The National Banner, Volume 10, Number 31, Ligonier, Noble County, 25 November 1875 — Page 2
N T s 088 | S o g g g A e TNI o ‘«. .eg,. T "r.v_:“»_:? sy {; e i The latioml Banner & ¥ @ Bl o (} St Breesidh S e e fur g . ,;‘." B et -?, Y Jy. B.STOLL, Editor and Proprietor. 2 Ex::—_;—-fi::‘:::":‘: LIGONIER, IND. NOV.I2Sth, 18735. | e TSR T L TS BRAT ~ Gex. PacgArDp, of the LaPorte Chronicle, recenfly commenced the _publication of a very;readable daily. He issued twelvenumbers, and finding " his expenses largely in excess of his receipts, wisely abandoned the enterprise and will hereafter be |content with the puplication of / a fyeekly. The daily neWSpaper businessis very largely overddae in XOr_tliern Indiana. .. SoME of the radical newspapers
have been building “pyramids.” Their slfiapéitfxeflarflisburgPaltn‘Ofubsei‘ves,, was 4 little irregular and their proportions wexe slightly slender without the names of such democratic States
* as New York and Wisconsin.' So they \ just put these in'to give their pyraimidical structures a. little, size and % shapeliness. Undef the gircumstances .~ “hadn’t 't,'»l}ey as\wé]’i abandon the pyra~ * mid business ? b T
- Ix New Orlegns the conimen schools ‘have been turned over to'the care of negro directors, whose priucipal aim seems to be tgmake attendance ind sufferable for Wwhite children by the adoption oif the ,mos"g ux;n'e_ce'ss_;n-y 1:ég; “ulations affeetin tfle social relations of thd scholars) The veneration of ‘the republican xr’_ty{'ffor the qflnmog Teheq}s ds well Hillustrated Dby} their compulsory systém of mixed schools in som;efof the scduthern Stntfl.s.)C B+ e e NR R o L e
. IX REPLY tothe reporter who said Senator. Booth, Bad/ been ngnred for the Presidency, themdistinguished. Californian said: “I know it js the Lirthright off every American to be President, . Every mother expects her son {o be President, and nearly every hoy i 1 the country talks th;)_(tf:\'\';:'_\,' : but_ it is an aspiration which is generally knocked out of him by the first hard cofita’ct with t-hé’( world. Any man with ‘eommon_ sénse.ought-to know When‘he‘;las no cliance.” s
~ DURING thé past two weeks considerable has been going {hé rounds of the daily press in regard to the relations ‘of Spain . toward the United States, and our readers will be pleased to Jearn that a recent Washington dispateh announces. that the troublé with Spain, which has been made it to be so great.in Cuban circles, is at an ‘end. On Thursday of last week, Secretary Fish veceived from Minister Cushing, at Madrid, a.dispatch to the effect that the Sp:inish:;g\éyer‘nmeént was now ready to congede all our demands- and had 'giir'é:l} sheh pledges 'th’t‘zt-thero remained nolonger any doubt that Spain would agree to do all that was required of her. ~ .
T SpEAgRING ofw libel suit instituted : by Hon. John Kelly against the N. X . Times, the World takes occasion to re- - mark: “Weare not aware of any rea- . “Spn why a. newspaper -shaml(}; be g ‘lpen’nitted.}sq to do ‘any more thgm'a z}p_riva_te pe;s‘gxx,—xlx;loll less indeed in *. proportion |to-its power to work mis- .~ thief. by the wide pablicity it is_able . to give to its. calumnies. Tlere are . journals which seem to be condueted 2 .. upon the theory of their divine right to vilify every opponent,at will. It is _ mot for the interest of the American © . press, itd freedom. or its dignity, that . such “journalism” should be/ unpun~_ished” This sentiment coincides ex- © - aetly with THE BANNER’s off-express- © ed judgment. g 2 Rl o o Juncg DENNY, late Attorney-Gen- % eral of tliis State, who is 'l)ein_g'"pfit forward by cerfain, republican jour- . mals as a syitable candidate for Gov< v - €rnor, éharged a jury in Irdiabapolis, ‘ recenfly, that “the sociallstanding f ' the defendant, his fatily and friends, .- might be 'v@t_)nside'red by, ért"h‘e jury in . determining the question’ of the phis- © . omer’s guilt or innocence.” ~ In other g 'fiog'ds, says the Daviess county Demo- - eraf, if the thief's father happens to ' Z be a high-toned coupon clipper, the * * jury ought to be lenient, and, on the - contrary, if the thief’s father saws . ,wood for a living, the culprit ought 3 to be punished to the full extent of, the law. He’s a nice man to be spo- ., ken of in connegtion with " gubernaL 'torial'"hor)’pfi:_—“M ._.,,,,;! i By WHILE at Indianapolis. last wéék ~ ° we had'the pleasure of meeting the £ '%m. WE. Niblack and of listening - tgabrief imp:ro\mptu speech delivered T _,Byf him before the ]‘-)‘Qrpocratic Hen- . dricks Club. -llis remarks were emi- .. nently sound, practieal and conserya- . tive—just of such acharacter ds the - exigencies of theltimes demand. ;If . his suggestions were generally adopt- ~ ‘ed by théparty, but little ‘dificuly ~ _ -would be. expériénced in. not -only &;flg{fiffifig.but;ab}:_figamtaining demo- . eratic supremacy in Indiana and the _+ eountry at large. Should the Judge .= be made the demoeratic ®standard ‘bearer of this State, the party will be gg placed under the leadership of W pru%;::mm{;chgefeam and in the event of hib . election the interests of the State will %}%‘h;mfely gharded. -00 l ! - ——— e : . THE TELEGRAPH announces the " * deatli, of paralysis; at his home in ~ Norwalk las Bunday, of theiHon. 01i ris S Ferry, United States Senator . from Connecticut. Senator Ferry was . born in 1832; he gdraduted at Yale, " and some time after entered upon the ‘practice of the law as a profession; | *mmbar of the State Senate in | 3668 and 150, was Stat’s Attorney e 19°0c was then elected RS B iber of the House of Repre- _ sentatives in the Thirty-sixth Congress. ,He held the ranks of Colonel and Brigadier ‘General in thé Union iy, and served with distinetion and onor. He was clected to the United expiring in 1879. Aithough a ““g’t% ; fi%&q@fi%
