Ligonier Banner., Volume 20, Number 42, Ligonier, Noble County, 28 January 1886 — Page 4

) f-.“( i S . |iy — i L T £ M e SV T N f“‘) W7l l—f K P LE Ly ALRAZA - 10\ ik PURELY VEGETABLE. . > P Are You Bilious? The Regulator never fails to cure. 1 most _ cheerfully ‘recommend it to all who suffer from Bilious X!ucks or any Disease caused by a dis: arranged state of the Liver. ’ Kansas City, Mo. W. R. BERNARD. - Do You Want Good Digestion? I suffered intensely with Full Stormach, Headache, etc. A neighbor, who had taken Simmons Liver Rfiulltor, told me it was a sqgre cure for ° my trouble. The first dose I took %licved me vcriy much, add in one wegk’s time I was as strong and hnni as ever | was. 2is the best medicine 1 ever took for, Dyspepsic. i ~ Ricumonp, Va. H. G. CRENSHAW . Do You Buffer from Constipation ? Testimony of Hiram Warner, Chief-Justice of Ga.: “1 have used Simmons Liver Regulator for Constipation of my Bowels, caused by a tempovary Derangement of the Liver, for the last three or four years, and always with decided benefit.” Have You Malaria? I have had experience with Simmons Liver Regn lator since 1865, and regard it as thy greatest medicine of the times jfor diseases- peculiar to malarial vegions. So good a medicine deserves uni-versal commendation. Rev. M. B. WHARTON, Cor. Sec’y Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. P { THERE IS BUT ONE SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR! - See that erou get the genuine, with the red. . oo front of Wrapper, prepared only by . 3. H.ZEILIN & CO., ! «OLX PROPRIETORS PHILADELPHIA PA

e Ligonier Lanner, THURSDAY. JAN.2B. 1586

BEYOND THE GATE. 2 . © Why doXlove you—if Ido? . = | Tell me that, and I'll tell you. i Tis not that you are more fair : ¥ Than other ladies whom I know; % 4 For the summer of your hair, . = | sOr the lights that come and go 4] ¢ In your radiant, startled eyes, E Apprehensive of surprise; 1 . Nothing in your bright, young face, i‘,, "Which is comely, I suppose; e b No illusive charm or grace; % X ‘What it is, Heaven only knows, : : I might not love you if I knew, ¥ For what I love might not be you! K- L ' —[R. H. Stoddard. " Tho Mania for Making Collections., ' Youngsters busy themselves making collections of eyery imaginable sort, and the mania hasppread 80 that one young man of an enterpuising turn has turned their desire; to exchange collected articles to goed acount. His father keeps a small shop on Wabash avenue, and the boy has secured a small apartment in the rear in which. ' hg has established what he calls a “collector’s exchange.” Here boys can meet ‘to examine each other’s collections, buy, sell, or exchange. He charges 10 cents a month, and derives, lam told, quite a.revenue. Kach member of the exchange is allowed to post on the wall a written advertisement of what he has ¢n hand for sale or exchange. Here, after school hours, boys drop in to barter and talk over congcgial ‘topics. They scan the walls with the same air that a bucket-shop operator looks upon the blackboard for quotation. Some of the advertisements ave guaint. One reads: ; “I have a pair of roller skatesand a croquet set which I will trade for a collection of stamps.” : : Another says: o “Tin tag for sale ior exchange. Tags speaks.” 7 “I have the finest collection of matches in the city, Over twenty varieties. What will you give ) i : “What have you to exchange for stamps and tin tags?” . T want to exchange a neat scrap-book full of pictures for a collection of stamps. % o B 6 And so they run op, exhibiting considerable ingenuity and not a little of that spirit that mnade Connecticut clockpaddlers famous a few -years ago.—Chicago News “Bambler.” .

. A Visit to Vanilerbilt’s Palace. Let me say that the house cost §£3,000,000, that art exhausted itself in beautifying it,.and that the floors were marble, the walls marble and mother of pearl, and the stairways bronze, and one may understand the indescribable character i of it all. Our amdzement was overwlielming and genuine. - ) Through Black ebony doors, opened AV amnVes ‘:~T “han ”‘::“:f’,:? .‘”}' .. 1:»1,_..3-' A Y i # ' e lery, % 3 WY

THE YANKEES OF THE FAR EAST. Progress of the Japanese—Not Copyists but Masters of Principles,. The japs are certainly the Yankees of the far east. Since 1858, when the Mikado sent his {irst exploring committees to western Europe, they have gone ahead at a rate that makes it a serious question if they will content themselves with copying their prototypes. In a country which less than two décades ago was nothing bnt a sort of morthern China, they have .now railroads, telephones, clectric lights, signal =lations, chemical factories, polytechnis Ligh schools, observatories and government burcaus of intelligence, where an inquirer can, on payment of a nomjnal feo, obtain on all possible subjcets such information as our mnewspaper oracles sometimes dispense on literary and historical questions. % §

Agricultural expositions ‘have permanent. halls 'in every large town. An American company mints. artistically finished gold and silver coins; thousands of foreigners have availed themselyes of the liberal indncemcents for the establishment of factories and technical trainingschools, -and the country abounds with well patronized newspa.pers. ~ “What Jacks this knave what & king should have?’ ' asks the mayor of L.ondon at night of Wat JTyler and his buckram bravery. “What lack these pagans?” weé might ask, of any thing we are pleased to ascribe to the influence of Christian culture. Fpr unlike the Chinecse, the Japs are emulators who do, not content themselves with copywork, but strive to master the principle of every scientific contrivance. ' Before the end.of this century they will get the start of Caucasia, or run the best of us a close race. A i

But what has so suddenly winged those torpid Mongols? ,It seems almost as if for ages théy had been kept down artificially by the weight of some smoldering incubus—Buddhism perhaps. Four hundred years ago any student of ancient ,history would have concluded that tho light of civilization had forever set with the sun of the Roman empire, a modified Buddhism being then the only flourishing industry from the convents of Russia to the convents of Spain. Science was dead; common sense nearly so. Darkness, 8 hundred times darker than the twilight of Grecian civilization, seemed to have settled over the world like & Newfoundland fog. A century later ail that was changed. All Europe bnzzed as if a sudden change .of music had set the languid dancers a-whirling; the stagnant pool had become a raging torrent. A dam had burst, and on such occasions rivers often make up for lost time.—Cincinmfiti._Enquiren : :

How Great Artists are Developed. During the dress rehearsal of a little opera which Auber had written in one week, he saw one of the amateurs who played the fiddle in that small orchestra staring at a very handsome girl who sang on the stage, but so fixedly that he held his bow on the violin without playing a note. Affer having observed him awhile Auber approached him politely and said: “It seems to me that you are not exactly playing in time?” = “Ah,” said the amateur, “vous croyes? I must tell you candidly that I paint a little, and when I see such a pretty model, with such a-pure complexion, I admire her above all.” “The name of this amateur who painted “a little” jwas Ingress, and from that day, for fifty-two years, he and Auber remained great friends. I must here mentton a circumstance which I heard from Ingress himself, ‘and which teaches a good lesson to this age. : Ingress told me that for a great many years before he dared to sketch anything like a figure, he was compelled to desjign nothing but lines, circles and mathematical outlines. ‘When he begun to sketeh figures, he was again kept for-years to the inanimate be-. fore he -was permitted to sketch from nature, and before he -dared to take a palette in his hands and paint in oils, no less than seven years passed. Only thus are frreat artists developed, and as it is with one art so it is with dnother.—Kan. Qity Journal. : )

Invention of a Stage Locomotive. " Mr. Harkins, of the California theatre, tells an interesting story of how Augustin Daly invented the idea of making a traln of cars cross the stage. Previous to the production of “Under the Gaslight? it had been customary to run miniature trains in the background. Daly had originally intended that the locomotlve should appear at the wings just as the curtain fell on the tablean. | “I canesee him now,” said Mr. Harkins, “The piece was being rehearsed; the carpenters were' still busy on the scenes. The engine was visible to Mr. Daly, who, seated in the orchestra was thinking over the piece.~ As he watched the locomotive moving out from = the wings, a:thought occirred to, him: “Why not. make the ' train pass across the gtage?” He called his head carpentar and asked him how long it svotl’ 2to make a train of cars the ‘oun . The problem was soon out, 4 ily patented the idea. eat 11 3 value. And yet, like many i inventions, it was a growth o B ~San Francisco Ingleside.

