The National Banner, Volume 9, Number 32, Ligonier, Noble County, 3 December 1874 — Page 4
The Farm and Household.
DAMAGED Fruir.—Don’t eat damaged fruit. It is no wiser than to éat the flesh of a sick animal. = Wormeaten, leathery, and insipid or.crabbed. fruit is diseased and not fit to be' used. A little investigation- will show how unfit to be consumed it is.Let a person of delicate digestion try both healthy and diseased fruit. .The first will, if properly taken, rest easily { on his stomach, dr at .any rate better than the second, which: will fret hisl ‘whole system, producing a feeling of distention, oppression or some similar trouble. Damaged fruit is but little better than an absolute poison. To Remove Warts from Hands. Purchase a dime’s worth of spirits of hartshorn; bathe warts, or,if very numerous, that portion of the hand where the warts are, with a small portion of the spirits of hartshorn, each night and morning, for about three .weeks, not washing the hands immediately after. The use of it will not cause any pain.unless it comes in contact with a cut or bruise, A cure is usually effected in about three weeks. . The same treatment for corns is one of the most effectual remedies ever tried; paring the surface of the corn each day as it grows hard; being careful not to pare tuo close so as to draw blood or to make them tender. Keep the vial containing the spirits wellcorked or it will soen evaporate. . Keeping Meals Waiting. Little things often interfere with our comfort very much, and one small annoyance is for men to delay coming to dinner when called. Sometimes they have an hour or more of work which they will do before .quitting, and then they go to the house to fiad the dinner cold and the cook discouraged. Nothing is more disheartening to a tired woman than a table full of dirty dishes ornamenting the table an hour and a half later in the day than usual. Punetuality is a virtue that men should learn if they -are in the
habit of being uncertain about com- ' ifg to meals. Any woman worthy -the name of house-keeper will be regnlar with her meals if it lies within her power to have them, so. : The Leading Evil. In this country, love of dress has assumed alarming proportions. Many homes are rendered materially dreary by, the passion for dress. Good food, nice furniture, prints, bogks, and various trifles which go to make up the sum of a comfortable home cannot be _afforded because Mrs. Robinson . would rather die than that Mrs. Jones slwuld see her again at church or at the Brown’s party in thiit mauve silk. Men cannot be too reselute in the steps they take to diminish ,this great evil. Most women are amjenable to redsonable arguments persistently urged by those they regard with affection, and theYremonstrances and representations .. 0f ifather, especially are likely to carry Aveight with his children, whose er- ' rors often arise from the absence of such sensible counsel precisely at that period of life when it is most needed. Give Your Child a Paper. A child beginning to read becomes delighted with a newspaper, because | he reads of names and things which are familiar, and he will progress accordingly. A newspaper in one year is a year’s schooling to a child. Every " father must consider that information " is connected with advancement. The mother of the family, being one of its heads, and having mere immediate connection with the children, should ‘herself be instructed. A mind’ occu- " pied becomes fortified against the ills of life, and i$ braced for emergency. Children amused by reading and study are more considerate and easily governed. How many thoughtless young men have spent their earnings in a tavern or grog shop who.oyght to have been reading! HHow niany fathers. who have not spent twenty dol- + lars for books for their families would have given thousands to reclaim a son or daughter who had ignorantly, and thoughtlessly fallen into temptation! ‘Cost of a Stove. : Persons familiar with the cost of iron castings in general business have doubtless wondered what there is in stoves over similar fabrics of iron to ' make them so expensive to users of them. Compared to beds, tables, chairs, carpets and other articles of prime necessity in household use they are exorbitantly high. They last no‘ longer than domestic wares generally, - and it would'seem ought: to approximate in price to other utensils. The life of a good stove is from five to ten years, according as it is used, which is no longer than “bedsteads, chairs, tables, and other furniture of similar - quality endure. The Iron Molders Journal gives some- facts as to. the cost of making stoves which are of generdl interest. Mr. John S. Perry, of Albany; calculates that a gross ton of iron will make 2,120. pounds of clean castings; which would furnish seven stovesi of 300 pounds each. He further calculates that the cost of molding per 100 pounds is $1.3714, which would make the work on a stove cost $4.1414 for molding. No. 1 foundry iron' was quoted in New York, September 10, at $3O per ton, which at Mr. Perry’s figures would make the iron in a 300-pound stove cost $4.28; the net cost of the stove in question being $8.40. Such stoves are sold by dealgers without any furniture or fixtures at- $2B and $3B, according to finish. ,
