Democratic Sentinel, Volume 7, Number 27, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 August 1883 — Page 4

THE DEMOCRATIC SEHTIHEL. OrfICiALfAFKB OFIASPKBCOUNf» . *~~~ FKIDA\~AUGUST 3. tBB3.

DCRSEY'S CONFESSION!

HOW INDIANA WAS CARRIED IN 1880—5400,000 USED “Yes,” said Mr Dorsey, “d tha' banquet,” and he added iu a sotto voice tone: “A lot of cowardly - eatne t l \ere, had a glorious time, made speeches, and then -well, never mind.” aud Mr. Doasey puffed at his cigar as if nothing but smoke •would fumigate his memoiy. “But i stick ‘o it.” he said, “there is nothing in the 1 ndiana campaign to toe usbamt>j of. WV too.t the means that were available s o carry the State, am} we carried it.” “But now?” “Simply organization.” “No money?” “Why, y*s; I said before it took mouey.” -Row much?” “Well, in round figures, $400,000 ” “And how was that money expend ed?” “Oh. now you are going down too deeply. However, perhaps I can give you some idea when I say there were 1,000 and more Townships in the State, an l th,.t in each of the Townships we had three good, honest square Republicans to canv.ss the whole vote, find out what was wanted in their Townships to change the complexion of affairs or Iv-lpto do it, and report to us at Indianapolis.— When 'he time came each one of these nit'u, nearly 5 000 in iiurpber. reported v. hat they could do and how much t would take to ini', .ien.ee people to a change of thought Whatever each tone said was pai t. We paid S2O to some and as nigh as $75 to others, but we took care that the three men frein every Township sho’d know just what each got—no chance for nigging there. That’s all there was to carry ludiaua in October.— You mustn’t ask me to gc any deeper into particulars, for I won’t do it ”

DORSEY CONTINUES.

44 Soap— That's It ” Laughed Arthur, as Hb Shivered His ChamHAGUE Glass—“ Soap.” Chicago H« iald: “Aftes Indiana had been won in October,” remarked the Herald reps esentative, “there was of course, no doubt in your mind of the ultimate result,” “Well, there ought not to have been, but when I came back to New York anu looked into the fold of shambled sheep 1 thought there was danger. I was utterly worn out and half sick Xrom the work in Indiana, but when I went to tuy house where Jewell and the Committee were, and saw Arthui sitting at. tha table with liis fat and .ruddy fß*v> buried in his hands, tne 1-ifturo of misery and appiehension, I knew iiiy work was not done. They were th* worst seated lot I ever saw They wore morally certain New York was lost. I thought so, too, to tel! the square truth, and I didn’t mu h wonder tit Arthur’s despair. Finally J 'ook rooms at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, rod set the ball iu motion to snatch vUiory from defeat. I calledfor the reports of every township in the State, and when I got them saw at onee that we were beaten unless We could reduce the rmipci y in New Y u s and Kings. Wesuoceeeed. We cut the Democratic vote down in those two counties 70,000. and by that means got the Slate bY 20,000 majority. They talk of line work in Indiana. It wasn’t a patch to what Wo lid iu Now York.” "And what were youi ohiei implements in that deal?” “Hot wont, sharp trades and quick bargains, and a golden stream from Stevenson’s Bunk.” “In other words, ‘soap,’ eh?” “ Well* ye«?,”said Mr. Dorsey, laugh ing. “That’s what Tom Actou called it.”

