Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 34, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 August 1879 — Page 6
THE IKDIAHA STATE SENTINEL, WEBnE&DA MOUSING AUGUST 20, 1879.
ABASCADOT.
XU never bear my darling's morning greeting any more, 111 never Kiss tier pretty lips behind the school house door; Those happy things ol childhood with me fore'er are o'er, Never again to return to this rough, rocky shore. With her I seemed in heavenly bliss on many a summer day, "When from the other children we chanced to slip away; In my ears stall ring my loved one's voice and the things she used to say. While beneath a tall shade tree we innocently play. Around us bloomed the lily and the sweet forget-me-not. But neither were more happy nor contented with their lot. Than we were in those happy days that passed us like a shot, While we were on the bans or the sweet Abanoadot. It would take years, and years, and years, my love for her to tell, To tell the love I had for this sweet little angel Belle And so with kisses on her lips I bid the girl Expecting oily in Heaven to meet her parallel. RELIGIOUS NOTE AND ANECDOTE. The man who does not help us at the right moment does not help us at alL He who has a true friend has great riches; be who has a false friend is hopelessly in debt. . There is happiness enough in the world for all of us. The chief difficulty is in getting our share of it. Many a man would be shocked at Ms own wickedness, were he to record his settled purpose not to give heed to the heavenly -calling. Yet he does not obey it, and dies in his sins. ' A kind word Is worth sometimes more than a dollar. And yet if the exchange could be made at par everybody would make a business of saying kind words, and so their kindness would be destroyed. The effect of an example of virtue on others varies according to character. In the low and vicious it begets envy. In the ingenuous it arouses the spirit of imitation. In the eminent it awakens gratitude. Last Sunday a Sunderland, Mass., superintendent, after the lesson was closed, asKed the little boys the following question from the smaller question book: "Who knows better than father or mother?" A hi tie five-year-old promptly answered, "I do." Visits to 15 churches m the east end of London show as great discrepancy between church sittings and worshipers as is seen in New York. On a certain Sabbath last month heads were counted, and 905 persons were found in churches that could accommodate 14,478. Simpson College, at Indianola, la., is about to close, and probably one or more of the other colleges under the patronage of the Methodists in that State will do the same to insure the establishment of a first-class institution at Des Moines; as is proposed aDd in process of accomplishment. The venerable William S. Plumnier, D. D., of North Carolina, entered his seventy-eighth year July 26. He is vigorous, and one of the most respected ministers of the Presbyterian church. Articles from his pen frequently appear in the religious papers. In his younger years he was a prolific writer. He is the author of 29 volumes and 91 tracts, which have been published by New York, Philadelphia and Richmond (Ya.) houses. A poor woman, who had attended several confirmations, was at last noted by the bishop, who thought it very strange that there should be at least a half a dozen old ladies in the world looking so exactly alike and all seeking confirmation. So one day he detained her and said, "My friend, haven't I seen you here before?" She humbly courtesied and replied, with the most charming innocence, "Yes, your lordship; I find its good for the rheumatiz, and as I have it bad, I get confirmed as often as I can." The affairs of the Bom an Catholic church in England, says an English provincial paper, are occupying a great deal of the attention of the propaganda. The pope has ordered the delay of the consecration of the new bishops of Northampton and Middles borough; and it is not improbable that strong steps will be taken to check the centralizing policy of Cardinal Manning, which his suffragans are bound to support openly, lest they should share the fate of Archbishop Ernngton, who was deposed without trial from the see of Westminster by Pius IX. THE STAGE ASD STAGE PEOPLE. Billy Birch, on a recent fishing excursion, hauled up an immense bullfrog. No sooner had the new arrival opened his mouth than Billy exclaimed: "Good graciousl Charley Backus, I didn't know that you'd got here before me." Kalulu, one of the cleverest artists upon the London press, and very popular as an off-hand sketcher of notorieties upon the variety stage, has arrived in New York, and will appear here as soon as arrangements can be effected. He draws without the tnck of previous preparation of the canvas any portrait