How to Have Gopod Cider. The careless, shifting way we have of making cider and spoiling it at the same time is a sin-as if ¢ider syere good only for vinegar, aird as if vinegar would be good enoughi no matter how poor the cider! We -shake our trees, gather the sour apples (in many cases) into heaps, let half of them become rotten, take them off to the cider mill, dump them into the common heap, and take the so called sweet cider which® the pressman allows us—so many gallons to the bushel.: The apples’ are,ground, and, if no water be .added directly to the mash, the straw with which the cheese is laid up is -dripping wet with water, and of course the cider;is diluted by just so much.— Water is of course added if the cider will bear it. Such cider is poor stuff, anyhow. It taste of rottenness when “sweet,” has a harsh flavor when it is the best, sours before it has done sparkling, and is “hard”—that is, vinegar, or vinegary—before February. Try this way: Select sound—that is, not rotten apples. Bruises are no disadvantage, perhaps the contrary.— They may be both sweet and sour, and the more substantial the apples the better the quality of the cider. Insist upon cleanliness at the mill. Better use a hand mill than take apples to a mill where you cannot have things done just as you want. Grind the apples and let the mash. stand some hours before pressing, stirring to get color, and’ when one cheese is in the press have another ground and waiting. Use no water to wet the straw, but moisten it with sweet cider; it requires but little. Run the cider or “must” direcfly into clean, sweet whisky barrels. If there is the least smell of mustiness the barrels should be purrified by burning sulphur in them. If tl‘\%yegmvo beld either cider or vinegar before, wash them out Moy?hly with soda, letting them stand for some time with water in
them, rendered alkaline by soda, and wash it around in them frequently so as to remove the vinegar from every part. : - Carry them home fuwll and place them in.the coolest place available.— Then draw out, perhaps, two gallons, to allow space for the effervescence to work off without overflowing during the active fermentation. Have one barrel or half barrel to drink from if you need, and ‘to fill° up the others from as soon as the active fermentation is over. Keep the bungholes covered with pieces of clean blanket, with stones laid upon them. This will keep out fruit flies and exclude access of air, while the carbonic acid gas formed during the fermentation will pass out freely. The cooler the cider. is kept the slower will be the working and the better the result. In a week or fortnight, according to circumstances, the' fermentation will have quieted down and a considerable deposit of lees' will have taken place. Then rack off into clean barrels, filling them full. -As soon as the. “singing” has ceased and the cider nearly clear, rack again and bung up tight. : : It ought really to be racked -again in March, and as soon as racked “fined” with' isinglass, dissolved after long. maceration in cider only until it becomes a thin jelly, using one and a half to two ounces of isinglass to the barrel. This will carry with it all impurities to the bottom and leave the liquid "clear and pure. This cider should. be nearly as fine as hock, and ‘may be rebarreled or bottled. There are sundry minutie which the best cider-makers lay great stress upon. We would be glad of the views of those who are really adepts at this simple art. It is really a shame that with such an abundance of raw material our people generally should be as ignorant of what good cider is as they are of good cheese.—Rural New - Yorker.
- ACCORDING to a correspondent of the Marietta (Ohio) Register, the body of an infant dying suddenly in that vicinity was followed to the grave by a Maltese cat that had been the child’s pet in life. The ‘animal persisted in remaining beside the burial place until the last sod was replaced, and then followed the bereaved family back to the house. At night she returned to the burying ground and, being followed and v@ifled, was seen to work frantically with all four feet until she had completely leveled the little mound over the grave. Then she went home again; but on the following morning was seized with a fit exactly at the hour of the child’s sudden sickness and died at the moment corresponding with ‘the child’s’death.
