Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 1 February 1890 — Page 2

THE JOURNAL.

PRINTED EVERY SATURDAY. X. U. It, MoCAIN, Editor.

(One Tear, In advance $1.35.

TKRMS:-! Oco Vear, outside county.. 1.35 (.Six Month*, In advance 75

SATURDAY. FEB. 1, 1890.

This

Lafayette Call has increased its

facilities by adding to its establishment a double cylinder Hoe press. The CalJ is on the upward grade.

There will be some line shipbuilding on the lakes this coming summer. At the city of Duluth will be built ten splendid steel steamers of perhaps 3,000 tons burden each, some of them larger. An-dr-'iw Carnt.-jjie's iron works at Pittsburg will furnish the steel for the plates.

The

only race problem there is in the

South is whether the negro shall be allowed to vote and have his vote counted or whether the constitution shall continue to be nullified there by ruffians and habitual law breakers.

The

Supreme Court of Moutana has

settled the muddle in that State,and deoided it in favor of the Republican contestants. According to this deoision the Republicans will have a majority in both branches of the Legislature, which will simplify the Senatorial matter

The

New York Tribune says that farm­

ing by irrigation is certainly the scientific way of carrying on the business, and ventures the opinion that what is now called the arid regions of the United States will some day raise most of the agricultural products of this country.

Remarks

an exchange, in an' unex­

plained spasm of truth-telling: "The editor of a country newspaper will grant more favors for thanks in a month than any other business man in a year. It is a well-established fact that he will receive more all-around cussing in a week than any other man in a life time. That's the reason he's not afraid of hades.'

Newport

Hoosier State: At the dis­

trict convention held at Crawfordsville on Thursday last, W. T. Brush, of that city, was chosen Chairman of the Republican party for this Congressional district. Mr. Brush is a man of good executive ability, well ppsted in political affairs, and a thorough gentleman in every particular. He is Col. R. B. F. Peirce's old law partner.

Mad Bear is a Sioux chief \vfj, recently visited his great father in Washington. While there he had a plain talk with Indian Commissioner Morgan. lie fired whole chunks of wisdom at the commissioner as follows: "You sent us three persons to show us how to farm. They can't talk to us they only make motions with their hands and then go away. We don't know what they mean. If they would plow and sow and raise crops we could see how they did it and learn to farm. We ha,ve boys and half breeds who know how to farm better than the farmers you send to teach us."

A distinguished compliment to American educational systems has been paid by the French government. French scholars have been sent to this country from time to time to examine our public school system, with a view to adopting suitable features into the government schools of France. The reports praised Professor James McAlister, superintendent of the Philadelphia public schools, so highly that the attention of the French government was called to him. Thereupon the University of France conferred on Mr. McAlister the degree of "Ofilcier d'Academic."

If

the free trader will compare notes lie will see a similarity between national and local free trade. The same cause produces the same effect. Here in Crawfordsville we are now suffering from too much free trade. If we produced more and imported less it would be far better for us. Instead of buying nine-tenths of all we handle, we should manufacture that proportion. Every plow, harrow, wagon, in fact every article wo might manufacture at home should be produoed here and thus keep at home the money we are sending away. It works just the same as a national duty and falls upon us just the same.

An association in San Francisco nave found a new and effective way to swear off from swearing. A grocer who himself indulged in a good many profane words in the course of each day suddenly resolved that swearing among his employes had to stop, and he vowed with many a double dash that he would stand it no longer. Thereupon an assistant mildly suggested that the reform should begin with the boss.

The result was finally the formation of the San Francisco Anti-Swearing association. It was joined by many grocers' clerks and others, amounting at length several hundred. At an informal talk at the organization it was decided that each member should pay a nickel every time he said a swear word and that the nickel should be dropped in a slot machine, to be opened once a month. The discussion over the plan was so hot that before it was adopted $1.20 was collected from members of the committee.

