Bloomington Progress, Volume 17, Number 13, Bloomington, Monroe County, 30 May 1883 — Page 2

Printed each Tuesday Morning, by WILLIAM A. SABS, Editor ana Fnblisoar.

Nevn Items Solicited. The date en the label, on which, your name is printed, ihotes the time to which your subscription is paid. The list is revised every week and subscribers should nptice the date, and see that they have the proper credit, and also that they are not in arrears. The funeral directors protested against the practice of uncovering at funerals, as injurious to public health, and agree to lend their best endeavors to .the abolition of the custom.

Last week, white making a blow on a lung tester, an Indianapolis man broke two ribs. What a terrible thing for the State if that man had taken to oratory ! Robert G. Martin, of Lapaz, Marshall county, suspected some parties of stealing wheat from his barn. He wrote his name on small bits of paper and mixed them with his wheat, and soon after fonnd them in the wheat at Baily & Cap-

ron's mill, and caused the arrest of

John Steel and Warren Chart, who sold the wheat. A petition will be presented to the county commissioners at their June term, requesting permission to build a bulletin board around the entire square, so that patent medicine and show men may plaster it with ragged bills. It would be so ornamental and suggestive of enterprise and refinement, you know.

One of the local preachers was somewhat annoyed by the practice his congregation has of turning in their seats whenever the church door opens to admit a worshipper. On last Sunday he made the following announcement : "If you will give me yonr close attention, I will en

deavor to watch the door, and if

anything worse than a man enters, I will warn you in time, so that all may make their escape." In the matter of dress, it has been agreed by the Duukards, assembled at Flora, that the men will still attire themselves in the broadbrimmed hat and closely-buttoned

eoat ; that they will wear their hair

long and parted tu the middle, and

adhere to the ancient customs of

the denomination as closely as possible. The women are to- dress plain and wear the shaker bonnet.

The Rochester Post sets itself against the proposed reduction of

two cents a gallon on whisky

''What good would it do ?" asks

the Post. If our lawmakers want to popularize themselves they

should reduce the tax on the drink

and let the price per gallon remain

where-it is. It has . come about that statesmen do not grasp the is

sues of the day with sufficient com

prehensiveness.''

An old gentleman who lives in

neighboring town, is famous for

the soiled condition of his linen.

A friend who had been looking fixedly at the bosom of the old gentle

man's sbirt, said: "Col., I have

known you ten years, but there is

something about you that puzzles

me very mncb. If you'll promise not to get angry I'd like to ask you a question V "All right," said the

Colonel, "what is it?" "Well, then, Col., do tell me who wears

your shirts before they get dirty?" Sheep culture is no longer a

matter of doubt or experiment in the Arkansas Valley. Numerous streams ot pure running water,tame and wild grasses, eheap food, and market facilities, present great inducements to sheep owners. From a very small beginning, made some five years sgo, the business has increased to good proportions.

wow a pair of stockings which cost $00. They were made of

blac'j silk, ami midway between the ankle and the knee was a green

tree embroidered in silk, and restiug on the branches of the tree were bright-plnraaged birds, some in :he act of flying. On tho

''bulge," or largest part of the stockings, was a huntsman, clad in

red shirt and trousers, taking aim

at the birds, in the tree. Upon the instep was the monogram of the lady wrought in gold letters. Between the knee and the upper

part of the stockings were eighteen narrow bands of many varying

hneii.

Head Light Coal Oil, 15c per gallon at the Bee Hive Grocery

Blooruington XXXX Flour, 65c. per sack of 25 lbs. nt the to Hive Grocerj

On the 16th of February some

peasants working in a field near

Braicia, in Italy, were startled by j

heating a loud report like thunder.

Looking up, they saw the clouds torn open, and a large body followed by s train of bluish smoke hurling j through the air over their heads, !

with the noise of an express train.

The aerolite buried itself in an adjoining field, the fall causing a

shock like that of an earthquake.

The report was heard at Verona and Piacenza, many miles distant.

