The National Banner, Volume 11, Number 26, Ligonier, Noble County, 19 October 1876 — Page 4

; e S The Aational Bamney e e e THE UNION FOREVER. No North, No South, No East, No ‘West in America, Says =~ -+~ " Uncle Sam. - Patriotic Address by the ‘Tilden | ° National Commitfee fo the : People Who Vote. b The Surprising Revolution in ' ohie Valiey Attributed toa . . Genuine Desire for . Reconciliation. - . . Nerthermers Generally Having Tired ' of Passion and Hate Which Disas» trously Blight Pro'sp'erit}". o Risging Appeals tothe Masses to Dis- ~ _ eard the Faise Propuhets and _ -~ Jeimin the Reform. To toe PeorLE OF THE UNITED . "T,{m — Fellow-citizens: — We con- | gratulate you a§ patriots, as partakers with us in the common destiny of Amencan freemen upon the results of the October State elections.. We. rejoice in‘tl’;‘e wvictory which the yeople’s > hallots hfiy@ bestowed upon the friends of reform in tli‘? valley of the Ohio, where the tepgfilic:m hosts have had foverwhelming ascendency in_every; _Presidential election since:lBs6. . = .. We rejoice in the assurances these elections convey that your ballots will’ bestow decisive’ majorities to the- al- ]‘ tied forces of democracy and reform ! in the November elections throughout | -the Union: but we rejoice not as partisans. Werejoice with you as fellowcitizens, and when the decision of this week of 1,000,000 voters along the ] valley of the Ohig shall Ug Lo ] RAFIFIED NEXT MONTIL | by the fiat of 8,000,000 voters thro’out the whole republic, we shall still reigice, chiefly for” the reason that not oneof its citizens can miss of an equal - share with us, who are Democrats, in Ihe political peace and good will whieh | will then and there he established among ail sections, r‘z\-ccs, classes and “conditions of men, and in the pros- ~ perity of which political peace, based on equal rights and fraternal good will, is the first condition. "Upon the three States of West Virginia, Ohio. ~and Indiana, were concentrited all ithe influence of the administration, all their efforts, and all R ‘ THE VAST SUMS OF MONEY » forced from 100,009 officeholders of the - parly in power. These were tearful . odds, notagain to be contended against so concentrated, for inthe November election the contest will be in every ome of the thirty-eight States upon the sameday. Nevertheless,againstthese odds the Democrats and Reformers of

West Virginia and Indiana have been ~victorious, and in Obio they have ail but rescued a State- hitherto deemed hopeless, and have created an assurance of victory in November. 'lf it falls to our lot, as'the National Democratic Committee, to congratulate the ‘people of the Union upon this victory in the first battle of the reform campaign, itis only because the Demoerats have been -honored to be the. leaders of the people in the work of . NATIONAL REGENERATION. =

The victory won. and the vietory still to be won will be deliverance as much to the Republicans as te the Democrats. The patriotic masses of the republican party may ‘be ‘thankful ' Ihat the mijsdeeds of their unworthy ~ leaders have been rebuked and are to be arrested: The suffering whites of the South may lift their Leads to greet - thedawn of a better'day for them as . well asthe nation at large. Theé colored citizens may share the general jo¥ that he will soon cease to be - ' THE'STOCK IN TRADE . ; of corrupt peliticians, but shall enjoy his rightful liberties and his equality before the law amid universal good ! will, As for the reform demdcracy to - whose standards victory has been tied »with all her/garlands on, it only Te- . ‘mains for them to welcome every ally, every. friend, close up the ranks and . pressonshoulder toshoulder under the banner and with the one watehword—réform. F ellow-citizens,peace between afl sections, prosperity in all oiir homies. —of ‘these you -have been for years deprived by the niistaken solicitude of patriotic Republicans, played upon by seliish and corrupt leaders, who have kept warm the dying embers of civil * strife in order to escape the inspection of the trusts which they have betray#d. For elevén years you have had the name of peace, but at no time ~have you had the substance of peace, - In ljew | thereof you Lave had the grindingi taxation anfl the wasteful expenditure of the war. Just before every election every year you have - had the preaching.of a new crusade against; a sectioh utterly defeatedin war ané?anxioxns only to be completeiy reconciled in peace. For eleven years the power of the men who have seized away the control of their party from the hands of U

-~ ITS STATESMEN AND FOUNDERS his been supreme in- almost every department of the federal government. Discarding the hopes of prolonging their domination by beneficent public measures they have created antl trafficked upon publi¢ ‘calamities. Tle policy they adopted has been . worked out. Its failure has been absolute. In place of past, performances these same cofrupt and selfish leaders now proffer promises already broken as their titles to further trust. Having -prostrated our manifold industries by vast aggregates and worse methods of federal taxation, they now again solicit your confidence as instruments of retrenchment and reform. Having DEBAUCHED THE PUBLIC SERVICE, and baving just now, in the face of open day, assessed their army of 100, 000 officeholders —the people’s servants, paid by the people’s taxes—in order to create immense corruption funds to frustrate the people’s' will, ‘they now profess to be champions of eivil service reform. Having imposed

