The National Banner, Volume 11, Number 24, Ligonier, Noble County, 5 October 1876 — Page 4

HON. FREEMAN KELLEY.,

" What He will Do, for the People if : - Elected to Congress. : b (From the Angola Herald.) : ~, ‘The Hon. Freeman Kell§B in his speech here on Monday, made many . friends, and showéd his ability to meet in'an able manner the many: Important questions. whicl_x are now befpx;q ' {he public. He said it was impossible . for the whole volume of currency to. < consist of gold: and silver, and that 1t ' was imppssible to think of resuming specie payments - for the reason that . there was not gold and silver enough " to resume with, and that it could only ‘le done with safety to the public in- _ terest, in accordance with the laws of, ¥ _ trade; when there should be an inflow instead of an outflow of specie.: The forcible contraction of the currency . ~under the present laws of Congress - worked an-injury to the business of the country, breaking up business _ men, ruining manufacturing, and turn- - ing laborers out of employment‘a,n.d coniverting them into tramps. His heartand his sympathies went out to shose men called “tramps,” who were ‘syandering around in Search of work on-account of the great depression in iihe money market. 1e was also op“posed 1o a further contraction of the currency to bring about a forcible .resumption of specie payments because * _it'boded no good to thedebtor classes. it might benefit isolated cases of ag- ; zregated wealth; it might enable cap- " italisls'to take advantage of men’s .maegessities and accumulate more cap- . italbut io the great and larger class . of debtors it would work additional _ hardship and suffering. Foreible spe¢ie resumption, in his opinion, meant © Ihe repeal of the legal tender act and a payment of-all debts in gold and silver. - The Debtor who contracted his “debl under a greenback currency, will be forced to(liquidate it in gold and silver when all values but his debt - have shrunk to aspeciestandard. Are “the debtor classes prepared for this; for he warned them of its coming if ihe repubiican policy of a forcible con: iraction of the currency and forcible reiurn to -specie, payments .are to be - carried out. " , “He was in favor of the repeal of the " mational bankinglaw and substituting .. degal tender notes of the Government ~+ instead, based upon'government bands at not over 3 per cent. interest, paya- © ble in gold orsilver and made interest - convertible into such legal tender notes of-the government; he was also in favor of reinvesting silver. with its old -Imme legal tender, properties; by this - plan he proposes to furnish the people - a self regulating currency without the intervention of a bank to tgke the - profits belonging to the peopld. The . people were taxed for. the national Bank currency in bonds and they were . . mot taxed for the greenback currency. . Twenty millions of dollars annually ', eould be saved to the people by substi§J inting greg¢nbacks for national bank % mnotes, and being a legal tender. for all : - debts, would afford them.a better currency. Between the two . currency. " policies—hard and: soft—he WiJ; decidedly in favor of the latter, -under © existing circumstances, and would adhiere to it, if elected a member of conHe was in favor of granting every - . union . soldier a quarter section of © land in fee simple as an -additional . . - bounty for his services in suppressing " therebellion. Ie was well aware that ~ile republican party had favored the =__ soidier above the ordinary citizen, un- ¢~ der the homestead law, by deducting ¢+ Ids time of service from the five years . xesidence on his land required of oth- * . er settlers, hut this worked a total for- . feiture in the case of all those'maimed _~ .in the service. A crippled soldier—amd there were thousands. of%them o 7 wver the land—could not settle onthe ;~ vullic lands on account of physical - alisability. ITe.was unable to settle - wn and cultivate his land, in order to S mpquire a title to it, even two years; =olo that class of men needing the " bounty most—those wounded-in the . ~war—ibg act of which the Republi- ¢ cansbodst works as a forfeiture. The + zovernment owned these public lands [ and he was in favor of donating a .. «uarter section in fee simple to those . who saved the government, and let ‘hem-either settle on it themselves, transmil it to their children; or sell it for their own benelfit. . Mr. Kelley is deserving credit for , tise. independent manner in which he ' | expresses himself, and the people can rest assured that in his hands their = interests will be well guarded. ;

1 - Faets for the People. i . |- The following truths, which we cut -~ from the Detroit Firee Press, are worth ~ireasuring up: . Tlie great bulk of {he people of the ' T nited States are depending upon . iheir daily earning for support,and it is @i the highdst -importance to them, » that the government demands upon . these earnings should "be as light as i }’)OSSAlb}e. = 1 . voot . limakes a differenceof $5 per head : 1o every man, woman and child in the couniry whether the annualfixpenditares of the nation are $200,000,000 or’ £400,000,000. 5 > . . - 1t makes a difference of 75 cénts per head,or $6 fora family ot father, - mother and six children, whether the mational -expenditures are $240,000,080 " oor 8270,000,000. ! s - Do The republican party and the Grant *administration have in the past seven ; ¥edars and a half expended over three ) bufdred millioh dollars more for 'tgle‘ ~ ordjanary’ purposes of the govern- ‘ ment—exclusiye of interest, premiums | and debt charges—than was necessary © for an efficient, honest and econonjical administration. - . o Y L. fGrantism and the republican party - have taxed the people for the national: ' administration about eight dollars per 'ifad more than was needed with hon- -\ £sly and economy. . h © ~ Every family of five has been plun- " i, ¥ered of forty dollars to maintain and | ‘perpetuate republican ring rule since 1859, ' S S ‘ ° - Tle people complain of hard times # : tait republican rogues have flourished - . while the people were overtaxed and | . plundered, and hundreds of millions | | “have been recklessly misspent. ’ 7| The democratic house has stood by | the people. It has demanded and , .imsisted upon & reduction of expendi- ? tures. Thirty million' dollars have | been ‘cut from the expenditures of last’ o yemr - ) . g :|, A democratic administration will ‘follow up the reduction in expenditures of this year by a still further reduetion and will take efficient measures to lessen taxation. : A republican administration, aided ¥ a republican Congress, will ‘maintain lavish expenditures and - drag P pghons unnecessarily from the peo- [ ; e v ; - Economy is the order of the day. The people must be 'economical £t live. Tosecure economy in thenation “hey must eleet a democratic adminisAration. .

: Sensible Advice. o ~ You are asked every day through' ‘the columns of newspapers and by sour druggist to use something for isyspepsia and Liver Complaint that vou know nothing about, you get dis souraged spending money with but jittle suecess. Now to give you satisfactory proof that GREEN’S’AUGUST ¥rower will cure you of Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint with all its effects, as Sour Stomach, Sick' Headache, Habitual Costiveness, palpitation of the Heart, Heart-burn, Waterrash, coming up of food after eating, low spirits &e., weask you to go to M% Seott & Sandrock, and g.jl sample bottle of Green’s August er for 10 cents and try it, or-a regular size for 75 cents, two doses will relieve you -22-60 W. |

HOW JAMES E. ROSE PROPOSED TO SHAVE A SOLDIER'S BOUNTY ORDER ! Fac-Simile of His Letter to the-Mother of "N;l;m‘ Eul-lenedfix, Deceased. - SAthon JM/%/W‘?M:— ' - laat dession gKo fomit g P =7 S L iy P L fer /,‘W m%@/‘}»fi Ly L e 7 p/éy,m&/% | THad <P Coens Aao foosr vy | LS, (ot oA /M O T

‘ . "The Fall Term. ' The public schoels opened for the fall and winter season yesterday, and every child in Detroit felt happy for an hour or two, at least. A boy was %oing down Second street from the Cass School at noon, met a boy going up from the Porter street school, and the Cass boy called out: ) “Hain’t school bully, though ?” “You bet!” was the prompt reply. “How’s your teacher?! - i i “Nicest person youever saw. I snapped six paper wads this forenoon and. never got licked once!” - “Just_like mine,” called the other. “When she saw me sticking a pin into a boy she smiled :and smiled, and T just believe she’s got a heart like an angel.” . These lads may meet a week later, and when they compare notes the first one will remark: o “I'm licked regularly three times a !().V, and for nothing at all.” o - “Soam I,” will be the mournful echo of the other. . , Tl - —— i That Same Man. The man who could have once purchased the site of Detroit for a shotgun was-in town yesterday. He was relating the cireumstance at the City Hall, where he was asked why he. didn’t close the bargain. ‘ ; “Well, I had chance .to trade the gun for six bear-traps,” he replied. “I suppose I’d have made better if I had taken the land, but I tell you there used to be a heap of money in bearpelts.” . - .

