Decatur Eagle, Volume 11, Number 48, Decatur, Adams County, 6 March 1868 — Page 2

THE EAGLE. OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE COUNTY. DECATUR, INDIAxX FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1868. DEIOCRIT¥jTAfFTICKEL FOR GOVERNOR, T. A. HEADRICKS, of Marion. FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, A. P. EDGERTOA, of Allen. FOR SECRETARY OF STATE. GENERAL REUBEN C. RISE, of Boone. FOR AUDITOR OF STATE, JOSEPH V. BEMUSDAFFER, of Franklin, FOR TREASURER OF STATE, JAMES B. RYAN, of Marion. FOR CLERK OF SUPREME COURT, NOAH S. LAROSE, of Cass. FOB REPORTER OF SUPREME COURT, M. A. 0. PACKARD, of Marshall. FOB SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION, JOHN R. PHILLIPS, of Davies. FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL, SOLOMON CLAYPOOL, of Putnam. THE NEWS. Late Arizona advices give the particulars of a fight between the Walahia Indians, under their principal chiefs, and a force of United States troops, resulting in the success of the latter. The Indians, armed with Henry, Spencer and Sharps rifles, fought with great bravely. Twenty-five Indians were killed and wounded. A scouting party of soldiers, under Lieutenant Stevenson, was ambushed by the Indians, but succeeded in escaping without loss of life. Lieut. Stevenson was, it is feared, fatally wounded, and one soldier slightly wounded. The English captives in Abyssinia are safe and well. Advices from Capetown, Africa, state that the Supreme Court of Natal has decided the question of the church property in favor of Bishof Colenso.

Mr. Merrick, as counsel for Ad- ' jutant General Thomas, has filed a i declaration in the Supreme Court, District of Columbia, bringing suit against Secretary Stanton for false ' imprisonment, and laying damages at 8150,000, charging Mr. Stanton, ' among other things, with falsely and maliciously intending to hurt, injure and aggrieve the plaintiff without reasonable and probable cause. The agent of the Bureau at Madison, Georgia, has circulated a notice requiring all the idle negroes in that town to find employment, else they will be reported as vagabonds and dealt with accordingly. About one white man to every one hundred and fifty negroes voted at the recent election in Alabama on the ratification of the new Constitution. The President has received a telegram from Governor Haight, of California, communicating to him the resolutions adopted by the Legislature of that State, which, in unequivocal and decided terms, indorse his positions in his present controversy with Congress, and tender to him any aid that may be necessary to defeat the revolutionary purposes of that body, who are attempting through his deposition to usurp all the powers of the Government to perpetuate their party rule. So much of general order No. 10, issued by the President, as assigns Lieutenant General Sherman to ■the command of the new district, the Military District of the Atlantic, headquarters in Washington, has been revoked and General Sherman will continue in command of the Division of Missouri. No new assignment of the Division of the Atlantic has as yet been made, though, as yet that portion of the order is not yet revoked. The United States Surveyor, appointed to establish a boundary between Oregon and Idaho, has reported a completion of the survey. In the Supreme Court, last week, a citizen of New York, sued a firm in Texas for receiving of certain goods delivered during the war. The plaintiff was nonsuited, on the ground that this contract was treasonable and unlawful.

