Bloomington Progress, Volume 17, Number 36, Bloomington, Monroe County, 7 November 1883 — Page 2

ELOonmoTon bah.

Ml

BUSKIBK& DUNCAN, Attorneys, Ofiee in the National Bank oaraar, opslgh. Will practice la all eonrta t taa IMd. Spacktl attention given to Probate basin ass, and ta eollectiun and prompt retarttaacaof all claims. LOUDEN 3IIZRS, Alteram. Oftfca oar First National Bank. Alt boatneaa of a legal aatare gtvaa carerul atteatloa in all courts. Baal aetata Tttlee carafU examined by aid ol Loodaa't Abstract. A specialty made of the collactioa and icmlttaaco of ckusaa ef all hind.

FMtKDLsr, psanson fmikdLEY, Atiaeaaye, OOeaow Jlc-CaJla'i Store. Settlement of estate a spectator. GollactiaM arataatlv remitted. Capt-O.W.

Fnedley or J udge .raarsaa will be ia avian daaaa at aaek tana of circuit court.

CLKY PITMAN, Attorneys, trill

L practice ia taaaariooacoatts. F-par

eial attaation given to eollactioas, and to probate buetaeea, Otace, Fee's corner, oppos -the Pros ran OSoa. TO0BMS Attorneys and

J CeUectora. OSfce la Mayor's OHea hailaiaw, guana! atlantioa riven to eat-

tliag aacedeaf estates, and to all kinds of

trotaUe business. Attn, acatractiaa;.

EAST -EAST, Attorneys, at law, Bfooaainctna. lad. OnVe. in Wal-

dron'i Block, nortk aide square. Probate

burineta and eaDactioaa wives, prompt attanien. WH1 twactfee ia ooorts at all

adjoining eanatiaa. Business aaliaitad. -era ansa a acrMXaT. atinmrv.

fj Office, Bm Hive Block, ap-etairs. To tha Drobata aad collection bsarfneas ka

wffl.ive aoaeial aad 'Darttenlar etten-

tka. Business attended to ia oonrti of

tttrnmading coanties-

riUJAMS UILLSN Attorneys.

OSes five doors south at Honiara

corner, up-ataire. Do a rexwra! collection and probata bamneaa. Will praatToa aa

CJt WOKRALi, Attorney. Oflb . ia Kaw Btoak. op-etairs, era Me. Calla Cat's. "vSTO- naaetjee to all the

aeaato. Snetnal attoatton riven to Fen-

ua utauaaaaAproaata

fpuMian progress

I.A.tC.

lAt Best, Caaapaat, Quickest, . cm! and aadet aWrabfe

Xante to all parts of tba Graat West

and JMorta won, tea aoaxa ana Seeth "Went. Tme in efect May 27,, 1883. ChleaffO T 1 am est xnarra. nicum hail, uonr ax.

Blaombwloa 1 1.59 pm 11.02 pm

Cbieaga 9.a pai 7.w am

SOUTH, unmuiwn. irbbtzx KtoaMiBctaai 4.51 am 3.46 am

TU-il a in mi k 70 aaa

Two dairy Unaagk Kxpraaa traina, withat akasca: eauwttoa; aloaary wita tba

i tftrooca naaa cm or vaucago aaa

anal ttrot XoairriUa,

l oatoa eala V&K UnABN

af can to an taa pctoctpai towns aaa enVia is tke northwest ad in the aoote wcaL

9o rexiaeekina; of Banaga. Hadejayla oaaaetinoa Xam eaangaaaf ear taaa by aaa othar Note. 8aU tkroorb ticketa to all parts af tha -.b. rwk haggaaa thronch to dS-

tiaaflaa Tiaaa cardvaBroad aaayavatea.

aoataa, throagh tiekata aaa taraga aag

gaga aaecsa, eataraan AmautX

' - aiiiiiiMjtn Tad.

Xanax Xnua, 6-P-A, LoaatTtile, Ka

virtna of an execution to ma di-

Tdd. rram the Clark af tha Mcaroa air

cnit ooart, I wl aapoas atpaalie aa1a,to

the TiaxliU bkMar, o SATUSDAT, Daossabar 1st, 1885,

In!,..- tut Warn nT la npJnrk a. at. aad

aTeleek p. M. of said daT, at the door of

iat km mt ami MiMW aiaaaia.

Indiana, tha reata and profu tor a tarn

ot. Mnaniagaaaaa yaan, w 4 S1 btaiL aUnatai ia

the coenty of Xoaroeaad Stata of Ia dtasa, to-wit: aia Wt.K TT? ii. till aad Taaniv

P aad 10 in tha Ota af Blooauagton,

a. SrtM a aaISt tha fiill .

oontof jadgBMot, totatcat aad easts, X will at thalaae time aad plaee expose at pobCcaass tha raaaisapla of said real aetata. Take as the propertyef Archibald XeSmakv at tha aait of Wm. A. 6aba.

