Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 13 December 1895 — Page 2
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ESTABLISHED IN 1848.
asuocoasor to The Record, the first paper In flrawfordsvUle. established In 1831, and. to The JFVwpZe's Press, established 1844.
PRINTED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING,
THE JOURNAL COMPANY.' 'TP. B. MCCAIN, President. IJ. A. GRIiENE, Secretary?
A. A. MoCAIN,Treasurer
TERMS OF SUBSCBIPTION:
One year In advance. l-?0 Biz months "J: Three months
Payable in advance. Sample copies tree.
THE DAII.Y JOURNAL.
KSTABMSUKD IN
1887. ./ "'.i::
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
One year In advance '5*22 glx months ?.50 three months. .. Per week, delivered or by mall iu
Bntered at the Postofflce at Crawfordsvllle, Indiana, as seoond-olass matter.
CIRCULATION STATEMENT
Of THE CRAWFOBDSVILLK JOURNAL, showing the average circulation of the Daily and Weekly for the three months of September, October and November, 1895:
DAILY
DATE SEPT'ER OCT'BER'NOV'MBER 1 Sunday 1,280 1,350 1,306 1,283 1,332 •Q 1,307 1,285 Sunday 4" 1,277 1,1287 1,328 5 1,280 1,285 1,332 6 1,276 Sunday 1,320
7
1 3
17
2 4
1,285 1.380 1,332 ..Sunday 1,307 1,346
9............ i.28i 1,305 1,335 1 0 1,307 1,311 Sunday 11 1,289 1,311 1,330 1 2 1,312 1,280 1,324
1,315 Sunday 1,330
1 4 1,281 1,285 1.324 1 5 Sunday .. 1,305 1,332 1 6 1,201/ 1,304 1,320
1,285 1,311 Sunday
1 8 1 281-1,310 1,430 1 9 1,276 1,311 1,354 2 0 1,287 Sunday 1,350 2 1 1,289 1,308 1,854 2 2 Sunday 1.306 1,348 2 3 1,291 1,309 1,804
1,287 1,313 Sunday
2 5 1.284 1,308 1,360 2 6 1,306 1,313 1.345 2 7 1,280 Sunday 1.356 2 8 1.286 1,308 Tli'ksg'v'g 2 9 Sunday 1,330 1,375 3 0 1,282 1,325 1,329 3 1 1.330
Totals, 32,241 '35,290 33.536 Grand Total- 101,007 Average 1,313
WEEKLY.
DATB SEPT'ER DATB OCTOBER DATE NOV'MBEIL 6 2,795 4 2,884 1 3,154 13.... 2,788": 11 3.080 8 3,204 20.........2.796 18 3,098 15 3,209 87....._..2,884 25 3,105 22 3,206 29 3,208
11,213 12,167 15,°81 Grand Total
3?3|»1
Average 3,028 STATE OF INDIANA, I
A
MONTGOMERY COUNTY,
Arthur A. McCain being first duly sworn on his oath, says that he Is Treasurer of the Journal Co., a corporation printing and publishing the Crawfordsvllle Dally and Weekly Journal, and that the foregoing exhibit Is a true ana correct statement of the circulation of said newspapers.
ARTHUR A. MCCAIN.
3s* Subscribed and sworn to before the undersigned this 5th day of December. 1895. BYRON R. RUSSELL,
Notary Public.
THEDAII.YJOURNALIScreditedwithahigher circulation rating than any other Daily issued
Bpaper Directory, WHO will
a reward of one hundred dollars to the first person who proves that its issues were not us stated. ,THE WEEKLY JOURNAL is credited with a 'biglilu' circulation rating than any other Weekly issued in Montgomery county, and the accuracy of its rating is guaranteed by the publishers of the American Newspaper Directory, who will pay a reward of one hundred dollars to the first person who proves that its issues wore not as stated.
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13.1895.
GROVES is off on a hunting expedition and that war with England must be postponed until he returns from his recreation.
