Ligonier Banner., Volume 13, Number 51, Ligonier, Noble County, 10 April 1879 — Page 4
- 9 ° * -(W The Ligonier Bamuer. J. B. STOLL, Editor and Proprietor. LIGONIER, IND. APRIL 10, 1879.
THE ENLARGEMENT of the Chicago Times has disgusted rather than elated a vast majority of its readers, at least go far as this locality is concerned. People don’t relish such a mass of indigestible stuff as furnished by Storey’s big blanket. :
THE Cincinnati Gazette says the proprietors of machine shops and foundries in that city are refusing orders, and that prices are advancing. It does begin te look as though the hard times were on the decline. They have reigned long enough, heaven knows. -
Jonn H. BAKER, of Goshen, is seriously mentioned as:a prospective republican candidate for Governor. We hope the Republicans will trot him out for that position. There is no man in that party who more richly deserves a severe drubbing at the polls than the “oily statesman in theland of Goshen.”
MANY MEN conneeted with the public press seem to be in bligsful ignorance of the fact that there is a wide difference between a licentious press and the liberty of the press. - If this fact were more generally understood -and recognized in' the management of public journals, there would be less occasion for the passage of Grubbs libel laws than has been the case heretofore. | e :
THE MAN who indulges in wholesale denunciations of the late Legislature does so because he is unwilling to examine into its work. For one we: believe it to have been the most useful Legislature that has met in this State for many years. Its members may have erred in judgment in some matters, but their actions furnish unmistakable proof that they were governed by honorahle and honest motives. Such being the case, there is neither sense nor justice in indiscriminate denunciation of the late General Assembly.
- ENCOURAGED by the action of the national members of congress in voting with the democrats on the army appropriation bill, ‘the New York World of Monday comes out in a lengthy editorial favoring a union of democrats and nationals. The manly speech of Gen. Weaver (the lowa greenbacker) and the action!' of Dr. De LaMatyr, demanding that war issues be forever laid aside and that living issues engage the thoughts of national law-makers, has awakened a m ost friendly sentiment toward these Irepresentatives. ‘
Dick BRrieHT, the new Sergeant-at-Arms of the U. 8. Senate, is handsomely vindicated against the charges of the republican press in a letter just published by Senator McDonald. Our senior Senator shows by such eminent republican authority as ex-Gov. Conrad Baker and the Hon. A. G. Porter ‘that Bright proved himself innocent of the charges preferred against him as State Priater, and demonstrates the high esteem in which the genial “Dick” is held by hisimmediate fellow-citizens by aeferring to the fact that when a candidate for Sheriff of Marion county last year he ran 700 votes ahead of his ticket,although pitted against one of the most popular Republicans of Indianapolis. In addition to the above it appears that Dick had the cordial support of most of t;he*‘republican congressmen from this State in his aspirations to the position to which he was recently elevated after a most vigorous contest.
THE STATE OFFICERS to be elected next year will be a Governor, Lieut.Governor, Secretary of State, Auditor of State, Treasurer of State, Attorney General, - Reporter of the Supreme Court, Clerk of the Supreme Court, Superintendent of Public Instruction,and ome Supreme Judge in place of Mr. Biddle. So far as the Democrats are concerned, the present incumbents of the Secretary’s, Auditor’s, Treasurer’s and Attorney General’s offices will be renominated without opposition, provided they present an unexceptional record; if otherwise, a new deal will be demanded by that element of the party which demands a faithfal discharge of the public trust'as a pre-re-quisite to a renomination. The renomination of the present Superintendent of Public Instruction will hardly be . demanded for a fourth term, though Mr. Smart is an exceedingly useful officer. Judge Biddle, as we understand . the matter, is not desirous of a renom_ination. This will give some capable lawyer from the north-western part of the State'a chance to become a mem- ~ ber of the Supreme Court. The propriety of giving the Clerk and the Reporter of the Supreme Court an additional four years térm will cause some «discussion and contention. Both in--cumbents of these offices are first-class spublie servants, but there are many. «who contend that four years of seryice s in lucrative offices like these ought to - be deemed sufficient, - B hiisd g o
