Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 48, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 December 1896 — Page 1

YOLUILF II

Idduoi Pauibox PM*id*n» ftao.K. Holuxoswoiii, Via* Presiddeßt. IxitiT li. Eouixoswoith, Cashier. THE BANK OF RENbSKLAER, ind. Directors: Addison Parkflon, James T. Randle, John M. Wasson, Geo. K. Hollingsworth and Emmet L. Hollingsworth. This bank is prepared to transact a general Banking Business. Interest allowed on time deposits. Money loaned and good notes bought at onrrent rates of interest. A share of your patronage is eo--11 sited. S 3" At the eld stand of the Citizens 5 State Bank —n,, , t . r=au JOHN MAKXXTXB, JA.T WILLIAMS, President, Cashier. Farmers’ Bank, Rxnssklaxb, - Indiaha. Receive Deposits, Bay and Bell Exchange . Collections made and promptly remitted.

PiOHEER MBIT MARKET^ MSEtf, Pork, Veal, Mutton, Sansage, BsXoona, et'o , sold in quantities to suit nufohtrters At the.LOWEST PRICES.— None fcnt the best stock slaughtered. Eveybody is Invited to call. THE HIGHEST PRICES PAID POB Good Cattle, iJ.J. EIGLEBBACH. Proprietor. Th Indianapolis Daily and Weekly Seal Inel circulation has ieaobed immense proportion by its thorough service in res living all the latest news all over the •tste and from its dispatohes from foreign countries. Every reader in Indiana should take a State paper, and that The Sentinel. LARGEST CIRCULATION Of any Newspaper 11 THE STATE. TEEMS OX SUBSCRIPTION, Daily one year - - 56.0 Weekly one year - LO The weekly Edition Has 12 PAGES! SUBSCRIBE NOW And make all remittances to The iNDumpousj SENTINEL CIE

Indianapolis, Ind. Thtf paper will Be finished with the weekly editioa of The Indians State Sentinel for 92 'OO. A- JT. KNIGHT, Painter ' w AED— Paper Hanger. *firOnly the Best work done. SATISFACTION GUARANT’DI Shop on Cornelia Street, Rear of Nossler’s Model. BUILDING Estimates Furnished On 'Short Notioe. COX BROS, * ar Shop on Onllen Street, North, west of Makeover Honse.Rensselaer. Ind.

*lm»bovembnt the Oedeh of the Age,* Three New Model 2,3and4 Ami tty GREAT PBOGBESS in mechanical art DURABIL lx Many Improvements Heretofore Overlooked by Othe *ll FIEIT OOHBIDIBATION. Manufacturers. Illustrated Catalogae THE SMITH PREMIER TYPEWRITER CO., Mailed on Application. 164 Monboe Street, Cbioa

The Democratic Sentinel.

LIIQMf r.J.MM. 1 Luruu, tutor. iiat tutor. JL. McCoy A Co.’s BARK, RENSS * - IBl> * Tie Oltei Mto Jaw Court! 1

ESTABLISHED 1854. Transacts a General Banking Bu ness, Buy* Ret#* and Loane Money on Long or Short Time on Personal or BeaiU Estate Security. Fair and Liberal Treatment Promised to AIL ForeignExohajigx bought axd Solo Interest Paid on Time Deposits YOUR PATRONAGE IS SOLeOITED. sarPatrons Having Valuable f apare May Deposit Them for Safe Keeping.^

L. A- BUST WICK, engineer and surveyor Maps and Blue Prints OF mm d BUM. LAND DRAINAGE, Map Work and Platting a Specialty Rbnsbblaeblnd. Office in Odd Fellow’s Temple.

G. P. KAHLER, RENSSELAER, IND .... BliHiig, BnN-Shnhg, Wagon-Making. nlen Won gl»9u to repairing Mac Dtatins; Casting! in Iron »r Bras

J. W. HORTON, Hentist, VI I I ■ ■ " -** All diseases of Teeth and Gums eaaefully treated. Filling and Crowns a spe oialty. msr Offioe over Post-Office, Rensselaer Indiana. P. W. CLARKE, JEWELER. Rensselaer, - Ind.