When they had recovered from

their fright they hurried to the spot, and found a clean hole about three feet deep, running in an oblique direction from north-northeast; and on digging down they came to a solid block, in the tor in of a truncated cone, weighing from

400 to 500 pounds. The surface,

which was still hot and emitted a sulphurous smell, was covered with a greenish black crust, full of small holes, such as would be made by

finger tips iu a soft paste, which may have given rise to the report that one of the fragments bore the

impress of a hand. The proprietor of the clover field in which

the asrolitc fell flew into a rage at

his crops being trampled down by people coming to see it, and broke it up, when it was carried away piecemeal. So he gained nothing

but damage to his fields,

while those who picked up the pieces found a ready sale for them,

one man receiving ,uuu iraucs

for a lump that weighed twentyfive pounds. A correspondent in Smyrna, Turkey, sends the following, and states that it is reliable : Take a piece of oilskin cloth, such as we use to cover tables, but of a soft, pliant kind, sufficiently large to cover the loins ; place it over the

flannel shirt, and bandage yourself

with a flannel bandage; profuse perspiration will ensue on the loins and you are quickly rid of that wearisome complaint, lumbago. Paoli News: Banks Stinson and Ed. C. Simpson started last Monday for Buffalo, Wyoming territory. By their departure Oranj;e county loses two young men of fine promise for future usefulness. They are well eduoatcd, moral and industrious, and have thabest wishes af the whole community. The News wishes them unbounded success.

Arbnckle's Coffee 15c. per pound. Other good Coffees same price, at 33 EES HIVE GROCERY STORE.

When a Troy man disappears mysteriously, his wife sends round among the neighbors to find- out whose wife is unaccounted for. A woman has a curiosity about such matters.

"Trust our cashier," said the bank director; "why, I've absolute confidence in him. He dosen't belong to the church, dosen't teach a Sunday school class, isn't even a temperance mas. There's a cashier you can rely on. He's a man wbo likes above all things to go fishing, and you'll find him starting out with his pole and a bottle of whiskey, and he vents his propensity for wickedness by lying about what be catches." Boston Pott.

Cot- Detroit Free Press : The costliest pair ot shoes I have ever seen covered the pedal extremities of a lew York lady $38 was pid for them. "The same lady

Gus De Smith, who is the greatest bore in Austin, called on Dr. Dosem, and complained that

he, Gus, was troubled with fits of

despondency, and wanted to know what to do for it. "You must go out riding in a buggy every day with some cheerfa companion who will talk to yon and amuse you." "You are a cheerful man, doctor, and yon have got a buggy, have you not?" "Yea ; but we doctors never take the medicine we prescribe for others." The Cincinnati Journal says :

The "booming" of Dakota has in

duced many people to rush into that wild, cold region, without the means of making themselves decently comfortable in their new homes. It is folly for people locat

ed in the older states to sell off

hard earned property and run away

to far western regions of which they

know nothing beyond the exaggerations of advertising land speculators. There is still room in Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky for people who are not constantly dreaming of big fortunes jumping right up out of the ground at them. Emigration is all right in its proper way, but people in search of new abodes srould, hviate they start, know

(Something oi the place iu wUioh

try are to land.

Canned Peaches, 31b cans for 16gc. at the BEE HIVE Grocery

All goods delivered free of charge, when bought at

B:HIVB -Grocery, nest to Postofficc.

Green Coffee only 10c. per lb., at

The BEE Hive Grocery

New Lake Salt, $1.40 per bbl. at

The BEE Hive Grocery

Everybody goes to

The BEE Hive Grocery

for cheap groceries.

Bacon Hams 12Jc. per lb. at

The Bee HIVE Grocery

Best English Soda, 5c. per lb. at

The BEE Hive Grocery

Best American Starch, 5c. per Ib.at

The Bee Hive Grocery

At BEE Hive Grocery, New White Fish.

To i Farmers:

The Bco Hive Grocery WAISTS YOUR WOOL A3T PHONEXT DOOR TO THE P0ST0FFICE, 'Bloomritagtoin, 3Ciut.

Ell wood Cooper of Santa Barbara, the leading olive grower of California, snys that he has trees eight years old that have produced two thousand gallons of olives to the acre. This would be equivalent to 250 gallons of oil to the acre, and the oil finds a ready market at $5 a gallon. The yield of one acre would thus be 1,250, which for a hundred-acre ranch would be a pretty fair income. But these fig

ures are not represented to apply

to any except the very choicest trees and an uncommonly good year. But even computing the

profits of olive culture to as low a figure as one-tenth, a twenty-acre ranch would support a family very comfortably after six or seven years of waiting. One of the great advatages of olive culture is the

fact that irrigation is not needed. In a climate where there is often

such a scarcity of rain as in Cali

fornia, this is a matter of much importance. The olive tree also grows very old. There arc trees

in Asia Minor that are known (o ' rollers.

be over 1 ,200 years old, and arc

still in full bearing. In consider

ing the profits of fruit culture, j

however, the dangers of insect pests, disease, and overproduction must be kept in mind; and these are usually passed by without mention in the glowing descriptions of Southern California.

