Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 13 September 1895 — Page 2

WEEKLY JOUBNAl.

ESTABLISHED IN 1848.

Successor io The Record, the first paper In Crawfordsville, established in 1831, and to The People's Press, established 1844.

PRINTED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING.

THE JOURNAL COMPANY. T.H B. McCAIN, President, J. A. GRBKNE, Secretary.

A. A. McCAIN,Treasurer

TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION".

One year in advance 1*99 Bix months "0 Three months ~5

Payable in advance. Sample copies lree.

THE DAILY JOURNAL.

ESTABLISHED IN

1887.

TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:

One year in advance $5.00 Biz months 2.50 Three months l-"5 Per week, delivered or by mail 10 Entered at the Postoflice at Crawfordsvllle,

Indiana, as second-class matter.

CIRCULATION STATEMENT

Of THE CRAWFORDSVILLE JOURNAL, showing the average circulation of the Daily and Weekly for the three months of June, July and August, 1895:

DAILY

DATE JUNE JULY AUGUST 1 1.395 1,359 1,350 JI Sunday 1,350 1,296 3 1.400 1,495 1,300 4 1,501 Fourth Sunday 5 1,396 1,330 1,324 6 1,405 1,325 1,320 7 1,398 Sunday 1,327 8 1.391 1,330 1.320 9 Sunday 1,330 1,328 1 0 1,400 1,326 1,319 1 1 1,400 1,336 Sunday 18 1,389 1.320 1,307 1 3 1,396 1,331 1.354 1 4 1,445 Sunday 1,312 1 5 1,395 1.429 1,304 1 6 Sunday 1,328 J.308 1 7 1.381 1,318 1,306 1 8 1,380 1.301 Sunday 1 9 1.490 1,310 1,309 30 1,385 1,301 1,307 21 1,391 Sunday 1,311 23 1,381 1.300 1,311 2 3 Sunday 1.298 1,312 2 4 1,375 1,301 1,305 2 5 1.369 1,298 Sunday 2 6 1.373 1,300 1.376 2 7 1,370 1,296 1.303 2 8 1.358 Sunday 1,311 2 9 1.360 1,300 1,306 3 0 Sunday 1,304 1,309 3 1 1.324 1.305

Totals, 34,924 34,540 35,540

Grand Total 105,004 Average 1,346 WEEKLY. DATE JUNE DATE JULY DATE AUOUST 7 2.756 5 ,2 748 2 ..2,752 14 2,758 12 2,766 9 ..2,784 21 2,763 19 2,700 16 2.766 28 2,765 26 2.756 23 2,768

JO 2,792

11.042 11.030 13,862 Grand Total 35.934 Average 2,764

STATE OP INDIANA, I MONTGOMERY COUNTY.

Arthur A. McCain being- first duly sworn on his oatii, says that he fs Treasurer of the Journal Co.. a corporation printing and nulilishing the Crawfordsville Daily and Weekly Journal, and that the foregoing exhibit a true and correct statement of the circulation of said newspapers

A. A. McCAIN

Subscribed and sworn to before the undersigned this 7th day of September. A. 1).. 189o.

BYRON R. RUSSELL. Notary Public.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1895.

THIS country is sending abroad about 850,000,000 worth of silver a year as a commodity, and the demand for it is growing.

ONE of the most cheerful liars of the country among newspaper correspondents is one Walter Wellman, of the Chicago Tunes Herald.

SPEAKING of "the glorious climate of California," the San Francisco Post says: "The East has life-killing frosts in the winter life-killing heat in the summer property-destroying rains every month, and death-dealing cyclones all the time. Why people live in the east no one seems to know."

ONE of the signs of Democratic disintegration in Maryland is the fact that as a party emblem it has discarded the old rooster and substituted the hickory tree as suggestive of Andrew Jackson. Like Jackson the Maryland Democrats have a warm side for the principle of protection as enunciated in the celebrated Coleman letter.

THE Louisville Post, which' has bolted the Democratic nomination for Governor, in reply to some other Democratic papers which say that white supremacy in Kentucky depends on the election of Hardin, says "this nonsense should be left to the benighted editors and idiots of Mississippi." The negro supremacy powder has been burned and it seems to have no terror for the Post.

