Ligonier Banner., Volume 14, Number 1, Ligonier, Noble County, 24 April 1879 — Page 4

The Ligoarier Lanmer, J. B. STOLL, fiditor and i?i'bptietor. LIGONIER, IND., APRIL 24, 1879.

IT 18 SAID that the recent conference of democratic politicians at August Be;mont’s residence, while professedly for: the purpose of harmonizing the party, was really intended to pave the way for Mr. Dorsheimer to the Governorship. :

HoRATIO SEYMOUR firmly rejects all overtures of the New York politicians for making him a gubernatorial and eventually a presidential candidate. The noble old statesman declares he has retired to private life and does not mean to be again dragged into politics.

THE Columbia City Post, in a temperate article, pronounces against the renomination of Mr. Tilden for the Presidency. The Post regards Thomas A. Hendricks the most available statesman for that position. A full, candid and good-natured ~discussion of this question is not only the privilege but the duty of the democratic press. :

AND row comes the N. Y. World with a three-column showing of a greatly improved condition of the business affairs of the country. Itsreports from the East, West and South are of a highly promising character. Manufacturing interests especially appear to ‘have undergone decided improvement. The World’s exhibit agrees substani tially with that previously published in the T'imes. 5

Tur Cincinnati Engquirér of Saturday contained despatches and letters from a large majority of the counties in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana relative to growing erops, fruits, etc. The reports indicate a healthy condition of things generally. Theaverage of wheat in all of the mentioned States is larger than that of last year, while small fruits, though damaged in some localities, withal look well and will come up to the average, - - :

- WHATEVER improvements have taken place in the business outlook of the country are due, not to the resumption .act, but to the.abandonment of the v 135 cious financial policy inaugurated under the Grant administration. The aet forbidding the further contraction of the volume of greenbacks and the remonetization of silver are the two allimportant measures that put a stop to further depreciation and ‘afforded encouragement to the industrial classes of theland. = i ‘

Tae Warsaw Republican clearly tnderstands what is meant by personal journalism, In language that cannot be misanderstood that paper dilates upon the disreputable methods employed by the contemptible“blackguards who are permitted to disgrace the editorial Brofession by their libellous attacks upon private citizens and membars of the press. The Republicandages itself great credit by taking high ground in favor of enforcing deegney in the management of the public press.. f

1% ARBEARS that the privilege Ofl‘ designating the chairman' of a House committee is in reality vested in 4he . comamittee . itself, though custom: b 4% for years conferred that POWeT W o the Speaker. The developraemi of _this fact has prompted the suggestior , ¢hat the Ways and Means committee depose the unfit and unworthy ¥ ernando Wood, and confer the éhair .manship upon Mr. Tucker of WVirgi pia, hjs suggestion meets wish g jeral fayor and would doubtless be acteq upon but for the fach that thr e demoeratic majority in the House i , go small that | it would be. hazardows ¢ ‘antagonize Mr. Wood: and his f 0) lowers, however few in, nimber. M., Wood seems to have sunk 8010 w in the estimate of some of the best Paen of the House that | they refuse to communicate with him personally. Speaker Randall cormmitted a great blunder im appointing Fer- 1 nando. YTre kT

ABOUT eight. years age, when the crazy herring who now edits a radid secesh papexs down in Mississippi, was employed on the Fort Wayne Sentinel, the editor of THE BANNER took occasion to visit the “wild critter™in his den, with a view to gaining personal knowledge of his make-up and mental calibre. 'We found him as, fancy. had previously pietured him. so.our mind: a dark-visaged, lean persomage, with narrow forehead, long black hair, pointed noseé, and “chuck full” of egotism. We talked - with the fellow two or three hours, at times pretty plainly. He developed the most intense hatred of demoeratic statesmen and politicians generally, spoke of Hendricks as a politieal nonenity, of Thurman as a backwoods lawyer,and had a kind word only for oneman: C.L. Vallandigham. Kernan has a certain degree of litera. 1y capacity of the Brick Pomeroy or- | der, and will write any kind of balderdash in order to attract attention and | obtain notoriety. He is appropriately designated an educated ass,

- A PENNSYLVANIA paper truly says: “If one-half-of''the neéwspapers ‘were killed and the amount of energy added to the other half, all would be better and the public better satisfied.” .

