wa built of steel, 1,770 ton* displacement, 4,501? Indicated horsc-nowr-r. 14 feet 0 inches draught of water. S-jj feet length, SB feet beam. It was built at Devonport, launched in 18H7. cost (hull and machinery) £•1,606. Its armament comprised six six-lncl^ five-ton breouhlouding rifle guns, eight thr«e pounder, rapld-fli-lng guns and three machine guns. It sailed from Devonport, being put iq commission June 3-1 last, under command o( Captain II. L. Ross, r.r.lered to the Cape and the west, coast of Africa.]
Onurrotift Contribution* for Ireland. NEW YORK, Nov. —Messrs. Dillon and O'Hriensay that r.e generosity of the contributions have l'ar surpassed theit expectations. Mr. T. P. O'Connor remarked that it would paralyze Balfour. The meeting at Philadelphia, they said, they regarded as phenomenal, $10,000 having been raised. Rut 837,000 in New York in one night fairly took their breath away. They have now collected !0,000. lllllml Illingeir in Jail.-
Nuw YORK, Nov. 13.—George \Y. Mar« tin. a carpenter, confined in the Ray
13
at
The Crawfordsville Review.
PREMIUMS TO AGENTS FOR 1891.
ontg gra
victories they have lately
ronage in subscriptions, and for offers the following premiums
heavy
mist prevailed at the time of the disas tor. Owing to the violenoe of tht atorm
was impossible to send assistance from the shore. Tremendous seas swept the decks of the doomed vessel, carrying away group after group of the unfortunate men on board. The news of the wreck was con-
3rd.—A Suit ot Clothes
given for the 3rd largest list of subscribers secured, but no rebate is given on this or any other premiums mentioned below.
4th.-- A Fine Gold-Filled Oase Watch.
Several watches just like this are now carried by agents who haye secured them forthree or four years past by getting subscribers for us, and »ey will tell you that they are first class time pieces.
5th.-A Fine Parlor Hanging Lamp.
This is a useful as well as ornamental premium. It is a first class lamp of 60 candle power, with beautifHl ornamented shade, prisms, etc,
6th.-A Picture "The Holidays."
re This is a fine steel engraving, valued at twelve dollars, is finely framed ady to hang up in your parlor or sitting room, and in size is 20 by 30 inches'
7th.~0rder on Carlson's Store.
This order embraces in it, bucket, broom, writing paper, jewelry, Pencils, fin ware, mirror, glass ware and other articles of household use.
8th.—School Teacher's Premium.
To the person handing us the eighth largest list we will give twelve copies of Dickens' Works, The Mammoth Encylopsedia of 2,100 pages, and THE HBVIEW for one year. Any school teacher of literary inclination can, byspending four or Ave days during the holiday season in soliciting subscriptions for us, easily secure this prize.
No name will he received not accompanied with the money, and ao list of less than 10 subscribers will be awarded a premium.
Agents ean canvass in any township or neighborhood they may wish. The list of subscriptions must be handed in by Thursday, January 1st, at 2 o'clock p. m.
$3.00
Will buy you a full stock KIP BOOT. And
$2.50
Will buy a CAJLE or LADIES KID Button Shoe. Warranted by Hamilton & Brown, at
J. S. Kelley's.
Four Doors East of Court House.
Notice to Taxpaysss.
December payment cannot be deferred without usual penalty. There Is another matter, however, that will interest time and money savers, or THE ECONOMICAL, for "time is money."
By aatnal comparison and carfullj computed figures it 1b found there was a saving of 822 hours, besides a great saving otherwise, to 274 excursionists that purchased "harvest tlekets' to the west during Sept. and Oct. via Toledo St. Louis & Kansas City R. R. Enough in aggregate to pay the taxes of any ordinary holdet in Ohio, Indiana or Illinois, if conipat ed at 20 cents per hour.
Fast trains ot the T. St. L. & K. C. make equal saving eastbound. Call on agents tor reliable information or address. C. C. Jkmkims, tten'l. Pass. Agent,
Toledo, O.
For scrofula In every form Hood's Sarsapanlla is a radical, remedy. It has au unequalled record or cures.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castoria,
Do Not Be Deceived.
Caution.-Do not let any Druggist palm off any medicine on you in place of Johnson's English Buchu for there is nothiBg equalto it that can take its place. Ask for it and|take no other.
Oae Fare Excursion to Missouri and Kansas Monday lfov. 10th. The recently developed Zinc and Lead mines at Carthage, Webb City, Jopliu, Mo.. Galena and Pittsburg, Kan,U are attracting a large ntmber of people, speculative and otherwise.
Perhaps this excursion means your|tortune. Isn't it worth the adveni ure For through tickets, reliable information call on nearest agent. Toledo. St. and Kansas Gity,
R, R.
or addsess,
democracy at the great
the purpoae of
lst.™A Splendid Gold Watch
For the largest list of subscribers. This watch is a stem winder and set full jeweled, a superb timepiece, and can be seen at Otto's jewelry store' The person securing this prize will also be entitled to each yearly subscription.
2d.—A White Sewing Machine.
This machine is worth $40, and can be seen at Billy Nicholson's business room on west Main street. The person securing this will also be entitled to a rebate of 10 cents on each yearly subscription. enuuea to a
party a liberal pat-
extending its list for 1891,
a rebate »f 10 cents on
F. T. LUSE, Publisher Review.
5
SEAL SOAKING.
The "catch" last year was The this Seal skins are rising in price, was an advance in the London market last week of 90 per eent.
100,00023,000
There.
Cheapest New.
You'd never buy them cheaper than now. We offer them at 50 per cent
less than they can be bought in New
York to-day.
1
MUFFS, OAPES, JACKETS, SAOQUESj ALL THE GARMENTS.
L. S. W
C. C. Jknkiss, If Uen'l Pais. Agent,
Ayers & Co.
INDIAKArOLIS.
Do not weaken yourself by drastic purgatives. Take Simmons liver regulator.
Crabb# & Reynolds for pure fresh buckwheat Hour.
