Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 20 July 1895 — Page 4
and
1.
Cast. Steel Wrought Steel
Greatest Sale On Record!
S50.000 Worth of Fine Shoes and Clothing
Slightly damaged by smoke and water from the firm of Werthimer Shoe and Clothing Co., 267 State street, Chicago, has been removed to Crawfordsville and is being disposed of at about
33 1-3 Per Cent. On the
Now this is your only chance to buy goods at your own prices such as suit the times. This sale will only last a lew days longer. Come quick if you need anything in our line.
PRICES WILL CONVINCE ^OU.
l.adio.- Oxtorils from l.S up I.adieu l'itu- Cut ion 3 7Jo up Good Hoys' shoes j.le. and up Mens Shoos 78f and up: Mms !»U\IH$1.Mens pants. I'"* and uj, Mcua good tihlrt?, 15c .Mens good sooks, a 1-2 cl-» and u|» Mont (?ood tfUt-pi-ndcrfi, :*.• and up.
Remember the place and thin sale only lasts a few days longer.
Wertliiner 8hoe and Clothing Co.,
Formerly oi Chicago, now Miller block, Washington street, two doors north of Court House, Crawfordsville, Indiana.
Stoves and Ranges
The Largest and Most Complete Line in the city.
Ranges. Cooks
"lewel'' Gas and Gasoline Stoves.
JO 15 E. FISHER.
I he Hardware man. 120-122 S. Washington street.
IN THE SWIM!
It makes Business pleasant to swim along
with the rest of the advertisers in
REVIEW.
ftftANHOOD
_2lrui:insts. Ask for It. tak
UUTUiiB ajtku LbLSU. lu plain wrapper. Addres For flcdo tn Crawfordsville, IndM by STAN ILK
LOCAL NEWS
Mace Towneloy is on the sick list this week.
Mayor Bandel was in New Richmond Thursday.
Mrs. W. E. Ilenkel and daughter are visiting in Cincinnati.
JohnL Goben and H. R. Tinsley were in Indianapolis Tuesday.
T. W. Lawson is interested in a pho tograph gallery at Anderson. Miss Nannie Vanvandt has returned from a visit to New Maysville, lnd.
Green street has now as good a well of water as any of the others in town. "Doc" Johnson left Tuesday for Danville, 111. He will work insurance in that city.
Dr. Chambers is visiting in Sullivan county, his former home, after several years' absence.
The "Hit and Miss" Club, of this city, will go into catnp Thursday, August ]st at the Bine Hills.
The "CIiII" Dwellers" are now in their cottage at Pine Hills. They will remain about two weeks.
Dr. M. B. Keegan, of Bloomington, was in the city Sunday, the guest of his father, Dr. E. W, Keegan.
13. F. Hoover, of Decatur, 111., is ic the city, the guest of relatives. He will locate on a farm near Linden.
Fritz Sagerholm, Hal and Andy JIcClamrock, are home from a camping trip at Cedar Lake, Starke county.
Howard Craig and wife are home from *their bicycle trip. They were in the gas belt and covered several hundred miles.
and
Windsor Kitchen Queen Indianola Dexter
TIIE
JOB WORK A SPECIALTY!
All the wide-awake Business Men advertise with us.
JUMP IN
t'unr:inu-i.'d to cure nil nervous dl.«e&st">. such as w"uk v'rmnrv'r?R"nli* l'o we r.llen'iftche.W a kef Ulricas, I.ofct Manlmoil, not??-, ii.11 drairiH and lo.*s of power in "J v. p10I»,xservou:*
SEE»S.»
A lbert Miller is refitting the room just north of the court house for lawyers' offices. Ihere will be four rooms when finished.
Geo. \V. Woolsey, proprietor of the Drfinille Sentinel, the prohibition organ of that county, was in the city on Monday, the guest of friends.
The Clinton county commissioners ha\ rejected applications looking to running pool and billiards co-jointly with the sale of intoxicants.
Lead J. X. Zuck "ad." in another column. lie is offering some inducements to farmsrs. He also does a rotail trade, and the citzens in general should patronize him.
Ihe advance bill cars of thoBarnum show, with posters and descriptive bills, announcing the comiug of the 6how at Crawfordsville, August ICth, arrived hereon Thursday.
John 1 rotter, of JLerro Haute, was released from the prison south, this week. He was sentenced for fourteen years for criminal assault, and by his uniform good conduct bis term was shorted five years.
Ihe two lots on the south-west corner of W abash Avenue and Green street have been sold to mo Home Building and Loan Association, which will this season erect two cottages thereon for sale or rent.