It seems to be generally conceded that Senator Voorhees delivered one of the ablest, most eloquent and argumentative speeches on the army appropriation bill yet delivered in that branch of the national legislature. The theme is one that affords Daniel an opportunity to spread himself,

WE see it stated that the supreme court of Ohio has decided that a drunk.en and unruly passenger cannot recover damages if he is put off the train for bad behavior and is then run over by another train. It is the duty of the 'c:o_nductor to protect other passengers against him by ejecting him, and if he is too drunk to take care of himself after that itis his own fault. This decision tallies with common sense.

- THERE are still a few localities in this broad land where the long promised good times have not yet made an appearance. One of these is Cumberland coenty, Pa., where the sheriff sold one hundred and forty-one (141) different properties on the 11th inst. The advertisements filled seven columns in a newspaper. This, as an eastern contemporary observes, looks like a general cleaning out preparatory to the incoming “good times” so long promised already by the Republican politicians. The “good times” will find plenty of roem in Cumberland county, as well as elsewhere.

[ THE TROUBLE with the anti-Tilden ‘movement in New York is this: The leading spirits are not calculated to inspire confidence as to the honesty of their purpose. So long as the best and most trustworthy Democrats of New York favor. Tilden’s candidacy, and such men as John Kelly, August Belmont and Fernando Wood appear as hisinveterate opponents,the people naturally infer that Mr. Tilden isa proper. person to occupy the White Houge. We do not wish tobe understogq 23 Baying that none of the better clagspfNew York Democrats' oppose. M '{)flden’s_

re-nomination, but those who are: par- ~ ticularly conspicuous In this oppositir | happen to be men in whom, we i take precious little stock. It war § just so at St Douis in. 1876; the Now Yorkers who fought Mr. Tilde ' . o vigorously were membezs of the T pany. and Canal Rings. Th/ 36 Yaot o .tnbute.)d largely to Z_Mr. T/ s suceess, ?,nd wlll.do S 0 aga.m. LS change is made in the selectior | ;o ) mana. ers of the opposition. :

DBESIDES aecquir/ .ng the notoriety Which he has 01/ Joa g souoht in vain, donkey Kernan, ;¢ the Okolona Southern States, seer as to be gaining ‘material reward. '/ pyo Pt Wayne Sentinel is informed /ot Kernan is receiving handsoms® '/ ov from the Republicans, and thad * o cireulation of his paper, whicha /' fow weeks ago was 187, includim’ ', o changes and dead heads, has N " risen to 20,187, the odd 20.000 be- "€ ' taken by the Republicans “to fire W', northern heart” with. In ConB bPt e R e S e T R

'/ ress, a short time since, Mr. Frye, of Maine, had an extract from this paper read, and the democratic members from Mississippi promptly avowed that the paper was not countenanced nor ‘Supported by the Mississippi Democrats and the editor was a northern carpet ‘bagger, who had moved to the South a few years ago. Only last Saturday Mr. Blackburn, of Kentucky,denouneed Kernan’s pernicious sheet in language which should forever silence the silly talk of Republicans as to the “representative character” of the lunatie carpet-bagger from Ohio. A

WE ARE PLEASED to observe that the more intelligent jand: independent portion of the republican journalists are beginning to take decided ground against the degrading and disgraceful proposition of fixing upon U. S. Grant @s the only man to be thought of in connection with the republican nomination for the Presidency. Whatever, may be our estimate of the republican party, wé are not prepared toTadjudge it so utterly worthlessand demoralized as to accept as true the avermens of the Whiskey Ring that Grant alone. ‘ean rally the party in the contest of 1880. ' So long as that party numbers -among its leaders such men as Roscoe Conkling, Gen. Garfield, Ben Harrison, Evarts, Fish, Washburn, Bristow, Edmunds, Sherman, and a dozen others whom we could name as in every es-. sential point better fitted for the Presidency, it is a downright insult to'intelligent and sober-minded Republi cans to be toid that they must centre all their hopes in' this one man; that he, for whom they voted so reluctant1y for a second term, must be selected (i, o o parels i standpoint the Democrats could wish ‘nothing more to their advantage than Grant’s nomination, but a decent regard for the manhood of their republican fellow-citizens impels them toscorn the imputation that Grantisthieir only man with whow to gnter intq ithe con-

