The National Banner, Volume 5, Number 11, Ligonier, Noble County, 13 July 1870 — Page 4

- ¥+p ‘ - ' ?‘ atromal Banner. SRR “4 AR ,;‘J“)&‘M p Th AL ey Ll - For the National Banner. : AN IRISH BALLAD. = | BY MIBB MARDA LEVERING. : IG! P b When I was but & little chile,” Life’s trials, shure, were mioe, ) Foroch! the winds eof fate were wild | A blowing from ould time, - : And oh! me heart was very sad, . Aniall for mithers gake— For l}h:éré, ih?c&‘d n;*t?n"of( got miad, | ~ "Twas then me heart would break. Sometimes, e smephildishhears,:, Was rnnm(Mu?g ?rt" So oft to heul the painful smart, ; I’d hum an Irish ditty—- " Twas thin me mither too would smile, "T'would aise her heartache so, ./ To feel that I, her only chile, 3 © - Could call it lightsome woe, But shure, one day, and mither died, All of & broken heart, - E And I crept to me fathers’ ride, j To see her'life depart. " "T'was thin mé father signed the pladge, 1 * And me, he beit no more, . ' ' He hid the ould flask in the hedge, - As’he migbt ba' done before. Oh! could me mither thin ha' seen | The ould mon change his ways, She would bave blessed ould Patrick Gireen - Her Pat of better days. . But:in the ould counthry we dugher grave; By a shamrock, green and small, Then bid good bye—upon the wave — : T'o shamrock; cot, and all., ; ll?wince'the time me father came : I+ To this land sufe and dry— ' : " Ah!ou! me heart! he was td blume, For he fell to drinking »ye. 1 An’ shure.one day be took tao much, Aiid piver spoke again ! Theidoctor said another Pat, ;' Had “Bourbon on the brain.” Sa now me toils, just for me hread, 5 So penniless—so poor— ' St. Patrick ! oh! that I was dead, : "Twould not be worse I'm share, s For this coynthry is not me home, ; : I'm wishing all the while, / That this poor chile could cease to ream, And tread’the ‘Emerald Isle,” 2 But the saduess of me heart is spent, . I'lljput the ould pen by - No more ’ll mourn, me father sent, = : :}cross the river—iye. Me years are few, me heart is strong, The end of toil is mive, i | The galeof Fate blows-me alonyg - Adown the stream of time, 4 THE NEWSPAPER. ' ; -In a recent sermon by one of tlic Pres hyterian ‘ministers in Cincinna*i, on the secular and religious press, it was-said : -We can get along without coffee for breakfast better than we can without our paper. Not only asa vehicle of news is the paper powerful ; not only because by the paper does Flora McFlimsey do her day’s shnpp’ingr‘and the merchant his day's buying, but es!)ecit_\:ll y because it does the practical thinking of a large part of the people. They are .00 busy or toe indolent tp do it for themselves, so they get a man ‘to sit up nights, state'the facts, and draw the conclusions and advocate a theory for them ; do the whole up in a con: venient package and slip it under the front door. In half an hour, waile they sip their coffee, they have not only learned what is going'on in the world, but exactly what they ought to think and how they ought to feel about the mixed up business in this great rushing world of ours. It is idle to say a newspaper isa very ephemeral thing, or'a very unreliable thing, . and that people do not believe what is in newspapers. It is ephemeral only as the leaves of the summer are ephemeral, easily trampled, but forever renewing and exerting their influence on the face of the world. from generation to generation. , The paper you had at your table to-day is easily thrown under the counter, but the power it +peaks of is one’ you would not care to grapple. And as to not believing the papers, while there is o great deal of that kind of talk, I believe that half of lt)?e; business community, affecting to %h;e zgf-the' ‘;g;ess,,belgevje.jg it with a surrender of faith more absolute by far than they give to the Bible. * * *&% The preacher thunders on Sunday, “He that believes shall be saved ; he that believes, not shall be damned,” and it scarce wakes a ripple in the dreadfully placid sea of the people's life. They go home and sleep soundly under the terrors ot the message that has been' launched over their heads. Buton Monday morning a single line in the paper. telling how yellow dust has run.up.or fallen'throws every man of that placid people into a fever. ‘A few letters of type, more forci ble than so much powder, shoots him through the,q@rtfib a 8 if he had been shot out of a mortar, and ‘more, 'quickening than so much electricity, makes him quiver through all his flesh and spirit as he rushed around 'Change. oo am o God speed the day when, forgetting our littlenesses, our party strifes, our denominational Shibboleths, we shall "comprehend the breath of the land of our herit-

