Ligonier Banner., Volume 17, Number 38, Ligonier, Noble County, 4 January 1883 — Page 4

Shpe ____ ChillsE Fever VYA SIMMONS e A Liver Regtlator soon 8% breaks the Ohills and ) PN carries the Fever ont LA \l b : of the “system, It ZB\ | . cures when all other £ BVI il remedies fail. IV NLLY Sick Headache S < ama For the relief and cure of this distressing affection take Simmons Liver Regulator. - f | . DYSPEPSIA. ' The Regulator will positively cure this terrible disease, "Ve assert emphntchly what we know to be true, H . CONSTIPATION should not be regarded as'a ml:lgg ailment. Natare demands the utmost regol Lgol the bowels. Therefore assist Nature by taking Simmons Liver Regulator, It is harialess, miid and effectnal.’ . BILIOUSNESS. ' i One ot two tablespoonfuls will relieve all the " troublesincident to.a bilious state such as Nau_pea, Dizziness, Drowsiness, Distress after eating. a bitter, bad taste in the mouth. . MALARIA, Persous may avoid all attacks by occasionally taking a dose of Simmons Liver Regulator tv keep the liver in healthy action, BAD BREATH, enerally arising trom a disordered stomach, can ge corrected by taking Simmons Live: Regulator. . JAUNBDICE, Simmons Liver Regulator soon eradicates this . disease from the system, leaving the skin clear and free from all impurities, k : . COLIC.. Children snffering with Colic soon experience relief when Simfiwns Liver Regulator is adminigtered. Adults &Tso derive great benefit frot thix medicine, Itisnotunpleasant; itis harmless ani effective. Purely vegetable. N " BLADDER AND KIDNEYS. Moct of the diseases of the bladder m‘lfiiunufrom those of the kidneys, Restoie the action o' .the Liver fu ly and both the kidneys and bladder will be restored. 2 2 @tl‘ake on]i the GENUINE which alfvays has on the wrapper the red Z trade mark wnd signatareof - J, H, ZEILIN & CO. i For saleby'all Druggists. 45-1 y z e i ol e ] \ , ~ Is a Positive Cure for & 2 * And Bronchial . . COUGHS. » ‘We refer you to the following letter, and wo have many more equally appreciative ones; & i < CH cAGO, June 30th, 18R0. DEAR Si= —TI oWe you many thanks for the courtesy last Snlur(l.nr evening in ncndln% me the medicine 1 so nuich wished for. 1 was first enabled to try yeur whooping congh remedy through the kindness ol’wglghhnr, Mrs. Wi, K. Sidléy, and it gave such great relief to my little girl{that when thesecond child was attacked I coveted the same relief for her. 1 know of no ‘other medicine which $d much mitigated a malady generally so distressing, and feel very appreciative of my good {\v)rlune in obtaining it Very truly {f"“‘ RS, MARY E. RICHARDS, . 8827 Ellis Ave. CHICAGO, March 13th, 1882 DreAßr SIR:~We have used your whooping cou;‘:h syror for all kinds of coughs in our own family, and alwave recommend jt to others. It hasnever failed to cure.. Ve wish every family with children had a bottle on hand Very truly, ? MRS. WM. K. SIDLEY, . 3848 Ellis Ave. Address, PAPILLON M’FO. CO., i 24.& 26 Michigan Ave., CHICAGO, ILL Price Oneo Dollar per Bottle.: - po | For Sale by all Drn‘g'iap. ; »f

RKER'S HMR BALSAM } ‘ ‘ ; . R Rt - The Dest, Cleanest and | EAo o D, most * LKcononucal Hair ‘ e Ti3%.\{'_-’v.- ressing. SRR lorir ils 1 Restore AR 4 Be (1:¢ youthful color to grey RN E:j;‘f B 8 air. soc and $r sizesat 7 RO IRERE (i ts. : GRS AR ° NGRS 77 Floreston Cologne. BN S N B < A siow il exceedingly fra- ‘ \ A - prant and lasting: perfume, | S~ Price 95 and GBc, -~ PARKER’S s 2 {, : A Pure Famity Medicine that Never intoxicates. If you are a wiechanic or farmer, worn oitt with overworlk, or a mother run down by family oy household dutizs try Parker’s Ginghir "Lonic, If you ilrcf:\ lawyer, minister or busindss man exhausted by mental strain or anxious cares do not take intoxicating stimulants, but use PARKER'S Ginger Tonic, : _Tf yowhave Dyspepsia. Rhieumatisin, Kidney or Urinary Complantsy or if you aretvoubled with any disarder qfthe lungs, stomach: howéls, blood ornerves you can ligred by [PARKER'S GInGeER TONIC. Ifyoyare wasting away froin age, dissipation or any disease or weakness and require a stimulant take Ginénr Tonic at once; itwill mvigorate and build vou up from the first dose but will never intoxicate. It has saved hundreds of lives it juay save yours. HISCOX & CO., 163 Williamm S§t., New York., 50c. and one dollar sizes, at all dealers i wedicines, GREAT SAVING BUYING DOLLAR SIZE.

WILL BE‘ISSUED BY THE : ook #t ’ £t Cincinnati News Publishing Co. THE FIRST WEEK IN JANUARY. It will be a Democratic Paper, devoted to Politics, News, Markets, Afirlculgure and Literature, and will be edited with the view of making is a desirable family newspaper. As a new candidate for public favor, THR WEERLY NEWS will cater to the requirementof its readers. It will thoroughly discuss all live questions of the day, It will give particu lar attention to the gathering of the news Especial care will be taken in compiling’ the various market repoits. In the interest of the farmer a goodly space will be devoted to agriculture. Literature and varions matters fitted for the family circle will comprise an important department of the paper, and it will be the {)urpnse of the mauafi;euient toso edit and pubish THE WEERLY NEwS as to commniend it to gnl(}xmake it a welcome visitor inevery houseold. - THE WEEKLY News will be a larfie quarto, con;xalni?g sixty-four columns of reading macter, printed on a fine article of calendared paper., In order- to reach all classes, it will be sold at the followiug low : : . ¥ . Rates of Subsecription : A Single Copy, One Year-....... .$l.OO A Club of Ten' Copies, Mailed . -to onePostoffice, One Year.... 9.00 A Club of Twenty Copies, Mail s ' ed-to One Postoffice, One Year 17.00° A Club of Thirty Copies Mailed, toOne Postuffice,One Year..... 24.00 A Club ot Forty Copies, Mailed . to. One Postoffice, One Year... 80.00 And larger clubs at the rate/of 75 cents: per copy per annum, | And, in addition, THE WERKLY NEWS will be mailed FREE for.one yearto any person who will raise a club of twenty or more annual subseribers at one postoffice, and forwaru their names and address with the requisite amount of mouey, as per above table of rates.

