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THE DEMOCRATIC NORTHWEST, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 181 IIXSIS LETTER. SCHOOL tTSTIM OF KAXSAS, TRB OBEAT STORM LC &C. fariels! Ccrmpoedeaos of Ik Kortawsst.) Law sixes, Kin., Oct. 28, 1881. With change of place, hibiu and vo cation, and with entirely new surround ings, the character of the ''Kansas Let ters" mast, perforce, undergo a chtngd. When the mind i engaged in study ing "science of teaching'' and other ab strose subjeccs it is not to be expected that it can par much attention to the subject of farming. Therefore, I am afraid that the far mer will not End much of interest to him (that is concerning crops, soil kc of Kansas), in the present series of let ters, which will relate more to things that teachers and all interested in edit cational matters, are supposed to tain terested in; so they will prove at least as interesting as the preceding series to all the readers of the orthwkst. In educational affairs, as in most ev erything else, Kansas is bound to take the lead. Yet, it seems to rne, that the school laws, some of them could be changed, and the interests of the cause not suffer so very mucn. For instance, one point that might be bettered is the deciding by vote how ruanv months of. school shall be held each year. The people also vote the amount of tax to be raised, the amount per montu that the teacher shall receive, &c. All that the directors have to do is to em ploy teachers and see to the business part of matters. Now, while this all very well in enlightened districts, it gives too much power to the ignor rant. For example, in one district in Woodson county onlv three months school were voted last year, (that dis trict give aheavy Republican majority. comment is needless). The ignorant class, if there happen to be more of them than of the other, can keep the schools down to the very lowest grade, while those who are anx ious to have things as they should be are perfectly powerless. Teachers labor under the same dis advantages that they do in Ohio. Wa ges are low, ranging from twenty-five to forty dollars per month, in country schools. Short terms are the rule, and frequent change of teachers also. As far as I have observed, however, the average country teacher is of much higher grade than in the part of Ohio with which 1 am acquainted. This is owing, for the most part, to the rigid system of examination. For my own part, I had much rath er stand examination, in the branch with which I am familiar, at the State examinations in either Indiana or Illi nois, than attend a county examination here. Another reason for the better class of instructors is the system of county supervision, though in some particu lars, even that could be improved. The average pupil is just the same as elsewhere nei ther better nor worse. Upon the whole- the country school here is hot much different from that in other places. But the country school, while it is such an important factor in educational affairs, is not all There are the Union schools, colleges and the State University to build up and develop the rising generation of Kansas. But of this I will speak at .another time. "They say" that this has been t most remarkable season in Kansas this fall 1 mean ; but every' season I have seen since I came here "has been most remarkable. ' ' There was a 'most remarkaole" storm here a few weeks ago at Emporia, it was a cyclone, while here it was simply a hurricane. It was wind and rain accompained by the "largest hail Btones I ever saw. The scene on the streets were beyond de scription; horses were rushing madly around overturning wagons and bug gies, men, women and children run ning to the nearest shelter, while the hail stones made such a deafening noise that nothing else could