Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 3 January 1896 — Page 4
"WEEKLY JOCEML.
ESTABLISHED IN 1848.
^Successor to
Tht Record,
THE Atlanta
the first paper
Crawford9vlllo, established 5n ana Th6 Peoplo'« Press, established 1844
PRINTED EVERY FRIDAY MORNIHG.
THE JOURNAL COMPANY. *. H' B. McCAIN, Presidont. jJ. A. GKSENE. Secretary?
A. A. McOAlN.Tieasurer
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THE DATTJY JOURNAL. ESTABT.ISnED IN 1887. TEH MS OF SUBSCHIRTION:
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Entered at the Postbffloo at Crawfordsville, Indiana, us second-olass matter.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 3.1895.
NINTH DISTRICT REPUBLICAN CON VKNriON. The Ttepublicansof the Ninth Congressional District will meet in convention at Coulter's Opera House, In the city of Frankfort, on Tuesday, January SI, 189t5, at 11 o'clock a. m., to select a member of the State Central Committee for the district.
The basis of representation is one delegate for each 200 votes or fraction thereof of 100 or more, cast for IVm. D. Owen for Secretary of State in 1894, and are apportioned to the various counties as follows: Boone, 17 Montgomery, '20 Clinton, IK Carroll, 12 Hamilton, 20 Fountain, 13 Tipion, 10.
C. C. SHIRLEY,
Chairman 9tli Dist. Com.
THE Democrats have used the word "jingo" as a term of ©pprobium whenever a Republican administration or leader was supposed to favor a proper enforcement of American rights abroad. The name has recoiled upon them, for there never was so great a jingo as Grover Cleveland has made himself by his Venezuelan policy. Everybody seems to be a jingoist now except the mugwumps.
Constitution,
a Demo
cratic paper of the strictest sect, says of the proposed bond issue by Grover, The skids have already been greased and the people will slide deeper into debt within the course of a very few days by means of a new bond issue. Some saj it is to be a hundred million slide, while others think it will only be a paltry.fifty million. But nobody knows except those who were parties to the secret deal between Mr. Cleveland and three British bankers. Everything is fixed, and the people have no voice in the matter.
ENGLAND is not only crowding Venezuela but she %vants territory belonging to the United States. The Alaskan boundary dispute has reached the acute stage. The discovery of gold in Alaska has made England greedy. The means she is employing are the same as the a Ivance in Venezuela. She is claiming a line running from Mt. St. Elias to the southern limit of Alaska, quite withiu iti'iircry which she tried Via vain to purchase from Russia just before the sale to the United States, which included this identical strip. It is time to call a halt on England's greed.
ANOTHER bond issue, to the tune of $100,000,000, is to be expected any day. There seems to be no doubt that all the arrangements have been made with a New York syndicate, and the announcement may be looked for at any time. This will be the fourth issue by the Cleveland administration. The total of the bonds issued in the three sets was 8162,315,000. If a new issue of 8100,000,000 is made.it will bring the total issues by the present administration up to over §263,000,000, nearly as many as the Harrison administration paid. Verily, this is a debtJnaking and not a debt-paying administration.
'^SENATOR LODGE made a speech in the Senate on Monday on the.Monroe doctrine. He dismissed as absurd the idea that it was a principle of international law, and declared that it was properly to be compared witn the Declaration of Independence, with which it raDlted in simplicity. 'It is a question of fact, not of law, he said, and we have always regarded it as the
guidiDg
prin
ciple of our foreign policy. He emphatically denied that there was any desire for hostilities on the part of either the people of England or those of the United States. Herein he unquestionably expresses the sentiments of the great .majority of reflecting Americans.
REPUBLICANS who are to meet on Saturday, January 11, cannot be too careful in the selection of their members of the County Central Committee. The coming election is one of vital importance, and the men composing the county committee should be chosen with great care. In all eases, if possible, the committee should be composed of men experienced in political work and'who arc thoroughly equipped for the responsible duties of the position. new material is selected young men are preferable who have an aptitude for the work and who are willing to sacrifice a little time for the good of the cause. Before a man is chosen a promise should be exacted from him that he will perforin the duties to the best of his ability. Succrdepends upon a thorough and ey uadc organization in every precinct. The character of the "work is such ibatit will not do it itself, but it mutt be done by tha men selected for the jy. rpose. Tht fore, look well to your precinct committeemen.
