The National Banner, Volume 10, Number 17, Ligonier, Noble County, 19 August 1875 — Page 2
The FAational Banner
AN » RNy W 4 e —— "~ J.B.STOLL, Editor and Proprietor. LIGONIER,IND.AUG. 19th, 1875. # ' OUR CLEVER SENATOR, Joe McDon- © ald, is expected to take part in the ~ Ohio canvass at an early day. Joeis "% a hard.money man. It is therefore - anticipated that he will spit on the: ' . platform and urge the election of the ',ti»cke’; oy : . IX OREGON, three political parties —Democratie, Republican, and Inde- ‘ .]»endeutihzive held State conventions, and each Tfesolved in favor of specie . resumption. Currency depreciators ; hiave no foot-hold in that coammonansealth 0 T ' :
~ SouppopY at Fort Wayne has proposed Hon* Hugh McCulloth for the Presidency. = McC!is a veryiestimable zentleman, -has. “a heap” of strong . COMMON sense; ;but, we say it with a * sigh, he can never be elected President of the United States. T
_A;’sox of Joe L;}né,_ candidate for Vice President on the Breckinridge ticket in 1860, is the democratic noniinee for Congress in Oregon. 1f the young man is not.an. improvement on the old gentieman, his election can hardly be: consideredessential to the welfare of the Gountry. T
- -WE are highly gratified to learn that President Grant has determined to staiid by Secretary Bristow in the prosecution of those rascally distillers whos6 outrageously swindled the government. It is so.-seldom’ that ‘l'ly’s‘sés‘afiords,‘us' an opportiiixifcy of ‘praising ‘an official act that we feel like spreading it on in double thickness. - e p A
J THE MIGH-TONED and honorable “gentlemen who have been connected with the Indian Bureau fully agree “in their statements as to the dishonest management of Indian affuirs by Secretary Delano.” They make out a very strong and altogethier clear case against the Ohio corruftionist. Ife has been stealing at a fearful rate. It ~.is high time for him to retive. -
. S ) ~ Tue Forp Wayne Sentinel discloses a bad ease-of scandal in Allen county. :‘X names are published. Itistheold _ story. Hus'bai}d goes away for ten ‘days and comes back the second night. - Wife and young man in his own _bed- ~ room. * Next, suit for d_}yorce,'»f}unily - ‘broken up, and remorse, when the end: '~ of life sums up all the results. In the language of -thie rock-rooted, 'we ini quire: Whitlier are we drifting?”~ - “UNFORESEEN EVENTS,” the Chicago " Tribune says, will prevent Mr. Jeffer- ;~ son Davis from delivering thé #ddress at- the Winnebago (I1l.) ‘County Fair., © At least this is the wa¥ he puts it in a téleguun 'to_ ihe Directors; and:a rather neat way it is of saying that he ~ had not foreseen any suclidegree’ of .opposition as that which has been developed since he was anngunced as ‘ the orator of that oteasion. FEx-Sen- " ator .J. R. Doolittle has been selected 'to deliver the address. . .. - "
- Tugr ~Chicago Times ~some time since made a eurious suggestion folr doubling the eapacity of the public
schools and giving the children a half holiday..' It proposed that there shall be two~ seSsi'Onbs‘in‘ each scliool every t‘fda’y, one beginning at 9 o’clock in the ~ forenoon and closing at hLalf past - twelve, the dther beginning at 1 o’clock " in the afternoon and closing at half past four. 'Children that attend the forenoon sesssion would not_be required to be present in the afternoon, and - pice versa. There is a great, dedl’of o sound sense in the scheme. 2 A i ‘._ s e — QF ) 4 INTELLIGENCE is at last received - which partially unveils the melancholy mystery reg‘:’u'ding" the fate of the !jallgonjs'ps who ascended _fx;\qxfi _Chicago'some five weeks ago and started’on a mid-dir voyage aeross Lake Michigan. Upon a lonely beach along . the “eastern ‘shore, near Montague, - Mich., the body of Mr. Grimwood, the " Chieago Journal reporter who accom-i)anied:'Prof.-lDonald‘son on-his peril- ' ous fix‘ped?tio'n, was found on Tuesday last.: The remains have been idertified beyond a doubt. This verifies the theory that the wronauts were dashed violently into the lake by the terrible storm évhich ‘came upon them about midnight. - There is no longer room' - to doubt-that the two were drowned, and tlie bursted life-preserver found - mpon the body of Mr. Grimwood suggests the probability that Le either leaped in the hlack night from a considerable elevation, or else was violently hurled upon the water by a - sudden blast of the hurricane. Prof. Donaldson’s body has not yet been reeovered. | e
:% 8§ WE HAVE ALREADY given publicity f o-the fact that - Mr. Jeffei"son Davis ¥b jq:eepted‘ the invitation to deliver & the annual address before Winnebago . County Agrienltm‘al'Society at Rock- ~ ford, Illinois, on the 14th of Septem- “ - ber. In view of this county lying in _ the heart of a staunch'c&{cwblican dis- - triet, the Chicago 7'ribune hints that it would not be prudent any more | than graceful for Mr. Davis to do any- .~ thing more than confine himsélf to . the practical subjects -which benefit ~the occasion and audience. »Tlnil@-ter-Ocean, with its usual malignity, ~ says his invitation' is “a gross “insult éto every Miman,-vvom;m and ¢hild .~ in the Sfate,” and alludes to him as*a Se . ‘ - mmderer and despoiler” and “a felon his appointment even . now at the sufferance of the hang- . man.”. The officers of the society are . charged with “beggarly truckling to - infamy,” and |advised that it would {%fi bet‘tet ‘had they selected ~ Tweed or Beiedict Amold as their ~ orator: In conclusion, it advises the ~ people, if Mr. Davis persists in aceept*k Jimvitation, to receive Lim | with an “ominous silence;” and v JEERERENS i the grounds his order of Decem! , branding all ofliers in Butler's army of the Gulf us. i a “erooked” whisky job to. divide