- Hon. Henry Wilson, Vice-President | of the United States, died in the city of Washington, last Monday morning at 20. minutes past 7 o'clock. About two “weeks ago he had ah attack of | paralysis, but his physicians succeed-" ed so-admirably-in-their treatment of the patient that strong hopes*of his recovery were entértained by his immediate friends. - Though suffering | intensely at times, Mr. Wilson seemed to approach eertain recovery. Hghad | slept comfortably .on Monday morning, but upon awakening a sudden. change came over him and in a very. short time he breathed his last. -~ ° - Henry Wilson was in many. respects a remarkable man.. “Born in 1812, as the Chicago 7ribune says, * in poverty, he-was apprenticed to a.farmer at 10 years'of age, and servedf\labori-, busiy until his ‘majority, in 1833.— With little epportunity for schooling; he found the means, even i'n." tliose days, when Dooks were not as plentiful or as aecessible as now, td read .a ‘great many volumes -of history and biogrdphy. As soon as he had com-’ ‘pleted his apprenticeship én the farm, he walked to Natick, Massachusetts, where he engaged at. shoemaking, at which hie worked diligently; pmc't‘i‘cing ‘temperance and’ rigid economy, until - he had accumulated some five handred‘dollars. e then tried to improve Jis limited edubzifion by attending an. “academy in New Hampshire, but the depository of his savings having becomé .insolvent, he retfl.rne'd ‘to ‘shoemaking at Natick. ITis good habits and his natural abilities,, however, made him conspjcuous -among. his associates, and in 1840 he was enlisted in: behalf of‘({:,-.n. Harrison's eleciion to the Presidency, he making a great miany speeches. From-that time to the present he has been conspicuous in Adnerican paiiivics. lie was almt‘istfl 1 continuously :x"memb@u:of either bfie=‘; or the other 1,»1‘;\11(;(1 -of tlie State Legj.‘j | islature, zmd_'f requ_enfl_y: the presiding officer. ITe was an active anti-slavery i man, and opposed ,t?.ge‘:amiéxati()n of Texas. In 1848 le lett. the Whig National Convention: when it rejected the :mti-sluy’el"y-_‘p]at,fqnn,' and united with the Free-Soil .party. For two {years he edited an’ anti-slavery paper ¥in Boston, serving also.in the l,isgise ature. In 1852 he presided at the Free-Soil - National Convehtion =in ' Pittsburgh. In 1853 he was the FreeSoil candidate for foyernor of Massachusetts, but was: defeated. When the Know-Nothing organization elected Gardner Governor of Massachusetts, Mr. Wilson. was .a’member of | that party, but when that party; subl sequently, Tejected. an Anti-Slavery | platform, he abandoned it. In 1855 %'-he was elected to the L'nitedStatesr | Senate in the place of Edward Everett resigned, and continued by successive eléctions a member of that body until 1873, when_ he I‘e'sigh_ed to become Vice-President, to which \place he was elected in 18727+ ¢ : Mr. Wilson was neither a brilliant statesman nor ‘an original thinker; ‘but he was a-man of great earnestness, -industry, and streng practical sense. He was an ardesnt‘pa-rtis:m, and-devoted much of his time and influence to rarmonizing the conflicting elements of his party. Like most of the more distinguished: 01'fgi11&1 anti~ slavery men, he had of late made an earnest and, we- believe, honest effort in the direction of harmony, conciliation, and a forgetfulness of the war. He visited sevéral of the Southern States “about a year ago, and spread the.gospel of fraternal love {vith commendable zeal and earnestnesy. His. chief aim, however, seems to- have been the reconciliation of those Republicans; who. from a sense of duty: identified themselves with the Liberal movement in 1872. He also vigorously combatted the proposition of a third ‘presidential term, thereby in- | curring the displeasure’ of many of Mr. Grant’s henchimen whose official tenure is depepder‘qt’upqn their am- | bitious eliief's retention of the executive chair. SRS
‘- WHISEY FRAUDS., © +~ . The eflective measures taken by Secretary i]iq.'istxf.w_._ some’ tirhe since, to put a stop to” the immense frauds perpetr;ttéd by '.tligti’llers,‘“tith the-aid and conuivance of federal offieers, have to a certain extent, atleast, béen crowned . with sucdess. ~ Suits have beer iust;ituted';;{gain%t anumber of officials in Missouriy and elsewlere. On the 13th iust., Col. Joyce, a former whisky inspector, was found guilty. by the court at' Jefferson Ci'&y and sentenced to three and a half years’ confinement in the pénitentiary. . -InSt. Louis,”on the 22d, Gen. MeDonald, the supervisor, was also.convicted. Sentence hasnot been passéd, the officiating Judge preferring to -conclude the trials of all the accused: officials before fixing the term of their imprisonment in: ‘-,tvhe perjitenti-a'ry,.l : ‘The disclosures made diiring theseé ‘trials -implicate as the known members of the -official Ring Mr. Megrue, the cashier, ‘who'divided the money; Col. Joyce, the inspector-and special agent; Gen, McDonald, the supervisor, and “Boss” Ford, formerly collector, now deceased, (Magu;’re,f whosucceeded him as collector, also succeeded to his share of the “swag,”) and McKee, #hie proprietor of the Globe newspaper, an administration organ. These are the men among whom the plunder was'divided every week, Megrue putting the money into five different envelopes,. and delivering it to the several members. It.is brogdly intimated that President Grant's brather;Orville, and his private.secretary, Babcock, also shared in the division of these funds, but no positive evidenee to that effect has as yet been elicited, It is known, however, that the most intimate relations have existed between Col. Joyce and Babeock.
