Decatur Democrat, Volume 48, Number 6, Decatur, Adams County, 14 April 1904 — Page 8

Linn Grove*. ~ Charles*' Morrow is spending a few days at the parental home. J. D. Augsberger moved into the Fred Studler house last Thursd ty. Archie Haughton of Geneva is rusticating here for a few days this week. p. Hoffman and :0i D. F. made a business trip to Bl’.ffton last, Thursday. John Simison jhas E 1 Newschwander’s residence known as the Kreps property and will soon be numbered with our town people. Henry Morrow is building an, addition to his barn being a combination, cattle shed.Jhog pen and wagon shed, floors are of cement throughout. Schindler and Shenbeck moved their portable mill on the farm of Albert Lindsey last week and are cutting the lumber for his new dwelling. The Sorosis dub met at the home of Miss Lovina Dunbir Thursday afternoon, light refreshments were served and a pleasant afternoon passed. On Thursday afternoon of this week the Sorosis girls will ■meet at the home of 1 Ossie Baumgardner all members ] resent is requested. The Hon. loard of' county commissioners made a buisness trip to this place on Monday. The river bridge here was by them proclaimed unsafe for heavy t ratio and the structure now bears a play card “condemned” by order of the board of commissioners. The board in a body made us a social call while here. A mass meeting of the democracy of the north precinct was held at the school building on last Thursday evening and delegates nominated to represent, said precinct at the county convention on Friday the delegates were G. W. Gentis, £,. L. Dunbar, Peter Hoffman, Peter Kizer, Frank Reffee, Edwin Heller and Jacob Augsbeiger. Rural Route Report.£ Tao rural route business has to be worked up the same as any other industry. This fact is evident because the business grows each month and all the routes established a year ago are nearly double the first few months. It is also noticeable from the fact that route seven falls so far below the older routes. This route lies through as good country as tie. - e is anywhere and will in time be a good route, but just at present it is far below the average. Postmaster Brittson has just concluded his report for March which shows the following: Rente one, C. E. Dailey, carrier, deliverd 7232 pieces, collected 517 I stamps Ctnoelled $9 “iXonte two, W. H. Engle,delivered 549, collected 80, stamps $13.18. Route three. R. V. Beaber. de- ■ livered 6736, collected 674. stamps sl2 64. Rm e four. H A. Fuhrman, de Itvered 5681 collected 519, stamps $1 ’"2. Ro-*- five. V I Butler, delivered 7 collided 874, stamps $16.99. R mte six, E. E Archer, delivered i 5551, collected 724, stamps $13.53. Route seven. S. S. Magley, delivered 2481, collected 227, stamps, •$4.15. Grand totals, delivered 41,302. collected 4215, stamps $792. Route five leads as it always has bnt several the other routes are pushing along close. Route six which for some time was in the last place has advanced to second best place. The routes all average well with <hose of other counties. Real Estate Transfers Rebecca A.Murphy to William A. Conrad pt see 16 Preble tp 20 acres 3880. 7 George Black to O. E. Witeman lot 223 Geneva SBSO. -J. H. Hilty to Samuel Barber lot 362 Berne, $950. Childrens Rescue Society to .■Helen Leichty lot 251 Berne $125. J. H. Hilty to George Paille pt see 10, Wabash tp 2 acres S2OO. Frank Gleckler to J. G. Sheets p; sec 10 Union tp'ls acres S7OO. P. J. Pothnisjie to Ellis Jones pt S o 22 French tp 116 $7134. Kills Jones to P. J. Pothnisjie pt sic 21 French tp 116 acres S2OBO. Amos Reusser to Jacob A.Habegg ir ]ot 33 Berne SISOO. Adam Pease et al to George Burke pt sec 27 Kirkland tp 40 acres S2OOO. J. L. Yaney to' L. M. Fogel 25 .acres sec 18 Jefferson tp sll2, G. Geo B. Dickerman to I. M. Dickerman lot 250 Geneva SSOO

