Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 17, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 May 1894 — Page 1
VOLUME XVIII.
The Indianapolis Daily and Weekly Sentinel circulation has leached immense proportions by its thorough service in receiving all the latest news all over the State and from its dispatches from foreign countries. Every reader in Indiana should take a State paper, and that The Sentinel. LARGEST CIRCULATION Of any Newspaper 11 THE STATE. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Daily one year - - $6.00 Weekly one year - - 1100 The weekly Edition Has 12 PAGES'. SUBSCRIBE NOW And make all remittances to The INDIANAPOLIS) SENTINEL (NE Indianapolis, Ind. This paper will be furnished with the weekly edition of The Indiana State Sentinel for $2 00.
Parties desiring farm) LOANS will consult their own interests by calling on, or writing to F. J. Seabs & Co., at the Citizens’ State Bank, Rensselaer, Ind. Terms can not be surpassed, and the commissions charged are low. IAIAUTrn —Eight or ten men to repre HAv I tUj sent ourwe 1 kncwnhous in this state. Our large and complete stock and various lines, such as nursery stcck, plants, bulbs, fancy seed potatoes, fertilizers, etc.,enaLle us to pay handsome salaries to even ordinary salesmen. Wages run from $75.00 to $125,00 per month and expenses—according to material m the man. Apply quick, stating age. MAY & CO., St. Paul, Minn. (This house is responsible.) 3m. Dr. I. B. Washburn, handles the celebrated Tolley’s ‘Kochinoor eye glasses, the best made. We in*vite attention to the ‘ad’ “Eee Again as in Youth,” m another column.. WA ■\TT'T7’TI Reliable men to sell gXuN JLJ—iJ-r. our choice and hardy Nursery Stock and Seed) Potatoes, full and complete line. Many vai eties can only be obtained through us. Commission or salary paid weekly, and promptly. Exclusive and choice of territory given. Don’t delay, wri eat once for terms. ALLEN NURSERY Co38—20 t. - Rochester, N. Y. ■ « -ti —i j— ——i composed of A usti NX&Xco„)y h/ G K. Hollingsworth, will loan you monev n personal mortgage, or chattel security for long ex shot i time at local bank rates. These loans can be paid back at any time, and are more desirable than b nk loans, Locnuse interest is rebated.— We have unlimited capital and can ac- < 'mmodate eveiyuody. H. Ilf 111 rT® Local and Traveling SalesIsAIIlL—" men to handle our hardy Can<»din grown Nursery stock. We guarantee satisfaction to representatives and customers. Largest growers of high grade stock. » Over 700 acres under culti= ration. ’ o substitution in orders. Exclusive territory and libe al terms to whole oi part time agents. Write us. STONE & WELLINGTON. Madison, Wis.
TRUSTEE S NOTICE. N • ae it hereby given that I will be a' my uice at John A. Knowlton s, in Joiu n towns ip or Fourth Saturday of each month ior ths transaction of business connected w Trustee Jordan Townshin WAN TED— SALESMEN, To sell a choice line of nursery stock. Good nay from the start and complete outfit free. Exclusive territory given if desired. Address, THE HAWKS NURSERY CO. n4o—l2w. Rochester, N. Y. ONLY ONENIGHT OUT TO FLORIDA. The noming train via the Monon Route connects at Cincinnati with the 7:00 p. m. Thiough Vestibulf d Train of the Queen nd Crescent Route reaching J acksonville at 10:50 p. M. the ipfiewing day The Service of this pop J « >ne is unsurpassed by any line to t r N uth. For rates, *ime tables, etc., a i r ss City Ticket Office. 232 Clark Stre , Chicago; or your local ticket agent. austE&Sjs-: G. K. Hollingsworth, will loan you money on peisonai mortgage, -r chattel security, for long or short time at local bank rates. These loans can be paid back at any time, and are more desitale than bank loans, because interest is r bated.— We have unlimited capital and can accommodate everybody The talk of the town—Qlarke’s line of patches an# jewelry. Alf Cqllips has bought out ths stock of agricultural implements Hammond Bros. Alf takes to the business as naturally as a duck to water. Give him a call.
be sure and get Clarke’s prices on Watches, both solid and gold-filled. He has some fine ones, Also other goods in great variety. Call, see, and be satisfied
The Democratic Sentinel.
