Ligonier Banner., Volume 25, Number 48, Ligonier, Noble County, 12 March 1891 — Page 8

i:s»"x‘ ) 5i g r PR \ = ; ‘ 7- : = 0,:-?"» ¥ ~“‘\‘\‘\‘Y ;‘(Tf‘\"'-' S . Vi Ly - ! 7 iy ot S | e, Y| R B R R : ¢ = |l'.’.‘: e B EE - . R | i \ | J] 3 ' R 1 s T Ly el e ‘ < T “.* P o ol ”"j S -~ R ; : % Straus Bros. & Lompany are now most conveniently settled .' ‘0 / . . ; in their new bank building, where they are ready to see their old customers and friends. 5 ' . TRRN G TP NTR /_E,very'th’ing pertaining to the bankng business will receive the closest attention. : Straus Bros &Co. ; : ;&:I 0. U, F.;Excelsior Lodge No. T aghN S * 267, meets every Saturday “umes~ evening, -0, C. HArTZELL, N G. GEo. MCMASTERS, Sec’y. CAsrer WoLr, V.G. e e ‘VASHINGT()N ENCAMPMENT N 0.89. I. 0.0. F.,meetson thesecond and fourth Tuesdaysofeach month,at7o’clock p. m. : GEO. MCMASTERS, Sec'y. - W.A.GIiLBERT.Scribe. iy 21-4 BEOE Tl e s eSS P K e Ligonier Lodge No. 123 g 2&. meetsevery Thursday evening . > at 7:30 o’clock. \ Hexfly Winkinson.C. C. F.E.HerLer K.of R. &8. 21-42

NOBLE COUNTY CHAPTER, No. 42, R. M.. meets the third Monday evening each month, Visiting comrades are cordia weicomed. 2 A R MONAIR HP J. B. STUTZMAN, Sec’y.

LIG()NIER COUNCIL, No. 58, R. & 8. M., meet the second Monday evening of each month. Visiting comrades cordially welcomed. A. R, MCNAIR, . L. L. M. J.B. STuTZMAN, Recorder.

g TH EREGULAR COMMUNICATIONS of Ligonier Lodge No, 185, F. & A. M_.are held on the first Mondayevening in sach month. Masonic Brothers are iivited to attend, I.J.McLALLIN, W, M. ¥. 8. AerLEß.Secretary, 351 y ——————————————————————————————————————————— \V. E. NEWTON, ! Homoeopathic Physician and Surgeon, SUCCESSOR TO THE FIRM OF ELLIS & NEWTON Special attention given to Chronic Diseases, UFFLCE—OverSoI, Mier’s Bank, Ligonier,lnd Omcehours—From 10to 12 A M., 1 to 4anc 7toBP. M. — e i ettt ALBERT M. SHAW, M. D, | IPHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, LIGONIER, - - - - - INDIANA " Office and resideuce in the Weir Block. Calls attended-to promptly, night or day. —————————————————————————————— \V H, FRANKS, . PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, Office over Gerber’s Hardware Store. Residence on Main Street on hill. Ligonier, o - - Indiana B G e S A R SR UA RR & SHOBE ‘ PHYSICIANS & SURGEOXRS Wulattend promptly to all calls intrustcc to swem. Oifico and residenceon Fourth street ldgonier . Indiana. i i i E. W KANEPPER. - . ¥ . L’HYS;CIAN AND sURGEON Wilisttendoromptly to all calls sntrusted to Rimsitherday ornight. Office, Kline Building, 33cond foor ; Residence on South Martin str. Lizonier.lndiana. j 1 43tf

S&C"li SBROTHERS, : 3AKERS AND GROCERS, Constantly keep on hand Frésh Bread, Cakes, Pies,ete,,also Choice Groceries, Provisions,and Yanke> Notions. Highest cash price paid forall Kindsof country produce. Corner of Cavinand Third streets, Ligoniér, Ind. 38, 'L,. 9 STIVER, | DENTIST, LIGONIER, - - - INDIANA. Parlors over Sol Mier’'s Bank., Fine filllngs a specialty. PRICES REASONABLE., WORK SATISFAUTORY, wi 24-48 7 N STV AR . . DENTIRT MUTYPW Rooms over Post Oftice, southwosgco}ner of dain and Mitchell Streets,opposite the Kelley - House,Kendallville, $# Allwork Warran d. P, V- HOFFMAN, ’ - . ; ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, ; {IGONIER, - - - - INDIANA Money to Loan at Reasonable Rates. L W. WELKER. 5 ATTORNEY AT LAW, _ALBION, - - IeIANA. Special attention given to allclasses of col ections. Office east of Court House,inClapp’sBiock. ; : Feb. 14,1884.-44 ! i CHA'BLES V.INES. ‘ ] —Dealerin— MONUMENTS, VAULTS, . Tombstones and Building Stones, corner of Cavin and Fifth streets, Ligonier, Ind. TTI 135 AT IS ]VT B SSTA A . SRR SO lAT R W 5 L 10k Banking IHouse it O B it : SOL. MIIER, lIGONIER - - IND, WILL LOAN MONEY, BUY NOTES AND MORTGAGES. ' RECEIVE DEPOSITS, BUY AND SELL EXCHANGE, snd make collections in all parts of : ~ the United States, and - Bell Exchange on Europe. #&-Be sure and see me before selljng any papers or making a loan.

