The National Banner, Volume 12, Number 9, Ligonier, Noble County, 21 June 1877 — Page 2

=S - i e o e SRR ¥, ;.mwcud Proprietor? s . = = — §_‘§G(’;\';£ IND., JUNE 21st, 1877. ——‘———————‘—_________________————————-——"———'——_——_— < W man worthy of the office of President should be willing to hold it & connied w or placed there byfraud.”— i.S.GraNT, s

- ¥r is claited that no s\traxigerjfrs mdva‘%:inm’h attention in Eng32nd as Gen. Grant since the' visit-of Yhe Shah of Persia. o

. the second day of July the Postwifice' Department will .establish 299 mew money-order offices, of which shirdeen will be in Indiana. - '

| SExaToR CONKLING, of New York, %has sailed for Europe, to be gone sev#ral months. President-elect Tilden w7l sollow suit next month. .

- rmx brief but telling speech of Samwel J. Tilden, which we' publish else‘where in to-day’s-issue; not only deservesan attentive perusal but careful preservaiion. Itis just that kind of 3 document which ought to be read and ye-read at least four times a year,

.¥s SmrmwaN, secretary of the treasary,a Tag baby galvanizer in disguise ? ‘JIR is or not, he fs certainly dcine more toward reiidering resump‘ion odious than any|ofher agency yet «mpiored. The hard money press, east and west, is almos? s‘olidlil against his uwwarrsnied and totally ) njustifiable «umiraction of the lawful currency. The 'soundest financiers of the East ;‘fl-{ngnme his policy full of danger to “he commercial interests of the coun-

| Tmx BaxNER is pleased to observe “hat President Hayes is showing signs «f sirmyess in the advocacy of the rememetizingof silver. Reportsrelative 1o his true position on that question #:ave been of a condlicting character, so much so as to render it extremely diffiemlt to understand whether he-is for or agsinst the “dollar of the fathers.” Pulidic sentiment is so overwhelmingir in faver of undoing 'thg fraud of 1475 that it only Tequires continued amitation until the meeting of Congress in order to secure the desired remedy by legislation, _ o

~ Pexxsyrvaxiy will hold e tate jection next November. A SQpr me Judge, Treasurer of State, and' Andiar G@?fl'fl] are to be chosen. It is senerally believed that the Cameron wmbwd wounld like to see the State go demgeratic, as a rebuke to Hayes—for izl to retain Don Cameron in the war ae nent. " There is but one ~omsideration that may . induce a ohanee in this respect, and that is the Terention (I;?S the management of the /~iate Ireasury, which office the Cam“erons have vi 1v controlled in their Fflmfl ’if;“gor anumber of yea¥s. ' A CALIFORNIA paper says: Ap- . PEATIENCES inly indicate that the " oid men fimgl ground, and that any aAltempt 1o resume specie pixymentson ;S‘Em"ple zold basis will bring efeat tothe party that makesit. The Jegal tender wing of both parties seems Inclined 10 éomprémise on the silver Lmsis, and there are few, if any, of the neted hard-money advocates who seem amxious o go into a campaign with Fesmmpiion on 2 gold basis as a lively isswe. 11 is admitted by both parties I 3 ©khio thatthe South hasbeen “eliminated asa political factor,” at which =l rational men-deservedly rejoice.

> Tmx IndianapolisJournai states that =mnder the contract recently concluded % the Secretary of the Treasury with ihe syndicdie, the latter took an additiomal $23,000,000 of the 414 per cent. Jaam, making the total amount of those Lowds megotiated $200,000,000, Thus w 4 the funded debt of the United States Thsere are, in round numbers, $700,000,%&:flng 5 per cent. interest, $200,006 bearing 417 per cent., and about P0R000,600 bearing ¢ per cexi{;. ‘Allof “hese six per cents will be recalled and exchanzed for 4 per cents as soon as possibie, reducing the interest burden wnethird, as far as completed.

S=xaTor JONES, of Nevada, it isreported from Washington, is at pres«xi staying at the national capital enZaged In preparing a lengthy financial essxy, in the shape of his report as & member of the silver commission. In it he will allude to the great distress now prevailing among he idustrial classes of the country, =s shown by the vast numbers out of

=mployment, and the general reduc“Sion of wages by railroad and other ‘serporations. He will take the yiew that unless some,means are adopted io grestore confidence and activity in “msinéss eircles, the distress ‘and ruin vet to come upon the: country will be snparalieled. Senator Jones says that 1 does not look upon this great quesiiom as'a Republican—that it is not a guestion to talk of parties. His repert will, itis thought, be used as a «ampaign document in Ohio., It will be remembered that Senator Jones was creflited with the authorship/ of the hard money arguments employed Yy President Grant at the time of the gresi financial contest in Congress a féw years ago, and [that he is the wealthiest fman in the U. S. Senate.— He is strongly opposed to Sherman’s poliy of contracting the legal-tender currency, atd in favor of remonetizSpsiver. | o

. The season has now sufficiently hdéaaca’l %o submif of an accurate estimaate of the pi cts of the corn crop _in Ilneis, and the reports which we - print this morning embody the obserweiZons and judgmen;;)?lgf famers in - #very Oongressional District in the State. ¥ speaking, the qut- | S S 0 cirn s betlor than 1t has hben Sor mmany years at this season of the yeir, and the farmers have begun to count with ag:a‘:nty upon an extra - dmrge erop. same flattering ac-. wounfs ave received from the other out the West and Northwest winter m oats, grass, etc., are cioming for finely, and the crop @8 & whole seems certain to be consid-

the silver dollar, it is bub @ecessary of the leading journals, Easti#nd West, North and South, democratie, republican, or independent. Editgeials, communications, interviews, &e., alike attest the overwhelming sfrength of the people’s demand 'fo;fi?’doin g the mischievous legislation of 1873, and of ‘paving the way for a revival of commercial and industrial interests by utilizing our silver productions for the liquidation of debts and giving new life to labor and manufacture. . - Look wherever you may, and you will find publie men of every shade of opinion freely admitting the dire necessity of doing something to relieve the country of the fearful depreég,ion so keenly felt in every portion of the American-Union. Business men of varied experiencé readily unite in give ing utterance to this sentiment.. Laborers and mechanics.join in swelling ; ;che grand chorus, so that, for the first ‘time in many years, the people are | practically a unit.in the advocacy of a measure from which so much is expected as a remedy for the great evil that besets us as a nation. - Illlistrative of the absolute truthfulness of these '6bseryat'ibns is a Wash-. ington letter to the Indianapolis Journal from which’ we quote the following: Lo e

