Ligonier Banner., Volume 14, Number 15, Ligonier, Noble County, 31 July 1879 — Page 4
_ . §oi ™ s The Ligonier Banaey. I B STOLI:, Editor and Prppr“iet:or. LIGONIER,IND. JULY 81,1879.
REPUBLICAN PAPERS in thisdistrict are at present engaged in manufacturing democratic candidates for Congress. ... A
Mr. Joun H. EARLY, of LaPorte, has been appointed inspector of petroleum oils for the counties of LaPorte, St. Joseph and Elkhart. Ex-Treasurer Monning, of Fort Wayne, is inspector for the counties of Allen, Adams and Wells. ‘ .
CoTTON, says the Indianapolis Journal, is no longer king, having been dethroned by wheat: During the éleven months ending May 80, 1879, the exports of wheat from the United States amounted to $192,000,000, and those of cotton to $159,000,000. - K
- Tie Hendricks County Democrat suggests that ex-Senator Robert C. Bell; of F't. Wayne; would make agood democratic candidate . for Governor, and the Auburn Courier thinks excellent gubernatorial material might be found in the genial Dan McDonald, of Plymouth: Next. '
WHILE there is every indication that “better times” are within certain reach, public expectation should not be wrought up to too high a piteh. So long as debts amounting to billions are resting upon the shoulders of the people, the effects of “hard times” cannot be wholly extinguished. . ‘
"DurinNa the first six months of the present year 1,163 buildings have been erected in the city of New York. This is in excess of the building ‘done there during a like period in 1868, when money was plentiful and “hard times” were not yet known. The estimated cost of these 1,163 buildings is figured at $11,754,502. = - o
Tur Warsaw Union says: “It strikes us as rather singular that the Republican press of this State should feel such an Interest in the defeat of len. Frank Landers’ nomination for Governor on the Democratic side. - How are we to account for this interestedness, unless it be the fact that they would prefer some other man to oppose them: They know his record in Congress and. fear it. Is that it?” S
It sEEMS to be taken for granted that Gov. Robinson will be renominated by the New York Democracy without serious opposition. The Tammany erowd is “terribly down” on the Goyvernor, but the reform element of the party seems to have things pretty well its own way in that commonwealth. Mr. Robinson has proved a worthy successor to the great “ring smasher,” Samuel J. Tilden. v
T N.Y. World of last Thursday remarked editorially : “Thereis now no doubt that the crops in Great Britain will be short, particularly the cereals, and that the wheat crop at least will be below the average in France and Germany also. This ill wind ‘at least blows good to us. This is the nineteenth Christian century, but nations still bear with a peculiar complacency those misfortunes of their neighbors which bring gain to themselves.”
Toe Pennsylvania Republicans, in their convention held Wednesday of last week, strangled a resolution offered by Hon. Charles: Wolfe, of Union county, which demanded “honest men in office, men with brains enough to know dishonesty when they see it and: courage enough toright it wheresoever they find it.” If not exaetly honest, these Pennsylvania Republicans are at least candid. They make no pretentions to honesty in the public service. | - e ,
AMERICA, says the South Bend 7'7ibune, has gradually been .supplanting European countries, in supplying Europe with grain, cattle, meats, sheep, cheese, butter, cutlery, agricultural implements, etc., and European stock raisers are viewing with alarm the shipment of horses to France. A lot of 32 arrived in Havre on Sunday last, for the French cavalry. They all passed inspection, and were accepted at prices ranging from $220 to $270 each. This shipmeént was made from - Richmond, in this State, as an experiment, and has paid so well that it will be followed as a regular business.
