Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 29 March 1895 — Page 2
WEEKLY JOURNAL.
ESTABLISHED IN 1845.
PRINTED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING
THE JOURNAL. VO.
T. H. B. McCAIN, President. J. A. GRBKNE. Secretary. A. A. McCAIN,Treasurer
WEEKLY—
One year In advance. 1.00 Six months Three months "a
DAILY—
One year in advance $5.00 Six months Three months l-2a Per week, delivered or by mall 10
Payable In advance. Sample copies l'ree.
Entered at the Postoflice at. Crawfordsville, Indiana, as second-class,matter.
FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1895.
CLEVELAND now has Germany, France, England. Spain and Hawaii "on bis hands Doubtless he would prefer Congress.
CHICAGO Record: When an Indiana man has nothing else to do he can just sit down and speculate as to who is really in control of the State Government.
THE Terre Haute Express refers to Bismarck as the "Colonel Thompson of Friedrichsrulie." This is neat and certainly highly complimentry to Bismarck
MA.IOK WILLIAM MCKINLKY should beware of the interviewer, especially the interviewer of the Joseph Medill type, who is both a free trader and a gold bug.
ELECTRICITY, put up in storage batteries of all sizes, like milk in jars, is to be prepared for delivery at the doors of consumers in New York, just as milk is now.
THE Department of Agriculture has issued a report on the culture of peanuts. It is very evident that the Governor of IndiaUiv has been a close student of the little volume.
THE corrected official list of members of the new House of Representatives, just completed by the chief clerk of the House, contains 245 Republicans, 104 Democrats, 0 Populists, 1 SilveriteJ
EXPERIMENTS in different parts of the country appear to have settled the fact that wheat fed to hogs is thus made to bring about 70 cents per bushel. It still pays to raise that crop, therefore, even if the world is not willing to pay over 40 cents per bushel for it as an article of human diet.
MISSOURI is rapidly filling up with emigrants from the arid regions of Nebraska, Kansas and the Dakotas. Well informed politicians of that .State say that it means not less than 110,000 voters, most of whom are Republicans. Missouri may therefore be set down in the sure Republican column in 1SSX5.
THE W. W. Taylor arrested at Havana proved not to be the defaulting State Treasurer of South Dakota. After being held sixteen hours he was released, It will thus be seen that professional detectives can make mistakes as well as amateurs. It is now Detective Overton's turn to laugh.
THE Missouri Legislature is considering the proposition to place insurance companies under the provisions of the anti-trust law. If the Missouri Legislature can withstand the "influence" of the insurance lobby it will exhibit more rock-ribbed integrity than was shown by the Indiana Senate.
A CARCIO of 120,000 bushels of flax seed arrived in New York this week from the Argetine Republic. Already 500,000 bushels have been sold, and another cargo is expected next week. It sells for Sl.'.'S a bushel. This of course is cheerful news to the American farmer and creates a feeling akin to love for the Gorman tariff law.
THE new Government bonds, which wera sold to a foreign syndicate at 104%, are now quoted in New York at 120}£, which is to say that they are worth about 810,000,000 more than the Administration obtained for them from the Belmont syndicate. Tins Administration is all "business
the foreign money lender
!—for
CINCINNATI U/muiicrciul-tiuzittc: There "will be fun alive when the next House gets after Pensioner Commissioner
Lochren. The rack over which Gen. Raum was a couch of roses, compared with the one that will be prepared for his successor. The methods by which Hoke Smith and Lochren have robbed pensioners will be exposed in a way that will not only make those two individuals painfully ill, but will cause a serious sickness in the whole Democratic family. 1
1
IMHUED with the progress of the times the Terre Haute Express has made its appearance printed on type set by the Merganthaler type-setting machines. The paper has been enlarged from an eight column folio to a six-column quarto, and it now presents all the airs of a metropolitan newspaper, such as the Prairie City demands and doubtless will support. Its publisher, George M. Allen, is to be congratulated for his ability to be in the ewspaperial swim.
