Bloomington Progress, Volume 15, Number 44, Bloomington, Monroe County, 15 February 1882 — Page 2
t)ublic;ittlrijgrfss.
rvtuaniaOmci: Progress Bkk,eoraer Sixth Street and College Avenue.
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Om Temr la advance) S3 09 Club of 3 or more copies, each 1 SO
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Emigrant for Texas and the Great West should purchase Tickets by the Ohio Muwsssippi Railway. Lowest rate for Tickets, Household Good, Stock. tc All ii ugm carried to St. Louis, Union Depot. So midnight change by this .rul. Fur all isUbrmtfioo, sock a Maps, Tisjo TsWee, ratal on passengers, frsjsrfatj, Oto, apply to Station Aspate of this Company, or call on or address J. S. MILLS, General Emigre1 ion Agent,SeymoaT,Ind.
l-Miavllle. M. A. at C
How tuna its eat ire TraMM to Chicago, Over ita own line, making the very est rout to all points is Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Minaeecta, Nebraska, Kaiu, Colorado and California. Only ona changs to all pviata west. Only direct route to Michigan. NORTH. MAIL. UXtMO. Lv.Btooraiagton J 1.2V am 6.M aaa Ar.Grentcastle 1.31 pm 1-30 am Crawfocds3e 2-4- pm Lafayette 3.49 pat Ckieage 8 50 pm Michigan City 7.20 pa SOUTH. MAII ACCOM. Lv.BloosniagtoB 5. pea 6.50 am Ar.Mrtchell SAO pas 7.26 am Now Albany 9.15 pm 1.15 am LooJavillo 9.45 pm 10.45 am Quickset route to Indianapolis. Throojh Tickets to all poieta, North, Wart and South,oasaiat Bloomiogton. The agent of th company is the only parson that can tell you through ticket, or check your auggago through from Bloomineton. CARTER PERI NO, Agt Morrayllellor, O. I. A, Louisville. Kentucky.
Henry Ward Beecher evident ly believes in the virtue of life in mrance, as hi premiums amount to near $5,000 per annual. It will be s great soarceof comfort to Hen. when be is dead, to know that bis widow is fusing 9100,000 oat of the insurance companies. Michael Hart, a printer, started to bis work in the old Work! building in New York, the morning of the fire, got drank on the way and was sent to Black well Island for three nonths. Several of bis brother printers were borned to death in the fire. ' Moral
What does "court in banc" mean? "Bane" brought into legal language from the French, means "beneh," and eomea to as from English law. "BaneBsgts" was the title of the King's Bench, which was above all other courts, an appeal to which was final. The "court in banc," therefore, means the supreme eonrt of the District of Colombia in fall beach . What is the matter with the college boys? They are getting themselves into scrapes right and left. Even in staid and decorous Canada they do not behave well. Some students ia Queen's College, in Kingston, are the latest victims to what seems an epidemic of lawlessness. They are charged with having borned property belonging to the college, and ate asked to pay $200 damages. Five medical students will be dismissed, and eighteen in the same school and fifteen art students will forfeit a year in their courses. In time the college boy will learn that there are rights which be will have to respect whether be wants to or not.
The porch ass of great Mocks of land in the Southern States by European eepttalista has been a marked feature of the past two weeks. 8ir E. J. Bead, representing English investor-, and Dr. Jacobus Westbeiia of Amsterdam, representing Dutch, have just bought 9,000,000 acres in Florida :
while Phillips, Marshall A Co., of
London, have bougnt 1,3W,UUU
acres in Mississippi. Nearly half
of the latter are levee lands, situated in the Yazoo delta, and are fine cotton and timber lands. The object in both these porchases has been to colonize and cultivate the land, and the effect can hardly fail to be felt in the future of these States when the cultivators of the soil have to pay their rents to 'English capitalists. It is of coarse absurd for anybody to tell bow much any very rich man is wort It. Probably Yanderbilt is the richest man in the world. He has at least $50,000, 000 that be ha no use for. This amount ho has in registered bonds, deposited in the treasury vaults in New York dir. From these alone
his income is over $5,000,000 a
year. Then count his railroad and other stocks and bonds, bis real estate, etc., and the figures become bewildering. Flood, the bonanza king, is worth $30,000,000, and Mackaye was worth still more. O'Brien was supposed to be worth about the sams and also Fair. Take the wealth of Vanderlnlt, and let it increase ten or twenty vanrs as fast a it has increased during the past deeade, and what is there be can not do ? Jay Gould the tame, and a down others. But let them slide : they don't owe us
anything; use very glad we don't
owe tbetn. JJon t sere muen tor money curself. There are, howev
er, two things we would like to be rich for. One is so that we eould
have a new pair of suspenders to
every pair of pantaloon, aati ue
other so that we could stay at Dome on rainy days.