Mr. Pha?e*Bß, of Benton county, a renegade democrat, received the nomination for senator in she re* publican senatorial convention met at Goodland, Tuesday. Bev. Billy Owen, the republican nominee for secretary of state, bo’t a large amount of Mexican gold mine stock, as did also ex-gov parson. Chase, and induced others by his example and representaton, to invest. For his stock he executed his note, which he af' erwards re* fused to pay.
At the congressional co vention which met in Rensselaer in 1890, and r. *nominated Id. Billy Owen the parson, in the course of his remarks, said that be and hi 8 friends would “bury the democrats so deep face down, that the harder they scratched thesoonet they’d reach home. ” It was a rather improper expression to emanate from a parson, and Billy got left on the day of judgment the following Nos vember. Hawkins, Carson, Hartley and Marquis, delegates to the senatorial convention from Carpenter twp, and Simon P. Thompson’s em* ploye (Babcock), of Union town* ship, were too much for Chilcote, in the senatorial race. Simon always has his hatchet ground and whetted for the republican ex chairman. Jasper county had 18 votes which, with the 12 from Newton county, would have more than nominated him. But Car* penter’s 4 and Union’s 1 defeated him. Will the ex*chairman re* taliate?
Senator Turpie gave the Republican filibusters in the Senate a terrible scoring. They deserve it. The Kansas City Star in commenting on the matter says that the outbreak by Senator Turpie and his forcible denunciation of Sen* ator Aldrich will come under the head cf Ohristion forbearance and long suffering, and will not be altogether conformable to strict notions of decorum. But to a large number of people who havr wearied or the dawdling methods of the benate, who have lost pa* tience with the pettiness of the Republican obstructionists and the skirmishing for small party advantage, the vi or of Mr. Turpie’s lauguage will be overlooked in the hope of its salutary effect. In ell political bodies parliament* ary strategy and cunning are look* ed for and te a reasonable extent tolerated, but when, for the shallowest partisan purposes, this strategy degenerates mto pure fil bus, tering and obstruction, it should be dealt with in a way that will prove the most effectual. The present attitude of the Republican? in the senate is taken on the thinnest pretense, and they seek refuge in the most trifling technicalities to embarrass their oppon* ents. Their course is neither pa • triotic nor sinjere, and their as* sumptions count for nothing more than partisan bluffing. In th ; s styleof parliamentary bushwhacking Senator Aldrich has constituted himself a leader, and put him* self fairly and squarely in the way when Mr. Turpie set the buzz*saw going.”
Senator Turpie’s recent speech on Senator Aldrich can only be considered in the line of tariff re™ form by being considered an exhi < bition of free raw material.—St. Loui? Republic (dem.) The Detroit f re l * Press simmers the situation down fine when it says: Three years of McKinleyism made gatling guns necessary, and it is a significant fact that it was Governor McKinley who called them out. A teaspoonful is almost exactly one dram, a desertspoenful two, a t iblespoonful four. The regulation wine-glass hulds two ounces, a common teacup about six, a tumbler about ten, With these tacts in mind it is possible fqr any one to give proper doses of medicines or medicinal preparations withput aid of the graduated vessels em - ployed by pharmacists. - St Louis Globe- Democrat.