that may be called for by the spectators, with the accuracy and celerity of a colossal photograph. Said a grizzly old pioneer to Remenyi after late concert in Virginia City: "I aint much on the fiddle, mister, but you bet yer life I know good playin' when I strike it. I was to hear you last night, and I never run afoul of anything like it. You're a fiddler from Bitter creek, that's what you are, an I kin lick the man 'at sez you aint." Remenyi seemed a good deal tickled and chatted affably with bis argonautic admirer until that worthy insisted on dragging him into a saloon, when he made bis escape. Marion Darcy, the living statue of the Park theater, seems to be a subject tor curious peculation. The Herald says that she Is an actress of great reputation and experience in England, and hints that Manager Abbey, having seen her there, could not rest until he had secured her for two weeks at his the ater. The World, on the other hand, de scribes her as "a young lady of society who has already acted in the West under another name." These accounts conflict; but we Darcy it is of no consequence. People are hungry for theatricals, and if Miss or Mrs. Darcy turns out to be a good actreis with strong play, "What's in a name?" hem, Sbakspeare. Two New York favorites are pitted against each other at tier Majesty's Opera. On July 22 Mme. Etelka Oerster was stated to be indisposed," and "Faust" was submitted for Rigoletto. Mme. Gersters' "indisposition" was not announced till within a very short time of the closing of the box-office, but opera goers seemed to think the change anything but a misfortune. The performance was, indeed, a highly satisfactory one. Mme. Marie Roze, without rehearsal, and at an hours notice, willingly undertook the role in which she made her debut , in this country, and abundantly proved that, although time had matured her voice and her dramatic powers, the French artist still managad to retain the freshness and unartificiality of her creation. Kilsson has been interviewed. "It is not enough," she said, "to possess a voice and knowledge of musfo, and some histrionic talent, or whatever it is, to sing through an opera xoo must be strong physically. brutally strong. It is the knowledge of this -which makes lyric artists so sensitive when they are said to be 111. They know that without pnysicai strengtn to sing through oca u opera as onengnn,- lor instance. art, talent, genius, what yon will, are use-
to the opera or to concerts as one of the audience, but to the. theater, English or French. Mme. NilBSon taid she had enjoyed herself beyond everything, the night before; she had been to the theater, and had seen Mrs. John Wood, who had recognized her instantly, In Nileeon or Nothing an incident which reminds the old play-goer of the visit of Ristori to the Olympic theater to see poor Robson play in Robert Brough's travesty of "Medea?' London is amused by a photograph taken by Mora, of a'gentleman of martial aspect, wearing a helmet and a lovely uniform, and standing in the attitude of one about to gobble up the enemy. His left hand grasps the handle of the sword with which he can strike the foe (if he can find the foe), while his left arm, curved, reposes on bis martial hip. His noble brows are shaded by his helmet, from either side of which emerges a gray whisker. This portrait, which was shown to two impresarii, three conductors, and an English operatic impressario and conductor rolled into one. One of them
guessed it was Bismarck, another the Duke of Cambridge, and another Wellington. Hut when somebody whistled the melody "La Donna e' mobile," each and every one of those eminent musicians cried "Why it's Mapleson!" And so it is. The gallant colonel tried to suppress a speaking likeness, but a copy of it has been wafted across the Atlantic. CURRENCY. . . No half-way doin's, bredren! Itll nebber do, I say. Go at yonr task an' finish it, and den's de time to play : For eben if de crap is good, de rain'U spile de bolls. Unless you keeps aplckin'in de garden of your souis. "Jack, your wife is not so pensive as she used to be." "No, she has left that off and turned expensive." a .Boston court has decided that if a woman lends money to her husband she can not get it back. The decision will not be new to many wives. Pilkins calls fan old cat that climbs on his back fence and howls all night, Macbeth, because it doth murder sleep. This is old, but if we don't set it going again somebody else will. An old bachelor, who particularly hated literary women, asked an authoress if she could throw any light on kissing. "1 could." she said, looking archly at him ; "but I think it is better in the dark." "Put out your tongue a little further." said a doctor to a fair invalid; "a little further, if you please." "Why, doctor, do you