A WRITER in the Chicago Timcs-Hcr-ald gives this very good advice to a certain class of gossipers: "Avoid unkind criticism. If a life be pure, let all its little oddities alone. If you are convinced that some not over-bright young man is trying to live a clean life in the world and make an honest record, don't pick him to pieces, girls, in your after-party talks. A pure man is sometimes better than a clever mac, and truth and honor should make a better showing than wit."

THE Lebanon Pioneer is an anti-sil. ver paper, but at the same time it is an ideal Democratic organ. It boldly avers that "should the Republicans adopt a financial policy exactly in accordance with the Pioneer's views, and the Democratic party should adopt the Populist theory, the Pioneer would march along with the Democratic procession, and it would not have to 'face about' to do it either.". That is a blindly partisan faith beautiful to behold. The PUmeer, paraphrasing Stephen Decatur's toast on his country, evidently believes, "Our party! May she bealways in the right: but our party, right or wrong."

THREE OR FIVE, WHICH# METHODIST circles are stirred from

center to circumference over the action of the quarterly conference last Monday night in passing a resolution asking the bishop to return Dr. H. A. Tucker as pastor for another year. It is the talk of the town among church people and a good deal of surprise is expressed on the part of many that the official board should take such actioD, especially in the face of the fact that there is so much oppostion to his return among the people of that congregation. Since the action of the board the oppbsition, which had been latent, has developed into outspoken denunciation, and a merry war is now on. Under all the circumstances, many of his congregation think his return would be disastrous to the church, and the better policy would be for the bishop to send anew man. While it is not the province of the JOURNAL to mix up in church wrangles, yet it is its province to give the news of local comment and even to express opinions thereon.

The JOURNAL has no wish to be considered as fighting Dr. Tucker and in case of his return to this place by the conference he will be treated by this paper with all the consideration and courtesy extended any minister. But it is a very grave question whether his return would be for the best. It is one of the tenets of Methodism that limited pastorates are essential to the success of the chuch and that the retention of a minister over three years, except under very unusual circumstance, is a very grave mistake. In fact, until within the last decade it was impossible for a pastorate to continue over three years, the emergency limit of five years having been made very recently.

The general conference making this change expressly stated that the three year limit should continue to be the rule and that the five year continuance should be the rare exception.

This continuance at a charge over three years, therefore, is meant to cover the cases of those pastors only who are in the midst of a great work it would be disastrous to interrupt, and who are unanimously endorsed by their parishioners. The question then becomes, is the case of Dr. Tucker one of this character? He has completed the usual term of. three years, and now is there such a unanimity for his return among his congregation and such a general admiration and liking for him in the town that his return is demanded and that the exception in his case would work to the best interests of all concerned'? There are those who believe that his mission here has been accomplished.

MUCII-XEEDED LAW.

The late disastrous flood has demonstrated the necessity of some legislation for the protection of our roads against such rains as fell Tuesday night. Go where you will, you will find bridges and culverts washed out, from the fact that brush, logs and trash have been allowed to accumulate in the streams and ravines leading to. It should be made a finable offense for the owner of lands to allow such obstructions to wash from his premises into the roads and thus cause their destruction and we are not certain but that the owner of lands would be liable for damages under the law as it now is, where they carelessly throw trash where it will wash down and obstruct the flow of water through culverts and under bridges. It is a settled rule of law that while every man has dominion over his cwn property he is bound to use it in a way that will not cause injury to others. But every good citizen ought, without the fear of law and without suggestion from any one, see that he does not suffer the roads to be damaged by his negligence.

TARIFF TIIE ISSUE.

Robert P. Porter, editor of the Cleveland World, delivered an address before the Republican League of New York, which held its annual meeting at Binghamton on Wednesday, in which he gave his opinion as to the

duty of the Republican press, chief of which was to keep the tariff issue ir/

front, and to keep before the people the fundamental difference between a Republican and a Democratic tariff law. He said that the Democratic party is trying its best to smooth over and put in the back ground this most important question, and for this reason the Republican press should push it to the front and keep it there. He then made a comparison between the McKinley act and the Gorman law. He showed that no sooner was the Mclvinley law enacted than the current began to run in our direction—the direction of the United States. Mills, factories and workshops began to spring up all over the country. Many large industries removed their entire plants to this country. The manufacture of tinplate, of various other metals, of pearl buttons, of lace, of plush, and a hundred other commodies, was established. Wages stiffened. Additional hands were employed. New factories were •built. The country was prosperous. The working people were employed. The cost of living was not increased, because we have the testimony of the most radical free traders in 1803 to the effect that never in the history of the

