Bloomington Progress, Volume 15, Number 34, Bloomington, Monroe County, 7 December 1881 — Page 2

fUp.itMicau)rBgrtss.

Publication Orrtcfc: Progrese Block,ornr.r Sixth Street and College Avenue.

PJilJiTKD AOK MO MCI NO BT MT.W. A. ABK, BtHtar and PaMMwr.

On Year (in advance) a 00 A Club of 5 or more eopie, each I 50

Ohio A Mliltppl Railroad. Trams Jcsn Mitchell aiMow:

OOISO

Mail, lJlrt.in Kpres, 1t.45p.ni Rxnrac. 1UI tm

Aconm'ion 1.06 p.m

GOING BAST

Mail, 2.47 p.m Express, 3.27 p.m Express, 1.39 a. in

Express, 3.54 a.m

ihWfMii tnr Tains and Urn Great West

hild purchase Tickets by the Ohio & Mississippi Railway. Lowest rates for Ticket, HousehokfGoods. Stock, etc. All passengers carried to St. Lou. Union Depot, No midnight changes by thi rout. Fur all information, such as Maps, Time Tables, rates on passengers, freight etc, apply to Station Agent of this Com' pun v, or call on or address J. S. MILLSttaieral Emigre ion AgontjSeymour.Ind.

!. if, A. C. Railroad. Jj.ae Tall at RlnotningUm.

OOISO KOS.TH.

Express. ll:29a.m

Acoom'ktn &

TJsrwfreiizht 4: 5 5a.ru Wayfreigbt S:50p.n

aoisi aotffEr

SJPWS? 525p.m AcconTtWn, 5-50a.ni

Thro.frei.ght 7-25a.ra

Way freight, S-ssam

i Letter Iron Teaaeasee. CnATTAXMOA, Txwic, Kor. 36, USX. Eoitob Pbooskss : I arrived to-day with my stock, and have been spending the da; with our old friend,' Dr. Durand, riding through the city. The Doctor is in high spirits : has bought a beautiful lot, ami is putting up a nice, tasty dwelling ; will be ready to mote into it in (bar weeks. Just bow, while writing, two of our Bloomtngton boys came into the hotel and recognized me, one a young Mr. Pauley, and a Mr. Sullivan. They say they are doing well ; have plenty of work at good prices. I visited Lookout Mountain, Missionary Ridge, Fort Wood and the National Barracks, also "the

city of the dead," where 12,965 of ... - ,

our brave soldiers were buried, ana read many a familiar name from Indiana and Ohio on their tombatones. We remained there till the janitor told us he would have to close the gale for the night. Be has strict orders to open every morning at sunrise and close at sundown. I left with some reluctance, as I was not through sight-seeing. It is fenced in with a good solid tone wall, and a hedge fence on the inside to keep any 'one from climbing in, so that all who enter have to come in at the gates ; it is nicely kept, the government having sixteen men employed there all the time to keep it in trim. Chattanooga is building op very rapidly. The Doctor pointed out to me twenty-five or thirty-five brick business houses that had been commenced since he moved here, and are now finished. The people are all astir here. To see them

moving, looks like a Northern town,

and I am told by persons who know,

that a majority of the cople are

.Northern men and women. 1 am

satisfied Chattanooga has a bright

future. Sax. Wallinoford. M mm

The Monroe County Ufcrary.

"WHY NOT?

Virtue and intelligence are essential, as safeguards to the stability and prosperity of onr Republic. Useful knowledge gives power and in

fluence to toe individual character, and

the general public derives .benefit from it

anrusaon. A means of acquiring such knowledge,

a the reading or instinctive dooks. j. nen wbr not read T Is it because yon have

not time? Who don not take time to

eat. or suddIt the body with nourishment?

Is not food for the mtod a necessary as food for the body? If jou have no taste

for reading, maxa an effort to acquire and

cultivate such taste. This is the duty of

every one, who can read, or who can be taught to rend. It is a duty yon ewe to Yourself, to humanity, to your country and

the author of your being, to endeavor to

atcre vour mind wito. useful wets a Da

thoughts for reflection.

If you have the ability to do this, and

willfully neglect it, you are guilty or mental suicide ; and if, "of such is the King

dom of Heaven," I have, no evidence of

the fact. Then why not read t Is it beeause you have no book 7 Comparatively lew men have extensive private libraries; it is not alwavs convenient, and sometimes

it a impracticable to have them, but are there uo public Libraries? ' Is Monroe eounlv destitute of this important means

of supplying reading matter for its citi

zens? Where U the County Library? Uoubtles hundreds of our citizens in the

country have never seen it, and know nothing of its existence. This ought not so to be. To all such let me say, there is a County Library, in a one story brick building, just east of the court house. It is under the supervision of Trustees with a regularly appointed Librarian. It is accessible to all citizens of the county, upon reasonable terms, and is kept open to the public every Saturday, from 8 o'clock x. till 4 o'clock i. M. Co neutering tbe Km'.ted patronage it has received, the Trustees hav done well, and deserve great credit for acting op- the rooms with all necessary means of accommodation, and furnishing quite a variety or reading matter, instructive and entertaining both to old and young such as History, Poetry, Biography, Politics!, Scientific and other miscellaneous work, and whenever the public patronage anil libra, ry funds justify, th assortment will be enlarged by additional supplies of new books. Then why not read? Why cannot young gentlemen and ladies, and old. people too, both in town and country, afford to spend a portion of tho twenty-four boors of the day, especially during the long winter nights, in muling with attention an-i care, some instructivv, entertaining book ? It U certumly not best to be

eonSned exclusively to newspaper reading; though I would not by any means discourage their publication. Both ought to

be read. W. Ii- J oxxa.