Said-sale wOl he aaade witheat aay ia-

aaa aahaattoa or ataaraae

laaa.

SILAS OKI Mats BOV71883: Sheriff of lloaraaea. Baskirk it Duncan, attoraaya.

F iiaha aacA IVasaVy Morning, by

tnUUJf A,eAXX, IdUoraad Foblisbsr.

Meara Itean Solicit nd-

Bar tfartnaof as exacotioa to me d5 sect-

ad, from tba Clerk of tha Mooroa Circuit Coart, I wBl atpsss at paaBc saia, ta-tha higkaat bidder, ea 8ATUBDAT. Pecamber let, 1883, hat asiai the hoars of 19 o'clock A. (. and

afclook r. at. of said day, at the door of

aae uoaat uaa of aioaroeeaowy, inon

tsaad anoslta lor atom aot

van yaara af tba falktwiag J astata. aitaato ia tha eeoaty

af Moajaa aad atata of Indiana, to-wit: In 1 limber oattlMaAred aad thir-

ty-eiht fl98) a tha City af

toa, Jaoarae

Aad on failnse to realiza the full ansaaat of Jadgmaat, interest aad eotta, I will at the same time aad place expose at atibfeeaat the fee simple of said real es-

Takea as the aronertT of Kartha atc-

Cabe aad Owea McCabe, at the suit of

Aaaa Birga.Said sate will ba'made withont aay re.

fiaf wsatarar fraaa Tafoatiosi or appraiae-

saaotUws. SIIi AS 6BIMX8, aor7-flS Sherif of Measaa eaaaty. aVwtd) Bast, attoraeya.

Tha oadetsicaad. a

the aae of twaatv-oae vaafa, aad

kahitaatof thecky of BlooaAtjrton

Mauitv of Hoaraa. ia tha Stata af ladi-

aaa. hrahT ciaB aotice to tha ertiaaaa of

Blooreiartoai aad of the rat ward of said

chr aad of Bioomioaioa township ia

aaid coonty of Moairue and tbe State of Indiana, that be will, at tha December term, 1883, af the Board of Commiaiioaera of tha oiuoty of Monroe and Stata of lad aaa, apply to aaid board tor a license to sell intoxicating liqaora, to-wit: SpiraV aoos liaata, Vtaoat aad Malt Hqaors, ia a lia ouantitV tban a auart at a time tor

a poriod of oaa year, with the privilege of

allowing toe same to ne araaa an inaaua premises cpoa which he desires to sell aid tpiritoea, vtaoos aad malt liooors Aad that said premiees being silnated ia the first ward ofaaid city of Bloomingtoa, towashiB at Bloomiaetoa. Monroe eeanty.

atata of Miaaa. aad described as fbUawa,

to-wit: A part af Ia4et oaa haadred aad fifty aevaa f 1671. to tha City af Blooaainatoa.

Klooniisgton township, Moaroa aoaaty, Indiaaa, which part of said la-lot U dascribed aa folio wa: Beriaaiac at tha

southeast corar of said In-lut, runniag taenia north with the east aide of aakt lat. mi feet, tbeaee doe west.

aaftal .with the south tide of said

toVat.-TlajiliiB (t) fart, tbeaco eaath mSBM the east iiaeef said la-iot to alaUaaaatt liaeof la-lot (W) am.tsaa fhai west of the aiaoe of Vwn-

aing, (hace east with the south liaa ef Mrt la-lot niaataao.(l) feat to the place

af cezmnina.

It wiu St ateer Elactlem. IfaaT of the Democratic jour

nals continue, to crow over the Republic defeat ia Ohio, find ara predicting tbe soocraa of their National tkket in 1884. And yet there U nothing in this result to fed ao Tainglorioos over. Ohio !m been carried several times by the DenMcracy since Republicanism tank the lead in national politics, and they have carried the state

again. The matter really needs no explanatory excuses to those

whose obaervatton has long ere this

tanght thesa that there is a wide

difference between local and nation

al politics, even in Ohio. When

Ohio's local issues become national

then we can expect a success

ia thai- state to aaean kwttething.

Tbe results of the election in that

state simply mean that the Ger

man BepublicaDS voted with the

Setaocraey against curtailment of

personal luxury, possibly in their

ease, persooal Deceasftr. That

question will not become national.

One ef tbe ablest political writers

in the Union wrote a day or two

ago that "the two great political

parties are drawing to the same

point, the one with a tendency to

civil service reform and tbe other with a tendency to levy tariff for

revenue only.

