Democratic Sentinel, Volume 7, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 November 1883 — Page 4

t«rri€IALPAPKB OPTASPBROODfiri . FRIDAY NOVEMBER 2 1883.

Mi- 1 - Joaie McCauley, of Liberty township, White Geunty, attemp.ed suicide Oct. 20th. Timely remidies prevented accomplishment of the design. Keifer, the late Speaker, no leuger mournfully exclaims “It is too bad, to# bad,” He abruptly says, ' I D-o Ohio,” aad goes into a discussion of the Civil R'ghts bill. Our former fellow-citizen, Charles Barouche we arc pleased to noti is the Democratic candidate sot Treas** urer us Kingman County, KansasThe Kingman Citizen, a Republican paper confesses that he is a siroug man, Ye?, and as capable and hon est as be is strong, and without know ing his opponent, or meaning any disparagement to him, we will say that the citizens of Kingman County cannot do better than to elect “Uncle Charlie.” *

CRYSTAL WEDDING.

On Thursday eve ning of last week it being the 15th auoiversary of the wedded life of our esteemed fellow* citizen, Ezra C. Nowels and his esti-, mable wife, a large numoer of friend s conceived the happy idea of affording them a rare treat, in a genuine SURPRISE PARTY. All preliminaries having boen arranged in the.afternoon, they met in the evening at the agreed rendezvous. aDd going into a “committee of the whole.” concluded it would be quite appropriate to c irry te the happy couple some slight tuken of their good will and esteem. Consequently, the ladies were detailed by their husbands—self-con-stituted lords and masters— to make a selection of some gift suitable to the occasion; and after due delibera. tion, decided it would be proper to select crystals, which they did in the shape of a set of decorated Chiua* ware. After the selection had been made all repaired at a late hour, to the res’ idenee of Mr. Nowels, and finding every indication that the family was “sale in the arms of Morpheus,” literailj “stormed the castle,” and “held the foit” afterwards. All went merry as the traditiona 1 “marriage bells,” and after asbor t time 'had been ‘ spent in soeial ecn versation and lively games, the hostess ana -uneed refreshments. When all had gathered about the “festal board” Charles H, Price, in a short speech, on behalf of the assem* bled friends, offered congratuiations f tendered the “slight token,” and expressed wishes of many happy returns, &e., &c. At a late hour the party adjourned feeling amply repaid for having brav ed the inclement weather, and de„ voutly wishing the genial host and hostess might live t# celebrate their 30th anniversary.

A statement made by ex-Congress~ man Dezendorf in a speech at a Republican meetisg at Williamsburg a few days ago has caused a flutter In Virginia politics. He quoted President Authur as sayiig: Dezeucorf.l know|that yoM.have been badly treated, but lam powerless and cannot prevent it. The caucus of Republi can senators made an agreement with Mahcne which JI am bound ts caxry out.” Mr. Dezendorf further said: “I understand that Mahons will adaresa the people of Southampton in a short time, and when ha does I intend to meet him ia that couutry, face to face, and charge him wiih selling his vote.” >4S»»The officers of the Smithsonian institution ace quite proud of a relic of antiquity whieh they have just put en exhibition. It is tue statue or a lion brought from Tunis to the Centennial ex position in 1876- It was sculptured some time before the beginning o' the Christian era, and was placed iu the temple o? Astorces built by tbo Romans ut Carthage. One night during the centennial the Brit • ish consul-general at Tunis, who was then at£Piiiladelphia, was visited by an Arab chief, the latter offered te obtain the lion for the consul general for a given sum of money. The offer was accept d and on the following night the chief and several other Arabs conveyed tne relic from its place in the exposition te a place agreed upon. Subaeqantly the relic was donated to the Smithsonian Institute by the British consul. The lion is of stone and Is in a good state es preservation.