think a woman's tongue has no end?" said the gentle sunerer. Boston Journal. "What's de time o' day. ole woman?" said a colored countryman to Aunt Milly, trying to poke fun at the brass chain that held her front door key around her neck. "Look at de town clock, chile. Dat's built for po' folks." It is said that a young man at Saratoga who seemed deep in iove, last summer, with a young lady of golden tresses, this season brushes brown hair oil the lapel of his coat. This doesn't indicate fickleness so much as an activity in the hair trade. An old bachelor was recently heard saving to a young lady: "There is more iewelry worn nowadays than when I was voune: but there's one piece I always admired, which I don't often see now." "What is that?" asked the miss. "A thimble," was the reply. One of the most beautiful compliments to woman was that paid to Lady Elizabeth Hastings by Sir Richard Steele. , He said of her: "Though her mien carries much more of invitation than command, to behold her is an immediate check to loose behavior, and to love her is a liberal education." A correspondent at Portland. Ore., fur nishes this of the "Heathen Chinee:" "John" had bought a watch at our jeweler's, but as it ran too slow, he took it back, savins. 'Watchee no good." "What is the matter with it?" asked the jeweler. "Oh," said John. watchee to muchee by m by." Harpers' Drawer. A country woman stopped some 10 min utes in front of a store in Springfield to gaze at a patent fly-trap in operation, which was prettlv well hlled, and alter studying the placard, $2, intently, moved on, after piping out, to the great amusement of the bystand ers: "Two dollars! 1 wouldn't give two cents for all the flies in Springfield." Tbey were walking along the village street. and they were newly wedded, husband and wife. The air was insufferably hot, when he, looking at the signs, "Ice cold soda" and Lemon ice cream, said: Darling, ice is very bad for the teeth; it ruins the enamel." Then she took out her new set, and putting them gently behind the tying post , said "Sweety, we will take all the precautions and save all the enamel." 'Look at de pieanna. folkses." said old Sam Johnson the other night, to a roomful of his sable friends; "look at de pieanna. Dere is whar yous sees an illegory, showing the proper spear ob de brack man. Doan yous see de common notes, the white trash down in the lower row, all r in togedder like a whitewashed boa'd fence? An' up in de balconia yous see de brack notes, de people ob color, arranged in select assemblies of twos and frees." An old man fell dead in Mansville, Pa., one Sunday night recently, while sitting in the parlor where his dauehter and ner young man were sparking. It may be that the conduct of the young couple sickened the old man and caused his death, but it will do no harm, and perhaps much good, to cut this paragraph out and show it to the oik folks who are addicted to sticking in the parlor on Sunday evenings when their daughter's beau wants to tell her a great many secrets and so forth. An old fellow, living on the west side and who has a son just entering in vemle society, made a terrible mistake the other night. A note was laid at his plate, which said: "Miss - , No. street, requests your com pany Tuesday evening." He combed bis bald head, and went there. A little girl ushered him into the parlor. "Is Miss in?" said he. "Yes, that is my same," faaid the girl. "Isn't Johnny coming to-night?" Johnny was his son. It all occurred to the old man in a moment. He thought Miss was an older sister. He wiped his bald head, took his bat, and said, "ao, Johnny has the cholera infantum. Just called to tell you he couldn't be here." And the old party went out and kicked himself. Nashville Banner. His Father's War Record. Detroit Free Press. One of the poe toffies brigade of bootblacks was yesterday telling how brave his father was when he heard burglars about, and added that the oid man was a soldier In the late war. "So was mine," quietly put in another bov. "But your father nerer killed a man down there, and mine did." retorted toe nr-i. "Pooh I" sneered the other: " 'twan't nnth in to kill a man standin' right up to be shot at, but when you can say your old dad beat a sutler out of a pair of boots and $12 vortn of ca ned soup, then you kin make this 'ere crowd believe you're an onion with four tops!" ; Grains of Gold. It is the best proof of tb, virtues of a fainilv circle to see a happy fireside. Prosperity seems to be scarcely safe unless it is mixed with a little adversity. To be really and truly independent is to nnmrt ourselves bv our own exertions. Success has a great tendency to conceal and throw a veu over me deeds of men. An able man shows his spirit by gentle words and resoi" actions; he is Del r p"
WENDELL HxUPS.