; HASTY CONCLUSIONS, ! M. Taine, a French writer of wide repute, has aptly said that ‘“The social and political mould into which a nation may enter and remain is not subject to'its will, but determined by its character and its past.” It thus happens that any question bearing upon the social and the political interests of the country must necessarily require much study and thought before we are prepared to speak either for or against it. To jump at conclusions will save’ much time and trouble, but the results ‘will have the disadvantage of immaturity,and thus prove of little value. Conclusions drawn from a train of logical reasoning will always have a practical application in formulating correct principles of action if not in the evolving of new political formulas. ' 1t is proverbially notable that many who presume ito speak authoritatively upon public measures or legislative actions jump at their conclusions without giving the matter under consideration a moment’s thought. Their predilections seem to be the motive force, and their biased state of mind obscures their reason and renders their judgments and conclusions wholly worthless, The method of thus hastily arriving at conclusions is not only dangerous to the well-being of society, but is ruinous to the fndividual who allows -himself to lapse into such a habit of thinking. . Individuals who follow the dictates of their predilections, are more frequently wrong than right, and should the erroneousness of their conclusions be pointed out, they as often lack the moral courage to admit their wrong, thus putting themselves in the way of disseminating useful knowledge. Their indolence to.investigate brings intobeing its counterpart-—dishonesty—~which, if persisted in, leads to a disregard of all truth, which comes in.contact with their predilections. We might point out many examples in illustration of our point, but one at present will suffice: and thatis the vindictiveness manifested on the part of some toward the Grubbs libel law. This law isdenounced as if it were an unpardonable act of legislative usurpation, chiefly by those who, /we venture to say, have never read the law, or having read it, fail to understand its provisions. Yet they presume to pass jli:dgment as if they had given the whole subject the most profound consideration.
A CALL has been issued for a meeting of county officers at Indianapolis on the 30th inst. for the purpose of arriving at a proper understanding of the provisions of the new fee and salary law. If this is the only purpose of the proposed gathering of county officials, no objection can beurged against 1t; but if it be the true object to defeat or cripple the law as enacted by the General Assembly, then we have no hesitancy in saying to the gentlemen at the head of this movement that they will stir up a hornet’s nest that may in the end. prove very annoying. The people demand a faithful and ready compliance with the law.
- REPUBLICAN PARTISANS complain of the presence in the halls of Congress of too many “Confederate brigadiers,” as against the small number of Union generals. Who is te blame for all this? Have not the Democrats of the North time and again placed in nomination gallant Union soldiers, and was not the republican ccrruption fund shaken up most vigorously to encompass their defeat? Verily, such is the case. The Union soldiery is and has for years been very ereditably represented on the democratic side of the hoi;se; if the Republicans have been neglectful in that respeet, they are the party to censure, not our crowd.’ |
THE republicans succeeded in polling more votes at the election in Michigan last Monday than the democraticgreenback coalition ticket. 'Fhisisnot unexpected. The consolidation was effected one year too late—after the two elements had got too far apart. Had the proper course been taken in 1878, our Michigan friends would now be in good shape politically. -
THE FACT that the German mission was offered to Whitelaw Reid, editor of the New York 7'ribune, last December, seems to have been one of the best kept officlal secrets which the present administration had. It was first made known on the 4th inst. by the publication of correpondence heretofore treated as confidential. :
RECENT DISPATCHES from different places in Kansas report copious rains throughout the State. The reports which gained currency some days ago, that much of the wheat in the State had either beéen killed or damaged by draught, are contradicted, and a statement made that wheat never looked L A e
'WiLL the New Era be kind enough to publish thefigures in substantiation of its averment that the Republicans carried the new - Twelfth District in 1876 by a small majority ? Our figures make its political complexion at that time democratic by over 2,000 majority.