“Did you catch many bears ?” inquired another of the grou;).” “Not aconsarned one.” S - “Well, then, what -good did your traps do you?” . “I traded’em for a scow.” ‘ “And the scow ?”. . , “She sunk,” D ' l“;&nd then you realized nothing at a] ” - ¢ . .

“Nothing; but when a feller’s taste runs to bear traps and old scows you can’t make him buy land. ' I'm not sorry sir—not a bit. - When I own anything it must be something I can take an interest in.” - : 120

‘Why He Don’t.

~ There was a cogent reason why a ten-year-old boy living on: Duffied street didn’t have a stick of gum in his mouth when he arrived at the Cass aventue dfinking fountain yesterday morning. , Other boys had gum to chew on, and when ' they expressed their surprise at his gross neglect of a ‘boy’s plainest duty, he replied: 5 ~_*Sposen a cow got ‘into your garden last night? . Sposen your father got up this morning and saw 'all-the onlons kicked over among the beets, the ‘peas mixed up with tg:e lettuce and the horseradish ‘all chewed up in strings? Sposen he just jumped up and down, and kicked and howled, and wanted to kill somebody or something, would any of you want to ask him for a cent t 6 buy gum with?” The jury at once returned a verdict in favor of the boy, and seven “cuds” were torn apart to form one for him.—Detroit Free Press. = = - |

Alexander H. Stephens has been unanimously nominated for Congress in his distriet, = - . {

Tue Chicago Tribune speaks of Charles Francis Adams. democratic candidate for Governor of Massachusetts, in the following appropriate language. . ' , No ene doubts the personal purity, the old-fashioned honesty, and manly virtues, the stately dignity, the irreproacliable character, the clear, strong intelleet, the brilliant literary qualities, or the exalted statesmanship of Mr. Adams. . birssae

That a man of such high merits should abandon the republican party, and give in his adhesion to the cause of Tilden and Reform, is a striking evidence of the rottenness and corruption of the organization in power, and of the necessity which the best of our public : men believe to exist for a radical and complete change in the administration. :

How to Vanquish the Stomach’s Tor- © ° mentor. ; If the Enemy of mankind was permitted to exert his diabolical ingenuity iu the invention of a new disease, he could scarcely devise one more worthy of his gemius than dyspeptic sufferer is tormented by symptoms resembling.those of almost every known malady, and is often worried into monomania by these “conflicting and perplexing manifestations. A .favorite though absurd hallucination of the victim of chronic indigestion is that he or she has heart disease. Dyspepsia has often been pronounced incurable, but experience has shown that Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters will vanquish it, together with the consti- | pation and bilious derangement which usually'accompany it. Diseases of the kidneys and supposed rheumatic pains | are also frequent concomitants of dysspepsia but they, too, succumb to the dbove named invaluable corrective. ' , - o 20-w4 e As a sample of the reform deter mination of the last demoecratic House of Representatives at Washington, we will state that out of the fiftythree useless' loafers whom the Republicans had put in the “folding room at high salaries, fifty were promptly dismissed to loaf somewhere else or go to work. By this single item the Democrats in Congress saved from $75,000 to $lOO,OOO of the . people’s money. <Let the good work of retrenchment go on until every useless officer or subordinate is dispensed | with. § § eel - — e The Saltzburg (Pa.) Press, a neutral paper, says that the democratic party “means that dishonesty. and dishonest ‘practices shall be abolished; that robbery, murder and assassination shall no longer find an abiding place in this blessed land of liberty, but that all «citizens, of whatsoever race, color or distinction, shall be protected in all their social and political rights and privileges.” 1

Don’t forget that one hundred and fifty thousand mechanics and working men are out of employment in Penn~ sylvania, -

The Next Governer of Indiana. Ex-Senator Doolittle, formerly Republican Uaited States Senator from Wisconsin, is on the stump in Indiana—for Tilden and Hendricks-—-and in one.of his speeches-he referred to the democratic candidate for Govérnor: “God Almighty has stamped his character for honesty too plainly upon his countenance to' be mistaken. I never met Mr. Williams until last night, and ever since I have been so impressed with his divine nobilify that I feel confident Indiana is safe.” And that’s what we would call an emphatic endorsement. ; ‘

Another little republican steal has just come to light at Washington in the “abandoned - property ” bureau. But as it is only $BOO,OOO, there is no use in making any fuss about it. The thieves refused to divide fairly, and thav's the way it leaked out.

A Few Things That We Know. . We know that a disordered stomach or liver produces more suffering than any other cause. We know that very few physiciang are successful in their treatment of these disorders. We know that DaCosta’s Radical Cure will, without the shadow of a doubt, almost immediately relieve and permanently cure all of these distressing symptoms. - We know of -thousands who are willing to 'testify that what we say is true to. the letter. We know that if you will give it a fair trial you will let us add your name to the. “cloud of witnesses.” Will you give it a trial, and do it now? = Trial size only 25 cents. Sold by C. ELDRED & SON,-Ligonier, Indiana. _Professor Parker’s Pleasant Worm Syrup is perfectly safe and extremely palatable. No physic required. Costs 25 cents. Try it. | : 8-eOW.

Let the laboring man who is unable to obtain work, the business man whose business is on the decline, the farmer who receives but half pay for his products, the debtor who, through the closeness 6f money matters, cannot obtain that which is justly due him, now that there is yet a time,closely examine into the cause of their misfortune, and seek |the.only redress that is now held out to them through the ballot. There is but one way open to deliverance at this time and that is through a change of policy and of rulers. ~, T

- Even if Hayes did make some sort of an income statement under oath, it has been officially ascertained by a clerk in the department at Washington that he never paid any of the tax. Come, Rutherford, sock up!

old John Pettit,; “Dirty Pettit,” the filthy old scoundrel, who was kicked out of the democratic party last spring for dishonesty and - bestiality, is now making speeches for Gen. Harrison,

THE republican party -has had full control of this country for 16 years. It has been unable to- place the country on a solid basis of prosperity. Business is growing duller and duller and times getting harder and harder all the time. Men' are out of employment more than they ever were before, and when work is obtained hardly sufficient wages can be had to keep soul and body together. The republican party, by its long continued mismanagement, is solely respdnsiible for this state of affairs. -The only way out of the difficulty is to change the administration. | A complete change of party government will do more to brighten ‘up business than anything that can be done. Business men and men of all classes have lost confidence in the republican party and they will not put thejr capital in active use until there is a change. To restore confidence to the country there rhust be different men belonging to a different party chosen as rulers. Nothingshort of a complete civil revolution wilk accomplish the desired result. Such a change can make things no worse, and there is at least resonable hope that the condition will be bettered by a change. There 18 no grounds for hope that times will be better while the republican party rules.