upon the Southern States the rapacity, fraud and plunder of carpet-bag governiment; .having almost ruinedf‘ the prosperity of the North by destroying the prosperity.of the South; and having dreated terror, -uncertainty and confusion in all the productive industries of thie South which furnigh most of the'exports of our whole country, keep in motion the commerce and manafactories of the North and East, and furnish a market for the agricultural products -of the West, they now. propose by a renewal of ; -/ THE SAME FATAL POLICY to prolong their own power, in the hope of concealing their misdeeds,and for.this purpose they do not hesitate to renew the cry of intolerance, to revive the dying memories of fraternal strife, and to appeal to the fears and prejudices of the timid and ignorant. Fellow-citizens, these men and their measures have been completely tried and have completely failed. Oppressive taxation, an exhausted South, an impoverished quth, a fll\ctqahing currency, the’enterprise of an industrious people locked fast i the paralysis of hard times—such is the outcome of their political policy; such are the achievements of | THEIR LONG SUPREMACY. Your ballots.in November can alone dictate a change of measures and a change of men. Shall not the uprising of patriotism along the valley of ‘the Ohio go on to a complete and beuel‘ficial revolution in the administrationof the government of the United' States? Will you not, by the voice of overwhelming majorities at ‘the.polls, proclaim your invincible faitl, after all these years of corruption_and pasf—sion, in the high, immortal principles of a government by _the(people. for the people, in simple i HONESTY AND STRICT ECONOMY as the supreme vwisél_om- of. public polieys in justice as the mether of power, and in civil freedom as the hallowed end of ‘a true republican nationality ? Will you mot build yup a new prosperity for all the people on the old foundations of American selfgo:\'ernment, on peace, reconciliation and fraternity between all sections,all classes, and all races embraced within our sysiem of American commonwealth; on frugality and economy in all governments; the honesty and ‘purity of the administration, and having lost your prosperity through governmental misrule, regain that prosperity through governmental reform ? We commit this great issue: to the ‘intelligence ‘and conscience of the: American people with an unfaltering trust in the wisdom and justice of their decision. ’ By order of the National Dem. Com. ABrAM-S. HEWITT, Chairman. , FRrREDERICK (. PRINCE, Sec’y. “New York, Oct. 13, 1876, » A R I Lookout for a Tweed Canard. * The national election, says the Indianapolis Sentinel, is distant léss than ‘a month. 1t is, therefore, about the time for subtly and well concocted Sellsatioi}s to be suddenly. sprung by the conspiracy in power to startle the country. Calumny has ‘been tried, but'after every effort afew days brought a recoil, the whole operating to ‘exalt and accredit our illustrious candidate before the people.— But when the few days requisite for ) the reaction would bring it too late for the election, depend upon it the most startling impostures of the canvass '»\"i}l be spruug——impo’stures so mons‘rous that in order to apprehend them in their stupendous hardihood and daring, it is necessary to recollect that they are the desperate resort of'a throng of spoilsmen, not to save a party erm‘ ‘defeat merely, but themselves and their plunder, as they shudder on the_brink of ruin. -Look out, therefore, for a sensation or two. Be ready for if, all re.a.s'onable‘ men, sensible at this supreme period of national peril, of the inestimable value of character in publie leadership. Probably a sensation will be ventured in connection with Tweed. ~We have had private information weeks ago that such was ripening, as a very ‘moderate discernment could see it must have been the original motive of bringing Tweed |here. But though thefjtime has been smple; they have not dared to compass Mr. Tilden’s dishonor thus. A few days would have sufficed to evoke a popular indignation and contempt that would have made Mr. Tilden hundreds of thousands of votes. - In fact, we hear that the attempt has been altogether abandoned. But we donot believe it.. We think not unlikely a few days will bring it out. We must remember facts. The great criminal’'was amenable only ,to\ the State of New York. But it was the United States which, only since the St. Louis convention, undertook -the enterprise of his recapture. In order to escape Gov. Tilden's search, ' Tweed took refuge in a country where 'no extradition ‘treaty. entitled -the U. S. to reclaim him, New York, of course, having no sucl' right. But the adtinistration was.in a situation, by condoning outrages on American citizens, to bargain with Spain; behind Gov.Tilden’s back,for the surrender of Tweed without a treaty. The bargain was made and Tweed wassurrendered. Tweed is simply a rascal of great judgment, plenty of money, but irretrievably prostrate character. It isto him a questisn of personal liberty,that is.all. He can not, of course, hope for apardon from Gov. Tilden. The President, of course, ¢an net pardon him. . But, unless he is pardoned, he must accept the penitentiary as an aged pauper does the poor house. One hope remains:. If New York could be carried by Gov. Morgan, possibly he might be pardong!. -By his promising Tweed ‘a pardon, Tilden might possibly be defeated for President. In that event, the entire republican’party would owe I'weed the debt of saving them by his ‘mere slander, and would certainly con-. strain hjs pardon. For this,an old: -man in Tweed’s situation, moral and _material, can net be supposed. to hestl tate out of scruples of conscience any dnore than a hound hesitates when he sees .a rabbit. He may have gotten _religion, but if not, most men would say he would be a great fool net to do it, as it would not blacken him much ‘to speak of. Be not surprised, there-! fore, at what you may hear.

On the morning of the 6th, the special train containing soldiers homeward bound from the Indianapolis reanion, on thé Indianapolis, Cincinnati & Lafayette Railroad, ran into a freight train six milés east of Greensburg, Ind. Quite a number of pag: sengers were injured. The conductor gf rtthe train was probably fatally

CENTENNIAL CORRESPONDENCE. Rhodé Isiand’s Day--Valuable Dis- ' plays--Butter Works--Attendance - --odds and Ends, ete., ete. From Our Own Cdeen“ . e 'PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 7, 1876. And now Rhode Island has had her day. Eighty-five thousand people were present to look at her. There wasa rumor about the city that the Pennsylvania railroad would send over a special train to' transfer the entire State within Centennial borders (by the by, there.are lots of Centennial boarders here at present), and that it (the State) was to be exhibited in the Main Building. On inquiry, ‘we found this statement incorrect. Gov. Lippit held a reception in the Rhode Island State Building. As the natives ‘entered by twos, it took. just two minntes and eleven seconds -to shake bauds all around. Thursday was Rhode Island’s day. Tt isa no-. ticeable ‘fact that more than half of the Rhode Iskanders are red-headed. We do not know whether this has anything to do with the burning of Lau- ‘ ber's restaurant on Thursday or noflr,.} Anvhow, Lauber’s restaurant, or part ‘of it, was destroyed by fire. The loss amounts to s2o,ooo—fully insured. None of the other buildings were injured. : 5 There is a very fine exhibit of statuary in alabaster, which has just been ) placed in the Main Building. It isthe property of Vita Bros., Italian Consuls here, and is well worth examination. The display of Malachites in the Russian. department of the same ‘building, is also deserving of attention. One mantel-shelf is -valued at $6,500, and a pair of vases at $4,500. We do not want them——would not have them as a gift. We think it hkely that o one will attempy to present them to us. The Emperor-of Germany has purchased a Malachite fire-place, for which he paid $3,000. He ordered it to be purchased as a souvenir of the Exhibition. Quite an expensive keepsake. Mrs. Brooks, the lady who makes heads from butter, gave an exhibition of her art in the presence of the judges and members of the Press, on Thursday last, An important engagement prevented our presence, but we obtained a description'of the way it was dome from a friend. He deseribes it thusly: “First, she takes and flattens out the butter in a pail, and then she takes instruments which consist of two spoons and a straw. She takes a dab out on one side with one spoon and slaps it on again. on the other - with the other 'spoon. Then she tickles the mnose with the straw and turns oyt a dreaming lolanthe.” This was the method-employed by Mrs. Brooks last week; and, although not expressed very elegantly In the above, the description is extremely Torcible and to the point. This method is entirely different from that described to us by Mrs. Brooks some ‘time ago (mentioned in a previous letter), and no doubt is much easier.. We had the pleasure of meeting Mrs. M. M. Ritterband, of Ligonier, this week. Since seeing her, our opinjon of Tagonier has grown wonderfully. If she would only endeavor to persuade her husband to vote for Tilden we woald have no fault to find. The attendance is still holding out firstrate. The average this week has ' been about 75,000 daily. Thursday, October 19th, will be a grand, gala day On that day, Maryland, Virginia and the District of Coluntbia will hold a joint reception. There will also be a grand tilting tournament. It is expected that 150,000 persons will visit the grounds. A proposition which appears to meet with general approbation has lately been talked about. It is, that- on Nov. 10th, the last day of the Exhibition, will be held a grand re-union of the thirteen original States. This will include a reception by the Governors of these States, and also a reception by the out-going President, and the President-elect (Tilden, of course). It would be' a “big card,” and “ draw ” itnmensely. It has not 'yet been . decided positively, but no doubt will be ere long. : . In noticing the valuable displays, WE(; neglected to mention the Austrian Department of the Main ‘Building. Among the meerschaum pipes, which are very fine,is a chandel‘ier “about three feet l'ligh, composed of pure amber. It is valued at $B,OOO. We have heard it stated that your cotempory of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat and exGurilla Col. Mosby, intend purchasing 1t for their mutual friend, Grant, who ‘wants it to make: cigar-holders of. However, we don’t believe it. We think they would prefer spending the money in getting Babcock acquitted, and procuring false electon returns from Colorado. C. LITTLESTAMPS.