be heard At Emporia several men were killed, out nere nothing was killed but pigs and poultry. Ite hail stones were, many of them, as large as hens eggs, and one was picked up some three miles from town which weighed over a pound, after it was brought in to the city. There was some thousands of dollars worth of window glass broken in Lawrance, and the streets looked as though old times had returned again, when Lawrance gained the name of the "historic city." On Massachusetts street there was scarcely a whole pane of glass left on the east side. The University building had one hundred and thirty -five panes broken, some of them very costly. It was said to be the "most remarkable" storm that ever visited Lawrence: and it is to be hoped that such storms will be like "angels k visit?," "few and far between." It has been very rainy for the past month, and all the western rivers have been overflowing. The Mississippi at Quin- cy was seven miles wide, and for a day or two travel was entirely suspended. c. e. l: What Ails Ton! Unless the food is properly prepared in the stomach it becomes corrupt and poisons the system it is intended to nour ish. Dyspepsia and its accompaniments are bad breath, headache, and constipation, piles, billiousness and depression of spirits. Sufferers with dyspepsia experi ence rapid and permanent cure by the use of Simmons Liver Regulator. It is purely vegetable and pleasant to the taste. A half-tablespoonful of the Regulator, taken after eating, ensures good diges tion. ISSUES THAT WILL WIN. The circulating medium must be re stored to the general government. Jefferson. Two thousand corporations ilh identical interests and with power to wreck bnsineaa in six days aa shows last February, are a constant menace to free legislation and stable business. Abolish National Hanka root and branch. Corporations, the creation of the State shall be controlled by the State. The following extract from the New York Time (Ind. Rep.) indicates the magnitude of the evil to be grappled with: "It is not only absorbing to itself the fruits of labor and the trains of trade and piling up wealth in the hands of the few, but it is controlling legisla tion and endeavoring to sway the de cisions of courts in its own interest. We are now at a stage in t'ae contest where the people may vindicate their authority and place these corporations under the regulation of law.'1 The rights of the States under the Constitution must be preserved. No troops at the polls.' "Bayonets are not lit instruments for collecting the votffs of Freemen.'' Hancock. No arrest of voters upon suspicion of violating election laws, except upon warrant. ''The right of the people to be so cure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures shall not be violated, and no warrants ehall issue but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized." Lonstttutmn U. Article 1 ., Amend ments. No United States Deputy Marshals to execute state laws. Such are the issues we present for the consideration of Democrats, be lieving that the man who will force them can be Governor of Ohio in '83 and President of the United States in '84. A man of convictions, of courage and ability enough to lead us is needed a man strong enough to hold smaller men to their places and the work. Gen. Thomas Ewing is the man in whom the people of this section of the State have more confidence than in any other man within our borders. Policy has been tried; let principle have a day in court. It's better to lose fighting for principle than to win in a policy con test. Yovngslown Vindicator. A Terrible Fire would probably haved raged, in Toledo last week, if the kerosene lamp bad burst in a Carpenter's Shop. Buc it was in a Boiler Maker's, and the lamp didn't burst, Use Hill's Peerless Cough Syrup for