JOHN SHERMAN was way down in Maine last week to enlighten the people in relation to the beauties of modern republican rule. , From all accounts the de facto Secretary was not received with that cordiality and en-‘ thusiasm with which the Maine Republicans are wont to greet their favorite leaders. The Greenbackers an‘noyed the Secretary considerably by distributing at his meetings slips containing extracts from his speeches—those which he ;geuvered“_fiome .years ago, before he had been bought up by the Money Power. The outlook in Maine is not entirely satisfactory to the republican leaders, = =
THERE is a little misunderstanding between the Hon. Joseph K. Edgerton and the F't, Wayne Sentinel in regard to some church diffieulty., v,
SoME interesting facts relative to “The Negro Exodus” will be found in an article which we transfer to our columns from that excellent paper, the Harrisburg Patriot, :
IF YOU WANT te know exactly why the Democrats are opposed to U. S. marshals at elections, read the article “How they are executed,’ copied from the Cincinnati Enquirer. :
ON ANOTHER PAGE of this week’s BANNER will be found an article bearing the caption; “Currency per Capita,” which every student of finance should read with care and thoughtful attention. It would be well to clip the article for future reference.
- I~ TuE SouTH the greenback and silver sentiment is spreading rapidly, especially in the so-called cotton States. The people cof these States do not be- . . ’ A ok lieve in an exclusive gold standard. They want enough money to meet the legitimate demands of trade.
Tue following tabulated statement shows the exports of wheat from the Atlantic and Pacific ports of the United States,.and trom Montreal to Great Britain and the continent of Europe; the quantity exported to France, Germany, Portugal and Spain from September 1, 1878, to 1879, compared with the exports to these countries for a corresponding period in 1877-8:
: Yol 1878-9. 1877-8. Total exports, bu5h.......96,940,400 63,471,200 To France, bu5h...........36,039,050 3,504,000 To Germany, bu5h........ 8,280,000 ' 3,998,000 To Portugal, bu5h......... 2,403,000 1,830,000 To Spain, bu5h............ 1,385,000 - 53,1Q0 Fo I6aly, bush ~ . ...ooii. . 92,000
Toe Lawrenceburg Register thinks “it is not generally known that a society for the promotion of marriage has been in existence in Cincinnati for over two years. Yet it is a fact, and they report up to this time 2,000 members of the association, which has branches in the several cities of this country, A picnic is to be given by the association at Inwood Park on the 10th of August, at which there will be over one hundred couples married. Here is an opportunity for some of the veteran maids and bachelors.” By all means let them improve it. '
GREAT DEPRESSION exists among the agricultural classes in England and a royal commigsion is to be appointed to inquire intv the causes that have produced it. . The matter was debated in the house of commons the other week and the discussion showed wide differences of -opinion as to the origin of the depression and the remedy to be applied. Mr. Chaplin said that the future of British agriculture was dependent on the cost of production in America. The liberals blame the British land system and game laws. Their arguments were summed up in a speech by Mr. Bright warning the land-owners that the competition of the United States would go on increasing and that the only way to meet it was to get rid of the stupid and mischievous legislation regulating the tenure and transfer of land.
THE BANNER has frequently called attention to the lying statements promulgated by reporters and correspondents of metropolitan- journals. A case in pointis furnished by Gen. Ewing who says that ‘while in New York the other week he met a N. Y. Mail veporter or Broadway, “and he brought me to a full stop .and held on to my hand while hesaid: ‘General, you are the people’s candidate, and all h—lll can’t beat you; you will- be elected by 40,000 majority.,’ I said: ‘I hope so, but recken not by any such majority.’ Thereupon we parted without another word. The next issue of the Meil had an interview with me, leporting me as saying that while Foster was a nice gentleman, I was the people’s favorite, and would be elected by at least, 40,000 majority.” Gen. Ewing, kind-hearted man that he is, thinks the reporter’s perversion was hardly a fair shake. .
