Noble County Register, Volume 1, Number 30, Ligonier, Noble County, 26 August 1858 — Page 2
4 HE REGISTER ~ LIGONIER, AUGYST 26, 1858. ' . Republican State Ticket. 1 e mmnx;;?ngu.fiffi 18t Dis.—HORACE P. BIBDLE, of Cass; 2d. ~ABRAM W. HENDRICKS, Jeflerson 33:!.:—_3_!%&}' ANDES, of Jlarions. ! Jh=WM D GRISWOLD, of Vigo.. _ ATTORNEY GENERAL. . WILLIAM T. OTTO; of Floyd ; | . TREASURER OF STATE. - = JOIN ‘H: ‘HARPER; of St. Joseph. ' AUDITOR OF BTATE, ALBERT LANGE, of Vigo. .. .'. SECRETARY OF STATE, - WILLIAM A. PEELLE, ot Randolph STPERINTENDENT PUBLIC INSTRUCTION JOIN YOUNG, of Marion. ... 4 - FOR GONGRESS. . CHARLES CASE, of Allen, ! ‘FOR CIRCUIT JUDGE. ED. R. WILSON, of Wells, . FOR CIRCUIT PROSECUTOR. & JAMES M. DEFREES, of - Elkhart,
‘Republican County Convention. 1 Trile : e : o The Republicans®of Noble County, and all others who ave opposed to the iniquitous course of tle present Admipistration ar¢ gequested to meqt,inl Convention at Albion, on Satnrday, the 28th inst., to neminate candidutes for Represemative, Trcasurer, Sheriff, aud two County Comanissioners, and for the transaetion of such other business as. may bLe deemed necessary. % 3 Let all attend who possibly can. - By order of the Co. Cent. Com. ~A. B. MILLER, Chairman. . Jndge Peclle. On - Monday f{cvcning last, Judge Y'eclle, Republican candidate for the office of¥Scenetary - of Stase, addressed a lurge and respectable audience in the town hall of our village. In the course of his remarks he exposed in a mastere ly manncry thé corrupt and tortuous course pursued by the pro¥ent deleetable admiministaation. Ile showed plainIy that while the Jeaderi of “the Bemoerafiec party iu order & _beguile the great masses of that organization north, who arc undeubtedly sincesely attached to free institations, loudly dnd ostentatiously proclaimed the doctrine of “Popular so'.'crcigntvy,” as though it wcre a new thing, a panacca for all political ills, they had previously concoes ted a' cunning scheme in conjunction with a majority of the members of the Supreme Court of the United States, all_patent democzats, by which that principle, so popular in the North, and ~o ohmoxious to the slavery propagandist of the South, would be incontiveatly killed. Those who voted for Buchanan under the belief that he was Jouest in his professions—found the fruit. of their exertions to be like “Dead Sea fruit,—at first, fair to the eye, but when tasted, ashes on the lip.” Hence the Dred Scott decision. A decision at variance with cemmon, eivil, ceelesiastical and international law. ‘At variancé with every decision of every court of the United States, either State or Nhtio’na;l',‘ wherever and whenever the ifiucstigj‘{, ‘has been” adjudicated, North or South. At variance, too with christianity; with bumanity, and with the dicta of the great and good of every' country, and of every age. _A decigion making Slavery National and Freedom Scetional is so palpably eriminal and preposterous as to preclude ar--gument or cxcuse. : aF ‘
He also showed how this administration after havidg loudly and proudly praclaimed at its inauguration that one of its cardinal features should be retrenchment and reform in. the expenditures of the General Goverament, tags itly condemning those which had preceded it as guilty of a profligate waste uf the public monies, absolutely expended in one year, a year too of profound peace, nearly ONE HuNDRED MILLIONS or Dorrars!! Five Millions -more than the entire expenses of the government from its foundation to the close of Jefferson’s administration. As the pop.ulation, the wealth and resources-of a country dinereases, when thero: is no disturbing influence, the ratio of taxasipn should, a 6 a matter of coyrse, decrease. It would cost one of tiwenty .nen less to. pay his twentieth to own and support a horse, than it would one man to keep him alone. So it is with. the peoplg of 2 nution. And yet instead of being less. per capita ii ’hasl grown from® forty-cight cents daring Washington's administration, to #hige dollars now! During the war of 1812, xing the war of 1846 with Mexieo it was only 1,85 for each inhabitant—\her GG S o e lshonsh. # miost Important one. 1t behooves
and- futnr:'we!fare of our eountry to examine into-this satter, and to hold our public officers to & strict accountability; not so much for the mere money’ itself, though that is important, a 8 to destroy as far aspossible the pernicious, soul-corrcding prineiple, now unblush= ingly avowed by this adminlstration, 0& prostituting the people’s money to foist] and sustain in office, corrupt and profligate men because of their m’xbaefi:icn'-"l‘ cy to the powersthat be, - Thus teaching the people to “crook the pregnant hinges of the knee that ‘thrift may follow fawning.” B £
Mr Peelle also'alluded to the outrages in Kansas. To the enormous and flagrant frauds perpetrated there by the agents of the government, and eongratulated the men of the free North upon thesturdy independence of the noble people of that territery in spurning the “Green English bill” with its threat in one hand and its bribe in the other.