MUNICIPAL, FRANCHISES. Missouri is making rapid strides in the improvement of her laws concerning municipal franchises. The Legislature of that State this Winter has passed several measures of great public importance, but none more beneficial than one relating to municipal franchises which would make good law in any State. In brief, the provisions of the measure are as follows: "The public authorities of every city, village, county, or other municipal or public corporation to whom application may be made by any private company, co-partnership, corporation, individual or individuals, for consent to the cohstruction, extension, maintenance, occupation or u^e of any electric lighting plant, or plant for the generating, transmission, sale or use of electricity, gas lighting plant, street railroad, for passengers or mails, telephone or telegraph plant, the transportation of either freight, passengers, or plant for supplying water, above, across, along, beneath or through any highway,road, avenue, alley, park, square, street or other public lands, must provide, as a condition precedent to the granting of such consent, that the franchise, privilege and right of such occupation, and use of any such public places for any such private purposes, shall be sold at public auction to the responsible bidder who will give the largest percentage yearly of the gross receipts derived from such occupation and use, with adequate security, as hereinafter provided, for the payment thereof, and for the prompt construction and completion of the proposed plantj'provided that such payment shall in no case be less than 2 per cent, of the gross earnings during the first five years of such occupation and use, and thei'eafter, for each period of five years, such percentage shall be increased to correspond with the increase in value of the land thus occupied and used."
A DECISION which is likely to be farreaching in its effect upon the judgment of other courts has been rendered by the Supreme Court of Illinois in its opinion of the eight-hour law of 1893 which provides that "no female shall be employed in any factory or workshop more than eight hours in any one day, or forty-eight hours in any one week." The court holds in effect that women, as to contracts, are on the same footing with men that the section in question prohibits them from contracting as to their own labor and determining how many hours they will work, and that such restriction is an infringmentupon the rights of both employer and employe and is in conflict with section 2, article 2, of the State constitution, which provides that "no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law." The court holds that the privilege of contracting is both a liberty and a property right that labor is property, and that the laborer has the same right to sell his labor and to contract with reference thereto as has any other property owner.
WHAT Crawfordsville needs is a shade tree commissioner or an officer of some kind whose duty it would be not only to look after the care and protection of those already growing but to direct the transplanting of trees. He should be clothed with authority to say where they should be placed with a view to harmony and the future beauty of the streets. As it is now some persons set the trees on the inside of their lots while others on the same street with no ideas of symmetry place them on the outer edge of the sidewalk. The consequence is that the street presents beauty is
NEW YORK Trlbuvc: Minister Thurston may have been indiscreet and loquacious in Washington, but he has never gone to the White House and demanded President Cleveland's resignation and ejectment. That is what Minister Willis has done in Honolulu. As "persona non grata" he may be said, in the language of the vulgar, "to hold over" every other diplomatist in Christendom.
TIIK Indianapolis News prints an interview with Hon. Byron K. Elliott, ex-Cliief .Justice of the Supreme Court, in which that gentleman gives it as his opinion that it will require a decision from the court to clarify the meaning of the Nicholson bill. He thinks the second section is most befogged and confesses he does not know what the author of that section meant by it.
SENATOR MORGAN, of Alabama, chairman of the foreign relations committee, favors the annexation of Cuba. He said to a reporter one day this week: "1 have always been a Cuban annexationist. I am in favor of pur chasing the island or of any other just method of acquiring it from Spain. It is an important island for the United States.
FOR the eight and a half months of the current fiscal year ending March 15, the receipts of the United States from all sources have been 8223,774,901, and the expenditures 8203,414,191, or an excess of expenditures over receipts of 849,037,290, an average of 84,603,000 a month. This statement shows some of the beauties of the Gorman tariff law as a revenue producing measure.