The mannér in which .this Ring conducted its operations is very simple. Each distillery- would run a certain proportion of “straight” and a certain proportion of “crooked” whisky.' The “crooked” whisky paid no tak. The gaugers and doorkeepers were paid .from $l-to $3 per barrel for all the “crooked” whisky they passed. The distillers also paid a round sum per week, supposed torep-. into the hands of the ring ashier, who. rrtessiaeals st imatl S Cosks PRV Bebilriod Wi
combine with the gauger and storekeeper hy paying them each $5 a barrel' instead of §1 and $2 a harrel, to misrepresent to their superiors in the | ring the amount of “crooked” whisky run off, and so “cheat” McDonald, Joyce, Ford, McKee and their pals out, of their share of the “swag.” = When Joyce and McDonald suspected anything of this kind, th'ey; would pumsh the distiller by forcing him to pay the tax on everything, which would result in ‘shutting down his distillery altogetlier, as he could not compete with those paying no tax. Thus brought to terms, he would be permitted to resume by dividing squarely.” -~ An estimate of the enormous profits thus realized by the. Ring may be | made by multiplying the figures given by some of its members during the trial at St. Louis. Megrue says that on an average $8,500 per week was obtained from the distillers and duly d;vide'd. ‘These operations commenced early in 1872, and have been continued until recently. Portions of these funds were devoted to .carrying- the kelections for the republican party. Megrue remembers of $22,000 being paid at one time to help the republican cause at the October elections of ‘1872, Similar frauds having prevail-. ‘ed at Chicago, Evansville, Milwaukee, aud elsewhere, it may readily be inferred that theusands upon:thousands. ‘of dollars have thus been raised for the enrichment of corrupt officers and for the corruption ‘of the balfot box, instead of passing into the U. S. Treasury for the extinguishment of the public debt. - S PR TSI T # TRAGEDY AT SOUTH BEN D.i Shooting of Editor Murray by’ : . Squire Palmer, == SCANDAL AT THE BOTTOM OF . THE AFERAY. . . 'The \"‘;)un(led Man:Still Livlnzfi.‘ Sourn BexD, Ind, Nov. 22.—0 n Friday evening last, a female printer named - Bayless, who had been discharged from the Herald ‘office, waylaid Charles . Murray, the editor, and demanded of him satisfaction for calling her*‘a loose female tramp,” and Murray, having been wained, grabbed her and flung her on the sidewalk. She-had a rawhide, and had standing near several who'are said to have been invited to witness the cowhiding. Among them was William A. Palmer, a Justice. : On Saturday and Sunday Murray published accounts of the affair, coupling with Mrs. Bayless the ‘name. of Justice Palmer, :aceusing { himn -of being her pimp and making other charges- against him.i! Palmer nursed his wrath antil near 2 o’clock to-day, when he waylaid Murray on the stairs leading to the Herald office, { and while Murray was ascending shot { him through the left lung,—the ball passing through the body and lodging on the sidewalk. ! The ball weighed nearly an ounce. i . ; PALMER’S OFFICE was across: the hallway from -Murray’s and is approached by the same, stairway. As the latter was ascending the stairs Palmer, who stood at the head, fired, the ‘ball entering his right breast just under the collar bone, ranging . directly: through his lungs and eoming out at the small of the ‘hack. The doctor stated that the.ball had passed into the right lung about four inches above and somewhat to ‘the left of the right nipple, and had come out at a point to the right of the spine_just below the scapula or shoulder blade. - Sheriff Turnock who happened to-he across the street talking _with Jernegan, of the Mishawaka Znterprise, brother-in-law of Justice Pal‘mer, ran td the spot where the wounded man lay, and as he raised him the latter exclaimed: “My God, Joe, Bill Palmer has shot me.” Murray was -at once takén to Cushing’s drug store from which he was removed to his quarters at the Grand Central Hotel. His father, C. L. Murray, of Goshen, was immediately telegraphed for, also -the dying man’s. wite, who recently went to Washington, her home before residing in South Bend; in order to have her failing health restored. ' < MRS. BAYLESS was raised in this county, but left some years ago and learned the printer’s trade somewhere in the West. She married a railroad man in Kansas, but tor some reason . didn’t live long with him. She is possessed of a bold, dashing appearance, and made as much show of dress as her limited meians would allow, even her “pinback” being formed iu the most taking style. = Sheis represented among the printers as being up in all the current slang of .the day, and always ready with a curt reply. She worked early. and late at the=case for-5 cents per thousand less than the men, but always had a full string at measuringtime, and really received larger wages than her fellows,: - - i
THE WOUNDED EDITOR : lies'in a very critical condition, with slight hopes of recovery. At 9 P. M. he seemed to rally, which gives his father strong hopes that he will live through. ol , -~ Mr. Murray served three years in the army, and was ‘left for dead on the field at Stone River from a Rebel bullet, which he stili carries in his hip. He served in Capt. Silver’s company of the Thirteenth Indiana. After leaving the army he secured a clerkship in the Second Auditor’s ‘office in the Treasury Department, ‘and while there he acted as Washing‘ton correspondent to the Danbury . News and a Cincinnati paper, and “wrote for several magazines. He came here a year ago, and purchased the Union, a weekly newspaper,which was lately merged into a stock company and pamed the Herald, which .issues a morning daily. Murray has followed the style of writihg up those persons who laid their acts open to public criticism, and: for this style he was shot by Palmer, . whom he had written up. Palmer wasimmediately lodged in“jail, and his‘friends secured | the Hon. W. G. George to take charge of his interests, and, although he denies nothing, he is by no means communieative, - ' . . Full Pariieniars. (From Tuesday’s Chicago Tribune.) Mr. Josiah Thompson, of South Bend, who was in the city last night, and who was a witness of the shooting, was interviewed by a Zribune reporter, and in response to inquiries gave the following additional particu- i lars: o e : Miss Bayiess, the young woman about whom the affray originated, came to South Bend some months since, and was employed in the office of the Daily Herald, of which Murray was editor and manager, as a type-set-‘ter. A short time since she had a quarrel with him about her pay—shy g e S uak ot he G ’shfi%“ww whichahs clitoled to havs ufsém.‘%dfi%@ i*flpfi.rf‘w‘ ;»fi;?ufi»fi
the Register, About this time a paragraph appeared in the Herald charging that she had had illicit intercourse with Squire Palmer. :
* PALMER PUBLISHED A CARD in the other papers denying it, and the Herald retorted by publishing an article in which it.was stdted that she had been watched on leaving the Herald office at night, and seen to go down an alley, where she was met by Palmer, when both went to her rooms in the Baxter & Wolverton Block, on Market street, adjoining the St. Joseph Hotel, at which she took her meals. Thereupon she went to the Herald building Saturday evening, and sent up-stairs for Murray. . When he came down, she said she had come to.settle with him, and wanted to settie with him now, and then asked why he had CALLED HER A THIEF AND WORSE.
He asked her if she ‘wasn’t a thief in trying to steal on her type-setting account, and: made. other remarks, when, noticing that she held her hand behind her, as if grasping a weapon, he seized her arm and found that she had a horse-whip. Thereon he shoved her out of the hallway in which thé altercation had oc'(:ur(}"ed. Then Mutray saw Palmer standing near the entrance, as though he had come there to assist her. That was Murray’s accountotit. o i > § i Her account as published was thav she went thereto cowhide him, when he drew a pistol' on her and kicked her into the street.