The Most Wonderful Medical Discovery Known to o the World.

To consungnlve-, Wenkg People, - and all Persons Suffering with. Scrofula, Catarrh; Scurvy, Syphg{}lc Anflociiollu. sl.tllt fi‘l;enm; 08, rys: B 3 g orm, Tetter, P,impfi- and 'laotchu on the !om‘hro Eyes, Rheumatism, pflrpe . l"fler'fi.ld Ague, Liver, dney and' U Diseases, Nervous: Debility, ke Disease, Fitsy Broken Down Constitutions, sund every kind of Humor in the Blood, 5 v Having suffered more or less for many years with Catarrh, Wealfieu of the Lungs, and a scrofulous disease which apyeared on my face in glmples and blotches, and aiter doctoring with the est physicians and tr;lng man¥ kinds of advertised remedies (iAcluding Sarsaparilla), without findlnf any permanént cure, I experimented by compounding roots, using the medicine thus obtained. I fortunately =discovered a most wonderful Blood Searcher or Wcal Bitters, which not only E&ve me great relief, ¥t after a' few weeks’ time effected & radical cure. I was free from Catarrh, my lun§a be< came strong and sound, my appetite 5;:)0d, and the scrofulous sores had dfsaepeared. I then prepared a'quantity of the Root Bitters,and was in the habit of giving them away to thesick, Ifound'the medi= cine possessed the most wonderful healln§ virtues, effecting cures of all diseases originating from bad blood or weakness of the system, asif by magic. At last the demand became 80 great I found myself called upon to supply patients with medicine far and wide, and I was compelled to establish a labor= atory for compounding and bottling the Root Bite ters in lax:fie (}uantitles for ?se. Root Bittersare strictly a Medicinal Preparatfon, such as was used in the good old days of our forefathers, when people werecured by some simple root or plant,and when calomel and other %olsons of the mineral kingdom were unknown. For Consumgt!on, Asth= m&iCamfl?. Scrofula, Scrofulous Eruptions, Rheumatism, Plles, Fits, Heart Disease, Dizziness, Liver Comglalnt, Kldne%‘snd‘ Urinary Diseases, Feverand Ague, Dynpepsln.fi ost Vitality, and Broken Down Constitutions, these Root Bitters are universally admitted to be the most wonderful discovery in the world, Thelr gearching, healing Igropertlem &enetrate every portion of the human frame, 800 ing the Jungsand strengthening the stomach, kidneys and liver. For weakly, neryous young men, suffering from; loss of memorg. cte., caused from abuses in early life,and to delicate females, these Root Bitters” are especlally recommended. No other :medicine will cure Scurvy, %gghius Salt Rheum, Bolls, Tetter, Ring Worm, ‘White éwelllng Sore Eyes, Running of the Ea»s, Ulcers, Fever éores, Qancerous Formations, Dropug‘, Erysf(i)elas, Pimples, Flesh Worms, Pustules, Blotches, and all Skin diseases, 80 qulcklglas the Root B;Ctera. All diseases have their origin in bad blood. . The Root Bitters lay the axe at the.root of the tree of disease, by searching and purifying the blood which will nourish and lnflfonne every organ and’part of the body and kee%u n repair until a ripe old age. 1t is my desire that the suffering all over the world should receive the benefit of my remedy, and garticulnfly such J)ersonsashsve glvenup all hoPes of ever being cured, G. W, FBAZ%ER. Cleveland, Ohio.

[Eztracts from Letters Recelved.] - lep_lelandl?.'rnp.\uonl on the Face, DR, FrazrEr—Dear Sir: I have been aflicted for over three years with a scrofulons affection on m{ face, which broke out in pimples and blotches, was also weak, with no appetite. 1 never found relief till last summer. Your Bitters being highly recommended as a blood medicine, I'procured a supply and in a few weeks thcrv effected a cure. I now enjoy better health than I have for ten years. My case was one of the very worst. I can’honestly recommend your Bitters to all. . ms§ LIZZIE CORNWALL, Cleveland, O. {To Consumptives. . - Mr. Barney Cain, Niagarg, Ontario, writes: “I havg been taking you:Eß:)%'t Bg’tcrs. Théy have doné me E‘e:t. good, They havé cured my cough, and I feel another person.”! Catarrh, Tired Fainty Feelings, &c. Mrs. Danfel Smith, of Concord, N. H., afflicted with Catarrh weakness, painsin lungs and shoulder, heavy galn over the eyes, restless at night and tired, fainty feelings all the time, writes: E MR, Frazigr—Dear Sir: Ireceived the bottle of Root Bitters -you sent me ;y express, and I have taken the whole of it and it has done me more good than all the medicines I have ever taken., I iave taken more or less for ten years, : Dyspepsia; Throwing Up Food, &c. Mr. Jacob Ruby, Zurich P. 0., Ontario, afflicted with Dyspepsia, tilrowlng up f'i)od. etc., writess “Bitters received, and have been taking them one week. They helped me right-off, 1 cou%d havesold B dozen bottles. Please write what you will charge fortwo dozen. Yeou may publish in the pa{mrs that your Bitters have done mec more good han any other medicine.” . ‘ 3 Inflammatory Rheumatisme. . Dr. FRAZIER—Dear Sir: Your Roob;LßMers have built up my wife more rai)ldly than allthe medicines taken bgher dufl#fi)fihe ast_nine months. She has been suffering te ly with Inflammntoxiy Rheumatigm, but 18 now so far recovered that I think one more bottle of your Litters will work a cure. Yours truiy, J.K.SPEAR, Indianapolis, Ind. Liver Complaint, Kidney Disease, Me. FrRAZTRR—Dear Bir: I have used two bottles of your Root Bitters for Eiver Complaint, Dizziness, Weakness and Kldnef Dlseaael and_ they aid me more %ood than all the micdicine I ever used. From the first dose I'took I began to mend, and I am now in perfect health, and feel as well as I ever: did. I comsider your Bitters one of the greatest of blg¢ssings. MRS. M. MARTIN, Cleveland, O. ; Fever and Ague. John Roland, Cleveland, Ohio, writes; “For weeks at a time I was confined to the house with fever and ague. After using Xour ngb Bitters two weeks I ‘was restored togood health.” Salt Rheum and Erysipelas. Mr.J~ ~ob Lerch, Belle Plain, lowa, writes: Seeing a notice of your wonderful blood medlcmiéßeot Bifters) in the Evangelical Messenger, I had our dmggifit at this place order'a few bottles. Myself and daughter have used your bitters with greatest satisfaction. I have been afilicted.a long time with Salt Rheum and Erysipelas. I 'tried most every medicine recommended without benefit, until I used our Root Bitters, I feel like a new man. Enclosed %nd $5. Send as man{ bottles as you can for the .money. A number of my necighbors want Bitters. Write at once and let me know how many bottles you can send me for $25.00. : ? The above is a fair sample of the thousands of letters [am receiving at my officeiin Cleveland., No ‘medicine in the world ever had lsuch a success, Sold by Druggists, and at_country stores. Price $1 per bottle or six toel;fi Show this advertisement to your medicine dealer. Ask for Frazier’s Root Bitters, and accept no substitute. Send for my large circular. filled with certificates of wonderful cures fi)ubhhed in Enfillsh and German). Sentfree by mail. G. W. FRAZIER. Cleveland, Ohio. Nee e e . : v ooenrmiy-6° Drs. PRICE & BREWER