REPRENENTATIVE OVERSTREET, of this State, has prepared a bill which he will introduce soon, providing for the payment'of all pensions by draft, and abolishing the payment of pensions on perbonal application. This is a bill that ought to pa-ss without opposi tion. 'v
CLEVELAND Leader: While the Dem ocratic newspapers of the East are praising Grover Cleveland for doing his utmost to "kill the silver folly, the Democratic newspapers of the West are damning him for killing the Democratic party. Thus the troubles of the big President are accounted for.
THE curfew ordinance was killed in the Terre Haute City Council by a vote of 16 to 3. Nevertheless, the ordinance is right and should be in force in every town and city in the country. Youngsters under 10 should be kept off the streets after 8 o'clock at night. The school of the street is the school of vice.
IN its editorial columns the Argus 'News is a devoted adherent of Grover Cleveland and the single standard, and that standard gold. At the same time it folds a free silver supplement in its weekly edition. The A. N. is anxious to catch Democrats both a comin' and a goin', most of whom just now seem to be a goin'.
FBANKFOBT wants a curfew law. A numerously signed petition has been presented to the City Council asking that body to pass an ordinance prohib iting all children from appearing on the streets after 9 o'clock, unless accompanied by parents or guardian. Wherever it hus been tried, it .has worked well. 7,'
IF Congress don't like Cleveland's financial plan why don't it suggest a better one?—Argus News.
For increasing the revenue Mr. Cleveland has no plan. His "financial plan" is a contraction of the currency to the extent of 8500,000,000, and substitute therefore interest bearing bonds. As a bond issuer Mr. Cleveland is a pronounced success.
TO MONTGOMERY COUNTY FARMERS. The farmers of the county should not fail to attend the Farmers' Institute to be held in Crawfordsville on the 21st and 22d days of December These institutes are held under a State law passed for the purpose of imparting useful information to the farming commur'ty, and farmers who neglect to attend them will be the very first ones to complain that there is never any legislation in f^vor of farmers. But the fact is, that when there is legislation in favor of farmers they ure exceedingly negligent about availing themselves of its benefits. The farmers should attend these institutes, if for no other purpose, to show that they appreciate the efforts the Legislature has made ia their behalf.
BENJAMIN HA"RRISON spent his term getting rid of a big treasury surplus and cutting down the revenues of the government. The people want no more Harrison in theirs.—Argus News.
Yes, that is true. He got rid of the big treasury surplus by paying off nearly three hundred millions of the public debt. The McKinley law cut down the revenues of the government to the pointof sufficiency. When Harrison retired from the Presidency he left in the treasury the sum of $124,000,000. The gold reserve of §100,000,000 was left intact with a surplus of 824,000,000. Before Mr. Cleveland had been installed a year the surplus had been squandered and $182,000,000 besides. The people want no more Cleveland in theirs. He is a back number. The people have tried him and his party, and their votes show plainly what they think about his policy and his party and its capacity and the condition of the country under Democratic rule. Even the Argus News must admit that Cleveland and his whole body of adherents and admirers would have been dumped into the Atlantic ocean if the votes of 1894 and 1895 could have done it. The people prefer a debt-paying to a debt-mak-ing party all the time. The Argus News is simply whistling to bolster up its courage.
THE New York Tribune is strictly in favor of Congress going ahead and doing its duty. It observes: "The duty of Congress is plain. It is waste of time to talk of increasing the revenues by any makeshift in the form of taxation. Nor is it at all to the purpose to say that because any tariff legislation in the line of Republican teaching and doctrine is likely to be met with a Presidential veto, a Republican Cougress shoald on that account deviate from the strict line of principle in order to meet the views of the President. Those views have been distinctively repudiated by the people. Anv attempt to conform to them by variation from the straight line of Republican doctrine would be a betrayal of trust. The duty of legislation is laid upon Congress. Let it be discharged conscientiously and courageously, leading with the President the responsibility of his own proper functions. The main thing to be kept in mind is that this Congress was elected to do something this year, and not to waste time talking about the possible effect of its action upon next year's election."