|fc“l thought,” said the H *t old eor respondent, "that you wer*. iud btei to President Arthur for thai ;. ie teit.” -Jll, Arthur made use of the exion, but Tom Acton was tho in-* r. It was at that d— — banquet I spoke of before; it was well past the shame of the evening, verybody was making a fool jself. Arthur, I remember was making a jubilant, hysterical and maudlin speech. He was rubbingjhis hands in invisible soap, and shower** ing encomiums right and left that were not deserved. Finally he said: “But while our friend, the honored guest of the evening, ia entitled to his full meed of praise, there aie oth-

er agencies which have helped to bring about those great results. Do you know what they are?”roared Ar thnr. He meant. I suppose, unity of action and hearty zeal, and all that rubbish. He paused an instant, as if for a reply. Tom Acton sat there with a big bottle of champagne before him. and in the stillness broke out with‘Soap!’ ‘That’s it,’ laughed Arthur, as he shivered his champagne glass on the table. ‘That’s it— Soap!’ ” “That,” continued Mr. Dorsry, “w-s the origin of the exp-ossion At this moment Isaac- announced that dinner was ready and the two hours’ interesting chat ended.

NEW COAL ROAD.

Another transindiana coni ro id was incorporated under the “tare law today. It will substantially parallel the Louisville, New Albuuy and Chicago and the Chicago and Great Southern reads, aud ia the fullness of time may be found swallowing one of these corporations. The new organization announces a capital stock of $12,50!), 000, and takes the name Chicago and Indiana Coal Company. The ineor porators are chiefly New York parties, and the dirt ctors are William P Drake, Chauneey Vibbard. A. Jameson, Morgan Morgans, Jr., Waiter S. Pierce, and James Caseyj of New York, and M. P. Wood, of Terre Haute. The organization takes out a char ered right to construct 500 miles of road as follows: From Chicago to Hartsville, in Lake county, 60 miles i hence through Lake, Porter, Newton, Jasper, Benton, Warren, Fountain, Parke, Clay, Owen. Green, Mar tin, Daviess, Dubois, Perry aud Spen cer counties to Troy on the Ohio iver, a distance of 280 idles; also 160 miles of branch road, including a line from Clay county through Owen Monroe. Brewn, Bartholomew and Decatur to Greenebuig; also a branch off the main line In Spencer couuty following the course of the river to Rockport. The company also proposes to construct and operate steam coliers, steam tugs and barges for the transportation of coal on all the navigable rivers of the United States The articles of incorporation indicate that 5,300 shares of stock, having a face value of SIOO ea* h have been taken—Chicago Times, July 24th.

Brown vs. Gresham.—The Cbicuco Inter-Ocean publishes the following Washington special: Jack Brown, of Georgia, a prominent Southern Republican, has for some years practiced before the Departments here. The other day he called upon the Postmaster General In behalf of a client. He says he was horrified upon being told by Mi . Gresham that ho regarded Southern Rep ibiicans as “d—d scoundrels.” The Inter-Ocean also publishes the f llowing letter of Mr. Brown to Postmaster General Gresham: Sir—Since your remark of yesterday that “Southern Republi ans were the d—dost set of scoundrels who had come in my (your) way siuce y..ur advent to yeur preseut 'posi uion,” self-respect will present my calling In person. You are certain y a type of the human spiles fr juj whence the soub.iquet of “Hoosier’ has been given to Indiauians, for. in ull my travels on this conrin n: and that of Europe, I have seeD no man who could boast o fewer awomp. lishmenis in civility and polkem ss than yourself. Graut made a. g; -at mistake iu having you appoint'd Postmaster General, for all men of sense with whom you Lave com in contact agree that you are sans common sense, suds law, and sansd c *n cy. What a pity fer this Nation that Arthur (as was his intention) did not appoint Lougstreet or MeLaw-, of Georgia, either one of whom has in tegfity and force of character that you or none of your Indiana •o; - freret can boast of * * An' innate respect for lunatics,'idibh; ;rQd dudes prevented me from slapping your jaws yesterday whe<n you , pressed the Hooifier and cont* : ;ptible idea that Southern Kepuui:. were scoundrels. Had Graut m any other man for whom I entertain respect manifested the same spirit I should have downed him on the spot. Northern and Southern Republicans entertain a very high opinion of each other-

Too Troo, Too Troo.