An Ohio judge and jury disagreed as to bow much Jack Robinson should be fined for kissing Miss Allen against her will. The jury gave her $430, but the judge, realizing that this was a good deal for so little, reduced the amount $200. A dying man startled the people of St. Albans, Vt. by confessing various crimes of which he had never been suspected, from larceny to murder. There is said to be corroborative evidence that he told a straight story. In the Indiana State election of this year there will be to elect a
Secretary of State, Treasurer of
State, Attorney General, Superintendent of Public Instruct iou and Clerk of the Supreme Court. The places of Supreme Judges Howk, Niblack and Worden all Democrats are to be filled at the November election. - Prosecutor Duncan left town last Friday, with one hundred dollars snugly put swsy in his pocketbook, contributed by the law-break
ers of this county, besides many
fees where the costs were stayed. The people mutt observe the laws
or be impoverished. Martin Cbun-
hfEtrald.
An item from Valnsia county, Florida, savs. rjotatoes are nlanted.
peas sown, and germinating ; that all tender things as tomatoes, egg
plant, etc, are sown in sheltered olaccs. and that the nlantinp- of or
ange groves and other trees, and
vines, pruning, etc, are progressing
rapidly.
Physicians sav that the nrinci-
j rf t pal cause for the prevalence of smsll pox, is the result of a failure to vaccinate by the people. The country has been exempt from any small
pox epidemic for so many years that
people have become careless. Thus
the disease has been permitted to
gam a foothold id a great many places all over the United States, and the greatest caution, the utmost
vigilance on the part of the authorities and people will be required to
stamp it out.
Girls Wjs'vs Am. Seek.
Gainsborough hat girls ; Oscar
Wilde girts ; girls with loud voices:
girls who talk aloud in the Mendelssohn Hall and annoy those who
desire to bear the people on the stage ; giggling girls : too awfully
young girls: girls who are only
just coming out j girls who have been out too long ; girls of thirteen,
who imagine themselves eighteen ; girls of forty-odd, who imagine themselves twenty-two and dress accordingly; girls who use slang ; girls who powder and paint ; girls who can sing or play, and make a fuse over it when asked ; girls who can neither sing nor play, and are always too ready to be asked. The prevalence of small pex throughout the country has caused . a . as - .
same strange, exhibitions et in em
and selfishness. Only nine miles out of St. Louis a negro lay sick with the disease on a pile of straw at the roadside. The next Looming he was discovered, and as the weather had been cold it is probable that be was badly frozen ; but nobody would go to his aid, and he was left to die all alone, which he did after another night of exposure. An Indian woman was similarly left to herself in a suburb of Cin
cinnati. After her death the shan
ty in which her body remained was
set. on fire by throwing blazing
wads of straw at it. lbree children were abandoned by their parents at Selma, Tenn., and in this
ease there was not the excuse of real
danger, for the father and mother bad been protected by recent vaccination. In a Wisconsin lumbermen's sump three men were left by their companions with food and water for only three days. After that .they would have starved to death had not a man, who heard of their plight through the fugitives, gone to their succor. On the other hand, easts of self-saorificing bravery are also numerous. A remarkable use is being m-.de of potatoes. The clean peeled tuber is macerated in a solution of sulphuric acid. The result is dried between sheets of blotting paper, and then pressed. Of this all manner of small articles are made, from combs to collars, and even billiard balls, for which the hard, brilliantly white material is well fitted. ., "Let me say, right heah, at the for'd eaod of dese preceedins," remarked Brother Gardner, as he rose up at the last meeting of the Lime Kiln Club, "dat I doan' want ai.y talk in dis dub about de wedder. You can't meet a man dese days but what am squintin' up at de hevins and wonderio' what timede nex' snowbank will arrov. Desnown' de rain, an' polar waves, an' de lush, an' de mud will come just de same ; an' all de anxiety, an' worry, an' talk, an' lookin', an lyin' am froan away. Jest let de wedder alone and keep your feet under kiver. Let de liars go ahead and tell dis am de hardest winter known for a million years. Let dem state how de hot water pipes froze up clus to de stove and icicles sebenteen feet long hong from de chimbly. Lit dem tell how the frost split hitchin' posts an' upsoi city halls, an' doan' set in an' try to tell a bigger li. Half do popalashun of dis worl' will be shet out ob better lan' fur no udder reason dan lyin' about de wedder for eight months of de twelve, and growlin' at d Lawd about de balance.
