Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 29 February 1896 — Page 5
Cloaks and Furs
5 ohlWrens' clo.ii cloaks, braid and fur tr.mmod, light and dark shadow, worth 1.0® to *.50, B'ze 2 to 3 years 7 ladles Jackots, l.gbt colored and not this year's sty os. sold for 4.50 at 90c 25 ehlldrens hnavy cloth olo ke, slzo 4 to 11 years, and worth 2.5" to6.110 10 ladies JacHeta, fine cloth an haro sold 5 to It.00, not al this year's at 1.99 15 6'*Udrens cloaks, sixes 4 to 14 years, fluo go da and latest style werthfi to 10 at.. 3.4S 15 ladles flno cloth jaokets worth 8 lo 12, choice of the jot 4.99
All fur «rpof» at Just half prlcc. We have about tw. nty left, the majority of which aro the best styles we have had this year,
Small Furs.
35 olack ha"o muffs, w»rth 50c and It feather boas worth 35c oh Ice 19c mails, blaak and silver hair, worth 1 to O1-B0 choice 10 muffa, black and light oolors. worth 3 to ••EOat 4extra long light fu boas worth 3 to 5at.. 99j 10 eh Idrens Angora fur sotts, whlto and colored, worfli 3 3 50 9 animal head boas light and dark ooloted fore worth 3.50 to 4 at 1,88 35 ladies mulls Including American seal, monkey, be»r, Engora, etc., worth 3.50 ty 0 50, ohoioo at 1W
Dress Goods
25 pc Fancy Suitings and plain radimoros, St Inches wide, almost all colors, and actual value 20o to 25c. Cholco at l!}»c S6 inch broadcloths, all colors In two lines, worth 750 to $1.00. Choice at SO pos hclf wool cashmeres wo th 10c yd at 10 pes si.k and wool novelty mixtures in new combinations worthS yd, at SS pes 50-lnch all woo French Serge, all colors, actual value 05c yd, at
490 5o
Remnants of wool dreBS goods In all qualities and leught*. The Prices are way below any remnant offers we have ever made.
Flannels, Blankets, Comforts, EtC -V
"White, red and gray flannels that have •old for 15 to 80c!der yd at llo All wool flannels In all colors, plain and twilled worth 35c yd at 17c V* pos extra fine all wool flannels In all •hades worth 50 to SOo at 15c Cotton blankets worth 1.00 pair at sac Srtra hoary oomforts worth 85c and 1.00 at 69c 45 hone blankets Including many of the famous 5-A goods worth from 2.00 to 3.l4, ohoioe...._ ..1.25 S9 extra large bed spreads not worth 1 for
It Pays to Trade at
THE BIG STORE.
mwmm mm wmmmmmmm mmwv mm
THE BIG STORE
The Probable Course
Of this immense business of ours makes it necessary that we close out every dotllars worfh oj
Winter Merchandise. The weather has been unfavorable for heavy selling of cold weather goods since the beginning of our Discount Sale and we think it advisable to offer some greater bargains while there is yet several weeks of cold weather time before us, rather than run anv risk of carrying over any of the stuff.
Here Is The Story:
50c. but actually woithSSort 22 blonkuta whlto and colored, all wool and worth 5 pair at.. 28 all wools irt pat'orns add ready made skirts worth 1 to l,50at 39 Merrltts all woo skirt pattorns3: and 11 ready mado skirts, worth 8.50 to 3.50, choice at
Linens
Cotton crash worth 5c yd at 3c All linon crash worth 6 Meat 8c 25 pc flno linen crash worth 13 1-1to 15c 10c 1,000 dolleys worth Mat 81-i Kod table damask worth 25c at 15c Turkey rod damask worth Slo at 21c
Yarns and Knit Goods
Tlio best footory mado worili 90 por pound at 80 Fairy Zephyr, all colors, worth 15c skein 7a Hand knit fascinators worth 2to at 13c s0to73o— —3ks Ice wool shawls worth 4,50 3.2)
Silks.
