Ligonier Banner., Volume 23, Number 46, Ligonier, Noble County, 28 February 1889 — Page 4
The Ligonier Banner,
THE BANNER PUBLISHING COMPANY.
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 28, 1889,
THIS GLORIOUS REPUBLIC DOW coOnsists of forty-two states. All hail to the American Union!
INDIANAPOLIS HOTELS notice quite a shrinkage in their receipts since Harrison’s departure for Washington.,
OF the 254 members of the Pennsylvania Legislature all but about a half dozen are natives of that commonwealth. L :
I'ae LaPorte Argus thinks Gen. Walter Q. Gresham will be the democratic candidate for the Presidency in 1892. Ten to one he won’t.
PrESIDENT CLEVELAND covered himself with glory in signing the bill for the admission of the Dakotas, Washington and Montana, on Washington's birthday.
THr - Indiana House of Representatives on Thursday voted down the proposed fee and salary bill (Foster’s) by a decisive majority. It would be a remaljkable thing, indeed, if the Legislature did not have to wrestle with fees and salaries everv two vears.
THE sELECTION of Hon. Robert Lowry asone .of the five supreme court commissioners of this state will add to that tribunal one of the most competent, efficient, and clear-headed jurists in the state. = Friend and foe alike admit his eginent fitness for the bench.
. THE U. 8. Senate, after the fourth of March, will consist of 39 Republicans and 37 Democrats. A little later on eight Republicans will be added from the newly-admitted States. The republican majority in the Senate will then be ten. ; A
NoriNg ¢ne premature announcement of a Southern Indianian’s candidacy for the State Auditorship in 1892, the Fort Wayne Sentinel correctly and prophetically says: ‘Political flowers that bud so early will be plucked first.” They will, dead certain. ‘
THE FREE TRADE CONVENTION held at Chicago during the past week can hardly be called a howling success. There was a good deal ‘of wild, incoherent talk, but a practical solution of the real question before the couatry was not attempted. It wasn't that kind of a eonvention.
THE Cincinnati C ommercial Gazette offers to prove that Blaine carried New York in 1884 instead of Cleveland, and
that the former was therefore elected. As Cleyeland has about served four years, we can see of no way to help Mr. Blaine to the fruits of his alleged election except by allowing him to take
the chair on the 4th of March instead of Gen. Harrison. ‘
WitH the addition of such able and experienced jurists as Niblack, Lowry, New, etc., to the supreme bench of the state, there is every reason to believe that the accumulated cases on the ¢ocket of that tribunal will in a few months be materially reduced. The new commissioners are capable of doing a great deal of work in determining points of law.
THE newly chosen board of trustees of the state institution for the blind consists of J. B. Stoll, of South Bend, and Terry J. Cullen and J. W. Riley, of Indianapolis. The superintendent of that institution is Prof. Jacobs, formerly .of New Albany. He has managed the asylum with consummate ability and will doubtless be continued in his present position.
IT LOOKS very much as if the Harrison administration were about to encounter some of the difficulties that embarrassed the Garfield regime during its brief existence, Tom Platt represents the professional politicians, while the ‘‘better element’’ ties its faith to Warner Miller. Any failure to duly recognize Platt and his gang will inevitably lead to trouble. .
THE CAMPAIGN 1n Pennsylvania over the prohibition amendment bids fair to become very lively. Already a great deal of hard work is being done on both sides. Heretofore Pennsylvania has been regarded as decidedly opposed to prohibition, but in recent years the prohibition sentiment has made wonderful progress in certain counties. At present the result is set down as extremely doubtful.
IT 1S A BROAD STATEMENT—but the authority of Hon. Hugh McCulloch is good—that no bank in the United States, the capital of which was a cash realty, and whose managers were not thieves or the borrowers of its money, has ever failed. All bank failures he asserts are fraundulent, and all who are responsible for such failures are betrayers of trusts and should be punished as criminals. : " THE INDICATIONS are that neither New York nor Indiana will have a change in their laws regulating the . liquor traffic. In New York the republican legislative majority can’t come to an agreement, and in Indiana the democratic legislative majority will met gonsider either high license or focal epgion. This is simply staving woff the day of judgment. Public senti- - gmment will demgnd action at a time _ swhen polltical teumpers snd time- . wuvew losst expect .