Gen. Tom Browne and Gen. M. C. Hunter have been here several days. ® % % Thesetwo generals and congressmen are very severe on Secretary Sherman’s fingncial policy. Both these gentlemen stated to your correspondent that they did not know a man in their respective districts who was not opposed to any further contraction, and who was notin favor of the remonetization of silver. They madg no exceptions' among either Republicans or Democrats. Gen. Hunter takesthe position that by remonetizing silver and making it the equal of gold as a legal-tender for all debts, public and private, .we. can resume specie paynients at once. - We produce the silver, and why not utilize it?. On our bond‘ed debt in Europe, National, State and corporate, we pay annually $lOO,000,000 interest in gold or its equivalent. While the balance of trade is in our favor we can easily pay this, but we.can pay iti-much easier by making, silver a legal-tender and giving it, for us, the value of gold, Great Britain, Germany, and some other countries to which we export largely, recognize the gold standard only.— “Whati we sell” to them would be at a gold valuation, while we would pay our ‘intérest account in silver.. In this way silver would be given an additional value, because there would be more demand for it, and as there would be, relatively a less demiand for gold the value of the two metals would approximate and give stability to a currency composed of what is now called a double standard, I may say that this is the position taken by a commission raised by Congress in the summer of 1876, whose report is now in the hands of the printer.” Goth General Hunter and General Browne express a determination to vote for an unconditional repeal of the resumption act, . .1 This ‘extract requires' mo comment.It speaks. for itself, and volumes:at that. The gold sharks have produced a union of two elements hitherto diametrically opposed to each éther. The advocates of coin (gold and silver) and the greenbackers are practically united in the support of the silver dollar, and this unionhas been brought about by the swinishness of the bondholders and their allies in demanding concessions that would at once prove destructive to the interests of the masses. These demands for still another pound of flesh have aroused popular indignation to such an extent as not only to render future ei’fiétions abortive but to jeopardize much that was generously granted before our modern Shylocks revealed their:true purposes. *

ACCORDINQ*TO CONTRACT. : That sound, eonservative and able’ journal, the St. Louis Republican, which has done more than: any otherwestern journal in combdting the false theory of an irredeemable paper cur: reney, tells the gold sharks- In‘,ver'z‘ plain and easily understood language that “the only business the people of ‘the United States have to do with na¢tional b"on’ds is to.pay them according ‘to the terms of the contract in ‘coin.’ “Silver dollars are ‘coin’ in.the mean‘ing of the law, and they may, there- ¢ fore, pay theése bonds in silvér dollars. It is none of their dutty to appreciate ‘the debt before they pay it by resolv“ing to'pay it in gold coin alone; that ‘sort of gratuitous generosity might ‘be agreeable to the bond-holders, but ‘it would be unjust to the bond-pay-‘ers; ;it'would bhe-more than the fiaw ‘requires besides. If silver is cheap, “the fact is not the fault of the people; ‘the cheapness is a fact which they ‘have a riglit to take advantage of in’ ‘paying their national debt. A debtor *is fairly entitled to all the privileges ¢ the contract allows in paying his ob‘ligations; he can not be held bound ¢ for one dollar more than the stipula- “ tion callg for, nor-be deprived 6f any: {"oplf'ion or liberty thatit permits. But ‘when },he holders of owr national ‘bonds /insist that the government “shall pay these obligations in gold ‘alone, worth 8 per cent. more than ‘silver, they simply declare that the “debtor shall pay $l,OBO for every $l,000 bonds it owes on the $2,000,000,~ ‘OOO of national debt and $160,000,000 ‘besides.” - This, the Indianapolis Sentinet says, the people are not disposed to do, and therefore demand that silver shall be remonetizéd and made a legal-tender équal with gold. = -

No more striking evidence. of. the waning power of Sgnator Morton can be found. than in his signal defeat over the Pension :Agency at Indianapolis. ‘Morton succeeded in having W. H. H Terrell—“ Buck” Terrell— re-appointed over the protests of Congressman Hanna, J. W. Gordon, and others. - The fires of personal hate were fully aroused and so great has hecame the pressure that Morton has been forced. to back down, and Gen. Kneffler, Hanna’s law partner, will succeed to Terrell’s place on ‘July Ist. ‘The fight has been bitter and long drawn . out. Morton goes to the wall and the Ben. Harrison element steps to the front of the Republican party ‘in Indififig. Sitting Bull Morton is rapidly losing his grip. —Kokomo Dispatch. - e : : » ¢ ot THe BANNER would be delighted to learn that Morton is *losing his grip” on the aclministration; but ia view of the acknowlédged fact that Gen Knefiler’s appointment was magde upon sory, it is said). of Senator Morton, we must_confess to some surprise at our

DEATH OF THREE EMINENT MEN. The papers announce the death on Sunday of three eminent Americans —John S. C. Abbott, of Connecticut, and ex-Senators Daniel D, Pratt and John Pettit, of this State; The Rev. John S. C. Abbo’st,‘ D. D., ’(lied iat his home, Fair Haven, Conn.,'on Sunday morning. He was born Septémber 18, 1805, at Brunswick, Me., and one of a large family, all of literary tastes, and of whom his brothers Jacob and Gorham and himself were the most widely known. He was graduated at Bowdoin College, in 1825, at the same time as - Longfellow, Dr. George Cheever, -Nathaniel Hawthorne and Jonathan Cilley. President Pierce and William Pitt Fessenden were-in college at the same time. : :

