Decatur Democrat, Volume 42, Number 42, Decatur, Adams County, 29 December 1898 — Page 2

The descent jUf A is certain from / ‘■’■Bt we.ak lungs, i lingering \ coughs, throat \ troubles or A?—i bronchia! A \ affections « through bleedg ing lungs, to 'Wite fcWflWg— onsumption looted 1 housands of people who are now in their graves would be alive and well to-day if they had heeded the first warnings of those troubles which lead to consumption and death. The hacking cough, spitting of blood, weak lungs, and all similar troubles of the organs of breathing, will surely lead to consumption, if they are not already the signs of it. Then there are the other indications of the approach of consumption, such as night-sweats, emaciation, or wasting away of flesh from bad nutrition, which, if neglected, lead to certain death. Ninety-eight per cent, of all the cases of weak lungs, bleeding lungs, lingering and obstinate coughs, and other bronchial and throat diseases, which have been treated with Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. have been cured by it. Do not wait until vour throat trouble becomes serious. All bronchial and throat troubles are serious. The time to take the ’’Golden Medical Discovery ” is right at the start. Even if your throat trouble has been neglected until it has been pronounced pulmonary disease or consumption, do not hesitate to use the “Golden Medical Discovery." for thousands of letters from the sufferers themselves, who are now well, bear evidence that the "Golden Medical Discovery " will cure, even after good physicians have pronounced the disease pulmonarv consumption. • I had been troubled wj*h bronchitis for several vears,” writes Mrs Orlin O'Hara. Box 114. Fergus Falls, Ottertail Co Minn. "In the first place I had sore throat. I doctored with different physicians and took various medicines but got no 'relief. I raised from my throat a sticky substance like the white of an egg Could not sleep and had made up my mind that I would not live through the winter I took Dr Pierce s Goldeu Medical Discovery and Favorite Prescription alternately, and in a few days began to see that I was better I took eight bottles. I have not felt as well in years as since using these medicines.' Vnfailable—Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets for constipation and biliousness.

CHRISTMAS IN CUBA THE SOLDIER BOYS HAVE AN EXTRA SPREAD. Illinois and Indiana Men Get Good Dinners by Means of Company F"riends--General I<ee's Turkeys Too Lean to Kill. Havana, Dec. 28.—The United States troops began last evening a regular patrol of the city of Havana in order to guard against possible disorders. The day, however, passed in comparative quiet. The baudo issued on Friday by Captain General Jiminez Castellanos, prohibiting crowds from assembling in the streets, has been generally observed. Christmas at Camp Quemados was as lively as the troops could make it with slender materials. Turkeys at $7 a piece were scarce and everybody said that, with the heat at a summer temperature and the hedgerows brilliant with flowers, the day did not seem much like Christmas. All the company messes of the Fortyninth lowa, the First North Carolina, the Fourth Virginia, the Second Illinois and the One Hundred and Sixty-first Indiana regiments had extra "spreads" out of company funds, with gifts from well to do members. The army ration was supplemented by fruit, canned goods, sweet potatoes and some times chicken. The Sixth Missouri regiment, the last to arrive, had no chance to pre-pare-all extra dinner; so the men dined on fresh beef, rice and beans. One battalion reached camp yesterday, the other two marching today a distance of eight miles over a dusty road. All the regimental bands played and the men were granted leave within a mile radius of the camp. Company F, of the One Hundred and Sixty-first Indiana regiment, liad a cactus tree with a present for everybody stuck on the points, as for instance, hard tack, beans, salt pork and candles. The officers of the One Hundred and Sixty-first Indiana indulged, after dinner, in songs and speech making, -with several solo dances. HAt El Vendado, the Eighth and Tenth regular infantry regiment dined well at the expense of the company funds. Major General Lee and his staff partook of a modest dinner. General Lee liad a number of live turkeys available, but as the b’"ds are very lean he decided to keep them on the chance of improvement for the New Year’s feast after the flagraising. General Lee spent most of the day on horseback studying the best route for the New Year’s day parade. The streets are too narrow to allow the troops to march past the palace, so that the route will probably be through the Prado and Central park to Cerro, the Havana suburb. General Lee expects to have 11,000 men, including the Cubans, in the military procession. Major General Butler will go to Matauzas and Cienfuegos tonight on official business. The American troops are .about to take possession of the San Ambrosios hospital. C. S. Beaver, the United States postal