age, stretching from the river to the sca ; when our wealth, our enterprise, our activity, as well as our faith, being pledged to God, we shall use, with all enthusiasm n 8 unmatched as our, wark is glorious, evcry element of nature as well ‘as every force’ of grace, for the progress of the truth and the redemption of man. Then impatient of the feebleness of human * breath alone, we shall use lightning and steamn to be ‘heralds jof the gospel, and count foremost among the agéncies for ‘the elevation of man; an ¢levated secular and an enterprising""#eligiuus press, twining their bannhers together for a' comnion advance upon the ignorance and the wickedness of the world. e e | » jfl‘qt&qfi%lfii Records (5 '} The Cincinnaty Commercial thus coolly’ deals with the “loyal” aspect of the Akerman business : : * In their efforts to harmonize their principles with the administration and the last appointment, some of our Republican contemporaries are inclined to keep back at least part of the truth. 'They should remember the fate of Ananias and Sapphira - In' speaking of ¢he war record of Amos T. Ackerman, without a ‘c,’ one of them: says that he was forced into the rebel army, and served in it until the close lgf.t WA . Akerman was_a Union d{i‘ll G ens gnsxéd, no more. op secession, hut when it had been done, and the war began, he -entered the army voluntarily. 8o far s we know, no force was required in the -case. Moreover, he stuck.te it like a brg[hgh and did not"';\&gaafi thie iga‘iise till ite flag ' tfi?o,, ; -The truly oyl BSALLD e bl S b nomination as another evidence of the ex- . :{imrdmury sagacity of the most extraor. nary President who has sat in the Executive chair.,”: - N :

vy t .- x ,rfl "?_‘___.—7 P 5 . AvrER 90% get ‘through discussing the congressional question, the funding bill,’ coolie laber, dicj gg G eny O:GHlatte's for - good groceries. He is there himself at all times to administer to yonr wants. He sells groceriea Wery eheap, aod Plenty of theg. ? e big g call at hi %}n n, oo e ies vk & & - . J.Droker, the popular grocer, 1s driv- ‘ R i ccommag mp ic,it.‘e?firn ! stock of groceries.and thie best assortment of queensware wrr seen in this market.

& o BT oy ¥ ; ! ; : A 1{ inter qut West makes bad work ~with his types. The editor intended to say of his deceased friend, that he did not 80 % his last bome “unwept, unhonored, ~and unsung;” but the printer by one wrong lebterigot it “unbing” f | - “Why do you not thank God? asked .an Eastern ruler of an Arab, “that since you bave had me fora ruler you have E'gv;gf.betcn} af})l(igte(ti witl(l1 the plague?” odis too g 0 send two_scour, ‘upon us at once,” mfie the r('glys,c%nfi: ‘gngsgvh.xm his head. . . "“Ag to being conflicted with the gout,” says Mrs. Partington, “high living don't kbringjt on. It isincoberent in some families, and is handed down from father to son, . Haufi_iexfim_r' sgl, "dzinégted it from hi¢ wifé's grandmothét.” = ~ The greatest joiner—the lawyer ;he can place a tepant, empannel a jury, box a witnegs, bore the court, chisel a client, 'augur the gains, floor a witness, cut his board, nail the case, hammer the desk, ' file his bill,fand'shaves whole community, | Madame de Stael once said: ¢“lf I “were the mistress of fifty langudges, 1 - would think in the deep German, con- | verse/in the gay French, write in the copious English, sing in the mejestic Spanish, '«leliver in the poble Greek, and make 4 lave in the soft Ttalian.” . | A little boy, who was nearly starved by the stingy uncle (his guardian) with - whom he lived,; meeting a lank greyhound - -one day in the street, was asked by his guardian what made the dog so thin.— - After reflection, the little fellow replied : “T-suppose he lives with Lis uncle.” | ' Leta young manat twenty years of age put twenty dollars at interest instead of expending it for tobacco. Then at the beginning of the next year repeat it, and | “include also the principal and interest of the preceding year, until he shall have reached the age of seventy. The amount he would realize* would exceed thirty thousand dollars, : i Camtion. - Two men died at Tell City, Perry county, and-a’ woman and boy are dungerous Iy ill, from poison received in handling the infestines of a cow. The following are the facts in the case : e On Wednesday night the cow of Dominic Friant_djed very suddenly, On the _next day, v’thggd?ny’, Mr Friant determ-, ined to open , and’examine as to'the cause of her death, suspecting she had ‘been poisoned. He called to his assistance his wife; his little boy of ten years, and Mr. Joseph Sporcey. ‘Upon cutting open the paunch of the cow, small pieces of a pewter and a silver spoon were found | in it; and each of the parties named pushed “their hands into the paunch and ‘ felt among its contents for other pieces of | the spoons than those already found. - ‘ - On Friday morning, when the persons | arose from bed, they founa their, lrands | and arms much swollen and broken out with large :réd blotches. The swelling continued to rapidly increase and spread until it covered the entire upper part of the bodies of the victims,© Medical assistance was sammoned, and everything pussible :done/for the relief of the sufferers, but all was of no avail. ‘Mr. Friant died on Saturday, Mr. Sporcey on Sunday, and Mrs. Friant was still dangerous ly ill on Tuesday, and 1t was thought would die. “The little boy was out™ of _danger at last accounts. | The physicians give it as their opinion* that “the unfortunate victims took the poison from. the cow’s paunch into their systems by absorption, as there was no abrasure upon the skin of either of them. The case is one among the saddest and most singular we have ever been called upon to record. gl PP : : ; Reform Movement. } The reform movement has taken deep root in Morgan county. We have already mentioned.the. fact that an. independept ticket hass héen agreed upon.. The Martinsville (Ga.zette; a decided Radical paper, says of the movement s (¢ ¢.O

