Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 May 1893 — Page 3
MM'
ST. JACOBS OIL
CURES
.: iS>IBAS»/^ATK*A c =?iU«5.
BRUISES, BURNS, SWtLUK3S, >'4 * "isrTn~r-r-p a “r.r3-T A \^- r -L »
.. *
-
The Financial Situation.
A Washington special of Monday Inst gives the inside of the financial situation as follows: Wall street finds itself outflanked. The policy of dip-
Into the gold reserve to pr t
^ , 1 {f*v
A copy of the “ Official Portfolio of the World’s Columbian Exposition, descriptive of Buildings and
Columbian Kxposition, Ui-scriptive oi duuuimks aim Grounds, beautifully illustrated, in water color effects, will be sent to any address ujion receipt of 10c. >n postage Stamps by THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.,
Baltimore, Md.
r » -- ■■^wwPMRwnw—-w" r*, - ■■pi
“Rock-City 1| , (PLJ?23,’’.GO)Soi!cl Axle Oil Itvour Grocer or vioftler nnf-n’t It. < -Iteim for ■ .^in Icutton v Hi run vorrlfutnrv PSgonSOOtolHOOmll •«. i r ■ . iT.ICAIi f \FT . M-OFSCO WaIASH, IKD., 11.fc
fi z'
n^E.A.isr-o-'w a
THE INDIAN DOCTOR, will bo at the
tomercial House, Greencastle, Ind, Thursday.
May 11, 1893,
.-repaml to heal the sick with Nature’s own remedies, viz: Roots, Barks, Herbs, Plants and Leaves, which were placed in the ground by the Great
Spirit for the benefit of mankind.
SUFFEiill IIAITT
--'fU f
Why fill yourjsystcm full of drug poison; and nostrums, when yon can got Pure, Kresh and Unadulterated Remedies, God’s Greatest Gift
to Mankind?
COME AND BE HEALED.
Dr. Mr.a-0-Wa
fs
Im a Regularly Licensed Physician. Spent three years among the Indians, learning their methods of healing the si rx wi h Indian Herl Medicines. Those medicines do not poison the system. They cure after all other medicines fail. They are Nature’s remedies for
the relief and cure of disease.
All who may be troubled with Acute or Chronic Catarrh, Dyspepsia, Indigest ion, Bright’s disease, Dropsy, Consumption, Epilepsy or Fits, Nervous debility. Headache. Bronchitis, Constipation, Scrofula or any form or Blood poison, Painful or Suppressed Menstruation.
any form
Inflammation of the womb or bladder, Diabe
poison, Painful or Suppressed .Menstruation, tes, Kidney or Urinary troubles. Nervousness [•akness, Pimples, Bloches or Skin disease in
and General Debility, Lucorrluea, Female weakness, Pimples. Bloches or Skin disease in any form. Impotency, Gleet, Gonorrhoea, Rheumatism, Heart Disease, Neuralgia, Asthma,
ttliy Ml nil. I m puveuuy, ' t Itret, v 1«»I11U i iliiuu mi.vv in iu, I mil V X I ^ Ii Mia, Hysteria, Piles, Loss of Strength and loss of Manhood are especially invited to call on the
Doctor.
YOUNG and MIDDLE-AGED MEN suffering from weakness and Impotency brought on by youthful indiscretion or over indulgence in old age, should call “* Herb Treatment will restore you to perfect Manhood.
at once. The Indian
Dr. Mnn-O-Wn Locates all your aches and pains and,tells each patient how they feel
without asking one single question. Medicine sent to all parts of the world.
Writ e for question blanks and terms; consultationTpersonal or by letter free.—Treatment
including all medicines used from $2.00 to |s.00 per month.
Address,
DR. MAN-O-WA,
Or, MAN-O-WA INDIAN MEDICINE CO ,
Frankfort, Ind.
FIMIHE
A new find complete line at Rock Bottom Prices, at
sy.
irtti
Undertaking and Embalming
GIVEN SPECIAL ATTENTION. East Side Square.
THE STAR-PRESS.