The matter led to considerable spar- “ ring between the papers, and the Her- | ald continued its attacks on her, and on Palmer as her paramour. In econsequence of an article it published on Friday, Palmer’s wife left him on | Saturday last, and went to her brother’s, at-Mishawaka, where the latter publishes . the Interprise newspaper. .The same day (Saturday) Palmer’s father told &4 nuraber of persouns to caution Murray, as his son had threatened to shoot him, and the father’advised that Murray keep out of the way. |'Nobody thought anything of it, however, until yesterday, when, at about 2 o’clock in the afternoon, as Murray was about to.go up:stairs to the ZHerald office on = Washington street, near Michigan, Palnier, whose ‘office was across the hall from that of the Herald, and who was standing at ‘the - head of. the- stairs, apparently waiting for Murray’s eoming, FIRED A'NAVY REVOLVER | at him. The ball' entered Murray’s right breast ‘a little below the mnipple. awd came out at his back, passing entirely through his' body, and shortly afterward was picked up on the sidewalk in front of the hall-way entrance. ~ Palmer then retreated down the back stairway, and started on a run for the jail. Sheriff Joe. Turnock, who happened to be on the street in front of the Herald office, gave puisuit, and a crowd followed atter, some of e THE BOYS YELLING, “HANG HIM!” Just before Palmer reached the jail the Sheriff grabbed him by the coattails, and, taking him inside, locked him up. . B : 4 After the shooting, Murray was immediately taken into Cushing’s drugstore, where every effort was made to ‘revive him, and from thence was carried o the Grand Central Hotel, where he was attended by Dr. Ham. After making an examination, and finding that the svcund would probably prove fatal, the doctor told Murray if he desired' to make any " statement he had better make it at once, or he could not make it at all. Mur‘ray, who seemed- entirely conscious, asked to have his father sent for, and then- attempted’ to say something further, but was so weak that he could not. :When Mr. Thompson left South Bend yesterday afternoon, it was ‘thought Murray could survive but a few hours, 2 : '
MURRAY IS A YOUNG MAN : about 32 years of.age, and came from Washington, where he thad been a department clerk, to Seuth Bend, about a year since, and took charge of the Herald. e was a spicy writer,. had written for the Danbury News, and made of the Herald an offensively personal sensation journal, such even as dissatisfied the Democrats, though it was the only Democratic paper in South Bend. He had frequently been threatened; and was known to habitually go armed. o
PALMER WAS RAISED IN SOUTH BEND. He is about 35 years of age, is a justice of the peace and a lawyer, and, except that he was regarded as “fast,” was of good standing. Both' men were married; Palmer has two children. ; ! 5 ;
LATER.—Tuesday. evening’s South Bend Register says: At about daylight this morning, Mr. Nurray’s case assumed a more liopeful aspect. By that time the hemorrhage had ceased and he was almost entirely free from pain. He has slept some, taken a little nourishment and rested quite easy all day. - His mother arrived on the early train this morning, and with her- husband is tenderly caring for her unfortunate son. Under favorabke circumstances Mr. Murray’s vitality and strong will power, will save him. The fitst of the trial, the shock, has been overcome, but inflammation is yet to be combattéd. e feels quite cheérful and seems to have taker a new hold on life. - . SR
" WE are in - receipt of severak commauniecations from Goshen, including ove from “Trué Blue,” relative to_ the course of Mr. Murray of the Goshen Democrat; but in consideration, of that gentleman’s afliction we have ~concluded to defer their publication, for the present. We_ only desire to say that Mr. Murray’s revised and amended s,tatenfient as to the authorship of the “True Blue” letters is unqualifiedly false; that“ True Blue” is -a bona fide citizen of Goshén; that he is. an active and life-long Demoerat; that his true name is neither Capt. Mitchell nor LaPorte Heefner, but that\ he is exactly what he has represente himself to be in the letters heretofore published in THE BANNER,. & T 4 G It is %o be ‘hoped fthat editors who assert it @s their right and privilege to assail and malign private character with impunity, will draw a lesson from the | tragic scene enacted at South Bend last Monday. While we cannot toojemphatically denounce the murderousg attack of Squire Palmer ‘upon yourjg Murray, our ideas of jour‘nalistic groprieties do not permit us to exonetate the latter frori censure for his /reckless defamation of Palmer’s private character, 1t is not the provifice of a newspaper to rake up every little seandal that may come under its notiee. A cEah R e i ~ THr NEWSPAPERS are again filled. wiph articles about a proposed third tem for Bresident Grant,”all because some of the latter’s personal organs haje declared hir to be the only man whom the Republicans can elect, We bu't propose to become excited over (he mater. If the Republicans should be foolish enwsfat:flolmth”m wriiten lgw” of the Jpnd by nominating Grant for & third term, we havo b e don et thr st i) Wioik u tieitbel rebnbe sl nvE beis
INDIANA NEWS ITEMS.,
Two hundred sheep were killed by dogs near Logansport one night last Week. ot i Nk s
Indiana has 2,033 Granges, one more than any other State in the Union. Missouri comes next with 2,032, ° ~ Elder W. B. Hendryx, of Remington, according to the Recorder, has a library of six hundred volumes, which cost him over $1,600. { There are 505 conviets in the Jeffersonville penitentiary. ~Of these four hundred are contracted for 'zt an aggregate of $240 per day. ; }
The Reform School at Painfiéld now. contains 336 inmates, and has reached the dignity of being the second largest .institution of the kind in the world. | Sauße !
One ‘wall of Hardy & Metzger’s warehouse, of ~ Logansport, 'fell on ‘Wednesday of last: week, letting 5,000 bushels of ' flaxseed escape for the ground. s ’ Eleven Indianians were jailed at Indianapolis last week, under aggregate bail of over $60,000, being charged with:-complicify in “crooked whisky” frauds. S e - The Herald says: Some of our good [Temperance women have been distributing tracts in the saloons in LaPorte, and talking and expostulating with the keepers. 5 The Cannelton Enquirer reports that judgments® amounting to over $1,000,000 were rendered in the Floyd Circuit Court against the New Albany Star Glass Works. 123 :
Says the Franklin Herald: “There are eight cases for divorce and five for bastardy pending. in the present: terin of the Johnson Circuit, Court;: and yet our freelovers are not happy.”
Thomas Cotterell, a South .Bend desperado, was last week convicted in the LaPorte county Circuit Court of an assault with intent to kill Carlos G. Sherman, and his punishment was fixed at two years in the penitentiary. Monroe county stands at present the second county in the State on the temperance question, not having a single licensed saloon. Hendricks county - stands first, not having a licensed - suloon " within her ® borders since 1859, bR
When a Vincennes editor wants to speak of the other paper, hie'says, “our genial contemporary.” He means “the yellow-faced son of a gun who edits the contemptible coricern on the corner,” but he daren’t speak that way in Vincennes. Vit s
. The Supreme Court of lowa has decided that the praectice of the loser paying for the game in bijlliards is gambling, while the Supreme Court of’ Indiana says it is not. When Bupreme Courts disagree, where’s the umpire.to decide ? ’
The First National Bank of Rochester, Ind., has surrendered its charter and will hereafter do business as a private bank.. ' A great'many National Banks are doing likewise and all of them eclaim that they can make more money in private banking. : - Daniél P. Baldwin, a lawyér of the Logunsport bar, has lately written a very logicalipamphlet entitled* A Lawyer's Readings in the Evidence of Christianity.” .. We hear it praised highly. Let Brother B. hand round a copy. . We have always thought a little more reading of thatsort would be a good thing for most lawyers.—7'ipton Times.. . : :
The other week a man named D. Craft, residing at Lake Station, Ind., purchased of a druggist one ounce and a halt of wormseed oil to give to his four-children, who were troubled with worms; He administered it to three of them for three days, according to the directions of the druggist. = One of the children refused to swallow it and lived ; the other three died.
