Bloomington Progress, Volume 17, Number 30, Bloomington, Monroe County, 26 September 1883 — Page 2
i
JUMBO
C07FEE COFFEE
JUMBO JUMBO
o m to
JUMBO JUMBO COFFEE COFFEE Makes a Splendid Drink. DUNN & CO. SELL IT.
CLAGGWARE, And Knives and Forks Given Away
With the Sale of TEAS AND
COFFEES.
W am keadqnarfers for 8alt. DUNS A CO.
CHOICE Clorei Seed At DUNN A CCS.
Choice Timothy Seed At DUNN A CO.'S.
ouioms
QTOU SAB.
M!
T USKLRJCt DUNCAN, Attorney, OfD Bee in the National Bank comer, up-
Wul practice in all coorU of the
ayw mi SHcnuov nveano nnm a, tad to collection and prompt re-
nnetir au claiirn LOUDEN MJERS, Attorneys. Office over Pin National Bank. All business of a legal nature given careful atteaQoa in all courts. Beal estate TUIas carefolly examined by aid of Louden' Abstract. A spoetstty made of the collection and remittance of claims of all kinds. FMIEDLEr, PEARSON FRIED LET, Attorney, Office in Bee Hire Slock. Settlement of estates a specialty. Collection! promptly remitted. CaptG.W. Priedley or Judge Pearson will bo in attendance at each term of circuit court.
ULKYfs fTTMAN, Attorney, will . practice in the rarioaa coarta. Bene.
eial attention given to collection, and to probata business. Offlce, Tea's earner, oppos the Progress Office. ROGERS BENhET, Attorneys and Collectors. OSes te Mayor Oflce bwildSng. Special attention given to settling decedents' estates, and to all kinda of probata business, Also, abstracting. E' AST EAST, Attorneys, at Law, Bloomincton, Ind. Office, in Waldron's Block, north side square. Probate' hiadaesc and eolleetioos given prompt at tentoa.' WB1 practiea in eoarta of ail adjoining counties. Business soiieitad. JAMES F. MORGAN, Attontev. Ofaee, Bee Hive Block, up-stairs. To the probate and eoltectioa business be will rive soocial and particular atten-
" tion. Basinena attended to in coarta of
MrroandrAg Counties. WILLIAMS J- MILLBX Attorneys, Office Sve doors sooth of Hunter's corner, ay stairs. IX a general collection and probate bminsss - Will practice in coarta of adjoining counties.
n M. WORRALL, Attorney. Office
j. in Hew Block, an stairs, over Jfe-
Cauask Co.'. Win practiea in all the
courta. Special attention given to rev sioa'tftsiau and probate business.
FrbUed tmA tWadsy Morning, Sjr
mXXUM M.9AMM,:
MoUssitesCt.
AeomBpoodeat arritaa from
St. Petersburg: "The larger sad own iasportant hotels here eoold be converted into prisons ia an
boor, oosoe, even to the very cfeora, seeta fceva out of solid atone.
Nobody thinks of laying carpet on
'grand staircases. Yon walk on granite. Lang and badly lighted
oorrodors lead to row of roome m
which there is an abundance of
furnitnrey where the high eating, waxed floor, and something not aaHy to be described in the appear
ance of the walls and the general anraneemeat leave a aenae of
frigidity; on the hottest day. Strong are the ntaircaaaa, gloomy theestrirtors; hot the most suggestive of all, perhaps, ia the ataa 1Jp preoadee, sometimes follows yoa, rattling bis keys. The sertoospbitae of hotel life in St. Pettubatz, however. i the drainage.
The scieaeaof bygeias u ia its la
tum, sad I have been, witness of
aiwgenwnts ia some of the 'granda which in England would be considered disgraceful in s com-
lodgtng boose.
er
A Mr. Bawley of Cincinnati hat a large tomcat that usually graces his newsstand. Hois strictly carnivorous and has n cat's appetite for birds. He ia old, and pot sweet tempered. On Saturday Mr. Hawlev missed him, and going to the basement found the' old moaser tenderly taking care of a half-fledged sparrow that had fal
len from its nest tinder the eaves. The little bird was cosily nestling in the long fur of old Tom's back.
and there it stays except at brief intervals. At night it nestles under the for of the old eat, which
i carefully as an exper
ienced nnrse; and when the cat
to his beet and walks about, be
dors it with the stately bearing of
borne guard officer. oo moon engrossed is he with his pet that
be stays in the basement ait tne
time.