: Substantial citizens of the county, satisfied that a reform in the management of the local affairs of this county, of a radical character, is ut‘ently;d‘emanded,j and that such ‘reform “can not ‘be reached through any party, but must, if attained at all, be bro‘uggnfibut@y the union of those from whose pockets taxation is from year to year drawn, have, after much deliberation, formed the following ticket for the: several offices \mm@g <t 19 but naked justice to say, that “the ‘menarc of irreproachable character, so.far as our ac qaintance extends with:them. We hear that the movement: is well received by many, while, of course, it is vehemently opposed by the nominees and friends of the ticket nominated on the 11th of June. After giving 'the names of the Reform candidates, the Gazette says: “Believing that reform in the managemént of our county affairs must become a fixed principle, we have concluded to support the above ticket.” /. A

A — [~ A Prosperous Editor. i Theleditor of that excellent paver, the Mt. Carmel Democrat, which we. receive in exchange, is to have a finc building erected in that town for his own use. It is related that a few years ago,th,is. sanie. ~gentleman advertised his printing office for sale, for the reason that he did not get } enough money to. sustain it, but not finding a purchaser for big dying instituton, he lmdptokatip fifig §‘s¥..e§@p%w pub lish the paper, but under a new system. He r¢solved not to send & paper toany man Jwit.h}mt its being paid forin advance, ‘and to strike off all those from bis list who bad not pdid’’ Tt came néar taking all of his subscribers, but he did not deviate from the rule, and ‘soon his list be_gan to increase and in ashort time it was 'fiarger than it bad ever Leen, and not a doHar on the books. Ashort time ago he advertised for a partner, not being able toatténd to the business of the office Lalone; and now is compelled to'issue a supplement to his paper and glories in the erection of a fine Democratic. building.— Would not some: of the readers of the Enquirer benefit by this reflection.— Brownville Enquirer. THE conference committee on the currency bill have at last come to an agreement upon a measure which is so near to nothing that perhapsthe two houses may allow it to pass. It retires $45,000,000 of three per.centi «certificates and authorizes the issue of ss4,ooo,oooadditional national bank currency -—fa difference of the odi npunt of $10,000,000 in .{zwr o wfi%g?qfitwgm _?végfiél call inflation. . The effect of this inflation upon the country may be ascertained .by pour ing about ten buckets of salt water into the Atlantic ocean. Besides this, the bill bakes $25,000,000 of bank currency from the eastern states and distributes the amount to the west and south. It dlso authorizes {ree banking on a specie basis, It is about the most contemptible little mouse that the congressional mountain bas brdught forth. <=Ohdeago Times, * ¢ +° : e - $25.00 Reward. It baving come to our knowledge that I®erior gradesof Satinet, Jeans, Flannels, - &c., are disposed of under the pretence of being our manufacture, we, on and after ‘ P S LRy 5 R e e this ég%qmiv Wfia@ reward thiahy! , who can” Turntsh ‘e “satisfactory ‘gvidence of thei deception. We still conLue to manufacture our renowned Sati;l:&:,, bg:tans.,'Flm;nels,a'lzlankets, &c., of e best material, and have given Sol. Miet exclusive. eontrol ,‘!uzitfig}ifi nier ‘market, whers (it patfohs in conctontly find a vomplete assortment at factory pri ces. 1 IALC. GEISENDORFF & Co, ~ Rome Oity, June 20th, 18707