THE Winter Wheat Millers' League is preparing to engage the attention of Congress this winter on some very im portant matters concerning reciprocity. Members of the Exchange Committee say that it is almost impossible for American, millers, to send their flour to many of the foreign countries so heavy is the tariff imposed on this product. Especially is this true of France and Germany. In both of these countries an enormous duty is exacted of the American miller. Congress will be asked to either establish more harmonious reciprocal relations with these countries or declare some sort of retaliation. The repeal of the McKinley law and the enactment of the existing Wilson measure have proved terribly disastrous to American millers.
THE most evident effect of free-trade is the increase in our imports. When the present tariff law was under discussion the advocates of the bill freely admitted that, in order to supply sufficient revenue, an increase in imports would be necessary. They claimed that we would pay for our increased imports with increased exports. Facts have not justified the: assumption. The Gorman bill closed our manufactories, paralyzed our industries and tremendously reduced the volume of our production. Instead of paying for our imports with our export products we are paying for them in gold.
AT THE special election held in Louisville on Saturday for a member of the Legislature in one of the districts of that city the Democratic candidate was successful by a majority of 468. The district has a nominal Democratic majority of about a thousand, so that the result is not a disappointment to Republicans. The result, however, makes the Legislature a tie. Two or three Democratic seats are in contest, with the probability that they will be unseated. If they are not the Legislature will be deadlocked and Kentucky will be represented by but one Senator lor at least two years.
BUILDING ASSOCIATIONS. The building association idea took hold of Crawfordsville in 1882, when the first association was organized.- It •was a success from the beginning. Since then three other associations have been organized, making four in all, each of which is doing a most prosperous and successful business.
Besides the four in this city there are prosperous associations at Waveland, New Market, Ladoga, Darlington, Waynetown, Wing-ate and New Richmond. It is estimated that onetwelfth of the homes built in the United States have been erected by the assistance of building and loan associations, and, further, that these institutions are building more homes te-uay than all other agencies in the country combined. These two assumptions are based on reports of the United States labor bureau, and they establish building and loan associations as a factor deserving of the most careful consideration. There are in the United States 4,160,00b families paying rent, and only 1,640,000 that own their own houses, besides which 650,000 homes are mortgaged. The scope and extent of the work before building and loan associations may, to an extent, be grasped when it is stated that they now have assets aggregating S750.000,000. At present there are in progress of erection ovfer 150,000 homes in the United States by building and loan associations. About one-seventh of this number, or nearly 20,000 homes, are every year completed and paid for by and through building and loan associations and become free and unincumbered to their owners. Fifteen years ago there was not one-fifteenth as many houses in process of erection or completion by building and loan associations. The rapidity of their growth in usefulness as a factor in civilization can be partially determined from these figures, but the extent of their usefulness and the hold they have taken upon the people is best seen in the fact that-they have in the United States over 1,500,000 of shareholders, or, in other words, they have an average of one shareholder for every ten families in the land. The largest percentage of shares ov. ned by any class of people is by housewives, their holdings being 17 per cent, of the entire assets of the building associations, as against three per cent, owned by capitalists, but as the safety of such investments is coming to be better known, larger sums of money from capitalists are becoming available.
THIS from the Democratic Louisville Couier Journal is respectfully referred to the Democratic Argus News. It will be seen that the C. J. assails the A. N.'s idol and makes him chiefly responsible for the woes and disasters of the party:
But why cry over milk that is spilled? What boots it now what were Mr. Cleveland's ulterior purposes? .If he meditated the disruption of both the Republican and Democratic parties and the construction of a Cleveland party as his enemies allege, he perpetrated a grievous miscalculation. The party which thrice honored him with its nominations and twice elected him President is left with the bag to hold, and a very empty bag it is. lie has had his dav. to him full of glory and renown to his party full of disaster. Presently he will go out of place and power, carrying with bim the curses of some, the adulation of others, and the average opinion that he was an average President, who if he did no great good, did no great harm marking time as it were, and leaving the public service very much as he found it, albeit, for the time being wrecking' the cause which the people fancied to be embodied in his person. Mr Morton's illustration of a bank and a bank president, with reference to Mr. Cleveland and the government, sizes up Mr. Morton's master perfectly. Mr. Cleveland has had no higher ideal.- The image which the people have constructed out of their own generous and confiding beliefs, setting it on a pedestal, labeling it "Cleveland," and extolling its virtues, has never had any actual existence—but in its stead a dull, plodding bank president, suspicious and grudging, destitute alike alike of imagination and sympathy, and far. very far, from a hero of any kind.