~ Hox. J. K. EDGERTON is publishing a number of articles in the Ft. Wayne Sentinel in opposition to the renomination of Mr, Tilden for the Presidenc¢y. Mr. E. was bitterly opposed to Mr. Tilden’s nomination in 1876, chiefly on personal grounds, as we’und'erstandi{ the matter, L 1

For oNE, we would like to see Congress take a vote on the important measures now. before it and then adjourn. There is entirely too much taiking béing done to suit the masses of the people. - Seareely one out of a hundred voters read any of the speeches that have been and are now being delivered. /

THE Fart Wayne Sentinel has been sold by Mr. Wm. Fleming to Messrs. W. R. Nelson and Samuel E. Morss. The latter gentleman has for several years .been the editor of the: Sentinel and ranks high as a vigorous and intelligent writer. The Sentinel is an excellent paper and deserving of unbounded prosperity. |

WE ARE PLEASED to observe that that ably edited metropolitan journal, the New York World, is gravitating towards the advocacy of the use of silver | money by the leading commercial nations of the globe. Investigations have led the World to the convietion tr gt gold alone is insufficient for met gjic currency, and that if commerci’ 4] disaster is to be averted, silver 7 ust be restored to its former monets ry funetions.. In this.judgment th e World is supported by some of the gpiest financiers of Great Britaid— 311 of which goes to prove the SOV ngness of the silver agitation of b |, past two years.

THE Indianaged ¢ . ews, a moderate republican psp@ | tlug punctures the ~revolutioraay” puphle so industriously blown up. ¥ g the radicals: ; Let s cgjl sy ags by their right names, In 1867 fite Eepphlies ns in Congress, in tying Andrew fohng ‘-m:?’ W 'Andé. changed the regulations concea'n;ng,‘ue army 80 as to rob him of al] the power t bog, cf'?‘?"/ 1, and to pass it tacked it to an appropriftion w. 4, and Johnson signed under.protest, “lest ,th&w .essary appropriations be defeated.” In 1872 ey amended the sapervisors law in the same ;Y:T ,« It was all right and lawfnl then. But be-

ase. the Democrats propose| to tack upon the ippropriation bills measures to repeal this same supervisors law, and -others, it 18 “revolation.” The republican papers do not deigua to ?peak‘ of it in any other way than the “revelutionany proceedings of the Democrats.” It is false and vicious, misleading and mean. Oppese that sort of thing all you will, but don’t call it *revolution” when the Democrats do It, and when the Republicans do it say **'it is well,”’ - ]

~ CONGRESSMAN DE LA MATYR has pr!?atty well destroyed his influence by ‘ the introduction of a visionary scheme for an enormous inflation of the cutrency and the subsidizing of certain railroad and canal corporations. The bill; introduced by him last Saturday 'provides for a new issue of one thousand million greenbacks, to be loaned by the government to somne eight or ‘ten wild-cat corporations named in,the bill. The corporations are to give ‘bonds, payable in fifty years, to be free from interest for five years, and after that to draw three per cent. per‘annum. The favored corporations named in his bill to receive government loans on the above conditions are the James, River and Kanawha Canal company, the Atlantic and Great Western Canal company, the Florida Coast Canal company, the Ft. St. Philip Canal company, a railroad to conneect the -waters of the Mississippi with tize Pacific, the Rock Tsland and Hen uepin ‘Canal' company, the Oswego. «7anal com pany, the Lexington and Big Sandy rallroad eompany, and the Niz gara Shijp. Canal company. . 'While Mr. De La Matyr was at it he might as 'well have provided for some internal improviements in his own State, but'ii lasmuch as his wild scheme will, not get a doze n. votes, there is nothing lost te our pt:ople. et B lal Gl T