“Dinna’ Ye Hear the Slogan 77

-;\ <SS . “‘ .i. e 'w,,; = ; B (HEAR YE!§ JNi & : - Wm. CROWY ' _ KEKPS THE ’4 {BEST -STOGK ; T GROCERIES; P TOBE roUND N 83 e Kendallvillefis Y = Sy P U '; = Buy'em, Trv'em, o& : '4 ;H-Vl“‘ "”'—v—@’f;—“——“

Wm.CROW, : GENERAL DEALER IN GROCERIES, PROVISIONS. Country Produce : Flour, Confectionery, &c., KENDALILVILLE

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Wm.CROW, GENERAL, 13}:_41,93’14\' o T A S, - COFFEES, Etce., ete., ete. IKENDAILILLVILILE

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DOTY'S WASHING-MACHINE Lately Much Improved—and the 4 New Universal Olothes-Wringer, lufipr?ved ;vith Rowell'wwnt Doub!a.»(m&.,fij wheels, and the Patent P, & OW unquestionably far superior to any?:Mu ffl%i ing clothes ever invented, and : will .save their" cost twice a year, by saving lsbor and clothes, . . Those who have used them give testimony as follows: L : i “We like our Machine much; could not be persuaded to do without it, and with the aid of Doty; we feel that we are masters of the })osition.”— hev. L, Scott, Bishop M. E. Church. “It is worth one dollar a week in any family.’ —N. Y. Tribune. e +"'ln the laundry of my house there is a perpetual tbankseivi::ig on Mondays for the invention.”” — Rev. Theodore L. Cuyler. i “Eyery week has given it a stronger hold upon the affections of the inmatés of the laundry,” —N. Y. Observer. : ‘I beartily commend it to economists'of time, money and contentment.””— Zev. Dr, Bellows. “Friend Doty—Your last improvement of the Washing Machine is a complete success * las sure you our Mechine, after a year’s use, is today thought more of than ever, and would not be parted with under any circumstances,’’— So. lon Robinson. / i “Your Washing Machine has-been in use in our laundry, and the housekeeper expresses herself as highly pleased. with it. It certainly accomplishes a greater ‘amount of work, with less labor, and goes not wear the clothes near 80 much as the old-fashioned wash-board.— Wm. M. F. Rounds, Superintendent of In'fant D:partment t{ St. Catherine's Nursery, N. ¥, City. .. ¥ I"havé had-oue of the Universal Wringers in my hotse, and it has been'used every week for over five years, and is now 48 good as new. I'have also had a Doty Washer for some three’ years, which we use everv week, and could not well get along without. Tt is as good as'ever, and will last years yet.—E. D, Van Slyck, Editor of Democratic 11‘.e%.., Hamilton, N. V. The N. V' Weekly i&&e, of Dec. 15, 1869, in answer to a correspondent; 8y 4% *f Of W ashers, there is none.to be compared with Doty’s.”” . Prices—a Fair Offer 8 If the Merchants in vour place will not furn- | ish, or send for the machinés, send us the retail price, Washer, $l4, Extra wringer §9,and we will forward either or both mechines, free. of’ fréight, to places where no oneis selling: andso sure are we they will be liked, that we ag.ee to tefund the money if any one wishes to return ‘the machines free of freight, aftér n month’s trial, according to directions. - S No husband, father or brother should permit the drudgery of washing with ihe hands, fiftytwo days in the year, when it can be done bet‘ter, mo'r"e'expeditiousli,'with less labor, and no injury to the garments,by a Doty Clothes Washer, and a Universal Wringer, : B Bold by dealérs generally, to whom liberal discounts are made, . . " : R. C. BROWNING, Gen. Agent, : .32 Courtlandt St., New-York. May 4, 1870.-1-13¢t . e & y