! SEND I ♦ FOR OUR I Fall : l Catalogue \ X —the finest we have J ▼ yet published — ♦ J 100 pages, pro- ▼ J fusely illustrated. J about the new + ♦ Fall and Winter ♦ ♦ Styles in Men’s and ♦ J Boy’s Clothing, £ T Hats, Furnishing 7 Goods, Shoes and Ladies’ Cloaks. + % and will be sent % ♦ free of charge. ♦ % THE HUB, % The WerHTh Leiyeet Clottlso Mere, <► Stat* and Jaokaon St* ♦ ♦ OSICAfiO. ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦

RBNSBELAEB JASPER COUNTY, INDIANA FRIDAY DECEMBER 4 1896

Ifeu* r. Itoa jm, Hrtt J. Ufiw. a town eg-at-Lew. Notary Pubta. Thompson A Brother sasasm xb, Indiana. *3" Practise ia aM the Court#. MARION L. SPIYLEB, Collector and Axstoaotor ea* We devote .paiticalar attention paying taxes, selling and leasing lands.

James W. Douthit, Ittoraay-at-Uw id lilt 17 fiMlt. W Office front room, up-etairs, over Laßue Bro’s Grocery store, Rensselaer Indiana.

Ralph 'W . Marshall, ATTOBNEY-AT-LAW, fT,Practices in Jasper, Newton and adjoining counties. Especial attention given to settlement of Decedent’s Estates, Collections, Conveyances, Justices’ Oases, eto. **” Offioe over Chioago B*rgain Store, Rensselaer, Indiana. CRaarleis E. Mills, ATTOBNXT-AT-LAW, | Rensselaer, Indiana. Penaione, Collections and Real Estate. Abstracts oareftdly prepared, Titles examined. •3“ Farm loons negotiated at lowest sates. Offioe up stairs over Oitlaens' hank.

Ira w. Yeoman, Attornoy-at-Law, Real Estate and Collecting Agent, Rbmington, : : : Indiana.

I. B. Washbubn. E. C. English, W ashburn A English ■°hv»loiaus & Snrganne Kenuelatr, Ind. Dr. Washburn will give special attention to diseases of Eye, Ear, Nose Throat and Chronic Diseases. Dr. English will give special attention to surgery in all departments, and General Medioines. Offioe in Leopold’s Corner Block, over Ellis & Murrey's. Telephone 48. W W Hartsell, M. I>., Honuropatbic fhjsieian ASarfeou. Rensselaer, Ind. A** Chronio Diseases a Specialty. "Be Offioe in Makeever’s New Block.

T. P. WRIGIIT, HhPEBUIKER & EMBALHEft XINBBWLABB. - I*«U"1 Maps of the Town of Ronsselser ami of Jasper condty, for sale at Long’s Drug Store

NewXmeatXmarketJ CREVIBTON BROS. Proprietors Located opposite the pflblio square. Everything fresh and clean. Fresh and salt meats, game, poultry, eto., constantly on hand. Please g;ve ns a call and we will guarantee to giva you satisfaction. Remember the place.. de0!4,’94

Worth Knowing. I'Lera are many who are suffer, ing from disease, who havs receiv* ed little benefit from medicines, and who have become discouraged or even hopeless of recovery.— The assurance that a remedy for these ills exists would be joyful news to them. And yet, this is just the announcement we make them, and this statement is verified by numbers of the most reliable witnesses, who gladly testify to its remarkable curative powers, and offer themselves sound and well, m evidence. Compound Oxygin has cured hundreds of cases given over as incurable. The proof is at your service. It will cost vou nothing to convince yourself. Would it not be wise to do so? If convex nient call at the offik*?, and we will give you all the information you may desire in regard to the treat" ment and its action and effects, or write us and we will send book of 200 pages, free. Home or Office Treatment. Consultation free. D»s. Starkey & Palen, 1529 Arch St., Phila., Pa.

Whenever clear vision at a proper dis. taaoe beoomes difficult, it is proper to seek the aid of glasses. They become to the overburdened muscle of the eye as muoh of a necessity as food to the empty Btomaoh, or a oane or orutoh to him who has not the full power of his legs. There is no advantage in delaying their use. - Call on or mail a postal card to CHAS. VICK, Optioian, and pet a perfect fit, with the best lenses in the world, at bard time pticee, the best that money ean buy, Rensselaer, Ind.;

•‘A XTBJf ADHSKBIf OB TO OOBMOT PBUTOIPLBa. ”