A. PARTICIPANT.

The fellowing is suggested as appropriate to be inserted in the Republican platforms hereafter: Resolved. That we have fooled the negro about as long as we can • there fore, “we mu=tgo.” Resolved. That the Civil Rights bill, though unconstitutional from the star:. mane the coloied voters think we were honest fellows and -tilled them irto voting for ua a long time; Therefore, we must get up some bing else and try to fool them again. Amen. Col. J. B. Maynard ou Thomas A. Henuiic ks. From a speech deliverfed at Sheibyville, October 13tfc From the Indianapolis Sentindl: The speaker felicitated himself because it was bis good fortune to take part in tne Shelb.vville shout for joy over the Ohto victory, t ( o see J homas A. Hendricks surrounded by his ad miring neighbors with whose good name, prosperity and fatue, he must be fotcyer identified. The speaker saidjjhe had been at Mount Vernon, he had walked the pathways where Washington walked, seen the trees he planted, the broad acres lie had cultivated; the Potomac, whose majestic flow Washington had admiredHe had seen the room where Wash" ingtou died, and the tomb where his ashes await the resunvet’on- He had stood beneath the shades of Ashland, forever associated with the name of Henry Clay. He hadgread of Monticelio, though off of the great lines of travel, is to be forever in tne iine of the highway of sublime thought and purpose because it was the home of Jefferson. He had read of the Hermitage, and ‘by the Eternal would like to stand uncovered at the tomb of Jackson and breatbe an a *» mosphere impregnated with the siii> it of devotion to Democratic principles which forever hovers areund the sacred spot. I am now ; said the speaker, in Shelbyville. Tnis vast audience will disappear from the face of the earth; other generations will come, live and move and pass away. Years, massing themselves into cen turies* will retreat as other years ad-* vance. Your blocks of granite will crumble under the battling banner of the elemeuts and the gnawing tooth of time, and still the name «f Shelby ille shall live, because it will forever be associated with the name and fame of Thomas A, Hendricks-

The Butler campaign in Messaohu* setts is attracting the attention es the ceuntrv as election day draws. A recent Boston special says: The latest accusation against Governor Butler is that he sent a man before the Unite ! States Senate Committee to testify to the tanning of human ski ns. Governor Butler knew nothing of the man or his testimony UDrill he read the report in the Globe the next morning, all the pa persin the city baviDg suppressde if. Mr. Chance, the witness’ avers that he did not intend to sav any thing about it when he went before the Committee, but that it was brought out of him in an unguarded monu nt. He refused to be lnterv ewed after the hearing, for fear it might, cause trouble to him. This did not save him. He was promptly discharged by his employer, “The newspaper* have lately been making inquiries as to what Colonel French thinks of Butler’s picture book As a picture book I don’t think much of it; as a campaign document it is the most effective we have ever issued. It is making hundreds of votes for Butter The moment the Repubjtsan press called attention to it, and after the Republican Committee bad backed out of its offer to circulate it, the demand for it from Republicans was immense. The papers said it was unfit to put into any family, but ail the Republicans are eager for it so I believe it does not shock their families as much as the Republican managers expected. The document aim*ply portrays the condition of things and tje atrocities committed a* tbs Tewksbury Alms House, for which th# Republican party is responsible.”

John Quincy Adams received a salary from the United S:a es government for sixty-rii e years and the sum total must have amounted to half a million At the close of his presidential term lie had uad fifty two pears of office holding, and his salary had aggr-ga ed $425,000; still, h»bad seventeen years of congress after tnis and died at die car>rol at a eengress" ionai session. At the age of fourteen he went to Ru.-.sia ns the private sec ‘rotary of die American legation, and be was in niter years minister to England, Germany. Portugal, Russia, and the Netherlands. The late Judge Black is said to have received th“ largest fee ever paid to ala wyer. He argued and won a case.ia the United States Supreme court for ibe New Almaden quicksil ver company, with Reverdy Johnsoand Judah P. Benjamin against hiran and was paid a fee of $250,000. “There isn’t au infidel in this whole room,” remarked a member of the Chicago <>xchauge o r thefioo:. “That can’t b>- true” sai l nn outsider. “Yes, it is,” was the rejoinder, ‘’every Idessof these fellows believes in a ’future.’ ” Sergeant Jasper, the hero who figures ia revolutionary annals ia to have a monument at Savannah. Of the SIO,OOO required for the work s6,* 887 have been subser bed. Blundering Americans apes of the English in attempting to eay hawlfpawn far half past, get it haw If-past or half-pawat. The latest feminine tests have real pockets like a man’s.

