Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 January 1910 — Page 4
CUssiW Calm Fer Sal*—Rhode Island Bed cockerels. From prise birds. Winter laying strain. Geo. W. Hopkins. F»r Sale—Good house and quarter acre of ground in Parr. Inquire of Frank McCurtaln, Parr, Ind. J. 26 Fer Sale—One base burner and one Master Economy coal burner. Inquire of Earner Gwin at Worland’s Store. Fer Sale er Trade—l6o acres all smooth black prairie land, has large ditch running, full length along one side of place, giving fine outlet for drainage. Lies on main road one mile from Station and gravel road. Will take property as part payment G. F. Meyers. t ' J.l3tf Fer Sal*—My place on Scott and Division streets, Rensselaer, Ind., 8room cottage, with electric lights and bath, new barn, hen house and chicken park, fruit and good well; two lots, new cement walks, 110 foot of groubd. Bargain if taken by Ist of March. Write Mrs. Bessie Barnes, Tulsa, Okla., Box 1308. F.ll Fer Sale—▲ fine Percheron stallion, • years old April 9, 1910, weight 1,300. coal black, with excellent style and action. This horse is guaranteed to be a sure foal getter, of good disposition and as fine a horse as can be found In the county. His papers are absolutely right. Prospective buyers can see me at Pleasant Ridge. Reasons for selling, I have bought the store and other business at Pleasant Ridge and am going out of the stallion business. H. E. Lowman, Owner. Fer, Sale—Fifty head of good milch oows, with calves by their side, or will be fresh within ten or fifteen days; also several good work horses, brood mares and colts. Ed Oliver, Newland, Ind. D.23tf Fer Sale er Trade A light wagonette, curtains all complete, just the thing to carry school children to and from school. Also some White Rock cockerels f.r sale. E. J. Duvall. Fer Sale—The heirs of John Bisioakey, deceased, desire to sell the 380 acre farm in Newton township, and the 3 acre tract in Marion township, Jasper county, Ind. See or write the heirs or kbits A Spitler, Rensselaer, ind., for prices. N.6tf Fer Sale er Trade—Four good sec-nd-hand cabinet organs. Fred Philup?.
FOB BEST. Far Bent—l6o acres, 6 miles from Rensselaer, will build new house and tile land. Long time lease to right party. James H. Chapman. F. 4 Far Bant Nice 4-room fiat in Republican building. Inquire here. Far Bant—l4o acres blue and wild grass pasture, new wind mill and tank. One mile south of Harvey Wood farm. Frank Foltz. d29tf Far Bant—Two furnished rooms. Mrs. B. L. Clark. WANTED. Wanted—At once, a dining room - girl. Makeever House. Wanted—Two or three tons of timothy hay. Inquire at W. J. Wright’s furniture store. J.4tf MISCELLANEOUS. Beosevelt’s Thrilling Experiences In the WBds as Africa—A very interesting book for everybody. Orders taken by G. K. Aldrich, Box 217. J. 22 FOUND.' Found—Aluminum purse, with small amount of money. Inquire here. Famed—lroning board coupon book. Inquire here. MONEY TO LOAN. Money ta Lean money on first farm mortgage security. Inquire of B. P. Honan. lo.tf
PUBLIC lAU I will Mil at public auction at my residence on the old Gaines farm. 2 miles south and 1 mile east of Mt. Ayr, • miles west and a mile south of Rensselaer. On ______ Wednesday. January 26. 1210, Commencing at 10 o'clock, the following property: S Head of Morses —l sorrel horse,. 10 yrs old, wt 1,200; 1 bay mare, 11 yrs eld. wt 1,200; 1 black horM. 9 yrs old, wt 1,000; 1 bay mare, 9 yrs old, wt 1.200. ■ Mlu Oows—Some fresh now, others giving milk; all No. 1 cows; 2 Jerseys and 1 Holes tin. * One kof, walght about ISO. Farm luiplmseels 1 Osborne binder, sulky plow, riding cultivator, corn Planter, road scraper, Mt farm harness, hay rack, and other articles too numerous to mention. *- : —*— Moamhold Coeds —Kitchen cupboard, dresser, table, two wood bedsteads and springs, clock, DeLavel cream separator No. 10, used one leason. Terms A credit of 11 months will be given on all sums of over flO, with approved security without interest If paid when due; If not paid when due, I per cent will be chared from date of sale. AU sums of $lO and under, cash in hand, {.far oeat off for cash on sums over $lO. Mo property to be removed until settled f /. Harmon. aSES? °°“ J. r. Hammond, Clerk. Ilf lunch on ground.