/ - A Stirring Address. If'Gov.' Tilden is not a rapid writer, says the Chicago Times of the 14th instant, the remarkable document print.ed this morning, like his justly admired letter of acceptance, proves him a comprehensive one. The address of the national democratic committee may be accepted as in great part Mr. Tilden’s handiwork. - It has all the Macauleyan stateliness of diction with the brilliant directness of Burke. It is a" significant’ document in tone as well as composition. If the result of the election had not gone far beyond Gov. Tilden’s ‘anticipations he would never have permitted an address 85 positive as this .to go out from his committee. He congratulates, or the chairman congratulates, the people of the United States in the assurance which 'Tuesday’s vote gives of a re‘habilitated union—of real peace, of a sgessation of the clamors of war in the time of amity. Words are rarely put to better use than in the address, and there should be some way of . getting it in the hands of every republican voter in the country,as a beginning in the education which must come sooner or later. It looks now very much as if the one million who have recorded their votes for Uncle Samuel in the valley of the Ohio were but the preluders to the eight millions who will indorse them in November. s

The heirs of William Penn still receive from the British Government $20,000 a year in compensation for their proprietary rights to Pennsylvania. It is in this manner that the British Government keeps its promises, even when those promises have been obtained in a fraudulent manner, But it finds its reward in the reputation for good faith which it has established in every financial centre of the world, ‘ : 0 47

: : A Solid South. ' Two contributions from eminent Republicans- on the attitude of the South are presented this morning,one from Prof. Sumner, and the other from Prof. Shaler. The dishonest presses which are busy in discrediting their own teaching of the last ten years are particularly concerned in the vigoruus analysis of motives. presented in these two remarkable documents. ' Why the South is solid ' and and how it could not well be anything else with such misrule as the last ten years have witnessed, both letters explain to the minutest detail. They show that the negrc can rationally do nothing else than vote with the people | who are the main industrial support of the section. The carpet-baggers are merely office-holders, and as such can not give the colored people employment nor put them on the. high road to such prosperity as the southern merchants and land-owners who really hold the destiny of thelate rebel States in their hands. Prof. Sumner emphasizes his point by recalling ‘Austria’s weakness when Hungary was ruled by the earpet-bag policy and contrasts the difference so soon as a close _union witli equal rights was accorded.. It is, however, something like a reflection on the intelligence of the American peopie to make a word of argument against the scoundrelly demagoguery which seeks, by perversion of the state of the South, to confirm the leagued . robbers of | Grantism in power four years longer. Until the 45,000,000 American people proclaim it in their votes, we are not going to believe -that they are deluded by the pleas of faithless rogues, such as are giving tone and color to this iniquitous-campaign. Not one of ! the prominent supporters of Grantism has thus far dared to lay before the people the true issues and ask support' en them alone. A Even Schurz has fallen from civil-service rhapsodies to bloody-shirt invectives. — Chicago Times. F e e el < (MB—— An Enfernal Outrage, Monmouth, 111, is under great excitement on "account of an infamous outrage -committed on” ¥Friday night in the heart of thetown. Aboutmidnight some unknownvillain entered the residence of a highly respected widow lady and brutally outraged her person, and attempted to violate her daughter, aged about 14 years. The mother and daughter were jsleéping together, ard were aroused from their | innocent slumbers by the dastard. On | their attempt to give an alarm he pressed x'é\:Q)\'ex's against their heads and said: “You will suit my purpose | just as well dead or alive, and if you make an outery I will kill you.” He ravished the mother, and compelled her to stifle her agonies while he mace an inhuman but unsuccessful attempt on her child. i ;! — ] < EER—— e - e ¥ .UxLEss the will of Lick, the late California millionaire, be contested by his son, John Lick, a portion of his vast estate will be divided up as a gift' to-the- public, as follows: The sum:iof $700,000 for an observatory, and '5300,000 to found and endow the California School of Mechanical Arts; $250,000 for a group of bronze statuary representing the history of California; $lOO,OOO for an old ladies’ home: in San Francisco; $150,000 for building: and maintaining free baths; $150,000 for a” bronze monument to Francis Key, author of “The Star Spangled Banner;” $25,000 to the Protestant Orphan Home of San Francisco, and the same amount to found an orphan home in San Jose, and $lO,OOO to purchase scientific and mechanical works for the Mechanies’ Institute of San Francisco. el - B £ i ~ A monster 'in human form has just been unearthed in New Jersey. A respectable appearing woman who gave her name as Catharine Stevens,is enj . deavoring to prosecute one Robert | ‘Stevens for bigamy, at the same time making a shocking statement. During the 14 years that the woman has been the reputed wife of Stevens, she has been the mother of four children. These children, she says, were all ‘drowned by their father before they were a day old. One was drowned at Jersey city, one at Brooklyn, one above Schenectady, and the other in Oswego county. - The last was drowned in February,. 1875, at° Atlantic dock, Brooklyn, an “hour after birth. Last week Stevens was married to a woman in New York, and has deserted his children and cdst their mother off.

In alawsuit now. being tried in N. Y., a juvenile love freak of ‘the father of his country is incidentally introduced. The title of property involved was traced back to 1697, when William lIL gave to Adolph Phillips a large tract ot land in the then provence of New York.including the present county of Putnam. - In 1754 tha property was deeded to Mary Mortis, a lady who, it was stated by counsel, had the distinguished honor of giving the mitten to George Washington. The old folks didn’t like whiggery,and commanded the young lady to frown upon the youthful rebel. The Morris family were faithtul to the king during the war, and at its close their property was forfeited to the State- of New York. - ° e ; : e i Triple Murder. The news of a probable triple murder has just been received from Bucksport, Me. The victims are an aged man named Trim, his daughter, Mrs. Thayer, and hér little girl. ° Trim’s house and buildings were burned Friday night. Hischarred remains were found in. the debris of the carriage house. A bloody trail was found leading from the house to the rear of the barn, and it was supposed Mrs. Thayer and her daughter were murdered and the bodies dragged to the barn, though they have not been found. Mrs. Thayer was known to have had $3,000' in the house, and plunder is supposed to have been the incentive. : :

Honors to Canine Sagaeity. There is a native dog in Newfoundland now 16 yearsold. He is gray and his fangs have fallen out; but he is provided with a cozy kennel and food that does not need much mastication.: Around his neck is a glazed collar bearing three medals, one of silver and two of gold, One of the latter is front the Royal Humane Society of England, the other is the gift of an Amerigcan Captain, and the silver medal is from a former Mother Superior of St. Michael’s Convent in St. John’s, All three are testimonials in recognition! of 'the animal’s sagacity in saving liyes.—T'oronto Qlobe. _

On the night of the sth inst. the engine, baggage-ear, smoking-car: and one passenger-car of a passenger train on the Erie Railroad, bound west, were thrown from "the track near Genesee, N. Y. in consequence of striking 4 horse. The engineer, named Clark, was killed, and the fireman, prakeman, and a tramp were badly injured. Three passengers were also slightly hurt. i

A fire broke out on the German bark Europa, ién New York, on the Tth inst,, and John Casey, a calker, and John Seiver, another workman, were fatally burned. = After the flames were extinguished the firemen entered the hold and discovered therein the horribly burned bodies of five workwen employed in making repairs on the vessel. R

Under our presen apportionment laws, the Democracfi must have a majority. of 17,000 of the popular vote in order to control the Legislature. and have a majority of the Congressmen, —lndianapolis Sentinel, .

