Ligonier Banner., Volume 24, Number 25, Ligonier, Noble County, 3 October 1889 — Page 4
The Ligonier Banner,
THE BANNER PUBLISHING COMPANY
THURSDAY. OCTOBER 3, 1889,
Subscribers are requested to notice the date on the address label on their paper, - The date ndicates the time paid to. If any have paid and have not received credit oft this label, the publishers would esteem it a favor to be notified of, the failure at once. The label is practically a receipt and should show correctly the time the paper has been paid for. ]
JupGE OsBORN, of Goshen, has returned from California and will resume the practice of law.
Friexps of the democratic candidate for Governor of Ohio think that Jimmy Campbell will have about 10;000 majority over Gov. Foraker.
SucH exuberant individuals as Corporal Tanner and Private Dalzell are not proper persons to determine the pension policy of this government. They are too much on the rattlehead order. : - :
. ONE of the most pernicious and reprehensi%le - notions that has crept into modern party politics is that which demands opposition to anything and everything favored by the opposing party, regardless of merit. |
"CLEM STUDEBAKER, the widely known South ‘Bend wagon-maker, 18 understood to have said that he neither asks nor expects the republican nomination for governor. But it is entirely safe to say that he would not dechne. it if tendered. e
Ex-Gov. WiLiam Pt KeLLOGG, who has just returned from : Paris, thinks that trouble with Boulanger has ~only been postponed, not averted. In his opinion a revolution in France is sure to come. The wonder with most people is that the revolution hadn’t broken out long ago. ’ - TEE INTIMATION that Cyrus F. Mosier, president of a death-rattle insurance company at Elkhart, is harboring congressional aspirations under his. No.. 6 hat, has caused a broad grin to illuminate the countenances of both Democrats and . Republicans throughout the Thirteenth district.
~ Tuk State Fair, at Indianapolis, last week, was largely attended; the International Exposition at ‘Detroit was an undoubted success, and the managers of the Northern Indiana and Michigan Southern Fair at South Bend congratulate themselves upon having had one day (Thursday) that helped them out so as to fully cover expenses. As a rule the attendance at the fairs this year has been quite satisfactory.
- THE NOMINATION of a machine politician as the gubernatorial candidate of the 'Massachusetts Republicans has awakened a good deal of bitterness among the better class of Republicans who earnestly desired the nomination of ex-Congressman Crapo, a gentleman of high character and eminent ability. It is belieyed that many of this class of Republicans will support the nominee of the Democrats.
JOHN JACOB ASTOR died worth $40,000,000 after beginning on a salary of $2 a week for beating furs in a damp cellar. The $40,000,000 left by him in 1849 has grown in forty years te $200,000,000. The Astors know the value of money-and never waste or spend it uselessly. The habits of the elder Astor, it is said, were asregular as a Dutch clock. His only recreation was a game of checkers; his only beverage was a glass of ale after dinner.
WiLkie CoLrins, himself somewhat beery, once entered a New York concert saloon at 8 o’clock in the morning, and svood for fully five minutes gazing through his spectacles upon the dissolute men and women who filled the place. *Fools, idiots, asses!”’ he ejaculated in his husky voice, as he stood with his glass in his hand. A little later he thus moralized: *lf we could but persuade the world that morality is the foundation of wealth and success this would be a happy uni-
verse.”’