PREMIUMS FOR CLUBS. . ¥ 1 Will be distributed among those who obtain and send to 'II‘HE WEEKLY NEWS the ten largest clubs of full-raté subscribers trom ang one State by theist day of July, 18383 ach subscnptlon in these clubs will be . One Dollar per Year. For Largest C1ub,........ 8300 1n told. oo - tereen.. OO - " o 8 B @ ivisyy. ROO “ i mevewaa i 9 " " Bth " troniohi i 0 “ “ @th - i We “ Tth o semuhisog o Y 8 " Sth ¢ ( veainn w 0 # ‘“ 9th " Sy vt AP 28 * 10th 2 PN ] 2 Parties working for the above premiums must lnv,arlabhy send One Dolbar with ezch name rg»orte , and they should give names with P. O. addresses, and send money as fast as the subscribers are obtained. Small amaunts of money may be sent by mail at the Company’s risk, but amounts over #2 must be sent by Rommce money order,, check, or by registered letter, 2 *AND THEN SUBSCRIBE. FOR IT, ADDRESS, S THE WEEKLY NEWS, 204 and 206 Race-St.,, - CINCINNATI, 3 : : OHIO. CONSUMPTION e e, . . ta otlicucy, thas I will.send TWO' BOTTLES FREE, tosthier rich & YALUABLE TREATISH on this d to A " P bT, i "Iv,»’ : <vt -n-" m’m J

«r Urchius of the Faird Generation. v s - —— by "Q‘ii ,')" When a wmar begins to got along in ‘enrs he gmdually.fifimgegfg m being a' .ing in his family* toi:i_pssflm‘ Heis nore tendey and kind te big o,flép‘flng.’ nd icvstead 'of ruling them, the first hing he knows they are ruling him. 1y f,’oungest children and my grandshildren just run over me now. and it rakes more than half my time t¢ keep up with em, . and find out Pvl;“ere they are and what they are xlofngi. . Itraing most. every day, and the weeds and grass are alwiys ot an l the branches are muddy, an | there are six little chaps around here, Eurusin’ the premises, and Mrs. Arp just nows they are bound to get sick or snake-bit, for it's np, tramp, tramp from mmrnfinM,— and her anxiety reminds m¢ of a hen that we set on some duck. egys; for when the brood was hatehad they made for the branch, and the hen like to have took a fit and flew from one side to the other, and made an everlasting fuss trying to tell ’em they would get - drowned, but they sailed around and around and was Kappy as happy could be. These little chaps ride the horses and colts oyer ‘the meadow and pasture, and make the sheep jump the big branch, and they go in a-wash-ing two or three tigaes a da(i', and they climb the grape arbor and the apple trees and stuff their craws full of }ruir and trash, and they can tell whether a watermelon is ripe or green, for they plug it to see, and every one of 'em has got a. sling-shot, and my pigeons are always on the wing, and the other day I found one of the finest young pullets laying dead with a hole in her side, and all the satisfaction I can get is I didn’t mean to do'it, or I won't do it any more, or I didn’t, do’ it all. - Jesso. It's most astonishing how the little ras‘cals can shoot with their slings, and now I'don’t believe it was a miracle at all that made David plumb old Goliah in the forehead, for these bays can plumb a jaybird now at forfy yards, and we have had to take alltheir weapons away . to protect the birds and poultry. Sometimes I get mad and rip up and daronnd like I was %oing to-do something desperate, but Mrs. Arp comes a-slis)pin;: along and begins to tell how they didit mean any harm, and they are just like “all other boys, and wants to know if 1 “didn’t do them sort of things when I was a boy. Well, that’s a fact—l did—and I got a -lickin’ for it;, too. You seé, I was one of the oldest boysgand they always catch it, but the ydfingest- one never gets a lickin’,.for by the time he comes along the old man has mellowed down and wants a pet. 'The older children have married anjl gone, and the old folks feel sorter lilfe they have been thrown off for somebody no kin to’em, and so they twine around those that arve 10ft all the clpser, but by-dmd-by they grow -up, too, and leave them, and it’s pitiful to sce the good old - couple bereft of their children and living alone in their glory. Then is the time that grandchildren find a welcome in the old family homestead, for, as Solomon saith, the glory of an old man is hjs children’s children. Then is the ‘time that the little chaps of the second and third generation love to escape from their well-ruled home, and for awhile find refuge and freedom and frolic at grandpa’s. A child without a grandpa and gea dma can. never have its gshare of happiness. I'm sorry for 'em, Blessings on the good old people, the venerable grand parents of the land, the people with good old ‘ lionést ways and simple habits and lim‘ited desires, who ‘indulge in no folly, 'who hanker aftcr no big thing, but live ‘along serene and covet nothing but the happiness of their children and their children’schildren. I said to a good old mother not long ago: ‘;VYQH,: L fiear that Anna is to be married,”’ .*Yes, sir,” said she, smiling sorrowfully, ‘I don’t know what I will do. The last’daughter I've got is going to leave me. T've nurse§ her and petted her all her life, and Ikinder thought she was mine and would always be mine, but she’s run oft arter a feller she’sno kin toin the world, one who never did do a thing for her but i;ive her a ring and a book or two and a ittle French candy now and then, and it does look so strange and unreasonable. I couldn’t understand it all if—if I hadn’t done the same thing myself a Jong time ago,”” and she kept knitting away with a smile and a tear upon her motherly face. v bty

But I'm not going ta slander theselittle chaps that ?{eep us so busy looking after them, for there is no meanness in their mischief, and if they take liberties it is because we let 'em. Murs. Arp says they are just teo sweet to live, am"f is always narrating. some of their smart sayings. Well, they are mighty smart, for thely know exactly how to get everything and do everything they want, for they know how to manage her, and they know that she manages me, and that settles it. . A man is the head of a house about some things, and about some other things he is only next to the head, if he ain’t a fool. A man can punish his children, but it's always advisable to make an explanation in due’ time and let his wife know what he did it for, because, you see, they are her children, shore enough, and she knows it ~and feels it. T%ne pain and trouble, the nursing and night-watching have' all been hers. The washing and dressing, and mending and )atcfiing—tieing up fingers and toes, am{ sympathizing with em in all their great big ' little troubles all falls to her while the father is tending to his farm, or his store, or his office, or his friends, or may be his billiard-tabie. When a woman says *‘this is my child,” it carries more weight and more meaninz than ‘wheh a .man says It, and I've not got much respect for a law that will give a man the preference of owunership just bécause he is a man, —Bill 4rp, in Allantg Constitution, .

; Sweet Sixteen. : Be glad that you are a little girl yet. Keep your childhood as long as you can. Those days are the happiest you evercan know in all your life, You may believe that to be grown up, and to have the pleasure of .society, will be better; but you never made a greater mistake in your life. With womanhood c¢omes duties, cares, anxieties, of which you have no knowledge. To marry means generally to leave home and begin a new life that may be full of trials and troubles, pretty as the bride looks in her wedding finery. ‘ In these last school days, with no greater anxiety than your music lessons, and encompassed by the affection of your parents, warm and snug in the home nest, with no more knowledge of the outside world than a newly-hatched spring bird has of winter, How many a styfish woman envies you, even as you ‘envy her gorgeous robes and her train of admirers. Be content. Time will pass all too quickly. You will have many years in which to wish yourself a little girl again. Linger ®n the threshold where * womanhood and childhood meet!’ as long as you may. Don’t' rush into matrimony, my dear ‘young ladies; enjoy your yo’ut)): while you can. If you are butsixteen, ddn’t a’l{’ow any such idea to get inte your head for at least four years. Don’t even run the risk of if by permitting any young man to fiet o far as the proposing point. Fight him off and make him wait or go away to somebody who is ready. Don’t live under the impression that you must accept the first love-sick youth who proposes. Be patient, deliberate_and sagacious. There is a world of happineas%or you between sixteen and twenty, The warld would be a dreary old waste if. it were not for the sweet faces of youn girls with their ‘;fiq,u:mt sayings anfi melting smiles.” Your father {m’s%mugbt you a Piano, and you have learnt how to play after many lonfcmd wearisome lessons. Don’t spoil all by getting married, for after that you won’t have much use for your piano. After tyou have reached twenty it will be well to consider the matrimonial Xroblefn with some seriousness. And even then, if you have a good home, you need be in no hurry to solve it.—Rural New Yorker. g

—The boys have started a new enter. prise in Blakely, Ga.—the trapping of ants. They sinkbottles down even with the ground into which the ants fall but can’t get out. Successful trappers cateh about a pint per day, The bottle con: tains a small amount of kerosene oil and when the ants are emptied out h!wi are cremated. ¢ : ' SR s —A epol reception ~Teg eream fostival,