Man that is married to woman is of many days and full of trouble. In the morning he draws his salary, and in the evening behold it is all gone. It is a tale that is told, it vanisheth, and no one knoweth whither it goeth. He riseth up clothed in the chilly garments of the night and seeketh the somnolent pareSoric wherewith to heal the colicky owels of his offspring. He imitatetn the horse er ex, ana draweth the chariot oi toe posterity. He spendeth his shekels in the purchase of fine linen and purple, to cover the bosom of his family, yet he himself is seen at the gates of the oily with one suspender, fie cometh forth as a flower, and is cut down. There is hope of a tree when it is cut down that the tender roots thereof will sprout again, but man goeth to his home, and what is he then ? Tea, he is altogether wretched.

BUCKLEN'S ARNICA SALVE.

The greatest mecirai wonder of the world Warranted to speedily cure Burns. Braises. Cuts, Ulcers, Balt Rheum, Fever Sores, Ganeers, Piles. Chilblain**, Coins, Tetter, Chapped Hands, and all sk n eruptions, guaranteed to cure in every instance, or money refunded 25 cents per box. For sale by F. B. Leaking.

FACTS FOR THE CURIOUS.

In one grove in California ar® 1,880 trees, none measuring less than six feet in diameter. The dog, which ft apparently tormented by the notes of a soprano voice, remains undisturbed by those of a bass voice. A thermometer, plunged in the snow to the depth of four inches, will mark nine degree.; more Heat than at the surface. The -4Vsr n soil of the Siberian coast never i v* to a depth of more than two feet even during the greatest heat of summer. S.MAt,£ sponges often fix themselves to living shells, and Dr. Johnston tells us that he once met with a sponge on the back of a crab, which walked about quite unconeemod with its light burden, though it was many times larger than itself. The sea-urehin has several movable spines. Each spine looks very knowing, and apparently makes its own little excursions without regard to what the other spines ar# doing. In large specimens, where Rp' claws can be seen round the the effect is very comical. In Lot one tigress was reported year, and ktofsped a public road for several weeks, ia another ease, a single tigress caused the desertion of thirteen villages, and 250 square miles of country were thrown out of cultivation. Government reports show that in Lower Bengal'about 2,000 persons are killed every year by wild animals, nearly half of whom are victims of the ferocious tiger. Enervating drags are freely used in cigarettes to disguise the poor quality of the tobacoo. Opium and valerian are especially mentioned. What is called ‘‘Havana flavoring” has grown to be an important article of commerce. Thousands of barrels of it are sold everywhere. It is extensively used in manufacturing certain kinds of r cigarettes. It is made from the tonca-bean, which contains a drag oalled mellolotis, a deadly poison, seven grains of which will kill a dog. The immense herds, now aggregating 20.000,000 which roam over the pampas of the Argentine Republio and comprise, with the sheep, most of the wealth of that country, are all descended from eight oows and a bull which two Portuguese brothers, named Goes, took to the Spanish oolony there in 1558. It is only within a few years that any effort has been made to improve the much-de-preciated stock of the country. As yet only a few cattle near Buenos Ayres have been crossed with short-horn breeds.

Leeches are among the curious pests which swarm in the moist places of a Malay jungle. Directly the earth trembles with a man’s, step, the leeches stretch themselves out in savage thirst, By some means they manage to make a lodgement on his body. He may not feel them at first, but when, at his journey’s end he strips for a bath, he finds a score or more of the little blood-suck-ers fastened to his legs and gorged with their sanguinary dinner. He pozzies his head in vain to discover how they managed to get up his trousers-legs. But on resuming his journey, he ties his trousers tightly round the ankle, places them in his boots, which he anoints an abomination to the little peats. Only in this way may they be kept off the person.

Comfort from Newspapers.

