Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 7 August 1896 — Page 2

WEEKLY JOURNAL.

ESTABLISHED IN 1848.

Successor to 2726 .Record, the first paper Orawfordsville, established In 1831, and The People'it Press, established 1844.

PRINTED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. THE JOURNAL COMPANY.

T, H. B. McCAIN, President J. A. GHEENK, Secretary. A. A. McCAltf.Treasurer

TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION!

One year In advance. Six months 2^ Three months

Payable In advance. Sample copies free.

THE DAILY JOCKNAL. ESTABLISHED IN 1887. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:

One year In advance Six months Three months .. Per week, delivered or by mall -lu Sntered at tho Postofflce at Crawfordsvllle,

Indiana, aB seoond-class matter.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 7. 1896.

THE poor man is entitled to as good a dollar as a rich man.

4

OF the 187 newspapers in Maine only nine are for Bryan and Sewall.

IT should be the Pop Plagiarist of the Platte instead of the Boy Orator.

SENATOK Caffery, of Louisiana, has bolted Bryan and Sewall. He favors another ticket.

EVEH since 1878, there has been more than four times as many silver dollars coined in one year than during the eighty-one years under free coinage.

TJIK American silver dollar will buy two dollars of Mexican coin. Why? Because the American silver dollar is kept at a parity with gold, when the Mexican silver coin is only worth its bullion value.

GUNTON'S Magazine for August sums up the whole thing in one short sen* tence: "The platform adopted by the Democratic convention at Chicago is the very embodiment of economic heresy, fiscal insanity and national disgrace."

Tms campaign will be decided on well ascertained facts, not on moonshine theories. The people tried that on tha tariff question in 1892, and found their error. They are not going to committ the same error in 1S9G on the currency question.

THE question for sound money Democrats in the Ninth District to consider is, to vote for a man who believes in protection and free silver, or to vote for a man who believes in protection and sound money. In this respect Cheadle is farther from their views than Landis by just one-half. As the latter comes half way up to their way of thinking there should be no hesitation as to how they will cast their votes.

BOUIIKE CoemtAN, the eminent Irish Democrat of New York, and at present Grover Cleveland's Consul General to London, is out in a statement in which he denounces the Chicago platform as a piece of lunacy and villainy. lie is in favor of another convention, and making a simon pure Democratic platform, but does not favor the nomination of another ticket. The surest way to defeat Bryan and his spurious Democracy, he thinks, is that this second convention should endorse the McKinley electors. As much as he detests McKinleyism it would be less hurtful to the country than the success of Bryanism.

A DEMOCRATIC leader well known in Indiana is Congressman Conn, of Elkhart. lie is against free coinage of silver and an obscure Washington newspaper was so angry about it that it accused Mr. Conn of taking this position of opposition to his party on unworthy motives, whereas Mr. Conn has sued the libelous sheet for criminal libel. In his complaint he says upon oath: "In Elkhart I employ some three hundred men in the manufacture of musical instruments, and if there should be free and umlimited coinage of silver it is probable that the factory would have to shut down and the hands be thrown out of employment. For that reason I am battling against the free silver movement."

THOMAS E. WATSON, the Populist candidate for Vice-President, hasn't a very high opinion of his running mate. Mr. Watson is the editor of a Populist paper in Georgia, and only the week before the St. Louis convention which gave him the nomination for VicePresident, had this to say editorially of Mr. Bryan:

Dressing Billy Bryan up in a Populist raiment makes Billy an attractive figure to our admiring gaze but, as long as he remains mixed in with the scrub sheep of the Democratic flock, we are much inclined to say to him, in the language of an ancient anecdote: "We love you, Billy, but your company."

The following impartial judgment formed by Watson two weeks ago is also interesting at this time:

The Democratic plan of campaign seems to be that Bryan is to run the windmill while Sewall runs the pay train. If Sewall rattles out his cash as fast as Bryan rattles off speeches times are going to be become lively. Even the negro Democrat will rouse himself, shake his ears, and begin to find life worth living.

