Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 14 November 1896 — Page 5
50 prs strictly all wool, full size, ton quarter blankets in white, scarlet, gray and sanitary, worth $3.25 $2 59 50 pr plain white, scarlet, gray and plaids in i« black and white and scarlet and white, •'r large size and every ounce wool, actutl value S3.5O, at S2 98 '2j pr extra large size, strictly all wool, fine soft quality and a regular
As
THE
S'I.OO
some prices for your consideration.
It Fays to .Trade at
THE BIG STORE
THE BIG STORE
For months pxst wo have b^-n goitiug ready for it. T-ic" highways an 1 byways jf Europe and Americi hivo bseu r.msickod by oar agents, and our own buyers, for tii-j somethings our customars will meed. Somethings we mil sell an I in ik :iey. S jmethings you oui bay nil
largest and best ass irte stock of staple ind fancy dry good? in this section has been gathered together 1 our storo, and tho liberal trade we have enjoyed for the pxst few weeks is proof tint we inve succeeded^
value,
we offer at $3 98 This year wo are showing several styles in tho Yountsvillo goods. This is our first season on these
I'CO
A'"'WORD ABOUT BLANKETS.
Our stock of Blankets is larger than ever before. Immense purchases in this line direct from the mills at spot cash have given usjseveral lots on which we will not only surprise our customers, but our competitors. For instance:
COLD-DEFYING ^UNDERWEAR
Our underwear for ladies and children is of better weight and quality pc More attention has boeu paid to the finish and improvements in the shape are noticeable. Yo prised at tho values wo offer in single garments at 25c, 85c and 50c, and Union Suits at 50c, 70c and $1.00.
THE CLOAKS.
Are movin" out rapidly under the pressure of the recent chilly weather and tho low prices wc have uut 011 up-to-dato styles. Last season we sold nearly three thousand garments mid carried over but about forty. This insures all new goods for this season's trade.
REGARDS WASH GOODS.
The fleece ick printed wash stuffs of which wo show a liindsoiuj line are in great favor for wrap nor- house dresses aud dressin sacqu-vs. They are beautiful in design, comfortable in weigh and low in prices It is' not hard to account for their popularity. Wo also show handsome designs in the popular Swansdowns. "T offer for next week a special bargain in Salines. Here is the story:
25 pes 30 inch Sitines. fast back grounds with_boauliful printings, floral and pcrsiau designs, good quality, worth 15c yd, at
We are showing a splendid line of flannels, skirts, skirt patterns, canton flannels, etc.
mouey. Hive wo succeeded/ The
goods and \TO wish you to call and] see just how much business on a large scale and up-to-date merchandising will save you on a staple article. We also wish to call your particular attention to a line of German Jacquard I31ankets shown for the first timo in the city. They are entirely different from anything heretofore offered. The colors are delicate and permanent. They are non-shrinkable and soft as Eiderdown. The prices are not low but taking into consideration their durability they will prove cho«ip in the long run. Some samples may be seen in our window.
NECESSARIES.
Full yord wide Canton Flannel worth 12 y,c, at ioe yd. Extra heavy mottled domets, 3 shades, worth 124 c, at 10c yd. Slate or brown Canton Flannels worth 7j4e, at 5c yd.
Strictly Cash!
Bays
We
The Strange Affliction of Little ...... ..........Wilbur Robinson. He Stopped Growing-Limbs Became Useless and
He was Unable to Walk—His Cure Brought About in a Singular Manner.
Prom the Observer, Oiarlotlr, i\". C.
Hearing that ft child near Iron Station, Lincoln County, had been greatly benefited by the use of l)r. Williams' I'ink Pills for Pale People, a representative of the Observer went thither to see ami ascertain the extent of the benefit the child had received.
Riding out 011 December o, ISM, to a little country cottage in the pine woods, a niiie distant from Iron ,Station, the reporter saw a bright-faced, young woman, a pure aiv.losaxon tyjje with light hair and blue eyes, standing in the doorway with two plump, rosy-cheeked children half hiding behind her dress.
I am trying to find a child named Wilbur Robinson, who was greatly benefited by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People."
The young mother smiled and a pleased look came into her eyes as she said "come in."
farm of 200 acres, but was oil' to the mi the time.
Dea -Moines, Iowa, Nov. 1).—Gov. F.
I.i.
Drake has issued a proclamation •'•.J'hig an extra session of the Iowa etat« legislature. The assembly is called to meet on Jan. 19. Although the business to be considered by the special session appears to be limited by the governor to the consideration of the new code and fo one or two other matters, vet there Is a generally accepted theory ihat the assembly may take up any business which it may consider expedient.
