The National Banner, Volume 10, Number 15, Ligonier, Noble County, 5 August 1875 — Page 2
Tle Fatiomal Banner ) £ : A BTe e R e ;. SERNYy Wi £ B.@??Lz.p'ditor and P?op?ictof_'. ; LIGONIER, IND) AUG: sth, 1875. e e FATHER ALLEN has finally goue _clear over to the rag money advocates.. He even repudiates a metaliic basis. oOld age is evidently telling on the ven-: erable Governor. L | Tiae ELECTION in Kentucky, for Governor and other State officers, last Monday, resulted in-a democratic vietory by the usual majority,—varying, aceording to circumstances, from ;»;"g'),000 to 60,000. 2ty e - SINCE the fact has been officially es- . tablished that there is to-day more |eurrency in circulation than in the ' year 1866, the inflationists are in-a very pad fix for new “arguments.” They wiggle as if the last prop had been " knocked from under their weak platform., R : FE | —— - — ) ' . THE Lagrange Standard is neither for Morton nor for Colfax for the Presidency. It Ras a decided hankering after ‘Dan | Pratt.”. The = Standard seems to- think Morton’s legs and Schuyler’s “tenth part of a cent” Credit" Mobilier stock“are heavier loads than the Republicans. can undertake . to-earry. - ' 27T o i . ‘Tie Columbia City Post, after raising its paternal voice against the discussion of Ohio- politics by outsiders, - last week exemplified its "consistency by devoting something oi'vler a column ' to'that interesting topic. Bro. Brown _evidently arrived at.the conclusion’ that since he:céuld n’t stop others, he mightds well take a hand himself.
THE CHARGES of corruption against Columbus Delano, Secretary of the Interior, have bgen coming-in so thick and fast that President Grant at last feels it'his duty to rid himself of this unsavory cabinet officer. It is now authoritatively - stated that- Delano must go. within ‘a brief period. It is believed that the position will be tendered to Judge Taft of Ohio or ex-zon-~gres.sman Armstrong of Pennsylvania.
- SENATOR THURMAN delivered his ‘opening speechfib Mansfield ]g}t Saturday. ' He'reiterated his steadfast adherence to hard money, and explained the peculiar features of the inflation plank in the Ohio platform: It-is very evident that the distinguished Senator “ felt the awkwardness of his position in trying to coavince his hearers that/though they despised the platform, they .should still.be enthusiastic in their support of-the ticket.
- THE MORTAL REMAINs of Andrew .Johnson were on Tuesday borne to the grave at ' Greenville, Tenn., followed by a large concourse of people. - The obsequies were conducted by the Masonic fraternity, of }Vl_lich the ex-Pres-ident was a member. All the Executive Departments at Washington, D. {C., and all the offices of -fhe Distriet . Government were closéd out of res- " pect _to this memory. - Throughout “the Unidn business in goyernment buildings was ‘sfispended, ‘and flags displayed at half- mast. The nation ‘universally mourns the loss: of a good and faithful servant. - . ¢ . - As afisherman, J. B. Stoll of the Ligonier BANNER is a syccess. He caught one at Maxinkukee lagt Friday - that was tully four inches in‘length.— Whitley C.omme‘rcia[l. S -As the “spiritual’ adviser” of the fraternity, it is very:unbecoming ‘in Bro. Baker to retail this fishiy story. _ Censidering the fact that it was our first venture in' that- direction,| that Bro. Baker’s figure denotes but onehalf of our piscatorial achievement, and that hiis measurement 1s grossly underestimated, we surely ought to be - exempt; from the taunts of une who believes in’ trouting with a lasso and ‘breakfasting on dried herring.
& - THE DEATH of _An'dregw ‘Johnson, : the World observes, leaves the coun- ~ try without a single. ex-President liv“ing. This has not hjppened since the - death of Washington in the adminis--4t4l_'a.t;i(?n of the elder »Adams:;";\ When John Quincy Adams was inaugurated, fifty years ago, all' the Presidents for the preceding seven terms, twenty- . eight years, were living, namely, the elder Adams, Jefferson, Madison and - Monroe. When Polk wis inaugurat: + ed, thirty yearsago, the incumbents of the previous twenty years, five térms? .W'ere; ,living';(,except Harrison, who " was in office but one month), namely, the younger Adams, Jackson, Vian Buren and Tyler; and when Lincoln was ~ inaugurated, fourteen years ago, no " less than five of his “illustrious prede- ' cessors” survived—Van Buren, Tyler - Fillmore, Pierce and Buchanan. The mortality among our public men has ~been very great.. Of Lincoln’s Cabinet officers only two, Montgomery ‘Blairand Gideon Wells, arenow live = oi ofek
Charges of frauds against Indian Agents are becoming.infectious.: The Chiefs of the Navajo 'tribe have made known their grievanees at the hands of their Agent, W. F. M. Arny, whom they charge with a long list of dishon‘est dealings, including threats, coercion, lying, false returns of supplies réceived and issued, withholding annuity goods, etc. Arny is a representative of the Presbyterian- Board of Home Missions, under whose direction the Agents in New Mexico are appointed, and iln whose possession the Narajo charges have remained for several weeks past. @~ =
. The Indianapolis Journal, Cineinnati Times, and other papers of that class, seem to think-thai John Lee “Carroll is not good- enougl to-run for governor of Maryland; because he is “a Catholic. There was no objection ‘made on that score to his grandfath: ‘er’s signing the Declaration of Independence. A man with his ancestor’s ‘name on that document ought to have & right to worship anything he pleased, from a Chinese joss upward, without Proseription.— Indianapolis Sentinel,
- . :The faet has just been brought to - light that Dr. Nichols, the Superin_tendent of the National Insane Asy: _lum, at Washington, igain the habit ot disposing of 'the patiénts under ©is _earp by Ifilking them to a wilderness ififhry d, and there setting them i%wMWeoae préy on each othell; - This brings up the question again, Is - civilization played out?
