Ligonier Banner., Volume 15, Number 46, Ligonier, Noble County, 3 March 1881 — Page 4
) * w I\ 5 The Ligonier Banner, Pri=¥ o SNy 2 ZL::;:T*_W——#—W—%;: J».,8- STOLL, Editor and Proprietor. IHURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1881,
Tre Indianapolis Zelegraph classifies’ Henry Hostetter among the German Senators. “Henry is “some” én “(Ohio Dutch,” but an entire stranger to the vernacular of Goethe and Schiller.
THE REPUBLICAN PAPERS of Michigan have‘a difficult task in explaining away the refusal of the republican legislature of that State to submit to a vote of the people certain amendments to the constitution for the suppression of the liquor traflic, 'T'he temperance people are dumb-founded over these flagrant violations of the pledges made to them by republican politicians.
A spECIAL from New York, dated February 26, says:.“ There is much indignatien felt against the bamks for the action they have taken in this matter. Their efforts to defeat the passage of the funding bill have re-acted upon themselves and created a strong sentiment in favor of the bill, and of such legislation as will strip the banks of such a dangerous power in the future.” - With the exception of the 7'7¢bune all the leading New York dailies condemn the {course of the national banks in their attempt to bull-doze Congress into the abandonment of the funding bill. - '
"Tne New York Express divides the respongibility for Friday’s panic as follows: “This responsibility rests (1) with the national banks, or at least certain influential institutions among them; (2) with Secretary Sherman, who acted with reprehensible delay in applying the remedies at his immediate command, and (3) with the republican party in Congress, whose criminal obstruction to antecedent measures debarred the democratic majority from effecting the final passage of the Funding bill before the last moment of the session.” The finding of the Ewpress is substantially eorrect. =
Toe New York Ewxpress, printed under the very shadows of Wall street, gives utterance to the following: “The national banks have justified the worst charges made against them by their outrageous acts. If we only had a government they would pay dear for their audacity. Andrew Jackson tho’t a single national bank, with an assur-ed-capital of $35,000,000, a menace to the liberties and credit of the country. What would he have said to these 2,000 national banks with an aggregate capital of over $400,000,000, virtually one corporation in all publie respects, and combined to dictate to Congress what it shall and shall not do?”
COLONEL FoORNEY tells this wholesome truth to whom it concerns, in last week’s Progress: “The revelation of this great drama of corruption going on before all eyes for twenty years in Pennsylvania, and now officially declared by the Republicans of Philadelphia, is proof positive that if it had been made last August Garfield would never have been elected President. The frauds now expesed, the mén who invented them at first—the Camerons—and their slaves who persevered in and repeated them, constructed the Garfield majorities in the State and city; and if the masses could have seen, as they see them now, Hancick would not only have carried this State, but the exposure of this organized corruption in Pennsylvania would have given him the counfry, Such is the inexorable logic of truth.”
THE POPULAR INDIGNATION at the arbitrary course of the national banks in attempting to thwart the legislative power of the land seems to be confined to no particular locality or class of people. The condemnation of their -inconsiderate and mischieyous scheme seems to be umiversal. Papers that have heretofore steadfastly and unswervingly stood by the national banks through thick and thin are free to confess that the defiant attitude of the national bankers is likely to awaken an opposition which may pave the way for their eventual annihilation. Even 80 conservative a paper as the Philadelphia Z'imes is constrained to remark that “nothing could be better calculat“ed to prove to the people that the “National Banks are an enemy to the “payment of the national debt and *“the lessening of the publie burdens “than the ill-judged haste of certain “bankers, as much interested in poli“tics asin banking, to array themselves “ against the bill providing for the pay“ment of the heavy burden of interest "+ at less rates than we have been hith- “ ertopaying.” The old adage, “Whom ‘the gods would destroy they first make mad,” may prove as applicable teo national bankers as to other people. |
- To-MORROW i 3 inauguration day. Thank God that the White House is once more to Have an occupant who was duly elected. L .
