Ligonier Banner., Volume 14, Number 20, Ligonier, Noble County, 4 September 1879 — Page 4
- * * @) 5 The Ligonier Banuer, J. B. STOLL, Editor and Proprietor. LIGONIER, IND,, §EPT4th, 18179.
. Tug NATIONAL BANKs *“inflated” the currency since last January to the amount of $7,021,203. -
JonN ULrlicH WINDISCH, a leading member of one of the largest lagerbeer brewery firms of Cincinnati, died last Sunday, aged 47.
DURING FIVE DAYS of last week 65,805 standard silver dollars were paid out of the Treasury Department, at Washington, being ten per cent. of the amount of all checks presented at the counter. The greater porti\on of these checks were from the disbursing officers of the government, given in payment of salaries. Of the $65,805, $23,153 were returned and silver certificates taken therefor. : C
Tue Indianapolis Z'elegraph forcibly and aptly states that the honesty of that sort of people who are so bitter and vindictive in their denunciations of the double standard consists inthis: that they would enhance the yalue of the capital invested in bonds and other securities by legislation and financial chicanery, and then denounce the opponents of these oppressive and thievish practices as swindlers, rascals, &c. That’s the long and short of the whole business. '
JOIIN SHERMAN has his hands ‘more
than full just now, He is catching it all around. The papers are after him with very sharp sticks. They are showing up his crookedness in managing the refunding business. Besides this he has a good many other things to defend that look very bad on paper. And then there is the Cassanave business that is worrying the old man. Mr. Sherman would much better have kept shady. He has too many vulnerable points to take a leading part in an important campaign. : ;
JonN B. HAsSKIN, the weather-cock politician of New York who wrote a letter to John Sherman some weeks ago encouraging him in his presidential aspirations, is now trying to get into the good graces of John Kelly, boss of the Tammany Ring. Haskin, in his letter to Sherman, spoke of himself as a “War Democrat,” which he once was, but of late years he seems to have had more of a “hankering” after the flesh-pots than attachment to principle. He took an active part in the democratic-anti-Tammany movement, but when he failed to succeed in retaining his brother in a tat office he immediately set about to form an alliance with Boss Kelly.— He is not the solid man we once believed him to be. '
. -“WE sometimes hear remarks,” says the Lagrange Standard, “that seem to “credit editors who are disposed to deal “in personalities, with more than or“dinary ability. We have always look“ed at the matter in a different light. “ There is no mental exercise an editor, ‘“or.any other person, can engage in, “requiring as little brain as retailing *“slander and indulging in personal “abuse and vituperation. Very little “mental ability, with a large amount “ of impudence and moral recklessness, *ig all sufficient for that kind of work. * That caliber is too small for an use- “ ful editor, or even for a worthy mem“ber of society.” This disquisition fits a namesake of the Standard to the very dot. Well done, Bro. Rerick!
IN A LEADING editorial on “The Revival of Business,” the New York World says: “The autumnal outlook for business 1n this country is actually clearer and brighter than the outlook was in the spring. Hard times like fevers have their periodicities and crises. The period of panic ended in 1874. Then ensued the period of shrinkage and the crisis of bankruptey. About a year ago began the period of positive recuperation. Witk this autumn we are undoubtedly entering the period of prosperity. After severe fovers the constitutions of patients are sometimes radically changed for the better. Let us hope that the national body politic may have gained fibre and stamina in passing through these hard times.,” ¢
A pIsPATCH from Steubenville, Ohio, says the reunion of the veterans of Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia on the 28th ult. was very successful. Gen, Ewing described a volunteer soldier’s life. Gen. Garfield replied, and made a slight waving of the bloody shirt. Gen. Rice also spoke, as did seyeral other well-known soldiers. When Gen. Piatt, the Greenback nominee for Governor, arose to deliver an address, he did not receive a single cheer, and the crowd made it so unpleasant for him that he did not speak half so long as he expected to. The cause of this cool treatment is doubtless owing to the well-grounded suspicion that Gen. Piatt is a mere tool in the hands of the Republicans who are running him in the interest of Foster, with & view to preventing the solid greenback yote from going to Ewing,
THE EDITOR who seeks to make his readers believe that the Okolona States, edited by the long-haired fanatic, Bill Kernan, is an exponent of democratic principles, is either a fool or a knave, or considers his readers consummate blockheads.