KANSAS' LETTER. Wichita, Kaksas, Jan 30, 1892. Editor Progrtn: Wichita ia a very lively place, about at large aa Qreencastte, but reminds me of Terra Haute. It has boen built but ten year. Douglas Avenue reminds one of h street in Cincinnati or in some other city, lined with wagons leaded with corn and wheat, going to the elevators. Corn is selling at 60 cents per bushel and people think that this ia an enormous price. There are two elevators, each doing a good business. The Arkansas river is a beautiful stream on the west side of the city. The county of Sedgwick contains 645,120 acres, about one-half bottom. The soil is deep black loam, resting on a lighter colored sub-soil, composed of loam clay and gravel, both soil and sub-soil being so porous that surface water readily pours through it. There is no dificulty in crossing streams with wagons and teams, the beds of spring branches and creeks are solid no danger of being mired in ihe mud. Water plenty, as the Arkansas runs southeast and the Little Arkansas runs south through the county. Good wells are found from a depth of 10 to fifteen feet. On the bottoms drive wells are used. All the wells in Wichita are driven wells. You can have a well any where you desire, in kitchen or dining room by placing a pipe on the pump. B. L. Denton. TCISli E1LT03S TRAGEDY. Wholesale Destruction of BurgUir ! Bedford Banner. Tunneiton, this county, was last Sunday sight, the scene of the bloodiest affair that ever occurred in this section of the State. It seems that some days since a plan was formed by Ed. Willoughbv, Zachariah Whittedl, Virgil Wilson, and Nicholas Bond to rob, burn and murder, and had it not been for Willoughby weakening and exposing the whole aflair, they would no doubt have been to a great measure successful in carrying out their devilish plot. Willoughby says they were first to rob the saloon of Armenius Meyers, where k was thought there was a considerable amount of money bidden in the cellar. They were then to repair to
the residence ot ihos. Clark, call him out, murder him and afterward rob the dwelling. The next thing was the robbery of A. Guthrie & Son's store, after getting possession of AL T. Guthrie and by using pincers on his tongue, force him to give them the combination of the safe lock. If necessary the clerk in the store was to be killed. A part of the programme also was to fire a building in the edge of town to draw the attention of the people, while they were proceeding with their work. After Willoughby told this, the citizens began to prepare for the outlaws. After dark a body of men were posted behind a freight car, near the saloon,and other squads in different positions where they
could have full .view of the window the burglars were to enter the saloon. These men, or the most of them, were armed with doublebarreled shot guns. At the time
designated by Willoughby, the robbers appeared and approached the window, Willoughby with them, wearing a pair of white pantaloons, that he might be recognized and not shot. The three doomed men quickly opened the window and entered the saloon, Willoughby then stepped aside, according to previous arrangement A pistol snot was fired to frighten the robbern, and in a moment all three were out of the house. No sooner were they out than they wore greeted with a deadly volley from the shot guns, which killed Whitted almost instantly, and mortally wounded Bond. Wilson, who was not so badly wounded, ran, but a well-aimed bullet brought him to the ground, and it is said one individual placed a gun to his head and blew a fearful hole in it. Bond lived until 12 o'clock the next night, and it in asserted, before he died, revealed the names of a number ot other persons who belong to the gang. Wilson U said to have been a dangerous
character, and at one tim.fled this part of
tno country to cava himseir from prosecution. Bond was quite young, being only about sixteen yean of age. Whitted formerly went to school in Bedford, and up to the time of his falling into bad company, it few years since, was regnrded as a respectable young man. Ben Willoughby, the party who betraved tba trio and led them on to their death, was at one time fin inmate of the Bedford jail, charged with the murder of a tramp at Tunneiton, but as there was no evidence against him, he was discharged from custody. It is said that the poople of Tunneiton and vicinity, feel they have been rid of three dangerous characters who kopt them in continued fear ao far as tba safety of life and property ia concerned. The burglars wore ll armed with revolvers, and there is no doubt, if a chance bad been given them, thoy would have dona some shooting. It is to bo hoped this dreadful and bloody affair will have the affout of putting a stop to the robbing and thieving that ha been going on in this county for a long time.
In all murder cases where the killing is proved and the prisouer is shown to be insane, he should he sentenced to confinement in the insane asylum during bis natural life, beyoud the power of the courts, the Governor or the Legislature, to release him. The taking of oue life while insane should forever forfeit the right of the party to liberty.' Should he even be restored to reason, the fit of insanity may return at any time. The statute should bo so changed that judges iu criminal caeca should be judges of the law and the jury the judges of the facts; and when a criminal is convicted, the judgment should not be reversed for technical error if, under the evidence, there ia no doubt of the guilt of the prisoner. Illinoia Bar Association.
A countrv editor 'makes the
following generous proposition : "If
the man who is too poor to pay lor a county paper will send his name, we will help him buy another dog." Engines No. 1 and 25 of the L., N. A. & C. a re out of the New Albany shops. They have been remodeled and repaired and look well in their new dress.
The Chicago and Indianapolis Air Line, when completed, will he much the shortest route between Chicago and Indianapolis and what is singular, in connection with the
Jeffersonville, Madison and Indian
apolis road, will be thirty-seven
miles snorter between Chicago and Louisville, Ky., than the Louis
ville, New Albany and Chicago road with its Chicago route.
The Democratic party of Indi
ana is blessed with two too too ut
terly great meu, and they come in
conflict quite often. Last week fif
teen ot the Democratic editors of In
diana held a State Convention and they ran amuck of these two men. One gentleman offered a resolution
to invite lion. Joseph Hi. McDon
ald to address the convention and
the resolution was about to pass when a gentleman jumped up and moved to amend, by inviting Thomas A. Hendricks, also. The resolution passed but a committee was also appointed to invite Hendricks to make a speech. He wouldn't do it. He went to the meeting, sulked
awhile and then went away again.