THE persistency of the Aiyu8~N€ivs in its efforts to show that this Administration is not responsible for the bonds that.have been issued is more in the nature of grim humor than sincerity. Its hallucinations on this question are only equalled in its belief that the law of "party perfidy and party dishonor" hasjproauced no deficit, when the facts stand out as bold as a clothing sign *.n the roof of a big barn that during the sixteen months it has been in operation the government expenditures have been §133,000,000 below the receipts. The position of the
Argus-Aavn
re
calls the explanation of the drunken sea captain, who, when his ship was bumping against the rocks, said, in answer to the suggestion of a passenger that the navigators seemed to have erred in'their reckoning: '-Bless you, no! We've steered her .all right, but she was hoodooed before we came aboard." The trouble is that Captain Cleveland and Purser Carlisle are drunk on the fallacies of free trade, and they imagine that the ship of State was hoodooed before they got aboard.
Death of Mrs. John V. Galey.
Mrs. Anne Galey, wife of John V. Galey, died at her home, 703 south Washington street at 9 o'clock p. m. Wednesday, at the age of 52 years. Mrs. Galey was the daughter of John and Hannah Gilkey, early settlers of this county. Twelve years ago she was married to John V. Galey, a substantial city of this city. Mrs. Galey was of a modest and retiring disposition, but she possessed many noble qualities. She had no children of her own, but it is seldom that the death of any one breaks so many family ties as did the death of Mrs. Galey, Her husband and his son Albert, to whom she was a devoted wife and mother, have the sympathy of a large circle of relatives and friends in their great loss. Of her own family she leaves a sister, Miss Maggie, and two brothers, D. H. and J. R. Gilkey, who will always carry with them the remembrance of her cheerful disposition and kind sympathy.
The funeral services will take place at the family residence at 10:30 a. m. Saturdav. Interment at Oak Hill cemetery.
"\Vliore They Will Meet.
On Saturday, January 11, the Republicans of Union township will meet at the large court room at 1:30 p. m. to select delegates to'attend the District convention to be held at Frankfort on January 21. After this business is transacted the different precincts will separate and meet at 2:30 at the following places for the purpose of selecting one committeeman from each precinct, such person to be the chairman of his precinct:
No. 1—Grand jury room. No. 2—Small court room. No. 3—Petit jury room. .••••:•••» No. 4—M. W. Bruner's office. No. 5f-C. L. Thomas' office. No. 0—P. M. Dice's cilice. No. 7—W. T. Brush's office. No. 8—Mayor's office. No. 9—Sheriff's office. No..10—White & Reeves' office. No.-11—Crane & Anderson's office. No. 12—Thomas & WhittingtonV office.
No. 13—Kennedy & Kennedy's office. No. 14—Auditor's office. No. 15—Recorder's office. A No. 16—Surveyor's office.
Faust-llerzog.
COVINGTON, Jan. l.—At 8 o'clock this evening Miss Myrtha P.crzog and Mr. Frank F. Faust, of this city, formerlj of Frankfort, were united in marriage. The bride (is
a daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Morris Herzog, proprietors of one of the largest department stores in this part of the State. The groom is a rising and promising young busines* man and with his accomplished and beautiful bride has the heartiest congratulations of a host of friends. The wedding ceremony was followed by a reception at the |-Cottage hotel. An elegant collation was served o.nd the presents very many and costly. The happy couple left at 13:45 over the Big Four for a wedding trip, and by courtesy of 11. B. F. Peirce, an old friend of the family, they will have special train service to St. Louis.
VeueniouB Visitors.
5
A batch of very unwelcome visitors arrived at Wamplers' store yesteday. They came in a bunch of bananas and were discovered by Jim McGilliard as he plucked the ripened fruit softly humming an old love tune. The discovery caused James to cease humming and to spring back against the candy case with a yell of terror. His hand had come in contact with an unusually large tarantula, which was jealously hovering a brood of some hundred little ones. The venemous insect was to chilled to sting and was finally coralled in a large glass bottle and is now on exhibition.
New Dovetail OlHcers.
The Dovetail Company has elected new officers as follows: Piesident—O. M. Gregg.
Vii'e-President—P. C. Somerville. Secretary and Treasurer—Chas. M. Gregg.
Superintendent—Chauncey M. Coutant.
FOB wedding invitations see THIS JOURNAL Co., PAIKTEBS
AT THE COURT HOUSE.
Marring* Licenses.
John Bell and Minnie Liter. Levi F. Davis and Maude Francis. Charles L. Harris and Dora Aikman. Win. P. McCaw and Hattie B. Lagle.
Probate Court.
