Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 12 September 1896 — Page 5

GOLD!

lo in, silk and wool novelty dress ^oods, worth 40c yd li in. all wool mixtures in tan shades worth 5oc yd 38 in. all wool serges in some good shades worth 50c yd, choice 25c 2" pes extra lino novelty suitings in light and medium shades worth 50 to Goc yd •10 in. all wool serges in good shades of .Ueol and gray, regular pries 75c, choice 33c English Cashmeres in most all shades, 36 in. wide worth 20 to 25c 2-r) pes figured Mohairs worth 2= c: 1O pes novelties and plaids worth 25c 12^2c pes Mohair figured black goods 38 in. wide, worth 25 to 4.0c, choice i'Jc •If! in. all wool black serge wth 50c

x/?

THE BIG STORE

Or any old money will buy goods at our store cheaper than unv house in this part of the Statu. It was not chance that placed this store in the front ranks of the Dry •Hoods stores of Indiana. It was the up-to-date idea ot' selliug as nni of any article as possible at the smallest possible price. This accounts for the following wonderful list of Bargains. Bring the list with von, we always do just as we advertise.

33c

Ladies fast blsck hose, high spliced heel, Richelieu ribbed maco foot, double soles, wth 35c 25c Ladies black and tan hose, double heel and toe, wth 20c, 19c Ladies and childrens seamless hose, black, tan or fancies, wth 10 to 12

Sc

Misses fine ribbed hose, black and tan shades wth 35c, loc to l~»OC 2 5c Misses and boys black ribbed hose, double kuee, regul price Ladies, men and childrens hose black and colored, wth 10c. -lc Mens' half hose, black and tan seamless, wth 25c i2j^ Ladies gauze vests wth 5c,.... -lc Ladies gauze vests wth i2^c to

O

Ladies gauze vests wth 2 5c.... 17c Childrens print dresses, ages 1, 2 and 3 years 2 5c Childrens muslin drawers wth 12 54 to 15c ioc Ladies silk mitts and gloves, black and colors, regular prices 25, 35, 40 and 50c i9c

It]Pays to Trade at

THE BIG STORE

i'.Mens

Special Sale of Shirt Waists.

Wo offer choice of any waist of white or printed lawn, percale or dimity in oar stock wjrta from Si to *9 9* nt *0c Choice of 100 ladies' unlaundried waists of percale, satin aud lawns worth 00c, 75c and $1, for 3.3c. 150 laundried percale waists worth 5OC to fel, 25c.

LOUIS BISCHOF.

SILVER!

all linen initial handkerchiefs .... 15c Ladies fancy scallop border handkerchiefs i5c Summer corsets, white, nearly all sizes, wth $1.00 73c Laces and embroideries wth 5 to 6^-c yd lc •Laces and embroideries wth 25 to 35c yd 17c Fancy printed ribbons 3 inches wide, wth 30 to 4oc 19c Plaid ribbons inches wide wide wth 75c yd 29c Childrens parasols wth c5c.... 15c Childrens satin parasols all colors, wth SI.25 to $i.50 79c Boys unlaundried shirt waists wth 50 to 75c 33c Star and other fine laundried shirt waists wth 85c to Si.50, G9c

Full size bed spreads wth 65c.. -l^c Real Mersailles bed spreads wth $1.50 99c Fine satin Mersailles spreads wth S3 to $4 S2.19 Gilt or silver belt pins wth 5 to rOc 2c Gilt belts wth 25c to 35c 19c N'ingpo straw fans wth 10 to 15c Gc Bleached cotton crash wth 5o yd 3c 25 pes assorted all linen crashes wth 11 to l2)jc yd SI 3C All linen cream table damask.. 12 1-2 6 pes all linen cream damask wth 50 and GOc ... 39c Large red bordered all linen napkins wth $1 doz GOc Fancy Turkish towels wth i0e.. Gc Yard wide brown muslin wth 5c 4c Best quality apron gingham wth

G£c 4 1-2 Fancy cottonades wth i5c yd. .. 10c Good quality canton llannel wth 6 i-2c 5c Best quality table oil cloth wth 15c yd 12 1-2 lOo yd spool linen thread ic 2OO yd John Clark spool cotton 2c 5o yd silk thread, blk or colors.. 2c Dress stays, slightly damaged, per set 2c

Strictly Cash!

The

Dessert

for to-day

Don't give it

a thought—further than to order ii from your grocer. Give your husband and the boys a treat after their own hearts —a mince pic, fruit cake, or a fruit pudding. To have the perfcctiun of miucc pic or fruit pudding, order

MINCE MEAT

Ready for use in twenty minutes. Always fresh, delicious and wholesome. Cleanliness and the best grade of materials arc first considerations in its manufacture.

I

Sohi Mvcrywbere. Tako no suhfltitHU'K. A lUe. ptvekagu makuH two large piua. Sctxl your vlilrcn, uamiug this |aper, tujii wo uin*ail voo fret* book, ".Mr*. l\pkiuh' TliAhkKgiriiiR." ty ouo of the niofct popular humoroun nriU'rs o! the «U*.