Barbara Miller, who was hanged at Richmond, Vs., hut week, for murdering her husband, had expressed a desire to so to the
gallows in jshito jrtookings .and
witnont snoeSj as she expected to
"wear golden slippers in heaven." The Greek dramatists have some
times anDiied the epithet eolden-
saadalled to the inhabitants of the celestial regions, but the modern revival of the idea seems to be doe to a popular melody, whose vigor
ous retrain ot "dem golden slippers0 may inspire the singers with the hope of actually wearing this foot gear. Had Barbara given more heed to walking uprightly
she need not have concerned herself as to the kind of slippers fur-
uianea to ucr in stepping into eternity from the gallows drop. The Philadelphia Bates says :
"The provision in Stephen Girard's
will excluding ordained ministers
from Girard College has had an effect that probably was not anticipated by the testator. It has pot the unfortunate boys at the mercy
of amateur preachers, who usually
nave tne mqltaot amateurs in otn-
profeanons in an exaggerated
These well-meaning but
prosy psrsons go out on Sundays and discourse at great length pious phttitodes that are seldom edifyine
or productive ef reverence. It is a good idea, suggested by Mr. Lex,
to pat a time limit on the chapel
exercises, for the diminution ot
twaddle and the relief of the hope-
lew .orphans."
Concerning the divining
rod, the Cleveland Leader publishes the testimony of several skep
tics converted, and the following from Mr. Charles Latimer of Cleveland: "The divining rod is only
another exemplification of a power not yet recognized. With a piece of witeh hazel I discovered the
Witch Hazel Coal Mines. I told
the number of feet a shaft would
have to be sunk to reach the coal.
and even gave the thickness of the
vtan. I got 15,000 for Joeatieg
the Witch Hazel mines, and am also paid 12 cents a ton for every ton of coal taken out of them. John B. Whitelaw, Superintendent of the Cleveland Water Works,
ays : -At Ueanga Lake, Mr, fat-
liner abowed the power of the divining rod. After he had cut one
I asked bin to go over little
stream that we eaw running from
the bank. We knew the water was there, and we wanted to see whether the rod would work over it. It was surprising. He held the prongs so firmly in his hands that the green bark twisted off in his palms."
The fanners of Hartford coun
ty, Maryland, have $1,000,000 in
vested in canning factories, and are building more. A correspondent ef the Philadelphia iVes describes the process of canning tomatoes.
"After being scalded, they are de
posited on long tables surrounded by women called 'peelers.' The peeled tomatoes fall through a spout, and the operator presses his
toot on a treadle. Instantly there is spirt, and seeds, juice, and pkees of tomato fly out; the can is foil ; The packer has done its
Small tin cans that fit in
the groove are placed on the can's moutb, and a brush dipped in a solution of weak muriate of zinc, is passed around the groove. The capper presses a hot revolving eap-
Kg iron upon small piece of sol- , and the cap is firmly fastened. The can is then submitted to heat, which expels all the air from it through minute hole in the centra of the cap, and then .the hole is stopped with drop of solder." A correeBondent of the Indi
anapolis Journal, traveling from
rfirrr , w uv ma.owu. saw burning mine. He saya: "It gives off so sulphurous an odor that I at first I thought the heat due to the decomposition of sulphiAoa Rut the olnw ia rod little
sulburous acid is formed ; yon can . . ' iL A f
tana on me crevasse wiiuom rear nf onlvKr hnreinsf or atlffiacaticiii.
Sulphur u volatilized and recrys-
telized on the edges ot tne crevices. There ia no smoke; the air quivers with the heat. The burning area ia from ten to fifteen roue square; and has been on fire since the first uiait that waa made bv white men.
and no one knows how many cenmm . w - m
tones before, it is oniy cue ot a
aumoer of fires tHatara xaovra on
the Bad Lands.' The writer goes on to say that the Bad Lands are probably the ashes of extinct coal fires.
The failure of the Virginia peanut crop through drought may startle some of the lovers of this delicacy, thus to be msde scarcer more than the devastation wrought by by frost in Northwestern corn. Nut only is this year's yield reduced to one-fourth in some sections, but in the most afflicted regions "not enough will be raised for seed next year." Calamity to the peanut crop is widespread in its influence, reaching even the circus and the drama. Fortunately, the Old Dominion is not the only source of peanut supply. The peach-growing centre is gradually, moving south. A few
years ago there were great orchards
in .new Jersey, xnen Delaware was the chief producer. Now Maryland and Virginia are com
ing to the front. The largest peach farms are in Maryland. The Bound Top farm has 125,000
peach trees. Un the estate of Col. Watkina there are 120,000 trees. A peach tree's usefulness is over af
ter about ten or twelve .years of
mmm . mm - - I
Hie, and the-soi! upon 'which it nil i "S.
grows w anus ior pesca culture.