IF the Democratic party was to continue in powertheUnitedStat.es would soon have a system of taxation similar to that of France. The income tax law is but the entering wedge to change our system of raising revenue from custom duties similar to that of the French nation. In that country every form of legal paper, checks, notes and documents, bills of lading, even lithograph posters, must have a revenue stamp affixed. From this source the Treasury draws 8140,000,000. The spirit and wine tax amounted to $120,000,000. Tobacco, matches, playing cards and other government monopolies yielded §180,000,000. Sugar paid an internal revenue tax of .052c. per pound, 829,000,000 in all. The land tax brought in $30,000,000 and personal property 828,000,000. If a clerk occupies a hall room he pays a tax of $2 per annum, while his landlady not only has to pay for her poodle, but for every door and window in the house. The Treasury receives 812,000,000 per annum for windows alone. If you own a horse, carriage, billiard table or bicycle you are taxed—the government collects 80,400,000 annually for permitting such luxuries to exist, and a bill was recently introduced in the chambers to tax the wearing of corsets. Business licenses bring in 824,000,000 per annum.
FRIENDS of the new tariff law are deriving great satisfaction from the fact that one of their pledges in regard to the operations of the law has been redeemed. It has increased the importations. During the six mouths in which has been in operation there has been brought into this county 8350,000,000 worth of goodfe in round numbers, against 8293,000,000 worth brought in during the corresponding period of last year under the McKinley law. So they have the proud satisfaction of knowing that their new law has added 20 per cent, to the quantity of goods brought in from abroad, and made it that much harder for the working people, the factory operatives, the farmers, the men and women who work in manufactories and the manufacturers themselves to make a living. It must be pleasant, for instance, for the farmers of the country to know that the importation of products of agriculture have nearly doubled under the new law, amounting to over 87,000,000 in the half year, against about onehalf that sum in the corresponding months under the Mclvinlev law.
A NEW feature will be noticeable when the next Congress meets. Ever since Congress has been in existence the members have called the pages by clapping their hands. Members are always calling pages, and this light clapping of hands goes on whether any one is speaking or not, but the system is generally most in evidence when a member is addressing the House. This will be done away with at the instance of Congressman Cannon, of Illinois. Electricity is to be evoked in the accomplishment of this object. When the LIVth Congress meets every member will find a button on his desk. An electric wire will be Connected with a call-board similar to those used in hotels. When a member wants a page he will press the button, an indicator will tumble down, showing the number of the Congressman's desk, and the waiting page will dart off to answer the summons.
JUDGE BAKER, of the United States District Court at Indianapolis, on Saturday delivered a well directed blow at the trusts. The National Harrow Company—a trust—sought to enjoin Quick & Landahl, an implement firm at Chesterson, from selling an infringement of the spring-tooth harrow patents. The defense was that the plaintiff was an unlawfully organized corporation that it was organized for the purposes ocontrary to public policy. Judge Baker sustained this position, saying that, as a Court, he would not lend countenance to it. The suit was dismissed because no infringement was shown. f.
AN amendment to the pension laws, tacked on to the appropriations bill by Senator Hawley, of Connecticut, increases pensions to SO a month. All pensioners who are receiving less than $0 will not be required to make a formal application for an increase. They will be paid on regular pay days by the execution of a newly prepared voucher sent out from paying agencies. In time the old certificates may be called in and stamped by the proper department showing the increase to 80. Arrears of pension will be paid back to March 2 in each case.
THE foreign demand for apples grown in the United States has always been in excess of the supply. Great Britain alone during the nine months ending September, 1894, paid to the apple-raisers of the United States 82,500,000. In view of the fact that the entire apple crop is sometimes threat ened by the worms which infest the trees, Secretary Morton has had the matter investigated, and finds that spraying with a solution of Paris green is a simple and effective remedy, which he urges all farmers and horti culturists to try.
HOUSES to rent. 2,8-3m C. A.MILLER & Co., 11-8 w. Main st.