IUKKKKLL SOUI.K CO., Svraruie,

N. V.

Montgoinar? (taty News.

WINGATE-

Sum Brown has built anew barn.

No .sickness: doctors talking free 6il ver.

a. is visitiug rela-

Mr. Gott, of Lado tives here.

•Plenty of peaches ar.d only 25 cents per bushel.

The farmers are busv plowing and sowing wheat

Joseph Hancock, of eedersburg, is hero on a visit. Tnoinas Sim ms and Bill Ceer were in Chi :ago this week.

The only way to kill uold bugs is to pour Bryan on them. JJBrother l'owe'l will preachj at the Christian church this year.

It is said that over .'5,000 people went to hoar Turpi' speak at Meharry's (.irove.

Our uackman's rife, who has boon in Michigan for her health, will be at home on the Pith. ()jr hacknian informs us that he will soil his hack line from Wingato to Crawfordsville, as his health has failed so that ho is not able to attend to it.

ELM GROVE.

McKinlcv is a back number.

Fanners have begun to cut corn.

Little llarley Kverson is improving slowly.

Miss Nina ("urn entertained her many friends Saturday night.

Charley Berry and family, of Uas City, are visiting relatives here

Linn and daughter, arc visit-inn relatives

Mrs. Mollii

of Lafayette. lie re.

A Bryan free silver club has been organized at Wliitesville of over forty members.

Samuel Layman. Nell Byers, Win. Lauthers, I'earl "Wright, and C. A. Everson's infant son are on the sick list.

Miss Sal ley Weeks died last Wednesday of typhoid fever and was buried last Wednesday at Calvary cemetery.

George Linn and Minnie Beck were quietly married last Wednesday night at half past six o'clock, by Rev. Fox, of Ladoga. The bride was dressed in light brown silk and the groom in the conventional black. Only near relatives were invited. After congratulations, refreshments of ice cream,cake and fruit were served..,.,..

To advertise our College we, will give a thorough course of instruction in double and single entry book-keep-ing and commercial arithmetic by mail, free of charge, to a limited number of persons. This course will be completed in forty lessons. No charge for diplomas. Address: The American Business College. Omaha, Neb.

Read the Big Store paper.

'ad" in to-dav's

Whatever your pursuit in life may be, a thorough business education is what you need. The American Bus. iness College, Omaha, Neb., now offers a free business course by correspondence, and we would advise our young people to investigate the matter and profit by it.

Read the notice, "Free Course by by Mail with the American Business College, Omaha, Neb."

Read the Big Store "ad" in to-day's paper.

THE SILVER BRIGADE.

The Capture of New York State In Alicarir Foreordained.

Amonjr the features of the campaign, as outlined by Chairman Jones, will be the sending of a Silver Brigade into New York city and state. This brigade will consist of three hundred picked orators from 'the west and south. The result of their work is already foreordained by the following poem, after Tennyson's famous "Charge of the Light Brigade."

I.

On t.o the light, on to the light, Brothers, inarch onward Against U10 Wall street hordo,

Charged the three hundred. Forward, the Silver Brigade,-. Three hundred men arrayed Into the enemy's lair

Charged the three hundred. TT. Forward, the Silver Brigade! Not a single man dismayed For well they all knew That Jones had not. blundered. 'Twas theirs to reason why, Twas theirs to make reply, Twas theirs to do or die Into the enemy's lair

Charged the three hundred.

Curses to the right of then/, 1 Curses to the left of them, Curses in front of them Volleyed and thundered Stormed at with rebel veil, Boldly they fought, and well Into tho Wall street hordes, Into the lairs of hell

Charged the three hundred. AH Wall street schemes laid hare Free silver rent the air, Bryan and Sewall there, Charging the Wall street hordes, while All the world wondered. Into the battle's smoke Through party lines they broke, Democrat and Populist, Until reeling from truth's stroke, Shattered, and sundered. Wall street's lines were broke, But not the three hundred's.

IV.

Glory to the right of them, Glory to the left of them, Glory all around lliem Volleyed and thundered. They had stormed tho walls of hell, While not a hero fell Of them that had done so well. Back from Wall street's lair, Back from the walls of hell, Came every one of them—

All the three hundred. V.

When can their glory fade? Oh, that grand fight they made! All the world wondered. Honor the fight they made, Honor the Silver Brigade—

Victorious three hundred! P. J,

D.

Bryan on Former President* and the rnbllr.

Now that Mr. Bryan expects to live in the White House himself it is interesting to recall what he wrote on March 31, loss than four months ago, on the subject of former Presidents and a proposition to pension them. These are his words from the editorial page of the World-Herald:

Ex-Presidents ought to take care of themselves as ordinary citizens do. If It should ever happen that one of our ex-Presidents should be in need of public or private aid, said aid would be forthcoming. In recent years our Presidents have retired in comfortable circumstances. Gen. Harrison is earning fat fees at the bar, and his dignity does not suffer one hit because he is eating his bread in the perspiration of his gray matter. When Mr. Cleveland re tires he •will net be in immediate want. The several millions which he is credited with accumulating will help to keep the wolf from the door for a while and whenever his reserve fund gets below one or two millions the peoplo will help him out cheerfully. This government will attain more to the purpose of its founders when the notion that the people owe their officials anything is entirely eradicated. To be sure, we owe the faithful official our appreciation and respect. We have paid him for his time, and he loses nothing in dignity if he steps from official place to the ranks of the laborers. If he is broken down in health or should be otherwise unfortunate, the American people would not permit an ex-Presi-lent to suffer.