A man habitually tied to a dog is a boundless nuisance whom 'twere base flattery to hit with a club, but a woman dogo-maniac is infinitely worse. You can kick a man's dog out of the house, but wheu a woman makes a social call on you with her dog, into the house that Ilea bitten yelper comes, scratches the tidies, sleeps on the ottoman, and there's a social revolution unless you affcel to enjoy it. In Fijii thirty years ago war was made quite as much with a view to dining off captives, who were actually carefully fattened before slaughter, as for auy other cause. Iu some eases meat was

cut, cooked, and eatea in the pres

ence of the victim, who was previously compelled to dig the oven and collect the wood for heating it. The sick were buried alive, and the death of a great man was cel

ebrated by a general strangling of

widows. Beside every great chiefs

house living beings were buried.

They had to stand clasping the

supporting pillars while earth was

rolled over them. When a chief

launched a new canoe a number of

persons were bound hand and foot

and laid on the ground to serve as

A thoroughly American city has been laid out in the state of Chiapas, Mexico. The site is a beautiful plateau of laud, through which runs a never-failing stream of mountain spring water, clear as

Hangtown is a railroad station

in Washington Territory. "I dunno jest how we cum ter git sich a name, cos it wor named afore wc cum ter live yere," said a gloomy resident to a tourist ; but we ain't a

goin' ter keep the doggoned thing j

no longer'n we kin git a Post Office .ami the Legislator meets. We

Stockings from 84 to SCO a

Pair. Brooklyn Eagle. The rage for expensive stockings

grows more violent every year.

There would positively appear to

be no limits to the lengths to which women will go in the way of expense for their hosiery. Only a few years ago it occasioned re

mark if a lady of wildly fashionable habits paid more than 810 for a pair of stockings. Now we sell hundreds and hundreds of pairs at prices ranging from 45 to $60, You see in this present style the hosiery is depended upon to give the finishing touch to all toilets and the nicest discrimination is needed in selecting color and texture. American women now go to greater lengths than Europeans in this respect. The custom, of having the coat of arms or monogram worked in gold shreds on the instep is quite general, and has led

to the general introduction of those

very low-cat Dieppe slippere, Tho fashionable color now is black, and

the general impression among

women is that the leg never shows to a better advantage than when encased in a black ribbed stocking with long and narrow clocks.

IBTTIElsriEID OTJT

BUT NOT DISHEARTENED.

A Lot of Goods Were "On The Road" When the

:BIC XT-IItE OCCURRED,

Wall Papers, "Window Curtains and Fixtures, Paints, Oils, &c, and I have Them For Sale at Stuart & McPheeters' Hardware Store. These goods

nave xo ue iraia tor, and 1 MUST sell them.. J. W. SHOEMAKER.

una air older nor llathdumo or State Line, but we don't seem to grow a bit. People won't settle here, sumhow, an' we think as how it's all on account o' the name.

! They say as how six or seven thiev-

. i t ii f i i .1 - i

crystal, xuu oi nsn, am, nuunuug InjuM WQr slr(jng on power for any amount of manufac- 'hat tmi ;n fn)nt o h

luring machinery, at an altitude of

3,000 feet above the sea level, on the line of the Mexican Southern Railroad. It is called Allen City. Around the city are laid out and

They stole a lot o' horses dowu

-A London physician is respon-

i eible for the statement that English

sparrows are subject to small-pox and also disseminate that disease. This is another argument in favor of exterminating that pest. It may also serve to explain the extraordinary persistency of the disease in appearing in and clinging to so many places in this country during the last few years. It may also

I throw some light on the myster

ious manner in which the loathsome

Spokan, an' woscotched here.

that's no good excuse for callin' us

But

j quarters. Fur instance, the case i ill .Tnrrerennvilla tvliw.li nna Ant-s.r

h J w... ...... ,....us. UWlibV. UIIP-IIKU) anil Our l-llnA H tnofnwn I . . .. .....

o o "

attrihlltml in HlA liirp rf i miunniln

lis it? We lins air t.liinktn' o' mnv-! .. - .