THE President iu a clear and forcible mariner has shown Congress what is needed. Will they listen and obey?— Aryus News.
He has shown that be favors exchanging a non-interest bearing cur rency for a currency that bears interest—that the country would have to increase its debt in the neighborhood of 8500,00r,0 terest on the •I rder to extinguish a cur rency which cost nothing. Congress will neither listen nor obey. It will be combatted by all Republicans and four-fifths of the Democrats. Even Dan Voorhees says such a suggestion is "repugnr.nt" to him.
JUDGE HEFFBEN, of the Daviess circuit court, has decided that a signer to a remonstrance under the Nicholson law can withdraw his name provided he so requests three days before the beginning of the commissioners' court at which the 'application for a licens-.-. is to be acted on. After that tSm* si petitioner cannot withdraw his nam No good reason can be given v.- a signer should be permitted to witudraw or erase his name at any time.
DEMOCRATS are hoping and prophesying that "the present will be adonothing Congress/' They would do as well to wait and see.-fc_
Catarrh of the Stoma#
INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT THIS PECULIAR DISEASE.
A Well-known Ulan Relates Mis Experience nnd Tells How lie Suceceitc-U In Getting Relief. {From the St. Louis, Mo., Chronicle.) "No one knows except myself the amount of suffering I endured for upwards of four years, from what I was tola was catarrh of the stomach." The speaker was Mr. J. P. Fox, one of the best known professional swimmers in St. Louis, now at Prof. Clark's Natatorium, 19th ana Pine. Prof. Fox's occupation necessitated his being in the water several hours every day. He contracted a severe cold, which he neglected, then another and another and finally he broke down,, the effect of these colds seemed to debilitate and finally disease his stomach, and he had such symptoms as— stinging pains in his head, an inflammation of the membranes of the throat and air passages, which filled with a slimy substance, liis appetite failed him, he became gaunt and thin and excessively nervous— all of which denoted Catarrh of the stomach. An attack of vertigo one day rendered him unconscious for naif an hour after which he was confined to the house, and scarcely able to walk across the room. He was sleepless, had violent pains and indigestion of the worst kind. Mr. Fox said to our reporter Often I would be seized with a feeling of suffocaUon. This went on until one day a friend insisted that I try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, and be read to me a paper wherein several cures of cases similar to mine were reported. I determined to give them a trial. My mother threw the doctor's medicineaway and actually before I had taken half of the contents of the .first box I began to feel a marked improvement. I began to sleep well, with my returning appetite I begau to take a better view of life, the gnawing sensations 'in my stomach disappearedt I ceased to belch up gas and had no feelings of vomiting after eating, the soreness in my throat went away, and, well, within a month, I ventured'out of the house. I kept on with the pills, and —well you see me now. I feel as well as ever I aid and I don't suppose there is a sounder man physically than myself in the country. I am in and out of the water three and four times a dav, giving swimming lessons, and I certainly attribute mv present good health to Dr. Williams' Pint Pills. You can use my name if you want to, and I shall be pleased to tell of the great benefits I have derived from the use of the pills at any time."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are new manufactured by the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., and are sold in boxes (never in loose form by the dozen or hundred, and the public are cautioned against numerous imitations sold in this shape) at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, and may be had of all druggists, or direct, by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company.