A FAITHFUL SERVANT OF THE PEOe PLERASFPARREN. o - In the life of the late ex-President Johnson the young men of our country can learn a lesson of-energy and perseverance that may and should be of valuable service to them. - ‘- Andrew Johnson -was a man born in obscurity and of very humble parentage; but by his untiring industry Ire rose to the highest positions within the gifts of his eonfiding countrymen. That a.young man whose parents were unable to give him an education or a start in business should raise | himself from a little tailor boy in North Carolina to the Presidency of the United States, augurs for him extraordinary powers. “ When we hear of a man starting in such humble life accomplishing great deeds, we naturally ask: :what is theré in this man that brings him so prominently before the people ? More than ever have we been reminded of this by the death of ex-President Johnson, which again brings his whole careér so prominently before'our minds. In analyzing this man’s’ strength, we may nétice, coupled with a physical body consti--1 tutionally strong and active, such motive forces as energy, perseverance, industry, self-reliance, and honesty. - ITaving abandoned ~ the tailor’s benéh for- the more captivating and: exciting arena of politics, AndrewJohnson pursued his labors with un-: ceasing persistence that he inight not only acquire distinction and fame, but also prove. of service to the people who plaeed their trust in him. He labored; too, with'such singleness of purpose which erabled him to combine all his strength and faculties of: {mind to assault the obstacle .in’ his way. In his gradual lme of ascent from Alderman .of a village to the Presidency of-the United States, we | may See thie beauties of a free Republic; in this, that the man of willpower, of character, and of integrity, though of humble origin, has an equal chance with the man of wealth and early advantages,—that the path is clear from:such barriers known as the castes . of ,smonarchial goVerninents. We alsd learn therefrom that it is not | always the man who attends the great- | est- number.of schools and graduates | from the highest institutions of learning that holds priority to positions of trust and honor. - ‘We see, too, that a firm purpose and determination | to educate oneself will ,pr‘ove' suecessful, though he may never step inside the walls of school or college. = Ilere, ‘there is a way for all who have the energy and perseverance to carve out the. path that is tolead them on to suceess. ' : e - | With- his- indomitable energy -and | perseverance, Mr. Johnson was truly patriotic. His deep-rooted love of | country, his unfaltering devotion to { an inseparable Union, prompted "him to array all his power and talents against the pernicious and treasonable scheme for the dismemberment of the American Union. = At a period when others -hesitated anhd trembled, the lion-hearfed Senator from . Tennessee thundered words of fierce denunciation into the ears of jthat band jof traitors who, while still occupying seats in the Senate of the United States, were consummating plans for the destruction of the government under which they- had pio_spered and risen to fame. . ‘His heart beating for his whole country, he dllowed no sectional considerations. to sway his mind: . And when the leaders of the South madly precipitated a conflict, | neither . personal nor political ties were permitted to restrain his bold .and féarless vindication of the supremacy of the government.” When we take into accountthe fact that Mr. ‘Johnson’s own State. identified itself with the Southern Confederacy, and that he was surrounded on all sides by, either -avowed . seccessionists- or their less outspoken apologists; when we consider that his own' life was constantly in jeopardy while bravely and heroically defending the emblem ‘of an indissoluble Union—we feel strongly tempted to point the finger of scorn,at the mad partisans who a few years later sought to disgrace the one faithful among so many faithless by an act of impeachment,—and that, for being true to his convictions and loyal to the constitution which he had sworn to obey, protect and-maintain.’ Fearlessly as he combated the treason of Jeff. Dayis, his hpnest and patriotic spirit would not permit him to wink’ at. or countenance the mischievous and motoriously unconstitutional schemes of Thad. Stevens, after the | confederates had laid down, their arms and pledged themselves to again be‘come good and law-abiding citizens. That same love of country which arrayed him'against seccession in¢lB6l, incited him “to resist the destructive measures of the radical conspirators in 1866. And how gloriously he stands vindieated: to-day! His masterly state p:'tpelfs'on the reconstruction and suffrage. questions haveby the very logic of events been proved sound and -correct, and as the cold and lifeless form of their author ‘is being entombed in the soil of Tennessee, fully twothirds of his- grief-stricken" country--men attest the foresight and wisdom of Tifs celebrated vetos. - s - Looking ‘at Andrew Johnson from | whitt standpoint we will, he was ever ' a faithful public servant,a true patriot,. an earnest advocate of popular rights, and a thoroughly honest man. That his judgment'may at times have been at fault, and that he was liable to error 'during: ‘his -eventful ecareer, ‘we have no desire to dispute. We maintain, however, that a true spirit ‘of integrity-always actuated him, and that his errors were, of tlie head and not of the heart. Being always imBued with a true spirit of loyalty and: ‘a constant devotion to honesty and constitutional government, the last’ ex-President has died without a taint ‘upon his character or a charge of ven~ ality to stain his honored name. =~ cR e — / i KIHDEIGASTE! CULTURE. ] . This system of education has for its ‘object the development- of the child’s moral and social nature from the earliest stage of its worldly existence. | It takes into consideration the importance of the mother’s judicious care over her child, in order to lead its faeu/lties‘intbr the proper channels of natural development. From the | mother's care the child, when about four years of age, enters the Kinder- |
garten—children’s garden — where it finds others of about the same age. This garden of little C%ren_ forms a little world; and in it e child’s so‘cial nature is brought into greater activity. Man is naturally a social being, and fo meet thecravings of his nature, ‘he seeks the channels suited to his activity. He aims to associate with'his equals, and when he finds himself out of his- pr"eg‘per sphe:e,; as it were, he feels uneasy and. restless, and will from the very nature of his social elements drift into the society that affords him the greatest amount of ‘pleasure or ha.ppiness. The child’s nature is the same; its social feelings follow the same law of development. It always feels uneasy when its only associates are the family. Its very nature craves for associations suited to its capacity of mind and develop‘'ment. It any one doubts this, let him observe the little child who is brought “upin the family with no little folks to interest it, and see how shy it is in ‘the presence of all but its own family; but let little children. of its own age and size come to it, and how quickly it makes up with them--their joys becoming its joy, and their sorrows its sorrow; From the study of the c¢hild’s nature we cannot do otherwise -than admit the philosophy of Freebel’s new system of education so fitly called the “Kindergarten Culture.” s
“ Our space will not admit of a full explanation of this syétem, and must refer our readers to books ' treating upon the subjeet. which may be obtained at most of our bookstores. The whole system, however, contemplates the guiding of the child’s activity instead of suppressing it,.as is too often the case. Little children are brought together, as before stated, where, under the guidance of a skillful_ teacher, they engage in systerhatic plays suited to their nature. Attention is given to the development of the observing faculties, the perceptive powers, and all elements that form the bond of union and sympathy in human associations.- . s
Six years of the child’s life is gone before it can enter the -public schools, and six of the most precious years at that. . Suppose the child had received the training from the mother and teacher contemplated in the Kinder‘garten system, would it not enter the public school at six years of age upon a much higher plane? And if all could enter our public schools upon that plane, would not the whole standard of our educational system be elevated? . Would not the moral and physical bases of our schools be much higher? Many of the evils of vice will find their true solution, if ever found at all, in proper child culture. We believe that the Kindergarten system is destined to reform our educational system_ by placing our ininstitutions of learning upon a higher and more natural basis. - The systerais in vogue in all our larger cities throughout the land. They have at Fort Wayne a very ‘successful school of this kind, and why c¢an we not have one here? Are the chlldren of Ligonier of so much less importance that they should be d¢nied the most improved system of education ? .