Tue New York Greenbackers did a very foolish thing by resolving that the volume of paper currency ought vo be increased so as to make it equal to $5O per capita, They ought to know by this time that no such scheme of wild inflation will meet the endorsement of the people. L .
Bro. RERICK must have got hold of a wrong pair of spectacles last week, else he would not have attributed the remark of an Ohio republican paper, “Take out of the republican party its “drinking members,” &c., to THE BANNER. We commented on that paragraph, Bro. Rerick; hence do not wish to be held responsible for its authorship. :
THE FIRST ELECTION under the new constitution took place in California yesterday. An entire State ticket, State Legislature and Judges, four Congressmen, and county and city oflicers were to be chosen. The contest is what might be called a mixed one, There were five State tickets in the field, namely: The republican, democratic, new constitution party, workingmen’s party, and the prohibition ticket. The list of officers to be elected is very long, and it will probably be several days before the result will be accurately known.— The Democrats, Republicans and Workingmen appear to feel equally confident of success. 5 :
CONGRESSMAN SPRINGER, of Illinois, in a conversation one day last week stated that he regarded Mr. Tilden as very strong in New York,and expressed the opinion that if the-Sage of Gramerey Park carries the Empire State in the coming contest he will have the best call for the democratic nomination in 1880. In case the Democrats fail to carry Ohio and New York, he thinks David Davis will be the nominee of the Democrats. The indications now point to a democratic victory in New York as well as in Ohio. In that event the ticket may be made up of Tilden and Ewing, always provided Mr. Hendricks refuses to stand for the second place. » ‘
- Tue Columbus (Ohio) Democrat makes a legitimate party point in the contest in Ohio, with which no respectable Republican can find fault, when it cites from the Cincinnati Commercial an astonishing paragraph to the effect vhat “the retort of Kalloch was “that of a .beastly desperado, and he “deserved to be shot dead for it.” The Democrat justly observes upon this wild and uncivilized outburst of the leading republican organ of the chief city in Ohio that it takes the life instantly out of all the attacks made by the Republicans of the North upon the so-called “shot-gun policy” of the Southwest. If in a civilized community the “retort of a beastly desperado” may properly be met by killing the desperado who makes it, why may not the attempt of a “beastly desperado” to outrage the peace of a neighborhood be met' as properly in the same way ? The'New York World correctly notes that there is no other fundamental difference between savage and civilized communities excepting this: that in sayage communities every man expects to protect his own life, his own sensibilities and his own property with his own hand, while in civilized communities men look to the moral instincts of their fellow-men and to the organized law of the land for their gafety from insult and from injury.
THERE ARE THOSE who give it as their opinion that the recent advance in the price of iron is but temporary and that after the rush incident to the Fall trade the low figures which prevailed up to within the past few weeks will again prevail. The Iron 4ge, good authorityon this subject, does not share this opinion. In its last number that trustworthy journal contains an elaborate review of the condition of the iron market. In that connection it prints a number of Interviews with the leading iron men of the country, and quotes as follows “one of the most extensive manufacturers of iron in the United States, whose name would be regarded as authority:”
Consumers also believe that iron must advance even more than it has. They have wondered at the low prices at which it has been sold, and have been expecting higher prices for a long time.— ‘Those that believe in the advance have been placing orders to get the beneflt of a still further advance in prices. - *Do you tLink the advance wili be maintained?” I think that we will maintain iron at the price we have reached now, and per~ haps at a hlgfiher figure, to which it seemed destined to ‘go. It may even go to 2.25 c. and stay there. I think, however, that under the excite‘ment iron will, in some cases, be advanced to & price that it cannot be held at, and there will bea réaction from these extreme prices, but it will not fall below two cents. ¥
It will thus be seen that there is, in the opinion of a eompetent judge, no likelihood of a decline in iron for along time, while it is more than probable that thete will be a still further advance. i :
AN ARTICLE headed “Secretary Sherman’s Financial Operations” deserves a thoughtful perusal. It may befound on another page.