Colds and Croup. Bottles, 60 cts. and $1.00. For sale by C. A. Kneeland. Vegetable Time Table. Potatoes, boiled, thrirty minutes. Potatoes, baked, forty-five minutes Sweet potatoes, boiled, fifty minutes. Sweet potatoes, baked, sixty min utes. Squash boiled, twenty-five minutes. Green peas, boiled, twenty to forty minutes. Shelled beans boiled, sixty minutes. String beans, boiled, one to two hours. Green corn, thirty to sixty minutes. Asparagus, from fifteen to thirtv minutes. Spinach, one to two hours. Tomatoep, fresh, one hour. Tomatoes, canned, thirty minutes. Cabbage, forty-five minutes to two hours. Cauliflower, one or two hours. Dandelions, two or three hours. Beet greens, one hour. Onions, one or two hours. Beets, one to five hours. Turnips, white, forty-five to sixty minutes. Turnips, vellow, one and a half to two hours. Physical Suffering. No one can realize, except by personal experience, the aneuish of mind and body endured by sufferers from dyspep sia, indigestion, consti ation, and other diseases of the stomach. Bukdock Blood Bitters are a positive cure for this dir est of all diseases. Price $1,00, trial size 10 cents. N. Y. Herald, Oct. 27. GENERAL (URFELD'S WOUND. Eclectic Surgeons Criticising the Late President's Professional Treatment. The twenty-first annual meeting of the Eclectic Medical Society of the State of New York began yesterday at CooW Institute; the president Will iam HMIawley, M. D., in the chair. During the afternoon session, in the course of an address upon -'Malaria." Dr. Bobert AGunn spoke at length upon the medicaHreatment in the case of the late President. He severely criticised the action of the surgeons and argued in support of the following propositions: 1st. Ihe examinations made by the attending and consulting surgeons were not conducted as they should have been to have enabled them to make a correct diagnosis. Had they placed the. patient in the position he was in at the time he was wounded they should have been able to trace the course of the ball. This should have been done as soon as the reaction from the shock had taken place. 2d. After the 23d of August every symptom in the case pointed to the ex istence of pyeemia, as can . be proved by the surgical works of Hamilton and Agnew themselves as well as those of all other surgical writers. The exist ence of three acknowledged abscesses unconnected with the wound, besides carbuncles, suppuratm acne and bed sores, sufficiently disprove the claim that there was no pyaemia. ' 3d. The wound was not necessarily fatal Every time it was d 'esse. K the patient tu twisted to one aide and the greatest possible motion of the injured spine waa thus produced. This in creased the inflammation and formation of put and diminished the chances for the patient's ;ecovery. 4th. The administration of mor phine from the first disordered the stomach and rendered digestion and assimilation of jiutriment impossible and thus complicated the case-depress-ing the vital energies and favoring the poisoning of the system by the absorp tion of pus liquor. 5lh. The administration o? food by enemata is one o( the greatest fallacies the profession has ever advocated. Dozens of patients have been killed by this method of feeding, and President Garfield's death was hastened by it. The treatment of President Garfield was the most outrageous piece of mal practice ever perpetrated, and the whole case from begiuiiing 10 end was a disgrace to modern surgery. Dr. Gunn's remarks were applauded and evidently met with the approval of his auditors. At the evening sess ion Dr. Alexander Wilder read a pa per on "Monoply in Medical Appoint ments in the-United Slates Service and How to Secure Representation. He also took occasion to condemn the med ical treatment of the late President. He said that