MOUNTAINS Ilf JAPAN. Vhey Rival In Panorama the Scenery of Biiiit»erlai.<l. On every side of us, from our feet to the golden distance far away, the world stretched mountains, peak upon peak : s thick as junks in a Chinese haraor and range beyond range inexhaustible. No sounds of mortal life came up inside the rock, while tne river, gentian blue, wound silent in transparent pools below. The panorama in .Japan on a splendid summer day is impossible to describe to an English reader who has not been in the east, for such a one will read between the lines the local color in which he was bred instead ot the wholly different atmosphere that heightens the charm of the picture there, the brilliant luminous air which invests our eye with telescopic power and brings the whole landscape to our feet, while a soft suspicion of silky haze seems to float a halo round each foljage hidden hill. Switzerland, too. is a mountain world, but small compared with this, the entire content from Innsbruck to Geneva only one-fourth the length of this single island of Japan, a thousand miles of continuous romance. And the quality of the sunshine is what separates by a very wide gulf a summer s day in these latitudes from one in more northerly Europe.— Ernest Foxwell in Cornbill. TOBACCO LEAVES. The First European* Who Saw Them Used For Smoking:. The first Europeans who saw tobacco smoked were two men whom Columbus dispatched on an embassy immediately after the discovery of the island of Cuba. The names of these envoys, worthy of memory by the smoker, were Roderigo de Jerez and Luis de Torres, the latter a Christianized Jew of special proficiency in Arabic and Hebrew. Six days were allowed to these two worthies in which to accomplish their mission, but after penetrating inland for some twelve leagues and stopping at a village of a thousand inhabitants they rejoimal Columbus on Nov. 6, 1492, and recounted the several wonders which had fallen under their notice. It was on their way back to the Spanish caravels, accompanied by three natives, that they first saw smoking practiced. Several of the aborigines were making use of dried tobacco leaves, which they formed into a long roll, lighted and put in their mouths, swallowing and puffing out the smoke. These primitive and gigantic cigars the natives called tabacos. a name since transferred from its original application to the plant itself.

A MONKEY’S JOKE. It Gave Him a Good Dinner. While It Startled the Cook. I remember in n inscription of In- : dia or Ceylon some forty years ago a I story of an Englishman who had a i monkey. Looking out of his window ; one day, he saw his cook getting a fowl ready for boiling, while the mon- | key lay on the ground shamming death, and a party of crows stood at a little distance divided between the desire for the kitchen offal and the tear of the possibly shamming monkey. One crow more adventurous than the rest came within the magic distance and was instantly in the clutch of the monkey. At the same moment the cook, having finished trussing the fowl, put it Into the pot and went away. The monkey plucked his crow as he had just seen the cook pluck the fowl, took the fowl out of the pot, put the crow in and retired with his exchange. When the cook came back and saw the fowl left preparing for his master's luncheon turned black he was. as may be supposed, struck black with terror at this manifest intervention of the evil one.—London Spectator. Shorthand Pioneer. That the ancients were thoroughly con 1 ••;• : : t with shorthand is an undisputed fact. It subsequently became a lost art until revived or rediscovered toward the end of the sixteenth century. At this time there lived William Lawrence, who died in 1621 and was buried in the cloister of Westminster abbey. There the visitor may read his epitaph, which includes the following lines: Shorthand lie wrote: his flower in prime did fade. And hasty death short hand of him hath made. Tennyson and Browning. As the world knows, Robert Browning and Tennyson were always the best of friends, and there was never a shade of rivalry on either side. A mutual friend once asked Browning whether he did not think that Tennyson’s ballad of “The Revenge” owed its inspiration to his own ballad of “Herve Riel.” “No,” he answered; “Tennyson’s inspiration is all his own.” Soft and Softer. “How beautifully soft it is!” he murmured. laying his hand on her glorious white arm. “How less beautiful, but, oh, so much softer!” she tenderly replied, laying her jeweled hand on the top of his venerable head. A Mercenary Preference. “She despised him because bls parents were poor, but honest.” "No,” said Miss Cayenne; “she didn't despise®him, but she preferred a man whose parents were neither.”—Washington Star. Which Was Far Worse. Williamson—Does your wife always have the last word? Henderson—Well, if she doesn't, old fellow, she looks it. — Smart Set. It is better to swallow a lie than to utter it.