THE present superintendent of the insane asylum at I.ogansport—Dr. Rogers—has proven himself a man eminently fitted for the position, and from all we can learn; he will be retained under the new management.
THE final happy termination of the protracted senatorial ‘contest in West Virginia shows the adyantage of an aspirant having a good deal of sticktoitiveness in his make-up. But for this quality John E. Kenna would now be politicallp\ a dead duck instead of a live Senator. ‘ el
~ THE LONGEST SPEECH ever printed in the Congressional Record was that of Senator Jones, of Neyada, on the silver question some eight or ten years ago. It would have made a portly volume and contained a mine of information. Competent judges generally regard this the ablest and mostexhaustive speech ever delivered in the American Congress on the subject of finance. It has never been answered.
DemccraTs and Republicans alike, in this locality, feel greatly pleased over the selection of ex-Sheriff David Hough as one of the trustees of the Logansport asylum for the insane. Mr. Hough enjoys in an eminent degree the respect and confidence of all who appreciate a good, generous heart and sterling manliness. When such' men as David - Hough are placed at the head ot our benevolent institutions, the people may rest assured that no abuses in their management will be tolerated, much less encouraged. , , ‘
TaE vOTE in the democratic legislative caucus for three trustees of the blind asylum stood as follows: John W. Riley, of Indianapolis, 56;J. B. Stoll, of South Bend, 55; T. J. Cullen, of Indianapolis, 46; John W. Piercy, of Putnam county, 30; Dr. W. B. Miles, of Spencer, 30; T. W. W. Sunman, 28; James R. Ryan, 9. Two of the nominees (Cullen and Stoll) did not seek the position. They simply agreed to serve if chosen, withotit any eflfort on their part. The same is true as to David Hough and L. F. Baker, two of the trustees of the Logansport asylum.
- AFTER enjoying the emoluments of the office of civil service commissioner for about three years, Mr. Alfred P. Edgerton expresses the following views about the civil seryice law: ‘““The law isn’t worth a blank. It’s too blanked nice. It reminds me of the yery particular housewife, who, when expecting company, whitewashed the woodpile and put the cow’s tail in curling papers.”’ It is needless tosay that this opinion is whoily at variance with the views expressed by Mr. Edgerton before President Cleveland gave him the grand bounce.
Levi Mock, J. W. French and James Renihan, the men who constitute the new prison directory, the Michigan City Dispatch assures us, ‘‘are good selections. All have had more of less experience in public life and will manage the great state institution well.” Mock and French were formerly members ot the Legislature, the former r':apresenting Wells county in the House and the latter the counties of Posey and Gibson in the Senate. The new board will vote unanimously for the re-election' of Warden Murdock, whose efficient and intelligent management of the northern prison gives universal satisfaction. .
THE action of the House of Representatives in agreeing to admit four
new states into the Union—North and South Dakota, Montana and Washington—adds a new feather to a democratic cap. These states ‘are expected to send republican representatives to Congress, but the democratic party would not stand in the way of the expansion of the nation, by a little circumstance like that. It does not despair of holding its own even in the new states, but (adopting the language ot the Albany Times) whether it be disappointed in that particular or not, it is for the Union, great and glorious—as big as it can be—all the time. .