It affords us pleasure to assure Mr. Peelle that the Republicap State Tieket will not only, in our opinion, receive a large majority in the 10th Congresstonal District of Indiana, but that Noble county will tufn out more than an average erop of . chulfl'ns, which taking every ihigg into fifisideration, is saying a good deal. ~ . |
Health and success to Wm A Peelle of i{andolph County, Secretary of State “thet is to be.” iy i —— s The Congressional Convention Now that the Convention is over we. would congratulate the Republicans of the District upen the nomination of the Hen. Charles Casefor Congress; for, taking him “by and large” we believe him to be the man who will not only best reflect our sentiments but will poll the largest vote, and for .this most excellent reason; that he has not only acquittcd"lximself in his high office to the abundant satisfaction of his friends but his eminent ability, integrity, and, in short; “his every day walk and conver-. sation,” has been such that the good' people of the 10th District will not do without him. And surecly, thercin the people’s desire and the public intcrest altogether coincide. L A
We are sorry that our csteeméd friend Wm. M. Clapp, Esq., was not selected for the important office of CircuitJudge, but we are consoled in knowing that in our other excellent. friend Ed. R. Wilson, Esq.,‘ who was nominated, the Republicans present a man not only possessed of the requisite qualifications, but one in whose Lonor and integrity the most implicit reliance may be placed. i s James M. Defrecs, Esgs, of Goshen, who was nominated ‘aB Cireuit Prosecutor is a gentleman admirably qualifi~ ed for that position. His attainments his long residence among us, his intimate acquaintance with our warts and wishes, will cnable him'so to discharge the duties of his onerous, and, at present, not very agreeable office, in a manner, we think, henorable to himeelf, and .gredi;table to -his county and the Disfi‘iet. - ks 3 " | g - Perhaps it would" not be amiss if, in 3 ‘this connection, we allude to what 9‘e‘ ;_ejonceive to be a gross departure from the usual medcs. of procéedure and;/a wilful disregard by a’ wajority of tfli(;i delegates from Nolle county, of the kuown wishes and will of its people, as formally expressed by their rcgular Co, Convention, which met, acted and de: clared ounly one weeck previous. At that Co. Convention the following resolution was adopted without one dissenting voice.’ T £ " Resolved, That the Republicans of Noble County in-convention assembled, recommend; to the Republican: cenvention of the 10th Judicial circuit, Aungus‘tasM Latta Esq. as a suitable candidate for the office of Prosecuting Attorney of said Indicial civenit. ;b - Now when it is known that'a majority of the delegates to the Judidial Convention had bien members of the Convention which passed the above res«lution, does it not seem singular that ‘they acted as they did—against Mr. Latta — ageinst theirown wish--8 and recommendations! And yet they did! | Whersfose. Was it to save the Union? Was ‘it to. perpetuate the party of Ereodom?_Or wasit o gratify petty SRS P Ay iinct the part of oe or two of the delegation against a gentleman who, ‘We are prepmed to say, is in every respect infij&‘w*@“’"’“"fl““ B s eling maure and kindred avocations,
W Woe do not care. Mr Latta does not ccave. Secure in tho abiding uttachment of hisfriends who know and love 'him well, and sécure.in diis own self respect, the chicfest. consolation of high of petiy apitc ‘pass bim by as the idle
wjfid which he regards nqt;. speak of it nmow for the first and Tas time to let such traitofs know that they are Lnpwn und that “they will meet in the fulluess of time their due recompense OF feward” RLARC W b ¢ A@ B > G