? ' " Bull’s Baby Syrup Facilitates Teething! Price only 26 cents. Bold at druggists, Requiates the Bowels!

s H Day’s Horse POWDER, Prevents Luang Fever and g cures Distemper. Ipound j in each package., For sale by all dealers. Tryfl

s,

b For the cure of Coughs,Colds, Croup, Hoarseness, Asthma, Whooping | Incipient Cough UG ConBronchitis, . sumption, and for the relief of Consumptive persons. At druggists. 25 cts. ;

'y LANGE’S CUBEB CIGARETTES for Ca= SM OKE tarrh., Frice 10 Cts. Atall drufaqlsts.

No oune can develop the grace of meekness by listening to a crying baby. Stop its tretfulness by curing the colic with Dr. Bull’s Baby Syrup®

How foelish to sit and wait and suffer with catarrb, when Old Saul’s Catarrh Cure will cure you readil and radically,

—A Philatlelphia paper estimates that since 1861 over 500,000 have died in that city.’ -

—lteh, Mange and Scratehes on hu man or animals cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion. This never fails. Sold by S. T. Eldred &Co., drugcists, Ligonier, Ind. :

—Mrrk Twain, among other equally big investments, has $170,000 sunk in a type-setting machine. : j

To Nervous Debilitated Men

If you will send us your address, we will mail you our illustrated pamphlet explaining all about Dr. Dye's Celebrated Electro-Voltaic Belt and Appliances, and their charming effects npon the nervous debilitated system, and how they will quickly restore you to vigor and manhood. Pamphlet free. If you are thus afilicted, we will send you a Belt and Appliances on trial.

Vorraic-Bert Co., Marshall,Mich

—Fifteen closely printed pages of the London city diréctory are filled by the Smith family in that city. o @@ Forced to Leave Home. . Over 60 people were forced to.leave their homes yesterday to call at their druggist’s for a free trial package of Lane's Family Medicine.. If your blood 1s bad, your liver and kidneys out of order, if you are constipated and have headache and an unsightly complexion, dor’t fail to:call oun any druggist to-day for a free sample of this grand remuedy. The ladies praise it. Everyone likes it. Large-size dackage 50 cents. ' _ 6 —A Lawrence (Kas.) seed-house shipped 12,000 pounds of sorghum seed to Melbourne, Australia, last week.

Now Try This.

It will cost vou nothing and will surely do you good, if you have a Cough, Cold, or any trouble with Throat, Chest or Lungs. Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs-and Coldsis guaranteed to give relief, or money will be paid back. Sufferers from LaGrippe found it just the thing and under its use had a perfect and speedy recovery. Try a sample bottle at our expense and learn for yourself just how good a thing it is. Trial bottles free atS. T. Eldred & Co.’s drug store. Large size, 50c. and $l.

—Twenty-six people named Mahoney are employed in various capacities by the city and county government of Chicago. :

Rheumatism Cured in a Day

“Mystic Cure” for rheumatism and neuralgia radically cures in 1 to 3 days. - Its action upon the system is remarkable and mysterious. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disappears. The first dose greatly benefits. ~Warranted, 75 cents. Sold by Eldred & Co., druggist, Ligonier. ; ‘

—When spring comes the wonderful things we are going to de will be put off until cold weather gets here.— Atchison Globe.: 2

. Arrested and Set Free. - Dr. J. H. Hanaford says in the Western Plowman: *lf the first cough is properly treated, the first step in the direction of consumption arrested, the lungs developed, the breath set free, we need not fear consumption.’”” Kemp’s Balsam for the Throat and Lungs is the proper treatment for the first cough. No other remedy has saved so many from consumption. At all druggists’. Large bottles 50c and $l. 7 *—The new universal language ‘“‘Esperanto,”’ has made great progress. Esperanto text-books have been printed 1n fourteen languages. , : et -R — e e o * Would You Believe. ‘ The proprietor of Kemp’s Balsam gives thousands of bottles away yearly? This mode of advertising would prove ruinous if the Balsam was not a perfect cure for Coughs and all Throat and Lung troubles. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Don’t hesitate! Procure a bottle today to keep in your home or room for immediate or future use. Large size 50c and 81 at all druggists. ' 8 —At Akron, Ohio, a tramp caught in a priyate residence pleaded in mitigation of his offense that he wanted a brush for cleaning purposes. °~ A Family Gathering, Have you a father? Have you a mother? Have you a son or daughter, sister or a brother who has not. yet taken Kemp’s Balsam for the Throat and . Lungs, the guarateed remedy for Coulgbs.. Colds, Asthma, Croup and all Throat and Lung troubles? "If so, why? when a sample bottle is gl& given to you free by any druggigt-t;%g the large size costs you only 50c and $l, a T

- The oppessed subjects of European governments turn to this country for free homes, free laws and for the free use of Salvation Oil for their pains. It is the slight cold frequently contracted that finally undermindes the system. Use Dr. Bull's “Cough Syrup in the beginning stages and be cured.