Mr. Abbott, as the author of numerous and widely-yead books—of which in all ke had. published nearly sixty volumes—was fanllllarlyik-nown toall America, young and old, as well as to thousands in Rurope, Asia and Africa, some of his works having been translated into fifteen or twenty languages. In 1868 he retired from the pulpit and settled at TFair Haven,: Conn., where he resided until the time of his death. For nearly a year he was confined to'his bed and daily expected death, but he kept up his labor nearly to the last. He leaves a wife and ten children. Of his daughters one married a son ef the late Dr. Gordon Buck, of New York city; one Oliver Johnson, and another Mr. Mead> oef the Boston TPublishing House of Dodd, Mead & Co. e * The death of ex-United States Senator Daniel D. Pratt; which occurred at his residence‘in Logansport on Suns day morning, was startlingly sudden, heart disease being the cause. Ie was sitting down, dictating to his daughter, Mrs. Huntington, apparent1y feeling as well as usual, when he gave a sudden ‘gasp, and before she could reach his side he was dead. Mr. Pratt was born in Palermo, Maine, in 1813." His parents'soon after removed to New York, where he was graduated -at” Hamiiton College in 1831. Inj 1832 he came to Indiana as-a school teacher, subsequently begixinipg the. study of the law and settling down to its practice at Logansport. Ile 'was. elected to the State Legislaturein 1851 and re-elected in 1853, and was Secre--tary of the Chicago Convention .in 1860. -In 1868 he was elected to Comngress from the (then) Eighth District, but resigned his seat on his election to the United States Senate in January, 1869, the Cumback-Baker feud ending in his choice as a candidate against Mr. Hendricks. At the expiration of his term in May, 1875. President Grant appointed him to the Commissionership of Internal Revenue, an office in Wwhich he was a few months later succeeded by General Raum. § - ‘

_ Ex-Senator, familiarly known in this State as Judge, Pettit died at his home in- Lafayptte last Sunday night. He ‘was bortrat Shekett’s Harbor, N. Y., in 1807, received a good education and studied law, removing to Indiana in 1831 and settling at Lafayette. He was-a member of the L.egislature and District-Attorney, served in Congress from 1843 to 1847 and in the Senate from 1853 to 1855, In 1850 he was a member of the State Constitutional Convention, ih 1852 a Fresidential Elector;;and in 1859 he wass appointed by President Buchanan to the ChiefJusticeship of Kansas. Ile also served in the Circuit and Supreme Courts of this State, and was last year renominated by the Democrats for the Supreme Judgeship in fthe Third District, but subsequently withdrawn on account of the excitement over scan-dals.-affecting the j \idi.ciary. .

Conviction of a “Rev.” Scoundrel. - The trial of Rev. McGhee, at Dixon, ‘IL, for wife-poisoning has concluded with a verdict of 14 years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. There could. be no doubt of his grailt. His wife died with symptoms of having been poisoned, and an analys;is of her stomach \by a chemist discovered in it the presence of strychnine. A druggist testified that McGhee brought strychnine of him twice, although! the prisoner swore to the contr:ary. - Then McGhee got his daughter, a. young lady of unsound mind, to co)p)y and sign a paper which he had prep:ared, contessing that she was the ‘cause of her mother’s death; and it was also in evidence that the reverend scoundrel twice tried to break jail. These were some of the links in g chain of circumstantial evidence which could not fail to impress all who heard or read it.with the certainty only short of absolute conviction that the ‘defendant was justly charged. His incentive for the crimeg ;seems to have been a desire to marey a comely member of this spiritual *flock, Miss Rilla Paddock, who reciprocated his affection, although it is not asserted that her conduct had been especially indiscreet. = Miss Paddock attended Mrs. McGhee during a part-of her last Illness, but the poison is believed to haye been administered by the hasband only. He may well congratulate himself that he escapes the gallows.—South Bend Tribune.

The Greenbackers of Maine. SKOWHEGAN, Me., June 15.—The State greenback convention met this morning, Solon Chase chairman. The attendance was very large. The chairman congratulated the conrvention upon the rapid spread of the principles represented by the platform unanimously adopted, demanding ‘the immediate repeal ot the resumption act of January 14, 1875; that the Government assume its sovereign function and furnish the people with currency based upon the faith and resources of the nation, in harmony with the genius of our Government, and adopted to the wants of legitimate business’; that as fast as practicable national banknotes be withdrawn and replaged by paper money issued by the government directly to the people, and be made a full legal tender for all debts, public and private, except when coin is in the contract; that this money shall be receivable for all duties, dues and taxes, and be interchangeable with low inferest bearing government bonds; that the Grovernment remonetize silver; that the present bonded debt to the country be funded as rapidly as possible into registered interchangeable bonds bearing a low rate of interest; that public domain should be reserved for actual settlers, and that there shall be retrenchmen t and economy in all the branches o 1 the public gervice, . State and county. . 1 |

Committees were appointed, and the Rev. H. E. Munson, of s3)kowhegan, was nominated for Govern.or.\ ] _ O et e s — | Harry/ Southgate, the Irdianapolis Indiana National bank robber, who, at the hour of high noon, got away with $25,000 of its cash, was eaught, has been tried and sentenced to seven gears in the penitentiary and fined 10;000. - The robbery took place jon the 21st day of March last. :

' SAMUEL J. TILDEN SPEAKS. A Calm Utterance that Will Find an Echo in All True Hearts, - At the reception given in honor of Indiana’s favorite son, ITon. Thomas A. Hendricks, by the Manhattan Club on Tuesday, June 12, Gov. Tilden was introduced as the first speaker, and said: : ‘ Mr. Presidenttand Gentlemen of the Manhattan Club: 1 accepted your invitation under the idea that this was to be a merely social meeting, the particular occasion of which was the presence in this city of Mr. Hendricks and of Gov. Robinson and Lieut.-Gov. ‘Dorsheimer. ' o

~ You are aware, I suppose, that one’ of your guests, Mr. Hendricks, embarks to-morrow -on an excursion to foreign lands, for rest and recreation. He will cafry with him, I am sure, our best wishes for ‘a prosperous voyage, for a pleasantivisit, and a safe return, and for the health and happi: ness of himself and family. [Applause.] I have been availing myself, for similar purposes, of a brief interval, and find myself now, with some reluctance, drawn away from this privacy to attend: this occasion. - But the occasion itself, and the apparent general expectation, seem to require that I should say a word in respect to public affairs, and especially that I sHould allude to the transaction which. in my judgment, is the'most portentous event in Aimerican history. [A hushed - expectancy here restrained the tendency to applause, which was just breaking out when Mr. Tilden proceeded.| , . Everybody knows that, after the recent elegtion, the men who were elect-’ ed by the people as President and Vice-President of -the United :States were . “counted out,”—[“Hear, ‘hear!” and' applause|—and. men who wereé not.elected were “counted in” and seated. {“Hear, hear!” “Yes! Yes!’ Applause.] I disclaim any thought of the personal wrong done to myself in this transaction. [“Hear, hearl!” (energetically) “Goodh Good!”] Not by any act or word of mine shall that be dwarfed or degraded into a personal grievance, which is, in’ truth, the greatest wrong that has stained. our national annals. ¥ Not one of the four millions, and a quarter of American citizens who gave us their votes bup experienced a wrong as great and as deep as 1. [“More!” Applause.] Not one of that minority who did not give us their votes, but, in the resuylting consequenceg of thisiact, will share in the mischiefs, if it is not redressed and punished. [Applause.] To every mdn, of the four and, a. quarter millions who were defrauded of the fruits of their elective franchise it i as great a wrong as'it is to me.. And no less to every man of the minority will the ultimate consequences extend. - Evils in government grow by sueccess and by impunity. They do not restrain themselves voluntfarily. They can: never be limited except by external forces. | . i