REPUBLICAN PAPERSannounce with considerable uniction that Hon. Wm. H. English advocates the ratification of all theamendments to the constitutien. In view of recent experiences we hardly think this announcemen} will cause any considerable numbér of Democrats to jump the fence for the special purpose of getting onto the side of Mr. English. :
For oNCE, John Sherman sides with the people instead the national banks. He says the funding bill is not exactly to his liking,vet its genéral purpose is a good one and the bill ought to become a law. He further says that much of the oppesition to the bill ig due to the fact that bankers do not fully understand its provisions. ;
A NEW YORK DISPATCH says that Jay Gould has offered the editorship of the World to Henny Watterson, of the Louisville Courier-Journal. It is to be hoped that the rumor may prove well founded. Henry Watterson is somewhat erratic in his notions, but he is at all times interesting and entertaining. Desides, u_mier his management the World would be made what it is not now—a newspaper.
A WASHINGTON SPECIAL of the Ist inst.says: “The Repul*licans under the lead of such blathering demagogues as Conger and Frye arei doing their utmost to defeat the funding bill. They object to it solely because it i§ a meritorious measure that they are not willing thatthe democratiq} congress should have the credif for, L‘liesides they want to force an extra session. -An attempt will be made to passTthe bill to-day, and it looks now as though it would succeed,” If the Republicans of the present Congress have acted the part of anything but that 'of arrant demagogues, the “fact” has ientirely escaped pbservation, L ‘
Y e e ¢4 WE RESPECTFULLY|invite the attention of local republican politicians to the fact that Judge Robert S. Taylor, in a lengthy argumefht favoring; the ratification of all the |amendments to the constitution, say% in explanation of the first amendment that it “also imposes upon the Legislature the duty of enacting a registry law.” As the Judge is by Republi(;ans‘ hereabouts considered the very lembodiment of wisdom and statesmanship, it is to be hoped that our local republican politicians will not again insult public intelligence by denying that the -first amendment clearly cc@ntemplates the enactment of a registry law. ,
SENATOR PLums, of Kansas, is a staunch, dyed-in-the-wool Republican, bui that fact did not deter him from saying in the Senate last Friday: “¢“T am a national bank ;Epresident, solcan speak without prejudice. I tell you the crisis has come when wé shall se whether the banks run the goverfnment or the government the banks. I think the government has a right to fix t;h,e rate of interest it will pay, and it is no business of any set of men. It makes no difference if Wall street gamblers do lose linoney or railroad stocks stop rising. It would make a difference if the hoes in sWtestern corn-fields should stop, and it is wtith the producers the prosperity of the cduntry rests. Let the bottom fall out of the money market if it will. It is an artifieial moyement to coerce.”’
“GATH"” wrote from New York last Friday: : : ’ ‘ Talking with a former Sena’cor-yesterday, he said to me: “I mnever knew a man to abuse himself worse thah Matt. Carpenter. He would drink threeior four bottles of champagne a day when in abundant health, beginning before breakfiast. Of course he collapsed. It did not make him drunk—it merely exhilerated him.”: Carpenter was not only fond of his wine, but also had the reputatien of entertaining a speciél fondness for. handsome women. The New. York T'ribune, it will be remembered, editorially accused him six or seven years ago of enjoying the company of a handsome woman—not his wife—at one of the famous summer résorts of the east. 1 Senator Carpenter instituted a libel suit against'the Z7ibune, but the case never came to trial. f ‘ |
Ir HE HAD acquired fame and distinction in no other way, the name of Matt. Carpenter would ever be remembered by all true lovers of their country for his noble utterances before the electoral commission of 1877, on which occasion he said: | =
- “ I domot appear for Mr. Tilden, but “for ten thousand legal voters of the “State of Loutsiana,who, ewithout ac“cusation or proqf, indictment or trial, “notice or kearing, have been disfran“chised by four villains incorporated “in perpetual succession, whose official “title s the Returning Board of Lou“isiana.” L] | Mr. Carpenter was, -&enerally classified as a “stalwart” Republican, but his early demoeratic training did not permit him o counteénance or endorse that most shameless of all political villainies, the stealing ef the presidency. el
THE AMENDMENTS, Inregard to the constitutional amendments to be voted on one week from next Monday, TDE BANNER occupies precisely the same posifion it occupied a yeéar ago. Nothing has transpired since that time to change our opinion with reference to the first and third amendments, each of which we regarded then and regard now as wholly impracticable. The first makes registration an essential qualification to voting, and the third, besides the registration clause, contemplates a separate and distinet election for choosing judicial ofiicers. As heretofore stated, no earthly good has ever resulted from registration laws, and the constitution of Indiana shall never by eur vote be changed so as to make it obligatory upon the Legislature to enact a law of that kind. Not one solitary sound, logical argument has yet been advanced to convince any unprejudiced mind that the adoption of these two amendments, in their present form, would be conducive te the public interest. They are grude, .ill-advised, and wholly indefgnsible from -whatever standpoint they may be considered. If incorporated into the constitution of the State, they will impose burdens and hardships upon the people that will inevitably excite popular indignation —when too late to undo the mischief. If, on the other hand, these two amendmentsshould chanee to be voted down, the Legislature (in extra session) can easily put them in proper shape for action by the next general assembly, and the people can vote upon them in 1883, before another presidential election takes place. A piece of patchwork such as the third amendment should never be permitted to disfigure . the constitution of Indianall . :