- TERRIBLE SLAUGHTER. ; : e . ‘; . . Annihilation of Three Egyptian { o 5 v . Armies in Abyssinia. | Eight Thousand Men Killed in Two . Engagements. i : ¥go! : A { ‘ - LoNDON, October 12.—The Paris correspondent of the 7'imes telegraphs ‘ an account of an interview with an officer in the Egyptian army, who gives eircumstantial details of the hor- i rible events which have taken place in Abyssinia during the attempts of ‘ Egypt to chastise the Abyssinians. 1 The ofticer states that there have been two known expeditions. The first, which was dispatched in October,lB7s, consisting of 4 000 men, was surprised in the defile of Goundel and massacred to the labt man. . The second expedition, -composed of 6,000 men, started in January last. It met the Abyssinians in February in the defile of Goura | and was overwhelmed, 4.000 men being Kkilled. The Abyssinian King then dissappeared into the interior, and accoirding to the latest reports has repeated what-he did in the defiles of Goundel and Goura by again crushing an atmy of Egyptians, but the, details of this, as of the oier expeditions, are guarded with great secrecy.: e s - DT 7 _All disesises leading to Consumption, Bronchitis, Asthma, sliort pains. 3 k J? [ iz s 453 in the chest, &e., Dr. Ilerring’s Veronica Lung Extract speedily, exterminates. For sale by 11. C. Canningham, Ligonier, Ind. . The Most Wonderiul Medical Discovery Known to . the World. ‘ To Consumptives, Weak;r People, - and all Persons Suffering wiih Scrofula, Catarrh; Scurvy, Syphg}:lc Anflecgions, sg‘t B‘l;eum,' B,y TyS. 188, = orm, Tetter, lep’i:- and B?otehe- on the anore Eyes, Rheumatism, Dyspep : reverrfi:ud Ague, Liver, Kidney and U ary -Diseases, Nervous Debility, Heart Disease, Fitsy Broken Down Constitutions, and every kind of Humor in the Biood. : SN 5 Having suffered more or less for many years with Catarrh, Wea.kilx}ess of the Lungs, and & scrofulots disease which ap})eared on my face in gimples and blotches, and after doctoring with the est physicians and t%flng manY kinds of advertlged remedies (including Sarsaparilla), without finding any permanent cure, 1 experimented by compounding roots, using'the medicine thus obtained. I fortunately discovered @ most wonderful Blood Searcher or Medical Bitters, whichnot only gave me great relicf, but after a few weeks’ time eflected & radical eure. I wasfreefrom Catarrh, my lungsbecame strong and sound, my appetite %;)od, and the \ scrofulous sores had d(snppeared_. I then prepared aquantity of the Root Bitters, and was in the habit ‘ of givingthem away to the sick, Ifound themedi= cine possessed the most wonderful heallng virtues, cffecting cures of all diseases originating from bad blood pr weakness of the system, asif by magic. At last the demaml became 80 great I 'found myself called upon fo supply patients with medicine® far and wide, and I was compelled to establish a laboratory for comppunding and bottling the Root Bit« ters ing larfe %mmmes for use. Root Bittersare ‘strictly & Medic¢inal Preparation, such as was used in thé good old days of our forefathers, when people were cured by some simple root or plant, and when calomel and other %oisons of the mineral ~ kingdom were unknown. For Consumgtlon, Asth= ma, Catarrh, Scrofula, Scrofulous Eruptions, Rheumatism, Piles, Fits, Heart Diseage, Dizziness, Liver Complaint,, K{dnex‘r[‘and Urinary Dl'seases, Feverand Ague, Dyspepsiafi ost, Vitality, and Broken’ Down Constitutions, these Root Bitters are universally admitted to be the most wonderful discovery in th world. Their searching, healing properucsg)enetrata every portion of the human frame, 800 hing the lungs and strengthening the stomach, kidnéys and liver. F%r’weakly, nervous young men, suffering . from loss of memorg. ctc., caused from abuses in early life,and to delicate females, these Root Bitters are especially récommended. No other medicine will' cure Scurvy, Sfl)hms Salt Rheum, - Bollg, Tetter, Ring Worm, White éwelling Sore Eyes, Running of the Eavs, Ulcers, Fever Sores, Cancerous-Formations, Drcyps%, Erysi:felas, Pimples, Flesh Worms, Pustules, Blotches, and all_Skin discases, 80 quickly as the Root Bitters. All diseases have thelr origin in bad blood.. The Root Bitters lay the axe at the root of the tree of disease, by gearching and purifying the blood which will nolirs ish and invizorate every organ andgpart of the body and keep it In 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 particulariy Fuc!ldpersons ashave glvmu:pall hopes of ever being cured, Gs W, FRAZIER, Cleveland, Ohio. : [ Bxtracts from . Letters Received.} Pimplesand Eruptions on the Face. D=r. I'razlrßß—Dear Sir: I have been afilicted for. over three years with a' secrofulous aiffection on m; face, whieh broke out inpimples and blotches. { was also weak, with- no appetite. 1 never found reifef till last summer. Your Bitters being highly recommended &8 & blood medicine, I grocurcd a supply and in a few weeks they effected a cure, I now enjoy better health than I have for tén years. My case was one of the very worsts I can honestly recommend your Bitters to-all, MISS LIZZIE CORN WALL, Cleveland, O. : f'o Comsumptivesd . - 27#. Barney Cain, Niagara, Ontarlo, writes: “I | have Leén taking your Reot Bitters. They have | doune me i:'-u:u; good, They have cured my cough, i and I feel Jike another person.’”” « | . Catarrd,; Tired Fainty Foelings, &cCe