Tire Chicago 7'imes pretends to have news that the ?altimore & Ohio Road will by competition reduce the earnings of the Lake Shore $2,000,000 annually. It is well known that the Times has a grudge against the Lake. Shore, and no doubt it would be pleased to see such a stateof affairs as it predicts. But the fact that one road leads from the West to New York djrect, and the other from' the West to Baltimore, is good reason for. doubting the prediction. The liake Shore has all the advantage in the outset, and we shall be greatly surprised if it does not retain it. 'The Lake Shore stockholders are not badly frightened.—EBlkhart Review. i -eO B e % Anxious but Convinced. An energetic lady in Olwein, lowa, laments her inability to vote. “Why, if I were a man,” she said recently, “I’d go to the polls if I had to be laid on a feather bed, placed on a stoneboat, and hauled by a blind ox with one leg broken, but I’d vote! = But what’s the use of talking? ~ Men are men, when they aint swine, and can’t be driven.” e GupE— Abandoning the Country. The directors of the Liverpool, London and Globe insurance companies have decided, it is reported, to close all their offices in this country except the New York office, and stop taking risks in the United States, owing to the heavy losses incurred here during the past few years. : PHILIFP A. CARR, AUCTIONEER, Offers his services to the publi¢in general. Terms moderate. Orders may be left at.the shoe store of P. Sisterhen.. Ligonier, January 8, ’73-37 A. GANTS, : Surgical and Mechanical Dentist, LIGONIER, - - INDIANA. > Is prepared : o f”‘—’ potdhosimlythinfi Aot i Py intheirline. >2B succesfnl prac-sxc-_\(“j} tice of ove 10 : x\ff\f,:fi\ g Sl years jus €8 ‘“*‘fi"@ **\%fif"ff?? him in saying s J;Q': fififi v'??* ;fif that he can T T S 3 giveentiresatY W ‘fl - lisfactionto a b B 8 A who may » stow their patronage. B® Officeone doornorth of Kime’s, Mavin St. g Gravel Roofs That Will Not Leak, 1 'Y desires to call the attention B' CAFFE& of the public to the fact that there have been but two genuine gravel roofs put up in the town of Ligonier, one of them 17 and the other 3 fvem‘es ago. These roofs are all that is claimed for them.and should not be classed with a somewhat gimilar but vastly inferior process of roofing lately introduced in this town. Mr. Caffey having gained a thorough knowledge of putting on gravel roofs that swiil not leak and are very dnrab.le,, respectfully solicits a trial and fiunrantees entire satisfaction. For proof of this he refers, with fermission. to Tim Forsyrne and W. A. BRown, Ll-gonier, Ind . The roofing on the Hillgdale Chair Factory bnildings is of Gravel Cement, and gives us enfire sat--Isfagtino. CeoOWrLL & HussARD, Proprietors.’ Hillsdale, Mich., August 20, 1873. gt T G i ° Lo ity 9. New Groeery in Ligonier!
CLEMENS KAUFMAN Would réfip(’.ctfullyinform h’is 61d customers, and the public in general, that he has just moved into : i the newly finished Middle Room of the Banner Block e withlan entire _ : G # eOP. | - Choice Groceries, Bought at the lowest cash grices. and that he is now prepared to supply the community with Every Article Usuaily found in a flrs‘t-class Grocery at REMARKABLY LOW PRICES! 'He sells for Casgh only, and will make it an ;)bject : for everybody to buy of him, Teas, Coffees, Sugars, ARD Pure Liquors B large quantities, '[, Buysall kinds of Country Produce é‘ rv———— S Everybody invited to call, examine Goods and ascertain prices. Remember t}xe Plape: Middle Room of the Banner Block. | CLEMENS KAUFMAN. Ligonier, Oct. 29, 1874-27-tf