Impeacachment of the PreSdent. The question of impeachment which was to have been taken up and disposed of, almost before breakfast, has occupied the attention of Congress for a week in simply preparing the articles, which embrace three distinct charges: 1. The removal of Stanton and the appointment of Thomas in violation of the Constitution and the laws. 2. A conspiracy to seize the War Office and its contents, the property of the United States. 3. An attempted seduction of General Emery, commander of the District of Washington from his obedience to law. For a long time Congress has been in consultation with the avowed purpose of either impeaching the President or stripping him of his constitutional authority. Having, in a great measure, succeeded in accomplishing the latter, and conceiving the former possible, articles of impeachment have been carefully prepared, and at the present time are being heard by the Senate. The President is being prosecuted and tried for alleged violation of law, by a body of men among whom are members that have themselves acknowledged that many of their acts of legislation were unconstitutional. By the action of Congress they emphatically declare, that, although the President has taken an oath to support the Constitution and laws enated under it, that he shall not exercise his judgment as to their constitutionality but execute them right or wrong, without regard to the obligations of the oath he has taken. This the President refused to do in the case of the removal of Stanton, and took such measures as he deemed would speedily bring the matter before the judicial branch of the Government for the purpose of testing its constitutionality. This is his offence—nothing more. The Senate may go through the solemn farce of a trial, and by a strict partison vote adjudge him guilty, but before the people Andrew Johnson will stand as before the trial, except that a Jacobin Congress will have triumphed. On the 3d inst., additional articles of impeachment passed the House. The first recites the Pres-

ident’s speeches in “swinging round the circle;” the second his declaration to the spokesman of the Philadelphia convention, that Congress was an unconstitutional body hanging on the verge of the government. This measurably increases the dignity of the affair. Congress has seen fit to revile the President with epithets and hard names all the way up to traitor. Accused him of complicity in the assassination, by direct charge and inuendo, to which the President replied. The impeachment question has resolved itself into the dignity of a boys quarrel, in which the larger one in his exasperation closes the argument with physical force. By this action the Rump has declared that they can call the President an assassin, and slander him in any manner that august body may deem proper, and if the President defends himself trom those assaults he becomes liable to impeachment. This is the precedent the Rump propose to establish. The grand Army of the Republic Ready for Service. General Logan, as Grand Commander of the Grand Army of the Republic, has received a large number of telegrams from various posts, stating that they are ready to eometo Washington formilita ry duty at short notice. The tender seems to embrace a lar°-e number of men. So telegraphs the Washington correspondent of the Cincinnati Commercial. The founders of this organization inveigled a great many into it by a avowing that it was purely a benevolent institution --to keep alive the associations formed while in the service, and to extend aid to such comrades and their families whose necessities required it. But it turns out that it is not only a military, but a secret partizan organization, and secret political societies are dangerous foes to.free governments.— Those who have heretofore been led astray by the misrepresentstions of the leaders of the G. A. R ; in. regard to its purposes, need no longer be deceived thereby.— Ind Herald.

