Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 17 January 1902 — Page 4
4
WEEKLY JOURNAL.
ESTABLISHED IX 1848. euccesscr to The Record, the first paper ID Or&wtordsville, established in 1831, and to tbe People's Prets, established In 1844.
PRINTED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING.
BY THE JOURNAL COMPANY.
TERMS O? SUBSCRIPTION.
One rear In advance 11.00 Blx months 50 Three months .26
Payable in advance. Sample copies free.
THE DAILY JOURNAL. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
On« year In advance 16.00 BIJT months 2.60 Ifcree months 1.26 Per week, delivered or by mail .10
Entered at the Postoffice at Crawfordsville, Indiana, as second-class matter.
CHANGING: ADDKESSKS.
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 17. 1901.
IT is a strange prejudice which looks with disfavor on two such scientific games as whist and billiards and encourages bowling and crokinole.
THE Lafayette council has rejected a bill of $2,560 presented by Dr. S. S. Washburn for attending to smallpox cases for 128 days. As the rate'was $20 per day we certainly think the council did the right thing in rejecting the claim.
Two women have been elected as bank directors at Wabash. It is in such insidious ways as this that the destroyers of the American home begin their campaign. The next thing we know the women of Wabash will get into politics and then the fireside is doomed.
BEFORE any man formally announ^ his candidacy for public office he should firmly resolve that in contesting for the nomination he will treat all other candidates fairly, that he will not lose his temper even in defeat, and that he will zealously support the ticket whether his name is on it or not.
So MUCH fiction has been published in regard to the President's reprimand of Miles that it seems only fair, even at this late date, to set the matter straight, in so for as is possible. Mr. Roosevelt did speak with considerable severity and in public, but he did not show any evidence of having lost his temper and he spoke in public only because Gen. Miles, who was very much excited, persisted in talking as soon as he entered the President's presence, instead ol accepting the twice repeated invitation of the President to go into the cabinet room where they would have been alone.
THE Democratic party just now ie like the world before creation, without form and void. It is impotent to make even a respectable opposition to, Republican policies. All the more is it the duty of the Republican party to maintain the same high standard of conduct ae though it was fighting a close battle for victory. We must move forward or we will certainly go backward in these strenuous times Sound policies of government must be pressed, men of the highest character must be selected for all offices both great and small, and last but not least, the party organization must be kept in a high state of etliciency. With such ideals and with such" a leader and exemplar as Theodere Roosevelt, Republican success is inevitable.
DRY LANDS AND RIVERS.
Moisture is the life felood Jof vegetation, and when nature does not provide enough in theiway of rainfall well dis tributed throughout the year for the growth of crops,Jas in the arid sections of our own and foreign lands, the streams must be relied upon to furnish the needed amount. The streams thus become as valuable a resource as any mineral deposit, perhaps even more valuable, as on them rest the permanent development of the arid sections, and they .demand careful study and protection. In our own land there are millions of acres of dry and barren lands awaiting the introduction of water to become productive and habitable. It is merely a question of controlling and utilizing the waters from the streams which How through them. For a number of years the U. S. geological survey has been studying these streams, measuring their flow, investigating storage sites and collecting other data regarding them which are needed as their waters become more fully utilized
BLUFF MILLS-
Mrs. Irons visited Mrs. Alice Canine Thursday. R. H. Hodgkins is hauling tile from New Market. uMr. Litsey, of Marshall, was at the mill Tuesday.
Albert Rice was at the mill on business Tuesday. Mrs. Todd has been visiting at Uncle JesBB Reynold's.
J. N. Deere and wife spent Wednesday and Thursday in Crawfordsville. George Deere sold fifteen head of cattle to-Deere & Wllloughby last week.
R. L. Moore and Harve Hallett put up thirty loads of ice for the Shader ulay and Tuesday.
lH OLD TIN CMS
A Big Bunch of Money Was Found Buried In Clark County.,
NICE §20 COLT) PIECES
Mrs. Kozella ,Wright Who Died :i Few Days Aifo Mad More Money Than Was Suspected.
Besides Cash In tlie Bank There Was Treasure Buried On Her Farm.
Jeffersonville. Intl., Jan. lf.—Burled in the ground in old tin cans $34,000 in gold lias been found on the farm of Mrs. Rozella Wright, who died Jan. 4, near this city. How long this money had lain in the ground no one knows, and its location was known only by one person, Miss Sallie "Williams, a woman whom 3\lrs. Wright had reared from childhood.
