Bloomington Progress, Volume 17, Number 14, Bloomington, Monroe County, 6 June 1883 — Page 2
k bow obsolete, thanks to the developeaKOt of a seine for the fit-
of things.
Prxnttd ccA TbcMfay Morning, 8y vnuuti. tun, hkm( Ma.
I.
Items olioit4i.
The 4mi ess tk Imkrt, o oftuA yowr wii is printed, aftotes Ms rtsnsro lut St rttid may wrmk cast smbeeriiers tkould natiet tk duis, cuts? tern ifcnt ikty kmme He proper crmiit, mud otto Ikat tkeg mre mot in arrmtrs.
Mary Aaderson is an exception o the oil-repeated rale that nobody can attain txcvtkaee on the stage without Begnia to climb at the lowest rond. She made ber debut in leading tragic roles only a lew yens ago, and began to make money and fame at the very outset. She is now very - wealthy ; and as lbr glory, she was publicly crowned with n hwrel wreath the
ether night in ber native city of
LoowTille, by the Mayor and Editor Watteiaon, of the Courier Journal. The Mayor assured her that she possessed "exceeding loveliness of person, parity of heart, and beaaUeB of mind."
A Chicago hotel, clerk went last yew to Ihkota, to a hotel reputed to be doing a. roaring trade t was. He returned lately, completely eared of all desire for change. The hotel, be says, was a small frame structure, with a school section on the top floor, and three handled people often slept in the home. "They came in wagon loads. The landlord made money, bat bo never was around, and. I bad to do everything. The landlord was selling town lots and sarveytng, and ran a lumber yard and everything. The first day I was there I bad to leave the office and drive thirty teams around to the barn', and helped to unhitch the horses, and all the time I was there I was half hostler, half chambermaid, half cook, and half everything there was. Why, a hotel clerk is of no more account out there than an Alderman here. It would make you sick. I bad to help- waft on the table, help make beds, split slabs for fuel, bail oat the cellar, deaf for faro bask in which the landlord was attempted, milk six cows, go- out and bold a rhaia fur surveyors, scrub the office floor, and lay oat corpse." A close observer of men and things in Iioodoa says be baa learned from personal observation and court records, that of adult criminals in that great eky, nearly all had fallen into a. coarse of crime bettreen the ages of eight and sixteen years. He further says that if a young man can be educated to aa honest life until be twentyana years of age, there are forty-
nine ehanees in bis favor to one of
his falling into crime after that e- r , L , The American Express Company has introdeeed into New York the. system of harnessing three horses abreast, after the fctahioa of London omnibuses. The change has been made on two of the wagons for experiment, with very satisfactory results. The wagons have two poles instead of one, and each of the three horses are attached to a separate wbifffotrce. This js found to be a decided improvement over the system sometimes used of patting one horse in a shaft and another at each aide. The sfarneasing is exactly the. same as with two bones, with
two poles instead of one. The experiment is tried upon the wagons that deliver goods in the- upper part of the city, not only beeaase the loads are frequently too heavy for two horses, bat to enable the drivers to make up for lost time with an- increased rate of- speed, when from any cause they are deJayed at the start.
Funeral reform is much needed in tbia country, but there are no
cost ores remaining, except those
pertaining to Irish wakes, so objectionable as those practiced in Scotland. The funeral of John Brown, the Queen's gillie, was con
ducted in the regular Scotch fashion.
and each person invited to attend
was received by a relative of the dead man, bottle in hand, and
urged to take refreshments. Wine and cake were served in the house,
while whisky, biscuit and cheese
were served outside. The American people have passed the period
in which fessling is considered a
proper feature of a funeral cereaao
-y, ejsd the cutcta once so general
Tbe Journal de Pharmacie says that a mucilage composed as follows will unite wood, porcelain or glass: eight and a half ounces of gum arabic in strong solution, 20 grains of solution of alumnia dissolved in two-thirds of an ounce
of water. m m
According to one of the most
ancient of ail traditions, tbe earth
in the beginning (whenever that
was), "was without form and void,
and darkness was upon tbe face of
the deep,"-- Though the earth was
void, that is, did not exist, the assertion that darkness was upon
tbe face of tbe deep shows that the
Democratic party was there or
thereabouts. It has been decided to change
tbe odor of tbe-tiniform of the British regular army from scarlet, which they have always worn, to
the Confederate gray. It appears
to have just been discovered, after several hundred years of exper
ience, that scarlet is too conspicu
ous a color to wear into battle, for
death loves a shining mark."