- THE VOICE OF TOM BENTON. The ablest statesman who ever represented the Southwest in the halls of Congress was undoubtedly Thomas H. ‘Benton, of Missouri; Ile was not only a man of great ability, but-a man of the strictest integrity. He was a. man whom the Democtaey of the whole country delighted to” honor.— Like all- other great expounders of ‘democratic doctrines, he was a hard money advocate. In the year 1834 Mr. Bentph’ delivered a speech in.the Senate of the United States, in course of which he summed up the merits. and advantages of a gold currency in that -vigorous -style which almost invariably characterized liis public utterances. At this day, when tlge American people at-large have almost lost all knowledge of that. metal, <and when the .champious of irredeemable - paper money seem {o be carrying it with so ‘high ahand, in and out of Congress, it is a good time' to put upon record the nine solid advantages which Mr. Benton aseribed to a hard monpey curvency: . : o _
“Rirst—lt has an intrinsic value, which gives it currency all over the world to the full amount of that valde, without ' regard to'laws or circumsstances. +. - : G o ;«; Second—lt has o uniformity of value which makes it the safest standard of the value of property which the wisdom ofinan has ever yet discovered. o - ' . T'hird—lts pertability, which makes it" easy for the traveler<to carry it about: with him. T ] “ Fourth — Its' undestructibility, which ‘makes it the safest money that people could keep in their houses. Fifth—lts .inherent purity, which makes it the hardest money to be counterfeited, ‘and.the easiest 'to be detected,” and therefore the safest for the people to handle. . . . S Sixth—-Its superiority over all other money, whiclr gives tou its possessor ‘the choice and command of all the money. -« - v ‘
Seventh—lts power over exchanges, ‘gold being the currency which contributes most to the equalization of exchange, and keeping down the rate of exchange to the lowest and most uniform point. = ' ST
- Bighth—lts .power over the paper money, gold being the natural enemy of that system, and, .with'fair, play, able to hold it in check. . Ninth =lt is a.constitutional currency; and the people have a right to. demand if for their currency as long as the present Constitution is permitted to exist. : ) | ; Mot e — e @ sw— | - OLD HICKORY ON THE CURRENCY. " There areim this country quite a number of venerable citizens who pride themselves considerably upon the fact of having cast their first pres-: idential votefor Andrew Jackson. To. these, and others styling themselvesJackson Der’imcrats, it may be a :pl'ea‘s-_ ure to-read what that gallant old hero thought of ‘a paper currency. We therefore publish.below a letter written by Gen. Jackson on the 24th of November, 1842, and addressed to Moses Dawson, of Cineinnati: “I am, and have ever been opposed to all kinds of Government paper. currency, let it be derived from exchequer or otherwise. -If the paper is theteal representative of specie, why not pay the debt in specie, and let the specie circulate in:the hands of the laboring and producing classes? Thén the dealings between the merchant and thé laborer will be in specie; and the merchant, by making a deposit, -can-get a bill-on any part of the Union.’ Where, then,:is the use of a paper curreney? Neither the merchant nor laborer wants it. | The merchant wants a bill—mnot a bank or exchequer bill—‘but. upon a banker, -where he lays in his goods—as in Germany. It is one of the greatest humbugs ever attempted to be imposed upon- a people, that there is not specie enough in the world to answer all thie necessary wants of the ¢ommunity.” Look at Cuba. There is-no paper there. Shut out, from circulation all paper, and specie ‘will low upon us as the tide; but it will never flow to any country that has a paper currency, which will dlways depreciate. A national paper currency -is a great curse to any:people, angfl. a particular curse to the laborer of any country, for its depreciation always falls upon the laborer.” If Gen: Jackson were living to-day and gave utterance tosuch sentiments, the organs of inflation would denounce him as a “tool of Wall street” or as a “hireling of the money poweér.” Old Bill Allen,.down in Obio, entertained pl'ecisél_y the same views' as expressed by’ Old Hickory; but he has lately undergone a change ot mind. He now Sdys t}m't a metallic basis for our cui‘rency is &.d——d barren ideality.”
. Pra-IroN KELLEY spoke’ at Indianapolis Tlmr*&y of last week and in Chicago on the day following. - llis theme was rag money and more of it. fiong Johu \Vexitworth was to preside over the Chicago meeting, but he did not put'in an appearance until Kelley h_nd about finished his piece, and then he stated ‘in" pretty plain language that he was not overly burdened with inflation proclivities. v
EpwiN Boormn, the eminent tragediaui, met with a serious accident at his country residence in” Connecticut on Sunday last. = He was driving in his carriage, when his team took fright and became unmanageable. . He was thrown violently to the ground and suffered the.fracture of ‘his elbow and of one rib. The_ifnjuries,'howevm', are not of a fatal character. . Tie DowLING scandal at Indianapolis is to be revived. The case was called up in church last Sunday evening, but Dowling interrupted further pmeeedin‘gs by vigorously playing “Home, Sweet Home” on the organ, whil€ Eld. Smith excitedly declaimed against thereading of an official document, and the janitor: finally turned down the gas.” el e
‘The Queen of the Turf had to sue--render Saturday. Thelittle mare Lulu, that has beén exhibiting such remarkable bursts of speed this season, captured the Maid|,at. Rochester after four of the most wonderful heats ever trotted. In' the first heat Goldsmith Maid was victer, while Lulu was satisfied with third position, but in the next three the little prodigy came to the front and passed under the wire the winner of the fastest race ever trotted. The time was 2: 1514, 2: 1614 2: 1514, and 2:17, which is the quickest first heat, the quickest fourth heat, and the quickest three and four consecutive heats ever made. - .
The Goshen Times and Democrat are irflulging in a hot skirmish. They hjurl such missiles as “whelp,” “dirty, arigrateful pup,” “natural born idiot,” “kicked-out-of-the-ariny quarter-mas-ter” and “shake-your-fist-under-your-pastor’s-nose scoundrel.” : !