- QANDIDATES.—We ‘have becn informed that Johnson' D. Carl, Esq., of Perry; Dr Reed of Noble, Dr Cecil of Wayne, Nelson Prentiss Esq. of Jeffer son, and Rev. Wni. Clock -of Orange has been mentioned as candidates for Representative before the Convention next Saturday. We like them all good wen and true, and can cordially support them all, even apart from party considerations. It will be an amieahle contest, and as sailors say, let the hardest fend off. e L o
pen Ata meeting of the Republicans of Sparta Township, held at Cromwell, on the 21st inst., the following named personsg were appoixited as delegates to attend the eounty convention, to be held at Albion on the 28th, Clark Allman, John Humble, David . Ohlwine, James MeMann, J. R. Randall, Abel Mullen; and Jonas Wyland. /.. . The following persons werc appointed as a wahshnp Central Committee during the coming canvass: J. R. Randall, Samuel Ohlwine and John Huwble. e e
~——--———'»c-a‘sr.__.'____ . Grove Mills---Kendalville, Ind.
We had the pleasure last week of visiting the Grove Mills at Kendalville in this county, owned by Taber & Brotheri We were really surprised to sce the porfection that had becn obtained in. the Machinery of the Mill. The Mill is ‘new, having been erected during the latter part of last sseason, The ‘Messrs. Tabers’ seemed to have the happy -fortune to fall upon, or the dis’ criminaticn to select for the finish -of
all the different departments of the i‘fill, ‘mest competent and thorough rorkmen and mill-wrights: : ~ The Engine was made by Mossrs. Sharpe & King of Salem, Columbiana county, Ohio, and is ‘a real—model piece of machihery in all of its parts. ° By the way we notice that the*Salem manufacture of Steam Mill Engines ar¢ noted all over the country as being the bestever known. .* . o=l We have a friend ind Towa who has Longlit and shipped one from that place to his home in-lowa., “ _rg.ti)éx_f _than pufchasc 2t dhre many poivts nearer him. 2= Aund wo are infcrmed by Messrs, T, & Bro., that even from the Tron- Manu. facturing city of Pittsburch, that Messrs. Sparpe & King have filled of Lzteorders for their engines. o
~ Bat to return to Messrs. Tabers” Mill it'is unméccsary to say that with as good machinery and as well put together as this one, and -with as indefatiga~ ble and enterprising men as the Messrs. Taber's are to manage it, that. the Grove Mill cunnot fail to turn out some as good samples of flour as is made by the most noted Mills of any country.— We learn that the flour ranks first in any market to which it has as yct been sent. S ‘ We, consider the Mill 3 eredit to our county. i nay S :
8 s o e TSt | Allen D. Hostetter, Esq. ' We learn thatjthe above named gontleman is spoken of as the Republican eandidate fo~ Sheriff* of o-r county. . We bope that he niay succeed in obtaining the nowinatjon, for we know of no better or more popular man| and are satisfied that he will greatly add to the strength of the whole ticket in this and the adjoining townships. & - . ‘We modestly express.the wish that this time. the houest and haedly carned claims of old Perry Township will not be Yoverslaughed.” We syyythis nodestly,’ becauseit has of late been'great1y inlvogue to deem evgn%gi)fiier man' ‘highly inipertinent and intrusive Svho should have the temerity. of Tfing [‘ifis‘t%’fih?fe?w a decent, ot intalligent Republican in Perry township, -
-+ County Convention.! { :Te e e _ Next Saturday|the Republican couaty Convention comes off at Albion to pominate a Representative, - Treasurer, j Sheriff and two county Commissigners. - We carnestly ‘besecch our frie‘nds"to‘_i let no foreign clement mar the harmeny, which should, ;and we have no doubt will prevail, ‘on such ‘an occasion. - Aé'j there are quite a number of c;andidgt»esfl‘ of course it i 8 to be expected fiha't‘tl;iéi'é; will be moze or less feeling. manifestedj a 8 is usual and patural, but that any ‘man or seti-of gen’ will endeavor to ‘merge a great National party in a litele. lmlommfi% W Aligatiee ol Dl and not ta be endured.”, "It would botmelablyailly.