SENATOR LEEPER, of South Bend, is doing good service by way of showing up theinjustice and meanness of republican newspapers and politicians in attempting to fasten the responsibility for bungling legislation in this' State upon the Democracy. “In a recent letter to the Mishawaka Enterorise the Senator from St. Joesays:
The truth is, the three bills about which there has been such a wonderful amount of rant and fustian frem republican sources—yviz, the whistling bill, the libel bill and the *“virtue” bill—are all of true blue republican paternity. They are among the few bills that party were ableto get through the legislature ; and were the Senator from Hendricks speaking from my stand‘point, he no donbt would exclaim, that these ‘performances.are but frue specimens of the ‘kind of bungled work that would have bee made of our statutes had that party possessed full power for mischief. Indeed, if the demo ‘crats are culpablé at all on account of the pas‘sage’of either of these measures, it is because ‘they failed to keep a more vigilant eye on the republican members and restrain them from. evil-doing ; and this fact deronstrates, if ‘tire whole affair has any political significance at all, the necessity of subjecting 0 the most rigid, Searching scrutiny évery measure that may ‘hereafter emanate from the republican side of. ‘chamber, whence this whistling bill and other. nondescripts had their paternity, e
Tne LaPorte Herald s authority for the statement that 400 workingmen can find employment at Michigan City at good wages.
- SoMmE interesting wheat reports will be found in another column of this week’s BANNER. Farmers and others will doubtless read them with lively interest. ' i
TO OUR ESTEEMED CONTEMPORARY, the Columbia City Post, we beg leave to say that if it were within our power to nominate and elect Mr. Hendricks to the presidency thateminent and worthy statesman would surely succeed Mr. Hayes in 1881. But—, well, we may have something to say on this point by and by.: ot
- MASSACHUSETTS has a new law which ¢onfers upon women the right to vote in school elections, provided they give notice to the town or city assessors by the Ist of September that they desire to pay poll tax. Up to the present about two hundred ladies have given notice of their willingness to pay poll tax in order to gain the limited right of suffrage. This number includes many of the city school teachers and women of recogaized social position. - :
- THE RECORDS in -the Interior Department at Washington reveal the fact that during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1879, there were over six million acres of public lands disposed of to actual settlers. The average number of acres taken by each claimant was one hundred and twenty, making the whole number of claimants in the close neighborhood of fifty thousand. As a large proportion of these were heads of families, it is reasonably safe to assume that during the year 150,000 persons settled on the public lands.— The increase in the land business has been very great since 1877, doubtless contributing largely to the improved condition of the material interests of the American people. : :
ILLUSTRATIVE of what alive, enterprising capitalist can do for a city, the correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette gives this example; W.C.DePauw,of New Albany, is the wealthiest man in Indiana. He has invested 2,500,000 in all the glass works here, demonstrating that as good plate glass can be manufactured in America as-in Europe, and the first man on this continent to demonstrate this fact. - Ie is sole lessee and operator of the New Albgany Rail Mill, a large stockholder in the Ohio Falls Iron Works, New Albany Woolen and Cotton Mills, two large foundries, three banks, steam forge works, and other manufactories; and is, withal, a Christian gentleman, has given away a half a million dollars in the cause of religion, education, and for charity, and still continues to extend his enterprises. Such men 'are worth ten times their weight'in gold in the development of the material interests of a city, county, and State. - :
BEN. BUTLER seems bent upon being made Governor of Massachusetts. A few days since he formally announced himself again as a candidate for governor in Massachusetts, and declares his purpose to make a thorough canvass. An address issued by a committee of his friends requests “the 110,000 legal voters of the Commonwealth who last year supported Gen. Benjamin F. Butler for governor, and all others who now favor his nomination as a candidate for that office,” to assemble on the 2d of September and choose delegates to the State comnvention to be held on the 18th. Ex-Collector Simmons, an influential . republican politician of Boston, has announced his purpose to take an active part in the ‘campaign for Butler, who, it is believed, will rally more elements of strength this year than he did last. In order if possible to rally the old-line Democrats to his support, the campaign will be wade on State issues, leaving national issues out of the canvass. It is generally believed that the campaignh will be made *“red hot.”" L !