RENSSELAER JAS EK COUNT!. INDIANA FRIDAY MA! II 1894
The Monon Niws of last Fri* day contains the following notice of a former resident of Reassel* aer: i “Dr. Bitters will lecture At Turpie’s Opera House on thi» (Friday) eve., at 7:30 u. m. on spiritualism, also on Sunday at 10:30 a. m. to 1:30 p. m. He will answer all questions on spiritualism. All are invited to attend. Lecture Free. There will also be a Platform Test Medium Present to prove ourimortality." Call at John Healy’s new shoe shop, on Vanßensselaer st, south of McCoy’s bank, when needing any loot or shoe repairing, or other work in his line. Good work guaranteed. at fair prices. Terms cash. 12-4tp. The Republic’s Stability.— “Coxey’s immediate ‘army,’ ” says the New York World, "was never a menace to the government None of the other Coxeyite armies’ are to be feared. A good police force can break u[ any one of them at the proper moment, just as he Washington force broke up the gathering of Tuesday. “This is the most stable government in the wo>-ld, and is less open to the attacks of anarchy than any other, because unier its institutions every one hasan opportu* nity to express himself on ; übho affairs by speech and vote. This is the Republic’s safetyvalve. Real workingmen, in or out of employment do not join the ranks of the Doxeyites nor throw bombs, because each one of them knows that lie has as much influence in the making of laws as it is possible for a single individual to possess. Our Anarchiet gatnerings are not or the wronged and oppressed, but of the lazy and incompetent who So not want a fair opportunity to work, but an unfair advantage over the Indus* trious and thrifty.” 8. E. Yeoman sells McCormick Harvesters and Mowers at Nowels’ mill, near tne depot; also Disc Harrows, Ideal Com Planters, Seeders, Binding Twine, etc.
A Sentinel subscriber sends in the followi g recipes ior preventing and curing smallpox: f‘l herewith append a receipt which has been used to my ovn knowledge in hundreds of cases. It will prevent or cuie the smallpox, even though the pittii gs are falling. When J enner discovered cow pox in England, the worl 1 of science hurled an avalaqceot farpe on his head; but when the most scientific school of medicine in the world —that ot Paris—published this receipt as a panapea fcr small pox, it passed unheeded j it is aa unfailing as fate, and conquers in every mstaqcc. It is harmless when taken by a well person. It will also cure scarlet fever. Her* is the receipt as I have used it and cured many children of the scarlet fever. Here is the receipt as J have used it to cure the small pox, when learned physicians said the patient must die: “Sulphat of zinc, o e grain; foxglove (digitalas), one grain; half tablesroonful of sugar; two tablespoonfuls of water and when well mixed add four ounces of water. Dose, one tablespoonful ev< ry hour. For children, smaller doses'’ “I am willing to risk my reputation as a living man,” wrote Edward Hine, of the Liverpool Mercury, “if the worst case of small* pox cannotbe cured ip three davs simply by the use of cream 'artar. One ounce cream tartar dissolved solved in a pint of water, drank at intervals when 'cold, is a certain, never-failing remedy. It has cured thousands, never leaves a mark, never causes blindness, apd avoids tedious lingering,”—[Rochester Sentinel.
For your millinery and dress making call on M. & A. Meyer. A vopng lady school teacher in a neighboring town recently asked her primary grammar class, com 1 ' posed chiefly of bo s, to form a sentence in which the three words “boys,” “bees” and “bears” sho’d occur. The scholars thought intent’y for a few moments, when one ragged youngster, with a look of victory on his face, raised his hand. ‘'Well, Johnny,” said the school teacher, “what is your sentence?" “Boys bees bare when they eo in swimmin’.” The teach* er did not call op any more of her class. T The Coxey army will disbapd when they are starved opt, They are °ot looking for work. Many of them could readily secure work, but thev fiist want to know what the government is going to do towards supporting them.
•‘A FIRM AD UOB TO CORRECT PRINCI LBS.
ft, M’CO j GO’S RANK) Ii pre] red to make five year loans on firm* at atei positively as low, ana on ai favorable >mi M ean be obtained in town, giving Abe privilege of partial paymanta a* any time, and stopping the internet ea the amount paid. We are also prepare 1 to make loans *n personal »e----eurity aa shorter time *. .■easonable rates. If you are ia seed o< . loan, give us a cslL ' 13—4 t. WANTED- An agent to sell good and reliable Nursery stock at Rensselaer and vicinitv. Address F. A. WCfoDIN, .Foresman, Newton Co , Ind.
