Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 23 March 1894 — Page 4
WEEKLY JOUE: AL.
PRINTED EVERY FRIDAY MORN^-'l
E O 1 O
T. H. B. McCAIN, President. J. A. GREENE, Secretary. A. A. McCAIN, TreuMirrr.
WEEKLY—
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DA1LY-
One year in advance 15.00 Six months. 2.50 Three months 1.2f Per week dellveredorbvmn.il 10
Payable In advance. Sample copies free. Bntered at the Postomee at Craw lordsville
Indiana, as second-class matter,
FKI DAY. MARCH 2.1,lS i4
1IKA I'l N(i Till WllIliMVIM). The Democrats are now reaping1 what they have .sown. At the last election they cast a drag-net for every disgruntled and dissatisfied man in the country. Whatsoever he wanted, they promised that he should have it. If lie wanted silver, they said he should have his pockets full. If he said "down with national hanks," they said down them and emphasized it with a d—n. If lie wanted a bank of issue at every cross road, they promised him all lie wanted. A large element in Illinois and Wisconsin wanted the public schools abolished, and they said the ''little red school house" must go. The laboring man said he was crushed tinder the heel of the capitalist, and they .said '"we will fix the capitalist.'7 If a man wanted to strut through Europe and buy a few trinkets without having to pay duty, they said you can do so. And .so they came to the "cave of Adallam" into which went "everyone that was in distress, everyone that \VM in debt, and everyone that was discontented,'' gathering themselves under the leadership of the ablest spirits of this variegated party, and now behold the result. There is such a thing as scaring up more snakes "than you can kill. It may be fun to stir up a cage of rattlers, and hear them hiss, but it is quite a different thing when you have them in the parlor. The Democratic party in 1S92 sowed the wind in the way of promises.
It is now reaping the whirlwind in the way of performancss.
VI THK New York Tribune in discussing religious revivals says that religion still continues to hold a large place in the thoughts of many people. The same old appeals that revivalist have found so potent in theopast are still effective. and the experiences of men who have been rescued from degradation and death by the story of the
Cro.ss have lost none of their old-time fascination. Hut, says the Tribune. there are Christians to-day. and they are rapidly increasing in number, who accept and follow the ethical elements s,of Christianity. and who are positively repelled by the perfervid appeals of the revivalist.
THK years of material growth and prosperity of the United States of America during the era of Republican ascendency, from 1801 to 1892 has never been equalled in the history of the ."world. People from all nations have been flocking to this highly favored country, attracted by its free and liberal institutions and unexampled prosperity. The years of Democratic rule have been years of ruin and of destruction, and the result attained at the Presidential election of 18«.i2 was caused ^'.y 25 years of falsehood in campaigning. and of unfair and specious arguments.
,, (iiiosvKxoii made a point on linloe that penetrated deeply, when he showed with all that gentleman' prating about yearning for economy, he had introduced no less than 72 bills to lavishly reimburse .Southern gentlemen who had their chicken coops robbed or their fence rails burned by the Lincoln soldiery. One bill of EnJoe's proposed to take .$(8,000.000 out of •.the Treasury to pay back the cotton tax.
IK it is true, as is stated by the Washington correspondent of the Indianapolis Sentinel, that the House will not accept the tariff bill unless sugar, coal and iron ore placed on the free list, then it can safely be said that no bill will pass during this session. On the tariff question the Democratic party is a party of variegated colors.
ONE of the provisions of the income tax measure is that salaries due to State, county or municipal officers shall not be subject to such tax. If this is not class legislation will some Democratic newspaper please give the meaning of class legislation?"
THK St. Louis Glihe-Democrt1 thinks that Col. Hreckinridge should have imitated that other distinguished Democrat who told the truth about a similar scrape.
THK Indianapolis Sentinel wades into the tariff bill as reported to the Senate through blood up to its bridle bits.
THK Sugar and Whisky Trusts permitted the tariff bill to be reported to the Senate Tuesday.
THK trusts seem to be in the Democratic saddle.