JOHN WEIR & CO’S HARDWARE STORE Theundersigned woald respectfully a nounce to the citizens of Ligonier and v -cinity, that they are daily receiving su plies to their stock of goods consisting 8 general agsertment of ‘ : Shelf Hardware. b v Cutlery,. Coffin Trimmings. . Stoves, l'in-ware Iron, Steel. : all kinds of 4 BUILDING. MATERIAL, » ; '/ And everything in the line of Mechanical and Agricultural Tools. We keep the celebrat d:South' Bem Plows and Drills, Hitchoock’s Grain Ora. dle and the Beardsley Gruss Scythe; The Mishawaka and Lippincott Azes; Lippincott’s Cross~cut, Drag and Mill Saws ane the world renowned John Rothery’s File, . We are Agents for the Champion, Rea pers, Mowers, and Cider Mills a'so the Bal) Reaperand Mower. In our ";j«‘}"' we employ fione but the best of workmes ' snd use the best of material.. Eave froughing and Repairing ?&Qk;@mlhflh notize and on reasonable terms.- . i ~ Oldlron, Brass, Copper, Rags, So., ta« ‘ken in exchange for our ;j id wares, To our customers we returs our sincere thanks for their libepaiunnironage; an hope td7merit & continGiNBORGISINE s by upright and fair ded¥iy T . e e g'h 't Co. _S-the!fglb-ih, imer Housay REst Bl of Covic Bzesly Ligonter, IndioU LT ‘mEyls s .. w 7

Eon ey 323 o g 2 BTy & RN "9« LA . B oo ' 8 S e P R 2 4 - 8 . . TR : AN 5 } ACETATE POTASH, 4 new and “ntuahle preparstion Jor ihe ve. Jief and cure of Gravel. beritation of the : Kiadder and Urethra, Dropxical, Rheumatic and Gouty AWections, Pains 5 ©in the Rack and Loiny, &c.. &e, : " el S S L § To those suffering from disexses withe Kid- . pvs und Bladder, and the consequent train'’ of distressing ailments, this semedy is coufifently reconmended as u relief, ani needs hui “a trial to provelits great value in the cure of the aihove hentioned diseases. Asan Alterative, this Elixir «ill Jre found much move heneficizl than the preparations of Savsaparilla, <o populay, (and we might say of questioned medicinal 'vaiwer, and where a 1 Bload Puritier i« wewied. there 18 no T(e i that the Diuretic and Alterative Elixir Will aceamplisi all that iy desived. Those Hyiig in malarions districts. West and South, rasia gendérial thing need. on the approach of L owarns wenther, sueh 4'reinedy @ ong that will remayve lgaor, aud restore tone il Vigoy 14 T ihe system. No preparation will moce efleciwally ceconsplish s i ihe ! OIURETIC AND ALTERATINE ELIXIR. 11 is by far a more putent and efteerual A l}cr- < stive and Blood Purifier than Sarsaparilla. and free rom_all objections that may he made against the latter, and its usual adjunets, © lodide of Potasginm, or ‘someghreparations af Merengy. 5

CMANUFACTURED BY THE PROPRIETORS, . =i . g ; F.E.Suire & Co. WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, : ! hlnmrlersfnml Dealers in | DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, OIS, &'(?., el Manunfact urers of Chemical & Pharmacentical Preparations, e AND PERFUMERY, N. W. Cor. 4th and Vine Btreets, i (OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE.) . Cincinnati. -- Ohio. e ~Syéet Quibe: sy NARKECENT - T WPRO v}g‘,\“i."\ 3 i pihdd ee Df the Birtep S sk - ¥ e w. h which all are famif e Doae tos Gose; it s " 1 FULL 7 JQUAL IN EVERY WAY TO BITTEFJQUININE, AND LIKE IT 13 THE ONE : s AT. POSITIVE and UNFRILING #0: fali DISEASES of MALARIOUS G):IGIN, Fe § and Ague, . ntexmittent Fever, Chill Fever, Remittent Fever Bilious Fey r, : Dumly Ague, ‘and tls long train of disorders tf'owing these fhen neglécted. s ! 'SWEET QUININE ‘ is mgde solely from Peruvian Balk, (so is Bfter Quinine,) therefore is or Veketable orighn, and not a Mineral poison, bufon the conieary is proved to be one m‘tiw ments founfll in the blood of all healthy peffons., SWEET QUININE acts s an antidote to, (a 8 wcll & a cure for,) falarial or miasmatic poifon, fige absorjgion of which by the lungd causes Interplittent Fevers, et¢. :The onlyfadvan. tage chimed for Asl - SWEET QUININE .| over §ae. use of old Bitter Quininedis the entirg absence of that l@tflne. pe tent bitte e which-in th [email protected] is angins mov ¢ obstacle Nihljreit thanogt personsf and always with childven. = .} SWEET. QUININE ; 1 u'rgformls—i;l;‘]'m!?r.me p g anc ) | Findl, ] ; .mn'uy amm e , ns, Farr & ¢f, 4 riedfe : PO ok LIS 'm Tl R