"I declare if there isn't the

deacon's dauchter out with a bran

new shawl. Well, I never." "Hun. !" said a better infornsed fe

male ; "tisn't hem. It's one she

borrowed from the company that's visiting over at the deacon's." ''Well, there's ont thing I know. She can't depend on borrowing to look well in heaven. She'll have to wear Iter own angel plumage when be gets there." And tbey hoth howo" their heads as the minister opened the services.

-The name and exterior of the Pacific Garden, Chicago, remain the wime as when it was a resort for beer and music, but the unwary sinner who enters now finds himself in a religious mission, exposed to the exhortation of an able evan gelist. Near Crawfordsville lately, the Journal says, chicken thieves, plying their trade at that place in the night, being fired at, fled, and next morning a set of false teeth were picked up at that spot which the dentist who made could identify, though for the present he would not make public the name of the owner.

m ar m .

Aloses lliompMn became a

hundred years old a few days ago. He is a negro, and for half a century has been a preacher, most of the

time in Arkansas. His people.. po.

garoea mm as an '.Bspired prophet, $a4-tet Tuled them in religious mat

ters like an autocrat. He said that

he was exempt from death, but on

bis hundredth birthday would as

cend bodily and resplendently to

heaven. A large crowd assembled

at inoKe in an open neici in ex

pectation of a supernatural specta

cle, luompson wore a white robe, and was very ecstatic, singing,pray-

ing, and exhorting by the hour.

He was to rise at noon according to his programme, and he attributed the failure to a rain storm which

was at that time raging ; but the people could not be persuaded that so important an affair would be postponed on account of rain, and

they jeered and chased away their prophet.

A little eirl only 14 years of

age, named Margaret Messenger,

has just been convicted and sentenced to death at the Cumberland Assizes in England, for the murder of a baby whose nurse she was. The jury found her guilty, and also that although, being at the time

under the age of fourteen, she was,

prima facte, incapable of crime-

she was precocious enough to have a criminal intent. There is on record in England an example of a boy aged 8 years being hanged for

burning a bank in Berkshire. A

boy of 10, convicted of murdering

bis bedfellow, was unanimously pronounced by the Judges as a proper subject of capital punish

ment, and does not appear to have

been reprieved.

Plymouth Republican: The influence of prayer on some men was illustrated at one of our churches last Sunday evening, when, after the minister had ceased praying, a man reached over and touching a friend on the shoulder, said : "Code, there are just 1,020 rafters in this church." m m m Indianapolis News : Eider W. F. Black, formerly pastor of the First Christian church, of Indianapolis, is a success as an evangelist. He has just closed a mouth's labor at Carlisle, Sullivan county, at which twenty-five persons were converted. This is about an average of his work in different sections in Illinois and this State for the last two years. They organized a debating society in Dead wood last week. The fact that the President was a dead shot and sat with two revolvers in hand kept the society in comparative quiet while the questions: "Ought a flush royal to beat tour aces?" and "Is it wicked to lyB.ch Mexicans on Sunday ?" were tiebated. But when they tackled the question : "Ought you to fire wb e a man reaches for his hippocket, or are you bound to wait till you see whether it's a revolver or a whiskey bottle he's drawing?" the President couldn't control them and five funerals was the result. Cincinnati is about to inaugurate a new and important rule in the common schools, viz : Abolishing grammar and substituting therefor elementary lessons in the best English.

Samdry Hambaga. The American Agriculturist, for December, in its list of Humbugs, advertised over the country, denounces: "The Patent 5 Shot Breech Loading Shotgun and Rifle, for $7J5b." Also, "The New Brunswick Lottery Scheme." In speaking of quack doctors gen

erally, the Agriculturist says : "it

is really too bad that tbey should be

allowed to Bractice rtuackerv on cat

tle, who cannot be warned like twolegged creatures. We have the circular of a Kansas chap, who signs

V. o. to his uame, to which title

we are sore be has no right. He proposes to cure all sorts of diseases in animal with his "infallible vaccine." He has discovered that poisons, when taken into the system, find matter "of kindred affinity in what are called the portcan ! com

pounds of the food und the blood elements" and "that's what's the matter." He goes and finds the same poisons "in certain plants and other substances,0 slicks this poison, as a vaccine, into the sick animal. On the well-known principle that two things cannot occupy the same space at the same time, one of the poisons has to "get up and get," and as he say, "I have never lost a

ease, we inter mat ins pizen out-

pizens the other pizen. If we had more real veterinary surgeons, such

chaps as this with his vaccine would

have less chance to impose their

false science upon the public."

The Ctarlstmas December) St.