- Flies are the scavengers of vitiated ‘air, where they fatten on the parasites that settle upon them in myriads; while they grow lean and starve in a pure atmosphere where their favorite gammeidscarce, . ‘
ALBION LLOCAIL. After an absence of several weeks from my accustomed place, I once more take up my pen to chat with the readers of THE BANNER. In these wet times it is a relief to write on even-a dry subject; yet I have a subject in mind that, while it is not a dry one, is of'no little importance to many people in this county, even though I may be dry in. handling it. It is a subject about which I. have had considerable eoniversation with many who are. deeply interested in it, and some of . whom have urged me to discuss the matter in Tne BANNER. - I refer to the- 320
N ' . MILL PONDS : still kept up-in this county. In the early. settlement of the county, and for many yeéars after, these stagnant bodies of water were of great benefit to the public. . Wherever a sufficient head of water could be made to turn the mill wheel with little expense and labor, there a mill was erected. In those days no railroad had penetrated Northern Indiana; the portable steam saw ‘lill was unknown; the necessities of the people were fully satisfied with even one gristmill in the county. Land was chéap, the county was new,j and the popul:&i‘on' thin and scattered. But times have changed. Noble county now has nearly twenty-five thousand inhabitants, and several Yailroads running over her territory, with flourishing towns and villagesin nearly every township. . -The steam threshing machine does thé work of the flail and oxen, and the reaper is found on nearly every farm. Nearly all'our gristmills have years ago introduced steam machinery, and the whistle of the portable steam saw mill can be. lieard in évery piece of ttmber. ~ And ‘with the passing away of the.old times has passed the necessity of the old mill ponds and dams. They are not needed for any purpose, and are a positive nuisance and injury to the people and the county. If then, on the score of necessity, the time has’ passed away when they can longer serve a good purpose, what shallgbe said of maintaining them on sanitary grounds, and the injury they do to lands in this vicinity on account of overfiow, &? I know of some old gristmills in this county that are not worth a dam, yet yeat after year, to the injury of health and real estate, the reek'ing, poisonous ponds are kept up for the benefit of one or two individuals at the expense of the health and pockets of the many. I think the sentiment at this'time is that these nuisances should be abated. "It is not proposed that in tearing out these old. ponds and dams that the owners of ‘mills shall be injured or ruined. But the timie has come when the public health. and material interests of the many is paramount to the selfishness of the few. Thousands of acres of land are practically useless, which might be made productive, on account of these old dams. Like the canal and stage coach, the water mills -have had their day, and those who own these old mills ought to come to some understanding with their neighbors and-agree on sorhe consideration. and pilll down the ol'a_r eye sores that have 'so long been offending the public. I have but touched a few of the salient points on this subje(':t,'a'nd’yet enough to set those who have most cause to complain at work and agitate the subject until some definite purpose is I reached. : s
‘The excursion to Chicago from this ‘place, under ‘charge of the Rev. C. H. Wilkinson, of the M. E. Church, real‘ized over all experises some $BOO, which will materially assist in building the church which the Methodists hereintend to erect. Some people seem to think a larger profit eught tohave ‘beén realized from the ‘excursion, but when it is considered that about every ‘body who assisted Mr. Wilkinson in ‘the sale of tickets, outside of Albion, charged a handsome. percentage, and that the labor and care in getting up the excursion fell entirely on Mr. ‘Wilkinson’s shoulders, the wonder is that he made anything. I learn that ‘the Methodist preacher in a town west of us charged about fifteen per cent. commission for selling tickets to help a brother preacher build a new. -church. - However, Mr. Wilkinson won golden opinions from all for‘the zeal and fidelity with which he stuck to the enterprise, and he may well feel glad that it was a success. George Price, one of the old settlers of’ this county, died of dropsy of the heart, at his residence in Jefferson township, on' Thursday, the sth inst. He resided many years in Albion, and was a genial and entertaining old . gentleman. | ;
- Prof. W. H. Fertich will give an elocutionary display at the court house, on Wednesday evening, August 25th; his programme is a good one, and it remains to be seen how he will fill it. Oratory is a hard thing to define. Elocution has as many ‘styles as a milliner shop has of bonnets. . ' Geo: W. Mummert, Esq., of Wawa‘ka, has fixed his lieadquarters in Albi,on, and is buying all the wheat he can get hands on. i o
A pew planing mill and lumber yard will soon he started her¢ by Mr. ‘Wm. Dressel, of Tiffin, Ohio. Mr. D. has purchased several thousand dollars worth of real estate within a few days here, and proposes to put up. at once a large brick building. Such men are welcome among us. The “Tent Elders”will'soon be here, and then look out forlively times. The Presbyterians have commenced. on their new church., ey : - The Methodists have purchased a lot and will soon commence on their new chureh. :
Cook’s Great English and American Circus Company, under our old friend Stowe, opened out on Saturday afternoon and evening of last week to good
orowds. . . S " The Auburn B. B. Club clubbed-our Club badly last week. Let our boys practice more and they will do better ‘work. ' They have the materials to make a good club. : The big stones for the new jail have at last got here, and now work willgo ahead in good earnest. - : -John D. Black, Esq., the new County Treasurer, took possession of hisoffice on Saturday last. , et * The eut worm, or the army worm agasl sy Seel AR ote, out east and south of here.
‘Considerable improvement will yet go on in Albion before cold_weat.her sets in. :
. Several of our citizens went over to Garrett the other evening to witness the baptism of two babies, and see the rest of the show. Each baby got a silver cup and each mother got some spoons. Happy mothers. Lucky babies. Do the railroad officials intend to give every woman in Garrett, who has a baby from this on, a lot of silver spoons? o e
A Mr.S. W. Martin, of Madison,‘ Wisconsin, editor of the Soldier’s Friend—so his hand-bill reads—open- { ed up on Phillip’s corner on Friday night in one of the most powerful speeches ever delivertd in this place. I say powerful, for he could be heard all over town. His viewis wonderful —his ‘object not so*much so. His theme—Bounty and Pensions. He is severe on Grant for not signing the bounty bill passed by Congress last winter. Mr. Martin is after signatures to petitions, &e. . Alfred S. Po‘wers, of Michigan, who was, on the settlement of the estate of Rush Powers, deceased, late of this county, declared to be dead by the court, turned up in lively shape the other day, and was not very complimentary in referénce to the person who settled the estate. The administrator,.at the'time of final settlement, informed the court under oath that Alfred Powers had not been heard from for ten years, and that no one knew of his whereabouts; and' upon such a showing the. court declared that Alfred was dead, and ordered his share of -the estate to be divided ‘among the surviving heirs of Rush W. Powers, deceased. Two-thirds of Alfred’s share of the estate had been paid out on the orders of the court, and the balance was still in the hands of Judge Tousley, who was Clerk at -the time; Judge Tousley being satisfied that the (iea(l man was really alive, promptly paid Alfred what was left of his share of the estate.
A breach of promise case from Kendallville promises to be lively next term of court. Also a slander suit from the same place, will come up for hearing, unless fixed up in the meantime. ; A ;
The Noble County’ Teachers’ Institute will convene on Monday, August 23d, and continue in session all the week. © Examinations for license to teach will commence on Tuesday morning. - - ;
Prairie chickens are now in order, and the sound of the shot:gun will be heard in the land. Sam Foster will be stepping around quite lively now, so will Doc. Denny, go will i b UxNcCLE ToBY. : . L e MINNESOTA CORRESPONDENCE. Crop Prospects—A Live Town—Per- ' i sonals, Ete. The.events of the past few months have been fraught with such deep significance-and have crowded upon ‘each other with such suddenness as to render it wholly impossible fdr me .to write more frequently to the BANNER. From sources least expected come many requests that I should write often to the BANNER, and nothing prevents my cheerful compliance with these ofl repeated desires save want of time. ] ;
* PERSONAL. ) To those of my readers who have experienced the rich happiness and comforts of a * home,” however humble, it will not ‘appear: incredible that through all the months: of my isolation here I should have indulged. in many flights of fancy as to what the future would be when _ljejoine(} by my little family in- the spring. ® Through all the vigils of a long and dreary winter my imagination had been busy weaving fanciful pictures of domestic bliss, our little daughter being the central figure. Without her every picture was imperfect. She -was the bright particular star of our domestic firmament, and around -her clustered all that was richest and purest of our hearts affections. Two short weeks after the arrival of my family—weeks of :intense anxiety to us—and the light of our domestic hearth went
“‘Out of the dark and gloom In through the gates of pearl.” It was a sad half-birth-day for her—a sorrowful anniversary of my own birthday, and shattered.into fragments all the bright anticipatitns of months, making the coget e @ Twag ever thus.® : From childhood’s hourl’ve sgeen my fondest hopes osdeeny,’’ o + i particulary appropriate. .