rolron nn. Hvr.nfv.fnnr onflW-fiirms '. . . I 'm 111C lnteCtCU UlStriCt Ot LiOUlS-

. 1 .. . ) : iq away irom here, cos tho town

each touchinff the city plat. There

will be over 3,000,000 coffee trees in nursery cultivation during the coming year, all to be transplanted and raised to bearing within the nest four years. All goods, stores and supplies, agricultural imple

ments, machinery, building muter

V'ille. 111:1V havfl heel! nrmlnnail liv

is just as good as killed, an' all on . the yhk of a 8parrQw -n

UCWUIIl OV US HUUJtV j (jjgjj

It may be that the mos-

...... .. ! Quito was unjustly accused and has The mosquito is little, but l is ,, .. . .. , . . bravo example is eoningious. Ho makes a" tlus t,n,e been Suffering obloquy the most cowardly cjme to tho scrnteh. ; for the fault of another. If so, the C. P. Bailev of San Jose. Cal.. wrong should be righted. The

i To). Ilidmr.l i iview of Atlanta, a.., mi ,,0or mosquito hassins enough of its ' id. Kobei-t NmU of Frankfurt hv., aro 1 1

ials and furniture for the colonists , ""' ' 10 s?t knw of Amoru-a, own to answer ror without being are exempt Iron, duty; also all ex- XiOT SLu! u compelled to carry those of the Portland imports of productions &Tr; f of the country, and stock for work j tho past t-,. rears ho sold :w.oo worth scientists investigate the matter,

or brced'uiff mirnosos aro exempt , w not only in tne interests ot numan

i

alter me circus parade, says the Cleveland Voice, two small

boys met on the street. One of

for ten years. The colonists thus far are from California.

' iiy, but that justice may be done to

the mosquito

-Horse racing, says a western

oaia tuc lauy o tue uouse to i - j - - nreaehor. is an ulcer. X, sir, vou aro

the hired girl; "Going to leave, i "'em, his face glowing with excite- mistaken. It is aimply a run-around. Mary?" "Yes, mum ; I find I am ' n,eilt' saitl : "' "Johnuy, ""id you, A number of citizens took advery discontented." "If there is see that fellow with a snake around, vantage of the excursion rates to anything I can do to make you I neck ?" worJ from Johnny. . Louisville, among others, Recorder

"xerseca the man m the lion s Hall, and County Clerk Browning, cage, of course?" No word or sigu ; Miss Alexander writes to from Johnny, save and except a some of her friends here, of Southcloud over his brow. "Well, yer: crn California, and from tho letter seen the ponies with the red blank-! we are permitted to make extracts : ets on, didn't yer?" "Naw, an' I ! "There is little drinking for so didn't," said Johnny at last, burst- ' great a supply of wine here. Some

comfortable, let rae know." "No, mum, it's impossible. You can't

alter your figger to my figger, no

more'n I can. Your dresses won't

fit me, and I can't appear on Sun

days as I used at my last place,

where missus clothes luted me

'xactly."

Indiana's State Seal. A man is chopping down a tree; Tho sun is rising in the east; A buffalo bull comes tearing by, But tho man pays no attention whatever to the wild-eyed, heavy-shouldered, westward-bound boost.

"Ma, don't they eat in heaven ?" asked an inquisitive urchin last Sunday. "I don't know, my child, why do you ask such a question ?" "Because to-day at church I heard tbem sing 'I'm going home to di(n)e no more.' " A Missouri woman spent eight years in making a collection of seventeen thousand spools, and sold the lot for fifteen cents, which shows that perseverance, as well as virtue, is its own reward.

"Here we have the great Egyptian Wonder captured in the wilds of South Africa, with a loss of

5,000 men and an expenditure of

40,000,000 of treasure!" said the showman, shaking his whip in a threatening manner at a stuffed hide in a glass cage. "Don't go too close," said a mother to her little son ; "it might seize you." "Have no fears, madam, for tho safety of your offspring," observed the showman, eloquently, "for does not the Good Book teaoh us that wonders will never seize? Pass rapidly on to the next cage and view the living skeleton, or the man who married his mother-in-law," For a whole circus in itself, go to the gallery of Barnes & Lewis west of court house. For commencement will be found a choice lino of dress-good3, Neckwear, ParaAols, Fans, Hosiery,, Gloves, &c, at McCalla & Co'a. TMQfcE fine shoes have arrived at McCalla & Go's.

ing into tears. "I had to stay at

home and mind our baby, but kin lick the stufhV out o' you !"