The strike of the bituminous coal miners, like all great strikes that interrupt the employment of large numbers of men and suspend the regular operations of a business that affects the supply of an article of common consumption, is a public misfortune. t matters not which side to the contest emerges victorious in the end, the gen* eral less oan not be avoided and must be great Bituminous coal mining is one of the protected industries. The proposition to put soft coal on the free list has aroused one of the severest storms of opposition to Wilson bill as it left the House. It would, we k ave been told, crip pie a great Southern industry, and, above all, it would make it impos sible to pay the men emp.oyed in the soft coal mines those superb ‘American wages,” so enormously higher than the wages paid to the “pauper labor” of C nada, which, under the McKinley millennium, they have been enjoying. And yet, with the soft coal miners still iu the paradise of protection, with a duty of 75 cents a torr against foreign competition, they are act ually so unconscious of their happy estate ns to go on strike. What for?
Preside j t Mcßride, cf the United Mine Workers, answers this questioinby saying: “Low wages, starvation wages” He asserts that the cutting of began last summer, six months at least before the Wilson bill was even drafted, so that it is quite idle to say that it was due to the proposed Democratic tariff legis ation. The “conservative” sena tors who have, since the Wilson bill left the House, restored coal to the dutiable list a* id given it a protective duty equal to the whole amount paid lor wageg to the soft coal npqeps—4o cents a ton—have, in the meantime, given the coal i. onopoly ample assurance that their garroter’s grip on 65,000,000 of American consumers is pot tc be relaxed. Yet eppeprs that for » JW peel, with McKinley’s matchless tariff in full force and no near prospect of its being de stroyed, so far as coal is concerned, the wages of the men working iu the mines have b.en all the time going down, down, dc>wu- ‘‘We strike now supply to Feslop the wage spaje of ope year ago,” says Mr. Mcßride.
To an interviewer who asked him if he did not anticipate that Ch nadian soft coal would be poured into this country to supply the xuarket left unprovi .ed by reason of the strike, the head of the Um ted Miners replied that, as thown by Sjrg’s Standard Coal Trade Statistics, “all the Canadian coal mines combined did not produce as much coal as the mines of Perry county, Qhio.” He went further and ridjcpl id the who e outcry of the protected coal combine agains free copl, which is in reality made by a league of coal barons and railroad kings to deadibeat both the seaborn ds, the Atlantic and Pacific, by compelling them to pay, not high wages to miners, but blackmail transportation rates to railroad pools. “It is nothing but nonsense,” says President Me Bride, referring to this selfish clamor of monopoly, hypocritical lv pretending to plead for laoor and its wages, which it is cutting down all the time to the lowest possible point. ‘ If,” he asks, "we fprnish now more than half the coal Canada uses and pay the 60 C’n's tariff, need we be afraid to let in Canadian coal free?”—Bal timore Sun,
Respect to Royalty In Germany.