The inauguration of a President, the selection of his Cabinet, and the seating of a new Congress—national events of the ooming year —suggest the question, What are the powereHand duties of these high offioi&ls? During 1b97 it will t>e answered through the Youth’s Companion, in a remarkable series of articles bj Secretary Herbert, Postmaster-General Wilson, At-torney-General Harmon, Senator Lodge and Speaker Reed. The Illustrated Announcement for 1897 (mailed free on application to the Youth’s Companion, Boston) shows that the above is only one of many brilliant "features” by which the Companion will signalize its seventy-first year. Three novelists who at present fill the pablio eye— lan Maclaran, Budyard Kipling and Stephen Crane —will contribute some of their strongest work. Practical affairs and popnlar interests will be treated by Andrew Carnegie, Hon, Theodore Roosevelt Dr. Lyman Abbott, Madame Lillian Nordica, Hon. Carl Sohura, Charles Dudley Warner, Mrs. Burton Harrison, and a hundred other famous men and women. Four fascinating serials, more than two hundred short stories, and ten times as many sketohes and aneodotes will be printed during 1897; and all the departments will be maintained at the high standard which has made the Companion’s name a synonym for impartial accuracy. The oost of the Companion is but 1.75 a year, and we know of no investment that will give so great returns for so small an am't of money. New subscribers will receive the paper free from the time the subscription iB received until January 1, 1897, and for a full {year to January, 1898. New subscribers also receive the Companion tour-pages Calendar, lithographed in twelve colors, which is the most exi ensive color production its publishers have ever offered. Address, The Youth’s Companion, 205 Columbus Ave., Boston, Mass.

A Book for Christmas.

The Christmas number of Demorest’s Magazine presents a table of contents attractively suggestive of Christmas cheer, apd a glance hrough the pages shows a profusion of pictures appr seriate to the season and i ttractive enough to please at any time. The number opens with sketches of the Holy Land, very# appropriated calle d “The Cradle of Christianity,' ’ written by Dr. Thomas P Hughes, who has long been a Btu'ent of that region, and writes from the observer’s poi ,t of view. New end beautiful pictures are giv.-n, fully illustrating the article and making it a fine feature for a Christmas publication. charmingly written by Mary Annable Fanton, describes the quaint old southern darkey in the Christmas atmosphere, which brought out all his best qualities ana dtveloped his queer superstitions end customs. Howard Helmick furnishes five lull-page illnstrations for the article which shows his nice appreciation of the negro oharaoter, and the other illustra* tions are not less interesting aud characteristic. Under the title of “A Poet of Many Friends,” Edwin “ Martin gives a short sketch of Eugene Field, in which he dwells partiouularly upon Field’s personal obar* acteristics and his warm friendships with men and children. Six attractive pictures illustrate the text. Among the other illustrated articles are: a lively description of winter fishing through the ice, by /. Herbert Welch;a ehort account of the great emotional actress, Elea»ora Duse, by Arthur Hornblow; and an interesting symposi nm of comments upon “Christmas Customs in Several Lands,” by prominent people who know them from personal experience. ‘‘Dea 1 con Simpson’s Trip,” by Kate Erskinel, is a charmirg contribution to the fiction of the number, and “The Fatal Knot-hole,’, the story in “Our Girl’s” department, has a touch of pathos that will appeal to every one. The departments are good as usual, and contain useful suggestions for Christmas presents, for the furnishing of the dining-room, and other practieal matters pertaining to dress, fashion, health, and the household.

¥ANxED— FAITHFUL MEN OR womem to travel for responsible established hhnse in Indiana. Salary 9780 and expenses Position permanent. Reference. Encloee self-addressed Stamped envelope. The National. Star Insnranoe Bldg,. Chicago.

Life at Washington.

Reduction In Wages.

Th ) Chioago steel works recently notified ita employes that a reduction of wages would be inanguiated on the first of December. An att*mpt was made about a year ago in this concern to lower the scale of wages, but it was defeated by a strike of the employes. The reduction now proposed is about the same as that which was successfully opposed by the workmen at the time referred to. The Homestead mills noar Pittsburg, and alkof the other manufacturing concerns ia which Mr. Carnegie ia interested, have also advertised the fact that wages would be ‘ readjusted’’ on January Ist. 'Readjusted’ is a term whioh is synonymous with a decrease in this connection. Dnring the recent campaign employes were warned against free silver coinage on the crouudthst if it were adopted their wages woul be paid in debased money, which wae not true. Nothing was said at the time abont the probability of a redaction of wages, although it was quite plain to those who took a rational view of affairs that suoh a polioy would certainly follow the eleoti n of MoK’nley. It has come a little sooner than was ex peoted, bat no ono will be surprised even at that,except the workingmen themselves What folly it was to suppose that the same scale of wages would be kept up under a continuation of the Binglejgold standard that oonld have been confidently looked for if the country had voted for silv r restoration! Unless indications are at fault there will be a general reduction of wages all over the oountfy within the next six month and it will be a sharp reduot on, too. The people have voted for an European financial polioy and they must take with It European wages and sooial conditions.