Jones says he has never seen

a gray haired Indian in his life,

and he has seen, some over ninety

years old. It is because an Indian

has no trouble or worriraent, or

anything that way. His wife chops

all the wood, gets np cold mornings and builds the fires, drives

tramps away, and blacks his boots

And he is not tormented by tax

collectors, lightning rod peddlers, book agents, or life insurance solic

itors.

Barnes & Lewis means good pictures at all times.

Barnes & Lewis have just completed a fine set of views of our

Otate University, and portraits of

the Faculty. Call and sec them,

Barnes & Lewis have a fine

collection of pictures in their gal cry. Go and see them.

"Got a conundrum for you, Johnnie; invented it myself," said a boy to a playmate. "What's the difference between that poodle you are draggiug by the chain, and a rotten tree trunk?" After a little deliberation Johunic said, "One is a led dog and the other a dead log. Them kind is awful easy wheu you know how." So thought Johnnie, and on his way home he built one on a similar model, which he tried

to explode on the maternal head. "I say, ma, here's a riddle; made it myself. What is the difference between the figure of a lady aud pa not letting me go to the circus last week? Give it up? Well, cause

she'i a sham dame, and tother's a

da oh ! oh ! ouch ! that hutts, I tell you : can't you take a feller of

your eiie !" The conundrum fac

tory has been closed for repairs. ;

of the Indians get too much and need the police. Some of the wine shed9 contain fifty th ousand dollars worth of wine, much ot it six, eight aud ten years old. The sheds are all made of brick but not many dwellings of it. They are

mostly of frame, ceild, some plastered. The linings and ceilings are of white canvass, papered, canvas ceilings whitewashed. The grapes for wine are mostly cultivated here. The dark mission grape and the light green muscat, which are splendid for canning without sugar, also the seedless grape Sultana. Near Santa Anna, the raisins are cultivated from the muscat grape. This is eight miles from Anaheim. As we drove out to view the country, we stopped at a country house where three wealthy brothers kept house with a young Chinaman for cook, and near a dozen more were packing raisins in an open shed. Mr. McPlierson, the owner, tells us his help eat two boxes of raisins a day. These Chinamen had their tents, provisions and cooking utensils, doing their own work, which took but little time. Tho raisins were large

and beautiful, $2 a box. These

were all of tho muscat grape.

They are laid out on riddles, in the vineyard, to dry iu the sun, aud

left until dry, when they are taken j

to the shed by heavily loaded wagons. These grapes make fine tast

ing wine.' Mr. Spurgeon, though in much better health than when ho preached last spring, still bears truces of the suffering ho has undergone. His feet are gouty, and this detracts from the promptness aud agility with which ho ascended to tho pulpit in former times, when the female members ot his congregation would riae aud peep ever

Stuart & McPheeters. North Side of the Square, East of Postoffice,

aas ac- mem jmc ml my a- rmc mom mr 9 mzmrxmrn Wholesale ana Retail Dealers in

!i III ID!

H .A. JR, ID "W -A. IR, ZED.,

MUbT

Pme id

County Headquarters for 9

Pi

Mar mm u m

DOORS. SASH, 33I-,I3V13S, GLASS, MOULDINGS, LOCKS, HINGES, NAILS AND SCREWS.

The Early Breakfast

cooking stove:

AND THE GRAND OLIVER CHILLED FLOW Are Among Our Specialties.

A IW ii SHE!; PETER BOVV3IAN has purchased the

Drug Store on the West Side of the Square, North of the alley, AND HAS ADDED FRESH NEW GOODS.

Cigars, Tobacco, Perfumery, Witney Oood

and Jf ure Wines and liquors For medical purposes. An experienced druggist in attendance.

WALL PAPERS r

AT UNDLEY'SNew Stock, New Styles, Low Prices, Drugs, Paints and Oils,

as- DR. FARIS, THE PRESCRIPTIONIST, IS HOW U CATED AT LINDLEY'S.

each other's shoulders to watch his movements. His hands are swollen and twisted with rheumatic gout so that his gesture is no longer free and uuconstrainend as

Wall Papei WINDOW SHADES

mUE I'KOf Bl ETOK Of t&O JOS

nfstl.l Kiit h!a niia utlll nnccMcos1 I tllT HfMIK 8TARR. ii

that charm and variety of tone takes pleasure in announcing to hi. u

which iu time past has overcome luinlt y'

tue scruples 01 me most ouciuraie.

