Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 5 August 1893 — Page 4
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THE CUT GROWS WORSE
-AND-
Refuses to Heal
AS THE HOT DAYS ADVANCE AT
McCLURE &'GRAHAM'S. This means Bargains for you. The Trade Palace always does as it advertises. Commencing
Tomorrow Morning, lug. 5th.
We Offer LOWER PRICES Than Ever!
We offer our entire stock ot Goods at Cut Prices. Every Piece of Goods in our store goes and no reserves.
Silks, Dress Goods, Trimmings, Millinery, Spring or Fall Wraps, Notions, Cloths and Cassimeres, Draperies, Lace Curtains, Curtain Goods, Shades, Portiers, Carpets, Mattings, Rugs, and a store filled with the best stock ot goods everinCrawIordsville. They all go in this cut sale.
Half Wool Cliallies at 14c per yard.
We have placed on our Counter
Big Line Straw Hats 10 and 20c.
At Tour Own Price, Eegardless of Cost,
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A lot of Linens, Towels, Handkerchiefs, Organelles, Demities, Monsleines, Crepes, Crepons, Swisses, Mulls, White Stripes, and Plaids, Satines, Satin Glorias, Etc., only slightly damaged by smoke.
-THESE GOODS ARE THE
And every yard goes out in this sale at what it will bring We opened the season with a stock of jgoods that surprised our competitors, and beat the record for beauty and low price. We will close it with a big stock disposed of and and the best pleased lot of customers you ever saw, as we
And the dollar you spend in this sale will go the farthest last the longest, get more style, more quantity, more quality and do you more good in service, worth and wear than any rntney you can spend this summer. So come early, Ladies, for the goods will be on the counter in the morning with prices that will make them go, and first come, first served. Respectfully,
NOBTH WASHINGTON STREET.
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THE REVIEW
Gen. Wallace's Success.
A New York special says: General Lew Wallace, the author of ''Ben-Hur,'' has recently been spending some days in New York, being called thither by the suggestion of his publishers, who are about ready to issue his new novel. General Wallace's new novel has been written with even more painful labor and exacting care than was "Ben-Hur," and it is a much longer story than that so that it will be published in two volumes. It is more than a dozen years since General Wallace conceived the idea of the story, for he had it in mind vaguely soon after "Ben-Hur" was published, but in the actual work of writing it he has been engaged a little over six years.
This story is bound to be a success pecuniarily, whether it meets the popular favor which "Ben-Hur" did or not. The publishers already have evidence of that, for they have received orders which will make it necessary for them to publish an edition of 50,000 copies, the largest first edition of any story e7er issued in America, and with exception of two George Eliot's stories and one or two of Sickens' the largest edition of any English story ever issued.
There is one exception to this statement, however, for Mr. A. C. Gunter, who is the publisher as well as the auther ot the stories which appear under his name, frequently issued editors ot more than 50,000 copies.
General Wallace is, if the sales of his works are considered and the profits there-fron\ the most successful of living authors with the
Btngle
exception of
Harriet Beecher Stow. One of the partners in his publishing house said recently that the accounts had been written up of the sales of "Ben-Hur" and the royalities paid and due, and it was found that General Waliace had earned in royalities from that single book some thing over $100,000. The book has sold over 600,000 copies and no American novel excepting "Uncle Tom'B Cabin" has equaled that sale.,
Capture of Marion.
Marion McGuffin wants to pose as the Bhaggy-haired terror of Walnut township. He wants people to know that he is a bold, bad man and anyone who makes a guess in that direction wont miss it far. Some weeks ago Marion, who was serving a term on the stone pile, pushed Keeper Jerry Carver in the face and made his escape. Last Saturday night the police were given the tip that the garrulouB Marion was in the city and it didn't take long to locate him blowing foam off of schooners in Tade Conner's saloon. At the sight of the police he made another daBh for liberty through the back door, but not being familiar with the premises brought up against a fence and was almost knocked senseless. McGuffin played dead to perfection but Officer Grimes bundled him into a buggy and landed him in jail He is now laying out the old tine.
Great Prospects.
"The prospects for the coining fair were never
BO
I
flattering as at present,
said Secretary Morgan this week, have received more letters of inquiry and for catalogues than ever before. One great point in our favor is this, we are sandwiched between the big stock ex hibit at Chicago and the Indiana State fair and a great many of the exhibitors have notified me that they will give us the intervening week. Another thing the races at Indianapolis are just a week before our fair. Now many of the horsemen will bring their horses here after the week's races there to our fair and as the state fair, as I have said fol lows ours, they will go bacu there after our fair. We are lucky on dates this year."
A Splendid Offer.
No one should fail to read the adver tisement of Lee S. Warner in this issue of
THE REVIEW.
It contains one of the
most magnanimous offers ever made by any merchant in Indiana and should be appreciated by every farmer in the county. During August he advertises to buy 100,000 bushels of wheat for which he agrees to pay •even cents per bushel above the market price, and offers to pay three cents above the market price for 200,000 bushels of oatB.
It is certainly a remarkable offer, a combination of generosity and enterprise and will be readily grasped by farmers.
Badly Burned.
Ihursday while Mrs. Charles Ryker, residing near Potato creek, was washing, her little 3 year-old daughter, Flossie, accidentally feil into a tub of boiling water and was frightfully scalded about the head, limbs and body. So dangerously was the little one burned that pieces of the cuticle as large as one's hand peeled off. Dr. Berryman, of Darlington, was called and at last accounts the little one
waB
resting easy,
Flossie was a beautiful little child and it is feared, should she recover, that she will be disfigured for life. It is hoped the little one may survive the accident all right.—Colfax Chronicle.
Of Course It's True!
Never Fails.
No sane person will deny the fact that
Sells Clothing cheaper than any house in the city. He especially prides himself on the fact that he has no old shoddy or shelf-worn goods in stock. Every article
New and Stylish!
He is satisfied with'a straight 10 per cent, margin while others are trying to get rich on fabulous profits.
Live and Let Live is His Motto.
Main Street, Opposite Court House. Sign of the big1 pants.
DOCTOR
LINDSEY'S BLOOD SEARCHER
GOODS N W
-AND-
STRICTLY FIRST CLASS.
CALL AND SEE US.
SAM C. SCOTT IS WITH US.
A. J. M'MULLEN & SON,
Wheat! Wheat!
CRABBS & REYNOLDS
hit in
Facilities superb and unequaled, and always the highest market price awaits you. Don't sell until you see them. It will pay you.
CRABBS & REYNOLDS.
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New Spring- Goods Now In
Beautiful Patterns! Reasonable Prices! Colnian & Murpliy, MERCHANT TAILORS.
AND SMOKERS' A TICLE S
1,
For All Blood Diseases.
"My SOB had an abcess In hta side, that discharged two quarts of matter. Dr. Lindsey's Blood Searcher cured him. J. F. BROOKS, PaineBvllle, O.
W. S. LlnecoU, Nilos, Ohio, had serofnla for thirty years, and Llndsey'e Blood Searcher cared him. Isn't it wonderful?
A lady in East Liberty, Pa., whose (ace was corored with sores, was cured by using, one bottle of Dr. Lindsey's Blood Seardterr.
Ask yonr druggist for Dr. Lludaey'a Blood Searcher. It will drive out bad blood, give you health &>d long life. TRY IT.
xM'MULLEN'S:-:
New Grocery Store
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105 SOUTH WASHINGTON STREET.,