CHICAGO LITE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.
ckxoaoo lira mcz Chicago, Jan. 24.—Receipts of live stock today: Hogs, 35,000; cattle, 27,000; sheep, 23,000. Kansas City, hogs, 10,000; cattle, 12,000; sheep, 7,000. Omaha, hogs, 6,500; cattle, 5,000; sheep, 10,000. ■ " Hogs open steady, 6 cents lower. Mixed, 38.20 to $8.60. Heavy, 98.45 to $8.66. Rough, $8.20 to $8.35. Light, $8.20 to $8.50. v . Cattle steady, 10 cents lower. Beeves, $4.25 to $7.90. , Cows and heifers, $2.25 to $6.30.— ■- Stockers and feeders, $3.25 to $5.40. Texans, $5.00 to $6.25. Calves, $7.00 to $9.50. —•— Sheep steady, $3.75 to $6.10. Lambs, $5.76. to $8.90. ——♦ cash omAxar wheat No. 2 red, $1.25 to $1.26. No. 3 red, sl.lß to $1.24. No. 2 hard wheat, $1.13 to $1.15. No. 3 hard wheat, sl.lO to $1.14. No. 1 northern spring, $1.14 to $1.15. No. 2 northern spring, $1.13 to $1.14. No. 3- spring, sl.lO to $1.13. 0 Corn No. 2,67 c. No. 2 white, 67c to 68c. No. 2 yellow, 66%c to 67 %c. No. 3,64 c. No. 3 white, 65c to 66c. No. 3 yellow, 64c to 64 %c. No. 4,62 cto 63%c. Oats No. 2 white, 49c. No. 3 white, 48c to 48%c. No. 4 white, 48c to 48%c. Standard, 48 %c to 49c. , "O FDZUXBB Wheat __ May July Sept. Open ... 1.11%10% 1.01%% 97% High .... 1.11% 1.01% 97% Low .... 1.09% 1.00% 96% Close ... 1.09% 1.00% 96% Corn • • Open ... 68.67% 67%% 67%% Higli .... "88 —“ 67% 67% Low .... 67 66% 66% Close ... 67 66% 66% Oats Open ... 48.47% 44 41% High .... 48 44’% — 41% Low .... 47% — 43% — 41% > Close ... ' 47% 43% — 41— ♦ BESMBIASB QUOTATIONS Corn—sßc. > Oats—42c. Rye—6sc. Butter—2sc. Eggs—3o-32c. Turkeys—l6c. Chickens—llc Geese—Bc. Ducks—loc. Roosters—sc.
SORE THROAT
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L. H. Markley’s Sale Date Changed to Saturday, Feb. 5th.
L. H. Markley, whose big sale was advertised to take place on Wednesday, Feb. 2d, has now been postponed to Saturday, Feb. 6th. The change was made to accommodate Stephen T. Comer & Son, whose sale will now take place on the day originally set for the Markley sale, viz: Wednesday, Feb. 2d. As Mr. Markley's sale is near town Saturday will probably be the very best day that he could have chosen, and he should have an immense crowd at his sals. === ComerAßon will have a thorough cleaning up sale, selling all their horses, cattle and sheep.
NOTION To the Nepublleaa Voters of, Jasper County, Indiana. 1 t Notice Is hereby given to the Republican voters of Jasper county, Indiana, to meet in mass convention at their respective voting precincts (except. as otherwise provided In this call) at 2 o’clock p. m., on V Saturday, January 29, 1910, for the following purposes: Ist. To elect a Precinct Committeeman and three assistant Committeemen for each voting precinct. 2nd. To elect a delegate and one alternate to the district convention- to he held at Hammoni Indiana, on Tuesday, February lsfjll9lo, at 1:30 p. m., for the election of a District Chairman and for the transaction of such other business as: may come before the convention. Each precinct will be entitled tOLthe representation as shown In the flgede below on the basis Of one delegate'dr fraction thereof for every 200 votes cast for Winfield T. Durbin at the November election, 1908. Notice is given to the precinct committeemen elected on Saturday, January 29, to meet in convention at Rensselaer in the East Court Room on Mon, day, January 31, 1910, for the purpose of electing a Chairman, Vice-Chairman, Secretary and Treasurer, and for the transaction of such other business as may come before the convention. Represen—Votes. tation. Barkley East 87 .60 Barkley, West ........ 67 .30 Carpenter, East 107 .60 Carpenter, West 96 .50 Carpenter, South ’ 125 .70 Gillam 98 .50 Hanging Grove 60 .30 Jordan 58 .30 Kankakee «.... 63 .30 Keener 160 .80 Marion, No. 1 160 .80 Marlon N0.,V.. 154 .80 Marlon, No. 3 110 .60 Marion, No. 4 11l -.60 Milroy 38 .20 Newton 69 .30 Union, North 79 .40 Union, South 91 .60 Walker 98 .60 Wheatfleld . 108 .60 Marion, No. 1, In East Court Room. Marion, No. 2, In circuit Court room. Marion, No. 3, in Sheriff’s office. Marlon, No. 4, in Court Library. moses Leopold, _v, • ■ v- — Chairman. H. J. KANNAL, Secretary.