OUR CITY. " The City Directory for 1875 has recently, been published, and from it many facts are gleaned worthy of notice: The present population is put at 33,747—an increase in one year of 2,809. We have a public library, containing over 5,000 volumes; 13 banks, 3 wholesale grocers, 1 wholesale notion, 1 wholesale drugs, 1 wholesale hardware stores; 31 Tetail dry goods, and 123 grocery stores; 28 hotels, 149 saloons, 20 planing and saw mills, 5 foundries, 18 flouring mtlls, aggregating over 200 run of stone, 2 Woolen and cotton mills, 2 paper mills, 1 linseed oil mill, &c., beside the State Uni~versity, McAllister College, a very fine and large new Scandinavian College, and the many costly public school buildings, worth $40,000 each, that are scattered threughout the city. We have 52 churches, with property: - valued at $589,650. o Minneapolis takes a just and commendable pride in her churches, her schools and colleges, her manufacturies and fine residences, costly business blocks, broad avenues, and colossal water power, her fine climate and long winters, and, last but not least, her rapidly growing pop.ulat.ion—;not-“ withstanding ghe hard| times. A double track street railway is now being built, as is also a new suspension bridge, the latter at an estimated cost of $175,000. “Progress” and “improvement” are the watchwords here; ‘energy and enterprise the mainsprings. Everywhere improvements, both public and private, are going forward as though money was worth only six per ‘@ent. instead of twelve, fifteen and twenty, The Minneapolis of to-day is a village as compared with the Minneapolis of ten years hence, at her present rate of growth and development. The new-comer of to-day will
e . THE CROPS. = 1 apprehend that the item of most interest to a majority of my readers | is that relating to the crops. Never has the Stale been more gegeta.ll‘y_ prospered in her crops than 'dn_rin% the present season. The harvest is now rapidly progressing, and, though it is impossible to obtain accurate statistics, it is estimaled that our wheat crop will be in excess of any ever harvested in this State. The ‘ grasshoppers'took same of it earl yin ‘ the seasori, but- their ravages. were confined to a very limited section and will scarcely be appreciable in the general result. Some buyers estimate the surplus at $0,000,000 of bushels, but it is entirely safe to estimate that the Statepf Minnesota will have 25, 000,000 of bushels of wheat to sell this fall. 'Phe price of wheat is now high and will probably not be less than $1.15 in this market for some time to. come. This will give the producers throughout the State an average price of not less than $1 per bushel at their sev‘eml riqint§ of Qelivers. Oats__and barley command good prices, and of these we shall have a large surplus. Corn is not relied ipon by our farm_ers to any great extent as a marketable erop, which is fortunate, for at present: it does not promise particularly well. But with the prospect of so prolific a harvest before us—and the harvest has so far progressed that we may bé said to have realized the high hopes held out by it—our business-men feel buoyant and hopeful. Fifty millions of dollars will come among us during' the next six months to-buy our products, and as this will he pretty gené’?@‘ ally distributed throughout'the State, ‘money will be plentiful and easier to obtain. e
The National Teachers’ Association | held their annual convention in this city last week. The attendance of «gchool marms” .was unusually large,: and as mostof them “boarded around,” of course everybody was benefited. || | Gen. W. T. Sherman and a large retinue of Generals, Colonels, Majors and Captains were in the city to-day, inspecting the ‘Government works at the Falls. . - . ‘ Hon. J. S. Pillsbary, the republican candidate for Governor, resides here, but will move to Sfi.vPaul, temporarily, after the fall election. He has a sure thing of it and will make, at ledst, an honest official. : pas - Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Best, of Ligo'nier,i are spending the summer here with their son, W. S. Best. They expect to remain until the latter part of September. : i : £ Thousands of people from all parts of the East; and South are here spending the summer, and all become *‘en‘thused” over .the ‘delightful climate, pure air am:l picturesque scenery which surrounds the city on every side. The enthusiasm of my esteemed gfriend,' Mr. Decker, was and is no unnatural growth, for everybody gets it who comes here; and even though it ‘may partially freeze out of the system ‘during the winter, it is very like that i thing hinted at by the poet:
“You may break, you may ruin, the vase ifyou But thvgl:lc'ent ofthe roses%wil].clinzround it st'ill.b" L . §' L.H. GREEN. Minneapolis, Minn., Aug. 12, 1875. CHURVBUSCO SQUIRBS., “Quite an excitement in tow.fii;fl,]ast‘ Tuesday evening. Reports came that a than had shot himself thrpugh the head about three gquarters of a mile east, along the railroad. lle was an old man about sixty, & stranger here. They telegraphed-for the Coroner at Fort Wayne, who did not arrive here until the next day noon. Forty-three dollars were found in the suicide’s pockets, but not the scrap of a’ paper to show who he ‘'was. He had a jack knife with a name‘on it, dotbtless the manufacturers’. He told the saloon keeper of (whom he had got two drinks of whisky that he was from Williams county, Ohio; sothe authorities sent a postal card to Stryker and also to several other places in that county, but'ere the, messages-Teached their destination the man was buried. The same evening a telegram: was received from Stryker, stating that the man belonged there, and some one would be after him on the first train. His name proved to be Lanoir. His son and son-in-law came the next morning, but did not take him up.-— They said be had been I'unnihg a liguor establishment in . Stryker, and whisky ‘was the cause of his self-des-truction. ¢ - {
A new butcher shop in town, N. Dodge and F. P. Shambaugh, proprietors. - Everything seems stirring here. Work is lively on the:new church.— Most of the farmers have got their wheat in. The army worm is making rapid strides through the cabbage patches in these parts, S..A. M. —— el O BO— 3 : Crop Keports., Advices to the Chicago Inter-Ocean from 150 points throughout the North- | west, representing ten States, and one Teiritory, indicate that wheat will yield 65 per cent of an.average crop, oats 79. per cent, and corn 91 per cent. Rye and barley are reported to show a dimihished yield, while the crop of potatoes is enormous, but “inclined to rot.” These reports were gathered mainly from farmers who, it is well known, generally look upon the cloudy side. While in some localities rain and floods have done serious damage, there is little doubt that the average of the grain yield throughout the West has been larger this year than usual, while prices now promise to average better than for some years past. . ; ; THE SILK FLAG or banner in which ex-President Johnson was buried—according to his curious request—had considerable of a history connected with its existence. It was a banner which was captured from Rosecrans’ force during the late war by Gen. Bragg’s troops at:the battle of Chattanooga, sent to Richmond, and after-. ward captured by Stoneman’s cavalry, at Saulsbury, N. C. Major Hambright, of Knoxville, Tennessee, being provost marshal at the time, got. possession of it. On learning of Mr. John'son’s request he at once telegraphed. the family, tendering the historic flag, and it was accepted. i ; —-Wn---*’——"—'._—‘":_,—;:' A Jersey City paper has started the story that Charley Ross is at the home of his parents in Germantown, and has been there for several weeks; but the Philadelphia police emphatically_ deny the truth of the 'sta;tgzyent._ X -————'—-‘4»—-——4"‘ Ee Rev. Chas, Finney, for many years President of Oberlin, Ohio, College, died very suddenly Monday mOrninf., pt 4 o'clock, of heart disease, at his [re?ide;ilce.tat“ Oberlin. He ma %g ffia | timeof Misdeaths. - - - FRon e e s
INDIANA NEWS ITEMS.