country was the American workingman able to purchase so much for a given sum of money as durjng that period. Had this policy been allowed to stand this -prosperity would have continued. The depression and ruin of 1S93-4 wOuld have been averted. As to the act of "perfidy and dishonor" he said it is neither an honest free trade measure, a straightforward revenue act, nor a respectable protective tariff. It is traitorous to American interests, perfidious in its sectional discriminations, and dishonorable in its administrative features, which encourage undervaluation and put a premium upon fraud. Unless repealed, or materially strangthened, from a protective point of view, this vicious legislation will undermine the whole fabric of American industry, and in so doing confer no benefit upon any American interest. In its most dangerous provisions it has started up British mills night and day, to the detriment of American labor and the destruction of American industry, and in its least dangerous provisions it barely acts as a barrier to the flood of foreign competition which threatens, should prices increase and prosperity return. The duty of the press, therefore, is to keep the facts relating to tariff legislation before the people, that the real condition of the American producer and the American laborer may be understood.

THE New York Sun, a Democratic paper, recognizes the advantage the Republicans will have in the next campaign. It says that the Republicans will argue that the country was prosperous when the Democrats brought on a panic by proposing to smash protection and start up a tariff for revenue only, and that they blocked them in the Senate and saved the country, and business began to revive when a protectionist House of Representatives was elected. Then the Sun remarks:

It must be admitted that they will be able to make a connected and plausible tariff story, which the Democrats, having stuck neither to fish, fowl,nor good red herring, will have some difficulty in doing. The Democrats made a protectionist tariff, but they are estopped from saying so by the unpleasant fact that they promised to unmake such a tariff and make one radically different. To tell the square truth, they must say that they lied to the country, and, of course, a confession like that will never be made.

Such an open confession from a Democratic newspaper ought to be good for its soul. Other Democratic newspapers might imitate its example with profit.

THE speech made by David Armstrong, an iron puddler of Cleveland, 0., at the Labor Day celebration, has caused much comment, and especially the following paragraph from him on strikes:

Lastly, let me say, I have told you I am not in favor of strikes unless as the last resort. But there are several things we can strike for, and it will be money in our pockets and also in the pockets of our employers if we do.

5

Strike for organization. Strike for unity. Strike for the Sabbath. Strike for eight hours a day. Strike against our greatest foe, King Alcohol.

Strike for restriction of gin. Strike for American markets for American goods.

Strike against wrong. Strike against sweat shops. Strike against every man who insults our star-spangled banner—the emblem of a Nation of grand people. And 'long may it wave o'er the land of the free and the home of the brave,' and a braver, grander people it can not protect than the horny-handed sons of toil.

HON. CHARLES W. FAIRBANKS has just landed in New York from i. trip to Europe. In the course of an interview with the New York Tribune, speaking of the English and their ways, said: "I found that many factories which under the operations of the McKinley bill had been forced to close, were now, thanks to the operations of the Gorman tariff law, running full blast. This is the strongest argument in favor of protection that I know of. By our own act we closed prosperous factories in this country and transferred our prosperity to build up the waning industries of England." Mr. Fairbanks

Seems

to have compressed a whole vol

ume of truth into a very few words.-

DEFENDER won the first heat of the international yacht race on Saturday, and won it handsomely There are four more races to be run unless Defender should be lucky enough to win two more before the time for the fifth is reached. It is now forty-four years since first Great Britain and the United States pitted their fleetest yachts against each other. The prize then won by the yacht known as America is the prize that now is the subject of contest. It is held by the winner in trust as a national trophy, to be handed over the next victor. It has been held by America forty-four years.

THE St. Louis Olobe-Democrat sagely remarks that it is a significant fact that political interest is now confined entirely to Democratic States that are likely to go Republican.

THE Revleiv wants Brice and Gorman kicked out of the Democratic party. Were it not for such men as Brice and Gorman there would be no Democratic party.

THE AMERICAN SUNDAY.