NOTICE OF REPUBLICAN DISTRICT CONTENTION. Notice is hereby given to the Republicans of the Tenth Congressional District of Indiana, that the District Convention for the election of a District Chairman, and for such other business as may properly come before the Convention, will be held on Tuesday, February 1, 1910, at 1:30 o’clock p, jn., at the opera house, In the city of Hammond, Indiana. The apportionment of delegates and alternate delegates, as fixed by the State Committee for the counties in said district, will be as follows: Benton 10 Jasper io Lake 47 Laporte . 29 Newton 8 Porter 15 Tippecanoe 61 Warren io White 12 ANDREW J. HICKEY, District Chairman. ED. J. AIDDELL, Secretary. — —-
Representative Crumpacker Given Praise By Two Newspapers.
Kentland Enterprise. Judge Crumpacker’s selection as the Indiana member pf the republican national committee places him in a commanding position in the conduct of the campaign next fall. Judge Crumpacker is easy the ablest man Indiaha has had in congress for several years. As chairman of the census committee he has one of the most important places in the house of representatives, and now as member of the republican national committee his influence will be nation-wide.
Concerning his position in congress the Gary Tribune says: “Judge Crumpacker is not a “Cannon” man in the sense of following the behests of the speaker. He is opposed to the war on the insurgents which the Cannon men desire to force on the president. He is an all round republican who, in the event of the success of his party next fall, may well seek the speakership for which he 'has been named so many times.
“Some of the papers of the Tenth district speak of Judge Crumpacker holding his seat in Congress too long. They want a change. They think he has had enough. “There is no sense in this kind of talk. The place for a congressman is not a prize to be given for party work. The place is one where the member can be of value to his constituents and to the nation. Position and influence in congress are gained only after years of service. Judge Crumpacker has attained both. Yet some newspapers would turn him out because he has held the office long enough, they say, and put a man in his place who would not know Washington when his train reached there. Such a man would be absolutely useless to the Tenth district and to the nation for at least his first term."
Owing to the continued advance of flour and the fact that us Quakers are on the “square,” we will continue to give 16 oz. to the pound and maintain the high standard and quality in our loaves of Quaker bread. We will be compelled on and after February Ist, 1910, to sell our bread at 6c straight and advance the wholesale price onehalf cent per loaf. This is not done to get rich quick, hut to meet our wholes sale bills promptly. I would rather be a good fellow in rags than to be rich anyway. To be rich I would not know how to act, but to be poor, that’s my long suit. Tours truly, THE MODEL BAKER, by GEO. FATE, The Fat Dinner Man.
Harvey Darisson Sells Farm Recently Bought of G. F. Meyers.
; Harvey Davisson, of Union township, who recently bought a farm of 280 acres in Union and Walker townships of Geo. F. Meyers for $45 per acre, sold it Friday through A. 8. LaRue’s agency to J. S. Meek, of Indianapolis, tbe consideration being $62.50 per acre. Mr. Davisson gets $5,500 in cash, a fine residence valued at $6,000 in Elwood and $6,000 worth of stock in the Central Bridge Co., of Indianapolis. The new owner of the Union and Walker township farm expects to make some substantial improvements on it, erecting a house and other buildings.
Marriage Licenses.