The will "of Minerva Calfee, has been admitted to probate. Sarah Stine has been appointed administratrix of the estate of John Stine.
Mary F. Hedriclt has been appointed administratrix of the estate of H. H. Hedrick.
Tle Juries.
The jury commissioners met Tuesday morning and Clerk Sparks drdw the juries for the January term. The names of fifteen were drawn for the petit jury, the last three names appearing being those of talesmen, who will not serve unless some of the regular panel are excused. The jurors are as follows
GRAND JURY.
ArthurS, Fraley—Madison, Daniel Remley—Walnut. R. D. Jeffries—Ripley. J. O. Schenck—Wayne. Josiah N. Foster—Clark. Fred. Manson—Union.
PETIT UK/.
George W. Alexander—Coal Creek. James R. Milligan—Brown. Samuel J. Stoner—Clark. Albert J. Sarver—Coal Creek. Wm. P. Griest—Union. C. N. McCullough—Brown. JohnS. Anderson—Coal Creek.
5
Joseph McDaniel—Union. Eleazer B. Booher—Franklin. Wm. K.Wallace—Union. Sylvester C. Morris—Madison. J. F. Evans—Walnut. John C. Wasson—Scott. David Arnold—Scott. Arthur J. Kleiser—Brown.
Circuit Court.
David Obenchain et al. vs. W. Meakin Hurt et al., complaint to quiet title. Finding for defendants.
C. W. Wright, administrator vs. Geo. N. Tomlinson et al. Finding for defendants on special finding of facts.
Doc F. Britton vs. C-. N. Van cleave, appeal. Judgment for plaintiff in the -um of §25 and damages in the sum of $.01.
DAItLINGTON*.
A small child of S. T. Milner's has been very sick. Shaw her, of the Echo force was in Indianapolis Monday.
Revival meetings are now being held at the M. E. church. Mrs. S. M. Miller and daughter Fay, went to Terre Haute Monday.
Sleighing parties are all the rage and cheap lion-es are the sufferers. S. M. Miller received another fine blood hound from Michigan this week.
V. E. Craig was on the street Saturday for the first time since September 9.
A happy New year to all. Tne new year started out very quiet at this place-
The Republicans ofjthis township are again tnreatened with dire calamity unless.
John Peterson and'wife have returned from an fixteuned visit at New Albany.
Murphy and Galloway have the Al Cornell house inclosed ready for the plasterers.
Guard carefully those good resolutions made and entered iato last Wednesday.
Qra Finch is again confined to the house and has been seriously ill. but is now better.
John Hulet is refitting a room to be occupied by a couple of Chicago ladies with dry goods.
J. D. Harris has the contract for building Lioie Cook's house and has begun the work.
Hall and Albert Sutton have bought the tobacco store of Ed Booher and taken possession.
Tom Kelsey was elected Post Commander of 11. C. ICise with an able corps of asaistants.
Several good fellows went from here to Mace Wednesday night to assist in working the Orient.
The Hoop factory is about ready now to begin work. After a few days readjusting off she goes.
Ol Delashmitt and family arrived here Wednesday from Knightstown, where they had spent the holidays. •When the time comes Sugar creek township will trot out a candidate for Sheriff that will knock the persimons.
One horse hitched to a pair of bob sleds loaded and driven by girls was one of the many sleighing rigs on the street New Years day.
C. E. Thompson and son Linn with their wives have returned from their tour of the south. Leaving Will and wife at Barnesville, Georgia.
Rud men from all over the state were here Thursday night. Big speeches, a big supper and a big time on this, their first anniversary.
Thomas Ingersoll vs: C. W. Truax, complaint. Plaintiff moves for judgment in his favor on jury's finding.
Charles L. Mitchell vs. James H. Swindler et al.. foreclosure. Motion or a
Winfiekl S. Terry and Joseplius Terry vs. Mary D. Starks and James Starks, replevin. Judgment for plaintiffs in the sum of S43 and costs.
C. E. Davis, sheriff, allowed S49&50 for November terra expenses. Matie Keeney allowed $135 for services as stenographer.
Sheriff Davis allowed SS7 for fees at November term. Wallace Sparks, clerk, allowed S1GS for expenses during November term.
Aravglla Dill vs. Alfred Pearceetal., compla'int. On motion of defendant court taxes certain costs against plaintiff, the same being the mileage and fees of certain witnesses.
Dickerson Goodbar and Catharine Hostetter vs. Jacobe E. Lidekay et al. Mqtion, Costs taxed against plaintiff.