Tbe party of the first proposition

is united on that point and carry all the conservative element and

the better element of the opposition

with them. The measure is so ob-

vtoualy boaeat and tor the benefit of the whole nation that it will receive the support of every citizen

who would see our nation live and

grow in strength and purity of

Government. The parry of the second proposition, is at once split upon its leading question tar iff. Absurd as the proposition may seem, the tariff tt in a tutma sense a local question. In Georgia, Louisiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania and numerous other states, high tariff on certain comaaodlties means protection to enterprise and protection to the bread aad butte of the laboring man; in Tennessee, Arkansas, Kansas, Iowa and several other states, a low tariff en these same commodities would mean a greater prosperity a

life to enterprise.

So far as each of these sections

ef the country are concerned they are going to favor the business pol

icy which conduces most to their weakb and material progress, regardless of party affiliations. Their party interests are their business interest. Sepnblieaniam is a unit on its ataia proposition and is largely backed by an element not strictly Republican. Doaocncy from

the very nature of he main propo

sHiou is widely split apart. On the questions of government reform there are no local influences to bear; on tbe question of tariff there cm the most powerful and unconquerable atieresta at stake and inluceies to be overcome. We are therefore led to the conclusion that the elections over which our friends are ntakingso much tdo are scarcely straws in national politics, and indicate nothing but a taste for beer. T)M Ctaw Raid tsMt ateavhldtc. Tbe Gougar-Maodler scandal suit is again tbe one subject of conversation, in Lafayette, growing out of a personal encounter between Captain DeWkt Wallace, the attorney whose name was linked with that of M rs. Gongar, and Col. John

a Williams, tbe senior editor of

the Times newspaper. Captain Wallace last Wednesday morning went into the Lahr House, where Colonel Williams boards. Shortly after Colonel Williams stepped into the hallway, and as he came near Wallace the latter shouted,

"John Williams, I have stood all

the abuse of your paper that I am going to do. Last Sunday you linked the names of my wife and my mother with that of the dastardly murderer, Nelling," and before Williams could make a reply, dealt him a powerful blow, followed by another with a heavy cane, the bead of which struck the Co), on the forehead, felling him to his knees; other blows succeeded, until Williams was prone on tbe floor. Two spectators grasped Wallace, one by each arm, and drew hm away vinm . JjjBJUams, irLoa Us was 5iB3V. ixACSt- on

stamping. Scenes such as thesi are to be regretted, but it seems to be the only recourse a gentleman

new-s-days has against foul mouth

ed newspaper blackguards. It is

now thought to be the proper thing

for newspapers to be "sensational," and as that class of matter seems to be popular at present, these ghouls

of the press pry into family matters and publish them to the world regardless of whom they may injure. Tbe law is slow to act, and public

taste seems to shield such men, so

that the only equitable argument

would seem to be a stout club or a keen rawhide, and it should be used without regard to age or social condition.

General Grant is sixty-one

years of age, and enjoys vigorous

health; Sherman is sixty-four,

Sheridan fifty-one. Fits John Porter is white-haired, but erect

and vigorous. 'McCiellaii is a ro

tund man, with bending shoulders, He is rich, entertains piucK, company, and is food of talking about

tbe war. Pleaaanton, the hero of a

hundred cavalry fights, has white

hair and a white moustache, and

his voice is as gentle as a woman's,

Rosecrans is white-baiied. Sick

les is practicing law in Few York

8toneman is Governor of California. Hunter and Crittenden are

rich, and live in fine houses at

Washington. Iremont is soor,

Buell runs an iron furnace in Kentucky. Banks is a United States

marshal. Grierson, the famous

raider, conmands a colored reei

meat in Texas. In a few years very few of the prominent generals of the late war will be ia active

The newest story from the

mines ia New Mexico is from Socoro, where they tell of a miner

wnose table tell over a precipice

wbile be was dosing, lie descended

into the canon to recover the book,

and he found it lying open on

piece of rich quartz that had been

dislodged by the tall. His eye fell on the seventh chapter of St.

Matthew. I be miner read, "Ask, and it shall be given you ; seek, and ye shall find." He searched,

and speedily found a lode over two feet in width that assays so tbe

story goes $225 a too. The story

teller adds that part of tbe country

nas since been overrun by prospeoters with Bibles in tbeir hands.

lecting a public int erest, to get even with a party, is wicked legislation.

lime will cal 1 for a correction.