SAF.EGUARDS AGAINST USURPERS. If aniything were required to estal)lish th e absolute justice of the positio.n taken by the Democrats in Congress relativp) <to the arbitrary use of the militaryz power, that deficiency was fully supplied by Senator Randolph of New Jersey during the debate on the army ap'propqiation bill on .the 18th. After speaking of the bad uses to which an army can be put whet it is controlled by an ambitious man, the New Jersey Senator gave the following illustration: - ‘ : “(Jan ‘ours be an idle warning to s free people ‘that has seen and felt the usurping power? Will it be: said, sir, that no President of a republic will ‘dare- to long misuse this power? 1 kno'w to the confrary. I had the honor to deliver a ;message in 1 376 from Gov. Hampton to the then President of t} 1e ‘United States, requesting’ him to with'draw: the froops from the State House:of South Oaroling, . [n deference to a decision of the Suprenne and bigl lest Court of the State. I urgied: the importanc 5 of it with all the force of langusge at my’ com mand. I told the President that, im thejudg-: men t of eminent lawyere, the Governer then ou,t{ of c fiice by the expiration of his term had not lawi ully invoked the assistance of Federal power, inas) nuch as he had made no effort to favoke his Legi; Uature, though easily done, and obtain their aciio b on a matter so vital; that the newly elect«ed G ivernor desired the _attendgmge.g:flrepm?egga{ : tives of the people in their State House, from’ ‘whicl:, Federal bayonets, as I myself saw, kept them; and finally, that the conte st being of pure1y ‘Bt \te_ concern, ’rz%:fdiflk ouly the'cldim of Stite oficors, and thoso having Doen definitively i 7 U s e A e Wl ever take cognluance of the ¢/ We, the Supreme Court of South Carolina, I Ho ped the Federal forces would be promptly with lrawa from the State caj p{tal. You may imagin :“!‘ gir, my asten-.

ishment and indignation when, inan angry tone and an uncivil manner, the President replied: “1 ‘won’t withdraw the troops. I don’t care that(snapping his finger) for the decision of the Supreme ‘Court, and if { had any message to send to Gov. Hampton it would be that his messaae to me isan impertinence.’ ° 5 £ ! “An impertinence, sir! for: the Governor of a State to commu'nicate his wishes, not demand his rights a 8 he might properly have done, to the President of the United States! An impertinence, indeed! ‘Upori what meat does this our Ceesar feed that he ha'th grown so great?’ ) *No, Mr. Pre:sident, we cannot make too much haste to gnard the liberties of freemen everywhere in this broad Iland from chance of blotting the pages of our hi :tory with a repetition of the usurping :ct of a Pre¢ sident less than three years ago.”

' This imp ortant bit of history, now ‘made public for the first time, ought to prompt ever y liberty-loving citizen to applaud the determined stand taken by the Democr: s in Congress to remove the dangero us power which ih a free republic never should have been conferred upom any one man. Republicans are equi \lly interested with Democrats in the maintenance of the supremacey of ¢l villaw. One-man power ought tobe dis :tasteful and repulsive to every Americ: n freeman. : The liberties of the people cannot be too jealously guarded.

PREMATU RE COMMENDATION, The Goshen I7'imés, during the session of the Me thodist Conference, published the subjoined editorial paragraph ‘with no little gusto: : When Mr. Jacob, the Republican candidate for Mayor of Ci ncinnati, was asked whether, if elected, he wou!.d enforce the Sunday laws or not, he answered: *1 am a law-abiding citizen, and if elected May or I shall enforce all the laws of the city!” andupon that platform was elected. Let the republican party stand upon the platform of rignt ‘and order, and; they will succeed. The time is past for ‘‘available” camdidates. Better suffer temporary defeat with a good man, than try to make 8 compromise with wrong.” o

- That’s very neatly said, gentlemen; but “flor the sake of truth,” as the immort:al J. N. is wont to say, we are compelled to spoil your laudatory allusion te the “law-abiding citizen” whow your political brethren of Cincinnati have elected to the 'mayoralty. Two days before the recent election in/that city Mr. Jacob published the following letter as a refutation of the sentiment attributed to him in the 7'imes’ article: . In your to-day’s issue you state that in the meeting of Meralis!s at Hopking hall there was a; letter read which is purported to-be written by me, in which I obligated myself to execute the Sunday law strictly according to letter. This assertion is an untruth. * o . I will never assist to prevent law-abiding citizens from enjoying their usual pleasures, either on week days or Sundays. lam no church visitor andno femperance man, and would not dictate to order .oving clti‘zens to stay away from properly managed amusements just as little as I would wish to dictate to them that they must not go to church; nor would I allow any one else to dictate to me that 1 must drink water in place of wine or beer.