- Gen. Meredith is dangerously ill. W. €. DePauw, of Floyd county, pays $7OO road tax. o A strange chicken disease is emptying Fort Wayne coops. - e Theodore Tilton advertises to lec--It:u;'e in South Bend the coming winer. N .
Fort Wayne is getting up a soldiers’ re-union. Privates are: to be recognized in this affair. , : ’ It is feared that t]ria frog, hay and whortleberry crops of Stark county \vfiil_l fail this year. ‘ The Mt. V-ernon Democrat puts the loss in Posey county by the flood at two million dollars. :
Lebanon has a case of mest-hiding. Several new sewing societies are in process.of formation. ' e
Mrs. Emma Molloy has received an invitation to canvass Ohio in the interests of temperance. | = The Remington Record reports the stoning “of a womap, while she was passing through that place. = Fort Wayne firemen’s tournament offers but a $lOO first prize and $5O second prize to hose companies. A Vincennes councilman has been arrested on a charge of rape. Je claims it is a black-mailing affair.. - Thomas‘Johnson, the largest landholder in Johnson township, Knox county, loses $15,000 by the flood. A sean. mag. case \will soon be given to the world from Goshen.. It is being discussed at choir meetings.
‘The Goshen girls don’t, consider themselves fashionably dressed unless they have on striped stockings, Jv Ton, Schuyler;Co‘hfa-x has already accepted over ong hundred invitations to lecture during the coming season. Mrs: Sarah A. Oren, late State librarian, has been elected assistant pros fessor of mathematics at Purdue University. - . | i The heaviest loser by the flood in Knox‘ county is W. F. Pidgeon, estimated at $20,000. Elisha Hyatt, of Daviess county, loses $50,000.
Marshal county claims to have about 130 scliool houses, nearly all of which are well supplied with patent seats and other modern convenifiences. The Kentland Gazette shows that 11. D. Thayer has - s6ld $l5O worth of raspberries from one-third of an acre of gr?undj this season, all picked in July. |« 17 B i pedehichog 3 { ‘There is a lake in Lagrange county called Wall Lake, which is confined by an embankment which is evidently artificial, and the work of the Mound DBuilders. . Ll
. The Hon. Schuyler Colfax will deliver an address at the fair of the Remington Agricultural ‘Association on the the third daytof the fair—September 9th. S
Valparaiso contemplates a marriage in. high life, a paragon of style and splendor; carpets from the house .to thé carriages; colored waiters; extensive wedding trip. B d : Jeffersonville is threatened with a scandal, growing out of the discovery, by a married man, of a sixteen-inch shirt “ collar in his bed-room. He wears fourteen and a half, he says, and he wants an explanation.
The Warsaw Indianian notes that on Saturday ‘night (Aug. T 7) several friends presented Gen. Reub. Williams a very nice gold wateh and chain, bearing this inscription: "“To Gen. Reub, Williams, by his many friends.’} Turf sports do nok seem to pay very well in Northern Indiana, this season. The association at South Bend lost #l,OOO on the races there, that at Goshen sunk $6OO and at Fort Wayne, $l,OOO fell on the wrong side of the: ledger. ' i
It is said that there will be lots of squirrels in the woods this fall. The walnut, butternut, hickory and beech trees are loaded withnuts, which will furnish ample food for the squirrels. Good shooting: is- anticipated by our hunters.—Mishawaka Enterprise.
_ Mrs. F. L. Collins has 'a fuchsia which contains 227 blossoms. One branch alone has over 50 blossoms. The plant is one which she bought of Major Carter, when they moved to LaPorte, and is seven feet tall—E7khart Review. : <
The Night Express train No. 3 on the Ohio_ and Mississippi Railroad was thrown from the track Friday night, half a mile east of Huron, Indiana. The cause of the accident was the removal of a rail, which is sup-’ posed to have been taken out of its: place by some'malicious person or pexsons. The engineer and fireman were slightly injured.
The estimated expenditures for the city of New Albany the ensuing fiscal year, foot up $90,660; the tax levied ‘will not yield over $75,000 leaving a deficit of some $15,000. The budget for Indianapolis calls for over $1,000,000 and the product of the levy ordered (or proposed) will mot cover this sum by at least $100,000; and the interest account of this muniecipality is now $227,000 per annum. V e R —— e ¢ The Herzegovina Rebellion. Herzegovina, where that rebellion has broken out of which we read; so much in the cable dispatches, is a province of European Turkey, in extent and population somewhat larger than this congressional district—territory 7,000 square miles, with 200,000 inhabitants. The people are mostly 3lavie, speaking a dialect of that tongue, and about half of them are Mohammedans, the other half being about equally divided between the Greek and ILatin churches. The province which originally belonged to the Kingdom of Crotia, now forms the southwest part of Bosnia, the Turks being confirmed in the possession of it by the treaty of Carvolitz in January, 1699. Itisdividedinto 13 departments and governed: by a 'vizer.— Mostar is the capital—a city of about 8,000 inhabitants. The principal products are tobacco, wine, silks and sword blades. The Turks attribute the insurrection to rampant agrarianism—a sort of communistic out-break on the part of the “grangers.” On the other hand it'is maintained that the difficulty is a religious one, the rebellion being a fierce uprising of the christians against the yoke of the Moslems. 1t is this view which gives the insurgents so much sympathy with the Slavonian peoples in Russia and Austria.
. —Austria calls upon Turkey to employ more energetic means than she has heretofore used .in dealing with the insurrection in lerzegovina.— The former power is undoubtedly becoming anxious on acceunt of her own possessions in that quarter, ahd there appears to be good reason for this uneasiness on the part of Austria. Latest advices show that the movement of the insurgentsin Herzegovina have received little or no -check from the Turkish troops, the dispatches announcing the defeat of a Turkish garrison and capture of a town by the rebels. The people of Turkish Croatia have now risen in arms, which fact, also, admonishes Austria that trouble is approaching her own door, ‘and that remedies must be sought to prevent this spread of the insurrection. Turkish Croatia is bounded by Austrian;Croatia, Bosania, and Herzegovina, an‘gl the blaze of insurrection well-started there, it wonld be diffieu}it -to predict when the war would end. ] : % S - . ‘ ; . Physicians prescriptions -carefully compounded at Eldred & Son's. ~
LATEST NEWS ITEMS.