Nicholas. This year's Christmas "St. N icbolas" is the finest number of that mngaaine ever issued ; and therefore, probably, it is also the fluent number of a children's magazine over printed. Its ninety odd pages full of line illustrations mnke it n delightful Christmns present for a boy or girl. It opens with a superb frontispiece, engraved by T. Cole, after n painting by the famous Spanish painter Zaniacoit, and which here figures as one of the illustrations of an article, about court jesters in the olden time. The pictures, stories, poems, and lively pieces in this beautiful number will, o'f course, interest the boys and; girls ; and at least thirteen hundred members of the Agassis Association will enjoy reading Mr. Ballard's ninth report concerning that vigorous society, and its delightful, selfimposed studies of Mature; andtho"Juck-in-the-Pulpit," "Letter-box," and "Riddlebos" pages will have devoted readers ; but that one thing in this number which is most likely to rivet the attention of the young folk is "Deacon Green's Offor" of one hundred brand-new one dollar bills to the one hundred boys and girla who best shall do acertRigrp'jcasant'piecoof work far-tea.

We don't want to move very many goods when we go into our new business room, so we will sell at a sacrifice to lower the stock. Come b. the New York Dry Goods Store pretty quick how.

Numerous peculiar weddings are happening nowadays. A girl at Coultersvtlle, N. C, was locked in a room by a father, who chained a savage bulldog under her window ; but ber lover poisoned the dog, pried open her window, add carried her off to a clergyman. Old Edgerton of Bellevue, Iowa, decided to get rid of his wife and marry a younger woman. This he accomplished by means of an irregular divorce and with the consent of the original wife, who remains in the Edgerton establishment as housekeeper while the bride plays the idle lady. A Nashville girl, being forbidden to marry her lover, promised obedienoe, but one day requested her father to hand their pastor a note on his way to business. Thus he was unsuspectingly led to deliver an invitation to the clergyman o call at. once and perform the prohibited ceremony ; and the latter, presuming that parental consent had been obtained, readily obeyed the summons. A couple were viewing the rotuuda of the Capitol of Ohio when it occurred to them that the place was a good one to get married in. A minister was employed, and the Governor gave, away the bride.

YOU WILL MISS ."(T BIO IF YOU fail to call at Len. S. Field & Co.'s Kw York Store, and get some of the big bargains now being offercl beforo thoy remove to tbeir new business room.

Bedford Banner: The H ins-dale-Doyle company lost several hundred dollars' worth of fine cut and carved stone curing the late cold spell, and had been manufactured out of green or unseasoned material. The pieces were frozen through and crocked that crumbled into hundreds of fragments. We learn that there was qui to a lot of rough blue stone in the C. & B. quarries mined.

Do we keg"? Boots ast Shoes in stock? "Well, if you will call at the Now York Store Ti e will show you how that is. "We keep a whoppi ng big stock.

The way the average cowboy

disports himself in Arizona is illus

trated by the exploits and the fate

of James Bond, as related by the

Deming Headlight. Juonu made

his first appenrance for the day at for the regular tablu supply the railway depot arid there "began ; J0 well to call at the old

the usual uproar. It appears that

he came for tight, una went down to the depot barroom and there fill

ed up with forty-rod whiskey."

He then mounted a horse and rode straight into and through the depot. A shopkeeper who tried to stop him was struck over the head with a six-shooter. Bond then dismounted.tied up his horse.and began

to swagger around with a Winchester rifle in his left hand and a cocked revolver in the right until dis

armed by a deputy United States Marshal. He then drew his bowie knife and proposed to fight with tlmt hut at thin nr.int bin fiorhtino-

, . . j - V' a o propensities were stilled forever by a deputy sheriff who appeared on

the scene and, being threatened,

discharged a load of buckshot into

him. A Coroners inquest was held

in a treigut car, and then, says the Headlight, "he was buried in Foot Hill Graveyard, the llev. Robert Campbell sending him off in the Protestant boat."

Our stock is kept irp, regard

less of the fact that we irn getting ruady to remove to our now busir.eta room. Do

come, fellow citizens, a:td get so-ao of the bargains wo are giving nwf.y. At LenJS.Vield & Co. s New York Store.

The Century fob Decembek. The second number ol' the Century .Magazine (Scribner's Monthly) contains, tippiopriatoly, material in memory of the lute Editor-in-chief. Dr. J. U. Holland. A raituful portrait by Wyiitt baton, engraved by Cole, is tin frontit piece, and well reflects his kindly face and fine bearing. A sketch of his tile by Kdvard Kgj-icston takes the first place, usually occupied by an illustrated ptgier; it is of an anecdotul character, and include umon; other topics, his early poverty, bin influence as u

journalist, his religious clmractor, and his personal qualities. Poews in his m-amorv ire contributed by '-H. H.," K. 0. Sted-

man, and Washington uladden. Oho of his own poems it printed in lutograph fac

simile, and two "Topics f the Time,".

The Lesson of the ear," and "t'jvorty

as a Discipline' ,tne mner unmusnea, nnu

written the afternoon before his death), nru

printed as his last contributions to tlmt

department. There is also an editorial tribute to him, and an abstract of the me

morial service at b ringlioi'l.

The Fiiih residence, in tlie

soul h western part of town, is for

sale at a low price, and on favorable terms. Application may be

jiuade to I. Milt. Uogeis, Agent.