Tue Carlisle (Sullivan county) Democrat, in'a flaming column editorial, nominates Senator. Voorhees for the Presidency. After disposing of the several prominent gentlemen named in connection ‘with this high office, and setting forth the heroic manner ingwhich the Senator has battled for the rights of the people, the Democrat concludes its article in these words:
It is a problem which only time can selve whether his name will come ‘prominently before the people in connection with the presidency or not, lltisextremely probable that it will. Stranger things have happened. Both Republicans and hard money Democrats will antagonize him from the outset, because in him both ~for they are one in sympathy—see an element of defeat. They behold anew Lincoln, armed with the ~strength of popular esteem and crowned with the vines aud. flowers of a conquering hero, The people love Voorhees. He has been true to them so long he has made himself the idol of their hearts, as the o’Connell inade himselfthe Idol of the Irish patriots ; and we doubt not that their gratitude and wor-ship-wil] assume the active form of a decisive and peremptory call for him to aecept. their leadership in 1880, To be sure there aréa thousand possibilities in.the way; bat above and beyond all possibilities is that nascent desire of the pedple to' have a man after their own. hearts on the seat of honor, and Senator. D, W. Voorhees, beyond a peradventure, is that man.
SAM. WINTER, who has been sued for libel by the notorious “Jayhawker” correspondent of the Cincinnati Enquirer, doesn’t seem to be very badly frightened. Samiis a plucky little fellow and will make it more than lively for Mr. “Jayhawker.”
RusslA, aceording to all accounts, is not a very inviting country to visit just now. The iron hand of the government in consequence of the secret murders and conflagrations,is pressed down upon the people with rigor more terrible than before. In every town large squads of soldiers are held for police duty, and it requires their utmost endeavors to prevent arson which is continually threatened. All letters passing through the mails are opened, telegramg, inspected and many foreign books which are believed to have a seditious tendency are prohibited from circulation. Once in the country, it is almost impossible to get out again, as passports to foreign countries are granted in very rare cases. Dispatches say that Russia is at this time more completely isolated from the outside world than she was in the days-of the Emperor Nicholas.
STARTLING REVELATIONS, In THE BANNER of July 17 was published a liberal synopsis of the report ot ex-Congressman Glover upon the testimony taken Dy the committee of inves-tigation-of which he was chairman.— Among the many serious charges which the report makes 'égainst the management of the treasury, the most important one is that greenbacks were fraudulently printed and issued during the several presidential campaigns of 1868, 1872 and 1876. After each of these campaigns the announcement came from the treasury that large amounts of counterfeit legal tender notes were afloat. In 1869 the whole issue of legal tenders was withdrawn and feplaced, on the ground that they had been largely and skillfully counterfeited. In 1874 the whole issue of $5OO greenbacks—about $35,000-—was withdrawn and replaced in the same way. In 1877 a counterfeit $l,OOO note was announced. One of the oldest engravers in the country testifies that when 4 note is so like the original that it cannot easily be detected—as these and other “counterfeits” are said by treasury officials to be—it cannot really be a counterfeit, but must be a genuine note surreptitiously printed from genuine plates, or from secret reproductions of these plates. The $5OO “counterfeit” greenback of 1873 was inspected by experts and compared with a genuine note for the Glover committee, and these expert engravers swore beyond all doubt that the note came from a genuine plate or from a surreptitious reproduction of one. The bureau workman who transferred the plate from the bed piece agreed with this. According to the report- a briefs inspection of the treasurer’s books revealed the fact that $19.000,000 of notes were at one time secretly afloat for several months, the treasury statements being false during that'time to that extent; and the fact of that secret remained unknown till lighted on by the Glover commiftee. The books were falsified and a balance forced to conceal-this secret issue by untruly stating that $19,000,000 had been deposited as a temporary loan, when no such deposit took place. In nearly the whole of the fiscal year of 1866 the treasurer’s books show that the amount of compound interest notes outstanding was from $5,000,000 to $44,000,000 more than the public debt statement showed. One month it was $27,000,000 less. Three different statements of the sum outstanding June 30, 1865, were published, differing by millions, and none of the three were correct, LG :
Realizing the enormity of the offenses enumerated in:the Glover report, republican journals are endeavoring to make light of the committee’s efforts to unearth the rasecalities of the treasury management, knowing that the facts concerning them have been ingeniously concealed. - But sufficient has been discovered by the patient and persistent-inquiry of the much decried inyestigator , to .require something more than a mere denial of the charges preferred in this report. The fact has been established quite clearly that the greenbacks denounced from the treasury as counterfeits, were printed either from the original plates or from plates reproduced from the originals. = This, the Harrisburg Patriot fitly observes, could : not ‘have been 'accomplished without 'the privity of the officials in charge of the plates. . It.is of course not to be expected that so long as & republican administration guards the secrets. of the treasury the dark doings which. Mr. Gloyer has ,n.le!‘.etyt traced will be fully exposed. X¥or this very reason the people will demand a change ofshlénin iBR, ..