The silver men have already prepared for submission an amendment of the election laws making it a felony for men to enter into or publish the fact of making contracts contingent upon the result of an election, and making it a felony for employers to condition the employment or wages of persons hired upon the result of an election.
'•'hlrnsro tlonril of Trade.
Chicago, Nov. 7.—The following table shows the range of quotations on the board of trade today:
A11T1CI.ES.
Here are
Wheat— Nov. December.. May C'uri.—Nov...
Decern bur.. Jiny OiiU— Nov...
Closing
High. Low.
Nov.
Nov. 8
.78% ,79 k'
.70S. •77Vi ,S2
70
S .76% .78
.82^-
,'lhv,
December.. 51 ay Pork— .Ian uar v...
Ivl
.BSV
mi
.20 .W£
.18^ HI 4 .a-j.y
o.)i.
•lajtf
May...". ... l.ii ni— January
.Hi'/
7.95 8.25
7 80 8.12J*
-.or. 8.25
7.85 |.
4.&>X •is,7y.
4.27^•1.50
.Sirt'r'bs— .iaijuurv... Mnv
4.82)^ 4.D7$
DeelaroK I'ul1111111 I*
4.30 4..VJ14
S 90 4-ISM
8.85 4.07U'
00
4
3.S7!.£ 4.07y%,
lk
i'ailure.
Duns, Nov. 9.—At a crowded meeting at the Association of Civil Engineers of France an address was delivered by Ernest Ilecht on "The Town of Pullman and the Condition of the Workii Classes in th'- I':i .d stales." Mr. Ilecht declared that fin .u.siilts of hi inquiry on behall of the government fdiow that the town 01 1 udman, 111., must from the warkiiitmnv's noLnt.
covers, was this line Dr. Williams' Pink 1 ills for Pule People." '"When 1 read that those pills would build up the hone 1 felt that they were the tilings for Wilbur.'' said his mother. "Old Mrs. Handy sat up n-nrly all of one night reading this pamphlet, with all the testimonials it contained. A few days sfter they sent to one of the two village Blores and got two boxes of the pills. This was about the last of November, 180-1. Before he luul finished taking the first box, the liule fellow was able to bear bis weight on his feet, and before the second box was all and
and added, "I guess that'stheone,"pointing March, the child began to go a few steps' nt to the younger of the two little boys. a time, but he didn't walk by himself till It was an humble, home, the family bring in September. The fourth box", or part of it, composed of that sturdy farming class that I was administered in August." goes to make tip one of the strongest and The testimony of the mother was that the truest types of North Carolina's good people, child's appetite and. indeed, his whole sysThe husband, Kobert O. Robinson, runs the teni was helped by the use of the pills.
OpL-lllil/i L'inKO /r ti. ..1 I .. 1 I U'tl I.II 1.*..!... .. .11.1 11 i« II
remarkable story of the cure ol Iter lilt boy from the effects of la grippe. Her aged, white-haired mother. Mrs. Sarah A. Handy! sat near and emphasized everv word of the daughter. The little bov. Wilbur, who owed his recovery to I)r." Williams' effective remedy, played about the house and yard, and was into every conceivable kind oi mischief. It really seemed that he must have, taken too »iany of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills so great was the energy with which he prosecuted his pranks. Three times his mother had to stop her conversation and rush out to rescue tho reporter's bicycle, which was leaning against the house outside, and with which Wilbur wa.i becoming almost too familiar.
This is the story the mother told "Wilbur was born August 8, 1S9.'!. He wa. a stout, healthy boy till he was nearlv five months old. Between Christmas and New Year's he took the grippe. A physician ut Iron Station attended liini, and lie was supposed to have recovered. Hut the after effects of the malady lingered with disastrous results. In March, 18M. his parents qot'iced that lie could not stand upon his eet, although before his takiinr the grippe he could do so easily, lie could not bear the weight of his body on his feet his legs were not growing any nor the muscle in them developins. He was not treated, however, till in the fall, about the last of October. When Mr. Robinson took his cotton to Lincolnton, the county seat, he also carried his baby along, and a Lincolnton physician prescribed for" him, recommending a" lotion for rubbing his limbs. This helped the child only temporarily. Twice afterward this physician was nonsuited. He told (lie parents that the child might some day lie able to walk and again be might not. They would just have to let him "grow ulonir." as the mother expressed it, and see what developed. At this period the chilli's legs appeared to be shrunken. As his mother
they were •'as soli as cotton." Here was a boy fourteen months old, who not only could not walk, but could not bear his weight on his feet.