A Silent-MWercymaking, There were about forty couples dancinz on the upper deck of an excursion barge as it moved slowly up the Hudson recently, in tow of the steam tug Vanderbilt. The feet of the dancers ke‘g)t perfect time to the merry music "of the orchestra, and they moved easily and racefully through the figures of the fiuicers. Had a ehance observer been told that not one of these eighty young ladies and gentlemen could hear a single note of the music he probably would have received the statement with incredulity ¢ he took another look at the smooth 4iiding motions of the revelers. Yet suc¢h was the fact. The dancers were not only depf but dumb, for. it was a})icnic party, made up of these poor, doubly afllicted ones.. But thiene was nothing to suggest afiliction inféhe manner of the excursionists. On the contrary, they were enjoying themselves hugely and seemed to feel al? that indeseribable exhilarations which thrills true lovers of the dance when the soft strains of a Strauss waltz come floating downward from the gallery of the Academy of Music on the night of the ‘‘charity.” [t was the sixth annual excursion of the Maphattan Literary Association, an organization of deaf mutes formed principally -of lady and gentlemen gradu--ates from the institution for instructing the deaf and dumb. Accompanied by their friends the party, about 500 in all; started from Highth Street, East River, at half past eight in the morning, steamed around fiue Battery to the'North River, and after calling at Eleventh Street to take a few more on board, proceeded up the Hudson to Mount Pleasant Grove at Hastings. ; ‘The excursion was a striking illistration of how much science has done to alleviate the condition of the deaf and dumb. It was strange, indeed, to see them dance with such precision merely from watehing with quick, trained eyes the time beats of the orchestra lpader and the steps of those who could| hear: But still more marvelous was it to hear “the deaf speak. | There were . at least a score of those present who had heen educated in the new act of lip reading, and who could carry on a conversation in the usual way, having learned to read and speak from watching the lips of their teachers. -~ A mustache on the part of the person they spoke with was a puzzle to them sometimes, as it partly conceals the movements of the mouth, and the Herald veporter, who has a ‘heavy mustache, found it a severe test for some of the pupils. One charming young lady, however, conversed with great ease and fluency. She admitted—and here she blushed very deeply—that she wag accustomed to a mustache, a young gentleman, a very intimate friend, poss,gz,?‘_.s:ingu very soft and silky one.

Two things were noticeable about the excursion party. When the music ceased there was almost a dead silence. Now ‘and again a peal of hearty laughter would be heard, showing that in that sense the picnickers were not dumb, but there was none of the buzzand chatter of conversation which one usually hears on festive occasions of the sort The few who conversed were, of course, a very small minority! ~ But such a confusingvand’ rapid gesticulation with the hands!. , With the quickness of lightning, and with bright, éxpressive eyes, the- mutes conversed with each’ other in the sign language, and jokes and repartee went round very mucil as they always do. Another thing noticeable was when a group of ladies and gentlemen was ‘composed of mutes and hearing persons—forthere were several such on board. - When. this chanced and a conversation sprung up an amusing sight followed. : The hearing persons not understanding the sign language, - other means of communication was| necessary. Quick as a flash out would come hote books ‘and pencils, and. the whole partg would take to dashing eft hasty notes to each other. When the talk became animated all hands would be seen writing furiously in their note-: books. i

" Wlien the barge reached Mount Pleasant and lunch-baskets had been empticd, little parties strolled off under the trees, and it was very soon evident to one who watched the pretty girls'and their escorts that flirtation and expressions of endearment are about the same in the sign language asin our spoken tongue. Whether any of the students pursued their studies in lip-reading was not ascertained.

The excursionists amused themselves very much as others do—with boating, fishing, swimming. and so on—and at half-past four started to return, reaching the city again at nine o'clock. - There are about one thousand deaf mutes in ,this city, and about half that number were at yesterday’s excursion. —N. Y. Herald. _

: About _Renxenibering Names.

¢ Good morning.tt ot g * Good morning. - Now tell me who that man is. He :fiw’nys speaks to me, yet I cannot for the life of me tell you his name.”’ ;

*“Don’t know that man? - Why, that’s Mr. ———, Pshaw! what’s his name! I know him as well as I do you, but just because you have asked me I cannot think of gnis'na.me.” :

“ Is it Mr. ————, what's his mame? You know the old chap who went to Europe two or three years ago.” - “oOld who?”?

“Why, the old man whose son married last summer—married Miss —— I've forgotten her name—that pretty young lady who—"" ' . i 130, that isn't the man; he has not got any son.”’ | . o The above conversation took place recently on Griswold Street in the presence of one of the male teachers in the public schools of ‘Detroit, and he joined the conversation with ¢ It's embarrassing, isn’t it?"’ . * It’s the most embarrassing thing of my life,” was the answer to the teacher, and the spa..kercontinued: ‘“Now I know your name, have been nfroduced to you twoor three times, yet Iconfess I cannot now recall it,”’ o

< “Now, let me tell you something,” said the teacher. ¢“Theaverage American underestimates the dignity and importance of an introduction. He is generally in too.much of a hurry to listen the name;of the stranger, and hastily answering: ‘How are you? Glad to know you,’ rushes off with his mind on business which has never left his mind during the introduction.!’ - ‘“Yes, . that is true, but how are you going to remedy the evil?”’ asked one of the first speakers. : ‘ ) “I'll tell you how I did it: I never forget a name or a face,”’ said the teacher, and he continued: ¢When 1 was a boy I clerked : for two years in a hotel, and to be a good hotel clerk T was told that I must be able at any mioment to tell the name of any guest. I tried various ways to learn to remember names, and at last succeeded by always carefully ss)elliug the name of each %uest after it had been written on the hotel register. ‘The haybit became a rule which 1 still follow, and now I uneconsciously, upon an introduction to a stranger, formulate a method of spelling the name given me.”? -/ J “(xood idea,’’ was the only comment as the three men separated.—Delroit Free Press, g

.+ Too Sensitine, When the girl with the pink powder on her face got into the street car the two passengers who had been talking about brea(fi;tnffls resumed their conversation, said one: s : “Flour is plenty and cheap enough; have youn noticed?”’ “That's bacause it's 5o much kneaded,’’ responded the other, with a feeble attempt at a pun. 'l‘Ke first. speaker -threw up his hands in affected horyor. ““To this complexion have we come at last,”’ he quoted. : Then the girl rose up. ‘fith'ink you're just horrid,’” she exclaimed #Step the ear! I won't sit here and have no such remarks passed on me!” i < “We didn’t mean——"" he would have explained, but she: was not to he appeased. Ta “You're mean enoulgh for anything! Let me out! I'd rather walk. Klour indeed!"’ and she flounced oft.—Detroil Post, o

! P e o o et . ~Prof., (;oor%e W. Alberton, of Rutgers College, 'N. J., has accepled the residency of the Pennsylvinia State College. v T