Paper is now substituted for wood in Germany in the manufacture of lead pentils,, 1t is steeped in an - adhesive liquid and rolled round the core of lead to the requisite thickness. .Afger drying, it 18 colored, and resembles an.or‘dinary scedar pencil, The.pencils sell in London to retailers at about 66 cents a gross.
- WHEAT IS KING, Notes of Indiana’s Big __("?i'op. Wheat yields from 25 to 30 bushels per acre in Adams county. ; _ . The.average yield of -wheat in Johnson county is estimated at twentyeigit bushels. - } The Evansville Journal savs the average yield of wheat in Vanderburg county is 18 bushels {0 the acre. i The average yield of wheat in Tipton county is reported at 25 bushels per acre. It is marketed freely. : One bank in this city has paid out over $1,000,000 in currency to one shipping firm for wheat alone.—lndianapolis Sentinel. - AN Mr. Please Hammond, of Hendricks county, reports 408 bushels of wheat raised on 814 acres of ground, which is about 4714 bushels per acre. By diligent inquiry among farmers we learn that the average wheat crop, in this county, will be over thirty bushels to the acre.—Miami County Sentinel. : A farmer named Wm. Tillman, residing near Columbus, threshed 156 bushels of wheat off of three acres of measured ground, an average of sixty-two bushels. ‘
The Waveland correspondent of the Crawfordsville Journal writes: Jas. M. Rice reports a general average of his wheat crop at 30 bushels per acre, and is quite confident that he had 10 acres that saveraged 50 bushels. He threshed 1,128 bushels in one day. The wheat crop in White county is reported as excellent, and corn on the lowlands is doing well; that on the uplands is suffering from drought. Thir-ty-five acres of wheat, harvested by Peter Wertz, yielded 1,115 bushels, averaging 66 pounds to the bushel. Mr. Ananias Becknel, of Kosciusko county, realized 44 bushels per acre from 18 acres of wheat. The wheat weighed 66 pounds per bushel. Mr. Amos Garret, of the same couunty, harvested sixteen acres, which yielded an average. of 43 bushels (of like weight) to the acre. ' e Correspondence Indianapolis-Journal.] Mr. Daniel Shute, of Highland twp., Vermillion county, threshed off of two acres and four rods, by actual measurement, one hundred and twenty bushels of gpod wheat. Itisestimated that we have 36,300 acres of wheat in this county that will produce over 1,000,000 bushels of wheat. SMITII RABB. -Perryville, July 25. -
Wheat threshing is now progressing rapidly in various sections of the country, and has developed the fact that the yield is from twenty to twenty-five per cent. heavier than the estimate generally made by farmers when harvesting. It is now thought that the average yield of the country will not be less than twenty-five bushels per acre.— Greencastle Banner.
To show what an immense wheat crop has been gathered, a farmer in the south part of the county had a mortgage on his farm for $2,000 with accumulated interest, and has been somewhat alarmed at the prospect of losing his farm. Yesterday he came into a bank where the loan was held with $2,300 as the proceeds of his wheat crop, and had the mortgage released.— Tuesday’s Ind. Sentinel. ‘ A Shelbyyville correspondent writes tothe Indianapolis Sentinel under date of July 27: The assessor’s booksshow that there were 45,000 acres of wheat harvested in Shelby county the present season. The best judges estimate that there will be g.’n average yield of twenty bushels to the acre, which gives a grand total of 900,000 bushels. At 90 cents per bushel, this will bring our farmers the gross amount of $BlO.OOO.