I pc 22 inch black satin Duohoss worth 90c per yd, at 1 pc 94 Inch blaok satin Duohess, worts $1, 1 pc 31 inch black Pea'i do Sole wortB $1 at 1 pc 31 In gros do laundrlo worth 85c at 3 pc 84 In Taffota finish Pougee, worth tl at 31 IncB satin Rhadame, all colors, wortn tl at ...._ .... 9 pc oolored Bengalines worth 1, at S pc colored normalities worth 75c at li pc checked Taffotas for waists, worth 85o at 7 pc surahs, light sha les, worth 75c at Colored Volvo
iooub
16.VC 39c
worth 50c at
Domestics
30 pc stable check ginghams worth so at Sc 50 pc Amortkong Htaple gingham worth 7c at..5c 10 pes outing dometn worth 5c to 8^c at 4c 25 pc oheck shirtings worth 5c yd at 4c 27 pes outing cloth domets worth 10c at 6Jfc 1,500 yds canton flannel full yd wide and worth 13^0 yd at 8c 1,000 yds heavy unbleached canton flannel, long floeoy nap, worth 7Jfc yd at Be 500 yds dar brown and drab canton flannel worth 7M yd at 5c 8* yd wide sheeting bleach IS 1-Sc: unbleached 10c Yard wide soft finish bleached m'Jilln worth 7c yd at Ic Lonsdale bleached maslln at 7c Heavy brown muslin worth S 1-Jc at 4a
LOUIS BISCHOF
iumuiiuuiuiuuuuiuimuiuimuiiuiuuiiauuuiuuiiaiuui
I Pepperell It brown muslin worth 7 l-3c'at'. .'...5c [Wo will limit tlio last four liotiiH to net »vor 1.68 20 yard-to each customer. At the price* hdvortised merchants would liko to buy 'hwo goods
Oo
by th« bolt, bat vo sell them for the benefit of our customers.] 1.83 Comfort calico worth 7 1-3 to 8J^c at So
All our best prints worth 5c at 3 l-3c Table oil cloth 1)4 yd wide 10c
niery an! Uii(lerwHi,r
Chlldrens wool hose worth 10c at 7c 25 to 35c 19c Ladles
40 to 50c 25J 20c 18c 25c 19c «C 35c
Mens' heavy wool hair hose werth soc lOo 35o.... 18c Mens Fleece lined half hose worth 15c at.... 10c Chlldrens lined hoso worth 15o 9c Ladles iined hose worth 15c at i'sc Mens hfavy shirts and drawers 20c Mons -hirts and drawers worth S5c 35: Mens shirts and drawors worth SOo 35c Ladies tone
mIhmvo
Jersey ribbed vests 12 1-J
Ladies catnol hair vests and pants worth 5K3 at Chlldr us uutou suits worth 10 to 50c 25o Ladies ULlon suits worth 50c at 85c Men- and boys 'eaters worth 35cat ".".19c Meus all wool sw»aters black, white and blue, worth fl 50 at 75c
Dnp^ry Department
Prln'ad draperies 40 inches worth 10c yd 5c Prin ed silkolines worth 15c at uc Printed Urapory silks and crepe* worth 50 at 35c Chenille table cov ra 1 1-2 yds square w'th 85a at cSc
MUSLIN UNDERWEAR
25doz chlldrens maslln underwear and waists ateach .... 13Wo adies corset covers worth 853, each 16o
35i
to SOo each 25c
Ladles chemise worth TOc, each 250 La ll»s muslin skirts wor hi 1.85, each... 75c Ladles night drosses worth 85c, each 49c
•VA.S GOO V.
Jnst four priccs, but enough to cover the grandest bargains ever offered In wash goods. Goods wo. th 7 1-3, a 10c, at 5 1-S Hoods w:irth 10c, 13c and 15c, at 7 1-t OoodS worth 15,10 and 85c at 10 lc Fin French brocide sat'.es with beautlfully printed deslg s, worth 35 and 40c, and half wool chi lies black nd blue grounds and colored flg urej at
Stricty Cash!