PROTECTIONIST CH'«ATT,H. The Popocrats of the Ninth District have nominated as their candidate for Congress a man who has been in direct oi position to all the doctrines hitherto held by the Democracy. In the Frankfort Banner of June 7, 1SS4, which Mr. Cheadle was then editing, appears the following: "Protect American industries and they will protect the people and give them labor and homes."

On October 1st, of the same year, he says: "Protection has always brought prosperity to bless our people a tariff for revenue has always resulted In business depression, financial loss and industrial prostration, and has left the national treasury bankrupt. History ever repeats itself and will do so this year again. If we are wise as a people, wc will not try experiments."

On Nov. 21, 18S5, he says: "Honest elections, a free ballot and a fair count, honest money and protection to American industries and laborers is a platform on which Republicans can and will win on in 18S0 and 1SSS."

Mr. Cheadle took a hand in all the Republican conventions that have been held this Spring, and was a candidate to be made a delegate to tha Congressional Convention which met in this city on the 7th of April. Is it any wonder that such simon pure Democratic papers as the Crawfordsvillo Review declines to be Grenleyized by thimblerigging politicians?

THE free and unlimited coinage of silver at the ratio of 10 to 1 means that the Government shall receive at its mints and coin into silver dollars all silver bullion that may be brought there by any peason or corporation whatsoever from any nook and corner of the world. Although one ounce of gold will buy thirty ounce of silver, yet the Government must take sixteen ounces of those thirty ounces and stamp them into silver dollars, and compel the people to take them as equal to one ounce of gold. Or, to put the matter in another but equally truthful light, it means that when the owner of silver bullion sells his silver without the intervention of government he must give thirty ounces of silver for one ounce of gold, but when he gets the Government, without charge, to coin and stamp his silver bullion into silver dollars, then he must not give but sixteen ounces of silver for one ounce of gold. If it does not mean this then it means silver monometallism—a single standard pure and simple—for only in this way can the silver dollar be degraded below the gold standard. Your silver dollar must of necessity be a gold standard, or it will be a lluctuating silver bullion dollar.

THE Hon. J. Sterling Mortou, Secretary 'Of Agriculture, in his address on finance, at Nebraska City, put some well worn facts into new -dress. The following was very effective.

The purchaser demands the highest known quality in the things that he buys of the farmers and enlightened self-interest muse compel the farmer to demand the highest and most uulluctuating and general purchasing power in the money which he buys. Never before in the history of civilization have people protested against being paid more than a certain sum for commodities which they have to sell But to-day there are many iarni-'r and laborers who declare themseles in favor of a system of coinage wlroli shall pay them only sixteen ounces oi silver in lieu of one ounce of gold. Vehemently these people are declan lg everywhere that they will be absolutely ruined if they be paid more than sixteen ounces of silver instead of cue ounce of gold.

In other words these howlers for free silver insist that they shall be paid for their commodities 16 ounces of silver, worth in the market SlO.Otl. instead of one ounce of gold, wortli a little more than S20. The free silver ite is a rare bird.

A YEKY good point is made by the Inter Ocean in an editorial paragraph which rends: "There never was a time in the history of the world when the rich were giving such princely gifts for charity and the uplifting of the poor as now. And 3'et there has never been a period when the pettifogger, the anarchist, the enemies of the race have been so open in their efforts to breed enmity between the rich and poor. Such creatures are the enemies of mankind and the agents of evil doing the devil's own work both in social life and in politics."

FRANKKOKT News: When Joe 1!. Cheadle was a Republican he made war not alone on Democracy as a p-*rty, but upon the Democrats as individuals. His partisanship was of the kind that he had no appetite for an apple that grew in a Democnatie orchard, or a potato that was dug from a Democratic hill. He now addresaes these men, whom he naturally despises, as "Friends, countrymen,"—and asks them to make him their Moses "boost" him to a position that pays $5,000 a year and trimmings.

THE silver mine owners can afford to shell out. The Boston Herald gives this information:

The owner of a silver mine in Colorado, who is now visiting Boston, informed a representative of the Herald yesterday that at ia recent meeting in Denver of mine owners from Wyominf. California and Colorado, the sum of S500.000 was raised to propagate the silver cause at the 16 to 1 ratio.