. THE WEATHER-AND THE CROPS. . This has been a remarkable season throughout. From the first reaking 1‘ up of winter until the present farmers have experienced alternate seasons of sunshine and shadew—of glowing prospeets ‘and saddening disappointments. ' The early spring found the wheat fields brown and bare, and the_ farmer’s heart sank within his breast'i iif contemplation of an entire failure. A little later the warm showers and genial sunshine put new life and vigor into all vegetation; the scattering germs of wheat which had ontlived the rigors of winter now shot up with unusual vigor, and ere the harvest came the prospect was indeed cheering. Vegetation never was known to develop more rapidly. The wheat had grown.rankf and "in many places stood thick on the ground. Then the hopeful husbandman viewed his prospects with a light heart. Everything promised abundance] But just as the well-filled heads of grain began to assume a golden hue, there came a succession of heavy rains. The tall wheat was beaten to the earth and the farmer’s -fondest hopes—almost realized—‘were biighted with visions of rust and ruin. The weather continued unfavorable, and the harvest was delayed and tedious. Wheat in the shock has sprouted and grown in consequence of the damp weather, 'and much of that which is stacked was put up in very bad condition and fears are entertained thgt a goodly ‘portion of the crop will-yet be seriously damaged, if not entirely destroyed. :
The oats grew very rank; and as' a consequence was badly beaten down by raiis and wind. In addition to this, in certain localities, that crop has sustained serious injury from the ravages of a destructive worm, and the frequent rains have made it very difficult for farmers to save what is worth harvesting. There has been comparatively little weather favorable for hay-making, so that much of the hay put up is of an inferior qual--ity. Corn has grown very rapidly on the uplands, but on:low ground much of it has been injured by the Wwet and is looking yellow and sickly. A good deal of it, too, shows a lack of sufficient cultivation, which, owing to the’ wet Weathgr in June, it was impossi“ble to give it. In such fields the corn : and weeds are having a hand-to-hand struggle, as it were, for the ascendan¢y, and it is doubtful which will come out ahead. But; notwithstanding all these drawbacks, we will probably yet-have an average crop of corn, some apples, plenty of cabbage and an abundance of potatoes and other vegetablés; and inasmuch ag’ we have escaped the grasshopper plague, have not been visited by either earthquake or pestilence, and there is ngw no imminent danger of famine, wé would better bear our misfortunes patiently, and instead of complaining, to make the matter worse, let us still hope on and be thankful that it is as well with us 4a¢ it is. - , J .
' The Secretary of the Treasury has directed the reftirement of $1,016,472 legal tenders, that amount being 80 per cent. of the additional national bank-notes issued last month. -Until further orders the outstanding- legal tenders will be $374,755,108. ° :
~ RAIN AND STORMS.
Widespread Damage by Floods. s ; i £ : OVERFLOW OF MANY WESTERN STREAMS RESULTS . DISASTROUSLY. . Much Farming Land Inundated and the Crops Swept Away. Railroad Travel Interrupted by~Wuah- ’ Outs and Land-Slides. : The recent heavy rains of the West and Southwest have done a great deal of damage to the growing and standing crops. The floods have extended over a large area of country, covering portions of the States of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Missouri. In O?io, “The Hocking Valley” is completely submerged. . Trains have been blockaded and crops totally destroyed. Reports from all parts of Ohio south of the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago. Railroad continue to give gloomy ac‘counts of loss and damage by the flood. The Scioto ‘River leaving its bed, broke widely over a tract of country ‘south of Columbus, burying cornfields 10 feet under water. The waters rushing into an extensive brick-yard, rose to the first story of the ten houses occupied by workmen at the yard, -but by judicious efforts all the lives ‘of the workmen were saved without serious accident. Considerable damage was done to property in the neighborhood. Along” the line of the Hocking Valley railroad the loss to growing crops and wheat in the shock by water will be very great. : In the locality of Terre Haute, this State, the flood has been very devastating. The Wabash river is some twenty inches higher than during the flood of 1858 and a few inches higher than the great inundation of 1828.— Several small houses have been carried away. Millions of bushels of wheat in stacks and shocks have floated away. Itis estimated that 6,000,000 bushels of corn .are drowned out between Terre Haute und Huntsville.— . Bridges have been swept away and others readered useless. Reports from Indianapolis, Lafayette, Fort Wayne, Terre Haute, Shelbyville, Peru and many other towns show that a very gloomy feeling prevails everywhere. The floods are certainly unprecedented and the damage excessive. The amount of loss at ‘this time is beyond conjecture, but so far no lives have been lost. ‘ : ;
From the Southern portion of Illinois come reports of great damage being done by the flooas. Heavy rains have prevailed throughout the Union, but nowhere with such disastrous results as in the Mississippi valley. Tléese great freshets in all the tributaries of thé Mississippi cannot fail to prove disastrous to the planters of the lower valley, whose farms are inadequately protected by levees; and whose crops, if destroyed now, cannot by any means be restored. Whatever may be the extent of the inundation which follows, its destruction cannot well be less than.that caused by the startling inundations of May, 1874, for the crops which are destroyed now will ‘repres”ent ;ar more of labor and of money than those. destroyed in May, and crops.destroyed in May can generally be replanted, whereas those destroyed "in August are a total and an firreparable loss. . The details of the disaster remains to be told, and it will be fortunate if, when they are all in, they do not sum up a widespread public ¢alamity. o
- WORSE AND WORSE. - Yesterday’s Chicago 7ribune says reports of damage by floods contiliue to bes received from various sections ‘of thé West and South. The vicinity of Chicago has not been wholly spared in the general havoc. In the towns of Palos and ‘Worth the 'lagiis, in all about 30,000 acres, lying ulong the feeder connecting the Calumet marshes and the Illinois and Michigan Canal are badly overflown, and the loss to farmers is estimated at $100,000.— In Indiana the destruction is almost incaleulable. The Wabash river, 15 inches higher than ever before known, has swept away everything along its ‘banks, including crops, farm buildings, and im plegnentis, mills, manufactories, etc. The Wabash and Erie Canal is almost ruined by the high water, haying broken its banks in a hundred places. At Memphis the Mississippi was still rising slowly, having already reached a stage which threatens an appalling ‘destruction among the levees and plantations.-. Happily the rains have ceased, and there are grounds for hope that the mighty river will diminigh itself in time to avert the imminent wide-spread, disaster. ‘Singularly enough, in the midst of all this terrible record” of water-waste comes the report from Madison, Wis., of suffering in consequence of:Pprotracted drought. 5 : ;
: E&ectp ‘of the Storm. (From Tuesday’s Chicago 'l'ribune.)