THE Boston Herald, quoting that paragraph of the President's message in which causes are assigned for the reduction of the gold reserve from 897,000,000 at the end of April, 1893, to §05,000,000 on Februay 1, 1894, says pointedly: "Now, in point of fact, when you take that period of nine months as a whole, you find that the actual conditions were the reverse of those painted by the President." Thus .the excess of exports for the nine months amounted to no less a sum than S190,000,000. And in the same period the imports of gold were 837,000,000 in excess of the exports." "When j'.ou come down," says the Herald, "to cold figures, the situation ran exactly contrary to his description." What., then, was the cause of the reduction in the gold reserve? "It was the excess of expenditures over receipts," is the answer of the Boston newspaper—the very answer that every intelligent man in the country know's to be true.
IT has come to be a common tning to hear "the tariff spoken of as a dead issue. Democrats generally recognize the fact that their party has made such a miserable failure of its efforts at reform that they would gladly see the subject relegated to the rear until their folly is forgotten. But it is still a live subject and one that will be given attention by Congress—and it will be present in the coming national campaign, no matter who may be the candidates of the respective parties.
CINCINNATI Commercial-Gazette: The President's financial policy, simmered down, is: Retire the greenbacks and Treasury notes, thereby reducing the circulating medium many millions maintain a yawning hole in the Treasury, and occasionally throw in a few millions of bonds keep the revenues below the current expenses.
POPULISM seems to have been pretty well checked off, for there are only six Populists in the new House, two coming from North Corolina and one each from Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska and Alabama, whereas there were 12 in the last House. All the delegates from the Territories are now Republican, for the first time.
THE Democrats of the State will meet as a Lodge of Sorrow next Wednesday at the State Capital. Senator Voorhees will be there with bis lecture on the "resurrection." Amid the gloom that surrounds them they hope to dt rive much comfort from the words that may fall from his lips.
THE deficit for the first four days of December is now 81,504,754.88, for the fiscal yeav to date 817,874,082.56, and for the Clov- lnnd Administration$129,235,523.78. Aud yet there is not a word in 'Mr. Cleveland's message by way of a suggestion how this deficiency is to be met.
TBYacan of Hopkins' Steamed Hominy (hulled or:: It is delicous. Full quart 10c. wll-21-4t
MONBY to loan. C. A. MILIJKB.
Fon
programmes see THB JOUHSAL Ca, PIUKTKKS.
Feed. Mills,
Breaking Plows,
Cider Mills,
Feed Cookers,
Wheat Drills,.
Dandy Wind Mills,
iver & Ramsey
211-213 S. Green St., Crawfordsville.
|jo you ever eat Anything old man? Jf }*ou do just j^eave your order, if You will, at the Daily
JVjJarket of R. E. Atkinson, /^nd if you have produce Ready foi the market
KeeP *n mind that ££very day you can "f ake it there and
D°
better than you
Really think for. Others can do no better. Prompt attention shown.
Jn every instance and [\|o one turned away.
The Daily Market
S DROP IN.
Corner of Water and College Streets.
LOS T!
in a fence by a wealthy farmer resid ing not far from Crawfordsville, the sum of 850, because he paid that much more for it than he could have Bought a better fence for at my factory. If you do not wish to have the same stor}' told of you call at my factory and get prices on the best
Woven Wire Fenc
in the market to-day, which for strength, durability and elasticity is equaled by none.
My Woven Wire Fencing is manufactured in heights and lengths to suit the general trade. Call and see me at my factory at the old electric light building. Spring Street, Crawfordsville, Ind.
CI. W. WHITTIN GrTOKT
In a Hurry! I
Want to go somewhere?
Ring up 63 quick and order one of those easy and safe turnouts of Davis Bros., the Pike Street Liverymen.:/* Farmers feed there, citizins board their family horses there, and thepeopie who trade there once are sure to go again.
DAVIS BROS.
Corner of Pike and Walnut Streets, Opposite Baptist Church.
CHOICE
Farms, Dwellings, Vacant Lots,
For sale on Reasonable Terms
Money to Loan
In Sums to Suit at Lowest interest.
Idle Money
Promptly Invested Free of charge.
R.E. BRYANT &CO
Real Estate Agents, Joel Block.
O.U. PERRIN.
iilA. w-y-EiiH.