^71
sKNATOH VOOIilllil'S AXI) Till STS. The Indianapolis Sentinel is not happy over the situation in the Senate. The roasting that it gives Senator Voorheos would do credit that gentleman's most implacable political enemies. In fact anything that a Republican could say of him would pale into insignificance as compared with what, tho Sentinel says. In the course of a most bitter attack" on the senior Senator yesterday, it says:
There-is a widespread belief anion Democrats that Mr. Crawford Fairbanks and his associates have had more influence with Mr. Voorhees than the masses of the Democratic party have had. There is a deep-rooted suspicion that the extension of time for paying ing taxes granted to the whisky trust by the Senate sub-commit-tee's report was due to Mr. Yoorliees. and that this concession to the whisky trust was secured by concessions to other trusts. It may not be true but the charge has been openly made by Republican papers. It cannot be answered by denial. Nothing but proof positive will suffice to meet it, and Mr. Voorhees is the only person who can furnish that proof. If that concession to the whisky trust and the concessions to other trusts go out of the bill, or if Mr. Voorhees makes an earnest, open fight to put them out, and failing to do so fixes the responsibifity for them on others, the proof will be made. It is plain to certainty that nothing less than that will suffice. The whole matter is in the hands of Mr. Voorhees. lie may do as he sees fit. but we assure him that the people of Indiana have been brought to a state of exasperation by the action of the senate committee on the tariff question, that the very suspicion of disloyalty will be enough to defeat any man. The feeling is intensely bitter.
THK Democratic members of the Senate Finance Committee will present to the Senate to-day their completed work on the tariff bill. It is understood that the bill is so amendod as to make positive declaration for the abrogation of the reciprocity treaties under the McKinley law. Under these reciprocity treaties new markets of great importance were opened for our agricultural products. The most accurate statistical reports as to the value of this new market covers the period ending September .')(), 1892. This shows an increase of $20,772,021 in the total value of our domestic cAports to all the countries with which reciprocity treaties have been made as compared with the corresponding prior period. This increase of exports consisted mainly of wheat, flour, meat, dairy products, bacon, hams, lard, iron and steel and lumber. The increase in value of our domestic exports to (lennany and Austrillungary, amounting to §10.319,000, was accompanied by a decrease in the value of our imports from those countries of nearly §9.000,000. This increase in the balance of trade in our favor is an eloquent fact.
DI-.SPI I the assertion of the Chicago platform, there is no class legislation in the McKinley tariff. In that measure all wealth producers and all parts of the country have the benefits of a just application of the protective principle. This has always been the policy of the Republican party. It has perceived and acknowledged the equal rights of the wool grower and of other producers of raw materials with those of the manufacturers. It has protected and encouraged Southern industries, while the whole force -of Southern influence has been exerted for their destruction. It stood by the Louisiana sugar planters while the planters made war upon their own business and the general business of the country: and when the duties were removed from sugar, the Republican party actually gave to these enemies of the protective system compensation in the shape of a bounty. The Republican party in this matter has sacrificed everything to its convictions with respect to the needs of American industry. The Democratic party has no principles and no convictions. It is governed by sectional feeling- and an irresistible propensity to destruction.
COI.OXKI. UHKCKI.NUIDGK it is presumed. is now telling his side of the story of his infamy on the witness stand. Everybody is prepared for any development from the dark and nether side of humanity in this case, that grows worse day by day in every new aspect presented, until already, as "l-\ 1). M," puts it. only the witches' chant will fit it: "Fillet of a l'enny snake.
In the cauldron boil and hake Eye of newt and toe of frog. Wool of bat, and tongue of dog. Adder's fork, and blind worm's sting Lizard's leg and owlet's wing. For a charm of powerful trouble. Like a hell broth boil and bubble. Double, double, toil and trouble, Fire burn and cauldron bubble.
TIIK Chicago platform pledged the Democratic party to remove the burdens of taxation from the people and denounced the tariff as unconstitutional. The Wilson bill as amended by the Senate, if it becomes a law, will place a burden of from §35,000,000 to to §40,000,000 a year on the people in excess of the burdens of the bounty system that exists under the McKinley law. The Sugar Trust has the people by the throat under a iDemocratic administration. Such are some of the beauties of tariff reform.
ANOTHER revival is booked for the near future. If this keeps on there wont be a sinner left in the town by 1895.
A MODKI, MAYOR.