These storms will help to verify the prediction of the Agricultural Department at Washington; that the surplus wheat crop of this country for export will be much smaller this year than it was last; and there is also a prospect, notwithstanding the recent reaction in Europe, that the foreign demand for American breadstuffs wijl be larger than it was last year. o The storms have passed over large parts of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri. As far as these sections are corn-growing, the damage has not probably been very great.” Where the corn was still ripening, the rain would do more good than harm, except where the floods actually swept it away. It must also be -taken into account that those sections visited by the grasshoppers in the early part of the season have been replanted with a second crop of corn, which can hardly fail to be benefited by rains, and will come in probably with abundance, if the frosts do not .interfere. It is not likely, therefore, that the corn crop will be short,” though it may rule at a littlebetter prices than for the past two or | three years. Corn, it must be remembered, is grown to a larger extent in ‘the sections where the rain has been serious than any other grains, and corn is less, damaged-either by the raing or by drouth than any other -grain._would be. The oat .crop will probably suffer considerably; but even where the oats are erushed down under the beating rains and winds, it may be mowed with a scythe, and cured like hay. Much of the crop may thus be saved. In fact, as a rule, the farmers-always save more under unfavorable circumstances than is antic'ifated at the time of the misfortunes. 'lie hay crop iS'vpret(;y generally cut and in stock; and will not be seriousIydpomged, . . e L
ANDREW JOHNSON.
A Paralytic Stroke Terminates - His Earthly Career. ‘
Universal Grief Over the Patriot Statesman’s Sudden Demise.
It is our painful duty to announce the sudden and wholly unexpected death “of a noble patriot and eminent statesman, ex-President Andrew Johnson. The deplorable event oceurred last, Saturday morning about 2 o’clock, at the residence of his daughter, Mrs. W. R. Brown, formerly Mrs.. Col. Sto: ver,’in Carter county, Tennessee,—the [Tesult of a paralytic stroke. Mr. Johnson had been in rather bad health since the adjournment of the last session of Congress, but nothing serious was anticipated. ) >
Wednesday of last week he took the morning train to visit his daughter, ‘with whom Mrs. Johnson had been sojourning for the past six weeks. He rode in a hack from Carter’s depot to her residence, some six miles’ distant, and seemed in good spirits on his “arrival and ate a hearty dinner, and after a few minutes of general conversation retired up stairs and conversed with his grand-daughter, Miss Lillie Stover. While thus engaged his tongue refused utterance, and, to the young lady’s great:consternation, he fell from his seat to the floor. Help was instantly summoned, and almost as soon as he raised he expressed, indistinctly, however, that Ris right side was paralyzed. ' After being taken to bed, when the family spoke of sending for a physician he forbade it, saying that he would soon récover. On this account the summoning of medical aid was deferred twenty-four hours, when Dr. Jobe was called from Elizabethtown, two miles distant. He ‘instantly began heroic treatment,aided ;by Dr. Cameron, and seemed at one time the next day to be succeeding.— 'The patient conversed imperfectly!in !regard ‘to domestic matters, and did not seem: conscious of ‘approaching dissolution, but his case was beyond the skill of physicians, and at 7 o’clock on Friday night he Hecame unconscious. . Mrs. Patterson and Andrew Johnson, jr. arrived'an hour later with two physicians from Greenville, Doctors Brey and Taylor, but he did not recognize any of them, and after seven hours and a half of unconsciousness, he peacefully breathed his last, surrounded by his'wife, children and all ‘his grandchildren, except the son and daughter of ex-Senator Patterson. TIIS MOURNING COUNTRYMEN, A public meeting of the citizens of Nashville, held on the evening of July 31, for the purpose of expressing condolence and sympathy for the nation’s loss in the death of ex-President Johnson, passed the following resolutions: Eirst—That we have heard. with sorrow of the sad bereavement of the people of Tennessee in the loss of“a guide who has for so many years pointed out the right way to political safety, and whose services at this time appeared to us so important to the republic. g e Second—That we deeply sympathize with his aged and afflicted wife in her bereavement, and with his daughter and son and their families in the loss they are-called on to mourn.