McDonald made bis npcech and
then went home and put another scalp on the top shelf cf his cup
board. Tart Haute Vo-tner.
ACSEJKTS wanted to (ell Edison's Musical Tolepbone and Edison's Instan
taneous Piano and Organ Music. Enclose
stamp for catalogue and terms. EDISON II UiilC CO., 929 Chestnut 8:., Phila., Fa. Big bargain house, Len. S. Field & Co's. New York dry goods store is the great sensation of the day. Crowds of people flock to it at all hours in search cf novelties, and cheap goods not cheap in texture, but cheap in prices. The new store room is the talk of the county, and people come many miles to see it. While looking at the new room and the handsome fixtures they very naturally see something that strikes them as uncommonly good and cheap and straightway tbey purchase it. New goods are coming by every train since the firm moved into the new store room and it is wonderful to note the quantity that can be placed upon the shelves. Up-stairs is set apart for carpets, of which they carry a handsome stock, and the Ladies are invited to inspect the new patterns.
Ctiansre of Toting- Precinct. Notice is hereby given that at the December Term, 1881, of the Board of Commissioners of Monroe County, Indiana, the following voting precincts were established in Bloomington Township : Beginning at the southwest corner of Bloomington township, in Monroe county, Indiana, theuce east along the township line to the alley running north and south between College Avenue and Wal
nut street through the City of Blooming, ton, Ind., thunce north with said alley to
Eleventh street in said city, thence east along said Etevsnth street to the State road leading from Bloomington, Ind., to .Martinsville, Ind., thence north with the
meandenngs of said road to the township line, thence west along the township lino to the northwest corner of Bloomineton
township, thence south along the township
Una to the pixee or beginning. And that the place for holding elections
in said West Precinct shall be at the west
window of the Court room of the Court
house of said county.
Beginning at tba aoutheait corner of
Bloomington township, in Monroe county.
Ind., thence wost along the township line
to tbe alley running north and soutn Between College Avenue and Walnut street through the City of Bloomington, Ind., thence north with said allay to Eleventh street in said city, thence east along said Eleventh street to the SUie road leading from Bloomingtsn, Ind., to Martinsville, Ind.. thence north with the maaaderings
of said road to the township line, thence
east along tho township line to the normeast corner of said Bloomington township,
thence south along tbe township line to
tho place or beginning. And that the place of holding elections in said East Pnwinct shall be at a window in the south side of the Monroe County Library room, in said township in said county. State of Indiana, Monroe county, ss. I, Kicbard A. Fulk, Auditor in and for aid county do hereby certify that the above is a true and complete copy of tbe record in the above named cause as the same appears of file in my office. Witness my band and seal this 8th day of February, 1882. RICHARD A. FULK, sea I. Auditor.
1TORTH SIBE OF THE SQUARE. WE HAVE NOW REMOVED OUR IMMENSE STOCK OF HARDWARE AND AGRICULTURAL XHPLEHENTS TO THE NEW BOOM PREPARED SPECIALLY for us in the Waldron Block. Any article kept in a Hardware Store will Be found on our shelves, or will be ordered on application. EAST OF TEE P0ST0FFICE.
COME
A!
SEE US.
STUART & McPHEETERS.
S
1IERIFFS SALE.
Bv virtue of a certified copy of a de-
c.ee to me directed, from the clerk's office of tbe Monro circuit court, in a cause wherein Maria L. Rogers is plaintiff, and Win . A. Rogers, administrator of the estate of Benjamin f Rogers, deceased, et al, are defendants, requiring me to make the sum of thirty-four hundred and forty four ($3,444 97) dolUrs and ninety-seven cents, with interest on said decree and costs, 1 will expose at publio sale, to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, March 11th, 1881, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 1 o'clock P. M. of said day, at the door of tho court house in Monroe county, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described real estate, situate in Monroe county, State of Indiana, to-wit : Tho undivided one-half Interest in the northeast quarter of section thirty-four 31 township ninaJ north range onel west, containing one hundred and sixty (ISO) acres. If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs, I will at the same time
and placo expose at public sale me teesimple of said real estate, vr sa much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs.
Said sale will be made without any re
lief whatever from valuationjind appraisement laws. SILAS GRIMES, fabl5-Bt. Sheriff of Monroe county. East & East, ttttj a.
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animal and vegetable structures from'
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Tbe value of Ozone as a natural . proserver has been known to our abler chemist!; for years, but, until now, no means of producing it in a practical, inexpensive.
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Microscopic observations prove mat de
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anil vegetaDie structures, uzone, appuea by Prentiss method, seizes and destroys these germs at once, and thus preserves.