There was a call meeting of the council last Monday night. The sewerage system was discussed. The city needs a sewerage before the paved street are ordered to be put down. The only sower wo have is the one under Washington street.
THE REVIEW.
JF. T. JUtXSE'
TBHMS OF aCBSCEirTlOS.
One year, In the county, 00 Oncyear,oatoftbe conxity. 1 it Xnunire at Office tor Advertiiuarates.
JULY 20, 1895.
Bv„uum Thru uiul Now. Hon. W. D. Bynura in his speech at Denver, Col., on October 14th. 1S91, as reported in the Rocky Mountain News, with a cartoon of Mr. Bynum, is here reproduced as it now apj.earsin that paper,
h-n
DOO
it I
Congressman Bynum—"/alwityxhat' voted for free coinaye uifl always will."
In said speech Mr. Bynum said:—"1 have always been in favor of free coinage of silver and 1 don't desire to advertise my own record, but in this connection I think it is not improper to tay what action I have taken in respect to this question. 1 was on the committee on coinage in the forty-ninth Congress and was one of the three members of that committee who reported the bill in favor of free coinage away back at the beginning of Mr. Cleveland's administration. [Loud and prolonged cheering,] 1 have voted for free coinage from the time the question has been before Congress, and will do so every time it comes up. [Renowed cheers.) I am willing to restore a silver basis. I am willing to restorers McKinley calls it, the 87c dollar, a dollar going down to that figure. But I want to say this, if we are unable to maintain free coinage or the parity between the two metals by free coinage of silver, it is because of this prohibitory tariff and nothing else." He refers to the McKinley bill as the "prohibitory" tariff. McKinley's bill has been repealed, and according to Mr. Bynum there is nothing no-v in the way of free coinage. But how does it happen that Mr. Bynum is now making speeches in favor of the gold bug theory aed against free coinage of silver? Consistency is a jewel which Mr. Bynum seems not to possess.
In 1S92, \Y. D. Bynum was elected to Congress under the democratic plat form on the silver question as follows: "We denounce the silver bill, so-ca: d, (tho Sherman billj recently enacted, as a surrender to the money power. It perpetuates the deinonitization of silver and the singlo gold standard, whereas, the people require the complete remonitization of silver and its restoration to perfect equality with gold in our coinage. Vve demand the free and unrestiioted coinage of silver upon tho basis existing prior to 1873, (16 to 1 and a legal tender for all debts, public, and private.")
Mr. Bynum was in the State convention and endorsed the above platform, ran for Congress upon it, advocated it, was elected in 1S72 under it, and continued to advocate it long afterward until he turned his back upon tho people, and upon democratic principles for Wall street gold.
A CLOSE OBSERVER.
A Person Who Knew a Good Thing When He Saw it, and Refused to Take Chances. "1 our Sl.jO Cabinets are good enough for me, is the terse way a customer talks. Our work suits him becauso ho is sure we will make his pictures right. Ihey wont fade, curl, crack, chip, peel or blister, and will bo nicely finished. W 0 will show him a proof, too—in fact ho will get an honest picture, and thats the reason our work meets with his hearty approval. This customer might get as good pictures for tho samo money somewhere else, but he's afraid to take chances.
Wn.us
&
McQcowk,
Managers the Willis Gallery, Main St., South of Court House, Crawfordsville. ^""Cabinets from .50 to ?o.00,
7c and 11c are the wonderful prices put on two tables of desirable hot weather stuffs at the Big Store this week.
ou will surely make no mistake by patronizing Richards'shoo shop, tow
Dress goods sale at the Big Store.
It Pays to Trade at
THE BIG STORE
THE BIG STORI
MONDil MOEimG, JULY 1
Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Psices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Disconnt Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices Discount Prices
We Begin Our Regular
Semi-Annual Discount Sa
At which time every item in our Sto will be offered at Reduced Prices.
on Dress Goods. 011 Silks. on Linings. on Buttons and Trimming on Wash Goods, on Domestics. on Flannels. on Prints. on Hosiery, Underwear, on Muslin Underwear, on Linens. on Gloves, BLindkeichiefs. on Ribbons, Fancy Goods, on Laces, Embroideries, on Corsets. on Boys' Waists, on Umbrellas, Parasols, on Shirt Waists, on Spring- Wraps, on Wrappers. on Lace Curtains, on Portiers. on Yankee Notions, on Upholstery Goods.
On every article in our store No Reserves. Don't think of buyi anything in our line without visiting our store. We will sa you from 15 to 25 per cent.
LOUIS BISCHOF
127=129 EAST iVIA.IIV 8J1\
It you haven left your name for that free Magazine yet, you'd do it this week. The list is filling up rapidly. It will «13 you nothing.
Strictly Cas