WEAK NERVES EPIDEMIC
WEAK MERVES WlLLSBftiiLY BiiEAK 'Y00 DOWN.
Neives are the Very Foundation of Strength
and Endurance.
11 Your Nerves nro Weak, Lose No Time in Get.ting Them Strong.
You are growing older every day, and if you do .not wish the unpitying years as they roll on their relentless way, to rob you of your hopes and joy, your pleasures, your ambitions, your very strength and energies, keep your nerves strong and vigorous.
It is the nerves which soonest wear out. You thoughtlessly use them up in work, pleasure or dissipation, and suddenly wake to find yourself broken down—that only your body remains, bereft of strength, energy and power, a mere wreck of what you were and with only dreariness, pain, weakness, and discontent your future portion. Then you realize the immeasurable depth of bitterness in Longfellow's lines: "Oh, sudden thrills ol' fire and frost.!
The world is bright while ye remain, And dark and dead when yo are lost Health, hope, happiness—everything is dependent upon strong and vigorous nerves. It is weak nerves which give to the young, fits, convulsions, hysteria, St. Vitus' dance, and the myriad nervous affections of youth. It is weak nerves which make women constantly tired, irritable, nervous, dispirited, dragged-out and miserable. It is weak nerves which conquer men in their struggle for mastery in the world, which render them nerveless, strengthless, powerless, with dull-feel-ing head, shaking, shattered and unsteady nerves, without 'appetite or good digestion, enfeebled from sleepless nights and wretched and discouraged from trying days. It is weak nerves which make age a curse instead of a blessing—a body, a casket from which every power and energy has lied,ileaving only weakness, despair and utter weariness.
If there is any advice, which above another, should sink into the heart, it is the admonition to keep your nerves strong. Hence, the words of Mrs. Eliza E. Clements, of 120 Bright street, Indianapolis, Ind., should have weight with everyone. "I was afflicted for six years with nervous debility. I could not sleep at nights, and I was in a terrible condition. I had heart trouble and it beat so hard 1 thought I should die. I was in constant misery and could do no work. "1 had heard so much talk about the wonders of Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, and now made up my mind to take it. I had given myself up for lost, but began to improve immediately under the use of this marvelous remedy.
MHS. ELIZA E. CLEMENTS.
"It has made me sound ami well. I can work all day and not get tired. My heart disease is entirely cured, and my nerves are strong- and under perfect control. "I feel it iny duty to tell suffering' humanity what Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy has done for me, and what it will surely do for them. I am thankful that Dr. Greene has given such a valuable medicine to a suffering world."
If you would be well and strong, with vigorous nerves full of the vim and energy of youth, use Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. At this season of the year you should take it, by all means, as it is the best spring tonic and invigorator you can possibly use.
It is not a patent medicine, but the prescription of the most successful living specialist in curing nervous and chronic diseases, Dr. Greene, of 35 West 14th street, New York City. He has the largest practice in the world, and this grand medical discovery is the result of his vast medical experience. The great reputation of Dr. Greene is a guarantee that this medicine will cure, and the fact that he can be consulted free of charge, by any one at any time, free of charge, personally or by letter, gives absolute assurance of the beneficial action of this wonderful medicine.
Morgan & Le6
ABSTRACTORS, LOAN AND
INSURANCE
AGENTS
Money to Loan at 6 per cent interest.
Farms and City Property For Sale
Life, Fire and Accident Insurance. Office North Washington et., Ornbann Block, CrawforHsville, Ind.
K.WALLACE
W.
Agent for the Connecticut Fire Insurance Co., ot Hartford. American Fire Insurance Co., of New York, Girard Fire Insurance Company, of Philadelphia, London Assurance Corp ration* of London, Grand Kapids Fire Insurance Co., of Michigan. Office in Joel Block with R. E. Bryant,
South Wash. St. Crawfordsville.
MONEY TO LOAN
With payments to suit borrower. Interest the very lowest Either real estate or personal security accepted, (iood notes cashed.