M NEVER BITES THE TONCUE- tS] ra] 4 LEAVES NO BAD TASTE IN THE l3j kg MOUTH ii ■— IS (übanola; V ASK YOUR DEALER FOR CUBANOLA. FINEST CICAR ever ra] SOLD in INDIANA at FIVECTS. r=jJ A. KIEFER DRUG COMPANY | SOLE DISTRIBUTERS. INDIANAPOLIS S

agent in Havana, has complained to the post master general of the irregularity in the arrival of the mails from the United States. SANTIAGt > COrXCIL Presents General Wood With a Gold Medal of Honor. Santiago de Cuba, Dee. 24.—Senor Baeardo, the mayor of Santiago, accompanied by the city council, visited General Leonard Wood, the military governor yesterday to present him with an old Spanish medal of honor of embossed gold with a chain and a parchment scroll containing the words: “To tiiake one's self beloved of the people m difficult moments is the best of victories.” The deputation requested General Wood to forward a similar medal to President McKinly with a scroll containing the declaration: “A people never forgets its benefactors. ” General Wood, replying in a few appropriate word-, of thanks, promised to forward the president's medal and scroll to Washington. Bank Robbery. Crooks Get Vway With SIB,(MX) of a Lima (O.) Institution's Funds. Lima, 0., Dec. 27. —The American National bank of this city was robbed of $18,162. The money was taken from the big vault. The robbery was skilfully done, no damage being done to the vault. The money stolen was in currency and gold. No silver was taken. The robbery was discovered yesterday by the bank's janitor, who found the door to the vault open. A deposit of $16,000, made on Saturday night, was gone. The manner of entrance to the bank by the robbers is a mystery. Died in the Flames. Two Women and an Infant Perish in Their Burning Home. Houston. Tex.. Dec. 27. —A special from Hillsboro, Tex., says: Mrs. Isabel, Her daughter, Mrs. Ossia Malone, and Mrs. Malone’s infant were burned to death in their home near here. The women could be seen in the house, but it was impossible to rescue them, though every effort was made. The fire started by the use of kerosine to kindle a fire.~ Wine Merchant Suicides Toledo, 0., Dee. 27.—Frank Kuber, one of the proprietors of the Catawba Wine Company, last night left the sapper table and shot himself to death in the bathroom. No apparent motive. He was one of the largest wine d ialers in the United States. Nicargua Canal, Washington. Dec. 24.—The report of the Nicaraguan canal committee has been read to the senate committee. It is estimated that it will require about $135,(XX),000 to complete the project. “Reading about the racket that occurred in one of your public schools here reminded me of the good old days when a schoolteacher that couldn’t thrash out his whole school wasn't thought much of by his patrons,” said Mr. George Dallas of Georgia to a Washington newspaper man. “In antebellum days down south it was often the fashion to employ New England teachers. I recollect a Vermonter, named Griswold, who came down our way and was employed to train the youth of the village. Griswold had a fair education, but pluck was of infinitely more importance in that locality than booklore. There were a lot of as tough ‘big boys’ enrolled among Griswold’s ‘scholars’ as were ever produced in old Georgia, and the opinion of the town was that the Yankee teacher wouldn’t be abje to cope with them, although he was assured of the moral support of all the best citizens. “Never did a town make a worse mistake than this one in its opinion of a ‘professor.’ The first day that he called ‘books’ Griswold made the boys a little speech. He told them that if he couldn’t keep order he would use the rod; if the rod was ineffectual, he would use his fists, and if that wasn't enongb he'd take a club to them. He whipped one of the biggest boys before dark that day, and ever after his supremacy was absolute.” Immense fortunes have been made out of the banana business. Revenues do not accrue alone from the sale of the fruit, for the leaves are used for packing; the juice, being strong in tannin, makes an indelible ink and shoe blacking ; the wax found on the underside of the leaves is a valuable article of commerce; inanilla hemp is made from the stems, and of this hemp are made mats, plaited work and lace handkerchiefs of the finest texture. Moreover, the banana is ground into banana flour. The fruit to be sold for dessert is ripened by the dry warmth of flaring gas jets in the storage places in which it is kept, and immense care has to be taken to prevent softening or overriptuing. The island of Jamaica yields great crops of this useful and money making.frpit.

