Ligonier Banner., Volume 38, Number 45, Ligonier, Noble County, 4 February 1904 — Page 4
. A HEALTH ' : By Edward Coate: Pinkney ‘ | EDWARD COATE PINKNEY was born in London in 1802 during ‘his father’s term as America’s minister at the court of St. James. . Pinkney entered the mavy at the age of fourteen, but resigned in 1822, Later he practiced law in Baltimore without success. After writing and teaching literature for a.few years his health failed, and he died - in 18%8. He was considered ‘by Poe the finest of America’s lyric poets. : “A Health,” “Picture Song”. and “Rodolph” are the best known of .his verses. -
: FILL this cup to one made u : Of loveliress alene, _I A woman, of her gentle sex ! The seeming paragon; , To whom the better €élement: / And kindly stars have given - A form so fair, that, like thé air, ¥ 'Tis less of earth than heaven. } Her very tone is music’s own, _ Like those of morning birds, And something more than melody -Dwells ever in her words: s The coinage of her heart arg they, And from her lfps each flows : As one may see the burdened bee Forth issue from the rose. ot " Affections are as thoughts to her, - -. The measures of her hours; _Her feelings have the fragrancy, - The freshness of yourig flowers; And lovely passions,-changing oft, So fill her, she appears . The image of themselves by turns,— The idol of past years!® -
£ ZAlgoniey Lanner. ,3. y ¢ / . J. £E. McDONALD, Editor. / ————— e BRI e e e e e Published every Thursday and entered in the postoffice, Ligonier, Ind., as second-clas matter P e N " 'PHONE NoO. 18.: .
- Senator Dubois, onceja free silver Republican, but now a l)elllocx'ayt» says that Bryan has had!'‘his chance twice on ‘thke issue ‘'whicb he names - and it 1s time for him to pause and find out what his friends think of the situation.” The Senator further says that if Bryan maintains his present attitude “*he will make it necessary for the convention to turn him down in a manner that we shall all regret, and which wilkbe likely to cause hard feelings;l’ Senator Bailey tells the Louisville Courier-Journal that the - Bryan leadersnip was a listake from the start, and that it ought to be ended. While our old friend, Senator Tillman, the untamed Bryabpite of four " years ago, says: “llj,js about time for B‘ryau‘&tlo'g{gpuut of the way and give somebody else a chance. iHe is not doing m_qfi%%fgnocmuc party auy good by assuming dictatorship: He ought to be muzzl .’ Senator Clay of Georgia holds substantially the sbjme views. There are thousands of Mr. Bryan’s former supporteré who express the.same opinion. : : In arecent letter from Washington, the congressional situation was considered and it is pointed out that witn the right kind of leadership we . have a most excellent chance of controlling the lower house. In the event of a democratic House of Representatives, it is pointed out that ‘“the Indiana delegation would get high places on committees, am& Messrs. Miers, Zenor and Robinson wouldall come in for chairmanships.: This would be due to the ability and experience of the gentlemen. - Mr, Griffith will, ot course, not be a:member of the next House. The Democrats of the House -hope and expect that the three vther veterans of the Hopsier delegation will be returned. Each one is ' widely acquainted and very popular among public men, and each would hold a commanding position™in_a congress controlled by the Democracy.” S o B L RRR R RR . . -There-is penffing’in congress a bill called the Brownlow Bill, introduced by Hon. WalterAP. Brownlow of Tennessee, which appropriates $24,000,000 as national aid for the building of wagon roads. This sum is to be available at therate of $8,000,000 a year; 1s to be divided according to the population of the different states, but no staté is to receive less than $250,000. Every state receiving national aid must appropriate and spend a like amount The asserted growth of sentiment in favor of the measure has been chiefly due to the institution and extension of the rural free, mail delivery system, which has brought the disadvantages of poor roads home tothe farmers-and other country dwellers. | Applications-for the extension of the free rural delivery system are being refu}sed by the postoffice authorities on account of the roads, and the glisa,p'pdimed communities-demand their improvement. These demands are so in excess of the ability of the local boards to respond to that for a year past hflghv’s}ay commissions all over the country have been putting themselves on recorh in favor of national aid. Itisclaimed on behalf of the bill that the plan of distribution