Girls

The Mormon tabernacle, a cor

respondeat of St. Paul Pioneer

Press says, is the most wonderful whispering gallery in the world. When everybody ia it is quiet the faintest whisper may be heard from the remotest part of the bouse. It will seat 20.Q00 persons. . There is no means of beating it, and in winter the services are held in an as

sembly room that will seat about

6,000 persons. The other large

edifice in aalt .Lake City the tern

pie, which was begun thirty years

ago, nas cost, the Mormons say,

110,000,000, and they will require

5,UUU,UW to complete it ; but

Boston architect recently offered to

duplicate tbe structure and finish it

within two years for 1300,000. Its walls are of solid granite, 9 feet 9 inches ia thickness. They have

reached a height of about 100 feet,

and tbe six towers will rise another

100 feet. Builders are so busy in Wash

ington that it Is hard to get the most trifling repairs done. Houses

are going op all over tbe city, and land since 1880 has quadrupled in

value. .Blaine's house cost o7,000 including the land ; Robeson's cost 28,000, but be bought his lot several five years ago; Don Cameron's between $40,000 and $50,000, while those of Fendlteon, Windom and Hazen averaged about $35,000. But Robeson asks $100,000 for bis house, and lots everywhere are assuming metropolitan E rices. A member could formerly ire a nicely furnished house for $160 a mouth during the sessiou ; now the same accommodations are twice as high, and floors in good neighborhoods, which four years ago rented for $50, are now scarce at $100. Tbe influx here growaeach winter. People who cut but a moderate figure on $10,000 a year in New York and Baltimore can come here and live handsomely. Tbe result is that Pennsylvania Avenue of an afternoon is crowded with handsome turnouts, and bouses renting at $2,000 to $3,000 a Sear are in demand. A large numer of flats are being erected, too. Indianapolis Herald: The money in the State is out on the

old appropriation. Tbe salary of laa afaaaaaaaaaV Tsad rraa in salt St rat Itaai

IIV VIIVUI V UUglO SO pt"JUII u uThere is no money appropriated for the payment. Y hat is to be done? That is a question for the Democrats to auswer. As tbe wheels of State government begin to stop running for want of an appropriation bill, the Democratic party may begin to conclude that the course of the last Legislature in its "masterly inactivity" was not successful political generalship. If there must be an extra session of the Legislature, the responsibility for its expense will not be with Gov. Porter. Spiteful . legislation usually xebftUnds 4m the men Who sia;;ieteo &ymrtx. Keg-

Wko Have "Unk.notvm

Correspondents." It is reasonable to presume

that there is no town in Indiana

which is not tbe home of a half-

dozen young girls who are keeping

up a correspondence with men at a distance with whom they have little or no personal acquaintance.

The writer is acquainted with the families to which some of these

young ladies belong, and knows

that they are as respectable as any in the town of Rockville. There is nothing criminal in the couduct of these giddy, thoughtless young ;;irls, though they are laying the oundation for a scandal which may

be pounced upon by some heartless,

unprincipled hyena, who, stealthily

sending to some distant paper such

particulars as he can gather, and

adding to the story whatever may

make it sensational, often ruins the characters of these too confiding girls, and brings disgrace upon an otherwise respectable family. The man, or (more properly) brute, that will thus in cold bipod Murder the; reputation of a young girl who has nothing left after, her good name is blasted, deserves the outspoken contempt of all good women and

ought to be spurned by men more especially by men who have young

daughters that are just as liable to be indiscreet as those who have

suffered for such indiscretioo.-Rock-

ville Tribune

I am going to tell a story

tbe first story that in my natural existence I was ever guilty of.

There is a genial, hearty gentleman in the Treasury Department by the name of Swank. Swank is in what

is known as the "Secretary's office." Now Swank sports a wooden leg, a relic of the late war. He covers

that wooden leg so well that no

body would, at a very casual glance,

think it was artificial. Last Saturday Swank and five other compan

ions went up into Virginia to stay over until Monday. They stopped

at a little wayside inn, where they could get good things to .eat and

drink. A lot of tbe natives drop

ped in. lhe owank crowd and the natives got swapping lies, as

men will sometimes do. Being somewhat overcome by the lies of

the natives, one of the Washington crowd, put to his mettle, thu de

clared himself: "You see that

man over there," pointing to

Swank. He can stand anything. He is tougher than a prize-fighter. Nothing can hurt him. Just

watch me" drawing a pocket

knue "plunge this blade into his

log and note that he does not flmcb." The speaker walked up to Swank

with the open knife and gave the

latter a vicious, two-iuch dig. In

jumping np it is related that Swank

took away a whole section of the

shingling on the room. His friend

had prodded him in the natural,

not the artificial leg! Of such

mishaps is life made up.