"A Nation of BanV.upU" "Resumption" a Sherman Unokaifni Oppression of Labor Spicy 'falk. Bosaow, Aug. li Wendell Phillips has Just written a letter to Solon Chase explaining his views on the present financial condition of the country. It is intended as a reply to Secretary Sherman's great speech in Portland, which has been so widely circulated. He arraigns the entire conduct of the Republican leaders for the past 10 years, and especially their neglect of the negro in the South. He thinks that his prophecies In regard to President Hayes' "Southern policy" have been fulfilled, and that the party is now in its decadence, whioh be attributes to the breaking of all its most sacred promises. "No party in our history," says he, "has ever fallen from such a height or to such depth of disgrace." After reviewing in his own way the finances of the Governmentsince the war, he continues: THK KATI0N BANKRUPT. What is its result? In 1866 the property of the Nation was estimated at $25,000,000,000. In the opinion of the best judges the Nation is bankrupt to-day. That is, if called upon to-day to pay its National, State, city, county, town and corporation debts, and for that purpose its property sold at present values, there would not be realized from such sale enough to pay those debts. If the property could be sold at its real worth, amply would it pay our debts. But, if sold at the prices to which Republican folly has reduced it, we are bankrupt. Prices the world over were never so low as now. Yet our producing classes are so unable to buy what they produce, and there wages are so low, that we are forced to export to find a market, and our exports exceed our imports, a very rare thing in our history. Were it to be so when fair prices ruled in the world's markets there would be great reason to rejoice. But when a Nation only keeps its spindles moving by selling goods to foreign Nations at cost, or even below cost, or sencs its products abroad because its people are too poor to buy or use them as Ireland has done for a century such a fact means loss, not prosperity. Jf or the first time in our history Legislatures and conventions have spent weeks in discussing "Tramps." So many thousands of unemployed men, and so many more on the verge of want, that in the United States the masses are dangerous, as in Mexico, Italy and Spain! What wickedness and folly have called this element so disgraceful to the Government that creates it into our streets? The administration which takes a busy and prosperous country and turns it into a land of bankrupts; its streets full of men begging in vain for work, or driven at the point of the bayonet, as in Pennsylvania, to work at starvation wages; with 200,000 men in America rotting into criminals; our highways and country towns, for the first time in our history, shrinking from the sight of a stranger, and our courts construing every stroller into a ruffian such an administra tion provokes only contempt and indignation when it comes before the people and expects anything but the gravest condemna tion. . We have been ruled by conceited and shallow demagogues, made willing or igno rant tools by grasping capital, ruled by Rothschild and Belmont, Gould and the gold room, cajoling Congress and using our funds as speculative kites to serve their selfish ends; ruled by what Chatham called the "cannibals ol wall street," merciless tinylocks, laughing at the ease with which they have cheated our bank presidents and Boards of Trade ; coolly killing the goose that was laying the golden eggs, and leaving gulled presidents and boards astonished at the jug glers who left them a table of empty cups while their own pockets were lull ot gold. But Mr. Secretary (Sherman says that we are not ruined. "Business is still alive and seems reviving. But, my friend, it Is as impossible to answer John Sherman as to find fault with a weathercock. That can always claim that it points the way the wind blows, aud so can be. There is no doctrine in finance that he has not advocated, and none that he has not denied; no principle on either side that he has not asserted, none that he has not scouted. His record will be equally good