WANTED— FAITHFUL MEN OR women to travel far responsible established houses in Indiana. Bal«ry 1780 and expenses. Position permanent. Reference. Enolose self-addressed stamped envelope. The National, Star Insurance Bldg., Chioago.

Our Increasing Exports.

In p te of the tariff legislation whioh operates to prevent the extension of our foreign trade there has been a steady increase in exports of our manufactured products. The American manufacturer is the most entorprl dng in the world, the American inventor is tnemost ingenious and the most praoticnl, the Amerioan workman is the most skillful and the most productive. Under fair conditicns the industries of this country ought to command an immense foreign trade. Even as matters stand our manufaotnrers aro const ntly enlarging their foreign trade, and onto - ing new markets. Our exports of menu • factored preduots h.s beon co tinuons for several years. It was $130,000,000 in 1888, $151,000,000 in 1890; $168,000,000 in 1892, $182,000,000in 1894, and $228,000,000 in 1806. At the present rate of inoreaselt promises to be $260,000,000 in 1807. For the single month of September it u as over $5,000,000, and t at too at a time when business was dull and the Presidential campaign had created-great uncertainty .s to future crenditions. Our exports of ootton goods have hot increased so fast this year as thevdidin 1888, but still there has been an increase over a’l former years. In iton and steol and their manufactures our advance has been most remarkable. In this line onr total exports in 1888 wereonly $17,000,000; will be fully $41,00i),000 this year.— The next largest Increase has been In our exports of articles mnde from wooo and leather. Amerioan oarpets are now sold largely in England and several countries of continental Euiope and the foreign demand for the American shoe is constantly increasing. The exports of nearly every article whioh is manufactured on a large soale in this country are growing We send abroad many carriages, wagone, street cars, musical instruments, agricultural machinery nnd implements and various other artioles which attest American skill and enterprise.

The first thing song) ess should do when it assembles should be to strike from the statute books that provision in the lew which permits creditors to exaot from debtors gold obligations. No American citizen should be permitted to discriminate against any money that the government makes a I< gel tender for tne p iyment of debts. If such a thing is to bo indefinitely permitted all obligations will be made paynble in gold, and as the ag gregate indebtedness of our country, na' tional, munioipa l ahd corporate, is more than twenty billions, or five times the total gold supply of the world, where will the people get the gold to redeem tbfii obligations? H nee the government, contrary to the law and the provisions of its obligations, has adopted the polioy of paving in gold, it has been forced to| borrow $202,000,000 to maintain a gold reserve. T e adoption of such a policy is a fraud upon Ihe American people and sbo’d be abandoned. The polioy adopted bv the Harrison administrctlon and approved by Cleveland’s administration, haR enoonraged creditors at home and abroad to insist upon the payment of all obligations in gold.

•rajTANTED—FAITHFUL MEN OR ** women to travel for rei' onsible tabliahed house in Indisna. Sal ary S7BO andexptnses. Positioftpermanent. Reference. Enclose self-eddresseA stamped envelope. T 1 e National, Star Insurance Bldg., Chicago. Notwithstanding the low prioes that prevail, the foreign demand for American prodnots, both of farm tnd factory are phenomenally large Under the second year of the Wilsomtariff law the exports of manufactured goods have doubled.— Last ear the exports of manufactured wares aggregated nearly $300,000,000, and the prospects are good for a i-till further moreaae In the demand for American goods. The balance of trade with foreign natioi r promises to be enormously great this year. Notwithstanding these favorable trade conditions the Republicans threaten to re-cnect theMoKinley tariff in the interest of the trusts and other combinations of oapital inrestraint of trade. Jasper Uounty Farmers’ Institute will be held Monday and Tuesday, January 18 and 19, 1897. It 'was discovered that the rec~ ord oi Indiana’s official vote in the secretary of state’s office has been tampered with. Maj. J. B! Mi’roy died at his home in Delphi, last Saturday night.