Bresk down of th Douglas Movemant| . Probability is assuming the form of certainty, and before th %‘at of Oet. Elem ct to see Douglas driven from fhe feld, sl boplens hidaselF vanqish. ed by the opponent whom ke has never ;fi'&et:‘g to despise. "axe battle then will b tme%&h the Republicans and the fi'iongz of Mr Bufiggnz . fi'he*in% z:fiy, “What eourse will the remaining friends of Mr. Douglas take?” becomes not only legitimate, but of the first im." portan eef%ofib oubfless ‘the greater part of them will as they now seem to indi~ cate, go back to the administration, ‘thoroughly convinced that the attempt to build up a personal party in Illinois, in opposition to the Démocra"c%o'o‘f a Union, is a failure even with Douglas as its leader. These probably will comprehend .those who, with Mr. Douglas, “do not ecare whether slavery ‘is yoted up or down,” so that they are voted in. DBuat a very respectable minority of those who now gather around his standard—-the men who have followed him off believe that his senti‘ments on the slavery question ha\’e' been essentiatly modified since he broke down the Missouri compromise—can find refuge nowhere clge than in the Republican ranks. From this source we may ‘confidently expect such accessions 'to our’ party as will- make it unquestionably mmvineible as long as the present isgues remuin unehanged. The duty of pressing these latter into Re‘publican service, when the crash comes and the Douglas movement is abandoned, will not, we trust, be neglected by our friends, particularly’in the South and Centre, where our party bas been comparatively powerless in face of the obloquy, misrepresentation, and malignity whieh it has encountered.” The great mass of the people are conservative on this Slavery question amd the ‘honest and “unprejudiced among them, ‘as soon as they see that the Republican position is that aud that only which can be maintained by resson_ and pats riotism—that it cerresponds not only with the views of the fathers but also with the necessity of the times—will cordially embrace it. It is this conscrvatism which has given Mr. Douglas the popularity which he so lately enjoyed. It is this. conservatism which, now that the Senator is unmasked—made to ap‘pear before all observers as the relentless and malignant enemy of Freedom ~—the unchanged supporter of the ultraisms of Calhoun and the latter day dogmas of “he South—thav is decimating his followers, and that will, before Oectober sets in, drive -him from " the field. Our friends then, have a great work to do. Let them keep wp their .appeals, circulate and exforee the facts on which the canvass rests; expose the sophistries mx%";-\misregpresentations of the encmy: keep the door open through which reeruits may. egome in; and in November the poll will tell that Repablicanism in Illinois is too strong to be overthrown. . ' ‘ ‘ *—_—_’“.»-,‘_.——_‘
: From the 3t. Louis Democrat, Tth inst: The future of Free Soil in Missouri. ; . These who think Free Soil by any weans prostrated by the late elections, are wide indeed of the mark, and show little appreciation of the elements which ‘go to make up great popular movements ‘The result may act as/a tonic, not as a paralysis—the force of plurality triumphs can only teach the Opposition its divided weakness and its united strength. Let us look at the ficts of the ballot box as they stareyus in the face, without doubting their validity. ‘What do they show? First, the stri*king truth is exhibited, that Free Soil in no locality, and wnder no pressure of adversity, has receded, one single vote wn the ‘State of Missourt. . Along the ‘border "counties, where lately it was death to utter the wurd, Emancipatiorists are returned to the Legislature.