THE SPORTING WORLD. Dr. Edward N. . T «avy, chief surgeon jf the Lexington veterinary hospital, writing in the New York World, says that Sloane’s success as a jockey is due i entirely to the fact that he knows exactly where to sit on his mount when the animal is under high pressure and | drawing upon all his running capacity. It is not necessary to go into the tech nical to fully explain this matter, as everybody knows enough about horses to understand that too much weight in the center of a horse's back will have a tendency to tire the brute quickly. This is especially sowhen a horse is running a mile in a little more than a minute and a half. Every leap racks the animal’s body more or less, and the slightest weight over or near the kidneys is bound to tax the creature's strength and wear him out. Apparently Tod Sloane JA / Ow* a - —ilf uv xz// HOW SLOANE FAVORS A HORSE. is familiar with this very thing, and instead of occupying that portion of the back where the saddle is commonly : placed he slides np on the withers, over I the shonlder blade, and rests his knees ; in such away that his entire weight is lifted from the saddle, and therefore off the horse’s back. This movement, which he generally executes as he comes into the stretch, has the effect of at once freeing the hind quarters from all weight, thus leaving the abdominal muscles and the three layers of hip muscles perfect play for the work in band. These muscles are the driving muscles of a horse, and even though the brute may be a little lame in the front legs there is still speed left in the hind legs. Slcaue knows that for every pound he can get off the back be will profit in fractions of seconds in reduced time. Sloane's knees, used as a support, lift ■ the weight off his stirrups, and there is therefore no immediate weight on the horse’s back. To be sure, Sloane also has much control over bis mounts. But that is primarily due to the fact that he does not annoy them any more than is necessary. A horse appreciates decent treatment as thoroughly as does a man, and it pays to accord it. — Base Running. “Base running isn’t all in one's ability to run 100 yards in ten flat,” says Tim Hurst. “Hamilton and Delehanty are great base runners because of their ability to judge a pitcher and get away with his arm. The same thing can be . Sjaid of Jake Stenzel. These men are not exceptionally fast,- but they purloin the bags quite frequently. They are hard men to fool. Some players would make jjood base runners if they could slide. Take Tommy Dowd and Dick Harley, for instance. They get away with the pitcher’s arm, bnt they can’t slide, and as a result they get caught when they should lie safe. It takes a man with a world of nerve to drop to the ground when at full speed and slide to second , head first But when you find a slow man who can do this he will have more ; stolen bags to his credit when the season is over than the faster men who can’t ’ slide.” Brakes and Accidents. “The number of accidents that are ’ due to the absence of bicycle brakes, I and particularly of good brakes,” says a man in the trade, “shows no signs of \ abatement. In one week there were five ! fatal accidents in England, four of them due to the brakeless condition of the wheels ridden, and in France the number of serious accidents traced to the same cause is extremely large. In this country instances where accidents terminate fatally are much mote rare, bnt every week there is a sufficient number of mishaps, great and small, to cause serious concern. In a very large majority of cases they could have been avoided had the rider been able to hold his machine in check with a good brake. ” Thirty Inch Wheels. It is not unlikely that the movement to revive the use of 30 inch wheels may become formidable before the season Os 1809 has been ushered in. While the suggestion was made mainly for the purpose of inaugurating a change and insuring a new talking point fur next season’s product, there are Some practical advantages to be derived from the wheel of greater diameter that may I commend it to riders contemplating a new mount for another year.—New 1 York Commercial Advertiser. I —• Edwards Resumes His Riding. Teddy Edwards, who succumbed to i typhoid fever after completing bis two hundred and fiftieth consecutive ceutnry run, has recovered from his illness. If his condition permits, Edwards intends going out after the yearly mileage rec ord pf over 33,000 miles, now to ths credit of John H. George of Philadelphia