DR.PIERCE % ALT{;:}EKI. EDICAL (ingfltfl“ R

This 18 the most thorough bisod purifie ‘discovered, and cu'raallf&iqn ffl)g‘l the X Scrofula to a common eruption. Pimples and Blotches on the face, and gkaly or a rough skin, which are sach annoying blemishes to many’ youing persons, yield to the use of'a few bottles of this wonderful medicine. From one to ei%ht bottles cure Salt Rheum, Egsi elas, Scaly Kruptions of the Skin, Scald e‘n& Ring Worms, | Boils, Scrofala Bores, Ulcers and ‘* Canker” in | the miouth and stowmach.. It is a puré medicinal extract of native roots and plants, combining in harmony Nature’s most sovereign cunb&v,e ‘properties, which God has instilled into the vegetable kingdom for healing ‘the sick.” Itis's great restorer tor the strength and vi%o'r of the system. Those who aré languid, sleepless, have nervous apprehensions or fears, or any of the affections symptomatic of weakness, will find ‘convincing' evidence of its restorative powers If you feel dull, dmwag, debilitated and despondent, haye frequent headsche, mouth tastes badly in the morning, irre l‘ur;";‘vmti#a' sad tongue coated, you are aué;ing [rom torpid. liver or *‘biliousness.”’” In many cases of “liver complaint’” oply a part of these aflmptogns.‘m experienced. 'Asw remedy.for all such cases, Dr: Pierce’s Golden Medical gisogt{ery‘hu no | equal as it effects perfect cures, leaving the liver strenfthene& ‘and healthy. | For ithe cure of Habitual Constipation of the Bowels it id a never failing remedy, and' those who have usediit’ for this purpose are loud in its praise. In Bronchial, Throat and Lunt M‘:tfiq‘ prodoo ed many gr.w remarkable cnres,; where ether | _medicines had failed, . Sold by drn_q’uh at 81, per bottle. Pressred at the:Chemical Laborato: ry of'R. V. PIERCE, M, D. Buffslo, N. Y.7qch 210WN ORDINANCE. o:nmncl"roé::mn SHOTION FIVE OF |AN: ORDI+ /. NANCE TO INSE_THE SALF¥ OF SPIRITUOUS AND mmxwflghm&gg;%m' OCTOBER 15, 1867:. Bit Ordained by the Botrd of Truistees of the Town of Lwoflgr.b& the State.of Indiana ;. ' ‘That section five of said Aot be and is hereby Cflé‘;m}:d tol lm«g;u %&!’fl FOIL - 8 i E:"M:’WJ 5 foma.of Aty :l'l?:u Alapoan feaarSh 1 ' m‘ QU Y '.? 0y s & §if he'obtain license fo anrfuw.Gixen under The” officlal T !fi"’!&i@!"fiflmfi!@ b 7 S B PARRER, President :eé.i‘ 4 e o o £ El'B.B.Glung?Okrk. Eira ol S anilig) Ligonier, June 29, 1870..9¢t3 p.f.84 60

: HAVE JUST RECEIVED AN ' Entirely New and Attractive Stock - L e SRR OXOTES, CASSIMERES, VESTINGS, ~ HATS AND CAPS, AND ! Their Merchant Tailoring bl)ep:u'tment is filled with all that is new and novel in that line, and they are prepared to | . MAKE TO ORDER, 4 Every description of Clothing, at Pricés to suit the times. Call | - and see them in their ; New Store Room New Store Room, | In Reub. Miller’s Brick. Block, West Side Main St. - JENGIEY. & CO. | Kendallvilte, May 4, 1870 :