A Danoer In Kurdistan. I The performers had already drawn' themselves np in line when I arrived, and a niinnte later the shrill notes of the pipe gave the signal for the danoing to commence. Boine score of young men and women stood ehonldor to shoulder, clasping hands, the line forming a crescent. At the given signal, the clapping of his hands by a youth n-ho stood in front of the Eemicircle of performers, tlio dunco commenced, the entire line of men and -women stepping slowly forward and then back again, each pace being taken a little to the right, so that a rotating movement was given to the string of dancers. As the music quickened so dirl the pace, and at each stop the body from tho waist upward was bent forward and drawn back. Nor were the stops themselves tho same, for the youth who gave them time ran up and down the line clapping his hands and singing and shouting directions and changes.
Tho principal feature of tho dance seemed to be the bringing down of tho right foot smartly upon tho ground at intervals, when, hand in hand, the whole company remained with their bodies bent for a second or two, to spring back into position again at a fresh blow of the pipes. Meanwhile the slow rotating movement was maintained, so that tho entire body was circling round the musicians. What laughter and fun there were! Men and girls giving themselves up to tho enjoyment of their national dance, which, graceful and exhilarating, bore no trace of tho sensual movements which usually mark the art of dancing in the east.—Blackwood's Alagazino.
Inception of Fifth Hatching:. During tho middle ages, and throughout the period of the European predominance of tho church of Rome, the necessity of providing a proper supply of fish for uso on Fridays and during Lent did much to create a species of fish culture. That this did not extend to fish hatching. but stopped short at inclosing and regulating tho supply of fresh water fishes, seems to us probable. At the same time, the Romans were at least acquainted with the securing of oyster spat, and from this to the artificial hatching of fish ova does not seem a very long step or one that may not really bave been taken. The probability is, however, that the roat of such artificially produced fish wjuld have been far beyond the purses of the multitude, and the wealthy had viviers and ponds in which they kept their own fish for their own use.
The extent to which they have gono may be judged by the system in uso among the monks of the monasteries and the great seigneurs of the continent, which was also introduced into this country, probably by the Normans originally. The absence of proper conveyances for the supply of sea fish to the inland parts of the country made it imperative for the various proprietors to meet their own necessities. In doing so they did not fail to discover that certain fishes required a particular kind of "cultch" npon which to fix their spawn. As the supply of this material was an acknowledged necessity this may be considered the first step toward fish hatching.—Scottish Review.
The Ways of the FUlani,
The national character of Fiji finds its best expression in the songs once common among the natives, but now, tinder Christian influences, almost obsolete. These songs, or mekkes, as they are called, generally recount the story of some ancient hero, of some military campaign or naval expedition, or perhaps of a peaceful fishing excursion. They aro generally sung of evenings by the men mly, who assemble for the purpose in one of their long, low lints. Here tliov s-it in solemn in m:sr.i laid nj.- .1 •.i .!y being tlii*: c,i end. Acoording to Majof-^'A^^uioiubie, an eyethe cere: dvMit alo: joins him, then a few more, till finally Bll present, have taken it up, accompanying tho wild muMc by nmch pantomime and earnest gesticulation. The time is beaten upon a wooden drum by on pf the number, and is occasionally accentuated !iy a general clapping of tho hands Alter a certain climax has been reached the nmsie stops quite abruptly With one lond clap.—Popular Science Monthly.
witness of the ceremony, one man begins the dvMit alone a second soon
Ingenuity a In Ilord«laise.