THOMAS A. HENDRICKS. The New York Evening Express declares emphatically in favor of Indiana’s distinguished statesman, Thomas A. Hendricks, for the first place on the next presidential ticket, In support of its proposition, the Express bestowes this well-merited tribute upon the many excellent qualities of Mr. Hendricks: : j
. “Thomas A. Hendricks is ene of the ablest lawyers in the west. He distingnished himself in congress by his talents, his fairness, his wisdom and his moderation. He commanded the respect of his opponents in that body by the weight and purity, of his character and the sagacity of his views. He was one of the best governors Indiana has ever had. In that office he displayed remarkablée executive power. He made a host of friends and no enemies, by his high minded,; honorable course. He has the universal respect of the people of his state,and of the whole west for that matter. In many points he resembles Abraham Linpogn, especially in his honesty, his frankness and candor, his grip on the common people, his love of justice, his profound sympathy with the masses. He was one of the leading candidates for the nomination in the democratic convention in 1876. It was with the greatest difficulty that he was prevailed upon by his friends to acecept the nomination of the vice presidency. He made a great sacrifice of personal interest and feeling by consenting to serve as the second man.”’
. The Express, which' is decidedly hostile to Mr. Tilden’s renomination, then proceeds to show that Mr. Hendricks was not properly treated during the campaign of 1876, and that, in view of this alleged fact, he “will be likely to “think twice before he consentsto act. “a 3 second man on any ticket' headed “by Samuel J. Tilden.” The Ewpress continues by saying: “Three democrats stand prominently ‘before the country to-day as candidates for the presidency—Mr. Bayard, of Delaware; Mr. Thurman, of Ohio, and Mr. Hendricks, of Indiana. They. are able, honorable men. The country would indeed be fortunate to secure the services of either one of them as president. | Other things being equal, the next candidate of the democracy should be a western man. Between Senator Thurman and ex-Governor Hendricks it would be very hard indeed to choose. But Mr. Hendricks ‘has one claim to the nomination which Mr. Thurman can not urge, in the fact ‘that for the sake of the party and to strengthen a weak ticket he consented ‘to take.the second place when fairly %entitled to the first place in 1876, and was counted out of the vice presideney, to which he was fairly eleeted. If he is drafted-into the service again it must not be as the second man.” That may be'all right, but we are not prepared to concede that the ticket of 1876 was a “weak” one, Boss Kelly’s Tammany organ to the contrary notwithstanding, : " The Indianapolis Sentinel, in reprodueing the above, says: “The views expressed by our New York contemporary are manifestly in harmony with the fsentimenps of the great body of the people south and west, and it is not too much to say that in the east Mr, Hendricks would command -a larger democratic vote than any other name mentioned in connection with the first place on the ticket.” - °
“Tae Columbia City Commercial indulges in a mass of singularly vehement nonsense over the alleged *gerrymander” of this State for congressional purposes. If the editor of that paper would subject himself to the trouble of comparing figures, using as a basis of calculation the election which dvew out the full strength of all parties (1876), he would discover that the republicans were traated far better than they had a right to expect in yiew of their outrageous discrimination against the democracy in the past. Giving the republicans six out of the thirteen districts on the vote of 1876 is surely as magnanimous as one party would expect to be treated by another. T :
" UNDER the new law governing incorporated towns, a town license for gelling intoxicating liguors may be imposed by the board of trustees. Query: Will the ordinances imposing such; license, rendered invalid by the decision of the supreme court, but not repealed by vote of board of trustees, now authorize the collection of same, or must new ordinances be passed, (if such license is to be -imposed), based upon the new act ?
- THE “rousing majorities” which the Republicans claimed the day after election in Cincinnati and Michigan are growing small and beautifully less as more complete returns come in. Their majority in Cincinnati (for Mayor) has dwindled down to 361, and in Michigan they have.only from seven to eight thousand majority—quite a coming down from their customary 20,000. ‘ N TR
Indiana has still another fool who don’t belong in the legislature. Helives in Indianapolis, however, and his proximity to the law-makers of this state may account for his idiocéy. His name is Herman Roemer, and on Sunday night he began the feat of drinking 1,000 glasses of beer in 1,000 consecitive hours, for $5O. He pays for each glass as he gets it and if he wins will simply get his beer for nothing, as his 1,000 glasses amount to $5O, and Bernh art, the saloonist with whom he wagered, will lose only the wholesale val'ne of the beer.—South Bend Tribume.