The attraction of .the color for rus
tic recruits is said to be so great, however, as to offer great temptations to enlistment, and for this reason it is to be retained for par
ade, but on the field the sober gray
will be used.
Little- additional news has
come from tbe discoveries in pre
historic mounds, recently alleged to have been made on the banks of tbe river Yadkin, in North Caro
lina. Yet these discoveries if gen-:
nine, hardly deserve to be dismis-
sed so shortly. Not to speak of
the beads, pipes, and stone axes and food cups unearthed, one mound in
Caldwell county is reported to have yielded fifty-six skeletons,
while the total number of skeletons
found in the neighborhood was
not less than 150. Some of them
were spoken of as possessing large
and well-formed skulk. A hundred and fifty skeletons are not to be picked up every day, nor can it be reasonably supposed that tbe
Caldwell mound was "salted" with skeletons to excite the cupidity of
otoSnfeftbeooiaa Institution. 'It is rime, therefore, to- Team more-about this remarkable North Carolina skeleton mine; otherwise it most be classed in popular belief with the Texas meteor. New England wagon factories are turning out for next summer an unusual number of two wheeled carts. Some have an arrangement by which they can be adjusted to horses of different builds, as a tall horse requires that tbe cart be pitched at a different angle from that used with a short one. The largest style of two-wheeled carts, built for four people and having seats running lengthwise of the body, panes under the name of wagoner. The carriage dealers say that the reason why there are so many novelties this year in the vehicle line is because trade is dull and the manufacturers have been ransacking their brain for patterns which wiU help stimulate it. m s The Sandusky (Ohio) Register tells the following story of a Grand Jury at the October term of Common Pleaa Court in that city : "One of the jurors could neither read nor write, and in order to cast his ballots for or against indictments in the cases he got a friend to write for him two sets of ballots one set
reading 'Yes,' tbe other set 'No.'
He folded his ballots carefully, and
pissed them in his vest - pockets,
those reading in the affirmative in his right-band pocket, and those
tbe negative in his left-hand
pocket. During tbe examination
of witnesses he was so occupied
in listening to tbe testimony that
he forgot how he had arranged the
ballots, and when the jury come to vote on one of the cases be couldn't
tell which pocket to dive into for
tbe right ballot. He wanted to vote 'Yes and so at a venture he
fished a ballot out of bis left-hand
pocket and voted it. When the
ballots were counted, it was found
that fourteen of them read 'Yea,'
and one 'No.' Vote after vote was
taken on the case, and with the me resu!t,tUl in soine way it leak
ed oat that the juror referred to his
left-hand pocket stuffed with ballots reading 'No,' which he bad
been voting, when all the time he
wanted to vote in the affirmative
Another vote was then taken on tbe nse, and the intelligent juror
went for the papers in hia right-
hand pocket, and when the ballots were counted they were all in favor of the finding of an indictment.
SOME fiOOD AUDIT STORIES.
Attention being directed, just
now, to tbe old soldier days, the following characteristic army stories will be appreciated by many ; A Chickkk Story.
A certain regiment was stationed not
far from Meridian Hill. dipt. Nat. Percival had command of one of the compa
nies the crack company, by general con
sent. One day a gentleman, resident near the camp, came in with a complaint set
ting rortn tnat certain soldiers Dad maliciooaly, wickedly and most unwarrantably taken direr fowls from bis ben-roost. He did not expect restitution, but be hoped that tbe culprits might be discovered
and properly punished, and a stop put to
the nefarious work. From certain descriptions which the Mntleman nn the Col. susnoctod that
the crack company of the regiment must
contain tue pilferers ; so he atraizntway
summoned Cant. Nat to bis headquarters.
Tbe Captain came, and in his pretence
tne gentleman repeated als charge. "What did you say the soldiers took from your roost?" asked Capt. Nat. Tbe gentleman counted on his fingers
one fine rooster, four laying ben and
three fine pullets.
