The National Banner, Volume 13, Number 7, Ligonier, Noble County, 6 June 1878 — Page 1
VOII. 13
© The Patiomal Bawwer : PUBLISHED BY | e -JOIIN B. STOLL, LIGONIER, NOBLE COUNTY,IND. k) ';S/' o~ E z ‘yYerms of Subseription: - | One year,m»u.wance,.------------¥----4----~3200 | Six monthg, in adVANCe.cceeaurnis nsncnrans 100; leven copies to one address, one year, ...... 2000 o ag-Subseribers outside of Noble county are } ¢iarged -10 cents extra [per year] for postage, which is prepaid by the publisher. : - STRAUS BROS., ',,_Q'rtt_ttnaact a general banking business on vorable terma. i Farmers’ & Commercial paper disconnted at reaspnable rates. . Buy and scll Real Estate, and all those wishing largeor small tracts will dowell to see us beforeapu_rchaling. ; : Ne{]’otiable Yioans, from one to five years’ . _time, secured by first mortgage -on im- - proved farms. . ! 4 Agents for first-class Fire and Life Insurance Companies. Déalers in s A, " Deaters i 1 Grain, Seeds, Wool, &c. ;' sgpecial Notice to Farmers.”’ " Grain placed i our name In L. 8. &M.B. R. R. Elevators is at owner’s risk in case of fire, if € not actually sold to us. When requested, we will snsupe same in first-class Companies. - Wooll Wooll Wool!l Wooll We have an order for B 1,000,000 : - —Pounds Of~— - W© 3 X v *and will give the o 1 ¢ Highest Market Price Fi); all grades: It will pay you to see us before selling. . Ligonier, Ind., May 31, 1878.-27-Iy~ ; BANKING HOUSE : : 1 i K ; —oF— | e e BOL. MIER, Conrad’s New Brick Brock, LIGONIER, IND’NA. ‘Money loaned on long and shorttime. . Notesdiscounted at reagonable rates. i Monies received on depositand intercetallowed " | on gpecified time, i | . Exchange bought and sold, and Foreign Drafts drgwn on principalcities of Europe, ' 8-2 C o THE FARMERS : You will please take notice that I am stillen= gaged in buyin&z wheat, for which I pay the highest market price. : ; Ft‘ you do not find me on the stieet, call before selling, at 1y Banking Office, in Conrad’s Brick Block. : . SOL, MIER. ‘ Ligonien,lndmna.May3.lB’&7.—tf ‘ ANDREW JACIKSON, ' JUSTICE of the PEACE, !, ’ i Ligonier, Indiana, . ' Bpecial attention given to collectibns and convey- | ancing. - Office with D, C.Vancamp, over Beazel’s | Hgrness shop. ’ i . 13-2 "V[ON EY T 0 LOAN, in small or large IYL~ ampunte; on long or'short time. - : ISAAC E. KNISELY, 1 Attorney at Law, Ligonier, Tndiana. H. G. ZIMMERMAN, S . D. W.GREEN, : Notary Public. " Justics of the Peacc. @ i ZINMERMAN & GRUEN, . Office in Landon’s Block, Ligonier, Ind. 12; Dr. J. . GARE, ;7 Physician and Surgeon.| . Prompt attention to calls day and night, Oflice over Eldred’s Drug Store, I“igonier. Ind 19, . ¢. VANCAMP, | I "ATTORNEY -AT LAW, : . Ligonifer, t : : Endianna, ‘Bpecial attention given to collectionsand convey-. ancing, and the writing of deeds, mortgages, and contracts, Legal business promptly attended to. Office over Beazel’s Harness establishment, 9-50 7. ALBERT BANTA, Justiceof the Peace & Conveyancer. LIGONIER, INDIANA. ' ‘ . Specialattention given toconveyancingandcol‘.ections. Deeds, Bauds and Mortgages drawnup . and all legal business attended to promptly and accurately. May 15187315-8-8 : 81, WAREMAN, TnsuranceAgt &Justice of the Peace KENDALLVILLE, INDIANA. Office with A. A. Chapin, Mitchell Block. Will 3 ecelve subscriptions to Tue NATIONAL BANNER. G, W. CARR, Physician and Surgeon, LIGONIER - - = = - « IND., Willpromptlyattend ail calls intrustedto him. Office and residence on 4th Street. ) : J. M., TEAL, : DBMNTIAT, : Rooms over L. E. Pike’s Grocery, o Corner of Main and Mitchell Streets, ‘ I’(.rppos'ise the Post Offlce; Kendallville, Ind. All work warranted. =@ s Kandallville, May/1, 1874. g ————————————————————————————————e . | & e lanohing G LR Laughing Gas!| | I,\'/)‘ t“%\ T AN\ ) ~¥OR THE--24 PAINLESS prRAcTioN ks 7 Lo 2 A TEETH Ko A o {._: 1 <ll /¥ P | y ‘ - NG 7| D Gants’ Offce. £ ' s Filling Teeth a Specialty ' Ligonier, Ind., Nov. 11, 1875." 3 1-1 i O.V.ZNes, DEALERIN MONUMENTS, - Vaults, Tombstones, AND BUILDING STONES, - J. W. HIGGINBOTHAM, 2 ! & 3 : ,' E(" ,"-r 9 fl ¥ : &/ BN fPf et | CRel o .V ) | “‘ & P"J ) \‘.‘ t"i.- - ’ o SR S @ i G, r"i‘%";t;\’ -m s % ;:" & 'e O e i MMOET . %1 A T » WATCH-MAKER, R » B T 2 JEWELER, ” "1t ’“’“‘v ” s 6'% ;Zi‘&‘ ‘i ~ e w%zéwn-.??;;&‘rwtsgz%f u“hgf:w{ N I LT b i s e 5‘ ‘“‘:jy rmr"n’,i“%q‘ #l:Hfiy»(flx£‘4, &J‘," nted | Y a 1 mzarug & Morris’ ‘celel wn ;) Apastacie %&fiwgfl%"*fi{‘%@%%{