}rs, Danfel Onmith, of Concord, N. H., afiicted v.on Catarren weakness, painsin lungs and shoulaer, Joavy pala over tie-cyes, restless at night and tired, 3 inty feclings all the time, yerites @ g, Fnazinn—Dear Sir: Ireccived-the bottle of 3Tyt Bitters you sent me by expresd, and I have t-izenthe whole of it and 1t has done e more iood ibaa gll theedicines I have ever taken. - I have taken’more Or less for ten years. Dyspepsia; Throwing Up Food, &c. Xr. Jacob Ruby, Zurich P. 0., Ontario, afilicted wich Djysnepsia, tfuruwlng. up food, etc.. writes: “,sitters recoived, and have bheen takinfi them ong week.. They heiped me right off, I could havesold p dozen. bottles. 'Please write what you will charge fortwo dozen, . You may publish in the paP ‘rs that your Bitters ‘have done memore gocid han sny other medicine.'” ? - © Imflammatory Rheumatism. Tin, Frazrer—Dear Sir: Your Root Bitters have bziit up my wife more ra,{:idly than-all the medicines taizen by her during the ‘last_nine months, : Bhe has heen suXering terribly with Inflamm_at.oxiy Rheumatism, but is now so tar recovered that I think one more bottle of your 1 itters-will work a cure. . Yours truiy, J.K.SPEAR, Indianapolis, Ind. Liver Complaint, Kidney Disease. Mz. FrazrEr—Dear Bir: I have used two bottles of your Root Bitters for Liver Complaint, Dizziness, Weakness and .KldneY Discasgiz and - they “aid me more %nod than all the medicine I ever used. ¥rom the {irst dose I took I began to mend,and I am now in perfect health, and feel as well as I ever ¢id. I consider your Bitters one of the greatest of blessings. 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 usira%i'our Root Bitters two-weeks I was restored to good health.” i _BBalt Rheum and Erysipelas. Mr.J° ob Lerch, Belle Plain, lowa, writes: See{2 a notice of your wonderful blood medicine 3Reot liitters) in the Evangelical Méssenger, I had our drpgeist at this place order a few botties. Myself and daughter have used your bitters with greatest satisfaction. I have been afilicted.a long time with Salt Rheum and Frysipelas. I tried most every medicins recommended without benefit, until I used vour Root Bitters. I feellike a new man. Enclosed. find $5. Bend a 8 man? bottles as you can for the money. - A number of my neighbers want Bitters. Vvrité at once and let me know how many bottles you can send me for $25.00. ° . & A Theaboveis a fair sample of the thousands of letters lam recelving at my oflice in Cleveland. No medicine in the world ever liad such a success, Sold by Druggists, and at country stores. Price ?i per bottle or six for $5. Show this advertisement o your medicine dealer, Ask for Frazier's R%)t Bitfers, and accept no ‘substitute. Send for my large circular filled with eertificates of wonderful cures (F_ub:\h_ed in Enflish and German). Sent free by mail, G. W. FRAZIER. Cleveland, Ohio.

: ¢ nrmiy-6 , . RENEWER=SSsay® Tais standard article is com-

pounded with the greatest care. - - Its effects are as wonderful and as satisfactory as ever. ; It restores gray or faded hair to its youthful eolor. .. . :

. It removes all eruptions, itching and dandruff. It gives the head a cooling; soothing sensation of great comfort, and the scalp by its nse becomes white and clean.

By its tonic properties it restores the capillary glands to their normal vigor, preventing baldness, and mak(ing the hair grow thick and strong. As a dressing, nothing has been found'so effectual or desirable. A. A. Hayes, M. D., State Assayer of Massacliusetts, says, ¢ The constituents are pure, and carefully selected for excellent quality ; and I consider it the Best PREPARATION for its intended purposes:” ‘Price, One Dollay. - Buckingham’'s Dye /. FOR THE WHISKERS. ' ~ This elegant preparation may be relied on to change the color of the beard from gray or any other undesirable shade, to brown or black, at diseretion, It is easily applied, being in one preparation, and quickly and effectually produces a permanent color, which will neither rub nor wash off, 7 , " Manufactured by R. P. HALL & CO., " ! NASHUA, N.H, i . Bold by all Druggists, and Dealers in Modiclnes, -

gTg! : : | Are You Going To Paint? i~ . oHENUSE MILGERBROS' - ! e < EW W e : : T FE CHEMICAIL PAINT, _ Ready for use in White, and over One Hundred different Colors mn_d‘é‘qf strictly prime ‘White Lead, Zin¢ and Liuseed oil, Chemically combined, warranted Much Handsomer Bnd! Cheaper, 2nd to last TWICE AS LONG as any other Paint. It has taken the FIRST PREMIUMS %t twenty of the State Fairs of the Union, and is on MANE THOUSAND of the finést houses in the couitry. Address .. MILLER BROTHERS, PRICES REDUGED. SAMPLE CARD SENT FEEE, . . ¢ 3818 t, Clair St., Cleveland, Ohio. C. ELDRED & SON, Agents, Ligonier, Ind. * 151 y : - : 3:" 0 E o : > : . =i 84ATVE $2O. o ; : i A i AL, “ V_.,; v ’ ; ?g“flr‘\\\fi—:::‘:u‘b: “) e f! s /fi!\ e ORI & QL ““” TR :“ : “-'v.-, \'mui’“"’)‘ -f‘ " '\/10/RLD ; e U TN I woowmen | L AN U W eNOWNEY =N B N\l W RECEIVEDTHE - v W R A\ Ea) : ; S . =f= Ay = § v : ) VA, /873, { B . : WARRANTED FIVE YEARS! ‘lt requirés no Instructions to run it. '_ It can not get out of orden It will do every class and kind of work. Lo It will sew from Tissue Paper to Harness Leather. 2 It 18 far in advance of other -Sewing Machines in the magnitdde of itg superior ' "improvements, as a Steam Car excells in achisvements : ) * the old fashioned Stage Coach. S : e Prices Made to Suit the -Times, either for Cash or Credit, . #® Send for Illustrated Catzilqgue of STYLES and Prices. . ' : AGENTS WANTED. ‘ « ¢ Address i WILSON SEWING MACHINE CO. Chficago, lil. New York, N. ¥.. New Orleans, Lg. St, anis, o, FOR SALE BY A. S/ FISHER, LIGONIER, IND

T SR : 30 CALIFORNIA! Have you any thought of going to California? Ar you going West, North or Not"th-\’\fést? | Yqu want to now the estroute to take? | Thie shortest, safest, quickest and most comfortEtble routes are those owned by the, Cbic’ago and North-Western Railway Company. It ownsover ¢wo thousand miles of the est road thee isin the country. Ask any ticket agent to show you it§ maps and time cards. All ticke! ageuts can sell you through tickets by this route. 5 Buy your tickets via the Chicago & North-West-ern Railway for i S T SAITN FRAINCISCO, Sacramento, Ogden, Salt LnkéfCity, Cheyenne, genver, Omaha, Lincoln, Council Bluifs, Yankton, ioux City, Dubuque, Wingna, St. Pasl. Duluth, Marguette, Green Bay, Oskosh, Madison, Milwaukee, and all points westor north-west of Chicago, I y<f\l wish the best traveling accommodations, you will buy your tickets by this route, and will wake ho other. iy RET This popular route is nnsurpassed for'Speed, Comfort and gagfcty. The Smooth, Well-Ballast-ed and perfect Track of Steel Rails, Westinghouse Air Brakes, Miller’s Safety Platform and Couplers, the celebrated Pullman Palace Sleepirg Cars, the Perfect Telegraph System of Moving Trains, the admirable arrangement for renning Through Cais trom Chicago to all points West, North and NorthWest, secures to passengeys all the COMFORTS | (N MODERN RAILWAY TRAVELING, = . | | PULLMAN PALAOE CARS M % et gt ad IR T R Y 0 * |

Arerun on all tfalns‘of this road. s " This is the.ONLY LINE running these cars between Chicaéo and St. Paul, or Chicago and Milwaukee. L P g