the monument to his memory to be erected in Ohio will he amonuraent to commemorate medical malpractice. He asserted that tbe sur gery in General Garfield's case would have killed any well man present, and that had nature been let alone there would have been a possibility of recov ery, inasmuch as the ball wa" encysted. An Elkton. Md.. paper mentions the case of Mr. Deene n, of that placer who suffered severely with rheumatic pains uiuu no inea a ooctie or st. Jacobs Uil, which cured him completely. In dianapolit(Ind.) Journal. My neighbor' baby's cletn and tweet -' A darling little tootsy poot And I have none; lint that In meet 1 want no little pootsy toot. "My neighbor's baby's my delight; 1 see it only when it's lood, And never have to spank the mile, Or cold It in its squalling mood. Never Falls. Mr. J. Leist, warehouseman for Luntz Bros., Buffalo, N. Y.. ravs he had a swelling on the foot which b.e attributed to chilblains. He used Thomas' Ecleo tric Oil., and is' troubled no loneer. For sale by J. C. Saur. The French allies in Tunis have es tablished a poor precedent by cutting off their enemies' heads and putting them on poles. It may occur to the heathen Bedouin that a Frenchman's head would look well on a pole. rJACflBSOl It. THE GREAT f ;erehedi. FOB RHEUMATISM, Heuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs Oil as a safe, sure, simple and cheap External Itcmedy. A trial entails but the comparative!) trifling outlay of 50 Cents, and everv one snfferiiii with pain can hare cheap and positive proof of its claims. Directions in Eleven Languages. BOLD BY ALL DBUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE. A. VOGELER & CO., Baltimore, Md., V. S. Daughters, Wives, Mothers, Dr. J. B. MARCH. 81, UTICA TJ" -Y ' DisooTSRiR of DR. 'MA'E0HISr8 UTERINE CATHOLICON A POSITIVE CURE FOR FEMALE CPMPUINTS. ' This Catholloon Trill overcome inflamma tions and Ulcerations, and strengthen the Ab dominal and Uterine muscles at all times. . It wi l cure Falling of the Uterus, HemorrbaBes, Painful Suppressions. Irregularities. Weak Kidneys, and many diseases arising from the abOTe complaints, such a Headache! Bloating, Sleeplessness, Nervous Debility, Lame Back, Barrenness. Palpatation of the Heart, Change or Life Putlfles the Blood and Tones np the Sys tem. Send for pamphlet, free. All letters ot Inquiry freely answered. Address as above. FOB SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Price (1.50 per bottle. Bo sure and ask for Dr.Marchlsl's uterine Catholloon. Take no other. For Sale by D. J. Humphrey. 15seplyr We Mourn For those ha fall to bay DRUGS, Faints and Oils. WALL PAPER, Curtains. STATIONERY, Albums, FIXE TOILET SETTS ! Blank Books, POCKET BOOKS, Shopping Bags, Lamps, Etc., of KNEELAND. GrocerY .AND-1 !? ME! (Successor to Chig. Ever.) , . Respectfully informs the citizens 01 Henry county ttlltt ho tntmirla tr 1a., n...,.. 1 1 ...... v ihw.uo iv ovji VUUDWUUJI Ull unuu General Assortment OF Glass and Queensware, Wooden Ware ! Crockery, &c. Which will be sold at Uvlng prices. tW All Goods Strictly First-Class. -g AUkindsof country produce taken in exchange for goods or the cash paid fur it. Give us a Call. Respectfully, H. H1KSELAXD. NEW- Over Cary's Store. GARDNER! Son., Have their new gallery now fitted lip in good stj-le throughout, and are ready to receive nil who wish to favor them with a friendlv or business call. They invito everybody to call and see their specimens and to make themselves at home while in their gallery. Their operating rooms are fitted up in modira style with as fine a light as any in the State; fine pcenic back-grounds, good accessories, first-class instru ments, etc. Those wishing to get anything in their Photographs ! Tin or Ferreotypes, Silver-types, Am brotypes, Crystal lverytypes, Orany