There are a number of Chinese

women in Denver. The most of

their time is given to the adornment of their persons, which are not rendered very charming by tbe

process. The head is a fright.

Tbe hair is waxed until it is stiff

and shiny. Then it is pulled out a rt . a

in waves and putts over the ears, and caught up in tbe back with a

mass of gaudy wax and paper flow era, together with dangling orna

meats of colored glass and brass,

supposed to be diamonds and solid

gold. No covering is worn on the

bead at any time. The ladies gen

erally carry a parasol, and always appear on the street with an im

mense red or yellow silk handker

chief in one hand. "Whatever

may be said against the Chinese

costume, says a white woman, "it

is certainly a comfortable one.

these Chinese ladies must be more comfortable in their wide, loose

trousers tban American ladies are

in their trained or clinging skirts."

An extreme illustration of the

coramereial value of iron is furnished by Dr. Geo. Woods, of Pitts

burg, who figures that 75 cents

worth of iron ore can be converted into bar iron worth $5: horse

shoes, $10; table knives $180; shirt buttons, $2,900; watch springs, $200,000; hairsprings, $444,000; and pallet arbors, $2,500,000.

Hie-largest part of this increase' of

value is in the labor that has to be put upon the raw material in forming into other shapes. Judge David Davis was not a victim of the drop game. He was makioe a deposit, and stood at the

counter of the bank counting a

Judge,

large roll of greenbacks.

you have dropped a bill

youth said as he took off his hat to the pouderous Judge. There lay a

crisp new $2 note at the Judge's

feet. "I hank you, the Judge said, placiug his heavy foot on the $2 greenback and keeping tight on counting his roll, while the youth levanted. The Atlanta Oontlituiion, speaking of the Mormon propagandists in Georgia, ssys : "No Mormon missionary ever so far forgets

himself as to preach polygamy to

those whom he proposes to convert. On the contrary, the missionaries take pains to assert that polygamy is no longer practiced, ana it is not acti I the girls od young women who are the dupes of the Mormon missionaries reach their journey's and that they discover the trap into wirl'cL thev have ik&r..

Xteal XCstate Vsr:nc'.

Notary Xu.tlla Ponsjloiiaj.

Farms and Town Property bought aod old. Money loaned on Baal Estate at 6 per ont. Five Tears' successful exoeri-

ance in obtaining Pensions. Can hurry

your claim through; blanks always on hand. Blanks for conveyancing, all kinds. Deeds and mortgages, and all writing, promptly and oorreully executed. Good Fire Insurance, cheap. Business solicited. Call and see me. So charge for consulta

tion or advice. O. B. WORK ALL

Attorney, west side square, over McCalla's.

Notice to Sell Real-Eat at). PROBATE CAUSE No. 115. In the Circuit Court af Monroe county, lad. Kov. Term, 1883. Milton Hiicht and Joseph D. Handv.

adminittrntori dc bonis of tbe Estate of John S. Smith Hunter, deceased, vs.,

Ulive u. Hunter, Florence Wbitworth.

John C. Hunter, Lannes H. Beauchamp.

to unve u. Hunter, jrioreace W hitworth, John O. Hunter, Lances H. Beau-

champ.

You are severally hereby notified that the above named petitioners, as administrators of the estate aforesaid, bevo filed in circuit court of Monroe county, Indiana, a petition, making yon defendants thereto, and praying therein for an order and decree of said Court, authorizing the sale of certain Seal JCstate belonging to the estate of said decedent, and in said petition described, to make assets for the payment of the debts and liabilities of said estate ; and that said petition, so Bled and pending, is set for hearing in said circuit court, at the court boose in Bloomingtoa Indiana, on the 13th judicial day of tbe September Term, 1883, of said court, the same being the third day of December, 1883. Witness the clerk an J sea) of said court, this 15th day of October, 1883. seal D. W. BROWNING, Clerk Monroe Circuit Court. Oct. 17-83. Louden A Miers, atty.s.

Commissioner' Stale of Real UstAte. State of Indiana, Monroe Co. si. Robert C. McMichsel, Susan McMiohael, VS. Cora McMichsel, Alice Allen,

Joseph Allen, Clelland V. Dodds, administrator of the estate of Andrew

Dodds.

Notice is hereby Riven that the under

signed, a Commissioner appointed by the

Monroe circuit tJourt at its September term, 1883. to make sale of certain real estate, ia the above entitled cause, will ia

pursuance of said order of said court offer

for sale at public auction, at the Court House door, in Bloomingtoa, Indiana, , on

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1883,

at 1 o'clock P. if- the following described

real estate iu Monroe county and State of

Indiana to-wit : Part of Seminary lot thirty-seven 371 in the city of Bloooiington and bounded as follows to-wit :

Commencing sixty-six 66 feet west of

loa nuruiwii conior w saiu iuv of, running thence West sixty-tix 6t feet, thence south one hundred and thirty two 133 feet, thence Ban sixty-six 66 feet, thence North one hundred and thirty two

f 1321 feet to the place of betfiunine-.