On Thursday last, Ezra C, Nowels, Auditor of Jasper county for ih« past four years, turned over the office to his successor, Ge#rge M. Robinson, with tne work don# up to the moment he took nis leave. Mr. Nowels perI formed the duties of bis position with ! fidelity, honesty and ability and toward those having business with him he was always obliging and courteous. Summed up—he was a model official, and entitled to the plaudit, “Well done” »■###•- Ben Butler’s canvass of Massachusetts is certainly very remarkable.— A Boston letter says: His tour of the Stat is one of the remarkable features of the campaign. Ah hough weighted by six'y five years of life, he displays au en which only a vigorous constitution could impart. Assailed right and left, and with tbo press almost a unit against him, he has never cried for quarter. From, morning to night he keeps on his tour of the large cities and towns of the Commonwealth sometimes making as many as four speeches a day in as mauy different places, and always providing a new theme. His tour has b< en a decidedly enthusiastic one, and he has boen listened to by larger crowds than have as a general rule attended those of his hpponeuts. He is now, however to receive assistance. and next week Democratic thunder will ba supplied by Mayor Albert Palmer of Boston, who floated iuto office oa the Rutler wave; excollector William A. Simmons, who was removed fromthe Boston Custom House by ex~.Pr«sident Hayes, and who is a tecent convert toDemoeracy; Judge Josiah G. Abbott, an old line Democrat; Colonel Joseph H. French, the chairman of the State committee and ex:eonga-ssman John K. Tarbox. It makes but little difference to the Governor as to whether he is assisted or not, as he relies on no oae so much as he does on himself. A portion of the bridge over the jioqmos, at ihis place, went down yesterday under the weight of a lot of cattle WOOD! Woodll Wood!!! -Dear reader, that wood you promised us. William Clark and master Victor Moore visited the family of Walt Culp, in Carroll c#unty, this week, The new mill is under cover and enclosed and soon the machinery will be placed in position. Last week ©t Circuit Court.

MRS. C, W. THOMAS, —THE GREAT—MAGNETIC AND BOTANIC PHYSICIAN ! Will be at the Makeever tin til October stn, 1883, and return Og tober 29* h, 1883. Who cures all kinds|of chronic diseases known to the human family, from a cancer down to a felon; and er remedy is chiefly Magnetism, some gises she uses herbs, roots and barks,—God’s natural remedies,—but she cures all her patients who do as she directs. Below we give some of the names of patient- whom she has cured, as references: In the vicinity of Attica, lud., Mrs. Catherine Galaway, Cancer on breast and tongue; John Smith, Dyspepsia’, and there ar# living in that vicinity over one hundred people that she has cured. At Williamsport.” Wm. Slaughter, 8.. Vitus’Dance; M:s. E. A Tuttle, Cancer en breast. West Lebanon, Miss Ella Butler. Cancer on arm. Carbondile, Mrs. Celinaa Brier, Catarrh; James F. Garnet, Blindness aud Asthma; Minnv Crusan, of spinal disease and 'dislocated ankle; Wtn. Brier, of dislocated shoulder of 20 years standing, and weak breast, and his son and wife of different diseases. At Alvin. 111., many cagOß of Piles and Female weakrie-s; Mrs. Harper, of Tumor. Remington, VJssper county, Ind., T nomas Harris’ family had Scroffulous soie eyes; his child had nor. had her eyes open for three months, and one part of er spine appeared fu be entirely gone, and Mrs. Thomas said when the spine was cured the eyes would open, so she trtatod her spine until the place filled up aud, on the 13th of September, in the afternoon. her eyes came open, and looked bright and nice as though there had been nothing the matter with them. His wife, who was nearly blind, k getting well. A little girl, for whom he has spent six hundred dollars is getting well. Mrs, McDougle, wife of J. O. B. MeDougle, had been sun struck, years ago, and the doctors had nearly ruined, both her system and mind. She bes came satisfied that their poisens were killing her, and quit taking them, saying she had rather die a natural death than they should kill her with poison. Sue employed Mrs. Thomas, aad in two weeks was much better* to-day she la nearly well, and one of the liveliest ladles in Remington. Brookston, Ind., John Reed, born deaf, or if he ever heard m his life his folks do not know it; Mrs. Thomas diagnosed the ease and said it could be oured, she has treated him three months and he hears everything, bat as yet has not learned to talk, but probably will in time. He is nsarly 10 years old. Bbookstok, Ind., Sept 17 th, 1388. Mrs. Thomas earns hero in Juno last. I had boen suffering with a very bad oovffti My fVtonl months, my • «*

wife and daachter were apprehensive that I was going into consumption. Mrs. Thomas said she oould cure me, and in 48 boors after treatment the cough wa& entirely gone, the sereness le't my lungs, and i ana as well as moat men of my age. My wife was sick •with disease of the stomach, and she *cured her completely. My daughter had been quite seriously d’seased for several years, an ! she cured her entirely, Mrs. Thomas cured a gr*»at many patients Lt-ro in my house, and as far as I know, they are all better, and many of them entirely well My,elf and family were treated without medicine, that is, she oured us by Magnetism. JAMES WALLACE. ExaraiD.atiun, with patients present, or with lock of hair. Fee sl, Office hours: 9 a, m., to 12; and from 1 to 6 p. m. £jTwenty>seven acres devoted to a crop of cabbage near Rocuester, New York, yielded tha farmer $5,000.