PEOPLE OF THE DAY. Second ;o Richard Croker only as director of the principal Democratic organization of New York city is the chairman r.f the executive commit ee of Tammauv Hall John F. Carroll, he man who lias just been raised to that position, is a skillful pulitie.au, and, like most Tammany leaders, ne has come up from the bottom. John F. Carroll was born in New York and is 44 years of age. He was educated in the public schools of the city. After graduating he went to work . as a clerk in a grocery store. He began to take a livelv interest in politics soon after he reached his majority and join- | ed the Tammany organization as a pri vate. His aptitude for ward work soon attracted the attention of the leaders, and he was given a chance to forge ahead. His first official position was in the park department. He remained faithful during the trying ordeals through which Tammany was forced by the downfall of Tweed, and rendered valuable assistance to the organization during the restoration period. He was appointed clerk of one of the district courts in 1881. He held this position until 1886, when he was made clerk of the court of special sessions. In 1892 he moved up another notch, to the clerkship of the court of general sessions, a place that is worth about $14,000 a year to the incumbent. Mr. Carroll has now resigned this lucrative position to become chairman of the principal committee of Tammany. His salary in the new position is “one of the things every fellar don't know. ” Princess Louise as an Inspector. Other inspectors of institutions may look out for evidences of whether the work ent out to be done is performed properly, but Princess Louise, marchioness of Lome, asks first to see the account books. She makes a careful survey of the expenditures and sometimes suggests to the matron that certain articles are bought at above the market price and advises a cutting down of expenses. Nevertheless the marchioness, who is called the “democratic princess,” is really generous. Once she asked a matron of a hospital if she was comfortably situated, and on the matron's reply that everything was all right, excepting the bed she slept on, the princess bad sent to her a white iron bedstead with real springs and a hair mattress. Mrs. Howard Gould. It is said that the brothers and sisters of Howard Gould are very much "put out” over bis marriage to Miss Kathriue Cltmmons and tbit they may carry out the full provisions i f the codicil to their father's will which bears upon the case. This codicil provides that any of the children "who shall marry without the consent of a majority of the executors and trustees under this will” shall forfeit one-half of the allotment made to him by the will. It is also said that the marriage has been delayed and postponed on account of the codicil. However, should Howard Gould lose the reported $5,000,000 by his marriage, he will still be able to worry along for awhile on what he has left, and he has his heart's desire in the possession of the beautiful wife he has wooed so long and so devotedly despite opposition. Young Mrs. Gould’s maiden name was Viola Dayan, though she is known to the public as Kathrine Clemmons, the name she took when she began her career as an actress. She was not eminently successful on the stage, though she became widely known and courted as the "beautiful Californian. ” She is tall and lithe, with an expression of great dignity, and has a most captivating gracefulness of manner. Tom Reed and a Wig. Speaker Reed dropped into the statehouse at Boston the other day and stood for some time before the portrait of Councilor Francis Bill, after Copley, which has recently been placed among the art treasures of the red room, contemplating the councilor’s resplendent scarlet coat and flowing wig. “What an aid to good looks those wigs were,” he remarked, as he reflectively stroked his fameus Shakespearean head. "With such a wig as that framing his face, a man could took handsome with very small provocation.” Imagine the Hon. Xboui—. E. Raed in a wig. Incessant. “I suppose the noise at the battle of Santiago was incessant?” “Yes, indeed. I never knew of but one thing that could compare with it.” “ What was that?” “A session of my wife’s afternoon whist club.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Have Been a Boston Man. “Hereis a story,” says the Kennebec (Me.) Journal, “they are telling on a trolley conductor in the employ of an eastern Maine company. There being a slight wait, a certain member of the sex which is not considered eligible for enlistment and may therefore be sat on with impunity got the benefit of his ruling passion. Here is their conversation: “The Woman—Are you going to th* Bangor House? “The Conductor—No, madam. “Ti)p -Woman—ls tips car going to the .Bangor House then? “The Conductor—No, madam. “The Woman—Well—er —er—is this the car to take to go to the Bangor Horse' “The Conductor—lt is, madam. It passes the door. ‘‘She clambered in, and the villain smiled on.” in Italy agriculture has made little progress, yet the season of the harvest is made one continual festival. Ths mountain toilers gather in Rome and leavj I the city in companies, white oxen, decI orated with bright ribbons, drawing their carts. Altars are erected in the : fields and mass celebrated. In the even- | ing singing, dancing and feasting ccuI elude the celebration.