If the men in possession of the Government can, in one instance, maintain themselves in power against an adverse decision at the elections, such an example will be imitated. Témptation exists always. Devices fo give the color of law, and false pretences on which to found fraudulent decisions, *will not be wanting. The wrong will grow. into a practice, if condoned—if once condoned. : = - In other countries, in the Old World; changes in ‘the succession of Governments have usually been the result of fraud or force. We felicitated ourselves that here, through theiskill and patriotism and philanthropy of our forefathers, we had established a system of peaceful change tuirough the agency of the ballot box. This:is the first time in American history that this right of the people.has been impaired. It is thé first time.in American history that anybody has ever pretended that ‘the Government of this great country was handed over to any set of men through fraud. : [Ap+ plause.] ‘ T R B The question ‘now is whether our elective system, in its substance as well as its form, is to be maintained. This is the question of questions.— TUntil it 1s finally settled there can be no politics founded on interior guestions of administrative policy. 1t involves the fundamental right of the people. It involves the elective principle. It involves the whole system of popular government. 5 The people must signally condemn the great wrong which has been done tothem. They must strip the example of everything that can attract imitators. They must refuse a prospérous immunity to erime. :

*This is not all. The people will not be able to trust the authors or beneficiaries of the wrong to-devise remedies. " But whe¢n those who condemn the wrong shall have the power, they must devise the measure which shall render a repetition of the wrong ‘forever impossible. [Applause:] - . If my voice could reach throughout our country and be heard in its'remotest hamlet, I woudd say: “Be of good cheer. The republic will live. The institutions of our fathers are not to expire in shame./ The sovereignty’ of the people shall be rescued from this peril and re-established.”— [Applause.] il Successful wrong never appears so triumphant as on the very eve of its fall. - Seven years ago a corrupt dynas-’ ty culminated in its power over the million of people who live in the city of New York.. It had conquered or bribed, or flattered and won almost everybody into acquiescence. It appeared to beinvincible. A yearot two later its members were in the penitentiaries or in exile. History abounde® in similar examples. We must believe in the right and in the future. ?yir]‘eat and noble nation will not ver its political from its moral life. t r. Tilden’s -address was eagerly listeped to, and at its close was loudly applauded.

Extraerdinary Fecundity. i MoßraA, 111., June 13th.—Aside from the important question as to whether we are to have goed crops in this section the present season, the most interesting topic of conversation on the tapis just now is the fact that, within a week, Mrs. Remm, living about 15 miles east of town, has given birth to four boys; Mrs. Guthrie, residing near Mrs. Remm, to three girls; and Mrs. Kressler, living only a few miles from the latter, to two girls and a boy. The three mothers and ten babies are all doing well. L . A

- A very singular and rare occurrence transpired in Indianapolis last week. About two ths since Mr. John Grube, a young géntleman of respectability, and wedlth,\was secretly married to‘a¥oung J ewl3ll lady by a christian minister of that! ¢ity. The affair created considerable comment at the time, which has been intensified somewhat by the conversion of Grube to Judaism, and his going through the sacred rite of circumeision, the ceremony being performed by the Rev. Mr. Messing, the Jewish Rabbi of Indianapolis, i =

- With the green, stagnate water in the canal, the filth in the sewers and the numerous stench holes, make a visitor to Fort Wayne wonder how it is possible for the people to live a l‘eason through. Wouldn’t the cholera lay havoe in that city though? We imagine that the few citizens left would vote measures unanimously for water works.— Auburn Republican.

1f you are not cértain that your subscription to Tie BANNER is.paid fora little in advance, send a greenback to the publisher without delay,

el xE-unALLwLLE oS = The seventh annual nieeting of the North-Eastern Indiana Medical Association will be held here next Tuesday. . Messrs. Hallenbeck and Cassaday. held a temperance meeting in front of the Mitchell Block, on Main St., last Sunday afternoon.- The efforts of these gentlemen are being crowned with success in this city. The immediate results cannot be estimated in dollars and cents, and if these results prove permanent our- community will -be much the bétter for their labors here. Confirmed drunkards have been reclaimed; families that were divided by the demon -of intemperance have been reunited ; one saloon has ceased to deal in intoxicating: beverages, while its proprietor has donned the red ribbon and is manfully striving to free himself from the slimy coils of the poisonous ‘ worm of the still,” and scores of young men and boys have come out and shown to the world that they, too, have the courage to “dare fo do right.” 'We hope and pray that our eitizens will earnestly .strive for the maintenance and perpetuity of, the good work begun iu our midst. :

Dr. 8. T. Williams has received the appointment of physician and surgeon for the L. S. & M. S..R. R. Co. at this point. Theappointment is a good one, and should any of the employes of the road meet g'with' accidents at or near this place, or otherwise need the attention of a physician; they can rely upon kind and skillful treatment. Pike will dotubtless recover. Bixler has returned to his duties at Washington, but there is no knowing when he may return to the bedsid}e of his companion to inquire: “ Who’s been here since I’'s been gone ?”* e A daughter of Ed. Zebell, living north of the city, recently fell and broke her arm while playing near the Lutheran church. The fracture was adjusted by‘\{)r’s.'Wil!i'amsian(l W'-ilsdp, and the patient is doing well. ol W. F. ITadley, an }Xvilla merchant, lost & pocket book containing over $6O while in this city iast Friday. The wallet was picked up by Evans Waltman, who promptly restored it to its rightful owner. : . , Dogs must be muzzled, and horses and cattlé restrained from running at large, is the imperative *request”"of our City Marshal. Obey. . The Red-Ribbon: Club talk of cele‘brating the Fourth. - A meeting has been called to take the matter under advisement. - . | -y ; A new dry goods store is soon to be opened up-in this city. Messrs. Campbell Bro’s, of New York, are the pro-, prietors. et ! : The “ Adelphians,” .of Albion, are billed for dn entertainment here on the 50th inst. Lol s Mrs. P. C. Isbell, two miles east of this ¢ity, fell, last Friday afternoonj and broke her ankle. Dr. Williams was called to treat the case, and the' patient is doing well. = VINDEX. |