is more equitable than the distribution of some $32,5600,000 a year under the Rivers and Harbors Bill, which goes, principally to the seaboard states and‘to the Mississippi delta. In support of the Brownlow Bill as a general measure, attention is called to the fact that France has 23,603 miles of wagon road, which are built and maintained by the nation. and ftaly about 5,000 nriles, whilg many of the i -states of the Union spend hundreds of thousands of dolla},fi’éxmually'in aid of highway improvement: - ' : : i B 2 %22 The death of Hon. Robert Lowry at. Fort Wayne .last week, closed the career of one of the most remarkable men in the history of the nation. A great man, a brilliant lawyer, a just judge and an honest and eonscientious statesman, he occupied:a’,pro'mvindnt and exalted position in the history of our great commonwealth. No man ever occupied apy bench who had a ~ more comprehensive id‘(jaa..of right and wrong, a broader view of humanity and a better understanding of the law than did Judge Lowry. .He had the confidence of thé lawyers who knew him as a wise, able and upright jurist; while the people.respected him as a just judge, consistent in his opinions, honest in his coxivictions and deliberate in his conclusions. He well deserved the many suécesses_ that came to him. He well deserves all the praise that will now be bestowed upon Lim by those who deal with him hbnestly and sincerely. As a Democrat,Judge Lowry was an honor to his party. He believed in the equality of man and the perpetuity of constitutional rights: He was an able, eloquent and resourceful advocate of. sound democratic principles, e&er’teady%deferrd'his party against the onslaughts of the forces . from withouc or the factions within. He never made terms with his political enemies nor did he forget his party friends. He had a broad conception of true citizenship, a full consciousness of the responsibilities of the politi- !/ cian and a campreheqsive understanding of conditions of society. As a representative of the people, his record standg without a shfidow; his great - intellectual powers, his untiring and well directed zeal; his mastery of political questions and his knowledge of party history fitted him for the lead_ership that made him prominent in party councils and forceful in the halls - of congress. Robert Lowry was the peer of any man; he well deserved the successes that came to bim in life, and in death, the calumnies that were - heaped upon him and the disappointments that came to him, will fbe forgotten. . o e o o L R Ay : In the Boone circuit court last Monday, Judge Samuel R. Artman, Re‘publican and former syeaker of the house of repr‘esenta.tlves,‘ held fhat the | recent act of the legislature for the apportionment, of ‘represention in the legislature is uncon.st_i;utior}al. -The apportionment was .¢ontested by the democratic state eczmnpitbee_. In his decision the judge says: *“The act of March 9, 1903, was evidently constructed on David Harum’s theory that self-defense is todo to you and do-itfirst.” This is a distinet yictory for the. Democrats. ik : : e i L sae 3 . i, Many tributes of r,ésj;’ecth have been paid to the memory of Robert Lowry, who died at his hot{n‘é in Fort Wayne last week, and all of them were ‘merited. There was no act in his long life that marred his reputation nor . ghe. strictest integrity(vfnfl the highest sense of personal and - professional honor. He was a man of ability, of strong impulses and indomitable energY, kindly nature and jdeep consideration for his fellows. He was successful at the bar, respected on the bench and influential in politics,a clean cut, ~ op’en-hande&,"fait—mirjd_ed man.—Sotith Bend News, (Ind.). . ' o . 6ee WP o i : ~Judge Lowry outlived the political asperities of the period. when he was most active in politics, but there was never at any time any reason to ~ suppose that he cherighed ill-will toward the critics of his political course, He also lived long enough to discoyer that all the harsh feeling which a puplic man cannot escape had passed away. 'ln this there should be a les- ~ son to all. Men will differ as to niethod and will question motive bitterly, _ but time will show all that the differences are shallow and are only as to methods, affording no ground to question one another’s patriotism. Judge Lowry illustrated thig broad spirit in his life and is entitled to the lasting respect and loving memory of his fellow countrymen. He was great be~canse he ha‘dlgrggggg;;;-.tpf&-——bohesty;. courage, intelligence, loyalty to his \ «nfic&fiommda?lm powg‘r_syotmignd.-l'%rt Wayne News.