~ At Omaha our sleepers connect with“the Overland Sleepers on the Union' Pacifi¢ Railroad fgr all points wést of the Missour River, « " | On the arrival of the trains from the East or South, the trains of the Chicago & North-Western Railway leave CHICAGO as follows: (= For Council Bluffs, Omahaand California, Tw through trains daily, with Pullman Palace Draw ing Room and Sleeping Cars througt to Q}dunci« Blaffs, 1 : -

For St. Paul and Minneapolis, Two through trains daily, with Pallman’ Palacd Cars attached on boeth trains, Sl ; :

For Green Bay and Lake Superior,, Two trains dailiy. with Pullman Palace Cars attached, and runhing tbrough to Marquette: : : For Milwaukee, Four through traine daily. Pull‘man Cars on night trains. S ; For Winona and points in Minncsota, one thro’ train daily. . : g For Dubuque, via' Freeport, twb through trains daily, with Pallman Cars on night trafn. For Dubuque and La Crosse, via Clinton, two. dhrough trains daily, with:Pullman Cars on night trains . i o o For Sioux pand Yankton, two trains daily. Pullman Cars to Misseuri Valley Junction. . For Lake Geneva! four traing daily. | <o For Rockford, Sterling. Kenosha, Janesviile, and other, points, you can have from two to ten trains dajly. - . ¢ For rates or information not attatnable from your home ticket agents, apply to MARVIN HUGHITT. - W. H. SYENNETT, General Superintendent, Gen’] Pageenger Ag’t] s t vlonf-Tmos : |

. Ayers .. Sarsaparilla q =LK Is widely known'! A Qf 7"513 as one of the most Q 8 - P M effectnal remedies \l‘i‘&i\\ 8 152’,4' ever discovered for' '\‘,%\&\ [ fifofl,”l cleansing the sys-‘ :'s';»‘s\\;‘\s: A 7 il #é’; tem and purifying Ay ~; the blood. It has Sz Z 77 stood the' test ot'] : \\\\{\\\“{{V ”:/ years, with a coneyt stantly growing r(\.p-i PBY GO utation, based on its. intrinsi¢ virtues, and sustained by its remarkable cures.” So mild as to be safe and beneficial to children, and yet so searching as to effectually purge out the great cor cuptions of the {;lood, such as the scrofulous and syphilitic eontamin?\_,tion.fi Impurities, or diseases that have lurked in the system for!years, soon yield to this powerful antilote, and-'digappear. FHence its wonderful >ures, many of which are publicly known, of Scrofula, and all scrofulous diseases, Uleers, Eruptions, and eruptive dissrders of the skin, Tumeors, Blotches, Boils, Pimples, Pustules, Sores, St. Anthony’s Fire, Rose or Erysipelas, 'l‘et);er, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Ringworm, and interhal Ulcerations. of the Uterus, Stomach, and Liver. It also cures other cowplaints, to which it would not seem especially adag;ted, such as Dropsy, Dyspepsia, Fits, Neuralgia, Heart Disease, Female Weakness, Debility, and Leucorrhoea, when they are manifesta:| tions of 'the scrofulous poisons.. gol . It is an excellent restorer of health and strength in the Spring. By rencwing the appetite and vigor of fixe digestive orcans, it dissipates the depression and listless lan-. guor ofpt-hefseason. Even where no disord& appears, ipeople fecl better, and live Jonger, for cleansing the blood. - The system moves ?i? with renewed vigor and a néw lease of & e s : ;

- ‘PRBPARED BY " ¢ Dr. J. C, AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass., Practical and Analytical Cliontists. .

SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE

HIDES WANTED!

I will make it an ohject for farmers to call on me, in the Banner Block, before selling their Hides. BMomney can be made by following this advice, -:Gflsh. \ i ~ 1+ . (Olemens Kaufman, Ligonter, Ind., Sept. 23,75,-tf |

To The Ladies! .:‘/ ~' A \ -Gj G ! '. L ITA VIENG RECEIVED A Complete Assortment of . Stamping and Braid-, ing Blocks, = gl s - TAM PREPARED o Exr:cvfi:'" : STAMPING |eb ] e Of Kvery Description, on' Short ‘ Notice, and at Moder- r‘ o 1 * ate Charges! 1 "

I also keep on hand a full assortmend o BE ol | FINE EMBROIDERY SILK, i of all colors, o+ 1 _ “ . MRS, J. B, STOLL. Ligonier Ind.. February 3, 1876.-tf - iif - ¥ iDE WAL . 1000 SOLD LAST SEASON. . [ WITHOUT ONE FAILURE OR :REJECIIQN.: | This is the famous Threshing machine that 'w. ‘swept the fleld” and created such a revolution jf{th rade, by its MATCHIESS GRAIN-SAVING aND THMEsShv L\'G}priu(‘iplca. £ | HE s SHEFARDR 0080 “VIBRATOR. PSS S e l TR ek e gl ) g fECNEN RS TGS PR sl bIS -y St s N j[fi@w;{gfi . A R ) ‘/\\ S P 'Jf”{d';ifégg.“fi eee Wi 1 AR 7\ Il VR e Ml NN G O i THE ENORMOUS WASTAGE of graip, o éncvitabl with other styles of Threshers, can” be SAVED by thi

[ wiln other styles of ‘Lhresners, can” be SAVID by tol ~ Improved Machine, sufiicient, on every job, to more tha say «all expenses of threshing. BReea ‘ FLAX, TIMOTHY, MILLET, HUNGARIAN an ‘ ike seeds are threshed, separated, cie - and save -18 easily and perfectly as Wheat, Oats, Kye or Barley. AN EXTRA PRICE is usually paid. for grain an. i teeds cleaned by this machine, for extra cléanliness, ™ . IN THE WET GRAIN of 1875, thess were subistan dally the ONLY MACHINES thatcould run with profi )r economy, doing fast, thorough and perfect work vhen others utterly failed, - ‘ ALL GRAIN, TIME and MONEY wasting complics ~ ions, such as _“Endl'ess Aprons,” “Raddles,” “Beaters, *Pickers,” etc., are entively dispensed with; less tha 1 me-half the usual Gears, Belts, Boxes, and Journals 4asier managed; more durable ;/light running ; no cost - ¥y repairs; no dust; no “litterings” to clean up; no \ roubled by adverse winds, rain or storms. % FARMERS and GRAIN RAISERS who are poste ‘ n the large saving made by it will not emzploy infe +or and wasteful machines, but will insist on thi mproved Thresher doing their work. = ~ FOUR BSIZES made ;'or 6,8, 10 and 12 Hors Powers. Also a specialty of SEPARATORS, designe ~ ind made EXPRESSLY FOR STLAM POWER. 5 ~ TWO STYLES OF HORSE POWERS, viz.: our im ‘ sroved “Triple Gear,” and our “Spur Speed” (Woad. Jury Style), both * Mounted ” _on'fqur wheels. . . } IF INTERESTED in Threshing or Grain Raising npplg. to our nearest Dealer, or write to us for Illustra sed Circular (sent free), giving full particulars of Sizes | Jtyles, Prices, Terms, etc. s .