" VISITING: CARDS, ‘elegant\‘sfifix' name, 85¢., 50 for 20c., 25 for 10c, - ples for a green stamp. Agents wanted. Outfit 13¢. You can make money 5 { Address, e 2 S 21-1 y EMIL E. RETTIG, Seymour, Ind.. Bakers' & Grocers, CavinStreet,Ligonier,lndian Fresh Biread,Pies, Cakes,&c. Choice Grdccrie_s.. Provisiong, Yankee Notione & the highest cash price paid for cormhl'g produce. Mayl3,’6B-t1 : SACKBRO'S N AR AIST AT L% TRI S MY AAY. o 1 W. A, BROWN & SON'S. ey % i o " & 4 : ) Furnifure avd Coffin Ware Rooms. . CHAMBER & PARLOR SUITS .. Andall other kinds of Furniture. Woo! Mattresses, Spring Bottoms, Chromos, Brackets, Picture Frames, &c. A L i J. :: i Undertaking Department Cnflhg and Caskets always kept on hand, ready for tYimming. Alsoladics’and gént’s Shronds, very beautiful and cheap.. Good Hearge = - / in readiness whendesired. : " Remember: Sign of the Big Chair, 33 Uavin Street, : : Ligonier, Ind . October 25, 1877,-12-27-1y § . b e ; TRUTHS, | Hop Bitters are the best and purest Bitfers " ever made. They are compounded from Ifops, Buchun, Mandrake and Dandelion,—the otdest,best and most valuable medicines in the world and conLz;.]n all the best and;most curative properties of'all other Bitters, being thc}greatcst Blood Purifier, Laver Regulator, and Life and Health Restoring Agent on darth. No disease or ill hcalth ecan poesibly long exist where these Bitters are nsed, o varied and perfect are the §- operationg.” Lo ; i They give new life and vigor to the aged and infirm. To all whose employments cause ir-§ regularity of the bowels or urinary organs. or who require an appetizer, tonic and mild St'mulant, these Bitters are invaluable,being high1y curative, tonic and stimulating, without in- § } taxicating. . No matter what yeur feelings or gymptoms are, what the disease or: ailment is. use IHop Bitters: Don’t wait until' you are sick, bup if you only fecl bad or miserable nse the Bitters at once. It may save your life. Handreds have | be¢n saved by go doing. ¥ 830 will ‘be paid for a case they.wiil not cure or help. Do not” suffer yourself or let your friends 2. suffer, bat uge and urge them to use Hop Bitters. ;i feoody Remember,;Hop Bitters is no vile, drngged, drunken nostraom, buat the purest and best medicine ever made; the “Invalid’s Kriend # | and IHope.” and no person or family shonld be § without them. Try the bitters to-day. - Try Hop Cough' Cure and Pain Relief. - For garr vy C. Erpzep & Son axp Scofr & SANDROOX, LiGoNIER. 2.im
OU R COMBINED'CATALOGUE FOR 1878 —OF— % Everything £ Garden JUlng & - Numbering 175 pages, with* Colored Plate, ) SENT FREE / To our customers of past years,-and ‘to all purchagers of our hooks, either GARDENING FOR PROFIT, PRACTICAL FLORICULTURE, or GARDENING ror PLEQS- ‘ URE (price $1.50 each, prcpaid.})fi’mafl)u To others, on receipt of 25¢. “P’lain Plant or i Seed Catalogues, without Plate, free to all: g \ 8 g ] Peter HENDERSON & Co., Seedsmen, Market Gardners and Florists, 385 Cortlandt St., New York. M QR AT YOUR A GREENHOUSE *%oom For ®K1.60 we will send free by mail either of the helow-named collections, all’ distinet varieties: 8 Abutilous, or 4 Azpleas, j 2 Begonias, or 3 Camelliag, s g 2 Caladiums (fancy), or 8 Carnations, (monthly), A 12 Chrysanthemums, or 12 Colens, . | 8 Centaureas, or 8 ot her white-leaved plants, : 8 Dahlias, or 8 Diasthus (uew Japan), 8 Ferns, 8 Mossces, or 8 Fuchsias, - 8 Geraniums, Fancy, 8 Variegated; or 8 © Tlvy-leaved, . 3700 4-Gloxinag, 8 Gladiolus, or 8 Tuberoses, (Pearly, . ) 4 Grape Vines, 4 Honeysuckles, 4 Hardy ! Shrubs, B R 8 Helliotropes, 8 Lantanag, or & Petunias, 8 Pansies (new German), or 8 Salvias, i 8 Roses, -Monthly, 8 Hardy Hybrid, or 4 2 Climbing, B 8 Violet, scented, or 8 Daisies, English, 12 Scarcer Bedding, or 12 Scareér Greenhouse Piants, ‘i 5 16 Verbenas, distinet and splendid sorts, 25 Varieties of Flower, or 20 varieties of - Vegetable Sceds, A i or by EXPRESS, buyer to pay charges, . ' 3 collections for §2; 5 for §3; 9 for §5; 12 for $6; 14 for $7; 18 for $10; ‘or the full collection of 350 varieties:of Planig and Sceds —sufficient to stock a greenhouse and garden—for §25, to our book *‘ Garaening for Pleasure” angd Catalogue offered above, [value $1.75] will be added. - Peter Henderson & Co, 0 e : i 35 Cortlandt Str., N. Y. D ARTRINGIE G
o - Y R exces i 79, leasant g;tgr o uratine 500 A e\\et%
Or Sugar-Coated, Coneontrated, Root and Herbal Juice, Anti-Bilious Granules. THE “LITTLE GIANT CATHARTIO, or Mulium in Parvo Fhysic. § . ; ; 2
The novelty of modern Medical, Chemical, and Pharmaceutical Science. No use of any longeyr faking the large, repulsive, mu.li nauseous pills, composed of cheap, erude, and bulky ingiecdients, when we can, by a carveful application of chemical science, exfract all the cathartic aud other medicinal. properties from the most viluable roots and herbs, and concentrate them inio a minute Granule, scarcely largor thair a mustard seed, that can be readily swallowed by those of the most sensitive stomachs and fastidious tastes, Each liltle Purgative Peilict Aepresents, in a most concentrated form, as much cathartiec power as is embodied in any of ilLo large pills found for sale in drug-shops. From their wonderful cathartic power, in comparison to their size, people who have not tried them are agt to suppose that they are harsh or drastic in effect: but suchis not atall the case, the different active medicinal principles of whic{x they are composed being so harmonized and modified, one by the otficrs, as to produce 4 ¥ROSL se'archinf and thorough, vet® ?eutly and kindly opo;rating, cathaigic.’ | $5OO Reward is heréby offered hy the proprietor of these Pellets, to any chemist who, u];on analysis, will find in them any ¢alomel or other forms of mercury, mincral poison, or inJurious drug. 1 { : Being entirely vegetable, no';lparticu!ar care is required while using them. They o‘)cr-. ‘ ate without disturbance to gxe constitution,; diet, or occufation. For Jaundice, Hoeadacho, Constipation, Impure liloo&, Pain in the Shoulders, ightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eruectations from the Stomach, Bad. tasto in tho mouth, Bilious attacks, Pain in ree g’lon of Kidneys, Interual ¥Fever, loated feeling about Stomach,Rßush 0f Blood to lifoad, ll}fih-co‘lorud: Urine, Unsociability and Giloomy E‘orehfidmfis, take Br. Piorce’s Please ant Pm;flnt ve Pellets. Inexplanation of -the, remedial power of my Purgative Pellets - OVeY Bo great a variety of diseases, Iwigh 1o say that their action upon the animzl economy s universal, nota sland or tissue esca‘Plug thelr sanative ime. ’ ?ron. : Ap{e o€s not impair the pragemes of ‘these Pellels. They are suzar-coatad and ine closed 1o glass botuosg their virtues being there< by préserved unimpaired forany-length of time,’ in any climate, g 0 that they dre alwavs fresh m‘d reliable. This is not the case with those pills which are put up in cheap wooden or paste boxes, . Recolleot thut for all disa eases wi a Laxative, Alterative, or YP‘nrfiut ve, is indicatel, thess Jitle Pellots - will LE ve the most perfees sutisfaction to all who ‘use them, 2 R ¢ They are sold by all Druggists ay 25 cents a bottlo. Wi o §! A 2 - X 4 e s e [ i it 73 R B o | A BOOK of nearly 5) MARRIAGE::. o e e e s o rualy secrets which th - O = B & ) ma ?*‘&w ’fi’; Seidd | PR WAk § Wiov iocuro diseases. Hunc, ikl v Slanabusnee e D e iateus iSRRI R O
IS RE ED BY ALL Physicians. = Varrey Stoeanm, Queens Co'.mvlsland, N ¥, Me. H, R. STivENs:— M Dear Sir,—ll take the pleasure of writing you a small cirtificate coneerning Vegetinme prepared you. I have been a sufferer with the dyspepsia for over 40 years, and have had the chronic diartheea for over 6 months, and hawe tried most everything; was given up to die, and did not expect to live from day to day, and no physician could touch my case. I saw your Vegetine recommended to care Dyspepsia. I commenced using it, and I continued doing go, and am now a well woman and restored to perfect health, All who are afflicted with this terrible disezse, I would kindly recommend to try it for the benefit of their health, and it is excelleut fur a blood puritier. AL o By Dr. T B, Forbes. M. D., for ; Mgzs. Ww. 1. Fornrs. VeGeTing. - When the blood becomes lifeless and stagnant, either from change of weather or of climate, want of exercige, irtegular diet, or any Jther cause, the Vegetine will renew the blood, cairy off the putrid humors, cleanse the stomach, regulate the bowels, and impart a tone of vigor to vhe whole body, ¢ . : G e - VEGETINE VEGETI? . FOR CANCERS AND Cancerous Humors. The Doctor’s Tertificate. T Read It. ¢ ASHLEYS 'ashingtop_&ln.. 111, Jdn. 14, 1878, i Mz. 11, R. STEVENSS . ot Dear Sir,~~This 18 to~ecrtify that I had been suffering from a Roge Canger y right breast, which grew very rapidly, and all my friends had ‘given me up to die, when 1 heard of your medi. cine, Vegetine, recommended for Cancer and Cancerous ilumors. 1 commenced to take it, and soon found myeself beginning to feel better; my health and spirits both felt the benign inflnence which it éxerted, avd in a few months from the time Icommenced the useé of the Vegetine, the Cancer came out almost bedily. : ' CarriE DEBORREST. I certify that I am personally acquainted with Mrs, DeForrest, and cousider her one of our very best women, . Dgr.S. H. FLowEes. ALn Diseases o 8 Tur Broovn,—lf Vegétine will relieve pain, cleanse, purify, and cure euch diseases, restoring the patient to perfect health after trying different physicians, many remedies. suffering for years, ig it not conclugive. proof, if yon are a sufferer, you can be cured? Why is this’ medicine performing guch great cures? It works in/the blood, in the circulating fluid, I{ can truly b called the: Great Blood Puorifier. The great gource of disease originates in ithe blooq, and no medicine that does not act directly upon it, to purify and renovate, bas any just claim upon public attention. < J l
VEGETINE - i . I Regard it'as a Valuable ¢ FAMILY MEDICINE,o Bl e - dan, 1, 1878. H. R. Strvens, EsqQ.:l— . : - Dear Sir,—T take pleasure in saying, that I have used the Vegetine in my family with good results, and I have knéwn of geveral cases of remarkable cure effected hy it. I repard it as a valaable family medicine, =~ Yours truly, - i ‘ Rev, WM, -MoDonvALD. - The Rev. Wm, McDonald is we!l known throngh the Unifed States ag & minister in the Methodist Church, - ; TuousanDs SPEAK.—Vegetine i 3 acknowledged and recommended by physicians and apothecaries to be the best purifier and cleanser of the blood yet discovered; and thousands spesk in its praise who have Deey restored to health, - : - VEGETINE