PF.XSION l'Al"MES'l'S.

It has been announced by tho U. S. Pension Agent at Indianapolis that on account of a reduction of the clerical force of his agency and a shortening of the hours of labor of 'those retained there would be considerable delay in payments. The present administration as is well known has done many mean deeds to show its disregard of the rights and privileges of the Union soldiers and their heirs, but this act, so uncalled for, is most contemptible. Most of the pensioners are poor and need their meney when it becomes due, and heretofore have received it with promptness. Many have incurred itebis for groceries and the necessities life, upon promises to pay when their pensions are leceived. Our merchants have trusted them upiin the laith they had a right to place in the government to pay them as heretofore. This quasi repudiation or delay wil1 inconvenience many of our people besides the pensioner. To the landlord and the merchant we bespeak for the pensioners their patience, for this delay is simply a Democratic exhibition of low malice and meanness for the defenders of the Union.

A WOIID TO THE PKXSIOXKK. The total number of names borne on the pension lists is about 050,000, and the pension appropriation still amounts to nearly $140,000,000 but the sr. 111 will be heavily reduced as death shall thin the ranks of tiie veterans. "While nearly two-thirds of the pensioners are women and children, who can exercise 110 direct iufluence upon the ballot, they have all an interest that the pension fund shall not be shriveled tip by a debased and depreciated currency. Every pensioner who shall vote for the free silver presidential candidate will vote not only against himself, but to defraud the widows and children of his deceased comrades.

No intelligent veteran has need of nny moro experience concerning the effect of depreciated legal tender currency. "When gold rose to a premium during the war, and the greenback fell to less than oO cents on the dollar, tho soldier's pay of $13 a month lost more than half its purchasing power. The soldiers and their families were compelled to pay more than twice as much for all they consumed as they paid when the greenback was at par with gold. Bills have frequently been introduced in congress to compensate the veterans for their heavy losses in a depreciated currency but there would be 110 such bills, and no justification for them, if their pensious should shrink to half their present worth under the inevitable operation of free silver coinage. The veterans who shall vote for this policy of repudiation will walk into tho trap with their eyes open.

There will be excuse for the pensioner to bo deceived by the i^etenso that the free coinage of this cheap silver dollar means bimetallism, or the maintenance of this currency at par with gold. Such a thing is not in the power of the government and the pretense of it is made only for the credulous who have had none of the costly experience which the veterans obtained when their monthly pay in war time fell to less than oO cents 011 the dollar.

Should William J. Bryan be elected president, with a congress in harmony with his principles, there would be 110 need to wait for the enactment of a free silver bill in order to realize its consequences. No sooner should the result be announced 011 the morning after the November election than the crash would fall upon the country. The depreciation of the greenback currency was gradual, and was therefore mitigated a great degree but the financial ruin threatened by the Populist policy would-be sudden and irremedial. Free coinage would be anticipated by an abrupt drop to the debased silver standard. The store of treasury gold for the redemption of public obligations would vanish, and as fast as the fund ehould be replenished by borrowing it would flow out again like water through the sieve of the daughters of Danatis. Gold would at once disappear from circulation as if the earth had swallowed it, and could be enticed from its hiding places only by the offers of large premiums in depreciated silver. Prices of all the necessaries of living would rise with tho depreciation in the currency but there would be 110 rise in the value of the soldier's pension. Tho worth of the pension certificate would fall with the fall in the silver currency.

With the pensioners the greatest sufferers from this policy of depreciation would be tho masses of citizens who have small savings in banks or in securities, or who are dependent upon their wages and salaries. But tho silveri to demagogues boast that they intend to cany the war into Wall street, and thus to avenge the people upon their oppressors. Wall street specula tors enrich themselves in the operations of uie money market and a depreciated silver currency would give them opportunities such as they have never had, even in the days of greenback depreciation. Tho cosmopolitan bankers who place the loans of nations would transfer their gold and their investments from United States bonds, payable in depreciated silver dollars, to the securities of Chile, Argentina, Russia or any other nation promising to redeem its obligations, principal and interest, in sound money —that is to say, in the money in which

its debts were contracted. Bryan and Altgeld and Tillman, the new race of statesmen and financiers, intend to show the country a way of paying old as well as now debts, public and private, with cheap silver dollars. But there is reason to predict with confidence that before the November days the folly, the fanaticism and the danger of the silverite plans will have been so thoroughly exposed to the manufacturers, merchants, workingmen and farmers of the land as to make their execution utterly impossible.