— In Jefferson city, where the whole power of ghe State Executive was brought to bear against it, Mf. Gardenliire, though not successfal, wins a elear gain {over the contest 1857% One year ago atl . the Opposition united against the :-;‘f;at_iqnal Democracy, yet the. latter carfried Uole County for Mr, Stewart, by ‘a’ majority of 285 votes. This year. upon the clear Free Soeil issue, with all *thevs{dvnntaggs of patronage most iav- | ishly- used, the National Demogracy .;,eiect Mr. Cordell®by a Majority of only 257 votes.. See the neighboring eoun‘ties; many of them have been closely contested. ~ In some a few ballots con- ! ;ti&ute .all the majorities against us; in Potllers we triomph by large wotes. It is true that in most cases the issue is not distinct, and in many are embarrassed by past antagonisms; but the ex- | prossion of public sentiment was made -%itb fvll kpawledge of the direction in which it tended. That boldness may ‘fiot attdch to those thus returped may ? true and - tolerated; "but the seed is | there—the tree is ‘growing, thé fruit g7ill ripen. Thefe may not be a memBer elegt to the present Assembly ready |to' move in the matter of Slavery ex- | tin mgnmdm‘h‘%h::%hwm%‘ %Wfi 8 this et &&SE “forty ¢ o%mfl | mount. up, in | twelve monthg titfle to eighty thousand. v e Mefim cast of “thought, and need only to have | covér with thé mantle.of: oblivion treass ?F{é?’ d ] %;5«. |sk 85 that Free Boil hus inoreased e | vote since 1855 by mare than five hun-
dred true adherents. %atdfié no‘t.hin#, Does it prove-nothing? On the ‘contraty, it shows, that the principle as a positive principle, is stronger than men or candidates. ~Many Bave dealt blows at it in silence ;_'l%d in secresy;— the power of organism hag'sbeen bribed to detract from its sapport, relizion and passion and conservatism have been invoked against it; -yet-with all this, it shows a manly fearless, sinewy growth ‘and not a deeay. Free Soil, we assert, is stronger in St. Louis to-day. Those. ‘who fainted by the wayside; or lingered in the rear of the battle, will fight henceforth wpon ' compulsion. The doubters mu_ng;r near six thousand, and of the doubters, four out five are Free Soilers. And even as it stands. what does a plurality poll of two or three hundred signify, where fraud has stalged at' large through the city, and the President of the United States has anticipated the national .revenue to carry his favorite for Congress? Is it a fu. neral knell for Free-Soil? No! DBrave ‘men do not sufrender thms—the six thousand five hundred Free Soilers of St. Louis are a victory in themselves. Theirs is the future. To mnome other can it belong, for they are progress—they are politics hereafter.
A A P N g N G 0 MY el S A A SR\ i eb 7, ~ Let us add some words to our micro~ scopic friends, who see; in every misspelled word, every origirval expression or eecentric nction,ffie icause of our appareut defeat. Such things are not so. It may be that some Catholics were driven from the ticket, or some Protestants made to withhold their suft} frage by this' cause. | One says it was| the Anzgiger, another says it was the Democrat. But such stuff is very idle, for those who desert find in such things. the excuse, not the reason of their desertion; T'he principle is stronger than men or candidates. If Scetarians have gone against I'ree oil, it was upon sec—- | tarian affinities. 