kind of enlarged nictures. Portrait in nil painted in any size , also In ink, crayon or water col ors. You can do no better than give us a trial. We make a specialty of taking Baby Pictures and "iiar- auuie sausiacuon in every case. Picture Framing ! In all its branches done to order upon short notice and at prices to suit all. We invite a call aud trial from all who wish anything In thiB line. 2ml5sep. OARDNKR fc SON. Notice to Contractors. SEALED proposal: will be received at the office of the clerk ol the Board of Education of Itichrlcld township, Henry county, Ohio, until 12 o'clock noon on the 12th day of November, A. D. 1S81, for build ing a brick school house in sub-district No. oi said township, according to the plans and specifications on tile in said office. Each bid mu3t contain the name of every person Interested in the same, and be accompanied by a suf ficient guarantee of some disinterested person that if the bid is accepted a contract will be entered into and the performance of it properly secured. The bid for each kind of material called for by the speci fication muBt be stated soparatoly, and the price of each given : and the price of labor must also be sep arately stated. None but. the lowest responsible bid will be accepted and the board may reiect all bids. By order of the Board of Education. D. FLOWERS, sepl3-4t clem; For Sale. THE undersigned offers for sale, on easy terms, his HHridniw in thtt wait a.. . . ' i - vu m. wvtu, euiuraciiiir eight acres of orcharding and fruit culture, with many conveniences for a suburban market garden. Fruit in great variety and of the best quality. En quire on the premises. L. F. AMES. jMapoieon, u., uctoDerua, 1881. tf Probate Notice. , NOTICE la hereby given that Jason Woodward. AdminiRtmtnrnf tht. Hf.1. ttf Willi. M T deceased, has filed his tidal account for settlement! which will be for hearing November 12th, 1881. mnuco IT. BALI, Sep. 29, 1881. , Probate Judge. Probate Notice. Notice is hereby given that F. M. Knmmell, ------, , , wwo. u..l.uuwu, ueceaeen. has filed his final account for settlement, which will be for hearing Nov. 19, 1881. e i ... .... JAMES . HALT, Sept. 21, 1881. Probata Judge. . I I. Hindi ml iff! mi -lltomtns. A.. L. IM-JUHICIC, Attorney-at-Law, OtBceatj Perry HteisrH. Clary's More, Kpo ka,Olua. -sacklS-tlll MARTIN KSm'P, Attornt-y at Law, ilkct In Dilleuhaier's liiock, t asblugfatti St, (Upolroe.o. jea-7t A. Il7 'l Vt.lilt. Attorney-at-Law And Xoturp Ptiblie. Ulticx In mum with J. 11. Tyler, Tyler Block. Npecial atteurjoti paid to oonveyanriiiij. myM 1. W. . Attorney and Counselor at Law. OrrUV. on Washington stmt, in first building west of Humphrey . old corwr. oct il 'U M. RUMMELL, Attorney at Law, X. aud Iteal fcataie Agent, (litre liahu A Meyer bulliluiK iweond atory) r-anoleuu. Ouiu, All bus lueneiuruaied to his care will be promptly at lauded lu. decls-78. Li C. YOUNG. Notary Public and . Convevaucer.l lbertv Center, Henry coun ty. O. All huaiutaol lb suffice pron.pmauended to. February .l;-.r 10. -A. l'ALJIKU, Attorney - at - Law And Notary Public, NAPOLEON, OHIO. Also Attorney for PciiFiuiif, ltoimtv. Back pav, etc. Collections pnnnptlvatlcuu't'd to. Office up stulrs Vockt Block irouiiug Perry Street, J. H. Tyler. M. Donnelly. Tyler Donnelly, Attorney s-a t-L aw, Napoleon, Henry Comity, Ohio, Office in Tyler's Block, Sud story, Washington street. DAVID Mfcl HI-oV. Attorney and Counselor -At- Law. o mc, 'Jd story in FreaBe Block. AVmbii.Btou St., i. M. HAAG. J. P. KAOAN. II A. AG fc ltA.Gi, -Attorneys - ut - Law, Napoieoit, Ohio. De,Vodie mo,.,. WUI practice in North Western courtu and United States courts. Business wiUreceive prompt attention. April (WO 8.M.HAOOK. Wit, H Hubbard HAGUE & HUBBARD Attorneys and Counselors-At - Law, Napoleon, Henry County, Ohio. YtTlfl practice the law in all iU branches, In Henry TT and neighboring counties. Heal estate law and i,1 "I liUea a specialty. Office in Heller Block on Washington etreet, opposite orthweet Office. $usticc of the &cace. Ci EEEDER, Justice of the Peace, Office in Shoe store, lsl door south of Cary's 5?C!r,-MIS,w:.1"' ''"'"' l'id to collections which will receive prompt attention, apl24-7D OHILIP cTscmVAB, Justice of the J 1fCe' 'I'"?,5"1" l.i Henry couuty, Ohio. New Bavaria P.O. inay:S-77 pETEU PUNCHES, Justice of the ir...ficu' .''"