There has been a great deal of discus- 1 eiou lately about the aspirations of General Calixto Garcia to be the leader of the new Cuban assembly. The ambition is one that any Cuban might Lola without apology, bnt the stories that the general was scheming for the place drew from him a positive denial that such was the case. In a letter dealing with this question he said that his whole course since Cuba had been relieved from the Spanish yoke was in line with that of other Cubans who understand the situation of affairs and who desire to shape such a policy as will meet with the indorsement of the United States and best conserve the interests of Cuba. While he might be selected as spokesman for certain of the delegates to the assembly he said lie would make no attempt to influence them in their honest opinions other than by legitimate means, and he wanted it distinctly understood that he had no desire to assume the role of dictator. Robert Bonner’s Ways. Robert Bonner had the story paper instinct largely developed. He read with bis own eyes every story printed in The Ledger as long as he actively managed it. He read all manuscripts submitted and himself selected those i which he deemed available. The contributor, no matter bow modest and humble, no matter whether a beginner or an established author with a hyphenated name, was always courteously received at an outside desk by the proprietor, who advanced from bis private office to return a story or deliver a check. “I’m sorry we can’t use this,” he would say in the first case. In the , ; second, handing over the check, “Fetch | us another story.” There was no waste | ;of words. His prices, except for arti- | cles by distinguished persons, were as low as the lowest. Anything from 250 words to a column he paid $lO for. If ' over a column there was generally an ! understanding, so much a word. Naturally. ' "She has such liquid tones, ” said the young man. "How appropriate!” said the young 1 woman. “Her talk drowns every other sound.”—Cincinnati Enquirer. ■ Legal Advertising. | OF EXECUTOR. j Notice is hereby given that the undersigned | I has been appointed executor of the estate ot I'John Hower, late of Adams county, de- | ceased. The estate is probably solvent. John Schurger. Executor. December 12.1898. | David E. Smith, Atty. w -3 ii ■ ' N' OTICE OF ELECT ION. Notice Is hereby given to the stockholders and lot owners in the Decatur Cemetery Association that there will bean election held at the office of Dr. J. S. Coverdale, tn the city of Decatur, on the nth day ot January, 1899. at 7 o'clock p. m . for the purpose! of electing seven trustees for the Decatur Cemettry Association for the ensttine year. 41-3 J. H. Stork. Sec’y D. C. A. Notice of election of directors OF THE DECATUR NATIONAL HANK. ; > I Notice ia hereby given tn the StrK?kholders i * of the Decatur National Bank, of Dwmtur. Indiana, that there will be held a meeting at , I the tooma of aald Bank, on Tuesday. January 1 1 10, 1899. b* tween the hours of 10 a ni and 4p. in.. for the purpose of electing a Board of 1 Directors lor said Bank for the year 1899. C A. DUGAN. ' 39-4 Cashier Decatur National Bank, EXECUTOR’S SALE Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned, as executor of the estate of John Hower, deceased, will offer for sale, at Dublie auction. 1 at the late residence of the deceased in Kirki land township, nine miles southwest of Decatur, in Adams county, Indiana, on Tuesday, January 10, 1899, The following personal property, towit: Cook stove, table, safe, milch cow, heifer. ’ brood sow with seven pigs, eleven head of I stock hogs, buggy, etc. • Terms of Sale—Amounts of 15.00 and under cash; all sums over 00 a credit of nine months will be given, the purchaser giving -two freehold landowners as security. JOHN SCHURGER. Executor. D. E. Smith, Attorney. 