SiUnday, May 0, 189!5.
the indications for this month are that the frost period will reach its crisis at the close of reactionary storms central about the 15th. The
“,"1"~~ ” . new moon on that day, and the equi-
“B g Warnut” was out of its banks j
s . nox of Mercurv on the 18th, will inthe first of the week. i . , , ....
crease and prolong storm conditions,
T. C. Grooms was called to Indian- an( j a( | ( ] probabilities of frost apolis on business the first of the a f\ e r the storms in northerly regions. wee ^- From the 18th to 22d falls a marked That game of base hall, announced storm period, the crisis of which for last Saturday, between Illinois will likely be reached about the 22d University and DePauw, failed to A very warm wave will pass over come off the “Suckers” did not the entire country during this period
make their appearance; it is posed the walking was bad.
sup-
nnd dangerous storms are liable result. Easterly to southerly winds
'Sultry air, with low and falling ha
THEY KNOW IT ALL.
Cortaln Women 11 ho Think TlirmselTmi Encyclopedia*. Have you among your acquaintances one particular individual of the feminine gender who k' i< all? Of
rometer. are certain harbingers coming disturbances. After storms pass, if winds continue from soutli3rly points, as the barometer sullenly refuses to rise, look for a repetition of rain, wind and thunder, in cycles bf twelve and twenty-four hours, unVn fbo uTinrla uhift. a norif.l’
iTeasury credT^Tiroke ih** caraal’A back. Carlisle would not go to Wall street. No one here can just tell whether it is Cleveland’s policy or Carlisle’s policy of Treasury management. No one much cares. It is the policy which has had effect, and if it be Cleveland’s he has scored a financial triumph. About the most sublime idiocy which evolved in the Treasury pinch was the report that Carlisle would refuse to pay gold on the Sherman silver certificates. This is precisely what Wall street wanted. The eombine of bankers had two ob- , ect points. One was to either force the Treasury to an issue of bonds or to silver redemption of silver notes Had Carlisle refused gold for silver notes the Wall street sharks would have put a premium on gold, treated it not as money, but as a commodity. In anticipation of such a policy they had already trapped all the gold certificates with an expectation to sell them at a premium. This nation can take care of itself if its New York schemers wall keep hands off. Somewhere in the country is about $710,000,000 of gold. Tin's is more than England has. If Mr. Carlisle wants to be heroic he may locate it. A hank examiner put into every prominent New York City bank would find it
hidden away.
The aim of the New York combination is to again force the Treasury to show its hand. Last Friday they drained all the free gold out of the Treasury to sec if the reserve of $100,000,000 would be used. It was used and the desire is to know if it will he so used again. If it is to be treated, as it certainly is, an assett to the Treasury, and not a prize package for mere show, Wall street is in chock It cannot undermine a hundred-mil-lion stone wall. It can reduce, how evet, a ten-million job lot, as it has shown its power to do. The Presi dent and his Secretary of the Treas ury are not in a rnoodRo be badgered. They see no necessity of advertising in advance how they will meet an emergency, until it comes. Tiie ro lief came from the West. The East pinched the Government, on the one hand, and the West helped it out It is simply a conspiracy against the public credit located in a charmed circle in Gotham. It is now in dazed condition because it has been circumvented. Wall street is losing its iron grip long held vise-like on the National Treasury, and it frets. Talk of extra session, panic and disaster originates in favored banking houses whose pipe line to the Treas
ury has been cut off.
Next week the second effort will be made to again drain the Treasury free gold. U will reach the climax about Saturday. Then for a second time will Secretary Carlisle use his reserve. Having used it once he has given the pace. That is to say, if the use of any part of it is legal the use of all of it is also legal This means that the Treasury policy is to use it to any limit. When this gets well ingrained into the so-called Wall street circle it will be the conviction that they have overplayed the game and will quit Dut the machinations of these men will have served a purpose. It will show to the more patriotic portion of the land that the danger lies in the East. Ti : s section has dominated thee •••di flhis nation since the nat ionnl ;,unk : n : system began. No matter J.ov. President Cleveland may becrifi. I for liis other acts, the West slion l |geet him with all hail on his flna icial policy. He is endeav oring to divorce the National Treasury from Wall street. Ho should sustained by every instinct of patriotism and good citizenship.