Many years ago, in one of the severe winters when there was much hardship among the poor, a city paper suggested that old newspapers, spread over the bed, would form an excellent substitute for blankets and coverlets. This brought upon the journal a great deal of harmless ridicule from other papers, but it brought comfort to many a poor family. In the matter of bed-clothing, especially, we are apt to associate warmth with weight, and do not consider that there is no warmth in the coverings themselves, but that they merely prevent the heat of the body from passing off. Whatever is a poor conductor of heat will make a warm covering. Paper itself is a poor conductor, but still poorer are the thin layers of air that are confined when two or three newspapers are laid upon one another. A few newspapers laid over the bed will keep one much warmer than some of the heavy, close-woven blankets. We do not propose newspapers as a substitute for blankets and comforters, but it, is one of those make-shifts that it is well to know. In traveling one may, by the aid of a few papers, secure a comfortable rest in a thinly-clad bed, and if we cannot afford to give a destitute family a blanket |or a comforter, we may show them how to increase the usefulness of their thin coverings by stitching a few layers of newspapers between them. It may be well to remind those whs grow window-plants that, by removing them away from the window, and arranging a cover of newspapers over them, they may be preserved from harm in severely cold nights. With the plants, as with ourselves, it is not so much that cold comes in as that the heat goes off, and often a slight protection will prevent the escape of heat—American ApricvlturUt.

A DisTiNGtnsHßjo minister, lately dead, having engaged to publish a sermon, was waited upon by the printer with the first proof, which, of course contained the text, in which a most singular mistake was made. The text was from the second chapter of Job, “Skin for Asa • yea, all that man hath wifi he give for his life.” The printer's blunder consisted in substituting a t* for the l in the last word, which presented a very different meaning from the original text The minister smiled at the miateke, end simply wrote on the margin, “ N. B.— This depends upon circumstances.”

The Jasper County Teachers* Institute will be held in the Court House, commencing August 20th. A full attendance is expected.

TRUE Temperance di Is not signing a pledge or taking a solemn oath that cannot be kept, because of the non-removal of the cause —liquor. The way to make a man temperate is to kill the desire for those dreadful artificial stimulants that carry so many bright intellects to premature graves, and desolation, strife and unhappiness into so many families. Itisafact! Brown’s Iron - Bitters, a true non-alcohol-ic tonic, made in Baltimore, Md.,by the Brown Chemical Company, who are old druggists and in every particular reliable, will, by removing the craving appetite of the drunkard, and by curing the nervousness, weakness, and general ill health resulting from intemperance, do more to promote temperance, in the strictest sense than any other moans now known. It is a well authenticated (act that many medicines, especially * bitters,* are nothing but cheap whisky vilely concocted for use in local option countries. Such is not the case with Brown’s Iron Bitters. It is a medicine, a cure for weakness and decay in the nervous, muscular, and digestive organs of the body, producing good, rich blood, health and strength. Try one bottle. Price si.oo.

NON-RESIDENT NOTICE. Cause No. 3087. State of Indiana. County of Jasper, sh: John Dimmitt and —L- Dimmitt. wife of said John Dimmitt. ure hereby notified that David J T'.ompsoii has Hied his complaint in the .Jasper Circuit Court to foreclose a tax lieu and quiet the title to'certain Real Estate in an d county, ana that said ca iee will stand so- trial on ihe first, day of the October T rrn. 1883. of aid Court to be-held at tne Cou t House, in R nsselaar, Indiana, comme cine October 15th. 1888. CHARLES o. PRICE, Clerk of the Jasper ClrcnitfCourt. By Jame |A. B. rnham, Deputy, - Thompson a -t o , Att’ya for pl'lt August 8, 1883 $5. Known to Men of Fame and Boience for Removing ALLIIRPURITIES OFTHE BLOOD. AelwwMgtd i (triad, Plunat, and Efficient Cure for CONSTIPATION, nVCpPPCIA known by irregular appeJiOrC.rOIW, tf*., 80ur bdcSfeg, weight and tenderness at pit of stomach, despondency. ■ turn Complaint. Biliousness, Malaria, Chills and Haver, canting soreness in hack ani side, also bottom of riba; weariness, irritability, tongue coated, skin yellow, hot and cold sensations, eyesdull,dry cough,stifled and obstructed feeling, irregular pulse, bad colored stools. ADA PI FYY Epilepgy.Paralysts.dim Hr Ur I. CAT , cii fht. sound in ears, giddiness, confusion in head, nervousness, flashes of light before eves, loss of memory. Diseases of Bladder and IfiniiFYC* urine dark or light,red deposit; wunaiO) burning, stinging, bearing down sensations, frequent desire to urinate, uneasiness, inflamed eyes, dark circles, thirst. Diseases of UCADT sevtre pains, fluttering or weight near nCnn I , heart, more so on moving quickly and when lying on left side; out of breath on exertion, urinAf*UF dull or sharp pains in temples, f* LnUnvil U, eyes or head ; faintness, nausea. Dropsy is caused by watery fluid. Bheumatiam, dec., by uric acid in blood. Bowel Disorders by corrupt matter. Worms by ths pests within. Colds by ohoklng of the secretions. SWATHE'S PIDM, by gentle action, removes the cause, making a permanent cure. Sent by mail foe 25 oents box of 30 Pills; 6 boxes, SI.OO. (In postagestamps.) Address, DR. SWATHE A SON, Philadelphia, Pa, Sold by Druggists.