IN SPEAKING of the constitutional amendments that are to be voted on the 14th of this month, the Lawrenceburgh Register re-echos the sentiments heretofore expressed in these columns by saying: o " We regret exceedingly that it was not so arranged that the clause inregard to registration could have been submitted as a separate proposition, but it was nf)t, and we are. left with no other alternative than to vote against those amendments that contain that provision. It is strange that no democratic member of either branch of the Legislature saw the necessity of making this issue. A new bill could have passed through the ordeal required by the Constitution, and the amendments voted upon before the next presidential year without any inconyenience or extra cost to the people. If this had been done it would then have been put in a shape that every voter could vote for what he desired. But as it is now presented all those who desire a change of the'State election from October to November, if they vote for the amendments at all, are compelled to vote not only for this change but also for the clause requiring registration. , : When they were last submitted these amendments, the FIRST and THIRD, had a majority against them in this county of about eleven hundred votes. We trust they will be so treated again. No law ever enacted in this State will be more unpopular than a registration law. It/ stands in hand therefore that Democrats should not be responsible for one. We know something about them, and having lived under their workings, we want no more of them.,
DurixnG Friday’s panicin New York, ready cash commanded as high as one per cent. per day. Theday following, after brokers and bankers had again come to their senses, plenty of money was to be had at the rate of 5 per cent. per annum. For downright foolishness commend us te: Wall street. .
At the last Presidential election the candidates of the democratic party received a majority of the popular votes, as they did four years ago. These votes were not bought, nor were they the result of persuasion and intimidation. They represent the honest convictions of the men who cast them, and it is elear that the party which is thus sustained after twenty years’ exclusion from the spoils of executive power has no reason to despair.—New York Sun. !
SENATOR VOORHEES is working hard to get some kind of alaw through Congress that will pretect the people from the tricks and outrageous exactions of patent right dealers. He hopes to do this good work the present session, and if he can accomplish it he will be entitled to the gratitude of all honest men. The people are generally much more interested in this kind of legislative work than they are in denunciations of rebel brigadiers for whelly imaginary evils.—LaPorle Argus.
There is so much money in the country that Wall street finds it impossible to create a panic. It was noticeable on Saturday that the high rate of interest in New York City brought money there from every part of the country, but chiefly from the west, and immediately put an end te high rates.
~ Speaker Randall is' represented as saying that the funding bill must and shall pass. It is to be hoped that the Speaker knows whereof he affirms. But if the funding bill fails to become a law, the responsibility will be upon the Republicans, and it will be no light one.
Garfield 18 reported as saying that the next four years will pot require such a great secretary of the treasury, as good men in the law, navy and post office departments. He thinks that the attorney-general will have a great deal to do, particularly with the Mormons.
- - LEGISLATIVE ITEMS. There is rejoicing among the county Clerks and mourning among county Recorders. The bill transferring the marriage license business from one to the other has been indefinitely postponed. : : The House gracefully concurred in the Senate amendments to the bill resubmitting the constitutional amendments with the exception that the date was changed from April 4 to March 14. This is dene in order teo enable the extra sessien to pass the necessary legislation under the amendmenfs. : :
The House completed the consideration of the criminal code, and passed the bill. There are 335 sections in the act, one of them taking the punishment to which criminals may be sentenced out of the hands of the juryand puts it in the hands of the Judge, except in capital cases. Under the new criminal code, executions also will be entirely private, shutting out the press, all spectators, and all persons except the cofficers appointed by the sheriff, the jury, and relatives of the condemned. :
‘An amendment to the Sunday law has been reported favorably by the committee having it in charge. It declares that any person abeve the age of fourteen years who shall do ordinary work upon Sunday, or shall go hunting, fishing, or shall engage in any sort of sportiveness shall be fined not less than $1 nor more than $lO. This will somewhat affect the meditations of the lone fishermen who take Sunday to read sermons in stones, books in the running brooks and good in everything. - Representative Kenner, of Huntington, has introduced a bill to create a State board of examiners to examine the books and accounts of eounty officers. It requires the Governor to appoint competent accountants and bookkeepers, one from each political party, who are placed under bonds in the sum of $lO,OOO. They are required'to carefully examine the books of the county officers, and report to the Board of Commissioners the condition of the books. They are also required, as far as practicable to establish in the various offices a uniform e%yst:em of bookkeeping. It is provided that the examiners may also bexcalled upon to investigate the accounts of any city or town officer, and their annual salary is to be $2,500.