The Texas Siftings noticing from an exchange that President Arthur had dined with August Belmont, says: “This is about as important news as we ever hear from the present incumbent of the Presidential chair. He has either just lunched, or gone fishing, like a baby or a school-boy. * Thou sands of dollars are weekly expended for wire reports about Arthur’s last “lunch” or string of bass. What does this nation care how many times the President eats between meals or how many suckers he pulls out of a millpond? Read the history of the United States, and you will find no word of any lunching by Washington except when he lunched off the British soldiery at the expense of Lord Cornwallis. Jefferson was rather more renowned for statecraft than lunches. The Adamses do not appear to have lunched all through the dull season preceding a political campaign. Abe Lincoln had his bands so full of business that he was satisfied to snatch a cold bite anywhere he could get it, without reference to the tact in the newspapers. It was Grant who set the horrible example of lunching to the click of the telegraph key board, and Arthur has lunched his wav from Washington to the Yellowstone and back, and is ilow fishing and lunching up and down the whole Atlantic coast. And the Great American free luncher is a candidate for another term! Turn the lunchers out.”

A LEI OF GOODS Purcupile’s™! A full line of Common and Faucy Candies! A full line of Bakers’ Goods! Bread, Pies, Cukos, &e.! Pepper, Spice, Nutmegs Oloves and Cinnamon. Teas, Coffees. Sugars! California canned goods! Baked Beans. Baking Powder! Canoed Salmon, Maokerel and Lobsters ! Flavoring Extracts, Tomato Catsup, Table Sauces. Spanish Olives Chow-Chow. Mustaid, canoed corned Beef/cauned Sausage. The best of Crackers, Holland Harin, Spiced Fish, Soaps, etc , in fact, everything kept in a first class Grocery and Restaurant. * emember! Buy your Teas of me and draw that elegaut set of Silver Knives, Forks and Spoons. Remember! That with each aud every pound of our Coffee ,ou receive a nice present. Remember! In purchasing your Baking Powders of us. you secure a chance to draw that nand-paiuted set of ware. H. M. PURCUPILE.

A LIFE SAVING PREBENT. Mr. M. E Allison, Hutchinson, Kan.' Saved his life by a simple Trial Bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery, for Consumption, which caused him to procure a large bottle, that completely cured him, when Doctor’s, change of climate, and everything else had failed. Asthma, Bronchitis, Severe Coughs, and all Throat and Lung diseases it is, guaranteed to cure. Trial Bottles free at F. B. Beaming’s Drug Store. Large size f 1 00. 1 The symptoms are moisture, like perspiration, intense itching, increased by scratching, very distressing, particularly at night, seems as if pin-worms were crawling iu and about the rectum; the private parts are sometimes affected. If allowed to continue very serious results mao follow. “Swayne’s Ointment” is a pleasant, sure cure. Also for Tetter, Itch, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Erysipelas, Barbers’ Itch, Blotches, all scaly, crusty Skin Diseases. Sent by mail for 10 oaate; • boxes, $1 25, (in stamps.— Address, Db. Bwatne & Son, Philadolpnia, Pa. Sold by Druggists. v7u2o.