whether hard money carries the day or we Greenbackers succeed. . "HAVI WB RESUMED?" Another bold-faced Munchausen is Sher man's assertion that we have resumed. He knows perfectly well that In this matter the administration has "kept its promise to the ear and broken it to the hope." He knows that, in the sense in which Congress ordered resumption and hard money men threatened and expected resumption, and ss what they are fully resolved to nnany mate resump tion, it hr.s never come, and that no Government would have dared to attempt it. ine Greenbuckers claimed and proved that at any time during tbe last five years Govern ment might have resumed if it would let the greenback Iivh and be receivable at the Custom House. The hard money men scouted betb conditions, and proudly proclaimed they would resume on the grave ot me greenback. When the time came they sub mitted gladly, like coy maidens, only too siad to be conquered, to re-issuing the greenback, and Sherman himself violates the law every day in ordering them to be received for duties He knows that he is obliged to no this; tnat without it resumption would be a lailure. Only by submitting to tbe superior wisdom of their opponents, and also by violating their own absurd and wicked legislation, are tbev able to-dav to Dlav this farce ot re sumption. Hypocrisy has been well-dehned aa "the bomaee vice pays to virtue, no this cunning trick of the bankrupt Republi cans is stealing the livery ot Heaven to serve the devil ia. I do not ask men to be Hove in this straoee theft on my assertion. The PhiladelDhia Led ner. whose money arti cles are known to be inspired oy one ot ine strongest, ablest and most successful of our banking house, roundly and distinctly tells Sherman that he has not resumed. In Portland, with cool impertinence, if it were not. rather, heartless cruelty, Mr. Sherman wishes you to forget that by this delav of resumption in the vain effort to gratify their caprice a caprice the stern experiment of reality obliged them at last to surrender when by receiving greenbacks at the Custom House it might have come equally well in 1875, thousands of merchants have been made bankrupt, business has been ruined, property destroyed, the Nation made bankrupt, and thousands left idle to rot into criminals. OPPRESSION OF LABOR. This tyranny of the money, which breaks down our stoutest men and makes nanarupt our strongest merchants, is something to be feared. The slave power we defied, and perhaps we have killed it, though ome things look as it we nan -scotcnea ine snase, not killed it:" but this tyranny of mom-y has always been the death warrant o( Repub lics. Touriow weed says: "the labor party owes its existence to the provocations of the Government and the capitalists. It is tbe result of a concerted oolicv to protect capital ar tbe ex Dense of labor. During tbe lait 15 years labor has been onerously taxed, while capital was exempt. In all these years Congress has shown no sympathy with labor, and, when legislating at ail, has unl formly legislated in favor of capital. blinder policy and, at tbe same time, a more untastand oppressive one, was never pur sued in a free country, and the only wonder is that toe issue did not come sooner." o . Burke said (recognizing that there is faith due to the people aa well as to the holders ot nnblic securities!: "It ia to the property of the citizn, and not to the de-p-andarf t -lit" nf t" tbat the
: i
claim of the citizen Is prior in time, parv I mount in title, superior in equity. Forgetting this, the Republican party broke the pledge which made greenbacks exchangeable with bonds, cheating the people out of millions, which tbey gave the Shylocks. Second, they ordered the bonds, which Sherman said, in the Senate, in 1869, were payable in paper, to be paid in coin. Swindle No. 2. of some $300,000,000. Third, they" demonetized silver, and left the bonds payable in gold alone, swindle no. s, wnicn robbed the people of hundreds of millions more to fill the pockets of the Rothschilds. Measure, if you can, the impudence ot such a party the Pecksniffs of politics with their hands in their neighbors' pockets, boring their victims all the