THE ADVANCE GUARD of the army of office-seekers who will harass the soul of Benjamin Harrison for many months to come has arrived at Washington, and its members are encamped at the most eligible sites that can be commanded by their present supply of cash. As time goes on and their money runs short they will remove to humbler quarters, and each descent in the social scale will intensify the pangs that come from deferred hope. The life of the office-seeker is most unhappy, but no man is forced to it against his inclinations. As an esteemed contemporary puts it, there is no pressing demand af the present time to lavish any particular sympathy upon these people. | ;
INDIANIANS have every reason to feel proud of their elegant new state house, and still more so over the fact that it was honestly built by honest men. Unlike other states, the people of Indiana have not been compelled to pay twice the sum originally set apart for a new state house. As contrasted with New York, Indiana’s showing for integrity is very striking. In this state ‘the building was erected at its esti‘mated cost—s2,ooo,ooo; in New York the state house was to cost $4.000,000, About eighteen millions have already been expended on that structure, though it is not yet completed and will doubtless require large sums of ‘money before the finishing touches are| e
IT MEANS A GOOD DEAL,
A very:significant vote was taken in the House of Representatives at Washington last Friday. The victory won by Samuel J. Randall was an abselute trinmph, from the rewards and honors of which no unseemly and ill-directed vituperation of the free-trtade yawpers can rob him.. Though the contest between him and Mr. Mills was upon the question of abolishing or reducing the internal revenue, its actual basis was upon the wvital question of protection and free trade. The old original Mills bill is dead long ago. The pretense of an effort to revive it was futile. As the Albany Times puts it, *“Were it the best and most patriotic measure ever presented, the proposition in an expiring congress to reyive it was a species of reckless bravado that amounted to criminality in a waste of the people’s vtime and opportunities. When Mr. Randall therefore put himself where nature inteaded him, as the people’s leader against this attempt, he performed a patriotic act, and as usually happens where the slightest fair play attends him, he was successful. By his skillful mancuvering the Mills project to revive the old Mills bill was defeated by a vote of 143 to 88, and his motions to press the Cowles bill, which provides for the reduction of the internal revenue, were agreed to., This is a big step toward the needed reduction of the surplus taxation. It is a substantial meeting of that condition, not a theory, which confronted us last year, although the manner of meeting it is one which the President condemned.” While it is true that the vote of 88 for the Mills reselution was comprised entirely of Democrats, it is of the highest significance that it represents but little more than half of the democratic representatives constituting the Fiftieth Congress. The southern Democrats who voted with Mr. Randall and against Mills constitute a hotable force in the solid South. It is a force that a wise Democracy at the North will not antagonize. It comprised representatives from Virginia, Georgia, North and Seuth Carolina, Texas, and Tennessee—the entire democratic delegation of North Carolina yoting with Mr. Randall. Half of the democratic delegation from the great state of New York voted the same way. Noting this, a leading democratic paper of the Empire state says: “Right and principle are above all. A condition that confronted us has been met and the onerous burden of taxation may be reduced without danger to the rights of labor or the invasion of America by England, and Samuel J. Randall is a leader worthy of democratic following.” One thing is evident: Mr. Mills will roost a geod deal lower in the future than he has during the past:two years. His power is broken. Conservatiye men will henceforth marshal the democratic forces in Congress.
LET US HAVE PEACE!
'The ‘‘southern question” was discussed in both branches of Cengress the middle part of last week, and in the House some wholesome truths were uttered which are not likely to be agreeable to some members of the republican party. . It was affirmed that northern men who are exhibiting so much solicitude for the condition of the South would exhibit wisdom if they would seek to correct electoral abuses in their own state before they sought to purify the ballot box of the }South. In the Senate, Mr. Evarts emerged from the slumber in which he seems to have been plunged for ‘months—for it was so long since he had been heard from that people were beginning to believe he had departed this life—to declare that changes in the election laws of the South were imperatively demanded. : This appears to be the predominating republican opinion. No demands are heard for changes in states where votes are cast in ‘‘blocks of five,”’ for republican candidates. Only in the South is special legislation asked for. But the republicam policy is not to stop with election laws. Gen. Harrison has given his faithful newspaper organs to understand that a new departure in dealing with southern affairs will be witnessed when he gets on deck with the captain’s trumpet at his lips. Peace to that distracted section will be at once restored. Everybody will have his vote counted as it is cast, and presumably greenbacks will be planted in the field, from which crops of dollars will be gathered by everybody who will take the trouble to pluck them. The truth of Mickey Free's story will be 'confirmed, and pigs already roasted, with knives and. forks sticking in them, will go racing and chasing about, crying ‘“Coms eat me, comp eat me.”’ 5
- This will necessitate a new and special policy for the South; for such a blessed state of affairs can not be brought about under ordinary laws. But to that new policy the peonle of the South especially object. They declare that they do not want to be subject to a peculiar and sectional poliey. They want to be let alone. They insist upon living under the same laws that prevail in other parts of the country. They contend that they are competent to work out their own destiny, and looking at the results wrought by republican hyod]e and intimidation in the North; candor compels the statement that they are doing quite as well as the northern Republicans who would reform them out of hand. | The appeal of the South to be let alone is one that should be heeded. An attempt to goyern it by special laws will not be countenanced or endorsed by patriotic citizens who would preserve the simplicity and the strength of our system of goye:nment. .