IT REQUIRES a vast amount of cheek for an unscrupulous republican organ grinder to publish the glaring falsehood that the murder of Capt. Dixon in Mississippi “is passed without notice” by the democratic press. ;
Tue Mobile Register, probably the most influential journalepublished in the Southern States, candidly admits that ’ . ‘‘The-South has its faults ; in some parts of it a spirit of intolerance does prevail which we would like to see disappear, and which isgradually disappearing, but when a sweeping aecusation like the one above is. made against us, we can only reply that the ‘intolerance’ of those who have their dearest interests at stake is a venial fault compared to that spirit of partisan hate that distorts everything and can excuse nothing.”
- “HONEST DEMOCRATS are becoming “disgusted with the policy of their “party as exemplified in the murder of “Capt. Dixon, of Yazoo,” says a ranting republican hypocrite. Yes, honest Democrats always were .ahd are “disgusted” with murders, whether committed in Mississippi or in Massachusetts, and they look with supreme contempt upon the miserable scribbler who'has the sublime audacity to assert that murder is an exemplification of democratic policy. . It requires brazen effrontery to make so foul an assertion as that. '
A REPUBLICAN ORGAN grumbles because Gen. Ewihg “hangs on to his seat in Congress while running for Governor of Ohio.” Wher Hayes was a candidate for President he held firmly to his seat as Governor of Ohio, not only until after the election but up to the very time that the infamous “eight” decided to defraud the people of their choice. Hayes’ “hanging on” was all right, of course; but Ewing’s emulation of Hayes’ example is an unpardonable offense. What a righteous set of fellows these republican organ grinders are, anyhow! -
WHEN the republican party had for its mission something beside the retention of official power, it was not so bitterly opposed to the doetrine of State’s rights as it is to-day. Turning to the platform upon which Mr. Lincoln was elegted in 1860, we find the following: q .
That the maintenance inviolate of the rights of the States, and especially of each State, to order and control its own domesti¢ institutions according to its own judgment exclusively, is essential to that balance of power on which the perfection and endurance of our political fabric depends; and we denounce the lawless invasion by armed force of the soil of any State or Territory, no matter under what pretense, as one of the gravest of crimes. ~ In those days Trumbull, Palmer, Julian, Greeley, Curtin, Cowan, Campbell, Chase, Ewing, Doolittle, Blair, Bates, Welles, and others like them had a controlling voice in shaping the political aims of the republican party; hence no such anti-republican sentiments as are now disseminat';ed by a degenerated republican press were permitted to be inscribed upon the party’s banners. The aim of this organization nowis the wiping out of State lines and the creation of a “strong” government, which is a modified name for an empire, with U. S. Grant or some one like him for permanent president. Verily, time produces wonderful changes.
WE HAVE before us about a column of extracts from ' fifteen prominent southern journals condemnatory of the Y azoo outrage. 'T'hese papers speak in ‘emphatic terms; they mince no words in telling the people of Yazoo county that such outrages cannot in justice to the South be tolerated. We wish our space would permit us to publish each and every one of these extracts, so that our readers might see for themselves that republican papers deliberately falsify facts when they say that the Yazoo affair is not condemned by representative Southerners. The following ‘from the Southern Argus, a democratic paper published at Selma, Alabama, establishes our point clearly and unmistakably: :
“Yazoo county had better been swept from its place on the earth and its people had better ‘ been destroyed in a night, than this damned crimte been committed—better for Mississippi, better for the South, better for the democratic party, better for the counfry. In the eyes of the world, the whole body of Southern people are stigmatized by these unpardonable aects of violence and blood ; their enemies are strengthened ; their friends are paralyzed ; their good faith is impugned ; their respect forlaw is called in question. The hanging of the murderer would vindicate Mississippi and the South ; ‘but with 500 aceessories in the county in which heis to be tried, this is not to be expected. * * * Theright of every freeman qualified by law to vote and t 0 have his ballot counted as | cast, the right of every citizen eligible under the laws to seek office at the hands of the people—these rights, stricken down in this county' of a sister Southern State, are essential to free government. Every man in the United States who values for himself or his children the right of freesuffrage, every one who values for himself or his children the right to aspire to a place in the publieservice, is personally wront»{ ed in these Yazoo county crimes, and should cry out against them. With these rights gonie, | there is anarchy, and despotism follows an‘archy, welcomed as a relief from more intolerable evils.” LN | - There is sincerity and earnestness in language like‘the aboye. All honor to the southern press for its boldness of speech, '
THE FRIENDS of Judge L.ong are getting up quite a “boom” for that gentleman for the supreme judgeship.