‘The cotton crop reports from the Southern States are of an encouraging character. = . e i It is reported that the Spanish Government intends to send 10,000 soldiers to Cuba, ¢ ° -« i i Ex-Governor Wm. A. Graham, of North Carolina, died at Saratoga, on the 11th inst. of heart disease.,‘ . The’ alleged| murderer of Mrs. Jarratt was taken from jail at Murfreesboro, Tennessee, Thursday night and lynched. o+« L : _ The cashier of the Corn Exchange Bank, of Waupum, Wis., hasabsconded 'with all the convertible assets of the bank. © T e
"Much damage was done by a heavy wind and rain storm which passed over Duchess county, N.Y. Friday afternoon. ' e : Another wild-cat insurance company, the Brunswick, of Wheeling, West' Virginia, has been closed by the officers of the law. cepan i A disastrous flood occurred last week in Franklin county, Mass. The streets of Ashfield and Conway were' completely flooded. : o < Amid . the black tidings of ruin by storms and floods and 'worms and locusts and weevil, it is pleasing to read that the.cranberry erop in the northwest promises fair.y | T . The Crusaders of Westesville, Ohio, have again blown up Corbjn’s saloon, this tinie almost: completely wrecking the building. Corlbin cantinues. to dispense the ardent. . . ~ .
Notice of trial of the $lOO,OOO libel suit of Theodore Tilton against the Brooklyn Eagle and Thomas Kinsella has been entered in the Brooklyn City Court for the September term. * Henry Yerling, of Indiana, came to New York to buy counterfeit money, and bought a box for $l5O, which contained nothing but sawdust. Yerling and the man who swindled him were arrested last Friday.. .= ; e - Reports from the 'west still show ‘vast - clouds of grasshoppers flying southward. They have ;appeared at Laramie City; Wyoming,, in some localities where they havé been thick for several days past. S g
The business portion of Victory, N. Y., was destroyed by fire on the night of the 6th. Forty buildings were burned, involving a lossof $250,000. An old woman and a boy were burned to death ,and a fireman was killed by falling from a ladder.. . -
* Mr, Welsh has written an_open letter to the President: defending Mr. Walker, Clerk of the Board of Indian Commissioners, from the charges nrade against him by Secretary, Delano, and accusing Mr. Delano of making false reports to the President. = - A decree of the Spanish Government -has been promulgated ordering a levy of 100,000 men for military service. Another decreeds issued directing the Minister of Finarce to redeem the floating debt and issue consolidated interior scrip for £60,000,000. llon. Charles Schagffer, formerly State Treasurer of Minnesota, commit‘ted suicide at St. Paul,on the Bth, by shooting himself with a.revolver. He is supposed to. have been temporarily insane. The deed waé‘mmhpli:shed at the grave of his wifé in the St. Paul cemetery. - - 4 R . Tourteen thousasd five hundred dollars of the .‘1'347,,%@0' lately stolen from the United States Treasury were recovered on the ch.- The money, consisting of, twenty-nine $5OO bills, had been deposited in a bank at Alexandria, Va., by Ottman, one of the _parties recently arrested.” . . ° -
Chicago architects to the number of five having examined the new Cus-tom-house at Chicago, now in process of .construction, have reported uhani-. mously in favor of continuing the | work on the original plan and with the same materials.t . The report has been sent to Washington. 5 . -« ... : A call f01'$10,000:000 worth of bonds has Dbeen issued by the Treasury Department, the syndicate having made! another subseription for that sum. This leaves but $38,537,550*0f the new . {ive per cent. bonds in the hands of the Secretary, and .the syndicate has until November 15 to tase this amount, The trial of Joh .’&)./Lee, the leadgr’ of the Mountain liz%mdow -murderers, at Beaver, Utah, has resulted in a dis= agreement of the jury. The evidencg; of guilt was clear enough, but eight 0t the jurors were Mormons, and -of course would' never agree to convict oae of théir ‘number for a crime against the Gentiles. o
Recent heavy raims have done much damage in Massachusetts. Friday’s dispatches state thiat Dradford’s saw mill, near Williamsburg, has been swept away.. The Mill River Bottom Company’s dam atil.eeds overflowed. The reservoir supplying Northampton water mills, overflowed, and the zailroad track between Albany and Bgston is submerged. ; ’3 il »According to acedunts from Dzu}'&m‘-’: cus to the 23d of July cholera was raging there. Four hundred cases were reported daily, but the real number was concealed. ; The Christian quarters are deserted: . Sudden deaths occur in the streets, There are no physicians, medicings, or supplies. The disease is also bad at Antjoch, JHamah, Aaman, and Salijah, g’find among the Druses the mission scflbols are closed and the cgildren have dispersed. Mg N "A portion of Knox ;’%ounty; I was swept by a tornado which pass ver on the evening of the 4th, doing gonsiderable damage to life and projeny. Mrs. John Anderson, -of Henderson, was killed outright, and many of the injured are not expected to sw&%e. In Wataga eight houses wexfil' royed - and several persons were badly hurt. In the vicinity of Kmoxville Mr. Burton’s residehce was. totally destroyed and all his: family more or less injured. St |
‘A number of Jesuites recgntly entered the Republic ;ofgCosta,;,ga_,from Guatemala, whence they hddz;been expelled. When they arrived v%l;hix; ten miles of the Capital they weére ordered to stop. Congress met 32 same! day, and two thousand Masdns went in a body to Congress Hall and' petitioned for the Jesuits’ removal as mischievous members of society. After an excited debate, the Congress t%nally voted them fifteen hundred dollars for their immediate wants, and order-. ed them to leave the country.. . '
THE MARKETS: | e S LIGONIER. « &1 Wheat—_\white....B) 40, H0g5—1ive..%......1§650. Amber—red ..... 1 32{Hogs-—dressed...... ... Rye........cuiiv.s 50 Turkeys—live.....x 06 Qate. oo ~'!ElCE,lickens—live,..f;.; 03; IQorn, .. e @I BEEBWAX ( olil voaui )28 P0tat0eg,...... ..@ 80 8ntter.......,......:e;- 15 FlaxSead. .0.. o 195 l ard ... iv v A 3G Clover 5eed,....... 6 80|Egg5,...... 5% . ...%x 11 Woolicieia .o 45iFeather5.......'_.... 75 P0rk........per br 2250 Ta110w.... vivyov.. o 08 ShoUlAers, leeessss ' lslTlmothy Hay. .0....1400 HUam5............ @l5/Marsh Hay......... 800 JKENDALLVILLE. Wheat—white.....sl3s Live H0gg..........80 00 Amber—red ....... 130|Dressed HOgS curee «oin Rye oo aiiianes lOO}lee"l“\rrkeys.....'.. OatB..cisevaiivasas “40iLive Chitkens. eecos o 5 COM, o vuus B 65|8eeawax;........... 25 Potatoss, ... L 0 ¥6ißutters. L., e9B PlaxßSeed.. oo 190Ihard, vonsseiiicans 14 Clover Seed.. ...@ 5 00| Egg 5,............... 11 W001..i0-ovoc. @ 45(Fenthers, v......... 90 POtk velis conn SoITRHOW s eBN 5h0u1der5,......... 12{Timothy Hay...... .13.00 Hamd. ol o @ 14!Marsh Hay:........ 800 e e e s Ll i & CHICAGO, : S Wheat—white..~ § 1 17| Hogs—live..s7so @B7 95 gheat-red iiieee. ..|Mess P0rk..20 80@ 00 00 COrfs.oyineivitewy - 65iLard....... 13 32@0000 Oatsi . iviisoew -08 5h0u1der5.......... 8§ Barley.. ... .v..... IOB[HAMB vovniiaoiane 1230 Wheat.....c.. vcnn 140, t!0}n....-_..“«\'.‘. “., Red ... 0000 45|Clover Beed. ... e SRR T e s T e gt S e e S si e
LARGEST AND LEADING CLOTHING AND HAT HOUSE IN. - NOBLE AND ADJOINING COUNTTES, '+ Buring the Next 60 Bays! .§ ». We fpr;)p{;.ée’ to s'l-(»5(;‘0,1'1@ the balance of . e : ! L ‘,’ B _'v,- 118 o B 8 s lEWCAD MR DEOUR, 5 And’to. éuc;-,e-éid m"fm e\el“, vm-ticie.m the line ()f ‘ o NS AND BOS WEARI!