Praotloes in Federal and State Courts. PATENTS A SPECIALTY. fSfLaw Offices, Crawford Building.
Opp, Music Hall, Crawfordsville.
ED VORIS. MAO STILWELL.
Voris & Stilwell.
(Established 1877)
Representing 2G of the Oldest and Largest Firo. X.'fe and Accident Iusurance Companies. Farm Loan* a Specialty. .Prompt and Equit able Settlement of Losses. Office—3d door north of Court House, Craw* fordsville. Ind.
C. C. RICE, Solicitor.
^HERIFF'S SALE.
By vlriuo qf a certified copy of a decree and order of sale to mo directed from the Clerk of the Moiitgomory county Circuit Co\irt, In ii cause wherein The Waveland Mutual Building and Loan Association is plaintifl, and James C. Wright et al. arede-
Tendants,
requiring me to make tho sum of
four hundred and forty-eight dollars and ninety cents, with interest on said docree and costs, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder on
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21. 185)5, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. und 4clock m. of said day,' at the door of the court house lu Crawfordsville, Montgomery county, Indliiua, the rents and profits for a lerin not, exceeding seven years, the followiiur doscWbed real estate, to-wit:
I he northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section one (1) In township seventeen (17) north, of ranjre six (0) west.
Also the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section one (1) in townshii) seventeen (17) north, of range six (6) west. described tract, to-wit: Three and ..J-100 acres off the southwest corner of the east half of the northwest, quarter of section one (1) In fownshiii seventeen (17) north, of ranee
six
S|
(6) west, ljounded
as follows: Beginning' at the southwest corner of said east half, running thence north eighteen (18) rods and twelve (12) links to a stone thence south 88')£ degrees cast nine (9) poles
even
(11) links to a stone. tlK*uce soutU
77 degrees east twenty (20) poles and fourteen (14) links to a post, thence south 58 degrees east twenty-one (21) poles to a post on the south boundary lino of said east half, thence west, on said line forty-seven (47) poles and ten aud one-thalf (l(Hj) links to the place of beginning, containing in all 83.7 acres IndKna
s"*uil^e^'n
7
Montgomery county
If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest costs, iwl at the same time and place, expose to public .sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufllelent to discharge said decree, interest and costs. ..aid sale will bo made without any relief whatever from valuation orappraisnineiit" laws. CHAULES E.bAVIS,
Montgomery county, Ind.
R-
JOHNSON, Deputy.
\Jm. T. Brush, Attorney for p'laintitl'. Aovember^O. 1805.—1U-20-S10.00.
gHEltlKK S SALE. ."
By virtue of a certified copy of a decree and order of sale to me directed from the Clerk of the Montgomery County Circuit Court, in a .V.1-,0.'11 the State of Indiana ex rel Wiliijim W bite Auditorof Mont^romerv oounty, Indiana, is plaintitr, and Walter Canine is defendant, requiring me to make the sum or thirteen hundred and twenty-six dollars, with interest on said decree and costs, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on
SATURDAY, DECEMBKK 21,1895, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. an9 & clock p. in. of said day, at the door of the courthouse in Crawfordsvllle, Montgomery.* county, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, the following real erftate. to-wit:
Th southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section six (6) also the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section soven (7) excepting therefrom two (2) acres in a triangular shape in the southwest corner, and also three (8) acres in a triangular shape out of the northwest corner of the east half of the northwest quarter of section seven 17), all in town-liipfcseventeen (17) north, of range five (5) west, containing in all eighty-one (81) acres more or less, situated In Moutgomorv countj-, Indiana
If such rents and profits will not soli for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, Interest' and costs. I will, at the same time and place, expose to public sale tlie fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may bo sufficient to discharge said decree. Interest and costs. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or (appraisement laws. CHARLES E. DAVIS.
Sheriff Montgomery County. By JOHN R. HOBIKSO.V. Deputy.
Flnley P. Mount, attorney t'or plaintiff. Nov. 20, 1895-12-20-812.00,
N
ON. -RESIDENT NOTICE.