Commenting on the resolution passed by the New York Republican League in favbr of the preservation of the American-Sunday the Cincinnati Corn-merclal-Gazcttemakes some pointed observations. Among other things 'it says: "The American^ Sunday is a great institution. It is a day of rest, and is a protection to the toiling masses. Christ said, in opposition to the blue laws of the Jews, that the Sabbath was made for man. and not man for the Sabbath. Experience furnishes abundant evidence of this. It is a day, first of all, of rest, of religious observances and of legitimate recreation. It is a day also of education, and thus proves a bulwark of liberty. It may be said that the Sabbath is most respected where it is not sought to bind the consciences of men within the narrow limits of bigotry. Liberally construed, the Sabbath is one of the great bulwarks of religion, or we may say of the churches. It affords the toiling masses time to think. It presents a weekly recurring opportunity for communion with God and with nature thus places of worship are frequented on that day as they would be on no other. Thus, too, the cause of religious education is promoted, communities are made better and olaws for the government of society are more respected. In proportion as moral suasion increases in power the demand for force diminishes. In this view the connection of the church with the Sabbath is fairly presented, but the church has its limit as that freedom claimed by those outside of the church has its limits. Virtually the Sabbath is an American institution and as such is to be respected and properly observed."

No DOURT our American temperance workers would like to have the autocratic power of the Czar of all the Russias for the purpose of solving the liquor problem as easily as it is to be solved in Russia. Speaking of the new temperance decree of that country the Review of Revleivs says: "In all the history of the modern temperance movement, no public law or decree has ever attempted any task so gigantic or of such far-reaching im" portance as that which Russia's new law has undertaken. For Russia has determined upon nothing less than a complete government monopoly of the manufacture aud sale of the liquor supply for the entire empire. Somewhat more than two years are to be allowed for the system to attain completeness. It is to be put in force in eight provinces on the first day of July, 1S9G, in seven other provinces on the first day of July, 1S!)7, and throughout all the rest of the empire on the first day of January, 1S98. Saloon keeping as a private business will be altogether abolished. The French attempt at a monopoly of wholesale supply has been based very largely upon considerations of public revenue. It does not appear that the new Russian policy rests so much upon financial motives as upon a desire to rid the Russian people once and for all of the demoralizing influences of the liquor traffic as privately conducted."

THE Democratic Chattanooga Times in a most heartless manner says: "Senator Voorhees has been denouncing the courts? but the courts will reflect that Dan'l is not a lawyer to hurt, that he is very much of a politician, and their Honors will smile on the Senator a smile of pity."

ST. Louis Globe Democrat: Senator Voorhees earned the distinction of making the most foolish and contemptible speech that was ever delivered on Labor Day. However, the expected always happens when he opens his unmanageable mouth.

Suecial Train to St. Louis—$2.00 Excursion.

On Tuesday morning, Sept. 34, the T., St. L. «fc K. C. R. R., Clover Leaf Route, will run a special excursion train to St. Louis, leaving Jefferson 4:30 a. m. and stations west in Clinton, Tippecanoe, Montgomery and Fountain counties to Veedersburg inclusive. to 15 minutes later according to distance. (See small bills for full schedule.) No stops will be made for pas sengers west of Veedersburg. Returning special will leave St. Louis, Union Station, 11 p. m., Sept. 24, or tickets will be honored returning regular train, 7:44 a. in., Sept. 25.

The great St. Louis Exposition now open 10 a. m. until 11 p. m. daily. Sousa's grand concert band.

See nearest agent Clover Leaf Route. C. C. JENKINS, Gen. Pass. Agt., Toledo, O.

"A Friend in Need Is a Friend Indeed."

A friend advised me to try Ely's Cream Balm and after using it six weeks I believe myself cured of catarrh. It is a most valuable remedy.— Joseph Stewart, 624 Grant Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.

My son was afflicted with catarrh, I induced him to try Ely's Cream Balm and the disagreeable catarrhal smell all left him. He appears as well as any one.—J. C. Olmstead, Areola, 111

Price of Cream Balm is fifty cents.