‘Third—That in view of the exalted character, great labors and the sub* lime lessons taught by him to this generation of his countrymen, a committee from the various counties of Middle Tennessee be appointed to select some suitable place and day for appropriately celebrating the obscquies of our departed countryman, and that the committee be authorized to select some person who shall prepare an address embodying the lessons which Andrew Johnson has given to his countrymen, and that the following persons be appointed as such committee upon the obsequies of Andrew Johnson. : : : " The committee is composed of over one hundred of the most prominent citizens of Middle Tennessee. o PRESIDENTIAL PROCLAMATION, On the Ist inst. the following order was issueq from the executive departmente o Gl e WASHINGTON, D. C,, July 31.—1 t becomes the painful duty uf the President to announce to the people of the United States the death of Andrew Johnson, the last survivor of his honoréd prédecessors, which occurred in Carter County, East Tennessee, at an early hour this morning. The solemnity of the occasion which called him to the Presidency, with the variéd nature and length of his public service, will cause him to be long remémbered and occasion mourning ‘for the death of a distinguished pufiigic servant. As a mark of respect for!the memory of the deceased, it is ordered that the Executive Mansion and ‘the several. de-partments-of the governmentat Washington ‘be draped in mourning until the close of the day designated for his funeral, and that all public business be suspended on -that day. It is further ordered that ‘the War and Navy Departments catseé suitable honors to be paid on the occasion to the memory of the illustrious dead. el _ (Signed) . i U.S, GRANT. _ BIOGRAPHICAL. -
Andrew Johnson was born of humble parentage in Raleigh, N. C., Dec. 29th, 1808. When about four years of age his father died, leaving him’ and his mother without the necessary provisions for their future support. Young Johnson, when ten years of age, was apprenticed to a tailor in his native town with whom he remained seven years. ' The: destitute circumstapces in which the mother was left by the death of his father, placed the education of her son beyond her power, and consequently he was thrown wholly upon his own resources for the means of his education. All his leisure hours, while learning his trade, were devoted to this end, and with the -aid of tho journeymen tailors e soon acquired a knowledge of the letters; and going on, step by step, till the ‘ cowmpletion of his - apprenticeship he. ‘became a very fair Engligsh scholar, Having learned his. trade in his native town, he removed to Laurens Court House, S. C., where for ‘about two years he worked as a journeyman tailor, and while there he became engaged to be married, but in consequence of his poverty the parents of the young lady strenuously oppos.ed the marriage, and the match was finally broken off. From Laurens Court House he returned to his native town, where he for a while continued his trade as a journeyman, but becom= ing dissatisfied he determined to. strike out into a new field, and with this object in view he induced his | ‘ :f: v o e *'h”'
mother, who was entirely dependent upon him for support, to accompany him to Greenville, Tenn. Having arrived at Greenville he again commenced wotk as a journeyman tailor. He. remained there about one year, when: he married and then moved farther West: Not finding a place congenial to his liking, he, again returned to Greenville, where he commenced the tailor business for himself. Mr. Johnson having sueceeded in marrying al young lady of refinement and culture, his education was continued under her immediate tutorship till he completed his knowledge/of the English branches.: .~ . .E ;
. His public and official career began at the age of 20, when he was elected an Alderman: of Greenville; he was Mayor from 23, to 26; a member of the Legislature from 27 to 31; canvassed the State as'Presidential Elector at 32; elected to State Senate at 33; to Congress at 85; and, during ten years’ continuous sérvice, took an important and conspiéuous .part, in legislation; served four years (until 1857) as Go.verhdr of 'Tennessee; was then elected United Siates Senator for six years; arrayed himself on the side, of the Union and against Rebellion; was appointed Military Governor of Tennesse¢ from 1862 to 1865; was elected . Vice-President November, 1864; inaugurated March 4, 1865 ; succeeded as President of the United States April 15 in the same year; Tetired &[arch'«r, 1869 ; and in February, 1875, was elected United States Senator, taking his seat on‘the 4th of March. From, his election as Village Alderman, in 1820, to the time of his death he was continuously in elective office, excepte during the time he served as Military Governor, and the six years following the expiration of his term as President. : -
—————l A p—— —————— INDIANA NEWS ITEMS. Hon. M. C. Kerr is in Colorado, whither he went for his health. In a late letter to his. son, he states that the bracing air there is benefiting him. : i At Goshen, on the 20th ult., a child, aged 3 years, of Samuel Moon, was horribly scalded by falling headlong into- a large tub filled with boiling: water. Its recovery is very doubtful. The total number of miles of railroad in Indiana is given by the State Board of Equalization at 3,881.45, exclusive of side-tracks, 469.58 ; thetotal assessment of taxation for the whole, with rolling stock, being $38,436,294. Of tweénty-four persons who have been arrested for the murder of enginee{vAmes. on the Vandalia road, only two have been held over for further examination. The detectives still {fsel. certain of getting the guilty paries. : . :
The colored people of Indianapolis held a meeting on Tuesday night of last week at which they passed resolutions: demanding the! abrogation of the laws of the State which prevent their Tace from intermarrying with the whites. i : i
© The question as to whéther wheat turns to chess, is agitating the farmérs in the Northern part of the State. The farmers of this county settled that question geveral years ago, and now they are all agreed that it does or doesn’t, they can’t just precisely tell which.—Bartholomew Co. Democrat.
The Democracy ~oof Maryland has declared in favor of hard money. The Cincinnati Enquirer has hurled at them ‘the withering =~ phrase—“tools of the bondholders.” It is,by the way, rather startling to .contemplate :the number of “tools” the bondholders have, every State that doesn’t inflate furnishing some, according to the Enquirer.—Columbus Democrat. i . The Methodist Society in Goshen, says the Elkhart Review, have now in course of erection one of the most beautiful churches in northern Indiana. . It has all the modern improvements, including a kitchen and pantry. in the basement, and is being finished in an elaborate manner. Its seating capacity will be about 600, and exteriorly it presents an appearance of beautiful proportions. The total cost of ibts’ construction will not exceed $lB,OOO, which. indicates that no means have been wastel. © Goshen s to be congratulated on this elegant structure. *o : i
1. FEARFUL TORTURE. o . A Remarkable Surgical Operation— Pierced With Red Hot Irons. : In the Fort Wayne Bentinel of July 28, mention Is made of a difficult and painful surgical operation performed upon the person of Mrs. Frank Caswell at the Hanna House, on July 27. The operation is-a rare one, and worthy of description.: a - Mrs. Caswell, the afflicted lady, has | been troubled with symptoms of curvature of the spine since she was four.teen years of age. Recently these symptoms have become more marked, until they excited the alarm of M Caswell, who .sent to Boston' for Dr. Richardson, an eminent surgeon of that city to come to Fort Wayne and examine the case. The doctor arrived there week before last, and upon examination stated that, unless.a cure could be effected, either paralysis or insanity would: speedily ensue; and perhaps death. TUnder these circumstances it was decided to have an operation performed: The patient was prepared by proper applications of medicine for the ordeal, and on Saturday afternoon the operation was accomplished by Drs. Richardson and Dills. - Just prior to this, cupping had been resorted to and a large quantity of -blood taken from the spine. The operation consisted of the burning of six holes in the spinal column :with red-hot irons, the consequent suffering being as excruciating and agonizing as could be. Chloroform was not administered internally, through fear that lock jaw might ensue, but was applied externally to the spine, hardly sufficient, however, to diminish appreciably “the intense anguish. The patient had to be held tightly while the heated irons were forced into the quivering flesh.. | i . Mrs. Caswell is now in-as favorable a condition as could have been antic-. ipated, although suffering, as might be expected, somewhat from nervous prostration, Dr. Richardsn remains constantly with her, as it Will require a period of ten days from Tuesday todetermine whether or not a perfect cure has been effected. . i The operation is one.of the rarest and most difficult: and dangerous in surgery, and requires for its successful performance a high degree of skill. Dr. Richardson is preparing for an leastern medical journal an account of this case, in the course of which he pays Dr. Dills a high compliment. The many friends of Mrs. Caswell sympathize deeply with her in her present affliction, and sincerely hope she may enjoy a speedy and permanent restoration to health. = Mrs. Caswell is. a daughter of Mrs. Minot, one of the earliest settlers of Kendallville, where she has resided until within a few years past, having | removed to Foit Wayne shortly after her marriage. Many of our subscribers, therefore, have known both Mrs. (Caswell and her husband from their youth up, and will be pained to h_efu,_ of hier painful afflietion.. .| | el s e
LATEST NEWS ITEMS. 7
~ The Centennial and the ‘Presidential canvass will keep the people pretty well stirred up next year. The New York Democracy ‘count Tilden as'the coming Presidential candidate on the Democratic ticket.
