The National Banner, Volume 13, Number 12, Ligonier, Noble County, 11 July 1878 — Page 1
YOL. 13,
The Fational Ban ViR vu.nu‘innn m / v ~ JOUN B. STOLL, LIGONIER,NOBLECOUNTY,IND. : A R Sl e 2 ] Yerms of Subseription: . " (ine year;ln advance, ..-... e Ll el Six months, in AAVANCe. coemncoure coneneans 100 lClgvennopios to ome address, one year,......2000 .x’c‘i‘Siflpm:rlhern outside of Noble county are _c"mrzed l}) cents extra [per ye:_x’rj for postage, which is prepaid by the publisher. . : e e et e — 1.1 l —— “--__._.___.-ll—CITIZENSBANK . STRAUS BROS., - Transact a general banking business on | favorable termas. S e Furmeq;a]fk’: Commercial paper disconnted at r¢asonadble rates. . 2 . : Buy and sell Real Estate, and all those wishing large or small tracts will do well i to sce us before purchasing. . Negotiable J.oans, from one to five years’ t . time,-secured by first mortgage on in_proved farms., . i 3 : - Agents for cflrat-oldu PFire and Life In- ;' surance Companies. o i - Dealers in ' : . Dealers in Grain, Seeds, Wool, . v Special Notice to Farmers.” (irain placed in our name in L.S. & M.S.l;f 1. Elevators is'at owner’s risk in case of fire, if not actually sold to ms. When requested, we will snsuresame in first-class ‘Companies. (et e s L e Wooll Wooll Wool! Wooll We have an order for = 5 - 1,000,000 {0 e ¢ «——Pounds of — \ § ; : | WU O O Exl S e R and will give the- - Highest Market Price _%For all grades. It will pay you to see us hefore fe ¢ sellig. Hes Ligonier, Ind., May 31, 1878.-27-1 y . : R S BANKING HOUSE ‘ Ue O F-—_-;— i 5 & SOL. MIERR, , Gonrad’sNew Brick Brock, LIGONIER, IND’NA, ~ Moneyloanedon long and shorttime. : - ‘Notes discounted at reasonable rates. - s - Monies received on deposit andinterestallowed on specified tithe, S : Exchange bought and sold, and Forpign Drafts drawn on principalcities of Europe, 8-2 1 TO THE FARMERS: - i YOU wiilpleasé take notice that I am atillen=L gaged in buying wheat, for which I pay the nighest market ‘Pnce. ik If you do not find me on the strect, call helore selling, at lay Banking Office, in-Conrad’s Brick ) Blocki A SOL. MIER. Ligpnier,lndiana, May 3,1877.—Lf : et et it PRV ra t i i, . COOPER, i) JUSTICE of the PEACE ‘ And Conveyancer, LIQONIER, : : @ INDIANA. Special attention given. to conveyaneing and eollections. Deeds, Bonds and Mortgages drawn up and all legal business attended to promptly and accurately. Office over Jacobs & Goldsmith’s ‘Store. S 7 ly. ANDREW JACKSOY, JUSTICE of the PEACE, “ Ligonmier, Indiana, Special attention given Lo collection® and conveyancing. Office with D. C, Vancamp, over Beazel’s . Harness shop. 1182
LOAN AGENCY. . Mo NEY TO LOAN, in small or large, A amounts, on long or shorqt'time. : 5 ISAAC E;.’KNISELY. 1 Attorney at Law, Ligonier, Indiana. | H. («)::VZTQ:\(;;\(};‘# W " . W.GREEN, Notary Public.. ; Justice of the Peace, ZIMHIERNI‘IN & QBEEN. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. . Office in I-:aqdon's Block, Ligonier, Ind. 13, " Dr. J.F. GARD, . | Physician and Surgeon. Pmmgt attention to calls day and nisht. Oflice over Eldred’s Drug Store, Ligonier; Ind .. 12 ATTORNEY AT LAW, Ligonier, ¢ : ¢ Indiana. Special attention givento collectionsand conveyancing, and the writing of deeds, mortgages, and contracts. Legal business promptly attended to.. Oftice over Beazel’s Harness establishment, 9-50 . ALBER’I“ BANTA, Justiceof the Peace & Conveyancer. ) . ¢ !LIGONIER,INDIANA. ¢ Specialattention given to conveyancingandcol- ; _ections. Deeds, Bonds and Mortgages drawnup . and all legal business attended to promptly and accurately. May 15187815-8-8 i _— _,_______-__—————-'——— - E. WAKEMAN,: TnsuranceAg’t &Justiceof the Pea TnsnranceAg't &Justicg ot the reace KENDALLVILLE, INDIANA. - Ofiice with A, A. Chapin, Mitchell Block. Will rfg_eiveuubscriptions to THE NATIONAL BANNER. b G, W. CARR, ’ . ~ Physician and Surgeon, ', LIGQNIBR, = = = = « (s INDi; X Willpromptiyatiend ail calle intrnstedto him, : Office and residence on 4th Street. ° S e J. M. TEAL, B - s TR f Rooms over 1 B. Pike’s Grocery, J : Corner oftl:umr -u:td ggfig"'&s"fifi?’ : .the Post O en . . ville, Tnd. L Work warranted. a& . | i Kendallyille, May 1, 1874. ; I . —— A “ . ¢ : 1B W\ g i el Langhing Gas! i W i) © LPORTHESWP PAINLESS EXTRACTION k- e e ORe i T ; gr Y or-&%r, _. B - YN T ’ R . o i 7 ’ . ', Ny 1 Dr.Gants' Offce. NS Y Piing Teotha Specialty ; Ligonier, Ind, Nov, 11, 1875, 11 2 [ O.V.INKS, .~ DEALERIN MONUMENTS, ~ Vaults, Tombstones, AND BUILDING SBTONES, d -‘ ‘LIGONIER, IND. Sl L e g _ PHILIP A. CARR, " AUCTIONEER, '} Offershisservices to the pubiicin general. et o %gfll%mehleflm e .Amf.flnlfl’fl,.'vw' o ot ."‘—"‘"”"'""""‘"'"v #—fi‘fl"—-—'—-‘fl-“"“‘"‘f"———"“—"— " - ‘v( - CONOORD & CATAWBA WINE, (- Wakesp sinstanily o baud and sellinlarge o e e MRnThetne, G {, LI - ‘tm' : ,flv’ ’:*_t B g gl . . BACK B! ROTHERS ge% L gi n DN i i ,& o fim,gw,uijfguggf@wgf
WY QR vVEEeweaamwy - CETYOOR-TEN 8