The Di. ID’s Have Xt. H. R. StEvens, Esq. :— ] : Dear Sir,—l have sold Vegetine for & long time, and find it cives most excellent satisfaction. ! ; .S, B DePrirsry, M. D., Druggist.’ 7-wd. 3 : Hazleton, Tndiana. VEGETINIC : i Prepared by i H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. . ' g . Vegetine is soid by all Druggists, WeE W B BB M S e Erchily B B feeß A PRE B E : o l N Se R 00l Vel 800 BB Y Y eßy Ve IR o 5 LD S\ Y B = By airimmense practice, extending throush/ period of years, having within that time trea o many thousand eases of: those di-eases peculiy to woman, I have been enabled to pericces & most patent-and agrecable medicing that meots .the iudications presented hy that elass of discases with positive certainty and exuaciness. To designate this natural specific compound, Thave pumedit "7 . ’ N : »iiite g ) intiny Br.Pieree’s Faverite Prescription, The term, however, is but a feehle expression of my high :1111)mciu‘(’mn of its value, bascd upon -Mmy own Yerwmll ()}éseqv:tti()n. A 3 a close obscrver, I have, while: witnessing its positive resulis in the few speeial discases incident to the “geparate organism of avomiin, singled it out as the ¢limax or erowning gem of my gncd!'ca! caroer. On its merits, as & posiive, safe, and eflectual remedy for this clasa of. diseases, and one that will, ‘at all times and ~under all eircumstances, act kindly and in har‘mony with the laws which govern the female -system, I am willing to stake my repulation us a .z;hyei,cmn. Nay, even more, so confident am I that it will not disn?poin't the most sanguine expectations of a'single invalid lady who uses it ‘for aliy of the ailments for which I rccommend it‘ that I offer and sell it under A POSITIVE" GUARANTEE, If a beneiicial eftect is not -experienced by the time two-thirds of the con~ tents of the bottle are used, I will, on return of _the Dottle, two-thirds of the medicine having -been taken accordilglg to directions, and the case - being one for which I recommend i, Prompfly refund the money paid for it, Had 1 not the “most perfect confidence in its virtues, I could not offer it'as I do under these conditions; but having witnessed its truly miraculous cures in thousands of cases, ¥ feel warranted and .perfectly safe im risking boih 1y reputation and my moinoy om ils merits. PR 3 :
The following are among those¢ diseases in which my .Favorite FProseription has workied-cuges, 23 if by magic, and wiih a certainty never before attained f)_v any medicings: Leucorrhea, Kxcessive Flowing, Painful Monthly Periods, Suppressions when from unnatural causes, Inreguiarities, Weuk Back, Prolapsus, or falling of the Uterns, Anteversion and Retroversion, lfe:u'ing' Down Sensations, Internal leqty Wervous Depres=ion, Dcebility, Dospondeucy, Tln-en{cuc'* Mizearriage, Chronic Congestion; Inflammation and Ulceration of the Uterug, Impoteacy, Barrenness, or Sieritity, ¥ewmale ,\\’,’cukncss, and yvery many othicr chronis diseases incident to woman not med! ened here, In all affections of (his nu vie, iy Favoris Prescription: works eurcs—thie marvel of theworlid;, Dhismuicincldonvier’ basa cure-ally but: 6 ahimiadny fulflils & Bii o~ ness of fil)!u'w:uev Lotne e riest e osost spacificin all chironiadisensesof thaso et tem of woman. | It swill uct ¢i=onn b, nor wid it do harm, in &ny slute or Conwiin Those who desire further information on these subjects can obtain it in Fiig Preorny COMMON BENSE MEDICAL ADVISni, o book of over 900 pages, sent, post-paid, ‘on receiut of $1.50. If treunts minuie'y of tiove discu=cs peculiar to Females, and gives muah vauabia advice in regard to the numagement of those allections, § el FAVORITE PRESCRIPYION SOLED BY ALL PRUGGISTS. : i Manin RV, PIERCE, H. D,, Prop’n, 95 -BUFFALO, NY, i i e S eL S ; Private Hospltdl ’ mm:wmng: r ; ton Bt.. Chicago, 40 8 W2O @ y 11, foil 4w careof all Disesses of s Private nsture, mulu%fipm early abuses ur infection of either Sex. Beminal Wesnkness fimhshml. Lonofllemor&. Impaired Slfgt, Lo:i anhood or Impotency ervous lisbl ty,_ permaently cured ; diseases'of the. Bladder, K 1 neys, Liver, Ynien, Asthrus, Cutarch, iles, #il Cbronic Diseasas, and ITB- - OF FEMALIS, yleld to bis treatment. Dr. Olin as had a life-long exg;flence, and cures where others fall, He + fsa graduate of the Reformed School, uses po mercury, has tha : lmim practice 1n the U. 8. LADIES mgxirlng.tmumen&w*th private bome and board, call or write, Every convenicnce for patients, Send fifty cents for sample of Rubber Goods and_circular of important information by cxpres. DR, OLIN'S Female Plils, $5 per Boz. Consultation i’flns.wB £ S& : g 2 information for the WMARHIAGE GUIDE eot a m! on a : Zzh’x’rg. ‘%rn!m‘\file s’fv!woto the marrledm' and ‘those contemplating mtmnén. How to be healthy and truly my in the mesried rela~ #ion, Everybody should get this book. 40 centy, toany ade Qesmeealed, ¢ B ] bansinesg you can engagein. 5§ : b to 820 gm‘- day made by any . ; worker of either sex right in 4 i their own localities, Particus lars and samples worth $5 free. Tmprove yonr spare time at thig business, Address Sringon & Co., Portland, Maine. s 461 y m«““w;aw&__._m“_gww D NIRRT DR S A iy W 4 Tlegal E3lanks eg Tl LR e T BNS A . FOR BALE AT THIS OFFICE. B B can make money faster ot work for us than ‘Bt mmihfi-e%;.e, tal not required; we g ';Hfll'”mty@pj 2 per. ay(% home made and girls wanted everywhere to work for rs.— Now is the time. Costly outfic and terms free. Addre & Co., Augnsia, Maine, 461 y T S T e T -§» o ~.::t_'-?\?«'n'qgnf:;l* Y e fié DY KE W &/ RD | ELIXIR did s fl-‘-j Al Y A A vy Bnaly applied, Cettaln XK b 1 s 4. M GUTTA 860 ole A 15, Palation. Til, R S D B SRR U ey s e L
LIGONIER. NOBLE COUNTY, INDIANA, THURSDAY, JUNE 6. 1878.