SWAN LOCALS. -~ ~ { — i Another week has passed awayé 11ts termination finds us so much nearer our eternal destiny. Itis a time for thought and retrospection. It is an appropriate moment to ask:* What good things have we done ?. What have we neglected ? Have we tried to steer our ship.axight? Tave we labored earnestly to. plant good seeds? Have we made an_ effort to check the progress of thelerring? Have we given a word of consolation to the discouraged and forlorn? ' Ilave we labored to malke home pleasant and happy ? Have we spoken. Kkindly to brother, sister? Havé we spoken words of cheer to the' aged and infirm ? . Have we'worked t§ divest ourselves of selfish and licéntious peissiqn§? Have we grown better and wiser? ‘Have we visited the sick and tried to comfort the fatherless? Have we spent time in planning how ,‘\".'efllgigh-lt‘ increase our neigllbor’s h‘appin“ess? ! Have: we appreciat,eda the beauties that surround us and rTealized the .power i\exbjbit'ed in: the construction- of this Idwer world? Or have we lived to gratify ourselves in things that are transient as the morning dew, and which not ‘only injure ourselves but mar the happiness of others? o .

The beautiful and brilliant display of aurora borealis in the nortliern sky, a few evenings since, frightened some people badly. It was fully developed, which caused: an®illumination of the whole heavens. - PR

It is strange, and yet true, that with all the facilities for obtaining an ordinary education, we not unfrequent1y meet individuals who are unable to read or write. Such a person we conversed with recently, and, upon his expressing his deep regret that he was unable to peruSe the columns of a newspaper, or write a letter to/ his distant friends,”we advised and assured him that-if he would improve all his leisure moments within the next year in-acquiring knowledge, he would then be able to do these things, which are so necessary, and which furnish an invaluable source of solid comfort. One greaf reason why young men and young women do not progress in knowledge and usefulness, is because they foolishly; waste the golden moments. | There is no excuse for ignorance in this day of the world. Solomon Baum, who ' has served faithfully |as clerk for the past; eight years in the store of Baum, Walters & Co., at Avilla, started for California last Sunday to visit friends. We af one time understood that he intended to remain there, but since we are informed that he will return in a few montlis. Sol. is a good citizen, and we are glad thiat he will scon be with us again. Avilla 'can not afford to Jose its best men. o e o

Those boys who carouse around after sunset, disturbing the citizens with their loud whoop and hoarse laugh, had better remain at home during the evening and read some useful work, relative to the duties of man. We need the services of every one in the battle for right, and these'boys who are now making themselves obnoxious can, if they will, develop their mental and moral powers, and become useful and influential men, = : The rain we.had a few days ago did corn, wheat, grass, &0., a vast amount of good, and cheeretl up morbid farm; ers. e A o J. B. Renkenberger and wife*contemplate visiting friends and relations in the Eastern States gomfiguime during the summer. We hope they willlcarry out their intentions, from the fact that they have laWored hatd for the last quarter of a century, ~?iml}ta. the hills of :fidiana. ,R&gxpaum;fi this kind would do them good. lA. R,

~ General Items. Gen. C. F. Her’mingsen; well known in years past in conneetion with the Walker expedition to Nicaragua, died in Washington on the 14th, aged 62 years. ‘ ' {

- Senator Bogy, lost $96,000 by the failure of the Commercial Fire Insurance Company, of St. Louis. His son, who managed the Senator’s interest, also lost ¢60.000. |= | o Moody and Sankey are to begin a new revival at Baltimore about September I,to last a month, and if successful longer. ' Afterwards the evangelists propose ‘resuming their work in Boston. : s .

It being warm enough for the Indians to!get out of the agencies, they naturally bend their giant intellects upon the extermination of the whites. Six" soldiers were killed in a battle near Cottonwood ‘Creek, Washington Territory, the redskins escaping with the loss of Young Joseph, a chief, and his squaw. ‘ S

The largest woman in the world, Fanny Wallace, died in Verhon county, Wis., June Ist. : She was 54 years old, seven ‘feet four inches high and weighed 585 pounds. Her coflin was seven feet eight incheslong, three and one-half feet in depth and four feet wide at the center. 1t required eight men, with block and tackle, to lower #he body into the grave. - The heat and drought in California are proving very destruetive to agricultural interests in that State.: Grains of all kinds are said to be burning up, and in some loecalities the stock is dying for want of pasture. Sheep are being driven to the mountains, thousands of them dying by the way, and this branch of husbandry especially has suffered a’'seviere blow.

At St. ‘Seholastique the belligerant Indians have taken possession of a stone building, and,’ preparatory to night sallies| against the neighboring churches, they hold a most devout and satisfaectory prayer-meeting. They have employed council, who divides his time between apathetic attempts to adjust matters and his clienfs go down in their/breech-clouts for fees.

Considerable excitement has been created in San Francisco and Portland by the receipt of news of a seridus uprising of Indians in Washington Territory. A 'dispat¢h from Lieut. Wilkinson at Walluia reports the murder of whites at Mt. ‘ldaho, and another dispatch tells of the massacre of settlers on Cottonwood Creek. Allavailable troops at Walla Walla have been hurried forward to the scene of the difliculties, and Gen Howard has telegraphed to Portland for reinforcements. - The garrison at Walla Walla are the only troops within: %everul days’ journey of Mt. Idaho, which is about sixty miles from Lewiston, on the Columbia‘River, but it is probable that there mill ‘be sufficient to hdld the savages in check until help arrives from Oregon and California. . - i T — HBUROPEAN WAR NOTES.

Rumors assigning a hostile attitude to Austria are again current in Lons don. Russia’s effort to secure the neutrality of Servia was abone thrown to the House of Hapsburg, but the pending arrangement for the marching of the Moscovite through Servia’s domain' has evoked from Austria a clearly-defined growl, upon which are based the stories that she will shake a gory fist under the nose of the Czar.

A disaster of magnitude is all that is needed to give the peace party in Constantinople a solid footing. Such a party has already been formed, with a member of the Grand Council at its head, and though his efforts in behalf of peace have thus far been overborne by the Sultan and his Ministers, it is believed that an important Russian victory would alter the phase of affairs and'incline the ears of the Parte to the proposition to invite mediation by some one of the European Powers.