Money and Confidence.

Under the caption: "A Word to Bimetallists,” the Cleveland t Jain Dealer, one of the Btaunohest advocates of the free coinage of both gold and silver, says: "Bimetallism is not dead; it is either right or it is wrong. It is a principle that has existed in monetary sjience and political economy from the earliest days of recorded history down to the present time. It haa done a thousand times more in tne business world than has ever been done by monometallism. “We have thought it best not to fight over-the battles of the campaign at present,but tohelp forward the business interests of the country. we have deemed it best to lay aside the discussion of the money question for a time, not, however, in the least givingupthe fight. It is a fig*ht to a finish.—

One campaign did not end it. We advis e all honest bimetallists to wait; onr day will oome. Let the monometaliists try their baud, and let the people find out whether nionomet tllisin increases the volume of money t r not. Give them a chance; it will be the best argument . Experience will prove true the philosophy maintained by the bimetallists during the campaign. "We want confidence to do all it can. We want it unlimited, unrestricted and universal. We want the party in power to have a chance to prove the policy whioh they advocated. It is far better that a definite polioy be in operation than that the country be in unrest Business men desire to lay plans for the future. 80 wo say to bimetallists. "Don t obstruol the policy of the Republicans and the gold bugs. Let them have full swing and they will convince the people that the gold bugs’ plans are inadequate to meet the wants of the country.’QThoy can uo more prove that the quantity of money shall remain fixed while business and population increase than they can prove that 10,000 people sho’d havo no more food to eat than 5,000 people. "We are the outs. We have the vantage ground of criticism. The responsibility is on the shoulders of the victors. They must provide the revenue; they must provide the curre oy; they must give better returns for money invested and for labor and skill expended; thwv mußt prove the propositions which they have put forward and fulfill the promises which the have made to the people. We can afford to wait. If the country is pross perous we shall rejoice. Wa vo’d rather see the country prosperous, even if we are defeated, than to see the people suffering for want of work, business stagnant and enterprise paralyzed.”

They Are Hedging.

Senator ‘Billee’ E. 6handler, of N.w Hampshire, has written a letter to the National Keview, an English publication, in which he takes the ground that the silver question has not been settled, and that it will not be until silver is remonetized. AmoDgother ibinge he says: “That the United States is opposed to the single gold standard, and is in favor of retracing in due course and with careful regard to the national honor the steps taken in the demonetization of silver, until both geld and silver shall be admitted to free coinage at the ratio of 15£ to 1, and made the standard money of the world, and the measure of the values of the world—is a proposit ion which wo’d receive the suffrages of four fifths of our voters, if this proposition alone could be fairly presented to them, even without further debate. “To suoh convictions entertained by a vast majority of American voters committed to bimetallism, the friends of such a monetary system may confidently appeal.The question is not one of lour years, nor yet of a decade. It may take as long to remonetize silver as it has taken to realize the paralys zing influence of demonetization. But the fact that 6 out of 13,000,000 of American voter* have given their ballots for the wild projoct of immediate free silvei coinage bv the United States alone shows that** the question is one of which must be compromised anc adjusted in eome way. I’he advocates of gold monometalism are crying out that the silver question is dead. They hope, but do not really believe that this is true. Never was it more important for bimetallists to exert themselves. Mr. McKinley is pledged by his own words to cooperation with us." » Palmer and Buckner did not carry a county in the United States Mr; Bayan had thirty-six more, electoral votes than Mr. Harri* son.

The Coen Brady elevator Is now in shape for business. Engineer BostwicK will prepare plans a. d specifications for buildings. Charges reasonable. The result ox the f*>ot-ball games shows up more badly injured than generally occurs in a railroad col* lision. A “republican aid society.” in New York, a few evenings ago, celebrated the election of McKinley. About the same time a stal wart republican club in Boston oheered to the echo a oomplimen* tarv reference to Grover Oleve* and. At the rooent eleotion in this State Mr. Bryaa received about 45,000 more votes thanMr Ci # y e , land did four years ago, w j^ Q oarned the State against Harri- ' son.