".Bather a small collection of fowls, I
should say, for such a place," said Capt.
"Oh, those ware not all I had." "What? Had you mora more fowls,
at that time, on your roost?"
' U, yes great many more." 'Whereupon Capt. Nat turned to his
superior, and with a low bow, and with
his band laid on his heart, he promptly
declared:
"Colonel 1 you know, sir, that my men could not have been the marauders on that occasion. They would not have left
a tall feather behind!" GOOD EHOUOH TO HKTRJC&T WITH. '-Just look at them d d 'valler-haro-
mers' marching along with their old flint-lock rifles and squirrel guns," remarked Kentucky "reb," as tha Fortyninth Alabama Regiment, C. S.A, sauntered leisurely through the streets of Naah-villa.
"You co to h 1" retorted one of
the Forty-niners. "I reckon these guns
e list as good to retreat with as any oth
er ; hain't they, mister ?"
HOW BK MUTED. When a Union gunboat was going into
action one of the men who was on his knees was sneeringly asked by an officer if he was afraid. "No, I was praying, was tbe response. "Well, what are you praying for V ' "fraying," said tbe sailor, "that the enemy's bullets may be distributed the same way as the prize money is, principally among the officers." . AIT IRISHMAN'S BEBUEE. An Irishman from Battle Creek, Mich., was at Bull Bun Battle, and was somewhat startled when the head of his companion on the left band was knocked off by cannon-ball. A few moments after a spent ball broke the fingers of his comrade on the other aide. The latter threw down his gun and yelled with pain, when tbe Irishman rushed to him, exclaiming: "Blasht your soul, you ould woman, shtop cryin' ; you make more noise about it than the man that losht hia bead." WHY THE KETTLE WIJT. . The committee appointed to collect metal fox cannon for Gen. Beauregard's army, applied to a planter of Adams Co., r - t - l i, T.T i i : .
aw., ior uv nwi. xn iravtug nuvu iff article, bo mentioned it to his wife, when she vary patriotically offered ber brass kettle. The little ones rather demurred
to the sacrifice, and one of them, with a sweet tootb, said,' "La, pa. what will we
do-lor preserves 7" "My daughter," said the wag of a father, "our whole duty now is to preserve our country." The kettle
was sent.
WHY MKT CLOSED CP. Among the troops in Western Virginia,
stories about tbe Philippi affair formed a staple of conversation. Here u one of the
Best:
A certain Indiana com pun y, almost
worn out with marching, was straggling
aiong witn very little regard to order. Hurrying up bis men, the Captain shouted, "Close up, boys I 1 n you, close up I If the enemy were to Are on you
when you re straggling along that way.
they couldn' t hit a d n one of you!
Close up!" And they closed up immediately.
A war EELic. A gentleman
recently exhibited at Ibis office a
carious and valuable relic of the
late rebellion, in tbe shape of a
copy of the Vioksburg Daily Citizen, printed in Vicksburg on July
2, 186S, two days before the surrender of that place to Gen. Grant.
Tbe sheet is printed on wall-paper, owing, we Buppose, to tbe scarcity
of blank news paper. We reproduce the following extract from it:
On Dit, Tbnt the great Ulysses the
Yankee Generalissimo, surnamed Grant-
has expressed his intention of dining in Vicksburg on Saturday next, and celebrating the 4th of July by a grand dinner, and so forth. Wbon asked if ho would invite Gen. Joe Johnston to join be said, "No I for fear there will be a row at the table." Ulysses must gel into
tbe city belore he dines in it. Tbe way
to cook a rabbit is to "first catch tbe rab
bit," etc. Another: - A gentleman who recently passed the Federal lines says the Democratic ladies of New York have gotten up a magnifiicant sword, at a cost of twelve hundred dollars, intended as a present to Gen. Lee. It will be' sent to Richmond by some underground railroad. Another : Good News. In devoting a large portion of our space this morning to Federal intelligence, copied from the Memphis Bulletin of tbe 25th, it should be remembered that tbe news, in the original truth, is whitewashed by tbe Federal ProvostMarsha, who desires to hoodwink the poor, Northern white slaves. The former editors of the Bulletin being rather pro Southern men, were arrested for speaking the truth, when truth was unwelcome to Yankeodom, and placed in the chain-gang working at Warrenton, where they now are. That paper is in duress at preaont, and edited by a pink-nosed slab-sided, toad-eating Yankee, who is a lineal descendant of Judas Isoariot, and a brotbergerraain of tbe greatest, Puritanical, sycnopbantic, bowling scoundrel yet unhung
rarson Brown low. xet, with such a
character, the Bulletin cannot cloak the fact that Gen. R. E. Lee has given Hook
er, MUroy and Co. one of the best and soundest whippings on record, and that
the gaiorioua union is now exceedingly weak in the knees.