In some way—they do not know how—a pamphlet found its way to the Robinson family. Old Mrs. Bandy fished it out of a
Wilbur begins to walk alone by himself." "After he once learned to walk," said his mother, "we could hardly keen him in sight of the house, and he was cured by four boxes, lacking fen pills. Mother says, and always has said, the I.ord directed somebody to send us that pamphlet of Dr. Williams." on really believe the child's euro is due to Dr. Williams' Pills? was asked.
I am really convinced the pills cured him,'' the mother answered. I haven't the slightest doubt about it."
And the boy's grandmother chimed in: I'm jnst as sure of it ns 1 am of living. I'll take an oath on the Bible that that is what, did it." 1 lie ncigbborr, in all the section around the little village of Iron Station know and talk about the remarkable cure of this baby, who ni'.'Jit have been a cripple for life, had he :.ot. even at the age of two years, one month and sev nteeii days, been enabled to walk for the first time by the uso of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People.
This story may seem to the reader like a fabrication, but is told as tin: child's mother told it fo the reporter. In order to show their appreciation, Mrs. Robinson furnished the following testimonial and signed it. (She says .she is willing nt anv time to make swot ti affidavit to her statements):
IRON STATION, I.INCOI.X CO., N. C.,: December 5, 1895. My infant son. Wilbur I.ee. rendered unable to learn to walk, by the effects of the rippe, when he was about five months old, hereby testify that he was entirely cured, and the muscles in his legs developed by the use of less than four boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, so that he is now a bale and hearty child. I am entirely convinced that his cure is due to these pills. I also state that the above statements made to the reporter of the C'hartirflr. Observer are true. C. L. P.OUINSON.
SA kaii A. HANDY,) P.O. Poill-KTsoN, Witnesses. II. A. HANKS. I Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are now given to the public as an unfailing blood builder and nerve restorer, curing all forms of weakness arising from a watery ndition of She blood or shattered nerves.
bureau drawer. It had the picture of two The pills are sold by all dealers, or will be dogs poeping over a fence on one cover, and sent post paid on receipt of price fin cents a on the other a herd of cows drinking in a box or six boxes for ftJ.'iO (they lire never cool stream near a bridge. Roth on the sold in bulk rv bv the 100) by aodrcssinj fence and on the bridge, oil the respective! Dr. Williams' Med. Co., Schenectady, N Y.
Will Convene tlun. 11) Amendment to He Offered by Silver Men.
bo declared "a failure." Judging from the discussion which followed this opinion was shared by many of the French engineers presont.
Mrs.
Viiiideibllt'H
W
ig the dose to
a ball, so they held out ti long time," said his mother. "We commenced the second box in January, this year. We had to send to l.incolnton, eight miles away, to get the xt boxes. After taking the third box, in
at I Mrs. Handy, who had been looking over I a sort of diary she keeps, at this point in the
The mother, Carrie L. Robinson, told a conversation, read this entry: "Sept. the 25th.
Funeral.
New York, Nov. P.—Mrs. V.'illiam H. VanderbllL's funeral will take place on Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock from St. Bartholomew's church, of which Mrs. Vandcrbilt was a member. There will be a full choral service at the church. Tho interment will take place at the Moravian cemetery, in the Vanderbilt mausoleum. Cornelius Vanderbilt'a health continues to improve and his complete recoveuy is only a question of tin
Ilnrrlson Appears as Counsel. Cincinnati, Ohio, Nov. 9.—Ux-I'resi-dent Harrison appeared here today in the United States circuit court of appeals in the case of Charles Hamlin against the Toledo, Kansas City and St. Louis Railroad company and Continental Trust company of New York. Charles W. Fairbanks of Indianapolis appears in the same case against the ex-president. Judge John H. Doyle of Tole'do also makes an argument in the case, as will Edward C. Henderson of New York.
Offorrt to Pay Ilryiui's Kxpenses. San Francisco, Cal., Nov. 9.—Clias. D. Lane, part owner of the Utica gold mine, announces that he will give William J. Bryan financial support in his advocacy of bimetallism. The Califern
Ian wil see to it that Mr. Bryan's traveling expenses are paid and that the living expenses of himself and family are paid during the campaign o£ education which he proposes to conduct during the next four years.