) = including Shooting Outfit. a u Nsslvery a{m Warranted. : ‘& Hogarth, Moore & Brooks St, Louis. '_'_—-—‘——.—.‘.—_——h'_—.l"—'—"—"— R GOLD PLA}'ED WATCHES, Cheap estin the known'world. Sample Waich Free to Agents. Address, A. COULTER & Co., Chicago. AYEAR. Agents wanted. fssusi--5 5 ‘ness legitimate. Particularsfree. 5 ; AddressJ WORTH & CO., St Louis, Mo, . ’ IR did Before % E!’fi%is“ aoalfififii?sfitl;m‘.lfigsgce. OO LA R R Ry } g g [EATY Pt o N oy, Bni)y;;:xlud,l!n\m (e i in offect. Plckn{ar‘nbflnflbfllm- id 25 ets. 3 for v 50 eta.> A.M.SMITH & CO. 8010 Ag’tx, Palatine, It This preparation has imitations. The public will use due caution 203 Addrass 4 shove i M AGENTS profits per week, Will prove it or forfeit $500,— n New articles, just patented. f ; ; Samples sent free toall, ¢ Address W, . CHIDESTER, 16 Fulton Bt.,N. Y, n week jn your own town. $5 Outfig free. Norisk. Reader, if you wanta 1 business at which perflnu?‘ of either gex can make great pay all the time they work, writé for particulars to'H, HarLETr & Co., Portland, Maine. < = 46-1 y | VISITING CARDS, elegant, with name, 35¢., 50 for 20¢., 25 for 10¢, Sam-~ - : 8!05 for a green stamp, Agents wanted. : utfit 13¢c. You cap make money = o Address, 21-1 v EMIL E. RETTIG, Seymour, Ind. 4 A Book of nearly 300 page e : : ‘married andthose contem--2 &Mmgmm‘pe should know ow to cure diseases. Hundled tor 60 cernits [ mone; o?dnffangcu‘gn?psfi"' 233':32 aled for s s . Er- C,A.BOHANNAN 621%- anh S{lect. 8t Louis. Mo
business you can engage in. 58 to §2O per day made by any worker of either sex right in their own localities. Particulars and samples worth §5 free. Improve your spare time at this business. Address StinsON & Co., Portland, Maine. 46-1 y
1 ol ¥ Uas POCKET PHOTOSCOPE”, rest magnifying power; detects counterfeit money; shoddy in cloth; foreign substacnes in wounds; flaws in metals; examines insects; flowers and plants, 25 cents, stamps or currency. Van Delf & Co., 20 Ann St.,N.Y. 51-6 m
‘B can make money faster at work for ugs than’ at anything elge. Capital not required; we will start you. $l2 per day at home made by the industrious. Men, women, boys and girls wanted everywhere to work for ts.— Now is the time. Costly ouifit! and terms free. Address True & Co., Augusta, Maine. 46-lly
A GENTLEMAN who' suffered for years from ] Nervous Debility, Prematnre Decay, and all the effects of youthful indiseretion, will for the sake of suflering humanity, send frce to all who need it, the recipe and direetion for making the gimple remedy by which he was cured. Sufferers wishing t@ profit by the advertiser’s experience can do so by addressing in perfect confidence. 51-6 m f JOHN B. OGDEN, 42 Cedar Si., N. Y.
A PHYSIOLOGICAL °)5 @ ¢ View of Marriage ! 2 B A Guide to Wedloek and WBMAN confidentinl Treatise on the duties of marriage and the s ———— causes that ufifit for it the se/Lflfl AN D crets of Reproduection and =l LTt mihe Diseases of Women. : A book for ‘private, .consid~ MA RR lAG E %mtc reading. 260 pages, price [ o L paes ) CUS.- i g 2 { ‘ 1 On all fi\sgfigrsfifism'?&?é %&%flxfieg‘!ilfigfibm Self Abuse, Eixcesses, or Seceret Diseases, with the best means of cure, 2241nr;{:}(‘8gos.pricv&()cts. e ’ A CLINICAL LE RE on the above aiseascs and thosc of the Throatand Lungs, Catarrh,Rupture, the Opium Habit,&e., price 10 cts. .7 ’ J‘Rfiher book sent postpaid on reeeipt of price; or all three, corftaining 500 pages, heautifully illustrated, for 75 cts.: Address DR, BUT'TS, No. 12N, Bth St. St. Louis, Mo W. A, BROWN & SON’S Furniture and Cofin Ware Roouws. 'CHAMBER & PARLOR SUITS And all other kinds of Furnitare. Wool Mattresses, Spring Boltoms, Chromos, * Brackets, Picture Frames, &c. Undertaking Department Coflins and C:\Skfits always kept on hand, ready for trimming. Alsoladies’ and gent’s Shrouds, very: beautifal and cheap. Good Hearse ~+ . inreadiness when desired. - Remember: Sign of the Big Chair, 33 Cavin Street, : : Ligonier, Ind October 25, 1877,-12-271y : Ml oL e e S J. W. HIGGINBOTHAM, } o "‘} [ ’ y = & 7/:557% R § o/ O CRE =5, > / A_A o ‘qiffi’fifi;.‘_,; % /g‘ «5 T S {1 O & Y4B éiv SO YN 1\ o s A=4 i Y \ = i '\ ‘“"‘,-') :;‘ [S e ; Ao\ @ "‘&?, N A 2N \ raaayy '.;‘_. @ @ f(w__.~( : WATCH-MAKER ") 9 JEWEILER, . : * —and dealer in— o Watchesy Clocks, Jewelry, 8 —AND-- : i Fancy Goods, : ¢ REPAIRING , Neatly ‘and nromgfly’ executed and warranted - @ Agents for Lazarus & Morris’ celebrate Spectacles. R \ : ;i wsifin ofthe Bi 33 Watch, oppositethe Banner Block, Ligonier, Ind. .. 8ep.30,'75-35
[ 'y w ? Y /-—\‘-, ALT.£XT.on gnu BRI 4§goyg e Nl izl by a.l 1y I './/l%mzr\z R el i J}J AR RR, U i ‘-'// il s r*".(my/\\“\ . ’: } ‘///(’ /'lz |e/ [7‘} 'R i, m%l «i\*\ .?\2@ g )1 OIR be Nl /%// g wlgr| PR e @Y i / s?? " ‘fl"’%E‘f‘;&!‘k“‘fl?fi”’i‘ o 8% et eAT AR i 3 I AR i .