i The Good Times Haye Come. - - To the Editor of the Cincinnati Engujrer. ¢ * The happy day of resumption of specie payments so long prayed for by the dupes of the Money Power is dawnirg. Goldis down to 14 premium; and we may now look for a revival of business, theemployment of labor, the pay_ment of debts. Is it notstrange what opinions are entertained and express ed by men of good sense and busigE capacity in regard to the effect of the approximation of gold to paper efrrency ? The whole thing is a delusion and a cheat. Gold is not in demand; nobody wants it, and hence it eommands no premium. If it was wanted for any purpose, how soon ié would appreciate in price! We have at 1% etght dollars-in paper currency toione of gold. The basis is very small for the superstructure, and the whole fabric would tumble if coin were demanded. One Cincinnati bank gives notice that it is prepared to redeem ifisxi paper in'coin on presentation. -
- The officers know full well that its circulation is &attered all over % United States,.and that probably %
thousand dollars of its notes could not be gathered up in three months. It makes the impression that this bank is “well heeked,” unusually sound. It may bhe true, but this boast is no evidence of the fact. Weknew aman who was in failing circumstances, who returned an income for taxation of $52,000. 1t made a fine impression and ingpired confidence for atime, but ‘he failed. i : :
. Many conclude that money is abundant because it can be had on first-class collaterals at a very low rate of interest. This is g delusion and ‘a snare. Money does not pay invested in business, hence it floats into the commenrcial centers, and is in demand only for the payment of interest and to secure a renewal or continuance of loans. 1t is drawn out one day for this purpose and goes back again the next, to perform the samne office indefinitely. Who but a lunatie would borrow money to give employment to Yabor or invest in a manufacturing or commerecial enterprise? : : . If money is wanted in business, or gold is required, neither can be had at a fair rate. ' " Some say nothing is wanting now but confidence to secure a revival of the business industries of the country. We would by no means undervalue the ‘necessity of confidence, but think some~ thing more is indispensable. Money is as essential as confidence! Confidenee is a good basis for credit, but ip will not pay debts. ~With less than half the volume of circulating medium of any civilized country on the globe, with four times the necessities -of any other, with heavier tax levies than any other, it is vain to suppose thatan era of pro§perity is immediate1y before us. % : : : . Coming down to gold, will furnish no man witlhi'a day’s work or loaf of bread. It will enable no debtor to relieve himself of his embarrassments, and will pay no man’s taxes. We have contracted 'debts, entered upon husiness enterprises, bought real estate, with a circulating-medium of more than $5O per capita, and now propose to square accounts with less than one-thir@ of“that volutne! This is a problem which can not be solved either with gold or confidence. Increase four-fold the greenback circulation, make it a full legal tender in the payment cf all debts, public and private, - put the canceling® hammer:. through .an equal amount of bonds, wipe out’ the National Bank circulation, and prosperity will come. Then labor will find employment, production will have a market, business will revive aund the whole land be filled with blessings, and joy, happiness and thanksgiving abound. Yours, &ec.,
: SIS CARY:. : il O —— - The Wisconsin Tornado. : 5 3 i Eighty Lives Reported Lost and Nearly Three Hundred Injured. A special dispatch dated May 28th from Madison, Wis., says: *“A large number of citizens are visiting the scene of the recent tornado. The roads are literally jammed with teams from all parts of the country, viewing the devastations of the storm. None of the accounts have been exaggerated, nor has hardly half been told of its destructiveness. ‘The eastern towns did not suffer as much as Primrose, Boutwell and Perry. Thirty lives were lost in this county alone, and nearly a hundred persons were seriously injured, while the destruction of property will reach into the millions, From the first appearance of the cyclone at Mineral Point through its whole course across the State the destruction was great. It is estimated that fifty people have been killed and from two hundred to two hundred and, fifty injured seriously, while scdres are left homeless, many of them not knowing where their next meal is coming from. The accounts of survivors are harrowing in the extreme, and the woe and desolation everywhere visible are extremely painful.”
Col. McDonald for Congress. (Goshen Democrat.) We understand that Col. MeDonald, of Columbia, is prominently mentioned as a candidate for Congress in the Foit Wayne District. The Colonel would make a formidable candidate, and if elected to the office would attend to its dulfes properly. There is a strong feeling in that Distriet outside of Fort Wayne that the -nomination should be given to no Ft. Wayne -applicant this year, and this proposition is eveni endorsed to a considerable extent irf that city.— Warsaw Unton. . ' ¢ We cordially endorse what the Uniton says, and hope our excelleng friend, the Colonel, will secure an unanimous nomination. iR : Adveriising for Cash in Advance, Under this title Geo. P. Rowell & Co., 10 Spruce St.,, New York, issue a b2-page pamphlet, which is singular in its promiseg, to say the least. They offer to insert an advertisement gratis in 1,000 newspapers, provided they are paid the publishers’ ruates for 26, which are catalogued. , On the same plan 34 different State Lists are offered, all of which contain the leading ‘ papens{i ' Whatevtg m:éy be tl&ggsgg: of the policy of puli {ifl orth such offers there is no doubt that Messrs. Rowell & Co. are responsible for their coniracts, and can be relied apon to faithfully carry themout. = 7 S - 4':"%“-’—-% e .. The big feature of the f’; ladelphia ‘Permanent Bxhibition 15 m%i el'fl“flfifikmil E"*%? *fi% trial of its capabilities the day before o 4 A 0 “ g-:'é 5 A‘k %%W?%*&Z{W&%‘“@é# w et Wlinare TRI At gt o T
DESTROYED BY AN EARTHQUAKE. How a Town in South Americn SBuffered---Two Hundred Persons Killed. ' (From the New York Herald) ‘The town of Cua received about all | the serious damage resulting from the recent shock. It lies about fifteen miles from Caracas, and was a hand--Bome, flourishing place, - The shock of the 12th entirely destroyed it. The loss of life was fearful. .No full account has yet been obtained of “the number killed. About two hundred ha*ve thus far been taken from the ruins. Three hundred soldiers, aided by a large number of volunteers, worked in the difficult task of extricating the bodies. The stench was almost .msupé)prtable. After the search had ceased fire was applied to the ruins to prevent-a pestilencz. The President, at the first news of the disaster, despatched a large body of men to the relief of the town with cartloads of provisions. ' He also sentdoctors and surjgeon?, as. wel!l-, as coachgs;‘ to bring ct.;xs. -pegple into the city, and announced. rgl?ggihéx“fggk the sgfierers all under his private protection. The destruction of the cily was as sudden as it was complete. In almost every house there were victims either killed or wounded, or hoth. Fortunately the hour was early. Had it been two ‘hours later, when the majority of people would have been in bed, 1t would have been much more dreadful. Fortunately, also, the day and evening had ‘been extremely hot, and many people were out trying to catch a little coplness in the open parks, and so were preserved. % One gentleman, who was in the park, says that he was looking at the catliedral, when suddenly, it seemed to rise straight up in the air,and, being thrown | clear off its foundations, it fell forward to the ground in one mass of ruins.
The river Tui, running through the city, had been so hot that all that day the inhabitants had been unable to drink its water; and the fishes were observed to be very uneasy, jumping frequently oui of the water, where they were apparently uncomfortable from its heat. On the banks of the stream great fissures were opened which became filled ‘'with water that gave forth such a stench that persons who had encamped on its banks were obliged.to leaye the vicinity. Small hillecks of sand, having the same smell, ‘were thrown -up in different spots. Nearly :}Tfihe coffee and sugar plantations for several miles around Cua and the other towns near Cua have been more or less injured, but fortunately no lives have been lost.