~ It i 3 not improbable that the end of the Russo-Turkish war may be hastened by an utter' collapse of Turkish finances. The Porte was really in a bankrupt condition when it entered on the war, and its case seems to have been steadily growing worse in- this regard. It has literally no means and no credit, and seems to be depending entirely on forced loans to sustain itself. The resources of the people are as completely exhausted as those of the government, and as war cannot be carried on without the sinews of war it would seem as if Turkey had about reached .the end of her rope.— Indianapolis Journal. _ - _ By way of Constantinople accounts are received of a five-hours’ engagement near Delibaba, a few miles northwest of Toprak-Kale, between. the Turks and Russians, in which the latter, the attacking party, were repulsed. with severe loss, the Turks continuing to hold: their position. The Turkish Commander ‘was among the killed.— It is gefting to bé more and more evident that the forces in Armenia are too evenly matched in point of numbers to admit of decisive results at present, and that until the Russians are heavily reinforced they will be undble to make head -against the Turks inltheir fortified positions. ‘ i

Again the gallant Montenegrins have inflicted a crushing blow upon the Turks at the battle of Plawa, which was fought on Saturday last, in which- 3,000 Montenegrins, taking a position behind intrenchments on the mountain-side, four times repulsed the charges of 10,000 Turks with fearful slaughter. The enemy, demoralized, wavered for a moment. The Montenégrins took :advantage of it, instantly rushed from their intrench-ments,-and droveithem back with the bayonet until their retreat resembled arout. The handful of Montenegrin horsemen pursued them for miles until the road was lined with Turkish dead and wounded, and darkness alone saved them from extermination.

* A Fast Train Wrecked. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., June 14.—The fast train on the Pittsburg, Cincinnati and St. Louis Railroad, due here late last night, was wrecked a short distance east of this city by a switech being partly changed and a cross-tie wedged between the rails. The engine, baggage, express and mail cars were thrown from the track and badly damaged, but the passenger coaches and sleeping cars did not leave the track. Ernest B. Cole, postal clerk, was the only person seriously hurt, but a number received slight injuries. Every effort will be made to discover the perpetrators of the outrage and bring them to justice. e

Murdered in Cold Blood. LAWRENCEBURG, Ind., June 14th.— The citizens of this place were startled last night upon hearing the sound of a gun shot, and to learn that an old and highly respected colored man had been shot down like a dog by a young ‘negro lad of about 16 years of age. Upon further inquiry the following facts were ascertained: ;A young colored man by, the name of Monroe Terrell lived next door neighbor to anold gentleman by the name of Green Edwards, who besides his weakness from old age, has a maimed arm, which was useless to him, ' Terrell had a worthless cur, which continued to disturb the old gentleman’s slumbers by its continual barking. ; liast night the old gentleman went ot and threw at: the dog, whereupon young Terréll procured his shot gun, followed Edwards: to his door and blew his brqmi-oqfi._ Ifxe?rfi;" was arrested, and is now lying Jail, @ o = =

3 1 h s / HfiRIflBLE TRAGEDY IN lI.I.INOIS’. 5 A Wealthy oxh Farmer HKills fi\Wife and then Shoots Himself, |\

- BLOOMINGTON, 111., June 16.—Frederick Hendrix, aged fifty years, a rich farmer of Oldtown township, near this plade, in a fit of drunfien rage shot his wife dead last night land then shot himself. His jdead body was found to-day near a bay-stack close to the house. It appears that he had long been an unfaithful husband, and last night returned from Bloomington about dusk and told his wife, to whom he had been married twent-five years, that a lewd girl whom he had brought with him was to supply her place in the house. On a remark which she made, he kicked her, then drew.a revolver and commenced shooting a her, firing five shots, three of which took effect. She ran toward the gate and there fell weltering in-blood. A hired man named Daley witnessed the whole affaitr, but was deterred by fedr from stopping it. - lle communicated with the neighbors, who'began a search for Hendrix, who had made his escape after the murder, and at 7 o’clock this morning they found his dead body, as above stated, lying .beside a hay stack, a quarter of a mile from. the town with a buliet-hole in his "head and his hand grasping the revolver with which he had murdered his wife. Hendrix was a representative of the oldest|family in Illinois, and was well known in different portions of the State, of which .he had been a resident for thirty years. The greatest excitement prevails. This is the most horrible double tragedy that "ever occurred in Central Illinois.

_ Tne New Silver Policy, ; WASHINGTON, June 14.—Senator Stanley Matthews carnies away with -gim from Washington rhe' new silver olicy of the Administfation. It will make its first, appearance in authoritative shape in the planks of the Ohio Republican platform. This policy has been pretty well anticipated this week by the outgivings of the President and Secretary Sherman. . The President favors the remonetization of ‘the old legal-tender silver dollar, and the readoption of the double standard of gold and silver. Mr. Sherman, in a word, favers placing silver on a legaltender level with the United States Treasury notes. The restoration of the double standard as i,t;!exi'st'ed prior to 1873 is the comprehensive way in which the question goes into theé Ohio platform, and is the President’s way of putting it. : ; G

$60,000! ACHANCE 10 SECURR [T | SECOND -‘]'ranD Drawinfi

- KENTUCKY - Last Distribution ' COMPANY, Uxlrler arl Agt; of the chisratnre‘!'l)issgfl March 16th, 1869, for the benetit of the City ¢ Sclmql of Frankfort, ‘ = At Publie Library Hall, ~ LOUISVILLE, KY, '.| e . DA @ ; June 30, 77,

Positively 2 Postponement S3IO. 000 . CASH IN GIFTS.) New Organization, =~ = - | ~ Entirely New Management.' Farmers’ and Drovers’ Bank, Louisville, Ky., Depository. - : Dra.wmgsLeiahzed by the o e Courts of Kentucky. . The Kentucky »Cast Distribution Company has been' re-organized, and its franchises and privileges transferred to an Entire new zlompzm-y.g On -the 18th of May, under a Quo Warranto Suit, brought by the -Attorney-Gener-al, their Charter was sustained by the Court, and PECLARED LEGAL BEYOND QUESTION. = * Sy