The result of this nickel-in-the-slot cure

^torswesuinfl^^ron^ked^rhefito^frMi-

cisco Cnronicle says, that some of the most ferociously profane individuals in that city have become meek as lambs, and are afraid even to say "Good gracious" above their breath.

DREADFUL IF TBUE

Plapucs, reigns of terror, confiscation and dispersion of concentrated wealth, mingled with anarchy, together with all that they necessitate and imply, are certainly leforo this generation, or future generations, during a purifying cycle of appalling horrors and of stupendous proportions. Wait

A man who says ho has been a tramp among tramps, a thug among thugs, a drunkard among drunkards and a dude among dudes, writes in The Chicago Times a paper concluding with the above dolorous proposition.

He says the epidemic of the grippe is what appeared in Europe in 1767, and was called the influenza because people attributed it to the malign influence of the stars. The fact that doctors can do little or nothing against it shows what may be looked for in case the black plague follows the grippe, and this cheerful writer has reason to think it will do so.

When the race deteriorates through generations of bad and unholy living, and its blood becomes very generally vitiated and poisoned, then nature sends a great plague to sweep it from the earth and begin over again. It is now almost time for such a wiping off of the slateour prophet says. Such a clearing up he calls a cyclo of purification.

The black plague first appeared in Europe in .the time of Justinian. It lasted fifty years and carried off nearly 100,000,000 persons. It is sometimes called the black death, and is the most loathsome, fatal and horrible disease on record.

There were four epidemics of the black death in Europe between 1477 and 1771. In Paris there were 40,000 deaths in Moscow 200,000. In Naples there were 800,000 deaths in five months, which may be explained by the fact that Naples will bear more purifying than any other city in Christendom or heathendom. In London, in a population of 460,000, there were 68,596 deaths. Of the 10,000 inhabitants of Halle, 4,397 died.

Our prophet concludes that the blood of civilized peoples is now again about bad enough for another cycle of purification, and that it is bound to come. With what winged speed it will travel when it does come is shown by the progress of the grippe. The prophet says further:« "Epidemics are nature's scavengers."

A COLOBED MAN'S SPEECH.

Rev. W. B. Derrick, a colored man of Washington, has been giving the negro's view of the question of deporting the blacks to Africa or somewhere else. In a speech at a meeting to elect delegates to the colored national convention he said, among other things, this:

Wo are not here for the purpose of applying the torch or drawing the sword. Nor have politics anything to do with my discourse. This is an occasion when the interests of our whole race all over the country demand attention. During my recent visit to the new south, where there are five millions and a half of recently manumitted slaves, I noticed that the ante-bellum spirit, of race prejudice was found to be growing. Why The negro's intelligence and industry was suppressed under slavery. But it is not true that freedom has made him indolent. The crops of all the great staples have enormously increased during the years of free labor.

The negro Is the life blood of the nationV commerce. He produces the cotton that gives thousands employment in New England's spinning mills. Yet Mr. Morgan wants the negro to go. tell you the lumber has not yet been grown in Georgia or Carolina forests that will make the planks for the vessels to boar the negroes away from Aaierica. In three southern states the negroes pay taxes on over $100,000,000 of real estate. This dot's not look as if the negro was lazy and thriftless.

All the negro nsIts is an equal chanco with the white man in the battle of life. lie cannot bo half slavo and half free. The whole trouble arises out of the negro's relations to the white In his new character as a citizen. Ho has not yet had a fair chance. Twenty-flve years is too little a timra for the negro to reach the same plane of advancement as the white race occupies. It took the white race over a thousand years to get there. It is political equality and not social equality the negro aspires to. Social equality is a phantom.