NOT CE OF DITCH ASSESSMENTDitch Oausu, N<>. 21. | 111 Jasper Circuil Court. Notice is hereby jiiven to all concerned that in the above entities cause Ihe Jas per Oircuit (jourt, on 'he 23d day of June, 1883. entered j .dgment < f ihcne> .loner estahlisbi.-ig the work pr veil f t, approving the asse-«menrs for benefits, and instructing the uodersi|rned, James W< lsh to construct said ditch » I fiierefore now give notice to all concerned, and especially to Davi I Gray, Marion L. Spitler, Hugh Lowe, Nathaniel Moore. Samuel Bcott, Hemyß Bind, Trustee, Elbert H. Shirk, Sarah Banta, Catharine Jenkins, Daniel Gordon, Rufus Cordon, Wilbur Gordon, HeuryJ. Banta, Maranda Moora, Theodore P. itanta, Margaret Banta, Mary Banta, Robert Banta Karah E. Banta, Everett Gordon, Esther Banta, Edward H Valent ne, Jasper county, for the benefit of ihe public in Hanging Grove Township, all uamed in said judgment as liable 10 pay assessments for that purpose. t'he aboye parties are farther notified that the assessments for benefits made for the construction of said ditch, and adjudged by said Court, will be due and payable at my office in the Court House, in the Town of Rensselaer, Jasper county, Indiana, as follows, to-wit: First installment, 20 per centum, September 4, 1883. Second installment, 20 per centum, October 4, 1883. Third installment, 20 per centum, November 5, 1883. Fourthtinstallment, 20 per centum, December 5, 1883. Fifth installment, 20 per centum, January 5, 1884. JAMES WELSH, Commissioner August 3, 1883. [iu chaige.