We have talked with a number of our best farmers from various parts of the county and they agree in ‘the belief that just -about one fourth.of the corn is soft and unfit to crib for keeping. Those who have stock of any kind are availing themselves of it to eat the defective corn but its fattening qualities seem to be but little more than one half as much as good corn of other seasons.—LaPorte Arqus. : o
The officers of our. blind .asylum have filed their report for the year ending.last month. The institution is reported in the highest degree prosperous. The. resources for the year ‘were $34,262.28; disbursements, $34,183.79; -the balance added to the appropriation for the currentyear makes the available resources - $23,578.49. During the year 116 pupils were enrolled. ' The number now in the insti-tutionis-103. The limited accommodations forbid a larger ‘attendance. There is an indigent graduates’ fund amounting: to sB2o°founded by Mrs, Nancy Fitzpatrick, of Delaware county. : - : i .
A colored married ;woman of this city went to Michigan‘City on a visit, ong day last week, and while there she became enamored of the manly qualities of a gay son of Ham and eloped with him. They went to New Buffalo where they were formally married by a Justice of the Beace, paying the official thirty cents for his servieces. They returned to "‘Michigan City -and set up house-keeping. - The friends of husband No. 1 sent him the news of what was going on and he immediately borrowed fifty cents and went over to investigate the situation. An affectionate interview led the wife: to believe that she preferred to'live with her LaPorte lord and.- she returned home' with him. The first husband holds a marriage certificate and in trying to get some official to make ‘it strong enoiigh to hold the frisky gal, he made the discovery that she Had left another husband to marry him. He is now talking of haying her “put in prison for brighamy” but don’t know exactly what he will do about itz Jt isa sad case and is shaking Afriea to the very centre.—ZLaPorte Argus. G s
That Absconded Editor. The Mishawaka Enterprise of last week announces that S:T. Montgomery, the editor of that place who absconded in 1872, has beeén seen in | Louisyille, Ky. The Enterpyisegives the subjoined account of the matter: “Mr. A. Eberhart of this place, while in Indianapolis last week, fell in with his cousin, Tom Phillips, the veteran editor of the Kokomo 77ébune,—and for whom Montgomery worked faithtully for over 15 years,—who informed Mr. E. that he had just discovered the whereabouts of the “lamented” Montgomery. It seems that just previous to the.latter’s escapade, he secured a loan of several hundred dollars from a certain well-known. temperange lecturess-of’ this State, with whom he is said to have been intimately connected. This he failed to return, and the woman, with the usual presistence of her sex, has been engaged . for-the last three years in hunting l('samh up,—though what good it would do hiey is hard to tell, for he must certainly be as impecunious as ever. Well, atlagt her efforts were ‘rewarded by finding that e was re‘siding at Louisville, Ky., and she communicated her information to Gen. Spagner. Indlusgeiiy whete Mr, S B L T Yk, fobtasrly vans:
LATEST NEWS ITEMS,
Eighteen Mormons living at Franklin, Idaho, have been indicted for po]ygamy. e A freight train ran into a construetion train, on the Chicago & North Western near Devil’s Lake, Wis., .a few days ago, and 20 persons were injured. e : Mark M. Pomeroy, better known as “Brick” Pomeroy, proprietor of the Democrat in New York city, suspended on Wednesday of last week. Liabilities estimated at $146,000. No assets.
At a meeting of railroad magnates in Chicago on Wednesday of last week, an effort was made to reduce the passenger rates from $22 to $2O between Chicago and New York, but unsuecessfully. = ’ : A few days since at Mendota, Illinois, there was a public trial of a corn husking machine, which is reported: to have husked and loaded corn at the rate. of about sixty bushels per hour. : el
John Richards, who has gained a great frontier reputation as an Indian interpreter,” and his nephew Palady were murdered near Red Cloud Agency by hostile Indians, and their bodies thrown' into Running Water Bver. o i i bie
The great 500 mile walking match in Chicago, between O’Leary and Wes.ton, cafne;to an end on Saturday nizht at a 'few minutes before 12 o’clock. O’Leary completed his 500th mile, while Weston had still 52 miles to travel, and received\ the medal as the champion.walker of the world.
At a'school-house mear Warrensburg, Mo., while one negro preacher avas; addressing a congregation another colored preacher fired several shots through a window at the speaker, though: missing him, but seriously wounding one of the congregation neéar by. Professional jealousy was theegause. - =l| i
- The Longon ; Morning KEcho —announces that en aceount of the recent floods ‘the sanitary authorities have declared the district of Bristdl, with a population of 6,000, unfit fof habitation until midsummer. Thousands of acres in the Valley of Trent will probably remain under water throughout the winter, . v
" The habeas corpus of Brigham Young's came up for hearing before Judge White, in the chambers on Wednesday and Thursday of last week. . Judge White rendered his decision, releasing Brigham from ' imprisonment, and has ordered the Marshal to pay the expenses of the process, $434. The Marshal has received notice of suit for false imprisonment.. The ground of the decision is that the de--ecision 'of Judge Lowe is readjudicated, and henée’ Judge Boreman’s ruling ‘was void. Brigham is still unwell. A Jackson, Ohio, special to the Cincinnati Gazette says Mrs. Mary Bruce was found burned, to death on Tuesday of last week, near- the burning’ dwelling- of Mrs. Lowder.. Her skull was fractured, and it is supposed she was assaulted: in the house during Mr. Tiowdei’s absence, and that the building was fired to conceal the crime; that sheirevived.and attempted to.escape, but her clothing being in flames, she 'perished outside the \burning building. Nathan Lowder, a son of Mrs. L.owder, was arrested, but the evidence against him'is wholly circumstantial. = | : i