."P ' 11Jr3' eovnty, Ohio. Hamler,P.O,Box55. aprill9-77-t EDWARD PKYTO. Justtice of the Peace and Notary Public, napoleon, Oliio. SPECIAL attention paid to conveyancing and col- w uicuutu oiuca. nrat stairwaynorth of Sheffield & Norton's bank. , '! ay orn, mat). f j. EOBQE W. VALENTINE, Fash- VJ lonable Barber and Hair Dresser, Room WeitsiUePerry street, Napoleon .Ohio. Janl678-tfl PHILLIP WEBB, Barber and Hair Dresser. IwndnnrR imith nf k i ... , .. i oery on Perry street. Patronage solicited and rood work, guaranteed. Toet3V78-if Carriage Factory ! LEONHART & SHAFF, Napoleon, Ohio, MANUFACTURERS of Carriage,Buggles,and Wagons of every description. Special at entlou paid to light w-rk, which will begaur anteed to be tirst-clats in every particular. Do oot go out of Henry County for work hutgive us a trial. Also do orse Shoeing arid all kinds ofrepairing. Brick Shop cornerol Washington and Monroestroett fy'75-tl JOHN ICUISZ, Blacksmith & Horse Shoer, FrontStreet, Napoleon, Ohio. Horse shoeing aud genera repairing of ma (hinery a specialty. Ail work done in a work. 'nanlike manner, charges reasonable, and the patronage of tbepublicsolicited. All orders for boller-repairingleft at his shop will be promptly attended to. JOHN, Jtnl7-lyt The.ild reliableBIacksniltb. Hjhgsiciaas. HOMEOPATHY. MRS. H. H. SHEFFIELD, Physician and Surgeon, Napoleon, Ohio, office at residence, corner Washington etreet sml Haly Ave nue. Will attend calls in town and country. Or ders can be left at the bank of HlietUi ld anil i'orton. " BLOOMFIELD, eSurgeon, Napoleon, O Physician and nich4-79 EB. HARRISON, Physician and Sur , geon, Napoleon, Ohio. OHiieoverSaursdrug itore. Office hours 8 to 9 A. si.: 12 to 1 p.m. ndto7P u. Nov2872-ly MRS. P. A, SAUR, Physician and SURGEON, Napoleon, (Ohi. Will at nd calls In town orcnuntry. Office at Saub's Drugstore.. . , (jan2-78-tfl M- J. MARVIN, Physician and Sur , geon.Napnleon, Ohio, will attend to all calls promptly. Office over Sheffield Norton's Bank. mch21-ly JM. STOUT, Physician and Sur , gcon, Florida, Henry County, Ohio, will at nd to all professional calls in all parts ol the unty. Saturdays set apart especially for the lamination of patient fat. my office. aug!9-ly DRS. McHEXRY & DULIiZ, PHYSICIANS A ND SURGEONS, NAPOLKON.OllIO. Office In residence CUntou Street. mylO'Sltf DK. J. H. IIALY, Physician and Surgeon, Napoleon, Ohio. W ILL attend to calls in town and country. Office at his residence on uunton street. Jly 1, 1880. umtst. Jr L. LEIST, Pharmaceutical Chemist, I . Napoleon, Ohio. All work done on abort notice. Laboratory In Humphrcy'sDrunStore. , myll PENSIONS. ARE PAID svsrr solJlerdliableo by accident or otherwlie. A WOTJNO of nr kind. Ion of ert tee or eye, Sl'PTURE, if but slight; riiHUM of Luasa or VaricuM Velu aiva m. E cnilon. ; Under new law thousand are sn. tl4 to an Increase of pcarlta. .Widows, or phans and dependent fathers or mothers of soldier get aneMioa. dead I stamps forcopr Penilon and Bounty Acts. AddreM. aud Pres't Central Bank, both f IsdSaaapolis. oct37-tm ' Hi iv2f m J3isreIlMnuasm BANK! orf- NAPOLEON, OHIO. Deposits received. Collections attraded to. Bfoney forwarded to all parts of the world at the lowest nun. Aiao represent the Best Plre tad Life Insurance