At Mrs. Yvright's doat.li she left a will in which she made bequests to relatives and friends amounting to $4,011 Miss Williams receiving $l,0i)0. John Potter was named as administrator of the estate, and besides a farm valued at $4,000 he found $0,000 to Mrs. Wright's credit in a local bank. Me believed that this was all of the estate until Miss Williams divulged the secret of the hidden treasure. The money was all in $20 gold peices. Mrs. Wright was 84 years old at the time of her death.
A HOIJK IN 111 I (iliOUM)
Is All That, Now Shows For Xilrotyt vrilie 1 nanx' ne.
Marion, Ind., Jan. 3U.—Fifteen hundred quarts of nitroglycerin, stored in the St. Mary Torpedo and the Empire Nitroglycerin company's magazines in a ravine two and a hall' miles southeast of this city, exploded yesterday. Nothing but a great yawning hole where the magazines stood is left to tell the story. The entire city was alarmed by the noise and concussion of the explosion, and every one of the veterans at the National Soldiers' Home, near which the magazines were located, was given a start as though their barracks were over the quaking crater of a volcano.
Business houses and residences ail over Marion were jarred and some glass was broken in houses three miles away. The jar was also felt as far away as Fort Wayne. At Gas City it was particularly severe and several hundred dollars' worth of glass was broken and several houses were damaged.
The house located nearest the magazines was a half mile distant. It badly jarred. It is thought that a gas jet left burning in the St. Mary's magazine set fire to the building and caused the explosion. No one was near the place at the time.
Trouble Due lo Love.
Muneie, ind., Jan. 10.—Wild infatuation for a girl is given as the cause of Herbert Reasoner looting the First Baptist church one week ago, fof which he was sentenced today. Reasoner confessed that he wanted to give presents to his swettheart. A gold clock that he took from the church he gave to the young woman, \ylio did not know that she was receiving stolen property. He is but 19 years old.
Veteran Sentenced.
Noblesville, Ind., Jan. 10.—William Rodgers, aged 61, who served four years in the civil war, pleaded guilty before Judge Neal yesterday to an indictment charging him with stealing a horse and buggy in this city last spring and lie was given an indeteiminate sentence in. the Michigan City penitentiary.
Sinothere 1 Umlcr a l.oad.
Anderson, Ind., Jan. 1G.—Byra.i Bowman, a peddler, was killed in this city yesterday. He was driving on a wagonload of potatoes which upset and buried Bowman under the load. When rescued he was lying face downwari with his mouth and nostrils filled wiMi gravel, smothered to death.
Caught By a Train.
Bedford, Ind., Jan. 1G.—The body of Bish Hamersley, 22 years old, was found on the tracks of the Monon railroad, one mile south of this city, cut to pieces. He had lived near the place where the body was found, and he was caught in a big cut by a freight train while going home.
^tetnrnecl With a Fortune.
Brazil, Ind., Jan. 1G.—William Elliott has returned from the Klondike, bringing with him a fortune. He left here 20 years ago, but only in recent years was he successful in striking competence. He will return to Alaska in the spring.
Drowned in the River.
Evansville, Ind., Jan. 1G.—Mrs. Laura, Shields went to the steamboat landing to meet a relative and she accidentally fell from the wharf boat and was drowned. She was a widow with three children.
Caught By Back Lojr.
Vincennes, Ind., Jan. 16.—Cecil Wlakier of Bruceville, while trying to place a large baclt-log in position in the fireplace, was accidentally caught and burned to death.
CAPITAL DOINGS
Some Pertinent Points Presented ij
Our Indianapolis Correspondent.
Indianapolis, Jan. 16.—Sportsmen from all over the state will attend the national gathering of the League of American Sportsmen in this city Feb. 12. New York is about the only state in the Union, that shows a roll of more members than Indiana, for the list in this state has increased rapidly in recent months. The object of the organization is the protection of fish and game and the enactment of legislation along that line. Frank Littleton, warden for this state, believes the work of the meeting may be accomplished in one day. An effort will be made to do it in that .time, at least. The sessions will begin early in the day and proceed almost without cessation until the work at hand is finished. In conclusion there will be a banquet that promises much in the way of addresses from prominent members from other states and this state.