ADVERTISED LETTERS Letters addressed as below remain uncalled for in the Post Office at Renßsal*ter, Jasper County, iutliana, on the 2Uth day of Oc <>i r, 1883. Those cot claimed within four woiks from the date below given will be sent to the Dead Letter Office, Washington. D. O H Baldufp, John M Chaffin, John r Davis, Robt Dickson. Albert Drake* Mrs. L Edwards, N l Hughey, UeoT Lynch, Won Me . Terssns earing Tor any o£ the letters in tills list will please say they are advertised. HORACE E. JAMES. P. M. Rensselaer, Imi. Oct. 22. 1883 CONQUERING THE WILDERNESS In American history there are no more interesting ligures than the Ho«* roes and Heioines of the Border.— Bold, dashing, adventurous and patriotic; loyal to friends, to country aud to tho interests of society, thenwork was singularly effective iu the advanjement of American eiviiiza'* tion*. With seeming recklessness, their efforts were in the interest of law and order, and the people owe them a debt of gratitude they do not forget. Their page in history is as fascinating as it is honorable, and thei e is a peculiar pie .sure in read iug the narrative of their wonderful exploits, The times which produced thos° heroes and heroines mark a period in American history of absorbing interest alike to old aud young. It io proper that it should be so. Thess hardy pioneers coupled virtue with courage, numanity and loye of country with the stern duties of frontier life aud battle, and the example of tlieir lives not only interest but strengthens our faith and admiration in human courage and unselfish purpose. In American pioneer history there are three distiuet eras marked as distiuetiy by tluao geographical divisions; from the Allegheny Mountains to the Mississippi, marking the fi st; from the Mississippi to the Rocky Mountains the second; Califors nia and the Paci.k- Slope the 3rd. The settlement of these vast regions developed great 1- aders. whose achievements have uu.de ibem justly and widely famous. They h ive a warm place in the hearts of thy people, and a prominent one in their admiration. It is appropriate that their achieve-* meuts should be recorded, and we note with pleasure the fouheoming of a nt w book, now ready, from *he press of N D, Thompson & Co., Publishers, New York and St. Louis M. „ ealled: Conquering the Wilderness, or New Pictorial History of the Life and Times of The Pioneer Heroes aud Heroines of America It is wri'teu b.y Col. Frank Triplett, an aecoiriphshed writer, whose literary qualifications and •. reat experience on :he frontiers are said to em«t inently fit him for so noble a task. A special feature of rh<- book is its apt and profuse illustration. 1 tnbracing 22U superb engravings, illustrating incidents and persous—the latter embracing nearly 100 lif' llke portraits, of pinned Icuht- ever be mre given—men and wi/m —which make it a -ort o p pm ore aK-ry, as well as . book of i riil.n t ..rratiyes. that will ,end >o n - U o charm and intere* r not to be resl t>d. It is .-old by subsci ipiiuu, through canvassing atretus an { reseats an oppo’iuui y • ■ iit-r 'tiu;c« money especialh i.> a . A', i • ruse it in auot : '

Oh, My Back! That’s a common expression and has a world of meaning. How much suffering is summed up in it. The singular thing about it is, that pain in the back is occasioned by so many things. May be caused by kidney disease, liver complaint, consumption, cold, rheumatism,dyspepsia,overwork, nervous debility, &c. Whatever the cause, don’t neglect it. Something is wrong and t needs prompt attention. No medicine has yet been discovered that will so quickly and surely cure such diseases as Brown’s Iron Bitters, and it does this by commencing at the foundation, and making tbi? blood pure and rich. Wm. P. Marshall, of Logansport, Indiana,writes: “ My wife has for many years been troubled from pain in her back 'and general debility incident to her sex. She has taken one bottle of Brown’s Iron Bitters, and I can truthfully say that she has been.so much benefited that she pronounces it the •nly remedy of many medicines she has tried.” Leading physicians and clergymen use and recommend Brown’s Iron Bitters. It has cured others suffering as you are, and it will cure you.