THE DUTY OF THE HOUR.
What Should be Done for the Moral Edu- . cation of the Young?
Dr. Felix Adler, the noted New York philosopher, recently lectured at Plymouth Church, Indianapolis, to a large audience on *“T'he Moral Education of the Young.” = He said that the question was sometimes raised whether the present generation is better or worse than those that have preceded it, which he regarded as an idle discussion. Better or worse, the fact 1s that, despite our material advance and our material success, morally speaking, our condition is bad enough, in all conscience. The physician whispers into our ears tales of shocking practices that haye found entrance even
into respectable homes and are polluting the sources of family life; the lawyer tells us—or could tell us—tales of crookedness tommitted by persons who are the respectables of the land, and who would resent, withindignation, any imputation upon their honor. Our political life is in some places-like an open sink, and the stench-of corruption that was recently emitted still fires the atmosphere. Among the lower classes not only does crime still stalk abroad as of yore, but new forms of crime haye been invented which our ancestors did not know. The question arises whether we are doing eyerything in our power to preyent these evilconditions and to bring a better state of society. Among the means which have been suggested to this end, the inclusion of moral instruction in our public schools deserves and receiyes frejuent consideration—unsectarian moral instruction.
The Doctor said he was speaking from twelve years’ experience, having conducted such a'school for that periody He did not propose to offer a specific. He was impressed with the gravity of the situation. We are in the béginning of American civilization—we are sixty millions; a few generations from now there will be one hundred millions, and the vacant spaces of the land will be filled with a toiling, seething, surging multitude, which knows and can know but that which itself prescribes—no laws but such as are the outcome of this natural detéermination. THE FUTURE OF OUR AMERICAN COMMONWEALTH depends upon nothing so much as the lawful, meral timber of the community. Since the task is so grave, and the situation so fraught with perils, every device which can be suggested, every auxiliary in the work of charac-‘ter-building, deserves a respectful hearing. : ‘As one of.the instrumentalities which will help in this work, he suggested a consideration of the system of moral teaching. Among the forces that tell in the formation of character, example stands first. There is the example of home, but that Christian homes, religious homes, do not suffice to build up the characters which are needed, 1s shown by the fact that the boy goes out of them and becomes a man, and succumbs to all the yices which public opinion eondemns. It is shown that home influence alone is not enongh. Then, in the building up of characters, we must consider heredity, study to modify it or to enhance it. We must consider environment and all the forces which tell .in the formation of character.- Moral instruction is an attempt to reach the will through the mind. The fact that the mind, the intellect, is one of the most potent factorsin the shaping of character is often overlooked. The office of the intellect in shaping the government of the will is of first importance.
In the system of unsectarian meral teaching in the schools there must be no attempt to blend or confuse with it religious teaching. Religious instruection may be of benefit, but in the public schools we cannoet teach it. In Germany it has been tried and has not been satisfactory. There are many different sects. We could not attempt to unite on anything upon which all could agree. To leave out all the differences which divide the sects would not do. To leave out those differences would be simply to construet some bare abstractions which would haye no power and conld give no satisfaction. In this coutest the state is divorced from the church, and the church is wise enough to perceive that this relation should be separate. ‘
THE CHIEF AIIM OF TEACHING.