Tae DEFEAT of Sim Coy in his aspirations to a seat for two years longer in the city council of Indianapolis, would in the judgment of a goodly number of Indiana Democrats be even a greater yvictory than the election of the democratic candidate for mayor, excellent man that he is. “But the general impression appears to be that Sim will be re-elected. A great many Democrats oppose his re-election, but for obvious reasons the republican bums and manipulators are giving him 8 very earnest and active support. -
Sor MILLER, editor of the Troy (Kansas) Chief, who occupies about the same position in newspaper circles as the genial Billy Beane of the Goshen Democrat does in Indiana, is not at all pleased with the disposition to find new pronunciations for old words. He says: *“The mutilation of the good old word route into root 18 one of the grand triumphs of the eolleges, and now everybody that wants to be considered cultured says root. '~ If it suits them, all right; but we suspect the lady soliciting agent for a charitable institold us that she was taking the same WMM“ Agt eRO RTR
J. H. WEsTFALL, of Rochester, N. Y., who was an officer of Admiral Kimberly’s flagship, the Trenton, before the destruction of the fleet at Samoa, tells the Post-Express that he never saw so finely developed a race, physically, as the Samoans. He also pays a high tribute to their moral qualities. “‘Give a Samoan a Bible,”” he says, ‘‘and teli him to swear to the truth, and even were he to lose his life, he would not perjure himself.” The women are chaste. The Samoans cannot conceive such a thing as almshouses. They ask: “Hasn’t the person any friends? ‘'Why don't they take care of him?’ The people abhor the idea of being considered stingy. = One will go into anothet’s house, and taking a fancy to an article of furniture, willsay: *I like this. Can I have it?’ The answer always is *‘Take it.”’ But the islanders will become ' untruthful, unchaste and selfish when they have associated more with Europeans and Americans, and become ‘‘enlightened’’ and *‘civilized.”’ If these statements of Mr. Westfall may be relied upon, a good many Americans will have occasion to change their estimate of the Samoans. :
THE “SOLDIER VOTE.”
Geo. William Curtis in Harper’s Weekly.
* Corporal Tanner’s sudden notoriety, if as extensive as he might wish, is hardly of the kind that he would prefer. The episode, however, is one of ‘which the significance does not end with his retirement and the remarks which it has elicited. His appointment, to those who knew both his reputation and the enormous financial responsibility of the office, was astounding. It was the more so because his democratic predecessor had been such a target for republican animadversion that it was supposed to be incredible thatthe R@publicans would appoint a successor infinitely: more vulnerable. The president was aware that he was placing in -a most important and responsible office a man who was universally known in his own neighborkood to have traded politically wholly upon his ' service as a soldier, and never to ‘have shown any other fitness or ability for important office than an unkridled tongiie and unbounded *‘cheek.” There was ‘but one explanation of his appointment ever made in public or in private. It was that he was taken practically at his own valuation, and selected to hold ¢‘‘the soldier vote.” His petition for appointment is said to have been signed by weighty names. It would be interesting to see what they are, and to know why they were signed to the paper. . = - As the appointment was held to be due to the desire of pleasing the soldier vote, the fear of displeasing it is offered as the explanation of the apparent reluctance to dismiss him, and the anxiety to transfer a man who had been found unfit in one office into another of eyen larger emolument. That “the soldier vote’’ as a mass, or in large part, could be drawn or repelled by the character of a single appointment is a supposition insulting to that body of voters. But that it was especially favorable to the commissioner for the reason alleged was still more insulting. ‘T'be theory was that Tanner was particularly dear to the soldiers because of his intention to secure the largest possible grant of money for them in the form of pensions. That this was his scheme was well known. He had proclaimed it upon all occasions, and in Brooklyn very early in his official career he announced that the president had exhorted him to be liberal with the boys. . :
' The commendation of the commissioner by state conventions after his performances had startled the country, and compelled the Secretary of the Interior to institule an investigation into his conduct, showed that his scheme was to be adopted as a party cry. It was, in plain English, the policy of buying the soldier vote by general and increased pensions. When ‘his continuance in. office became intolerable, this policy was to be maintained, and the soldier vote held by appointing a successor to T'anner who would carry out his schemes, and by placing him in another office of larger emoluments, with a protestation that the change was made not for any personal reason, but solely upon grounds of administratiye harmony. This theory that Tanner was acceptable to the veterans for mercenary reasons, and that their vate is to be bought by large pensions, is, as we have said, grossly insulting to every honorable veteran. ‘Tanner’s talk and policy, and the praise given to them by republican conventions, degrade patriotism into venality, and estimate loyal and honorable service by a money tariff. We do not believé that the soldier vote, as such, is to be
swayed by the pension bids of party. . We believe that honest soldiers *‘will vote as they fought,” not for money, but for honorable and patriotic reasons. 1f we are wrong, if the .enormous pension payments, as the Tanner doctrine and its commendation imply, are substantially the “price of soldier votes, then there is no more dangerons, because venal, vote in the country. The conduct of the administration both in the appointment and the removal of Tanner betrays its apprehension that veterans will vote against the republican party because’ they may not gel as much money as they hoped for from Tanner. This is a droll way of conciliating honorable American citizens. G _Wo have now the finest line of wedding stationery, cards, etc., ever Sawn iy Lipanie: Sow shies for pe.