Arthur "H. Hopkins vs. Isaac Saidla e, al. Foreclosure ordered to satisfy judgment of §115.
Minnie F. Jones vs. J. E. Bayless. Motion for a new trial filed. A. Kostanzer &• Sons allowed $23 for goods furnished court room.
John Elmore vs. L., N. A. C. R. R. Co. Judgment entered in favor of plaintiff for S100 on jury|s finding of facts.
John II. Cox vs. Harrison Flannigan. Complaint on notes. Plaintiff awarded $140.85.
E. J. Baldwin vs. Montgomery County Union Agricultural Society. Venutd to Parke county.
Jaines W. Lee vs. estate of Judette Compton. Claim. Plaintiff's motion for new trial overruled and costs taxed against plaintiff.
New Suits.
Carrie F. Bryan vs. Wm. D. Fall, on note. Birdie' Corey vs. Joseph Cory, divorce.
Evan Shelby vs. Alfred A. Taylor, on note. James C. Standiford vs: James Stark et al., partition.
Caroline Watkins vs. Dan Lewis, administrator Russell Watkins' estate, complaint.
The Republicans of Franklin township will meet at the town hall Saturday January 11, for the purpose of selecting two delegates and precinct committeemen. Let us. open up with a rouser.
The elevator so long closed by the sickness of Craig aud the death of Ivimler, was opened up this week by Jim Sellars and Thos. Atkinson, of Frankfort, they having purchased the same. Our farmer friends can now come on with their-grain.
W. D. Harlow gave his second annual dinner to a small but appreciating audience Wednesday. These din. ners are not patronized by our people as they should be. If we have a hotel run successfully here it must and should have the support of our people.
Fred O'Haver and wife came home from Rockville where tbey have been spending holidays Tuesday evening, with their six weeks old babe apparently as well as could be but was a corpse before morning. Soon after arriving home the babe was noticed to be suffering from some cause. A doctor was summoned, but the child was past human aid and soon died.
The father and mother have the sympathy of the entire communitv in til is, their great bereavement. The child was taken to Flora Thursday for interment.
OAK GKOVJi.
Oiio Miller sold Frank Beck 500 bushels of corn. Flannigan brothers will soon move on their new farm.
Noah and Ed Bundy are moving on W. H. Mount's farm. Arch Needham and family spent Christmas at Thorntown.
Harry Hankins will work for A. J. Henderson the coming year. The December snow caught considerable corn in the shock in this locality.
In justice to the former scribe from this place be it said that the present one is a novice.
Frank Stewart, the hustler after stock, was looking after our sheep during the holidays.
Marshall McAllister moved to Stiannondale this week, he having purchased an interest in the store.
There are about 1,000 head of sheep being fed for the market in this neighborhood and the farmers are feeling some better over the advance in price.
The annual club "meeting and banquet of the Sugar, Plains and Oak Grove social team took place at the elegant home of the Misses Mount on Tuesday eveuing, Dec. 31. The event was most enjoyable in every particular and anded with an urgent invitation from the gentlemen for the ladies te meet with them next year' as it is leap ye*w.
Miss Hintie Wray visited home folks last week. Our dairy barn has changed hands again, Chas. Say lor purchasing it.
Clarence Furgerson has moved into the property which Mrs. Pucket vacated.
The union prayer meeting at the M. E. church was well attended Sunday night.
John Britton and Leland Childers spent last week with Lora Britton in Frankfort.
Waveland's home talent gave a play at our hall Saturday night which was well attended.
Miss Viola Armstrong and Miss Lida Swindler are attending business college at Indianapolis.
Albert Doyle, who lias been attending medical collepegat Indianapolis, is spending the holidays at home.
If you want Tiia •JOUKNAI, for next year give your name and Si.00 to J. A. Hiccs, the agent, and if you want to know how you stand on the ilst ask and he will tell you. If you are delinquent please settle. We have a good list at our place but want to make it larger.
YOUNTSVILLE.
Mrs. M. V. Brown is on the sick'list. Sleighs and bobsleds were the rage here this week.
Miss Jennie Sweeney is improving from her illness. The new year started in very nice. May it continue to be so.
Epworth League was led by Miss Eva Love Sunday night. The house was full.
Two sled loads of young people went to church at Alamo Wednesday night and had a pleasant trip.
Henry Charters, of' Waynetown. is a frequent caller at this place. There seems to be Love somewhere.
Mr. Booe's singing.class will give a concert at the hall Saturday night. Admission 15 cents. Proceeds go to the church. All are invited.