Probate cause No. 2,508. In the Circuit Court of Montgomery county, Indiaua, January term, 1898.
William Burris,. administrator of estate of Margery Fuller, deceased, vs. Georiro Osboru et at, to Rebecca Bever. Matthias Bever, Oliver P. Puller, Wealthy Myers.
John.
Myers, Jane Kmtnons. Jolin Emmons. William1 Fuller, Ruth M. Underwood and Harris Underwood.
You are severally hereby notified that the above named petitioner as administrator of the estate aforesaid, has filed in the Circuit Court of Montgomery county, Indiana, a petition making you defendants thereto, and praying therein for an order and decroe of said court authorizing the saleof certain real estate belonging to the estate or said decedent, and in said petition described, to make assets for the payment of the debts and liabilities of said estate, t.ogeilier with an affidavit that said defendants are non-residents of the State of Indiana, and thataldpetition.. so filed and pending, is set for heariDg in said Circuit. Court at the court house in Crawfordsville, Indiana, on the 5th judicial day of tho January term, 1896, of said court, the same being tho 10th day of January, 1896.
Witness the Clerk and seal of said court, this 4th day of December. 1890 WALLACE SPARKS, 12-5 3 t. Clerk.
N
ON-RESIDENT NOTICE.
Probate cau«e No. 2497. In tho Circuit Court of Montgomery county, Indiana. January term, 1896.
William R. l.ynch. tSxecutor of the last will and testament of Silas Hall, deceased, vs. Grace Hall. etal.
To Amanda M. Wesner, John M. Hall and: Alice M. Lackey. You are severally hereby notified that the above named petitioner as Executor of tlie last will and testament.of Silas Hall, deceased, has tiled iu the Circuit court of Montgomery county, Indiana, a petition making you defendants thereto, and praying therein for an order und decree of said c^urt authorizing the sale of certain real estate helonglng to the estate of
Bald
decedent, and in said peti
tion described, to make assets for the payment of tho debts and liabilities of said estate together with an affidavit that said defendants are not residents of tho State of Indiana, and that said petition, so filed and pending, is set for hearing In said circuit court at the court house in Crawfordsville, Indiana, on tho 5th judicial day of the January term, 1896, of said court, the same being thelOth day of January. 1S96.
Witness, the Clerk and seal of said court, this 4th day of December. 1S95. WALLACE SPARKS,
Dec. Otli 1895.-11-20 Clerk
JV^OTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS, ETC.
In the matter of the estate of Robert J. Vance, deceased. "In the Montgomery Circuit Court. November term. 1895
Notice is hereby given thatEIizabothV. Roderick. as administratrix of the estate of Robert' J. Vance, deceased, has presonted and filed her accounts and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said circuit court on the 27th day of December, 1895, at which time.all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said court and show cause if any tliere be, why said accounts and vouchers should not be approved, and the helrs.or distributees of said estate aro ulso notified to be in said court at the time aforesaid and make proof of heirship.
Dated this 5th day of December. 1895. ELIZABETH V. RODERICK, 12-6 2 Administratrix.
Estate of Benjamin N. A. Grimes. Deceased, OTICE OF APPOINTMENT.,
1ST
Notice Is hereby giveu. that the "undersigned has been appointed and"duly qualified as Executor of the last Will and Testament of Benjamin N. A. Grimes, "late of Montgomery County, Indiaua, decased. Said estate is supposed tobe solvent.
ROBERT H. BRUMFIELD. Executor-
Dated Nov. 29th, 1895.
J^XECUTOR'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE.
In pursuance of the authority vested in me py the terms of the last will and testament of Elliott Pearson, deceased, I will sell at private sale after four weeks from date hereof at my office, No. 7 Fisher Building, Crawfordsville. Indiana, the'followlng real estate IntMontgoroery county,-Indiana to-wit:
The east half of the'.southeast.'quarter of section sixteen (10) In township seventeen (17) north, of rangfe three (3) west, containing 80 acrei. THEODORE H. RlSTINE,
Nov. 29-12-20 Executor.