Asking for Tariff Revision. Cleveland Plain Dealer: ’ . The recent Massachusetts republican convention made a deliverance on the tariff question. It asked congress to bring about a reduction of the surplus‘ revenue and requested the representatives and senators from Massachusetts to support a thorough and equitable revision of the tariff so as to adapt the protection which it affords to changed business conditions affecting New England industries in common withs those of the rest of the country. That is a request which the republican senators and representatives from Massachusetts will hardly dare ignore as they have done the queries from the question ' clubs bearing on those “changed business conditions,” but if they comply with it they will have an uncomfortable time with the majority of their party colleagues in congress. ‘What the request means is explained by the petition which is headed by the republican governor of the state, Oliver Ames, and signed by nearly if not ‘quite every republican iron making ‘and iron working establishment in the state, asking for free iron ore, free coal ‘and a reduced duty or no duty at all on pig iron and other crude forms of iron manufacture. The changed business conditions affecting New England iron industries require these modifications of the tariff, so those Republican manufactures say, if they are to keep their works open and the thousands of workmen employed. It is not likely any republican orators from Pennsylvania will be invited to stump Massachusetts on that plattorm. The situation might prove awkward for inviters and invited. 1
Party Favors and Business.
1t is not. a fact that the average politician and office-seeker considers himself under little or no obligation to his party paper, and looks upon it, except during the few months of a heated campaign, as simply an enterprise for the money there is in it? We are not quite sure that thatis not the proper way. A man may be a strong Democrat or a strong Republican, and look to his party paper for a vigorous support of the men and measures of his choice, all of which he has a right to expect, but when he has two dollars’ worth of printing t 6 do he goes to the nearest: blacksmith shop to have it done. From their point of observation, business is' business, and politics is politics. = Some of our editorial brethren look at it in a similar manner. As a Democrat we ought to have the support of the democracy of Kosciusko county. It is now claimed that the Independent press is the most prosperous. If this is true it would be conclusive proof that the non-partisan paper holds over the party paper in that it is non-offensive politically, from which often grows a great deal of personal enmity. Perhaps there is a point here for the party press to consider.—Warsaw Union.
Y. M. C« A. Convention.
The second annual meeting of the Young Men’s Christian Association of Indiana, is to be held at Lafayette, Indiana. Thursday, Nov. 7th, to Sunday, Nov. 10th, 1889.
The city and college associations of the state are entitled to representation on the basis of one delegate for every twenty-five of its paid up membership, and all officers of associations are exofficio members of the state assoeiation.
All corresponding members, Christian business men, pastors and all others interested, are urged to attend the meeting, in order to become more interested in the state and local work.
Addresses will be made by prominent men, and papers will be read by workers of experience. : - For further information, address Fletcher Humphrey, State Secretary, Indianapolis, Indiana. . _
Harry Went Home With Papa.