LETTER i FROM ADAM CHRISTIE. What Our Illinois Friend thinks of The Banner— His Views on Temperance and Woman Preaching—He Endorses Ben Hill and briefly refers to the Monster Fraud of the Age. , MR. EDITOR.— - * * * T gee THE BANNER comes out newly Lieaded and is now called the Ligonier instead of the National Banner, which;is a good name, and well may northern Indiana, or the people of the'same, feel proud of a paper of its magnitude, for it is second to no paper in the Union, and for sound sense it excells anything I have ever read.’
. Mr. Editor, the Illinois canal has been talked over a great deal last winter. Some have tried to dispense with it entirely, and there is now a move being made to have it converted into a ship l canal, which, in my opinion, is the better way and is in accordance with Jacksonian Democracy. * Now a thought on the temperance question. It made me shiver to yead the account of the murder that was committed near Columbia City, Ind., caused by liquor. In this case it was used to excess, therefore abused. But, ladies and gentlemen, it has but little bearing on the main question. This brings me to vhe point from which I wish to speak. The women of this State have been sending up petitions to the Legislature and from thence to Wasghington praying the powers that be to give them the right of suffrage, so that they can vote at the next State election for prohibiting spirituous ligquors from being sold in the State as a ‘beverage. But, my fellow citizens, the ladies will find this temperance ques'ti.on a big thing, and in pvlg opinion will never make it win. hy? Because liquor, or its equivalent, has been used to a greater or less extent from the earliest history of the world, and will while water runs and grass grows. This may be a hard saying to many, but is nevertheless true. A Universalist lady preaches at Wedron every-other Sunday, but if we are all going to be saved why does she preach at all? She ought to be “more temperate and learn of her husband at home,” as Paul says; and the Virgin Mary says unto her son Jesus: “They have no wine here;” therefore the water pots were set about and Christ turned the water into wine, and they all drank; and St. Paul, the greatest apostle that everlived, said: “Drink ye no longer water, but a little wine for your stomachs’ sake and your oft infirmities.* Ladies and gentlemen, I don’t wish it to be understood that I advocate intemperance. Ido no such thing, but Christ says, “Be ye temperate in all things.” g A few words on political mattérs: Hurrah for Senator Hill on southern claims. His speech, as published in Tae BANNER, is good and to the point. Light and truth, I hope, is still being revealed upon the presidential election fraud. Yours truly, \ ADAM CHRISTIE. Webron, LaSalle County, Illinois.
Codifying the Laws of the State. / (LaPorte Herald.) One sensible thing has been done by the legislature, which was the appointment of a commission of five competent lawyers to. codify or revise the laws of this state. Our present cumbersome statutes,which have not had a revision since 1852,costing $l5 with the addenda of laws that have since been passed, changed or amended, render it almost impossible for even lawyers to find what is needed; and for justices, township trustees, and other officers, ic is like hunting for needles in a hay stack, to find the laws bearing on their respective duties. "Theindexing and arrangement in the last revision, was very faulty. Nothing is more essential than the simplification and convenient arrangement of our laws, as well as a reduction” of their cost. They are now published by private enterprise wholly, and exorbitant prices are charged. They should be published by the state, and furnished to officers at cost, which need ngleexceed from $5 to $6. Illinois FERnishes copies of her statutes in ti#§f¥ay for two dollars. L eA‘ : e+ @ : Life of Little Value at Indianapolis. (South Bend Register.) The acquittal of Warren Tate for the murder of William Love is one of the most surprising verdicts ever rendered by a jury in the state of Indiana. There is no doubt that men have been hung on the strength of evidence similar to that presented in his case, and not only to hold him guiltless of that crime but to exculpate him entirely may well cause the astounding sensation which it is stated exists at Indianapolis over the announcement of the finding and the discharge of thelprisoner. Clearly if Tate merely acted in self-defense in killing Love with a revolver, who was unarmed, the judge who fined Tate $lO,OOO for contempt of court in committing the homicide in the courthouse, inflicted a severe penalty for a wholly innocent act. There will be those who will suspect that the jurors who could regard Warren Tate'’s crime as properly punishable neither as murder in the first or second degrees or manslaughter had reasons for such a view directly connected with the plethoric pocket-book of the defendant.