People in [Constantinople. The lowly orders proper live ver; much like tybeir' hmthmpein ‘-Christaii countries. Both men and women work. The wife helps her lord and master in the daily toil, washes, cleans and keeps the house in order; she has neither time nor opportunity. for frivolous amusements, consequently she is' more respected both by hushand and children, and knows not the heart-sickness and weariness of the harem. Buteven here women do not eat with the men, and never stir outside of their domicile unveiled. There is no middle class among the. Turks. ‘There are the rich (or easy) and the poor. These two orders are constantly changing places. The rich man of to-day may be the poor one to-mor-row. You will know him by his shabby, greasy coat and unbrushed shoes. e will make no eftort_to keep up an-ap. pearance. You may see him buy some simple fare and eat itin the street’ on his way to business or home. He has lost his place. He is poor. He is neglected. Meeting him thus you might suppose him a .fixoe-mender or a low class coffeehouse keeper, yet he has only just missed being a Pasha, and a few months more will probably reinstate him in the.position {xe has lost. The men and women of the country are naturally all on a par. There is no genius, no talent, no eminence of virtue among them (or if there be, it is banished as soon as it dares lift its head. One man is as good as another. A fair address, a smattering of French and ‘‘good luck,”” @mre all that are wanted to make a nobody first minister; but the same fortune grown fickle may hurl him from his post, and he sinks lower than what we understand by the ‘‘poorest gentleman.” One fact baffles European would-be reformers. Wo are always meeting with surprises. There is nothing solid ‘anywhere. There is no public spirit, nb landed interest, no trade: interest, no personal authority—nothing to grapple with. . Everything .slips through your fingers. The laws “exist, but are: not enforced. It is nobody’s business to enforce them. Property is yours to-day, mine to-morrow, ‘and a week hence it may be Mahmoud’s. or Safnet’s, or Ahmed’s. The one thing permanent among us is the watchful jealousy of the various nationalities. It is the different Consuls that keep order here, not the Turks; and were it not for: this protection Europeans could not live in Turkey. The /Turks are jndifferent tradesmen. Nearly all the shops in Galata, and the whole of those in Pera, are kept by Europeans.. The Greeks are the chief traders, though a ' smart business 7is done by the Levantines. The most fashionable shops are French, but there are a few first-rate English and American ones. A large class of the Turks hawk their wares in the street. They are for the most 133'!"‘" fine, stalwart, civil-spoken men. They shoulder enormous ' baskets containing cheeges, creams, fruits, vegetables and many other comestibles, and- farnish ‘more than half the alimentation of the city. The ‘habits ot these men are very simple; they live chiefly upon bread and fruit; butthey alsu know the secret of the pot aw fen, and often T have seen a knot of them after their day’s work, grouped under a shed, or on a green spot of earth, mixing the ‘‘savory mess’’—you will perhaps be shocked to hear the pot contains vegetables (of onions a large share) stewed in oil!: ‘A somewhat strong tasted mutton called Karamani is the favorite food of the Turkish upper classes. Pilaffis also an every-day dish wherein -Europeans also delight. The chief fault of! the Turkish cooking is the enormous quantity of grease and fat consumed, and the excessive sweelness of many of the dishes.—Zemple Bar. :

Heat From Hammering,

, Theory assumes that the sun is a stupendous anvil in the course of ! being perpetually hammered upon by falling meteors, and that its heat energy lis maintained by this hammering as a lump of iron is kept red hot by ‘the vigorous blows of a blacksmith. Sir \filliam Thomson undertook to calculate how much heat might be furnished to the sun by this process if the planets, instead of meteors, fell into it, and he came to the conclusion that by such instrumentality the sun might be sustained in #ts present state for nearly forty-six thousand years. The plausible point about this theory is that secientific investigation has proved that if a moving bady is stopped a degree of heat is generated where the resistance comes into play which is in proportion to the mass of the moving body and to the square of its velocity of movement. A body weighing a trifle more than - sixteen liundred weight and moving at the rate of a little more than thirty-nine inches in the second if stopped would generate enough heat toraise two pounds of water at freezing temperature one degree of centigrade or 1.8 degreé of Fahrenheit, If it were movi' g with the speed of g cannoh ball—that .is, 546 yards per second—it would generate 250,000 times as much heat, or enough to raise a mass of water equal to itself nearly 300 degrees of centigrade. If it were moving with the velocity with which. a planet would fall into the sun it would geuerate nearly 2,000,000 times as much heat, or enough to bring a miss many million times larger than itself into vivid incandeseence, far exceeding that which could be produced by any form of combustion. A mass of matter equal to about a hundredth part of the earth falling every year from the earth’s distance would in this way suflice to maintain the sun’s heat radiation permanently. ~ The chief strength of this conception, it will be observed, is the use which it makes of the fact of the continuous increase of heat, with increase of velocity, in the square of the augmentation of speed. Its obvious weakness, on the other hand, is the extreme improbability that any such quantity of matter can be thus thrown meteorically into the sun. If meteoric materia]l was so abundant in space the earth’s share, instead of furnishing it with an occasional pyrotechnical display, ought te batter its mass in a yearinto the temperature’ something li.e that of boilin ‘water. Such an amount of mass adde% to the sun would serve to accelerate the movement of the planets and to shorten their periods of revolution in consequence of the solar attraction. If, acain, there were any meteoric gatherings necar the sun, capable of yielding such copious contributions; these would of necessity produce very manifest disturbances” in the movement] of | the planet Mercury. But nothing of this kin§ has been detected. - In consequence of these considerations the conclusion, almost unanimously adopted by astronomers;.-is 1;9 the effect that, although some accession' to the sun's heat may possibly be derived from the impact of meteors falling intoits substance, it is very improbable.that the Fain from this cause can reach ax:{thing, ike the amount which is aseribed to. it in Mayer’s theory. The verdict of mere common sense is gertainly quite uncompromisingly and unconditionally in the game direction, especially when it is taken into account that the anvil upon which the meteoric blows have to be delivered ismore of the nature of an air cushion fastened upon a nucleus of * putty” than of tEe iron mass upon which the blacksmith operates.—Edinb“rgh Remwh ; 3 ;

—Much excitement was created at a Long Island watering {)lace the other daK by a bottle drifting ashore there. Muc to the disappointment of the man who waded into:-the water after it, it contained only a maunuseript, which, en being opened, read as follows: <¢‘Latitude I.%‘ahn;nheit 99. N. N, E, trom City Hall about one mile. Cast awlz‘;ry on the (fiystexl beds of impecuniosity. : No chart. othing on board to feed the ‘finest.’ We are starving. Will pay one dollar apiece for ’em . Don't know where to get'em. Sent some of the detectives after em, but they ocame back smiling and said they couldn’t find larly. God help us. Forward by mail to Si%mmomls, Thom.” -~ Detroit Free Press, ' & .

—A lately introduced fashion in Enc fila_ud is to include with invitations to inners or other gaftherings in the country, atime table of the railway whioh will carry the guest to and fro, -

—A Cinelnnati bank eashlor who gave a man %300 too much on a check paid the Tloss out of hig*bwn packet rather than admit his mistake, = W

. SCHUOL ARD Cuusilide : —Of 6,237 teachers in. the Sabbathschools -of the United Presbyterian >hurch, only fifty-six are not professors of religion. i - —AChicasaw Indian proposes to pay half the cost of Testaments to sxfi)ply the school children of his tribe. e is not 2 professor of religion. —The increase in the membership of the Methodist Episcopal Chuzch South since the war has been 502,000, and the mcrease m all the colored denominations of Methodists has been 900,000. —The Cumberland Presbyterians have among the Indians thirteen ordaired and licensed preachers, seven candidates. forty ruling elders, twenty-nine deacons, twenty-four organized congregations #nd 527 communicants. : > —DBishop Paddock, of Massachusetts, discourages the confirmation of very young ' children. He thinks children should not be confirmed until they reach the age of fourteen, though he will not refuse those. of twelve, ‘‘our blessed Eord’s age at His first Passover.”” —The mission fields of the Moravian Church comprises at the present time sixteen provinces, with over 100 stations and 1,800 missioharies. They' have 215 schools, with about 15,000 pupils, and a total of nearly 75,800 converts from among the heathen. . - —During the year 1881 there attended the schools of England 4,045,362 children; of whom 1,268,250 were under 7 vears of age, ‘2,573,801 between 7 and 13, 157,584 between 13 and 14; and 45,727 above 14. The increasein the number of scholars amounted to 149,538. The average attendance increased 4.09 per cent. ; _

~ —ln the city of Riga, Russia, is a flourishing Sunday-school kept by the Baroness Von Halm. It is composed of Gérman children, of whom five hundred attend, and others who are willing to attend are at present excluded for Tack of room. As the scholars attain a certain age, they are obliged to leave to make room for others. There are about fifty* classes in:the school. !