Harry Loffler, jr., the young New Yorker who recently eloped with a Gotham lady, was arrested by marshal Kane and turned over to his .father. Lofiler, jr., 1s but twenty years of age, and when taken into custedy promised to-return home. with his fatber. The mystery that surrounds the woman’s identity has not been penetrated. She was not arrested and father and son refused to speak of her other than to say that she is the wife of a wealthy New York man. Harry, however, admits that he bought his wedding suit at the clothing store of Sol May. He did so because he knew that what he purchased there would be ¢in style,”’ just as represented, and the cheapest for the money that could be found in Ligonier.
Holiday Closing.
~ Notice is hereby given to the public that the undersigned citizens and business men . will close their respective places of business on Thursday. Sept. 26th and on Saturday, Oct. sth, on account of holidays, on which days they will transact no business whatever: ; ~ STRAUS Bros. & Co., ’ - SoL MIER, G . E. Jacoss & Co., M. Jacoss & Co., M. Baum & Co., : SoL May, : ' : " JAcoB Bauwm, ; AARON Bauwm, D& §ELIG. ; . ISAAC ACKERMAN.
Is Consumption Incurable ?
Read the following: Mr. C. H. Morris, Newark, Ark., says: ‘“Was down with Abscess of Lungs,and friends and ghysicians pronounced me an incurale consumptive. Began taking Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption, am now on my third bottle, and able to oversee the work on my farm. It is the finest medieine ever made.”’ Jesse Middlewart, Decatur, Ohio, says: ‘‘Had it not been fox Dr. King’s New Discovery for consumption I would have died of Lung Troubles. Wasgiven ug by doctors. Am now in best of health.”” - Tryit. Sample .bottles free,at Woodruft Bros., drug store.
Electric Bitters . This remedy 18 becoming so well known and so popular as to need no special mention. - All who have used El;ectric Bitters sing the same song of raise. A purer medicine does not exEst and itis %laranteed fo do all that is claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all diseases of the Liver and Kidneys, will remove flpimp_les, boils, salt rheum, andother aflections cansed bL impure blood.—Will drive Malaria from the gystem and prevent as well as cure all Malarial fevers. For cure of headache, ‘ eonafi;pfltionpand indigestion try Electric Bitters—Entire satisfaction’ guar‘anteed, or money refunded.-—Price 50 E cents and $l.OO per bottle at Woodraff %*W’*%p s s e g
AROUND ABOUT US.
The Sayings and Doings of Our Neighbors.
Hog cholera is prevailing in LaGrange county 1n several localities. The Waterloo gas well is to be drilled deeper, the gas having played out. ny i et
An Elkhart county fatmer exhibited at the Goshen fair forty-four varieties of potatoes. - :
John L. Crary, one of the early settlers at Goshen, and a well known citizen, died in that city Thursday last.
. After serving oyer four years as. ‘postmaster at Auburn, Michael Boland ‘will surrender the office to his republican successor, next week. : ~_After a stay of several months in California, Jadge Osborn has determined to return to Goshen where he will again enter the practice of law. ' While handling a loaded revolver last Thursday at Goshen, a young man named Wyland Bienz, was fatally injured. The bullet struck the unfortunate fellow in the right eye and lodged in the bramn. | In a North Manchester saw mill one day last week, a board struck Joseph Turner, knocking out both eyes and, tearing away almost all of the lower part of the face, leaving a hole larger than a man’s *fist and exposing the brain. ‘
Special elections have been called in Washington and Wayne townships, Kosciusko county, October 15 to vote on a tax in aid of the New York, Fort Wayne & Chicago railroad, and in Plain township in aid of the Indiana Pacific railroad.
According to the Standard a pitiful sight one evening lately in LaGrange, was a girl about sixteen years of age staggering under the influence of liquor down one of the principal streets, half dragged along by two men of probably no better character. 7
Last Thursday evening Stella Goheen, aged twenty years, én inmate of Vic Clark’s house of prostitution at Fort Wayne, swallowed an overdose of morphine upon retiring, and was found dead in her bed the next morning. He(;‘ parents reside at Columbia City, Ind.:
The other day a lightning-rod shark called at the farm house of William Walkup. of Perry township, Allen county, and received an order to repair the rods on his house and stable. A few days later Mr. Walkup discovered that he had put his name to a note for $l4O and must suffer the loss.