; HAVE A TT T T T A 533 T S ST eATRS s AV BeTYSSBYNT S SRR £ SO A B 'TEEN YEARS.. A R 2 Te i YDLeT W o) HAVE met with unparalleled guccess in the treatment of all : Chronic Diseases ettt e e OF THE : : THROAT, i m = - LUNGS. RN PR ITT AR U e w— LIVER. R e SAP IR ‘ IIBAII)z Nerves, Kidneys, Bladder; Womb, and Blood Affections of the Urinary Organs, Grayel. Scrofula, ll}:fl;l:!gcl!m.,(?flt"rh' Asgxma, Bronchitis, Dyssia, . = (gnrrelputation hasbeenacqairedby candid,hon- | est dealing and years ofsuccessful practice. | Our practice, not one of experiment, hutfounded onthelaws of Nature, wit.g years of experience and evidence to sustain it, doesnot tear down, make sick to make well; no harsh treatment, no !riflinf. no flattering. We know the canse and the reme dy needed; no guess work, but knowledge éaine bg years of experience in the treatment o 1 hronicdiseases exclusively; no encouragement ‘'without a prospect. Candidy in our opinions, rea-~ sonable in our charfi;, claim not to know everything, or cure everybody, but do lay claim to reasom and common senge. We invite the sick, no matter what their ailment, to call and investigate before they abandon hope, mnkelntnrro%uflom and decide for themselves; it wiil cost nothingas consultationisfree. ;4 Drs. Price & Browercan be eonsuited jas follows: - Ligonier,Ligonier Houge, Thursday, September 28th. fo e Kendallville, Kelley House, Friday, September 29th. : i LaGrange, Brown’s Hotel, Saturday, September 30th. * -~ - . . Bturgis, Exchange Hotel, Monday, October 2d. S . ; Visits willbe made regularly for years.' Residenceand Laboratory meimin.’{)t.tlil. ‘ e § .

CABINETSHOP & e AN e g BIN ROOMS R.D. KERR, e Wouldcespec'tfully announceto the citizer sol Noble county, that he hasconstantlyon - . handalangeandsuperiorstockof CABINET WARE. : k 3C‘onsistiux‘;iu ptrto; : * DRESSING BUREAUS. : - WARD-ROBES, | L o TABLER, ! " STANDS, P L LOUNGRS, . L OUP-BOARDS, e T e NG CHAIRS 'AND BEDSTEADS, Andinfacteve-)ythin(g usually keptina First class Cabinet Shop. Particularattention paid tothe Undertaking Business. ] COFFINS ALWAYS ON HAND. And made to ordér, upon short noice. Also all kinds of Shop Work made to order. il Furniture Ware Rooms on west gide of Cayin Street, corner of Fourth street, Ligonier, Ind. | A Agood Hearse alwaysip reaciness. ¥ | LIRODEH';MEY 24 1871.

, N - - Ayer’s Cathartic Pills, oo < For the relief and ol P cure of all derange--2 ments in the stomr ! ach, liver, and bowL 4 ; -els. They are a mild WM,{‘« : _ aperient, and an £ :*g P - excellent purgative. T R Being purely vegem w- i, table, they contain PSSI W, 1O mercury orinine- “ "e&,. H ./, Tal whatever. Much } i/, serious sickness and <P Feadvdintn i sufferingis prevent: ] G & " ed by their timely ‘use; and every family should have them on hand for their protection and relief, when required. Long experience has proved them t% be! lilc safest, surest, and best of all the Pills with wliich the market abounds. By their occasional use, the blood is (Purlfied, the corruptions of the system expelled, obstructions removed, and the whole machinery of life 1-est%re(l to its healthy activity. .Internal organs whith become ¢logged gtnd sluggish are cleansed by Ayer’s Pills, and imulated into action. Thus incipient disease is changed into health, the value of which change, when reckoned on the vast multitudes who enjoy _it,’can hardly be computed.. Their sugar coating makes them pleasant to take, and ‘)rescrves their virfiues unimpaired for any length of time, so tha ;they are ever fresh, angrperfectly reliable. Although searchin‘g, they are’mild, and operate . without disturbance to the constitution, or ({iet, or DCCII{)atIOD. St o y Full directions are given on the wrapper to gach box, how to'use them. as a Family Physic, and for the following complaints, which these Pills rapidly cure:— vt Shabis For Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Listlessness, Lnniuor'und Loss of Aplpetite, they should be taken moderately,to stimulate the stomach, and restore its healthy tone and action. For Liver Complaint and its various sym_gtoms, Bilious Headache, Sick Headache, Faundice or Green Sickness, Bilious Colic and Bilious Fevers,they should be judiciously taken for each case, to correct -the diseased action’or remove the obstructions which cause it. L i

For Dysentery or Miarrhoea, hut one mild dose is generally required. i For Rheumatism, Gout, Gravel, Pal. gltu‘tio‘n of the Heart, Pain in| the ide, Back and. Loins, the{ should be contin. nously taken, as required, to change the diseased action ‘of the system. With such change those complaints disappear. e b For Dropsy and Dreopsical Swellings. they should f)’:taken in large and frequent doses to produce the efféct of a drastic Ilmrge. ¥or Suppression, a large (lose should ' be mk?‘n, as it produees tile desired effect by symathy. | ' As a Dinner Pill, take one-or-two Pills to promote-digestion and relieve the stomach. An occasional dose stimulates thé stomach and bowels, restores the appetite, and invigorates the system.. Hence it is often advantageous where no serious demnfigment exists. One who feels tolerably well, often finds that a ‘dose of these Pills makes him feel decidedly better, from’their cleansing and renovating effect on the; digestive apparatus, | o . PREPARED BY Dr.J.C. AYER & CO., Practical Chemists, ZOWELL, MASS,, U. S. A. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS EVERY WU ERE. Ayer’s Ague Cure, : . : 3 -/ 9 For Fever and Ague, Intermittent Fever, Chill Fever, Remittent Fever, Dumb Agu,?, Periodical or Bilious Fever; &c., and indeed all the affections which arise from malarious, marsh, or miasmatic poisons; : g No one remedy is leuder called for by the necessities of : the American people than a sure and safe cure for Fever G and .tfiue. Such we are now enabled to offer, with a perfect certainty.that it will eradicate the disease, and with assurance, founded on proof, that no harm can arise from its use in any quantity. That which protects from or prevents this disorder must be of immense service in the communities where it prevails. Prevention is better than cure, for the ‘)_a'tient escapes the. risk which he must run in violent attacks of this baleful distemper. This “ CURE?” expels the miasmatic poison of FEVER AND AGUE from the system, and; prevents the development of the disease, if taken on the first approach of its premonitory symgfibms. . Itis not onlly the best remedy ever yet discovered for this class of ¢complaints, but also the cheayesu, The large quantity.we supply for a dollar brings it within the reach of everybody; andl in ' bilious districts, where FEVER AND AGUE prevails, everybody should have it, and use it freely, both for cure and protection. Itis hoPed this price will Place it within the reach of all—the Fooxj as well as the rich. A great superiority of this remedy over any other eyer discovered for the speedy and certain cure of Intermittents is, that it containg no/ Quinine or mineral; consequen#ly it producés no auinism or other injurious effects whatever upon 1¢ constitution. Those cured by it are left as healthy as if they had never had the disease, Fever ind Ague is not alone the consequence of the miasmatic poison. A greatvariety of disorders arise from its irritation, among which are Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Gout, Headsy:he. Blindness, Toothache, Earache, Catarrh, Asthma, Palpitation, Painful Affection of the Spleen, Hysterics, Pain in the Bowels, Colic, Paralysis, and derangement of the Stomach, all of which, when originating in this cause, put on the .intermittent type, or become periodical. | This “ CURE?” expeld the poison from the blood, and consequently cures them all alike. It is an invaluable protectien to immigrants and persons travelling or temporarily residing in the malarious districts. If taken occasionally or dhily while exposed to the infection, that will belexcreted from the system, and cannot accunjulate in/ sufficient quantity to ripen: into disease. Hence it is even more valuable for protection than cure; and few will ever suffer from Inter-: mittents if they avail themselves of the protecs tion this remgé affords. e : For Livers Complaints, arising ‘from torpidItf' of the Liver, it is an excellent remedy, stimulating the Liver into healthy activity, and Er@ ducing many trul{ remarkable cures, where other medicines fail. i o ! : PREPARED BY | : Dr. J. C. AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass., Practical and Analytical Chemists, AND 80LD ALL ROUND THE WORLD, PRICE, $l.OO PER BOTTLE. |