«.fl,'fi oS ‘fis Wl Al &éfi et et I fi& ;‘:"‘;’/! il //7"/%‘ V :”F‘ \ —/‘: 7 gl ¥\ o : \s\\ | «i\, B 4 = - 38 B s N N 5 f—“\ sm.sm‘una/-“\ THROAT, LUNGS,LIVER & BLOOD. {n the wonderful medicine to which the aficted arc'above directed for relief, the discoverer pelieves he has combined in harmont{ more of Nature's sovcrcign curative proE‘ex‘t es, which God has instilled into the vegetable kingdon ¢or healing the sick, than were ever before c‘om‘ bLined in one medicine. The evidence of this fac is found in the great variety of most obstinate iliseases which it has been found to conquer. In the cure of Bronchitis, Severe congh-, and the early stages of Consumption, it has nstonished the medical facully, and eminent thslciaus fpronounce it the greatest medical lscovor{ of the age. While it cures the severest Confi 18, it strengthens the system and puri« fles the blood. By its great and thorough lood-purllylnlg properties, it cures all Hue mors, from the worst Scrofula to a common Blotch lerlo, or Exruption. Mercurial discase, iflnem Poisons, and their effects, are eradicated, and vigorous health and a sound sonstitution established. Ernlpalaa Salt. rheum, Fever Sores, Scnlgf;or ough Skcin, in short, all the numerous dfseases caused by bad blood, are conquered by this powerful, putifying, and invigorating medicine, s If you feel dull, drowsy, debilitated, have sal’ow color of skin, or' yolh brown spots on face or body, frequent headache or dizziness, ig B s na Wi i AOW BD, ana gloomy forebodings, irm &mm and tongio aoatg‘dm)fi are ) m ! n%ll lee:! “Liver Com fi'( »m] mof m mmpwms are experienced. a_remedy 0 sk cased Dt Rieregs o mkfl, G‘E{; 30V -equal; as it effects : s “euvig the Jiver sixéngilionoa and heaichy. . SOLD BY DRUGEISTS AT 81 PER BOTTLE.
LIGONIER. NOBLE COUNTY, INDIANA, THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1878,
VEGETINE
FOR DROPSY.
: X Never Shall i 3 . - Forget the First Dose. % : okt - PROVIDENCE. Mg; H. R. STEVENB 1~ v } IJenr Sir,~l have heen a great: sufferer from dropsy. I was coptined to my honse more than a year. Six moiths of the time I was entirely hol]plqss. I was obliged to have two helpme in and out of bed. I was swollen 19 inches larger ‘than:my natural size around my waist. I suffered alt a man could and live. I tried all reniedies for dropsy. I had three different doctors. : 'M¥ friends all expected I woald die; many nights was expeoted to die before morning, . At last Veg= etine was gent me by a friend. I never shail forget the tirst dose. 1 comld realize its good effects from day today; I was getting better. After I had taken ‘some 5 or 6 bottles I conld sleep quite well mghts. I began to gain now quite fast. After some 10 botiles, I could walk [rom one part of m({ ropmn %0 the other. My appetite was gocd; the dropsy had at this time dirappeared. . I kept taking the Vegetine until I regained my usual health. !l heard of a great manycures by nsihg Vegetine after [ got out and was able to aitend to ‘my work.! lam a carpenter and builder. I will also #ay it has curéd an aunt of my wife’s of neu~ ralgia, who had saffcred for more than 20 years. #ne says ghe has nat had any neuralgia for eight months.. I have giveu it to one of my children for canker humor. I have no doubt in my mind it will cure any humor; it is a great cleanser of the'blood; it issafe to give a child. I wiill recom= ‘mend it to the world. My father is 80 years old, he says there is nothing like it to give strength and life to an aged person. I cannot be too thanktul for-the use of it.. lam, Peinl el
| Very gratefully yours, Joun H. NorTAGE. ; All digeases-of the blood.—lf Vegetine will relieve pain; cleanse, purify, and cure such diseases, restoring the patient to perfeet health after tryin g different physicians, many remedies and suffering for years, is it not conclnsive proof, . if you are a sufferer.you can be cured? Why is/ this medicine performing such great cures? It" worksin the blood, in the circulating fluid. It. can truly be called the great blooa purifier. The great source of disease originates in the blood; and no medicine that does not act directly upon it to purify and renovate, has any just'claim upon pablic attention. ] .
VEGETINE I OWE MY HXALTH ' VEGETINE. 5 4 4 Ao " - Nmwrorr, Kv., Apr. 29, 1817. Mz. H.R. STrveENg:+~- = . © - g s Dear Sir,—lHaving suffered from a breaking out of Cankerous Sores for more than five years, caused by an accident of a fracturca bone, which fracture ran into a runnirg sore, and having used every thing I counld think of and nothing helped me, until I had taken six bottles of your valuabie medicine which Mr, Miller the dpothecary reconimended very highly. The sixth bottle cared me, and all I can gay, is that 1 owe my health to your valuable Vegetine. - . { . Your most obedient servant, . ALBERT VON ROEDER. It is nnnecessary for me to enumerate the diseases for which the Vegetine ghould be uged. I know ofno disease which will nol admit of its use, with good results. Almostinnnmerable complaints are caused by-poisonous recréeitonsin the blood, which can be entirely expelled from the system by the use of the Vegetine. When the Llood is perfectedly cleansed, the diseare repidly {ields; all pains ccase; healthy action 1s prompt= y restored, and the patient cured.” . VEGETINE Cured me when the - DOCTORS FAILED. CincinNATL, 0,, April 10, 1877, H.R Stryenss, Esq.:— @ | : Dear Sir,—l was seriouslytroubled with Kidney Complaint fcr a long time. I Lave copeunlted the best doctors in thig city. I have used gour Vege= tine for this discage, and it has cnred me when the doctors failed to do so, Yours truly, - | Erngst Duriaan, Residence 621 Race St., ; f Place of business, 573 Cent. Ave, | VEGETINIC , - ‘Prepared by H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. Vegetine is sold by all Druggists.