At Bordeaux recently a wi'io merchant, whoso liusineh.i sneees was ah.iut in keeping wiih (be bad quiiii of i:is wares, decided on a bold U'okv. Everyday ho assidunusly sought. i:»tt a 111 pleto list, of deaths of the well to do in the town, .nd also the dale and hoar of the funeral. Oe then wru:e a letter to the deceased, thanking him l'or (.:• der ho had lec-oivod. a :d ai u.-v •. a a iv a at the biVive for the funeral h.s it a.v arrived wltii a quantity uf wines :.ud spirits. The bill was an.ays paid. «.i one suspecting that lie was being mudo the victim of an ingenious Irick and quite convinced that the dead relative had given the order.—Galignani Messenger.
Character.
Character is like stock in trade the more of it a man possesses the greater his faculties for making additions to it. Character is power—is influence it makes friends, creates funds, draws patronage and support, and opens a sure and easy way to wealth, honor and happiness.—J. Hawes.
Sunday Observance In Boston. No more "work of convenience" on 8nnday. Work of "necessity or charity" xnay still be performed. Under which class does preaching oomef Boston Traveller.
Revolutions are not made they oome. revolution hi aa natural a growth aa Mi e-k. It oomea out of tha pad It* CnmdatloM art laid far back.—Wendell Pblllipa.
the "Waoht"Xm Kheln."
Of the martial songs more particularly connected with the various periods of storm and stress in Germany, one of the most celebrated is that of the Rhine, composed by Becker, and answered by Alfred de Musset in other well known verses. The "Wacht am Rhein," by Max Schneckenburger, was composed about the same period as the Rhine song, but attained its widest popularity during the war of 1870. Unlike Becker's song, it cannot boast of having been set to music by 70 composers.
The patriotic 6ong of "Deutscliland, Dentsohland ubor Alles" was the work of the popular writer, poet, philologist and historian August Hoffmann, who was born at Fallersleben in tbo year 1798. For a time wo find him acting as librarian and later as professor at tho University of Breslau, but the liberal tendency of 6ome of his writings caused him, in 1888, to bo deprived of his professorial chair. For many years ho was librarian to the Duke of Ratibor, and died in this sheltered post in 1874. The German national anthem, "Heil Dir im Siegerkranz," was written originally for the birthday of Christian VII, king of Denmark, by a ILustein clergyman. The wcrds were written to the air of "God Save the King" in 1790, and a few years later were modified for Prussian use.—Chambers' Journal.
:vV The Boers.
Tho Boors aro a race of hunters, as I well as pastoralists, and the Transvaal Boers especially havo been engaged in a war of extermination (lamentablo to the lover of animal life) against every species of wild beast. Numbers of them have been occupied ever since boyhood in the hunting of elephants, buffaloes, lions, rhinoceroses and other heavy game. They have practically exterminated the elephant south of the Zambezi, and the buffalo is becoming very scarce.
No man who understands South African hunting can pretend to say that the chase of these animals is not a dangerous one, requiring the highest qualities of nerve and courage. I will not say that the average Boer hunter will, by way of recreation, faco the lion single handed in the way that the great English hunters—Selous, Oswell, Vardon, Gordon-Cumming, Baldwin and others —have accustomed us to. Few hunters, indeed, are so quixotic. The Boer treats the lion as dangerous vermin, if possible obtains help from his fellows, and as a matter of business elays him by a volley. But hundreds of Boers have Blain lions single handed, and hundreds have been mauled and even killed by lions.—London Globe.
Pickett and the British.
In one of the most serious disputes the United States has had with Great Britain over a boundary question a Virginian bore the most prominent part in preventing British encroachment We refer to the San Jnan island incident. The Virginian was Captain George E. Pickett of the United States army, afterward General Pickett of the Confederate army. In 1856, during the disagreement aneut the northwest boundary, Oaptain Pickett, with 60 men, was ordered to occupy the island, and Sir James Douglass sent three British warships to eject him from his poeition. Pickett bade defiance to this show of foroe, threatening to fire npon any troops that attempted to land from the vessels, and a clash of arms was only prevented by the timely arrival of the British admiral, by whose orders the matter of endeavoring to take possession of the island vi et armis was postponed. Subsequently Pickett was re-enforoed and the danger of hostilities blew over. For his conduct on this occasion Captain Pickett was highly complimented by General Harney, and the legislature of Washington territory passed resolutions of thanks to iiiui.—Richm-.nd Dispatch.