Terms of sale : One-thiid cash, one-

third in six months and one-third in twelve months, purchaser giving his no'.ea for defurred payments with approved surety, drawing interest at six per cent, per annum from dnte of wilo, JOSEPH E. HKNLKY, Cum mission sr. Oct.. 17-83. Bast & East, alty's.

ESTATE OF ALLEN SPARKS, IMS

CEASED. In the Monroe Circuit Court, in the SlatA of Indiana. All creditors, heirs and legatee of said estate, are hereby notified that Ben. F. Adams, Executor of said Estate, has filed bis account and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that tbe same will come up for examination and approval on tbe 24th day of November, 1883, the same being the sixlhjudicinl day of the November term, 1883, of said court, at which time said creditors, heirs and legatees are" required to appear in said

court, in the court house in tbe eity of

Bloomington, and snow cause, u any tnere be, why said account should not be approved. Witness, my name as Executor of the Will of said decedent, the 1st day of November, 1863. BEN. F. ADAMS, nov7-83 Executor. Louden A Mien, attorneys.

Administrator's Sale of JEteal Estate. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the undersigned Administrator of the Estate of Betsey A. Gentry, deceased, will, pursuant to the order of tbe Monroe circuit court, at September Term, 1883, thereof, offur for sale at public auction, on THURSDAY, November 39tb, 1883, on the premises, the following real estate in Bean Blossom township, itonroe county, Indiana, vis : The east half of southeast quarter of section ten, town tea, range two west. And the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section fifteen, same town and range. Also die northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section fourteen, town ten, north range two west. Also, tbe west half of the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section eleven, town tea, north range two west. Tbe said real estate will be sold free from liens. Sale to begin at 1 o'clock f.ii. TERMS OF SALE. One-fourth cash in hand, remainder in equal installments, due iu six, twelve and eighteen months front day of salej the purchaser giving his notes tor deferred payments, with good and acceptable sureties, waiving relief from valuation law, and bearing 8 per cont. interest from date of sale, and attorney foes. DAVID P. BURTON, oct 24 83 Administrator. Mulky & Pittman, attorneys.

sry m wirrrsik enxr

SKUXOOliTKACIXKBS

Administrator's Sale of Real Estate. THE UNDERSIGNED, Administrator of the Estato of Sarah E.May, dewaaad, will, by order of tbe Monroe circuit court, offer for sale at public outcry, on the promises, oh SATURDAY, December 1st, 1883, at 1 o'clock P.M., the fee simple of the following described real esUte, in the Citjof Blooinington, Monroe county, Indiana, U-wit : Part of In-Lot No. 305 three hundred and five, beginning at the southwest corner of said lot, tbenca east 59 feet, thence north 88 feet, thence west r0 feet, tboiice south 86 feet to the place of beginning. TERMS OF SALE. riHA-iliifwl i..h nna.fhir1 in MfT mnntliK.

wwtuiiu v." v .... . and one-third in twelve months, purchns - t : . m .3 l 1 hn.-MAM.

or giving ai noies luruwuuou imjwiwi., at six per cent, interest from date of sale, with approved surety. RICHARD N. DENTON, oct3-l888- Admi&t."ler. liitst 4 Set, Atioraeja.

SEE THE Fine Hall and Library Lamps,

At tne .cee tlive Urocery.

SEE THE

Large Stock of Fine Queensware.

JSee Jttiye Urocery.

SEE THE

Nice Parlor Lamps,

At JJee Wive (J roceryv

SEE THE Fine Chamber Sets, At Bee Hive Grocery.

CHEAP

SEE THE BUY THE Cream Flour, Finest made.

SEE THE

FAMILY FLOUR, 65c

FEB SAGE.

Hurrah for Jumbo Cof

fee. It beats all.

O

HfO & .VMSSISSiPPT

kail av jc 'it ; X

OCT PUBLIC

One-Price, Gas-Lit. Castl 9U$re,

HAS WO CONNECTION WHOTTOro

wun a so-cauea ween uity" uiotL in the Corn SooJn. T

I Don't keep Shi

And dislike to be classed with Ilea

Best Made, in goods, cut or SOLD Jk-rM? half i:

mflRir if AUfl Osaaa Da4ae sfMasia

ww nni a WIIV rilVV WlVW

LS I ' .. a--- i i A at

McPheeters & Shoeml&eir,;

North Side of the Square. VrtrfTt&!!:-

Wholesale unit RetoU JCoIero leP

m

iJ i a a.Wai -

BiU 3itl Msitte HARD W AaRll,

Countv Headquartorb for

Pine aM War Sijles anltolli OOHS. SASH, BLmifel? '.