Waldo Hill, a lightning-rod agent of Fort Wayne, was arrested for constructive larceny, having swindled Wm. Walkup, a farmer of Perry township, out of $133 by the lightning-rod trick. Hill has grown rich from.the profits of his: business, but a jury of farmers will probably cut- his career short. 2
The town of Nappanee, Elkhart county, has been made defendant in a damage suit in the cirenit court, in which John H. Coliflower, a traveling salesman, of LaGrange, Ind., is plaintiff, and wants one thousand dollars because he was tripped by a defective sidewalk. The complaint alleges that he was laid up two months. Columbia City isto be ‘‘well healed” with newspapers. The Commercial commenced the publication of a daily, Monday morning last, and the Post will begin a daily publication today. It is reported also that Hon. Eli W. Brown has determined to start another democratic weekly, and that the first number will be issued soon.
J. C. Sheffler, the new postmaster at Wolcottville, was robbed of $467 some days ago. He took the money home for safe keeping, and during the absence of the family, somebody entered the house and appropriated the funds. Over $2OO belonged to ‘‘Uncle Sam,”’ and the remainder was to have been used to payon a new house. The LaGrange Standard says that the son of a LaGrange county man was the first Union soldier killed in the rebellion. He was the' son of J. H. Ladd, formerly of Lima, in the 6th Massachusetts regiment, and was shot at Baltimore, when on the way to Washington in answer to the first call for troops, according to the report. About a year ago an English syndicate: offered J. H. Bass, of Kt. Wayne, $3,000,000 for the Bass Foundry and Machine Works, located in that city, St. Louis and Chicago, one of the largest works of the kind in the country. The offer was refused. It is said negotiations are again pending for the purchase. Valuable iron mines in Ala bama are also included in the property. . . G. B. Lésh & Co., manufacturers and lumber men at Warsaw, made an assignment ‘yesterday morninil for the benefit of their creditors. The failure was no doubt caused by the heavy losses they have sustained of late by the failure of other people, two losses alone agregating $20,000. The mem‘bers of the firm have mortgaged all their property, and it is said that they will be able to pay dollar for dollar.
There is a good chance for cheap meat at Fort Wayne as Swift. & Co., the Chicago packers, have rented a large building in the business center of that city and will shortly open a branch office for the sale of their meats, at the same time using Fort Wayne as a distributing poinf to supply this state and eastern Ohio! Local. butchers are alarmed by this attempt tocrowd them out and some of the larger concerns predict a fierce war upon the Chicago meats. -
At Goshen last Thursday ghile exercising the horses before tlte pacing race, ‘‘Little John,”’ a valuable horse owned by Nelson Drake, of LaGrange, was badly injured by colliding with another pacer. It seems that an old lady was crossing the track, and to avoid running over her, both drivers turned out, and in the same direction. The point of a thill was driven into Little John’s breast about eighteen ‘inches, making an ugly wound. The ‘horse was taken to fim‘stablo and at‘tended by a veternary surgeon, and as no vital organs were injured, the ani‘mal will in all probability get well. If all re}i;om are true, a Goshen woman who has become notorious within the past few years for blackmailing, eating opium, drinking and harléttr’sy, created something of a sensation at the village of Milford lately. It seems that she selected that town in which to sell corsets, and & temperance mm being in progress, she made herself quite conspicuous as a dovomm;nptm ance woman and assisted in pinning the blue ribbon to ma Jyfihm she got on a Wfim ) male companion in her room and subsequently made such & spectacle of herself that she was run out of town —Goshen ewe o L e L AR SR ol e ae e s a
The Fair Next Week.
Bring your whole family with you. There ought to be 25,000 entries this year. : ; :
There are more applications for stock stalls than ever before. :
' Base ball every day on the grouhds will be an attractive feature. S
The buildin%s on the grounds have been put in splendid condition.