According to tho last reports made by the building and loan associations of IndiaiTa to the state auAitor, there was paid up and in force $93,912,234 of stock. From reports and estimates made by experts it is found that the value of lifo insurance policies now carried in Indiana is $120,000,000, a total of building and loan stock and life insurance of $213,912,284. This was paid for in money worth 100 cents 011 the dollar. If the iholders of this could be paid off in money worth 50 cents it i3 easy to see tho amount of loss that would bo sustained by citizens who have invested their savings with no other understanding than that the standard of money in tho United States would be maintained and the honor and credit of the government kept above reproaoh.

For years Democrats told farmers that the ftopublican idea of a tariff on farm products was a humbug, asserting that the price of farm products was fixed by tho London or Liverpool market. If this was the truth then how will free silver coinage help farmers now—will not prices still be fixed in London on a gold asis?

SMAKTSBUHG.

Myrtle Newlin visited home folks last Sunday. The heavy rains did considerable damage here.

Mattie Shelton is clerking in Crawfordsville again. Wonder who is Henry Mcuullough's best girl at present.

Rev. Miller, of Waynetown, will preach at the Baptist church here next Sunday.

Our Sunday school was largely attended last Sunday and may it continue thus.

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wisehart and little son, Loyd, of Indianapolis, are here visiting relatives and friends.

Remember that Rev. Johnston, of Lebanon, will preach here the fourth Sunday, and also Saturday night before, in this month. Everyone requested to be present at these meetings.

OKAVELLY KUN.

Miss Ethel Lago is visiting her uncle, Foss Williamson. Miss Iva Butler, of Russiaville, has been the guest of her cousin, Miss Maude Johnson.

Jos. Johnson rides in a new bugpy For full particulars call on Dave Binford, at Garfield.

Forey Horner and wife, of Thorntown, rode down on their wheels Suiiday and dined with Rob:. Peebles.

Alonzo Miller, of New Richmond, and brother Yen, of Farmers' Institute, were at Uncle Pleasant Butlers Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Weesner, of Darlington, and Arthur Anderson, of Colfax, attended services here Sunday morning.

Aunt Lydia Quigg has concluded a two months' visit with her son, F. S. Quigg, and Tuesday went to Dublin to visit her daughter.

Miss Josephine Hays is taking a two weeks' outing and at present is the fruei-t of her sister, Mrs. lloscoe Bond, at K'ngsley's chapel.

L. E. and Will Butler have returned home, the former to Aledo, 111., and the latter to Indianapolis Their property here was rented for next year by Frank Graves.

The heavy rain of last week did nn amount of damage to grain and fences in this vicinity. Jonathan Fruits. Hankin Sellers and Roscoe Bond were the ones most damaged. It will take some time and a vast amount of labor before all tilings are righted again.

We were very much disappointed because we dia not get to attended the reunion last Saturday. But we console ourselves with the thought that we were not the only one disappointed, and that perhaps next year we may have the opportunity of attending the reunion

Rev. Amos Hannay, of Indianapolis, will be in attendance at Friends' quarterly meeting to-morrow, Aug. 8. He will also occupy the pulpit in the evening and be at 11 o'clock services Sunday morninfr nnd again in the evening. A cordial invitation is extended to all to be present.

lion's 'I Ills!

Wc oiler One Hundred Dollars Reward for :my case of catarrh tliat cannot be cured by Hull's Catarrh Cure.

F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props, Toledo, O. Wo, tho undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable lu all business transactions and financially able to carry out. any obligations made by their lirrn

WEST & TKUAX.

Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O. WALUINO, KINNAN & MAKVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.

Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting-directly upon tho blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price 75c per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Testimonials free.

Hall's Family Pills are the best.