ICS

Indianapolis Review. A Dangerous Practice. The reversal of criminal cases by the supreme court on purely technical grounds, wholly aside from all consideration of the guilt or innocence of the accused, or the bearing of the alleged defect on the determination of the jury, is one of the evils of a distorted judicial system that is gradually loading itself so heavily that it will be thrown off by a statutory reform one of these days. It multiplies county expenses for nothing and enlarges the chances of escape of scoundrels whose presence is a perpetual menace to the safety of the community. The reform may have to come by the abolition of the supreme bench, which would do no great harm, and would avoid a vast deal of evil. The wrongs corrected on appeal are as nothing to the delay or the protraction of litigation, the expense, the embarrassment of private interests in civil cases, and in criminal cases there is positively no good attainable that is not equally attainable by a motion for a new trial in the lower court. If appellate de

cisions were governed by substantial justice, there might be one case

in a thousand that an appeal would

profitably correct. But they are governed wholly by considerations

as remote from the merits of the case as a discussion of the conversa

tion of forces. Here is an illustra

tion : The supreme court recently

reversed a case because the bailiff

having the iury in charge was pres

ent in the room before a verdict had

been formed. What in the name of

common sense had this accident intrusion of a sworn officer into a jury

room to do with the justice of the

case? Unless he interfered in the debate of the jurors, or attempted by solicitation or argument or corruption to make or change a verdict, what more wts his presence than

that of the stove or the clock ? An

allegation of an abuse like this would make a different case, but

even then, unless substantial injustice could be demonstrated in the verdict which the lower court refus

ed to corroct, what good would a reversal do ? In a criminal case, a reversal on the ground of a bailiff's

presence in the jury room, without

evidence that he interfered in the

jury's action, would be a premium on crime, a chance of immunity that could do nothing but mischief. it. K. s.

Amelia Pohl was a St. Louis

hunchback. Her deformity was such as to make her rather hideous, and i li t L-J -t

I uuiuraiiy sua uu uo suuurs. at

the age ot 40 she lived .alone and worked in a glove factory. Sowe mischievous girls in the workshop told her that a handsome foreman had fallen in love with her, and he assisted in the joke by maintaining a mock courtship. Amelia was slow to believe that she had won so attractive a man, and by the time she was fully convinced the others had grown tired of deceiving her. The truth was made known to her quite heartlessly. She indited a bitter curse on her tormentors, and committed suicide. : eJames B. Claxk is busitess manager for the popular, and long established grocery house of J. C. Orchard, south side the square. He has now titocked th3 establishment with a complete and choice supply

of all staple and fancy goods, and

persons buying tor the Holidays, or

would stand.

All manner of produce bought and sold. '

i ma ! a

How to Ikcrease Youb :In-

come.- Just at this season of the

year there are, amo v; our renders, ttoso

Iookincr for smnrnvuinL! for tho next sir

months. "Ve nave latuly received f om

L. E. Brov;n & Co., he well-known n an-

ufttcturtirs of specialties for agents to 1 an dla, a rKiiuRt to put them in eommuniea

tion with one or rooresuit&blo persons in this locality, to act as agents in intrw uc-

ice sevt-ral of 'heir patent housohold i.rti

clesto 'Jiis coiiimunity, and after coniid-

eration,; wo take this method to con: ply

with tteir request. 'J he arm are nunu

facturera of a large numbnr of household

articles,' winch they introduce to tuo iub

lie by means of ngents, having sometimes

as many as l,oou persons in tlieir employ.

The particular articles which they seol: to introduce hero, at this time, are : Brown's

Peerlcsi Sifter, iienerallv aeknowledeel to

be the bes t in the worll, of which nearly

one minion was sola during tie last year ;

tne ivitoiien iueen, me latest ana best in ventioa in coal oil lamps, and the only ah

solutely safe lamp made: the Centennial

Cake ai. l .Bake l'an, an article which has

a nation ul reputation, and is the delight of

every nuuiaiceeper; the Hull Minute .Kgg

neater, w inch alwavs ells at sight, and the new Alto Kfloivo Bronze Profile Cast of Janr.es A. Garfield, with memcriul

frame, the bast selling nrlicle ever put in

to me nana ot mi agent, tno uest ot all me portraits, chromes or stoel engrt-.vings hat have bjen offered. It is a truer likeiess of the mc.i'tyrcJ hero 1han any we have ever sean before, and its price' bringi it

within the reach of nil. For this county, Messrs. Brown & Co. rlesiro as manv :-

cuts as can worse a J riiniageously uiy

smart, litolngenl udy or gentleman nan

make a line income in this way. 'J'he tint)

will send to any responsible person five

who will assume tho agcixy lure and go to work, a compltile outfit of these goods, to tho amount of five dollars. The

reputation of this liouso is first rate ; the good4 nro a-liat they represent them to be. Tbeir terms am liliera), nnd we advise those looking for gdiiteel, romur.erstire employment to send to thorn for furthor infbrumtion. Their hlns is L. K. BROWN & CO., 61 Wulnnt St.. CINCINNATI, O. Oct. 26.7'. Important to Travelers. Kpccittl JiKluccmcnls uro ollored you by tho K'.irlincton 1'nuto. It will pay y ii to read their a ivertiseuicnl to bo found elsewhere in this issue.

What in home without a baby ? Many clii'dren havi) coughs and colds just now und should, bavo tho greatest cure, nnd a bottle of Dr. Marshall's Lung Syrup. Prico twenly-fivo and fifty cents a hoitle. Dit. Marshall's Lung .Syrup takes the lead of all medicine for coughs,

colds, asthma, sore thront and pulmonary complaints generally. Cull on your drne;. gist and try a hntlio of it. irir; m)r

IwcnH five nnd Oni c.miU. t

The Greatest Remedy Known On. Kino's New Discovert for Con

sumption is certainly the greatest medics

romiiiy vvur jiiuuuu wiimii ion raacn o snilering humanity. Thousands of once hopeless sufferers, now loudly proclaim their praise for this wonderful Discovery to which they owe their lives. Not only does it positively cure Consumption, but Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, Hay Fever, Hoarseness and all affections of tho Throat, Chef-t and Lungs yield at once to its wonderful curative powers as if by magic. Wo do not ask you to buy a largo bottle until you know what you arc getting. Wa therefore earnestly request you to call on your druggist, H. Lindloy, and get a trisl bottle for ton cents which will

convince the most skeptical of it merits.

and show yon what a regular one dollar size bottle will do. Por sale by II. Lindley, Tiloomington, Ind.