Jan. 22. George Grant Mitchell, born Sanford, Vigo county, Ind., Sept. 19, 1?69, present residence Chicago, occupation U. S. navy, second marriage, first dissolved by divorce at Terre Haute, Ind., Jan. 13, 1909, and Mary Fyffe Miller, born Malden, Essex county, Mass., March 27, 1873, present residence West Newton, Mass., occu* pation none, second marriage, the’ first having been dissolved by divorce at St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 19, 1910. Jan. 24. Robert Hanson Hurley, born Jay county, Nov. 19, 1888, present residence Jasper county, occupation farming, and Lulu Irene Gray, born Remington, Nov. 26, 1888, present residence Remington, occupation housekeeper, father’s name John A. Gray, first marriage for each. The prosperous Illinois farmers are selling their $l5O to S3OO land and coming to northern Indiana, where there are better roads, equally good towns and equally good schools, as any in Illinois. They are glad to snap up this land that is almost, if not quite as good. Forty to sixty bushels of corh is the rule this year. Illinois is not doing any better. The same money will buy twice or three times as much land in the northern counties of this state.—Francesville Tribune.
FDBUO, SALE. The undersigned will sell at public auction at his residence, % mile west of Pleasant Ridge, known as the R. O. Oardner farm, 3% miles east of Rensselaer, on the Pleasant Ridge Road, on Friday, January 28, 1910, Commencing at 10 o’clock, the following property: 5 Head of Horses —l black horse, 9 yrs old, wt 1,400; 1 good general-purpose mare, 7 yrs old, wt 1,100, in foal to H. E. Lowman's Percheron-Norman horse; 1 grey mare, 10 yrs old, wt 1,200; 1 two-year-old draft colt; 1 coming yearling, Kentucky bred. 7 Head of Cows —l half-Jersey cow, extra good one, will be fresh in March; 1 red cow; 1 black cow; 1 roan cow; 1 red cow; 2 spring heifer calves. These are all extra good cows and all will be fresh in spring. 9 Brood Sows. 1 Fat Hog. Farm Implements —2 broad tire wagon, 1 new wagon, Champion binder, J. I. Case corn planter with fertilizer attachments and 80 rods of wire; an 18-ft wooden harrow, good as new; 1 J. I. Case disc, 1 Janesville 14-inch gang' Plow. 1 Avery riding cultivator, one 14-lnch Walking plow, a good top buggy, 2 sets work harness, 1 good as new; set single buggy harness; U. S. cream separator, 2 5-gallon cream cans. Household Furniture —Range, heating stove, kitchen Cabinet, kitchen table, dining room suite, sideboard, table, 6 chairs, 3 rocking chairs, a Morris chair, couch, folding lounge good as new, 2 iron beds with springs, sewing machine, two 6% -foot window shades, 6 dozen chickens, many other articles not here mentioned. Terms —A credit of 11 months will be given on all sums of over $lO, with approved security without interest if paid when due; if not paid when due, 8 per cent will be charged from date of sale. All sums of |lO and under, cash in hand. 6 per cent off for cash on sums over $lO. No property to be removed until settled for. WXLLIAH ELKnrS. . Fred Phillips, Auctioneer. C. G. Spitler, Clerk. Hot lunch on ground.
PUBLIC BILE. As I am going to move to north Dakota, I will offer at public sale on the Charles Malchow farm, just oustlde the Rensselaer corporation, on the County Farm Road, commencing at 10 a. m., on Saturday, February 6, 1910, The following property: 12 Head of Horses—l bay mare, 10 yrs old, wt 1,300, in foal; 1 team bay mares. 11 yrs old. wt 1,100, bred to Kenton Jack; 1 sorrel horse, coming 4 yrs old, wt 1,200; 1 bay mare, coming 3 yrfe old, wt 1,060; 1 black horse colt, coming 3 yrs old, wt 1,000; 1 grey horse, coming 3 yrs old, wt 1,000; 1 bay colt, coming 2 yrs old, wt 1,000; 1 bay Ally, coming 2 yrs old; 1 sorrel colt, coming 2 yrs old; 1 brown Ally, 8 months old, a good one; 1 bay Ally, coming 1 yr old; 1 horse colt, 6 months old. 8 Head of Cows —1 Roan Durham, 8 yrs, be fresh in April, an extra good milker; 1 Hereford-Jersey cow, 8 yrs, will be fresh by date of sale; 1 coming 3 yr old cow, with calf by side; 1 cow, coming 4 yrs old, giving milk; 2 two-year-old heifers, one a good Jersey; 2 spring bull calves. 18 Chickens. 6 Turkeys. Farm Implements, Etc.—7-foot Deerlng binder with tongue trucks, used three years, had good care; 16-Inch John Deere sulky plow; 16-inch Good Enough sulky plow; 14-inch sulky plow; 1 new 14-inch Deere breaking plow; Deere corn planter, fertilizer attachments, 120 rods of wire; 7-foot Deere cutaway disc; Avery riding cultivator with gopher attachments; Case riding cultivator, good as new; 2 Eagle Claw walking cultivators; double fan Hoosier seeder with grass seed attachments and cart; single fan seeder; 3-section steel frame harrow: 3-section Aexlble wood frame harrow; 2-sectlon steel harrow; new Studebaker wagon, triple box, 3-lnch tire; Milbum wagon, S-lnch tire, triple box; narrow tire wagon, triple box, spring Mats, all In good shape; new set or gravel boards, hay rack, blacksmith’s smith forge and anvil, 2 sets work harness; 15 bushels pure seed Early Ohio potatoes/' 18 bushels other good eating potatoes; new washing machine, good wood heater, good Round Oak soft coal heater, and other articles such as table, cupboard. Jars large and small. Terms— A credit of 11 months will be given on all sums of over $lO, with approved security without Interest If paid when due; If not paid when due, 8 per cent wlllybe,charged from date of sale. All sums of $lO and under, cash In hand. 6 per cent off for cash on sums over $lO. No property to be removed until settled for. _ Xk x. mahkt.it. Fred Phillips, Auctioneer. C. G. Spltler, Clerk. Hot lunch on ground.