CAl'T. JOHN" STKVKXSOX,

Of Xoblesville, Indians. Recommends Wright's Celery Capsules. NOBI.ESVILLK, Ind., April 24, '90. To the Wright Medical Co., Columbus,

Ohio. GENTS—I have purchased a box of Wright's Celery Capsules from E. S, Raymond, druggist, and used them for rheumatism and kidney trouble, and I feel like a new man. Before taking them I was not able to do anything but now feel better than I have for 20 years, and cannot recommend them too highly. It is the only medicine that has done me good.

Yours very truly, CAPT. JOHN STEVENSON

WOMEN WANT TO KNOW.

To Whom Can They Tell Their Troubles

A. Woman Answers "To Mo"—Anxious Inquirers Intelligently Answered— Thousands of Grateful letters.

Women regard it as a blessing that they can talk to a woman who fully understands their every ailment, and thus avoid the examinations, experiments and theories of incompetent physi'fh cians, whose

•for.A«lams SF.

sex

deprives them of knowing by experience.

The endless confidence placed in Mrs. Pinkham by

American women,

prompts them to seek

her advice constantly. Female diseases yield

to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once. Inflammation, ulceration, falling and displacement of the womb, ovarian troubles, spinal weakness and kidney complaints, all have their symptoms, and should be "nipped in the bud." Bearing-down pains, backache, headache, nervousness, pains in groins, lassitude, whites, irregularities, dread of impending evil, blues, sleeplessness, faintness, etc.

Here is testimony right to the point: The doctors told me that unless I went to the hospital and had an operation performed. I could not live. I had falling, enlargement and .ulceration of the womb. "I was in constant misery all tho time my back ached I was always tired. It was impossible for me to walk far or stand long at a time. I was surely a wreck. I decided that I would give your Compound and Sanative Wash a trial. "I took three bottles of Lydia E. Pinkb .m'a Vegetable Compound, and used two packages of Sanative Wash, and I am now almost well. I am stouter and healthier than I have ^ver been in my life. My friends and neighbors and tha doctors are surprised at my rapid improvement. I have told them all what I have been taking.K

—MBS.

ANNETTA BICKMEIER, Bellaire,

Belmont Co., O.

BRASS BAND

Instruments, llrnms, Uniforms, Krjulp-

IIIF-ntsf(ir]tam!.sn:I«]

Drum Corps.

LOW-

ami A

••MT".

Not one part but every part of HIRES Rootbeer tends toward making it the perfect temperance and healthgiving drink.

Marieonlv

HV

The

Oharkx K. IHro*

Co.. l'MlnU'lphia.

25C. PACKAGE MAKES 5

callous. Sold everywhere.

PARKER'S CINCER TONIC lltatoa Lung Troubles, Debility, distressing Ftomarh and female ills, and is noted lor making :urc.'* when allotuur treatment fails. T.verv and invalid should hnv»jt.

PARKER'S

HAIR BALSAM Clenn.*cs end le:mt.f»C9 tho hair. Promotes luxuriant growth. Kovcp Fa* la to Hcntore Gray

Hair to its Youthful Color. Cures scalp d.seaso At hair failing. AOc.ancSl.Ou nt Druggisto

HiNDERCQSmS Thponlvsutfi Cur* fit (Torus.Stops r.u pa»n. Makca walking easy. atDrug^iat*

^•FEVERJ)

NASAL

CATARRH

-Is it-

Local Discnse And is the result, of colds and sudden climatic changes. It can be cured by a 1 as an remedy which Is applied directly Into the nosirlls

ELY'S

CREAM BALM

COUD'NHEADI

and InHatnniiitiiui, Heals the Pores, Protects the Membraue from Colds, Uistores the Senses of Taste and Smcli. The Halm Is quickly tibsiii lx il and plve.s relief at once. Price ")'i rents at. Irii|rjrists ur bv infill. Ely Brothers, arret! Street. New York

fn» 5-«lrv-v!-

a ilo-. Johnson's JI,,]!tu1.o:u:a j.'hrt"v. ,• —everv ft -"t wixcr-i Userils-waA.•

'V ...

p:.in or ar.y tvhtnc "MOW wa liow s.to:lihu{, h-.iw qiueuu^.',' how £•. strengthening it is." :j",v tk \-e who have feit it on their s-oro uuis.-l s, 011 any plar-e where extnrn.:l nlici ib -V possible. It even cures sea-sieliiieN*. It as el:.sin, suf.' and speedy. On tho face of the genuine see the Ked Cr:»w. -j frtllVU/»V IV miivw^v

JOHNSON & JOHNSON. Mauiilactiirm CJhemlstH, Nuw \ork.