. LEVIN OS' CANDY FACTORY. PURE UNADULTERATED CANDY, mad« fry*h every day. For qnality ol Hoods and cleanliness la uiauniabtnrine, 1 defy competition. HENRI LEVINO, Proprietor. Rensselaer, Ind., August 17, I*B3. NON-RESIDENT NOTICE. Cause No. 11087. State of Indiana, County of .Tasuer, ss:. John llimmitt and Dlnimttt, wife of said John Dimmitt, are hereby i.otitied that David J Thompson has tiled his complaint, in the Jasper Circuit Court to foreclose a tax lien and quiet the title to certain Real Estate In sa d county, and thut said cause will stand for trial on iho first, day of the OctoberT nn. 1883. of - aid Court to be held at tne Court House, in It nssclaor, Indiana, commencing October 15th. 1883. CHAIII.KB H. PRICE, Clerk of the Jasper Cireuil Court. By JamesfA. Burnham. Daputy. Thompson .t tiro , Att’ys for alff. August 3, 1883. $5. -- : ~ ' f - •' HIWWoME Lowing 3^ POp ScM c^ T S. w I Cfi/N EVt“ DUTOr ORDER. EO^ HEWWA',iciUfflSfO / 30 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK. ILL. MASS. GA FOR SALE BY W. H. RHOADES, Reussciaar, I&diata. JN otice to Non-Residents. State of Indiana, I In the Circuit Court - Jasper C'oiwity, j October Term, 1883. Complaint, No Josias Neier and James M. Nei r vs Peter I)tmn r James Parcel, Patrick Maloy, Job* A. Wamh&uqU, Robert 8. Dwiggiua, Fannie T. Dwigarins. NOW COftVKS THE PLAINTIFFS, by Jamea W. Don tbit,, i heir Attorney, and tiles tlieir complaint herein, together with an affidavit that -aid Defendant Patrick Maloy is nos a resident of the State- of Indiana, and that Patrick Maloy is a necessary party to the above eutitled action, which action is in relation to Real Estate, to-wit: to quiet the title and for a foreclosure of a lUb for taxes p«M thereon. Notice is therefore hereby given said Defendan*, tb ess he be and appear on the first iay < erin of the Jas|»er Circuit C -urt, to be hoi. . a' d Mo.dery of Oetober, a. n. 1883, at fch* in Rensselaer. In said County and! State. or or demur to said complaint, the same win ad and determined in his absence. , —. Witness my name and the seal of I seat.. [ said Court affixed, at Kensselar, this ' —v— * Mth day of July, A. D. 1883. CHARLES M- PRICK, Cl*rk j. c. •. By James A Burnham, Deputy. James W. DouthiL Att'y for Pl’flh. July SO, 1883 —$10. Notice to Non-Residents. State of Indiana, ... I In the Circuit Const. Jasper County, f October Term 1863. Complaint No, 30ML Marion L. Spitler, ▼e. James H. Willard, Sidney 8, Hazleton, Nathaniel Cook, Kate C. Cook. James 11. Cook, Fannie Crowlyy. Robert Crowley, Cynthia 8. St-uton, Alp eus Stanton. Corn hit Ann Arnold, Amelia Parker, Oscar F. Parker, John E. Cook, Caroline C. Will rd, James H Tallmau aud Susan Tallman. NOW COMES THE PLAINTIFF, by Thompson & Bro., Attorneys, and files his complaint herein, together with an affidavit that said Defendants a e not resident, of the State of Indiana, in wit : Sidney S. Hazleton, Nathan! 1 C ok, Kate C. Cook, James H. Cook, JohuE.CooL, Fannie Crowley, Robert Crowlev, Cynthia 8. Stanloil. Alphetis Stanton. Cornelia Ann Arnold. Amelia Parker, Oscar F. Parker. James H. Tallmnn, Susan Tallman and Cnroliue C. Will ard. Said action is brought to Jore'-loso a tax-lien and to quiet th title to certain real state in said county. Notice is therefore horeby given said Defendants, that unless they he and appear on the first dav of the next Term of the Jasper Circuit Court, to be holden on the Third Monday of Octoner; a. j> 1883, at the Court House in Rensselaer,in said County aud State, and auswer or demur to said rompiaint, the same will be heard and determined iu their absence. —■— . Witness my name and the seal of seal. - said Couit affixed, at Rensselaer, this 1 —’ Seventh oav of Jnly, a. d, 1883. CHARLES H, PRICK, Clerk. By James A. Burnham. Deputy. July 13, 1888—318. Jnly 27NOTICE TO NON-RBSIDEN'W. State or Indiana, Jasper Countt, bs : In the Circuit Court, October Term, 1883 Complaint No. 3074. David J. Thompsoi vs. William Foster et als NOW' COMES the Plaintiff, by Thompson & Bro his Attorneys, and files his complaint herein, together with an affidavit (bat »aid Defendants are not residents of theßtate of Indiana, to-wit: harsh A. Noble and -—Noble, hor husband, iro jdeud"d with Wm. Foster, Mnry B. M. Foster, Wm. H. H. Grahnm, Wm. a. Besver and Margars A. Beaver, and Wm. W. Gil nan, Adna'r of EstaU o! Henry Reynolds, dec’d, nts David J. Thomp son- Said action is brought to foreclose a taxlien and to qnlst the title to certain real estate in said count/. . Notice Is therefor# hereby riven said Defendants, that nnleae they be ana appear on tha first day.oi the next Term of the Jasper Cir cult Court, to be holder oc the Third Monday ol October, a. »., 1883. at the Court House, in Mono seiner,in said County, and State, and answer o» demur to Mid complaint, the same will be hear, and detei mined in their absence. | , ~. Witness my nams and the Seal o ’ Seal > said Court affixed, at Rensselaer * ’ this Ist day of June, a. d. 1883. CHARLES H. PRICK,fClerk By James A. Burnham, Deputy, funs 8 |lßaß-tlO 75.) Jnly VT.