“There Must be a Change.” A contributor to the Indianapolis Herald, who signed himself “Republican,” in speaking of the condition of the country, from a Republican stand-point says I” So say two-thirds of the people one meets on the street So say the farmers; so say the laborers; so say all. Thousands are out of employment, and the few that have work are crushed to the earth with taxes. It is really lamentable to go into the United States Collector’s office and see the last five cents drained from the pockets of the business man to pay his taxes. And what are we working for? We are working for money to pay taxes to keep a party in power whose entire legislation is to trample the people in the dnst, and vote themselves plunder. The soldiers that happily escaped the enemy’s bullet, and disease, are toiling to pay bounties that were voted by stay-at-homes to keep out of the draft. Pleasant, routed, joeular patriots, who would vote “the last man and the last dollar,” provided, they didn’t have to go themselves!— They all have fat offices now for they could stay at home and pull the wires, and get chairmanships, and public printing, and postoffices, while the poor dupes, who shouldered the musket must take the crumbs. When the soldiers came back from their enlistment how were they treated ? Why these very men who bawled so loud about retaining for them the situations they left when they went bravely forth to defend the flag, these very red mouthed Republican patriots, looked at the soldier boys askance, turned, up their noses and said: “You’re nothing but adtrty, lousy soldier; you have been to the field, go back again.” Smooth, sneaking, oily skunks filled the places the soldiers had left, and held on to them like old politicians, or death to a consumptive man. Not one man who held a State, county or city office, during the war, but what is rich and comfortable.— Some who barely had enough to live on in 1861, now, in 1868, roll in wealth and luxury. There has been big stealing somewhere, and the people propose to hunt out these dens of thieves—for they are nothing else—they have robbed the widow and orphan and now propose to steal our liberty. But the game is played. The Democrats propose to pay the bonds in greenbacks, and the Republican leaders howl “repudiation.” They would pay these aristocratic bondholders in gold, and take the last rag off the poor'man’s back to make him pay it. But let us tell these Republican leaders that hundreds of Republicans will vote for greenbacks and the Democratic ticket. The writer knows whereof he speaks, and can name honorable army officers, who have always acted with the Republican party, who will vote the Democartic ticket on this issue. In fact the Republican party is below par. Its rank and file are leaving its corrupt ranks, as rats desert a sinking ship. It must go down and will go down. It will vanish, with Grant at its head, just as the Whig party .went down with Scott.— There will be a few kicks, and all will be over. Thad Stevens has prophesied its downfall, and time will prove his prophecy correct. “Republican” is right, everywhere the cry goes up, from the cottage to the workshop, “give us a change, anything is better than this suspense.” We are not only taxed for the small pittance allotted us, by daily toil, but we are also taxed for the rich Bondholder, who revels in luxury and ease Is this according to the Chicago platform of 1860, on which the Republicans gained the ascendency ?— Did they not promise therein “retrenchment and economy ?” How have they kept their solemn resolves? Profigacy and corruption have marked their whole careen Plighted faith and - broken pledges is all the dominant party can show. Hence, the universal cry “a change! Anything is better than now!” The people are moving in this matter, and are determined that there shall be a change in the administration of the government.— Fort Wayne Demcrat. The new constitution of Louisiana provides for the education of all children in public schools, without distinction of race or color; dut it adds that “no seperate schools, shall be established for any seperate race. In other words neither whites nor blacks shall be permitted to provide seperate schools for their children, no matter how much both may desire it. The old Vermont farmer, who lived his eighty years on the same farm, is surpassed by Thomas Jenkins, of Saco, Maine, who is now in his one hundred and first year, and has had but one home for ninety-five years. When Mark Twain spoke of George hrancis Train as an “eminent old lady,” he had no idea that George Francis was going over to England to be confined.

Impeachment. Special to the Ind. Daily Herald. Washington, February 28. The impeachment committee determined not to report to-day. It finds the task of framing articles of impeachment that will justify that extreme measure, concluded upon in such hot haste by the Jacobins in Congress, more difficult than was anticipated. The committee promise, however, to have the bill of indictment ready to morrow, and then the country will be informed of tie extent of the offending of the President, the high crimes and misdemeanors which they hope to prove against him to iustify his removal from office. The city is free frem excitement. The stirring events of the past week which caused such intense feeling, seems to hare left no trace behind them, and makes the foolish missels from some o. the radical Governors, offering hundreds of thousand of men to defend Congress appear absunl, especially as there has been no eause whatever to call them forth. The impeachers are not so sanguine as they were on Monday last. The friends of the President are confident that the machinations of the Jacobins will be foiled. The confidence of the President in being able to sustain his position, although his plans are not developed, nor will be until after the conspirators have shown their hands, inspire the belief that their schemes will fail. A ridiculous report was sent off by the associated press last night that Stanton intend resigning today. The character of the man, and his tenacity for office, should have stamped the report with improbability. He would make no such personal sacrifice, even if he knew that such a step would relieve the present complications, lie is a cold hearted, selfish, but determined man. Du Chaillu is lecturing on the gorilla in New York. He is said to be a man of much humor, and very entertaining. At a public dinner in a northern city he was importuned for a gorilla story, and in compliance, told one of his best. A distinguished city official, notorious for his negrophilism, who had on several occasions manifested in a good humored way his incredulity with regard to M. Du Chaillu’s stories, approached him when through his narative, and addressed him: “M. Du Chuillu, I have heard your marvelous story of your encounter with the gorilla. I desire to know what you suppose a man like me, raised in a city, knowing nothing about hunting, and never in the African forest, * would be ■likely’ to do upon suddenly meeting the gorilla face to face ?” The African traveler promptly replied: “With some knowledge of your antecedents, Mr. , I should suppose that if you were to meet the gorilla, you would, assuming the attitude of courtesy and friendship, impressively and appealingly yay to him ; “Am I not a man and a brother? 1 ’ It was the best thing of the banquet, and long kept up the uncontrollable mirth of the guests. “There is no avoiding this conclusion. There is no middle course. The President has assumed the responsibility of breaking a law. _ Congress must assume the responsibility of impeaching. Not to do so in the face of this flagrant an insolent proceeding is to become a partner in the crime.”