—Three young sons of Andrew Gilbertson, of Budson, Wis., were buried one day last week. They died within thirty-two hours of diphtheria.

When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, ‘When she had Children, she gdve them Castoria,

—A turnip measuring four feet i-n' circamference and weighing fift_yv" pounds is on exhibition at the New Whatcom (Wash.) Chamber of Commerce. Miss Flora A. Jones, South Bend, Ind. Have just purchased a bottle of your “Blushes’’ of Arend, Cor. Fifth Ave. and Madison Street. If your ownindividual blushes are as nice as the preparation of yours, I'don’t see why you cling to your ¢Miss.” I find it delightful. = Will gladly recommend it to others. . : » Yours Respectfully. , : FrED M. SMITH, With Marshal Field & Co. Chicago, 111. Mr- Smith is not the only one who finds *‘Blush of Roses delightful, as many ladies and gentlemen can testify, who have ' purchased it from E. E. Reed. Ligonier, Ind. Did you ever try Luxury instead of soap for your face? No. Then try it immediately, it costs but fifteen cents.

—The Canada milftia hold what are called smoking concertsy at which every man must smoke from the time he enters tha room until he leaves it.

. Specimen Cases. S. ‘H. Clifford, New Cassel, Wis., was troubled with. Neuralgia and Rheumatism, - his Stomach was disordered, his Liver was affected to an alarming degree, appetite fell away, and he was terribly reduced in flesh and strength. Threé bottles of Electric Bitters cured him. Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, 111, had a running sore on his leg of eight years’ standing. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven boxes of Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and his leg is sound and well. John Speaker, of Catawba, 0., had five large Fever sores on his leg, doctors said he was incurable. One bottle Electric DBitters and one box Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cured him entirely. Sold by S. T. Eldred & }(Co., druggists.

—An Easter card is of rough white paper painted with blossoming roses. In one corner is a spider’s web, where rests two pink petals tipped with dewdrops. ORUNKENNEsé—LIQUOR HABIT—In ail the World there is but one Cure, Dr Haines’ . Golden Specific. It can be given in a cup of tea or cotfee without the knowledge of the person taking it, effecting a speedy and -permanent cure, whegher the patient is a moderate drinker or un alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been cured who have taken the Golden Specific in .their coffee without their knowledge, and today believe they quit drinking of their own free will. No harmful effect results from its administration. Cures guaranteed. Send for circular and full particulars. Address in confidence, GoLDEN SPECIFIC Co., 15 Race Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. ’

~—A Maine man went sleigh-riding with his daughter who wore a bright red wrap, and they were chased two miles §by a bull that objected to the color of the garment. : .

Bucklen’sArnica Salve,

The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands,chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and pes itively cures piles, or no pay required It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. Forsale by S. T. Eldred & Co. .

==Prof. John Tyndall, the famous British Scientist, did not marry until hh was sixty-three, when he wedded Lord Hamilton’s eldest daughter. He is now in his eightieth year.

TO CONSUMPTIVES. ‘T'he undersigned having been restored to health by simple means, after suffering for several years with a severe lung affection, and that dread disease Consumption, is anxious to make known to his fellow sufferers the means of sure. To those who desire it, he will cheerfully send (free of charge) a copy of the preseription used, which they will find a sure cure for Consumption, Asthma, Cattarrh, Bronchitis and alil throat and lung Maladies. He hopes all sufferers will try his remedy, as it is invaluable. Those desiring the prescription, which will cost them nothing, and may prove a blessing, will please address, Rev. Epwarp A. WILSON, Williamsburg, Kings county, New York. 35-Iyr. —Little Wallace Chapman, a four-year-old Kansas City boy. has a won derful memory. He recently repeated, | verbatim, a ninteen stanza poem after hearing it read aloud three times. A . good house in the south part of town. For particulars enquire of C. R. GRrAVEs. o e . i We Pay Salary And expenses to Live Agents men or women. No drones wanted. Work steady year round and cash weekly. Good Ea‘y for part time, Fine outfit free. Experience not needed. Send references and stamp at once. J. EvuGENE WmTNEY, Rochester, N. Y, B@y~This firm is perfectly responsible. : 39-6 m ' —Electric lighting on sh@oard is dangerous, from the fact that the curs rents of electricity not only influence the compass, but magnetize adjacent masses of iron, which in their turn affect the compass. ‘