‘i riking Figure in Society. T: . - another striking figure in New . ty. In fact, there are many, .« nore prominent than others, i :8 not begin to have so many. i are.is only one really striking i e, Sullivan, 1 believe. The in mind here is the blue ribbon s the swells. You'can see him of: ernoons, driving up the avenue g art. You notice that his head : Ty ‘to one side, and under the im‘hat he is suffering from some i on of.the cords of the neck, yon ~ some pity for him and ask why . 't submit to an operation that } {ow his head to sit straight on dei's. You are laughed at. He om choice, and it is his proud ‘ it #the —s, sir, have carried ‘ " .ds that way for years, aye, for nt 3.” Can you imagine such idiocy? N. © Dor. Post-Dispateh. ° : s >thschild’s Ironclad Fortress. 30 i " Alphanso de Rothschild has just " & the transformation of his house Rue St. Florentin, Paris, into a t... tonclad fortress. -Every window: : ded with bullet-proof shutters; ¢ ss showcase containing priceless v+ es disappears into an iron safein - 1 by the simple pressing of a each picture ig provided with a :«d case, lined with -morocco vl so that in an emergency the 0 illery'could be packed in an hour a red away in the cellars or sent to v 4 forsafety. 'The bill for these. rounts to 50,000 francs.—Chicago . | o e Yil R — o S i medicine, Athlopheras, has ) 'd me very much., I was laid f wo weeks with an attack of i {iam and -could nof use my i A bottle and a half helped me, . Rafert, 603 North Delawsre = ¢ "Indianapelis, Ind. : ) G [RE—- ! >r the Oregon law; a pergon who « taoney atthe gambling tatle is ~ Ito recover double the m!nount, + Portland party who deposited a w faro bavk has recowred migt for 260, ‘ D ) G PP - : . bave been afflicted with catarrh 1 yesrs. . It became chronie, Lire was a constant dropping of ,f 8 matter- from the roof of my t . It extended to my throat.i ) . 2 hoarseness and gre"t.difi“ic:gty‘ ' i akin-, indeed for years I was ble to speak more than thirty i eB, and ofien this with great . oot ity. 1 also, to a great extent, . he gecge of hearing in the left ivd of taste, By the use of Ely’s care Balm all dropping of mueous . noaged and mwy voice and bea_rl% o greatly improved. James W, Adgom, Attorney at Law, Mon £ :U,o,f!t‘ 5 . ‘ 2 -12 t 2. : N : "¢ prices of imported goods at the - </ Mexico are being advanced by ~ « wo-techants in consequence of the - uned depreciation of silver, fe—- -« petroleum from the United o hes advanced pearly 14 per

A CARD. al who ard suflfering from the errorsand icvotions of ;outh,‘ hervous - weakness, oay, 1088 o manh‘t;}v;»d ete., I will sgend a «« atwill cure you. FRBE OF CHARGE, 7 it remedy was discovered by a misCir o in Bouth America, Bend a self-ad-i nwew the Rev, Ji h T, Inman, b iy ), Ym'k C“Y' o WWP.YJ T ! G

‘ POMEROY, OF KANSAS, HOW HIS LIFE WAS ONCE SAVED BY ‘ A FRIE‘NDI:.Y VIFGINIAN, An Incident of the “Wakarusa YWar'— A Close Call — One of Sterling Price’'s Men Gets a Pass —A Contribution. sy

In that famous campaign known as “The Wakarnsa War,” Col. Alexander ‘W. Jones was on the staff of Gen. David R. Atchison, who had charge of the proslavery forces. It was on the Wakarusa that an incident occurred which caused Senator Pomeroy to ever afterward hold Jones in grateful remembrance. Pomeroy had made his appearance in Kansas ‘a short time before, and representing the New England Emigration Aid society, he had scattered Sharp’s rifles-and incen‘diary abolition sentiments with considerable efféct. Atchison heard so much about the bad influence of this new abolition lcader that as he marched into Kansas he offeréd a good round sum for Pomeroy, dead or alive, and issued a proclamation to that effect. = " BRINGING IN A PRISONER, Jones, who had knocked about on both sides of the border, knew Pomeroy, and he was about the only one in Atchison’s command who did. |One day there came into camp a scouting party, bringing a prisoner. As usual they went at once to headquarters. Atchison had been trying to get some sleep, and the arrival aroused him. He raised himself up from the blanket, and with anything but good humor, looking at Pomeroy, demanded: “Who in — are you?” “Stranger,” replied Pomeroy, raising his hands in a deprecatory way, “I'm an humble follower of the meek ard lowly Master.” | L ; sime ———yon,” said Atchison, feeling around in his blanket, ¥I Believe you are one of these —— Abolitionists.” - “Stranger,” drawled' Pomeroy, “please don‘t take the name of the Lord in vain.” Atchison found what he was looking for, and, raising the bottle to his lips, drank. i e “Jones!* called Atchison. “Then for the first time Pomeroy saw his acquaintance, and his face showed that he thought his last hour had come. Theaid stepped forward. “Jones,” continued Atchison, “take this —— crank outside the lines, and make him understand that if I catch him prowling around my camp again I'll stretch his — —— neck.” The young Virginian and the Yankee Abolitionist walked to the edge of the camp. Jonessaid: 3 . “It was a close call for you, Pom.” “I’ll not forget you,” said Pomeroy, looking a volume, and they parted. To this time Gen. Atchison has never known that he had in his hands the man upon whose head he had set a price, and who certainly would have been hanged that day on the Wakarusa had the Virginian revealed the identity of the prisoner. ONE OF STERLING PRICE’S MEN. At last Col. Jones|was captured and sent on to Washington for disposition. His case was to be a kind of precedent for dealing with Price’s men. On the way Jones made terms with his guard. When they reached Washington they didn’t go to the Old Capitol prison. They set out to find some of the prisoner’s friends, and the first one they found was Judge Stanton, whom Jones had known years before as a member of the Kansas territorial court. And the ‘next aeqifaintance the former stafl officer of Gen. Atchison renewed was with- Pomeroy, then the head and front of the Kansas contingent of statesmen at Washington. / “Pomeroy,” said Stanton, presenting the rather unkempt-looking rebel from Missouri, “here's a man you ought to remember.”

“Yes,“ replied Pomeroy, “the faceis certainly familiar, but I don’t quite place him.” ? “T am a follower of the meek and—" commenced Jones, raising his hands with a gesture of humility. “Jones, by thunder!” said Pomeroy. “What are you doing here?” The situation was explained. ; “Come with me,” said Pomeroy, and the oddly-assorted party went to the ‘White House. When they came out they walked over 'to the war department. After they got through with their business there the guard from Missouri was without a job. Jones went to a hotel, carrying in his pocket a, duly signed and certified bit of paper reading: “Col. A, W. Jones of Sterling Price’s forces is hereby authorized to pass through the lines.” Yink A LIBERAL CONTRIBUTION.