Doctor Adler then proceeded to show his system of teaching. He said the chief aim should be to teach the
younz child the duties of life. 1@ many adults, otherwise intelligen men and women, could, if asked, give an intelligent account of the c%xief duties of life® Not the duties mentioned in the Decalogue, which cover a very narrow part of the moraledield. Most men possess no knowledge of duty, no knowledge of morality, but a certain meoral -instinct. They have never clearly analyzed the principles upon which they act. Is-it possible to make young children reflect upon the principles that underlie the. conduct of life? The aim in moral teaching isto %jve the young an idea of the main dues of life—first, the duties relating to the body, temperanee, purity, ete.; secondly, the duties of the intellect—and these are based upon the principle that knowledge is to be sought for its own sake. The child should study his lesson solely for the approval of its ewn conscience. )
The lecturer then took up the yarious duties of life. There were the duties that relate to the feelings. The principle of unselfishness applies to the feelings, bat not to the whole territory of morality, asit is sometimes puf. Then there are anger, pride, difnity and the like. Then cowme the duties that relate to our relations with others —respect for the life of others, for the property of others. , Then there is truthfulness; fidelity in keeping promises. There are duties which we owe to all men as men; duties which arise in our special relations .to -others; duties that arise in the family; duties which parents owe their children; which children owe their parents; brothers to sisters and sisters to brothers; duties which older brethers and sisters owe to younger brothers and sisters, and converse}{y. How many younger brothers and sisters suffer from the tyranny of older brothersand sisters, because those dutieshave never been set glearly before their minds, or been insisted upon by their parents? The duties to the state, to friendship, and the duties we owe to future generations—to humanity which is to be, The Doctor exemyivlified his teaching the young, giving illustrations of difforont kinds ot gfi,fixm and showog how their morsl porcapiion. was edioated to distinguish tho Fight trom
wronig, and to take each at its true value. This was exceedingly interesting, but too long for a newspaper report. Definition, he held, was the first thing to discover the guises and disguises which falsehood assumes. After analysis we know
THE CAUSES THAT LEAD TO FALSEHOOD and can find the remedy. Fear isone. The child’s fear of punishment leads it into falsehood, and the parent is even more to blame than the child. Hope of gain, exaggeration, vanity are other canses. A lively imagination leads to falsehood. Many children are betrayed by their imaginations. Not alllies are equally damning; there are faisehoods that are almost venial. One remedy is to curb the imagination. Teach the child the practical of things life. In each case make a diagnosis of the lie; classify and clarify. The love of children, as often observed, is not as intense as that we bear them. ‘The children do not love the parents as deeply asthe parents love the children. I?lhat is partly due to our own mistake. Children take the benefits they receive from parents as a matter of course. The teacher can make clear to the child what the parents have done for it. The analysis of the best proverbsis admirable training. Such proverbs as ¢‘The beginning of wisdom is to desire wisdom,”’ “The prompt man can stand before kings.”” Letan indolent child commit that proverb and analyze it, or this on fortitude, ‘‘lf thou art faint on the day of adversity thy strength is small.” Dr. Adler quoted a number of other proverbs, among them some from Buddah. <¢He that has a good eye shall be pleased.”” Much can be done, he said, in systematic moral teaching if one only turns his attention mn that direction. Let the young children repeat the prophesies of Isaiah; let them repeat the sweet and tender speeches of Jesus; the dying words of Socrates before his judges, than which no nobler composition has been penned by human hand. Let them repeat the words of Lovejoy, his dying words, for as we repeat we put on for a time the language of the man -whose sentiments we utter; the feelings which are upon our tongue are reflected upon our heart, and leave their mark there for good. In this system of moral teaching patriotism also should be taught. ‘ OUR YOUNG GIRLS. : Qur young girls should study, and know, and be familiar with such wo-. ‘men as Margaret Fuller, Mary Somerville, Florence nghtin%ale. Victoria Colonna. Boys and girls should feed upon these high characters; should know the life of Socrates, of the philanthropist Howard; lives of great scientists, leaders and thinkers; of Sir Thomas More, one of the greatest souls that ever lived, whe is hardly known to thousands and tens of thousands. These great examples should be held. up to children, for they make them familiar with those who are one’s pride and honor. In religion there will always be difference of opinion, and there must be. It is foolish to attempt unanimity; that is impossible. But in the work of moral development there ought not to be any diversity, any difference. lln the work of moral training there is no reason we should be divided. @Whether praying for the kingdom of everlasting righteousness or not, we can always: work for the kingdom of righteousness hand in hand and heart to heart together.
DIED.
On the Haw-Patch, February 25, 1889, Mr. Samuel Hartzler, aged 59 vears, 3 months and 17 days. Funeral took place from Maple Grove church, Rev. Fink, of Eikhart, officiating.