ATTAINED AT LAST! A TRIAL will INSURE ITS POPULARITY EVERYWHERE. e =~ ‘s\{\ TR n[”'g ger— sy, e - =t eSS =7 e TR 11 e ’,“n,{z?‘; [,, N l}\zmfl | SR e SRS P R MEZ Nl €5 1 O QIS € R BQir ‘;:{ :‘ e lcn )\ TP i AR . e !;; ‘ . s:(' ?\l =l | Y & I W\ =/ A AN = ] N e o M N S P O e e D= | WHITE SHOTTLE SEWING MACRINE. ' When once useti will retain its place forever. . IT IS CELEBRATED FOR ITS ADVANTAGES, IN THAT IT IS ONE OF THE LARGEST SEWING MACHINES MANUFACTURED,—ADAPTED ALIKE T 0 THE USE OF THE FAMILY OR THE WORKSHOP. IT HAS THE LARGEST SHUTTILE, WITH A BOBBIN THAT HOLDS ALMOST A SPCCL GF THREAD. J : . THE SHUTTLE TENSION IS ADJUSTABLE ; ;{kl’aflg]z' REMOVING THE SHUTTLE:FROM Tlit " THIS MACHINE 1S SO CONSTRUCTLD THAT THE POWER IS APPLIED DIRECTI ¥ OVER THE NEEDLE, THUS ENABLING IT 70 SEW THE HEAVIEST MATERIAL WITH UNEQUALED EASE. IT IS VERY SIMPLE IN ITS CONSTRUCTION, DURABLE AS IRON AND STEEL CAN MAKE IT, ALL ITS WEAR!: . . PARTS CASE-HARDENED OR STEEL, £.::D INGENIOUSLY PROVIDED WITH MEANS f.'F TAKING UP LOST MOTION, SO WE ARE &'.5" TIFIED IN . : _ : Warranting Every Machine for 3 Ye:- .. T IS THE LIGHTEST AND EASIEST-RUN':" & MACHINEIN THE MARKET, 1T IS, ALSO, ' MOST ELABORATELY ORNAMENTED A 0 PRETTIEST MACHINE EVER PRODUCED. WITH ALL THESE ADVANTAGES, IT IS S6GiL.I) FRQOM $156 T 0 S_EB LESS THAN OTHER| FIRS |- CLASS MACHINES. ? EXCLUSIVE CONTROL OF TERRITORY GIVLN TO AGENTS. | EXTRAORDINARY INDUCEMENTS OFFERED FOR_CASH OR ON CREDIT. : ‘SEND FOR CIRCULARS AND TERMS T ) g i ; - White Sowing Machine GO, ; 358 Euclid Avenue, AGENT ik y WAk | CLEVELAND, . For.dale in Noble County hy B, Nicodemus, A = - ; bion, Ind. Cll-38-1% Dr.A. G DLIN'SE®: &2 | ' o Qton St. Chicago, | muu-:' ur“. : nature, resu) nfi"".'.‘.’.fi;;“sb":“"'} ' w.;m:. Smfi:luaen'll: ness mfi B e e L B ntly cured ; diseases of the der, K ney#, Liver, Asthms, Catarrh Plla;h:lll L'hronhDhmuLm mg‘OF FEMALKS, yieid to bis treatwet. D, O a life-long m&n«, and cures where others fuil, He is a graduate of the med, School, uses 1o mercury, bas the i practiceln the U, 8, ,xfimms% treatrient with » vmmmdbwd.u ‘or write, Every couvenience for patients. fifty cents for snmplo of Rubber Goods and ele--cular of Iupofl;: !nmc:o: ,byxxyg:.‘, DRR. OLIN'S WARRIAGE GUIDE mamtens young and ’mdhrd'o both Sexer, on all dlseases of a private ewnsii Bl oo g o Kl Do 1 Non, Everybods abould get this book, Prics 00 ooty to ARy adr dross, sealod. e i RalEg e : Sick Heudache) |CARTERS] & ous Lt Pie:” | 3' “ ¥ . . foes V‘ B e ":qu k R g% L i BTk Ny & L D |4 Periect lemeay 10T gy §§‘@ F IS "‘«r@@ B |- 5“{,9 Constipation s m,vww,a,%{.,‘fl, ihe small-] z
‘The Political Revolution in California. ¢ * [New York World.] e One of the leading partisan journals of San Francisco describes the state of political feeling in that part of the world as revealed by this election in language as emphatic as the Lamen‘tations of Jeremiah. It considers the downfall both of the republican and of the democratic party in California to’ be as complete “as the ruin which has “ crept upon the ancient decayed pal“aces.and walls of the lost races “ which once inhabited Central Amer“ica. No skill can ever restore their “old power and renown in the politi“ecal world.” . 5 :
The same journal, which by no means exults in the prospect, expresses its “firm belief that the State of * California will never again see an“other Governor or another Legic“lature elected either’' by the demo- “ cratic or the republican party.” JAll this may or may. not be the first effervescence of a.profound political disappointment. But there is obviously truth enough in it to corimand the serious altention of thoughtful men in Other parts of the country. = The rout of the two hitherto leading political parties in California has indeed been overwhelming. I{ is plain from the election returns that neither of thiese parties now possesses a com-' pact organization or a respectable:following in half a dozen out of the fiftytwo councies which compose the State of Califernia. To what are we to attribute this sudden and sweeping political revolution? * * * *
On the surface of things there is some excuse for regarding this revo--lution as a “revolution of contempt” like that which in an hour shook to pieces the fabric of the Orleanist monarchy in France thirty years ago. Tlie recognized leader of the triumphant Working-men in California, immediately after the election, harangued his followers at Charter Oak Tlall and made d speech, in the course of which he proclaimed his intention of going East and of visiting New York, Pennsylvania and Washington for the purpose of “denouncing the rascals who “ had assembled 1n the National Capi- “ tol and adjourned without relieving “the people of the Dacific ¢oast of the ¢ curse of Chinese cheap labor.” How the Congress of the United States could have relieved the Paecific coast of the curse of Chinese cheap labor is not, perhaps, quite as clear as it might’ be. But it is perfectly clear that if the Congress of the United States had occupied itself effectively with the great econumic problems which underlie the existing distress and paralysis of our great industries and of our worging-people, not on the Pacific coast aloue but all over the country, it would not have been possible for the leader of a new and half-organized party in California te command the applause of rejoicing thousands by such an allusion to the National Legistature. “ ‘
Read What the People Say in Regard to -the Great Shoshonees Remedy © o oand Pills. '
Levi Jones, Markham, says: I had a severe :attack of bronchitis. I was so bad that I’ could hardly get my breath. I sought for a quick remedy, and seeing the Shoshonees Remedy so highly recommended, I procured a bottle, and am happy to say that, by the time it was taken, I was entirely well and have remained so, although I was much exposed through the winter. in fravelingi e " Rev. F. B. Stratton, Demorestville, writes: [ have found your remedies particularly beneficial for liver com‘plaint, dyspepsia and bronchial affec: tious, and would advise all similarly affected to give them a trial. - Mrs. A. D. Pierce, Moberly, N. Y., says: ‘lt affords me much pleasure to express my heartfelt gratitude for the benefit I have received from using the Great Shoshonees Remedy. I was sorely affiicted with dyspepsia and disease of the lungs. After having used Bix bottles, I have become hearty and well. I never knew .a medicine to have such wonderful effects. I cannot speak too highly of its merits. John Finlayson, Athol, says: When traveling one of my feet got sore and broke out. I could not cure it and had to return home. It became bétter, and afterwards worse, I finally purchased a bottle-of the Remedy and a box of Pills, and before they were half gone I commenced to improve, and before they were finished my foot was completely cured. It is now seventeen months since, but have had no further attack. ¢ :
Price of the Remedy in pint bottles, $1: Pills, 25 cents a box. ' . Prepared only by FOSTER, MILBURN & CO., Buffalo, N. Y. Sold by all medicine dealers. For sale by 11. C. Cunnnigham, Ligonier. 10eow-4w.