THE FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT HAS PASSED! v o And is anvestablis'héd fact ;so is the & ; NEW S ¥ S 8 IVE : s : — Introduced at — i Solomon Mier’s DRY-AG-(v)ODS, CLOTHING, BOOT & SHOE, AND 'GENERAL MERCHANDISE STORE, ; ' - fose i Of selling Goodsat a— ° - Profit of Five Per Cenl.! .~ FROM ORIGINAL COST. I{rwing arrived from the fiast yigl::mfully selected fashionable stock of NOTIONS, Silks, White Goods, Linens, &c. &c. ' . Anti all ;mfiginghle articles belonging to a first ¢lass GENERAL MERCHANDISE BUSINESS, ;1 am prepared and determined to offer to the publie, ' : | At a Profit of Five Per Cent., e .Relying ofi the old proverb, o “LARGE SALES AND-SMALL PROFITS,” : g Aée l;xnch more advan.tégeons to lv)uyer> and seller than : LARGE PROFITS AND SMALL SALSE. » i ijWfl;-nét sell‘:‘as low.” but ' s - Lower than any other House IN NORTHERN INDIANA, i And pay higher prices tor b ' /ALL SORTS OF COUNTRY PRCDUCE.

; ? 5 ¢-' ! ] P A NI D . ke READY-MADE 7i_ ‘ : CLOTHING DEPARTMENT ’5 iHs_xe’been thorq“\mghly ;énovated, and an entire new stbck_has been added. The Five Per Cent. System has been inaugurated, and will be : s strictly enforced. bl “ Bhoo, iy, don’t bodderme’;”' % lam going to Sol. Mier’s to huy:.cheap Grocerier, - Coflee, Sugar, Rice and Tea.. = . ; : ; ! To buy there.is of advantage to me. Come one, come all, and try, . : And look somewhere_elseilg-and~by. g ¥ s ) i, i SOTLOMON MIER. Ligonier, April 20, 1870.50tf i -

1000 ) 7 AGENTS WANTED - somrd v BINGLEY’S | . NATURAL HISTORY.. 'Giflng:iclegr and intensely interesting account of ‘the l{: nite vakréety of hnl;::s :nd modes of flni:f of ‘NEArIy ever, W of y es, inm{sminés,g mofi usca, and ‘ln"tfi’dchim of the globe. the famoas London four-volume edifion, with large additions from the most celebrat‘edmfiaturflhuotthelfe. Complete in one large handsome volume of 1040 pages, with over 1,(%0 spirited. cngravli’flrfim- c | X CE': ONLY 8450, | The cheapest book ever ofc reg,, and one of the most desirable, . Agents doln% El&flly "Terms the: most liberal. ‘Address, C. P T, Pablisher, - | 38 West Fourth street, Cincinnati, 0., 421 y Bch.) or 5 College Place, N. Y. SHERIFF’S SALE. ; By virtue of an order of sale, to me issued by the Clerk of thé Noble Circuit Court,in the _case orj'Johx‘; Csm;rmings a;d»l}rbg_fl (ti_ummlingp 1 ~verctus Jacob oung, I will offer for sale at pub'c avor:6uiat e Coird Houshdoor in.the 1 town of Albion, county of Noble and state of In- | dians, on .Bntnrd:‘y. July 2trd, 1870, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. :and 4 o’clock, ». M, _of ssid day, the follewing described real estate. ituate in said :county and Sta':to wit: Com:. , ng.st the north-east corver of the south“east quarter of the north-west quarter of section ten-[lo] in township thirty.five [3s] north of: range‘nine {9] east, and running thence south t-mymgu 128] rods, thence west 7.180] ¢ds, :thence imorth {wenty-eight: f - rods,. thenoe east'eighty [80)| rods to the fi e of. be-; gioniog.*° ° MOSES KISER, bl nida ! Noble Conuiy. Albion June 29; 1870. [prfee, $6.30.]

A | THE GREAT CAUSE HUMAN MISERY. Publighed in Sealed Envelope, : Price 6cts A Leecture on the Nature, Treatment and Radical Cure of Seminal Weakness, or Spermatorrhea, induced by selt-abuse, Involuntary Emissions, Impotency, Nervous Debility and impediments to mlrriagglgene_nily; Consumption, Epi(eily and Fits; Mental and Physical fncaploitg, % —By Bob%:.l. Culverwell, M. D., Author the Greenßook, &c. | : : ' | The warld-renowned anthor, in this admira‘ble Lecture, clepr:_y proves from his own experience that the awful conuguences of self-abuse m? be effectnally removed without medicine, ‘and withont dangerous surgical operation, bougies, instrunments, rings or cordials, pointiui out a mode of cure at once certain and effectua by which every sufferer, no matter what his condition may; be, may-cure -himself cheaply, privately ans, radically. This LecTore wiLL PROVE A BOON TO THOUSBANDS., Bent under sesl to tny address, in a plain envelope, on the receipt of six cents, or two post'&3‘s% Afi’;%a ks. Adae"“:ft:' 'i%fi‘;"’i‘.“‘ uide,’’ price nts. ress the P ORISR TOCHAS. 7. C, KLINE & GOy - 127 Bower&!ew York, Post Office Box 4,586, July 91,1869-Iy. = . CRAT b . Adminmistrator’s Notice. | iThe undersigned has been appointed adminW:fi;m% of Gideon Planck, late of gobh , Indiana, deceased, - Said estate Foine ot 2 JORN'D. MORRELL, Adm’r. June 29, 1870,.9¢8, Lo £