S ‘Terrible Railroad Accident. S ~ An Augusta, Georgia, dispatch gives an account of a frightful accident, on Wedn‘es%‘ay night of last week, on the Charlotte, €olumbia & Augusta railroad, néar, Pine Housé€, some twen-ty-five miles from Augusta.® After the regular . passenger train had left Columbia,:Wednesda; afternoon, for ‘Augusta it was followed by a train of empty cars for' Augusta. The two trains rolled on at the rate of about“ gwenty miles an hour, one following | close upon the'other. The passenger train hiad just reached the erossing and was about to stop, when the sec- | ond train came rushing along:and the engine telescoped the ladies’ passenger car, throwing it and the smoking car from the tracki A terrible scene followed. The ladies’ ecar was filled with passengers, and-men, women and children were jammed together, wounded, crushed and bleeding. After a few moments’ confusion, the windows and doors were broken open and the passengers taken from the wreck. But one life was lost, that of Charlie Nightengale, aged six years, of Brunswick, Georgia. ~ Gov. Chambexlain, of South Carolina, wassamong the passengers. The outward train from ‘Augusta, being unable to pass the wreck, returned with the wounded, .some of whom, however, prove fo have received but slight injuries. - . . . 1 AR e e TR S 2 | A Soldiers’ Monument. 5 The old soldiers of Indiana, by arrangements perfected at the late reunion at Indianapolis, have been called to meet in every county in .the State Decemper Tth to give an expression of tlhieir viéews on thelocation® of a grand State monument to their dead brethren of the lnte struggle for the Union. Oflicers for the:Monu-* mental Association will also be balloted for at thesemeetings, and the style of the obelisk selected. The work of carrying forward the patriotic designs of the soldiers of Indiana seems to be in energetic hands, andpromises to be successfully performed.—Fx. " The erection of a goldiers’ monument is a duty the living soldiers owe to their dead comrades.—Elkhart Qbserver.: % i S
THE STORIES circulated by republican papers that the cnlored men of Mississippi were coerced into voting the democratic ticket is flatly contradicted by trustworthy authority. The chinge of base on.part of the negroes is due to the simple fact that carpetbag rule had become odious even to negroes and that the general interests of Mississippi demanded the election of better men than those now in power. A plain explanation of these facts by democratic speakers wrought this change in the ¢olored mind.. =
The owners of the Waco will prob-. ably. suffer heavily in the suits for damages that will arise from the persons who have lost friends or proper.ty by the burning of that unfortunate vessel. It is known thas thres hundred cages of petroleum were earried in her cargo when no license for carrying such merchandise was taken out by the shipowners. - There should be other punishment than this for the crime of deluding people to ‘death, Every passenger supposed the boat was laden with a safe cargo and few would have shipped in her had the truth been known. It is lownright mu;*der. and should be treated as such. ! : - :
Plymouth church in consequence of its irregular action in dismissing ‘Mrs, Moulton from church membership is strongly condemned by other Congregational churches and there is talk of putting it in disfellowship at the session of the council. Beecher will offer no explanation of the fact to the chnrch and the prominent ministérs of Wew York cénsyre him for a gilence that is -hurtful to himself and others Beecher is certainly weak .and cowardly in the matter af frank Malemena. . 0 . Fhe spirit of many whilom Administration jourrials shinies forth in ‘the Wfikflg *fl‘l fiifigfiw“ erald, to g R L e R Re Y §e‘é=. :"Pf'*’ % SRI ifi;a*fi%’é‘”fif
STMMONS LIVER RECULATOR
For all diseases of the Liver, Stomach and Spleen. MALARJOUS 'FEV ERS, BOWEL COM-| PLAIN §, DYSPEPSIAMENTALDEPRESSION, JAUNDICE, :;NAUSEA‘, SICK HEAD- | ACHE, COLIC; CONSTIPAT;ON “AND o A o BILIOUSNESS. - a It is eminently a Family Medicine, . ' ° and by being keptready forimmediate - . . resort, will save many an hour of suf- ol . fering 4nd many adollar intime aud . doctors’bills. 2 S - ‘ i After Forty Years trial it-ig still re- o . ceiving the most unqualified testimo- . | nials ofitg virtues, froqa persons ‘of ‘ i the highestcharacter and responsibil- - | ity. Eminentphysicians commend it 4 * ' - as the most : e EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC : for constipation, Headache,Pain in the Shoulders. Dizz!ness. Sour Stomach, bad taste in the moath, bilious attacks, Palpitation of the heart. Pain in the rezion of the Kidneys, despondeucy. gloom and tfirebodmgs of evil, all of which are the offspring ef a diseased Liver. : : i " The Liver. the lirgest organjinthe | ' body, is gencrally the seat, of the discase, and if not RreuraTkp in tgme. great suflering, wretchedness, and DEATH willensge, ©.« = 2 0o 1F you feel DuLL, DProwsy, Desiri- e TATED, have frequent meavAone,mouth b tastes badly,poor ArreTITE and tongue ' ¢ o coated ; you are snfl'eri_nfi from Torrip - Liver or Biliousness, and nothing will ! care 80 ?ec'dily and permanently. “I have never seen or tried such a simple, efficacious, satisfactory and plegsant remedy in my life.—H. HAINER, St.. Lotiis Mo. L . Hon. Alex. H. Stevens. . : '+ occagionally use, when my condition requires it, Dr. Simmons’ Liver Reégulator, with good effect.”—Hon. ALex, H STEPuENs. 1 S L Governor of Alabama. .. “Your Regulator has been in use in my family | for some time, and I am persuaded it isa valuoa- | ‘ble addjtion to the medical science.”—Govw. J. GILL SHORTER, Ala.: 7/, e ) i ~ *‘l have used the Regulator in my family for the past seventeen years. I can _s‘afely recommend 1t | to the world as the best medicine I have ever usea for that elass of diséases it purports to cure.—H. F. Tuieres. S e | * President of City Bank. 4 “Simmons’ Liver Regulator Has proved a good and efficacions medicine.—C. A _'NurTing, : . Druggists. ; ‘‘We have been acquainted with Dr. Sinanous’ - Livir_ Medicine for more than fwenty years. and know it to be the best Liver Regulator offered to ‘the public ”—-M. R Lyox and H. L. Uvox, Bell: fontaine, Ga. ; 5 e ~_ “Ywas cured by Simmong’, Liver Regulator, after having suffered several years with ¢Hills and fever.”—R, F. ANDERSON. ; X v The Clergy. g My wife and self have used the Regulator for yvears, and testify to its great virtnes.”— Rev. J.R FeLver, Perry, Georgia. i . T o Ladies Endorsement., = - : - T have given youar medicine a thoroagh trial, - and jn no case has it failed to give full sdtisfactign"—ELLENy MEeaouam, Chattghoochie; Fla. s : Professiongl. --+ 1 “From actualexperience in the use of this ned- - icine in my practice, 1 have been, und am satistied to use and prescribe it as @ purgative medicing Dr. J, W. Mason: ; s s T voo M.B. Flovida -Conference. + ° | I have used Dr. Simmons’ Liver Revulator in my family for Pyepepsia and Sick Headache, and‘regard it gn invaluable remedy. It has nat failed. to give reliefin any instgnce.”"—Rev. W. F. EasTERLING, = ] : P President Oylethorpe College. - ~“Simmons’ Liver Regulator is certainfy a specific for:that class of compiaints which it claims to ¢ure.”—Rev. Davip WiLLs. : No INBTANGE 0F ‘A FAILURE ONRECORD, When Simmons’ Liver Regnlitor. has been prop- { erly.taken. 