I "A thousand wheels—but only one Shoe"

I Use the 9 ®"BaH=Bearing®

bicycle

ezkxShoe 0 Wear. 1

Pratt Fasteners hold laces. Xeadlng Dealer* have them• Booklet Free 1

C. n. FARGO A CO. (Malten), CIIICAGO

The Popular Through Car Line

EAST AND WEST.

Elejrant Vestlbuled Trains run dally, carrying Palace Sleepers between St. Louis and Toledo, Detroit, Ntagara balls, New York and Hoston without otaange.

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

Heurless Dining Oars and freo Reclining Chair Cars on all through tralnB. Connections with other roads made In Union Depots. Baggago cheeked through to all points.

When you buy your ticket see that It reads via tho Wabash." Kortlmo tables, maps or other Inlormatlon apply to any railroad ticket agent or to THOS. FOLLEN

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

C. S. CHANG,

G. P. i: T. A.. St. Louis, Mo

IIElilKF'S SALE.

Uy virtue of accrtlfieu copy of a decree and order-of sale to me directed from tho Clerk of the Montgomery Circuit Court, lu a cause wherein 1 ho Ladoga llullding Loan Fund and havings Association is plalntitr and Elizabeth Jlairis-on et al. are difendants. renuirIriK me to make the sum of nine hundred and nineteen dollars and ninety-one cents, with interest on said decree and costs. I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder on

SsATUKDAY, AUGUST 15, A. D.. 1896, between tho hours of 10 o'clock a ni. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the courthouse In Crawfordsvllle. Montgomery County, Indiana, the rents and prollts for a term not exceeding seven years, the following rt al estate, tu-\ it: I'artot out lot number tour (4) In the John Myers addition to the town of Ladoga, Indiana, bounded as follows: Beginning one hundred and thirtysix and one-half feet north of tho southwest corner of said out lot number four (4) and running thence north sixty-two and one-half feet, thence east to an alley, being tneeast I hie of said lot four, ihouco south sixty-two and one-half feet, thence west to the place of beginning in Montgomery County, State of Indiana.

If such routs and profits will not sell for a siillieinut sum t.o satisry said decree, interest and costs, I will, at the same time at place, expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sulllelent to discharge suld degree. Interest and costs. Said sale will be made withoutany relief whatever from valuation or anpralse'inent laws. UHAKLUS E. DAVIS,

N

PK? PRICES (RVI'TIIHGTI-'D. I MO U:\LR.TF, iiu lliurftrftUonM,iurnUfty'rt'- it KHVH .Music Iribtrtu'i'nafor

AmaiuurBamitt.

I.YON A IIK.U'.V,

Slieriil Montgomery County. Uy JOHN 11. UOHlNSOtf, Deputv.

M. M. liatchelder, Attorney for Plalntlll" July 17, lS96.-7-17-4t.-fl2

^TLF.KII"S SAI-E.

Hy virtue of a certified copy of :L decree and order of sale to me dI recti from the Clerk of the Montgomery Circuit Court, In a cause wherein George A. Uooher is plaintiff, and Elizabeth Lyons. John Lyons. Henry Taylor Lumber Co. and George K. Long are defendants renulring me to make the sum of eight hundred ninety-oue dollars and forty-two cents, with interest on said decree and costs, I will expose at public sale to tho highest bidder on

SATURDAY. AUGUST 15, A. IX. lc!96. Between the hours of 10 o'clock a. in. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the court house in Crawfordsvllle, Montgomery county, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, the following real estate to-wit:

Lot number thirteeu (13) in Jane M. Stoddard's addition to the town of Linden, in Montgomery county, Indiana.