: Dberti eio ertisements. THE WEEKLY SUN, Al ciehe 'page, indegen dent, honest and fearless nempaper. of 56 broad columns, eegecially designed for the farmer, the mechanic, the merchant and the professional man, and their wives and children. We aim to make the Weekly Sun the best family newspaper in the world. It is full of enteriaining and instructive reading of every gort, but prints nothing to offend the most scrupulous and delicate taste.— Price, $1.20 per f'e,ar, postage prepaid. The cheapest paper published. Tryit. Address Tar Sun, New York City. 5
~ The Liver must be kept in order, - SANDFORD’S LIVER INVIGORATOR has become a staple family medicine, Purely vegetable— Cathartic and Tonic—forall deran?emems of Liver, Stomach and Bowels. Will clear the complexion, cure gick-headache, &c. Shanimitations. Try Sandford’s Liver Invigorator. '-'PSYCHOMANCY, OR SOUL CHARMING.” * How either sex may fascinate and gain the love and affections-of any person they choose, instantly. This art all can possess, free by mail, for 25 cents; to%ether with a Marriage Guide, Egyptian Oracle, Dreams, Hints to Ladies, etc.— '1,000,000 sold. A queer book. Address T. WILLIAM & CO., Publishers, Philadelphia, Pa. e R R S R o periday at home, Termsfree. AdssE~ s2odreas (Xno StiN aou&Co,Portlpnd,&e A WEEK guaranteed to MaleandFemale Agents, in their locality. Costs NOTHINGto try it. Particul'rsFree. u P.O.VICKERY & CO., Augusta, Me.’ | T Geo.P.Roweli&€o. c¢onduct an Agency for the reception of adve}tiSements for American NEwsPAPERS —the most complete establishment of the kind in the world.” Six thousand NeweraPEßs are kept regularly on file, open to inspection by customers. Every Advertisement is taken at the home price of the paper, without any additional charge or commission. An advertiser, in dealing with the Agency, is saved trouble and correspordence, making one contiract instead of a dozen, a hundred or a ttf)oueand. A Book of eighty pages, containing lists of best papers, largest circulations, religious, agrieultural,clags,political,daily and country papers, and all publications which are specially valuable to advertisers,with some information about prices. is sent FREE to any address on application.— Persons at a distance wishing to’ ma{);e contracts for advertising in any town, city, county, State or Territory of the United States, or any portion of the Dominion of Canada, may send a concise statement of what they want, together with a copy of the Advertisement they desire inserted. and will receive information by return mail which will enable them to decide whether to increase or reduce the order. For guch information there is no charge, Orders are taken for a single paper as well as for a list; for a single dollar as well as for a larger sum. Offices (Times Building), = . 41ParkRow,N.Y, ::::‘ . A,.‘_:,_. _t> . »._.,,1_ ee e b e SHINKE & | T F. W. SHINKE & BRO, b.; ] i ‘ HAVE ON HAND A STOCK OF Summer Goods . ; 9 L STICH AS '
S 0 i ‘-‘ . 3 e Beots & Shees GAITERS, &c., | For Men, Women and Childmn‘s wear, which will pe sold : : g AT AND BELOW COST ——To muke room for another stock of— — Fall and Winter Goods. REMEMBER THE I’L,-\(TE:' . Shinke’s Brick Building, CAVIN SIREET, LIGONIER, IND. Aug. 20, 1874-9-117. ! Tin Emporium JOHN ABDILL, At the old stand of Geo. McLenn,‘has constantly on hand a large and complete assortment of Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron Ware Forks, Hoes, Butts,Screws, Lock>s, Latches,Straps _ Hinges, Pocket and Table Cutlery, &c. Also, a full line of the celebrated MISHAWAKA PLOWS, A]l of which will be gold at bottomfigures bfor cash. _o_— Especial attention given to the laying of TIN ROOFS, PUTTING UP OF EAVE TROUGHS, . and all kinds of JOB WOREK. Call and examine goods before buying elsewhere. EEMEMBER THE PLACE: ! SIGN OF THE LARGE COFFEE POT. May 21,73-25tf JOHN ABDILL., qAD ] ’Br & TRUNKS?