Fob commencement will be found a choice line of dress-goods, Neckwear, Parasols, Fans, Hosiery,
uloves, die., at f4.cve.lia Lo b.
One Good Friday a freshman was agreeably surprised to find that the hall dinner at Keble Col
lege, Oxford, consisted ot fish, of
hot roast mutton, and of cold boiled beef, all excellent of their kind. The repast was not ordinarily of so varied a nature, and B did it ample justice, aying his attentions to each separate dish. Next morning he received an invitation to call on the Warden. "Good morning, Mr. B.," said that dignitary. "Pray be seated. I think you may have failed to understand the dinner arrangements of yesterday. There was fish for those who were both willing and able to fast, cold meat for those who were willing, but, from delicate health, might beainable to do so, and hot meat for those who bad no wish to observe tbe day in this respect. Now, you partook of all three " At which point one hopes the Warden cut the lecture short from a dawning sense of the humor of the situation.
The practice of chewing the betel nut, not unknown in China, is carried among tbe Malays to great excess, tbe betel nut being to the Malay what opium is to the Chinese or tobacco to the Japanese. Miss Bird, a recent traveler, condemns it as "a revolting habit," and the account she gives of it
shows it to be nothing less. If a
man chewing betel nut speaks during the process, his month looks as if it was full of blood. It blackens the teeth, moreover ; and the Malays say, with a certain superficial
accuracy, that to have white teeth
is to be like a beast.
Mrs. Smith Tells all About it.
"The sermon ah, and by the way, I smiled when Mrs. Brown Came sailing down the aisle to-day In her new Easter gown ; The ugly thing I she's got a waist As big as three of mine, And yet she has the vulgar taste To say her figure's fine I The text oh, do you like my bat And terra cotta dress? Now don't you dare to sneer like that Come, Baxter, tell me yes I I know you're sick and couldn't go To church with me to-day. But you'd be very proud, I know, If you had seen the way I took the other women down With all my Easter gear : And as for that old llrs. Brown She's horrid ain't she daart"
When the rider in the guise
of a drunken spectator staggered iuto a circus ring at Marquette,
Mich., and the ring master went through with the usual foolery of
ejecting him, incidentally remark
ing that no policeman were ever present when order needed to be restored, a German officer bustled tbe performer off to -jail, in spite of all protests and explanations. "A choke is a choke," he said, but ven a man zay vere is de bolice, and vy don'd dey arrest dat drunk man, den de Marquette bolice is in dot vicinidy, and don'd you forgot id, Mr. Circus, J bed you." .
The extent of wine making in California astonishes vistors from the East, At the vineyards of San Gabriel, tbe largest in the State, 500,000 gallons of wine and 100,000 of brandy will be made from this year's crop of grapes. The unskilled labor employed is usually Chinese, but the experts are mostly from the wine districts of France and Germany, though Americans learn the processes readily. The grapes are stemmed and squeezed by machinery. The juice ruD8 into vats, where it ferments sufficiently, and is pumped into great butts in the cellars. There it stands until it is clarified by whites of eggs, isinglass, or gelatine, after which it is filtered through charcoal and drawn off into casks for shipment. As to the profits of grape culture, it is calculated that the vines will bear in the third year after the cuttings are set out, give a profit in tbe fourth, and in the fifth yield enough to pay all expenses, including the cost of tbe land. There are seven wine-producing districts in California, and the vintage this year is 12,000,000 gallons. .Some of this will be distilled for brandy, some drunk at home, but the bulk will be sent Eastward, to be sold under foreign labels. For a whole circus in itself, go to the gallery of Bar.nes & Lewis west of court house. Barnes & Lewis means good pictures at all times. Baknbs & Lewis have just completed a fine set of views of our
state University, aud portraits of
ttie J acuity. tJall ana sec then). Barnes & Lewis have a fine collection of pictures in their galerv. Go aud see them.