—-Mexico is said to be a great ficld for mission work. The Protestant congreeations in that' country are twice as numerous as they were five years ago, the present number of chureh members being over 10,000. - There are 239 native helpers, and abouwt 19,000 people who go to church. The Mexican is not naturally a profoundly devout person, yet those who have become church members are said to give quite as good evidence of leading a Christian life as members of churches in other countries.

! PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS. It is fashionable now for young ladies to take boxes of candy to the hote} tables. It shows a growing fondness for taffy. ) £ —A Kansas joker who filled a cigar with powder and rained a friend’s eyesight, doesn’t feel as cunning as he dig before he shelled out $5,09) danages.— Detroit: Free Press. & ‘' : ——Sald‘l\h‘. Moviarty, in explanation of his battered appearance: “Ye sec the horse T was dhriving waz a mule.” And Mr. Finvegan replied: ¢Ye neeld say no more, Dennis!”—Boston Post. —They have got one of the first Napoleon’s veterans in jail at Portland, anid every effort will now be made to run down Washington's last body-servrant and chain him to a post.—D.troit I'rce Press. —The first coins of the United States were steack with ‘a portrait .of Martha Washington. When George saw them he was provoked and ordered the medallion cli’auged.‘ 'l‘llß‘f(}:ltlll‘eS"Vel‘efiig‘ht—ly altered, a cap was put on the head, and thus Mrs. Washinglon's portrait was converted into the present one.—XN. Y. Graphc, * —A lawyer was cross-examining a high-spirited woman, who was evidently a match forany man, while her husband sat sheepishly listening. The lawyer was pressing a question urgently, when she said with fire flashing from her eyes: “ You needn’t think to catch me, for you tried that oues.” Madam, I have not the slightest desire to cateh you, and your husbands looks as if he was sorry he did.” G —Wahile a tourist was in Palestine he took a sail on the Sea of Galilee. After visiting the ditlerent places of interest he returned to the landing and asked: “How miuch for the trip?’ . “Ten shekels,” responded -the smiling boatman, ‘“Ten shekels!" echoed the travcler; ‘“why that is an outrageous price!” “Well,”” replied the skipper, ‘that’s what they’ve been paying ever since the. sea was here.” “Thunderation,”’ growled the voyager, ‘I don’t wonder that Peter tried to walk it.”’—XN. Y.!Commercial Advertiser. x ¥

—¢Do you think so, darling?’ “Yes,"” said;the girl, passing her plate for more pie ‘and smiling archly as she spoke,’ ‘skisses and embraces and fair worgs are very . pleasant things —sweet lips and warm arms and loving eyes—but trath and sincerity and loyalty and purity are very much fairer and rarer.” “You are right,”’” replic:d her husband, locking at her with loving tenderness,. ffyou are right, sweetheart, and I will ndt deceive you -any longer.” -~ +“What do you mean?”’ she asked, a look of horror passing over her face. ‘‘There is but one piece of pie,”' said George W. Simpson, “and I spall tackle it myseli.” — Clidcago I'ribune. o

Venus is becoming very brilliant in the evening sky, throwing her fiery neighbor Mars completely into the shade. In the telescope she now resembles the moon when it is a 'little | past half full. Through the autumn she will continue to grow more and more brilliant, until she appears as-a thin crescent, a siiver bow. Then she will disappear as a star, to reappear on the 6th of December as a black dot on the sun. At that time she will have to face such a bristling array of telescope . was probably never before turned upon any celestial Dbody. Almost every civilized Government has fitted out expeditions. of astronomers to observe the transit from various parts of the -world; and in western and central Europe, North and South America and Australia thousands, of telescopes will be trained upon the sun from public. and - private observwories, roofs, back-yards, lawns, city parks and street -corners. Everybody will want to have at least one good look at Venus upon the sun’s disk, for all the world will be talking about it," and mneither we of -this generation nor our children, and but few even_of our grandchildren, will behold another transit of Venus, for the next occurs in the. year 2,004 After it is over the astronomers will set ‘themselves down to figuring; their! caleulations will extend timué'.i]‘ months and even|years, and at the last they will probably announce that they have not yet obtained exact knowledge of the distance of the sun, that they believe they are within about 100,000 miles of the truth, and that at the next transit of Venus they hope. the astronomers of the twenty-first century will be able to: reduce the limits of error to 50,000 miles or less. There are, however, other methods of measuring the sun’s distance, which it is hopeé{ will long before that time give more satisfactory results.—N. Y. Sun. : A

Use of the Eleetric Light in War, The use of the electric light in warfare seems not as yet to be shoroughly perfected. An experiment was made with it the other night by the Superb, now lying oft Ramleh, but, in the cautious language of the Times correspondent., whether it was an advantage or otherwise is an open question. "%nasmuch as the officey in charge of the picket, whose duties’'it was supposed to assist, complained that it was Fenera}ly on his own men that the light was thrown, while all around them was wrapped in a more than Egyptian darkness, it seems rather as though on that accasion at least it was very much otherwise. Indeed, one feelsinelined to say of it much what Sam ‘Weéller said of the dark lantern with which Mr. Pickwick prg*)osed to guard from discovery the. midnight loves of Mr. Winkle and Miss Allen—“wery nice thin%s. it they’re managed properly; but when you don't want to be seen, I think they're more usoful arter the candle’s gone out than when it's alight," —Chicago Timese

Is not signing a pledge - or taking a solemn oath that cannot be kept, because of the non-removal of the causc —liquor; Thewaytomake a man temperate is to kill . the desire for those dreadful artificial stimulants that carry so many brightintellects. to premature graves, and -, desolation, strife and unhappiness into so many °~ families. ' . Itisafact! BROWN's [RON BiTTiRS, a true non-alcohol-ic tonic, made in Baltimore, * Md., by the Brown Chemical, Company, who are old drug- . gists and in every particular reliable, will, by removing the craving appetite of . the drunkard,:and by curing the nervousness, weakness, and general ill health resulting from intemperance, do more to promote temperance, : in. the strictest sense thon anyother means now known. It is a well authenticated fact that many medicines, especially ‘bitters,’ are nothing butcheap whiskeyvilely concocted for use in local ! option countries. Such ise not the case with Brown's - IroNBiTTERS. Itisamedi- - cine, a cure for weakness and decay in the nervous, muscular, and digestive organs of the body, producing good, rich blood, health ! and strength., Try one bottle. Price ¢l.OO.

THE BEST REMEDY

Diseases of the Throat and Lungs. AYE R’S In diseases of the pulk m9{lal~_}'. ('iv’xigaus a(faffi s = and reliable remedy is fl:g,«\". i invaluable. - AYER's RUFE 4l © CHERRY PECTORAL is such a remedy, and no : ;,_ othersoeminently mers ey : /;7/% its the confidence of ' f J,g/,/,\ ‘the public. Itisa sci< . QY entific combination of CHERRY the medicinal princi=o ples and curative vir- _ ) o=~ i tuesof the finest drugs, =O, ¥PEA chemically united, of T '-'s"B},'3 such power as to insure ; e ‘ 7. the greatest possible N, efiicifency iand lunifoxl"{xn- ; ity of results. Itstrikes PECTORAL' .:atythe foundation of all pulmonary diseases, affording prompt relief and rapid cures, and is adapted to patients of any age or either sex. Being very palatable, the youngest children ‘take it readily. In ordinary Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Influenza, Clergyman’s Sore Throat, Asthma, Croup, and Catarrh, the effects of AYeEr’'s CHERRY PecTORAL are magical, and multitudes are annually preserved from serious illness by its timely and faithful use. It should be kept at hand in every household for the protection it affords in sudden attacks. In Whooping -cough ' and Consumption there is no other remedy so efficacious, soothing, and helpful. Low prices are inducements to try some of the many mixtures, or syrups, made of che?‘ and ineffective ingredients, now offered, ‘which, as they contain no curative qualities, | can afford only tem!;sorax‘y relief, and are | sure todeceive and disappoint the patient. | Diseases of the throat and lungs demand \ active and effective treatment; and it is dan- | gerous experimenting with unknown- and cheap medicines, from the great li;‘gility that ‘ these diseases may, while so trifled with, become deeply seated or incurable. TUse AYER'S CHERRY PECTORAL, and you may confidently expect the best results. It is a | standard medical preparation, of known and acknowledged curative power, and is as cheap as its careful preparation and fine ingredients will allow. Eminent physicians, knowing its composition: prescribe it in their practice. The test of half a century has proven its absolute certainty to cure all pul‘monary complaints not already beyond the reach of human aid. '

Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Practical and Analytical Chemists, Lowell, Mass. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. e —*__.____.__‘“‘———,M——:——‘———‘T“”’ . PISO'S CUREIFOR 7 n Bflflgg mr'fgi ALL %I.SE FAI&{»& S Tup. rastes o B Teointbne. Sold bydrui.s, (=} L CONSUMPITION,: - A Cure Guaranteed in all Cases. ¥or Old and Young, Male & Female. Magnetic Medicine; a Brain and Nerve Food; Positively Cures Night Losses, Spermatorrheea, . = Impotency, Nervous Debility, Lencor:heea,Barrenness; and for (Before ) all Weaknesses of the Genera- (After.) tive Organs ir either Sex it is an Unfailing and Positive Cure. Tones up the debilitated system, arrests all involuntary discharges, removes mental gloom and despondency, and restores wonderful power to the weakened organs. 2 With each order for 12 packages, accompanied with §ss, we will send onr GUARANTEE to refund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. It isthe Cheapest and Best medicine in the market. Full particulars in Pamphlet, which we will mail free to -any address. Sqld by all Druggists. One package, 50 cts ; Six for $2.50, or sent by mail on recetft-of price, by addressing the MAGNETIC MEDICINE CO., DETROLT, MICH, g&=Sold in Ligonier by D. 8. Scorr & Sow, and by all druggiste, | 52-1 y

TOQ CONSUMPTIVES. The gvertiser having been permanently cured of that dread disease. Consumption, b{! a simple 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 charie). with the directions for preparing and using the same, which they will find a sare cure for Coughs, Colds, Consumption, Asthma, Bronchitis, &¢. Parties wishin%,the prescription will %ease address Rev. E. A, WILSON, 194 Penn St., illiamsburgh. N. Y.

Over 500 7 © Druggists AND : .Pb ICT Have Signed or Endorsed the Following Remarkable Document: Messrs.Senbury & J ohnson, Manufasturing Chemists, 21 Platt St., New X{ork % Gentlemen :—For the past fow yeare wa, have sold various brands of Porous Plasters. Physicians and the Public prefex '- asow’s Capcine Porous Plaster to all others. Wg consider them ono of the very fow reliablo hausehold remedies worthy of confildence. - They are superior to all owhér Porous Plasters or Linimexnta for external use, i :nggog 'y ‘Cnm ¢ Plaster is & genuine Parmaceutical product, of the highest ordexr of merit, and so recognized by physicians and mmu§ : ) Wn othgr.i-ampdie_n fail mlarnew‘ son’s Capcine Plaster. You will be disappointed if you use .cheap Plasters, Liniments, Pads or Elecia Feematis torn. , SURE REMEDY AT !W Price 85018, WEAD'S Modicatod CORN .., BUNION PLASTER,

: orAn ) DRYBOODE DLOTHING, - (EURUBUSCO TO THEFRONT. . = = -~ . %} -~ FOR BIG BARGAINS e - In all Classes of Goods call on - e e Mayer & Eichhold, S In their New Brick Building at - . - ‘.CHURUBUSCO, INDIANA, Where can always be-found a large line of CLOTHING, Hats and Caps, - DRY GOODSs. Notions, Booté, a’.n,'d‘, Slloes; Highest Cash Price Paid for Country Produce, We make it a point to ovei-Bid all. Compeli;; points on all : Classes of Gl“llfll, 5 . G A Churubusco, Ind., Oct., 19, ’B2. MAYER &. BIOHHOLD. B E B ) CQLCENC | ANDRETHS PEDIGREESEEDS ERESRE ": 2 E@_"muf%‘iff'%bfi*#\%%;ns B i SEEDS/3 Yoo R SEEDS i SEEDS‘G?orwneby oßul;é\lves on our own Farms SEEDS ; | £7" Handseme lilustrated Catalogue and Rural Register FREE TO ALL. - MERCHANTS, SEND US YOUR BUSINESS CARDS FIQRVTRADE »I‘.IST.‘ ! ; “ ’ DAVID LANDRETH & SONS.SEED GROWERS,PHILADELPHIA

]’l‘he Largest Establishment in Northern'lAndi'ana. J. KELLER & CO. KENDALLVILLE., : : : : INDIANA. ‘ ——lnvite the public to visit their— i iy

’ A comple;te' lißaotrt— © BRY GOODS, t NOTIONS, * . Fine Boots & Shoes, —The latest Novelt:iés in—. Dress Goods and Shawls, _' " FineLinesof . - LACES, HOSIERY, 'OIL CLUTHS AND CARPETS, - TRUNKS AND VALISES.

J. W. "HIGGINBOTIIAM,'_ _ gt WATCHMAKER, /,/ ) JEF |A A T . ] 5 |€ R H e ‘ - v(] eweler 0\ el R A ee 8 P& (4 "‘ S\ e DT o < NYIEE NS /. = N W _' = eAN D=~ {;:# =:§ §\é¢ I’ 5»93 A \,. _,}\;S : : ; o =% 3t N r:";v'-;‘»"‘ j s G J SAROPTICIAN, ;&"’- TAI PR ¥ ,“ ¢ ? . - g By fi N i = 5 1’ 3 . w 1 WE o T e B "—AND DEALER IN— : WATCHES,CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SILVER-WARE, — SPROTACLES | Musicallnstrumentsand Strings, &c. Ozpersforselections goliclte'd. »{Fit’ted toall kinds of} Watches Clocks and Jewelry promptly and neatlyrepaired and warranted. |’ 918’“‘;“ :cle_ntifl;: ' Corner Thirdand Qavin Streets, Ligonier, Indiana. - [%l‘_i’l_g_pfi;_d- A i “An English Veterinary surgeon and Chemist, now © traveling in this country, says that most of the Horse and Cattle Powders sold here are worth= MAKE HENS LAY less trash, 'ie safa that Sheridan’s. Condition - ° ! Powders are abso utelg»pure and immensely - valuable. Notbmg on earth will make hens lay-like Sheridan’s Condition Powders. Dose, 1 teaspoonful to 1 pint food. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail for § letter-stamps. I.'S. Jonnsox & C 0.,. Boston, MAss. -