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There is no ehange in the slightest particular in the. appearance of any article thus preserved, and no trace of any foreign or unnatural odor or taste. The process is so simple that a child can operate it as well and as successfully as a man. There is no expensive apparatus or machinery required. A room filled with different articles, such as eggs, meat, fUu, eUx, can be treated at one time, without additional-trouble or expense. WTla fact, there is nothing that Ozone wilt not preserve. Think of everything you can that is liable to sour, decay, or spoil, and then remember that we guarantee that Ozono will preserve it in exactly the condition you want it for any length of time. If you will remember this, it will save asking questions as o whether Ozone will preserve this or that article it will preserve any thing and every thing you can think of. There is not it township ia the United
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any amount of money, from 81,000 to $10,OOU a year, that ha pleases. We desire to get a live man interested in each township in the county, in whoso hands we can place this preservative, and through him, secure thu business each township should have. RErrsKsrcRS. We desire to call attention to a class of references which no enterprise or firm based on any thing but the soundest business Buecess and highest commercial merit could secure. We refer, by permission, ns (o our integrity and to tac value of the Prentiss Preservative, to the following gentlemen . Edward C Boyce, Member Board of Publio Works; K. O. Eshelby, City Comptroller ; Amor Smith, jr., Collector Internal Revenue; Wulsin & Worthington, Attorneys; Martin H. Uarrell and B. F. Miller, County Commissioner; W. S. Cappoller, county Auditor ; nil of Cincinnati, Hamilton county, Ohio. These gentlemen are each familiar with the merits of our Preservative, and know from actual observation that we have without question the most valuable article in the world. John C. Whisnand, of Bloomington, Ind., has examined many specimens in their building in Cincinnati, and brought me some specimens of their prenorving done Aug. 10, 18S 1, and are perfectly good now and can be seen in my office at any time. The undersigned has been appointed and commissioned their Agent for Monroe county, Ind., and I wish to establish agencies in each township as early as possible. If you wish to secure control of your township, come or send in your application. Our motto ir, first come first served, nnd one day's delay may l'Jse you this
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E. Corner 9th & Race Streets,
ajaaiaMisMKSTOiMring
KSTATK OF R. D.J CLENDEKBN, DKCEA6IJCD. Im the Monroe circuit court, io tbeStato of Indiana. Mo. 25 All credi tors, heirs and legatees of said Estate are herby notifiod that Jackson H. Clendenen, Ad minittrator of said Estate,has filed his account and vouchers in final settlement of said Estate, and that tbo same will come up for examination and approval on the' 24tb day of April, 1882, tbe same being the first judicial dav of tha April Te?m, 188 J, of said court, at which time said creditors, feeirs and legatees are required to appear in said court, in the court house in the city of Bloomington, and show cause, if any there be, why said sccount should not. be approved. Witness my name as oierk, and tha seal of said court affixed, the 8th day of February, 1888. W. F. BROWNING, max. Clei Monroe C. O. J. B. Mulky, att'y. Tob. 15-81
KSTATK Of ISAAC IT. FIELD, DMCEASED. In thu lfrtfirAA Aifmntfi Mitt In Iti. SU-A
of Indiana. No. 30.
All creditors, heirs aid legatee of said Kiituta . ra hitnKw tinllS.! William a
Taylcv, Administrator of said Estate, has
nma di acconnr, ana roucnen in final tottlemeoit of said EUte, and tbnt the tame will nnmA an fnr AYamiriatitn n4 eaMa-.aaj-.tn..
. , -w. -r M-aa.ivM whis w al on the 24th day of April, 1882, the same being tba first judicial day of the April Term, 188), of acid court, at
wnicn time said creditor, neirs and legatees are required to appear in said court, in the court house in the yty of Bloomtsgtnn. anil linw AjtiioA. if anv tV..M v.
r ; .. -".J VV Rll said account should not be approved.
n lines, my name a eiarK, ano Ue aaal of said court affixed, this 8th day of February, 1883. Wm. F. BROWNING, heal Clerk Monroe C. O. Louden & Miers, att'y a. Feb. 15-82
ATTORNEYS AT UV7.
l?RIROLEV. PEAmOM J- fttKtU
F LEY, Attorneys, Bloosainctoa, Ltd. Office in Allen' New Bloak. ipeoial attention given to settferaent of dmiieala estate. Collections promptly resnlttad. Capt. Fried ley or Judge Pswree wl ba :n attendance at each term of eonrt. ap-7 BVSKIRK t DUSCAM, Attorneys at Law, Bloomiogton, Ind. OlSoe in tha Bank cornar.up-atairi, on sooth aid of tho jqnare. Will practioe in al) tbe eoarts mt the State. Special attention gives, to Iro bato bnatneea, and to tbo eolleetio eatprompt remittanee of claims. JAUES B. MULKY, Attorney at Lew, Bloomington, Indiana, (will ms tice in the various courts of tba Stat. Jh pecial atteatioa givea to tho cnlleeeiosi of claims. The settleo nt of estates, sad aM Probata bnalfiAaa nviui -...t.