40-3 ’ OTICE TO TEACHERS. I Notice is hereby given that there will be a public examination of teachers at the county k superintendent's office in Decatur. Indiana, ' on the last Saturday of each month. Manuscript made in other counties will not be received. Applicants must be seventeen years of age before they will be licensed. Besides the statutory branches and Science of Education, applicants will be required to answer a f ; list based on selected literature—the selection made by the State Board of Education For the six months beginingwith Novem- . | ber. the questions in the Science nf Education wdl be based in part < n Plato’s Republic, fol- ' I lowing the Township Institute Outlines. 1898 9 | and from General Pedagogy. Beginning with { January two or three questions in the history I examir ation will be drawn from “Social Ele- : ments ” Teachers' examination begins promptly at 8:30 a. m. Yours very truly. IRVIN BRANDYBERRY. County Superintendent. k I • t TO NON-RESIDENTS. 1 The state ot Indiana, county of Adams, ss. In the Adams circuit court, February term, I ISO 9. * Miles M. Hamrick 1 VS. Daniel Lewis. Lewis, his wife. I No. 5830. ( All the unknown heirs of i Complaint to quiet Daniel Lewis deceased, > title and to cancel All the unknown heirsof I mortgage. Lewis, decease*, wife of Daniel Lewis, > ’ deceased. J j It appearing from affidavit filed in the above entitled cause, that Daniel Lewis. , Lewis his wife, all the unknown heirs of Daniel Lewis, deceased, all the unknown heirs of Lewis, deceased, wife of Daniel Lewis, deceased, of the above named defendants are t non-residents of the State of Indiana. Notice is therefore hereby given the said j Daniel Lewis. Lewis, his wife, all the unknown heirs of Daniel Lewis, deceased, all i the unknown heirs of Lewis, deceased. I wife of Daniel Lewis, deceased that they be and appear before the Hon. Judge of 1 the Adams cir uit court on the sixth s day of March. 1899. the same being the i tw’»»nty-tiftb juridical day of the next regular term thereof, to be holden at ihe court 3 house in the city of Decatur, commencing on Monday, the 6Lh day of February. A. D.. 1899. and plead by answer or demur to said com- ? plaint, or the same will be heard and deter--2 mined in their absence. Witness, my name and seal of said court, hereto affixed this 26th day of December, 1898. John H. Lenhart. Clerk. 42-3 By E. Burt Lenhart. Deputy. Schurger A Smith, Att’y for plaintiff.

Copper Colored Splotches. There is only one cure for Contact Blood Poison—the disease which completely baffled the doctors j| are totally unable to cure it. and di/,? their efforts toward bottling the up in the blood and concealing it f roin view. S. S. S. cures the disease p O T tively and permanently by forcing out every trace of the taint. I was afflicted with a terrible bloni s.wbich was iu spots at first, bir «P r ‘' adall "v-r mj toS 4 These soon brok<-o u[ / W 9ore3 - a, ‘fl it is £ WEN endured. 8,-; orp W ® am « co “vineed t ha t t U. jp l ?°£ t T oouiddi ” i opxxr r' i n ad s P7 nt » hu® T- T - ?, ollara '* | nchwasrr,u, Ash ffirovrn away, i ~7!’’ tried various Jan X. >’ut chryd d Y not reach -he Wlwfe’ i Vhe 'l. l bad ‘inishedX IY( fiMt bottl< ‘ of 8. S 8 { was greatly i mpr(iw and was delighted writ the result. The large red splotches on m, chest began to grow paler ami .mailer ani before long disappeared entirely. [ regained my lost weight, became stronger, and mr an petite greatly improved 1 was ~.,n e nt ’ lr . well, and my skin as clear as a piece of gl.s. ' H. L. Myers, 100 Mulberry St . Newark,N J Don’t destroy all possible chance of 5 cure by taking the doctor’s treatment of mercury and potash These minerals cause the hair to fall out, and win wreck the entire system. S.S.S. r 77,8100d is purely vegetable, and is the only blood remedy guaranteed to contain no potash, mercury, or other mineral. Books on the disease and its treatment mailed free by Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Georgia. OTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS State of In Jiana. county of Adams, as: 1 In the Adams circuit court. February term. Samuel Simison, Peter Soldner i No. vs. • On note. AttachJohn Hyatt. men t William M. Buffenbarger I Demand 4125 ft) Margaret Eley. It appearing from affidavit filed in the above entitled cause, that William M. Buffenbarger of the above named defendants is a non-res - dent of the state of Indiana. Notice is therefore hereby given the said William M. Buffenbarger. that he be and appear before the Hon. Judge of the Adam«circuit court on the 14th day of February. 