In Germany it has been, up to a, race it date, a serious matter to show any di respect for royalty. It is only a short time ago that a man was sentenced tp spiqe months’ imprisonment because he kept his seat in a beer while the health ot the Euiperpr wa < being drunk; aqd aq artillerist in BeiI nwasnotlong agoppnijemped by h is su; pripr officer for having spoken disre?pectfuny pi' a horge in the' imperial service. But a change seems to. have come ovpr German judges m this matter. A |s reported the a cased was proven tg be seated while the Emperor’s health w::» being drunk, but the court held that there was no insult to the Emperor in the mere fact o' keeping one’s seat a long as no word wa used implying an insulting inten
Miss Fra”c McEwen has pur* chased aCaligraph and is prepared to copy legal and other instrument? in type writing, carefully, promptly, and on reasonable terms The Monon will sell excursion tickets to Indianapolis and return, on account of the People’s Party convention, for $3 30. Tickets will be placed on sale May 22 and 23, and are good returning until and including May 25th, W. H. Beam, Agent. Mrs. Sarah Tuteur Weil, of Chicago, is visiting her mother and friends in Rensselaer. John Healv has established him* self in the boot and shoe making and repairing business in rooms with Uncle Charley Rhoades, bars ness maker. John is industrious and honest, an expert workman, and his charges will be moderate. We wish him success. The Iroquois ditch dismissed by the Board of Commissioners. THEY WANT NAMES. The Russell Art Publishing Co., of 928 Arch Street, Philadelphia, desire the names and address of a few people in every town who are interested in works of art, and to secure them t ey offer to eend free, “ Cupid G aides the Boat," a superbly executed water color picture, size 10x13 inches, suitable for framing, and sixteen other pictures about same size, in colors, to any one Bending them at once the names and addrees of ten persons (admirers of fine pictures) together Wi’h six two-cent stumps to cover expense of mailing, etc. The regular price of these pictures is SI,OO, but they can all be secured free by any person forwarding the namea and stamps promptly The editor of this paper has received copies of these pictures and considers them really “Gems of Art."
Fred Fielder, of Mason City, 111., a former Jasper county boy, ie visiting his sister, Mrs. H. B. Murray, and friends in Rensselaer and vicinity. BRUNNER’S Carminative Balsam, the great stomach and bowel Remedy, is still working wonders. For sale by all druggists. ALL FOR st> CENTS. The Monon Route has added to its al ready splendid equipment, two bran new dining cars, which are now in daily serv« ice on the fast day trains between Chicago and Louisville. These oars are models of convenience, comfort and beauty, and are operated on the a la carte plan, which means that a passenger oan get any thing he wants and pay only for what he gets. An elegant steak, with bread, hutoer, coffee or tea with cream is served for nnlv 55 cents. Watch for the Monon's ew sahednla to Florida.
Dr. F. P. Bitfera, es FuPon county, ie visiting friends and ac - quaintanees in this locality. J. E. Spitler has placed a lem* onade and milk*shake counter in his news ard confectionery store, Miss M»ry Moyey has returned fp'tfl the city after studying the styles and learning all tfe new ideas of trimming for the spring and summer millinery. Ctll and see her. We are sure she can suit you.
Last week the Commissioners appointed O> P. Robinson const* able for Marion township. Mrs Nelson Randi** has been brought home from Post Graduate Hospital, Chicago, with a prospect of fu’l recovery. Mrs. Margaret Zoll, a former resident of this pl ice, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Burt. Hutson, in Hamraand, Thursday of last qgud about 67 years.— The remains were brought to Rensselaer for interment in Weston cemetery the following Friday. We have received the first number of the Monticello Press, C, M. Reynolds and Harry Bott, pub* lishers. Independent in politics. We wish the bo.s success in their venture. Peter Soallon and Miss Annie M. Hordeman were married Tues day morning last, at the Ua+holic church. Rev. 8. Neiberg officiated.
I have made arrangements with Eastern capitalists whereby I can loan $30,000 00 in amounts from SSOO 00 and upwards, borrower to oay commission 5 per cent.— Ke;p money 5 years or more. M. F. Chilcote. John W. Ki g returned from the Delphi baths last week cons siderably improved in health and strength. Kentland had another big blaze Monday morning. A number of business buildings wen destroyed. A series of interesting meetings are in progress at the M- E, church. Spitler delegates were selected by the Marion township republican representative convention by 159 to 78, J Don't Forget! Tommy Crocket will pasture colts at 75c. per I!?onth; cattle at one cent a day.— Running water. Dr* I. C. Kelley is visiting relative! and friends in Columbus Ohio. "Willis J. Imss ism "Washington City,
WANTED SALESMEN STU Of NURSERY STOCK and SEED POTATOES. LIBERAL SALARY or COMMISSION PAID WEEKLY. PER. MANENT and PAYING POSITIONS to GOOD MEN. SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS to BEGINNERS. EXCLUSIVE TERRI 3 ORY GIVEN IF DESIRED. Writ jat onoa for terms to THE HAWKS NURSERY CO., Rochester, N. Y.