OLD LISERTY BELL.
You have noticed
Phllatlttlpliia** Tr«*asurc<l Italic Htarts for
tli« World's Fair City.
Philadelphia, April 2rt.—The train bearing the liberty bell left the broad street station of the Pennsylvania rail-
course. you have, for ie-r inti e.b mnds i mail :tj !o:i': a. in. tort hi ag .. A part;,- oi
tat r , .
would have t !>< very r -tricted if yon t world's fair committee of eouneils, and
that some houses always seem to need repainting ; they look dingv, rusted, faded. Others always look bric^t, clean, fresh. The owner of the first “economizes” with “cheap" mixed paints, etc.; the second paints with
did not happen tn moi* onep in i' while one of this disagreeable species, says the Philadelphia Times iTho strange part about it is that the woman w i > thinks she knows it all is generally the one least informed on the subject 1 ■ cho ises to debate upon. Those who are re illy competent to give advice and state opinions are usually silent unless their sentiments are abs<v lately dragged >ut of them, but the woman who knows it all, according to her own estimate, airs her views with a lavishness that makes you long to slap her, if such an action were but per-
missible.
She riles you continually, she newer rubs you the right way. and if she says thing is black you ire possessed with desire to swear that it is white, even though you know that for once she is right, and that black is black. She pcses as an authority on fashion, religion, social laws and customs, the rules card playing, and the science of
housekeeping.
If you touch on theosophy she is right with you, ready to correct any statement you may make. If you dabble in the intricacies of polities she can give you points on the tariff or the* silver bill, and so impresses you with your own infinitesimal knowledge of things in general that before long you actualhate the sight of her. She is not popular, the woman who knows it all, and unless she once in awhile will admit an error or allow a correction such a one is certain to narrow the circle of her acquaintances to those very few unfortunates who cannot by any possibility get away from her.
Ml the winds shift permanently to westerly, and the barometer moves lecidedly upward. About the 25th md 28th there will be another rise in emperature, resulting in reactionary storms, beginning of course first in he west and appearing later and la,er at point s along their march to the last. The last day of May is the cen■erofn regular storm period which •uns into the opening days of June.
. *«*“*-. •-
•_ .A**
Real Estate Transfers. • ■^—«i i ■
If you want th any kind leave flee our prior orders are pr
Washing a pig love of mud.
best job printing of ir orders at this e the lowest and all tly filled, not take from him
Every reform that comes and stays begins in the heart.
pastK*,
Jessv Kendall to Ann Call, lot in New Mays-
ville. ?
J. L. Hinkle to Flora Cunningham, lot in
iGrcem astle, $100.
J Mellville Owen et al. to J. 8. Booker, land
4 in Jackson tp., fl.
j H. Hulmau et al. to Charlotte Roberts, lot
j in Manhattan, $200.
fl C. H. Osborn to Etta M. Osborn, lot in
il Green castle. $3,000.
H. M. Randel to D. D. Handel, land in Mon-
i roe tp., fl.900. Z. H. Wi Ilian
ms to W. H. <fc S. N. Durham,
Talk’s cheap, but when it’s backed up by pledge of the hard cash of a financially respon siblefirm, or company, of world-wide repu tation for fiir and honorable dealings,
motin^bnoi in-sis 1
"■ 1 ' , ~T• .r b' -—
Strictly Pure White Lead
i The first spends three times as much for paint in five ye is bidd-
ings never look as v.-ell.
Almost everybody k -s that good paint ran only he had 1 / using strictly pure White Lead. The difficulty is lack of care in selecting it. The following brands are strictly pure White i Lead, “Old Dutch” process; they ore standard and v eil known—established
j by the test of years:
“Armstrong & McKelvy”
THK 1.1HKKTY BELL. other city officials and newspaper men were on the train, whieh consisted of the bcdl car. a combination car, three sleepers, and a dining-car. The municipal officials will return in two we-ks. Williamsi’out. Pa., April 26.—Patriotic demonstrations marked the progress of the liberty bell special train from Philadelphia. At several points school children lined the tracks and waved American fiags and cheered. At each stop parents handed theirchildron out over the rails to kiss the boll, while others got the four reserve policemen to rub medals or trinkets against the relic, to obtain souvenirs of the occasion.