CHEERING NEWS comes from Ohio. The democratic prospects are growing brighter from day to day. In conversation at Steubenville the other day, Gen. Ewing said that in the past two weeks he had become convinced that the Democrats will carry the State. He thinks the Greenback vote will be drawn chiefly by the Democrats. Gov. Bishop said that from present indications the State will go democratic by 10,000, General Garfield told leading Republicans at Steubenville Thursday night that he felt worried about the result in Maine, and feared the Nationals would carry the State. -He started for Maine the same night, intending to stump the State.
NoO DENIAL, or an attempt at denial, has yet been made of the alleged confession by Judge Miller in regard to Mr. Tilden’s election to the Presidency. .The exact language attributed te Judge Miller is thus reported: v
- Speaking of Mr. Tilden and the events of 1876 and 1877, Judge Miller remarked: *‘On the other hand it may be said of him that he honestly tho’t himself elected, and entitled to the votes of the two Southern States which the tribunal decided against him. He was elected in Louisiana—that i, ke got eight or tew thousand more actual votes there than Hayes, In the event of his success next, year, I think he will make a good President. He’ is a man of great ability, unwearied pertinacity and extraordinary courage. He cannot be bulldozed by the politicians or office-seekers,” He has made an excellent Geverner of New York, and has shown administrative and executive powers of a high order. He isold and rich, and has no temptation to abuse the powers of his office.while he has every inducement to give to the country a good administration—one which will inure to its fame and obliterate in a measure the scandalg which have attached to its name,” ;
Toe Indianapolis Herald is a paper of decided republican proclivities, but that fact does not deter it from doing justi®e to a political opponent when unjustly assailed. Witness the following: “We do not believe that Dr. Blackburn, recently elected Governor of Kentucky, ever attempted or countenanced an attempt to plant yellow fever in the Northeérn cities by means of infected clothing. Dr. Blackburn has denounced the story as a lie, and we believe him. A man who loves his fellow men so much that he voluntarily leaves his home and business to attend the sick in fever-stricken cities, and literally wears himself outin the good work, could not originate or countenance so murderous a schems.” Congressman Colerick told us a few weeks since that when Dr, Blackburn was nominated for Governor the Kentucky delegation in Congress stated that the only possible objection that could be urged against him was his extreme kindness—that it would be next to impossible for him to deny executive clemency to anyone making a pitiful appeal for pardon, &c. A man of such tender-heartedness is not apt to engage in the heinous business which republican papers, without a particle of evidence, charge against him. . ‘
Gov. WiLLiAMs attended the old gettlers’ meeting of Bartholomew county, and while sojourning at Columbus several small boys came up to him. The Governor addressed one of them by propounding tke question: “Do you work ?” The boy’s answer was, “Yes, when I can get a job.” “Well, that is right. Have you a father?” inquired the Govermor.. *“No, he is dead.” *“ls your mother living?” - “Yes.” “Well, be good to your mother, give her the money you make, mind what she says, don’t smoke cigars, don’t chew tobacco, don’t swear. Be a _good boy, don’t waste your time on the streets with bad boys, make use of all your time to some good i)urpose, and some of these days you will make a man of some note, and be of benefit to those of your day and generation.” The Columbus Democrat, in narrating this incident, says: the boy’s eyes fairly sparkled ‘with delight over this conversation with our good old farmer Governor. We fully agree with our contemporary in saying: “Would that more of our older citizens would encourage our boys on the streets, thus stimulating, them to be active, frugal and industrious. Much good could be done in this way, at no cost, and would certainly result in great goed to our rising generation.” ; ;
THE MAINE ELECTION.