Tli ere IB 2Q .AtiAntae W Villi nor
rotn who may be said to have in a m -mm
measure married nimseit. His bride is a Swede, and nnable to
sneak English. The Ameriean clergyman could not speak any tonflrne hrt his own. Them or a a a
doubt how the ceremnnv wnnM
end almost as soon as it began,
nut this was removed by the bndesrroom. who acted aa intfrnmtr-
putting the questions,made respon
ses, ana aeciarea tne marriage cer
emony periormea.
A lady livine in Clinton.
Mass., recently mixed a batch of
bread which failed to rue. even af
ter a delay of twenty hours. She did not wish her father to see the
waste of flour, so she buried the
dough in the garden. The next
morning her father called her out to see an enormous white mushroom of an unheard of variety that
he had discovered. He was callinir ! 11 . .
out neignoors to see me curiosity, when his daughter elightened him as to the nature of the plant. It has been manv veara ainco
Quinine sold at so low a fienra aa it
reached in May last, when sales were made, in Quantities of 1.000
ounces, at f 1.40 an ounce, Prices have advanced since that time to $1.75, and the regular wholesale rate is small Quantities is now SI .80
to $1.90. A large manufacturer says that' it does not pay to produce quinine at a less price than $1.40. There has been considerable speculation in the article, and this has tended to advance prices, which the nresent damnnrl ia libs.
ly to keep high.
A good many handsome bachelors and well-fed widowers make
the Orchard House their head
quarters.
Mr Attention to Easgllati. President Robinson's report to the annual meeting of Brown University, Providence, B. I., corporation, is exciting comment from liberal thinkers. In it the doctor, in a forcible msnner, comes oot boldly and criticiseii the neglect which the mother tongue is experiencing at the American colleges. He says: Years and years of oloset study are given to other tongues, both
ancient and modern t o n e u e s
which only a fraction of educated men are expected to use in after life while only incidental and comparatively superficial attention is given to that mother tongue which all are compelled to use, in speech or in writing, every day of their lives, and on skillful use of which, with many, depends in no small degree their success or failure in life. And saying this it is not forgotten that for the enlargement of one's knowledge of English words and for the cultivation of that nice discrimination between synonyms, which only the most careful study of isnguage can impart, a discrimination which shows itself to be a striking characteristic of the classics of every people, nothing has yet been discovered; or is ever likely to be discovered, that can take the nlace of the critical
study of the classical literature of
the Greeks and Bomans out the
fact cannot be disguised that many an excellent Latin and Greek schol
ar writes wretched English, while admirable English is written by
many who know neither Latin nor
Ureek. What oar colleges most
need is, not the entire neglect of
the classics of the ancients, but
more attention to the classics of
our own tongue, an attention that
shall consist aot merely in the
study of its best authors, but of
that unremitting and critical prac
tice, without which in literature bb in everything else, no high degree
of cxoellenoscan ever be attained.
A Maryland tramp came in
to a fortune nd sent a hospitable
farmer 1 10,000 for a nighfa lode
ing. That firmer entertained an
angel unaware ; but if farmers, in
spired to Christian oharity by this
successful throwing of bread upon
the whiskey and water of a tramp's conatitutios, go extensively, into the business of entertaining angels
with malice aforethought, they
will be likely to discover that the
majority of their euests do not be
long to1 that breed of angels, but
are nearer the "swamp" order of
heavenly beings. Ten-thonsand-
dollar tramps are as "seldom" as
democratic statesmen. ,
Slick Mwladlere.