WHAT BEV. HEBEB NEWTON SAYS. Rev. Heber Newton writes a letter to Henry George's Standard in answer to George's criticism that the clergy lack interest in the cause of progress. He says the clergy are just like other people in one respect. They cannot be expected to fight a wrong until they see it. For himself, Mr. Newton says that he does see a good many wrongs, and fights all he has time and strength to. Moreover, he believes with Henry George that the mineral lands of a country should be held as public property, for the benefit of all, and not allowed to fall into individual hands. He advocates, too, the taxing of vacant city lots to their full rental value, and believes the time is ripe and the people are ready for these two changes. He says:

We could sweep the country within half a dozen years upon two points. First, the retention of all mineral resources hereafter to be opened as the property of the people at large. This would secure an enormous public fund for many of the states, whereby their educational system could be developed as never has been done In history, and vast beneficences be wrought for the public good. It would also be the Introduction of the thin end the wedge, in which would be the recognition of the principle ot the right of the people at largo to land, of the wrong of private proprietorship is the purely natural resources of the land. Secondly, the time seems to me ripe for the application of th*t form of the principle which is already coining to the front In England, in the taxation of unused land In our great cities and towns up to their full value, thus to prevent their speculative holding.

If ladies will wear birds upon theii bats, let it be the English sparrow. It can be painted any color desired. In fact the sparrow is thus used, and ia some places taxidermists make a very good thing of preparing the stuffed skin for the hat and bonnet market. Now that the season is over for shooting other birds, country sportsmen and boys are

turning their attention to sparrows, .at Scranton, Pa., they are killed by the boys with air guns. Sparrow trap shooting has also been inanguratrd. Many thousands of the little pests ha re

thus been got rid of. A taxjdermist tlwxe pays the boys two cents apiece for ih« birds, and a spry boy can earn fifty to •cventv cents in a forenoon

A USEFUL LIFE.

Pctci Henderson, market gardener, florist and seedsman, will be universally lamented. The market gardening and floricultur.il interests of this country owed him a debt that cannot be reckoned in words or figures. The man's own life is at once an encouragement to poor boys and an illustration of how our country rewards those who bring to her something really useful.

Peter Henderson was born in Scotland in 1823, a poor country boy, with almost no advantages beyond those which nature gave him. He was early apprenticed to a gardener. Little spare time fell to an old country apprentice in those days, yet the boy used such precious scraps of leisure as came to him in studying botany. Lie studied very carefully and faithfully, illustrating his work as he went along by a herbarium which he himself made. After a year spent in drying, preserving and classifying his plants, the Botanical society of Edinburgh gave him a gold medal for the most scientifically arranged herbarium.

At this time he was oniy 17. From that time on he took a prominent part in gardening societies in Scotland. He denounced in the severest terms the practice among gardeners of keeping their processes a secret. He believed if anything in horticulture wj»a good, all the world should know of it. He certainly practiced what he preached in this respect, for when in America in after years he himself came to write books on gardening, he made the directions so plain that the veriest city novice could take one of them and, by closely following the printed page, could cultivate successfully all ordinary flowers and vegetables.

When ho was 20, Peter Henderson came to America, He had no capital at all. But ho worked for gardeners and florists, a common laborer—no, a very uncommon laborer—and saved his money. In four years ho 6ct up as market gardener for himself.

Gradually the business of florist wat added, then that of seedsman. At the time of his death Peter Henderson's greenhouses alone covered five acres in Jersey City and kept busy 100 men. He had much property besides, for he was a shrewd business investor. The Scotch gardener'c 'prentice lad had become in America a very wealthy man. He wat never "set in his ways," but ever 6n tht lookout for improved methods of! work and culture. As fast as he came in possession of information he gave it tc others, in his books and elsewhere. Sc it came about that he was always learning, always teaching.

When the Jersey City bank, of wliict Mr. Henderson was one of the founders, failed through mismanagement, he war one of three men who made up the loss to depositors out of their own pockets. He was always interested warmly ir publio enterprises and always ready tc help. He was 06 years old when he died, and until his late sickness had never beec ill a day in his life.

Once more the Russian government has waked up to the fact that Nihilism is not dead, and the czar has closed the university at Odessa because of revolutionary doctrines among the students. Closing school houses is a poor way to suppress Nihilism. It is a great deal better to open than to shut them, even if the object is to suppress Nihilism. Bismarck has tried for eleven years to stamp out the Socialists in Germany. The repressive law against their public and private utterances has been in operation that long. Yet, the other day in the German reichstag, Liebknecht, leader of the Socialists, declared that that party was stronger in Germany than it had ever been before, and ho brought forward facts to prove it. Bismarck himself formed his favorite scheme of insurance for workingmen to propitiate the Socialists, who, however, did not bite at the bait.