One of the largest yields of wheat to the acre reported this season is that on the farm of William Oliver, in Warren township, where 24 acres averaged 51 bushels to the acre, and 40 acres averaged 43 bushels to the acre. The wheat is of the Fultz variety. David Lollar, of Union township, threshed from a ¢ acre field 301 bushels of wheat, one load remaining unthreshed which would have swelled the amount to 315 bushels. That is fifty-two bushels to the acre. Next!--South Bend Register. The people of the west side of the county are excited. Their wheat crop has yielded far more than they expected. Fields that they had put at twen-ty-five bushels to the acre, have turned out thirty-five, and other fields have yielded proportionately. Shep Crumpacker, always fortunate, is at the head of the heap down there, a twenty-five acre field turning out over forty six bushels to the acre by weight. Lucius Crumpacker, sen., brother of Shep, has thirty-nine hushels to the ‘acre, and a much larger field than Shep. Over forty thousand bushels were sold at Alida previous to last Tuesday, and the farmers were rushing it in as fast as they cowld get it threshed. | We understand that farmers all over the county are intending to sell as soon as they can get it to market. This is:a good move and we trust it will be continued.— LaPorte Herald. S R
The wheat crop of ,this (Montgomery) county is simply enormous. Never before ‘was there such a large area sown and never before was there such a yield per acre. The short straw and big heads are quite deceiving, 'Where threshing has been done from five to ten bushels more per acre than were ‘expected have been realized. It is'estimated that the county has 2,200 farms, These farms will average 20 ‘acres of wheat. - It is safe to say.that 25 bushels per acre %Wwill be the yield. This will. make 1,100,000, bushels, Estimating the pepulation a,‘t;,‘3‘51900, and seven bushels to each person for bread ’during the year, will require 245,000 bushels for this purpose. If will re‘quire say 55,000 bushels for seed. This ‘will leave a surplus of 800,000 bushels, which at 90 cents per bushel will bring into the county $720,000. This is what wé call a healthy inflation.—CrawJordsoille Jowrnal, .. g
" |The best mixed paints_in the mar§ ket are to be found at Eldred’s drug ““Qre- v A &3 g g s »z"w;?‘ Pl A AR : ! i § £ ¥ i 3 P Ay X A 1f you are troubled with Lame Back or diseased Kidneys, try Hill’s Buchu. Sold by C, Eldred &Son.
Rail Road Directory. . LAKE SHORE -
° .‘. 2 : k% e ~‘.“ . A '\ 3 Mich. Southern Rail Road, On and after September 20, 1878, tréin_s will leave ' ; ' Stationsas follows: - Lo . No¥eo W‘fifimm Express. 3 Stations. il s DYessl: «+ 920 am..|........Chicag0.,...c..].. 535 pm.. ~= 1 10. pm o Feonsaa s Bikharti ol o <o D 0 Eon 1529 eefs-es-...G05hen,........|..1010 = .. -A4 0 fol Mllersbhaeg il F ——— e i o ...,...:Ligonier.,..-..L.~10‘42 3q 207 oo forvene. WAWARR Loo T S L 2 00 shaiccyßrimflelds 00l D . 280 ..'......Kenda11vi11e...‘..‘. L ALIS .. 