OF INTEREST TO WRITERS. A Laber Saving Invention Indispensahle . to all who Write, Of the many valuable improvements which have been made in self-feeding pens a great part are due to the skill and persistence of Mr, L. E. Dunlap, of Boston, who, as a pioneer in this business, has spent the last decade in perfecting the fountain pen that bears his name. The latest perfected invention is the Dunlap Double-feed Pen, and in this very double-feed lies the ‘secret of its success. ! It carries a sixteen-karat diamondpointed gold pen, and is a perfect pocket-companion that will not only prove indispensable, but a joy and blessing as long as life lasts. It is cuaranteed to write instantly, always and under all circumstances. To introduce’it among the readers of this paper, the manufacturers offer for a short time only, to send it by return mail at one-half the regular price. By posting a letter, enclosing a twocent stamp, to the Dunlap Pen Company, 280 Washington street, Boston, Mass., you will receive a beautiful enoraved ticket worth $2, and also an illustrated price-list and circular, telling you how to make 85 per day.

““‘Bleeding’’ Kansas.

- Some fifteen years ago E. Shelmadine left Elkhart for Kansas. He has just returned, and the ‘l'ruth reports his experience as follows: “When he determined to retrace his steps he lived in a Kansas town about the size of Elkhart. He owned -a house and lot which would be worth at least $2,000 here. He finally succeeded in selling it for $l5O, giving time en the payment, and started East. Shortly before leaving Kansas he had made a tour of the state, visiting most of the principal towns and cities. He says that with hardly an exception in the smaller cities and large towns at least twenty per cent of the residence and business houses are unoccupied; that business is an unknown quantity, and that property can scarcely be sold at any price. Taking Topeka, the capital of the state, and among the most ‘promising towns west of the Missonri river, as a sample he pronounces the city dead ahd bankrupt, smaller in population by 7,000 than it was three years ago. Property therc, at Wichita and other once flourishing towns, may be bought for half the cost of improvements in hundreds of instances,’”’

It Holds True All Around. . “I don’t know anything new to-day,” remarked a prominent merchant to the reporter of an exchange,”” ‘‘but you will win the everlasting gratitude of a certain class of merchants by giving people generally to understand that a store is no place to loaf. 1 lose hundreds of dollars every year through the thoughtlessness of my friends, and vet haven't the courage to -speak, fer fear of making them angry at me. The boys take great interest in me and want tosee me prosper, but at the same time they do'net seem to realize that instead of benefitting my trade they are mnjuring it. I have numerous lady patrons, and not a few have left ‘the store without purchasing what they came after, because there are w«ertain articles they do not care to call for in the hearing of my friend, the lounger. Only the other day one of my best friends came into the store, and, after purchasing a cigar, took a stand near the door, and by the time he had got ten that cigar well under way, a lady entered, and she was compelled to fight her way through a perfect cloud of smoke. The question, how to eradicate the evil without giving offense, is a conundrum to me. Merchants in ‘any line of trade would save moaey by establishing a club room for the accommodation of: their friends.

Life of General Sherman.

No literary announcement of the year is of greater interest to the general public than that of a comprehensive life of General - Sherman, which is about to be published and sold threugh agents by the noted house of Hubbard Brothers, of Philadelphia. ‘Admirable biographies of Grant and Sheridan, complete to the time of their death, are already familiar to the publie, but a life of the third great commander, to finish the series, has been lacking. The various biographies of Sherman hitherto published have necessarily been incomplete; ‘and even his own memoirs, written in' 1875, said almost nothing of his intensely interesting early life, and not a word, of course, of the more than twenty years of social activity and fraternity with old comrades since the war. | The work which is now to be issued will splendidly supply the widely felt demand for a history of the great’ strategic commander. It is being written by General O. O. Howard, a man of fine literary attainments, who knew Sherman better than any other of his comrades now living, and ranked next but one to him in the army, and by Willis Fletcher Johnson, whose ability as a historian is familiar to the reading public of America through his former unusually popular works, which have had millions of readers, and the sales of their vast editions enriched an army of book agents. That this history of Sherman, the last of the great generals, will surpass all others in popularity is not to be doubted. i The story of this great General’s career is of a marvelous march from the 'mountains of time to the sea of eter‘nity. Of the three great war heroes, ‘Sherman was by far the most interesting personality. He was the best known to the public and the best loved for his genial disposition and warm sympathy with the popular heart. He has joined his illustrious compeers in the eternal bivouac of the dead. He is a life to study—to emulate—and is a profound inspiration. The forthcoming volume will tell the whole story of | his marvellous career, and from the authorship engaged upon it, we are assured it will be told in a way that will enthral the attention and interest of every reader from first to last. 1t is a book every American will want and one every American youth should | read. It will doubtless be the best life of the freat chieftain published, and | we predict for it wonderful popularity.