A hard money conyention is to be held in Cincinnati on'the 25th of October. This is not a political affair. The tobacco crop promisés to be better than that of last year, and the increase in Kentucky is said to amount to thirty-four per .cent. S ¥
A dispatech from Niles, dated last Tuesday, says the wheat crop is all secured and is the “largest known in years,” ithe average yield being 26 to 30 bushels per acre. S _ It is rather againsi the Keely motor that no application for a patent has been filed:at Washington, and not so much as a caveat issued. The officers .of the Patent-Office believe Keely’s motor to be a humbug. s ‘
William White sued a New York railroad fourteen years ago for $l,OOO damages for killing his wife, but, getting tired out, he took $5O, the other day, and called it square. His second (viv"ife used the money to get her a silk -dress. 2 J S bt
~ The Sioux have taken the war path in the Black Hills, and are already reported to have Kkilled ten whites.— The miners will be apt to conclude, when they find Mr. Lo 'shampooing their heads with the tomahawk, “that all is not gold that glitters.” = ‘ It is probable that the State of Nebraska has. set a good example in her new Constitution, by providing that State and county officers. shall be paid fixed salaries, without fees of any kind. - The working of this system might be watched with profit by the older States. o :
Isaac Merritt Singer; inventor. ef the sewing machine which bears his name, died in london last Saturday, at the age of 64. He was worth several millions. Hebegan life a Boston mechanic, making his first machine in--1850. 'Of late years his' health has Reen yery poorse. o 3 Heareafter people who glory in the prowess of fighting cocks, must loock: to their children. A child two years old was spurred to death a few days ago, in Gadsen, Ala., by a rooster. 'This is the first instance of the kind on record. Probably the rooster-will be sent to Barnum. ’ i : : * United States detectiveslast Saturday arrested two men and one woman, at St. Paul, Minn., on the charge of counterfeiting. :They found on the premises where the parties were arrested printing press, chemicals, plates and material, complete for carrying on the business, together with about $lOO,OOO of paitially completedcurrency. sk BT i
A summary of the losses of the fire insurance companies for-the first six months of this year, shows that they aggregate more than thel entire lgsses for 1874. The losses this .year have. fallen, not upon the great cities, but chiefly upon the country towns. '‘Onthe .property destroyed the insurance companies have paid about twenty-six-million dollars.. - - CE The jewels which the Khedive sent ostensibly to Minnie Fitcli, last. winter, are to be divided between lier and her two sisters. They were really designed for a family present to General Sherman, but the occasion of Minnie’s wedding was selected fo offer them nominally to her. They are now said to be worth not quite one hundred thousand dollars. - - N
A frightful rate of mortality prevails among the poor children of New York City. Cholera infantum is carrying off the little ones at the rate of 100 per day, and a.call is made for volunteeriphysicians. 'ln Chicago the death-rate from: this cause is about one-third of that of New York, 85 being the number of fatal cases of chelera infantum in this city for the week ending July 81.—Chicago Tribune. " <The great banking house of Duncan, Sherman & Co., -of New York, failed Tuesday of last week. The li-abilities-are reported to be nearly $6,000,000, with assets estimated at less that one-half that amount. :The cause of the failure is reported to be disastrous speculdtions. in railway stocks, cotton, and grain. The failure caused great excitement in financial circles throughout the country, but no ofher suspensions are announced in consequence. P .
The failure of the publishing house of J. B. Ford & Co. is announced. This is the firm of which Brother Sam Wilkeson is amember. It will be recollected that he was specially anxious to have the Beecher scandal suppressed, fearing the giving of it to the public would “knock the ‘Life of Christ’ (which his house. was publishing,) higher than a kite.” . Now that the house has attained that exalted altitude ‘it becomes an interesting question whether the book has gone with it : ! i s
At White Cloud, Kansas., Thursday last, a man named Hurst killed - his wife. They had been married only six months and had s_epara]ted.' On Thursday afternoon he went to the house where his wife was staying, called her out. to the fence, put his arms about her, kigssed her 'affectionately and then cut her throat with a large pruning knife. Hurst was arrested, and it was with great difficulty that the officers prevented his lynching by the populace. He is now in jail at Troy, and pretends to be crazy. .= It cost the United States Government the snug little sum of $274,500,~ 000, exclusive of the sinking fund req iirement, to keep the machinery-in motion during the fiscal year ée'nding, June 30, 1875.. There was some good. guessing done in this direction. "Gen. Garfield, Chairman of the Committee on Appropriations, placed the figure at $270,000,000; while Secretary Bristow, one year later, and six months before the year closed, estimated the expenditures at "$275,000,000, which was oaly $500,000 out of the way.
There is but little doubt that' our erops; - notwithstanding the recent storms; will-be ample enough to take advantage of any increased foreign demand that there may be, and give farmers good prices. A week or more of clear weather, with a northeast wind, ‘will do much to counteract the:damage done by the storm, and dry the standing crops:and the land sufficient1y to enable a good harvesting, The prospect is, therefore, a favorable one on the whole, and the influence on the .general commerce and business of this country will be decidedly good. The South can largely supply itself with grain, and the surplus of the West may be drawn upon by Eutope. —Chicago: Tribune.: : i e ~ The New York Sun says that Augustus Storrs, the t-easurer of Ply- ‘ mouth Church, hag paid to Henry Ward Beecher $30,000 as the first installment of the $lOO,OOO salary. Two gecret meetings of the bbard of . trustees -have been held within the past three weeks, and there has been very much difference of opinion, bordering almost on dissension, as to how, the rémaining $70,000 shall be raised.— The amount paid to Beecher was the surplus that the pew rents netted at. the sale in January, and ®overs his regular $20,000 salary, The Z'imes says that it is -somewhat authoritatively stated that the officials of Ply--mouth Church intend to raise the $BO,OOO additional salary voted to Mr. Beécher by a mortgage on the Bethel. A fund is now being raised by the members of Plymouth Church for the: benefit of Miss Bessie Turner, - . | sie e e Clieleit nR e sre i B o D el el Rl s e e
. ENGEL & COO’S ADVERTISEMENT. | LARGEST AND LEADING CLOTHING AND-HAT HOUSE IN Buring the Next 60 Days! : : We p;opose to close bllt the bvalgfice (.)f.bvur ' e \PRING \DAUHMER SOk ‘ ‘ Andto succeed ofie} é_very altlcle Infith;3 line oi ‘| ‘ MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR!! lAtsuch Low Pricesas will criho Sl P ATHe L
oo ENGEL 8& CO., e Westatae main strest, =} + . = . Kendallville, Ind. July Bth, 1875.210-11 ; e o : % ¥ ] .