The best place in Noble and adjoining co'u-ntie!h to buy Substantial and Durable Trunks —is at-—; L - A. METZ’S, ngdnier, : : : Imdiana. He has just received a splendid assortment of Trunks which he will gell at Very Low Prices, much cheaper than‘n similar article can be purchased elsewhere. ' Call and see. HARNENS and SADDLES. Farmers, call at my shop and ascertain prices on harnees, saddles, whips, & lam selling at bottom figures, andl warrant my goods to be firsto & | ¢lass—durable and substantial. Oct, 29, 1874.-97 | - - . A.METZ. J
1874. WINTER TRADE. 1875. - One Price Cash Store. LIGONIER, INDIANA. We desire to annou_nzce to the public that we have just received an entire new stock of Winter Goods. and would call especial attention to the large assortment of . ettt e et e } :Of Every Description.‘ Also, Full Lines of . ~ Black Alpaccas, Puré Mohairs, Cashmeres, ' AND EMPRESS CLOTHS A SPLENDID LINE of WATERPROOFS in all the NEW SHADES, . ‘A FULL LINE OF: : & LADIES’ UNDERWEAR, GENTS” FURNISHING GOODS, . KID& WINTER GLOVES. V A LARGE ASSOiRTMENT OF L Shawls and Skirts, Cloths, Cassimeres and Cloakings. ; . A Complete Assortment of . ; For Dresses and Cloaks. :]E}e_adéd Gimps, 'Ball Fringes, Yack Laces, &c., all of the very latest styles. - LAP ROBES, BLANKETS AND FLANNELS, ‘ ‘ Of every quality and description. A \&jéll uss&rtcd stock in TS 2 SHOE :CAPS BOOTS : SHOES, HATS : CAPS, . | AND CARPETS, - (;‘rive us a call before purchasing. We gfiarantee the pricé and quzl.lity of our goods and will not be undersold, - SRR e T e ' “LIVE AND L;ET LIVE.” . HARDWARE EMPORIUM OF FOIRN WEIR, : : : DEALER IN . e . . SHELF & HEAVY HARD-WARE, g , ) o Cutlery, Stoves, Agricultural Implements, &c., &e., : ¢ ; Where will always be found a fall line o‘f‘ : ' . Parlorjfßox and Cooking Stoves, For either wooli or COAL. Ikbcp a full line of Building Material, composed in part df’ Nails, Glass, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Palats, oils, Door ‘Trimmings, Pine Lath, and the Pelton Stafr Shingles, a“:fcv(;’.hiclha‘i‘;%ls%?fll)xlg as low as the lowest, quality ‘consido SR - i | P O SNN ) v A NN
’ ¢ "COQUILLARD WAGON,” Oviatt Patent Bob Sleds, Walter A, Wood Reaping and Mowing Machines, samples of all of which may be seen at my store. Agent for the Wouster Clover Hullers, and Richmond Portable and Stationary Steam Engines, Threshers, Porse Powers. &c¢, A T'IN SHOUP in connection with the store. Give me a call before purchasing, and prove my motto: **Live and Let Live.” LIGONIER, IND., Sept. 17, 74—tf. ’ JOHN WEIR. ___ENGEL & CO’S ADVERTISEMBENT. . THE LARGEST CLOTHING AND HAT HOUSE IN NOBLE AND M ADJOINING COUNTIES. _ w‘ . _ MAY L WX D) | R T e B T Te L e e S eP i S SY T ' AT KENDALILVILLE, ’ Call the particular attention uf their patro-ns, and ghe public geunerally, to their unusually complete \ ~ and large stock of s - _ . 5 s 2 ' L . i) T Goods for Men’s and Boys’ Wear. i : L —CoiC—CLOTHING for Men, Youths, Boys and Children.. . : FURNISHING GOODS for Men, Youths, Boys and Children. . - HATS AND CAPS for Men, Youths, Boys and Children. = Cloths, Coatings, Cassimeres and Vestipgs, Trunks, Satchels, : and Traveling Bags, . - ' And all goods that are usually found inia first-class | Clothing and Merchant Tailoring Establishment ! As usual we | every description of .Men_’s and Boy’s Wear at the lowest Mflkfl 10 Ul‘flfll’ possible prices FIRST-CLASS WORK can be made. | . An Bxamination of Our Prices | o % W 5 " Wil convince all that 4 A LABGEHE Per Centage will be SAVED . By pnrchaqlfig of us, in view of ouf glving oitr entire attention to Men and Boys’ Wear, .- ' Meuy caside main strect. *f 1 . ENGEL& CO. Oct. 15,1874, . ! e | RENDALLVILLE.