In the Michigan City prison Friday, John Rinkard, the Marion wife murderer, will pay with his life the penalty for his awful crime, unless something unexpected intervenes. Rinkard will leave the death cell shortly after midnight tonight and begin the journey to the same scaffold where Joseph D. Keith was recently hanged. It is not believed here that any of the powers that be will interefere with the carrying out of the sentence, for the supreme court has refused to even grant a request that his mental condition be investigated by a lunacy commission. Governor Durbin has declared that he will not interfere, so there seems no hope for the condemned man. He seems least concerned of all about his fate, but continues to manifest the most stoical indifference.
E. E. Neal of Noblesville, candidate for the Republican nomination for clerk of the supreme court, had a narrow escape while bound for this city Wednesday evening. He was on a Monon train that was just entering the city after a trip from Chicago. Just before it reached Sixteenth street Mr. Neal left his seat and started over to talk to a friend. That saved him, for as he arose a large stone crashed through the window, scattering fragments of glass in every direction. Had Mr. Neal remained in'his seat a few minutes longer he would probably have sustained serious injury. He does not believe the stone was aimed at him.
The Republicans all over the state have elected their new district committeemen and the chosen ones will meet in this city next Tuesday for the purpose of reorganizing the state committee. Most of the prominent party men here express themselves well satisfied with the personnel of the new committee.
A Question of Liability.
Indianapolis, Jan. 16.—In affirming the judgment recovered by Samuel Polland against the D. H. Davis Coal company the Indiana supreme court yesterday held that an employer cannot by any contract he may make with his workmen relieve himself from duties and liabilities which the law expressly imposes on him. Polland was injured by some coal that fell from the roof of the defendant's mine.
He alleged that the accident was due to the company's failure to furnish timbers for propping the roof of the mine, and to have the mine properly inspected as required by the law oi 1885. It was urged that Polland, being an experienced miner and knowing that the mine was not sufficiently propped nor properly inspected, had assumed the risk of injury from those causes and that his Own negligence in remaining in the mine when it was in that condition was the cause of his injury, and therefore he ought not to recover. The court, however, held dif ferently, under the statute requiring due care on the part of employing companies, and adjudged that Polland should recover damages.
Married lit Jail.
Peoria, Ills., Jan. 16.—George Washington Brown of Woodford county, aged 21 years, confined in the Peoria Jail on a charge of horse-stealing, and Miss Lucinda Fetters, also of Woodford county, were married at the jail by County Judge Lovett. After th6 ceremony the prisoner was again locked up in his cell and the bride went on her way.
Adding to Her Navy.
Colon, Colombia, Jan. 16.—The Colombian government has purchased the steamer Chucuito, belonging to the Pacific Steam Navigation company. Artillery from the Colombian gunboat General Pinzon will be mounted on the Chucuito, which is a little bigger than the Liberal gunboat Darien.
THE CRAWFORDSVILLE WEEKLY JOURNAL.
r."he
ses
sions will be held in the Commercial club rooms. A committee to make all the preliminary arrangements for the entertainment of the city's guests during the meeting was appointed last Saturday night and has been working hard ever since trying to perfect its plans. It is probable that Indiana will submit much in the line of proposed legislation for the preservation of game, but some of the states that have not satisfactory laws are expected to come to the front with propositions. Persons who are not members of the association have been invited to participate in the preliminary sessions that have been held up to this time. It is not the purpose of the league promoters to bar anyone from helping them in their work simply because he has not a card of membership in his pocket.
NAVAL PLANS
For
Prince Henry's Keception
Are
Now Under Way.
Washington, Jan. 16.—Secretary Long yesterday called Rear Admiral Robley D. Evans into consultation respecting the coming visit to the United States of Prince Henry of Germany. The rear admiral has not yet been given written orders detailing him to act as the representative of the navy at the reception, but that matter has been agreed upon, and Secretary Long charged Admiral Evans with the preparation of a naval program for the reception. In view of the number of distinguished officers who are now reported to be about to accompany the prince on his visit, it is evident that Admiral Evans will require the assistance of a number of junior officers. They will be detailed a.s occasion requires.
So far the state department is not officially advised of the approaching visit of the prince, hence it has done nothing toward arranging a program for his reception and entertainment. It is assumed at the war department, though orders have not yet been issued. thai Major General Brooke, as commander-in-chief of the department of the East, will represent the United States army in the reception.