Mike Nippert’s famous menagerie will be an attraction at the fair. -
Read the list of special premiums and try for one or more of them. The famous Ligonier Military Band will be one of the attractions at the fair.
The officials are working hard to have everytbing ready for the opening day. . :
There will be a large number of good local horses in the races this year.
~ Ample arrangements have been made for police protection day and night. L
Neither time nor money are being spared to put the track in perfect congitiou. ! With favorable weather the attendance this year will be larger than ever before. :
Entries in the speed ring a:@ coming in at a rapid rate, indicating fall classes. !
The thirty-fourth annual fair will break the record of all previous exhibitions.
If you hayven’t anything else to show pick out your biggest pumpkin and send it in.
The premiums are liberal in all Jdepartments, and, better still, they are always paid. : No intoxicating drinks will be sold on the grounds and no gambling will be allowed. : - . The small sum of 25 cents admits to all parts of the grounds, except the grand stand. »
Put in the whole week at the fair if you cam, but if you can’t stay so long stay as long as you can. Comfiete and adequate arrangements for sprinkling the grounds and approaches have been made. It is not an easy thing to run a fair successfully. The managers need everybody’s help and encouragement. - The races this year will be better than ever before, as a large number of good local horses have been entered:
Everybody in the county should contribute something toward making the exhibition the largest in the history of the society. : ; ~ The Secretary assures us that Mr. Nippert’s menagerie of native animals will be on exhibition on the grounds. The great fair begins next Tuesday, and the managers are doing everything in their power to make it the pride of Northern Indiana. They appeal to the surrounding country to assist them in their undertaking. One of the features on the ground will be a six-horse team. All iron gray Normans, that weigh 9,500 pounds, driven with a single line by an old Pendsylvanian on his saddle horse. Gee whiz! let’s all go and see it. There will be plenty ot eating booths on the grounds, where good meals can be secured .at reasonable rates, butif you want to bring your lunch basket you will find check room where they will be safe while enjoying the sights of the fair. _ - This has been a very busy season for the farmers, there have not been even many rainy days to afford the farm hands a rest. Now let them all have a day or two next week to come to the fair and have a jollification, and see l:heilfine exhibition, the races and base ball. ;
| DIED. At Springfield, Elkhart township, Indiana, Saturday, September 28, 1889, WiLLiam W. BUCHANAN; aged 57 years, -7 months and 6 days. Mr. Buchanan was an attentive father and friend, He had been the victim of heart disease, which very suddenly terminated his life and ended all. We miss thee from thy home, dear father, We miss thee from thy place, s A shadow from our life is caxt, Xl We miss the sunshine of thy face, - .We miss thy kind and willing hand ‘ Thy fond and earnest care, Our {Jome is dark without thee, s W e miss thee everywhere. : CARD OF THANKS. We all extend our sincere and grateful thanks to frignds and neighbors for their many acts of kindness at the death and burial of our beloved father. | MARY BuCHANAN, WiLLiam W. BUCHANAN, ALICE MAYBELL, ; GEo. W. BUCHANAN, MR. AND MRrs. WALDRON.