8 et : i it g . ache, Pain m the Shoulders, Coughs, ; :s X ~1.232 Do Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour m i 1 Sty 167 F_lnmh) Dura'blhty & PI’IQ&, Eructations of the -S-tofnach, Bad’Téste | < Are far superior to those of eastern mmm_fnct{lr_e. : ::lilmt;h‘(()lfhtll;) énlli’egltl lollfi'flfintltr?:;];is(’) nsz‘Plttfi: G : s- o " : - |Call, See and IBBuy.| Lungs Panin theregionof the Kidnoys, g 1 October 30, 'l3-27tf ' . and a hundred other painful symptoms, :‘i e A omaERL, - are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. One botw| : Yool ee e tle will prove a better gnarantee of its : . | APPLETON’S - | merits than a lengthy advertisement. Sey . | -Scerofula, or King’s Evil, White ' ' ' AMERICA NCYC Lfl P E DIA Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled LOOK! LOOK! il LA Xeae Eitre, Scrofulotis Tnfwnmations, e : : New Revised Edition. b Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial affec-: £ e ey : Entirely rewritten by the ablest ‘writers on every |. gg;_f,F%g Egé%’lgla%;gnzso&tgfi 25;2{, - subject. Printed from aew type, and il- s U e i s 12 : / Zhe Lo % constitutional Discases, WALKER'S VINWIILILE A M JAY, lustrated W‘.t}‘. Several Thoysand En-.. - BGAR BITTERS have shown their great cur- | : gthyings gng Maps o ative powers in the most obstinate and . (Successor to J, Keasey) ‘Tur work originally publiched -under the title intractable cases. e . ‘
LOOK! LOOK! WIILILIAM JAY, (Successor to J, Keasey) Manufacturer and Dearer in ‘v ' ¥ 1- I : Wagons, Buggies, Carriages. ALL KINDS OF ; ; REPAIRING, PAINTING AND TRIMMING Done to Oxrder. ALL WORK WARRANTED,. Public Patronage Solicited. nFB‘ICE and Manufaétory on first street. first 3 door west of Ligonier Plow Works., =.51-1y NEWMANS CARRIAGE & WAGON MANUFACTORY, . i ¢ T R i v‘ x % ) o i BE : Noirth-east; corner of Cavin Street. - LIGONIER, : ' ,: INDIANA. ALL STYLES of Carrigges and Bu%gies, also Wagons, made of the best materiala nd in the most substantial manner. The proprietor has adopted all the modern iinprovements and inventions for the prompt execution of all kinds of work in his line. ‘Only the best of timber used, and. none but the best workmen employed in every de-g&rtment-—lroning, Wood-Work, Trimming and ainting. The work executed by my painter-s such as to defy competition either East or West.
e .+ He alap exedutes: i - it Ornamental and Sign Painting, FARMERS, look to your own interestg and patronize Home MEonanics whose work is in every respect equal if not superior to that of establishments abroad. My work is all warranted. I have been among you 18 years. and expecting to remain with you in the future, I shall make it my study to please by doing satisfactory werk at the very lowest prices. J. NEWMAN: ~ Ligonier, June 11, 1874,-7-6m HIGGINBOTHAM & SON, 1 PR i D S . | LR ’W // T | ‘ fi\ ~,”W‘ W OND | . "r(rf\",‘/;r,‘,'r, 2 o 5 RS G e\ : ,"f "‘\ N\ = ‘“ ‘“\ ' o RS §/v ' A by e ) [ ) ' b, W TR - VR A st « h-,’f,“j f ' o o ,0“_':/4;/ 7 7% R N ; . B ’."..‘\ e ‘ TR o ok o, ! Watchmakers, Jewelry, > ANDDEALERSIN | Watchess Clocks. JEWELRY AND FANCY GOODS' Repairing neatly and promptly execnted, .and j warranted, Agents for Lazarus & Morris’ Celebrated i i Spectacles. i . e SiEn ofthe bigwatch, corner Cavin & Fourth streets, Ligonier, Indiana, 468 Jan. 1, 1874,
E. J' DODGE &0. $ - MANUFACTURERS OF i 2 Factory opposite the Empire Mills; “Sale Rionia ~on Cavin Street, opposite-the Plow Works, . LIGONEER, :' :.: .INDIANA. OUR new Factory is now in full operation, runing 10 hours per day, and we are prepared to do, at short notice, all kinds of Planing & Matching, - RE-SAWING, JIG-SAWING, - TURNING, CARVING, ) &e. ;Also manufacture Wood Mouldings, Ballus- . \ ters, and ; i Parlor Brackets, Toys, i Etes Blel Ete . il L We Guarantee All Work to be Sccond ‘o None. We have new machivery and first-class hands, and do fine worl, €0 bring along.your Planing. in the morning and carry 1t home with you in the afternoon,- Call and Sée us. Goods gold. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Ligonier, Ind., June 11, '74-7-6m e ‘;}-w-*—’——“—‘—~—f“—»—f—"—*f—j—‘ F.BEAZEL, ; : | : . . Manufacturer of b Saddles, Harness e ot t i AN e el
TRUNKS, 12 ; e B s LIGONIER, INDIANA The proprictor will be pléfised at any time to wait - on all who may wish anything in the line of HARNESS, aan SADDLES, ' '~ 0 S ~ BRIDLES, B f WHIPS, . & (‘()IJIAA\]’\S. ; : : . FLY-NKEPS o * . BRUSHES, &c., and in fact everytkhig pertaiuing:tvo fihis line of business. S : Especiu] attention is called télth.e' fnct that he is now engaged 1n the manufacturing of_all.kinds of L TRUNKS, Which, fn . - : Style, Finish, Durability & Price, ; LA 3 Are far superior to those of eastern manafacture. Call, See and Buy. October 30, '73-27tf - F. BEAZEL. O ———t—— et et elB : - - ot — ' APPLETON’S o New Revised Edition. f Entirely rewritten by the ablest writers on every subject. Printed from anew type, and illustrated with Several Thousand En- - : " gravings and Maps. . - S