Stand Upy Benjamin.
Stand up, Benjamin Harrison. Stop calling nick-names. Take your hands ouf of your pockets. Now, sir. You say that prosperity will be restored if we will return to specie payments. and put the Greenback agitators in an idiot asylum. Cast your eyes northward, Benjamin; as far north as Canada. You will see a country ‘that has never had anything else than the specie system; and you will observe that Canada has harder times than the United States, and that the workingmen of Quebec, have been fighting for: bread, and that it has taken. an army o soldiers to put down therevolt. You are aware that Canada has no green-. back agitators. = You will observe, Benjamin, that your remarks in the Republican State convention shows gross ignorance. e trust that you will not again bring disgrace upon your honored grand-father, who fit the red-skins in these parts, by talking about a subject of which you know nothing.- 7. H, Express, (National ) L el e — . Ben’s Best Hold. S : (Cincinnati Enquirer,) !
Gen. Ben. larrison is a clever gentleman and a brainy little lawyer, but hé was never eut out for a politician any more than Stanley Matthews, He ought to eschew politics .and cling te the courts, and he would stand a good chance of dying h.appéy,_’,"',[l’;isa is good advice, but we are afrald he will not heed it. lle Lias got his pipe of peace charged and a pocketful of matches, and is trying to get the®Nationals to smoke with him and bury the hatchet. But they won’t do it. They want his scalp. Ben has but little hair on his head, and he won't have that 3;%1& long. el In nocountry are changes of fortune 80 quickly made as f’fg:,_-:maf"tlntt..eq Statos. A fow years ago the daughter g@ggm%"%wflgummflr&* were valued at%fifé living in New Orleans in destitute oir-
%t Weber’s Important Testimony. ff!‘he only witness before the Potter fzf’}%:gmittee} on July 3d was Emil L. “Weber, the man who destroyed the ‘Sherman letter. e testified with more circumstantiality and detail to ‘the facts brought out in his examination on Tuesday; the caucussing and ‘plotting of the visiting statesmen; ‘their persuading the Returning Board to'go on and throw out enough more parishes and precinets to count in all the Hayes electors, after the local Republican leaders had virtually given it up as a bad job; the manner in wilich this: work was done; the-em-ployment of a seore of United States soldiers to copy out bogus aflidavits; flfi Feliciana trickery; the FEliza Pinkston business; the arrival of Mrs. Jenks in Donaldsville, aceredited by Gen. Sheldon, to procure the griginal of the Sherman letter; her Tepeated and constant declarations that it was a genume letterand worth a great deal oL money; with other matters of hardly less interest. St :
i Deécidedly the most important par of ‘liis testimony is the account he 'W%fi;@-_@mmmteq;or-"th@'awempt,s made to induce him {6 commit perjury—for that is what it comes to. Before he started for Washington, Judge Marks, recently appointed by Hayes Collector of Internal Revenue at New Orleans, and another of the persons who showed a singular anxiety about the Sherman letter, wrote go him that Le was tobe a witness, and added: “Have you received your appointment? If not, let me know at once.” When he reached New Orleans, a Custom House employee told him -that Gen. Tom Anderson, late of the Returning’ Board, wanted to see him. He called at the Custom House accordingly, and Gen. Anderson gave him to understand that he was expected to contradict James E. Anderson, and that the service would be properly rewarded. When he reached Washington, several notables and ex-notables of Louisiana, among thém an ex-Gov-ernor and a Judge, told him that Marks was anxious to see him; one indiscreetly added that Marks had given out that he could control his testimony ‘before the committee. Only last week, Capt. Jenks told him that if he testilied right he could have a place i the New Orleans Custom House, as he (Jenks) expected to.— More. interesting still: Ile was approached in Washington by a Treasury employee, who told him that Sherman: felt kindly to him, and would be glad to have a brief interview with him. The interview did not take place, because Weber was not in the market. - 2
Ilis examination will be continued in New Orleans on July 10, to which day the main committee also adjourn.
Ohio’s “Business Governor.” 3 (Baltimore Gazette.)