WILL HAVE TO SHOW
Too Much welry Causes Thrie Arrests in New Orleans.
New Orleans, Jan. 16.—George I. Kline of St. Louis and Robert L. West of Cincinnati were arrested across the river yesterday charged with robbing the trunk of T. E. Manners of Chicago of about $2,500 worth of jewelry. They are alleged to have represented themselves Tuesday night as Manners and another guest, at the St. Charles, paid the bills and left with the baggage. They crossed the river in a skiff and were caught before the train came on which they expected to leave, through the watchfulness of a newsboy who had read the story in the newspapers.
Later in the day Manners went over to identify the property and Kline accused him of being a thief under ar alias. As the whole affair had a queer look Manners was also arrested. The police suspect he is Kerns, the New York jewelry thief, and Chief of Detectives Titus of New York sent a telegram here which strengthens the idea. Manners claims that he is with his father in the pawn brokerage bur ness in Chicago and the jewelry taken was unredeemed pledges he was trying to dispose of. Fifty diamond pins, a gold watch, a diamond brooch and some pearls are in the lot. ks
Hope Is Given Up.
Port Townsend, Wash., Jan. 16.—AH hope that Captain James Mclntyre and comrades of the steamer Bristol might yet be alive was dispelled y.-sterday on the arrival of the steamer Cottage City from the north. Captain Wallace, who picked up the survivors, says that he believes that the others went down with the vessel when she slid from the reef, and even if they had got clear from the ship it would have been almost impossible for their smallboats to have lived in the sea which was raging at tbe time.
The Condor's Fater In Doubt.
Victoria, B. C., Jan.16.—Hope for the safety of the British warship Condor is all-, but abandoned. Naval men here are convincrd she went to the botom during the recent typhoon, while on her way from here to Honolulu. The Admiralty officials will send the Phaeton Saturday in search of her.
Color Line In Oklahoma.
Guthrie, Okla., Jan. 16.—Chief Justice Burford has issued an order that if there be only one colored child of school age in a school district, the authorities must provide a separate schoolhouse and teacher. This order takes in the entire territory.
Kliedlve Sends Pope a Mammy.
The khedive of Egypt, as has been reported, recently sent a present to Leo XIII. The offering is not exactly an exhilarating one to receive—a mummy. But this is a very special rnummy, for it dates back to two thousand years before the Christian era. The pope took the khedive'a present in the best of humors, and sent him in acknowledgment an autograph .letter.
Couldn't Identify the Finger.
"That is Jimmy's hair," said the football player, laying out his trophies ofter the game, "and this is Billy's nose, and this is Tom's ear, and this eye-brow belongs to young Rusher, butT can't identify this finger to save me."—Baltimore American.
Woman vs. Man.
Women like to be half understood before they speak, and the grosser, intellect of man seldom more than half understands them after they have spoken.—Marion Crawford.
^BALANCE ICROPTH^ ALU SiMUCnXUL
awwf:1:, •wig
[NAMES OF THE
5YV
OWNERS.
Brandon, W. C. andC.... Brownilow, Fred J. M... Collins, Thomas Campbell, EUz Douglas, Saml., et al Hicks, Jesse do Jones, Thomas Korbaugh, Ezekiel Martin, Sarah do do do McCormack, Letitia J... Oliver, Lucy Reeves W. M. and Troutman, Mary Tofrnslev, Jere._ Younp blood, M.
7
Ohio Cracksmen.
Canal Dover, O., Jan. 16.—The safe of the Tuscarawas Electric company was dynamited and robbed of its contents by three masked men, who over powered the night watchman and a boy, both of whom they bound nnd gagged. The receipts of the day had been placed in an iron box under the floor and was overlooked by the burglars, who got less than $30 from the safe. The robbers escaped. At Mary.sville, Ohio, the safe of the Big Four railroad office was dynamited, but nc money was secured.
LIST OF LANDS ANDLOTS
IN MONTGOMERY COUNTY, INDIANA,
RETURNED DELINQUENT FOR THE NON-PAYMENT OF TAXES
135 304
Gott. W. B. and Mary 59'pt hf nw qr. ...