The Syndicate’s Profits. . ; fKansas City Times.] The Syndicate have taken $35,000,000 of their $50,000,000 of four-and-a-half per ceuts, but they are not taking them any faster than they are selling them at a profit, and not much, if any, faster than the people are taking the four per cents at par.- When the four-and-a-half per cents are caneeled they will have cost the Government, principal and interest, $117,500,000. The same amount of four per cents, runnitg the. same-length-of “time, cost $110,000,000. The Syndicate pay the Government 50,000,000 for bonds calling for $'117,5?,000, and - the people pay $50,000,000 for bonds calling for $110,000,000. 'Net difference in favor of the Syndicate’s bargain, $7,750,000. If John Sherman does not get at least a million in the dividend of the profits on this fat contract he is not as good a provider for his own household as he is supposed to be. o O EES———— : A Remarkable Result, It makes no difference how many physicians, or how much medicine you 'have tried, it isnow an established fact that German Syrup is the ouly remedy which has given complete satisfaction in severe cases of Lung Diseases. 1t is true there are yet thousands of-per-sons who are predisposed to throat and lung affections, consumption, hemorr‘hages, asthma, severe colds settled on the breast, pneumonia, and whooping cough, &c.; who have no. personal knowledge of Boschee’s German Syrup. To such we would say that 50,~ 000 dozen were sold last year without one complaint, Consumptives try-just one bottle. Regular size 75 cents.— Sold by all druggists in America. For sale by Scott & Sandrock. @ 29-eow
Four of ’Em. o 5 ‘[ Hilleboro Gazette.] g g =Dr. J. L. Wilson, of Greenfield, invited us to visit his office and take a look at the colored quartet of babies when we_ were over there last week. This is the family that was all born at one time, three béing alive and the fourth dead when born. The three lived about twenty minutes after birth. They weighed ten and a half pounds. They are kept in a glass case in spirits, and’are in a good state of preservation. The colored woman, their mother, and her husband have been miarried fourteen years, and have had fourteen chil~ dren, two sets of twins among them.. Dr. Wilson has quite a collection of mementoes of his surgical skill, such as an amputated hand, cancers, a piece of jaw-bone, & . : B ! That’s the Talk. s g [New Albany Ledger.] We say God speed Montgomery Blair ih all his efforts to get at thé true inwardness “of the huge pwindlevperpetrated and by which Rutherford B. Hayes was inducted into the presidential office. The-American people will never have done their duty to themselves, to their posterity and the fair name of their country, until all the facts connected with that monstrous fraud is exposed and denounced, andproperiy atoned for. : . i G fihba oo Good Advice. AT X - [Conuversville Examinerd = . Governor Pinchback, in a speech delivered a few days ago, advised his colored fellow-citizens 1o act and vote independently. - The wisdom of such advice will never be questioned when the colored man realizes that the welfare of the Union depends to a great extent upon his determinativn to sup‘port sound principles, irrespective of party.. The colored man is becoming *enlifih.t:’e;néd , and has ceased fo be the e wfmé;mmm . Offises That Ave Worth Having, . i A fiW{W’ L s s S R -orable positions, and, with possibly the L ebt “im" 'he that 850000 snftalls. The Auditor, i Wfi?fi . %%fi‘réfi gy o wion ffie Geh Matean Iy ok Bhantohiidass TT E LS
A South Bender on Communism. (South Bend Register.)
It is my belief that Communism is the almost inevitable result of the uns fortunate financial policies which have -actively prevailed for the past 10 years: The elevation of platitudes and abstractions for the devout contemplation of starving, wretched, desperate, and homeless millions, will afford them neither relief nor hope. I solemnly maintain that our government is not only fully justified, but is under the . most imperative obligations to adop\; -extracrdinary and heretcfore unprecedented measures—short of subsidizing private corporations—to afford employment, at reasonable compensation, to the dailv inereasing host whom its criminal and disastrous legislation ‘has dragged from comfort to penury. This could be accomplished at once, immense amounts of money be restored to honest circulation, and every pulse of business be caused to throb with restored life and energy, by initiating'great and nesded publicimprove.ments, of national character and importance, to be paid for out of the public Treasury. : i - Congress should, without delay, pass an act, to take effect immediately, forever prohibiting another Southern war-claim from being presented within its halls, that the money thus saved from being squandered for an unworthy purpose may be applied to the objects which have just been described. Wherever hate, robbery, violence, murder, and incendiarism may present themselves in the hideous guise of the Communist, there should municipal and State authority at once invoke the aid of military power, and, with the red-het grip of the “mailed hand.” even to grim death, crush out of existence the horrible pessibilities that might result from lenity.or indiffereunce. - . DwieHT DEMING. -
Cut Hay Early.
A buyer of hay writes to the Counlry Gentleman a request that farmers cut their hay earlier. lle would be willing to pay three or four dollars a ton extra for good, bright, preserved grass, (which properly cured hay really is) than for the brittle, stalky stuff which too often tills the market.” He says: “It is a commmon belief among farmers that grass cut when nearly ripe, gives more weight per acre. 1t may not be true, but if they think se,. they will be pretty sure to let it stand to the last minute unless the argument of self-interest in the other direction gets them out of the miserable habivc. In general, the idea prevailsthat a few days delay as to haymaking is not at all important, and so when grain is ripening about the same time, that that gets the preference as to timely care. TFarmers should be taught—those who seek to sell hay at least—that every crop should be gathered at’just the right time, and that a failure to do so will bring a financial penalty. I.ate cut and over ripe hay is little better than straw, and observing purchasers know it. Millions of dollars are every year lost to the country from this one cause—because, in general, farmers are slow in adopting this reform. Our modern improved machinery 10r rapldly. making hay-ta-vors the reform but as'yet it does not seem {0 have been very effective.
That Terrible Famine in China.
It appears almost impossible to.con= ceive the frightfulness of the famine in China. A recent letter from a gentleman whe traveled through the stricken district states that the roadsides were lined with dead bodies and the roads coutaiuned scores of people staggering along in the last stages of starvation. The dead and dying are mutilated and devoured by wolves and -dogs voracious from hunger.— Many of the people eat clay—the clay being ground up and baked after being mixed with husks. Fuel has also become exhausted and the people are now tearing down their houses to obthin material for fires. Coal is scarce because none dare go into the mines té procure it, for they with-their beasts of burden would be stript and eaten. Millions of people are suffering terribly, while ipgother parts of China there is an #undance of food, but owing to tHe insuflicient means of transportation it cannot be secured in sufficient quantities to speedily relieve them. i ST
Too Mueh Coin.