Nichols, Shepard & Co., : ' BATILE CREEK, MICH .Ca'Ca co-34 mos

mi‘%t% i ] !]{/WW*J _THEBEST WOOD COOKING STOVE o JO.BUTY It is the Quickest Baker, & ( Economical, M“ST Convenient (and Durable. . Sizes, Styles &Prfices Enbsuil GVETY 01 : -~ Manufactured by e WM. RESOR & CO., Cincinna# 8. For Sale bv John Weir Liconier T Kaa wimne Legal Blanks _ FOR SALE AT THIS OFFICE.

Ko Th°’°“@“”°'°‘@ ‘ e v i | x.o;;a,lm;d : q' A qchnw‘f;FOß THE BANNER

. PER anvuM. /- SUBSCRIBE NOW.

The long winter gvemnfgs'al“e tmoxi s, mfil'fevel"ybody bp'ght‘; to be . supplisdwitha 0 (tood Family Paper.

Larl hwoad Pirectory. | Teee s Bk &h' i : ; ey 2l . .‘ Michigan Southern Rail Read. ‘on ‘and after Sept. 17th, 1876, traums will leave ‘. . | tasdons asfollows . § L BoeßsEy . . R Sp.N.Y.Ez. Atl’c.]s;:'- Aco i Chicag0.........920am.... 535 pm.", . IRIRBaTt ... 120 mini 0 9800 ... . 3 Goshen,.i. i)y 14000 (0001010 .l L e Milletsbnrg. (.. F 139 0.41096 [g e fiponter tic gt oo 048 L L RWRRS .(G TRe (LOB3O, L ‘ Brimpfeld clo 28 SLTITO2 N Kendallville.... 250 * ....1117 ", . 6Coam {ArriveatToledesso ....240am....1000 % o GOINGWEST: * . ; Wil S Chic(Elezi{ “{Pac Exp, ; Acc TQLed0........A.'.11:05{n ..‘...11-l’)Sqm.... 455 pm Kendallville.... 2 20ipm.,.. 8C8am.... 900 Brimield fh iR G L 1893 L, — WAWREE LTS Al L S Lifionier....,.'..i*)fld? G ) ‘Millersburg. o 48071 5. 1400 0., . Goshen .ooul o§Bo Dot s L lnarboL e 406 1 000480 Ll . ’-A_rrivcnt()h;cagoseo Sl 820 M - _tTraing do not stop. el ‘. Expressleavesdaily both ways. S e i QHAS. PAINE, Gen’lSu‘pt.,Clévcfi:\nd l"" J.M.KNEPPER, Agent, Ligonier. = o o b i ) L itisburg, Ft. W. & Chieago R. R. ¢ From and after December 12, 4875] | ! NT N | o 4, } ' Noljy old o 7 NO 3y " .| Fastßz. Mail. PacEwv. Night Fr. .Pltgsburg...... I:baw .. .ipm 9:ooam 2 00pm Rochester..... 2:3Bam ..... 10:10am 3 10pm J v gilri{,ilrlllcec. 2:;&““ - ..pm l_;:l(lz’pm 5 g«;;:m" g St B Siens 3309 pm T 23pmes , bilanmeld..'. 3% 8:_48:1]1] ceroes ;‘»;_i.',f;m 9 qu,m. Crestline. . JAF. 98%0am .. ). s:sopm - 9 55pm Crestline...Lv. 9 4doam™ 4 soam 6 1t pm 10 00pm F0re5t.........11 02am 6 2Sam. 7 58pw 11 30pm ‘Lima..........12 01pm 8 (sam . 9 15pw 12 40am Ft.-Wayne..... 2 Jopm 10 45am 12 (lam 2 50am Plymouth..... { {2pm 1 36pm 3 Coani "5 Qoam Chicago,...... 7 20pm 5 25pm- 6:soam 8 osm oo GOING EAST. : o i e NGe, . N 0 6, Nog o Nightliz. KastEx. Pac Ex.. Mail. Chicdg0.......10:20pm Y 20am . 5 35pm 5 25am Plymouth..... 3 (oam 12 (spm 9 0 pm 9 Wam Ft Wayne ... 6 doam | 2 '3opm 11 35pm ‘l2 26pm Lima.......... 8 dlam /'4 20pm | Svam 2 bupm; F0re5t........10 03amy 5 25pm 3 Yoam 4 15pm/ LOrestlive .. Ar.ll 40ani® 6 45pm 4 <oam . 5 55pm Orestline . .Lv.l2 00m *© 7 06pm - 4 50dm’ 6 Oam’ iMansfiel(} E....;12 ¢Bpm 7 33pm 5 20am -6 402 m {0rrvi11e....... 2 16pm 9 25pm 7!l%pi 9 10am - ~A11iance....... 3 bipm 10 sTpm 9 00am 11 85am/ . Rochester..... 5 59pm 10 odam }1 12am 2 14pm Pittshurg.... . 7 05pm - 2 10am 1245 pm 2 30pm . B~Through Mai!, (limited ) leaves Pittsburgh . daily at 550 p M, stopping at Alliauce, 815 p m. ‘Crestline, 1120 » M, Fort VVuyzxe, 250 AN, arlives ‘at Chicago at 6,55 AM. = - ey . - Traine "Nos. 3 synd’fi. daily.; All others daily, except Sunday. g ¢¥ m e nEk = GeuemlPahsenzzcmh:dfl‘ickelAgefit, . E rand Rapids & Indiana R. R. s Cohdejsed Time Card, October 1,175, g . GOING NORTIL / ; B e i ] Statioas. - NOL 1. N 0 8. i No. T. ¢ frtodivct el SRS L bt SR iU Vbbb {.Cincinnati. ....Leave | « .. pm; 730nm|'.... ~Richmond..... ** 340 ' 11035 Winghezlx‘pnr.........r. 456 (|1147 Ridgeville........ 1| 5227 11240pm|.... [... Porvland:aili . of. 1 588 N2F6Y oL, Deeatur.. .o s,.ba ;‘_:‘AIF). {1865 Fort Wayne........u. |'d OOami 250pm| 5 40am Kendallville %....... | 621 {29 .|llOB ROME C1TX.:...... | 659 ~|-446 ' /1198 LaGrange...z........ | 715 | 517 11203 pm E Blurgilciicißiaciis |oA 4T 1546 12 56 Waisipi(A.L,crossing) | 817 | 615 Ib7 Vicksburgh.......... |'Bss. [652 1137 - Ka1amaz00.......... | 933, 730 ‘ 225 Grand Rapids. Arrive {ll 50am 10 (0 |4 86 pm e (‘g; .Leave |.... Tooam| 5(5 Hawaed @ity oo o |0 BOT || 657 By e ce ol s § T am, : Cla Lake1........_+ | . .. ~[l22opm{lo3opm . Traverse,..... Arrive| - .., '‘! Petoskey./.... * ... [....amj........ 1. BOIRGEOURH, . | Stations - | No. 2. ["No. 6. | No. 8. ’l;etoskey.......&cave,l T pml Ss4Bami.o. .. Mravenseilitoof Sl 820 Clam Lnke......g.'....:- 400pm'1036am| 540 am ] ReedOity oo . 2.....1| 529 - |l2 129m] 708’ Big Rapids.i-...... ] 625 .| 110 7555 - Howdrd Gitys .00 1 VBB 17| 216 BT - Grand Rgl ids. Arrive |9 30 410 pm|10.45 Grand, Rapids. Leave | 710 am| 430 pm-11.10 ‘Kalamazog....... .. | 930 68> 125 pm "Vicksburgh .. ..., .... [lOO2 G |- Wasipi(A L. crosging) (1037 . | 759 e S Sturgis . sl I, .‘].830 flcii G - LaGrange aeoaie 111,40 -9 00 ! ROME OITY,. .. :cll2lopm| 9382 pm|._.. ... Rendallville.. ....[1230 952pm| No. 4 Fort ‘Wavne..z. ....|;2 00 1115 700 am Deogtar i b 3 15pm|.... cie.| BC3am L Pottlahd ... .j.. 0. 1481 aens avie | 922 Ridgewille .0i0..i10., 1501 10 T 963 | Winchester/..........| 823 ' | lallouB - Richmond oo OF6 88 .. .T.h{ll4o Cincinnati..... Arrive | 940 IAT IR e e eeeet e e eo S e