¢ Like to Obtain. ' . No doubt the public would like to obtain what it requires at as cheap a rate as possible, and many times are induced to purche cheap articles, wh.ich%re in realib%%_e dearest in the end. Dr. Price’s ¥pecigl Flavoring Extracts cost a few cents more, yet they are the cheapest, for they require much less in quantity. : - eo R e 2 Grant’s Alleged Popularity. ' [Selinsgrove Times.] 'What makes Grant apparently popular for a third term, is the interest felt in his renomination by all the thieves who were copartners of hjs dyg-. ring his first and second terms, ’Fhe_sej are the men who are talking him up! and keeping him in public print. It'is not the people. : ,
Plain. Talk About Sunday School ! Libraries. e (Huntington Democrat.) = * _ There is a great demand among our Sunday schools for sensible library books which large boys can understand and appreciate. Boys who have outgrown the silly stories which form a large part of the staple of 'Sunday school library literature, find no attractions in the library, and are almost without anything which can be called good religious reading. No branch of literature has been more neglected than this. The managers of the relig‘ious publication houses can hardly complain if the boys read the flash stories soliberally furnished by the weekly story papers, for no religious house has made adequate provisiens for the older boys of the families for whom reading matter is supposed to be provided. To ask these boys to read dry treaties on Adam’s Fall, or on the Nature of Original Sin,or the Five Points of Calvinism, is to provoke smiles, possibly accompanied by sneers. For the “Memoirs” which burden so many Sunday school library shelves the lads do not care, They will read well written books on. history, travel, science, and such things, but they hate dry books of any kind. If the religious publishers and managers will not look after this Important part of their work,they run the risk of losing their influence ever boys who are rapidly becoming men. It would be well for our Sabbath school teachers and those having charge of its interests, if they would look to the class of reading which they are now furnishing the children who attend such schools. - There is a great want of good and interesting books in the Sunday school libraries, and if that want is not supplied it would be far better that the Sabbath schools of the land would dispense with that class of books that is now generally found on their shelves.
Protect Your Hiomes. : The best way to protect your house is by putting good paint upon it, and among the most well-known manufacturers of paints are T. H. Nevin & Co., of Pittsburg, Pa. Their celebrated Pioneer Prepared Paints are wellknown throughout the west, and, in fact, all over the country. The paints are warranted to last as long and wear as well as strictly pure white lead,and they are mixed ready for the brush. The quality of the paint may be known when it is said that lead \and zinc are the principal ingredients. This forms a good, hard, glossy surface, which rain does not affect before drying and which will not fade, crack, or peel off. Fhese paints are much cheaper than pure lead and they are so prépared that any one can easily use them. We take pleasure in calling the attention of our readers who may want a strictly firstclass paint to the above-named article. T. H. Nevin & Co. guarantee it, and will repaint (free of cost to the purchaser, allowing him choice of material) any building on which their goods do not satisfy. This firm :was established in 1841, and during the quarter of a century of their existence they have always had a high reputation for business integrity. They are also the manufacturers of pure white lead, colors, ete., and they always make it their aim to give thorough satisfaction. , The above mentioned paints for sale in Ligonier, Ind.; by D. S. Scott & Son.