What the Newspaper Does.

A widely circulated newspaper is a friend indeed to all business men who seek the most efficient method of making their business known to customers. It is also a friend to the community in which it is published. Itcan, and generally does, do as much for the town or county in which it is located as 1s done for it. —Connersville News.

: Saws! Saws! v ~ All kinds of saws hammered and preaired by Carlton Jones, at Ligonier, Ind., on Friday of each week. Large circular saws a specialty. All work warranted. Orders can be left at Gerber & Co 's hardware.

Children (aslona

Castoria promotes Digestion, and

overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour Stomach, = Diarrhcea, and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep matural. Castoria contains no Morphine or other narcotic property.

¢ Castoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me.” H. A. ARCHER, M.D., 82 Portland Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.

T use Castoria in my practice, and find it specially adapted to affections of children.” ALEX. RoBErTsoN, M. D., 1057 2d Ave., New York. THE CENTAUR Co., 182 Fulton St., N. Y.

DR. BARTLEY, The well known Eye and Ear .\“peoialist and Optician, and late asgistant surgeon in the Chicago Bye and Ear Infirmary, treats all -discases of the Eve and Ear, Nose and Throat, by request of many friends and patients has deeided to visit ILLIGONIER, Taesday, March IT7ih, from 8 a. m, ; o 1p m, Examination Freein bis parlors in the LIGONIER HOUSE G : ) 7 ‘,%\*S—x:;/ BN di e ¥ « . ,A_:~:l;4:«_:;.';ss{2'.{-'5; R .~ X R\ S N\ PR\ \ SN NN NN =

DR. BARTLEY,

The Eyé and Bar Specialist .and Optician, is agrad. pate of the Chicago Eye and Ear Colicge, and late pssistant in the same_ college; and also Assistant Rurgeon in the Illinois Eye and Ear Infirmary, treats ail diseases of the Eye and Ear, Nose and Throat, and Nervous Diseases. All. operations performed on the Eye, such as Cross-Eye cured in a few minutes without pain; also Cataract cured;no dark rooms; closure of the pupil, closure of the tear duct, pter. ginm, chronic sore eyes cured without caustic. sli for a failure to cure a case of granulated lids. Catarrhal diseases of the Nose and Throat, gnch as noises and deafness, discharges from the nose and ears, and granulated laryngitis, treated and cured by the latest and most improved method. Nervous diseases, suckl as nervous headache, sick headache, dizziness, pain in' the eyes and nervous prostration, are generally” caused by some defect of vision, and can only be_cured by properly adjusted glasses. Our Spectacle Department is complete, and with our system of fitting we guarantee a fit in every case. A y )

OUR REFERENCES. B The Faculty Chicago Eye and Ear College, who are as follows: Prof.J. E. Harper, A. M. M. D. Prof. ¢ G Silder, M./ D. Prof. Geo. F. Hawley. M. D. Prof. J. Brown ‘Loring, M. D. Prof. C. A. Kelsey, M.D. Prof. Oscar A. King, M. D. Dr. Milton Latta, E. E. Mummeri, Goshen, Ind. Rev. D. C. Wolpert, Warsaw, Ind. ; Rev. M. S. Marble, North Manchester, Inds

Commissioner’s Sale,

Notice 18 hereby given that the undersigned commissioner, appointed by the Noble Circuit Court, Noble County, Indiana, in an action for partition which Alice McDowell et al are plaintiffs ane Harriett K Carr et al are defendants, will sell at private sale, ong SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1891,

Between the hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 4 o’elock p. m., of said day, and thereafter, at the law office of Green & Bothwell in the town ot Ligonier, Noble county, [ndiana, the tollowing described real estate to-wit: Commencing at the norcheast corner of lot twenty-six (26) in Chapman’s addition to the town of Ligonicr, and running thence south'to the southeast corner of said'lot, thence west two hundred and thirty-five (235) feet, thence north to the north line of said lot, thence east two hundred and thir%y-five (235) feet to the place of beginning in Noble county, Indiana. tAlSOithe following real estate in Noble county, 0-wit: .