ngafflgfihtfiifi‘mlit;t‘\!iis
Notice ‘to. Heirs of Petition to o L Sell Real Estate,
State of Indiand, Noble.Cownly. In the Noble Circuit Court :> i e cigag ol @ NOTICE is hereby given that Ch istopher IHoo- . ley, Administrator of Isaac Lantz, deceased, has filed his petition to seilithe»Be_a} Estate of the decedent, his personal being insufficient to pay his debts;. and that eaid petition will be heard at the” next term of the' Court of Common Pleas of said | County. : Soitaks Al ©Attest: e o WML CAWILLIAMS, TS Tt iy " Clerk C. C. Nable County. Augiist sth, 1875.215w3 . 1 Lo T e ;J % - 1Y € - sy ~ SHERIFF'S SALE. BY virtue of an execution to me directed by the“J ) | Clerk of thé Noble Circuit:Court of Indiana, | in the case of Wilson W. White 'vs. John Yanderford, I will offer for sale at public auction at the‘} Court House doorin the town of Albion, conniy of Noble and State of Indiana, on - o SATURDAY, AUGUST 2’8.4’75. Between the hours of 10 o'clock, 4 ar., and 4 o'clock, ~ of said day the followinz deseribed real estate,.to wit:: Lot'number five (5) in Wood’s Addition to the town of Llgonier, Noble County, Indiana.: sl et S i Cem UNATHANIEL-PUEAGLES, | drab el e + Sheriff of Noble"Connty. F.'PriokeTr; Attorney for Plaintiff. Sk ‘Albion, Ind, Atgust; 1875.-15w3-p, 634 © ( SHERIFF'S SALE. BY virtue of a cerfified copy of a decree:andan ! order of sale to me directed by the clerk -of | the Noble Cirewit Court-of Indiana, in the case of | Andrew, "Ashbaughsvs.- Andrew Kniss, Martha | Kniss and 'l,‘imntfiy‘Hu'dson, T.will ofter i‘or,sa]e atpublic guction at'the door:of the court housein | the town of Albion, Canuty of Neble, and State of | Indiana, O oo g SR Fohs b ‘Saturday, August 21st; 1875, Between the hours of 10 o’clock 4. M. 'and 4 ¢’clock | .M., of said .day, the following described: Real | Estate to wit: The- west ‘half of the qorth-%fi,flt ; quar.er of section twenty-uine, in township thir- | ty-five, north of range nine eag. excepting therefrom® all ‘that portion:of gaid tract lying south ofi ‘the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railrdad, ! in Noble Gounty, and State of Endiana. ==~ Leeore s O NATHANIEL P, EAGLES, o oo Sheriff of Noble County. T. E. Ellison, Attorney for Plaintiff, =~ Albion, Ind., July 29th, 1872.-pf §6.00 = ° : - SHERIFF'S SALE. - BY\.Vi’l“tue of a certified copy of a decree and order.of sale to meissned by the Clerk of the’ Noble Cirenit Court of the'State of Indiana,in the case of RichardS. Williams, "Thomas W3ll< iams, Jr.,” Ellis Pofter, Samuel M. Cornell, and, Siduey Cornell vs. Abraham B. Miller and Mary E. Miller, I will offer for sale at public auction at the Court House door in the town of Albion,; Noblé County, and State of Indiana, on -~ °
SATURDPDAY, AUGUST 28,°75, Between the hours. of 10 o’clock. A 4 M., and 4 _o’clock », m. of said. daythe following described real estate situated in Noble County and State of | Indiana, to wit: The “west half of the north-eart quarter of section. geventeen (17) and the west half.of the south-east quarter of'section seventeen (17 all in-township thirty-five (35) morth of range | .eight (8) east. in the 'county of Noble, and State of Indiana, -Aleo that certain pieceior parcel of land -sold and conveyed t 0 Baid Miller by Joseph Teal and wife-in-Noble County aforesaid and described | “as follows, viz: Commencing at a stake in the middle- of the Elkhart river, sixty rodsfrom the ‘west line, thence following the middle of the said river twenty-two - (Bfizhg‘ods cast, thence gouth twenty-two (22) rods, thence west (22) rods; thence' north to.the place of béginning, containing three acres more or less;_]yintgnn the sonth<side of gaid river, and being part of gection lwenty-one 21)intownship i#irty-five (35) north of range eight (8) +east, together with the grlvile’ge'of the overflow of said river, caused.by building a dam seven:-feet eight inches highs irfsaid section twenty-one (21), i T NATHANIEL P, EAGLES, " . ! - - Sheriff of Noble County. Tousley, Pricket & Zimmerman, Plaintiffs Att’ys. Albion, Ind.,"August sth, 1875,-w4-pf $lO . S e e ] NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS. The State of Indiana, Noble C’ounty.) Set - .t ! Charles O Buchtel -and Sarale Buchtel | s s WL i sn £ x ¥ George Keehn, Margaret Kechn, Adam Simmons, Nancy Smith, Nathah Smith, Mary Lowry, Joseph Lowry, - Maggie - Snyder, Selicie Simmons,’ Clara Stmmons,- Francis S. -Myers, - ..and Charles Fear. el : In the Circnit/Court of Noble County; in the State 2 of Indiana. October Term, A, D, 1875; ° 40 PETITION FOR'PARTITION. '« = = ¢ BE‘IT KNOWRXN, that'on this 30th day of July,. e, “in the year 1875, the above-named plaintiffs, by.their attorney, filed in"the office of the Clerk of the Noble- Circtit Court their complaint against said defendants, in the above entitled: cause,’ together’ with ‘an. affidavit of a c‘omge_tent" gerson‘ ’ that said defendants, Nancy Smith, Nathan Smith, Mary Lowry, Joseph Lowry, Maggie Sn{d‘er, Se- ' licie Simmons; Francis S. Myers, and Clara Sim-. mons are not residents of the State:of Indiana. - “Said non-resident defendants are therefore here- | -fore vhexjebf notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint against them and that unless they . appear and answer or ‘demur thereto at the calling ‘of sald cause on-the second-day of the next term -of said Court, to be begun and held- at the Court House in the-town of Albjon, on-the third Monday | in Ottober, 1875, said complaint, and the matters | and things therein contained and alleged will be heard and determined in théir absence. '~/ > e 00l e WML G WAILLIAMS, “Clerk. I. E. KNiBELY, Attorney-for Plaintifis, @/ 9. August 5, 1875.~t3-16~" - 4t
DR. GEO. CLEIS’
French Liniment.