Shelbyville, Isp., September
1. several tanners in this coonty have been swindled during the past week by a gang of men traveling through the country pretending to take contracts for painting barns. One man goes ahead and represents that he is the agent for a new paint house that has sent him out with instructions to paint a barn every eight miles for what the material alone it worth. The contract is entered into, and in a few days the workmen coma along.to do the Job. Much to the farmer's surprise the foreman informs bun that he has a contract with bim, the amount tuaally being ten to twenty times as great as the unsuspecting Granger supposed it to be. Dunns! the wrangle, that it ear-
tain to ensue, a third party arrives on
the toene, ana in a very short time discovers that the fanner ia about to be swindled. Calling him out be tells him confidentially that for twenty dollars he will pot a stop to the scheme. Generally the last proposition is agreed to, the third man soon "runs the rascals off," the twentv dollars it naid. and the eane soon after
divide the spoHs. William Cochran, of
daoMon townsntp went into a contract or this kind, the amount being as he supposed, four dollars. When the men appeared to do the work they refused to compromise, and forced bim to pay them ,104. They attempted to work Mr. Miehml Tbeobold in the same way, his contract being $22 at Brut, but $179 when Collection day arrived. The 920 man appeared in this instance, but Mr. Tbeobold, in place ef being "guyed," came to town ana put the ease in the hands of bis at. torneys. Oao of the men to-day swore out a warrant against another, charging him with stealing some paint. Then by telling the officers that he thought the man was near Columbus, he left for. that point. Many of the farmer have been Sited in this way, and K is not at all lety that the men will be caught, The wife of Samuel Orchard, jr., ia visiting relations ia Commerce, Missouri.
T. H. Courier: Two Democrats have been appointed to clerkships in a New Jersey postoffiee, nnder operation of the civil service law. This may work all right as long as long as the Republican party has control, but let the Democratic party come into power, and no Republican would be permitted to even sweep a postoffiee out. We caiuo to this conclusion after viewing the work of the Indiana Legislature of 1383. They hogged the ring, so far as the offices were concerned, and played thunder with the benevolent institutions, and everything else that they possibly had time to look after. The State ia worse off than it would have been had the last legislature never couveaod.
Mrs. James Vanhan of Gen
tile Valley, Tdaho, missed her-18-montb-old babe, and her neighbors, following the tracks of a large bear into the Bear range of mountains,
foond the baby curled up in a
bunch of weeds and grass, in the bushes, sound asleep, with its little
tattered and torn dress thrown
over its head. Close beside the sleeper was the warm bed of the bear, which had abandoned its captive on the approach of the
searoning party.
A citizen of Borne, Ga., while
crossing the railroad tracks in that city got his foot caueht fast in a
frog. While trying to get loose he saw the Chattanooga train on the
East Tennessee, Virginia & Geor
gia road come dashing over the
bndge. Wild with fneht, the man
jerked his leg almost ont of joint,
and came near breaking bis foot. But the train was almost upon him and he decided to unlace bis shoe,
pull bis foot out, and leave the
shoe to be smashed. He acted upon this thought, and as he got bis
toot out the train glided by on an
other track.
The seventeen young women who played at bass hall in Oriole Park, Baltimore, on Saturday afternoon last, drew four thousand spec
tators. The nines wore comfort
ably fitting and graceful dresses,
out on an inch or two below the knees. Jaunty hats, colored Blockings, striped belts, and fancy bsse ball shoes completed the outfit. With the brunettes the trimmings were red ; with the blondes, blue. The diamond was much smaller
than the regulation arena, the dis
tance between bases being sixty
instead of ninety . feet, and .the pitcher's stand being much' nearer the home plate. Few balls were
caugbt ; they were pioked ur$ -
Greencastle Banner i During
the late Conference, Rev. J. EL Brant called attention to the fact
that no monument has been erected
over the grave of Dr. Cyrus Nutt, in Forrest Hill cemetery, near this city, and that gentleman and Bev.
W. B. Halsted were appointed committee to raise the ueoesssry funds to buy a monument. Dr. Nutt's grave ought not to be neglected, and wc trust the committee will meet a ready response in their effort to care for it.
Sneneer RemMioau: The fun
eral services of the father and
mother-in-law of Henry Boruff will be preached by Bev. Ollpbant and Rev. Gideon Potter at Mt. Olive Church, near the residence of Mr. Boruff, on Sunday, Sept. 30. Students have found, (and a arrest
many others have also found) that J. M. Barnes' Gallery is tte pUce to get the in est picture. sspVtf
Michigan City EnUrpriss : A most unfortunate and serious accident occurred at Jas. G. Talifaro's
barber shop Tuesday evening,
which came near resulting in the death of the victim, E. H. Lund. About six o'clock last evening. Mr.