Commencing at the intersection of the north line of East street, and the west line of Detroit street, in the town of Rochester, in Noble county, Indiana,running from thence north two and 25-100echains, thence east five and 25- | 100 chains, thence north four and 82-Ivo chains, thence north forty-four and one-haif degrees east; three £nd 19-100 chains, thence north four and 32-100 chains, thence north sixty-six degrees west, seven and 10-100 chains; thence south seven chaing, thence scuth thirty-two and one-half degrees; west eight and 75-100 chains, thence south two and 25-100 chains, thence east three,and 82-100 chains to the place of beginning, to contain ten acres of land more or less, the same being the Rochester Mill property, except » strip of land on the north side of ~the Elkhart river, sold and conveyed to Eber McConnell, May 6th, 1879. Brooks’ Wheel, old iron and shed. : . TERMS OF SALE: One-third cash at the time of the sale, onethird in one year and remaining one-third in two years, The deferred payments to be secured by notes of the purchaser bearing rix per cent. interest per annum from date and attorney’s fees, and payable without relie f from valuation and appraisement laws, and secured by mortgage on said lands, except the old iron, Brooks’ Wheel and Shed, which must be secured by approved personal security. DaANIEL W. GREEN,Com’r. e i . . Notice of Final Settlement, STATE OF INDIANA,} 88 NOBLE COUNTY, ” In the Noble Circuit Court, March Term, 1891, Estate ot Solomon Shroyer. ‘; Notice is hereby given that the undersigned administrator of the estate of Solomon Shroyer deceased, bas this day filed in the office of the clerk ot the Noble Circuit Court of Indiana, his report and vouches in final settlement of said estate,and that sgad report is set for hearing, in sald Circuit urt, at the court house in Albion, Indiana, oh the 24th day of March, 1891, 'at which time and place the heirs and creditors i»ol’ said estate and all other persons interested therein, are required to appear and make proof ~of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate.and show cause, if any there be, why Baid report should not be apgroved by the Court and said administratur discharged, March 3, 1891, JOHN E. PANCAKE, Adm'r, o A SA A A R L e A € Yi N RKT 7o the Public. e STATE OF INDIANA,y NoBLE COUNTY, } . John Flannagan, of Perry Township. Noble County, Indiana, deposes and says that the report which has been put into circulation by divers persons to the effect that Polly Heffner is as onery a gereon as walks the streets of Ligonier, and charged to have originated with me is false, and without a shadow of truth. And I do further depose and say that I bave full faith and confidence in her good name and character, and | do believe that she is 4 ‘good ‘woman and entitied to th: respect ana friendship of the citizens of sai?! town of Ligonter. : : e JOHN FLANNAGAN, Snggoflbaflimd sworn to before me this 2d day of Maich, 1891, . - s e e D, W, GREEN ; e %} Lo Notary.finbuc.'

Fflz??. 3 ; g & / " ' * ANTA-CLAUS - SOAP- 1S HADF ol Lo SRR : ' e N ,‘,"‘J’S'fi*fl‘,\‘\ n e Z f”;;"” R t\‘: % : /;‘\\ \Q NfifiAflfiNW@o g \ P B 2 Cls e - Y N /7 - @WU@A@ o R 8 ‘v»;,f.} @ _° i ©. 2 & & ',' N s £y N 6 24N, o e N A~ R :73-.'-.'_:-7!-"7%:7.\ LD : s \\\\\‘ ”",“""f‘ul'y,w et I ORST EES (C ~ : DA B i j{\ “gfix wf,g.,b N! AP " Lo & Sy ” sy ; .4 ) L S - 4q R E AN == 4. I 8 - B i, S\ ,Ex ECCLIOm A& B AT T[] 62 B 2 TREI O T B v /A ; P LT WOMAN THAT HAS ANY SENSE, g\% “: " AND MANY THERE BE WE HOPE, \("s; ~ WEL SPEND HER CENTS FOR A USEFUL CAKE PR WA AR /73 SANTA . O/'*“ P e stANA O 'CLAUSS M

3 N La . 7 & f ° ‘ had ' 3 Er _),/ & ‘"-:mu., i .':J ‘L_\‘ ; % : : : b VRN RO Mg . @y g % B L }‘\-;mt?. R E fi‘&; ez i”'fi ™ bt B 9 OV K bom B W : ARE THE BEST. : 100 styles, prices to suitall. - WM. AYRES & SoNS, PHILADELPHIS. - Sold by all dealers.