Office over Fee's store, opposite riutwsS
shock, corner o-tn at, ma BOIiagO a
LOUD EX t MICK Attormtj.mtZmw Blooming ton, lad aaa. 'TTti aii slain over First National Eak. All bswla l of a legal nature given careful stentiaain aJi courts. Titles to Real estate esuvaUy examined by aid of Louden's Abstraot. A penalty made of tho oolleotioa aa4 f ' mittance of claims of all kinds. ROGERS t jyjB, jrr, Attorneys aaal Collectors. Oftes in Mayor Ofloo building. Special aUeetiongiveti to sot tlinir dswedanta' aaafaai w.A to ii k-l.f. m
probate business. Also, ahsSraailag.
EAST EAST, Atteraeva, at Law, Bloominartnn- Tnil fmm. In Wat-
dron's Bloea-. hatOi mii riiaii
Vxtsinass and collections givea wrecapt at-
M-wir. nm practioe in ooera cc mu adjoining counties. 3sinesa svUrft.
Slot: Ice .of ItTtaivnncy. In the matter of the estate of B. D. J. Clendenen, deceased. In the Monroe circuit court. No. .25. Notice is hereby given that'upon petition filed in said court by Jactaon H. Clendenen Administrator of said tatate, setting up the insufficiency of the aetata of said decedent to pay the delta and liabilities thereof, the Judge of said oourt did, on the 7th day of February, 1681, find said estate probably insolvent, and order the same to lie settled accordingly. Tht creditors ot said estate are therefore hereby notified of such insolvency, and itro required to file their claim against mid estate for allowance. Witness the clerk and seal of anid court, at Bloomington, Indiana, this 8th day of Feburary, 1882. 8AX W. F. BROWN ZNO, Feb. l.'i-82. Clark. J. B. Mulky, att'y-
N otice of laatf verncr. In tbo matter of th estate of James Davis, deceased. In the Monro Circuit Coart. No. 49. Notice is hereby given that upon petition filed in said court by David Davis, Administrator of said estate, setting up the insufficiency pf the estate of said deceder.t to pay the debta and 'liabilities thereof,- the Judge of snid court did, on the 7th day of February, 1882, find said estate to be probably insolvent, and order tbe same to ba settled accordingly. The crediiors of said estate aril therefore hereby notified of sueh insolvem:y,and required to file their claim against said estate for alUwaa.ee. Witness the Clerk and aaal of aaiil court, at Bloomington, Indiana, this 6th day of February. 1882. fsKAi. Wat. T. B KOWNINO, Feb. 15-82. Clerk. Louden V Mien, attya.
Resident Dontiot.
Dr. J. W.
CRAtTJ.
Offlee, over McOalla Jk C'o store.
infton, mo. mm wort wftMisx,..faJ.ia
ELKCTIOKer DMaWTOaU THE Annual Mieting of the Stockbolder of the rouibville, New Albany and Chicago Railway Company, wrlQ bo held at tho National Beak of Ootmarce. ia tho Citv of Ww TmV mm m.
day, February tenth,. 1881, at which msat-'-
wg inirosen jirecwrs will eo aiecMtt to ssrve for the sasuiag; year. The polls vriU be open from 13 m. to 1 o'clock p.aa. jaall-RI W. H LRWI8, Soretary.
Ma.emsfjuMl.Mol Rsksul Tmmmtmr IBM. NOTICE ia hereby fives that tho Tax Duplicate for tho Maradaaiiaad Rosai on tho petition of A. W. Rogers asd. others, it now is my hanas and I aas i-s4a to receive tho Taxes tbsreoa. L. X. MrCINNET, Treasurer Monroe Cw. Bloomiagtoa, Ind., Itoe. 13-St.
ESTAT.S or DANIEL SUM HIT. DECEASED. In thu Monroe circuit wart, in the State of Indiana. No. 05. All creditors, heirs anl legatees of said Estate are hereby notified that -Tames L. Ktairwa't, administrator f said Estate, has filed bin account and vouchers in partial settlement of said Estate, and that the same will come up for examination and
! approval on the 31th dsy of April, 1882,
tbe sAms being the first judicial day or the April Term, 1882, of said court, at which time said eroditon, hairs and legatees are required to appet.r in said conrt,in the court house in tha city of Bloomington, and show cause, if any there be, why
aid sccount aboald not e approved. t:
Witness my name as clerk, nnd the seal of said court affixod, the 8th dav of February, 1882. Wm. F. BROWNING, fsKALj Clerk Monroe U. O. J. 8. Williams, attya. FeblS-83
lVottct) off IniwslveaicT. Ia the matter of tho attato of Join J. J. Cherry, deceased Ia tho Monroe circaK court. Mo. 144. Notice is hereby given thatnpoo petition filed ia said court by Joseph T. Batkirk, administrator, de bonis not, of said state, setting up tho insuSeieney of tho state of said deeedon to pay the dobts and liabilities thereof, tho Master Commissioneror amid court did, oa Ike third day of February, 188:), find said estate probably insolvent, ant order tbo ante to be settled accordingly The oreditora of aid estate am therefore hereby Bell tod , of each Insolvency and required to fib ' their claim against said estate for allowance. Witness tha Clerk Mid seal of saldeoart, at Bloomington, Indiana, thi 3rd day oi February, 1382. Wit-F. BROWNING, Feb.S-62. Clatk.
sail
$1011
Per WH. 91. TATE, Agent for Monroe Co.
s
UERIFF'S SALE.