Some in our town can mix while others can not. Wonder what the trouble can be. For particulars see W. Q. O'Neall, sr., or A. E. Yount.
George Munns started for town in his sleigh on Tuesday, but there being no snow in tho bridge the harness choked the horse and he fell and broke a shaft. Mr. Munns was comyelled to borrow a sleigh to complete the journey.
Mr. John Reynolds, one of the weavers in the woolen mill,moved his household goods«and wife here Saturday. He will occupy half of the house where his sister, Mrs. Abe Burke, lives. Mr. Reynolds is a very nice man and we are glad to have him in our midst. iThe I. O. G. T. gave a watch parfcv at the hall last Tuesday evening and had a very agreeable time until some if o^r older members suggested we home at
10
o'clock .and not wait for
the New Year. The young people wont home with heavy hearts but imagine the surprise of the older peopttto hear all the bells ringing out the old year and ringing in the new.
WAVELAND,
Prof. Kritz is spending the vacation at home. School began Monday after a week's vacation.
Special meetings are being held at the M. E. church. Wm. Williams, of Crawfordsville, was here this week.
Miss Effie Preston, of'South Bend, visited here last week. Mrs. Leech, of Terre Haute, is visiting Mort Acker and wife.
Mrs. Sam Cully and baby have returned from Bloomington. Tyford Canir and wife, of Harris burg, 111.,are visiting their pareuts.
Will Mann and David Eiger, of Lafayette, visited Charley Scott and wife. Rev. Moore and wife, of Mouticello, were guests of Thomas Milligan's fami,y" ~A
The Baldwin Quartette gave a very fine concert, here,last Thursday eveniag-
John Deer preached' at th"e Baptist church last Sunday morning, and evening.
John Cochran, of Tilden, 111., visited his son Harvey and daughter, after an absence of fifteen years.
There will be a meeting of the township Republicans at the hall January 11, to. elect central committeemen.
John Milligan and Miss Batchlev were married at the home of the bride in Anderson Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. A reception was given them at his father's home Thursday evening.
KLMDAL15.
A great many of the farmers are butchering their hogs this weeiv. Henry Vancleave attended the K. of P. lodge at Wingate Tuesday night.
Mort Bagley, wife and son, Bert, of Eaton, O.. visited frientls in this place this wpfW,
Mrs. Lou Foote went to the Capital city .Tuesday to see her father, who is in a critical condition He fell para lyzed on one side and he has to be turned in the bed every hour.
Allen Moore sold a bunch -of cattle and his hogs to Tom Herron, of Waynetown, last week, and delivered them Monday. He received S3.25 per hundred for his hogs and S4.15 for his cattle.
Brother and sister correspondents this is the beginiug of a new year and let each one of us try to do all we can to increase the circulation of the JOURNAL. Write as often as we can. I wish you all a prosperous now year, may .we all look forward to the reunion in hope of having a good time.
Joseph Swank was married Christmas eve to Miss Julia Cox near Danville, 111., a daughter of .William Cox. He and his fair bride came to his father's Christmas day, where his folk had prepared a supper for them. Quite a number of guests sat down with them, to a table loaded down with the fat of the land. All had'a good time and wish.Joeand companion a happy future. They will live on his father's place one mile west of Elmdale.
ifoB tags see THE JOURNAL CO.. PBIHTKBB.
"-^CONDENSED NEWS
gathered From All 1'arts of the Country by Tolograph. The legislature of the state of New JTork convened at 11 o'clock Weduesiay.
The Hamburg-American Steamship Ho. have definitely adopted Plymouth, Eng.,as a port of call instead of Southampton.
Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, the colonial secretary, is preparing a paper' dealing with the subject of colonial' exports to the United Kingdom.
The Politische Correspondent St." Petersburg correspondent 'emphaticall3r denies that Russia intends to administer to Armenia or to intervene in any vvav in Anatoiiu. 'l'iie Eitafette, of Paris, in an article treating of the Venezuelan dispute between Great Britain and the United States, suggests that France, Germany and Russia might intervene to settle the trouble.
At midnight the Santa Fe system was transferred by the receivers to tho new organization, the Atchison, Topeka. & Santa Fe Railway Co., and tho most notable reeeiverfchip in the history of the world was practically ended.
The Cologne Gazette has a dispatoh from Constantinople saying that tho Armenian bishop at Erzeroum was arrested Mond&y and sent to. Constantinople. He is accused of taking a leading part in the agitation against the trove rnnifnt.