POSITIVELY CURER | LUMBAGC, PNN'IH BALH BRIGHT'S DISEASE, PROMIRERT : , PR sChlae p PHESCRIDE LIVER AND KIDNEY DISEASES. IRFORMATION Bottle $l. Ask Drugglst or wriie MAILED FREE WM. T. LINDLEY & €O., - R i 214-224 La Salle Bt.s Chicago, lIL St. Louts,Mo., Aug, I,’BB. BRIGHTINE cured me of Diabetes, and to-day am hearty and well. Mgs.A.A.GILLIAM, Treas. Woman’s Exchange. ‘CHICAGO, Dec. 1. ’B7. My Kidneys troubled me several years, BRIGHTINE entirely curedme. § A. (g SMITH, Western News Co. Jos.M.Norris, Agt.C., R. L&EP.R. R. { BUFFALO,N.Y.,M&%II,’BS. Suffered from Lumbago several years. BRIGHTINE cured me. Shannan, Capt. Steamer Chemung, Un. St’boat Co. Bt. Lours, April 24,783, BRIGHTINE gives zat. § isfaction. STAND’D DruG Co. 900 Franklin Av, | | St. Lonis, Dec. 12,788. BRIGHTINE hasall the ‘ k virtues claimed.MasTßroOß, D'gs 169 8. B’V ay. Rockville, Ind., Nov, 18, ’57. - Can recomrrend | BRIGHTINE highly. REev, JouN Hawkes, E Chicago Times, Murch 28, 'B3-Glohe, Nov. 11, . 5 Illustrated Century, Jan, 28, 'BB,—Comme: cial Traveller, Feb. 15, 88, PRAISE BRIGHTIN B.! Refer to Muf. Inv. & Loan Assn., Bullock Fros, J.Shepard,Supt. U.S.Ex. G.F.Kimball Glass Imp, Royn CIE R on Your G;glaé‘é?—{fia 7 STy Ul ul Tickat to RGN Uik, J C.JUDSOM & .CO.'S perzonally conui 2ted California Hxcursionsin broad gauge Puilm . Tourist Sleeping Cars, via Denver & Rio Grinde R. K., (the scenic'line of the world) leave Chicago vig Chicago & Alton R. 8. 12:00 noon Saturday of every week, each excursion in chgrge of &n etficientand gentlemanly excursion manager. I'ullman tourist sleeping cars through from Boston and Chicago to San ¥rancisco and Los Angeles. For rates, reservation of - berths, etc., cail-on or address, J. C. JUDSON & CO., 195 Clark Street, Chicago. e ———————————————————————————————— PN & o @&/ \\ {FIC Co R 7/ SciENT AMERICAN A ¢ gt ] AGENGY«f or e o : : il fi ",:4'?,'/,/ 3 FIML| = ) i R\ A pamphlet of information and ab- /4 M\ stract of the laws, showing How to/#/d @\ Obtain Patents, Caveats, Trade/#///h, W\ Marks, Copyrights, sent free. 277/} PN\ Address MUNN & CO. 779 AN\ 361 Broadway, 2 QLA New York. 7)) : S N\ e - : e e eoo o= - - $6000.00 a year is being- mage by John R. s 5 L N Goodwin,Troy,N.Y.,at work for us. lieader, it S 8 you may not make as much, but we can ey %,-/’ 8§ teach you quickly how to earn from %5 to P ‘ $lO a day at the start, and more as you go NS @i SR on. Both sexes, all ages. -In any part of e L 8 America, you can commence at home, giv- . b A9ing all your tilne,or spare moments only to o *e,é%‘-‘*‘ the work. All is new, Great:pay-SURK for L every worker. We start you, furnishing 4 g everything. EASILY, SPEEDILY learned. {:‘q-‘% ‘ l’Al{'l‘lC}JLAl\'S FREE. Address at once, i STINSON & (0., PORTLAND, MAINE. s ‘ - e Snug little fortunes have been madeat BESDLRGRR N work for us, by Anuna Page, Austin, K 6":%?(;‘ AR\ I'exas, and Jno. Bonn, Toledo, Ohio. ;/“vfi‘* ',z;,)fl,.‘.‘ [\ See cut, Others are doing as well. Why A 0 //yl fnot vou? Some earn over $500.00 a Ny 7 month. You ean o the work and live Syt home, wherever you are, Even beS@ B/ ginners are easily earning from $5 to { sloaday. All ages. We show you how Bl and start you. Can work in spare time y < - or all the time. Big money for work= oL RPN s\“: Failure unknown among them, NEW and wonderful. Particulars free. H.Hallett & C0.,880x SBO-Portiand, Maine

READ TEHIES TWRLHY

~ The only Protection that will effectually protect all people, all clisses, all labor and all interests is that styled SELF PROTECTION ! acquired only from a truthful knowledge of ways and means, legal and illegal, just and unjust, by which the burdens of government, profits of labor and industry, are 50 unequally divided. ' " That knowledge is power, and ignorance its slave, i%. forcibly illustrated daily in all walks of life, among all people, in all countries, Where knowledge is used as a’power or a means for gaining wealth without. labor or an eqUivalent therefor, it becomes necessary to deceive or keep in ignorance of such methods those from ‘whom the wealth is-taken ; hence it is that of the ten thousand newspapers printed in the United States, less than ten are absolutely free and independent of the power or control of some class, party or monopoly whose interest it is to keep the great mass of people in ignorance of their methods. 5 The Cincinnati Weekly Enquircr is one of the few, if not the only one. absolutely free from such influences. It is the most honest, thorough, abl. teacher -and exponent of truthiui knowledge, of reliable data, free fror partisan bias, fair, frank and explici to such degree that one cannot ‘b'ut.i‘pel edified and capable of forming corrci.. conclusions therefrom, Such a paper should be in every household. Sample copes can be obiained by addvessing the publishers,.ab Cincinnati, 0.~