Powers of Incorporated Towns. | Senate act No. 59, amending the twenty-second section of the act of 1852, relating to the incorporation of towns, defining their powers, provides for incorporated towns the following discretionary powers: ; To have a common seal and alter the same. To purchase. hold and convey real estate as far as necessary for carrying out the provisions of the act. : » To organize and regulate fire companies, provide all necessary a{)paratus for the extinguishment of fires, regulate the manner of putting up stovepipes. and prohibit the use of fireworks and the use of firearms. 6 To define, prevent, abate and remove a nuisance and to take other measures for the preservation of the It)ublic health. ! : To restrain cattle, sheep, swine and otheranimals from running at large. ' To prevent gambling and the keeping of gambling-houses, houses of ill-fame, to punish prostitution, intoxication, furious driving, ete. To impose a license fee upon auction establishments, street auctions, traveling &Jeddlers, ¥la.ces where sports and %a_.m_e_s are indulged in or hire or pay, public exhibitions, and the sale of si)irituous, vinous, malt and other infoxicating liquors, and that a sum not exceeding the amount named in the statutes of the State for llcense to sell orretail intoxicating liquors may be required to be paid into the treasury of the corporation, ! L 5 To. establish and regulate market places build market-houses, and direct the location of slaughter houses. : i ‘ To regulate streefs and aueays, appoint street commissioners and fire wardens, and prohibit incumbrances of sidewalks, : : To insure the public pr?erty of such town. To purchase, lay out, and regulate cemeteries, To ornament public streets and grounds by the planting of trees, ete, ) To lev?! and collect annual taxes to the extent of fifty cents on the hundred dollars, and twenty-five cents poll-tax, and also charge dofi license of $1 for each male dog and $2 for eac female dog. ] . T(; construct wharves and landings for steamoats, And also defining the duties of boards of trustees of such incorporated towns.
Death of Judge Buskirk. It is our painful duty to announce the death of Judge Samuel H. Buskirk, late of the supreme court, which occurred in the city of Indianapolis ‘Thursday night of last week, after a ‘brief illness. The immediate cause of ‘his death was the rupturing of a blood ‘vessel irr attempting to raise phlegm. Judge Buskirk was born in New Al?ban%in' 1820, graduated at Bloomington nivet‘siéy, and entered upon the practice of law there. Subsequently ‘he was elected to the state legislature ‘ as a democrat for six terms, serving as ‘speaker of the house in 1863. In 1870 ‘he was elected to the supreme bench,a positition which he held until 1877, During this time-he published “Buskirk’s Practice,” a legal work found in the library of nearly every Indiana lawyer. Upon retiring from the supreme bench he resumed practice in fudiagapolis. § -Warren Fate Aciqq;tygd. INDIANAPOLIS, April’ 5—A% 10:30 to-night the jury in the case of Warren Tate, who killed William Love in the court-house on the 19th of last September, after being out four hours and a half, returned a verdict of not guilty, standing on the first ballot eleven for acfigital‘.- The verdict 18 received with much surprige, gnd threats are freély made of ‘lynching, etc. Great excitement prevails, “~© '
ail Houd Pirectorp. ".""".“""""""‘.;""""‘f""'r‘"""”","""‘"""“‘ 2 LAKE SHORE Sl ;A‘N,fibf-. : - .5iT 3 N : i Michigan Southern Rail Road. On and after Sept. 29th,'i878, trans will leave staiions asfollowe: - : 5 GOING EAST / S Sp.N.Y.Ex.. Atle.Ez. Ace Chicago..i.:.... 920 am... gsrfipm.. Vis.pm. g Elkhart......ee. 110 pm... 1; S 0 e s A G05hen,.....'.'...129 vev+dolo P 3 Millershory, S 01143 . 01090 "L o Digonier .. i 108 . 0088 > A Wawaka, .c00.A2070 . . pOBB o L Brimfeid.. (ol 810 opteN oo Rondallville, ;280 1148 o 0 ArriveatToledobs4o ~..240am...... ..am . ~ ~ GOINGWEST: ; ‘ ~ Bp.-Chic.Exp. - Pac. E Adec . T01ed0........:.1105 am.,...1201 :%’ . ..pm Kendallville.... 230 pm.... 805 am........ am Brimfield ....... 245 /....1'320» LS s : Wawaka....... 12565 el il Tl : Idponier.. .. ;. 307 L. 340 oL. Mfilersburg....‘rsm vin T 306 SRI o G05hen......... 3388 asss 810 HEEharte o, 4000 L S a3l st ArriveatChicagoßBoo = ... 820 - (... ... tTrainsdonotstop. - : Pt £ Exprese leaves dailyboth ways. : . CHAS.PAINE, Gen’l Supt., Cleveland. T. C. MONTGOMERY, 4 gent, Ligonier.