Lund stepped into Talifaro's shop for the purpose of getting shaved,
and the barbers, except Jobny Sridlitz, a boy who is working in the shop and learning the trade, all being absent at the time, Lund thought he would take the chair and let the boy shave him. The bay proceeded to shave his customer and got along very nioely until the shave waa nearly finished and the boy was going over Lund's face the last time, when he was suddenly taken with a fit, and as he fell to the floor drew the razor around the side of Lund's face and neck, and up under his chin, outting a most horrible gash about eleven inches in length and plainly exposing the main artery of the neck. The cutting was dons so quickly and with an instrument so sharp, that Lund didjnot fully re alise what had been done until he felt the blood begin to run, when he jumpedjfrom the chair and ran out on the street, where Dr. Hamrick happened to be passing, and who accompanied him to Dr. Mullen's office where the wound was sewed up and dressed. The wound
begins on the left side of the head and passing alone under the ear
and the jaw terminates at the right
aide of the chin, making an ugly
wound indeed, and had it been one
twentieth of an won deeper, would have caused death in a few minutes.
Louisville is commendably encouraging the opening of another field of work for women, vis : d rue-
gist's clerks. A school of pharmacy will open next month. This
is the sort of thing we like to see. Give women every possible chance
lor employment.
A copperhead bit the foot of W aT i era a ao a
jura. imn oi i ranaun township, Pa., while she waa drivine cava.
At first she felt as though a thousa a a0 a m
ana neeaies were piercing her teet. Then her stomach was affected, and aha loat snnmnnsaan. A nhv.
sioinn's care brought her out of
danger. aeasveS)e-Ssi
"I shall teach you to speak
properly and then to write as you speak," said a teacher in the pub
lic schools. "Poor Billy Wilcox,"
said a little voice apparently invol
untarily. "What about Billy?"
"jriease ma'am, he speaks through his nose he will have to write
through his nose."
One of the lecturers in the
school of philosophy, at Chatauqua, N. Y,, delivered a profound address recently on the "heneelorlhness of the subsequently," and one of our Indiana University people who was there, attempts to explain the theory to the Progreu in the following words : "We all know, or profess to know, and it is even patent to those who are not cognizant of the fact, that in all ages, from the very remotest to the goods in the misty future,man has, or has not, according to his inslienable rights and prerogatves in the premises, through the organism of the mind which connects the undeistaud-
ableness with the intelligibility ef
the dynamic energy of tne body an underlying, inherent inclination, on multifarious occasions, as if propelled by an unseen fores, to seek quickly the msgnetism and stimulation co-existent with, and analo
gous to, fermentous extracting of
these forces, propelled toe circumambient atmosphere in parallel directions." Portland, Oregon, had only about 3,000 population twenty years ago. At the Villard celebration the other day she had a procession two miles long.
Notice of View of Proposed Turnpike Ok Petition or Blctaard i gtowhesM, mt atl. NOTICE is hereby given that at the September, 1883, term, of the Commissioners Court of Monroe county, Ind., a petition and bond was filed, asking to have the following highway improved by grading or MeAdatriising, te-wits Beginning at the point on the Columbus and Bloomington state road where the rame is crossed by the meridian line about 3 miles east of Bloomington, at the end of the turnpike now surveyed and located, than following the line of said
state road, as near as practicahle, to where it crosses Stephens' Creek, in said
county of Monroe, and being about 3 miles in length. Said road to be made of
small broken limestone or bard gravel.
8 feet wide, and eight inches deep, on a
grade is rest wiae, ana gooa euiverts to carry on the water, and whereas at said term ef court tbe said Board of Commis
sioners granted tbe prayer of said petition and it was ordered by said board that Wallace Hight, William Norman
and Samuel Uinsmora, three competent freeholders of Monroe county, Indiana, and Benjamin F. Adams. Jr., a competent engineer, be appointed to examine, view, lay out and straighten said road as in their opinion, publio con
venience and utility may require, and to assess and determine the damages sustained by any person or persons through whose premises said road is proposed to be laid out, straightened or improved .
And that they meet at tbe Au
ditor's ofiioe of Monroe county, Indiana, on tbe 1st day of November, 183, and after being; Qualified, proceed to do
said work and that they report the fame
at the Decern oer, isss, tersn.oi laia court.
Witness my name and seal or the Board of Commissioners this 18th day of
September. 1883. saux.1 RICHARD A. FTJLK,
ep26-83 Auditor Monroe County.
biMilt e Duncan, Atwrasys.
Claurat's Batter Cows.