A couple of hours later Pomeroy entered the Virginian’s room. “Jones,” said he, “under the circumstances it won’t do for me to be seen with you. My advice to you is to ‘go to Canada. and stay there till this thing is over.” Here’s something that will help for expenses.” : ‘When Pomeroy went out Jones opened the envelope and counted §OO in new greenbacks. The Virginian took the advice. He went to Canada and remained there until the war ended. Then he went to New York;and drifted into speculation. He made some money and moved to Woodborn, whence he. entered the New Jersey legislature. Time passed, and Pomeroy was out of the sénate and under a cloud. Jones had never seen him from the time they parted ifit Washington in 1861. He calculated the intérest accruing on that $5OO, drew a draft for the whole amount—more than double the loan—and zent it to Pomeroy. The reply came back: . “DEAR JONE?: I've got enough to last me through life. Please contribnte this to the cause of the meek and lowly Master.” : | = . “I divided it among three needy New Jersey churches,” said Jones. “Two of them have done well. The third has gone all to pieces under a disgraced pastor. « I don’t know whether there is dny moral in this or not.”—Cor. Globe-Demo-crat.

Statistics of the Six Companies. j A leading Chinese merchant in San Francisco gives the names of the Chinese Six companies and the number of° the Chinamen in California in round numbers as_follows: Ning Yung company, 80,000 Cfiinamen; Tung Wo, 33,000; Sam Yup, 35,000; Keong Chow, 40,000; Hop Wo, 55,000; Yen Wo, 10,000; total, 253,000, ! ; { The Ink of Ancient Times. According to Prof. Hartley, who' has been Investigating the chemical nature of the illuminations of that wonderful “copy of the gospel, the book of Kells, writtsn by Irish monks about the year 800, the pigments were identical with those msed by the ancient Egyptians,— Excbange. p L oGO ‘Seott's Emulsion of Pure | Cod Liver Qil, with Hypophosphites, Especially Desirable for Children. : A Lady physiclan ;at the Chiid’s Hespital,at Aibany, New York., says: “We have been using Scott’s Emu’sion with greit suaccess. Neoarly all of our patients are suffering from bone diseéases and our physicians find it very beueficial.” Eeax bl

St. lLeuis boasts that it is scon to have the tallest commercial building in the world. 'An insurance company is soon to add four stories to its eight--8 ory structure in that city in order to provide offices for the Gould soutbern railwsy system. o

The Homliest Man in Ligonier, As well as the handsomest, and othlers, are invited to call on E. E. Reed Central Drug Store, and get free a trial bottle of Kemps Balsam for the throat and lungs, a remedy that is selling entirely upon its merits, and is guaranteed to cure and relieve ill chronic and acute coughs, asthma, bronchitis and consumption. Price 50 cents and $l. ;

The police of Joliet jailed the ecaptain and drummer of the Salvation Army, last week, and a garg of roughs bad a fight with the private soldiers at the barracks.

* News About Town, . : 1t is the current report about town that Kemp’s Balsam for the tbroat and lungs is making some remarkable cures with people wha are troubled with coughbs, ssthma, bronchitis, and consumption. E. E., Reed, Central Drug Store, will give any person a trial bottle free of cost. Itis ngfsran’q teed to relieve and cure. Prioce 50 cents and $l, Sahiaans

~ MUSIC IN THE TOWERS, SOME FACTS ABOUT CHIMES AN,Q N i; BELLS AND THEIR MELODY. _How Thickness of a Bell Affects Its Tone —The “Silver Bell’” Delusion—Mend- - § ing a Cracked Bell'—The Practice of Clappering. -~ “Sir Edmund Beckett, president of the British Horological institute,” said a dealer familiar with the subject, “who has made this subject a special study, gives some very interesting facts about bells, He saysthat there is a fullness and softness in the sound of a thick bell which a thin one never has. The old bell-founders cvidently knew that it is a law of naturc that a given weight of bell metal is only capable of sounding a very narrow range of notes with good effect; and if you infringe that*law and make your bells thinner for the sake of getting dceper notes out of them you are as certain, as usual in fighting with laws of nature, to pay for it by a more than equivalent loss in the guality of the tone. It happens that this loss is even greater now than it would have been a century ago, on account of the difference of the copper. It isless tough in working, capable of holding less tin without becoming too brittle, and apparently incapable of a certain softness of sound which even thin old bells sometimes have, but these new ones never do. Indeed, it must be admitted that some of the finest old tenors are what we should now call thin. They would probably-have been .better still if they had been thicker. As a peal of bells is a luxury, meant to give pleasure to those who listen to thein, and not a necessity of life, it is astonishing that people will go on raising large subscriptions for them without taking the least trouble to ascertain that they get what is really the best thing for their money, and forgetting that you pay for the same weight of, metal whether the bells are thick orthin, only in one casé you get them of the right notes for their weight and in the other case wrong, and so make the bells bad instead of good.” THE “SILVER BELL” ILLUSION. ! | “What about the popular idea that bells with silver in them give the most musical sound?’ “My best authority says the most inveterate of all popular delusions about bells is the notion that old bells had silver in thém, and that all bells would be improved by it. There is not the slighs est foundation for that belief. Nevertheless there were some experiments mad @ for the purpose of being quite sure tha’ gilver was of no use, either with reference to sound or strength of metal. Several different proportions: were tried, beginning with a small piece of silver in a bell of nearly a pound in weight, and it was clear that the silver rather did harm than good in both respects. The delusion very likely has arisen from the ring of pieces of silver, but-which justified no such inference. In fact, no composition for bells has yeét been disé¢overed equal to copper and tin in the right proportions. There was a large bell of - iron and tin in the English exhibition of 1851, but that also was very inferior to bell metal, and it required an enormous blow to bring out the sound, though it was thin, and it was at last cracked by these blows.” - : “Can large bells that are eracked be mended successfully?” : “Whenever a bell of any importance cracks, says Sir Kdmund Beckett, there invariably follow: a flood of suggestions, public and private, for mending it: generally by ‘cutting out the erack’ in some way or other; and as there exists in some persons what is called color-blindness, so there are persons to whom a bell so divided sounds no worse than when it was whole, though to other people’s ears the tone is generally altered several notes, or is' made otherwise intolerably bad. Another way of mending is by what is called burning the parts together, that is, cutting the crack wide enough to let hot metal be poured in and through, which, is done until the constant application of it partially meets the faces of the division and then the running is stopped and left to cool. - This may perhaps answer in very thin bells, but the contraction and consequent tension of the metal would most likely crack the bell again as soon as rung. There is no evider#; of any bell as large as a common church bell having been successfully treated in this way yet. If the bell has cracked from any radical defect it is absurd to think of mending it, even if it were otherwise possible, for the same defect would make it crack again. | : . A LITTLE BIT OF ADVICE. “Tt is still necessary to warn clergymeza and church wardens against allowing tha lazy and pernicious practice of clappering—that is, tying the bell-rope to the clapper and pulling it instead of the bell. More bells . have been cracked in that way than by all other causes togethdr, and there is not the least excuse/for it, as any man may learn ito toll a bell in one lesson, and the work of doing it is nothing, for the bell moves so little - that it seems wonderful that the clapper should strike. it; but they both act as pendulums, which a very small impulse will keep up, and the blow being elastic loses very little of its force. i “When it has become impossible to ring bells properly the best thing to do is to fit them up for chiming only, that is, tolling with levers. Though inferior to ringing in some respects, and much less interesting to ringers, it has a sweeter sound, but feebler. The clappers ought to be heavier for it, as they strike much softer. When" there are only three or four bells chiming sounds much better than ringing. The tolling of three large bells has a very grand: sound; and the ringing of two bells only frame high, that. is, swinging up to horizontal, so that they strike quickly, has a pleasant and lively sound. The windows of bellchambers and of every opening in rthe tower or spire above them should be complétely covered with strong wire netting, which must aiso be kept in repair, to keep out birds, which otherwise fill the place with sticks and dirt.”—New York Mail and Express. Sl :