MAVOK DKNNY, of Indianapolis, is giving that city a model administration. .Hardly a day passes that the. papers do not note some effort of the police to make the saloon keepers and gamblers toe the legal mark. Mr. Denny argues, and most correctly, that he was elected to enforce the laws, all of them, not a part.. Fortunately the charter of Indianapolis places all the responsibility as well as the power, with the mayor. In Crnwl'ordsville and most of Indiana's smaller cities the power, and consequently the responsibility, is divided. 'The mayor has to depend on the marshal for the enforcement of the law, but the marshal being elected instead of appointed is responsible to no one but the people and with a sure thing for four years, is liable to do just as he pleases. The policemen in turn are not responsible to the marshal or mayor but to the police board. This body is composed of four men and consequently no one of the four feels his responsibility very heavily. True the mayor appoints the board, but he is limited in his choice to six men, so if his board does not carry out his wishes he has no chance to make much of a change. In fact between mayor, marshal, police board and policemen it is difficult to locate the responsibility. The next legislature might well pass a law giving to small cities a charter modeled on that of Indianapolis but simplified to meet the needs of smaller places.
A HILL TO MAKE liKI'l'lll.ICANS. The sew York Sun, like the Indianapolis Sentinel, is wading through blood up to its bridle bits in its denunciation of the tariff bill. I'nderthe title "The Bill to Make Republicans," it proceeds in the following vigorous fashion:
Although not yet, thank heaven! a law, it is already working. It is already making Republicans out of Democrats by the thousands, the tens of thousands, the hundreds of thousands.
Wherever the people get a chance to vote the wonderful efficiency of the proposed bill to make Republicans of Demociats, even in advance of its enactment, is demonstrated by actual results. llow do Democrats like the prospect? Are they anxious to see the measure in operation on full time and with full horse power, income-tax attachment and all, using the Democracy of the United States as a raw material, and turning out Republicans by the million as a finished product?
And all for the sake of "tariff reform," meaning by that phrase not any honest and definite and consistent reform of the tariff according to any intelligent principle, but a vague and mendacious Something, no matter what, which shall enable cuckoodom to hail the completion and consummation of the great enterprise begun by (.}rover Cleveland and the mugwumps in 1887!
Who is the Democrat in the Senate that will stand up and tell the truth about the Bill to Make Republicans?
OXK year ago hogs were worth §7.10. cattle 84.50, sheep $5 per cu t., wheat 05 cents per bushel, corn 35 cents.-
THK .Xew York Sun calls the tariff bill proposed by the Democrats "a bill to make Republicans."
l.AI'l-A.M).
.lames Slirader was here last week. Billy Heath has moved to Putnam county.
Wm. Day. of New Market, was here last week. Miss Eva Service visited Miss Anna Davis last Monday.
John Burgess has put a picket fence around his gardeh. Mrs. Mary Hicks visited Aunt Betsy Hicks last Sunday. llam Williams and wife, of Raccoon, visited their son A1 on Monday night.
Manning Vancleave has improved his farm by putting" up some wire fence along the road.
Wm. Davis and Lambert Smith attended Masonic lodge at Russellville on Tuesday night.
Aunt Nancy .Johnson and Frank Coulter visited Mrs. Sally Swindler one day last week.
Walter Lawson, of Kentucky, has been visiting I'ncle .Johnny Burgess and other relatives.
The F.M.B.A. lodge here will put up a blacksmith shop soon, and then they will want a blacksmith. .John L. Davis, our next County Commissioner, took dinner with Wm. Davis one day this week.
David Hicks and wife were called to Crawfordsville on Monday by the death of their son-in-law.
Mrs. Rose llogclin is visiting" her aunt. .lose Hester, and other relatives in this vicinity this week.
Word has been received at Parkersburg that Gear A. Gardner died last Sunday at a town in the West.
The G. A. R. post at Parkersburg is talking of going to the encampment at Lafayette in' a special car that will start from Ladoga on April 4.
Lambert Smith last Sring took about seventy rods of barb wire and broke the stalks in his wheat. Several others will do the same thing this year.
If the County Commissioners want to study the interests of the county let them put up good iron bridges and not wooden ones that must be replaced every few years.
Rev. Asliby filled his appointment at Parkersburg on Sunday morning, but owing to the New Market protracted meeting he did not preach at night or on Saturday night.
Lambert Smith says the Democrats area little scarce now, but then he says they are like hogs—can raise plenty of them in two years. We hope his prophecy will be like that of Hicks for March—slightly missing the mark.
James Brush come here after a rooster, and tying both legs together put it under the buggy seat and started for his home in New Market. When he got home and reached for the fowl it was gone and has not been found.
We ive no exhorbitant rent to pay
And sell at Bottom Figures
YOUNTSVILLE.
Fishing is in order every night. Chas. Ayers was in town Sunday. Carlton Snyder was in Plainfield the first of the week.
Robert Stubbins is the proud father of a girl baby at his home. Miss Rose Beal is teaching some of the boys how to handle a guitar.