SEVENTY-FIRST BIRTHDAY. The Youth’s Companion will oeUbrM* !t’» •eyenty-flm birthday in 1897. Among the many altrootive announcements of tho Companion for tba coming year ia an ar< tide of exceptional Talne by Mr Andrew Carnegie on *i he Hnbltc f Thrift." Buooeseful men In other walk* of life will seoond Mr. Carnegie's paper with readable, practical articles based on their own ex> perience, and valuable to the old as well as to the young. Stories will be given by lan Maelaren. liudyard Kipling, Stephen Crane, Harold Frederio and Clark Russell, Speaker Speaker Reed, Secretary Herbert. Senator Lodge Hon. Carl Sohurz, Postmaster General Wilson, Dr. Lyman Abbott, Hon. Theodora Roosevelt—these are a few of the two hundred names that figure in the latest list of Companion contributors. The non-partisan Editorials and the Current Events and Nature and Soienoe Depn tments are of espeoial interest to students and to all who wish to keip in formed of the doings of the world As a reforonce book a file of Companions is well nigh invaluable, for its reputation is founded on seventy years of tested soon racy. Hew subscribers sending f 1 70 to the Companion for 1897 will receive the Companion for the remainder of the year free, also the Companion’s artlatio twelve oolor Calendar, and the papers tall year to January, 181)8. Illuatratad l’roepootus of the next volnme will bs sent free upon reqseet, Address, , Thb Youth’s Companion, k 205 Columbus Ave; Boston, Mass, j

Sheriff’s Sale- ; fly virtue of a certified copy of Deoree and Exocution to me directed from the Clerk of the Jasper Circuit Court Tin a cause wherein George K. Hollingsworth is plaintiff and Peter Nash and Fianois M Reed ot al »re defendants, requiring me tu make the sum of Three Hundred and Fifty-two Dollars ($852 00) and interest and costs accrued and to acorue, I will expose at Publio Bale, tot he highest and best Udder, on MONDAY, DECEMBER 28,1896, between the hours of 10 o’olook a m and 4° olock pm of said day, at the door of the Court House of Jasper County, Indiana, in the City of Rensselaer, first the rentsjand profits for a term not exoeeding seven years, of the following Real Estate hereinafter described, and if said rents and profits will not sell for a> sufficient sum to satisfy said decree and execution and interest and costs. I will at the same time and place expose at publio sale the fee simple of said Beal Estate, or so much thereof as may bo neoessary to discharge said deoree and exsontion and interest and costs, to-wit: The south half of the north-west quarter of section one (1), in township thirty (.10) north range five (6) west, in Jasper oonnty, Indiana. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from the valuation or appraisement laws of the State of Indiana, „ NATHAN J REED, Sheriff of Jasper County *• AH Hopkins, Att’y for pl’ff December 4. 1896—510 f!

Notice to Sos-Mali. j State of Indiana, ) County of Jasper.) In the Jaaper Cirouit Court. To January Term, 1897. Dennis MoLaughlin, Plaintiff, vs, y Samuel Nelson et. al., •> and ij Franz Bengtsen, cross-plaintiff, vs. I Samncl Nelson, et. al. oross-dsfendants. Complaint No. 5189. Now oomes the plaintiff, by Foltz, Spitlcr & Kurrie his attorneys, and Franz Bengsten, oross-plaintiff, by Marion L. Bpitler. and plaintiff files his complaint together with an affidavit, and the orossplamtiff files his oross-complaint with a proper affidavit that each of the defendants in the complaint and cross-com-plaint, to-wit: George Heidenblnth and Anna Heidenblnth bia wife; Joseph Heidenblntb and Christinte Heidenblnth his wife; Joseph Strnsewski and Mrs Strusewski hia wife, and Robert A Heidenbluth and Mrs Heidenblnth his wife are non-residents of the State of Indiana. Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants, that unless they be and appear on the 14th day of January, 1897, the same being the 10th juridical day of the January Term, 1897, of the Jasper Circuit Court, beginning on the First Mopdayof Jsnuary, 1897, at the Court House, in Rensselaer, in said Connty and Stati., and answer or demur to said complaint and cross-complaint, and also answer or demur to the appointment of a receiver asked for in the complaint and cross-complaint, the aarne will be heard and determined in yoor absence, t > In Witness Whereof I here j Seai*- t unto set my hand and —■ l affix (he seal of said Court at Rensselaer Indiana, this 20th day of November, 1896. „ . „ Wm. H. COOTER. Clerk. 2 Foltz, Bpitler & Knrrie, plff’s* att’ys. Marion L. Bpitler, for cross-pi'll November 20, 1896.—*10 ,

MUMBJMU