WOMAN SUFFRAGE. Able and Exhaustive Speech on that Subject - BY SENATOR HENRY HOSTETTER, Who Admits to Having Undergone a ! : Change of Heart, And Now Gallantly Vetes for the Enfranchisei ' ment of Woman, (Extract from the Legislative Proceedings as published in the Indianapolis Sentinel.) Mr. Hostetter, when his name was called, in explanation of his vote was understood to say: “I have not ocecupied any time in the discussion of this question; and in relation to this matter I will only say that if it had come up a year or two ago, I should have voted agalnst it. Not having heretofore given much thought to the question, but recently having studied it considerably, I now of the opinion that it would bggght to pass this bill, and therefore I vote ‘aye.””’ Why Women Should’Net Be Dragged into P olitics. ! [Extract from the speech of Senalor Heftron. ] Political power will degrade, ‘not elevate woman. Do not drag her down from the exalted sphere that she now occupies to #level with man in the coarse and vulgar affairs of life. The field of politics is now 8o corrupt, debauched and debasing that thousands of good men turn from it with disgust apd aversion, and skall we make woman—the stay of society, the hope of the world—shall we make her a factor in this cesspool of political corruption? Shall we place her in a position to vote and be voted for, to electioneer and be electioneered with, to influence and be influenced, to bribe and be bribed—in short to be subjected to all the debasing influences and practices of politics? If we do, sir, in my judgment we destroy the dearest domestic relations, reverse the natyral order of society, and commit a erime against humanity. j . Let us leave her where nature and nature’s God has placed her—at the hearthstone of the family circle, the rearer and educator of our children and the mistress of our homes. Let us not destroy the softening and refining influences which nature has planted in her bosom by bringing her in contact with the coarser affairs of public life. i I am willing to give to woman all the legal rights enjoyed by man, placing her upon an equal footing with him before the law 1n respect to her person and property, but I wish to save her, and thereby save the purity and morality of society, by excluding her from the evil tendencies and de‘basing influences of political strife.
To the honor and crecdit of our people be it said, that in no Nation undar ‘the sun is the respect and deference paid to woman that she receives in this our own country. It is the high‘est evidence of our christian civilization. She is not treated as an equal, but as a superior in an eminent degree. Her presence everywhere is the signal fer order, decorum and decent respactfulness; the veriest ruffian on the gtreet corners bows his head in silence as she pasges by. Let us not endanger this good inflyence by changing her status in society, She is to-day the sovereign power of the land, the mother of mankind, the queen of that miniature heaven — home; the edueator of youth, the guide’ of manhood and the stay and comfort of declining age. Let us not destroy her power and usefulness in these hegven-appointed departments by contaminating her with the evil influences of political strife, : |
How Manufacturing Establishments Enhance the Value ot Real Estate. : ISouth Bo?nd Tribune, Feb, 25.1] _ The Studebaker Bros. Manufacturing Company have bought the Swygart property consisting of about 57 acres, for which they paid in the neighborhood of $25,000. The land faces on Sumption prairie road and and on both sides of Samg{)}e street. That on the north side of Sample is within a shert distance of their wagon works grounds. We learn it is the intention to plat the property, or a tortion of it, in an addition to the city, and to use the rest for the extension of their works, The sale is the most important and involves the most money of any that has taken place in real estate since the purchase of the Perking property by the Oliver Chilled Plow Works. Before buying the Swygart place the Studebakers asked 8. C. Stull to put a price en his land east of it, His figures were $60,000 for the 114 acres.