If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree. Interest and costs, 1 will a 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 Nuti sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or approvement laws. CIIAKLES 15. DAVIS.

Sheriff Montgomery County.

July 24tl. A. I)., 169(3. J!V ,LMIN I{. KOKINSON, Deputy. Stuart Brothers A: Hammond,

Attorneys for Plaintiff.

TOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS,

btate of I ndiana. Montgomery County: Tn the Montgomery Circuit Court, September Term, 1*90.

Jacob Wlngpi vs. Obcd Guntie d. al. Complaint No. 12,148. Comes new the plaintitl. by ltlstlno Iilstine, his attorneys, and flips Ins complaint herein, together with an affidavit that the defendants. Obcd Guntie. saniuel Guntie, Heri janun F. Guntie, Catharine Miller. Eliza, Mciles, Daniel tkiles. Theodore Guntie. William Guntie, Alleles Guntie, Minnie McSliery and Simon Meshery are non-residents of the SfMtn of Indiana, and that, tli" suit is tqaHisfy a mortgage upon real estate own^^oy plaintiff.

Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants, that unless uey be and appear on the 2'2nd day of the September term of the Montgomery Circuit Court for the year 1H96, the same being the 1st day of October. A. I)., Ib90, at the court house In Crawfordsvllle, in said county and .State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in their absence.

Witness iny name, and the seal of said court, affixed at (jrawsnrdsviile. this 4t.li day of August. A. D., lbOtJ.

8 7 3t

WALLACE SPARKS, Clerk.

rNDEHTEUNESS OF WA LNU TOWNSI1 IP

I)0(i FUND.

The following orders have been issued: 1H95— Aug. '28, No. 1, M*rv M. Howard S'^O.OO Sept. 11, No. George W. Powell 11:00 Sept. 24, No. :i, Isaac Sperry 37.50 Sent. !50. No. I, W. Powell 32.00 Oct. 12, No. ii. G. W. Powell 25.00 Nov. 'JO, No. 6, G. W. Powell 22.00 Dec. 20, No. 7, Isaac Crain 3.00 Dec. '20, No. 8, Win. Meek 14.00 lj?96JaB. 14, No. 9, Geo. W. Powell 12.00

Total.. $176.50 Due James II. Steward, No. 8, order given by O. M. Eddingljeld s? 55.91

The above and foregoing is a true and correct statement, of indebtedness of Walnut tuwubhip as 1 verily believe.

C. A. MINNTCIC, Trustee.

Sworn to and subscribed before me this Aug. :td. 189(. W. H. WBIISTKH. Aug. 7. 1690.—It Notary Public.

N

OTJCE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS, ETC.

In the matter of the estate of Garrett WykolV. deceased. In the Montgomery circuit court, September term. 189tl.

Notice is hereby given rtiat William M. Reeves, as administrator of the estate of Garrett Wykoll. deceased, has presented and tiled lus accounts and vouchers in linal settlement of said ('state, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said circuit court on the 7th day of September, 1890. at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are required to appear iti said court and show cause if any there be, why said accounts and vouchers should not bo approved, and the heirs or dist ributees of said estate are also notified to be rn =aid court at tho time aforesaid and make proof or heirship.

Dated this 30th day of July. 189(3. WILLIAM M. REEVES. 8-7-2t. Administrator.

ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE, Notice is hereby given that, the undersigned administrator of the estate of George McKinsey. deceased, will sell at public sale on the 25th 'jay of August, 1896, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day at the late residence of safd George McKinsey, three miles southwest of Crawfordsvllle on the east half of the northwest quarter of section 10, township 18 uorthtincl range 5 west, the following personal property:

Two milk cows, one 9 year old lieifer. five yearling heifers, one two year old Jersey and Gernsey bull, one sulky breaking plow, ono 3 year old horse.

TKIIMS—Nine months credit on all sums over $5 S5 and under, cash. KELLY HALL,

July 30, 1896-3t Administrator.

ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.

Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned iias been appointed admistrator of the estateof William il. Simms, deceased, late of Montgomery county, Indiana. Said estate is supposed to be solvent.

GEORGE W. WIDENER,

July 31,1896.—3t Administrator.