‘Tur work originally published under the title of Tue NEw AMeRIOAN CYOLOP.£DIA Was completed in 1868, since which time the wide circulation which it has attained in.all parts of the United States, and the signal dc\’elngments which have taken place in every branch of science, literatnre, and art. have induced the editors and publishers to eubmit 1t to an exact and thorough revision, and to issue a new edition entitled Tug AMERICAN CYOLOPXEDIA. j S g
Within the last ten years the progress of discov: eryin every department of knowledge has made a new work of reference an impera-ive want, The movement of political affairs has kept pace with the discoveries of science, and their fruitfu) application to the industrial-and useful arts and the convenience and refinement ofsociallife. Great wars and consequent revolutions have occarred, involving national changes of peculiar moment , — The civil war of our own country, which was at its height when the last volume of the old work appeared, has happily been ended; and a new course of commercial and industrial activity, has been commenced. v <
~ Large accessions ‘to. our geographical knowledge have been made by the indefatigable explorers of Africa. N R
The great political revolutions of the last decade, with the natural result of the lapse of time, have brought inte public view, a multitude of new men, whose names are ill every one's mouth, and -of whose lives every one is curious to know the particulars. Great battlé s have been fought and important sieges maintained, ot which the detaijls are as yet preserved only in the newspapers or in the transient publications of the day, but which ought now to take their place in permanent and aunthentic history. 5 GRS = In preparing the present edition for the press it has accordingly been the aim’ of the editors to bring down the information to the latest possible dates, and to furnish an accurate a2ccount of the most recent discoveries in science, of every fresh production in literature, and of the newest inventionsin the practical arts, as well as'to give a succinet and original record of the progress af political and historical events: SRR
VTB;:vzxkvhaEbgm;-f)c:gun after long and careful preliminary labor, and with the-most ample resciaurces for carrying it on to-a successful termination. e 2 -
None of the origindl stereotype plates have been used, but every page has been printed. on new type, forming 1n fact a new Cyclopsdia with the same plan and compass as its predecessor, but with a far greater pecuniary expenditure, and with :uch improvements in its composition as have been suggested by longer experience aud enlarged knowledge. : B o The 'illustrations which are introduced for' the first time in the present edition have been added not for the sake of pictorial efféct, but to give greater lueidity and force to the explanations in the text. ' They embrace all branches’ of explanations in the text. They embrace all branches of science and of natural history, and depict the most famous and remarkable feature of scenery, architecture, and art, as'well as the various processes of mechanics and manufactures. Although intended for instruction rather than .embe]lieiment, no pains have been spared to insure their artistic excellence ; the cost of their execution is enormous, and it is believed they will find a welccme reception as an admirable feature of the COyclop@®dia, and worthy of its high character. This work is sold to Subscribers only, payable on delivery of each volume. It will be completed in sixteen large octavo volumes, each: corntaining ‘about BOO“Pnges.rfully illustrated with several thousand Wood Engravings, and with numerous | colored Lithographic Maps, - - B Price and Style of Binding, . - ' In extra Cloth, per vol.,......ocoeieenvsnon.. $5 00 In Library Leather, per v 01.................. 6 00 In Half Turkey Morocco, perv01.,............ 7 00 In Half Russia, extra gilt, per v 01.,....... ... 8 00 In Full Morocco, ami%ue, gilt edges, per vol., 10 00 In Full Russia, perv01,..................... 10 00 Four volumes now ready! Siucceeding volumes, until completion, wiil be ‘issued once in two months. ? LAvRa '.‘Sgeclmen pages of the Amrrioan CyoLopsDIA, sShowing type, illustrations, etec., will be sent gratis, on application. e ‘ FlrsT-CLASS CANVASSING AGENTS WANTED. - Address the Publishers, ' . Badl-Iy.. i D. APPLETON & CO., - 549 & 551 BROADWAY,N.Y —_———'_————_— - W. A. BROWN, Manufacturer of and Dealerin al kinds of - FURNITURE, SPRING BED BOTTOMS, . - WILLOW- WARE, § Bk oS RL COFFIINS EZECASKETS o s S ‘Always on hand, and will be furnished to order, Funerals attended with hearse when i_d_‘ynlm‘d;- . Storeßoom: '} Trooooeilie o Cer. Cavin and ma str.} - Ligonier, Ind. - August 7th, 1878.-8-15,