READ THE LIST OF,GIFTS. 1 GRAND CASIE G1FT...5 . ciicoohads adane:sso,ooo 1 Gran@Oaßh Gt coi.sansiyinmssie svarsa226,ooo 1 Grand Oash Gt uii s - ciiiivsvsadiseiave 15,000 1/Grand Cash Gift. ... .o ol ciiiaiiase 10,000 8 Grand Cash Gifts, $5,000 each........... 15.000 5 Grand Cash Gifts, $2,000 each........... 10,000 20 Cash Gifts, 1,000 each................. 20,000 40 Cash Gifts. £5OO each................ .. 20,000 100 Cash Gifts; $2OO €ach..........kw.00ea. 20,000 300 Cash Gifts, $lOO each.cuovoite denasaa.- 30,000 500 Cash G(i}tt‘s. g 0 eache.c..oie iiiizovhs 29,000 6,000 Cash Gifts, $lO each.....ceuuuerenanr - §O,OOO 5,7375 Cash Gifts, amounting t0..........:5310,000 Whole Tickets $lO, Halves $5, Quarters §2.50. ~ 11Tickets $lOO, 3314 Tickets $3OO, 563 : i ~ Tickets $5OO. - , ~ All Prizes paid on presentation after fhe 'Drawing, and Lists fl,lrnishl_ed?brompfly. e Whole Tickets $10; Halves $5; Quarters $2.50; 11 Tickets $100; 33% Tickets $3OO. 567 Tickels All commenications nfid‘ordg.re for tickets and applicmun forfggenqles should be adaressed to - G. W. Barrow & Co., GENERAL MANAGERS, ' 73t Courier-Journal Building, Louisville, Ky. ERRORS OF YOUTH. A GENTLEMAN who suffered for years from ) Nemunnebfl;’?. Premature '.Dw. and all the effecte of youthful indiseretion will, for the sake oh&f!;gdnig hm%y, send free to all who need i, | "E“i;’* mfiztgt irectibn for fim%\%hfic ‘%mi. gfil remed -b{!r_hph;hfl,w: _oured, - Sufferers wishing to prof ‘.»:bx:;:d,v‘e iser’s experience ‘can do 8o by addressing in perfect cont s\k%, e ~ JJOHN B. OGDEN, 42 Cedar Bt., New York] cae o BN SRR ee

| BNGBL & CO'S ADVERTISEMENT. e LARGEST AND LEADING CLOTHING AND HAT HOUSE IN .| NOBLE AND ADJOINING COUNTIES, ~ To all who wish to buy good Bl 1 8 B | R N W:Ve -can_j show the L:U‘ggs’it and Most Complete Stock of Men’s, Youths’

~ and Boys’ Clothing of all Kinds, AND AT PRICES WE D ECEY eomrn}fl;m. We,'{Let ‘Oiu*;(}iobdsvSpeak Tor »Thémsg\l;ves.v . oatr alvp INSPECT OUR STOCK. \\{ . ENGEL&CO., e Tmtatae i wirder 0 | _ Kendallyille, Ind.

The following dispatches have been received at the home office of the Walter A. Wood M. &R. M. Co.: : b L THE FIRST WORK OF THE o B st oty % A . i . - KT QAT Pl Al b ‘ Walter A. Wood Self-Binding Harvester W e ' : : il | \ FOR THE YEAR OF 1877, te i e TELEGIMPHJ o L | | s , " DALLAS, Texas, May 16th, 1877. WALTER A.WOOD, President:’ = ' : 2 : ‘We have two Binders running inf t);trley— most too-green to cut—some heavy and some very thin. Both doing well, : - T i [Signedy. -.. i R. V. TOMPKINS. ! s i oo b 0 NEw BRAUNFELS, Texas, May 18th, 1877, "WALTER A, WOOD; President: . . A R - Hurrah for the Wood Self-Binding Harvester! Col. Cunningham, who bought Binder last year, bought another this. Put it up himself. Ilas been ! running the past five days with perfect satisfaction. _ Syl e . [Signed] - : TIPS, CLEMENS & FI\AUST. ‘ . L ' DALLAS, Texas, May 24, 1877, - - I have reportsto-day from seventeen Binders sold.this season. * All’ doing splendid. - R. V. TOMPKINS. ] 4»' P Lo : 'NEW BRAUNI"ELS, Tegtas, May*24‘, 1877. ‘ ¢ . ¢ Four new. Binders started. All domng well,! - ‘ i e TIPS, CLEMENS & FAUST. o . e ! ol | SHERMAN, 'l?exas,; May 24, 1877. { Started one Binder in barley to-day. Doing well.| s 4 ; | e e S THOS. FORBES & CO. | | ' - oot e ' ¥ The ‘above jare only a part of the favorable reports that come i from 'lF'exas, where the Machines have been in use the = . past two weeks, but is sufficient to give an idea , | offthe wonderful operation of this yem’s ' o w s o Hiapvedters Siad Bimders, S : One of these Machines can be seen in working order by callG - . ing at my warehouse. . L Every Machine Fully Warranted. o F()If toi‘ms'm?d prices, call on or aiddress: . U JOFIN WEIR, LBl e ILigonier, Indiana.

THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY {1 aaNOINE ke gy L L. ne " Vibrator” Threshing Machines,

S +——CONSISTING OF—: ‘q L o ( ‘Complete T orsc-Power Establish- | -ment, with:24-ineh,’ 28-inch and 32-inch Cylinders, and 6,8, 10 or 12 Horse Powers to match, - Two Styles of Mounted Horse ‘Pows ers 3 our improwed ‘“T'riple Gear,”and improved “Spur Speed” (Woodbury. style), both kinds mounted on tojr wheels, and special sizes made | for 6,8, 10 or 12 Horses. ey 3 ? Compiete Steam Power Qutfits; our | unrivaled “Vibrator”: Separators made expressly | for steam power, with 32-inch Cylinder and 44-inch Separator, or 36-inch Cylinder and 48-inch Separa- | ting cleaning parts, with all the other parts pro- | portionately capacious and full of *‘businéss;” also, our matchles STEAM THRESHER EN-J GINES, of our own make, beyond rivalry in Pows- i er, Durability, Eaey Firing, Beauty of' Design,' Perfect Workmanship, Elegant Finish, complete ! in every detail, and in all respects a 11t companjon l for ouyr celebrated Steam Separator. 4 l Our ““Vibrator” Separators ‘“‘alone,” made ex?reSsly for Steam Power, and to match to l and by all other make of Engines, also, perfectly | adapted to go with any and all: other make of, Horse Powers; four sizes, ranging from 24 to 36-,[ inch length of Cylinder, and 36 to 48 inches width of Separating parts. : ~ : " The World-Wide Reputation of our ‘matchless ““Vibrator” Threshers for rapid threshing, perfect saving,iadmirablé cleaning. no wastage, cleanliness, economy in repairs, durahillty.l] ease of management, and & general superioriti in | various other rgspects, 18 now fully eswablished | a.ud:firen_erallyre agrized; . o ' The Acknowledged Head and Front of Grain Threshers, and especially superiori if Elr;tin be damp or wet, while for Fiax, Timo- | Thy, and like Seeds, no. other maghine can truth-| Jully jf;lai'm aAnY COMPAriSoN. g Yoo e - EA & ‘ ¥y ~Th -hv P The Genuine 'Vibrator' Threshers |