. Mr. Jacob was elected Mayor over the democratic candidate by a majority of 447 votes on the great question of free beer on Sunday. And yet, in the face of this fact, our Goshen contemporary felicitates itself upon “the great moral victory” achieved in Cincinnati. Let the Z'¢mes undeceive its readers by publishing Mr. Jacob’s letter that they may know just what kind of a victory its party achieved in the “Paris of America,” L

On the Right Track at Last. (Selinsgrove Times,) A new temperance movement has been inaugurated in New York City. Such leading men as Peter Cooper, Thurlow Weed, the Rev. Dr. Howard Crosby, Rev. O. B. Frothingham, Rev. Dr. Potter and others ate at the head of it: They propose to promofe moderate drinking and fight only against excess. They do not ask: men to pledge before God, but only before man and upon honor, so thatin case they yield to the tempter their conseiences will only chide them ' befere men. They ‘have four separate pledges: Ist, Not to drink ‘daring business hours. 2d. Never to use intoxicating liquors asa beverage, excepting wine or ale, and then at meal time only. 3d. Never to “treat,” nor allow one’s self to be “treated.” 4th. Tetal abstinence. These four pledges are-open, and 'those ‘who sign any one of them'are expected to ‘live up to it. This covers the whole field of the temperance question, and while it takes in the teetotaler, it also ‘proposes to make a moderate drinker out of the excessive drinker. But the ‘main and real good feature in the four pladges is the anti-tréating proposition . ‘Ouce break up the custom of treating and excessive drinkin.ghhas received its most fatal blow. Wibh suchan organ--Ization in ‘every town in the country wounders might be accomplished. -

Muzzle the Blackguards. [Winama¢ Republican:) : Some of the newspapers of the state, among them the Indianapolis Sentinel, are growling about the libel law pass.ed by the legisiature. For our pdrt we don’t care how stringent they make it, if they allow the truth of the ‘allegation to be set up in defénse. We don’t consider the members of the *Press «“muzzled” because they are not allow<d to blackguard every man that differs with them, or to vent his spite on political or business opponent by publishing' charges, affecting character, | which have no foundation. . :

L | ' seasonable Inquiry. oo 4 © + ! [Columbia City Post.{ { The Fort Wayne Sentinel rightfully! spares not the disgraced Representa-| tive from Allen p%unty._ When will| ‘the democracy of that county learn to sele ct members for the lower House of age and experieace? ' - .1 Our Cousitny’s Peril. v {Haredsburg Patriot.} 4 . Jefferson Davis i going to -visit -Wish;ngtbg’and itis imn to rfa feared that% “in an inadvertant moment he should violently blow his nose, this eountry will fall to pieces, member by memyber, from sheer fright.

INDIANA NEWS ITEMS. _The Huntington Herald is Inclined to the “opinion that Gen. James R. Slack will be a candidate for Congress in the new 11th district. =~ ' ' The Secretary of State is busy in the arrangement of laws recently enacted by the Legislature for publication. They will be out about the 15th of next montb, RNI R e The Methodist conference at New Haven suspended Rev. Seneca Isiip one year “for dishonesty.” They also suspended for one year the Rey.dJ. H. Beale “for kissing female members of the congregation.” , David Turpie, of Indinaposis, John ‘H. Stotzenberg, of New Albany, and James S. Frazier, of Warsaw, were appointed by the Supreme Court a board of Review to compile and revise the istatute laws of Indiana, pursuant to 'an act passed by the late Legislature. Judge Turpie is well known as a former opponent of Schuyler Cqlfax for Congress. i . The Seymour Democrat says: The wheat crop can now be considered out of danger so far as cold weather is concerned, and from all portions of the north-west comes the news of most promising prospects for an immense yield. \%i;.h favorable ‘weather from now till harvest the largest crop ever raised 1n the United States will be gathered, With a good wheat and corn crop this season, the people will be on the straight road to success and easy times. -

In response to numerous . inquiries in. relation to the publiecationof the laws passed by the general and special sessions of the late General Assembly, we would say that under a law passed for their speedy publication, the laws will :be printed gnd distributed in the several counties by the first day of June; that about sixty, pages of them, besides the assessment law, the road laws and the ditching laws, are' now in type, and may be procured on application to O. H. Hasselman, who has the contract for publishing the laws. No provision was made for the publication of laws which declared an emergency in the papers.—lndianapolis Journal. «