Administrator's! Sale or Real Estate.

OTICE is hereby given that tho un

dersiiraod Administrator of the Es

tate of Martha Goodwin, deceased, by order of ths Monroe Circuit Court, will sell at Public Sale, on the premises, on FRIDAY, January 13th, 1883, the following Real Estate, situate in Monroe county, State of Indiana, to-wit : . Tho southeast quarter of section (1) one, township (8) eight, north range (1) one west. TERMS OF SALE: One-third cash in hand on day of sale, the remainder in two equal payments of 9 and 18 months from day of sale, purchaser executing his notes for the different payments waiving relief from val

uation and appraisement laws, beuring interest from day of sale.

sale to begin at i o ciock r. m. ROBERT HENRY, Dec 7,-81 Administrator. Busk irk & Duncan, att'ys.

W desire to oa.ll

YOUB ESPECIAL A

T O

rnnnnTniTniiT

OUR

BIGISTOCK AND LOW PRICES BIG STOCK AND LOW PRICES

BIG STOCK AND LOW PHCES In BOOTS AND SHOES. McCALLA Ac CO.

JSK!!W law. LEr, Attorneys, Bluimisygtoa. lad.

. r "" " sspeciai u tenuen given to settteiaaiit of decedents' estates. Vllantlm.. . .... ... .

Capt Fnedley or Judge Pearson will b

in attendance at each term of court ap-7

jyUSKIRK D USC A 11, Attorneys at J Law, Bloomington, Ind. Office in ft Bank corner.up-etatra, on nouth side f the square. Will practice in Ui the courts of the State. Special attention given to Probate business, and to tb eotteeUon aa prompt remittance of claircs.

SUE 'd ConBty to in. Notice is hereby given that the Tax Duplicate for the year 1881, is now in my bauds, and I am ready to receive Taxes. Hie following shows the rate of taxation on each 9100. $

TOWNSHIPS.

Bean Blossom, Washington, Marion, Benton, -Bloomington,

Bloomington City,

Notice of Administration. AT OTICE is hereby given that the un

1M dcrsigned has been appointed by the Richland,

Van Jiuren,

Monroe Circuit Court, Administrator of

the Estate of William W. Keller, late of

said county, deceased. Said Estate is supposed In be solvent. W. A. WALLINGFORD, Nov. 30-81. Administrator. Fi-indley, Pearson & Friedley, att'ys.

UGRtFF'S SALE.

By virtue of two executions to me di

rected from the Clerk of Monroe county

circuit court, I will expose at public sale, to

tne ni nail. Diaacr, on SATURDAY, December 10th, 1IB1,

between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and

4 o'clock P. M. of find day, at ths door of

the Court bouse, of Monroe county, Indi

ana, the rents and profits tor a term not

eiccedinR seven years of the followinc de

scribed rail estate, situate in the county of

Monroe and ."statu ot Indiana, to-wit: The southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 33, township 8 rauge 1 east.

Tho northeast quarter of the southwest

quarter of section 28, township 8, range 1 east. The south half of tho southwest quarter of section 28, township 8, range 1 east. Part of the south half of the northwest quarter of section 34, township 8, range 1 east.

Tho south side of the west half of the

nortboast quarter of section 33, township 8, range I cast.

The east half of the southeast quarter of

section li', township 8, range l eait.

Also, tits south half of the north half

of the northwest quarter of section 31, in township 3, range 1 east. Also, part of tho north half of the south west quarter of section 31, township 8, range 1 eust.

Also, pirt of the southwest quarter of

tho northeast quarter of section 31, town sliip ciulr. runjo 11 east.

Alio, part of tho northwest quarter of

tne southeast quarter, section 31, township 3, range 1 east. Also, fio southwest quarter of tho north west quurtor, suction 28, township 3, range 1 east. Also, the northwest quarter of the north west quarter of mction 28, towusbip H, range 1 eust. Also, put of the nortlios.it quarter of tho

southeast quarter, taction 29, township 8,

range l iinst. And on failure to realize the full am

ount of judgment, interest, and costs, I

will at tlo same time and place expose at publio sale th fee simple of said real estate. Taken as tie property of John Rush and Reuben Clark, at the suit of John

Uuntiniruin.

Said sule will be tnado with' relief from

valustio.1 and appraisement laws. SILAS GRIMES, novlil-S! Shoriff Monroe County. J. F Piltman, attorney.