Don't Tobacco Spit or Smoko Your Life Away is the truthful, startling title of a book about No-To-Bac, the harmless, guaranteed tobacco habit, cure that braces up nicoj.ini/.ed nerves, eliminates the nicotine poison, makes weak men Rain strength, vigor and manhood. Vou run no physical or financial risk, as No-To-Bac is sold by T. D. Brown Son under a guarantee to cure or money refunded. Hook free. Address Sterling1 Remedy Co., New York or Chicago.

FOB bill heads see THE JOURNAL CO., PRINTERS.

THE BLUES.

Ifhj do Women have the Bines more than Men?

[SPICTAL TO OUR LADT KEADZBS.]

Are not women naturally as lighthearted, brave, and hopeful as men Yes but woman's organism is different from man's. ^.

Women in perfect or good health are rarely victims of this symptom.

Women nearly monopolize the blues, because their peculiar ailments promote them.

When the female organs fail to perform their functions" properly, when the dreaded female complaints appear, there is shownnervousness, sleeplessness, faintr ness, backache, headache, bearingdown pains, etc., causing the dreaded "let-me-alone" and "all-gone" feelings.

When the woman does not understand what the matter is, and her doctor can not or will not tell her, she grows morose and melancholy that's the blues.

Mrs. Newton Cobb, of Manchester, O., says: "Lydia E. PinkJiam's Vegetable Compound will correct all this trouble. I cannot praise it enough. I am pleased to tell every one that it cured me and ii it will cure me, why not others I am sure my case was severe enough." It will.

Get it of your druggist at once.

The Popular Through Car Line

EAST AND WEST.

Elegant Vestlbuled Trains run daily, carrying Palace Sleepers between St. Louis and Toledo, Detroit, Niagara Falls, New York and Boston without change.

Also through sleepers between St. Louis and Chicago, St. Paul, Omaba, Kansas City, Denver and Salt Lake City.

Peerless Dining Cars and free RecliniDg Chair Cars on all through trains. Connections with other roads made in Union Depots. Baggage checked through to all points.

When you buy your ticket see that it reads via the "Wabash.' For time tables, maps or other information apply to any railroad ticket a sent or to J. 1, McCONNELL.

Pass, and Ticket Agt., Lafayette, Ind. JOHN SHUTTS, Ticket Agent, Danville, Ills.

C. S. CRANE,

G. P. & T. A.. St. Louis. Mo.

Morgan & Lee

ABSTRACTORS, LOAN AND

INSURANCE AGENTS

Money to Loan at 6 per cent Interest. Farms and City Property or Sale Life, Fire and Accident Insurance. Office North Washington st., Ornbaun

Block, CrawforrtBville, Ind.

W. K. WALLACE

Agent for the Connecticut Fire Insurance Co., ot Hartford. American Fire Insurance Co., of New York, Girard Fire Insurance Company, of Philadelphia, London Assurance Corporation* of London, Grand Rapids Fire Insurance Co., of Michigan.

Office in Joel Block with R. E. Bryant, South Wash. St. Crawfordsville.

ED YORIS. MAC STILWELL.

Voris & Stilwell.

(Established 1877)

Representing 20 of the Oldest and Largest Fire, Life and Accident Iusurance Companies. Farm Loans a Specialty. Prompt and Equit able Settlement of Losses. Office—3d door nofth of Court House, Crawfordsvllle, Ind.

C. C. RICE, Solicitor,

GEORGE W. FULLER,

Crawfordsville, Ind. Breeder aud Shipper of thoroughbred POLAND

CREAM BALM!

Is quickly absorbed. Cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and

Inflammation, Heals the Sores, Protects the

Membrane from Additional Cold. Restores the Senses of Taste

And Smell.

CHINA hogs,B.P.Rocks, White Guineas and Fan Tail Pigeons. Stock and Eggs for sale. Eggs81.25

per 15 or $2 Write your wants.

ELY'S

CATARRH

COLD 'M HEAD

IT WILL CORE. A particle Is applied Into each nostril and is agreeable. Price 5u cents at druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warre stree .New York.

PARKER'S

HAIR BALSAM

I Cleanse* and beautifies the hair. I Promote* ft luxuriant growth. Never Fails to Restore Gray

Hair to its Youthful Color. I Cure* acalp diseatro A hair ialling. ^^OcjMd^OOaMrujgi8j^^

UNO or PROMISE

HERIFF'S SALE.

|A HOME

YOUR OWK

With good living the year round.