How to iUako iv liundlo Stick. Handles will get loose, do what yon will, says Ihe Wheel, and some time or other they will part company with the bar. Forty ways to cement them on have been exploited as many different times in the columns of the wheel papers, but the average sticker on of handles makes the mistake of smearing the oement over the handle bar instead of placing it inside the handle, the consoquence being that the handle when forced on, pushes up the cement, which forms in an unsightly ring round the end of the handle. The proper way is to melt a little cement, ponr it into the mouth of the handle while the latter is being revolved, so as to make it run round, warm the end of the handle bar, but not sufficiently to injure the cork or celluloid, and push tho handle on. The handle bar will thus tend to oarry the cement farther in, and there will be none visible round the outside.—Exchange.
Success In Society.
The seoret of success in aooiety is a oertain heartiness and sympathy. A man Who is not happy in oompany cannot find any word in his memory that will fit the occasion all his information is a little impertinent. A man who is happy there finds in every turn of the conversation occasions for tho introduction of what he has to Bay. The favorites of society are able men, and of more spirit than wit, who have no uncomfortable egotism, but who exaotly fill the hour and company, oontented and contenting.—Emerson.
Mastera of the World.
Simple words, short maxims, homely truths, old sayings, are the masters of the world. Great reformations, great revolutions in society, great eras in human progress and improvement, start from good words, right words, sound words, spoken in the fitting time, and finding their way to human hearts as easily as the birds find their homes.— D. March.
Strong la Her Specialty.
"My wife la a great lingoiat" "Bow many languages doee aha peak?" "Just one.T a Topta*
IT'S THE FASHION
jr prudent-minded men to wcar"Celiuloid Collars and Cuffs. Tlicy sre waterproof, and besides saving laundry bills and bother, they arc comfortable to wear, never chafing the neck and never wrinkling. Tlicy can be instantly cleaned—with a wet cloth or sponge. The original interlined col® lars and cuffs with a "Celluloid" stuv facc. Everyone is marked like this,
E
EuuToio
MARK.
INTERLINED
Imitated of course, bat you wunt tlio ftcnntM and your money's worth. Insist ujMin gooSS marked witti above trade mark. At tlie furnilh* era or direct from us. Collurfl 20 eta. Cuffii 40*0. pair, mallnge paid. State Blze and style.
THIS CELLULOID COMPANY, New York*
SAPOLtO
s:s
E A A S S E a
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING.
O O O A
BOILING WATER OR MILK.
1
TJtTANTBD:— Several trustworthy gentlemen ladles to travel In Indiana for established, reliable houso. Sulary 1780 and exponsea, Steady position. Enclose reference and seltiUI- 1 dressed atampod envelope. The DominUm. 4 Company,third lloor, Omuku Uldg., (Jhioago. 111^ I
New Quarters
THE MERCHANTS'
Transfer Line
Is now located at No. 207 West Main St. 'Phone No. 44. All kinds of light or heauy hauling, safe moving, etc. Ring ns up.
MARK HAYS.
J. L. PUR SELL
PRACTICAL
Carriage and Buggy Repairer Repainting A SyiopinHv NEW WORK TO 0RUERJ
1
Bnoklen's Arnica Salve,
EIGHT ANl7\\INE GENT Investments. Nontaxable. The State Building and Loan Association of Indiana. Gallon John M. Sohultz, Crawford* ville.
In the case of Sarah O. Doberty va. John Robb, on trial at JopliD, Mo this week, regarding tbo title to 50 acres of land under which are quantities of lead and zinck, the court decided in favor of Robb.
There are 459 patents covering ma* Bonary work.
Awarded
Highest Honors—World's
W
X:
Corner Lrtfiivettr Pike nnd Grant Avenut'. ,=
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