° Dunker Emigration to Kansas. 3 [New York Times.] . ; Nearly 200 Dunkers, or German Baptists, as they are often called, have just emigrated from Lanecaster county, Pa., where so many of them have settled; to new homes in Kansas, Abilene and the vicinity, Dickinson ceunty, being where they are to pitch their tents. Thatis a fine agricultural region, and their long experience and their skill as farmers will make them very desirable: citizens of the west. They have sold all their land, with improvements, in Penhsylvania, getting good prices, and have reinvested much of their money in Dickinson county, thinking it will be a better place for their children. As they have set out with their Bishop, ministers, and a full church organization, no colony that has gone beyond the Mississippi for years can besaid to be better equipped ecclesiastically.— They are virtually one family, all of ‘them being related either by blood or marriage. They were joined at Harrisburg by other Dunkers from the Cumberland valley, and it is said that when they shall have reached Kansas they will number at least 1,000, embracing ‘three generations. They are unusually ‘well off, for emigrants, some. of the families being worth from $60,000 to ‘.‘570,000, and nearly all of them are in comfortable circumstances. More Dun‘kers have been going to Kansas recently than to any other western State. It )is said, special inducements having been offered for them tflettle there.

The Drive Well Deecision Not Final. (Elkhart Review,) The drive well case.of Hine & Stephenson vs. Wahl et. al,,\is. now being brought in shape for an appeal, and the bond will be filed in..a few days. The men who are at the head defending themselves against this outrageousswindle are not discouraged at. the decision, but are bound to see thé thing through to the end. Judge Niles says the patent can’t stand ran hour, when once properly presented before thie Supreme Court of the United States. It will be remembered that the Judge defended the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railroad Company against a claim for royalty for an alleged in-fringement-in the use of a patent brake a few years since. ‘The circuit judge rendered a judgment against the Company for $250,000 at which rate the royalty to the patentee ‘would have amounted to the emormous sum of $50,000,000 on all the brakes that were then in use in this country. The case was ‘appealed and argued orally by Judge Niles and the patent deeclared void, and the patentee left to pay the costs. The Judge declares that this drive well patent is based on the most flimsy pretenses, and from his knowledge and experience in patent cases he does not hesitate to -say that the patent in this case will be declared void as soon as it can be properly presented before the highest tfibunal. =

Dangers of Rope Jumping. : [Elkhart Review.] The practice of rope jumping is one which parents, if they allow at all, should keep within bpunds. Girls indulge in it to such an extent that their health is badly jeopardized. KElla Ap plegate, of Knightstown, is on the point of death by over-exertion in.this sport a few days ago. Her body is largely, swollen, and her attending ‘physicians fear that some internal organ has been injured. This is not a single case but only one of many thap are recorded in the papers. The teachers in. .the publi? ; fihg@ls should caution the little. girls against such overexertioni« ... S B

w 0 Ttis Well Known, s * Many grocers sell Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder atiths same price of the cheaper kinds, and as they pay more for it, make less money; hence, they never sell it unless the purchaser demands it. - Pure articles: can not be. ‘made as cheap as those that are adulterated, i ¥

g AR 9 3 R e ot GH N ga‘fi” gfifih "@i&fimfip PR e e T S e s LAKE SHORE . lh . ,7 o ‘-~—- : - Michigan Southern Rail -Road. On and after Sept. 29th, 1878, trains will leave "~ . 'staiiong asfollows: = | GOINGRAST . o L . Bp.N.Y.Ez. AtUe.Ex. Acc Chicag0.........920am.... 535 pm.. ... ..pm BlKhart.voeoeees 110.pme, .. 9500 ' ose, & .. am Goghens i@ AN s ! Millersburg.... 7143 .S ¥R uivih o Digonleri ... . 100 - (o MOA9 L. Lol i Wawhka....... 1807 . FIGBS" o .l | Brimfeld o o 0800 cLLt 0B 0L 2 Randallville ;.. 2380 o3R - ooy i ArriveatToledofido ....240am........am . GOING WEST: e : Sp. Chic. Exp. FPgc. Exp, Acc T01ed0..........11 05 am...,1201 am.... . .. pm Kendallville.... 280 pm.... 305 am.... .... am Brimfield ....... 845 @ ... 1390 " ".\ .. Wawaka. ... 1805 LLnta3o i Liqonier......'..‘SO? Tesae 340 Millersburg. ... 321 vss 1365 seab svy Goshen o.oi 0. 388 01l eil 81khart.........400 " Sl 430 00l ArriveatChicagoBoo ... 820 ....... -~ - ITrainsdo not stop. ! e Express leaves dailyboth ways. -