1f laymen have trans- | ferred themselves to slavery propagandism, it was for a consideration. If sympathy has seized upon any, it was during the solstice of politics, when men fancied repose grew under the bushes set out for their delight by the artful icontrivers. DBut the vital I)emo‘cracy,f) the cssential protesting thought of our | ‘peorle, the radical, fundamental liberal- | ism that must unmderlie. every social reformation, has made itself mauifest in a shape, with a prestige and under circumstances that admit of mo retreat. As well talk of reaetion pgaiust daylight, or the spring time,or public intelligence, ot the increase of population as reaction against Free Soil in Missouri. Nothing can react -against it but slave importatiom; and that has neither where to come from ner wherefore to come. The column of migration that embraces the movewert of the white mee¢ from east ! to west is upon‘us, and it will blaze the | path of eivilization with the church, | the sehool, the farm, the city, until slavery, s a system, shall be known no: wore in the land. In ‘speaking these | things, we know what we say. Never | was the heart of the Ixee Soil party firmer than it is in this conjecture.— Never did its prophetic men see with | surer vision the final triumph of the | cause and its rapid recuperation frow |th~e very elements of discord that | induced defeat. * Never wero those who ‘have fed and those who have becn | overborne more calmly conscious of their own strength or more heroically resolved to lold their position against all comers. Before this day two years hence I'ree Soilers will have deployed in controlling force within the halls of our Asyembly, and will have possessed | themselves of the entire State Governs ment.. Mark the predietion! : To your posts, then, Free Soilers!— Be fearless, be vigilant. Let no man |in Missouri henceforth vote blindly.— ‘Assure yourselvés that every township is canvassed with tract, and paper, and specch. Unite the labor of police, colporteur, and missionary in your own person, and the time will. not: ber far distant when you will be the mighty arvis of a great party, whose very gesture here in the valley of the West 13}1'411' give command to the whele na‘tiom. : : ' i ' 1
i ; —eee. 42 ) P O ‘ ' From Salt Lake. ' , } ————— i Por U. S. Express to Boonvilla. " i 7 St. Louis, Aug. 18. | The Sait lake mail has arrived at St. %Joseph with dates to the 24th. : t All the Mormons who were able had ‘returned from Provo. v . Brigham Young was reported to have [ oS it P L R T I T SRR shut himself up in his residence under strong guard, fearing assassination.'= | Gon. Johnston intended to mmé% encampment and prepare for going into. winter %ua.rters. aeie e @ i . Cols L‘_otfman still remained at Bridg{er. The battalion ot volunters were at . A great batle is reported to bave take lace W€bween 700 Pawnees and Wwar_ parties of Camanches, Cheyennes £ g X Bl P T Chans o gk adfl Arrapaboes, in the Big Bluoregion imwhich four Pawnees were killed, and several wounded. . s Privato letters from the army ‘in- | Utah announce. the deparéure of CGol. Loring, with three_ coppanisn of Third Fiatan iy and 100 riflemen itk Miw: et O “»”R $lOO. s il T Yo TR TR SEEy PEs Ty v ,\r‘/’ % = _.‘, e Mb ,‘ :‘! |ly for the Btates...| . sl oo b | The board of Officers ordered to conb R AT v s S AT A o ] }vene at Fort Leavenworth ‘to-day, for) | rejected bj flmi uartermaster’s De- ! typitman B emtle it 149 {here awaiting Military Board, is unders| TR iy SkeEerti ShD g RaUd SN 1 | for apimale declared ypavailable. |
. 8. Simons, Bfli,am' present worthy incumbent of the office of Sheriff, which ' he Has- satisfactorily and ably Glled, is'a candidate for the @ifportant office of T reaéhrfe_;', of the County. An office of so much responsibility and trust requires a ‘man - not only of the strictest business habits, but ene whose int gntyls§g§®d doubt, and character beyond suspicion, and one too who can command the full cefifinden,ce of his fellow ‘citizens. Such a man is David 8. Simons whom we most fcordially com® mend to our fellow-Republicans nex Saturday for their suffrages. We say, and we speak from the card, that the nomination for Treasurer WOii!d’be extremely gratifying to him. Let usput ‘bim through. = P i The Administration in Minnesota.