Atsuch Low Pricesas will A Bell e A ENGEE 800 \“e",:fv-;;':;';:;:f;;;':::‘::f;;zg-:f*-sf} © Kendallville, Ind. -
ei S RST S e R RCRA e e S i % g e egal‘-.%Ohhmmmnmts | Notice to Hleirs of Petition to et -Sell ll_é;ll.v’llf]fiiflt‘c’. e i .Sla;é of Indiana, Noble Cowsity. In the Noble-Cire. ctril Courts ;v mhil Siel @ Burl e : NO"I‘«ICEjs hereby given that Christopher Hoo-" ey, Administrator of Isaac Eaniz, deceased, has filed hig petition to sell the Real Estate of the, decedent, hig personal being inguflicient.to pay his ‘debts; and that'said patition will be’hoard at the inext.term of the Court of Common Pleas of said 'C()umi.' S e Yt lun W Sen el E g ttests gt 5 WAL G WILLIAMS,.: YoooonmE e o Clerk(s CiNable Counidy: - . August sth, !:8}5.,'—.15\»’.‘! G R
.. SHERIFF'S.SALE. - Saaeal ee AT ST di i BY virtue of an execution to me directed by the ' Clerk of the Noble‘Circuit Gonrt of Indiang, in the case-of Wilson W. White ve.John Vanderford, I will offer for. sale at public auction at the Court House door in the. towh of Albion, county of Noble and State of fndiaia, on; - Sl v SATURDAY, ATVGUSE 2%, 75, Between -the hours of ‘lO o'¢loek, A, ~ and & o’clock, p: i of said day the folowing described real estate, toswits Lot number five (5)-in Wood's Addition to-the town of Llgonier, Noble County, Todinpate v S et e ; ce L NATHANIEL PYEAGLES, - : G Sii. o Sheriftof Noble County., F. PriokErT; Attorney for-Plaintift. - = .~ . Albion, Ind.;~August2,-1875::15w3-p.f. 84 © -
SHERIFF'S SALE. e S e T T R g R BY- virtue of a certified copy of a decree and-au; order of sale to me directedl by the ¢lerk of the Noble:Circuit Courtof Indiana, in the case of Andrew Ashbmrfih vs. Andrew ‘Kuisg, * Martha Knissand Timothy Hudson, ' will offer for sale at. public’ auction at the door of the court housein the toawn of Albion, Gotnty of Noble, and Stateof Indiana of=iory 0n e AL b s Gt 0 i o Saturday, Augnst 2hst, 1875, I\?etweei‘n. the hours of 10 6'¢lock as Mi-and 4 o’clock .M., of said day, the following desc‘ribgw Reéal Estateto wit: The west half of the noPth-cast -quar:er of section twenty-nine, in "t,obvn'shigt) thir-ty-five, north of range nine éast, excepting therefrom all-that partion of said g;fiqgll‘y,in_'g soutli of the Lake Shore & Michizan Southern Railroad, in Neble County, and State of Indifins, U NATHANIEL P EAGLES, ! A G et -,Sherifl‘.g@%b}e County. T. E. Eilizon, Attorney for Plaintiff: ==« " “Albion, Indi, July:29th, 1872:-pf B§oo - .
Orale!- fl‘f(‘nf ‘the C;oig}siriu:liéi; of el g SR e Bas L Pl
ON MOTION.. Ordered: That the Marshal be ). ‘and is heteby inktructed to proceed to advertige and letthe contracts for vhe plapking of all sidewalk reguired to he built hy “Ordinance 117 at'the expiration of 25 days from this meeting, unlesg the sanie shall be built. or commenced in good faith; by the ownersofl thedots:on which all or'any partof said:-sidewalk may front, within said periold; aud furthHer, s (=l s . Ordered : - That the owners afall Jots ipon which any sidewalk may front.that may need repairing, shall we and are hereby required: to-repair snch sidewalk in a proper manner ‘within 15 days. from: the.day of publishing this erder, anad in‘default, the Marshal shajl repair the saine:at the cogt of such ownersiand, furthérsthat this order be published oneweeks " e i GG e s e - T hereby certify the above to be a'true and complete.copy of the original order; therein’ made by the Board of Trustees of the,tf}.wild of Ligonier, Ingd., at their meeting of July 8001875, . . ; .1 THEO, S. ELDRED, Town. Glerk . YL STV E AT ! LSHERIFE'S SALE. .
BY virtne 6T a certified copy of-a.decree and ors _.der of sale to me issnéd’ by -the Clerk of the Noble. Circuit Court of the State of Indiana, in: the case. of RichardS, Williams, Thomas Williams, Jr., Ellis Potter, Samuel M. Gornell, and. Siduey Cornell vs. Abrahiam B.' Miller'and Mary E. Miller, I} will ofter for sale-at public anctioniat: the Court Honse door in the town-of Albion, Nobie County, and State of Indiana, on« ~ . ke SATURDAY, Al{'G UST 28,°75, Between. the heuis ‘of l_gko'clni:k_. A, M., and 4 o’clock ®. ar. of raid ‘daythe following described real'estate situated in Nol')fet(:)punty. and State of. Indiana, to wit: The westihalf of the north-east quarter.of section. seventeen (17)-‘and the west half of the south-east quarter of section seventeen (17; all in township. thirty-five (35) north of range eight (8) east. in the county of Noble, and State of Indizna. ~Also that certain piece orparcel of land sold dnd conveyed to said Miller by Joseph Teal and wife in Noble County aforesaid and-described as follows, viz: Commencing at a stake in the: m’lddl‘f of the Elkhartiriver, sixty rods from-the west Jine, thence following the middle of the said, river ‘twenty-two (22): rods east, thence south twemty-two (22) rods, thence west (22) rods, thence north to the place of beginning, containing three acres more or _lese.‘lyi_n?on the south side of said. river, and Deing part of section*twenty-one (21} in township thirty-five (35) north of range eight (8) east, together with the grivilege,qf the overflow of said river, canged by building a'dam -seyen feet. eight inchés high, in said section twenty-one (1), : Tt " NATHANIEL PO EAGLES; caiv .. ..7 .. Sheriff-of Noble County.: Tougley, Pricket & Zimmerman, Plaintifis Att'ys. * Albion, Ind., Aogust sth; 1875,-w4pf 10« NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS.