Of her bright face one glance will trace = A picture on the brain, L And of her voice-in echoing Hearts ~A sound must long remain; But memory, such as mine of her, So very much endears, | When death is nigh my: latest sigh : Will not be life’'s, but hers. : T fill this cup tv one made up Of loveliness alone, : S A ‘woman, of her gentle sex The seeming paragon—=— Her health! and would :on earth there stoad: ~ © : - ; Some more of such a:frame, . ° That life might be all poetry, And weariness a name. : 0000600680 22H54646006006086H0¢
Strange Relic of War Times, - A special to the Indianapolis News from Uniontown, Penn., will be one oi local interest. ; - ‘““After nearly forty years Jacob S. Miller, an old soldier of Uniontown, has received a section of bone taken from his’left shoulder by the late Dr. Norman §. Teal, of Kendallville, Indiana, July 21, 1864, at the battle of Peach Tree creek, which was fought on the site of the land occupied a few years ago by the Atlanta exposition grounds. ; . The piece of bone is about three inches in length and was taken out of the humerus by disjointing the bone at the shvouider and sawingit off below th& wound. The operation was a most skillful one as a terrific wind storm was raging at the time and the surgeon operated in the open air at night by torchlight and- antiseptics were unprocurable at that time. -
At the present time with np-to-date surgery such an operation would not be difficult but physicians state that under the circumstances in 1864 it was a remarkable operation and Mr. Miller was fortunate in having his arm saved. Dr. Teal was much gratifled over his sucecess and after the war when he lectured on surgery exhibited the piece of bone before students. The bone was placed in the collection of wagsrelics of Dr." Teal and kept by him as long as he lived and recentiy returned to Mr. Miller by Dr. George A. Teal of Kendallville, Indiana, a son of the late Dr. Norman S. Teal. !
- Things Have Changed, ; When Judge Lowry was elected circuit judge in 1864, the judicial district over which he presided was composed of the counties of Elkhart; Lagrange, Steuben. DeKalb, Noble, Kosciusko, Whitley, Allen. Adams and Wells. lln 1867 the legislature divided this distriet into two, and Judge Lowry moved from Goshen to Fort Wayne, for political reasons. The ten counties that constituted his district at the time of -his election now constitute six separate judicial districts. Itshould be remembered however that in those’ days we had common pleas courts in Indiana in addition,to circuit courts. The former were abolished by the legislature of 1871 and the circuits were made smaller. - Nevertheless the duties of a eircuit’judge of ten counties were exacting and onerous. Butin those days ease was not as much a consideration as is now the order of the day. Judge Lowry was a prodigious worker. ‘While fairly loaded down with judicial duties he still took upon himself the additional burben of a congressional nomination in a Republican district. It is doubtful if any other man in that district could have endured such a strain.—South Bend Times, =
State Bank for Cromwell, | Cromwell is to be blessed with a State Bank by the first of February. A. B. Mier of the Sol Mier Company of Ligonier, was'here yesterday and solicited subseription stock and nearly every.business man .in the town subscribed. Today Mr. Mier is soliciting she country surrounding our hustling little city. It is to bé a St»ajie Bank with a capital stock of $25,000, and it will be one of the strongest banks financially in the state. Mr. Sol Mier is now rated as‘a millionaire, and the stock-holders-of our community-are well to do. ; ' : Our city has been badly in need of a bank and this accounts for the interest takan by our people. Everybody should encourage Mr. Mier in his urldertaking. A , , Milfon Moore is_escorting Mr. A. B. Mier and assisting him in his solicitation. Mr. Moore is always interested and enthusiastic over anything that will improve the town. _Mr! Mier will find that we are the most patriotic people on the earth. The bank will enhance the value:of all the property in our city and is just as essential as a school house. Let efierybody patronize it and push it along.—Cromwell News. ! : Money to Burn. According to the Waterloo Press a young man froma Kendallville visited that city recently, claiming that he was a bankers son and had recently fallen heir to a large sum of money and had gone there to spend part of his money and have a good time treating the boys and also treating himself to the best drinks that the town could afford. He arrived in the city and registered at Hotel Locke, where he remained a couple of days. He displayed large handsful of twenty dollar gold pieces, and said that he had nearly two thousand dollars with him, and that he proposed to have a good time, and was spending much of his money for drinks. He treated all the drinkers who were in the saloons when he would visit them, and then for safe keeping gaye $715-0f his money to Landlord Eugene Kelley, and it i%i‘}éported that he distributed like amounts to other parties to keep for him until he was "ready to leave town. -
; Advertised Letters. The following letters remain in the postoffice uncalled for: = . Miss Lizzie Pulietze, Miss Ednah Gilson, Mrs. Mary Wise, Mrs. Wm. Stevens,\Mrs. Maud Brady, 2; Mrs. Florence Starkey, Mrs. Amanda Lacor, Rev. John G. Lauer, Mr. H. D. Myers, Stanley Murphy. Claimants for any of the above letters will please call for advertised list. - J.L. DUNNING, P. M,
What Are They ? Chamberlain’s S’tonl;wh and Liver Tablets. A new remedy for to mach troubles, .biliousness and constipation and a good one. Price, 25 cents. For sale by B.J. Williams; Husseys & Son, Cromwell. . 45-4¢
. Folly of Remaining Too Loné. Representative Griffith of the Fourth Indiana district. has received many letters asking him to reconsider his determination to retire from congress. ‘I hope noone got the impression that I decided not to seek g renomination because T ‘ doubted whether I could succeed,” said he. ‘I could have been renominated with as little effort as at any time since I entered congress. I wanted to quit before it was too late. My observation is that a good many men stay in congress too long. The associations here are pleasant, but the longer a man stays the more he is unfitted for the battle of life in which he must engage when he does retire. I could name a good many men of my acquaintance who stayed in congress until they were unfitted for any other kind of work, and the result is that they are now much worse off than they were before they entered congress.” And then, with a smile, the Indiana member who is setting a new example by retiring voluntarily, said: My going out may not be a good thing for the country, but it is a good thing for me.” .