‘The people of Ohio elected to the office of Governor last year a venerable grocery-keeper named Bishop, whose chief recommendation was that he had prospered in business and was the sole owner of the most majestic and patriarchial beard west of the Appalachian range. Since his election a great many persons in his own party (the Democratic) have come to dislike him. Ile has had his ambition stirred, and it is not knewn whether he is a candidate for President of the United States or the Premiership of Russia. At the recent State convention at Columbus a Committee was appointed to wait upon Senator Thurman and Governor Bishop and bring them into the convention. -The great men were marched in. Senator Thurman made a brief speech and was enthusiastically applanded. n When Governor Bishop arose some of the bummers in the Cincinnati delegation began hissing.— From other portions of the house came groans and cries of “Put him out!” *The old fraud!” and “He’s a bigger fraud than IFayes!” The Governor was quite confused, aiid his speech was a migerable failure. Endeavoring to refer to Mr. Thurman; he spoke of him as his “friend, Senator Morton.” The yelling and hissing which followed this feux pas was indescribable. From all parts of the house came cries of “Put him out!” The probabilities are' that when Mr. Bishop offers himself for re-election as Governor he will be promptly “put out.” Buf what are we to think of a party which treats the Chief Executive of tlie third State in the Union with such indignity ?
e —l e M-_‘. 2 Perished in the Flames.
A horrible catastrophe befell a farmer’s family, near Ricker’s Prairie, Mo., on Friday night, June 28. The family, consisting of John Leonard, his wife, a married daughter and five younger children, lived in a log house With an attic overhead. During the night the house took fire, and, before it was discovered, the stair-case leading to the attie; where the five children were sleeping, was in flames, cutting off their escape. The father, in his frantic efforts to rescue the children, was s 0 badly burned as to entirely disable him. The oldest of the children, a boy of 16, tore the sash out of asmall window in the attic and threw himself out, falling upon-a sharp g)(icket fence below and was impaled, killing him instantly. The other four children were burned in the building. The father’s injuries are so severe that there is little Liope of his recovery. i
- The Bottom Reached. = : {Evansville Courier.] Sy Unless John. Sherman flagrantly violates the law forbidding the contraction of the currency, the bottom has been reached, and a gradual resumption of business is getting on ils legs again. The assurance, not only that ‘we are to have tliree hundred and (ifty millions of greenbacks permanentIy engrafted on our financial system, but that the country has determined to punish those who have defeated the will of the majority by resorting to fraud, forgery and perjury. hasalready done much to mspire confidence. Bet-. ter times are at hand, : e — e E—— =~ The country. press throughout the State shonld warn theicreaders against signing their names to any kind of a g'qnt;:acg presented by traveling agents, and steps should be taken at once to armg%;tb@“gax}g. now operating in the State—7lnd. Journal, . L 0 TE eL e son L couns try press to warn? The men who et swindlad I this way re generally men who ure too stingy lo take the Ppapers, and expect o get some adyanBy i e
How to Learn to Swiii,
~ Every boy and girl should learn to swim. A writer in the American Agriculturist offers -the following suggestious, by obedience to which the art of swimming may be readily acquired: L L ‘When'l wasa boy I learned toswim by means of a swimming-board. This is the safest method possible. If corks are used they mey slip from around the breast down beneath the body, throwing the head beneath thesurface and putting the wearer in danger of drowning. * | : s Some country boys get two bladders and then tie them togéther with a short cord, and use these as supporters. They, are ‘tfl.;xe_ most dangerous thing possible for a-boy to have.’ o ' The board is perfectly safe, and one may learn to swim in a very short time by using ote.. It should be over four feet long, over a foot wide and’ about two inches thick, white pine or_‘ cecCa . ) e J
To use it, a boy wades into the water up to his shoulders, then taking vheld;of the end of the board he pushes, it before him—toward the bank, and not into deeper water—springs for‘ward with his feet and throws himself flat upon thie water. 5 T'his movement: carries him along a few feet. lle then draws up both his legs at .the same time, keepirg the knees as far apart as possible,and then strikes out with both feet, not straight backward, but sideways, just as a frog does. E
The stroke is made slowly and is repeated again, drawing up the legs slowly and steadily. The board keeps the head above water. When the leg stroke has been learned, one hand is taken from the board and the stroke learned, or the chin may- be rested on the board, while the stroke is taken with.both hands. e
- .'This is a very good plan, as it compels the swimmer to keep his hands under the water, which he should always do. By and by”the board may be pushed ahead, and the young swimmer may swim after it, always keeping within reach. When a number of boys go Jo swim they should always have two or three of these boards with them for use in case of any aeccident. - B e
Attachment to Newspapers,
- The strong attachment of subseribers of well-conducted newspapers is fully counfirmed by newspapers. *“Stop my paper,”: words of dread to beginners in business, lose their terror after a paper has been established for a term of years. So long as a paper pursues.a just,hoforable and judicious course, meeting the wants of its customers in all respects, the ties of friendship between the subscribers and the papers are as hard to break by an outside third party as the links ‘which bind old friends in business or social lite. Ocecasionally defects and errors in a newspaper are overlooked by those who have beconie attached to it, through its perusal; for years. They sometimes become ‘dissatisfied with it-on account ot s(;;(;met:hing which had slipped into its cglumns, and may stop taking it; but the absence of the familiar sheet at their homes and offices, for a few weeks becomes an insupportable privation, and they hasten to take it again and possibly apologize for having it stopped. No friendship on earth 'is more constant than-that contracted by the reader for a journal which makes an honest and eirnest effort to merit its continued support. ITence a conscientiously conducted paper becomes a favorite of the family.
Purifying the Party.
The New Albany Ledger gives, this adviee to i conscientious Demaoerat:
A correspondent from an interior county writes: **When the Democrats make a mistake and place upon the ticket the name of a person that has not one good quality to recommend him, but on the otber hand, is low, dishonest and drunken and repudiates even his whisky and: washwoman’s bills, what are good Democrats to do under such circumstances; are they compelled to swallow all such fellows?” Our advice: to our friend is, that on election day, if he finds any such name as he represents above up: on the Democratic ticket, it is a duty ‘which he owes to himself aud to his party, to scratch, end scraich and scratch, until there is not a vestige of the hame left to pollute the democratic'ticket. - 5 b
Before September.
[Salem Democrat.]
. If you want to make a fortune by going into bankruptey, you must do ‘it before September. Duy all you can on credit and turnitinto cash; borrow all the money you hear of ; sell every thing you've got and transfer your home property to your wife and then ‘break. The friends that you defrauded may go back on you, perhaps, and ‘question your honesty and integrity, ‘but that don’t matter; it you come out a good deal ahead other friends will soon flock around you as thick as tadpoles in a mud puddle, :
. Seif-Saerifice. . (Thompson's Philadelphia Times.)
