Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 5 December 1896 — Page 5

w.

The expected cold weather has been alow in coming, and while our Cloak business has been good, we find our stock larger than we like on December 1st. In order to move them quickly we offer our entire stock at

For a short time. This is not a sale of old style goods, but every garment is included, -1 and dozens of them lave been received within two weeks, will give all a chance to buy a l&fce style garment in the height of the eeason at January and February prices. Here are a few of the lots

UK

-i iw

$5 Jackets for SO $7.50 Jackets for $5.00 $10 Jackets for $7-5o $12.50 Jackets for $10 815 Jackets for $12.50. All made in the latest style a ml from the very latest material.

10 Black Coney Fur Capos, 30 inches long, full size, worth $12.50. In this sale. .$6.25.

15 Fine Black Astrakahn Capes, ^30 inches' long, hoavy satin lining, worth $15, in this sale, choice $6.75.

20 Handsome Plush Capes, worth $7.50 to $10. Choice in this sale $5 00.

IJOUIS

It Pay?

the big

CLOAK SALE

rough anil The prices

Twenty per cent discount on all smooth cloth capes for this sale. read as follows: $5.00 Capes for $4.00 $7.50 Capes for $6.00 '$10 Capes for $S.oo $12.50 Capes' for $i0 $15 Capes for $12.

ig store,

a a P|j

50 Eiderdown CloakB for children, size one to four years old, Gretchen and Hubbard styles, warmly lined with domets and handsomely trimmed with braid and Angora fur.

They sold for $i.oo to $i.50. We offer choice for 6Sc.

25 Children's Cloaks made of fine all-wool Cashmeres, Tricots and Eiderdowns in the very latest styles and handsomely trimmed.

We can fit children from three to five years old in this line. Worth from $3.00 to $5-00. Choice in this sale Si.98.

50 Long Cloaks for Children four to fourteen years of age, fine, heavy, seiviceable cloths in styles that are always popular. Former fr°m ^5 $10. Choice .$2 50.

Jackets for Cllildrfe'ii si# twelve years old, made from fine cloihs in nobby late styles, and worth from $5 to &7.$Q. CiiOiCO..

35 Ladies' Jackets in tan and in'own shades sola from $5 to $6.50. Choice'. ..$2.39.

$3.50.

BISOHOF

otnctly Cash!

1

jl Pi Yl

OUNPOWDKR'8 PIR8T USB.

1

.Waa Originally Inpl« Wl fcy Um Mohammedans In Warfare. People outeide of military lite who have no connection with the making of gunpowder know it only as a coarse, black powder like sand, which will flash off with a loud report if shut up tn a case of any kind and set on Are. It is a very queer mixture, made up of three simple and well-known substances, no one of which will explode, although two will burn. No one knows when or how it waa die covered, for as far back to the dark ages as records or tradition will carry us we find that gunpowder, though not used for guns, was known. It was. no doabt, looked upon with awe and fear by. the ancients on account of its flame, its noise and KB rending force, but their limited mechanical skill could suggest very little use for It. Possibly It was used in warfare long before the beginning of history, but the first man in historical times to form an idea of the terrible destruction which this bursting, fiery substance might produce was an English monk named Roger Baoon. Monks In hie day were chemists, scholars and writers of the world, and this Roger Bacon traveled and studied much and made continual experiments in his laboratory to prove for himself and to develop what he learned from others. He probably saw gunpowder among the Moors In Spain, and tried for himself its explosive effect. Then he wrote of its composition in the year 1267, and In hie writing suggested that

It could be used in engines of war to deal death and destruction to armies of men. Soon after Roger Bacon's time his suggestions were taken up and guns were constructed, first by binding iron bars together "with hoops, to form a tube, then by casting a tube out of brass, with one end closed.

C4

8 Ze

aa shot,, and the powder had to be carried around In chests or barrels shoveled into the nozzles ot the %uns. rww backs, very large built, for there waa one

1

SyMohammeg I!, against the Grec&f)! at the elege of Constantinople }{f 14m,

which threw a stone Weighing 600 1 ..Mghlpg §00 pounds a distance j£ She mile—St, Nloholas,

nected by telephone with all parts of

tlie city, and also with each other. The

buoy, so that, the connection is thus

made without trouble. If a vessel leaves

proaches one it makes connection. The

veyors of provisions, hitherto fraught

with so great inconvenience and delay,

PITY POOR POWEBS.

NBW YORK MAN.WHO 18 AFRAID OF WOMEN OOLBRS.

•aa Hlrvd [a lady CTh»perou Wk« Aocompanlaa Him on All Bla Joiraty lIi aad Act* aa a Protaotor Against "ftronB Minded" Women.

the lineaments of their parents. When with their attentions. Mr. Powers is a old age comes on them, however, they

1

show many of the resemblances of the ulated upon his originality and horoio parent stock. Take your own circle, disregard of ithe world's opinion of for illustration. 1 manly conduct. "If you are old enough to remember .. the parents of any of your friends or relatives you will notice that as they in turn grow old the family likenesses come out. There are, of course, some

people wlio have the general features Character, and appearances of their parents, and His will displays hiH qualities in in many cases of both father and moth- I their entirety. The language sounds er, though in most cases of but one simple and sincere there is a hidden and that most likely of the father, in meaning in almost every line, says »a their youth and through life. There October Century. His religion had are others, though, who had none of

this I mean fifty years or so. In many cases persons have shown in their faces none of the family likenesses until they reached very advanced ages, and it grows more and more marked as they leave the milestones of age behind them."—Washington Star.