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of Liver Comp]aipt are a bitter or bad taste in the mouth; pain in the back, sides or jolnts, often niistaken for rheumatism, sour stomach, loss of appetite, howels alternately costive and lax; headache, loss of meggory, with a painfal sengation of havln% failed to ?D somiething which onght to have been donej deb llitg, low. s%iritis’.gz; thick yellow appearance of the skin and eyes, g dry ough ¢ften mistaken for congumption, . Sometimes many of these symptoms attend the disease, at others very few; but the LIVER, the ]largest organ in the body, is fenerally the seat of disease, and if m Regulated in time, great suffering, wretchedness and death will ensue. AS AN UMAILING SBECIFIC for Dyspepsia, &onsflgafion Jaundice, Bilious Attacks, Sick Headache, Colle, Depression of i Spirits, Sour Stomach, Heart Burn, &0., mmons’ Liver Regulat Take Simmons’ Liver Regulator, his fustly celgbrated medicine Regulates the %,lggr, bfqmz_)fie"fl flflxpsflgn, gng fortifies the system gnlnatm'l&ria’l. e A 'n_-‘- 3 “ i ~ CAYTION, g See that yoy get the genuine in elean: white wruppet with large red “Z.”” Pre-, pared by g : s A SOLD BIY ALL DRUGGISTS. » Marchll,lBBo -47-Iy-cntrm-alden ; !
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. A MUSICAL WONDER. RN G i R I - g it \.‘ ” 0(— i i i 4 4l 21 e St ) P, A i el [ Do yo t a Musical T 1 ’ : Organ, oi :hlmt d.ght ;m oann;:gx:’a?v?l}mqs :l:xoy m?t:s:: upon the instruments mentioned! If you do, send for our Illustrated Catalogue of THE MECMCAL ORGUINETTE—the g:;tzs:"?;t:lsiahh:;:nfionlol t}m &—npon which any one can a \llBr, ciass! opemfic, I.eted,' 4 Other music. Prioss, $lO, 812, 430, 15, $195; Bewareot lotoinnd LYON & HEALY, 162 State St., Chicago. 00,000 Acresi=ras ON THE LINE OF THE . T Pt g ; Wisconsin Central R. R. Full porticulars, which will be gent frée, address x CHARLES L. »COL!S Y. Land Commissioner, Milwaukee, Wis. ‘l O OOOCAIiPE!iTEBS are now uging our New | y Machine to File Saws of all kinds. | Price, ¥2,.50. Send your address,on postal card’ for our Ilastrated Circular. E ROTH & BRO., New Oxford, Adams county, Pa. " . : A YEAR and eéxpenses to 7 7 7 agents.. Outfit Free. Address - "~ P.O.VICKERY,Augusta.Me. e¢ ra mrn Ari S e se S Tt .18 eee e R TP 42 year toagents, and expenser. 86 S, 9990\1““. free.. . Address F. SWAIN & CO,, Augusta, Malne 7 \‘TL’TTERING cared ‘bf Bates’s Appliances.: fend D for Description to SIMPSON & CO., DBox 2236 New York. ; : ‘ s \DVERTISE RS by addressing GEO.P.ROWELL . £X & ©O., 10 Spruce Street, New York, ¢an learn the exact cost of any proposed line of ADVERTISING in American Newspapers. g@—loo-page pamphlet, 25¢. _ teo T ealth is Wealth! Dr E. C. Wes T’s NERVE AND BRATN TREATVENT: a specific for Hysteria, Dizziness, Conviilsions, Nervous Headache, Mental Depression, Loss of Memory, Spermatorrhe, Impotency, Involvntary Emigsions, Premature Old Age; caused by overexertion, - selt-abuse, or 'over‘-indul%e‘nce, which leads to misery, decay and death. One box will cure recent cases. Hach box contains one month’s; treatment. One dollar -a box, or six boxes for five dollars; €ent by mail prepaid on receipt of price, We goarantee six boxXes to cure any case. - With each order received by tis for slx boxes, ac- . comrpanied with five dollars, we will send the purchaser ouv written. guarantee to return the money if the trcatment does® not effect a cure. Guarantees issted only when the treatment Is ordered direct from us. Address G. 8. Woodruff, sole agent, Ligonier, Ind. JOHX C. WEST &CO, sole proprietors, 181 & 183 W. Madison Street, Chicagao, 111. s : ; 45-1 y