"Want MillioiiH for Duniugen* Paris, Nov. 9.—The Matin announces that Sidney O'Danna has arrived in Paris and intends to bring an action in the French courts against the German embassy, claiming 37,650,000 francs damages. O'Danna has just finished a term In prison in Berlin on a ciharge of intriguing to bring about war between France and (iermnny. He c.ititends taat he was unjustly sentenced.
Oman's ork
Is never done, and it is especially wearing and wearisome to those whoBe blood is impure and unlit properly to tono, sustain, and renew the wasting of nerve, muscle and tissue. It is more because of thin condition of the blood that women are run down,
Tired, Weak, Nervous,
Than because of tho work itself. Every physician sayB so, and that tbo only remedy is in building up by taking a good nerve tonic, blood purifier and vitalizer like Hood's Sarsaparilla. For tho troubles Peculiar to Women at change of season, climate or life, or resulting from hard work, nervousness, and impuro blood, thousands havo found relief and cure in
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
The One True Wood 1'urlfler. $l six for $5. Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.
•j j) OMI are the only pills to take nOOQ S HIS with Hood's Sarsaparilla.
JOT1CH OK APPOINTMENT.
N
pill
Estate of Andrew William Srndor. deceased. Notico is hereby civon that the undersigned bus been appointed mid duly qnallMed OS Administrator/)! the estate of Andrew William trader, late of.'Montgomery county, Indiana, deceased. Said estate Is supposod to bo solvent,
JACOB G. SKADKli, Adm.
Bated Novembor 11, 181)11.
N'
OTICE OP I.KTTKKS TESTAMENTARY.
Estate of John Morric, deceased. :*L N'olh is hereby ulvon, that ti.o undersigned has duly qualified and Kiven bond as executor of tho last will mid testament ot .!. hn Morris lately of Montgomery County, Stalo of Indiana, deceased, and that letters les amectary on id estate have been duly granted to Uim. Said tate is said to be solvent.
WIl.I'.lAM 11. MOKH1S, Executor.
Uated Novembor 11,18%.
jyOTICE OK APPOINTMENT.
Estate of Sarali K. Meais, deceased. .Notice is hereby given, that tbo uudersignoti has been appointed and duly qualified as Administrator of tile estate of Sarah F. Mears late of Montgomery County, Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed to bo solvent.
CI.AV1IK L. THOMPSON, Admr.
Dated November 111, IH'.lti.
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
The Host Salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum fever sires, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,corns, and all sWn eruptions.and positively cures piles, or no p:iv ruijuired. It is guaranteed to give pci feet satisfaction or money eunded. Price 25 cents per box. For
Sya & IJooo. ly
"SCRAPS"
Tho porcupines in some parts of Maine are very numerous this season.
Chaucer was well known at court as a poet before he was twenty-live.
Tbo Princess of Wales has an annual allowance of $10,000 for pin money. The crown worn on state occasions by William, liinperor of Germany, weighs exactly three pounds.
The first 6trcet railroad was laid in New York in 1832, between the (Jity Hall and Fourteenth street.
The artist g' tn a glimpse of heaven in tho meadow, where the fanner sees only I
BO
much hay.—llitas's Horn.
The first telephone wire
WIH
stretch
ed betweeu Hoston and Souiprville, a distill ce ot Ihree iniit P. in 1877.
Tea was fust brought to thib countryin 171!l, a consignment arriving at Boston in tho summer of that year.
Harbpr, the great authority on fish, says that overy sqnaic m.l of the sea is inhabited by LlO.Of'O.i.OO tinny creatures.
Owing to tlir ol iti'in of VtcKinley, a Maine minister wili have to ^roacii a sermon wilb In coat anil vest on wrong side out.
In niatleis ol court 11 1111. tt" Her Majesty is punctilious to a degree a^ul her memory for peiV»«ree8,..^s. J'.r,.fncee, is I unrivaled.
While Dr. K«r.e ar bis second expedition be ai.! 1 nn-i- iived nino I diivH IIJ a teivjpeiatur^ ranging from G4 to (ill iJegieen t»-Hr,v zero.
Ti oiir.L' man who is anxious to lay I the worl.l at tin- feet of 1 Im girl he aoorew. three months aiter he marries iier inn't willimc even to lay the carpet. I Yonkers Statesman.
A i\u third Me 1 I'iple. writing home from their wedding journey, said they' found iu Washington at the hotel where thev had qtiiinei nun teen other newiymarned i-owj.li'".
Awarded
ffighest Honors—World's Fair*
).......
DR'
POWDER
MOST PERFECT MAP
pure Grape Cream of Tartar Pa\ Frte from Ammonia, Alum or any othei adulterant. 40 YEARS THE STAND -SB