Combination of Substance and Flame. A Swedish chemist has invented a suitable combination of suitable substance and flame -for producing light from an incandescent solid. e flame of watergas has intense heati’fig power. An ordinary fan tail burner is used, the flame from which passes between two rows of vertical teeth compgsed of magnesia, baked and ground, 'and with atarch, under high pressure. The tceth, when heated, become beautifully luminous, and the light shows colors correctly and can ke used for photography.—Scientific Journal. 3

An 'Old Story—Look at a human being when under the iuflience of that terrible torture, rheumatism. Trivial symptoms were neglected until the disease became established, whereag all the long suffering could have been prevented by the prompt use of Salvation Oil, costing only 25 cauts a bottle at all drug stores. '

Some Koolish People Allow a cough to run until it gets beyond the reach of medicine. They often say, “Oh, it will wear away,” but in most cases it wears them away! Could they be induced to try the successful medicine called Kemp’s Balsam, which we sell on a positive guarantee to cure, they would immediately see the excellent effect afier taking the first dose. Price 50c and $l. Trial slze free. At E.' E. Reed’s Central Drug Store. :

A silver quarter of a dollar was found in the intestines of a four pousd trout which was being dressed for the table at Virginia City, Nevada, a shoit time ago. It was covered with a black coating nearly. an eighth of an inch think,and had evidently been in the trout’s stomach for a long time. The coin was| probably dropped by some fisherman, and the fish seeing the glittering coin, darted at and swallowed i : / :

-+ ‘A Fortunate Discovery. s A new light is thrown on the sabJect of eonsumption by- Dr. Wagner Kemp, discoverer of Kemp’s Balsam for the throat and lungs—a remedy that has proved itgelf to be a remarkable compound. It does its work thoroughly, stopping a hacking cough instantly. Sold by E. E. Reed, Central Drug Btore, Price 50 cents and $l. Trial size free, Get one, % ; S A

How President Arthur Was Kidnapped. Ex-President Arthur tells the following story: “It is not generally known that I was kidnapped once, but the same is true, nevertheless. In the surnmer of ’B4 T was taking a trip in a government dispatch-boat along the coast, when one morning we put into Marblehead, in order to visit Salem, the ancient home of witchcraft. Our time was limited, and we desired to escape observation, but no sooner had we landed than I was recognized. We hurried into a carriage and proceeded to Salem, but while in the museum of that city, which contain many souvenirs of the witches, I was accosted by a sad-faced man, with piercing black eyes, who had come, he said, td ask me to say a few words to the people of Marblehead. I firmly but pleasantly refused, on' the ground of present engagements, and was compelled to repeat my refusal at least three times before the sad-faced man departed. ‘ “On the way back to the vessel my carriage suddenly stopped, and the door was rudely opened by the sad-faced man, who again insisted that I should speak to the people of Marblehead. Three times again I positively declined. One of the naval-ofiicers who was with me becamo very angry, and shut the door witha slam. The sad-faced man jumped upon the box alongside of the driver, and we were driven foward the wharf. Presently the carriage stopped again, the sad-faced man again opencd the door, and before I knew what to do I found myself literally borne along by the crowd to the city hall, and into a large room, which was packed by the.inhabitants. s Resistance was simply useless. I had been taken right off my feet. Yielding to necessity, I said to the sad-faced man: “Well, I will speak for fivé minutes if you will let mhe go.’ ‘Five minutes it shall be,’ hes replied. I worried along with a rambliing talk, as well as I could, and at the eld of it was allowed to go back to the véssel. But I can never forget the faet, t I was once kidnapped in Marbleheaa ""x,g:bqnge. ‘ 4 e A— Origin of Mitographic Show Printing. Thefirigm of the huge and striking'. show printing from stone now in vogue is due to Matt Morgan, who is an Englisman, and came to this country, with a high reputation as a scenic artist and caricaturist to run Leslie’s Newspaper in the Greeley interest against Tom Naston Harper’s. He did not catch the spirit of the country, and failed as a caricaturist. Then he embarked in theatrical speculation and failed, and so drifted to Philadelphia, and later to« Cincinnati, where he settled., : :

A wonderfully spirited designer, and a man fertile of ideas, it had suggested itself to Morgan that the woodcuts then in use for large show printing could be improved uponsin stone. The biggest poster made up to that time had, I believe, been a two sheet head of Lydia Thomg@on or some other hirsute burlesquer, drawn by Peter Kramer. - Morgan developed a method of creating the gigantic posters now in use, making large drawings for them, transferring the outlirés to separate stones, which were filled in by his subordinates, and adding the touches which gave them finish and spirit himself. He educated a staff of the cleverest lithographici draughtsmen in the country, most of whom are now at the head of other establishments. Few people have an idea of the amount of money iocked up in the lithographic show printing business in this country. Millions of dollars are invested in the plants of great establishments, who now compete for custom all over the land. So sharp is competition, indeed, that prices have been cut 33 per cent. by it, and pessimistic printers anticipate a still further reduction.—Cincinnati Enquirer. Cutting Off ‘the Indian Maidens' Hair. To an Indian girl no humiliation is so great as to havé her hair cut off. The matron of the Lincoln institute, in giving me a description of the introduction to civilization of the young Sioux, Pawnees and Chippewas, said: “It requires great persuasion to induce them to enter | a bath for the first time, and stiill more to induce them to desist from eating the soap, which they invaribly take for something good to eat. To don the garments of the white woman and sit on chairs their red skins rebelled against; but all these difficulties. are mere bagatellcs * when compared with the hair-cutting process. Persuasion, bribes and sometimes, threats even have to be used to gain this sacrifice to the altar of cleanliness.” - T

“How do you account for it?” I asked. “Altogether hecause it is the Indian fashion when mourning the dead to let the hair fall over the face like a' thick veil, and which muffles the wailing the womén give vent to. The mere thought that if any brave of their blood should be summoned to the happy hunting ground they could not mourn him in proper Indian fashion causes them extreme mortification, and consequently when the coarse black braids fall to blie floor in our little lavatory almost tragic scenes ensue. Later on, when they are made to understand that cleanliness is the only condition imposed on its growth, they become reconciled, for their hair grows rapidly.—Cincinnati Enquirer.