On Monday next the people of Maine will “enjoy” their usual annual election. Only one officer, the Governor, is elected on the general ticket. For this there are three candidates in the field, as follows: Republican, Daniel F. Davis; Democratic, Alonzo Garcelon; Greenback, Joseph L. Smith. The vote of Maine in recent years has been ‘as follows: ; Year. . Office. Rep. Dem. .Grbk. Scat, 1878-—G0vVern0r....56,654 28,208 41,371 36 1877—G0vern0r,...53;631 42,114 5,266 810 1876 —-G0vern0r....75,867 60,423 . 533 e 1876—Pre5ident.:...66,300 49,823 663 The last Legislature was politically composed as follows: ; Rep, Dem. Grbk. Ind. Bonate il iiiint v % 8 2 House..... ..o aioeil 06 27 o =1 ~ There being no choice of Governor by the people (a majority vote being required to elect), Dr. Garcelon, the
democratic candidate, was elected by this Legislature. ; The people of Maine are also to vote upon proposed amendments to the constitution of their State, which provide for biennial elections and sessions of the Legislature, and extend the term: of office of Governor, Senators, Representatives and other State officers from one to two years. If a majority of the votes cast are in favor of these amendments, they become a part of the constitution. _ ;
~As to the probable result it is useless to enter into speculation. 'l'he. Republicans affect to feel confident of ;.carrying the day over all opposition, yet some of their shrewdest managers ‘ are evidently apprehensive of danger. ‘The fight is really between the Repubjlicans and the Greenbackers, a large number of Democrats having resolved to vote for the candidate of the latter with a view to preventing the republican candidate from receiving a majority over all. On the legislative tickets the Greenbackers and Democrats have generally entered into a fusion. ; B
For The Ligonier Banner. COUNTY KFAIRS. In view of the approaching county Fair, it might not be out of place to consider the object of our county Fairs, and to make some suggestions as to the best means for making them both profitable to the people and a benefitto the farmers. e : I consider the object of our county Fairs should be to promote the interests of the farmers by the exhibition of stock, the products of the soil, and improved implements for the performance and the lightening of the lahors of the farmer. . . - But, by the manner in which our ‘county Fairs are generally conducted, they appear to be more of a sporting association than a county Fair. There is generally a very creditable show of stock and speed, but the other interests of the farmer are fearfully neglected, which is evidenced by the meagre display of implements and the products of the'soil. : - e
The farmer, of course, is interested in good stock, but he is equally interested in the improvement of the products of the soil, and the best machinery for securing his crops and the .cheapenhi'g of the production of the same. It should be the object of every farmer, manufacturer of and dealer in farm implements, to' put upon exhibition at our Fairs the best stock, implements, and products of the seil, so that the success of and the improvements in the products of the farm may be seen and compared.. Now, let every farmer and dealer in farm implements bring along and put upon exhibition, samples of grain, vegetaples, dairy products, implements and machinery, even though each one may think they have nothing worth exhibiting, and that some one will have something better than anything they have. I presume this is one great cause of thé meagre display in these departments; and auother reason is that they say the prémiums are not suflicient to pay for the trouble of exhibiting. The incentive for exhibiting should not be the premium, but to make a display and to see whether another has anything better than we have, and pride in showing what we can do. Nothing contributes more to the interest of any show than a large display in every department, though a majority of the samples may be inferior. Every one likes to look at any large colleetion and compare the different samples. .
We often hear the remark made at our Fairs, “I have got better than that at home, but I did not think it worth bringing.” - Now, when you go to the Fair take along anything you have, and if 'yours is better than that of others, you may take pride in it, and if others’ are better than yours, it may stimulate you to try and do better. By doing this we can make a large collection at our Fairs and add great interest to them. Let all make an effort to have a full dispfiay in every department of our Fair. I'believe it would be of great benelit to the farmers and others if our county Fairs were also: made market Fairs, where those having good stock, seeds, etc., they wished to sell could put them on exhibition and advertise for sale, and those wishing to buy would have a much better chance to examine and make a selection than in any other way. And it would be a great attraction to our Fairs, and bring many to them who might not come for any other purpose. - = Farmers and dealers: Just try the plans suggested at the coming Fair and see how it works, and see if you do not have the best Fair eveeld in SRG oottty L o BDA
low to Get Sick. Expose yourself day and night, eat too much without exercise; work too hard withoutwest; doctor all the time; take all the vile nostrums advertised ; and then vou will want to know : How to Get Well. - Which is answered in three words— Take Hop Bitters! See other column;
Rail Road Directory.