1899 the same being the Hth juridicial day of the next regular term thereof, to be holden at the court bouse in the city of Decatur, commencing on Monday, tbe rtth day of February. A D.. 1899. and plead by answer or demur to said complaint, or the same wiil be heard and determined in bis absence. Wi’ness. my name, and the«eal ofsaidcour hereto affixed, this 19th day of December. I*>. John H. Lenhart. Clerk. E. Bert Lenhart, Deputy. Lutz A Snow, Att’ys for Pi'tiff 41-5 Notice of petition to sell real estate. In the circuit court of Adams county. Indiana. November term. 1898, Pc*o» J. iratorof tu»* estate ot Thomas G. Dailey, de- , ceased. vs. Rachel IHiily, widow, i Albert Dailey. David Dailey. ; Oscar Daiiey. '< Probate Cause, Pearl Erwin. No. 782. Philip Erwin, John D iley. Amos Dailey. Stella Betz. Peter J.’Brvan, Lydia Steele. James Steele, Frank Betz. To Albert Dailey. Lydia Steele, James Steele and Oacar Dailev. you are *cven»]ly hereby notified that the above named petitioner. as administrator of the estate aforesaid, has filedin the circuit court of Adams county, Indiana, a petition, making you defendants thereto, and praying therein for an order and decree of said court authorising the sale of certain real estate belonging to the estate of said decedent, and in said petition described, to make asaest* for tbe payment or the debts and liabilities of said estate, and nn also filed an affidavit avering therein that you and each of you are non-residents of the itate of Indiana, or that your residence is unknown and that you are necessary parties to «’•« proceedings, and that said petition, so niw and which is now pending, is set for bearing in said circuit court at the court house in bo* catur. Indiana, on the Sth day of February. 1899. Witness, the Clerk and seat of said court thia 14th day of December. 1898 JOHN H. LENHART. Clerk. 40-3 By E Burt Lenhart. Deputy. R. K. Erwin and J. T. Kelley. Att ys for Plft ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE. Notice is hereby given that the administrator of the estate of John Kin F- . will sell at private sale. at , , office of Paul G. Hooper, in Decatur. Indian on or after Saturday, January 14.1599, the undivided two-thirds of ,h L f ? l 2 ) u i 5 l t v < of scribed real estate situate in the■ co Adams, and stateotlndiana, in parcel-. Parcel No 1-The north naif of inLd V' in the first addition to the tow.i (no Decatur, Indiana. Parcel No. 8— Commencing a' 8 P*’' I ’, t rnPr of and « inches west of ’he southeast ern in-lot No. 274 in the first B ’i d '“ o ? e nOT t’. (now city) of Decatur. Indians thenee parallel with Front "'“Kulh Hoe feet: thence east naraliel with the . of said lot twenty (Wi feet and six atrw; thence south parallel with F r h l o f said ninety nine <W»> feet to the 1 ts u ,6 lot; thence west twenty c!0) feet a inches to the place of beginning Parcel No. 3-Tn-lot No 277. in the (now city* of Decatur, IndianaParcel N0.4.-The 88 278, in the town (now city) of Decatur. Parcel No s wMtero U «ddltkrt 290, in Joseph Crabb, third wester |ndjaM to tbe town (now city) of L r perexcept therefrom the following ■ tion thereof: Commencing at the 'i CrabM . I corner of out-lot No. 29°. J n ‘ eilf third western addition to the ' P south of Decatur. Indiana, running the along Eleventh street the north thence west parallel with 8 nd forty-flyy side of said out-lot one hundred a u ffff (145) feet: thenc north sixty[‘br flve (148 thence east one hundred and tor j feet to the place of beginning # Parcel No «.-Commencing at *^sSo feet west of the southeast corner o e!ty 274. in the first addition VlS*north P*™ e : of Decatur. Indians. . th ?[J!>nco f:--t P ar \'c I with Front street 99 feet: thence j, . With the south Iraeof saiJ I . ot , wlt b Fro”- ; laches: thence south parallel jtij lot . I street 99 feet to lhe .^’yf^ h '' u tot he 1>1»<* 9 ‘ I thence west 5 feet and 6 inches to beginning. TERMS OF SALE. nd j one-third cash. b nP ' th n^ f erri‘d one-third iu two[year^ft e aud to tie secured by fre f" undersignedsecurity satisfactory to t-e tn CHARLES M. KING. Paul G. Hooper, Attorney.