NOTICE TO NON -RESIDENT, - The State of Indiana, Noble County, Sct. . JONATHAN RIMMELL,). ; ; . vB, ~ : WILLIAM DePEW. Tk In the Noble Circuit Court of Noble coun‘ti‘;. in the State of Indiana. October Term, A, D. 1876BE IT KNOWN. that on this 29th day of Ju]g, in the year 1876, the above-named plainti by his attorney, filed in the ‘office of the clerk of the Noble Circuit Court his complaint against said defendant, in the above entitled cause, to-« gether with an affidavit of 'a competent person that said defendant William DePew .is not a.resi dent of the State of Indiana. | ‘Said defendant is, therefore, hereby notified of the flling and pendency of said complaint against him, and that unless he appear and auswer or:femur thereto, at the calling of said cause on the gecwnd day of the next term of said court, to be begun and held at the court house in the town of Albion. on the third Monday in October, 1876, said complaint, and the matters and thingstherein contained and alleged, will be heard and determined in his absence. 2 ¢ : GEORGE B. TEAL, Clerk, . . THOS. fl Graves, Attorney for Plaintiff, 4 ~ Angust 3, 1876. j 3 i 15-wl_ - ALL E INDS . i —OO F— ; TL.egal Blanks FOR SALE AT THIS OFFICE. “ 4 No One Need Suflfer from Piles. A sure cure for the Blind, Blee\dlng.‘ltchln{q and Ulcerated Piles, has been discovered by o d Dr. Williame, (an old Indian Remedy) called Dr. William’s Indiar Ointment. A sln‘gle‘qu has cured the warst old chronic cases of twenty-five and thirty years standln%; Lotiong, instruments and Electuaries do more harm than‘good: William’s Olntment supports the tumors, and acts ag ssoothlnf pouliice and medicine, glves instant . and Paun ess relief, and is prepared exclusively for piles and nothing else. _ Over 20,000 grateful pationts attest its virtues, ln‘(} physiclans of all aegools cndorse it unequivocally. i | ! s ; Bhan all spurious advertisements and imitations. of Dr. William’s Remedies. Sent free of);mlue. ncnreg sealed from observation for $1.09, = Ad-, dress Dr, Frazier, nol: proprietor, 318 Erie Street, Cleveland, Oklo, = Tyh ¢ i g | 3 2 a 3

~Are You Going To Paint? . ' THEN USE MILLER'BROS = & 0 0w » G ; g { set 4&r ¢ 1 : CHEMICATL, PAINT, Ready fi;r'use in White, and over One Hundred different Coiors made of é;rictly I)rline" White Lead, Zinc and Linseed Oil, Chemically combined, warranted Much Handsomer and Cheaper, and to last TWICE AS LONG as any otheéPaint. It hastaken tho FIRST PREMIUMS at twenty o;' the State Fairs of the Union, ’and 4s on ’ 'ANY THOUSAND: of the finest houses in thAe country. | Address i MILLER BROTHERS, ' PRICES REDUOED. SAMPLE OARD SENT FEEE, $ 318 t. Cl_'{six' .s‘t." Clev e].h = d.t‘Oh-io. C. ELDRED & SON, Agents, Ligonier, Ind. L e

-t 84ATVE $2O. VBl E=er | YEW Sy U T voßtmes Sl Ryt I R e As\ wirsoN &——— SRR ox . ges 2 eaps A AL sl el o A& M 0 i GRAND PRI ZE T W \AA T T papeeya g i e B o WEDAL. - t—fi-fi T R LA, (83, . WARRANTED. FIVE YEARS! 4t requires no Instructions fmnit. Tt con mot get. sut of orden. - .It will 'do every olass end kind of work, = o et s : It will sew from Tissue Paper to Harness Leather.« . “.- - It 18 far in advance of other Sewing Machines in the magnitude of its superier improvements, as s Steam Car excells in achievements - | & . ‘ ' : the old fashioned Stage Coachi . " n: .1 gt Prices Made to Suit the Times, either for Cash or Credit. =~ Send for Illustrated Catalloguefi of STYLES and Prices. \ e . Address | [WILSCON SEWING MACHINE CO. Chicago. [l}. = Now Vark, N.“ Now Belaans, Ta.. St Louis, I‘?[9. FOR SALE BY A. S. FISHER, LIGONIER, IND

THE LATEST AND BEST! s e, £ gh S fl*';,”;,'*:"‘w:%‘f”*\ e . figs‘%/fg‘ i ¢ jEEEe i : : BB s : - EPERSEEeT L e 1 == N AR ‘ 7%3! . 1 PEERLESS ‘ B “ - J2NEW IMPROVED | PATENT TODD STOVE, ' WITH.FOOT REST ON BOTH SIDES. MICA WINDOWS, SWIAG HEARTH, : - AND CHINA URN. The Fluos aro o comstructed that it is given tho greatest o radiating surface of any stovo madas . | ° PORTARBLE LININGS. Flue and’Pipe on the baci: No more Rivets . ang of Collar or Elbow on Sheet Iron. - WARRANTED {TO DRAW,. - NO SMORING OXN CPENING FRONT DOOR. o WiH. RESOR & CO., Cincinnati’Uhio. For Sale bv John Weir Ligonier CALIFORNIA! Have you any thought of going to. California? . Ar you going West, North of North-West? You want to know the estroute to take? The shortest, safest, quickestand most comfortable routesare those owned by the, Chicago and North-Western Railway Company. It owns over two thousand miles of the est road there isin the country. Ask any ticket agent toshow ybn its maps and tfm;:i cards: All tic‘";f:‘. agéuts can scll you through tickets by this route. \ k Buy your ticketsviathe Chicago &North-West-ern Railway for - : : i % SAN FRANCISCO,: Sacramento, Ogden, Salt Lake City, Cheyenne, Denver,Omaha, Lincoln, Council Bluffs, Yankton, Sioux City, Dubuque, Winona, St. Fanl. Duluth, Matquette, Green Bay, Oskosh, Madison, Milwau-, kee, and all points westor north-west of Chicagg. If you wish the best.traveling accommodations, | you will buy' your tickets by this route, angd will take no other. i e | This popular route 'is unsurpassed for Speed, Comfort and Safety. The Smooth, Well-Bailast-ed and-perfect Track of Steel Rails, Westinghouse Air Brakes, Miller’s Safety Platform and Couplers, the celebrated Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars, the Perfect Telegraph System of Moving Trains, the admirable arrangement for rtnngg Through Cars -'l from Chicago to all points West, North and NorthWest, secures to passengers alithe COMFORTS IN MODERN RAILWAY TRAVELING. PULLMAN PALAGE CARS Arerun on all tralns of this roa . i This is the ONLY LINE running these cars between Chicago and St. Paul, or Chicago and Milwaukee. bt D l . At Omaha our sléepers connect with the Overland Sleepers 6n the Union Pacific Railroad for all points west of the Missour River. - On the arrival of the trains. from the Eastjor South, the trains of the Chicago & Nor-th-Western Railway leave CHICAGO as follows: , ; For Council Bluffs, Omaha and California, Tw through trains daily, with Pullman I’nlacé Draw, I ing Room and Sleeping Cars through to Connci. Bluffs, o 5 !