So discoursed the New York Tribune, a paper that in 1860-61 told the dissatisfied people in the Southern States, that if they desired to go out of the Union, it would do all in its power to help them out. We will use the logic of the Tribune in reversing its proposition in the extract we quote from it. Congress has assumed the responsibility of breaking the Constitution. The President must assume the responsibility of breaking that body. Not to do so in the face of those frequent flagrant and insolent proceedings is to become a partner in the crime. Does not this read just as well as the logic of Philosopher Greeley ? And doesn’t the President owe a duty to the country in that regard as equally binding upon him, as the Tribune claims for Congress ? So it looks to a man up ths tree.— lnd. Herald. Stephen Ives, proprietor of the Meriden House, in whose hotel Frederick Douglass was sailed a nigger and from whose public table Douglass was ejected, brutally assaulted Captain Riggs, editor of the Meriden Recorder, this morning, for commenting on the affair. Much excitement prevails, and popular indignation is aroused against Ives, who has been arrested, and held to answer both in civil and crimnal action.

Intelligence is received that the Freedman's Bureau in Kentucky, abolished by General Grant has been quietly restored by Stanton, without the orders of the President.

The Hair. Read what Elder D. T. Taylor of Rouse’s Point, N. H., says on the hair. “The human hair, bleached by age, fright or disease, can be fully restored to its natural color without dying it. My case illustrates this statement truthfully.— My hair for seventeen years has been gradually growing white and falling out; but, lo !in a short time I have back my old auburn locks. My hair is as firm as when young; this has been accomplished by the use of Hall’s Vegetable Sicilian Hair Renewer. It does its work rapidly, is cooling, healing, and in my case effectually, without harm to brain, body, or general health; this cannot be said of any other preparation sold. Ido not know the wonderful ingredients, but I do know experimentally, and by observation in a score of cases, that it is a most marvelously transforming compound. Heads of sixty-five are changed by it to the color of youth.” The proprietors, R. P. Hall & Co., Nashua, N. H. will sell to clergymen at wholesale prices. Indorsing the President. New York, February 28.—An immence mass meeting was held at Cooper Institute to-night, J.' Galletin, presiding, at which resolutions were adopted affirming the right of the President to remove members of his Cabinet, and declaring the attempt to deprive him of that right a monstrous perversion of the power conferred on the House of Representatives deprecating impeachment as the last resort for the protection of Representatives from disgrace or grievances and wrongly expressing confidence in the dignity and moderation of the Senate, and finally denouncing impeachment as scandalous, wrongful and unconstitutional, at the same time counselling to trust to the free decision of the ballot-box for redress in the event of the removal of the President. ■— Speeches were made by Joseph W. Gerard, Mayor Hoffman and Hon. James Brooks. » * Among the resolutions adopted by the Kansas Democratic State Convention, which met at Topeka, on the 27th instant: “Resolved, That we regret the unhappy differerence between the radical party in Congress and the President, and condemn the attempt on the part of Congress to strip the presidential office of its constitutional authority and the Supreme Court of its proper functions, in order that they may carry out their impracticable schemes of negro supremacy in certain States, and contrary to to the sentiments and feelings of the great bulk of the population of the Union.” SiiLETHESSW, R. BURNS, -MANUFACTURER AND DEALER INSaddles, Harness, Bridles, Collars, Halters, Whips, Bridle-Bits, Hames, tec. Decatur, - - - Indiana. I keep constantly on hand and manufacture do order, Saddles, Harness, Bridles Collars, Halters, whips, FlyNets, &c., which I will Sell Cheaper than any other establishment in the