Amnsa Stone realized, poor roan, the full force of the question "What's all the world without a

In the Willson Room, opposite the Old Orchard Block,

A Large and Splendid Assortment -,i

good digestion ?"

tyr to dyspepsia, which produced

with him sleeplessness, and somelimes he scarce got two hours' sleep

iu a uight. Dom Pedro, Emperor of Brazil, cares nothing for splendor,

He r'des in an ordiary black coach,

usually drawn by six mules, and followed by twelve Cavalrymen, mostly negroes, whose discipline is not too strict to permit (hem to smoke cigaretts while escorting his Majesty. The coachman aud footmen are shabby in worn suits and silver lace. The Emperor wears the plainest of black clothes, and is very courteous to all who ap-j proach him. Ho has aged rapidly sinoe his visit to the United States six years ago.

He was a mar- tures, whicti he will offer nr. prices that

re J m '

1 uannoi rail -

to please. Among the Wall Paper win be found many of the latest act most fhionmW

styles, j.0 tue aepanuieaijK

Window FlxxuTZ

will bo found beautiful styles of SHADE GOODS, Also WINDOW CURTAINS, in large variety, including beautiful DADOS AND TAPESTRIES. A lot of Wall Paper, injured by tta .

firo, will bo sold at a Ltrgu reduction tie-

low tho usual prices.

Resident Dentist.

Dr. J. W. GRAIN.

Office in tho Grcoves corner, np-etatrs. All work "warranted.

j3

I.acics will consult their interests

not purchasing until thoy inspect Jtgi '

E. P. COtH. Bloomington, Ind., March 21, 1 S83FOUTZ'S KORSC AND CATTLE POWDERS

FOR SAt.K. A two story framo dwelling honso

thirteen moms, situated ubout one hull'

block from tho public square nf tho city of HloomiiiKton. ThU property has been

lately jt in noat repair, with iron fpneo in front, good cellnr. all ueowiry out

building, good walks, streol nu-adamiaMl, in lacl everything about tho pri-misvs is in first-class order To a porson doMring a nice, bandy residence, or ono willing to keep boarders or roomurs. here is a olmheo for a bargain, within tho next thirty day, ns th j o'vvncr deii-03 to remove, and will sell rhcar).

l''or further particular and terms call;

on or address. JSAKT & KAM, Jwal estto iieoi'.ts. Bloomiiisflon, Ind. niy!Ml

.LYON&HEALY

I state a munroc Big.,wniuiyv.

Yo liosas m die of oi.it riwot Irxo fmrun. 11 Pontiff owUr nrr iwhI In Ku iu Poar wUlcerenlxlfrcv.?, HonCworjtm Fo a t'oo ili-M will iwuveat (Urn mi rwu. Ko'iKH Powtlen will intMVMrka awuultrsf mllic

tiKl art'iun iwuaty por ccat, u4 UfUc Uic twittor fro

i -MiisK i-owiwrs ww or iwvnt amxMt naac fifth. 10 ulin-ti llorjtin hiH Cwuta r tnbkTt. l-iu tk'b IWuam was. V EATlsrA-.Tlox. DAVID FOOT, t Sold hv P. Bowman, Blooniiinrton TUK l'AttMR JKU STOKS-

nl PfiwM 10 any aiMtvff 1 httr

HO CATALOGUE,

Will

rtf imtrauwi'U. surf!. tp Mh I'ampun. :"iw"Icn Cit-I-inii

m tMirmtti """S-f gfn -r fr AmVcur Ihitdv fl ('MstS'

. -.1 I

2'

i 1

Hoard or EWllsaflM. Notie is hereby given Unit tho, County Hoard of Equalization for Monroe county will meet in the Grand Jurv room t

said comity situate in the court house i

tho city of ttloomtngton, county of Moproe, and htalo of Indian, on the tint iion

day of Ji.no, being the 4th day of Jmik 1H83. at 10 o'clock a m. Said board shall meet to equaTae the valuation of .irtunat

property and hear complaints in reference to ti c valuation of property made by th respective township assessor!, and tran a k. such other business pertaining to the valuation and assessment of prnpertv tor lb year 1SB3, as may be brought before board. Witness mv hand, this May Hh, i,lt83, ,.

RICHARD A. JUtK, mar 3. Auditor Jlowife C