while with ever lasting chatter about "public honesty." Th ra M AnnnnK R aVi man tj a?vAYt all the sacrifices woman can make. A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO WII A FORTUNE! Kintri Grand Distribution, Class I, At New Orleans. TUESDAY, September 9th, 18711 112th Monthly Drawing. Louisiana State Lottery Co. This institution was nsnianr lncornorateL. by the Legislature of the State for educational and charitable purposes in 1838 for ttie term of Twenty- li ve Yearn, to which contract the Inviolable faith of the State Is pledged, with a capital of 1,0(10,000, to which it has since added a reserve fund of (350,000. Its grand butGL HTTMBKK DISTRIBUTION Will take place monthly on the second Tuesday. It irsvsa scales ob PosTPONxe. Look at the following distribution: CAPITAL PRIZE 830 OOO. . 100,000 Tickets at 2 each. Half Tickets, II. LIST OF PRIZES. 1 Capital Prize j3Q,O0C 1 1 6,000 6,000 6,000 10.000 3 Prises of 12,500, 6 - um. 30 " 600., 100 " 100., aoo " 60., ... 10,000 10,UUU 10,000 10,010 600 " 30 ixoo " le, APPROXIMATION PRIZES. Approximation Frizes of 1300 do do 200 ( do do 100 3,700 L8C0 800 1,857 Prises amounting to.4110,400 Responsible oorresoondlnE aeents wanted at all prominent points, to whom a liberal compensation will be paid. Application for rates to elnbs should only be made to the Home Office in New Orleans. Write, dearly stating roll address, for further information or sena orders to M. A. DAUPHIN, F. O. Box 692, New Orleans, La. or same at No. 319 Broadway, New York. Or J.T. Woodward. IS North Illinois street Indianapolis. All our Grand Extraordinary Dra wines are under the supervision and management of Generals G. T. Beauregard and Jubal A. Early It is passive suicide to permit the health to he undermined, the constitution b-oken, and tbe lease of life shortened by nervous complaints, constipation, biliousness. Indigestion, headache, or intermittent and remittent fevers, when it is a fact established by unquestioned evidence that the Bitters will prevent and remove these evils. All tbe symptoms of lassitude ana general aeniuty speeany vanisn when tills lnvigorant Is given a trial. f or sale ty an Druggists .ana respeciaoie aeaiers generally. r a wn l A rtr 3 v WEAK BACK. Benson's Capcine Porous Plaster. This article is one which ieally possesses extraordinary merit. By consulting reliable physicians In your own locality, you will find that tbe above Is true. It Is far superior to the ordinary porous plaster, all the so-called electrical appliances, and to all external remedies whatever. It contains entirely new elements which cause it to relieve pain at once, strengthen and cure where other plasters will not even relieve. For Lameness and Weakness of the Back, Diseased Kidneys, Lane and Cbest Dl tllou ties. Rheumatism, Neglected Colds, Female Affections, and all local aches and pains. It Is simply the best remedy ever devised. ! hoio Dy au uruggisis. Price 23 cents. s "XTOT1CE 18 hereby given to the citizens of tne second ui w.ira, in tne city or In dianapolis, Center township, Marion county, Indiana, mat i, v,nari. s werne, a male inhabitant of said ward, over the aseof twentyone years, will apply to the board of county commissioners of said county, at their Sep tem per meeting, mr a license to sen, lor one year, spirituous, vinous ana man liquors, in a lesi Quantity than auuart at a time, with the nrlv ilege of allowing the same to be drank on my Tiremlses. The precise location of the premises whereon I desire to sell said 11a uors is described as fol lows: A part of section thirty-Blx (36), townsnip niieen iio). norm oi range mme (.) east, and known aa Exposition Oronods, bounded on me north by Twelfth street, on the east by Central avenue and by Exposition avenne. In the city of Indianapolis, Center townsl ip, Ma rion county, xuuiwua. (Signed) CHARLES WERBE. TTOTICE is hereby given to the citizens of IX the First ;1) ward, in the city of Indianapolis, tjenier townsnip, Marlon county, Indiana, that I, Joseph Bentz, a male luoauitanior said ward, over the age of twenty-one years, will apply to the board of noun t v commissioners of said county, at their September meeting, for license to sell for one year, spirituous, "inoUs and malt liquors, In a less Quantity m. a Quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing tbe same to be drank on my premises. The precise location of the premises whereon I desire to sell said Unuors. la described an follows: No. M) Halott avenue, in the city of W . . I . 