ODD KOREAN HABITS TEAR BASKETS AND HEART CLOTHS AND THEIR USES. •‘’ecret” Mourning: That Every One Knows of and Rewpceta —• T >-** Quaint Toilet of a Muwuiupbo Belle. A Strange Headdrewi For Women. There is a great deal of poetry about all Koreans. This does not make the visitor in their country love them less. •Why do you shake your husban i's gown so ferociously every morning: the writer said to a hostess in Seoul. ••Are you afraid a spider may be weaving in it?” • Oh. no. moonface.” was the reply. ••He must be in Japan now—so far it is —and his spirit comes every night to this gown. So tired must he be in the morning to go back so far into h;s body again.” And she wept copiously, dropping each tear very carefully into a metal lined little basket hung from her waist. If her husband had died on his journey the basket would have been nearly full by this time; every one who has any regard for her would have added a drop or two, and her mourning would have been as intricate a performance as a case in international law. Even as it was the tear basket was steeped : in incense and many heartbreaking songs and proverbs wailed over it. Weep flowers—that is, any sort of | bloom that withers soon — may be | pressed and strung around the basket. I The wing of a wounded bird may dec- | orate one side; a i.o therless child may | imprint a kiss upon it for the good of i the spirit. "Do men ever wear the tear basket I for women?” I once inquj»ed. “Oh. moonface, you are curious so much,” was the reply. "Women never go away from men in Kowli.” “But they die.” “Yes. and then verra often the good | men wear the tear basket In secret I

mourning.” There is much secret mourning in Korea, and it is like the Irishman's secret—everybody knows it and re- ! spects it. A woman who has loved | the wrong man may wear secret mourning clothes for him and don the tear basket filled with tears of perI sons Avho have not deigned to speak to her in the lifetime of the loved one. 1 At certain hours she may wail round I his grave and leave the best of every- ' thing to eat on his tomb for his hun- ! gry spirit. The worldly mate of the ' departed looks on, and often it seems j she is flattered by the performance. A 1 slave may mourn secretly for the queen, and anybody who wants to may sympathize without hurt for a beheaded criminal. Next to the tear basket the heart cloth is the quaintest symbol of Kowli | emotions. One is never permitted to 1 know of this precious ornament uni less it is worn for his or her sake. In ! old Korea it was placed over the heart of the beloved before being worn in ! any other breast. One heart cloth often does for a whole family, being worn by different members in turn. .Characters representing poetic sayings are appliqued upon it, such as: “Without thee I dwell with the spirit of the withered tree.” “My heart beats only to thine.” “Ahu—peace.” “The sun will come again.” In some parts of the country hear; cloths are placed over the body of the dying and then given to the shanggoo, head male mourner, and the joo foo. leading female mourner. Masampho is a quaint and picturesque town, nearly as much so as Fusan, from which it is not far removed. One of the sights of Masampho is her shopping district, which consists of innumerable mats spread out on the ground, upon which are exhibited the wares of their owners, who squat beside them. But the chief joys of Masampho are her deliciously strange little women—the never to be forgotten Masamphonese, wild eyed, glossy haired dumplings, with cherry lines for mouths, who waddle around and about, quacking in fascinating tones. The Masampho belle's toilet is worthy of the time she spends upon it. Her face is washed with honey oil instead of water. Sometimes she sifts a fine powder scented with her favorite flower over it. She may stain her complexion to suit her fancy, but generally she prefers it to be the natural color, which is » beautiful ecru. Though she may never be seen by man. save husband or fa ther, during curfew time or women’s hours—B p. m. and 3a. m.—she may go out freely visiting friends and relatives. Her hair is brushed with a fragrant bunch of switches and glued into many different forms. Sometimes it makes a butterfly or a tortoise and at other times a lot of leaves or a little sampan. When it is properly shaped, big jade or glass pins are stuck in. The only cap she ever wears has no crown. Its back is shaped like a helmet, and there ere two long tassels hanging from the forehead and neck brim. Her cotton trousers are as full as a divided skirt and become narrow at the ankles, where they meet little socks made of grass and picturesque shoes. Her skirt is very full and shirred at the top into an eight inch band. This fits tightly around the chest and under the arms. The jacket worn is not over seven inches in length and runs the gamut of Korean blues and greens, which are somewhat the tints of the peacock's tail. If of the common people, she may alloir her small feet and ankles to show, but if of noble blood her skirts must sweep the streets. All women carry with them a leffig cape, so that if by any possibility they should meet a man they may throw it quickly ovei their heads, leaving only a slit in from for the eyes.—New York Post.