Perry,

Perry City, Salt Creek, -Polk, Clear Creek, Indian Creek,

501

50 50 50

50

50 50 50

501

16 16 16

16

16 16 16 16 1 A

16 50

16 50 16150 16150 16501

j i " & o ,e 2L s o o H H 5 18 2 001 05 15 2 15 2 00 I 35 25 19 30 2 00 1 45 lOjlB 2010 2 00 1 30 20 19 15 10 2 00 1 35 2 00 80 15 1515 2 00 1 30 10 6 10102 001 15 5 ! 5 10 2 00 1 00 I 2 00 80 10 18 30 2 00 35 1510 25 2 00 1 30 10 5 10 5 2 00 1 10 10 ( 15 10 2 00 i 20

TJmDtir W Attorney.,, La AJBlmmingtonJadiut. Oficeup-sUfni over First National Bank. . All buX or a legal nature given careful atteation in 11 court. Titles to Seal estate carefully examined by aid ot Loulsn's Abstract. A specialty made of the collection aud remittance of claim ot all kinds.

Aoi a JCAST, Attorney, at Law,

floor, east aide public so ian. Probate hsjnM and collections gfVm prompt attention. Will nnu-tfaa in vu,. .n

joining countias. Business toiidted.

For one Hale Dog, $1, For each additional Male Dcg, 12. For each Female

iog, i.

Each Tax Payer may pay the full amount of his or h sr Taxes on or before the 3d Monday in April, 1882, or may, at their option, pay on-half thereof a or before

said 3d Monday in April, and the remaining unit on or iieior tne 1st Jaoaday in

Kovember following.

In all cases where as much as one-half of the amount of Taxes ch arged against a Tux Payer (including all Road Tax) shall not be paid on or before the 3d Monday in April, 1882, the whole amount shall become due and returned delinquent with 10

per cent, damages and 6 per cent, interest, and collected as protiaea by Liw.

Bring your Road Receipts whan yoc come to pay your Istilni-Ullment, a they

will not lie received after the 3d Monday in April, if you are liable to pay Xases in

murti man UNO ivwuBiup, uiviiuuii ujb. tnv. w m. iimuin, q n rhiiii ci?n for each Township. Examine your receipts before leaving: the office, and I

if they include all your property. No County Ordtir will bo indorsed or paid when

the party in whose name the order is drawn, owes animations taxe. rax rayer

will llnd it greatly to their advantage not to put on tax paying until tne last two or three days ; and those that have their tax complicated, such it undivided Estates, &c, are especially ri-qtiestcd to call when we are at leisure, as it requires considerable

uuia iu miKS me uivisiou sou netiaratv rwwipbB. 1 LAWSON E. McKllViVKY, Bloomington, Ind., Nov, 1, 1881. Treasureifof Monroe County.

JX MULKT, .Utornay a! Law, V Bloomington, Indiana, wai mm' uce in the various courts of the Statu. M-

" "on Bsa to ttte collection of v?: J"h? Moment .f estates, nasi aH Probsts bu.iness, givesi .nm'Wl atteattea. Offlce over Fee', store, opposite Progran Block. crrnM c.t. j . " r

' sou mujegv aveasja.

Collectors. Office in Mayor '(Mbt

"7" ,5- , "H""1 usiuos.fivsn to settling decedent' estates, and to all kis) of niYHkAfce KriaiviM At.-.. -I a. if

' "--ww. ajy, mtmvmmmm

WX. SADLER, Attorney at La n: 't n ?miD&c", Indiana, fa tie B Hive Buildina. uiutatr. .

corner. Collection made promptly.

UiJ1

TO THE TAX-PAYERS OF THE City of llloouiingtoii

XfOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, 1'iat

Ll tho Tax Duplicate for 1881 for Ihe

City of Bloomington, Indiana, i in in; hands, ready for cclleetion.

Tie City Treasurer is required to coll act

txaei immediately on rocomng tho duplicate. The rates of taxation on each (100 val

uation for Ounernl und special purposes,

and Tor roll and Dog lax, is as follows : General Municipal Furpowi,

On each one hundred dollars 50c

Poll T.x 25c

Spatial Additional Bondt.

On each one hundred dollars '20c

Poll Ta x ill 00

Sptisial- Additional Sehoo' Jurposes. On aich $ 1 00 Special School 1 0c Ou each do Special Tuition, 20c Sinking Fund. On each do Sinking Fund 5c

On eset. Mnlo Dog 1 00 On ech Female Dos 1 00

The penalty for non-payment of Taxes ussesied, attaches ou the Third Monday of April, 1882, which is 10 per cent, dam

ages and costs of collecting. The OfBso of the City Treasurer is in tho Mayor's Office building, Bloom inglon,

ma num. Whore personal property cannot be

round, thn City Treasurer will sell rsal property in February, for the payment of Delinquent Tax now due. WILLIAM P KOGKWS, Nov. 2;i, 1B81, City Treasurer.

Estwta ot John McDowell.

OTICB is hereby given Unit James

M. .McDowell, Administrator or the ..... j.... itt.j :

a oo vii iinrnea .tsiav?, nai mis uy uin hi tho olica of tho Clerk of the Circuit Court of Monroe county. tiUU of Indiana, his

recounts acid voucher in final settloutont of said Estate, and tlud the Sumo will come up for hearing nd disposition in aid Court, at the next term thereof, to-

wit: on the 3rd Monday m .fcovembor,

1SS1.

Witness the Clerk and seal of said Ct.rt

this luth duv of November, 1881.

WM. V. BBOWNINU, f ska i.'l Clerk.

Nov. 23-81.

Fii -cli'v, IVarson & FriodVy, all ys.