1 1 I . . I I . . . - . i Dutuitiviu, vcuioi lAjwusuip, iuariou county, munui. (Signed) JOSEPH BENTZ. NOTICE is hereby given to the citizens of the Ninth (Hth) ward, in the city of Indianapolis, Center t -wnsnip, Marlon county, Indiana, tbat I, James Le. a male inhabitant of said ward, over the age of twenty one years, wiu apply to the board of wtnnt.v nnmmf wtlnnfm nf ulH i WUU, 1.1 bll711 Heptember meeting, for a license to sell lor one year, "pi ituoua, vinona ana malt uquors In a leas quantity than a quart at a time, with the prlvUeg of allowing the same to be drank on my pram sea. Tha precise location of the premises wheren I desire to sell said llannra la Horihi follows: Part of lot No. f, outlot No. M, Ray's subdivision, and known aa No. 808 Eut WuhlDKtnn street, in the cltv ot Id --u,
anSTETTElfc flw- CELEBRATED
Notice of Sale
ands Mortgaged to the State of Indiana for the Benefit of the College Fund. Notice Is hereby elven that the following described lands and lots, or so mnch of eacn tract, parcel or lot as may be necessary, will be offered at public sale to the highest bidder at me winn nuuse aoor, west entrance, in tne city of Indianapolis, Indiana, between the hours of 10 a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m on Wednesday, September 10, 1K79; the same being mortgaged to tbe State of Indiana to secure the payment of loans from, or sold on a credit. on account ef tbe College Fund, and forfeited py non-payment oi interest one it: No. 712. Seventy acres off of the south end of the west fraction of the northwest quarter of section nineteen, townBhlp eighteen north, range six west, being situate in Fountain county, Indiana. Mortgaged by Harris Reynolds and America Reynolds his wife. Prin. cipal.SSOO; interest, S51.62; costs, S24; damages. No. 666. Tbe northeast Quarter of section thirty-two (32), In township seven (7) north, of rauge Leu i iuj eust, containing one nunared and sixty (itiO) acres: also the southwest, nnar. ter of the northwest quarter of section five (a), in township six (6) north, of range ten (10) east, containing forty-three and sixty-three hundredths (43 63-100) acres; situate In the county ui xiipiey, iu me otaie oi inaiana. Aiortgagea oy oaran A., v ail. Principal . . T74 no Interest . 80 85 Costs. n i 12 00 Damages . ., , 37 71 Total . tm 59 No. 810. Ten acresoff of the north side of the following described tract, to-wit: Beelnnine at the west line of section nineteen, town fifteen, range four east, thirteen and fifty hundredths chains south of the northwest corner or said section, at Johnson's corner; thence ; south with said line fourteen and forty hun dredths chains; thence east twenty-one and seventy nnnareatns chains; thence north twelve cnains, to Kays line: thence north. fiftv-elKht degrees west with Ray's line, two : and seventy-one hundredths chains; thence north, 87 degrees west, nineteen and thirtyeight hundredths chains, to the place of begin ning: toe last dtscriDed tract containing 80 6-100 acres: situate in Marion county. Indiana. Mortgaged oy w imam Lu lAaeenlelter and Margaret C. Llngenfelter. Principal-.......... 1500 00 interest ,,, .. 52 Damages- 27 63 Total. ..692 42 No. 816. The northwest Quarter of the north east quarter of section nineteen (It),) township twelve ix,) norm oi range (3) east, situate In Johnson county, Indiana. Mortgaged bv j aeon uuimaa ana laanan u. uiiiman. Principal 1100 00 Intesest mi 19 Costs. 12 00 Damages 23 30 Total .. 501 49 No. 858. Lot No. seventeen (17) of Goldberry 8 heirs subdivision of outlot No.forty-sli 4(i), in the city of Indlanapolis.Marion county, Indiana. Mortgaged by John Kaitenhorn and Laura Kettenhorn. Principal-Interest.-. ..(400 00 7 67 12 00 Costs Damages.. 