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. ALMOST ASBAD g ok What the perplexed Physicians do in " Cases of Emergency. o I’ll tell you the homest truth.” answered the physician, “Bright’s disease bothers the medical men almost as badly as cancer does. Having passed a certain stage, both point straight to eter< nity. It may be unprofessional to let ont the secret, but whenever a patient comes to me with Bright’s Disease, or any kldnegoprouble acting iike it, I tell him to put on BENSON’S CAPCINE POROUS PLASTER without delay.” | The physician spoke by the card. The Capcine goes right to the spot. If you can be helped, the Capcine will do it. Look our for frauds, Is t’he‘ word CAPCINE eut in the middle of the plaster?] If 80, you are all right. Price 25 cents, Seabury & Johnson, Chemists, New York. Highest awards. b j FARMEKS’ SONS and DAUGHTERS Or any Active Man or Woman j Z ETBRs. &y CAN MAKE rikMonin in essh, working for th&AMERICAN FARMER, Address, Bz A. K. HAGKETT, Ft. Wayne, Itd. e e oPe e A e et A S for 211 Union Soldiers dissbled in lingof dut chEASE ! of pension. wsARREAh of Pay an more Liberal. Bounty to Unionsoldiersre ""f.dlé’(’,‘ (r}c{l} 15‘1;5 lt)ies‘grtelrs LD. Apply SDISCHARGES skt ant . cent stamps to i 413 G Street N» W V\Pafiungton, DG B | A Leading London Physs |‘ fcian establishes an l‘ Ofiico in New York w ¢ . for the Cureof = . . EPILEPTIC FITS,, From AmJournalof Med” zina. Lond ho mal 1 elB?y %P'E}»‘fifi?;lfhg: ':l?l:outndo‘::?u' x"c ated g, f:‘ ‘:y;,."‘.%'; / more cases than any other living &hyslclan._ Tlssnccess has simply been astonishing; we have h-_,.4 o cases of over 20 years’ standing successfully © aredt b “\m. He has pulxlshad @ work-on this disc .o ‘.mc§ he sends with a large bottlo of his wonderf cure free to any suf- | v-‘;‘a":{,::‘;’ Juay l;‘;&{-};e‘: OXPl".agand P. 0. Address We T AD, MESHRO) L 5 No. 46 o Sb., NewTork,

—_——_-w—’—-_— AT : B 3 = IRASEED 5 88 |Bo‘3‘°" Rn’smarm M\ 00, RN A e - “RARY MINNESOTASWEET CORN 1 T, L e na:‘*‘%l;;fl BLty | Educated and practical growers now assent to our [‘ motto *¢ That the further l:l'firth seeds are growh the earlier their product will be.”? 1 «'l:a offer this year a full line of Standard Potatces true toname, grownon dry upland ; Scotch Fyfe and Blue Btem Wheint ; White lingsian Outs; Etampes Cabbage, saidto beone weelk earlier than Early York; our North Star Yellow Dent Corn stiil takes tho lead, and for fodder is equal to aisy; of onion gecd, tomatoe carrots, peas, &0., &0., a fuil line snd large crop. n?l ls&‘zgrowth on onr own farms.,, Wiid Rice for duck A Caalogn 120 S O 8 REA SEE: Grower, Importer&Jobber, St. Paul, i obtained, and all bisiness in the U. 8. Patent Cf,q_tl:;aigr inthe Qourts attended to fo MODERATE Weare o’Fpo-lte the U. 8. Patent Office, en%aged in PATENT BUSINESS EXCLUSIVELY, and can obtain Batents in Jess time than those remote from WASHINGTON. . : ‘When model of drawing e sent we advise as to sumubim{ free of chsr_r: and we make NO HARGE UNLESS WE OBTAIN A PATQNT. We refer, here, to ithe Post )futer. the’Buperin. tendent of the Mono{._grdg * Divigion, and to oflcialsof the U 8. Pa mfiu ‘For circular, ad. vice. terms. and m&mflfléfin&%&lcflenhin}eflr own state, or county. address— = - O A BENOW & OO Orpostr Parswr Orvice, Wasninerox, D. O,

l_ . "“'l“.hélha‘ndsomest- ifife o.r; : Ready - Made CLOTHING | _Ever g;hown in this market, Thelr | Merchant Tailoring ' DEPARTMENT 1s filled with the latest styles of Foreign’ | and Domestic (e ‘ o CASSIMERES AND WORSTEDS For Suitings and Pantings. Also a fuil assortment of iy - HATS & CAPS. - Gents’ Furnishing .Goods . &c..&c}.&c; Sl

B = .SS —— - _,W_A#.;{'m eT S T e - —_'—_‘_'_—\ ‘__‘ 5gP R R e (. :

BOOTS AND SHOES. | NEW WINTER GOODS . Latest Styles i Direct from the leading ; manufacmrers. 'SLIPPERS | . 1n endlees variety and at , ' lowest living prices, 1 , P, 1 | Remember that -« " | SHINKE Has the largest and best : AP stockof : . s—and—- | L \ i A ——— SHOES i Ever aeen'hmom“‘: - P S | - 'The Best ¢ :-: ‘ N Iflow Shoe. o In the Market, =- ; l .O_f ever} desg;lpfion knen.h . 1y and expeditiondly ex- " * ccuted and satisfac- . - - tion guaranteed, ~ . 5 REPAIRING: - Done to order at . Shinke’s 01d Stand Ligqnier.«lhy 31, 1882.-1 3

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS., Mason & Hamlir 3 adoll &0 nalmiin: ORG’ .A.NS are cortainly hest, having been 80 decreed at'every Great World’s Industrial Competition for Sixteen iaura; no other American orga ms having been found equal -at any. - Aleo cheape st. Style 109; 3figocuves: suflicient compass ¢ nd power, with t quality, for pogu]nr eacred ¢ ind gecular music in schools or families, at only § ;22. One hundred other styles at $3O, $57, 866, §72: §7B, $93, $lOB, $ll4 to $5OO and upy The larger siyles are wholly unrivalled by any other or%am‘ Algo for easy payments, New Illustrated Cata'logne froc . The MASON & HAMLIN Organ n?lgPino . Co.y 154 Tremont St,, Boston; 46 K, 14th Bt., (U nion Square) New Yorfi; 149 Wabash Ave., Chica go. e TR, PRI s ettt O ABVERTISEBS bynfldreasln%fll‘.o. P.ROW 'ELL & €O, 108pruce Bt,. New York, can léar n the exact cost of any proposed lir.e of ADVERTI SBING in American Newspapers. & 100-Page P¢ mui,llefy 25 cents. . / bl 85-1 m fimmss&r-cuns. | . A favorite: presoription of one of the thost noted and snce-auafil spcoiniists i thia U: 8. (Row retired) for {h hcu:? of ?m% - {iplain sodled Eavelope fvee. Drugsistacandil i | MMM \mfi%g <o, I.g,mm.”fi-