- y X HECARBIT NRGAREET €¢.‘; \ ABM Y | B . SN2 L 5 NWg o L LR Nl XA 'VINECAR BITTERS or. J. Walker’s Califorzia Yinegar Bitters are a purely Vegetable preparation, made chiefly from the native herbs found on the lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains of California, the medicinal properties of which are ,extracted therefrom without the use of Aleohol. The question is almost daily asked, “ What is the cause of the unpar alleled succéss of VINEGAR BrrTERS ¥’ Our answer is, that they remove. the zause of disease; and the patien* recovers his health. They are the great blood parifier and a life-giving principle, a. perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the system. Never before in the history of the world has a medicine been compeunded possessing the remarkable qualities of VINEGAR BITTERS in healing the sick of every disease man is heir to.. They are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonie, relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious Dizeases
The properties of Dr. WaALKER'S VINEGAR BITTERS are A perient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxa1i VE;, Diuretie, Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Hudorifie. Alterative, and Anti-Bilious
Grateful Thousands proclaim VINEGAR BITTERS the most wonderful Invigorant that ever sustained the sinking;system. _ :
No Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means, and vital or\grau% wasted beyond repair. = Bilious, Remittent, and Intermittent Fevers, which are so prevalent in the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado; Brazos, Rio . Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, .James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our. entire, country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably ac-= companied by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upon these various organs, is essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to DR. J. WALKER'S VINEGAR Birrers, as they will speedily remove the dark-colored viseid matter with Wwhich the bowels are loaded, at the saime time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring the healthy funetions of the digestive organs. . . Fortify the body against disease by purifying all its fluids with VINEGAR BITTERS: No epidemic can tdke hold of a system thus fore-armed. b Dys;iepsia or Indigestion, Heaéache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kidneys; and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better gnarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. -Serofula, or King’s Evil, White Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous ‘lnflammations, Indolent Inflammmations, Mercurial affec--tions, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, ete. In these, as in all other constitutional Discases, WALKER'S VINEGARBITTERS have shown their great curative powers in the most obstinate and intractable cases. e .
For Inflammatory and Chronie Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remittent’ and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder these Bitters have no equal. - Such Di eases are causéd by Vitiated Blood Mechanical Diseases.—Persous engaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters and Miners, as they advance in life, are subject to paralysic of the Bowels. To guard against this, take a dose of WALKER'S VINEGAR BITTERS occasionally.
For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt- Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustiles, Boils, Carbuncles, Ringworms, Scald-head, Sere Eyes, Erysipelas,! Iteh, Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the:Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system ina short time by the use of these Bitters. ' Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of so many theu- (,» sands, are effectually destroyed and res moved. No system of medicine, no ver- | mifuges, noianthelminities will free the © system from werms like these Bitters. For Female Complaints, in young or old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, orthe turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an influence that improvement is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood . whenever you find its impurities bursting - through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, , or Sores; cleanse it wheh you find it ob- " structed and sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is foul; your feelings will tel you when. . Keep the blood pure, and the health of the system will follow. . R. H. MeDONALD & CO., Druggists & Gen. Agts., San: Francisco, Califor nia, & cor. of Washington and Charlton Sts.,N.¥ Sold by all Druggists and Dealers. et TOaEC s W e T R CABINET SHOP
i i~ AND =~ - : : s .q { - > CABINET WARE ROOMS! "R.D, EERE., . Would resgectfully announce to the citizensof Noble county, that, he haz constantly on ‘hand a large and superiorstock of ~ CABINET WARE, Consistilfg'in part of : DRESSING BUREAUS. oo ' WARD-ROBES, A . TARIER . STANDS, . ) J LOUNGES, . : ' - OUP-BOARDS, | . MOULDING CHAIR AND BEDSTEADS, And in fact everythin%ns'mliy keptin a Firstclass Cabinet Shop. - Particular attention paid to the Undertaking Business. = _ COFFINS ALWAYS ON HAND. And mad , pon short noice., * Also all klds of Shop Workmade 1 order, | " Yo e alvera ke sl V . Y : 'l' 2 & ik S :