GLASS, H0THJHTGS, LOCKS, HINGES, NAILS AND

The Early Break

COOKING STOTO

AND THE GRAND OLIVER CHILLED

Are Among Our Specialties.

--"HiKW E3UB aUK

faauawoj

iast-ew

"as: i

A

nw

DRUG

i Solid Daily Trxins (each wsj ) between

CI NCI A If A TI ASV ST. L.U VIS.

Q Solid Daily Trains (ach way) Wwoen

O CISCINaATl AJSV ItVVlSYIlLidlZ.

( Solid Daily Traina (each way) betwoon

fy ST. LOUIS AISU iW VIS ViL.l,l&.

HO Chaag-o of Cars for ANT

Class or Passengers.

First Cltui, Second Clans and Emigrant Passengers, all tarried on Fatt Express Trains, consisting af Palace Sleeping Cars, eleoant Parlor Coaches and comfortable

Day Coaches, all running TUAOUOH

WITHOUT CHANGE, Only 10 Hours Time Between Cincinnati and St. Louis, or SI, Lout and Louisville. But Four Hours 6SBetmcen Cincinnati and Louisville. Tne Ohio A Mlaalaalppl R'wajr is the only Line between St. Xoui sxneJL Oisattlakaaaatl Under one managemsnt, runniag all its trains through "SOLID," and in consaquenca is the only recognised first class route betveea those cities, its Easy Grades, lit Splendid Motive Power, Steel Bail, Straight Trade, and Solid Rood Bed Enable the O. A M. to make faster average time than any other Western Road. 19-Ask for Tickets Tia O. M. R'y.-w For sale by Agents of connecting lines East, West, North and South. V7. W. PEA BODY, Gen'l Sunt. W. B. SJtATTUO, Gen. Pass. Agt. CfNCIITNATI, OHIO.

PETER BOW& haa purchase! M Drutr Store on the West Side of tne S'ttaMivr

North nf Hip flllov. A Nil HAS A 1 lllF.ll IrRRSH KW faflOi"i-'

Cigar, Tobacco, li nfiiiim i j sTiimij .CT.ti and Pure WIhch and lalo;aMn ': : For medical purposes. An experienced druggist hi atteqiaesv V

IVotlce to IVon-Resdettt. State of Indiana, Monroe county, as: Samuel "W. McCune, vs. Andrew S. Oliphant, Elisabeth Oliphant, Ollie Ktulikin and William J. Allan. No. 459. November Term, 1883. Be it known, that an the 30th day of July, 18B3, the above named plaintiff, by Buskirk & Duncan his attorneys, filed ia the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Monroe coifnty, In the Stata of Indiana, bis complaint for Partition against the above named defendants, and on the 2td day ot September, 1883, the said plaintiff filed in said court the affidavit of a competent person, showing that said defendants Andrew S. Oliphant, Elisabeth Oliphant and Ollie Mulliain are aot residents of the State of Indiana. Now therefore, by order of court, said defendants last above named are harebv notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint for partition against them, and that unless they appear and answer or deniurr thereto, at the calling of said cause on the 20th day of November, 1883, the same being the 2d judicial dv of a term of said court, to be begun and held at the Court House in tbe City of Bloomington, on the third Monday in November, 1883, said complaint, and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will be beard and determined ia tbir absence. aaai. D- W. BKOWNINO, Clerk Monroe Circuit Court. Sepl26 33 Buskirk. A Duncan, attys

Resident Dentist.

Dr. J. W.

CRAIN.

Office in tho New Block, up-ftairs, over Co'.s'i Sc Storo. AU wori warranted.

U. J. NICHOLS, ARCHITECT AffD PRACTICAL B VI LOTTO,

Plans and Specifications carefully pre.

DUMIC

El

-r ,

oared tor awoiiine nouses ana pu

building. Also estimates of buildings com

pleted throughout: All work Saiehed

at the time specified. Bloomingtoa, lad., March 31, ISSSv

LIVERY and SALE STABLE. North Side Public Sqnare, Bloomiagtoek mUX undersigned take pleaaata-ia aHX ing attention to tbe fact that they have Tlse Latest Styles of Bsagtrles and Carriages, and good, steady horses fat single and double driving. We are prepared to furnish Carriages for Weddings, Funeral aad Parties, aad swift teams lor Commercial Travelers. Fanners' Borsea

fed cheaply. WOBXBY & MAY.