¢ Mr. John G. Thompson has re-elect-ed himself Chairman of the Democratic Committee of Ohio. All that Mr, Thompson now wants 1s the Chairmanship of the National Committee, the position of Sergeant-ut-Arms of the Senate, and the Presidency for Senatof Thurman. Mr, Thompson is sacrificing himself in the most wanton manner to serve his party and his country. 2 oy fei
A Compliment for Sam,
The Cincinnati Commercial (republican) says: Sam Randall, the speaker of the Ilouse, deserves more credit than any other man for the suppresgion of the giganticand infamous lobby schemes of the late session. Ile is “in this respect a very great improvement on the late Mr. Blaine, who was -always in favor of jobs that had millions in them, and was not a deadhead “in the speakey’s chair. i g o e o b e A : : - Done His Best, Sk Dr. Price has done hig best to make his: Unique Perfumes supérior in sweetness, freshness and permanency of order to those made in this or any ‘other country, and ladies of most exquisite taste have decided that his ntentions have been successfully carBMROWN > Aamg}on ‘has recently been made in New York that a note, whether ac. ounted ‘or purchased , higher ”‘ j ;*é » ”f*“«""i‘fifig‘ o 4iayes ougni 10 pay dize I'lnkKsion “”g 4450, She risked hell.on his acR ee L EOORAN .o e s e
Who Can Yote at a Nchool Meeting? - s"(Con_u'vt:‘;;’sfille‘ Eiém-infép}? i . The question, Who is a vofer at a public school meeting? Superintendent Smart says, has been a puzzling one for several years. Section 26 of ‘the school Jaw provides zthgb:t_iat such school meetings all tax ‘pay s of the district shall be entitled fo a vote, except married women and’ minors.— This seems plain enough to a person who does not understand the school’ law, but what is a schog] distriet? A school district ‘has no determinable geographical boundaries. The only place in thé school law _f'roml ‘which ‘any approximate answer to the question can be obtained is found |in section 14, which provides that on taking the annual enumeration thé'trustee shall ‘enquire of each person ‘whose name he so lists to which school he or. she desires to be attached, and that such persons, upon m:lkjngwi_scl.eclionr,, shall be con.sid_cr‘vd*‘:‘ts"‘fmtming thescliool district of the school selected, and none shall'be alloweid thereafter to attach themselves to of have the ‘privilege -of any other school except by the consent of the trustee and for 'good cause shown. This weuld seem. to limit voting ‘at school meetings to ‘those who were enumerated.: Such Ww.us evidently not the intention of the Legislatare, although the Attorney General has been' forced by a strict construction of ‘the law to so: decide. The law formerly gave tax payers who did not have charge of ;Lzhildre_n of school age the right to become enumerated, and thns become voters at school - meetings. [f this . provision was re-enacted, 1 think the intention of the Legislature would be realized. From all the light possible on the. question, as the law how stands, to be | eligible: to the right.of fravchise at the school meetings, a-person must be enumerated as having charge of children of proper -school age. Simply this ax% nothing more, - Directors shonld s€e to'this, and save much unpleasantness ap times. SR e
How It. Was Done, [New York Sun, July 3]
: The' sensational testimony of the dasg. at New Orleans was given by William Simpson, one of Gen. Bank’s staff. officers in the war, for several years cashier in the New Orleans Custom ITouse, a-man with the highest testimonizals from “eminent Republicans. Ie testifies that a friendy; now in office under the Government, told him that he was in Kellogg’s room. when the Returning Board’s returns were brought in; tlat the signature of one member of the board was wanting; that this: member said in his hearing he would not sign the returns until $lO,OOO was forthcomjng, halt in cash and half in good notea?;_ that the sum was made up, then and there, whereupon the member #flixed his signature. The.witness at once wrote to llayes, telling him ‘the story.= layes referred the letter to Sherman, who referred it in turn to Tom Aunderson. Letters from Ilayes’ private secretary, from a subordinate of Johu Sherman, and from Anderson are now in the hands of the committee. Whether they already have the name of Mr. Simpson’s friend is not known, but Mr. Stenger says the friend will be examined in due time unless he flees thecdountoy. = ovdiaay vo Gl o
The Great Grant Movement., ' (Washington Post)> . .
We feel :authorized to say that thé Grant movement ismot spreading. .1t had all its speedatthe very first jump, and seems to have remained stationary ever since. . The tremendous noise we hear is due to the agony of those who require & Grant moyvement for their personal salvation, rather than to any inherent vitality in the movement itself. Aceording te preseéntindications the awful.shadow of the Man on Horseback was cast -athwart thie country by no more formidable substance than a’ whisky-ring ‘editor astride of an. empty barrel. Under these circumstances: the outlook for the Great Grant Movement becomes more melancholy the-more it is scrutinized. saa B Sndi e g
Served Him Right.
A ‘minister . was riding: through a gection of the Statelof South Carolina, where custom forbade inn-keepers fo take pay from the clergy whoe stayed with them. ' The minister in question took supper without ‘prayer, and dte breakfast without prayer or grace, and was about to take his departure when “mine host” presented his bill. *“Ab, gir,” said he, “I am 4 clergvman!” “That muay be.” responded Boniface, “put you came here, smoked like a sinner, and ate and drank like a'sinner, and slept like a sinner; and pow, sir, you shallipay like a sianer.”