Cincinnati, Wabash & Mich. R. R Time Table No. 26, taking effect Feb 1, 1879 v '~ GOING SOUTH. . foihin o Stations. N0../v:. No; 8, . :N0.4. Nu. 8 Elkhart... ... eeeceee. ..JiBm . ..am 420 pm G05hen.............. ‘Bloam 410 am 440 New Paris.. .oooi e <A 457 - B&OCroseg ....vi. v 248 - 510 Mitfordvocs s Soocial ke adl S BN Leesburg....: «.....; 1036 456 528 WartaAW.seee encace. --4 513 . 545 N Manchesfr ....... <. 602 " 685 Wabash..... o 0 UL 650 T 4 Marioniesae viiei, atee s T 4 817 i Alegandrifiey eeiaii das 835 911 : Anderson J........ 725 pm 905 940 Richmong. .« J..ii 0 ook 645 Heswaks Indianapolis ....... .i... 2 - 1045 am 10 50 pm - z ' GOING NORTH. : Stationg ** No,l N 0.3 .. N 0.5 “~No. . Indianapolis 430 am 6 45PM .cecmsee wiacaen Richmond.. ....... 10 58‘/am Wokompint Wobaass AndersonJ. 605 am 830/pm: 6 08Bam ....... Alexandria. 639 = 91} Sl S aaas Marion....> 742 1012 ca euduai Wabash.... 850 Léfls S Cadign NManchestr 930 1909 am 125 pm . ....... Warsaw,.... 1020 =~ 1 %qm‘j Gl gl Leesburg...lo 86 ladam o 0 Sl Mi1f0rd.....10 52 LAY sl B& O Crosslobs = 145°.. ~ ... SEhea New Paris.. 1108 201 - BT o g G05hen.....1125am 230 am. 6900. pm ....... Eikhart,, ... 11 80am -, iam <o pm s Closge connections made at Goshen with the L - S & M. 8. R. R.; at Milford with the B&O R R. ; at Warsaw with the P, Ft W & C R R; at North Manchester with the D & E RR; at Wabash with the T, W & W R R; at Marion with the P, C & St LRR. NORM. BECKLEY, Gen. Man, Littsburg, Ft. W. & Chicago R. R. From and after November 10, 1878. ° Sl ; GOING WEST, - , +i-Nol;: Nob;: No 7 'No 3,. : « FastFwz. Mail. PacEz. NightEz, Pitisbarg......ll:4spm 6 00am 9:ooam 1 50pm Rochester.....l2:s3am 7 45am 10:12am 2 55pm A11iance....... 3:10 11 00am 12:50pm 5 35pm 0rrvi11e....... 4:soam 12 sE{pm 2:26pm 7 13pm. Mansfield..... 7:ooam § 11 = 4:4opm' 920 pm Crestline...Ar.-7:3oam 550 s:lspm 9 45pm, Crestline...Lv. 7 50am .:... 5 40pm 955 pm F0re5t......... 9 25am ‘.¥.... 7 35pm 11 25pm Lima.......... 10 40am ...... 9 00pm 12 25am Ft Wayne..... 1 20pm ......] 11 558 m 240 am Plymouth.,... 3 50pm - ....... 246 am 455 am Chicago....... 7 00pm ......" 6:ooam 758 am [ GOING EAST. ! : <« ‘No4, . 'No2, - No 6, ' NoB, : NightE%. FastEz. Atc Ex. Mail. Cnicago.....,. 9:lopm 8 30am 5 15pm . sa... Plymouth...,. 2 46am 11 48am 8 SOPIM: caeo-id Ft Wayne.... 6 55am 2 25pm 11 80pm = ...1... Lima.......... 8 35am S/QOpm- 18080 il F0re5t........10 10am- §27pm’ 233 am ' ....... Crestline . Ar.ll 45um 6 55pm 4 00am ' ....... COrestline . /Lv.l2 05pm 7°lspm 4 15am 6 05am Mansfield.....l2 35pm. 7 45pm 4 55am 6 55am 0rrvi11e....... 2 26pm 9 38pm -7 00am 9 15am A11iance....... 4 00pm 11 Ispm 9 00am 11 20am Rochester..,., 6 22pm 1 20am 11 06am 2 00pm Pittsburg,... . 7 30pm 2 30am 12 lgym 3 30pm - TrainsgNos.3 and 6, daily.” Train No. 1 leaves Pittsburgh. dailg' except Saturday; Train Ne. 4 leaves Cfiicago Aaély except Saturday. - All others daily, except Sunday: . ‘ St . F.R.MYERS, ; General Passenger and Ticket Agent,