Rail Road Director y. LAKY SHORE : —~——AND— Michigan Southern Rail Road Nowv, 30th, 1890, GOING KAST.. | GUING WEST 50| 50| Mo seattons) N 3 AN ean 4-30 |- T:45 1......)Ckucag0 7.35‘ 845 . ... P.M. | 1.00 11:401....:.! Elkhart 340 l 2401 ... = , » 11T [11:59| ... | Goshen | 3.6 2:20]...... 1:32 ..“I’.....~il\lil'lersn'g emeveet 2:01 fLLLL.. JTAmi 1:45 1 12:25 [ ...« [LIGONIER| 2:50 | 1:45 1;551‘.....?.....>| Wawnga |......| 1:85|...... { | ~ , . 204 ... ... Brimfielaf......| 1:26].._.. | [A.M. | | P. M, 2:181 12:57| 6:lo|Kendalye ‘2;l7‘ 1:121 Yl5 | : 2:40 | 1:20 | 8:40 | Waterloy ‘-1;52112:47 8: 48 | e AM PM 2:56 | 1:38 | 6.58| Butler 1:37| 12:30| 8:33 ! | P .M. : 5:15| 3:55| 9.50| Toledo |11:05(10:00] s { iP: M, | = AM.|A. M, 9:40 | 8:101 225 Cleveland| 6:50| 5:45| 10:45 A. M, | P.M. | it JP.M .| AM, 3:20 : ‘23()]' 0| Buffalo | 11.50{ 11:45| 5:4( -.-—_._-r—p——-—._—"“—“—‘—_.—— Liocal Frelght Golug East about 10:00 A. M Locar Freignt Going West abourt 12.30 P.M Nosg, 8 & 9 Run Daily. P.P.WRIG HT, Gew’lBupt, Gievelana, O, A.J.SMITH Gen’]l Pass. Ag’t, Chrcago.llis X 64 s - 19 Elkhart Line” C.W,& M. Time Table. May 18, 1890, All traingrun dai'lybexceptSundaJ i B o L RS R R GOING NORTH, i GOING SOUTH ———— T No. | No. | No. | No. | No. | No. 5. f 4. | I..|'s“"“°"S'l 2. , a. ’ 6. AM, ] | \P.M,JA.M.IA. M 2:36| 700! 12:()5,B.Hurbor[ 326 T:15) 3: | | Lol ‘ 1:37] 6.7 11:1‘1" _ Niles 4,15.’ 8:07| 4:3¢ o = o bRI 535 i 11:47| Granger :I.::'9i &:28] 503 AL M. ! i 5;231 10:21| Eikhart 459 8 47| b P.M| » 12:80 S:UUi 10:03l;Goshen _5:221 9:10| - 5:4¢ 12:06] 4:36| Q:Bil}MilfordJ. 546 9:33 6:08 1:34) 407 910{warsaw 6:14‘”1001 - Brd( : : : | 11:15) 5:48 s:s2}Clay'pool 6:35 10:7| 65 10:48 3;22; B:27|N.M'nch’r| 70z 1042 l 7.5 10:33) 2:07| 82 Bolivur\ 7.%! 10:47| 7.28 | I (P.MAM.|A. M t:15) 2501 7:55 1 Wab’shal 7383 11:10] 7 5 P. M.|P. M. A, M. {P.M.IA:M.[A. M 10:0 z;wl 7:40 a Wab’shl 7:4811)1]:1‘\.510 8 1 9:22 1:57‘ 6:55 Marion 8:38{ 12:07| 85 857| 6:10 Alex’dris| 9:30 12:58| 93 PIM, | : ,8.1(/'12:51)' 5:45/Anderson| 9:58] 120| 100 IP..\L A, M.JA.M.| P.M(PM.|aAM | 6:40] 11:15| 3:3v|lndia’p’lis 11:20] 2:50| 11:% e g e L R e R | tDo notstop. GENERAU OFFICES . ELKBART ,IND. ‘ NORMAN BECELEY .Gen. Man EDGAR H.BECKLEY, . ~Gen. Passenger and Ticket Agen M Ah e : | BR 2 iRy : REtAe ’ P . R : ‘ I , : | | N | : S ‘ i SR j//\\\ - ;_, v‘ \""U“""x..,, A

TAKE WARNING . A and Save Money by buying your Boots, Shoes T ANRE = Rubber Goods ' —oud : THOMAS . PRICKETT, in north'.room ‘of Weii' Blgek oppo- “ . site the Ligonier House. - ; Custom Work and Repairing a = ~ Specialty, . : GIVE MEA CALT. | THOS. PRICKETT. e AYEA'R! T undertak Year intheirown lomg?lv:ufevhee:“mm’:;lgmlm 1s M o E?:::tmfié: :Ef::fi?‘:: m . i L;.l fi? AL, or iRB"