1
There is still some wit left in
Ireland, though it has lost much of
the exquisite quality for which it was once celebrated. There has been a good deal of fun in tbe land courts. Recently a suitor, being questioned as to the quality of manure used on his lands, stated that he used both solid and artificial, the former of which he preferred, and that he only employed the other when he thought the ground required a stimulant. The opposing council vigorously cross-questioned him as to the, meaning of the word stimulant. The farmer replied: "Jt is just the same as if you took a glass of brandy before you come to court to make you' talk the more." The court was convulsed, the loquacious barrister sat down, and the farmer retired, saying: Wid all his larnin', the divil & much that gintleman made of me." making a Barrel Arotssad a Bnngnole. From the Cleveland Leader. . Mr. Mark L. Deering, mechanical engineer of this city, has recently taken out a patent for a barrel without staves or hoops, all in one piece. Tbe "material he uses to make this seamless barrel is wood pulp. A certain amount of pulp is placed in an iron cylinder, the inside of which is shaped exactly like a barrel. The cylinder is made to revolve by an ingenious arrangement both ways ; that is, the ordin
ary way that a barrel would revolve, and revolve at the same time head over head at right an
gles, at about 100 revolutions a
minute. The centrifugal force of
this double revolution throws the pulp equally in every direction, spreading it, so to speak, equally all over tbe inside surface of the
cylinder. After being revolved in this manner for three or four min utes air is then pumped through the bung (which is made tight ar.
ouud the pipe conveying the air)',
till a pressure of a 100 rounds to
the inch is obtained. This is done without a cessation of the move
ment of the revolving cylinder
The pressure of this air squeezes
all the water in the pulp through
the brass lining of the cylinder,
which is perforated with minute holes, and is carried away in the
erooves of the iron cylinder. Af
ter being revolved three minutes under this pressure, the two halves of the cylinder are opened and a perfectly sbajied barrel is taken out all complete, with heads in, which
is laid aside for twenty-fonr hours
for the purpose of seasoning, when it is placed in a drying room, heat
ed by steam to 160 of heat, and kept there for about three days,
when it is taken out all finished for the market.
There is nothing like repenting of a wrong deed, and if one
has stolen anything, making repar
ation to the rightful owner, even if
one does not appreciate the heni-
ousness of the act for a long time. So thought a man living near Greenwood, who a few mornings
since, discovered the remains of a valuable saddle, (which was stolen
from him six years ago) hanging on the front fence of his house. Although the saddle was consider
ably dilapidated, the owner identi fied the article instantly, and con
gratulated himself that the thief
had at 'last repented of his act, and
returned the property. But on
going to his stable, bis pleasant
reflections regarding human nature
were a good deal rattled when he
found that the supposed repentant thief had taken another new saddle io place of the old one returned. It is fair to presume that the man was slightly vexed. m The almost incredible growth of New York is again brought to the attention of the public by the proposed erection of an immense apartment bouse in that part of the city, which only a few years ago was considered out of town. The
proposed structure is to be 200
feet high from tower to ground, higher than any other building in New York. It is intended to ac
commodate thirty-eight families,
and will cost over half a million dollars. The necessity for erecting such a high building, as far up town aa Fifty seventh street, shows
the demand for locations in the great metropolis. It alio verifies
the old adage that there is always room at the top. A real estate dealer advertises in a Dakota newspaper : "I can be found either at the gold mina playing 'freeze out,' at Mitchell's Exchange betting on the age of 'old li oases' with Brown, or at my residence on Oak Street, perusiug the Scriptures."