Owing to some misunderstanding our chases were not made to suit our change in foim, and tue paper does work out on a couple columns. The defect'will be remedied next week NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS. Canoe No, 8088. State of Indiana, County of Jatper, ss: The unknown h ire of Timothy Foster, d - ceased, are hereby notified that David J. Thompson has filed bis complaint in the Jasper CircuitCourt to foreclose a tax Hen and to quiet the title to certain Real Estate in said County, and that said canse will stand for trial on the first day of the October Term, 1888, of said Court to be held at the Court House, iu Rensselaer, Indiana, commencing October 15th. 18SJ. ■ CHARLES H. PRICE, Clerk of the Jasper Circuit Court. By James A. Burn- am, Deputy. Thompson & Bro., Att’s for pl’ff. Augusts, 1883. S - NOTICE or DITCH ASSESSMENT. Di'ch Cause No 28. , In Jasper OirJotin VFootT, ExPftrte.i cult Court. Notice Is hereby given to all concerned that in the above entitled cause the Jas per Circuit Court, on the 13th day of July, 1883, entered judgment for the petitioner esta' fishing the work prayed for, approving the assessments forbenefl's. »>>d directing the undersigned, James We!«h, to make and construct the proposed wont. Reference is made no the peMliou and order or said Court. (See Order Book No. 11, pages 185 to 183 inclusive ) I now giv*> notice to all concerned, and especially to Johu Wood, Alfred Hoover, Wm. M. Hoover, \Y. M. Reed, Charles J Bornlrager, J R Heaston, heirs of Isaac Adams, dec.’d, and Jasper county for benefits to pul lie highways in Marion township, all named in said judgment as liable to pay ssessment for that purpose, and i > all profited to have said worse constructed. And the parties are farther notified that the assessments tor benefits made* for the construction of said ditch, and adjudged j by said Court, will be due and payable at my office in the Court House, in the Town of Ronsseiaer, Tasper county. Indiana, as follows, to-wit: First installment, September 4, 1883. Second *• October 4, “ Third “ November 5, “ Fourth “ December 5, “ Fifth “ January 5, 1884. Each installment being twenty per contum ol the whole assessments. JAM ‘<lß WELbH, Commissioner August 3, 1383. [in charge.

DITCH NOVICE. Ditch C’au eNo 26. 1 In Jasper Michael ’Br usnehan > Circuit Court. ExParte ) Notice h hereby given to all whom it may concern that on the 12th day of July, 1863, the Jasper Circuit Court, by an order entered of record iu Order Book il, pages established a Ditch in the above entitled cause, and finally confirmed tht assessments made. A - copy of said assessments has been by me duly recorded in the Recorder’s Office, and affects the lands of the following persons named in said proceedings, towit: Michael Brusnehao, John Oarlin Alfred Thompson, Simon P. Thompson, Mary F. Thompson, James Yeoman, Frank B. Meeker, Cordelia F. Monnett,, j Ann Eliza Burns, James Burns, George , J. Haste, Theodore F. Warne, Louis*' ville. New Albany & Chicago Railway 1 Company, and Jasper County, Indiana, torjlbeneflts to public highways in Union township. Notice is farther given to said persons, and all others interested, that I will, on September 3d, 1883, commencing at 9 o’clock, a. m., at Walter Ponsler’s residence, on seciion 21, town 80, range 7, near the proposed work, divide the work in suen parts as I may deem best.gand will let the same for construction to the lowest responsible bidders, in parcels, or ull together, as I may then ueem for the best advantage of those assessed benefits for the construction of said work. And I farther give notice that I have divided the amount assessed into five installments, to be paid <o me, at Rensselaer, as follows: Oil September 4, 1883, twenty percent. Ou October 4. * “ “ “ On November 5. “ “ Ou December 5, •* “ “ “ On January 5, 1884, “ “ “ ihe re-idue to make a sum sufficient to pay the costs aud expenses inc.dent„to the establishment of said ditch, in preparing reports, (he amount due the petitioners for preparing and presenting u eir petition, the damages assessed, and costs of construction. if such payments are not promptly made I shall proceed to collect the same according to mw. LEWIS 3. * LTER, August 3, 1883 Commissioner. NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS. State op Indiana, Jaspeii County, sb: In the Circuit Court, October Tenn, 1883 Coinplaint No. 3074. David. J. Thompsoi vs. William Foster et als NOW COMES the Plaintiff, by Thompson & Bro bis Attorneys, ana flics his complaint herein together with an affidavit that said Defendants are not residents of rhe State qf Indiana, to-wit: Sareh A. Noble and —— Noble, her husband, impleudcd with Wm. Foster, Mary E. M. Foster, Win. H. H . Graham, Wm. a- Beaver and Maroare A. Beaver, and Wm. A. Gil-nan, Adm’r of Estate o! Henry Reynolds, dec’d, ats David J. Thompson. Said action is brought to foreclose a taxlien and to quiet the title to certain real estate in said coun y. Notice Is therefore hereby given said Defendants, that unless they be and appear on the first day 01 the next Term of the lasper Circuit Court, to be holden on the Third Monday of October, a. 1883 at the Court House, in Rensselaer, iu said County, and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined iD their absence. —. Witness my name and the Seal of Seal. j- said Court affixed, at Rensselaer, i — Y ~ * this Ist day of June, a. d. 1888. CHARLES H. PRICE,^Clerk By James A. Burnham, Deputy. June 8. 1888—$10 75. July 87. Notice to Non-Residents. State of Indiana, I In the Circuit Court, Jasper County, ' f October Term, 1888. Complaint No Josias Neier and James M. Neier vs Peter Dunn, James Parcel,'Patrick Maloy, John A. Wambaugh, Robert S. Dwiggins, Fannie T. Dwigeins. *' NOW”COMES THE PLAINTIFFS, by James W. Don tbit, their Attorney, and files their complaint herein, together with >U affidavit that said Defendant Patrick Maloy is not a resident of the State of Indiana, and that Patrick Maloy is a necessary party to the above entitled action, which action is in relation to Real Estate, to-wit: to quiet the title and for a foreclosure of a lien for taxes paid thereon. Notice is therefore hereby given said Defendant, that unless he be and appear on the first Jay of the next Term of the Jasper Circnlt Court, to he holden on the Third Monday of October, a. n. 11883, at the Court House, in Rensselaer, in said County and State, and answer or demnr to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined In his absence, ( -—*■—» , Witness mv name and the seal.of \ seal. > said Coart affixed, at Rensselar, this I —J lfith day of July Ta. d. 1888. CHARLES H. PRICK, Clerk r. c. c. * By James A. Burnham, Deputy. James W. Douthit, Att’y for Pl’ffs. July SO, 1888—$10.