C. W. BURTON.
lOT.'i East Main street.
6 per cent. 6 percent. MONEY TO LOAN.
On improved property. In sums to suit. At lowest rates.
R. E.
BRYANT.
Joel Block.
O. W. PAUL. M. W. BUCNKK.
PAUL & BRUNER,
Auornoys-'vt-l.a-w,
Office over Maliorney's Store, Crawfordsvllle^lnd. All business entrusted to their care will receive prompt.attention.
O. U. PERRIN. A W E
Practices in Federal and State Courts. PATENTS A SPECIALTY. SS^LawOffices, Crawford Building.
Opp, Music Hall, Crawfordsville.
GEORGE W. FULLER,
Crawfordsville, Ind. Breeder and Shipper of thoroughbred POLAND 'CHINA hogs B.P.Hocks,
White Guineas and Fan Tall Pigeons. Stock and Eggs for sale. Kggsll.25
per lo or$2 Write your wnut.^.
SE BARNES' INK.
A. S. HA LINES & CO. 56 E. 10th St.N.Y.
WANTED, A LEW MORE BOOK AGENTS ill tins and iicljoiiiing counties for
Our Journey Around tlic World'
A bruit' new book by KKV. 1'RaNCIS E. CLARK, 1'ris't. ot tlie United Soc. ol'Clirihliau Endeavor The lieM ilmtiee to rnnko money ever offered to all who want profitable work. A gond agent, in this vicinity can earn $100 a month. Distance no hindrance, for we pay t're'ght, Give Credit., Premium Copies. Free OuttK, and exclusive tenitory. Kor particular.® write to A. D. W'OKTHINGTON & CO.. Hartford. COUP.
WaCAVtAld, I HAUL MAKKSjV COPYRIGHTS.*-
CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT? For a prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to lUUKN & CO., who have had nearly fifty years' experience In the patent business. Communications strictly confidential. A Handbook of Information concerning Patents and how to obtain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechanical and scientific books sent free.
Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive epecial notice in the Scientific American, and thus are brought widely before the public without cost to the inventor. This splendid paper. Issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far the largest circulation of any scientific work In the world. S3 a year. Sample copies sent free.
Building Edition, monthly, *2.50 a year. Single copies, £5 cents. Every number contains beaumul plates. In colors, and photographs of new houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the latest designs and secure contracts. Address
MUNN & CO., NEW YOUK, 361 BIIOADWAY.
KLV/ ALBANY
A HOME
yourfown
With good living the year round. If tlioso Intending to fnrm.and others, will write to 'J'ho C. S. GRAVES LAND CO.,
osr««
Chicago, Illinois, who hnvo excellent
[arming land in Central Wisconsin, Clark County, at from §5 to $10 per acre, they will learn something that Will interest them. Terms easy, only 2 per aero cash.
If you have a 1 Ittle money the Company will furnish llio rest, and you miizht as well own a farm as to pay lliifxli cash rent each year or work one on shares.
Companies of practical farmers now behiK formed locato in the spring. Over 3,UOO acres Bold in foui nontlis. Address:
the C. S. GRAVES LAND CO., R. 311,58 Fifth An., Chicago, I1L
ELECTRIC TELEPHONE
Sold outright. no rent, no royalty. Adapted to City, Villus© or Country. Needed in every home, shop, more nnd office. Greatest conven ieiico and best, seller on earth. make from $S to 950 per day.
One in a residence means a sale to all th* neighbors. Fine instruments, no toyn, worki anywhere, any distance. Complete, ready ioi use when shipped. Can be put np by any one, npvorontof order, no repairing, last* a h*:s time*. Warranted. A money maker. "Write W. P. Harrison & Co.. Clerk 10. Columbus.
'fci*NUFrD 8V A'tt'Wais THE
mm
EACH PAG&AGES^
SCRAPE BASKETS,
Packages for I 1 I urNew I
FRUITS and VEGETABLES,
Manufactured by
CAVALcfcUE 1 HEATH, MORRIS CO.,
TALOCUE
mailed on 1 Application.