THhe board of directors of the Sacramento Savings Bank gave notiée to their depositors that, owing to the accumulation of coin faster than it can be loaned upon undoubted first-class improved real estate, that sa? board have deemed it for the best interests of the depositors to decline to receive any more interest-b.aring deposits until further notice. The plethora of coin is due to the exhorbitantinterest demanded—from 12 to 15 per cent. per annum. There are few business enterprises that ean bear such per centage. Were capitalists content to lend their money at a rate that would leave a'margin of profit to the business man, no such notice would be given by the bank.—-New Albany Ledger. i ; -
; “Wants Hayes Bounced. - LA S oWabash Convlarys The Republicans assert that the objeet of investigating the frauds committed in Louisiana and Florida is to unseat Hayes and put Tilden in his stead. . This is not certain, but we hope that such may be the case. Both truth and justice demand that the usurper shall be ousted to give room for the elect of the peopld. Heaven would look déewn with an approving smile upon Hayes, assisted by the roseate Rodgers, in the act of checking baggage for Fremont, Ohio,
It Seems Impossible
That a remedy made of such common, simple plants as [ops, Buchu, Mandrade, Dandelion, &e., should make so many and such maryelous and wonderful -cures as llop Bitters do, but when old and young, rich and poos, Pastor aud Doctor, Lawyer and Editor all testify to having been cured by them, you must believe and try them yourself, and dpubt np longer. See otheérecoliimin. o o e a
THERE seeins a general revival of horse racing throughout the country. The spring ieetings thus far have been quite brilliant, not only in regard to the perforimance of the horses, but thie crowds in altendance huve been very large, while stakes have been batter than usual. ‘At the close of the season the record will prove.quite inSeRERURE. . e : . How to Popularizge I, -~ . The present administration will nev~er be popular with the hoys until it goes on a prolonged drunk,
Indiana News Items.
_Owners of real estate are confidently awaiting a steady appreciation of their possessions and don’t care to change their investments, = i Luther Benson’s FEastern lecture tour was brought to.a sudden close last week by a stroke of paralysis, which he sus{ained in° Massachusetts. ITe was brought home by easy stages.
. Forty-two tons of strawberries were expressed from Terre Haute in five days last week.- The fruit and wheat crops of that section are greater than ever before known. Farming prospects are exeellent. . L ne
The second Indiana State Campmeeting, for the promotion of holiness in the church and the conversidh of sinpers, will be held at Warsaw, commencing Wednesday, August 7, and continuing ten days. o - The LaPorte Argus says thaf in the South part of the-county many of the tfarmers are plowing up their wheat fislds fo plant them with corn, The fly has so damaged the wheat that it is deemed of ‘no-use to attempt-to harvesbit. . on ; ;
Indianapolis is being flooded with Mexican silver dollars, whieh are furnished by speculators in New York to Western baunkers at ‘ninety-five cents, and paid out by the latter at one dollar. The profit to both parties is large, and the loss falls on the public. Blessed are the widows and unmarried women. They are exempt from taxation to the extent of $5OO if worth in real or personal property not over $l,OOO. The gardians -of unmarried women under 21 years of age, can claim the same exemption for such WAaPdS v g e FT
The Superintendent of -Public Instruction has unearthed a comnspiracy having for its aim to furnish-a list of questions to candidates for school teachers’ lieense. Herafter this list will be published outside the State, and special care taken that candidates: are not posted in advance. .~ ..
/ Complete returns of the school enumeration: of the State have béen received by the Superintendent of Pub-. lic Instruction. The number. of children of school age, between six and twenty-one years, is returned as follows: Whites—males, 354,239 ; females, 363,007. Colored —males, 5,987; females, 5,912. Total of white and colored children, 699,095, an increase over last year of 4.291. oAt Norman Beckley, superintendent of the Cincinnatd; Wabash and Michigan road, is making extensive improvements to the road:bed. The entire line since lie took control of it has been ditched on both sides, 50,000 new cross-ties have been: put in, and a considerable distance of old track has been replaced with new iron or steel rails. v : * v Dl o
~ Hon. John Scott Harrisénf father of Gen. Ben IHarrison, of Indianapolis, ‘and the last survivor of President Harrison’s children, died suddenly at’ his-home near North é}end.'o'n Satur--aily night, May 25, aged 74. - Mr. Harrison was born in Vincennes when his father was: Governor of Indiana Territory, graduated at Farmers’ Col‘lege, Ohio, studied law, but devoted himself to farming, and was -twice a foember of Congress from Hamilton county, being elected as a Whig. We havereports from all directions that our county isswarming with ¢onfidence lightning-rod peddlers, who are swindling the people;out of their mon‘ey. Their plan is to get men to sign certain mnotes: which look all right to the casual observer, but which can be and are so mutilated after being signed that the persons giving them are defranded out of large sums of money. —Let people beware how they sign any kind of papers that are presented to them by strangers. The tramps ‘who steal are not the only rasecals out of juil.—Goshen Times.
WHAT THEY SAY OF.IT! A FEW TF'ACTS FOR THE ProPLE.—There are’ but few preparations of ~médicine which ;have withstood the fwpartial judgment of the people for any great length of time. One of these are Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil. Read the following and" be convinced: “I have been afflicted with rheumatism for the last ten years, and haveé iried many. remedies without any relief, until*l’ tried Dr. Thomas’ Eelectric Oil, and since then have had no attack of iti— I would recommend it to all.”—A Maybee Merehant, Warkworth,writes: “I have sold some hundreds of bottles of Eclectric Oil; and .it is pronounced by the public, ‘one of the best medi-; cines they have ever used; it has done. wonders in healing and relieving pain, sore throats, etc., and-is . worthy of the greatest confidence.”—Joseph Rusan, Township Percy, writeg: “I was persuaded to try Thomas’ E‘-',léct.ricv()il‘ for a lame knee which iroubled me for three or four years, and I never found anything like it for ecureing lameness. . It is a great public benefit.” —A.M. Hamilton, Warkworth,writes: “For weeks I was troubled with a swelled ankle, which annoyed me very: much. Mr., Maybee of this place induced me to try Eclectric Oil, and before one; bottle was used I was cured. It is a mosf’remarkable medicine.” Sold by all medicine dealers. Price, 50 cents, and $l. ‘Trial boftles 25¢. Prepared only by FOSTER, MILBURN & CO.. Buffalo, N. Y. successors to 8. N. Thomas, Phelps, New York. . For salein ‘Ligoniier}«‘by;'H‘; a. Cunningham. = 51-eow-4f. Note.— Eeoluctric—Selected and Electrized. = =
Self Respect.