‘ - CHAS.PAINE, Gen’l Supt,, Cleveland. T.C. MONTGOMERY, Agent, Ligonier. : Cincinnati, Wabash & Mich. R. R Time Table No, 26, taking effect Feb 1, 1879 . GOING SOUTH. - e Stations, No. ¢ N 0.6. N 0.4. Nvu.2 Elkhart...... ..., ...am ...am 420 pm Goshen...... ....... 810 am 410 am 440 New Parie.; w 0 00 425 487 B&OCrossg .....oc ... 4389 . 510 Mi1f0rd...... SRy 441 ;.5 13, i Leesburg.... ... 1036 = . 456 528 WARRAW eil TR S o 845 N Manchestr ....... [.s 602 . 635 WObBEH. =26 ieoves L ohs o B 0 mug MBION 00.5. Colll) vl 0 81y Alexandris, vi.....%.%.0 0 835 911 < AndersondJ. ....... 325 pm 905 940, - Richmond.. ....... ...... 645 ..., Indianapolig ....... J..... 1045 am 1050 pm GOING: NORTH. Stations No,l N 0.3 N 0,5. No, Indianapolis 430 am 645 pm _ w.leiies ceeeaan. Riehmond.. (.3 005008 m o o iiis AndersonJ. 605 am 830 pm 608 am ....... Alexandrig. 634 9110 ol i Lgeii. Marion..... 7.42 1012 - iy st Wabash ..., 850 /1125 - . ook NManchestr 930 -1209 am. 125 pm ....... Warsew, 01090 " 1 068 m .t il Lieesburg. 1086 - L 9 am 0 ndiil Mi1f0rd.....1052 . 141 £ o FRSW RS B& O Crosglos6s - 145 = ..\ akeedal New Paris. 1108 201 4 570 Sacas G05hen.....1125am 280 am. 600 pm ......s Apkhart.. .. 1150 am 0. am. .. DM Lo { Close connections made at Goshen with the L 8 & 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 Marionwiththe P, € & St LRR. . NORM. BECKLEY, Gen, Man,

Pittsburg, Ft. W. & Chicago R. R. : From and after November 10, 1878. GOING WEST, - ; Nol, No 3, No 7, No 3, | FastEz. Mail. PacEz. Night Ex. Pittsbaeg......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 55pm ~ 2:26pm’ 7 13pm Mansfield..... 7:ooam 811 - -4:4opm 920 pm Crestlire,..Ar. 7:3oam . § 50 s:lspm 9 45pm Crestline...Lv. 7 50am ...... 540 pm 955 pm F0re5t....c.... 9 2bam ...... |7 35pm’ 11 25pm Lima.......... 10 40am ...... | 9 00pm 12 25am Ft Wayne..... 1 20pm ...... 11 55am_240am Plymouth;.... 8 spm “..;... 2 46am 4 55am Chicago....... 7 00pm_ ...... ~ 6:ooam 758 am . . GOINGEAST. - . ¢ No 4, No 2, No 6, NosB, \ - NightEz. FastEz, Atc Ex. Mail. Chicago....... 9:lopm 8 30am 5 15pm' . sians Plymonth..... 2 46am 11 48am. '8 55pm ....... Ft Wayne,... 6 55am 2 25pm 11 30pm- ....... Lima.......... 8 bsam_ 4 20pm 1 80am ....... F0re5t........10 10am 5 27pm 2 33am ....... Crestline. Ar.ll 45am 6 65pm- 4 00am ....... Orestline . . Lv.l2 05pm- 7 15pm 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 15pm 9 00am 11 20am Rochester,.... 6 22pm" 1 20am 11 Ofiafi 2 00pm Pittsburg.... . 7 .30pm 2 30am 12 l,g*) i B'3opm ; Trains%ios..s and 6, daily, Train No. 1 leaves Pittsburgh dafl&except Saturday; Train No. 4 leaves Cglcsgo‘ ly except Saturday. -All others daily, exceptBSunday. - o SR ET % ks 1 Q'o ?-R'MYER‘S, _ General Passenger and Ticket Agent,