This ia a Bee Bive Customer. He eats unadulterated Groceries.
The Cream Flour Is the Finest and Best in the City, At the Bee Hive.
Everybody Chews The Little Florence Tobacco. Bee Hive Grocery sells it. Head-light Oil, At the Bee Hive Grocery, 15c. per gallon.
Bee Hive Grocery tells
Best English Bods at 6c. per lb.
WATCH what GOBS U7
here next issue.
Salt $1.35 per barrel At the Bee Hive Grocery.'
LEW. H. AuDEBSOH,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in BeMfca, Cards aael !feve!tles, ALSO
Cigar and Hews Stand,
Cor. College Ave. and 4th St., (One Block South 1st National Bank), BLOOMIMS.TOM. IRt.
N. B. Any Book or Periodical published
8
HBBIsyra SALE.
BT virtue of a certified copy of a degree
to me directed, from the mark's umce oi the Monroe Circuit Court, in a causa
wherein Thomas I. Owens is plaintiff, and Jesse Binds, Robert M. Hinds, Fsank M, Hinds. Jessie Buskirk and Sybil Friadley
are defendants, requiring me to make the sum of two thousand one hundred and twenty-elKht dollars and saventy-five
cents (S2,12S 75) with interest on sata decree and costs, I will expose at public
sale, to tne htgoest siaaer, en
SATURDAY, October 37th, 1883,
between the hour of 10 o'clock A. u. and
4 o'clock r. at. of said day, at tbe door or the court house of said Monroe county, Indiana, the rents and nroflts for a term
not exceeding seven years, of the following described Real Estate, situate in tbe county of Monroe and State of Indiana, to-wit:
The south half of Out Lot, No. (41) forty-one, in the City of Bloomington, Monroe county, in the State of Indiana. 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 plaea expose at publio sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discbarge
aid decree, interest and costs.
Said sale will be made without any relief whatever, from valuation or appraisement laws.
SILAS OKI MICH,
sepXS 1883. Sheriff of Monroe en.
Rest & Bast, Attorneys.
fctwtarilU, . A. C, Ballway
Monoa Route.' Affords tbe Best, Cheapest, Quickest, most direct, and most desirable Route to all parts of the Great West and North West, the South and South West. Time in efeet May 27th, 1883. Chioago Time! NORTH. CHICAGO If All. JIIOHT BX. Bloomington 11.58 pm 11.03 pm Chicago 9.00 pm 7.00 am SOUTH. LOOISVILI.B MA1U IflOBTXX Bloomington 4.61 pm 3.46 am Louisville S.10 pm 7.30 am Two daily through Bxprees trains, with, ont change, connecting closely with the great through lines out of Chicago and Louisville, giving only ONR CHANGS of oars to all tbe principal towns and cities in tbe northwest and in the southwest. Unexcelled traveling accommodations. No re-cheeking of Baggage. No dolay in connections. Less changes of cars than by any other route. Sell through tickets to all parts of the country. Check baggage through to destination. Time onrds.railroad maps, rates, routes, through tickets and through bag
gage checks, obtained only of CARTER PERMS, Station Ticket Agent, Bloomington, Ind.
i in ii i i miasjini a i sttTp Vndor Tkto co M$i
I
OUSTE PBICE
$30,000
ing just received and norr being
M
If
CI
dicplaTcd In
NEW ROOM. ALL ARB INVITED. Everything Htm, Heat and AttrcctlTI
Stuart Ci TZccotoifc, Horth Side of the Dqnare, Esst cf Pe3ct Wholesale and Retail Dealers In
Bins ii lets H .A. 23, 3D "W" .A. IR 33
Count Headquarters far
n ml Lit
DOORS, SjsJSH. BLINDO, GLASS, nOTJLDmOS. IQCEB,
The Earlv Breakfasv
COOKEsKT SOVB
A2TD THE OBAITI) 0UVE&
Are Among Our Specialties.
DRUG
Hi f
)oo(-
PETER BOWMAN has puixhzsz tho Drue Store en the West Side of the Oqwrnrmi tAT .B I 11 A TT WW- a M av --r'WWk tanYSsAtF AaTAAWtATa .
xNortn ot me eiiey, Aav has jluv&u x iuh jxjbvr uuuuob'
tJlKara, Tobacco, JPorriunenr, JET
Ratal Pore Wlmos auid lajo)
1? or medical purposes. An experienced druggist in i
Resident Dentist.
Or. J. W. CRAin.