Always: remember that no one can debass you but yourself. Slander, satire, falsehood, Injustice—these can never rob you of your manhoed; Men way lie abont you, they may denounce you, they may cherish suspicion manifold, they may make your feelings the target of their wit or-eruelty;-never “be alartned; never swerve in inch from the line your judgment aud conscience have marked out for you. They eannot, by all their. efforts, take away your knowledge of yourself, the purity ‘of your motives, the integrity of your character and the generosity of your nature, While these wre left, you are; in pointof fact, unharmed.—Hints for Datly Life 0 o i el i L e —— ot v ' You can stop that teasing, hacking “eough with Dr. Smith’s Cough Syrup, or have your money refunded. %’gfi by druggists for 50 cents perbottle: Four bottles sent, express paid, for $2. '; :et e mfifimfifi& z e RTR G B e s dfifi;fl*, L {1 103 gt %fi%m ¥ WS e T fi’ffl;ifl’(*&%fi:fi
. NO, T, .-
General Items.
“THEY have a mission in Louisville which takes upon itself the duty of furnishing flowers to the sick rooms of the poor. If thisis nota heavenly mission, it will be in order to describe one. : & &
Tux life policy of W. M. Tweed has been declared forfeited by the courts of New York, upon -the ground that he had gone beyond the limits of the United States, which the policy expressly prohibited withoutthe consent of the company. ;
. Here’s a chance for more reform societies. The Jnter-Ocean takes the responsibility of‘the statement that at least twenty-five per cent. of the male and thirty of the female Chicagoans are victims of a confirmed opium habit. - This is bad, very bad. 1
A split has oceurred in Michigan Gre?nba%ciileryé 5 Ralph E, Hogti,afg!rmerly of the Chicago press and y ed?,{or of the J. a.clf:ogn Sustfiaeads acall for a State conven%ion of the simonpuresat Grand Rapids, to mest an hour earlier on the same day that Moses W. Field’s National State convention is to assemble in that city. . The excitement on the Canadian border over expected Fenian raids continues to become more intense, Everywhere rifles and ammunition are to be seen, and men go around in some of the villages with arms in their hands. The correspondent who tells of all this adds that “Canada does not propose to be taken by Fenians,” which is no doubt a safe remark. :
John Ross of Casnovia, Mich., had an ailing wife. It was certain that she could not recover, and he thought that he might as well look around for her suecessor. He chose thedaughter of a neighbor, and soinformed his wife, who told him that she would not stay long in the way. That night she drowned herself. A mob tarred and feathered Mr. Ross. Right. M
- It is asserted as beyond a doubt that Doorkeeper Field is a Republican, and in 1868 took an active partin support of Grant and the rest of the ticket, bing an officer of a republican club in Baltimore. On his return from Egypt he received an appointment as assistant engineer at Washington, solely on rebublican recommendations., © The democratic members of the House make wry faces over the disclosure.of these facts. , ''The Methodists have finished their new hymn book, and it is ready to be given to the world. The old book whose place it is to take has been in use about thirty years, and is much beloved by a large- class of people who will look with disfavor upon the new one.. The new book has been prepared ~with great ,ca_./re“‘byP several very ‘eminent gentlemen, well known as the most expert hymnologists in the denomination.—Lawrenceburg Register.
Several churches?are being organized in Michigan, and others are like1y to be, with this simple and brief ' creed as the only test of membership: “We belleve Christianity is not a belief merely, but rather a life; that the savings of Christ are the plajnest pos- = sible statements of religious truth,and constitute the only true theology; and that any person who believes and ear- . nestly tries to live in accordance to .- those sayings is entitled to church privileges.” . : !
.'The Houn. Jesse H. Moore is an ex- - brigadier general, an ex-member of Congress, an ex-pension agent, and an ex-friend of ex-President Grant, and now he is likely to be an ex-Methodist preacher. At a recent meeting of the members of the First Methodist Episcopal Church of Decatur,lll.,he startled his hearers by stating that for twenty years he had been preaching a doctrine that he had never believed, and, thereupon, he asked for the prayers of the congregation. g - The Supreme Court of Nebraska has pronounced unconstitutional the State law exempting from taxation land on which the owners shall have planted - forest' trees. " This decision, ‘while it will discourage the cultivation of frees in that largely’ treelegs - State, is a great relief to the other taxpayers. In iaunders _county oneeighth of the taxable property —about sl3o,ooo—was exempt under the law, and in Liheoln county the value of the exempted property reached $600,000. '
. ‘“Nothing except:a navy contemptible even by comparison with those of third and fourth-rate powers.” Such, ‘according toa committee of Congress, is-all the United States have to show for the enormous expenditurs of $149,15%7,655.50, appropriated from 1869 to 1877, besides debt incurred by Secor Robeson amounting to $7,083,503.25! ‘The robberies by the Tweed Ring sink out of sight before such figures as these. Yet Tweed has diedin prison, while Secor Robeson is a free man, revelling in the enjoyment of his illgotten wealth. :
A Few Things that We Know. "We know that a disordered stomach or liver produces more suffering than any other cause. 'We know that very few physicians are successful in their treatment of .these disorders. We know' that DeCosta’s ~Radical Cure will without the shadow of a doubt, almost immediately relieve and per‘manently cure all of these distressing symptoms. We know of thousands. ‘who are willing to testify that what we say is true to the letter. We know that if you will give it a fair trial, you will let us add your name to thecloud . of witnesses.” Will yon give it a trial, ahd do.it now? 'Trial size only 25 cents. Tt'issold by Eldred & Son, Ligopienydnda o v S D i ma . Prof. Parker’s Pleasant Worm Syr-. up is perfectly safe and extremely palatable. No physic required. Costs 25 centa: Tryaf o 0 Gt Sl oNN v i e ie B R O ..+ Dehold Nature’s Beauty,” . - - A short drive in the countr, fis%ax | fectly delightful at this ms&nm aubient air s lnden withsweet aroms, ugrgestive of clover blogsoms, beds of pinks and roses and new mown hay, .while song birds. vie with each other. /in festive song to enliven the scene. ¥ STty R o ana e e Fha‘“nflm"f ourr »s . fi:fimfi ant charms Which to be apprectated must be seen,. 8o hiteh ;?- s see nature's great ghow. Rusty, crabbid, selfish ola bachielors don’t deserve g’, 7 ‘ i ‘”;1 ‘g;gg,gé 3g( ‘. a,;i ,«\ iR iek Pel i s T o e B