HE BEST OF ALL . . FTOR MAN AND BEAST. . For more than a thirdof a centur;g the Mexican Mustang Liniment has been known to millions all over the world as the only safe reliance for the relief of accidents and Puin. It is a mediciné |nbove price and praise—the best of its | fixina. For every form of external pain 'ao : ' : ‘Mustang Liniment is without an equal. [ It penetrates flesh and muscie to the very bome—making the continuance of pain and inflammation impos’sible. Its effects upon Human Flesh and the Brute Creation. are equally wonderful. The Mexican s | . Liniment is needed by somebody in every house. Every day brings news of the agony of an awfal scald or burn subdued, of 'rheunmatic martyrs restored, or--a valuable horse or ox saved by the healing power of this which speedily cures such ailments of the HUMAN ¥LESH 88 " v Rheumatism, Swellings, Stiff Joints, Contracted Muscles, Burns and Scalds, Cuts, Bruises and Sprains, Poisonous: Bites and Stings, Stiffness,* Lameness, Old Sores, Ulcers, Frostbites, Chilblains, Sore Nipples, Caked ;Breast, and indeed every form of external disease. It heals without scars. il - For the BRUTE CREATION it cures «™ l Sprains, Swinny,» Stiff - Joints, Founder, Harness S’ores, loof Dis=x:iuflij, F(oo{,‘ Rot, Scr'ewt:‘;lorm',iv S{:;;‘ll), Hollow Xon,™> Scraiches, §Vinds )ga.lls, Spavin,: 'l‘frush, Ringmme, Old Sores, Poll: Evil, Film wpon the Sight and every other ailment to which the¥occupants of the Stable and Stock Yard are liable. The Mexican Muastang Liniment always cures and never disappoints; and it is, positively, 1 : THE BEST . - :), s : : ; OF/ALLY = FOR MAN OR BEAST,
EARS " MILLION 4 WK THE YA ALAIRIR LY oo Choo’s: - ¢ 9 13 Balsam of Shark’s Oil Positively Restores the Hearing, and is the Only Absolute Cure for Deafness Known. This oil is extracted from a peculiar s})ecles of small White Shark, canght in the Yellow Sea, known asCarcharodon Rondeletii. EvervChinese fisherman knows it. Its virtues as a restorativeof hearing were discovered by & Buddhiet Priest in the year 1410, Its cures were so numerous and many 8o seemingly miracnlouns, that the remedy was officially proclaimed over the entire Empire. Its use became 8o universal that for over 300 years no deafness has existed among the Chinese people, Sent, charges prepaid, to any address at $1 per bottle. Only Imported by HAY DOCK & CO., SoletAgents for America. 7 Dey St,, New York. Its virtues are nnquestionable and its curative ! character absolute. as the writer can persenally testify. both from experience and observation. Awong the many readers of the Review in one part or another of the country, it is probable tha numbers by afegted with deafness, and ‘o an% it may be said: “Write gt oncg tu Haydock & Cg,, 7 Dey Stregt, New York, enclosin Qt;p,&,’m;% yog will receive by return a remedy that ‘Wwill engblé | you tc hear like anybody else, and whose curative effects will be permanent. You will never regéet deing so,”—Editor of New York Mercantile Review, Bept. 25,1880, = - : o . 1,000 Forfeit! ' Having the utmost confidence in ' its superiority over all others, and after thousands of tests of the- - complicated and severest cases we could find, we &e! justified. lnvofl‘_erin‘g to forfeit One Thousand Dollars for any case 0 Cpt‘ughe. Colds, sore throat, influenza, hoarseness, bronehitis, congnmption, in Its early stages, whooping cough, and all. diseases of the threat and ,lnnwss, ‘except Asthma, for "which ws 'onlv‘flahnggg ) s‘g , can trshrp wltb;g{iltfifibug_. Sytup, when'taker . according to diréotions. 8§ il‘xlplp*bfi%t ) cents; larg bottles ' one ~dollar, * Genuile v gera‘ ouly in blue, Sold by__—al_lv&mmm.. or.sent y exXpress on r‘ecelft of price. JOHN C. WEST & CO., sole proprietors, 181 & 183 W.. son §t., Chicago, Ills, Sold by George 8, Woodruf! Ligonier, Ind, p e N