LEW. H. ADD

Wholesale and

BMks, Carets ataat' - a i. a a 'im

lenr ann ssssi a a-rwr-aus ..

cor. ek-4imlAM

vam ivak Mvwai usm .Araaaa vsajsaa aannawiy BLOOmXCTOBt, . ...

, a. aa book or awaeasaai new fH.fca .t VnMhW'k La

the"

IB AT .

i '' '-

'.ft-:

REPORT

OF THE CONDITION of taa FIRST

NATIONAL BANK, ett ttoomington,

in the State of Indiana, at etasa of easiH

nass, on the zd day or Uctooer, 1883 : aisouaoaa :

Loans and Discounts $215,28 32-

OvcrdrafU 8.94Q 6S U. S. Bonds to secure circula

tion .v.... . 120,000 00

Due from approved Reserve Agents a a aaaa a a 19,343 5 Daa from otherNatioaal Banks 19,365 18 Due from Stata aad Privata Banks and Bankers- SiSSt 8t Keal Batata.......... $2,685 00 Puraitore ft t'iturc2,094 00 Current expanses and Taxes

paid )3S34. Bills of other Banks 13,617 00

Fractional currencvUBcludinet .

Nickels aad cents) 420 Ot

Gold Coin , - 19,000, 00

Silver Coin T 00

Legal tender Notes. 3,200 eti

Redemption fund with U.S. Treasurer (aot marc tban 3 percent-on circulation)....... ' 8,400 SO

Total ........447,40I 69 LIABILITIES.

Capital stock paid in....... $120,000 oo Surplus Fund 19 000 00 Undivided profits-........... 0,587 91

Circulating notes re-

c ved fr m uomp-

trol'r..

aaaaaaaaaa

Individual deposits subject la

cheok I3B,i jo

Demand certificates

of Deposit 58,136 f5

$108,000 00

wa nave wa ttrsajapaasaaaaai mj.;:

rurnuure ia town, ana aaaa jwa '

tar prtcea maa aay aoosa ia unraw aad see as in oar new raeta, wstava

goods, and learn oar-pTliwa'.Ma9saaYMatV

Allan . McNary Bk.

aaaavdaasr

ryv n

mm BinLDinc

And General

shop;

West of LeHefii We make a epeoiaity of

it ah a 1 ci xt iavtf ir rt '

v a Aa BawuMVs.

A Irga aad coaiveaJant, Vafaa Tasal;, : is attached V6 the Shop, wttb apteatjfajk

a. a .

aaoas am sueirs caaw4uV'Saawaaaa.

or aunt oi me aew materials.

luxaatiae n- Faamiata Wa

nlZ-Bl MtLtSIUKsl J

MaaaaaBBaBaaaa aaMaaaBBBBsaaaaBBBBsaBaaaaaaanBaVsaaaa Row Watch m tC' -

ThJaroceaaofauaa3aMiaia' w Jbaaea aWaa. wfta- atajMaaiii

1854, and" taa wriliiaa wl jlaaf$

aaUaiuaaiitekaa'an cava

i.ImiS. saau & ata aaaataaaaaV aaaa aiaa:

easier tltstaaaeanv fir aaiay lisis !JM

315 25 $447,497 09

Due to 8tate and Pri.

vata Banks aad BaDkors..,...,,......, Tatal

Stat a or Indiana, 1

JUon roe uojaty, as. T VV V. WnnJkllrn. (llhl- nf tha

mw-nmmA Raak.dAaalaoanl aanaar that

tha above statement is true, to tha best of

my Itnowieago ann nonei.

Suhinrihiwl and sworn ta bofore me, this

XOlU day of October, 1883.

Notary Public.

. - - MifliSjaa,

. . . ' it T M ."Hr, tCTFfT

bat gTadnaiytaa poooc

Josass JsW'eWi afia Ca.jj Sil'J

tkirreot Attest

cclt7-.183S.

Joxw Wat.tbax, 11 may C. Dckcan, Nat- V. Hu.i,

bet waa aaada of jimiiaa aaK

alaarsfsaaKajraaaltiiclaaia.

adkarenca ta taa 4mmioMt -la

aaataaVanOea casa rr fwlasj

suggested, has aaade taa

Watch Que tha BTAKD.UW.

most aabjaettaaaai ttelaMeiaa.

laaaat mktan,mrnmmmti:

aiaaaSlH aritUtsaMBH-

W-aw

. in to

aiaJ'MlS!!

I.rtsaaaiad ailNa .

ha1' st, ,i

fasBsBaV FSRfr

T ,.-llt-iiHtafliT"a:

"aW.aasDBaiaaaBaaBiafij .

A'