HONORS TO AMERICANS.

Tti0 New World lias Been Ki*proscntcd

111!' noy:il

Al-iirl.-iuy,

Iii connection with the recent election of Mr. Abbey to the associateship of the Royal academy it is not perhaps gen« erally known that seven other members of that essentially British body may claim American origin, says the Pall Mall Gazette. These have been elected not to the merely titular distinction of honorary foreign members of whom the list is always complete, but held or hold a foremost place among those who have helped to build up the glories of English art. The second president, Benjamin West, was an American, but, having been born at Springfield some forty years before the war of independence, was of ftourso an English subject of King George III. So consistent wa* West to the Quaker principles in which he had been brought up that he respectfully declined the official honor of knighthood offered him on becoming president

Jofen Singleton Copley was of Ba» ton origin, but, like West, virtually English subjMt, having been born a genenctio* before the great struggle ot 1776. The "©eat* of Lord ChAthxmin the National gallery, is his best known York. That ha wu ttxe telber ti L«r4 Lyndhurat, the famous lord ekjtaccller, Is a faot familUr to all. It

Blood means sound health. With pure, rich, healthy blood, the stomach nnd digestive organs will be vigorous, and there will be 110 dyspepsia. Rheumatism and Neuralgia will be unknown. Scrofulaand Salt Rheum will disappear. With pure

Blood

Your nerves will best rong, and your sleep sound, sweet and refreshing. Hood's Snrsapiirilln makes pure blood. That is why it cures so many diseases. That is why ho many thousands take it to cure disease, retain good health and prevent sickness and suffering. Remember

9 *'i

Sarsaparilla

Is the One True lilnixl Purifier. St six for $5.

iv I is to

nOOG S i-MIIS take,easytoopuratc.'ssc.

is, however, not every one who is aware that Washington Allston, the poetpainter—a. true son of Boston, though born in South Carolina—was a full blown A. R. A. and an American citizen, since he saw the light four years after the historical severance hut on his election, which took place in 1818, ho returned to Boston and lived there till his death, & quarter of a century later. His wonderful portrait of Coleridge, of whom he was an intimate frieud, is one of the far too little known gems of tlio National Portrait gallery. Charles Robert Leslie, tho father of the present popular R. A., was a Londoner by birth, but his parents were frolm Philadelphia and were bosom friends oJ Benjamin West. It was while Leslie's father and mother were on a visit to England that toe future It. A. was born but ho returned while an infant td America, was educated at Philadelphia, and it was not until 1811 that ho came to England and ten years later was elected an A. R. A. After Leslie comes

Gilbert Stuart Newton, who, though la reality born an English subject, at Halifax, N. S., obtained all his art train/, ing in Boston from Gilbert Stuart, who. If only as the limner of George Washington's best portrait, is well known on thissideof the Atlantic. Mr. Broughton, with Mr. Sargent and his friend, Mr. Abbey, just elected an associate, still keep alive the pleasant American element and serve amply to maintain the truth that if in political matters we may at times appear in disunion with our cousins, in art at least, in the words of tho noble poems of the poet painter and associate, Washington Allston-* "We are one."

A Dream—A Thought—A Prayer* 1 slept—and this is what I dreamed: .. I dread the quiet hour,

The stupor of the brain, The numbing of the foreees till ther'g Neither joy nor pain Vo brighten life or cloud it.

I do not want to sleep Nor let. Oblivion's darkness O'er all my senses creep.

:tfjg!hC:

I woke—and this is w'uifc 11: hat.e life's bustling riot, The whirling of the brain, The quick'ning of the pulses till they

Bound with joy or -pain! want my life so quiet 'Twill be a gentle sloop, And may Oblivion's darkness

My senses over keep.

I prayed—and this is what. I said. 0 Father! take iny current Of undecided life And lessen all its wayward force anl

Calm it from its str:fe. 1 know not what is needful— O give me what is best! The sunshine and the darkness—

Activity and rest

—Exchange.

Make the Most of Yourself. 11 is the duty of evory man to make the most of liiitiself. Whatever bis capacities may be. lie iesure to find some place where he r,tii be useful to himself and to otherp. But lie cannot reach bis highest usefulness without good health and he cunnot have good health without pure blood. Tho blood circulates to every organ mid tissue and when it is|)ure, rich ai.d heiilthy it carries health to (be cp!1'" e'i is inipure it BCilltirs lliM riM* »l.i'it'ViT it flows. Hood's Sarsaparilla is ouo true blood purifier. It cures salt rheum, scrofula, catarrh, dyspepsia and rheumatism because these diseases have their origin in tho blood.

Awarded

Highest Honors—World's Fair, DH

POWDfR

MOST PERFECT

nk Grape

Cnim rf Tartar Pwriicwe

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