‘You Can Be Happy : 1f you will stop all of your extravagant and wrong notions 1n doctoring yourself and families with expeunsive doctors or humbug curc .iis, that do harm alivays, and us¢ only nature’s simple. remedies for all your ailments —you will he wise, well and happy, and save great expense. The greatest remedy for this, the great, wise and good willitell yeu,.is Hop Bitters —believeit. See *Proverbs”. in another column. ot e e )el
The silver vault now being constructed at the sub-treasury in New York will be forty-seven feet long, twenty-four feet broad and twelve feet high. It is designed to hold $40,000,000 in silver, and the cost-of the' iron and steel work will amount to $20,000. The floor will bs made ofiron and steel two.inches thick,beneath which will be four feet of concrete. ‘The silver will be moved by an elevator. -
News from Bear Paw Mountains, seventy miles from Fort Benton and ten miles from Joséph-Miles battlefield, represents two gulches with gotd discovered, and two miners’ districts organized with Recorders, " 'The last, disgovery s the placer: winer's bouau: za, yielding a 8 much as $5O. - Alveady | nearly every man in Béuton has gone out. It i$ a regular craze. The men from the Hills are going up, .~/ <, . Vanderbilt iz the greatest railway owuer and manager ih the world. Ile is suprema dictator to the New York Cent-,-_t;aa}%‘ Hudson River, -thie New York & Harlem, the Canada Southern; the J,ake Shore & Michigan Southetn, e Mfi&%fifl% Central, and the Rochese & SR Line railways, representing a combined capital of $184,385,000, “and 0??”*5%99%@%%@1@%@@#3 BRI Vgl il e St Gl OGO _ Leba pfi Patriot: Tom Doyal ats tempted the feat of cleaning his wife's hent -ffii‘% s, thial shone with all e el SRI e
- . Times Have Been l_!éx‘der, : . We often hear it said:® “We have l._xa;ql..x;ardgtimes before, but never anything to equal the ‘present.” Hear how Thomas H. Benton characterizes ‘the state of the country soon after the ‘war of 1812: “No price for property ‘or produce; no sales but those of the Sheriff or Marshal; no purchasers at the execution sales but the creditor or some hoarder of money; no employment for industry; no demand for labor; no sale for the products of farm: no sound of the hammer but that of the auctioneer knocking down property, stop laws, property laws, replevin laws, stay laws, loan oflice laws, the intervention of the legislator between the creditor and the debtor; this was the business of legislation in .threefourths of the States West'and South of New England.” | % ' Mr. Jefferson describes the condition of the country during the war, as follows: - A e
. “Dy the total anuihilatien in values of the produce, which was to give mie subsistence and independence, I shall be. like Tautalus, up to the shoulders in water, and yet dying with thirst. “We can make enough indeed to eat, drink, and clothe ourselyes, but nothing for salt, iron, groceries and taxes, which must be paid in money. For ‘wual ean we raise for market? Wheat? we can only'give it tio our herses, as we ‘have been doing ever sinee Harvest. ' Tobaeco? it is not wortlt the pipe it is smeked in. Some suy whisky, but all mankind must become.drunkards to consumelt.”
.My Jefferson was the owner of 10,000 acres of land and 150 slaves, the males, encugh of whom were skilled in the various branches of the mechanical arts, to 'supply all the necessities of thé estate, and of females to manufacture the cloth and mike up into the necessary clothing. Afterhisdeath it took all to pay his debts, and his only surviving daughter was left penniless: o el
& . The Telephone, = ¢ i . [Seclinsgroye Times,] = . S The prineiples of the telephone are nothing new, which every one knows . who ever studied Comstock’s Natural Philosophy, a common school book. There the principle is illustrated that the sound travels faster through solid bodies than through thewair, and even under water one can hear a sc’n}nd further than through the air. The principal: illastratior given, howg'tvger,' was that of a log. * By putting on ’p- ear, to, the end of the log,’a blow or a’'scratehi made on-the other end is heard twice in close suceession. The soundthrough the log -is heard first, and the sound coming through the air comes to the ear afterwards by Its slower advance through the airi There can be no sound without matter, and the more solid the“matter is the better it conducts'sound. Hence a string or wood conducts sound well, but' wire much better. The principle of the telephone has long been known, and Edison has only developed a bLetter means of application to practical use. e )
What We Ship to Europe.
- Some idea of the magnitude of our foreign exports can be gained from a glance at the shipments by the steam--ers which sail from New York to-day: The France takes, among other items, 487 head of live cattle (the largest ship: ment of the kKind hitherto made), 70,000 bushels of grain, 1,050 cases of canned goods, and 290 bales of domestics. The Erin has 80,000 bushels of grain, 10,000 packages of cheege, 100 sewing machines, 70 horses, and forty tons of fresh meat. The City of Chester has 40,000 boxes of ‘cheese (the largest -shipment this iseason), 1,700 cases of eanned meats; 3,000 packages of butter, 100 tons of agrieultural imn‘plements,; ‘and 50 tons of fresh meat. The Neckar has 50 tons of agrieultural implements. and 2,000 pounds ‘of feathers.. The other yvessels also take out similar cargoes. |
A Furious Bull in the China Shop. “Brick” Pomeroy has mounted his war ‘horse and makes this bellicose ‘proclamation in his Democrat of Junel: “In the organization of greenback clubs we counsel every able-bodied member of these organizations to be‘come as proficient as possible in the manual-of-arms. In thetime of peaceit ig well to prepare for war. In every greenback club there should be a drill master—that is, in every club whose ‘members are brave enough to stand at all times, under all circumstances, who defend their rights as citizens. ... Ve, the people, are in rebellion against the intaxed noßility of this country. We, the people, propose to have our ‘rights, peaceably and by means of the ballot if possible—by ghe bayonet; if wenugh., b Rt tdis o i N S : 1 Tncreasing the Debt. : : . 5 (Wabash Courier.) ' The public debt statement for June shows an in¢rease in the debt of $2,149,318 -for the month. This comes from Sherman’s preparation for resumption. He is increasingftpe bonded debt in order to obtain coin for resumption purposes without any regard ‘whatever for the consequences. Is ‘there sense or propriety in forcing re: sumption at such a cost and when the probability of maintaining it is not the least flattering? . : -
He is not an honest man who will ‘try -to pull down any living creature that is- fighting the battle of life and struggling to make an honest living. —Seymotr T'imes. ' - - Theubovesentimentcontainsalarge sized truth, but such teachings are of no ‘avail with the sordid and selfish portion of the human family.—Bryan BTGNS e e el - Bishop McCloskey of the Roman “Catholic Diocese of Lou'sville has is‘sued a circular letter to his priests “calling attention to the “scandal growing out of the use of intoxicating liguors at pic-nies gotten up for ehurch \ purposes,” and adds: “Money obtain--ed in this way brings with it no blessiingj_elther for priests or people. Fi‘naneial gain is a paltry compeunsation forithé ruinofsouls! ; =~ oy o 3 ." 5 3 iA B i The Chicago Post has succumbed to ‘pended publication, Monday. night of last week being its final % %&mfi’m ‘tha. %M% cago News. The Post was established SRR P istence has made for its owners a good AT L AN Bl e R e R S R ngm”;"i;% Bt sbl At - Bovatuor B aib ot Save tHat oo a 1 ,§§ g RLIEET N EINE TEe ee e Ao 3 ila fep e W RITeRE e T P R
NO. 12.