Could Not Have a Worldly Thought, In the orchestra circle: Enthusiastic young lady—How charmingly beautiful Miss Aria is! How divinely she sings tonight, and what a lovely bride she makes. Just see how pure and sweet her face is as she confidingly clasps her husband’s arm and listens to his words of love. Really, it doesn’t. seem as if she ever could have a common, wordly thought. On the stage: Miss Aria (drooping her eyes modestly beneath the tenor’s ardent gaze)—Who is that ugly fellow just coming out third from the end in the bridal procession, with that dreadful smirk on his face? For heaven’s sake, do tell him when we go by not to grin like that, or he’ll put out the footlights!”—Somérville Journal. 3

At the Carlisle Indian School. A horse belonging to the Carlisle, Pa., Indian school was sent up from the farm to be shod. There was a nvmber: of ready-made shoes on: hand in the shop, and the job in the absence of the boss was given to an apprintice. After an interval the following mote came to the superintendent: “This horse don’t fit none of our shoes.”—Exchange. Getting Ready for Bhsiness. “What are you doing, my dear,” he, asked his wife, as he saw her throwing great handfuls of tacks on: the bed-room floor. “Why, don’t you know? It’s your turn to walk with baby to-night” } “Oh, yes, I had forgotten. Well, hide/ my slippers and disarrange the furniture, and I’ll let the furnace fire go out.”-Tid Bits, - : ’,? : 100 Duses One 1»% llar is inseparably connecitd with Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and is true cof noother medicine. A ‘battle of Hood’s Sarsaparilla coutains 100 doses, and will last a month, while others wiil average tc last not over a week, Use only Hocd’s Sarsaparilla. : <

Among the relics ¢f the late war stowed away in the United States ordnance museum js & saber fully five fret long, which was found on tte nameéd above must be listed by the assegsor and 'te must, whether they are white or black, take the rank,letter of the company, number of the regiment, and the state to which the regiment bslonged of which the listed ‘man was & member, the arm of the service in which employed, whether injured, wouaded, or contracted dis ease while in the service, and his _present’posioffl e addreas, of all others listed, and in case of dzceased fathers and husbands of gsaid children and widows, the date of their death, and place of residence at date of death; and shall ascertain and report whether any widow, not remarried, or other person listed, is in indigent cireumstances, or in the alms house or depending upon others for support.

~ You are not old, yet your hair is ‘getting thin, Your friends remark it, your wife regrets it. Parker’s Hair Baleam will stop this waste, save your l hair and restore the original gloss and color. Exceptionally clean, prevent dandruff, a perfect dressing. 42-t4 | —Miller, the spectacle man, adjusts glasses for headache. -

And Hypuposphitss of Lime & Sol % 4 o ypoptosphites of Lime & Soi Almost as Palatable as Milk. The only preparation of COD LIVER OH.: that can be taken readily and tolerated for a long time by delicate stomachs, . AND AS A REVWEDY FOR_CONSUMPTION, SCROFULOUS AKFECTIONS, . ANAEMIA, GENERAL DEBILITY, COUGHS AND THROAT AFFECTIONS, and all WASTING DISORDERS OF CHILDREN it is marveilous in its results. Prescribed and endorsed by the bess Physicians in the countries of the world. s FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.

Marvelous success. X&) Insane Persons Restored Dr.KLINE'S GREAT » NERVERESTORER o 7 all BRAIN & NERVE DISBASES. Only sure cure for Nevve Afections, Fits, Epilepsy, etc, INFALLIBLR if taken as directed. A 0 [its after | first day's wse. Treatise and $2 triz} bottle free to Fit patients, they paymng. exgrcss chargeson box vhen raceived. Send names, P. O.and express acddress of affiicted to DR.KLINE 931 Arch St., Philade!nhia, Pa. See Druggists. BEWARE OF IMITATING FRAUDS.

F. W.SHINKE & SON, Ligonier, Ind., 4 —has the sale of the—cow e [freda Blark] . : Bl G\ B BB= WALKER k;;is .'Aj:m'?fa ;'s;‘.:.;-;. BOOT “The Best in America.” - Call and See Them. Extra Quality Women'’s Calf Shoes.

100 CORIDS . j i : “Q; OF HARD WOOD CUT WITH ONE FILING BY ONE OF OUR CELEBRATED F This is the record of a pracfica.l%ndia.na sawyer, with the King of i |§ Saws, made from our Special English Tool Steel, capable of holding an §@& : edge ionger than anyother saw made. Wechallenge the world to gqua.l it. M ?tlce, sl.oo§er foot, including Handles and Gauge. Furnished either regular gauge or extra thin back. Any one sending this card, with an order for a Saw of any length, will be presented. with one of our Celebrated Criterion Saw Sets. We take this method of introducing these sets to the users of saws, E. C. %TKINS g. CO., SoLE MAKERS oF SILVER STEEL DiaMOND, CONCAVE TOOTH DEXTER, SFPECIAL STEEL DIAMOND AND %HAMPION CRrecssCuTts, CiRcULAR, BAND AND MuULAY SAws, INDIANAPOLIS, IND.

: Any one can become 80 &8 thoroughly posted in 3 - Weeks reviewing with The Common School =Question Book as to succesat‘u;liv pass the mostdifficult and technical legal examinations for teacher’s certificates. By itsaid thousands of young Feople earn an honorable and lucrative livihood. 27],300 sold last year. Full descrigtive circulars and speci- . ] men Xages sent forstamp gents Wanted, A.H, CRAIG, Publisher, Caldwell, Racine Co. Wis.

28 . \ A>T 04 FEDWMFERRY & 571 WogY LT iepis 2 VS Eagy OB DesorlP ="Price22 | 6887 R e S T ] it = f:’ii’ 1886|z ;‘Ax 2727 Will be mailed FREE toall ap!pucants, and to customers of last {eu without ordering it. It contains about 180 pages, 600 illustrations, prices, accurate descriptions and valuable directions for planting all varieties of VEGETABLE and FLOW?ER SilEl}S, BULRBS,ctc. Invaluable to all, especially to Market Gardeners. Send for it. ©. M, FERRY & CO., Detroit, Michlgan.

THE TIMES.

Hai md Weekl Haily and Weekiy, ANNOUNCEMENT FOR 1886. THE DAILY TIMES. : TAE TimeEs, which has for so many years stood in the front rank of American journals, has more than fulfilled the promises made mn its last annual announcement. Not only have its news-gathering facilities been enlarged and extended in all directions, but it has reached out into the domain of literature, and fairly competes with the magazines in the quantity and quality of its original articles of a strictly literary character. As in the past the mark of excellence has been set forward year by year, so THE TiMES of 1886 may be expected to surpass its previous high position. - No portion of the ever-widening fieid of news will be neglected. An adequate and trained corps of correspondents at Washington will furnish full reports of the important debates in congress, besides covering all the news and pelitichl and social gossip of the capital. At New York, as well asat other important news centers in all parts of the country, Tar TiMES will be represented by eapable and vigilant correspondents, It will be the aim to make the local department of THE TIMES a complete and entertaining chronicle of the events of the day in Chicago, and persons desiring full and impartial reports of national conventions, such as, from the gecgraphical situation of the city, frequently meet here, may be assured that their desires will be gratified in THE TIMES,

The financial and commercial colimns of THE TmmMES will be kept up to the high standard that bankers and merchants throughout the west have conceded to them, No expense will be spared in the collection of unbiased reports for this important department ot the paper. The political ind?})endence that has characterized the editorial utterances of THE TIMES for the past twenty years will be in no wise abated. In national as in state and municipal affairs, official acts will be subjected to candid and impartial criticism. Honest measures of reform will meet with hearty commendation, but political charlatanism wiil be rebuked. In order to meet the demands of its country gatrons,‘amngements_ have been made wherey the Sunday addition of THE TIMES is circulated by means of special and fast trains from Chicago early on the day of its publication, | This edition of THE TIMES, as well as the Saturday issue, contains many valuable and interesting special departments, -

THE WEEKLY TIMES, Trne WEEKLY TiMes is a complete compendium of the news of the week, with special features of late and trustworthy market reports, and a department of industrial and agflcultural intelflgence carefully prepared by an editor of long experience, and is printed and mailed the morning of the day on which it is dated. In these respects. THE WEEKLY TIMES is sugerlor to any mere agricultural paper, for the field it covers is iniinitely more extensive than that which can be occupied by the “‘oneidea” press. “x _The subscription price of THE WEEKLY TiMES is only $1.25 per year, post,afie %repa.id. It is not believed that so many valuable and oomg;ehenswe a library of useful knowledlfe‘ can anyWwhere else obtained for so smalla sum. The endeavor willbe tomake THE WEEK-~ LY aFerfect newspaper for farmers and for 3:1 e es to whom it is not eonvenient to take a & Sample oogies ‘will be sent to any address on o&plloation y letter or otherwise to THE Tlvzrs office, corner Washington street and [ifth ave~ nye, Chicago, Til. : »