To tne Old Settlers ot Monroe
County. Ifanv of the'eitizens of Monroe county
(or many year have expressed the wish that old settlers meetings would be held annually at Blooinington, in order to ac
commodate all in all parts or the county with the privilege of attending nuch annual gatherings at the county seat, which place is central and more easy of access than the places at whieh such meetings have been held for several years past. To make arrangements for such meetings at the county seat a publio meeting will be hold at the Court House in Bloomineton, at one o'clock p. ii, on Saturday,
Juno 16tb, 18B3. This meeting should be attended by personsfrom all portions of of the county and especially by the bus
iness men or jsioomington. Excursion tickets to Louisville will be sold 92.50, round trip, on Thursday, June 7th, by the 3:46 a.m. train, good to return the 8th. There will be six races on Thursday, including the great turf stake. First-class Organs at prices
lower than you can buy shoddy ones. S. C. DODDS & CO.
m hi Two Left. Nowlisyour chance to get one of the celebrated Palace Organs, atjpostttve cost. We desire to close out oar Organ businesiuand will sell those on band at figures that canjnot be beat. Call on E. P. Adams, at New York Store, ior full information. S.C.Doods & Co.
In England the Queen only can drive eight horses on state oc
casions. There is no objection, if
you wish, to seven horses and a mule. Actors who have traveled through the country agree that the most perfectly built and decorated theatre ot the United States is in Denver. The Reformer, a new paper
started in Paris with a view to
converting Catholics to Protestantism, suspended publication after tbe twentieth number. It was a hopeless task. The philosophical shrewdness of some children is remarkable. A Sunday-school teacher had been telling her class the story "David
aud Goliath' and, she added, "and
all this happened over three thous
and years ago." A little cherub
opened his bright blue eyes with wonder as he remarked, "Oh I
teacher: what a memory you ve
got." At the criminal court : An unfortunate man is up for a
trial by a jury of his peers. His
misfortune consists iu having murdered his wife. After carefully killing her, he has, with equal care, cut the body up and placed it in a packiug-case, which he sent as freight on a railway train. 'Defendant' a counsel. "Gentle-
tueu of the jury, I am aware that.
these painful circumstances seem to militate against my client. But I have an important fact which I wish to bring to your notice. It is this : wuen my unfortunate client placed the chest on the train
he prepaid the -charges. This shows that he is not wholly deprav
ed. Had he been so he would have consigned it to some fictitious
personage, without prepaying the
charges, thus leaving the company to stand the loss. Bear this in mind, gentlemen, in rendering
voar verdict. 'The quality of
mercy is not strained,' etc.'
Notice to Non-Residents. State of Indiana, Monroe county, ss : In the Monroe Circuit Court, of Moors county, in the State of Indiana, No. 390. September Term, 1883. Thomas I. Owens vs. Robert M. Hindi t al. Be it known that on the SStb day of March, 188), tbe above named plaintiff, by bis attorneys, filed in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Monroe county, in tbe State of Indiana, his complaint against the above named defendant, and others, to foreclose a mortgags,and on the 8th day of May, 1883, the said plaintiff filed in the Clerk's Offlce the affidavit of a competent person showing that said defendant, Robert M. Hinds, is not a resident of tbe State of Indiana.
Now therefore, by order of said Court, said defendant last above named, is hereby notified of tbe filing and pondency of said complaint against him, and that unless he appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of said cause on the 3d dy of September, 1883, the same being tbe first judicial day of a term of said Court, to be begun and held at the Couit Houm in the City of Blooinington, on the first Monday in September, 1883, said complaint, and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will be heard and determined in his absence. June 6, 1883. D. W. BROWNING, msaiI Clerk Monroe C. C. East & East, attorneys.
BUT IV OT DISHEARTENKI..
A Lot of Goods Were "On The Boad" When the
BIGr FIRE OOOUIREJX.
Wall Papers, Window Curtaino and Fixtures, Paints, Oils, and T have Them For Sale at Stuart & McPheeters' Hardware Store. Thes good IT.... T T TC,1 T rvm ....
w uu a. niuoi sett mem. yi J. W. SHOBMAKEIfc.
Stuart & McPheotero, North Side of the Square, East of Postoffice, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
Mite's and BMsniitte HAE,D"WAB13
County Headquarters for He an J Poplar $1 al
DOORS. SASH, UL,ITVXS, GLASS, MOULDINGS, LOCKS, HINGES, NAILS ABB SCHJ2T7S. The Early Breakfast COOKING STOVE AND THE GRAND OLIVER CHILLED TWXT Are. Among Our Specialties.