Consumption Surely Cured,
To THE EpiTOß—Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedies FREE to any of your readers who have consumption if the% will send me their express and post office address, - T. A. Srocum, M. C,, 181 Pearl St., N. Y. 23 28,
¥OLL WEIGNTF PURE n * l ctk ; m’ / | Its superior excellence proven in millions of homes for more thap 8 (}Mfl' of & cenfury, It is used by the United Biates Government, Endorsed by w:ym of the Great Univer. Healthful, Dr, Price’s Creaw Baking Powde NEWYORE, OuICAGO, “‘%"
m g 2 READ! AR K"“ & =t AND 4 & AR BN g - &y arr sSave Money ! & i PR\ Chostnut Fine Cut, ... ....25c per lb \\\\\\\ L 11 lbs. Granulated Sugar for... $l.OO AN N Gl &% 31 Ibs. best Crackers for .........25¢ AL NN i i }\\ D\ S 52; Churches & Dwights Soda, 07c per lb ah A\ |MR Si)vor Drips Syrup, .. .....85c per gal \\\\\\}' b The Dude Broom, .... .. ... 20c each NN A Elkbart Starch,. ..........05c perlb ;::jj:i%@@Qmflmmmmmuummmi‘mzu;mm;mf..w 11b. Baskets of Tea, ........... 40c MAN D /MEEEEE T Best W. W. oil, 13¢ per gal. or 5 oalb\\\\ % N\ \\\¥ l‘ Rif ; €8 ’ pe g g Nk \i\flmm mm;[[]iyll'gpfilsw lons for 60c. A N \\\ LAy Rail Soap, the largest and best sc. QTN TR Soap on the market \\S\f\\‘\\\\\\\\\g &\\\@\\ p o 1 1 . ‘W e TCIi This Ad each week for new prices. We pay the . highest market price for al. kinds of country produce. B&Buy goods for cash and SAVE MONEY. - ,--v 3 ° 1 DECKER'S CASH GROCERY, - Ligonier, Ind.
Book Knowledge 1s not the only thing requisite in physicians. Unless he is born for the business, unless he has the subtle, indefinable power of looking through a man and seeing the disease in its most secret hiding place, he will never be a good physician, even though he graduated from a German university. A man may dissect add vivisect, he may know every detail of human anatomy till he can, by looking at a bone heaps and fossils, trace the descent of his ancestry down to the lowest marsupial and beyond, he may know all those things and more, but unless he is born for a p%uysician he will never rise above mediocrity. : An illustration of the great advantage given to a man by an inborn power of diagnosis is seen in the results of the practice of Dr. Fruth, late surgeon in the Provident Medical Dispensiary of New York City. This eminent doctor has had, to be sure, all the adyantages of thorough college training and wide-spread experience which the most ambitious physician could desire; but by the side of others who have that fitness and nothing else, he stands out preeminent. His cures are remarkable. They are worked in cases which seem utterly hopeless, and no one, no matter what his malady, should dispair until after consulting Dr. Fruth. ‘He will be at the Mier House, Ligonier, October 9th, 1889.
Beulah.
Beulah is free! The time of her deliverance came, and she was gloriously made free. A debt of between five and six hundred dollars was provided for on last Sabbath in good substantial subseriptions. | Revs. C. H. Murry, of Milford, Ind., and C. C. Albertson, of Goshen, Ind., came to ‘our rescue. Bro. Murry did the singing and Bro. Albertson did the begging. These young Sampsons rendered services most satisfactory, and to the delight of everybody present. Bro. Albertson is the Talmage of the west and Bro. Murry is the Sankey of the north Indiana conference. ''May God bless them, the pastor and the people abundantly foreyermore. J. M. DEWEESE, Pustor.