Wanted—A boy about 15 years old to work on a farm. Enquire of George Flanders at Haviland’s livery barn, Decatur, Ind. 78-1 w For Sale—The Archbold tesidene property on corner of Fourth and Madison streets. Decatur. Ind. For further particulars call on or address C. J. Lutz- DecaturJ Ind., or John Ferguson, executor, Fort Wanye Ind., care Citizens Trust Co. 76d6w2 If you have contracted rheumatism* no matter what form—Dr. J. H. McLean’s Liver and Kidney Balm will cure it. This medicine so regulates the kidneys that the poisonous products which cause the disease are removed from the body through this natural channel. For sale by The Holthouse Drug Co.

MARKET REPORT. Accurate prices paid by Decatur merchants for various products. Got reeled every day. GRAIN. BY E. L. CARROL, GRAIN MEICHANT. New Corn yellow 4 60 New Corn, mixed 58 Machine shucked one cent less. Oats, new 39 Wheat, No. 2 9'2 Wheat. No. 3 90 Barlev 50 Rye No. 2 — 64 Clover Seed 5 05 Alsyke @ 4 80 Buckwheat 4b Seed 80 Timothy » 95 CHICAGO MARKETS. Chicago market closed at 1:15 p. tn today, according to J. D. Hales soecial wire service, as follows: Wheat, May 93f Wheat, July 87| September wheat 827 Corn, May 53 Corn July fo| Corn, September 49g Oats, May 37| Oats, July 37g ' late, September 32$ May Pork 12 32 July Pork . 12 59 May Lard, per cwt 6 60 July Lard 6 77 TOLEDO GRAIN MARKETS. Changed every afternoon at 3:00 o’clock b T J. D. Hale, Decatur Special wire service. Wheat, new No. 2, red, cash JI Co| May wheat 99 J July wheat, 89 j September wheat: 85| Cash corn, No. 2, mixed, cash_ 50 Corn, July 50J May Corn 50 September corn 50 Oats. Cash 414 May Oats 39 Oats, J uly 38| September oats 38J Rye, cash 72 OTHER PRODUCTS. BY VARIOUS GROCERS AND MERCHANTS. Eggs, fresh, per doz $ 14 Lard 7 Butter, per pound 16 Potatoes, new 1 CO Onions 75 Cabbage per 100 lb 1 50 Apples, per bu 8C Sweet Potatoe, per bu 75 STOCK. BY FRED SCHEIMAN, DEALER Lambs 4(6 5 00 Hogs, per cwt |4 50@ 500 Cattle per lb. 3 @ 34 4 Calves, per lb 4j @ 5 Cows 2 @ Sheep, per lb @ 3 Beef Hides, per lb 6

POULTRY. BY J. W. PLACE CO., PACKERS. Chickens, young per lb 6) @7 Fowls, per lb 6(6:6$ Ducks, per lb. 6(67 Young Ducks 6(6; 7 Young Turkeys, per lb 12 Geese, old per lb 5(®6 Geese, young, lb 5@6 HAY MARKET. No. 1 timothy hay(baled) No 1 mixed hay (baled) No. 1 clover hay (baled) WOOL AND HIDES. BY B. SALVER & SON. Wool, unwashed 16t020 | Sheep pelts 25c to 75 Beef hides, per pound 06 Calf hides 08 ■ Tallow, per pound 04 ’ Muskrat 15 to 20 OIL MARKET. Tiona fl.Bo Pennsylvania 1.65 Corning 1.45 New Castle 1.52 North Lima 1.16 South Lima 1.11 Indiana ’ 11 Whitehouse 1.30 I Somerset 1.10 Neodasha, (Kan.) 1.25 Barkersville 1.09 Ragland 66 COAL—Per Ton Anthracite | 7 50 : Domestic, nut 4 00 Domestic, lump, Hocking 4 00 Domestic lump, Indiana 3 80 Pocahontas Smokeless, lump 55q When you become aware that the distress you suffer comes from improper action of the liver, and such distressing symptoms as biliousness, jaundice or torpid liver appear, take Dr. J. H. McLean’s Liver and Kidney Balm. It cures diseases of the liver and kidneys. For sale by The Holthouse Drug Co.