. Strange'Diswppeardhce. | Yesterday Goshen relatives received word that Fred Batchelor and family, formerly of this city, have been missing since last October. Mr. and Mrs. Batchelor have-pne daughter. The three have completely dis‘appeared, all efforts to learn their whereabouts being unsuceessful. They left Goshen last October, ostensibly to mfi»qke a trip.- throngh the south, since which time nothing has been heard from them. 'Their first stop was to have been Terre Haute, Indiana, but their mail including remittances ,which was ordered sent to them there, has been returned. Since this time many letters had been written by bis parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marion Batchelor, 131 Crescent street, seeking information, of the missing family but without result. Re{lft,ives residing at various points in thesouth have seen and heard nothing 6f the trio. The matter has become|agrave one here as Mr: Batchelor was not an eccentric person, and was in_the habit of writing home frequently whileat a distance:—Goshen Democrat, Friday. ¢ Mr. Batchelor is well known here and it'is hoped that no harm has come tosthem. Itissaid that a recent letter from Chicago 9th inst infers matter that will lead to the whereabouts of the young people. | : Most Excellent Selections, _District Chairman A. A. Alams has anuounced that he will name Harry D. Stone of "Albion, and Daniel M. Link of Auburn, as members of the democratic state executive committee. In the stateorganization, Chairman O’Brien will appeint two men from each district as members of the executive committee upon the suggestion of the different district chairmen. . ‘ o o No better selection could be made than the men named for this district. Both are young men, full' of energy and democratic zealand with the district chairman, will see to it that democratic interests in this part of the state ‘are well taken care of. Mr. Stone is a prominent business man of Albion, whd'takes to polities like a duck to water, while Mr. Link is a leading lawyer of DeKalb county, and a young man of great promise. He will be remembered as the gentleman who so admirably presided over the district convention held here a couple of weeks ago.—Columbia City Post. ; e
~ Audacious Performance. Walter Wellman, in .one of his letters from Washington,intimates that William R. Hearst is in the market for the presidential fiominaition, or that he is trying to buy it.- There is no question but that Mr. Hearst is a. candidate, and it is also true that he is making an effort to secure the nomination. This fact has been apparent for several months. He is employing methods and means to.secure the high honor that were never employed by any other aspirant in the democratic party. He has a literary bureau and has men in his employ to carry out his plans. lln fact, he is operating like a candidate for a state office, or for congress, or for some county office. He is making a canvass of the whole country by means of letters and documents and is booming himself through his newspapers in Chicago, New York and San Francisco. Wellman intimates that Hearst is trying tobuy the nomination.—Columbia City Post.
{5 Obituary. William Groweock was born in Lincolnshire, England, October 24, 1834. He came to America in 1854. His two brothers, George and John came to America in 1852. , He was married in 1865 to Catherine Shearer. To this union 13 ¢hildren were born, three af the children are dead. The following are the names of the children still living, Mrs. A. E. Bailey, Mrs. E. V. Williamson, Mrs. J. L. Biddle, Mrs. R. Winebrenner, Frank, Marion, Ross, Fred, Gertrude and Elva Growcock. : “Mr. Growcock 'moved to Noble county in 1854. He owned. a fine farm of 190 acres in York township. He died January 27, 1904, aged 69 years, 3 months and 3 days. The funeral was held at Sparta last Sunday, Rev. Page officiating. $2 More Than Half Fare from Chicago via Chicago Great Western Railway. To points in Colorado, Kansag, Missouri and New Mexicc. Tickets on sale Jan: b and 19, Feb. 2 and 16, March 1 and 16, April 5 and 19. - For further particulars apply to J. P. Klmer, G. P. A., Chicago, 111. 41-15 t
Itisn’t how much cold eream a woman puts on her face but how mueh Rocky Mountain Teashe takes inside that brings out real beauty. Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea comlexions stay. 386 cents. Teaor tabFet.e S. T. Eldred & Co. !