~ Train“ No. Sbj;)eaves,Kal-e;maz’ga—:'utfiv’{—so ‘amand arrives at Petoskey at 8 35 pm. : - - Ail trains run daily except Sunday. L

Nos. 1, 2. 3 and 6 make direct connection at Ft. Wayne with fast express trains of the P F W & C Ry to and from Pittsburgh, Harrishurgh, Baltimore,_Washington, Philadelphia and New York. . Nog. 2 and 3 make connection at Ft. Wayne with Express trains on Toledo Wabash & Western Ry, to and from Bt. Lomis, and all points sonth-west. Nos. 7 and 8 make direct connection at Kalama--200 with Mich. Central Ry toand from Chicago.

_No. 8 conbects.at D &M Junction with D & M Ry, ard at Grand Rapids with M C R R for Detroit and all points east. ; Nos. 2 and 3 contfeet at Richmond with Pittsburgh, Ciucinnati & St Louis Ry for Indjanapolig, Louisville, Bt. Louis and all points south-wesl. | Nos.2and3 hayve through sleeping and chair cars between|Cincinnatiland Grand Rapids. o ol : - J'll, PAGE, R ‘Gen: Passengerand Ticket Ag't. M. F. OWEN, Agent, Rome City Ind,

Cincinnati, Wabash & Mich. R. R. Time Table No. 18, taking effect Sunday, May ‘ L 21, 187 B; oo GOING SOUTH. 8 Stations NogB. . N 0.6:. N 0.4. No. 2.: diißharto L s oo Ll ... 960 pm - 1.05 pm dpshen. ... ol TBO pm 1015 pm 130 New Pars.. ....JO, 748" 10 28 1:45 B&OCrossg ....... B 10; 10 42 200 iMiltordsce s 00l BYIS 1045 205 Teeshnrpoccs oo B 60: 711 02 223 Warsaw s Sil 940/ T 1109 . 245 N Manchestr ....... 1130. 1221'am 347 Waba5h,.....1235pm 1215 pm 105 435 ‘Marion..... 220 il 905 540 . Alexandri, 400 .oo 300 640 AndersonJ. 500 e ) 7 25 pm Richmonad.. ... . .o 555 Indianapolis 6 40 T G 00 am 10 50 pm Cincinnatl,. «<T.., 'v..ic.. 8386 i , ‘GOING NORTH. ! Stations No.l ~ N 0.3 No. 5 NUE 2 Indiajgpolis 485 am 1230 pm +.eicavis cingpen Cincionatl-s 70 pm: 780 am .L..... 1.1111. - Ricimond. 1000 BEBS. oo U AnflersbnJ. 605 am 220 pm ....... T 2 am Mexandria. 645 | 805 ! ....... |Bl Marion ..... 7.45 427 persuie o +lO 08 ‘Wabash .... 858 556 215 pm 1215 pm’ NManchestr 9 34 641 3147 Warsaw.j...lo43 756 515 Seassstond Leésburg...ll-01 391 R 0 Rl Milford.... 11 20 841 @Ban oel B& O Crossll 25 8?1 A 8 faissdd] New Paris. 1138 041 1000 el Goshen.... 1210 pm 9 33)pm 140:pm . oLI uls Elkhart.... 1230 pm 435 am, 1....... Gua ik ¢ Close connections made at Goshen with the L S& M. S R. R ;at Milford with the B&O R R, ; at Wargaw with the P, Ft W & C R R; at North Manchester with the D & E RR; at Wabash with the T, W & W R R; at Marion with the P, C & St. - LRR. i ] . A.G. WELLS, Sup’t.., ey - Eesan e e ¥ i A, 3 =~ o Chicago, Rock Island 3 S [ $ ; B ; ! 3 PACIFIC RATLROAD. 1 . % 3 " A s i o 2 ¥ .5 [_. oo s i : '{JJ { The Direct Routefor ' | JOLIET, MORRIS, LASALLE, PERU, HENRY, LACON, - Peoria, Geneseo, Moline, Rockl%lnud, Davens part, Muscatine,"Waehinfiton. Towa City | Grinnell, Newton, Des'Moines, o 4°e 7 : & ‘Council Bluffs & Omaha . WITHOUT CHANGE OF QARS, ' Whete itjoins with the Union Pacifie Railway for Denver Salt Lake City, 'Sacramento, San F?;ans cisco, and | i 1 All Points West of the Pacific Cogist. __ Trainsleave Chicago Daily as follows : Omaha, Ledavenwort,hy&, Atchison Express, (Sunday oxc?ted)i 10.00 am Peru Accommodation (Sunday exc’ed) s.Copm Omaha Express (Saturdays excepted) 10.00'p me . KANSAS LINE. . eé’ll‘rll);“?’mg:ga.;\kocklelpng %P}éiflc Railroad ve now opened thei Divigion between ‘D q L slnth\.\lreswrn} Leavenworth, A%rh‘soh and Chicaga, £odist i i AR ; connecting -at Leavenworth with Kansas Pacific and Missouri Pacific Railroads. and at Atchison with Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Centralßranch, Union Pacific a.ns Atchison and Nehraska Railroads, for all pointsin « ' - et Kansas,lndian Territories, Colorado . oy »l-' un&’Ne*w MO.K(GO. J : : _ This companynas pmita fuli colaplement of Palace. Dnmginoom‘wéfislee;ping cars, which for external beauty and interior artaz.}zemenwrur ‘the comfort‘eon_v&l‘qn@e and Inxury cf passengers are unexcelled. “Wed" by any nther carsof the kind dn gheeworld. | vrocoh seds an @ Throu, .h'mqgmfbr a:la at ali the General By eOl RILIA R e g Oem RS ; 3 ien. Sapt. M. A-.;sl_llfl_!iveqn,l’xpg\h.ung. 1;737 Nebraska Ahead! THE B. & mflmumtcm‘:.um 1 The Best Agricultural and Country in Ameriea? i iR f;.‘!;: ,‘, 4 S e Good Lands ina Good Climate! Low pricee, Long Credit, Low Hares, & Freights, Buyers w®.Fur fall particulars applyto , = RS T G bl e S T L R U R R SRR e B BARS NE T p e e LN T R