I Telophonv from Ship*. Lately experiments made at Kiel on

telephonic connection between war

ships and the shore resulted very fa-

I vorably. Tn future, accordingly, it will

be possible for all the ships that lie

near a buoy in Kiel harbor to le con-

RANCIS FISCHER Powers of New York has a ohaperon. He Is so very handsome that he must be protected from emotional females of the homo genu. He ha* juat Issued a large number of card* to his friends. They are "Mr. Francis Fischer Blackmore, charperon."

-U

engraved thus: Powers. Mrs.

The lady's name appears in the lefthand corner. It Is the New York Journal that gives publicity to Mr. Powers' departure. It Is a real departure, too, for by this act the New Yorker has left all his fellow men. He Is a step in advance of the times—a distinct step— and marks and lndleates clearly Chat the women will be supreme In the next century. Mr. Powers Is a singer with a beautiful tenor votoe. He is not a small, weak man. Quite the rerarse. He 1s 6 feet 1 inch in his stockings. His chest measurement is 44 inshea. Ho has biceps like a professional pugilist and his mustaohe Is gray. Mrs. Blackmore will accompany him everywhere. She will see that he does not eat New York table d'hote dinners, or indulge in any other recklessness. She will not lot aim talk more thaq is good for his satiny vocal cfcwrds. She will

ul"

,, regulate his exercise tnd attend te

7T

SflecU5d

1

41W

Resemblances Come With Old Ago. Ajjje brings out family likenesses or resenibla&fceS as nothing else can or will," replied a scientist who has given much attention to the study of physidlpgy and its running mate, physiognomy. "Ip the ordinary life of a man pr woman they are eo much occupied by other things—that is, with the jleasurds, passions or business of the

world—tliaf they do not show any of' 'a11

in

the

publi8hod

tem is in the torpedo depot. From a himself. The second portion of the j.

by him at

itf. buoy it disconnects the wire from ]eeatPPS which includes every one who

a a

a

has by this invention been greatly fa- agg^ginate that oligarch aa he (Welcilitated, and it is also of noteworthy ilngtoI1) had to send me to the rock of nd important, use for signaling pur-

HOUSEHOLDS HINTS.

st

on clothing that have been

Sptft'rf* the color being taken out caused' ti) ay be obliterated often hy by acida! ife ammonia and after it first applyfv chloroform.' dishes great care

In garnl&hilk not to overdo the should be taldsi decoration tends to matter. Too 'mprove the appearinjure ratiher tbj»t^\ ance of a dish.

do

If the whites oT'e]^ froth readily add a pft* place in the refrigerafofr* thoronghly cold theh't^ light very quickly.

A large onion peeled

OUO Wilt

other little oflUea tor him, b* chiefly

FRANCIS F. POWERS.

will she defend him from women who

ln

l&ve

b,m ani

been- at-1)eat.

the marked family likenesses until professed a piety never they reached an advanced age. By ?r practiced. During is 1 ranee

torture him

teaoher of music. He Is being oongrat-

NAPOLEON'S WILL.

,Ji*

Rcal s,,lf BUd

same spirit for the "libel

ln 18^0 it is full of false-

hoo(j8 an(j

central office of the ship telephone sys- 5iame {0r Snghien's murder he took to

falsified documents." The yes

small temporary wooden building run ^ocument is a series of munificent ,.aj0.,.,.| i„. mrt., [wires through the water to the same

goimdjng

250,000,000 francs, to a list of

serv|C€ BinCe

communication of the ship with the dif- V-odlcil he remembers one "Cautillon, amiu:,' ferent port authorities and with pur-

who had

t0°

undergone trial for an al-

le„ed altempt

Helena

beat to a

cut across of water •ihe door fresh

:anA'

the top, then placed in a in Lb-e center of the room,' wftliv shut, w-ill remov®-all smrtl

!«.

paint in a very short timer Fat which is to be kerpt sbWld 'kt i^ ^rnall and boiled in a satkeepah!'ix

cut a

,w.

little water and never put intothfe to melt. If it has to be dohe in Ok tven. the dpor Wrff oSa&al'.^.

to perish there."

Koad ttic !5iy: Store paper.

Pronably the largest quantity of lima beans are raised In Philadelphia coun-

ch of salt and tr. Pennsylvania until they are should beat

James H. Hillis, the populist nominee for governor of Missouri, is making his campaign tour in a "prairie schooner."

Nearly five thousand persons are engaged in the wood pulp and paper industry in Maine. The yield is about 12,000 tons a year.

Two Saco (Me.) youtha who are smitten with the charms of the same fair damsel propose to race on their bicycles from Biddefora to Old Orchard and return, aad the winner vlll set her.