. For St. Paul and Minneapolis, I'wo through trains dp,illy, with Pullman Palace Cars attached on both traing. | - - 17 i

For Green Bay and Lake Superior, Two trains daily, with Pullman Palace Care attached, and running through to Marquette. For Milwaukee, Four through trains daily. Pullman Cars on night trains. : : For ngndn;l. and points iilv(Minnesota, one thro’ train daily. b o

For Dubugue,via Freeport, two through, trains daily, with Pullman Cars on night train. . For Dubuque and La Crosse, via Clinton, two through trains daily, with Pullman Cars on night train. 1 il

For Sioux City and Yankton, two trains daily. Pullman Cars to Missouri Valley Junction. For Lake Geneva, four traine daily. = ' == - ' For Rockford, Sterling, Kenosha. Janesville, and other points, you can have from two to ten trains daily. 4 . For rates or information not attwinable from your home ticket ageutfl,,hpply to i | MARVIN HUGHITT, ‘W. H. SYENNETIT,, General Superintendent. - Gen’l Passenger Ag't] i i vlon6-Tmos | 55 _ Awarded the Highest Medal at Vienna. - B & I T ANTHONY & (0, v 592 Broadway, N. Y. . . / (Opp. Metropolitan ll;)te_‘,.)- ‘ Manufacturers, Importers and Deplers] in ! s dronEs ey CHROMOS & FRAMES, ~ | 3 = - . y Stereoscopes and Views, ] e2e & * < @ ‘ Albums, Graphoscopes, & Suitable ~ ws. ‘ ;; 1 w ; y 1 Photograpfim Materials. We arefheadquarters for everytfiing in the “‘*ay"uf ‘ STEREOPTICONS e \ N and MAGIC LANTERNS. g * Being Manufacturers of the ey MICRO-SCIENTIFIC LANTERN, s : STEBE%-PANOPTICUN. | . ‘UNIVERSITY STEREOPTICON, ok ADVERTISER'S STEREOPTICON.. : ARTOPICON, | ‘ ‘SCHOOL LANTERN FAMILY LANTERN, ~ ' PEOPLE'S LANTERN. i Each style being the best of its class in tle | market. ; i : B v o e e - Qatalogues of Lanterns and Sides with' direc- | tions forusinfiwnt on application, - . } Any enterpr ing‘manun make money with a ! S oopoe o Magic Lantern. ¢ t &¥ Cut this advertisement out for reference. &) 3 % S L no 43-6 m,

To The Ladies! ‘, C o }“.;. ) & “ & { - : 'l‘»"';“;k _,l';f_v.=“’ b : HAVING RECEIVED | ' Ly, { s SR s Gl o gy A Complete Assortment-of QAL ey e e Stamping and Braid- - L anp Bleekss o ; I.AM PREPARED TO EXECUTE - - | ) e i etk : s % SR - Loh st s - STAMPING 0f ,’E\'Gry' Description, on Short P ’ Notice, and at ModlerL ate Charges.,” |+ | | 2 R ¢ <Ly Sy b v ; b i | 4 . 1 s San U S sy 5 1 : Lo EEEEaL @ S | T also keep on hand a full assortment; . FINE EMBROIDERY-SILK, - ‘ Loate o ootoalleolorsi v e e { ° v UMRSJ.B, STOLL. Ligopiér,:l’nd..v Febrnary 3, ‘ISIG’.-’{l‘” gtrsre HIDES WANTED! X will make it an object for fiarmers to call on me, in the Ranner Block, beforp selling their Hides. Momey, can be made by following this advice. ’Cash,‘; L ~ 1 Clemens Kaufman, Ligonier, Ind., Sept. 23, °TS-tf * "\ nie ol S Notice of Sale. | Notice is herdhy given that T will. Glliat ‘publi¢ saledd e Db B Tluu-sday;,S@:lrt, 28, 876, at the residence Of'tlj;l.'an.zillley',-hi'te,' f Wasi:ifl;:- ; ton township, Noble county, .I'x}di.'_m‘x. ‘deceased, " all ol his personal property, not taken by the widow, cousistfiuz of Horses, Cows lind Heifers, Hogs, Wheat by the bushél, Farming Implements; Threshing Machine.. New _C,ha?npion Mower. Wagons, Horse Rake. ‘Drill; also: |Shéep, one yoke of Oxen. |‘Hay by theé ton, Apples-in the orchard, Corn'in the field; Buckwheat, 125,000 Dry Staves, together with a generul variety of Honsehold Goods, etd. L TERMS:—A Jkreflit of nine months will he given on all simsjover Three “Pollars, the purchaser giving his note with good freehold security, ynmv-' ing valuation and appraisement laws, with 'inter~ est from date at sixpercent.’ . ;L . : . Sale to dommence at ¥ o’clock, a. m. ; W. Kunppeub,rgcr. ‘Auctioneer.. |, b i e e ELLEN'SM&%LL“EY; (o 20:w3: ¢ { : ¢ “Administratiix, o