ADDITIONAL LOCAL. , : Ike Rose spent Sunday in tfiis city. Taylor C. Shobe is laid up with la grippe this week. : ;
" Abe Ackerman was over from Fort Wayne last Sunday. »
Prof. L. K. Bahcock of Topelestt was the guest of Miss Alma Billman last Tuesday evening. :
- Charley Green will leave Sunday morning for Chicago to attend the big antomobile show.
Miss Kate D%ugl‘as. a nurse from Harper Hospitdl, Detroit, is in the city nursing R. D, Kerr. 3
Owing to the bad condition of the roads, Rural Carriers Freed and Kern were unable to make their trips yesterday.
Mrs. C. R. Graves, the owner of the first automobile owned in Ligonier will attend the autoimobile show at Chicago next Monday. - G
" Hamy Stansbury went over to Albion Tuesday with hiseil wagon and has been unable to return on account of the blockaded roads. ; .
H. P. Tucker and wife entertained a select party of young people Monday evening in honor of Miss Ethel Summers, the popular teacher of the Stones Hill sehool.
Word from Kenton, Ohio, states that P. A. Carr, our genial auctioneer, is improving slowly but he is unable to walk yet. - He hopes to be able to resume his work in the salering next month. b
Dr. M. H. Thomas, the eminept specialist in chronic diseases, will be at Hotel Goldsmith, Thursday, Feb. 18. We especially recommend all‘invalids to call on the doctor for a candid expert opinion of their case free of charge. : 5 :
You cannot cure piles’ by external applications. Man Zan is put up in a collapsible tube, with nezzle, and is applied where most needed. ManZan stops the pain, soothes,cools and cures, Sold by S.,T. Eldred & Co. 45-9¢t
George H, Llohmen, deputy oil'in spector of Kendallville called at this office yesterday. Mr. Lohman was at Topeka Tuesday and started for this city but was compelled to stay at a farm house over night on account of the snow storm.
A rumor has been circulated about town to the effect’'that the Ktchyson family is implicated in the Mishawaka robbery, but it is.due them to say that they knew nothing of the affair until Marshal Lung arrested young Carter last Saturfiay.
- Uriabh R. Treash of Ligonier was appointed administrator this afternoon for the estate of 1.. C. Humbert of Pontiac, 111., who committed suicide several weeks ago as a result of despondency over losing his money in the failure of the Indiana National bank.—EkFkhart Truth. -
William Sawyer of Noble county, Wednesday left for Colorado, near Denver, from where he will escort his son home. Young Mr. Sawyer went to Colorado last fall to benefit his health,but in vain. He issuffering from tuberculosis of the lungs.— Columbia City Commercial.
" Judge Adair has refused to grant a new trial in the case of Bell vs. Kel--Iy, of DeKalb county, which occupied the attention of!f%e Noble ecircuit cdourtrecently. A judgment of $5,000 was obtedned by plaintiff from the defendant for alienating his wife’s affections.—Kendallville S«in. .
Missionary supper at the M."E. parsonage, Thursday, Feb. 11, 1804, from 5 to 7 o'clock.
S MENU. : \ Frica,gsvee Chicken: - .Grayy . ° Mashed“ Potatoes - Cold Slaw Hot Biscuit - Cake ~ Fruit Coffee Price 25 cents.
The pastor of ‘the Presbyterian church, Rev. Thos. G. Pearce by a special request will repeat a series of five or six sermons that he delivered some years ago on ‘‘Pilgrim’s Progress’’. The first of this series will be given next Sunday night at 7:00: o’clock. These sermomns are illustrated by paintings. You are invited.
- Fanny Stoneof Albion is lying at the point of death due to a complication of diseases. Her malady has baffled the skill of eminent physicians and her friends receive but little encouragement in regard to her condition. Her. many Ligonier friends still hope that the disease may take a turn and that she will be restored to health. : .