REMEMBERS THE REVOLUTION.
Grandma Hawthorne Is Approaching the Century and a Quarter Mark. One of the most Interesting women In history resides seven miles from Bonham, Tex. Her name is Mrs. Fam nie Hawthorne, and she Is now 117 years old. “Grandma" Hawthorne, as she is familiarly called by those who kn iw her, Is remarkable for more reasons than one. Notwithstanding her groat age she talks entertainingly and clearly and retains her mental faculties to a marked degree. But it Is with the incidents of her early life that she is most familiar, and her stories of the stirring events of the days of the revolution are exceedingly Interesting. She was 12years old when Cornwallis with his British and Tories invaded this country and forced able-bodied men to join the army of the King. All who refused were shot down. The men of the colony at length rose up against such tyranny and shouldered their guns to tight the common enemy. The women of the day, with the fire of patriotism burning in their hearts, took the place of their husbands ana sons and went into the fields and cultivate I the crops. One day the British and Tories swooped down on the little settlement where Mrs. Hawthorne lived and burned and destroyed their houses and crops. The soldier colonists hearing of the raid, turned back to protect their families and in a hot engagement, which the old lady describes us if it happened but yesterday, boat of! the foe. Her stories of Gen Jackson's campaign are also most interesting. Mrs. Hawthorne’s mother lived to l»e 115, while an aunt reached the age of 114.
COAXED INTO CONFESSION.
Th* Skeleton In a Family Vloaet Revealed Under Dtirsn, The principal of a Philadelphia Sunday school has a fondness for statistics, anil the other day he directed the teachers to ascertain the occupations of the parents of all the scholars in their respective classes. The inquiry progressed smoothly until it reached the Infant class, wheie one small redheaded and freckled Ixiy obstinately refused to give any Information, says the Detroit Free Press. Tnt your father living, Willie* inquired tne teacher. “Yes'm,” "Doesn't he wovk'f* "No'm." ' "Bfif ho RfpporiM you and mamma, docsii'l bo 9 " The small scholar assented, emphatically. “Then isn’t he in business?" "Kind of." Visions of a gambler in a checked suit and diamond studs, or a saloonkeeper dealing out ilery fluids, crossed the teacher's mind. ’•William," she urged, apprehensively, "what does your father do?” There was a moment's pause, whi'e the sobs in the small boy began to rise to the fre 'kied surface. “My pa," he siiid, weepingly, "ain’t in any regular business. Ho s de bearded lady in de museum and musftid it I give it awav she d 'Valu me. u
An Embarrassing Experience.
Most American women have had emIni r.iss.ng ox •erie.Ku.s in social emer go .civs, i o Imps mine was ever more trvliig th.-i.i flie advenlure of a lady i. ted in o.v . ork society for her lO irtesy ; nd suvoir fairo. < no wint r day he > tar ted on the ti a n (or i I i xtelphiu taking kor seal in what she npimscd was an ordinary pur.or ca . 'L'nure w; s but ore other i ceupan , r. wmiowhat stout man, who rat with hi-» bamt to her. I rosently h, lighted a ei/ur and began to smoke. Tne lady c ughed and moved uneasily, b;.t her hints had no enect. She raid at la t tartly; “You probably a-e u foreigner, sir. i;n I d > n t know that there ia atm >kn car attached to the train. Sucking is not permitted here.” Tiie man without reply throw his ►-» _ar out of the window. A few moments later the conductor entered an 1 stared at her in dismay. "How did you coma here, madam?” he inquired. "Why, where am I?” "In Gen. Grant’s private car." The mortified lady’s usual tact failed her here. She looked at the dumb immovable figure, and retreated without a word.