.a
A H DSDE
PETER BOWMAN has purchased tho Drug Store on the West Side of tbe feinmre, North of the alley, AND HAS ADDED FRESH NEVY GOODS. Cigars, Tobacco, Perfumery, JPane Ood and Pure Wines and Iitquors For medical purposes. An experienced druggist in attendance. WALL PAPEHi AT LINDLEJPS. New Stock, New Styles, Low Prices. Drugs, Paints and Oils.
DR. FAEIS, THE PRESGRIPTIONIST, IS NOW IX) CATED AT LINDLEY'S.
NORMAL
sixth: session. Bloomington, - - Indiana, Beginning July 23, and ending August 24, 1883, the week beta tha Monroe County Institute, WORK. " . 1. Normal, embracing everything required by teachers b4 those desiring to teach. 2. Preparatory, meeting the wants ot those who. may vialt to enter preparatory, or uollege classes next fidl. EXPENSES. , flTTuition $5, for the session; 1.25 per week; m etttk .caw in advance. No refunding of tuition. Board from 2.'50 to $3,0Q per week. Expenses tor the entire term need not exceed '.. For further information, address Jas. K. Beck, I J as. A. Woodbdkk, y Bloomington, lad.
.a
4
Notice to Non-Resldents. State of Indiuna, Monro county, aa: In tbe Monroe Circuit Court. Ko. 379. September term, 1883. Robert W. Miorsand Honrjr C. Duncan va.AlexandorGuthrioand Maria ii.Roeors.
Be it known tbat on the 13th day of
March, 1883, the above named plaintiffs, by their attorneys, filed In the circuit court of Monroe oountjr, in tbe State of Indiana, their amended complaint against the shore named defendants to quiet title, and on tho 14th day of May, 1883, tho said plaintiffs filed in tho ClorkTs offics the affidavit of a competent person, showing that said defendant, Alexander Guthrio, is not a resident of the Stato of Indiana. Now therefore, by order of said court, said defendant last aboTe named is hereby notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint against him, and that unless he appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of said cause, on the 30th cy of September, 1883, tho same being the tint judicial day of a term of said court, to be begun and held at the court liou.se n the CilT of Bloo.ningtvn, on tho first Monday in Seplenibor, 1883, said complaint, and the mutters and things therein contained and alleged, will be heard and determined in his absence. D. W. BROWNING, seal Clerk Monroe C. C Kfist & sst. attvs fcr plaintiff. Juno 6, '.883.
AJOUR3(El) Term or Circuit Court.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVES, that an adjourned term of the regular
April torm, 1883, or Monroe county Jir cult Court in the stato of Indiana, will bo held in the court house in tho city of Bloomington, in said county, beginning at 8 o'clock a., sc., ou TUESDAY, JULY 10th, J883,
and continuing so long as the business of
said adjourned term shall require. By order of .Court. Witness my name as clerk of said court, with the seal thereof affixed, Uay 30th, 1883. DAVID W. BROWNING, skal Clerk Monroe U. 0.
Resident Dentist.
Dr. J. W.
CRAIN.
Office In the Grooves corner, up-stairs.
All work warranted.
SLA
H
JIM
LYON&HEALYft
State & Msnree Sl.,ChlcMO. JaV 1
IktlmuitnU. ShIU. Cap Wlu,l
unnr Baast Otttklo. lUnaMsM
Inawrtais auaiutuwa latiwuen van c
1
CITY IIOObV STOKE,
Wall IpdV
window shad:
nriHE PROPRIETOR of the
tak nlaasura in announcing to hia otJ
will open in a few days i . In the Willsoa Room, opposite the Old Orchard IMock,
A Large and Splendid AmortnMafc of Wall Paper, Window Shades an Fixtures, whlca he will osferat, prices that Cannot Fall to please. Among the Wall Papers will be found mttnv of the latest and most fafhionftbie)
su le. In the department f
Window Fixtures
will be found beautiful stylos of shadis govii, ; Also WINDOW CUBTAIK3, in large variety, including bewtiftl '
vawua ui larcsints, A lot of Wall Paper, injured b!y th ' fire, will be sold at a Ure redUctifeu be
low the usual prices. ...
Ladta will consult their interests by -not purchasing until they iaspc "V
stock. ,
R. P. COJUE.