Ll TIRDATADY S 1 g ]: 1" : B ' 1000 SOLD LAST SEASON - WITHOUT ONE FQ&ILUEE_OB.REJ ECTION This is the’ p‘ix’r_uou.s. Threshing maghine that har ‘swept the ficld”’ and created such a reyolution in thi wrade, by its MATCHLESS GRAIN-SAVING ‘AND TiMeSAv ING principles. | @ <~ ; L b - aur 00, s i h ' AHE o SHEFARDECY. @8 “VIBRRTOR, : Hfll e 2 A;y;:}‘&:i&;\‘::&mmm:; N gFEaBRERE o SPEINEL LT o e " T e O R N AN dRGE T (e Qi =0 Sl Ea) g - = m; ] . THE ENORMOUS WASTAGE of m;& tnevitabl| with other styles jof Threshers, can: be SAVED by thi[mproved Machine, sufficient; on.every job, to more tha - pay all expenses of threshing. = - . Wie o FLAX, TIMOTHY, MILLET, HUNGARIAN an .ike seeds are threshed, separated, clee \«d and save 18 easily and perfectly as Wheat, Oats, Rye or Barley AN EX’I‘RA#’RI‘CE is usually paid for grain an': teeds cleaned by this machine, for extra clg;mlin'egs.‘ IN THE WET GRAIN of 1876, these were substan dally the ONLY MACHINES that could yun with profi r ecoriomy, doing fast, thorough'and - perfect work - hen others utterly fadded. :° . < L SE ALL GRAIN, TIME and MONEY wasting: complics :lons, such as “Bndless Aprons,” “Raddles,” “Beaters, . 'Pl:&ers,," otc., are . entirely dispensed with ; less tha: me-half the usual Gears, Belts, Boxes, and Journals sasier managed ; more durable; light running ; no cost y repairs; no dust; mno litterings” to clean up; ng roubled by adverse winds, rain or storms, . - 2 FARMERS and GRATN 'RAISERS who are poste n the large saving made by it will not employ ‘infe sjor and-wasteful”mmhine:lvbuta;will mdc}fl on thi’ mproved Thresher doing their work, = . FOUR SIZES: made for 6,8, 10 and 12 Hors Powers, - Also- a specialty gxl ’S}fmm'ron., designie) md made EXPRESSLY FOR STEAM POWER, © @ . i - _TWO STYLES OF HORSE POWERS: vizs ouetar roved *Triple Gear,” and our ““Spur Speed” %:& : oury Style), both “ Mounted ™ on four wheels, I INTERESTED in Threshing or Grain Baising AEX%‘;O “?:rr (nse.rugnge;lr:f thfitevto us .for Tllustrs syles, Prices, Terms, stc, T P :"A . . Nichols, Shepard & Co., . Coon ehcecoSmond - |

o e R ! TR : ei;i £ s f e i ' it b e Ruil Roud Dirvectorn., L L\o¢ D. ek S o L +.... She I A,fK E S Ifil ORE ; | 3 fie : i —AND —-_1 i L v ¥ 11 v Michigan - Sonthern 11{311 Road. B£Dk- o 4 G { On and after Sept. 17th, 1876, \tra.ns will leave ity : tasions asfollows st . o 3 i : Ll GOINGEAST |, : i sl SN V.Es. Atle.Be, - Aco Ehicag0......... 920 am..... 585 pm,. . . N Klkhart. (... lmpm.... 950 dpaae s G05hen;...:....: 1405011010 il sl Millersburg... 159 ./f1096 1 (... Ligonier........ 214 a 4 ilO4 Sy uiny Wawaka.o.... 1225 0 1083 /..., ... g 8ri1f1e1dit.....285 li.fiiop ... ... { Kendallville:... 250 " ... 1117 ..., 600 am. | A?riveat"l‘o]edob 50 ....240am....1000 | el el OINGWHST « L € < Sp..Chic.Exp. ' FPac |Exp,| Aec| . . T01ed0.......,..1105 am....1135pm.... 4 55pm KRendallville.... 225 pm.... 308 am.... 900 - Brimfield}..s.. 1235 * (..:182 B Wawakasl, . J 01246 .o faBe Ul Ligonier io . 18000 ... 344 HReS oo Millersbura .. 18170 Loo 1400 dIL. G 0 | Soghen v L 880 vl 415 ol Wikmarb L MG B ArriveatChicagoB2o ... 820 ... |. fTrainsilonot stop. Y { * Exprescleavesdailyboth ways. Tk S . JCHAS.PAINE, Gen’lSupt.,Cleveland * .« J.M.KNEPPER, 4gent, Ligonief. | | 3 ; 5 - Grand Rapids & Indiana R. R. = . | " Condensed Time Card, July 2, 1876.' - . v = GOINGNORTH. | . . ' Buatiens: | |/No. 1. | No. 3. | N 0.7.! Cincinnati. ....Ledve { . .pm 730 am.......s " “Richmondi. ot ) 840 JORoa - Winchester. ...l 456 1147 -Ridgeville _..i...... 1 692¢ ho omo Portland ............ | 558¢ [19'38 Becatnr. ... ... L L 716 . (IDS Fort Wayne.......... | 500 am 250pm|10 00 am Kendallville .. ...... | 633 ‘ 496" 11117 ROME CIT¥. OoL | 689 [ 448 " 11186 . " LaGrange. .ooci s L 737 gl7 12 06 pm Storgls. DpL oii L RIS VR46l° |1237) “Wasipi(A.L,cros=ing) |8 51 - 6150 106 Vicksburgh.....ni... { 936 652 145 Kalamazoo .ic....... |10156 730 295 “Grand Rapids:Arzive (10 15am 10 00 . | 4 36 pm ey ‘% Leave {l2sopm|lo 36pm| 445 - Toward Cite = i lid = 12 Qq)qmi 638 . Bigt Raplas: 1w o 182 742 Reed Bl Loi i 0, 913 83 4 Ol Rke, DiiciEn b O l 4 00am 10 00 pm Traverse...... Arrive* P B dusa lao sl - Petoskey.. ... s o lySoohmlh ooL e ' GOING-SOUTIL, A Stations Iy i { Noj 2. |'No. 6. | No. 8. Petorkey .......Leave | 8 05pm, 845 am|.....°.. Traverse.. ... J% 1? : |B2O NG Clam Take .../ ... 112 50'am'10 85 am N 5 40 amn” Reed Cityl .ol .. 213 12 25 pm| g 25 . Big Rapid5..........| 250 ‘ 105 ROl | Howard Gity: ...... | 357 216 905 Grand Rapids. Arrive | 6 (0 am| 4 15 pm|ll 60 Grand Rapids.Lenve‘ 240 - 4_32pm;11 10 Ralamazoo ....... ..| 930 | 6.8% 125 pm 4 Vicksburgh .. ....... [lOO5 l 724 - Wasipn(A. L. crossing) {lO 44 o 9 il chl. Stutgis oo ueloET ]l5 l Bgato 1 i A:LeGrange 0145 ] 960 1.... ROME C1TY........|1215pm| g 8 pmi o Kendallville.. . ..., 11236 I 952pm| No. 4 ! {Fort Wayne.... ....| 209 A ) 700 am leDErane el e S s nmi 2 | #6B am Portland .. ..0 437 .:“"‘ 922 Ridgeville .. ... 1. | 501 SelmbLE eg 53 Winchester .......... | 583 sepdol. 11018 :‘Richmun_du.,.....‘..{ 632 1..%..‘iu111‘w : | Cincjnnati.....Arrive |9 40 et aeh v aaaen