( MILLINERY ) . - ~ " 111 '■ • , r -'t * : The Greatest Sale < of Millinery Ever Held in Rensselaer. We will sell for the next Ten Days any of our Ready-Made Hats, or Trimmed to Suit Yon, and sell it to you for Forty Cents on the Dollar less than Wholesale Price. Now is the time for you to make money and get 3, new hat for very little money. We also carry a full line of Pillow Tops, Luncheon Sets (stamped ready for embroidering), Laundry, Darning and Collar Bags, Ladies’ Fancy Embroidered Collars. • We also carry a full line of Richardson’s Silk Flosses. Anything we have in the store will go at Forty per cent less than Wholesale Prices, so don’t miss this great sale at L. M. lines’ Old Stand. £ Carson & Foster 1
0.8. 37. Page 369. BHBHXFF'B BALE. No. 7173. By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk’s office of the Jasper Circuit Court in a cause wherein Winifred Finn, Mary Izetta Kays, Anna Francies Kays, Louella Kays, Vera Matilda Kays, are judgment plaintiffs, and John Finn, Maggie Finn his wife, John C. Kaupka, Avgusta Kaupka his wife, are defendants, requiring me to make the sum of $1,462.40 wi.th interest on said decree and costs in favor of the judgment plaintiffs, Mary Izetta Kays, Anna Francis Kays, Louella Kays and Vera Matilda Kays jointly, and the sum of $943.60 in favor of the Judgment plaintiff Winfred Finn, with interest on said decree and costs, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on TUESDAY, THE Bth DAT OF FBBBUABY, 1910, between the hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 4 o’clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House of said Jasper county, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described real estate, to-wit: Lot seven (7) in section fourteen (14) containing 62 and 40-100 acres. Also the northhalf (%) of the southeast quarter (ty) of said-section fourteen(l4) containing eighty (80) acres. All in township thirty-two (32) north, range five (6) west, in Jasper county, Indiana. If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient Bum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs, I will at the same time and place expose at publio sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, Interest and costs. Said sale will be made with relief from valuation and appraisement laws, and subject to a tax lien in favor of Ray D. Thompson for the sum of $332.19 and the current taxes of 1908 and 1909 for the sum of $44.40. L. P. SHIRER, Sheriff of Jasper County. Jan.lß-36-F.l .