UUU tjXUj

EIGHT OR TEN Thousand Dollars' WORTH OF GOODS At Cost or Less, To CLOSE BusinesH. Mst of my stock was purchaied this fall fiir cash, and a l old stock will be sold rfgarilas of cost. I have a splendid stuck of the newest style of shades of Dresi Goods, Cloak, Dolmans, Shawls, Dresi; Trimmings, Notion, Hat, Caps, Cnipats, Oil Cloth, Qittensware, etc. A large stosk of Bcoti and Shous.bost make. It w' 11 pay you to call und oe thm.

wav.A. larce stocx oi .nuns' ana uoy

Clothing at less than eost9

L'eficiency in hearing is the cause

of my closing business.

I Iterab? tender tny sincere thank to

the :tix'in of Monroe county for the lib

eral iintronaga they have bestowed on me for the last forty year, and I now invite

all lo come iintl (bare in the barcain

prop oio to give in closing out ray stock of

good! w . u. jt ajhi Nov K-SS.

PROBATE CAUSE. In the Monroe Circuit Court, of Mon

roe county, Ind., November Term, 1881. Joaepli 3 Paynn, administrator Jo bond

non. potilioner or tne estate oi aiuvon Branam, deceased, vi, Isaac T. Griffith,

Mary A. Griffith (it at. To Isaac T. Griffith and Mary A. Grif-

fl Hi ; y ou are each notified that the above

nnnuid petitioner, a administrator of the

estate aforaiaid, has filed in the Monroe Circuit Court, of Monroe county, Indiana,

a vnrifled petition, making you defendants thereto, and alleging in said petition that

you nro not resident or tne Btaie oi inuinun. and nrsvinc therein tor an order and

dec -ee of saiil Court, authorizing the sale

of certain Beat Estate belonging to tne o tn tn of said decadent, and in satd petition described, to make asset for the payment of the debts and liabilities ef said estiito; and that said petition, so filed and pending, is sat for bearing in said Circuit Court, at the Court House in Bloomington, Ind., on the 21st judicial day of the i No mmber Term, 1881, of aid Court, tbe j

same being the 14th day or JJceml)r,iBBi. Witness the Clerk and seal of said Court, thi 7th dv of November, 1S81. WM. F. BROWNING, 0al Clerk. Nov 9-81 Iluakirk & Duncan, att'yi

The Chicago A Northwestern Railway ';bo oldest, bat coiutmotea, beit equipped, and hence tbe HADING Railway of the Nsrthweit. It ii th hort and best route between Ohioag and all

point, in Northern Illinois, lowa, iMKOian, W vomit sr. Nebraaca. Callforata, Oregon,

Arixona, UUh, Co ordo,ldho, Montana,

Nevada, and for ctimru lfwn vmaaa,

Dtnr, .UadailU, Mt Lk, &H Franeiio, DtuuiiKHxL, Siou CUy, Cedtr Kapldf,

Des Mol iei, Coluu boi, nnd all

th TtrrltoriN, and mm.

iiolnt In

aim, tor

MllwauVIe, Gmn Say, Oihkoah, Bbeboy-

fan, Marquetta, Fon du Lac, V aatrtowa, louehton, Nenah, Dtantsha, t Paul,

Minneapolis, ilnron, A alKa, Farw, Ut

Mlnnaapoll, Uown, alga, rarfe, vwmarck, AVinons, 1 Crass, Owatiia,a, all polntii in MinnwotA Dakota, VI0tA in and tbe North whV. J At Council BluiT tla train of ih Ohlcago A North-WMtsra and the V. Xy'i depart from, arrWs at aad tls joint dejiot At Chicago, clot eonnttitoai at aa wlthtth Like Shore, MIhlgaa CMtral, Bnltimoie A Ohio, Ft. Wayne and rma ylvanlaand Chicago Grand Track rait ways, and Knnkakte Panhandle saute. CIom iMmaection ma t alt J a lot Ion Point. It Utha only Una maniac Pullman Ho(4 Dining Cm batwean Chicago Couaail Blufft. f f max Smii'SM on all sight train. Inaiat npen Tliikot Agantt Mlll;ff tlckeubr ihl road. Ktamin youriiw

at and refuse to buy If thtv tlo not roM over the Chicago North-Woitorn fwy, If you wUh tb best trayallag aH0Hi modatior yon will buy your ticket If thl

route, wiwu'i A&a nw Oi'HSH All Ticket AsenU sell tlckau

by this linn. Msrvln Hughltt, H V. ?.

general Manager, unioage, tn.

PH08ATE CAUSE NO. 29.

Entate of John, lllcllenry, e-

ceasea.

"V 'OTICE i hereby given that George j W. McHcnry, Adminltrator of the above named EsUta, ba thi day filed in the office of the C'erK of thn Circuit Court

of Monroe county, State of Indiana, hi

sciounts and vouuber in final aettlemeni

-f said Kstato, and that the lame will coimo up for henring and disposition in saM Cenrt at tho aext torm therftof, towi'. : on tho third Monday in November,

1811.

tVitness tbe Clork and Seat of said Court

Hi a 12th day of November, last.