A QUEER PEOPLE.
African. V*Dio Hoar a Very Clone Kr.ein-
!>l:tnr«* to the Ape.
Strange stories are told of the Dokos, who live among the moist, warm bam boo woods to the south of Kaffa and
Susa, in Africa.
Only four feet high, of a dark olive color, savage and naked, they have neither houses nor temples, neither fire nor human food. They live only on ants, mice and serpents, diversified by a few roots and fruits. They let their nails grow long, like talons, the better to dig for ants, and the more easily' to tear in pieces their favorite snakes. The Dokos used to be invaluable as slaves, and they were taken in large numbers. The slave hunters used to hold up bright-colored clothes as they came to the moist, warm bamboo woods, where these human mdbkeys still live, and the poor Dokos could not
Kentucky’
“Southern” “Shipman’ “Red Seal” “Collier’
“Davis-Chambers”
For any color (other than white) tint the Strictly Pure White Lead with National Lead Company’s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors, and you will have the best paint that it is possible to put
on a building.
For sale by the most reliable dealers in
paints everywhere.
COST or A GALE.
Losgen hy 8torm on l.uk<$ Michigan Egthnatctl at t* i'AO.OOO. Chicago, April 25.—A -pm h from Cheboygan, Mich., announces th" foundering of the schooner N. A. Eddy near Spectacle Reef. The s -hoouer hud 81,000 bushels of wheat aboard and a crow of nine men. It is now believed it went down in Hammond’s bay. The boat was worth $70,000 and was insured for $65,000. The cargo was also fully insured. The losses to lake shipping in the gale of Wednesday night and Thursday of last week exceed those of any previous storm iu April that lake mariners can recall. The last of the wrecks has probably now been reported, as a num bor of boats, about which there was some anxiety, have all been heard from. The money loss aggregates about $290,000, with un insurance of $205,000. The nine men who composed the crew of the steamer Newell Eddy complete the list of the loss of life. The boats wrecked number fifteen.
resist the attractions offered by such superior people. They crowded round them and were taken in thousands. In slavery they were docile, attached, obedient, with few wants and excellent
health.'
These queer people have only one fault—a love for ants, mice and serpents, and a habit of speaking to yer with their heads on the ground and their heels in the air. Yer is their idea of n superior power, to whom they talk in this comical nature when they are dispirited or angry, or tired of ants and snakes, and longing for unknown food. The Dokos seem to come nearest of all people yet discovered to that terrible cousin to humanity, the.ape.
HEAVY ARTILLERY.
CRUSHED IN A CHURCH.
LIkIiI Women and I'lvu ellIIdr,*11 Trampled to Death at Naple*. Naples, April 25.—A fatal panic oc curred Sunday evening in the church of Torre Annunziata. During the serv ices which were attended by a very large number of persons, part of the draperies about the altar was blown against a candle. The flames spread with great rapidity and the congregation made a rush for the doors. The wildest excitement prevailed, and worn en and children were thrown to the floor and trampled upon. The fire was quickly extinguished, and when some semblance o r order was restored it was fount! that eight women and five children had been crushed to death, while hundreds of others had been more or less seriously injured.