Mr. Buchanan has been - signally - defeated in his war upon Scnator Shields - of Minnesota, The General had the misfortune to incur the President’s animosity, by epposing his Lecompton policy and the attémpt. wis made to punish him for his ' contumacy, «by electing a suceessor, in violation of law’ and decency.. -He knew that a majoriiy - of the Legislature, (and which has but recently adjourned or is'now in session,) - or rather he thought so—was ‘ready ‘to do his bidding without seruple. So & resolution - was -introdueed into’ beth branches, to .proceed forthwith to an election of his - successor, although his - term of offiee ‘does not expire until thes 4th ‘of March, and a new Legislatareis to be. elected in:the meantime: But~ the result of the disreputable attempt o proved that he had mistaken thétejn%t ‘ of the’ Legislature, and that there are some things tob contcmptible for even them to do—many evidences of dem-. agogueism as they had given. The dennesotiam statés that when the motion was_madegindefinitely to pestpone the resolutions for going inte an election in * Joint eonvention, the Lecomptonites - ‘beeame ‘perfeetly frantie, ‘and broke throygh all rules of ovder, and disregard¢d ull ‘propricty. Having failed, by a resort to the ‘most desperate . system of” Parlizmentary tactics; tostifle the motion they next resorted to the erime of stealing the resolution—Dbut ‘this ' only recoiled upon their own heads. After the most exeiting struggle, the resolution passed the House, and subsequently the t Senate, after an'equally desperatestragzle amongst the Lecomptonites to defesk ift. ~ And thus the question is definitely disposed of inboth houses, and the Ad‘ministration ingloriously vanquished in !ios first open - -atemypt to. control the lj)‘Olitics of this young Staten :
g From statisties carefilly collect. ed in England, it appears that three hnndred ‘and fifty-seven “intemperate persons die for every ane hundred < ten of temperate habits: : At 20 4o of age,an intemperate may iy xpocl to live 15 and a half years linger, whilc a tempcrate man of the same aze way expect to live fortydour years longer At thirty, an i-ix"nl:mpe rate mun @ib probably live Tourtden yéarse lonuer a tempetate man thirty yeurs - longer.— At forty, an intemperate _xp;‘g'tigr‘hirty will ordinarily live twel &e"cm‘s longer, while a temperate man m}l Jive tweat’y T 77#7#3 £ ;I&}‘ i % i ‘,:g’; .
THE Stock holders in the Ncble o, Printa ‘ing Association are requesied to meetat Moo Lean’s Hall on. Monday Sept 6th, atone o'. clock P. M., to altend to the intcrests of . said association. : : il L WL W, MALTRY, Pres't. | Instruction in Music. : - MISS ‘CONVERSE would respectfully ; inform, the citizens of Ligonier that she. lis prepared to give ‘instructions to begimners . or advanced scholars in music, on the Piano, Harp, . Melodeon, Guitar, or Qrgan: Will see pupils at their homes if desited. Rooms rat De- Palimiialls oo bt e Rersrences —Mr. J. Palmiter, Otis Cole BOR Depor - ooge B O '~ Masenic Netice. = = | »LTGION l‘lv"Jß‘.L(‘)dgé Free. and aépepl‘ed‘ Masons meet at their Hall the Monday €vening before eachfull mounce & =t 808 30 500 ~The next stated communication, awill"be September 22d whenall members are expect-ed-and invited to attend. as theve will be s ’ portant business to ‘be fransacted.. | 14 - State of Irediana, & 7t Noble County} §=l 1317131 In the' Noble Circuit Court, November* PT A D IBbe T g ) Fiaucis W Comstock ) =~ S 5 B S T Foy SRR RN B gt - : ;iwli&:%% oy E‘V&C“ frt! G Hanm}l L Comstoek; ) »i 0 Gy e @ ’FF yoThe plaintif n the shote enttled caual | ‘having filed” his complaint i the ofide ol the, - | Clerk of. the Nuble Circuit Quutt, ahd also” having flled the affidavit of & distntevested iper g, thatlie auote KSKEC Selt NE TR BOb ¢ B HAGHTC oL U SEe O ECOMTREHae, dast Haririali I Comstock will theréfoe take '* s e and that tho same will stand’ forteial stthe - gext term of vaid Coutt, at the Court House - :gg&*%%flmgi 2ad Statg o, fia énfi?: econd da; . - e saadl ,? b 3B s R A Rek SN LYT RBN 1 BEIEE. o e s G B R e S i (PONUEL B ALYCEECEE R St T e O NS R e s Bl e A. A. CLARK, Proprietor, = 5w ebekPß Sl L S andes e T T ie “ SRNEL ANy -R i aasf S e e e k) > “’?w e aateE L e O e s