J. W. King, night operator and ticket agent at the Union:depot at Kendallville during November, who left that city suddenly, has been located at Richmond. He was arrested last Saturday and taken to Kendallville by Marshal Shauck. He is charged by the G. R. & I. officials with selling two tickets, one to Richmond, the other to Cincinnati, which he failed to accountfor. :
Last Monday Ora Ramsby met with a painful acecident while hauling wool to Cromwell for N. Wertheimer & Sons. His sled upset near the residence of Charles Stites, sbuth of the city, throwing Mr. Ramsby to the ground with great force. He was taken to his home and Dr. Black administered to his wants. No bones were broken but he was pretty badly bruised up and will not be able to work for several days. .
It isnow announced that the Farmers Bank at Auburn 18 to be re-open-‘ed. The capital stock of the concern is “to be increased from $40,000 to $lOO,OOO. and an entirely new set of officials. are to be in eharge. It has been arranged that the depositors are to leave their money in the bank, many of them old time depositors. It has beerr conclusively shown that the bank was solvent when closed and that the depositors did not stand to loan anything excepting the nse of their money for a few months, while ‘the affairs of the institution were being wound up. . ' ! £ : L, Lost .
Sunday evening, Jan. 10, between David Hire’s and Smith’s livery stable, a lady’s purse containing $lOO in bills, several dollars in silver and P. O. receipt with lady’s nameon. The finder will be liberally refarded by notifying L. J. Hire. :
. Farm Hand Wanted. ) I desire to hire an experienced farm band for the coming season. German or Swede preferred. Inquire at this office. : e
e IBTEREOVEARE - o 8 : Is'a ware that every. housekeeper who \:'ant.s‘a,_reall}: good article should have | : T e ————————————————— tikhats . | AR ‘Stranskyi H | the 'S;thl’y | / e %18' Pure - | | of the making of thei : ‘f AR and clean—it is acid- | best enameled ware | e proof—it . won't chip -made o - Pae T . off ' ‘ : ;THE BODY OF| E ;Ver y | STRANSKY ' Ware :Stransky Wareis of || - ' o v | will cost you a lit- : ‘heavy steel —seam- . b ] tle - more at . the’ ‘ less; on this four - B lece : start = than other : coats of heavy en- ST ' | ware, but figure the 1 amel — each burnt| OF “STRANSKY’ WARE IS | wear you get out $ ‘on separately ' (V'%UARAVNTEE‘I)‘ . pofit :-’: L |‘ - FOR FIVE YEARS .7 : i $We are @~ ——mB3 — A . . : Sole Agents ) Complete $ for this ware in this.{* ~v;vfi}g : ‘léAs"sortme:nt just re“Bity - Y - | ceived . ¢ WEIR & COWLEY : I.IGONIER,. @. ___PHONE 67 ©) ~ITINDIADNA
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Zimmerman will leave next Sunday for an extended trip through the south. They will go to New Orleaus for*Madri Gras and.do'not expect to return until early in March. They will spend a good portion of the time at and in the vicinity of New Orleans. ,
Bee’s Honey and Tar is a.delighful remedy for coughs, colds, la grippe, croup, whooping cough, pneumonia and consumption. > Made from the best clover honey and tarry distillations. It is mildly -laxative, tonic and strengthening. Children like it and it cures. Best cough cure. Sold by S.T. Eldred & Co. 45-9 t
‘T'wo months ago the safe in James Wach’s'store in Mishawaka was rifled of $6OO butno arrests could be made. Friday night the same safe was robbed of _ $2OO. af:turday Detective James Gummings brought back from Ligonier Louis Carter. the alleged culprit. He is nineteen years old, but is shrewd.—Goshen Democrat.
Bee’s Honey and Tar will prevent or cure pneumonia. It will utterly destroy the germs of the disease. 1t is maryelously efficacious in every form of lung inflammation, tones up the exhausted glands and builds up the muscular tissues. Cures all coughs, eroup. whooping cough and expels colds in one night. Try it. Sold by S. T. Eldred & Co. 45-4 t -
: MUST BE SOLD! ¢
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WE FILL MAIL | T "JLIGONIER 'ORDERS | IYR AL | INDIANA
g ~ thiscold weather iséhow on exhibition at % * . Equal to twenty-five feet of clothes line . ’ allin-a very small space ; can be folded - . | and moved 6ut of the way when not - inuse. Callandseeit. .. . . . . . Do not forget that we are the headquarters for Bargains. . . .. . .
very Suit and Overcoa ~ Must be sold, and if the price will : ~ do it we will sell them all regardless : .of "cost, as we cannot afford to ~ carry goods over from one season ~ ‘to‘another" : . Clitbing: - At Half Price