FURNITURE & UNDERTAKIN
SOMETHING NEW. I have on hand at all times a full and complete assortment of the : LATEST AND NEWEST : R . o L 2 FURNITURE : of all grades, Parlor and Chamber Suits, xc,, in faet everything in the furniture lin The Indestructable Casket Company, of Chicago, have made arranged with me to handle their . . English Cement Casket They are really a Casket and Vault combined in short it is a sargophagus in appearance and is like other cloth-covered caskets, We all know that English Cement is stone and will never decay in the 4 earth but will there remain in tack to the end of : time, HEn - $lOOO IS OFFERED by the company to anyone that will sh - ypound ofpotl{er s’ub’ag:noe‘ in the wa(l’lgogne the casket than pure English Cement, ‘ Embalming a Specialty. - TWO GOOD HEARSES ale constantly subject to the order of my ocus tomers, Allof the above at prices to suit th, times. Thankful for past favorslremain s Yours Respectfuliy,. : W.A. BROWNX
James-- Madden -'- : : ? i . PLUMBER, o FoIIER. ‘v K : "\ - 101 Calhcun Street, L ¥ i i 3 . NextDoorto Y. M. C. A., , FORT WAYNE, : : IND. ~ EXECUTORS SALE, deveased, will offer for sgle at pu blio outery, Sownahip, Noble connty, Indiang, on Saturday, b rTaais 'y 2‘_"“*’% "-"“% B iet S \." '\':-“."f ?:mfiv‘) a‘%fiwh\%‘r‘?’ o o F'%M."f”it‘:‘{: ~gt :;;,:_’ | S ‘..}} Pt "s-_u%w:."f'ff‘k\w‘;é:'r;_v\_»« . {i,?q’frfi:..—ims«g &% YoRORy PSOE BRI RXEO R O, N S g % MJ«:%:»%“*%%%‘%%&@E& ‘v‘“‘* § the 8 A e & amadt 77»3‘-’3%. ) s A B "4?\1;%-:-' % g‘&_\ga' oe B r‘f,&\fif“;@f Yeaa g"-’“fi. B e % séw-if:};;?;ia:.i | DANIEL W, Gruny, Executor,
Devoted to the Treatment of Chronic - Diseases. : [ERA " -::.{»\J\\\:.;\};y_j AR ol SRR e . B 2 S 5 TOR e : AN .“.\};-::fi e i i N A T j / 7 ;;5; il o=~ " ST e This extensive experience with thousands of: patients enables me to cure every curable case. Those afflicted with diseases of the Lungs, Throat, Heart, Liver, Kidneys, Neryes, Brain or suffering from ‘Rheumatism, Neuraigia, Debility, Youthful Indiscretions, Cancers, Old Sores, Tumors, Fits, any Chronic Ailments, are invited to call and examine my record of CASES CURED, when hope of cure had been abandoned.. Candid in mg examinations, reasonable in my charges, and never encourage without a surety of success. BLISSFIELD, Mich., April 22, 1888, DRr. F. B. BREWER—DEAR Sir: It is with . gratitude for my restored health thatl now ! write you. I doctored with several prominent doctors of Southern Michigan for over a year, but constantly grew worse, until I commenced taking your mediecines. After suffering with Bright’s Disease for over two years, I am now estored to y¢ood health. I was given up by other doctors to die, but after taking your medicine for afew weeks began to improve and continued to do so untihmE health was cestored, Miss E, E. PARKER, ; DR.F. B. BREWER, : 136 Chicago Ave., Evanston, Hl, ¥ Dr. Brewer will be at the Mier House, Wednesdaé. October 16th, and the Gallowv %ouse, LaGrange, Ind., Thursday, October 17th, 89.
Swiss Brewery,
A, WALDER, Prop'r, LIGONIER. - o INDIANA.
Strictly First-Class Beerin Eighth and and Quarter Barrels and by the f Case, constantly on hand. Delivered Free of Charge. - GIVE IT A TRIAL! B@Persons having empty beer bottles in their possession will confer a favor by returning them at once, either te the brewery or to the saloons from which they purchased the beer, | Brewery and Office on Chatham Street . north of L. S, &M. S. Depot. mfi_;____________ # FALL = STOCK.s WE HAVE ALREADY IN A GOOD STOCK OF : - For Fall Trade. -——-_—-——— ‘ &) Call and see our MENS’ BOOTS and SHOES, BOYS SHOES. WOMENS and MISSES SHOES in latest styles and best Custom Makes at prices the lowest. We are always headquarters for custom work and repairing, - ~ F, W SHINKE, & 80N, Ligoni_er. Ind. .} TR fl*ly. ‘ bt PR R S R W OBV ALR%% MR vk \ALA rin m{;‘:f’&g%s; ol AR %@»fi%%‘%wwfi?&w b i’»*%? EXECUTOR'S NOTICE.