23 38 Total., .4503 00 v. nrn -l-i, i, ... . ,.r - . v. east quarter of section fourteen (14), In town(TO'. . tl mil' ncno i j , n mi in vi iiio iu l ;kii, containing forty acres, situate In Morgan n t v Inftlona f rrt ti (1 trinl hv Tuunn Vwi i neid ana j aua Ann coonneia. Principal 1400 00 Inerest . 47 m Costs . 12 00 Damages. 22 39 Total . 4482 30 No. 1.051. Lot No. thirty-four (341 In Wood ruff's subdivions of lota Nos.(7) seven, (i) eight (9) nine. (10) ten, (11) eleven, (12) twelve, (17J seventeen, tin) eignteen ana (rj) nineteen, in Bethel r . Morris' addition to tne cltv of In dianapolis, Marion county, Indiana. Mort gaged oy ftooert ju.;uriggs. Principal . ... 500 00 Interest 62 32 Costs 12 00 Damages.. . 28 11 Total 46 2 43 No. 1.063. Lots Nog. one (1) and two (2i In the town of Valley Mills, In Marlon county, In diana. Mortgaged oy Jessie F. Hawkins and Minerva Hawkins. Principal . . $300 00 Interest 62 21 Costs 12 00 Damages 27 61 Total .r. f39I 82 No. 999. Lot number two (2) In "Bruce place," according to tbe plat thereof recorded in nlat book number six (61. page one hun dred and twenty-two (122), In the recorder's oilice ot Marion county, saia lot lying ana being In Marlon county, Indiana, mortgaged by j acoD x. w rignt ana saiiy a. w rignt. Principal 1500 00 Interest-..... . 61 i4 Costs . 12 00 Damages 28 08 Total. ..KOI 82 No. 9H6. Beginning at a point in the center of the Fall creek gravel road, and in tbe south line or me southeast quarter oi section twentyfour (24), township sixteen (16), north of range three (3) east, seven (7) chains and nineteen (19) links westoi tne soatneast corner oi said quar ter section ; thence north eleven degrees, east along the center of said road nine (9) chains and thirty-three (33) links; thence north seventy-nine (79) degrees, west at right angles witn said gravel roaa iour ) cnains ana ninety-nine (99) links to the water's edge of the east side of Fall creek: thenoe in a south easterly direction with the meanderings of said Fail creek to a point in me south line oi said Quarter section; tnence east along said line one (1) chain to the place of beginning, containing one and sixtv-fonr hundredths (1 64-100) acres more or less, being situated In Marlon connty. Indiana. Mortgaged Dy uranvuiea. wngnu Principal JoOO 00 Interest.; 63 49 Costs 12 00 Damages.... 28 17 Totalt603 66 No. 1,088. The west half of the southwest quarter of section twenty-three (23), township thiny one (31), north of range two (2), west; also the sonth half of tbe east half of the southwest quarter of tbe same section, township nd range.oon taming one hundred and twenty acres, more or lets, situated in Pulaski county, Indiana, mortgaged by Edward A-Naitner and Ada M.. r aimer. Princi palInterest ,., JRSO 00 25 28 12 00 13 76 Costs... Damages.. Total i 1301 04 The above described lands and lots will be tlratntniKd fnreiuh. Should there be no bid tbev will be immediately offered on a credit nf Ave years, with Interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum, payable In advance; bat in neither case will any bid be taken lor a sum less than the principal, Interest and eosla due as above stated, together with five per cent, damages on amount of sale. Sixty days are allowed the original mortgagor or his legal representatives for redemption upon payment to tbe purchaser of such damages asre fixed bylaw. M.D.MANSON, Auditor of State. Office Auditor of State. Indianapolis, Ind, June 23. 1879. M. -B--rrTrvT7 a. VK itlwAn tA t YM tti KATtH J3i of the Second (2) Ward, In the city of IQUmUHIXHIH, VtJULCr WWUWliu aawU w"";' Indiana, that we, Charles Werbe and Johu Bteln, male inhabltanu of said ward, over the ae of twenty-one yearn, will apply to the Board of Connty OomiBlloner of ald county, 1 Ll w Vkl A. liflAtlBA tn sell lor one year, uplrituoua, vinous and malt a i i .. tlian a nnarl at a t lmo with the privilege of allowing the name to be mi, . in! ATwmlnAN whereon we desire to sell said liquors, is described aa follows: A part of section thirty-alx (36), township fifteen (15) north, range three (8) east, ana known as Exposition Grounds, bounded on I lie uunu u v iwvuiu i.ww, w Central avenne aud by Exposition avenue, in r mnur townahlD. MS-
the Indiana
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