BY virtue of a certified copy of a decree and execution to nie directed, from tho Clerk's office of Monroe Circuit Court, in a cause wherein Asher Labertew is plaintiff and John A. Bower, Drutilla D. Bower, Wallace Hight and Emily Hight lire defendants, requiring me to make tbe sum of Twelve Hundred and Fifty-seven Dollars and Nineteen Cents ($l,257.1) with interest on said decree and costs, I will xtKwe at public sale to tho highest bidder, on SATURDAY, March 4th, 1882, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. u. and 4 o'clock P. sc. of said day, at the door of tbe court house of said Monroe county, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of tbe following described Real Estate, situate in the county of Monroe and State of Indiana, to-wit: A part of tbe west half of the northwest quarter of section thirty-three (33), townhi)) nine (9), north of range one (1) west. Beginning at the southeast corner of a lot of five (5) acres, mora or less, heretofore sold and conveyed by Asher Labertow and Elizabeth Labertew, hi wife, to Thomas P. Lucas, running thence north macnolio 5 U5" west with said Lucas line thirtyont (31) poles and five (5) links, thepee north 85, east fifteen (IS) pole and six teen and one-half (10 J) links thonce south 5 US" east thirty-ono (31) poles and five (5) links, thence south KS, west fifteen
ft 5 1 poles and sixteen and one-hair (UJ) linlts to the place of beginning containing thri. (3) acres and eight (8) square poles mora or less. If such rents and profit will not sell for a tuffirient sum to satisfy said decree, intowst and cost, I will at tbe same time and place, expose at public sale, the foesimple ot said Real Estate or so much thoreof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, inturost and costs.
6aid sale will be made without any relief
whatever from valuation and appraisement law. SILAS GRIMES, feb 1-82 Sheriff of Monroe county. Busk irk & Duncan, attorneys.
s
UERlFfS fALB.
Vnecine Virus of Fox Lake, Wis. Virus Co., And roiuuvlvania Virus Co., For sale .t J. W. Shoomsker ' Ross Drug and Book Store.
BY virtue of a certified copy of a deem
to me directed, from the Clerk ones ot the Monroe Circuit Court, is a cause wherein Nat. U. Hill, Administrator do bonis non with the will annexed of tho
estate of George A., Buskirk, deceased is
Siamtitr, and JU. K. JticJunnoy, ansa J... cKinnev. Moses F. Lumaa and Miner
va C. Conover and John Kerr are defend
ants, requiring me to make the sum of
Five Thousand five Hundred ana nigaiy One Dollar aud Ninety-Nine Genu ($5,
581 99) with interest on said decree, ami costs, I will expose at publio sale, to ihe
highest mud or, on SATURDAY, March 4th, 1881,
between the hours of 10 o'clook a. U., and
4 o'clock p. si-, of said day, at the door of
the Court House or Monroe county, tne
rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years of tho following described real estate, situate in Monroe county,8tat
of Indiana, to-wit: The east half of tho northwest quarter ot section six (0) township eight, north ran go one west, containing eighty(8S acres, more or less. Also a tract or parcel of land off of tho north ond of tho east half of the southwest Quarter of section sixft 1 in the Seminary
Township of said county contai ning tea
1 10J acres.
Also a part of the southwest quarter of
section six (U) townsnip eigne (.) nortn range oncT I west. Beginning on the line, (119) one hundred and nineteen pelc and
fifteen links north of southeast corner of
said touthwest quarter, running thence
nortn ten.i0j pole and ten n'Ji nnki, thence west seventy -eight 78 poles and eighty-eight hundredths 88-100 to the line between the east and west halves of said southwest quarter, theneo south four 4 poles and eight8 links, thence south oighty-eight88 dogrees to the place of beginniug, containing three and one half 3J acres, morn or leu. If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said da. erce, interest and costs, I will at tbe sam-s time and place expose at publio sale th fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and eosts. Said sale will be made without any reliof whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. SILAS GRIMES, febS-82 Sheriff of Monroe eoanty. Buskirk A Duncan, attorneys.
- wms cr rCaOOi X&ACHKSe' Thoroviaiay Fitted,
XT. JT, NICHOLS, ARCHITECT AND PRACTICAL BI7IXDER, Plans sad SeeificatioBii oarofally propared for dwelling houses and pablio building. Also estimate -if buildings completed throughout. All - work Inhbed at tbe time specified. Bloomington, Ind., Mareh 11, 1880. '
Fkuit Trees. For Fruit Trees and Vines of all kinds, call and leave your orders with me. I will gat good tree and as good varieties a any nursery in the U. S., and at more reasons.ble prices thaa some agents. I. MILT. ROGERS, Agent Canton, Ind., Nursery.