5 1 | Train No. 5 leaves Kalamazoo at 730 a m and arrives at Petoskey at 8 05 pm. | -\ Sunday Excursion Train leaving Fort)Wayne every Sunday at 8:00 am; and-arrives at/Hunter‘town at 8:40, LaOtta §:5O, Swan 9:00, Avilla 9 8, - Kendallville 9:30, Rome City 10:00; Returning, leave Rome City for Ft. Waytie at 6400 pm, | * ey b . S Ji 11, PAGE, {i 2 Gen. I’assenger:fln? ’l‘/igkci Ag't, ‘L\L E. OWEN, Agente Rome City, Ind.” | | =@ 3 ¥ . & Littsburg, Ft. W. & €hicago R. R. [/ From and after December 12, 1875. L | GOINGWEST, v - { j Lo | NoIS Noig! No 9, 'No 3 b ! 5. Fastkz. Mail. PacEx. Night Ex. *Pittsbu‘rg.;{... I:4sam . ..pm 9:ooam ‘2 00pm |Rochester-il.. 2:53am ...... 10:10am. 3 10pm Alliance...i... 5:10 - . .:pm 1:10pm- 5 50pm {0rrvi11e....... 6:46am ...... 3:o9pm 7 23pm . [Mansfield..... B:4Bam ...... s:lspm- 924 pm Crestline...Ar. 9:2oam .. .. s:sopm 9 55pm Crestline...Lv: 9 4doam 4 50am 6 10pm:10 00pm |Forest....... .11 02am 6 2Sfl‘g 7 58pm- 11 80pmy [Lima..q.......12 Olpm 8 054! 9 15pm 12 40am |[Ft Wayne..... 2 10pm 10 45am 12 Olam | 2 50am (Plymouth..... #l2pm 1 36pm 3 Qoam ’5 00am Chicago....... 7 20pm ‘5 25pm . 6:3oam .8 20am " e GOING EAST, £t .. No 4, No? 2/ Noé, No 8, it NightFz. Fast Ex. Pac Ex. Mail. Chicag0.......10:20pm 9 20am 5 35pm 5 25am" Plymouth..... 3 (pam 12 05pm 9 Otpm 9 25am | Ft- Wayne ... 6 40am 2 30pm 11 35pm 12 25pm* [5ma..........'8 50am 4 20pm 1 50am, 2 50pm' F0re5t........10 03am 5 25pm. 805 am 4 15pm Crestline..Ar.ll 40am 6 45pm 4 40am 5 55pm Crestline ..Lv.1%,00m 7 06pm 4 toam 6 Otam Mansfield .....1% 28pm 7 33pm 5 20am 6 4Vam 0rryi11e....... 2 16pm 9 25pm 7 12am 9 10am - A11iance....... 3 50pm 10 s{pm 9 00am 11 3am Rochester...., 5 59pm 10 odam 11 12am 2 l4pm Pittshurg.... . 7 05pm 2 ‘loam 12 15pm . 8 30pm BQ?Throu'ghEMni]; (limited,) leaves Pittsburgh daily at 550 r M, stoppin%vat ‘Alliance, 8715 P M. Crestline, 1120 »m; Fort Wayne, 250 AM, arrives at Chicago at .55 AM. | SR | Traing Nos. 3 and 6, daily. All| others daily, except Sunday. ) oy | G Rae ! F.R. MYERS, ! .- 0 .: GeneralPassengerand TitketAgent. b e He [ = . . § g . Cincinnati, Wabash & Mich. R. R. Time Table No. 18, taking effect’ Sunday, May » 1 21, 1876 : e i . . GOING SOUTIL¢ { “Stations 1 = INo.B. N 0.6,!: N 0.4. N 0.32 Eikhart.. oo it Sol 980 prh 105 pm “Goshen...... ...t 730 pm 10Ihpm 180 - | New Paris.. 1.0, 104748 AORB 145 1A B& Oi€rossg '....10. 810 - 10;‘:; 2:00 -\ ’Migofi'd...“. seoallde 815 1045, 205 ’ Lécßburg. 1 v.lolL 850 1 11 02 1993 71 WaArSAW. C.ocitasee s 040 0 LY 1 245 N Manchestr. .:..... 1130 1221 am 347 Wabash... .12 35 pm 12 15pm - 1 05, 4350 ", Marion .... 220 Lo 903 5 40 Alexaudrin.i4oo, ...l 300 640 -, i 1 AndersonJ. 500 ‘... . 340 ;. 725 pm Richmohdl .l /toicr 0 5550 5 Indianapolis 540 pm’ ....... 600 am 10 50 pm Cinepnnatice Soohm b o 1888 S i / . GOING 13,0RT}[. b Stitions™ | N0.,1 | N 0.3, 'No.S! N 0.7 Indignapolisi 435am12 30 pm .couoyi | ceniann in Cihcinnati.« 705 pm 780 am ‘.....e: |.....,. ! Richmond 10008035 -[0 0] onl ‘Anderson:J. 605am° 220 pm ....... 720 am Alexandria. 645 305 getzain s 081 Marion. e Wbl Ml 2y Ll 10 057 k Wabash ...! 8568 "7 556 213 pm 1215 pm, NManchestr 934 641 4. 847 Lo Warsaw, ....10 43 850 s s iy Léesburg.. 11,01 "1 ' 8921 . 600 el Milford.... 11 20' 841 . 630 badeiis B'& O Crossll 25 851 6,45 By New Paris. 1138 1|- 011 710 Poral Goshen.....l2lopm 933 pm 740 pm Ji._..L.. Eikhart,... 1280 pm 435 am .. ... L..... 0 | Close connettions made at Goshen with the L | S & M'S; R. R; at Milford with the B &0 R R.; at Warsaw with the P, Ft W & C R R; at North' Minchester with the D & E R Ry; at Wabash with the T, W & W R R; at Marion with the P, C & St. LRR. JA.G. WELLS, Sup’t. .

! @ it Chicago, Rock Island & ! | AXD{ ‘ ). 2 X TY X ' PACIFIC RAILROAD. ) i ,The Direct Route for JOLIET, MORRIS, LASALLR, PERU, HENRY, LAOOK, Peoria, Gcneseo, Moline, Rock Island, Davenport, Muscatine, Washington, Towa City } - @rinnell, Newtpn, Des Moines, ; {»TI 4 s g Council Bluffs & Omaha § WITHOUT CHANGE OF CARS, ‘Where it joins with the Uxiion Pacific Raflway for { Denver 'Salt Lake City, Sacramento, San Franieisco, and - G | . ; All Points West of the Pacific Coast. ; Trainsleave Chicago Daily as follows: Omaha, Leavenworth & Atchison Expresg, (Sundays excepted) | G, 10,00 am Pern/ Accommodation (Sunday exc’ed) 5.00 pm Omaha Express (Saturdays excepted)’ 10.00 p m . IKANSAS ILINE. . The Chicage, Rock Tsland & Pacitic Railroad Company have now opened their Southwestern Division between i ol | Léavc;;worth,“ Atehison and Chicage, connecting at bLea'veml'bi-t.h witk’ Kansas Pacific -and Missouri Pacific Railroads. and at Atcl?laon - with At?lson. Togeka & Santa Fe Centralßranch, Union Pacific and Atchison jand Nebraska Railroads, for all pointg in G \Kansaéjnallnn"l‘ei;rlloi-len, Colorado e and Newéiflexl@o. G i . This company nas dwita ruy’ colaplement of Palace Drawing-Room and Sleéping cars, which for external beauty and interior arrangements for| the comfort, c%nvoqienceand laxury o}z pnssengerg are unexcellet. xreaualed, byany othercarso ‘the kind in the world. ~ 4 .~ B¥ Through Tickets for sale at all the General ‘Railway offices ‘n:the ‘Ftatea and Canada. | . broy 'HUGH RIDDLE, Gen. Supt. M.A. SMITH Gen, Pass. Agent. | 871 y REV. Y. B. MEREDITH’S Four Sermons in VindicaoL ke of the . ; sk S b R (e | @ : CHRISTIAN SABBATH, Hayé been printed in pamphlet form and gent, postage paid, to any address on receipt of | ONL¥ .15 CENS. | “Eyery christian family ought to have & copy; : tfils‘%lgafiiwfi“ B » i Oflimm 4 ,“M" 3 i mc Yc{nilmn L . ‘MeylslB76-€° . . . . = 160 M ;‘ g i s eelF LT 1 S et Y S