county. All Work Warranted to be of good material and put up in a substantial manner Repairing Done to Order on short notice. Call and examine my work and prices. A good stock always on hand. SHOP—On Second street, in Meibers’ building. v11n47. R. BURNS. Petition for Divorce. State of Indiana, 1 gg Adams County, J ' In the Court of Common Pleas, May Term, 1868. Thomas Sturgis 1 vs. i Divorce. Lillian F. Sturgis, J It appearing from affidavit filed in the above entitled cause that Lillian F. Sturgis is a non-resident of the State of Indiana, Notice is therefore hereby given she said Lillian F. Sturgis that she be and appear before the Hon. Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, on the first day of the next regular term of said Court, to be begun and held at the Court House, in the town of Decatur, on Monday, May 11, 1868, and plead by answer or demur to said complaint or the same will be heard and determined in her absence. Witness my hand and the seal of (i.s.) said Court, this the. 25th day of February, 1868. A. J. HILL, Feb. 28, w 4. Clerk. JVotlce of Insolvency. At the January Term, 1868, of the Court of Common Pleas, of Adams county, Indiana, the estate of James C. Wilson, deceased, was declared probably insolvent. Those interested are notified that it will be settled accordingly. DAVID STUDABAKER, ' Administrator de bonis non. Feb. 81, 1868, wB.

WARD’S CHINA STORE. 48 Calhoun Street, FORT WAYNE, INDIANA. - Call and see our Goods and prices. All Goods must be sold to close the estate of H. N. & W. Ward. Goods will b? sold at these prices until further notice. 150 pieces best stone China, $25 00 98 “ “ “ 12 00 46 “ “ “ •' 5 00 12 Wine Glasses, 1 00 12 Goblets, large size, 2 00 Tumblers, each, 05 Crocks, thatboilingwater will not break, per gallon, 11 6 common Plates, 40 6 common Teas, 33 Wall Paper best quality, per roll, 16| Window Blinds, 5 in a roll, 35 Satin Wall Paper, per roll, 28 Glass Molasses Cans, tin tops, 35 Tin Toilet Set, 3 pieces, 5 00 Stone China Bowland Pitcher, 1 50 Common •* 1 00 Stone China Plates, 75 Stone China Teas, 75 Beer Mugs 12 for 2 00 Labeled Bar Decanters and Stoppers, 65 Pails and Wash Boards each, 25 Whiskey Glass, 12 for 1 00 6-inch Glass dishes, 10 12 Cup Plates, glass, 30 Steel Knives and Forks, per sett, 150 Spoon and Castor and Plated Goods China, Glass Bowls, in fact everything in the China line, will be sold lower than in any other house. . N. B. None of our stock will be sold at Auction. v11n46m6. Administrator’s Sale. NOTICE is hereby given-that the undersigned, Administrator of the Estate of Abraham Robison, deceased, will sell at Public Auction, at the late residence of the decedent, about two miles east of Decatur, on Thursday, March 19th, 1868, the following articles of personal property, to-wit: Nine head of Horses, ten Milch Cows, twenty head of young Cattle, one hundred and forty head of Sheep, sixty head of Hogs, a lot of Fowls, one Mower, one Horse Rake, two two-horse Wagons, one oue-horse Wagon, one Sleigh, Sleds, Plows, Harrows, three set double Harness, Saddle and Bridle, a lot of Wheat Rye, Buckwheat, Corn, and Oats, jn the Grainery, thirty acres of Grain in the ground, Hay, a lot of Poplar, Ash, and Oak Lumber, ten stand of Bees, Bacon, Hams, Farming Utensils, Household and Kitchen Furniture, and many articles not mentioned. TERMS:—Sums under three dollars cash; three dollars and oyer a credit of twelve months, by the purchaser giving his note with approved security, waiving benefit of valuation laws. GEORGE W. ROBISON, Feb. 21, w 3. Administrator. Petition for Divorce. State of Indiana, 1 Adams County, j In the Court of Common Pleas of Adams County, May Term, 1868. Jacob Swartzendrouber j vs. I Divorce. Charlotta Swartzendrouber j