If those Intending farm, and others, wil write to The C. S GRAVES LAND CO..

I GoaBjgfyun tr

•SSSSM

Chicago, Illinois.

..who have excellcni

arming land in Central Wisconsin, Clark County,

MW t0 per BCre

they will learn something tbut

will interest them. Terras easy, only $2 perncrocash If you have a little money the

Company will furnist

•n® rest, and you might as well own a farm as to paj nigh cash rent each year or work one on shares. Companies of practical farmers now being formed (O locate la the spring. Over 3,000 acres sold in foul nonths. Address: fh«C.S.

GRATES LAND CO., R.

$11,56

Fifth Am.,Chicago,111

O. U. PERRIN.

A W E

Practices in Federal and State Courts." PATENTS A SPECIALTY. J53r"Law Offices, Crawford Building.

Opp, Music Hall, Crawfordsville.

By virtue of a certified copy of a decree and order of sale ,to me directed from the Clerk of the Montgomery Circuit Court, in a cause wherein .The Eureka Bank- of Eureka, Kansas, is plaintiff, ancl Jackson Bailett et al. lire defenda nts, requiring nie to make the sum of twenty-seven hundred twenty-one dollars and fifty cents, with interest, on said decree and costs, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder on--

SATURDAY,SEPTEMBER 21, A. D., 189.5, 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 ami profits for a term not exceeding seven years, the following real estate, to-wit:

I'art of the southeast quarter of .section two (2) in township seventeen (17) north, of range six (6) west, and bounded as follows, to-wit.: Beginning at the southeast corner of said southeast quartet section, thence west seventy (70) poles to the center of a road, thence ',y,on£-r said road north two (2) degrees and fifteen (15) minutes west thirty-six (30) poles, thence north twelve (12) degrees west thirtytwo (.'52) poles, thence north forty-one and a quarter (41J4) degrees west thirty (30) poles, thence north sixty-seven and one-half (67^4) degrees east twenty-six (26) poles and fifteen (15) links, witnessed by an elm fifteen (15) inches in diameter, bearing north six (6) degress east five (6) links, thence north twenty-

al,

one-half (24^) degrees west thirty

(30) poles and fifteen (15) links to SugarCreek. thence up the same south seventy-nine (79) degrees east about ninety (-90) poles to the east line of the aforesaid quarter section, thence south on the said line about one hundred aud fourteen (114) poles to the place of beginning, containing sixty (60) acres more or less. Also, the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section one (1) township seventeen (17) north, of range six (6) west, containing fortv (40) acres also, part of the northeast quarter of section eleven (11). township seventeen (17) north.of range six (6) west, bounded as follows: Commencing at the northeast corner of said northeast quarter of said northeast quarter of said section eleven (11) thence west on the section line eighty (80) rods to the northwest corner of said northeast quarter of said northeast quarter of section eleven (11), thence south with a line dividing said quarter section fifty-five (55) rods to a stake or stone thence east eighty (80) rods to the section line, thenco north with said section line fifty-live (55) rods to the place of beginning, excepting two (2) acres more or less in tlie northwest corner of said tract of laud above described, on the west side of the public highway sold and conveyed by Mary J. and William A. Smith, said two (2) acres comprising all the laud on the west side of the center of the road. Also, part ot the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section twelve (12) township seventeen 17) north, of range (6) west, bounded as follows: Commencing at the northwest corner of said northwest, quarter of said northwest, quarter, thence east on the section line eighty (80) rods to the line dividing said quarter section, thence south on said line fifty-live (55) rods to a stake or stone, thence west eighty (80) rods to .the section line, thence north with said section line fifty-five (55) rods to the pla^e of beginning, contalnng twenty-seven and one-half (27'/^) acres, and in all one hundred ajid fifty-three (153) acres, more or less, all situate in Montgomery county. State of Indiana, excepting from the above described land.