Call, Julia A do oo Pennington, Sarah A ... do do do do Quigg, Chas. A bcaggs, R. N. and F. S do
For the year 1900 aud previous years, with interest
and penalty of 10 per cent, thereon, with current taxes
for 1901 and cost of advertising.
UNION TOWNSHIP.
DESCRIPTION LANDS.
153 154 219 277 425 794
pt hf sw qr.. pt ne qr pt hf ne qr.. pt nw qr pt ,hf Kelsey'siadd..
892 919
pt ht ne qr Curtis add Britton's Glen
1091
1185 1261 1867 1618 1629 1858
Blair, Annie E Crow, Hannah Campbell. Alex Devitt Patrick Davis N. S and M. R_... Ensmlnger, Louise W... do Fullenwider, James S... Gray, Mary do do Harney, Sarah do Jones, James Martin, Ed and Phoebe Meeker, Dora N. and L.
pt hf se qr.... pt ehf ne qr,.... pt sw qr. pt hf pt hf nw qr.. pt hf se qr
83
pt hf ne qr. Blair's add B. & W. add Wolfe's add Elston's add Pt, Dunn's Heirs Elston's... Smock's add
842 402 561 618 669
32
746 839
998
1157 1449
C. Blaine do do McClure, Alice S Nioholson, Mattle and Oppy, Chris Pearson, H. and I, Palre, A. L. and Sallie Richmond, Chas S & ME Swank. Smith Swift, Leonard., Seaman, John do Strode, J. Stewart, Caroline Warren, Chas., heirs.. .. Wolfe, M. J., etal
2097 2099 2477 2489
Nichols & Klllen do do Newklrk, Alice do Nunemaker, Dan'l. & A Parker, Dora. Rusk, Walter 11 Tacker, Emma B.
E E E E E E E
Browning, H. Payne, Moses D. do
Taylor. Thomas.
Brant, Mai?
Brant, Mai? 13 White's add
Charters, T. L. and D.
Bell, Mary J..
Jones, Jennie Myers. Harriet A Vanduyan. C. and J..
Wilson. John A.
Aiirey, Mary E Dooley, Wm Hargravr, Dred
pt hf sw qr Pt pt hf sw qr Pt
55 671
1041
Bilbo, James W Byerly,"Nellie Hayes, William Moore, John Moore, Henry.
122
Neeley, Martha E Powers. W. andSarnh
i°^n
186 227 M. and N add
STATU OF INDIANA, MONTGOMERY COUNTY,
1 W1!!,,am
s2ldoolinty
were
h0"se
NAMES OF TOWNS.
05
19
Thompson's H... Old Plat
1479 Bryant's udd..
1672 1700 1725 176G 1788 1862 202(1 2078 2085
Lockhart'sadd.. Wilson's add Dunn's Heirs pt hf ne qr pt nwqr Pt--May&Thomas ad ptseqr Thompson's add
WFElston's add ME Elston's add Warren Place... Brown & White
Ghere, Jacob T. I 98|pt hf se qr. do |pte hf ne qr...
73
81
19
Connard's add...,
15
31
19
MADISON TOWNSHIP.
LrNpEN.
188 Nicholson &.K add
140
Paugh, Mary
Kelsey's add
141 149 168 '214
do
pt ne qr Shauklin's 2d add Old Plat
Coatnejf, John jl33j Wood's add
A'"Z.""'483!oid
Barnbart, M. Day, James A Howard, John Wisehart, H.
20 25
IFRANKLIN TOWNSHIP.
PiatZ.Z"!Z.'.'j
DARLINGTON.
23 94
pt ht ne qr pt ne qr pt ne qr Perkins' aad
Hi
19 3 17
HI 19 3 '.12 8 19 3 15
NKW ROSS.
CLARK
79 W Forest Home do do 380 E Forest Home.
do do do do do do do
387 451
LADOGA.
30• pt lif ntv qr.. 355, 0 dPlat.
N W I O N
Paze.y, Nancy t:. 32|01d Plat. I I I —. jNewRlch'd shfl ]•$ 9 0b WING ATE. Dodge, Francis 1 48: 1 1 iwingate.
WAYNE TOW JN SHIP.