Special Low Excursion Rates Via th? Clow Leaf Route Seasen 1904. Homeseekers to west and southwest, Ist and 3rd Tuesday in each month. Colonist or Settlers to west and southI west, Ist and 3rd Tuesday in each month. | Colonist or Settlers to Pacific Coast. Everyday until April 30th. German Baptist Meeting Carthage, Mo., May 24th. General Confeience M. E. Church, Los Angeles, Cal., May 3. National Assoc’n R -tail Grocers, San Francisco, Cal.. May 3rd to Bth. Triennial Conclave Knights Templar. San Francisco, Cal., Sept. sth to 9th. Sovereign Grand Lodge I. O. O. F. San Francisco, Cal., Sept. 19th to zsth. Louisiana Purchase Exposition, (World’s Fair) St. Louis, Mo., April 30th to Nov. 30th. Stop-over Privileges at St. Louis on all tickets to and from the west. Wiite for rates and particulars to GEO. H. ROSS, Gen’l Traffic Manager. Toledo, Ohio. T. L. Miller, Agt. New fine piano to trade for a horseWrite John Cunningham, dealer. 603 E. Main St., Portland. Ind., for prices and description of pianos and organs. 5-4

...Legal Advertising... APPOINTMENT OF ADMINISTRATOR. Notice is hereby given, that the nnfiervigned has been appointed administrators of the estate of Iva Ro 1 buck, late of Adams county, deceased. Hie estate is orobably solvent. George W. Brown. Administrator. April 15 l&M t>3 D. D Heller & Son. Attorneys. yoTICE OF SaLE OF REAL ESTATE. Noticei« hereby given that John Ferguson, executor of the last will of George W. Archbold. deceased, will offer at private sale, at the law office of Clark J. Lutz in the city of Decatur. Indiana, to the highest bidder, on Friday, May 6, 1904, the following described real estate, to-wit; Pursuant to an order of the Adams circuit court, heretofore entered of record, in lot number one hundred and seventeen (117) in the original plat o» t‘*e town (now city) of Decatur. Adams county. Indiana. Said sale to be continued from <iav to day uniii said real estate is sold No bid will be received for less than the appraised value of said lands. Terms of sale are as follows. U»-wit: One-third cash in hand on day of sale, onethird in one year and one-third in two years from date of sale. Purrhaser t) secure the defered payments by good freehold and mortgage surety to the satisfaction of the executor. JOHN FERGUSON. Executor. Clark J. Lutz, Attorney. 6-4 APPLICATION FOR LIQUOR L CESE. Notice : s hereby *o the citizens of the Third Ward, of the ciiy f Decatur. Adams county in th^state■ f Indiana, that I. William Hartings, araal- inhabitant and resident f said ward, a person over the age of twentyone years, a pers rot in the habit of becoming intoxicated and a fit person t • be » n rusted with the sale of int ixicating liquors, will make application to the boaid o* commissioners of the ooun’y of Kdams. at their May session for the tear l!04, for a Itcens** »b seP spirituous, vln us. malt an 1 other intoxicating liqtrots in les* quantities than a quart at

J Prices Punctured I —I Paint of all kinds 75C-SIJS [ One show-case 5.00 [1 H One paper trimmer 6.00 J! H One barrel crude oil and tank . 4.00 J W Step-ladders SI.OO-1.50 | | Oils .25 | Varnish at cost . . . 90c - 2 50 I Two oil tanks 5.00 1 | Barn paint per lb | % Other articles of all kinds. ■ One mare with foal, 10 years old. One colt, 2 years old. One 60-gal. tank for coal oil. One buggy. A credit of six months, with approved S ■ note. One pair platform scales, 1 grindstone and ! frame. One carpenters’ mitre box, SB.OO | FOR SALE BY F |R. B. Gregory! St., Decatur, Ind. |