It appearing from affidavit filed in the above entitled cause, that Charlotta Swartzendrouber is aNon-residentof the State of Indiana, Notice is therefore hereby given the said Charlotta Swartzendrouber of the filing of this cause of action, and that she be and appear before the Hon. Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, on the first day Os the next regular term thereof, to be held at the Court House, in the town of Decatur, in the said County, on Monday the 11th day of May, A. n., 1868, and answer or demur to said complaint, or the same will be heard and determined in her absence. Witnes my hand and the seal of (i.s.) said Court, this 11th day of February, 1868. A. J. HILL, Feb, 21, w 4. Clerk. Petition for Divorce. State of Indiana, "I gg Adams County, J In the Court of Common Pleas of Adams county, May Term, 1868. William N. Pierson j vs. [• Divorce. Elizabeth T. Pierson. J It appearing from affidavit filed in the above entitled cause that Elizabeth T. Pierson is a non-resident of the State of Indiana, Notice is therefore hereby given the above named Elizabeth T. Pierson that she be and appear before the Hon. Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, at the Court House in the town of Decatur, on the first day of the next regular term thereof, to bo held Monday, the 11th day of May, 1868, and plead by answer or demur to said complaint, or the same will be heard and determined in her absence. Witness my hand and seal of said (is.) court, this the 11th day of February, 1868. A. J. HILL, Feb. 21, w 4. Clerk. Notice to Non-Residents. — **■ State of Indiana, 1 Adams county, J In the Court of Common Pleas of Adams County, May Term, 1868. Selina Seymour j vs. J-Petit’ntosellland Sanford A. Seymour. J It appearing from affidavit filed in the above entitled cause that Sanford A. Seymour is a non-resident of the State of Indiana, Notice is therefore hereby given the said Sanford A. Seymour of the filing and pendency of this cause of action, and that he be and appear before the Hon. Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, on the first day of the next regular term thereof, to be begun at the Court House in the town of Decatur, on Monday the 11th day of May, 1868, and plead by answer or demur to said complaint, or the same will be heard and determined in his absence. Witness my hand and the seal of (is.)- said court,.this 11th day of February, 1867. A. J. HILL, Feb. 21, w 4, Clerk.