Hardware Down! ' WE’_ARE .lUS'I“ RF‘.(;Y’.]VING A FRESH AXND C;).\ll’LE"l‘E SPRI'N(:;: STOCK dF | e i — CONSISTING OHF—‘:V : ‘ - i STEEL, NAILS, SASH, GLASS, . "~ DOORS, PUTTY, LOCKS, BOLTS, HINGES, LATCHES, | TABLE AND POCKET CUTLERY, | CHISELS, AXES, MATTOCKS, &o, & vl : . | —All of which we ofl‘ér-— o : c AS LOW AS ANY HOUSE /i ' Lo " —IN : ; NORTHERN INDIANA. STOVES ! STOVES! STOVES ! inlendless ;ariety. sl:y les‘and patterns, at Tower prices than ever. Among them we mnyvmention Senator, Redan, Jubilee, Minnesota. Sovereign, and _fi EXTE NSION. T : THE LEGISLATOR,

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Heads the List of Improved Cook Stoves; ndmit;ed by all usin tto be the best Cook Btove made. It has everywhere given universal satisfaction, and -we cong A dently recommend it to all persons in'wani of a Good Stove: ; » Calland seeitat =~ J. M. CHAPMAN & Co.’s. ) £ .. . i ‘ : ’ \ \: - -~ Shingles! Shingles! N A QA 410 : g 200,000 “A” SAWED, 16 &18 in. : PINE SH lAN(:}IJEXS,,: : On hand, at the LOWEST CASH PRICE, at - ¥ ML CHAPMAN & (30,’;3. iy P W, »fio Plows ever sold in this section have given Sl aviril 7 satisfaction &8 the SOUTH BEND CHILLED PLOWS, introduced last season. Its chief pointsare: Lightoess of Draft, Width and Degthaof Cut, while it.is warranted to scou{*whereve'r a Steel ' Plow will, and they are'much more durable. We give below the result of a trial of Plows‘held - in South Bénd, last fall : - Yoafs { sy g 1 { £ : 3 Draft.. ' . Width. Depth. 5 CHILLED, - - wit AT R 350 pounds,’ 16 B'4 inches, * 7 inches. ~ BRYAN, ' < - fewvew 00l N Teegtrhe Do seggiy 88l o e e BILL, AAy e S e by e e 1400 5b T B e 8,18 BALL g BRSO D e oet et e 6 o SYQOR L oy Rt IR e e Ry e . Call and see them at J. M. CHAPMAN & CO.’S, e bt R ok Cheapest Hoes; Forks and Rakes, o Shovels, Spa.des and Garden Tools in town,at s WAGON MATERIALS, HUBS, SPOKES, FELLOES, SPRINGS & AXLES, a full lineat . s i F M OBAPMAN & €O7B, widlesieens QUNSMITRING vl 3 s e Pl TR AR ey Ll . 'fa",“gf ' IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. Saiatinbed, raraired hovall abs. ket seod oh S ark wotie. R el of workmen, < WHRENDA Y, (Wrn. Culveyhouse,) who will repmr angihing iom o Hemieey Machine to a Saw Mill. : e Ll LSRR e T ey SEE SIGN OF THE BIG 6UN, AT J. M. CHAPMAN & 008 | A i & 4 5 . i Ssd 3 W e 2 : - e Ly e ! . b oit 2y - EAVE TROUGHS PUT UP!! g e iy e <t b | : it el R ‘““””‘«"‘?%& 5 3@1%»94 awatnil K Fgios o iy B 10 ey SRS el Sinowl sosfviinist bualve A'T J. M. CHAP M}A} -fi i qugfi o ikl i i el a 5 i pteioeees (0003 SO RG] MICRCUGERI NS ST . wmmq-mgmgmuawminm tantinl manner, on shos notioe " ' Lwonie?,m‘fis,mi*‘? Latak eol I o iR “ot wnihpal o 0 0