Ant lci-t Gun* That Throw Knormou* Pro J«ctll«*. In 1478 Mohammed II., in firtaning the siege of Scutari in Albania, employed fourteen heavy bombards, the lightest of which threw a stone shot of 870 pounds weight, two sent shot of 500 pounds, two of 750 pounds, two of 850 pounds, one of 1,200 pounds, five of 1,500 pounds, and one of the enormous weight of 1,640 pounds, enormous even in those days, for the only guns whose shot exceed the heaviest of these are our 8(i-ton gun, throwing a 1,700-pound projectile; our 100-ton, throwing one of 2,01)0 pounds, and the 110-ton, throwing an l,800-pound shot witli a high velocity. The stone shot of Mohammed’s guns, says Chambers’ Journal, varied between tw •nty and thirty-two inches in diamet.i r, aliout the same height as a dining table; 2,584 of them were tired on this occasion, weighing, according to a calculation of Gen. Lefroy’s, about 1,000 tons, and were cut out of the solid rook on the spot. Assuming twenty-four inches as'the average diameter of the shot fired at this siege, the total area of the surface dressed was nearly 32.000 square feet. At this siege the weight of the powder fired is estimated by Gen. Lefroy to have been 250 tons. At the siege of Rhodes, in 1480, Mohammed caused sixteen basilisks or double cannon to be cast on the spot, throwing balls two to three feet in diameter
Two Yount; Mon Drowned* Cleveland, O., April 25.—Three young men, Julius Falk, Martin Arelt and Charles Liptak, on Sunday rowed out to the breakwater, where, in an attempt to mukc a landing, tin* boat capsized and Falk and Arelt were drowned. Liptak, who kept hold the bow of the boat, was almost dead when a tug picked him off. The bodies have been r ■ • overt d.
other blood purifiers, all cracked up to bo the bust, purest, most peculiar and wonderful, but bear iu mind ' for your own sake), there’s only one guaranteed blood-purifier and remedy for torpid liver and all diseases that come
from bad blood.
That ono—ntanding solitary and alone
sold on trial, is Dr. Pierces Golden Med', -pjjgy aro so much better off, you know,
Just the Tiling. A waa' was on a visit to a lunatic asy- , . Buffalo Lxqu'rand as the physi dan in charge was taking him about, it happened that^ several of the wilder patients were screaming in
chorus.
“One of the hardest problems I have to deal with,” said the doctor, “is to find employment for those in my charge.
Beymer-Bauman” “Eckstein’’
Fannestock”
“Anchor’ “Morley’
If you are going to paint, it will pay you i send to us Tor a book containing informa* tion that may save you many a dollar ; it
book containing e you many a <
Will only cost you a postal card to do so. NATIONAL LEAD CO., t Broadway, New York. Cincinnati branch, Cincinnati, • . . Ohio.
L! WOOL!
I will be al the old Greencustlo Woolen Mill un! ! July 1, and pay tho highest market price'for all the Wool in this and adjoining counties.
DANIEL KELLEY.
a * :**• • * N .
Iloslon .'tlilluitry And Motion Store.
\ext boor I'tisf of <. The Latcxt tmtl Jicxt in Sjtrinff (ioods m ntoch and to Arrive dnriny thvt ntir< itnon. Tr'untnintf finuriint n-d.
I’rire.s </intrant< ed. . j ,>n J mv , Wj T ;• WMr alf.i w. liiliiiM.
illiil)
* .rfc> xv **u. - -
K<»i<>‘«* oi Stile ol i*i rnoral I'roperij .
Notice is hereby given that the* undersigned, administrator of the* estate of James M. Sharp, lute of I utnum county, Indiana, deceased, will offer for sale at public outcry, to the highest and best bidder, at the lute residence of b -.id decea.a d, two and one-hal f miles north-west of Koelsville, in said couuty, on
THURSDAY, TIIE FIRST DAY OF JUNE, 1893,
All the person.il property of tiie deceased nut taken hy the widow, consisting of horses, cows, hogs, sheep, wag »ns and farmiurr implements.
TERMS OF SALE.
Five dollars and under cash in hand; over Hve dollars :i credit of nine months, purchaser giving noti wi ill approved s - unity waiving valuation and appraisment laws. Sale to begin at 10 o’clock i\. m.
2\pr. 24, 1H9J. sts
BENTON SIIA UP, Administrator.
AoGr«* Oi
I 1 '?lift *
th
< Ufi'tiit til of est ite of Ldin omb
UtrLtm
Court, April
In the imiu* r Gu. i' iii«. .e caM-d. Iu tho Putimn*
Term. ! tit'S.
Ni 'i - i* '.’■•roby gi\ *« i ! v i«f th-* ’uder^ierned a- Executor oi the c.tate oi Edgoomb • ia'1:iaiiig deoea-H. h p-sented unci filed
. Lit . vouchers in final
aid -laie. ud tuat
I.lgPit Sentence In a Noted Case.