1 B < ¥ 4 Rail Road Directory. ~ LAE RE oS | — D — :‘ s ¥ ok ; r L 5 Mich. Southern Rail Road. On and after May 15th, 1861, trains will Jeave. et Stations as follows : ; - N.Y. | GOING EAST, Atlantic ExExpresps. I Stations. I ‘press. «+ 420 am..|........Chicag0.,......[.. 535 x v 15 PRV fonenny s BARKRRYbe i o SSE ++- 186 . f.....1..G05hen,........|.. 1016 ' o ;%g e ......Mxxl‘llersb‘urg.....__J___-_ .o ssdsee oo Ligonier,......|.. 1046 5 ve. 335 ..1...;...annk5..;;.... ——— <220 i Brimfleld il el .- 289 . ..,1......Kendn11v111e......, ashißß o L s 540 pm. il il Toledo il 245 am,, ‘Chicago Hx-| | "GOING WEST, | Facific Ex- '.. press, .| Stations. | ' " __press. B T T Y O B TT, VR BT ) 7 am.. -« 222 pm..|{......Kenda11yi11e.....|.. 310 e . 287 icleecsa.Brimtield ....i.. |=———a—_ .- 247 ..1.......Wawaka....‘...'—-——-—-—— <= 308, il il Ligonter il [l ses o -- 313 -1. Millersburg..... ]-—- -— - lae 3800 i Goßten sl Ll is i .- 850 solseaees . BIRRAYE. . s 1., 435 . :. 800 pm.. ........chicag0.....:..!. 820 amy - © Way Freights, going west, pass Ligonier a 9.05 a. m. ; about 12 50 p. m,, and at 6.10 p. m. ~ Way Freights, going east, pass Ligouies s 3.23a.m ; acd about 10.25 8. m, _ *And where time is not given Lraing dol v stom. Atlantic and Pacific Express traini lesves daily 'both ways. L : L P.-P, WRIGHT_. Gen’l Sup’t, Clevelaad, Ghio. - W. P, JOHNSQN, Gen’l Pass. Ag't, Chicago, Ills, D. B. ELDRIDGE, Agent, Ligounier, Ind, 3 Ciucinnati, Wakash & Mich. . R. . Time table, taking effect Nov. 17, 1882, A 8 ettt 80UTH. . NORTH. No. 4. | No. 2. |A Stations, L| No. 1, |- No. 3. 220 pm{ll 10 pm|lndianapofs | 4 50 am |ll 20 am 1245 940 pm|Anderson J.,| 615 a.mi 115 pm 1219 [ 991 |.Alexandria.| 644 | 145 1180 4m| 820 ..-Marion.. | 735 252 1037 1/ 728 |...WabasH..| 835 |i347 1002 645 |N. Manchestr| 910 435 915 558 ...Wsrssw..tQSb .} 529 pm 848 532 ...Milford;..{lo-23 6 00 8§34 518 .New Paris. 13937 614 . 821 505 ...Goshen... 1050 628 158 am| 443 pm|L. Elkhart. A 1112 am{ 6 53pm 715 ° | 400 pm|....Ni1e5.....|1152am| 740 pm-. Closeconnections made at Goshen and Elkharti withthe LS & M S R R; at Milford with the B & ORR; at Warsaw withthe P, Ft W & CR R; ati ‘North Manchester withthe D& ER R Ry at W~ bash with the T, W & W R R ; at Marion with the P.,C&BtLRR. Throughcoacher will be rur on traine No. 3 and 4bet. Elkhart and Indiamg;)lis, : . NORMAN BECKLEY, Gen. Man,

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3 4~° ; The SHORTEST, QUICKEST and And all o BEST line to St. Joseph, points in " Towa, P“V Atchison, Topcka, DeniNebraska, Missour!, Ean~ ofi,r son, Dallas, Galsas, New Mexico, Arizona, Mon™eg. FRn Yeston, tana and Texas. ; . O . .or T'his Route has no superior for Aert.. 2 X 33 Lea, Minneapolis and St Faul. Uniyersal- ,E _Natlonally reraied asg ly conceded to being tye. Groals be.she best equipped braughCsiy Railroad"in the World for A o all classes of travel. ; 19 KANSAS CITY 1 o N All connections tade % S £ Iz Unjon % - Depots. @ 5 Through @ Try Tickets via this . Q and you will Celebrated Line lorN, ® fnd traveling a salcat o' ofiices oM 0 luxury, inssead the U. 8. and $ of a disCanada. ¢ Q\f Al %‘ " comiort, Q) inforimation® ’0& : ; : \$ abiput Rates of: Ny 4’, s TFare, Steepivg Cars, /. N (\! et clh-t“t‘:ll.\' given Ly 4 T 3 POTTER, ‘ BERUEVAL LOWELY, S Vsce Lrev? o€ Gentl Manuger, Gen, Pyus. St Clijengo: lao. Clijla oot g « i WHO IS UNACQUAINTED WITH THE GEOGRAPHY OF THIS CoUN : TRY.WILL SEE BY EXAMINING THIS MAP THAT THE f{:‘ \;74,7’;;*‘ -‘-49\4/'*“' NST AT, / ’:“ ] SN et R & el B - =i A AT 79 S RS el R LT e ) \"‘V-‘“"‘A: d ), T 5 : > "f.’x"; “ oY% ""‘v'n‘ BW /’ =0 1B 2\ K ,gfi,i d s 3 { 5 ayd b z g e ) sl ZE _»’t& bR leTiiety oon Y @ TR DAY fl,;.(,{ BAY G\GESEANTE ¢ T (i RUEREEQZESIN oW g w 1 g w3O vy «,"—--‘“Jr v| 0P /18 INSENIE Wi JA 7ar gl TN K<) \ ‘1 o & 2 =4 A ; ‘\s‘ .g’s‘\:/ o 4 i ’W/ 4.? /‘fi "‘{ i_ b LR\ NI Xsy N <[l e Ag"ij TN Al o Al IRI Re b /i R (SRt 35y W "t_\; g * N\ ’.\{(’l*« % & o 0 'v‘x‘ 3 b ‘\!4 AR i S LA RS BN A ol Wt )?4»l_}]{{\&3‘o{“‘?""@ X ‘r!f? A f;,.\; 2 ax eiV BRI 5 B iR, wieda bTR b F 7 - IAN L e ARRE Ak { S )t N R TN P a CRE\D 5&%’&;»1&‘? ol (,J l-’()' TR AY, R \\«\:{;:’:f/j\‘\ @ 7DNAN S LR L S R e ;Z‘\‘.j' / CAIGAGO, ROCK ISLAND&P? oIFIC RY xy L.:A cegt‘ral po.mliL of nlq)au? b lc Rh Tast and the West bg the shortes’ 2 ct;nnegéa '::r?-’ rios passengers, without change FOulo SUC SO Chicago and Kansas City, Coune .I°m e Leaven: worth, Atchison, Minheapelis .+ gy Sp CBVERT gonnects in, ¥nion Deiot. ¥ n°all the principal hines of soad between the A,, antic and the Pacific ?ée;,mg._{lu gqupment 38 o' | ioaled and magnifioD wompoAsd 0; slost Comfortable and I]dem_»..;ful oay Co‘n%‘ isgnificent Horton Keb}x\n .m_g c};‘““ Cars‘h' > iman’s Prettiest Falace ";'xf”% ?;" ’-iv‘i,d‘ ¥ Best Line of Dining Cars M omid. (P3B ¥ rains between Chicagojand S And Mooy semY . wo Trains betwecn Chi--08 .m“ = “‘FOM sand’St. Paul,via the Famons v v MBEP [ LEA ROUTE.” k:&- »r' o ”‘Rd%’" et Line, via Seneca and Kankas Notr e qeeami been opened between Richimond, S "'-éfi_‘;&’:-}}y ot News, Chattanooga, Atlanta, Aue Pt Nash o Tonisville, Lexington, Cincinnati, g :“.-wfl“‘:;l’gfl' ‘nd Litayette, and Omaha, Minncap4,‘!’; ana Se paul and intermediate points. ‘E:,‘R“Tk\' Igh Passengers Travel on Fast B¥press '.['lo:‘(? “for saleat all pringipal Ticket Officesin | the Un' ed Sixtes and Canada. Bagf age checked through and rates of fare al, \VJ?"_ 48 low as competitors that offer less advan= :Efifd&tgfiea iuformmiqn,get thf: ,_l;\’ls.{;)? and FoldGREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUT ™, . At your nearest Ticket Office, or address R-R. CABLE, E.ST.d HN. Vicg-Peey: & Geu't 3's'r, Gen Pkt & Juss agt o CHICACOD. | 5 Py

: —AND — N .. @ Cabinet Ware Rooms »,; " o 1 / S \*3l3 - \4\\'s.‘4:?/ ; i S CSSE L ,vi \i‘\tg“ _ SN o = & fiii 1 s ;51;?4‘ ' N oy B el ? T AVTR T L - 2 b I ';":l;',,‘3—.’: = ‘ B D KERR Respectfully announces to the ci $ of Noble county that he has always on hand a large and s« i b neglor-lm of : CABINET WARE, g B Oonql_gflnx!n partof i R ebey Losuges Cugbossin War-Robes, phoar B s n fact e IR '8 ; OD, lar & 7 ; RS e™ 00 L COFFINS 'mfi{o 21 Kinds of shop wfl-’m&hflm ’ Juraitare Ware Rooma, cornsr 4tk #nd Cavin