The township institute was a decided success at this place last Saturday. Mrs. Willie Walters, of Lafayette, is spending a few days with home folks.
Mrs. Ella Connaliay, of Francisville. ville. is visiting her sister at this place. Walter Whittington attended institute here Saturday from Brown township.
Several from here have been attending the revival meetings at Crawfordsville.
Doctor Webb lias purchased him a horse and buggy and is now ready to attend calls.
Geo. Lawton and family are now occupying thir new house in the west end of town.
There were eighteen pupils on examination for graduation from this township last Saturday.
A.J. Love is home from the southern part of the State, where he has been spending a few week.
Mr. .Johnson for treasurer, and Mr. Wasson for auditor, were here looking after political fences on Tuesday.
The mite society at Andrew Yount's was well attended and a fine time was had. Mr. Yount furnished the supper.
Those parties that kick the hardest on set up delegations are the first to up a delegation if they get the opportunity.
The Republicans of this township, will put up a first class man for township trustee. Think we have got them on the -run.
The patrons of the Yountsville portoffice will have to give the Democratic postmaster credit for keeping things in a clean condition.
The Yount Woolen Mills Company are making general repairs on one of the buildings since they have received their new machinery.
Rev. A. G. Yount has notified his many friends of the arrival of a girl baby at his house on the 11th, named Agnes Ramsey Yount.
We predict that the secret organization that dabbled with politics will die a very quick death. We hear of some that are working in that line in this section.
There would have been several houses built here this spring if lots could have been bought at reasonable figures, but the high prices will scare them away to other towns.
There will be a grand entertainment at the Yountsville hall Saturday night. Mar. 24. for the benefit of the M. E. church. Refreshments will be served in the lower rooms. ,,, Adraision 15 cents.
The ladies of this place served dinner at the school building for the benefit of trustee, teachers and the pupils on examination last Saturday. Seventyfive persons were fed. A vote of thanks was tendered to the the ladies.
The laugh is on the Democrats of this township in the selection of James B. Elmore as township committeeman for the county. He remarked only a short time ago that he had voted his last Democratic ticket aud more recently that there was going to be hell raised in old Ripley. This is the same Jim that told the people two years ago that he wanted to go to the legislature in order to help adjust the tariff. We feel much relieved to know that he has broken into other political pastures aside from the Republican party just at this time.
KLHIJALE.
Charley Vancleave. has the lung fever. Henry Vancleave is ditching for Carlton Moore.
Dave I'atton called on his son George at Round Ilill Tuesday. Miss Abbott has taken up her residence in Elmdale again.
James Coons, of Crawfordsville, is visiting friends and relatives here. Miss Edna Patton has gone to Waveland to see her mother who is sick.
Johnny Vancleave is building" a kitchen for Joe Henry near Wingate. Meeting closed at the chapel Sunday night with five additions to the church.
Four more weeks of school. Several of the scholars are getting tired and quitting.
Jake Surface and family were the guests of Hal Davis and family Saturday night and Sunday.
Lizzie Grubbs and family attended the funeral of her father, John Lewellen, at Balliinch. on the 10th.
This has been the finest spring for sowing oats we have had and the people are all about done sowing.
Joe Swank and wife attended the Old School Baptist meeting at Indian Creek church, south of New Market, last Stinday.
Ralph Vancleave and wife attended the funeral of John Llewellen at Balhinch last Friday. Fathei Ports, of Waynetown, officiated.
Fry Thomas said that last Saturday night while on their way from meeting
In Spite of All Competition
WE STILL CONTINUE TO DO THE BUSINESS IN
Clothing and Hats
some one shot through the house and came very near hitting- him in the back.
The Herman Utterback land has been divided and Joe Bowers' wife got forty-four acres with the house and barn, and he moved onto it last Wednesday. He bought thirty-five acres of Forg Mclntyre.
One night last week as Clint Thomas was coming from church he was held up by some one in a buggy who told him to throw up his hands and at the same time struck at nim with a razor, cutting through his clothes and scratching his breast. Clint knocked him back in the ditch and ran for his life.
GALLFIKD.
Mrs. Vangundy is still on the sick list. Born, to Samuel Johnson and wife Monday night, a boy.
Several from Gravelly Run attended church here last Sunday. Rev. Wainscott has moved on Jerry Mote's place southeast of here.
A part of the lumber is on the ground jor the new house that will go up soon at this place.