5 - - 30-Iy-ntm t o HL Zmiran & Co.; Proprietors. Application ‘for License. ' N‘OTICE is hereby given (hat the undersigned N willapply to the Board of County Commissioners of Noble County, Indiana, at their next reguiar sgession. which commences on Mouday, December 6th. 1875, for a ljcensze to retc;fil_\splritm ous and malt liguors in less quantitles tban a quart at a time, with the privilege ofallowing the same to be drank 'en his preémises. His place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to ba gold and drank are located as follows :— On lot No. 44 in the village of Wawaka, in Noble ‘county. State ¢f Indiana. A S HENRY RIGKEY. Novembey 11th, 1875.-29-w3 : e e & Application for Eicense, | NOTICE is hereby. given that the undersigned: will apply«to the Board of County Cominissioners of Noble County, Indiana, at their next regular session, which ‘Commerces on Monday, December 6th, 1875, for a license to retail spirituous and malt liquors in less quantities than a qnart at & time, with the privilege of allowing the { same to be drank on iheir premises. Theirplace of business and the premises whereon eajd liquors are to be sold and drank, are located asTfgllows¢ { On the South 43 feet ofdot No. 32. in the original plat of the town of L‘gonier, in Noble county. In‘diana. ; T % HARRISON SHOBE. i : o ARTHUR MORROW. Ligonier, Ind,, November 11, 1875,-29- w 3, Notice to Non-ißesidents. T'he State of Indiana, | 9 ' Noble Coumtyy, (™. i) ‘ In the Noble Sircuit Court of Noble county, in the - State of Indiana. Oectober Term A, D. 1875. Simon Bouse R R ey ‘ VB. . wasiifs s Samuel P. V_an‘a;ki-h-, Harrjet ¥anakin, - COMPT. Eusebius J. Dodge, Maggie Curry, | & Eliza Stewart and John Stewart. )« -~ BE IT KNOWN that on the 29th day of September, in the year 1875, the above named plaintiff, by his attorney, filed iu the office of the clerk of the Noble (‘ireait Court his complaint against. said defendantsin the.above entitledicause, together with an afiidavit ,nfa'cumpeteft -person, - -that said defendants, EJiza Stewurt and John Stewart, are not residents of'the State of Indianas Said defendants are therefore hereby notitied of the filing and:-pendency of gaid complaing against them, and that unless they appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of said canse on the second day ofthe next term of said court, to be begun and hetd at the Court Houre~in the fown of Albion, on the first Mouday in Jannary, 1875, said complaint. and the mastersand things therein contained and glleged, will be heard and determined in their absence. o b ‘ i . JOSEPH 8. COX, . L - ¢ Clerk of the Noble Circnit Court, Igsae E. EntSELY, Attorney for Plaintiff.’ Albion, Ind., Nov, 11, 1875.-w3-29; i 4
Notice to Nou-Hlesidents, The State of Indiana, | Qb fes . “Noble County, ~ §~"" | . ‘Jacob C.-Zimmerman, et, dl.; i % V. : X Elias Gortner, Levi Diller, =8 ! > Abrahum 8. Fisher, Jesse L Duouing, - | Lewis J. Dunning, Gearge M. Shady, | - 1 Daniel M. Reynolds, John Gortner, | I Mary E. Fleming: Adminisiruirix of George y H. Fleming, deceased. Eli B. Gerber, S James Siiburn, John Ebuer,’ g 2 } Charles Alday, Andrew Crarmer, 2 l i August Alday, Churles ¢ Reed,, i Turner & Seymore Manufacinrir'y Coniply, ', 4 Richard W. Ostrander, Charles L Rice, | John L. Wayne and William Wayue Fiik In the Noble Circuit Court of Noble ountis, in the State of Indiangy October Tesrm, A D. 1875. . BE IT KNOWN, that on this 30th day of September, in the year 1875, ‘theiabove-nsmed plaintiffs, by their attorney, tiled in the offive of the clerk of the Noble Uircui#Cuurt tHeir complaint against said defendants, in the above entitled cause, and that aflerward, to-wit: cn the; 9th day of November. 1375. being the 20th judicial! day of the Octuber Term, for the year 1875, the, plaintiff filed in open court an affidavit of a competent ‘person that said defendants Charles C. Reed, Turner & Seymore Manunfuctaring Company, Richard W Ostrander; Charles'L. Rice, John L. Wayneand Wilhiam Wayne, are not residents of the State of Indiana. ' Thereupon it was ordered by the court that the clerk of said court causes that notice of the pendency of thisaction be given by publicaiion, according te law. . : ; Said defeudants are therefore hereby 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 saidcause on the second day of the next term of said court, fo ke begun and/held at. the court-house in the town of Albion, on the first Monday in January next, said complaint, and the matters ang ‘ things thereincontained and alleged will be heard | and determined in their absenge. R L ] " JOSEPH . COX, l i Clerk of the Noble Circuit Court. Isaao E. Kxiseuy, Attorney for Plaintiffs,. . Albion, Ind,, Nov. 11th, 1875,-29-w3. = ° : J S RS Ry St CINCINNATI WEEKLY ENQUIRER
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kbt publishes letters of inquiry direct from the people and answers them fally without regard. to. party bias or benefit. | : ' ! 1t is the advocate of right and justice to all, ard the greatest good to the greatest number. - It is oppoesed to the unwise and dishonest class legislation that has benefited. the few and oppressed the many, as realized . in act of congress: ‘retiring from circulation nearly two-thirds of the peagle's money. 2 . i : The National Bank Scheme, a dcvice to place the control of the currency in the handsofithe Money Kings and creating & non-prodacing ‘aristocracy. i } The Salary Grab Robbery, increasing the payiof overnment officials, while the price of lahor and’ : Fts products, real estate, and greenhacks (the peoples’ money,) have been. depreciated. | "« The act- changing the original contract with bondholders, and inaking bonds payable in gald instead of legal tenders, as first agreed upon; a favoritism of 25 per cent. in value to the few at tpe expense of the many. ~ .« L st The Resumption Act, demanding that which/is utterly impf)‘aaiblg’, and p’lnclu% the object sought for twe_nt‘gyeun- urther off. [° A For such and other crimes ‘against the people the Enquirer will advocatea changein the ndm‘i)nIstration of goveriment affairs, a most fitting - Celebration for the Centennial Year. IF?O“ wouid knowand understand the {es?es,? | Fod o Hnautcas Serins thisarl oot iny arish: read the Engu aring thisall infportant crisis, and mbwfi!’?fim@ your (816 GG it cep, TERMS Single Copy, one year........... ..B§2oo Flv#’flopism‘ (e, *?: . $175 each 875 w e oo i gfl % 1800 Swentp it M, 380 B 3008 With magt tiberal tgrmsto club agents. Send for. Speciment coptes and age oha M%t% b e e el e Ll - FARAN & McLI AN, Publishers, RS snae R e e codra el iy aows .‘:" e e [CINNATL; O
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Men's and Bovs®' Wear | Men's and Boys’ Wear ! And ét: meer El'lfebthan the sa né class of Goods zéife sold & i Aoy anywhere in Northern Indiaha, - ¢ Clothing for Men, Youths, Boys and Childrén.