Bohton, April 24.—In the United States circuit court, Asa P. Potter, convicted by a jury some w« ks atfo of
false certification of checks drawn upon the failed Maverick national bank, of whieh he wa£ president, was sentenced by Judge Putnam to sixty days' imprisonment in Cambridge jail and to pay a
fine of $1,000.
hi* .'Co.. -••ttlcm »•
th, will muo u;t I ' 'I * exaraina- : ' I • l I ( 111 I i:ne •i i r- - in ■ : t'*teil i n ml i'*t('p .ir f'i|ii red e . in ud '.'Hurt, i. I i in, ., o iiit u. n a y i i.-i' hit, .'hy -.lid iwenuntand voucher* should not be »|>or"Ved. An ! < •• hi ir? of find estate, ir.d 1 ntlicre interested tburein, are also hereby required -it the time and place nfor> aid. to ■ ppearand make proof n! their heirship or olfiim to my part of * >'| - tate. JA.MK.t A. (.1 11,11 A MS. 2t2 Exrcutor.
Col.l-Hloodccl .Murder at St. I.otila. St. Louis, April 25.—Mathew Renecker, a German butcher. 25 years old and unmarried, was shot and instantly killed Sunday night by Isaac Dickson (colored) in a saloon at the corner of Chouteau avenue and Manchester road. The killing was unprovoked and cold-blooded. Dickson was arrested.
J
1 Tho uicKB weatnor Forecast May is as follows: After a few days of cool, clear weather, about the 7th it will grow warmer in the west, and during the 8th to 11th the warm will increase as it advances eastward over the continent, resulting in many storms about th 8th, 9th, 10th. There is a marked tendency to D ost, as a rule, from about the 10th to 15th of \May, especially wdien storms occur
1 or b^lj.PEf' 5 '-
if they arc occupied in some way.” “Doctor,” said the visitor, after a moment’s thought, “why don’t you set them to inventing college yells?”
J -f x-
cal Discovery.
Ifit doMn’t do good tn akin,icalp and acrof-
‘“h c“ Cooper to &’B. Bridges et al., land in ulcus diseases and pulmonary consumption Russell tp . *1. 1 Isoitly lunifcrofuln—just let its makers know
Nathan Chapman, Comr. to Louisa Hnnne- an( j Ket y 0Ilr money back.
“n'i 'hap,nan 1 Com" to'j* C.'Vas, land int Talk’s cheap, but to back a poor medicine, Madison tp., $3,080. j or a common one, by sellinR it on trial, as A. Monday to J. A. Flannigan, land in War-! „ 0oIden Meb | ea i Discovery” is sold, would
e .L t*. Cully to C. H. & Susan Grimes, lot in | bankrupt the largest fortune. ! , , > t _ t i „ ( .„ na t q'h 0 Bninbridge. $225 I Talk's cheap, but only “Discovery” is puar- packet-boats on the Luc canal, int
1 Irishman offered to work his passage to
dee, $225
Brick Chapel Cemetery Co. to A. B. Hanks, allte j -
Cut’s Had Bargain.
Jay Gould once told a story about an Irishman. It was when there were
lot for $30.
Sheriff P.C. to J. W. Cole, lot in Green-
cnstle, $61.50.
G. A. UobltK to Oscar Dobbs, land in Mill
Creek tp.. $2,000.
R. 8. Davis to N. M. Weathers, land in War-
ren tp., $505. C. B. & R.
to H. C.