Brown. Jonas N 44ipt whf ne ir 181 19 h'| Lowe, Jane :229iptswqr. 5! 19 6 86 WAYNETOWN. Booe, Sarah 10 Brant's add
pt hf se qr 14 19 6 07
White's add
Perkins.. 70 Edwards 3d add ... Davis, Geo T._ 83 pt wh ne qr. 14 19 6 30 Ellis, Emma 97 Edwards add
Inlow, E. E 194 pt 14 19 6 80 Lowe, Mary 3)fi Brant's 8d add
Merrill, A. 321 pi, whf neqr'" "l4 "19 "6 ,1 "65 Phillips, Rebecca 335 Phillips add
Reeves, W E. and M. 347 Edwards add Williams, Edith 227 Edwards 3d add.
Bowman, E. J. and 10.... Hallett, E. P„ sr O'Connell, 'l'dos. slmms, Geo. W
18
140 262 318
0 17 6 48 21 i'17 (i 90 78 .'16 1 18 6 i-: 5 80 18 5 161 66
ALAMO.
4|Original Plat...
BROWN TOWNSHIP.
20 36
pt hf sw qr 25 7 6 37 White's add pt nw qr sw qr 1 17 6 30 pt whf sw qr 25 17 25 pt seqi 3 17 6 pt sw qr. 2 66 25 pt hf sw qr 25 17 6 25
•284 407 410
6R4
WAVELAND.
76
pt nw qr.. pt nw qr.. Fourth E. "add
36 36
.... 60 20
SCOTT TOWNSHIP.
Sogers, Nancy J.. |37a|P. and C. add IPark'rsb'gnhf) 5)6 2 29
ss:
-a
S G' S •a 3
E*
51765 60.06 9.00 5.30 2.66
New Market...
85 18
87
109 19 9
CRA WFORDSVILLE.
17.67 9.21 7.77
C'ville. do do do do
6.14 8.01 4.93 3.19
146.50 31 89 21.58
16.92 3.93 11.59 8 51 9.73
ehf
60.3h 3.72
Pi Pt
47 45
Pt
39.13 8.42 10.71
hf
7.06
pt
30
11.41 14.64 1.40 15.02 10.48 10.20 16.12 1.62
2.29 2 82 7.54 2.95
,...n hf
...n hf
13.19
20! 4! I 4! 6| I.'""! $17.07
Linden do do do do do do do do 8-9
5i
6 7|$ 2.64 9 1.84 a |2.27 9.30 4.33 3.74
21, 4 71 a
Shannondale... 21! 221 $ 19.90 231 4.40
...jl 3.19 ... 16.86 3.99 l| 6.39
DarliDgton..
-I 361 18j 3| .... 501 TOWNSHIP.
I* 6 05
...pt
$ 11.34
9.52 4.08
-pt
•2.80
18 17 3 1 Ladoga G.32
....
COAL CRKKK TOWNSHIP. |528[pt swqr. ...... .20|" "6~|" 79|"Tion.-T."."
—Pt 3 4l 27.14
li 76 54
511 62|l 28 37
i« 7.33 I 62.88
Waynetown.. do do
19 07
$ 14.07 7.02
do ". do do do do do do do do do
14 19 30
14 19 80
"l4 "19 "6 "65
RIPLEY TOAVNSIIIP.
8.27 9.73 9 55 8.45
12 80 17.79 5.66 21.47 5.11
13.86 38.89 10.84, 40.06
Alamo..
6.51 1.33 5.15 9.72
New Market
17 17
6 6
2 20 8 50 2 31 3.36
""5V25 18.21
Waveland Waveland
auditor of said county hereby certify that the foregoing lands and town
returned delinquent for the non-payment of taxes thereon for the vear
1900 and previous years that said taxes, together with Interest, penalty, current taxes for 1901 and cost of advertising remain unpaid at this date, as appears from the county treasurer's return WILLIAM M." WHITE,
Notice is hereby given that so much of the foregoing lands and town lots as may be necessary to discharge the taxes, interest, penalty and charges that may be due thereon, or due from the tl?^ ofJ,a1® w,1f,1
b®sold
or
offeredfor
door ln the city of Crawfordsville, Montgomery county, Indiana, between the hours prescribed by law, on the second Monday in February, 1902. WILLIAM M, WHITE Jauuary 17,1902.
$ 13.84 11.26 2.39 22.74 9.90
$ 13.84 11.26 2.39 22.74 9.90
Waveland. Waveland
I207 145
Auditor Montgomery County.
sale at public a^cUon at the court
Auditor Montgomery County.