R TERMS. : ' Pgr year to subscribers, by mail, postage pre’i'%ie Daily and the8unday....,........... $l5 00 ‘The Daflly. Bix days in the week........... 13 0p .T)gtnaé y of Muesaay, Thursday and i MUXAAY rssusssiesnvsbansnansegrcacaninsis ; TbeFHdDaflyy of Monday, Wednesday and ¥ii e Dally oroday ifthe week. [ 11111 32 The Daily two daysin the week.......... ~ 450 ,’l‘heg‘&llgaot Batßrday os oo vl i 2 80 Fhe Bunday edition ... ioiveiiiiiiasin 260 %yvm:theelti"k 12 i ier in thy : week : /Tho Dally 856 the BUNGRY . /- cxeei. 30 %:Wee vquig1p‘yq\.‘,v..‘..............V...... Qg 3 R eR A A A kNSNS Nty s reaa e For Single SN Sy Or oeta R "

—e: T F URNITURE— " | /(o & ‘Wholesale and Retail Dealer in and Manufacturer of o = Chamber Suits, Bureaus, Extension Tables, Commodes, Wash - Stands, ;= i e o BWmDOD-EY WA De A full line of Epholstered Work made a specialty for the Retail Trade. ATT, KINDS OF FURNITURE! Kept on Hand at Prices to Suit the Times. = . Ligonier, March 20, 1884 =~ : | J. M. B ELTS. S — J. WL HIGGINBOTIH AM, o &% WATCHMAKER, &4 J /I D N a 0 % ",;):&5 AN g, LTe Weel . P SN Dol NS S QAL (i OFPTICIAN, R 4'_-. L —AND DEALER IN—WATCHES,CLOCKS, JEWELRY SILVER-WARE, SpECTAGiEE Musicallnstrumentsand Strings, &c. Ozpxnsforselections solicited. [Fitfed to allkinds Wwatches Clocks and Jewelry promptly and neatlyrepaired and wa:ranted.‘ sighton scientific I (ntnerThirdand Qavin Streets. Ligonier. Indians - . 188 prineiplee..

———lf you wish to Farm for Profit, BEAD A : ‘“HOW THE FARM PAYS,” 412 pages, $2.50 ——lf you wish to Garden for Profit, READ—— “GARDENING FOR PROFIT,” 300 page 3, $1.50 ——lf you wish to become a Florist, READ—— " PRACTICAL FLORICULTURE,” 300 pages, $1.50 . All By PETER HENDERSON. L Any of the zbove books mailed free on receipt of the rice. Our Catalogue for 1886, of 140 pages, containing descriptions and illustrations of the newest, beé‘t, and rarest SEEDS and PLANTS, will be mailed on receipt of 6 cts. in stamps to cover postage. . ; P t H| d rsSo & G 35 &31 Cortlandt St., BB NENCEISoNn & LD, ¥Ew YorE,

s COMBINED SCALES, YEASURE & DIPPER all oy €OO, .- 0o , o e~ - = ¢ s RS, T ey &£ e ——— S A W S Bl L o e AL gl s 4 St - et e S ’.‘dz‘;,fi:r b;%fi/a,;: ey & MONEY X SAVED ‘i - Prics 60 cents. ShEeErel o- . 5 by buying e = [ay //}f"fig‘ g - the best and cheapestin e {0 T . STI [:fi’qlf— ] : market, Our Scissorg o e > o el _,-,-/[:,/v%.; ’9”’l’;' A Sharpener will last al- g e =S “’/f,'l" i }"#fi;’,fl;.*fi"fi SE mostalifetime. Ev- s 3 L R YRR 4 Sy eryladyneeds one, 74 ) e SaTlte Nl 0 j g. > : T N gy VERYFAfiI nce sthes:geofisay u.cy are 7- - @ > bo~ E LYoo hbapest, “Ask - ‘-fi,—;,"fiimi = ' your dealerto getyou Globs Tonsters '\',lh-oi_Lers,-]BO. N /\‘fi?in' & 35¢. (very superiorarticles)Globe Fiunitand Jelly e 1‘;’?‘1“1‘?\} “icm Press, $1.25, hasno equal. Cake Mixer, stone powl Seiagors Sharpene (iR il j;fi;_ $1.75. Globe combined Thek Hammir,[Kettle Serap- - . 1‘2",;51- 200., 1',(,!1\!!”‘!1 o er Hot Pan Tifter,ls¢. Globe Sad Iron{fleatersaves = P L coal, 25¢., &e., &e. If your dealer is gntelub with Box 1047. neighbors send money tous &we will ghip direct. : CLOBE M’F’C CO., 926 Walnut St., Phila, Pa. 1550, 5o ! “IN UNLON THERE IS. STRENGTH.” i EANE The Bryant and Stratton guéin(:ss Coilege, it nen ‘ ,Indianapolis Business College (Recently owned by ‘.'O.v.li(férrlel'),,' L | i Bryants Business €ollcge and |7 Gt o e o , ¢ : : Granger’s Business Cd-ll eZe, e By regular purchase and transfer have been consolidated ynder the name of =~ =~ - ‘ o (BRYANT & STRAZTON) v - o 7 o A A i . : o ___~_/ 5 ¥ -i - ‘l_: % ? ; i ! : 1 ( . -. 5 . )/i. sl L () Wit R EAIE Aol 7 : N / o $ 5 \ /w/ R : ) L % Goy i ; When Block; North Pennsylvania St., Opp, Post Office. salanane e ; : TROOK, HEEB & REDMAX, Principals and Hropriétczs. i ol e i The only commercial school which hag béen permanent in-Indianapolis, Established 35 yvears, e TTTT T A A TRI Ll soto MU o 5 S LA A I S The only representative in Indiana ot the Bryant 4nd Stratton chain, The pnly institution of the kind in Indiana represented in the Business Educators Association of A 'n'eriqih e e e The Business Uniyersity comprises: The Original Indianapolis Business College, a Thoroughly Equipped Sho:jfh&nd, Type-writing and -Sr.errlograph School, an Institutéof Pennmanship, and a practical English Training School, Elocution and German, Evary possible facility for acquiring a thoroughly practical and sound Business - Education. ‘Studgnts Erégeive Class and Individual instruction and may enter at any time, We invite the most| critical eXxamination of this institution. Business men supplied with reliable ‘Book-keepers, "St_;e'no'graphcm Penmen and Clerks, .Send for University Joll:3{ial and full particulars, FREE. - -~ o ’ 20—17 Address, BUSINESS UNIVEXSITY Indianapolis. Ind. . -

ss e e s e i = ey S ;‘:’}ffix{‘ B = e== SR PLT = < e ) ! Bty RV laR T s e e ssl e ; B R Nl e e _ s B ‘_.a«'\"(\yt SENEE e Sy e . ¢ oty ‘ i 3 BVO a 0 o b : fa | iLy Ehasi e i B ). Iwy 10)sn ol ‘~§?{l«a’sl£§»{gf %fi%\:@‘g w“% || JJ_JVQ Es e 8 I Nee e P <&@ fo e Wil e e SRI e e aa i) TN e Glen sS v e SR e ; s S\ é’ffi:"‘f~?§e§?§ s SEe . R Elg eel U DAY VATIIW /,///7/5/;//;; 427 &,fif’/////;:g//, B ~(\‘»lFP\’.‘={§’»'T R o ’ = i ' o: b e Eme = o = o=l A peifect profectiqn of the bodies 7TSS e A t Uil ARANSR ST S '—,s}\3s,_?:: R o i el e L i @ e vou riendstiong professional e e ey re e na AN iy e . L SRR sy fn- rave r S 'min. g%_ = ?%%:%_fi% .;1;;? i grav robbers ,A_} 0, frgm vermin, VSR e S e | SS.. { e T aßee R se | potmal and denupne =—FOR SALEBY—— onudy f TRs . K R R. Ll HPR L PADING —FURNITURE DEAT HE.—— ——FINE FURNITURE OF ALL KINDS AT—- - © Ve Wonderfully IL.ow Prices. " Do not buy until yon call and examine my stock. An elegant Hearse is constantly in readiness and. the finest burial cases - : . and robes furnished' on short notice. - | 1 = .o -0 ‘ ' Particular Attention paid to Embalming.| -~ .. ©