The State of Indiant, Noble Cowunty, Sctv .'~ ; Charles C. Buchtel and Sarali Buchtel 2zW s e George Keehm, Margaret Keehn, Adam Simmons, Nancy Smith, Nathan' - Smith, Mary Lowry, Joseph Lowry, < Maggie. Suyder, Selicie Simimons, L Clara Stmmons, Francis 8., Myers, . .and Charles Feayi-: . 7 In the €irenit Court of Noble: County, in the Stateof Indiana. October: Term, A. D, 1675, - .. PETITION FOR PARTITION. s BE_}T KNOWN, that.on this'3oth day of July, 1) -inthe.year 1875, the above-named plaintifls by their attorney, filed in the office of the Clerk of the Noble Circuit Conrt. their complaint against: said defendants, in the ‘above entitled cause, to-. gether with an: affidavit ofa comfietent, person that said defendants, Nancy Smith, Nathan Smifth,Mary Lowry, Joseph Lowry: Maggie Snyder; Sclicie Simmons, Franeis 8. Myers, and Clarg Simmons are not residents of the State of Indiana. = Said non-residentdefendants are therefore herefore hereby notified of the filing ‘and pendency of said 'c”ompfaint:ag‘ainst ;_hem,%nd that unless they. appear and answer or démur thereto at the calling* of stld cause on-the second day ofthe next term ‘of said Court, to' be begun and held at the Court House in the towr of Afbion, on the thitd Monday in-October, 1875, gaid complaint; and the matters. and things therein contained and alleged will be heard and detérmined in theéir absence, =« T en U WM O WELLTAMS, Clark. 1. E. Kxiskry, Attorney for Plaintifiy, = Augist 5, 18818 - Lo A
R&T.TONIC ELIXIR I T Wi CONTAINS BEEF JUICE TONICS & MILD CATHARTICS &IS AN IM PRO VEMENT ON LIEBIGS EXTRACT.
y Ext. Carnis ot se B A Fe(Sln anci's‘handolph"s Process.) ‘ Prot. Oxalate Iron, .« . 51 ‘ Alkaloids of Cinchona, . '+ si. Pepsin SBaccharated, . . 5 i Ext, Diosma Deod. . '« . 51. Rhei [Turk,]: . v ¢ o B
THIS MEDICINE !|S PRESCRIBED BY PHYSICIANS FORTHE CURE OF INDIGESTION ,CONSTIPATION ,DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE PILES FEMALE, CHILDREN.} BLADDER STOMACH KIDNEY,LIVER & BLOOD DISEASES,LOSS OF APPETITE & GENERAL PROSTRATION OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM. LARCEBOTTLES 102 TRIALSIZE2SCTS FORSALE BY ALL DEALERS: RICHARDSON & TULLIDCGE,PROP'S. CiNCInNAT L, O.
SENT FREE i $4O t 0 §75 CABH. per week o all, at home or traveling [email protected] new; Addwss. Themm'lyflo. OW
F.BEAZEL, Saddles, Harness
W Lig i : Ro : - TRUNKS. LIGONIER., INDIANA =_v b e i : : / ‘The prbprictor will be pleased at any time to wa | “,on all'who may wish anything in the line of : HARNEGS o n CLLBADDINE 4 ) : : BRIDLES, ‘ wi s WHITDS, : Stk iBT DARS. W ‘ FLY-NETS, Sl e BRUSHES, ed e : LCARDS, ¢
&e., and hr[act everything j:ermining to'this % : _ofbusiuc;;ss; ) J Efipenia‘xl attention is called to the fact that he is _how epgagedin the mannfacturing of all kinds o s JTTRUNKS, : B Style, Finish, Durability & Price, Are far superior to thfose of eastern manufacture.” Call, See and Buy. | ‘October3o,"73-27tf | F. BEAZEL. M. E: KENYON FIV e B de. h B b ST \ 9 “(Succesror to 8. A. Hertzler.) dealer in fine Gold ].' . nudiSi-lvcrAmcricay.uud Swiss g | ; ; | 4o 3 Lo tobs o o b WATCHES e JAL IR B4rble “Having bought out Mr 8. A. Hertzler, and permanently located in Ligonier, I would respectfully | invite the attag(‘iou\o'f the people to the fact - that ' I'shall make a specialty of Solid Gold and FINE, P { ROLLED PLATED ' - ; o ; vl o . : ot O3sty by Sl - Jewelry and Chains, ey Al : : i Embracing all of the latest an@ most approve . e g styles for both " et 'fL ADIES’ AND GENTS' WEAR,
Which I shall offer at prfces that will defy competition. lalro keep on hand a beautiful line of i B fine solid gold._ { . . SEAL RINGS. - ‘Being a practical workman, 1 shall pay especial ! . attention to the 2 4 ‘ lAl'ld udjinsting of fine watches, and all work en- = ¢ trusted to' me will be done in a first-clagss manners : G -and warranted. i v s’_'."_‘: PR ENGE»AV_IN_G Of all'styles done with neatnéss and diepatch af i . M. E. HENYON’S, : In the Lizoniet House Bloek, Ligonier, Ind. Qete 29, 187427 = - : P
CABINET SHOP : ‘f‘Al\'l)'E;—— s o i -fl.' kg ‘ ) & | CABINET WARE ROGNS! : Lo A S ROD, K‘E‘R,R, L Would respectfully aunounce to the citizen ol Noblecounty, that he has constantly on . handalarge nndsupérinrstoek ot i ‘ .. i ‘ v!( N . »\ 3 I CABINET WARBE, T ]“Cm‘nsis\fin;"-lit‘: purtot : . DRESSING BUREAUS. b e s R e g L | WARD-RDBES. .. - ' . imAmEe o L ,e)w;'.?*._‘ a sTéNi)fi, .} i, ] R el e e | L& OURBOARDN, ;' £ '._‘,.'.\“':_‘ X ,’ s \MOULP¥N“‘( L el B | Andin fact eveiythiug usoal g ptifi s First | And made to ocder, upon ehost noice. Also all. 6 Food Hearay afwaye . resdmers, . HIGODIBE, AAY | bt aac o 0