Compan lei in the Coantrj. Banking House Haeressorto First Nations! Talk, 1 NAPOLEON, O. Deposit accounts received and certificates of rfw Posit Issued payable on demand or at a fixed date bearing Interest. etv-uouecuone promptly attendedto. SJiscellautovs. JOHN DIEMER, AT his Meat Market, Perry etreet, keeps on band the choicest Beef, Pork, Veal, Mutton, Hama and Shoulders, Salt Pork, Corned Beef, Ac. Fsrmers having fat cattle, hogc.sbeep, b'desand peltsfor sale should giv.e met call, ti DENTISTRY -A.. S. COJSTDTT. ISuccessor to W. H. Stllwoll. DENTIST. f)Am RuJb'. Rm. amrf CL.. u. ... -..v.w....-1.b ouvi oiore. All operations pertaining to Dentistry carefully per formed. Lsughing Gss, administered for the palnlessextrsclion ofteeth. Work warrantedand prices to suit tbe times. mailt tiATKAUTEU WITHOUT PAID Napoleon, Ohio. Oct.14. 1878. tf Sash and Blind Facor f PLANIKG MILL. Thiesen, Hildrcd & Co. Pronrloti.ru T.V. nlo.anr. In ......J.. .v. v.. . all in need of anyihing in tbe way ol building TL .r, . 3 ,7. P",P"ro io furnish them with lumber for building purposes from the grouud to tbe roof. We keep constantly on hand. ' Doors, Sash, Blinds, Casing, Floorings siamgs, smngies, Finished Lum bar. HflTtffli T.nmfcA and every kind of lumber required for a building. Custom work doneoa short notice. Poplar, wal nut, whltpvniul uih ihIa.1 Innh..!.. ti. . .V iuuiiiu UVUKDIIDQ sold. THIESES, HILDRED A CO. Januaryl,1878-tf. ATJLAST ! The Thing Most Needed! XX- CO NOT AWAY HUNGRY! JOHN BEILHARZ HAS OPK17ES Ii ii i n g- J?a rlors TJp stairs in Ludeman's block over Nnnten fc rv,. Store, on east side of Perry Street, Napoleon, where "ABM MEALS, Oysters by the dish or can, tea, coffee and all that the inner man craves, can be had at all hours, day or night. . Oyetersby the can! ; Oyster stew .,. , 25cta' Oysters raw ',. jsctsl OyBterFry ; s5ct6 Warm Meal 25ctoi Ct7Well furnished parlors for ladies. War I War! War! "EJ. Bressler&Co., Manufacturer ol Lath, Pickets. Shingles &c. Pickets made to order, plain or fancy. Pricea . according to the times. All work warranted. Shop in Damascus township, in the Beaver settle ment, Henry county, 0. decl-79-tf. P. F.TlNK," HOUSE, SIGN,, Ornamental Fresco Painting and Graining, WALLS AND CEILINGS TINTED. SHOP In Tyler Block, over Northwest office. Orders can be left at Humphrey's Drug Store. Jel0'80 Fred Yachee's Boot and Shoe Shop! i Perry St., north of Canal Bridge. All klndsof Boots and Shoe manufactured te orderin the neatest and most substantial manner n short notice. aWBepairingproniptlyaUeoded to. oclotf W, H, Stockman. Real Estate Deler! Buys and Sells Ditch Contracts and Bond; With O. W. Gardner A Son, NAPOLEON, ll-80-ly OHIO. S. 3VE. HONIOK, Merchant' Tailor, Napoleon, Ohio, Perry .-eet south sldoofCanal. Parties wishing neat fitting suit of clothes will do well to call on me. By selecting from my very largeand very fine line 01 piece goods you will have no difficulty in hndingsucb goods ss you may de sire. WS"Satisfaction given in every particular. sept24-79tf. S. M. HONICK: NEW Wagon and Blacksmith Shop South Side of River, Napoleon, Ohio. Manufacturers of Carriages, Buggies, Spring and Lumber Wagons. Also repairing and repainting done at reasonable rates. Horse Shoeing a specialty. deoSMm. JOHN W. KNIPP, Proprietor J. P. REEDERi (Successor to Reiser i Bro.) DEALER INf-- ; Fresh and Salt Meats, Bologna &c. Will kenn on hunfl Ahnfoa nu irui -n t kt.-.u. r : - w roi voaif rwa. jhumvu Hams,Shoulders, Corned Beef, Pickeled Pork. etc. ov vuu. pituc jaiu iur Cattle, Hogg, Sheep. Calves, and Hides, We Invite all oldoristomera and aa many new ones as chose to come. Have engaged John Reiser and other competent butchers who will be lu attendance .?? postomere. X willguorantee satlafaction, 26oct81tf J.P.BEEDEB. i