Orphans' Home Annual Meeting. The annual meeting of the Montgomery County Orphans' Home Association will be held at the residence of Y. Q. Irwin, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 1890. All interested in the work of the Home are invited to be present.

Jos.

1

Milligan,

Pres.

Solicitors Wanted.

Energetic ladies and gentlemen needing employment can find something to their advantage bv calling on A. Abbott at the Edwards House, Crawfordsville, Ind., during this week. Salary ranging from $52, $62}, to $75 per month. Call at once.

In Its treatment of rheumatism and all rheumatic troubles, Hibbard's Rheumatio Syrup stands first and foremost above all others. Read their medical pamphlet and learn of the great medicinal value of the remedies which enter into Its composition. For sale and highly recommended by Mofifett, Morgan fc Co

Heart Disease.

If you get short of breath, have flutter ing, pain In side, faint or hungi spells swoolen ankles, etc., you have heart disease, and don't fall to take Dr. Miles New Cure. Sold at Nye fc Co's drug store

ChildrinXry forJPitche^CistorW

A DIVIDED CHURCH.

JL Radical Speech in the New York Presbytery.

DR. VINCENTS IDEAS OF A CHAXGE.

A. New Statoin "lit of I'.t'Hef Dfimmdnd— Ho Takos

1 shm*

witii Sume of

ht.

l'auiVs liiK-triiU'S'-C.ilVinisui Out o( l:Ho.

STII.I. PISr iTSSlNO HEV1SIOX. New \o]!k, ,lan. 2'.).—At la.se the radical men in the presbytery of New York have come -'at fairly in favor of anew creed. They have denounced the old confession in unsparing terms during the last ten days, but have denied until now that they have desired to shelve the work of the Westminster divines. In an able speech, carefully prepared and slowly read, Prof. Marvin R. Vincent on Tuesday used words which are considered revolutionary by many members of the presbytery. Ho is a professor in the Union Theological Seminary and a colleague of Dr. Briggs. For many years he was the pastor of the Church of the Covenant. His scholarship and theological soundness* have never been questioned. As an author, instructor and preacher ho has few equals in the presbytery or in the general assembly. Consequently his startling address has additional force.

In the work of the church, he said, the confession of faith had held no place for a long time. To many of the members of the church it was unknown. He claimed that it called forth strong expressions of disapproval from influential quarters of the church. In his opinion the church was ahead of the confession of faith in aggressiveness and in carrying out the Master's commission. Ha said that the confession was not adapted to modern times. God's word was intended for all ages, and not for one period of time.

He said that, with all the respect he had for Augustine and Calvin, the seventecth century oould not fix inexorably tho forms and limitations of the nineteenth century. There were important features in which tho confession did not represent several important features of the creed. The doctrine that men and angels were preordained to everlasting death was repudiated by Dr. Vincent. He admitted that God had a right to make a Hindoo or a Tartar of him, but denied that He had any right of arbitrary power to condemn him to eternal torment in hell. He declined to accept Paul's interpretation that he was a lump of clay in the potter's hands, or that ho could be made into a vessel to serve base uses. "Why should wo accept the works of Calvin?" he asked. "To perpetuate his name, simply? Who was he? Was he cruciflod for us? Was it in him we were baptized?" Ho said: "My brethren, we have been urged to hold by the confession ae It Is for fear of creating divisions. Why, Is It postible that It Is not recognized that division Is already a faotj The Presbyterian ohurch in these fast months has traversed a space which separates her forever from what she was before the last general assembly. Not that the same differences of opinion did not exist then as now, but these differences have been formulated. Numerous presbyteries have declared their opinion that a revision of the confession la demanded, and numerous Individuals, ministers and laymen, have expressed unequivocally their disbelief in certain articles of the confession and the division is on record. We are no longer a united church before the world. We are confessedly disagreed as to the articles of faith. I submit that this fact will not suffer us to go backward. It is demonstrated that we can not agree on the confession as it is. To go back and reaffirm the confession is not going to fill up that gap."