23 Water St.,
New Albany, Ind.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair. Promotes a luxuriant growth. Never Fails to Beatore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color. Cores scalp diseases & hair tailing. fiOc, and 81.00 at Druggists
O N S IV E
O
U»e Parker's Ginger Tonic. It cure, the worjt Cough, Weak Lunge, Debility, Indigestion, Fain, Take in time.50cU. HINDERCORNS. The only jure cure for Com«. Stop, ufiwin. lSc. at Druggiiti, or I1ISCOX lc CO., M. Y.
v% ja |PNESS
NOTICE OF SALE
Of Montgomery County Orphans' Home.
Notice is hereby given that the Hoard of Commissioners of Montgomery County, Indiana, will offer at public auction at the door of the court house in Crawfordsville on Saturday, the sixth day of .April, 3 805, between the hours of tea o'clock a. m. and four o'clock p. no. of said day, the tract of lfnd known as the Orphans' Home in said county, described as follows to-wit:
Part of the west half of the northeast quarter of section one (1), township eighteen (18), north, of rango five (5) west, beginning at a point tnirtj-tive (35) rods and eleven (11) linKs east ol the northwest corner of said quarter section, thence west thirty-Live (35) rods and eleven (11) links to the northwest corner of said quarter section, thence south on the west lino of said quarter section seventy-five (75) rods and three (3) links to the north line of the right of way of the 1. 0. & W. Kaihvay, tlieneo in an easterly direction along said right of way thirty-five (35) rods and eleven (11) links to a point directly south of the starting point thence north seventy-seven (77) rods and eleven (11) links to place of beginning, containing sixteen (ill) and ninety-three i,!)3) hundredths of an acre.
TKKMS:—Said land shall not be sold for loss than two thousand and six hundred dollars, that sum having been fixed as the minimum price therefor by said board, oni -third of the purchase price to be paid cash in hand, onethird in one year and the residue in two years from the date of sale, the purchtiser giving ilia note for deferred payments. learing six (6) per cent Interest from date until paid and attorneys' fees, the same to be secured by first mortgage cn said land. Hy order of the :.'-i-i0t IIIIAIIH OK COMMISSIONERS.
HERIFF'S SALE.
Hy virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Montgomery Circuit Court, in a cause wherein Wabash College is plaintiff, and William D. Serlng et al are defendants, requiring me to make the sum of nine hundred, seventy-eight dollars and forty cents, with interest on said decree and costs, 1 will expose at public sale to the highest, bidder, on
SATUltDAY, MAKCH 30, A. D. 1895, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock m., of said day, at the door of the courthouse in crawfordsville. Montgomery county. Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding Beven years, the following real estate, to-wit:
Lot number sixty-two (02.) as the same is known and designated on the recorded plat of Grah-im, Houston and Connard's addition to the City of Crawfordsville, in the county of Montgomery and State of Indiana.
If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisty said decree, interest and costs, I will at the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Said sale will be made without any relief wliatever from valuation or appraisement laws.
CHARLES E. DAVIS. Sheriff Montgomery County.
By WM. M. WHITE, Deputy. March 7,1805. Kistine & Ristino, Attorneys for Plaintiffs.
March 7, 1805-S10.
HERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue ol a certified copy of adeeree to me directed from the Clerk of the Montgomery Circuit Court, in a cause wherein Amanda Vance ir. plaintiff, and Walter R. Paxson and Frank Bclpig are defendants requiring mo to make the sum of five hundred nnd si.\i.\ -eight dollars and fifty cents, with interest on said decree and costs. I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder on
SATURDAY". APRIL (i, A. D., 18!)5, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. nnd-1 o'clock in. of said day, at the door of the court house in Crawfordsville. Montgomery County. Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, the following real estate to-wit:
Part, of the southwest quarter and part, of the northwest quarter of section thirty-one (31), township nineteen (10) north, rsinge 'our (4) west, beginning at a stone in the Crawfordsville and Wavnetown gravel road at a point S. 13 degrees E. eleven chains and thir-ty-Live links from the center of the southern! of the iron bridge, said point being the northwest corner of the tract ot land conveyed September 2, 1 877, by T. N. Mvors to John A. Hardee, thei.ee south 73 degrees east in the center of said road two chains and fifty links, thence south 17 degrees west three chains and fifty link* to a stake, thence north 73 degrees west three chains and thirty-einht links to a stake, thence north 45 degrees east nine-ty-one links to a stake, thence north 26 degrees east two chains and seventy-two links to the beginning point containing one and G-100 acres more or less
If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sumto satisfy said decree. Interest and costs, 1 will, at the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee simple ot said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Said sale will be made without any relief from valuation or appraisement laws.
CHARLES E. DAVIS. Sheriff Montgomery County. By WM. M. WHITE,
March 12, 1805—$14 Deputy. Kistine & Histine, Attorney for Plaintiff. March 15, '95.
"HERIFF'S 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 ^tate of Indiana ex rel John L. Goben, Auditor Montgomery county, is plaintiff and Jane Simms et al are defendants, requiring me to make the sum of seventy-two dollars and ninety cents, with interest on said decree and costs. I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on
SATURDAY, APRIL 13, A. D., 1895, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. in of said day. at the door of the court house in Cmwfordsville, Montgomery county, Indiana, the rents uud profits for a term not, exceeding seven years, the following real estate, to-wit:
Five acres from off the'north end of the oast ha'f of the nortliohst quarter of section twen-ty-five (25) in township twenty (20) north, range five (5) west.
II such rents and profits Till not sell for a sufficient, sum to satisfy said decrce, interest, and costs. 1 will, at the same time and place, exioseto public sale tho fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as miy be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and cos's. Said sale will bo made without any relief whettver from valuation or appraisement laws. CHARLES E. DAVIS,
Sher'ff Montgomery County.
March 22, A. D„ 1895.-110 WM. M. WHITE, Deputy. JOHNSON & JOHNSON, Attorneys for Plaintiff.
^HKRIFK'S SALE.
Hy virtue of a certified copy of a decree to Uie directed from the Clerk of the Montgomery Circuit Court, in a cause wherein the State of Indianner rel John L. Goben,Andltor Montgomery county, is Plain1iff. nnd Paul Palmer et, al are Defendants, requiring me to make the sura of onehundred and ninety-one dollars and twenty cents, with interest on said decree and costs, will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on
SATURDAY, APRIL 6, A. D., 1895. between the hours of 10 o'clock a.m., and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day. at the door of the Court House in Crawfordsville, Montgomery county, Indiana, the rents and profits for a for a term not exceeding seven years, the follow ng real estate. to-wit:
The northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section thirty-six (36), in township eighteen north, range six (6) west, in Montgomery county, Indiana
If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy s»id decree, interest and costs, I will, at the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. CHARLES K. DAVIS,
N
JEAD NOISES CURED.
'ubulttr Cushions help when all
& HEAD
TTTUIn
a Bi Uy Tabular UusL.»w„ ...
•v else fails, as glasses belp eyes. Whispers heard. No pain, isfitible. K. Hincox, o53 B'way Hew York, sole depot. Send for book and proofs FREE.
Sheriff Montgomery county.
March 14, A. D., 1805.—$10. JOHNSON & JOHNSON, WM M. WHITE, S Attorneys for Plaintiff. Deputy.
Estate of Henry Keeney, deceased. OT1CE OF APPOINTMENT.
Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed and duly qualified as administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Henry Keeney, late of Montgomery county, Indiana, deeeased. Said estate Is supposed to be solvent
JAMES H. WHITE.
Administrator with the will annexed. Dated Mar. 23,1895.-3t