| : | ARE MADE ONLY BY 3 P ~ NICHOLS, SHEPARD & CO., Battle Creek, Mich. 'Thé{ or any of theirregnlar anthorized Dealers, -fnrnigh Tlustrated Pamphlets, Price lists and “full particulars, free, o application. : 6-2 m, ‘ FOTTBZY e HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS, ("":'-:’”; : ‘:‘ ,«,:..\;,; R }. . ’ .‘ / WY WY YL - RN (| : P e e ) Ay aluly S AV 5 . Will oure or prevent Disease. § No Honrsr will die of Corrc, Borls or Lung Fr: VER, if Foutz's Powders are used in time. Foutz’sPowders willcure and,{)revent Hoa CHOLERA Foutz's Powders will prevent GArzs 1N FowL, es pql?lally‘ Turkgya. : sSR : : Foutz’s Powders wili increase the quantity of milk :m?l g-'emg twenty per cent., and make the butter firm an eel = 2 = 3 A Foutz’s Powders will cure or prevent almost EVERY DiseAsg that Horses and Cattle are heir to. i JFourz’s POWDERS WILL GIVE SATISFACTION. - Sold everywhere. B g : - DAVIDE ¥OUTZ, Proprietor, : : = it i_.mmoa,n.ud. L ALL EINDS - T.egal Blanks POR SALE AT THIS ORFICE. SOniRGE R ees s e e i L

oy & : iik ASK the recovered Sreersrerwrwrewrew—aa dyspeptics, bilious »"S l MMO N S \sufferers, victims of feN e % ver and ague, the mer- : é 7 g?‘ ' curial diseased paLo \\‘ 7 tient, how they recovAT A TR cred health, cheerful -————-——-——-—-{—E spirits and good appeREGULATOR AZDaagizae i Nl B 4Ly hy taking SiMMONS’ WS ~ @5 Liver REGULATOR. | The Chea'pest.gureét and Best Family. Medl’clne‘ 5 in the World! A For DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION, Jaundice. Bilious Attacks, SICK. HEADACHE, Colic, Depression of Spirits, SOUR STOMACH, Heart Burn, &c., &c. 2 | ; This unrivalled Southern Remegl is warranted not to contain a single particle of Mercury, or any injurious mineral substance, but is

, " ~ PURELY VEGETABLE. ‘| Containing those Southern Roots and Herbs, - which an allwise Providence has placed in coun- . tries where Liver Diseases most prevail. It will ‘ cure all Diseases caused by Deérangement of the Liver and Bowels. : - The SYMPTOMS of Liver Complaint are a bitter or bad taste in the mouth; Pain in the Back, ! Sides or Joints, often mistaken for Rheumatism; - Sour Stomach,Loss of Appetite ; Bowels alternately _costive and lax; Headache; Loss of Memor‘{. with ‘a painful sensation of having failed to do something which ought to have been done; Debility, Low Spirits, & thick yellow appearance of the lSkin and eyes,a dry Cough often mistaken for | Consum_%)tion. G _ Sometimes many ot these s{mptoms attend the . disease, at others very'few; but the LIVER, the largest organ‘in the qugt. is fienerally the seat ot the digease, and if not egu ated in time, great ° suffering, wretchedness and Death will ensue. ' . I can recommend as an efficacious remedy for disease of th%eLiver.. Heartbarn and D{;pepsia. Simmons’ Liver Regulator. Lrwis G. WUNDEK,. éfi?.‘igi{astet Street, Assistant Post Master, Philaelphia. bl : *“We have tested its virtues, personall% ?d know that for Dyspepsia, Biliousness,and Throbbing Headache, it is the best medicine the world | ever faw, We have tried forty other remedies before Simmons’ Liver Regulator. but none of them gave us more than tem&)omry relief; but the Regulator not only relieved, but cured ns,?—Ep, TrLEGRAPH AND MESsENGER, Macen, Ga. ¥

Nothing is 80 unpleasant, nothing so common ag-bad breathyand in nearly every case iticomes from the stomach, and can be so ensil{ corrected if you will take Simmons’ Liver Regulator. Do noi negleet so sure a remedy for this repulsive disorder, It will also improve your Appetite, Complexion, and general health: SICK HEADACHE! This distressing afiliction eccurs most freguently. The disturbance of the Stomach, arising from the imperfetly digested contents, causes a severe pain in the head,jaccompanied with disagreeable nausea, and this constitutes what is Ponularly known ns.elicx headache, For prompt relief | : | ) Take Simmons'Liver Regulator, i or Medicine, v It contains four medical elements, never nnited in the same happy ?ro(?ortion in any.othez'i)repnration, viz: a gient e Cathartic, a wonderful Tonie, an uneéxceptionable Alterative and certainCor- . rective of all impurities of the body. Such signal success has attended its use, that itis now _ regarded as the : i EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC ; A As a Remedy in . MALARIOUS FEVERS, nofm, COMPLAINTS, DYSPEPSIA, MENTAL DEPRESSION, RESTLESSNESS, JAI?IDIOE, NAUSEA, SICK HEADACHE, JCOLIC, CONSTIPATION and DIGIGUBRINE ] ~ IT HAS NO EQUAL. . A‘\%ed_ with this ANTIDOTE, all climates and Sar A m;;;di s Pt Bowet ear, a rem n Malarions : : Complaints, Restlessness, Jaundice, Nanses. T Y LA ! i *‘m“ 2 If"r‘kli'ffiz:;jf{:a“‘; Sud R eN G e “‘el \t@f‘cfisfi&