Cures

BU

of a

{le's^

ftt 1

During

had been loved and used as a skillful artificer uses his tools the last words of his testament suggests a passionate devotion. To his son he recomm-ended the "love of right, which alone can incite to the performance of great deeds for hie faithless wife he expressed the teuderest sentiments and probably felt them. It. was his hope that the English people would avenge themselves on the English oligarchy

an(1 thal

prftnCe would forgive the

tra tors

,vho betrayed liw—Marmont,

Augfir0au,

as he

Talleyrand and Lafayette-

for£ave them. Louis he. par-

(Ione(j

~tW

Ptoto the merit of Hood's SarsapariUatlv», perfect, permanent Cure*. Cures of scrofula in severest forms, like goitre, swelled neck, running sores, hip disease, sores in tbe eyes. Cures of Salt Bheum, with its intense Itchlag and burning, scald head, tetter, etc. Cures of Boils, Pimples and all other erup»

Hons due to impure blood.

Cures of Dyspepsia and other troubles where a good stomach tonic was needed. Cure* of Rheumatism,where patients wereua able to work or walk for weeks. Cures ot Catarrh by expelling the Impurities which cau«e and sustain the disease. Cures of Nervousness by properly toning aad feeding the nerves upon pure blood. Cures of That Tired Feoling by restoring strength. Send for book of cures by

Hood's

Sarsaparilla

To C. I. Hood ft C#., Proprietors, Lowell, Mass. n.|. are the best after-dinner tlOOu S illS pills, aid digestion. ISa

MEN WANTED

Local aud traveling Salesmen for S PAUL DING Nursory and Orohnril Co., 8pauldlne, III., to sell their Tre 8 and Plants direct to the retail trade, saving "Dealers" and "Jobbers" profits. Premium and gold medal trees. 600 acres—40th reai—108,000capital. Write for terms. Bend reference#.

A BARGAIN IN_^

COFFEE

Each package of "Luxury" Coffee contains a spool of thread. Regular price per !»$. •. package 20 cents. You can

buy it for 18 cents afc

WIRT'S

COLLEGE ST. WIIOCERY.

mm mm

weak

vigorous.

l»'0*r. O'-OAY. m™DRY. Wnat PEFFER'S KERVIGOfK Did! It acts powerfully und quickly. Cures nhen all others fall. Touni men regain lost manhood: old men rocuvor youthful vlcor. Alianlulely Onarantced toCureNvpv'u«neni, LnitVltallty, Imnoton^y, Nlichtlr JTmlcslum, I^mtPawer, either Hex, Fulllug Memory, Wanting DIa* ei»c", and all effects nl self abuse or exemses and Inillacrtlimi, Wards off itinanltv anil consumption. Don't let druggist Impose a worthless eubstltuto on ityloli"

«iuii and all effects of self abuse or exemses ant off l! pose you I'praimn itytoliln crctitor profit. Insist on hav* W l'EECEE'S KE1CVIUOK, or sen* tor It. On bo carried ln ve*t pocitot. Prepaid plain wrap* per. (CI per hox, or 4) for V, w11U A Positive Wrltton Uuarantee to Cure urKeftmd tba Money. Paint lilct roc.Sold

by druggists. Address

PEFFJEU MEU1CA!, ASS'N, Chlcugo, 111.

Sold By MoilVtt Morgan.

ASTORIA

For Infants and Children.

The tuilmils slpiitnts of

Th« Lotus hi I) tiHd tion Tueedity i.iyh!. I and R. C. btmiti wen- c!i vacancies «-n 1 tn- i»-iird ollicors were cliTi.'c. ifMcAlevy. pr'-sul-M I. re N A In I It owii, S •-1a

Dt'I'itmv Univ.-r^i(.v n*i

0|ii

bequests, disposing of 'ils

BUppOSjtiou6

private fortune, estimated

•».

nown

1 1

a a a

his earliest childhood. In a ful

to assas3lna!i* Wplltng-

"Cautillon had ae much right to

tjWIl fll.llll will U'

nl" in to ilav's

MISSING LINKS.

Henry Porter, of Johnson, Vt., Is gathering a sectond crop of strawberries.

More than half the world's production of quinine is disposed of in the linitM States.

It OS ertry

WW*

unnual elec-

i.K.

(ireene

•n to till the and ^iio.vh: .lohn v'nurtii, vice

I-'red T.

a

in ii, Uii' tii

to "he

siiock an

i,: utiition, and ii-vcr tn-i.o-eked and 1 yitliout .r the

I|t

A

1

,l|nvnl Hut l(

.'•N S-. i'f

.r

ii to vi'i

I

buck

to

and

•X!

•i-k on the ei-wer-

'l'ln.-f I Hi 15 H' and lituiuii F.II *'i'' I ,V t' li.ir -i :t ranvi'i- i. y,

I

u.m.iib

at MyerB me price tf.

Awarded

Highest Honors—World's Fair/ DR

*WER

CREAM

BAKING POWMft

MOST PERFECT MADE. A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder.

Frai

from Ammonia, Alum or any other adulters*^ 40 YEARS THE STANDARD. "Vl'"