HOW SHE SAVED HER DARLING **l shall not feel so nervous again about baby’s teething,” writes a grateftil mother. "We almost lost our darling from cholera infantum, but happily heard of Parker’s GiDget ! uic iu. time. A few spoonfuls soon cur* d baby, and an occasional dose keeps us in good health."— Notice to Non-Residents. State of Indiana, I In the Circuit Court. Jasper County, [October Term ,1883. ComplainJ tfb. 8080. Marion L. Spitler, vs. James H Willard, Sidney S, Hazleton, Nathaniel Cook, Kate V. Cook. James H. Cook. Fannie CrowUy, Robert Crowley, Cynthia S. St-nton, Alp eus Stanton, Corn lia Ann A'no.a, Amelia Parker, Oscar F. Parker. John K. Cook, Caroline C. Will rd, James H. Tallmnn and Susan Tallman. NOW COMES THE PLAINTIFF, by Thompson <fc Bro., Attoruoys, and files his complaint herein, together with an affidavit, that said Defendants a e not resident of the State of Indiana, to wit: Sidney S. Hazleton, Nathan! 1 C ok, Kate C. Cook, James H. Cook, Johu E. Cook, Fannie Crowley, Robert Crowley, Cynthia S. Stanton, Alpheus Stanton, Cornelia Ann Arnold, Amelia Parker, Oscar F. Parker, James U. Tailman, Susan.Tallman aud Caroline C. Willard.— Baid action is brought to foreclose a tax-lien and to quiet th title to certaiu real state in said county. Notice is therefore hereby given said Defendants, that unless they be and appear on the first day of the next Term of the Jasper Circuit Court, to be holden on the Third Monday of Octooer, a. d 1883, at the Court House In Rensselaer,ln said County and State, and answer or demur to said coiupiaint, the same will be hoard aud determined in their absence. —«— Witness mv name and the seal of •J slal. [said (lour f affixed, ct: Rensselaer, this ' —-> ’ Seventh nav of July, A. n. 1833. CHARLES H, PRICE. Clerk. By ,'aiiies A. Burnham, Deputy. July 13. 1883 —$'3. Ju y

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