At. Jr. tutv w n if w, fftKALj Clerk. ,1 B. Mulky, all'y. Nov 18-81.

vJ(

Buy The Beit

FURNITURfi! I have to EXCLUSIVE contract

with tho two ifsotoriei or nicmianoa, by which I SAVE FRKIOH1B. By thi. arrangmmat I oan gat My f Hm chpr than any oat who buy 1 Ciacinnstl or LouUvlUa. ; I CAN ANO Will UNBERtILL ANY (HOUSE IN THE COUNTY. Before you buy. cow and rat my prloNj Aug. 24, Ull. JOHN P. BlttTH. "

T

Estate or .lames Borlaaa

NOTICE I. hereby given tbat C'harla W. Caughaa, Administrator with th will annexed of the above named stale, ha this day fllsd In the office of th. Clork; of tbe Ctrouit Court of Monroe county,,

State of Indiana, hi. account and vouch

en in Snal settlement of laid tataf), ana that the same will coma up for hearing

and diaposition in laid Court nt th next

term thereof, to-wit ; on tbe third Monday in November, 1841 Witness, the Clerk and Seal of laid Court this 15lb day of October 1S81. aa-AX WM. F. BROWNING.

oct. 19-81. Clark.

Loudan & Mlers, att'y.

M-F. PERRY. T. C. PERRtNO. Abtraetn of Xitl . oft Monroe County Real Estate

PEERY at PERIlinG,

Examinar of Lanat TlUoa, hav mow ready a cjoaaplate Aa tract Of Tltla of every Town aTaMBM Tract

of sLaaal i Mearee Coanty, and furnish every Owner, lelNMor or Mortgasree of Ktmlatsmtawitw full ABSTRACTS OF TITLES, as am appear, from COUNTY RKCOMQ8. Only ABSTRACT of TITLES to MOXXO COVXTT; Keeordt or ixty-4r yajanteventy aix-hundred-paga hooka, oeadaaw and written into oneeonveaieait, afsmtant Title Abstract Kocarol. MAM OWNERS, LAND BUT EMS, HOMELOAEEAS tak aeiioe, loek wafl I all LAND TITLES; many of tbeea aro crook' ed many utterly wortbleas aaa to R teal they aro straight and orrsja Wet risk or asitor th eaMqaaiaa of 4nauv TITLES. A LEASE, m MOMT0AOE. MstJP

or coavsysnca of LAND t L0T9 fa as

reliable or to ha trusted tn this uacaHaia tricky age, without a GITAKAMTIRD, CERTIFIED, ABSTRACT of TRAMS

r, snowing awain ar Tiito itom

ownarahln. A I

REAL ESTATE, furaU

notice.

Foetal ways reacasWo. PERRY i PERRlUO. '

Coapilar. otKoaroo Otaatf Aaatrasta at

TES to nrooMt data aaal

Atotraett of Titlae tot mmr

JH.aT.lVIOIlOEa, AltOIiXVBOT AMD rRACTIClAK. ttVf&OR, Plana and SiieoilloaUou mtmm r

rd for dwelling mtmm M mnM ulldlne. Also asUmato ot htri kttasaaaaa.

platod throughooA AM t UMm at th tlmotfooitadb

nioominfxoB, ta., aaraa) pi, aoasa.

Realdont Donticl.

js. Or. Ja

Ofia, ov.r MeOalla 01 St. I

isgtvn.taa. ah wotc mmm,jmm

Dity Book ltor

STOCK INKK9WR,

JTRHWEBI SjR1T

MlHUKLLAMVAtJS a4 GtkmTo Boole, KM4iwy, rot, IMtiMliw, Wall Pain. Man- Bika. Mbk. Alkw Z

chMtims, ihM pa, mmm PriSs

Bmckois, Ntatnary, wtp' Mj ftlaiM, and Faucy Art trios iMmf SitlMh'tl niom take ftw m N Wit hjiiJi aa Magi slM

School Boors and Brfaaii lka

pU for ttw lill44(HI

yff.h llaaaa a ha sks Aall -i k .

All ar in vteai to tMttt an 4 a tit Uattai

PrUtKATR tUUSt WO. H.

tae at' sSatla Cosialoav,

NOTICK it arVy Ha tM miM It (,ndr, AdmltArator f Uw &m

named Kauta. laaa tkta at Mail to In V

of th Ottrk of th tiirealt tH f Mimro'i wuaty, Mtot of Misj)4 Ml count an-t owwi ht tl Hitlamstifi of said ltstito, and that tb M will Ntf un for hoarlng an4 d laps III I tjM Court at tb nat town thrf, t.ttt t tho 1st Monday In FWiraary, tftt. Witaot th Clark and Stial of (

Court tfcw lth day of Novibr, IML

WM. T. BROWN IK SK. !. CWk. v aa . Ms . . . j aa. u a,a atif

LIVERY and SALE ft T i It Ii K .

Kortb Side Public SauHre,Bloctmineton. I Wotl0 Of Administration

rinilK nuderaiennd tiiko nleasure in cll-l "VT OTICE il hsrbv rivan that th un

I inn-attention to tho fact that thev have I J.!l derticrneAl has been annctnted by the

The I. n test St vies ot iiuiririea

nnd Carriages, and good, steady borset for ni iglo and double driving. Wo nro prepare! to furnish Uarringes for Weddings, V im nils and Parties, and swift teams for Commercial Tra-.v!err.. Farmers' horses rl i-'ieaply. IV OKLKY & MA V.

Clerk of tho Circuit Court of Monroe

county, Jitato of Indiana, Administrator d bonis non of the Estate of Alexander Nicholson, late ol' Monro county.deetased. Said es:ate is surposd to be insolvent.

w.M. a. WAbUSortmi'i Ni v 2-si Administrator de bonis noli j

wiiiiXni&asl'VSl vi)SMas!Sat

wui im h iiwi mwm vm mm h

MAI