SPECIAL' NO»’I‘ICES. TEHE WORLD’S BALM Dr. L. D. Weyburn's Alterative Syrup. ¥ A remedy used THIRTY-FLIVE YEARS in a private practice, and neyer taili_ng to _rsdically cure RHEUMATISM, Dropsy, Erysipelas, Scrofula, Secondary Syphilis, Gravel, 'Diabetes, and all diseases in which the blood is lmrllcate‘d,i‘e now offerod to the public. Sold by all'Retail Pruggists, and (wholesale on1y by The Weyburn Medicine Co. . P. O. Box 838, Rochester, N. Y. = ab.-42-m6 i "PIMPLES. l I will mail (Free) the recipe for a mmEle‘VnonrAßLE BArnw that wiltremove TAN, FRECKLES, 1-PIMPLES and BLOTCHES,; leaving the skin soft, clear and beautiful; algo instructions, for l;]u-qduc-ing & luxuriant %r'owth of hair on a bald head or smooth face, - Address, inclosing 3 ¢, stamp, Ben, Vandelf & Co., 20 Ann Bt., N. ¥.: . ab-42-mé TO CONSUMPTIVES., “*The‘ad vertiser, ha.vingfb-een permanently cured of that dread disease, Consumption, b{ a simple remedy, is anxious .to make ,lgx:‘vvu to his fellowsufferers the means of cure. all who desire it. he will gend a copy of the prescription used, (free of charge) with the directions for greparin_g and u'sixg the same, which they will find a surE Cure for CONSUMPTION, ASTHMA, l}'nommrm‘el &e o Parties wishing the Préscflgtion wil wplease address, . S REV. E. A. WILSON, ab 6m 421 194 Penn St., Williamsbarg, N. Y. A GfiMLEMAN ‘who -su’fl‘eré‘d for gea'rs”from‘ Nervous DEBILITY, PREMATURE DECAY, and all the effects of youthful indisoretion, will for the sake of suffering hnmanity, send free to all I:Fm’ nee& it the recipe and direction for making he simple remedy by which he was cared. Sufferers wmhing to profit by the advertiser’s experience can do so I% add:essinfi in perfect confidence. JOHN B. OGDEN, 42 Cedar St., New York.

Of all kinds, TUMORS, dis- ; . charges of BLOOD or mucus, : ] 3 and all diseases of the REC- & ' 'FUM quickly and perfectly cured b{y a eimgée and soothing REMEDY, For information address, ' Dg. J. FABER & CO,, ab-4 Rome) il; Cootuie TR Rg Ann B, NY.

P S DYKES: ;u:g_’g’ :ngtl@%m m ;fl& g willdeiton sm P P SRy aikh e k ; BB from Ito 8 Pack’ gs. N_zm-:ry, hied. ‘aJ £ ls?:fi‘kiu'fixfi“cw mfi%fl'ff : BB B ond Morphine Habitabsolutely and speedily OPIUME s = i i * 181 Washington St., Chicago, 111, AAGOLD PLATED WATC] s ; s3est?n the known world. Samp?e‘#/agt?h 1?‘;"3 E, : 4gents. Address, A. COULTER & Co., Chicagos

FARM FOR SALE. . FOR SALE, chéap and on favorable terma: A Farm of 147 acres, sitnate in Perr{ twp., Noble oo‘unt%, Indiana. Abont 100 acres cleared, balance' timber. Good buildings, excellent or- ‘ ehfird, ?Inuegmd -fwa&tagfifnor_fi]‘:;gg}'epamgghfis callon J, C, m LAV e [y A Ty Or-. I, PrarMAN, on the premises. = . 48t g Cm*i{%ioh Notice, OTICE is hereby given that a certain certifiN cate isdned bj{hglAfilm of Noble County Indiana; apon -wufior({r_m:;wtfln-tme& of land in ,a:tg county, ag school lp&fi.‘ to wit: The west ‘balf of the south-west quarter of section sixteen, township thirty-five north, range eight east, has -been lost, and that the undersigned will ‘? ly to sald Auditor for'a new Certificale as prov &5 in such cases, ROBERT 8. LATTA, | February 18, 1879:-43-m3 o