TR i L NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. ./\.’\/'\‘/‘\'\.’\N\/\N\Af\/\/\/\l/\/\:/\/‘\f\/\/\/\ 2 ¥ FREE Cata K. B. CHAFFIN & CO., Richmond, Ve, i 8 1 have a positive remedy for the abeve disease; by its use thousands of cases of the worst kind and of Fong standing have been cured. Indeed, sostrongis my faith' in its efficacy, that T wiil send TWO BOTTLES FREE, together with a VALUABLE TREATISE on this disease to any sufferer. Give express and P. 0. addr:ss. DR.T. A. SLOCUM, 181 Pearl St., New York, EAFN ESS ATS CAUSES AND é ) CURE, I’iyone who was deaf twenty-eight years, Treated by most of the noted specialists of the day with.no benefit. CURED HIMSELF in three months, and since then hundreds of others by same process.‘ A plain, simple and successful home treatment,. | Address T. S. PAGE, 123 East 26th St. New York City. { 30-4 t RSR St R Al S e R T SRS T . | i When I say cure I do not mean merely to stop them'fora . time and then have them return again, I mg;n aradical cure. I have made the disease of FITS, EP’ or FALLING SICKNESS a life-long study. I warrant my remedy te cure the worst cases. Because others have failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure, BBend atoncefora treatise and & Free Bottle of my infallible remedy: Give Express and Post Office. It costs you nothing for a trial, and 1 will cure you! DR:. H. G, ROOT, 183 Pearl §t,, N. Y.,

- g #e o S Newspaper Advertising. B RTUERA TN LI o Reo MR . DAUCHY & CO., ‘ 27 Park Place & 24-26 Murray St., N. Y. Make lowest rates on all newspapers ‘ir_x the U.S.and Canada. Established 1867. . To those whose purpose may be accomplished by a short advertisement, or by a transient advertisement, and to whom prompt insertion is important, we recommend our ; POPULAR LOCAL LISTS: - 1,180 Daily and Weekly newspapers, divided into sections, #* i Alluldggme-prlnt papers—no co-operatives in= e . ; s These papers have a MONTHLY circulaticn of ver ’ : ELEVEN MILLION COPIES. Send for new Catalogne just out, Parties contemplating a line of advertising, large or small, are requested to send for estimate .of cost. ~, Please name this paper.’ o 1

RSO NeckoE

A Life Experience. Remarksble and qQuick cures. Trial Packages. Send stamp for sealed particulars. Address Dr. WARD & CO. Louisiana, Mo.

WANTED | ENERGETIO, PUSHING SALESMEN to sellal kinds of Nurser&,)swok. I guarantee steady emglozmentbg;ud- sgiccessful sslesmen I pay a 8 higl as?l r month and exgg‘lges. %pply immediately, gfiv?ng age. R, B. KNIFFI / Nurseryman, Rochester, N, Y. 5y (Refer ot this paper.) 2

| DR e l CpRPERTER CAIL UL | N . | - STHE fEa GENUINE MERIT Sl . of this most ' - -« VALUABLE DISCOVERY " .isfully evineedt by its e iy Unparalelled Success : . inthe treatment of = ° Diabetes, Gravel, ‘gtone in the Kidneys and Bladder, Inflammasdtion |of Kidneys andi Bladder, Brights Disease, Liver Com- . / pluint and Utering Inflammmation, : It hasalsoigiven | ¢ Wonderful Relief . - and cured hundreds of cases of = ~ Dyspepsia, Ncuralgia and Rh‘eumatipm.' Satisfy Yourself - %to the truth of the above by usiog faithfully six bottles, and, as v ] - Proof of Our Faith ' sghould you fail to derive' = -

| Satisfactory Benefits ,|we will refund your five dollars, upon applica- ® tion through® yo rdruggisfi; ,‘ ‘Calculi Resolvent Manuf’g C 0.,, 3| . 70 Water Street, Cleveland, O. . Sold bX Will McDonald "[Eldred & Son. E. E. Reed an ,D.S.’Scoct&So.v i : | S : b 2 g 5 /A LECTURE TO OUNGMENi , © ON THE LOSS OF -

4 x ? ‘x\*”):.,‘*"“‘:il J-'»:;-*i:i:-:‘ '27 . Fra s gLA et aY By 545 Dl OHORDS | emh S R S g

I LTS RSN | A Lecture on the | Nature, Treat{ment and Radical cure of Seminal Weak: ness, or_ Spermatorrhoes, induced by . SelfAbuse, Involuntary Emijssions, Imgootenoy, Nervous Debility, and Impediments MMapriage generally, Consumption, Epilepsy and Fits, Mental and Phfisical Incapacity, &c.—By ROBERT J, CULVERWELL, M, D. _ . The world-renowned author, in this admirable Lecture, elearly proves from’ his own experience that the awful vonsequences of SelfAbuse may be effectually remoyved without dangerous surgical” operations, bogies, instruments, ringB or cordials; pointing out a mode of cure at'once certain and effectual, by which every sufferer, no matter what his congdition ma({ he, may cure himself cheaply, privately and radically, : ; TR A A 8# " This lecture will prove a-boon to thouse W Gl % i Jope 1o any nt under seals in a plain envelope, ‘addr'egs‘ on ‘reeeix%t of four cents or two-post~ 4 SEHM GULY BRWELT, MEDICAT: €O, 41 Ann St., New York, N. Y., Postoffice Box 450 OR SALE-Wo have jon hand a barrel of Reabgs s et a o L “‘_\ A ‘_\":h RYR e Tieor i e

Rail Road Directory, ' LAEE SHORE Mich. Southern Rail Road. Onand after May‘ 24, 1885, ‘tmins will leave this . 3 ; Btation as follows: 3

. GOING EAST el No-2, Specidl New York Expre55......... 138 pm No 8, Atlantic Expre55...................12 28pm No 82, Way Freight to 8ut1er........... 10 25am No. 64, Way Freight to Butler,.. +......7:45. pm .~ GOING WEST.- _ ‘ No 3, Special Chicago Expré55........... 255 pm No 9, Pacific EXPre55........i.. ccoieeeoes 305 am No 83, Way Freight to E1khart...........1215pm No: 61, Way Freight to Elkhart..._.. vene 845 am | Atlantic and Pacific Express train leaves daily lbeth ways. : ‘ g : {P. P. WRIGHT, Gen’l'Supt, Cleveland, O. IW. P, JOHNSON, Gen'l Pass. Ag't, Chicago, I}s 'F. J. ELLERMAN, Agent, Ligonier, Ind.