540 pm..j........T01ed0 ..ol ;i).. 240 am.. Chicago Ex-] GOING WEST.. [ Pacific Express. -‘ Statiox}s. s moals L Dresss --.230pm..|......Kenda11vi11e.....|.2. 8305 .. .- 245 -femewdd Brlmfßld NS [t il D .- 255 vo | edwvan - WANBKRSE i ¢ s aai D 307 ..‘._.....Lig0n’ier‘....... eRO - sed R oI MTTIOrRbATE it e L e e «. 388 selicaiaeLQoshen Jlois ki 410 S .. 400 .. ._......E‘khart.....i.,.1.. 435 5 .. 800pmL_|........Chicag0........|.. 820 am .. Where time is 'nqt given, trains-do-not stop, ‘ Atlantic and Pacific Express trains leaves daily both ways. tHAs. PAINE, Gen. Supt., - e : . .Cleveland, Ohio. T. C. MONTGOMERY, Agent, Ligonier, Ind, = ,
' : Jigy gt Tt & e el Pittshurg, Ft. W. & Chicago R. R. From and after November 10th 1878, trains will . ‘leave stations as follows: : Fast Ex.l Mail lqome wmr.,fic Ex, ‘Nt. Ex, No 1. | No. 5. Stations. No. 7. | No. 3. 1145 pm| 600 am|. Pittsburg..} 900 am| 150 pm 1253 am| 745 «+Rochester.. {lOl2 l 266 310 © {llOO |..Alhance...{l2s¢ pm! 535 - 450 . {l2sspm|...Orrville..} 226- | 713 700 311 ..Mansfield .| 440 920 730 350 pm|Crestline..A.} 515 945 pm 750 .v.*.’.lCreetline..L.' 540 | 955 pm--926 1.... il o Forest b y 35 o 11195 ¢ 1040 ceeneges|sas LAI 900 ¢IR9S am 120 pm|........|F0rt Wayne|llss | 240 350 <=+ «soo|--Plymouth..| 246 am| 455 700 pm|.......|..Chicag0...| 6 00.am} 758 am . i A " : -) d ‘M’ : i e Nt. -Ex.lFast Ex.'l GOING EAST. |Atlc be.--, Mail. No. 4. | No, 2. | -Stations. No. 6.'| No. 8. —— e = 910 pm| 830, am|.. Chicago..| 515 pm|.... -... 246 am;1148 - Plymouth:t 855 1., ... 655 225 pm|Fort Wayne|ll 30 Siyeacil 855 420 e Limaciac B 0 amili. oG 1010 52 ..:Forest....| 233 s 1l 45am! 6 55pm|Crestline..A. ¢l3 -am|........ 12 05 pm| 715 pm Crestline..L.| 415 am| 605 am 1235 745 . |..Mansfield .| 455 655 226 938 .l...Orrville..| 700 | 915 400 1115 .-Alliance...| 900 11 20 622 . 120 am|. Rochester.|llo6 ~|2oo pm 730pm| 230 am|..Pittsburg .[l2 15pm|.3 30 pm _Trains Nos. 3 and 6, daily; train No. 1 leaves Pittsburgh daily except Saturday ; train No. 4 will leave Chicago daily except Saturday. All others daily, except Sunday. F. R. MYERS, - General Passenger and Ticket Agent.
Cincinnati, Wabash & Mich. R. R. « Time table, taking effect May 11th, ,1§795 R e ee e e BOUTH. = ;7. 002 i . /NORTH. No. 4. | No. 2, |A Stations, LI- No,-1, | No. 3, 10 55 am| 940 pm{Anderson J.,| 605 am| 835 pm 1028 L 910 |.Alexandria... 637 910 939 817 ...Marion.. | 734 10 05 850 72 . - I... Wabash.-v 845 1110 804 635 . |N.Manchestr| 925, 11 50 718. 545 .. Warsaw .. ‘lO 19 12 43 am 649 513 1-.. Milford... ;1052 T 3 6314 .| 457 - |.New Paris. ’ll 09 134 620 "/ 440 ..;Goshen...|ll3o‘ | 150 600 am| 420 pm|L. Elkhart.A (11 50 am({ 210 am Close connections made at Goshen and Elkhart with the LS.« M S RR; at Milford with the B & ORR; at Wars#y with the P, Ft W & C R R: at North Manchester with the D & ER R R; at Wabash with the T, W & W R R; at Marion with the P.C & St L R R.. Through coaches will be run on. trains No. 3 and 4 between Elkhart and Indiapolis. j NORMAN BECKLEY, Gen. Man.