. . . iRi
Cooper, land in Russell tp., $3,815. _W. M. HoouULet al. to A. J. Golf, land iu ■ n-me 11 tn , „ *' • -
Notice to Taxpayers. Notice is hereby (riven to all who are dei n quent iu p >vment of their taxes that if they do no pay Iv i’ore JUNE 1, 1803 their names and the amount of their delinquent tuxes will be published. W. A. BOWKN. Treasurer of Putnam County. . April SOlWri. 3ta
* J - jvu
1 Buffalo, and they set him leading the 1 hor;.es that towed the boat. lie worked
77t« tail thanci
of the consumptive
is usually taken when he “ goes south.” Alas how
many never return nitre’ Dr Fenner’s A, L ' old, ’ a taken J = r in 5 drop doses on a V, ^ 1 j ! = i small lump of sugar ~ ' 7 I IS one* in two hours, 4' i ’j ' CUKES CONSUMP- * 1 f nox. It has been -**/ Vj stigmatized as a “cure all.” That ts ~ ^ unjust. It claims to cure but one disease, viz.: INFLAMMATION, But that appearing In so many forms makes a long list of names. It certainly looks like a big Jump from corns and felons to consumption. But each is Inflammation, and Inflammation can no more thrive under the application of this remedy than potato bugs can under parts green It kills it. If no inflammation then there would be no consumption: nrreat it and you arrest tho consumption. Mr. S. L. Amphlett, Clearmont, South Dakota writes: “I am a well man and cannot say enough in praiso of Golden Relief. Took it ns directed. In two weeks cough had ceased and throat trouble oi years standing disap-
Coimnissioitil 'sSutroj Ural {'.state Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, commissioner duly app Intcd by the Cir-
mty, action now pending in said court, wherein Joel Dobb? t! al. are plaintiffs, and Martha J. Dobbs et al. are defendants, will in pursuance of an order of said court, offer for sole at public outcry, to the highest bidder, at tiie Court House door, in the city of Oreencustle, Indiana, on
SATURDAY, THE TWENTIETH DAY OF MAY, 1893, At 10 o’clock 0. m., the following described revl estate in Putnam county, Indiana, towit:
Tiie east half of tho northeast quarter of section thirty-five ,35), and the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of said section thirty-five i3’i , iu township fourteen 14) north, of range three ,3) west.
Also all that part of the southeast quarter of section twenty-six ('26 , in said township nnd range, that lies south of the National Road.
TERMS OF SALE.
One-third 1 1 :j cash, one-third ()>,) In nine i9) and one-third 1 , 1 in eighteen ’is) months,
deferred payments to he secured by mortgage on said real estate, and evidenced by notes bearing 3 per cent, iraterest from b.tc and waiving valuation and appraisement laws and
providing for attorney's fees. QUINTON BKOAD8TREKT,
4t52 Commissioner.
peered. The Golden Reilef is all you claim for it. I could tell of other wonderful cures.” This is
(
faithfully for two days, doing a great the brief tale of a r au who had had the "hectic
deal of thinking. On the third day he !
thought it out. ‘Hy the powers,-' he j Golden Relief lie did not “go south.” To-day t .ii,l "I moierht m well walk ns work ’ he Is a well man. Try It. If not satisfied with said, I motght a» wen warn as wont D onj , y refunmd. No noreoUes. do Lie passage. And walk he did, vyttli-; m [ U eral poisons in it. Bafe and certain. Never, . .mil ^yen thanking his emp! disappoints. Oo^abksgoouful curve LaGrippe^
Bald estate is supposed to he solv Dated this 20th day of April, tuns.
BENTON 8
John P. Ailee, Atty. 3t’2
8HARP,
Administrator.
Woiii’i Oskmcha Ezjoji’.ica, profusely illustrated
Ills at pon
handsomely bound, sells at popular price, nays good commissions. Everybody needs it just at this time and will buy it. Exclusive
territory gi " —
live circula
»%
of A'lutlniNlrnllou.
Notice is hereby Riven that the undersigned ins been appointed by the Clerk of the Circuit Jourt of Putnam county, State of Indiana,
has been;
Court of : iSlliL ., - -
Administrator of the estate of James M. Sharp, late of Putnam couuty, Indiana,
deceased.
Sabi estate is supposed to be solvent.
WANTED SOLICITORS
to handle tiie Ofichl Dircottty .'jf;ro::o B:oi of ’.to
ven. Send for handsome descrip- «. CO.VKEY CO., fotli.isrj, Chloigo, 111.
For sale, a beautiful home on East Seminary street; house of eight rooms, largo shade trees, large lot, choioe fruit of all kinds, tf II. A. Mills.
t\
J
MMMBM
- ttiitf