APPLICATION FOB LICENSE. Notioe is hereby given to the citizens of the Town cf Wheatfield and of Wheatfield township, in Jasper o unty. State of Indiana, that the undersigned, a male inhabitant of said Town of Wheatfield, in Wheatfield township, county and state aforesaid, and a person over the age of twenty-one (21) years, not in the hab t of becoming intoxicated. apd in respect to all legal qualifications and requirements, a fit and proper person to bo intrusted with a license for the sale of intoxicating liquors, will apply to the Board of Commissioners of said Jasper county,lndiana, at then regular June term, a. d. 1894, for a license to veil and barter spirituous, vinous, malt and all other intoxicating liquors, less quantities than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing, and permitting Ithe same to be drank on the premises where soldi and bartered. The precise location of the "remise, where ►aid liquors are to be acid and Altered is the 1 wer story of a two story frame building twenty-four (24) feet wide by forty (40) feet long, situated on lot five (5) in block one (1) in Bentley’s addition to the Town of Wheatfield, in Jasper county, Indiana. The precise location of said building on said lot is as follows: Commencing at the southwest corner of said lot running thence east twenty four (24) feet, thence noytl forty (40) feet, thence west tw qty-fiour, (24) feet, thence south forty (4#) feet, tq the place of Said license will ba asked, lor. a,period of FABIAN NOTHEISENp May V. I*94—>B SQ.
, NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS. 1 State of Indiana,) i County of Jasper, j’ ’ In J asper Circuit Court. To June Term, 1894. i The State of Indiana for use of Eliaa Marion, Commissioner in Ditch Cause No. 73 of said Court vs. Roseanna Jones and Mr. Jones husband of said Roseanna Jones. Be It Remembered, That on the 11th day of May. 1894, the plaintiff in above cause filed his eomplaint and an affidavit that the -aboye named defendants are non-residents of the State of ‘ Therefore said defendants are heteby notified that said cause is set for hearing on the first day of the June Term, 1894, of said Court, which begins on Monday June 4th, 1894 and to be and appear before the Judge of said 0 mrt at Rensselaer, Indiana, on said day and answerer demur to said oomplaint, or the same will be heard in your absence. Witness my hand and , . official seal this the Uth - Sbai,. j day of May, 1894. ’ —-4 ’ WM. H. Ooovbk, Clerk of the Jasper Circuit Court Thompson 4 Bro. forpl’fi. May 11,1894—57. NOTICE TO NON-BEBIDENTB. State ot Inolana, I County of Jasper, j In Jasper Circuit Court. To June Term, 1894. Fred Saltwell vs. John Irwin, ot. al. Be it Remembered, That on the 21st day of April, 1894, the plaintiff by his attorneys filed hie complaint with the Clerk of said Court, together with hie affidavit that the following . amed persons were believed to be non-residents of the State of Indiana, to-wtt: John Irwin and Mrs. Irwin his wife; Mrs. Irwin widow of John Irwin; John Irvin and Mrs, Irvin hii, wife; Mrs. Irtln widow of John Irvin; John Irvine and Mrs. Irvine his wife; Mrs. Irvine widow of John Irvine, and all of the unknown heirs, devisees and legatees of the unknown heirs, devisees and legatees of all of the above named defendants. Therefore notice is here I y given all of said defendants to be and appear before the Judge of the Jasper Oiioutt Court at ithe Court House, in the Town of Rensselaer, in said county, on the 18th day of June, 1894, the same being the 13th judicial day of said Juno Term, 1894, which begins on he first Monday of June, 1894, aad answer or demur to the plaintiff's complaint, or the same will be heard In your Absence. Witness my hand and offi- —■ oial seal this the 31st daw Seal. of April, 1894. WILLIAM H OOOVER, Olerk of the Circuit Court. Thompson 4 Bro., Att’ys, April 28, 1894-J9. A C. BUBHI.Y, Piorn jit
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NUMBER 17