PUBLIC SALE. I will sell at public auction at my residefwe, 2 miles east of Rensselaer, on the Iffeasant Ridge Road, commencing at 10 o’clock, on Thursday, January 27, 1910, The following property; 8 Head of Horses —l brown mare, 12 yrs old, in foal, wt 1,350; 1 black mare, 3 yrs old. In foal, wt 1,400; 1 black mare, 6 yrs old, In foal, wt 1,300; 1 bay gelding 3 yrs old, wt 1,260; 1 roan pony, 6 yrs old, wt 1,100; 1 spring colt; 1 black yearling mare colt; 1 roan mare colt, coming 2 yrs old. 8 Head of Cattle— 6 milch cows, will be fresh In March and early spring; 2 Jersey heifer calves; 1 Shorthorn heifer calf. 85 Xsad of Horn —Consisting of 10 Poland China brood sows, all bred to a Poland China boar, and will farrow In April; 14 October pigs; 1 Poland China boar. Three dozen Brown Leghorn Pullets. Five dozen Plymouth Hook Pullets. Farm Implements Binder, mower, Avery riding cultivator, walking plow, walking cultivator, 14-lnch walking plow, John Deere com planter with 160 rods wire and fertilizer attachments, low down oats seeder, one 1-horse disc grain drill as good as new, fanning mill, Oliver gang plow, grindstone, hay derrick with fork, ropes, pulleys and slides; carriage, road wagon good as new, sled, two sets heavy work harness. Mt single harness, set double buggy harness, 16-foot 1-ar-row, one 1-hqrM weeder, hay ladder, disc, 6 bushels yellow corn, 12 tons Timothy hay. Terms— A credit of 11 months will be given on all sums of over $lO. with approved security without Interest If paid when due: If not paid when due, 8 per cent will be charged from date of Mle. All sums of $lO and under, cash In hand. 6 per cent off for cash on sums over $lO. No property to be removed until settled for. _ " .■* _ W. B. lIULII Fred Phillips, Auctioneer. C. G. Spltler, Clerk. —— Bart Grant hot lunch. Ten bars Laundry soap, l»c; 1 quart borne canned peaches, 26c; 1 gallon pure maple ayrup, 9L35; 1 quart Mason Jar olive*, 26c, at Bowles A Parker’s, “The Big Cohier Dept. Store,” Phone 96.
Chicago to northwest, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and the South, Louisville and French Llok Springs. ~T BBNSBELAEH TUU TABLE In Effect March 7. 1909. SOUTH BOUND. No. s—Louisville Mail 10:56 a.m. No. 33 —Indianapolis Mall .... 1:59 p.m. No. 39 —Milk Accom 6:02 p.m. No. 3—Louisville Ex. 11:05 p.m. No. 31—Fast Mail 4:45 a.m. HOBTK BOUZTD. No. 4—Mail 4:69 a.m. No. 40—Milk Accom. 7:31 a.m. No. 82—Fast Mail ...10:05 a.m. No. 6—Mall and Ex 3:17 p.m. No. 30—Cin. to Chi. Mall 6:02 p.m. No. 6, south bound, makes connection at Monon for Indianapolis, arriving in that city at 2:20 p. m. Also train No. 38, north bound, leaves Indianapolis at 11:45 a. m., and connects at Monon with No. 6, arriving at Rensselaer at 3:l7'p. m. Train No. 81 makes connection at Monon for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 6 a. m. No. 14, leaving Lafayette at 4:87 p. m„ connects with No. 30 at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 6:02 p. m.
NOTICE OF DITCH FBTITIOH. Cause No. 113. State of Indiana, County of Jasper, ss: In the Jasper Circuit Court, To February term, 1910. In the matter of the petition of Robert C. May et al for public drain. To Philip W. Davis; George Gibb; You and each of you are hereby notified that the petitioners in the above entitled cause have filed in the office of the Clerk of the Jasper Circuit Court, their petition praying for the location and construction of a public tile drain upon and along the following described route, to-wit: Commencing at a point about 25 rods south and 80 feet east of the northeast corner of section 21. township 27 north, range 7 west, in Carpenter township. Jasper county, Indiana, and t>n the east side of a public highway running north • and south; thence in a northwesterly direction, crossing an east and west public highway at a point about 600 feet west of the northeast corner of said section 21; thence following the line of an old open ditch to a point near the southwest corner of the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 16. above mentioned township and range, where the proposed drain will have a good and sufficient outlet In Alter’s Creek. You are named in said petition as owning lands which will be affected by said proposed drain. * You are further notified that said petition is now pending, and will come up for hearing and docketing before the Honorable Charles W. Hanley, sole Judge of the Jasper Circuit Court, at the circuit court room in the court house, In the city of Rensselaer, county of Jasper and State of Indiana, on Saturday, the 19th day of February, 1910 the same being the 6th judicial day of the February Term, 1910, of said Court. ROBERT C. MAY ET AL Attest: C. C. WARNER,^* t * t> ° nerB ’ _ Clerk Jasper Circuit Court Jan.lß-25.
NOTICE. As I am preparing to go to Colorado soon, I must insist on a prompt settlement of all accounts at once. Please settle by cash or note and do not compel me to resort to legal measures. Respectfully, L M. WASHBURN. Try us for coOkstove coal. We can please you. J. L. BRADT.