All that part of the east half of the southeast quarter of section two (2) in township seventeen (17) north, of range six (6) west, bounded and described asfollows: Beginning at a point twenty-nine (29) chains north of the southeast corner of said section two (2), said beginning point being on the east line of said section at the point of intersection of said east line and the south margin of Sugar Creek in the mouth of Indian Creek, thence south four (4) degrees west along said east line four (4) chains and forty-five (45) links to a stake ou top of the bluff, thence in a westerly direction with and followingthecrestor top edge of the bluff to a point on the crest.or top edge of the bluff six hundred and ninety (690) feet west of said east line of said section, thence north four (4) degrees east tlve hundred and four (604i feet, to the south margin of Sugar Creek to a stake witnessed by an elm eight (8) inches in diameter, south four (4) degrees east, six (G) feet, and a .sugar tree two (3) feet, in diameter, south five (5) degrees east twenty-four (24i feet, thence up said Sugar Creek about, ten (10) chains and ninety-six (96) links to the place of beginning. And also, the following part of said mortgaged premises, to-wit: Beginning at the northwest, corner of the last above described tract on the sout margin of Sugar Creek, running thence west along said creek to the center of the first hollow east of the bridge across said SugarCreek, thence up said hollow in a southwesterly direction to a fence, thence in a northeasterly direction with said fence to a point where said fence intersects the ere-t of the bluff on said creek, thence easterly with the crest of said bluff to the west line of the last above described tract, thence north along said west line to the place of beginning, containing, in both tracts, seven (7) acres, more or less, all in Montgomery county, Indiana.

If such rents and profits will not. sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs. I will at the same time and 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 my relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws.

CHARLES E. DAVIS, Sheriff Montgomery County.

August 30, A. D., 1895,—9-20.—$.36. NEBEKER & SIMMS. Attorneys for Plaintiff.

N

OT1CE TO NON-RESIDENTS.

State of Indiana, Montgomery County. Ii the Montgomery Circuit Court, September term, 1895.

John A. Sterling. Executor of the estate of Mary S. Tapp, deceased, vs. Charles F. Bell et al. Complaint No. 117'il.

Comes now the plaintiff by William T. Brush, his attorney, anci files his complaint herein, to quiet title to real estate, together with an affidavit that said defendants, Maria Gaines, Martha Lucas, Mary A. Lee, Georgia Lucas. Genevive Shelly, Maria Lucas, Sarah Gregg, James A. Paxton, David P. Paxton, Mice C. NVoodin, Elhi Paxton, Amanda V. Irons, Clara M. Sterling. Mary T. Hubby. Dora Graves and Luclle Graves, are not residents of the State of Indiana.

Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants, that unless they be aud appear on the 45th day of the September term of the Montgomery Circuit Court for the year 181)5. the same being the 23d day of October, A. D., 18'Jo, at the court house in Crawfordsville, iu said county and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in their absence.

Witness my name, and the seal of said Court affixed at Cra wfordsville. this 24t.li day of August. A. D., 1895.

WALLACE SPARKS,

August 30, 1895.—3t Clerk.

"I^OTICE TO HAIRS, CREDITORS, ETC.

In the matter of the estate of Darwin McCullough, deceased. In the Montgomery Circuit Court, September term. 1895.

Notice is hereby given that Hosea II. Ristine as adininist rator of the estate of Darwin McCullougli, deceased, has presented and filed his accounts and vouchers in final settlement of said aestate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 25t day of September. 1895. at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are required to appear iu said court and show cause if any there be, why said accounts and vouchers should not be approved, and the heirs or distributees of said estate are also notified to be in said court- at the time aforesaid and make proof of heirship.

Dated this 2d day of September, 1895. HOSEA H'. R1STINE, 9-13 Administrator.

N

Estate of Silas Hall, deceased. OTICE OF APPOINTMENT.

Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed and duly qualified as executor of the last will and testament of Silas Hall, late of Montgomery county, Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be sol vent.

WILLIAM R. LYNCH,

Dated Aug. 30, 1895-9-20 Executor.

MOJVOJV ROUTE.

NORTH BOUTH 2:18 a. Night Express 1:50 a. 1:10 p. Passenger. 1:10 p. 2:50 p. Local Freight 9:16 a.

,£*

BIG 4—PEORIA DIVISION. EABT WEST 8:17 a. Dally, except Sunday 6:27 p. 1:24 p. ui Dally, except Sunday 8:55 a. 4:53 p. Dally 1:24 p. 1:50 a. Daily 12:45 p.

VAJSDALIA.

SOUTH JiOllTIJ I 9:02 a. m. ......8:16 a. 5:10p. 6:19 p. 8.-10 p. _.2:33 p.