JVoUce of Survey. Notice is hereby given that I will, on the 7th day of April,, a. d., 1868, at nine o'clock, A. M, begin the survey of section three, in tswnship twenty-six north', range fifteen east, and the location and perpetuation of lines and corners thereof. Said survey to begin at the north-east corner of said section, and continue from day to day till completed. H. C. PETERSON, 8. A. C. Charles FBAWcn,j licaj Geoboe Place, J Feb. 21, 1368, w 3. JTolice of Survey't Notice is hereby given that I will, ow the 30th day of Maroh, 1868, at ninw o’clock a. m. commence th# survey of section number six, in township twen--ty-six north, of range number fourteen east, and the perpetuation and location' of lines and corners thereof.' Said survey to commence at the north-east cor--nor of said section, and be continued from>> day to day till completed. H. C. PETERSON, S. A. a P. C. Bollinger, Applicant. Feb. 21, 1868, w 4. Jl'otice of Dissolution. Notice is hereby given that the Copartnership heretofore existing between the undersigned in the Hardware business, under the name of Spencer and Meibers is dissolved by mutual consent.The business will be conducted by W. G. Spencer, at the old stand. Those knowing themselves indebted to the late firm will call and settle with W. G. Spencer, who alone is authorized to collect the indebteness to said firm. W. G. SPENCER, Feb. 11, 1868. JOHN MEI&ERS. Land for stale. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Administrator of the estate of Edward H. Shepperd, deceased, will sell at public sale, at the Court House door, in the county of Adams, in the State of Indiana, on Friday, March 20, 1668, between the hours of 10 o’clock, A. M., and 4 o’clock, P. M., the following described real estate, to-wit: Fifty acres oft’ the east side of the west half of the north east quarter of section thirty-six, township twenty-five north, range fourteen east, in said Adams county, and State aforesaid. ' TERMS:—One third cash in hand, one third in six months and one third in twelvemonths, with interest on deferred payments. MARK ASPY, Feb. 14, w 4. Administrator. Commissioner’s Sale. Notice is hereby given (hat the undersigned Commissioner, appointed by the Court of Common Pleas, of Adams county, to make sale of real estate, will sell at his law office, in the Town of Decatur, in the county of Adams, in the State of Indiana, on and after the 20th day of March, A. D., 1868( at private sale, the following described real estate, in the said county of Adams, to-wit; The north east quarter of the north east quarter of section six, in township twenty-seven north, range fifteen east, containing forty acres of land more or less. Also the following town property, towit: Commencing at the south east corner of In-lot number two hundred and seven-ty-four, in the town of Decatur, in the co inty of Adams, in the State of Indiana, thence running west along the line of said lot forty feet, thence north parallel with Front street, in said town, ninety-nine feet, thence east parallel with Monroe street forty feet, thence south with Front street ninety-nine feet, to the place of beginning. Also the following described Out-lots, in the said town of Decatur: Out-lots number seventy, sevent-one, and two acres off the south side of lot number seventy-two, in a square form, parallel with the south line of said lot, being in sub-division of out-lot number thirty-eight in the said town of Decatur, as recorded in Deed Record “P,” on page 580 of the records of said Adams county. And also the north west quarter of the south west quarter of section thirteen, and the south west quarter of section, thirty-two, all in township twenty-five north, range fourteen east, in said county of Adams. TERMS:—One third cash in hand, one third in eight months, and one third in sixteen months from day of sale, with interest on deferred payments. DAVID STUDABAKER, Feb. 14, w 4. Commissioner. Land for Sale. Notice is hereby given, that by virtue of an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Adams County, the undersigned Administrator of the estate of Zachariah P. Gard, deceased, will offer for sale, at auction, at the Court House door, in Decatur, Indiana, on Saturday, Mabch 14, 1868, between the hours of 10 o’clock, A. M., and 4 o’clock, P. M., the following describad real estate in Adams County, Indiana, to-wit: The undivided two-thirds part of the south half of the north west quarter of section thirty-three, in township twentyseven north, range fifteen east. And the undivided two-thirds part of the north west quarter of the south west quarter of section thirty-three, in township twsnty-seven north, range fifteen east. TERMS:— One third cash; one third in nine months, and one third in eighteen months; with interest and security on deferred payments, without relief from valuation and appraisement laws. JAMES FAUST, Feb. 7, w 4. Administrator. jTolice of Insolvency. At the January Term, 1868, of the Court of Common Pleas, of Adams county, Indiana, the estate of Daniel W. Welty, deceased, was declared probably in- r solvent. Those interested are notified that it will be settled accordingly. « JESSE NIBLICK, Feb. 21, 1868, w 4. Administrotor, Appointment Administrator. Notice is hereby given that the un- . dersigned has been appointed Administrator of the estate of Abraham Robinson,. late of Adams county, deceased. The estate is probably solvent. GEORGE W. ROBISON, Feb. 14, w 4. Administrator.