SPECIAL NOTICES. TEHE WORLD’S BALNM Dr. L. D. Weyburn’s ‘Alterative Syrup &¥°A remedy used THIRTY-FIVE YEARS in a private practice, ;md never failing_ to radically cure RHAEUMATISM, Dropsy, Erysipelas, Scrofula, Secondary Syphilis, Gravel, Diabetes, and all diseases in which the blood is implicated, is now offered to the public: Sold by all Bfitail Druggists, and (wholesale on--1) by The Weyburn Medicine Co. P.O. Box 338, Rochester, N. Y. | - s - - ab.-42-m6 I will mail (Free) the rééipe for a simple VeagTABLE BaLy that will remove TAN, FRECKLES, PIMPLES and BLOTCHES, leaving the skin soft, clear and beautiful; also instructions for producing a luxuriant growth of hair on & bald head or smooth face, Address, inclosing 3¢, stamp, Ben, Vandelf & C0.,20 Ann St., N. Y. = ab-42-mé - TO CONSUMPTIVES. The ad vertiser, having been permanently cured of that dread disease; Consumption, by a simp.e remedy, is anxious to make known to his fellowsufferers the means of cure. To all who desire it, he will send a copy of the prescription used, (free of charge) with tge directions for greparing and using the same, which they will find a surk Curk for CONSUMPTION, ASTHMA, BRONORITIS, &C. .~ Parties wishing che Presc’r%)tion wil%vplease address, o - . REV.E: A; WILSON, ab 6m 42] 194 Penn St., Williamsburg, N. Y.
A GENTLEMAN who suffered for flears frq;vn. Nervous DEBILITY, PREMATURE DECAY, and all the effects of -yonthful indisorétion; will for the sake of suffering humanity, send free tosll - who need if the recipe -and direction for making the simple remedy by which he wag cured. Sufferers wishing to profit by the advertiser’s experience can do so by addressing in perfect confidence, - JOHN B. OGDEN, 42 Cedar St., New York. MA s y T —7 o i Of ‘all kinds, TUMORS, dis--2 charges of BLOOD or mucus, 1 ; { ' and all diseases of the REC- ; -TUM quickly and perfectly cured by a simple and soothing REMEDY, For in- . formation address, - Dgz.dJ,FABER & CO., ab-42-mé] ; ! - 23 Ann 8t.,, N. Y.
r['HE Ligonier Norma) School, at Ligonier, Ind., ik : will open e P . JULY 28TH, 1879, and continue in session eight wcglgs. - ; Tuition for the Terni, - $6.50 , " i{Payable in- Advanee.) . THE Qourse of Study has been arranged to accommodate those who desire to review the Common School Bnnc‘hesi’ and others who wish . - to pursue the higher branchcs of(iearni-ngi v , TEXT for Common School BranchTnes wi?boe?hlgssame a 8 those 'adopted by the Noble County Board of Education. .~ ] CLASSES iwill be organized for the benefit of . ‘‘those whe wish:to {zrepare' -themselves.for . any of the classesin the: High S¢hool for the coming year. .. i e TSR eAR OWER @Grade Classes will be formed for L . such puggs of Ligonier and. vicinily whose. garante ‘may wish to avail themselvesof the bene. JBOTEMISSONOOL: -- U SeSh ek ie .ST RF gmwm have been made for a - A.- Jourse of: Liectures; 1o:be delivered during the gession. - . . TR T 100 D BOARDING in private families G’ ca;?be‘ had ag reas%%afl%ez“"rfibge’f‘wug & wish to rodom ‘and: board themse:ves can.obtain good and convenientirooms at a low rate, ; - NO PAINS will be spared tomake the school N FIS e prolianle; {make the aeiool OR Circulars, or furthér, particnlars, address F t;he-’l.’rin‘d%él‘; or J. L‘Mimnlgofixeg? ffifi? & L e D, LUKE, Prinetpale Ligonier, Ind, July 3, 1879,-11w6 *= =~ .