a t ime, with the privilege of t , be drank on tl,< uretnisis wl „.sa,„ e place where 1 de-lre to I; Bltid I s ' Id T| ' liquors is In a one rtory buil,ii„„ -'till, Secon i sin et in s -id citv. situ„. J lowing described premises. to-wit,- " n fiiftoj. Crnnmenclng at the southwest onmbertwo Inindr. d and six, v , . Ip of| n , the city of Decatur Adams c' m " running thence eas‘ one Inn <i,,,, Un, two (•:«, feet; th, nee north tu, ,’*>irtv. feet: thence west one hundred :tn,i ir?> feet; tln nce south iw-ntv t« to the plnce of beginning. The ro t desire to-eii aforesaid Intoxfeet'eJi-**’"'l twenty feet and r ine Ineli. s v Id,. ~ !•> l ight feet anti two inches lon -in ’"’tv. liMlldlngnn the outside Is tv.entt -• „i. S »M! ‘ wide and fifty (Ml) se n t long; :tI1( i '“’feet same time ask permission !><„', s.eal?’ ’he commissioners tn teeu and nnlnt en , )’Ui>f counter in nforesaid room tor th,.'n„. ,I «ch selling eatables. L '’’’’POseot WILLIAM HARTings Applied . •vrOTlt’E OF hearing of DITCH ne TITION. mtCHlu. In the matter of the petition of t l A. Yeoman. 1 J| An Notice is herebv given that a befio,,... been filed with the uditor of Adams,.,?," hits state of Indiana, and viewers apnoimJ lll '!. have viewed and reported said view , c 7, on file in my office. Ihe hearing Lia 2 tion upon its merits will be on a I* l *' Monday, May 2, 1904, the same being the first dnv of u te m. lAM. of the Board of Co nmis S L, ’’ ot Adams or untr. Indiana. ' The prayer of said petition is that adits be constructed on the following rente to-wg. <’o nmencing «t. a point seventy.fon r rods wst and fifty-four and on-vn” rods south of the m rtheast corner of tKj " north h if of the southwest, quarter of 4>?, e tion eleven 111), 'ownshiptwent >-A -j. ' range fourteen (I4> east, in Adams .-nun,?' ' Indiana Running thence east thirtv-ei.,1,; ! (3S) rods; thence south TH degree. . ils , “ ? teen(lf>i rods: th< nee south 3- di gr.. s'east 1 fortv-four i'll) rods: thence south id de- t A; east, twenty one rods, and terminating m ths James K. Martz ditch at a point thirty x>, rod«<astaud nineteenilio rod* south ,>f a,, southeast corner of the north half of ths • s. iithwest quarter ot section elever u. tuw I ship and rar ge heretofore mentioned Passtnir through and affecting the lands Alice L. Ray. John A Yeoman G. H. I.a u ,,h I ery T J Rayl, T H Ray. John M Ray. George U Martz. Josepn Whitehead and Monroe township. ABE HOCH, . 6-3 Auditor Adams county VOTICE OF HEARING OF DITCH PFTI--A TION. In the matterof thepetition of William 0. Meyers ditch. Notice is hereby given that a petition lias been filed with the auditor of Adams county, state of Indiana, and viewers have beepapl pointe! who have viewed and reported said view, which is on file in my office. Tin- hearing of said petition upon its merits will be on Monday, May 2, 1904, the same being the first day of the Mar* term. 1904. of the board of commissioners of county. Indiana. The prayer of said petition is that a ditch be constructed on the following route, to-wit: Commencing at a point fifteen 1’ rods I north of the southeast corner f the William O. Meyers land, described as follows: Commencing at the northeast corner of the north half of the northeast quarter of section nine (9 . township twenty-six north, ransie fifteen (lft» east; thence south seventy-f »ur (74) rods and five links; thence westtj Blue i Creek ditch: thence north following the , meandering* of the Blue Creek ditch othe section line: thence east to the place of beginning, in Adams county. Indiana: thence north 55degrees west, twelve(l2) ro1s; thense north eighteen (IS) r »ds; then *e north 27degrees east, six (6) rods; lhence north 40 jerrees east, eighteen rods; thence north 'd degrees east, twelve (12) rods; thence north •20 degrees west six rods; thence north fourteen (11) rods; thence nor'h 10 d<-srees east, nineteen (19irots; thence north 47 degrees west. fifteen (15) rods; thence south S 3 degrees west, twenty-six <26» rods: thence south 55 degrees west, thirteen 113* rods; thence west nine (9) r >cs; thence north 39degrees west, six (fi) roes; thence south -1 degrees west, nine (9) ro Is; thence north grees west, thir y (3o) rods: thence north 19 degrees west, twenty-one (21) rods: tbrnce north 72 degrees we’t eigeteen I' rods; thence north 29degrees west, twenty rods, and tenninaling in Blue Creek at a point thirtv-three (33) r ds north and twenty JO) rod< west of the northeast corner of the southwest quarter of sect’on four i 4), township and range here’ofore mentioned. Passing through and affecting the lands of Dye Furgeson. William O Mey« r> lames Meyers. Nancv Passwater. Rebecca Malgney, Julius Havgh and Blue Creek township, as shown by the viewers report. Abe Boch. Auditor. 32-3 Adams County. Ind.