Joseph .Johnson, of Gravelly Run, and sister, of Thorntown, spent last Tuesday at S. P. Vangundy's.
(.'rand Easter Excursion.
The Big Four Route will run a grand Easter excursion to Indianapolis on Thursday, March 22, at very low rates. Tickets good on all regular trains. Returning tickets will be good on all regular trains until March 23, inclusive. For tickets and full information call on G. E. ROHINSON,
Agent Big Four Route. Crawfordsville, Ind.
INDIANAPOLIS MARKETS.
The Live Stock Ularket. INDIANAPOLIS, March 22.
CATTLE—Receipts light. Shipments none. All grades of butcher cattle sold at steady prices. Milkers, "springers" and thin veal calves, however, were in slow demand and at lower prices. The outlook is lower for all grades of steers. Extra choice shipping and export steers $ 4.00W 4.50 Good to choice shipping steers, 3.50(?', 3.1)0 Medium to good shipping steers, 3.00fi/ 3.40 Common to fair steers 4.25?i 4.75 Choice feeding steers 3.25([. 3.50 Fair to medium feeding steers.. 2 15(5' 2.50 Common to good stoekers 2.2 ofe Ii.75
Butchers' cattle we (|iiote: Good to choice cows and calves... 27.00ffi:35.00 Medium to good cows and calves. 20.00(a 25,00 Common to medium cows aud calves 12.00(^18.00
HOGS—Receipts 3.000 head. Shipments 2,000 head. The hog market is more active than yesterday, aud prices showed an advance ot 5 cents. Shippers were the leading buyers, and, although competition was not very brisk, a good cle'iianco was made. Wf |uote: Good to choice medium and heavy*4.00(fii4.J5 Mixed and heavy packing [email protected] Good to choice lightweights 4,[email protected] Common lightweights 4.60©4.(55 Pigs 4.00(®4.G2 Roughs [email protected]
SHEEP—Receipts light. Shipments none. The sl eep and iamb market continued light at unchanged prices. Good to "choice lambs [email protected] Common to medium lambs [email protected] Good to choice sheep 2.75§3.25 Fair to medium sheep [email protected] Common sheep [email protected] Bucks, per head [email protected]
The Grain Market.
WHEAT—Quiet: No. 2 red 53c bid. No. 3red' 49J4c bid, rejected [email protected]. wagon wheat, 53e. CORN—Steady No. 1 white 37V4c No. 2 white 37!4c No. 3 white, 3ic for one color, 36c for grade. No. 4 white 30c, No 2 white mi.\ed 36c No- 3 white mixed 36e. No. 4 white mixed 30c, No. 2 yellow 36c, No. 3 yellow 36c, No 4 yellow 30c, No. 2 mixed 30c. No. 3 mixed 36c, No, 4 mixed 30c, ear 37'^c.
OATS—Steady No. 2 white 34c. No. 3 white 33J4. No.2 mixed 32J^c, bid No. 3 mixed 29c, rejected 26(f/28c.
HHAN—813.50 bid. HAY—Choice timothy 811.50, No. 1 811.00. No. 2 $0,00. No. 1 prairie $6.50, mixed 88.80, clover $8.00.
RYE—NO. 2 45c for car lots, 40c for wagon rye.
Butter. Eggs anl Poultry.
The following are the buying prices offered by Indianapolis shippers: Butter—Fresh country extra, 87,10c. mixed country
Jiggs—Fresh, per dozen. 8c. Live Poultry—Hens, a pound spring chickens,6Mc cocks,3c turkey hens, 7c: old toms. 4c young toms, fancy, fat, 4c: poor, 3fS'.4c ducks. GHc: geese, full feathered, $4.80 per dozen fcr fancy large.
Flour ami I'Veri.
Fboua—Winter wheat, patent, $3.75T/4.00 spring wheat, patent, $3.90®»4.00 winter wheat, straight, 82.75@2,85: winter, extra [email protected] low grade, [email protected] rye flour. $3.10 buckwheat flour, 7.00 oat meal. 85.60 655.75 rolled oats,[email protected]: cracked wheat, [email protected] middlings, [email protected] screenings, $10.00(T/il5.00 a ton corn meal,SI.00® 1.15 a cwt... pearl meal, [email protected] rye meal, [email protected]: feed meal,[email protected] a ton.
Seeds.
Clover—Medium, red, prime, $5.60, choice, $5.75 mammoth, prime, $5.75, choice, $5.85 alfalfa, prime, $6.00 choice, 86.15 alskve, prime, $5.75, choice, 89.00 scarlet, prime, $5.75: choice, $6 00.