FEB. lStla, 1881, wn.F. reed & son will remove to Lind-
ley's Drug Room with their stock of Saddles, liar
ness, etc. Don't forget the date,
and give ns a call in the new room. FEBRUARY 15,
Notice of fSwrvey. XTOTICE is hereby eivtn to all nonres
S idenls, and all others interested, than
I will proceed on MONDAY, February 8th, 1883, together with the county surveyor or his denutv. to determine all the lines and cor-
ntr necessary to establish boundaries of
tbe northwest quarter oi voa soutneaai quarter and the southeast quarter of tha northeast quarter, all in section U, town 9, run ere 1 west Be present at said tim i
and place or tho survey a ill proceed in your absence. Jan. 18-83. MARY C. A. BUSKIRK.
THE tOG REGISTER.
THE NEW LAW provides that any person who own or harbors a Do,;, must call at tho Township Trustee's officii.
on or before the first day of April, 188.S, and secure a Metallic Tag. Upoa failure to comply with section 2 of said Act, the
owner snail do sudjcoi to a nne oi za vu. Please lake due notice aril comply with
the requirements of the la '.
janll-82-it Trustee Illaiimington Tp.
GOLD.
Great chance to make
ways take advantage of the good chances
for making money that are offered, gen". ally become wealthy, whili those who do not improve such chances remain in rit-.v-
erty. We want men, wouen, boyr and girls to work for us right in iheir own localities. Any one aan do the work .ro)-
eny rom me nro stars, xna Onslow will pay more than ton times ordinary wage. Expensive outfit :'urni: hed tVoe. No one who engage fail to make money
rapidly. You can devote your u hols time to the work, or only your spare moments. Full information and all that is needed sent free. Address tKirson fc Co.,
Dec. 181 3m. . Pari land. Mnine.
North Side Pablio SqaaroBleoBfiskgtoit, THE undersigned take pleasure ia osltt Ing attentioa to tho fiaet that thoy httva The IttMt Style Bauvfat. and Carriages, asud good, steady honst So ingle and double driving. We are pre. pared to furaiih Carriages 'tmr Weoaiagft, Funerals and Parties, and swift tassas fW
Commercial Travelers. Farmers' horwao,
fad eoeaply. WOKLKT MAT.
Buy The Deat FURNITURE! I have an EXCLUSIVE contrad
with ths two Faotorie of B loots iartoa.
by which I SAVE FREIGHT, By this arrangement I can got say goods
cheaper than any on who buys at
unciaasM or jUoolavtile. I CAM AMI WILL UNflEtSEU AJT HOUSE IM THE CStfOT.
Before yon bay. come and est my ri
Aug 24, 1881. JOHN . SMIT
ESTATE OF DUDLEY G. SMITH, DUCK ASia In ths Monroe circuit oourt, la the 8tsta of Indiana. No. 128. All creditors, heir a I legs toss ef tali Estate are hereby notified tba Dudley F. Smith and lAm . a. Kran.
don; Executor of said. Estate, hava
men inter account and vouchers ia Cosiest. Dement of saii Estate, and (hat tho saaso will eoiiie un for examination and alia.'.
al on tha 24th day of February, IsH tto same being tho 17th judicial day at the
rvnranry urai, 1993, ot ssia swan, which time said creditors, heirs sad left
tee are required to appear in said aoHr in the court house in the City of BloOss. ingtoa, and show cants, if any there bo, why said aooouut should not bo appro vi. Witness my name as dark, aad the) seal of (aid court affixed, tbs soth day ofJaaSt ary, 1883. W. F. BROWlflHO. sai, Clerk Monroe Q. P Veb.l-82. By I). . Browning, Deputy.
EIGHT OR TEN Thousand ltallax WORTH OF G0OB3 At Coat or Le. To LOS Caliraau Vest of my atook wm psirshamd this tall for cash, and an old stock will b asM regardless of cost. I have a optsadld stock of tba newest styles of shsdeii of Dress Good, Cloaks, DcJaoaaa, Stuswis, Dress Trimmings, Notioao, Hats, Clip. Carpets, Oil Cloths, Qusenaware, ste. A, large stock of Boot aad Shoes, best sstoips. It will pay you to call and saw tlwssV, BSuA Urge stock of Msgs' wad W Clothing at loss thaa o3bTDeficieney in hoarngii UMMUM of my closing business. I hereby Under say siDssre tbsatsi Va tho oitiasBS of Moaroo eoanty for tho lis), oral patronage they bays kiestowsd on aaa for ths last forty years, aad I now iarite all to com and share in too berasW 1 propose to (ivo ia elosiog oat my steak of goods. w. o. rn. Nov 10-82.