At her home, two and a quarter miles northeast of Ligonier, Saturday, Feb. 23, 1889, MRs. MARY LININGER, wife of Mr. Josiah Lininger; aged 67 years, 1 month and 25 days. Mrs. Lininger was born in Fayette county, Ohio, December 28, 1821, and emigrated with her parents in the fall of 1834, settling near the present site of Wawaka. She married Mr. Joel Herriam, of Noble county, in 1844, Her husband and only child both died within five years, and she again married in 1854, Mr. Josiah Lininger, of Noble county, who with one son survive to mourn her loss. The deceased lady had a wide circle of friends, who will sincerely sympathize with these stricken relatives in their bereavement,
CARD OF THANKS. We wish to express our sincere thanks to our many friends who so kindly lent a helping hand during the late illness and death of our wife and mother. : ' -1 JosiaH LININGER AND FAMILY. , The Jurymen,
The following are the names of the Jurymen for the March term of the Noble Circuit Court:
GRAND JURY. Henry Stump, Elkhart; John Weir, Perry; George Perry, Swan; Wm. Slabaugh, Sparta; Wm. Hooper, Allen; J. H. Hottman, Perry. . PETIT JURY. Samuel Braden, Jr., Noble; E. L. Teagarden, Albion; Geo. W. Easterday, Green; David Wysong, Perry; V. A. Stewart, Noble; E. B. Spencer, Wayne; Ira M. King, Swan; Elisha Blackman, York; R. L. Myers, Orange; Wm. Cushing, Wayne; James Godfrey, Washington; James H. Fisher, Orange. B ( ‘““;t:fizfi ) l prangd - s | Sl g RKT v -~ Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varies. A marvel of puri. ty, strength and wholesomeness, }lol‘9 economical than the ordin«ry kinds, and eannot be sold in eompetition with the multitude of low test, short welght, alum or phosphate powders, Soid only in cans, : : i RovAr Bagrva Pownrr Cn , 106 Wall Street, Now Yoik,
S A \’ 3 : - T ".:‘f A ‘ }Lil:— - ; v eo~ 7 4 527 . g —~ M, o= - h— e N W —— T = . = L e S . > &£ . N T 3 O — - S, = q ;‘:.‘ P e : £ AL 4 o gl eLG O o i }o ‘ .u»“{-;".;f}: : It don’t pay to run after other S : # i A;;;"i":'-."‘.l SR brands, for in the end wise houseM G ‘s‘ ,A( E — keepers settle down to the use =. F% &Q@SAR of SANTA CLAUS SOAP. 5 g © .-_\\ =3~ S If your grocer hasn’t Santa Claus MADE ONLY BY ° - Soap, he'll get it for you. . N. K. FAIRBANK & €O.;Chicago, 111.
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The Oliver Chilled and Steel Plows, of which the No. 405 is the bestin the market. Every farmer who has ever tried :ene says so-—try one. The original and best three wheeled Sulky Plow--The Flying Dntchman, Jr. Call and examine it before you buj——' it beats them all. The new !
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APPLICATION FOR LICENSE,
~ NOTICE is hereby given to the. citizens of Elkhart townsbip and the village of Wawaka, -in Noble county and State of Indiana, that the undersigned will make application to the Board of Commissioners :at their regular sesgion, commencing the first Monday in March, 1889, for license to retail spirituous, vinous and malt liquors in less quantities than a quart at a time, with the privilege «f allowing the same to be drank on the premises where sold. The premises on which I desire to sell said liquors are as follows: In aroom on the ground floor of a one-story frame building, forty (40) feet deep by twenty (20) feet wide, located on lot forts -four (44), in the original plat of the vilage of Wawaka, l%oble county, Indiana. JARVIS LEROY LANDON, Wawaka, Ind., Feb, 1, 1889, 4 e R eol e . { S APPLICATION FOR LICENSE. : l