Timothy—Fair to good, $1.90 prime, $2.05 choice, $2.20,
AVool.
The following prices are l'or wagon lots: Medium, unwashed, 16c fine merino, unwashed. 12@14c coarse or braid wool, 13® 15c: tub-washed 25@26c.
Local Markets.
Crawfordsville dealers were paying the following prices for produce on Thursday: Wheat per bushel 50 Corn 32(5*35 Clover Seed [email protected] Oats 26@28 Timothy Hav 8.00 Navy Beans [email protected] Lard per pound 7@9 Butter 10@15 Chickens 6 Country hams SfittO Side meat 8W Eggs 10 Shoulders 7
JAKE JOEL
The
New York Store
KSTAHMS1IKI) 1853.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Spring riillinery
N
We have held our opening- and now we are ready to execute orders. Everything is new and fresh, and there never was a more invitinglot of Hats and Honnets shown anywhere.
Pretty Paris Pattern Hats and Bonnets
From Felix, Ponyanne. Virot. Collier, Sara Mayer. Heitz Royeraux, Lynn taulkner, Toase, Colombe," Arnot and others. Our own Milliners show some very stylish things which might compare with even the French. We shall be pleased to give von prices. or better still—to show you when von come.
Gloves By Mail a Specialty
Pettis Dry Goods Co,
C. H. ELLROD
FOU—
Strawberry, Blackberry
—AMI)—
Raspberry Plants.
Three miles northwest of Crawfords-' ville on the Attica gravel road.
OT1CE TO NON-RESIDENTS.
State of Indiana, Montgomery county, in tho the Montgomery Circuit Court, March term,
William Docrinjj' & Company vs. Kate Cains Carnahan, Elizabeth Jtannister, Kohert T. Gains, Maria P. Kirkpatrlck aud Maria 1\ Gams.
Come now the plalntill's, by Histine & Kistine, its attornejs, and file their complaintherein together with an affidavit that, the defendants. Kate tGains Carnahan, Robert T. Gains and Maria 1J. Kirkpatrlck are residents of the State of Indiana.
Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants, that unless they be and apppar on the 8th day of the next term of the Montgomery circuit court, the same being the 15th day of May, A. D.. 1804, at the court House in Crawfordsvill, in said county and State, and answer or demurto said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in their absence.
Witness my name aud the seal of said court affixed at Crawfordsville. this 20th day of March, A. D., 1894.
WALLACE SPA RKS
Mar. 23, 1894.-w3t
gHEKlKK SALE.
By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Montgomery Circuit Court, in a cause wherein The Crawfordsville Building and Loan Association is plaintiff, and James F. Alfrey et al. are defendants, requiring me to make the sum ol' four hundred and ninety-eight dollars aud fifty cents ($498.50), with interests on said decree and costs, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on
SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 1894,
Between the hours of 10 o'clock p. m. aud o'clock p. ru. of said day, at the door of the court house in Crawfordsville, Montgomery county, ind., the rents and profits tor a term not exceeding seven years, the following real estate tc-wit:
Parte of lots numbered thirteen (13) and fourteen (14) in Maria K. Elston's first addition to the city of Crawfordsville, bounded as lo!lows: Beginning at the northeast corner said lot No. 14 and running thence west one hundred and fifty-live (155) feet, tlience south l'orty-one (41) feet, and three (3) inches, thence east one hundred and lifty-five (155i feet, thence north l'orty-one (41) feet and throe (3) inches to the place of beginning, situated in Montgomery county. State of Indiana.
If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs, will, at the same time and place, exjose to nubile sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest ana costs. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever lrom valuation or appraisement laws. CHARLES E. DAVIS,
Sheriff Montgomery County.
By R. P. A, BRRRYMAN, Deputy. March 22d, 1894—4t. Crane & Anderson, Attornies for Plaintiff.
Monon Excursion Soutli.
On April 9tli the Monon Route will sell tickets at one first class limited fare for the round trip to all points in Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama and Mississippi and to points in Georgia as far east as Augusta, and on the west of a line drawn from Augusta to Miller Eastman, Abbeyville, and Albany, thence to River Junction including points in Florida on the L. & N. west of River Junction. We will also sell at same rate to New Orleans, La. Those contemplating a trip South this spring will be shown the many advantages in going via the Monon Route. Rates, time and connections gladly furnished at depot. L. A. CLAKK, Agt.
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