SPECIAL NOTICES. THE WORLD’SBALM Dr. L. D. Weyburn’s Alterative Syrup. 82 A remedy used THIRTY-FIVE YEARS in a private practice, and never failing to radically cure RHEUMATISM, Dropsy, Erysipelas, Scrofula, Secondary Syphilis, Gravel, Diabetes, and all d& asesin which the blood is imrlicated. is now offércd to the public. Sold by all Retail Druggists, and (wholesale on--1y) by The Weyburn Medicine Co. P. O. Box 3838, . Rochester, N. Y. - ab.-42-mé6 - I will mail (Free) the recipe for a slmgle VEGETABLE BarLy that will remoye/ TAN, FRECKLES, PIMPLES and BLOTCHES]} Jeaving the skin soft, clear and beautiful; also ingtructions for producing a luxuriant growth of hair on a bald gead or smooth face. Address, inclosing 3¢. stamp, Ben, Vandelf & Co., 20 Ann BSt., N. Y, ‘ab-42-m6 "TO CONSUMPTIVES. Thejad vertiser, having been permangntly cured of that/dread disease, Consumption, by a siinple remedy,is anxious to make k to his fellowsufferers the means of cure. To all who desire it. he will send a cOpi of the prggcription used, (freg of charge) with the directioys for greparing and using the same, which they will find a surz Cure for CoNBUMPTION, ASTHMA, Bn‘onomm,l &e. Parties wishing the Preacr[lgtlon wil Wplea.se'address, - - REV.E, A. WILSON, ab 6m 42) 194 Penn St., Williamsburg, N. Y. e e S A eT ot ERRORS OF YOUTH. A GENTLEMAN who suffered for fie‘ars from . Nervous DEBILITY, PREMATURE DECAY, and all the effects of youthful indisoretion, will for the sake of suffering humanigy, send free to 91l who need it the recipe and difgction for making the simple remedy by which he was cured. Sufferers wmhinfi to ({)rofit by the advertiser’s experience can do so by addressing in perfect confidence. JOHN B. OGDEN, 42 Cedar St., New York.
- Of all kindg, TUMORS, dischakges LOOD or mucus, - ‘ and all dijeases of the REC- . ‘ o 4 TUM quickly and perfectly cored by a simple and soothing REMEDY. Forin. formation address,” = D=r.J, FABER & CO., ab-42-m6] Al 22 Ann St., N. Y.
'R JA Bookof‘béarlySOOpm MARRIAGE ;=757 7 Elfli m e 'k now SEGRET Szt e : _ . + Add B 2 8 LBOLINNAN BIN. Fith Siseet, B Louin Mov: N £-p DYKER' BEARD ELIIR Oyl e el AURREY HELE ol A e SR Tois prrelion ..‘.-n‘“,wfip:‘:"m&tfl ..S s abore AT AYEAR. Agegts wanted. Busis > 4 nesslegmma Particnlarsfree. i Address . WORTH & 00., St. Louis, Moy ; i A tely and: OPIUMEERET GOLD PLAT A!‘Og%:‘. heag R estin the known ‘Sample e s3fim&°mmmcmmm 5 s ‘- 3 - & ._III 4 I FARM FOR SALE. FUR SALE, cheapl and on favorable terms: ‘A Farm of ‘147 acres\ situate in Perry tiwp., Noble cohnt{. Indiana. - ADgut 100 acrés cleared, balance timber. Good buildings, excellent orchard, and good water. For further particnlars call on J. C. ZIMMERMAN, Ligonier, or B. F. Praruan, on »the pxgmmg. b 2 B ; Nfitl