e ich. Southern Rail Road Mich. Southern Rail Road, On and after September 26. 1878, trains will leave Stationsas follows ; e TN Y ‘ GOING EAST, |Atlantic ExExpress, § b:tat.ious.‘ .l press. s 90 ami | oo oChiepbiell sl e 535 pim & o pmel i Bikhart o hislil 850 0 19 e Goßlen s g oAI 2514 cedse-o..Millersburg (oLI e =1 56 o ...,.;.;Lig0‘nier.......1..10,42 52 e LWk 218 L Bmle e a 2 30 wlecaaKendallvilleso it i ds. - o 2« 040 pm .o Toledo s iil DAgl am Chicago Bx-| GOING WES 'r_[ Pacific Bxe - npress. | Stz;Lio_,ne. il DIESRy cATOF At .| .ci Toledea, .. v 190 am 0280 pmc i oo RKendallville doi ir 0846 L 243 cilewwocn . Brimfield Lol et 52 0h cilevasnse- Wawaka (.ol |t SR 07 aeeaiaarHigonier o Luslio BAO o =< 382 eefiemen . Millérsburg. ... ——m—..'33B SilsmiieeasGOßleß ol sil e 4 10 i Llidga b ..-.....Eikhurt.........‘.. #8335 0 .. 800pm..|........0hicag0.......00.0 820 am.. Where time ismot given, trains do not stop, Atlantic and Pacitic Express traing leaves daily both ways. CHAS. PAINE, Gen. Supt., . : .+ Cleveland, Ohio. T. C. MONTGOMERY, Agent, Ligonier, Ind,
’ 3 > Rt i Pittshurg, Ft. W, & Chicago R. R. From and after November 10th 1878, trains will leave stations as follows: . e Fust Ex,| Mail loomq wesT,|Pac Ex,|Nt. Ex, No L. | No. 5. { Stations. | No. 7. | No. 3. 1145 pm! 600 am|. Pittsbarg..| 900 am} 150 pm 12 53 am| 745 ..Rochester.. {lOl2 l 255 310 41100 .:Allance... {1250 pm! 635 . 450 1255 pm| ..Orrville :.]226. . [ 713 ‘ 700 311 - |..Manesfield .| 440 920 o\ 730 :} 350 pm|Crestline..A.| 515 .| 945 pm 750 .-..lCrestline.,L.‘ 540 - | Y 55 pm 925 cervnas b Foreat 1785 5 Hlabi 1040 Vaan v e iMoo 9000 12 25 am 1201pm|........|F0rt Wayne{llss ‘240 350 . |........|-.Plymouth..| 246 am| 455 700 pmj........|..Chicag0...| 600 am| 758 am Nt. Ex.'Fust Ex.ruomu nmx. Mail, No. 4. | No, 2. | Stations." , No. 6. { No, 8. 910 pm| 830 am|.. Chicago ..| 515 pmj.... .... 246 am(1148 - . Plymonth.f 855 « |..z. 5. 655 225 pm|Fort Wayne|ll 30 o e 855 A2O - o Dimaloo 1130 mt oLI 1010 R e B W) LR R B 1L 45an| 655 pm|{Crestline..A. k) 32 am|.._. .... 12 05 pm| 7 15pm,Crestline,.L.] 415 am| 605 am 1235 745 --Mangtield:.| 455 . l 655 226 {938 Aic.Orrville o 700 el 915 400 1115 ~Alllance, .9 00 " 111307 ¢ 622 ' 120 am|..Rochester. {llO6 | 200 pm 730pm| 230 amj..Pittsburg .11215 pm 3 30 pm
Traing 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.
. - - T i . -y 2 Cinecinnati, Wabash & Mich, K. R.. . Time table, taking effect May 11th, ¥879, : SOUTH. A S NORTH G No. 4. | No. 2. | A Stations, LisNo, 1, | No. 3. - 110 pm}ll 10 pm{lndianapolis.| 420 am| 6565 pm 10 55 am| 940 pm;Anderson J.,| 60b am| 835 pm 1028 1 910 I.Alexa'ndr'ia.lvfifl SG g G 939 81T ]...Marion.. I°7 .34 1005 5. 850 72 |...Wabagh..| 845 LlOOO i 804 635 +“N:Manchestr; 995 ~ {ll5O - 718 | 545 (. Warsaw..|lol9 *|i243 im 649 513 I...Milford.z. 10,62 t TAT s 6.34 457 - | .New Parié.’)lf()f) 1134 620 440 ..| ..Goshen... 11130 ; T 600 am| 420 pm|L. Elkhart. A jll 50'aml' 210am’ Close connections made at Goshen and Elkhart with‘the LS & M S R R; at Milford with the B &+ ORR; at Warsaw withthe P, Pt 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 RR. Through coachier will be run on - trains No. 3 and 4 between Elkhart and Indiapolis. NORMAN BECKLEY, Gen. Man.