Rev. R. IX Harlan, a son of Justioe Harlan, of Washington, spoke in favor of revision, and Prof. Popton, of Princeton, Rev. J. J. Lampre, and an older defended tho old creed.

TnE WESTMINSTER ASSEMBLY.

Presbyterianism, as a denomination, may b« said to date from 1560. As an organization it was formed in Scotland at that time. In another and more strictly germinal sense this church was born at Geneva, John Calvin, rpther than John Knox, being its father. CM course, the doctrines set forth by Calvin were by no means now. Ho was a disciple of Augustine and Athanasius, and, like them, adhered closely to what thoy and he thought was the theology of St. Paul.

The Presbyterian creed, which is now under domestic lire, is the statement of doctrine and rule of practice agreed upon by the famous Westminster assembly, which convened in London in 1043 by order of the British Parliament.

Tho Westminster confession of faith was drawn up by a committee of that general assembly appointed August 80, 1644. Nearly a year later a sub-committee was appointed to complete tho report, wl 1cb was submitted tu July of 1646, but owing to the thoroughness o» tho discussion which followed It was not until December that thi}'assembly was ready to submit it to Parliament. Tho next year tho Church of Scotland approved the report. It should be added here that Scotch commissioners were invited to participate In the formation of the proceedings, and did so, thus making the creed about equally the product of English and Scotoh Presbyterians. In 1648 the Scotch Parliament ratified it, under the title of "Articles of Christian Religion." The English Parliament made a few unimportant changes, and then adopted it, but this English adoption mattered little. Tho restoration soon came, and with it Episcopacy regained the place briefly wrested from it by Presbyterianism. Scotland, on the contrary, clung, and still clings, the faith and polity of the Westminster assembly.

The Westminster assembly held many see* slons after the work which made it famous had been completed. It may be said to have been the third estate under tho Parliament which gave it birth. The last recorded session was held March 25,1653.

JftADFIELHS FEMALE. REGULATOR

JtOOK TO^OMAN "jmprstK BSADUEID REBUUpm^AnANTA

,. Sold by Nye & Co.

NAMES OF OWNERS.

Arnold, MalindaC Bias, Elijah Burk, Salome Britton, William Beck, Angeline W

Do

Butcher, Emma Do Bank, First National Bell. WyleyG Beaty, Lewis A

Do Do

McGrlgg, Willis Do McCarty, Edward O'Connor, F,dwarl..

for Infants and Children.

"Castorla is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me." H. A. Ascnxa, £1. D.,

HI So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y.

100 406

Do

Carr, W

Graham, Jas and N Gllliiand, Jacob Gipson, Lemuel

Hardabeck, Harmon

1002 1605 172

Do

O'Connor, Catharine Pine, David Do Pearson, Mary E Paxton, Ashley Pattlson, Loren Peak. Joseph and Samuel and Ann Hawkins Porter, Ianthlas and

1730 170

Do

Ramsey, Mary E Royalty. Mary Riley, Mary ,1r Richmond, Mary E Reynolds, Austin

Do Do

Robb, Ellen Ray. S.vVvester Roliinson, Clias a Sullivan, Daniel Smith, Samuel Smith, Samuel et al

Do

Slattery, Mary Slattery. Thomas Sharpe, Granville W Seaman, Frances E Stephens, John and

old piat..!'.! .""'"."' Blair & Houston's Do Part hf qr Eliza Paxton's add.... & Cou add

1774 17 1781

1783.