Office in the G reeves corner, up-etairs. AU work 'warranted.
JH, .J, NICHOLS,
ARCHITECT
AMD PBACTICAI. RtTILOKR,
Flans and Specifications carefully preoared for dwelling: houses and public
building. Also estimates of buildings
plated throughout. All work finished
at the time speciuea. Bloonifngton, Ind., March 31, H80.
LIVERY and SALE
STASLG. j.tv KM. VnMie Rmiare. Bloom Incrton .
THS undersigned take pleasure in calling attention to the fact that they have fmm itMl atvlM sat RjisisrleM
and Carriages, and good, steady horse foe single and double driTiar. We are pre
pared to rurnisn uarnagea ior nvwuo, Funerals and Parties, and swift teams for Commercial Travelers. Fanners' horses
fed cheaply. WOBI.JE Y MAY.
If eXJM mt Ad
rastaw
VroTIC Is hereby given, that taw s.
IkTasV
dersurned has
istrstriz of tbe estate of
w w wmmj, aanane. Said estate la sapooasd to- be solves).' CIBAJf. TTJ-KflJL
epts-s3-t 4 Louden ek Mtera, Astya.
the; To Ctot
IS AT
Hatftew & TcrcsTfe.
We have the largest and beat stash T Iwrnitnrein towsaa4eaaivye S
ter prices than aay aeoes a tawa and as. na ia eaw aew Sanaa, wtth
geoda, and laara ear ptfese befctw bov. nse Tnsss on WestltBa Rres
Allen ds McNary Bbsek. sayty
wra tt TITS. UHL IV saraOl
TATE A BOCfBl Htamdnaaau-eav-aTa "'T?
JUfe, Biro, TsvnftSfr AND
Cyclcne JsssresLtxl
If you are not inenred yea essgbt so kw. Please call and see anv cwt ear aaraae asasV
seeiaro a Jlre, Thunder TlgbUfcsa. 3jr
etona and Tetaado rscy, IssstfR at avv erlastingly too late, ' "wm .-! t Wli Tt till Au
or both of us will be fowsat l .Rwstss during all business hoars. ' y j
jsioomincton. iao-, imm a. aaa
BJatlca ta Haat-Realelaait. State of Indiana, Itonroe county, as: flaasiul W. Medina, vs. Andrew S.
Oliphant, Elisabeth OKphaat, OUte Kl-
tkin and William Alien. No. 4S. November Term, 1389. Be it known, that oa the SOth day of July, 1S83, the above named plaintiff, by Buskrk cb Duncan bis attorneys, Sled in the office of the olerk of the circuit court ot Monroe county, in the State of Indiana, bis complaint for Partition against the above named defendants, and on the 2Jd dry ot September, 1863, tbe said plain tiff Bled in said court the affidavit of a competent person, showing that said defendants Andrew 8. Oliphant, Elisabeth
Oliphant and Ollia Mullikia are not residents of the State of Indiana. Now therefore, by order of court, said defendants last above named are hereby notified of tbe filing and pendency of said complaint for partition against them, aad that unless they appear and answer or demurr thereto, at the calling of said cause on the SOth day of Noxeoiber, IS, the same being the id judicial day of a term of said court, to be begun and held at the Court House in the City of Bloomington, on the third Monday In Novem. her, 1883, said complain, and the matters and things therein contained aad alleged, will be heard and determined, ia thir ab-
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the publisher to S48 pages. It s lianas over 1,000 bnassagld reteifM asA tsased to all classes aad ccadttisns afjiiisaji, A woadarfttl book and a lasaaMH aeata-
Aieasaa Issaasa
far OS..
Uv. It aalla at aieba.
meats ever oaVed to book i
pie copies seat by Mail, a
than double their msssev, ireis Dr. Chase's Utoaa PrintiagBeaie, AsaAjwsV,
smiCOMjaa.
sence. SSAt
Sept6 33
D. W. BBOWNINtt, Clerk Monroe Circuit Court. Buskirk in Muucstr, atty.
rjAOCa 0011X100 UCOOe And Ckntncpair T7est of IicHcrt I111L We snake apeeiahy of
HORSESHOEinO.
a iarn ana wownnm p."" .""t Is attached to tbe Shops, with a fUmmt
Msvcneo w w s" ' 1 ' 1 ; iprdy of good rtock water. ..1. WaeesVaad Baawba oarerawitA
or built of tar cost aeesrsaj-.