e = e g Wi ; Cincinnati, Wabash & Mich.R. R . | Timetable, taking effect June, 1885, - { SOUTH. J NORTH. 4 No. 4. | No. 2. {AStations,L| No, 1, | No. 3. 205 pmilo 15 pujindianapohs | 4 00 amll U 5 am 1230 838 pm, Audc;rson‘J.. ! 530 pml23spm 11204 8409 -Alexandria.| 555 100 . lii7am| 715 ..-Marion.. | 641 14% 1629 623 - |...Wabash..{ 743 245 945 ', 1940° N.Manchestr: 816 318 L-900 456 .. Warsaw..!| 9. 402 pm 831 430 -..Milford...| yoB 430 817 416 | New Paris.'] 948 443 802 403 ...Gos'flen...’ 856 456 | 780 am| 340 pm|L. Elkhart.A (1020 - 5 18pm’ 655 287 - |....Ni1e5.....[1106pm 600 pra 600 am| 205 l Benton liarbr 119 00 pm 700 pny 1180 pm| 850 |.. Chicago...| 800" : 900 pm Through ceaches will be run on trains Nos, 8 and 4 between Elkhart and Indianapolis. Through coaches between Benton Harbor and Indianapolis, on trains at the Harbor 6 :30 a,m, and 7:15 p. m.—on other trains ecars are changed at Union Depof, Anderson. Traing leave Union Degot., Indianapolis, via Bee Line, - NORMAN BECKLEY, Gen. Man.

; . MONON nov-,flcu ; = Rt S e i Are You ‘Go,hix to New Orleans or Sy " Florida? [ <lf 8o you can go via. the Monon Route, via. Louisville or Cincinnati, and see the Mammoth Cave, Nashville Blount Springs, Birmingham* Montgomery, Mobile and the Gulf coast for the same money that will take You through the dreary, uninhabited Mississippi swamps; we are confident fiou cannot seiect a line to the South enjoying half the advantages that are POsSessed bv, the Monon Routeand its southern conk’ nections, ' i s ; - No one should think of going South withont; visiting the Mammoth Cave, the great natural wonder of this continent. -8o much has been - written of this world-famous wonder, that it is impossible to say anything new in régard to it ‘—it can not be described; its cavern must be -‘explored, its darkness felt, its beauties seen, to be appreciated or realized. It is the greatest .n_at.aral curiosity—Niagara not excepted—and he’whose expectations are not satistied by its - marvelous avenues, domes and starry grottos must ecither be a fool or a demi-eod. From "Mohile to New Orleans (141 miles) the ride alone is worth-the entire cost of the whole trip. Im full'sight of the Gulf all the way, past ©cean Springs, Mississii)pi City, Pass Christian, Bay ;)t, Louis, and Jeauvoir, the 1 ome of Jeit Davis, i : ; ! When you decide to go South make up your mind to travel over the line that passes through the best.country and gives you the best places to stop oveér. This is emphatieally” the Monon Route, in connection -with .the Louisville & - Nashville and the Cincinnati Southern Railways, Pullman Palace Sleepers, Palace Coaches, Double Daily trains, the. best to ‘Cincinnati, Louisyille, New Orleans or Florida. For full in_i‘ornmtion,fl(sscripfivfs books, pamplets, ete.: address any agent of the company, or Robext - Emmett; District Passenger Agt., No. 25 Sou%h Illinois Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. '

= T ———— R ¢ Qe et 1= VA SN T T G M ) A e PTG S W N v e o 4 1,,, BT B seßTe oy 20 L ~':l'4':\'};\va\'-uly--\,:f i R 0 A s e g DT PR e (éé AV T T ’t; NP R Y B £ = o S S e Positive force feed for grain, grass seed and fer” tilizers. No gears to change. Gates in distributors connected with pointersto dialsindicate quantities instantly, Will sow kidney beans, corn and all grains evenly, without cracking, Will distribute sticky phosphates, plaster and ashes when sothersfail. Best spring hoe in use. CROWN GRASS SEEDER. : e é!!'.»,;.—-—*— = e LT e T TG e SN /- 3 s " \-,,;gM\h e gty 3 Tl et oty iy ASt e e, T S YA s i Graduated tosow from 3to 25 Ibs. clover or grass €ced per acre. Very strong and durable. Wood and gas pipe frames, all iron wheel, wire agitator =np cord, Not expensive: will repay cost firs season and last for years. First preminm! Everywhere exhibited. , CROWN' REVERSIBLE COMBINATION MAY CARRIER AND SHIR SLINGS. Hasnoequal incapacity and quickness, Saves timeand labor. Our goodsaremade of best materiald by skilled workmen, and fully warranted. Send for Circulir to CROWN MFG. cc,, Phelps, N.Ya ga-Mention this papery SR e e N A

T FOTe L Toy LEFFET, 'S . IMPROVEDIRON 252, Wid Eingino. 8 iy o o A L : ey -5 oo = === Il L’%fj e e et | 1] et = R = i Y, o i 4?\ m. o I Wk e ‘o [ NS | . ALL THE PARTS MADE QF MALLEABLE & WROUGHT IRCH ~ No Shrinking, Swelling er Warping: -TaE Lr::gz‘rxsr Rq:«;':;,_g;x-m;rwr a ;xd Easresr REGULATERSWIND ENGINE in the WORLD. ‘itha BEST is CHEAPLST. Scnd for Cix-culz;:-s to tho SPRINGFIELD MACGHIRE 6T _____ Springtield, Olie, e,% ‘ e ST | ANDLIGHT SPRING WORK TOn 2 i - o : Hotels & Livery.: AGENTS WANTED £S3.Qasins Arva: e WE MARE' - Hose Reels, Hook & Ladder Trucks, Patrol Wagoens, &c. And Fit Out Fire Departments Complate. And good men of influence can make _ fayorable arrangements with us. * - HORTON & CO., 53, 66, 57 & 59 East sth Streei, Lol CINCINNATL O, A

= FREE! - £ ; 3% RELIABLE SELF-CURE g ' - 2 s e A favorite prescription of one of tha most noted and successful s%gciallsts in the U.S. gxgw retired) for the cure of Nervous Debility, st Manhood, Weakness and Decay. Sent inplainsealed envelope free. Druggistscan fill it, Address DR. WARD & CO., Louisiana, Mo.

R FEe = TN ) " A QUICK. PERMANCNT, CERTAIN CUREFOR Losg orFailing Manhood, Nervousness Wealmess, Laok of Strenfth, Vigor or Development, : “QOausad by indiseretions, excesses,’stc Benefitein n day; Cuares usually 3v_ith'£n a month, No Deception | Rieb Rt L AT Eeuied o don 4nd ERIE MBDICAL G 0 P.O: Drawer 190, Bufeio, N.Y ATCH The Crai({; ¥olding Incubator and Broodor stiombined) is the ‘cheapest and best, ~ Will hateh from 1,200 to 1,500 chicks per year, worth as broilers [from $4 to $l2 per dozen. Pleasant and profita~ ole at all seasons. * No cost or experience to Rpemte. Hr;)lds 100 egrgs, Price, $l2 ggélp!gte. : Any one ca z T a few -ohigken,s. AuGHICKS BYabaolute ; la;xene% Perfect imi_t.%tian v&fi the hen. Igc; mpeto explode. Ten hens pay $2OO : per year, 50 humgfed incubators in use. 8?3& universal satistaction. A Send stampfor @ BB new 39-pp, book on poultry, incabators, SN btfiwv eontans A % eto. D, CRAIG, Manufacrad §GI . North svinston, Cook Ol m o el