Elizabeth Parker, Sarah Qulnlen, Catharine

2042 2043 2056 206

Margaret

2078 2080 230 2309

Sneed.jSIdney A Vance, RobertJJ Vanco, Isaac

Williams, Zauk Williams, Williams, Maria

2354 2356 2360

Do Do

Wllhito, Isabella A Williamson, Geo W Wiseliart, David Wilcox, Amelia Wade, Isaac Walker. Adam

Do

Wolfe, Marlon Do Do

fit

2427

Do

White, LauraE Wright, Jam Wright, Marcus Wray. S

Montgomery County,

at

9

Castorla cures Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, DiarrhCBa, Eructation. Trniq Worms, gives sleep, and promotes dlpestion, I Without injurious modi cation. The Centaur Company, 77 Murray Street, N. Y.

THE DELINQUENT TAX LIST

-OF THE-

CITY OF CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA.

List of lands and lots returned delinquent for the non-paymentof taxes due thereon for the year 1888 and previous years, together with taxes of 1880, situated In tho city of Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, State of Indiana. If said taxes for 1888 and formor years be not paid before tho second Monday in February, 1890, the whole or so much of said lots and tracts of lands as may bo necessary to discharge tho taxes, penalty and charges which may be due thereon, or from tho owner thoreof on the day of sale, will be sold at public auctlou at the court house door iu the city of Crawfordsville, in said county of Montgomery, on tho second Monday In February, 1890. Sale to commence at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day and continue from day to day until all the lots and tracts of land have Deeu offored for 6ale as aforesaid.

DESCRIPTION OI LANDS AND LOTS.

18 80 93

Part Sect Graham & Houston's hf Wm Dunn's add pt Canby's add Part Sect Mary Jones' add Naylor's add pt

101 115

117

101 106 1

Do

Bratton, Wl'llam Banister, Elizabeth Bowon. Clara, Arthur and WalterCarroll, Julia

Do

Old Plat

Do

45'

Do

Devine, David Doherty, Laura Krorlght, Simon Foust, Elizabeth

Do

Williamson's add Do Old Plat pt Canby's add ME Elston's 2nd add Scliultz & Reynolds' add

030 039 744 805

854 801 806

Do

Gerard, Mary Do Hays. Cathwine Hartpence, Mary Hanna, Geo.

Do

Do

Graham & Houston's add & Con add Grahrm & Houstou'sadd, shf

870

Do

John Wilson's add, O pt Do Old Plat hf Canby's add Powers' add

073 088 990

997

Houlehan, Patrick Hazelton, Elizabeth Harris. Mary A Hall, Joseph

Do

Hawkins, Ann and Jos and Samuel Peak Johnson, Beuajah

Do

Jordon. Anna Jones, Margaret Kelly, Michael Kepler, George and Mary Kepler, Joseph A Long, Mary. t)o Martin, Jas A

Do

Cellege add O pt

1022

». Via" "i*i»t .V" 11" 1" I! 11" Part Sect Old Plat ehf S & Park add..

1041 1042 1051

1052 1190

1200 1200 1257 1277 1278

Bowen's add

Thompson's Hillside add Do pt Whitlock's add Blair & Houston's pt Part Sect Hanna's add pt & Con add Old Plat pt

130'

Do

Mulllkln, John Mahonoy, Kate

1401 1420

Morjran, Nathaniel. Intrust for Sarah Harwood Mitchell. Chauncey Moore, Dora

1432 14551 1465

S

OS I Ci 32

3

32

Parts qr Part Sect Jacob Hughes Jacob Hughes' 2nd add Part qr

182 190

gti

O 3

19

.21

1 93 7 11 54 93 61 10

6

167 16

19

Do pt

.32

18 89

4 08 5 27 8 39

.10 .16

6 03 5 49 2 04

18

Thompson's Hillside add....pt McClel & Con add

.41

19 5 6

137 138 1

208 51

25 28

77 0 31 °l

7 45

25 50 45 73 8 53

10

22 39 53 85 5 84

15 38! 6i 8

39 72

59

9 98

74 67 45 74

10

23 12 28

110 13 1 59

18

32

10**00 27 07 10 72

19

Do hf

Hughes' add Wolfe's add Do Canine's add pt Graham & Houston's

136 26 27

7 20

29 1

2 33

17 7 3 20 37 13 28

31

Part Sect Wabash College add.. W Elston's add

4 37

15 56 8 44 18 63 4 46 3 05

37 01

19

""5 6 141

31

35 09 11 70 8 82

19

Do Do

E Elston's 1st Do Old Plat Part Sect

Do

1851 1801 1809 1872 187'