DR._ BOWESMITE’S S.S. B R TRADE _~ A e : w ATFEIN A\ 94\ *“~ R 3 S e ) *r’/( “ MARK “Gl FOR MEN and WOMEI. No. 1; Nerve-Anodyne and 'Teonic; Cures Seminal Weakness, -and stops the devitalizing losses which cause Mengg,l,' Nervous, Sexual, Heart, and other Diseases. Enfallible Remedies. Thrée Medicines in each box,—Pill form. g s i N 0.2: Aphrodisiae and Tonic; Curcs Impetence, Brain, Nerve, and Sexual -Exhaustion ; Weakness of body. Mind and Functions. A Rejuvenating Vital Food and Restorer. Action prompt. Mwo Medicines in each box,— Pill form. | _ : 2 BOOK FREE by mail that every one shrould read. For over fortiy years these Specifics have cured in every fair trial; hence we ?)varrnnt them. ‘“Advice-Sheet” with each OX. : : i : Price, $1 per package, or six for #3, lasting two months ; sufficiént to cure in recent cases. Sold by Druggists ; or sent by mail, securely sealed, on recei% of lE}'iC-e bi e i § BOWESM SPECIAL SPECIFIC CO., No. 337 Wabash Ave. ; or Lock Box 528, Chica%gd Sold in Ligonier; by C. ELDRED & .SON, Druggists, o T Oy,
MAINEFLOOD: HOW LOST; HOW RESTORED! £ Just published, a new edition of Dr. @Culverv‘ve]l’s Celebrated Essay on the radical cure, without medi--3 cine, of SPERMATORRH®A OF Scminal Weakness, Involuntary Seminal Losges, IMPoTEN=6y, Mental and Physical Incapacity, Impediments to Marriage, etc.; also. Consumprion, ErILEPRSY and Firs, induced by self-indnlgence orsexual extravagance, &c. : 2 : el The celebrated anthor, in this admirable Essay, clearly demonstrates, from a thirty years’ successfal !gracticc, that the alarmin (ffr consequences of selfslibuse may be radically cured without the dangercus use of internal medicine or the application of the knife ; pointing out a mode of'cure at ence simple, certain and effectual, by means of which every sufferer, no matter what his condition may behm&y cure himself cheaply, privately, and radically. 5 5 : & This Lecture should be in the hands of ‘eve ery youth and every man:in the land. Sent free, under seal, in a plain envelope, to any address, Address the-Publighers, T - THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO., 9yl] 41 AnnSt.,New York ; Post Office Box 45806.
To Nervous Sufferers--The Great European Remedy--Dr. J. B. Simpson’s Specific Medicines. -~ ; It is a positive cure for Spermatorrhe. Seminal, Weakness, Impotency, and all diseases resulting from Self-Abuse, a 8 Mental finxietx, - Loss of Memory, Paingy ssmmmmm ki in bgckdqr side, BEFORE, - i AFTER. an isease Tv G YOOT2 T that lead tocon=-§ ',.\ifi“{{m A 4 §<m:,£\ ) sumption, In-§ @& QoA e Ry }”1 i sanity and ang TR d& S 5= YA early grave. NS A o/B Th e Bpecific MBS TR LB )4 v Medicine is be £R Py VS-S ing osed. withf SSUSCNEN P LGRRN=Y wonderful BUC-Vommmmns saumsonimmemumens o cens. ' | 2 s Pam{,)hlets sent free to all; Write for them and get full particulars. : Price, Specific, $l.OO per package, or six packages for $5.00. Address all ordersto - J.B. SIMPSON MEDICINE CO., . 20-Iy. Nos, 104 and 106 Main Bt., Bu.fi'a‘do. NX. Forsale by C. ELDRED & SON, - Ligonier, Indiana.
FUR SALE, cheap and on favorable terms: A Farm of 147 acres, situate’in Perry twp., Noble county, Indiana.. About 100 acres alearcd, balance timber. Good buildings, excellent or< chard, and good water. Forfurther particulars callon J, C. ZIMMERMAN, Ligonier, or B. F, PrarMAN, on the premiges. = i L HREE
'Chew Jaokson’s Bisr Sweet Navi Tobacco. Sty 13-31-1 y