Notice is hereby given to the citizens of Perry townsh? and the town of Ligonier,ln Noble countg’ and State of Indiana, that the undersigned will make application to the Board of Commissioners at their reg:ular session, commencing the first Monday in March, 1889, for license to retail spirituous, vinuous and malt liguors in less quantities than a quart at a time, with the privilege of baving the same drank on the premises where sold., The premises on whicg 1 desire to sell said li(%mrs are, in front room fifty-six &5]6) feet deep by twenty-two (22) feet wide. with wareroom nineteen (19) feet deep by twenty-two (22) feet wide attached, all on the first floor of the two st.or%brick building seventy-six (76) teet in depth by twenty-two (22) feet in width, situated on the north onethird (3¢) of Lot No. twenty seven (27) in the original plat of the town of Ligonier, in eounty of Noble and State of Indiana, | : FERDINAND ACKERMAN. January 80th, 1889, : APPLICATION FOR LICENSE. : NOT!OE is_hereby given to the citizens of Ligonier and Perr{ township, in Noble county State ot Indiana, that the undersigned will apply to the board of commissioners at tkeir next regular session, commencln% Monday, March 4, 188 y, for a license to retai s?iritous. vinous and malt liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time,with the privilege of allowing thesame te be drank on the premiess where sold. His place of business and the premises whereon ‘said liguors are to be gold and drank are as follows: On the first floor of a two-e?ry brick building 22 feet wide by 60 feet in depth, lo“cated on outslot No, 19, on the east side of Cavin street in the town of Ligonier, in Perry town_ship, Nouble county, Indlana.lmm y ) | S ATSSLINE, Ligonier, Ind., Feb, 6 1889, o, : : < iNew Feea Mlll, = = = ~ Feed ground on Wednesday and Saturday. Also planing, band sawi:g saw gumming, and trimming of all kinds done on short notice. Call at| the Fruit Dryer Factory, North Cavan mewgam;im fggw@ PRI Bl o SRR e s e G B LR B G B e
FURNITURE & UNDERTAKING SOMETHING NEW. I have on hand at all times a full and com- : ' Dplete assortment of the ~ LATEST AND NEWEST TV TIR N TIANVE B W o of all grades, | Parlor and Chamber Suits, &c.,ln fact everything in the furniture lin The Indestructable Casket Company, of Chicago, have made érrang‘ed with me to ; handle their English Cement Casket, They are really a Casket and Vault combined in short it is a sarcophagus in appearance and is like other cloth-covered caskets, | We all know that English Cement is | . stoneand willnever decay in the earth but will there remain ) ‘in tack tothe end of : : time. i l $lOOO IS OFFERED | by the cow pany to anyone that will show one | pound of other substance in the walls of i the casket than pure English Cement. Embalming a Specialty. TWO GOOD HEARSES a 1 e constantly subject to the order of my customers. All of the above at prices to suit the timée. Thankful for past favors I remain : " “Yours Respectfuliy, 7 | . W. A.BROWN m_' . W ONIKS & dON ‘Ofl"ers a good stock of Boots, Shoes |and Women's Lined Shoes at very ' low prices. Call and see and be con- | vinced. You can save money by buy‘ing yonr foot wear at Shinke'& Son’s | Cash Boot and Shoe Store.
F. W. Shinke & Son, Are now ready to meet their many customers with BOOTS and SHOES : for fall and winter wear. : —they have the finect and latest line of | Men's, Women's and Children’s Shoes | At Greatly REDUCED Prices, - When purchasing goods of us, remem that*we also do Repairing with neatness and dispatch. ; : | F. W, SHINKE & SON, Ligonier, Ind. : 41-Iv.. SWiss Brewery, ~ ) - A WALDER. Prop'r, LIGONIER. - - INDIANA Strictly First-Class Beer in Eighth and and Quarter Barrels and by the “Case, constantly on hand. Delivered Free of Charge. GIVE IT A TRIAL! B&S=Persons having empty beer bottles in their possession will confer a faI‘vor by returning them at once, either to the brewery or to the saloons from which they purchased the beer. : S L Brewery and Office on Chatham Stree north of L. §. & M. S. Depot. & = § SAVE-:-MONEY . ———by cailing on s E-PRKOGNITL ‘ —for the best— FURNITURE at the lowest prices. 1 have a large ’ stock of all kinds of ‘ Parlor and Bedroom Sets, -Dining- . -room and Kitchen Furniture. ] ha.ve_ also a nice'iine for the
.Call ‘and see, and save Money. E.P. xoontz. Presidential Inauguration. On account of the Inauguration ceremonies at Washington, D. C., March 4th, the L. 8. & M. 8. R'y, company will sell tickets from Ligonier to Washington and return, at $15.15. Tickets will be sold from February 28th to iol e R e A havmgrwmimwérwm March Bth. Thoss, See “‘il nmation, P o%‘ et et el e R