Part Sect & Con add Whitlock's add Part qrn qr

Blair's add

1878 1883 1892 1974 1985 1980

Do

Smith, Lctltla et al Do Smith, Ada

.12

,....pt

28 1 11 15j... 13 14 59

Pt

.s

hf

lt

JJJughes' 2nd add....

1787 1790 1832

Brown & Blair's add II & Con W Elston's 1st add

31

Do Do hf

W Elston's 2nd add Brown & White's add1 Mary Jones' add Blair & Houston's 1st add Coon & McMullcn's add .....

Do Do

1994

Do

Smith, Myrlck S Shean Ann Scott. Laura A Scott, Flora Simpson, Seller..!as and I.uara Slattory, Patrick jr

Graham's add Do ME Elston's 2nd add Pld Plat .V,t Part Sect Old Plat

1999

2004 2014 2019 2022 2027 2038 2041

Pt

Part. Sect Mills' add pt Brown & Blair's add pt John Willson's add O pt Blair & Houston's 2nd add. Jas Heaton's add McCW & Con add Old Plat pt Part hf qr Old Plat, N end

ME Elston's 2nd add... S S Thomson's add Powers' add art Sec

-Pt

31

Do

Part Sect Graham & Houston's add Wolfe's add

2443 2440 2448 2437

STATE OF INDIANA,

Do

N A Dunn's Hrs 1st add John Willson's add O pt Do pt Brown & White's add

Us:

if.)

John K. Bonnell, Treasurer of the City of Crawfordsville. Indiana, hereby certify, that the foregoing is a correct list of the lands and lots returned delinquent for the year 1888 and former years, together with the ourrent taxes of 1889, as they appear on the Tax Duplicate i*k i?i* wL

the same are severally oharged with the amount of taxes, interest and costs

with which thev stand charged on said list. .. Given under my hand and seal at Crawfordsville this 13th day of January, A. D. 1889. JOHN K. BONNELL,

STATE OF INDIANA, MONTGOMERY COUNTY,

City op

19 14

6 21

6 16

31 05

.14

42 83 8 15

14'

6 47

18

6.57

3

43 13 7 22 25 95

10

30

11 19

13 09 14 15

4 70

11 56

19

.14

I

8 28

19 8S 34 37 10 37 6 18

11 11

18

.28

"4

5 6 8

4 71 1 08 1 95 8 03 7 04 9 96

39 14 2 3 1

26 04

12 13 16

37 08

158

.16

9 73

27 92 26 79 23 94 1 58 3 52 08 25

11

".26

'ii 10

29 5 18

18

29 83 19 28 17 07 18 00 7 17

132

32

19

2,90

55

3 53 9 86 2 93

19

Part hf qr ME Elston's 2nd add hf it ehf neqr

E Elston's 1st add Do Canby's add ME Elston's 2nd add Mary Jones' add hf College add O pt Willson's add hf Wm McClelland's add

2369 2372 2385 2386 2389 2391

2.50

97 77

.40

15 57 5 27

".10

14 70 20 37 3 54 15 30 7 92 29 07

3 71

18

1.30

8 66

28 53 22 24 4 62 1 79

38

Treasurer of the City of Crawfordsville.

Iss:

CBAwronDBVii.iiE1.)

Ifted H. Sheet*, hereby certify that the foregoing Is a true and porrect list of the Land 1 and Lots returned delinquent bv the City Treasurer for the non-payment of the taxes of 1888 and former years. ...Witness my hand andofficlal seal this 13th day of January, 1800.

FRED H. SHEBTZ,

Clerk of the City of Crawfordsvill