One rioreWeek
One more chance to get Ladies' FINE SHOES worth'$2.00, 13.00 ani
v:4.C() liofv
^LOOC
No more fine slioes for $1 after January 11th.
Scott-Rinard Slice Co.
W. II. ARCHIBALD, Manager.
wlWiMynA C/ g^BefiaAoima
[Relieves tired Backs!
IT TOUCHER.)
THE
SPOT.
PWWj
flSTISMfl DR. TAFT'S ASTHHALENB f|w 1 IB telH—-011D n»everfaUB send UBycmr oadrcps, wo will UUnCUmniltrinlbottlernPP IheDR.TAFT BR0S.M. Co., Rochester,N.Y.rKtt
UKRIFF'S SALE.
My virtue of a certiUed copy of dccroo ana onler of sale to me directed Irom tbe Olerk of tlie Montgomery Circuit Court, in a causo wherein Wuluisli Cullese is pluintltr. anil Charlotte Ky loci al. are defendants, requiring me to make tlie sum of iifieen hundred and eiKhiy-niiitt dollars, with interest on Kitifl decree and ci/sis, 1 will expose at public sale to oho highest bidder, on
SA.'JUKDAY. JANUARY 25, A. D., 18SUJ. between the hours of 30 o'clock a. ui. and o'clock p. ui. of .said dny, at the door of the court house in Grawfordsviiiu, Montgomery Oounty, Indiana, tho Mils and proiiis for a tcm not. exceeding'seven years, the following real estate, situated in Montgomery Oounty, Indiana, and described as follows, 10-wit:
Part of the southwest quarter of suction thirty-one (ill I tuvvn-sliiji seventeen (17) north, range three (3 west, bounoed thus: lieginuing at a point forty-four (44) roils and fifteen (15) links north deirrees east of the point whore the h. 'N\ A. & Chicago Railroad crosses tlie south line of Montgomery county, said first, mentioned point being in the center ol said railroad and running tlienco west ten M0j rods, thence Kontli sixteen (1(5) rods, thence west eighteen (18) rods aud seventeen (17) linics, thence north seven (7) rods and six ((J) links, thence west twenty-nine (-j'j) rods :iltd eighteen (18) links, thence iiorth flftyeijihl (iiH) roils, thence west seventeen (17 ro.:s and eie'v- (11) links, ihetice north iift.vciglit (08) rods and tweiity-twy (22) link's thence east eighty-six (KG) rods and fifteen (15) links to the L. IS A. & Chicago ltatiroad, thence south
it
devices west along .said rail
road one liunciH'd and fourteen (H4)roil« and twenty-four C2-11 links to the plnco of beginning, containing !5 4-10 acres more or less, except the following tract beginning at. tho above (lesciibed starting point, and running: thence south 80"^ feet, thence west ii-t feet, thence south 183)6 feet, tlienco west 370 feet, tlieuce north 7 rou» and 6 links, theuee eas'u and intersect, llie east, line I.D3 feet, -north of mo doutlii-ast ci'i'uer of said above, described piece of land which excepted part was conveyed lo A. J. My rich.
If such rents and profits will not sell for a suliicient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs, 1 will, at the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee simple of said r.-al estate, or so much thereof as mav be 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,
Sheriir Montgomery County. Ry JOHN It. KOB'INSON, Deputy...
Ttistlne & Ristine, Attorneys for Plaintiif. January 3. A. D., 1806.—1-24.-$17
Probate cause No. 2514.
OTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS.
Albert D. Thomas, executor of the last will of Thomas Taylor, deceased, vs. Alfred Taylor et al. In the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, Indiana. January Term, 1890.
To Oscar Taylor and Alexander Taylor, you arc severally hereby notified that the abovenamed petitioner as Executor of the last will aforesaid, has liled in the Circuit Court of Montgomery Oounty, Indiana, a petition making you defendants thereto, and praying therein for an' order and decree of Fala Court authorizing: the sale of certain real estate belonging to the estate of said decedent, and in said petition described, to make assots tor the payment of the debts and liabilities of suid estate and showing that said Osctir Taylor and Alexander Taylor are non residents of the State of Indiana and that said petition, so filed and pending, is sot for hearing in said Circuit Court at the court house in Crawfordsville, Indiana, on the 27tli judicial day of the January term. 1896, ofKaid court, the samo beiog the 5th day of February, 1896.
Witness, tho Clerk and .seal of said Court.., this 31st day of December. 1895. 'y® 1-17 WALLACE SPARKS, C!ej^Vl