Hats and Caps, Furnishing Goods, Trunks, Satchels, : 'lClOths‘;":Qas:sim'ér6Bsi,*Vestin s, Jeans, Shirtings, . Buffalo & Lap Robes, and Horse Blankets, . ALL at TRICES that MUST Attract Attention. V.V‘%%f‘M?i\kG AfOAiQ,i'dell',’;"i’”‘dS usual, every dqs,&_»i‘pfion of Men’s and Boys’ Wear at “Popukar Pricés.” Do not fail to look through Sl our umnense%ock hefme 'bu_“'iufg. It will Pay !- - e Wentmiae matmntreet 2} 41 Kendallville, Ind, Octoßer TER ISFS IO T 0 v s e SRR . gl ah )
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: s Notides of the Press <7 52w 7oy The Bazaer is edited with a combindtion of tact and. talent that we seldom find in any journalj and: the journal iteeif is the.organ of the great world of fashiod.— Boston 2raveler. E e The Bazar commends iteelf to evéry member of the household=—to the children by drolland pretty pictures, to:the yonng ladies by its fashion-plates in endless variety, to-the’provident masdron byits patterns for the children’s clothes, to paterfamilias by its: tasteful .designs:for embroidered glip= pers and luxurious" dressing-gowns,. But . the reading-matter of the Bazar is uniformly.of great excellence. The paper has acquired-a wide p‘uiyularity for the fireside enjoyment it affords.-—N. -¥. Evening Post. - - e 1o : “ad . Inits waythereis nothing like it. Fresh and: frustworthy as a fashion gtide; its stories and es - says, its: poetry and equibe, aré all iavigorating, to the mind.—Chicagy Evening Jowrnal. . . ; i : TERMS: . . | i Postage free to Subseribers in the United States., ' HARPRR'S BAZAR, ON¢ year...c......54 00 l $4 00 includes prepayment.of U, 'S, postage by the publishdrs oo ol se i L Y Sabseriptions to HARrER'S MAGAZINE, WREKLY, | and Bazaw, to one address for oneyear, $lO 005 or, | two ofsHarper’s Puriodicals, to ‘one address for, one year, $7 00: postage free.. . ( ©. o [ . An'extra copy of either the MAgazing, WEEKLY, or Bazar will be supplied gratis for every ¢lub .of five subscribers at §4OO each, in one remittance; or, six copies for§2o 00, without oxtra copy: pos--tage free. . - A R RaR Gy | * Back Numbers can be snppHed &L any time, . The Annual Volumes of -Harreg's Bazag, in neat cloth bluding;, will be‘sent by express, free: of expense, for §7:00 each. A complete Set. com-: prising Ei%ht Volumies, sent on receipt of cash at ‘the rate of\@s®s per vol, freight at expense of! I PMECARBEE tient et o SRR el oS s R s I Prominent attention wilk’be given in Hanere’s t]:?uzxu:i to,.q?%x‘ill‘nsiu;&tfone, :0f the Céntennial In~ ernational Expotition as may be peeuliarly apprhorrigte toitscoluthng, .- y gp_ a£ p- - Newspapers are not to copy. this advertiremnent | without the expreeg order of Ha ires & BROTHERS, " Address HARPER & BROT{IERS. New York. ‘Having permanently locatea 4n Ligonier, would | respectfully sayto the citizens’ of the place and .- SOFranßdthy sg&»‘ewx»'fgr‘.fwfi'gm@?efl39»s9-' i All Kinds of Cutting and Making - Tthe latest styles and at living rates, -~ | LePR A A TR PAT eSS e R T e e O e | S Bathine Maanadand Ranaived | - VIO G uicaied ana nepaired | S e B LADOOB R A g A ] Shop in Behfier Blook | TN NI T O L R N s S N RN e, L RN A
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DR, J. BRYAN, {7, .CONSULTING PHYSICIAN OF THE Ui Medioal snd S st Clinton Nodioal and Sungical Instibute .. ° 147 East Pifteenth St.,, New York,‘Gluarantees the most Scientific Treatment and a § 1: and I’erman_(‘;ngb Cure inl alllcgsege& J&T‘mfifl. anm ] clalty for thirty years has been the treatmentlof - DISEASES OF MEN. | : 1 ok Every Chivnic diseasa is treated, but apecial attention is given by hizh to Diseases of the Kidneys, Bladder and Generative gysfom, , Bright's Discase, Dial Seminal ’, Weakness, Nervous Debility, - Impotency, Strlahu'e and all diseases of a private nature, and all who aresuffering are rc«suestegi tosend {m.rtlculurs of their condition, When a candid opinion will be %‘vflu the probability of a cnre, thd time required and the expense, {2 : ¢ ANI Coprespondence strictly Conftdendial, = | 5o Medical Fees arc Moderate to ail, and Especially to the Poor. . The xitmbstreflmoe may be placed in the treatmient adopted, for i SPECIAL REMEDIES FOR/SPECIAL DISEASES, are employed, that ha fail fFecti S s e “of th@fi?mfigxinlfigm»mmfi%esmm sent by mail’ or cxproes for & full course at one time, withou &BflSt e 00 THG A OAU i Ehis T aatnga, s e : “The Glory ofa Toung Minloin bis Stredgth,” And hewho bossf obtins this glory, best fulfild his man. hood. Dr. BRYAN m:mw&gm of &nm _the wubject, as follows, which every. man should read: .- . On‘tho Degenotation'of Amosieat Touth, = ' - Om Discass, tho Fountsin of & Thoussad Ween, 0 nRt Rl et Bt b . moTe 65 "!) ,w“f“—’h‘" - Onpanic Disease, Physical Dera ent; ‘..f“’i;__fi*"fi o mfif f Vital Force, Nervous D%or who | are weak % ity %«‘w»‘ hature of their disease, and e iharated withansion o tre sy TH yolume s lUNSTaten With engravings and will/bo sént og. _reveip %'l@}%s [VE CENTR, Add RN 3. BBY Wfi W) 15th B, NX, L SRR sttt B e DTN X)L RN L e T T S : ' and postoald—Twn -