. /This Lininment possesses great curative powers for variotis ailments. ' For asthmatic complaints, difficuit breathing, tightness of the breast, and ailments of the Jungs, it is applied externally, on the breast, and between the shoulders. ' In case of sharp pains in the back and limbs, heéad-ache, ear-ache, affections of the throat, or.in cases of internal injuries, whether resulting from ‘a severe stroke, fall or bruise, this Liniment is especially éfficacious. It re ‘eves ulcers, open wounds, salt, rheom, ‘white ‘swelling, milk le%, and; works charmingly on corns; chilblains, frosted hands,’ “eet and ears. Nnrsing mothers suffering from swollen breasts, regulting from ,a_stagnafion.of the lacteal fluid, will find this Tiniment of incalculable benefit by way of separating the swelling, -allaying the fever, and healing the breast. By several applications perday, highly satisfactory results may be obtained from the use of this Liniment in the treatment of tumors, fistula, cancer, piles, and like diseases; also, for wounds resulting from scalds, burns and crts, and from the biles of wasps, Bnakes and mad dogs, or {)olsoning,from ‘ noxious plants. . The French Liniment will also be.found & valnable hougehold remedy in cases of fheumatism,croup, scarlet fever, diphtheria, quin¢y, bronchitis, scrofula, erysipeias,~for external applications, ~ Cholera, ci‘olem' ‘morbus, ¢elic, cramps, spasams, flux, diarrhes and frlp(ngs in the bowels may be efl‘ecm’alg'checke by the in.terngl use of this celebrated Liniment, as follows: One-half ; teagpoonfnl four to five times within & period of from ‘ome-half hour to two or three -hours, according to the severlty-ef the case, For calic, take one 'or. two doses. For flux or diarrheea, infants, one year of age, require from 3 to 6 drops; two em.oxa, from 10 to 12 d:?g. given in sugar, | Ru{n,h_e, abdomen with the Liniment. For inflammation-of the bowels, use the Liniment internally and extérnally. o 00 - Price 580 Cents per Bottle. . Prepared and mannfagtured exclusively by . et oDy, Gee. Glels, 10‘]“’ e2o v i ““, x’.“n. el 5 CRAN v woek Jel ob bt fayeig e e ~ i; m:;%é
F.i‘o BEAZE I; ,‘ £ e ' Manufdacturer of © - Saddles, Harness "TRUNKS. LIGO"NIAE:E?;, IN‘DIANA , ;;[‘.ll(_3 ‘p’rn?ricm; w:il.l b'c; ;;levaee.d'at an}rthfie to w.a. R - on all wha'may wisp flnytlfinig in !he‘»li‘u“e_of_k . HARNESS ™ = & 0. | <~ SADDLES, © B - .- BRIDLES, - : 1 - WHIPS, . ; | COLLARS, , e FLY-NETS, - v BRUSHES, .. . rae - CARDS, -
&c., and in fact everything pertaining-to this : ; sof busineseg. s A i i G &‘\s:; ; * s Especinl attention i‘s.cslled" to the fact that hé is | now engaged 1n the manufacturing of all kinds of . TRUNIS, g Which, in e Style, Finish, Durability & Price, ‘Are far superior to'those of eastern mannfacture. ¢ & ¢ $ e ; fis Call, See and Buy. " October3o,73-27tf. - ' . BEAZEL. M. E. KENYON VYI 4 N 9 .‘. “# "", B "y (Successor to S. 3 Hertzler.)_&dealer'ixLflpc Gold e and«sfive;rAmericau and Swiss © . WATCHES., () 3 ‘W I X e ae Koy \ | _.. L 2 ¥ ‘Having bought out Mr. §. A. Hertzler, and permanently located in-TLigenier, I would respectfully invite the attention of the people to the fact that ‘1 shall make & specialt% oiSolid Gald and FINE £ odianate g ROLLED PLATED. : . o ’ Jewelry and ‘Chains, -~ . 3 : ; ; :fEmbr‘acing‘all of thé latest and. most:approve } S styles, for both LADIES' AND GENTS' WEAR, | Whith:l shall offer at prices that will défy dcompetition.] I'aleo keep on hand a beautiful line of. R By fine dolid gold G S 4 : : 3 - "SEAIL RINGS. Being a p'ractics(l; wor‘kimun. I shall pay especial . : -attention to the B e xe REPAIRING ' And pdjusting of fine. watches, and all work entrusted to me will be done in a first-class manuer § : 1 - and.warranted. -y A : - o Lo 0o i Of&i:}styles done with neatness and dispntéh at { : f M. E. KENYON’S, 5 ! In the Ligonier House Bloek, Ligonier, Ind. . © Oct. 29, 1874—27 T i § CABINET SHOP S e ¢ e V) (U = AND' — g Sl ‘ ‘ e : CABINET WARE RODOMS! g e B “ 3 : ) e 4 : e o : 7ek i A ; ‘ G I RIDXERR,
Wouldrespectfully annoubce to the citizensof Noble county, that he has constantly on, - hand a large and syperiorstockof ' . CABINET WARE. | Consisting in part of 4 : DRESSING BUREAUS. .- _ - WARD-ROBES: , _ : ' . TABLES. 5 : S T NN, G St e ROUNGRB . o e w L UIORP NGRS, | e e MBI (e g s ‘; "": i -“ 'CHAIRS AND BEDSTEADS, "' Andiaust ovstything asually Repiin o ikt class Cabinet Shop. Particn ‘sfi- paid 83“” T I ECPRE set pron BRATt poloe, |Ao sl -w; 3_,,,;;; mfié% «-‘% S T »;{ g g “,e = siroe, corner of Fourih strat, Ligonier, nds | < - :._pv:(;i,,,g.s,g,. SICATIEO alw. i?}%‘( I ‘;7 ,_m}‘ S AMROTICE MRy RELEOTE, 0 o R RR L fi*“‘*“"mw
