Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 4, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 February 1888 — Page 7
THE INDlAiNfA feTATE SJTIN-EL YV10IöIAr FEBRUARY 29 iöö8.
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Eptiiu cf Wit Hiaaend Ft en tlu A a 7Ü 0 x Famj tu, Paint at Fart Th MaiUr A RcmiiiltC 1C Of Lis A. LawltN Ufo Letter vVrUinc-A Chane for in Poor Mau, Written for The Pen tin el. ICopyrinhted, 1WI A PAlSrDL FACT. Hew seldom dees anything happ?n that rarcJy Decors. Stone the happy days of boyttcd, when I felt it duy of the hoar lo hlv everjthinjt that anybody eke had, I tad, diking 8 varying space of period, and f-.cattersd over closely remote districts of mj mortal frame, colonies of Job's com XorteiF, said by old and wise people to be worth five dollars pieefe, I hays been free from euch prosperity. Aad now that it hu suddenly come upon me again, I know pet b )w to abound. One who has walked Btwmany years in the yale of poverty finds It hail to stand prosperity. . The naked fact in, gentle reader, I hare a distressinglookLig carbuncle on the third vein of my neck. Binxge that a little revolt, no larger than S base ball, shoaM shako to its very foundation an otherwise healthy system, Wfcl.ine 110 ponnda, and yet it is so. It has its foot upon my neck. It is net exactly a constituent part of me, it is an-meckt-ed, as it were. Bat I am not certain jfhetaer it be It or I thst is annex!. I am the biggest, it Is tru?: but I do not ppeur to have any influence m the administration. I have a voice in affairs; a great deal of voice, I am told, by people who want to sleep, bat my appeals and frjoaia da not ailect the r?turns. Tne Government goes right on. It is a groan, itsel! growin' fssUr than my wak patience can compass. It is, indeed, a pain investmerit. It must be amusing to thos? who see me, the varied and cautions experiments or a Jellcw with a tortured and dualled neck to lied an easy position. I am, indeed, 'Zmitnl to find into hew many attitudes the aurnan f jrm divine ctn be distorted. Sorre of them ar cot graceful, and some of them are not striking, bu; under present circumstances all are equally comfortable, with tne exception ot perhapa three or Jpur others wuich are mare so. I am a little apt to grow impatient, I feai while thus exercising my daily ingenuity. "Rjmember Job," sajs'a lady friend toMy. in a tone of a comforter. AEut 1 ask her how can I remember a man )ra I never knew? Is it possible for a ielloar to remembers Btranepr who died mfare he, the fellow, was born But I do thick of him, td contemplate his patient anl vererable rJure with reverence. I wiidi he had had my carbuncle. Not that I tl harshly toward him. but when he fca 1 so id any he wouldn't have noticed one aHTt. Ana OLe caroutiCte 13 nsa oue chdd. No man who has it makes more loij about it than the one with a dozen. Jc3t Bee. I have one, and to save my d terraced mind, I cut bejp writing aout it. Job bad a vhtcdred, I reckon, and never a word did is sy about one of then. He just sat down and scratched hu:3lf wiia oue bird, and wrote grandtr poetry than St ake sp-eare with the other. That is the di3erecce between Job and myself. There ara some other points cf ctiflVreaca, bat lb is cte will do for the present. I tao Iii at tha In't a p'-iasaot subject to thrrut zjion tbe public attention, bat then it is culte as unp'tasant on a private ncs. It xaay make tl'sUs'ffnl reading, but it his fen far more disagreeable a -id painful anting. TBI MASTER. I never heard Luit bat once. I was 5)urg man then, youcger than I am sow. bit I can never forget, and no one whose enui em not towed in humble worsnip at JCte Feet of the M Master enn ever know feie Complete Contecration I made of my ajaiwnue l listened to iim. Me wore tuat Weary and Haughty expression which H as habitual to Ulm, and as Hi crossed the rm to the piano. He received our Humble 3Iorjoege with Majestic yet Awful concen5onion. The very Atmosphere of the Iponi wis ImLsfd with the M Master's 'imtca. As He took off His coat and JOlied up Ui8 S.eeve", I held my breath nith both hand. He played. The U jisster clayed. Under the Magic Touch Iii His Hands the heavens Bam to Lis'en lb hearse chord mutterrd like the Ee ireating Storm, or the electrified keys an 'nil tbe twittering songs of all the Birds of Jjpnnar at once the 8ud burst through yjie Liven Clouds the Moonlight Slept iapcn ins isanta or violets, and singing IBrooks ran Murmuring to the Sea erim iaaged War clanged on the Brazen Snield with mimic Thunder of the Skies, and all the Clamor of the raging Battle shook the ground beneath our feet the room swam with the brilliant perfection of every Mar venous Conceit that sprang Into living Deine under, mis marvellous Execution. and when He raised Both Feet higher than His Head and brought them down upon the keyboard in the Final Grand Hoopla. I knew no mor. for I had Swooned at the M M Master's Feet. I never heard H H Jinn again. A LAWLESS LIFE. Eometimes, when I think what a lawless Hie mine has been, I wonder that the re j pectabie outlaws with whom I am most intimately associated in social, religious, W- M 1 ; 1 a . na pouucai circles nave not elected me cnlef of the band. I think nothing of de fyirg those in authority; I "saas" the President, scoff at Congress, bully the Igia.'atnre, and transgress the laws of the land daily. I drive across the bridge 'faster than a walk," and openly aresr at the five-dollar fine with which the sign board threatens me. I have walked on the irrus" in Fairmonnt Par; in tenirai rar i nare "plucked a leaf, flo tr, or EhraD." I haye "stood on the front platform" for many milea; I hays ---taixta io tne man at the wheel J have "got on and off the cars while In motion;" I have 'smoked bait this shaft;" I have refused to ''keep moving" on Brooklyn Bridge: I have da?. lectedto clear the enow from my sidewalk: I haye dumped ashes into the aliey at early cawn; l do not muzzle niydo?, an4 last year Le waa not registered; I do not always ,-iurn to tne right ' when J am driving; I oo rot always "piwure tickets before en lerir the cars" why, I can't begin to tell DO t all my lawless acta. Bat one .virtue, eye?' inougn it may be considered a nega tive one, l insert cere as a saving clause, I layf never overstated the value of my prop' prtj to tne assessor. THE ART OF LXTTES-WRITIK. In letter-writing be entertaining, bs xbu( og, be brief, and, if you can, be funny. A J anny letter is always welcome. But don't be funny il you can't Don't try to funny. Unless you are morally certain mat your run is lunny inn, save it lor a term on. Nothing in all this world is so flat, irsipid. tasteless, vapid, utterly savorsees, as rat inn. it u heavier than stupid Ity, staler than dullneaa,blanker than vacan cy. How and then I receive a letter which Dome writer who is aa devoid of humor avs a cow is of feataers has tried to xaake funny for my entertainment, nd as I dismally tirade) through tha cireary lines, my heart la painfully diaapxxnntea because l tninx: "What an ex cellent, sensible letter has this good-hearted fellow moiled, because) ha thinks I am an
all tne day." He could write a good Iettr,
too, did he write like his own natural ael(. 'lint." von Bav. MI might write a letter that I thought waa very funny, and vet it would cot be fanny at all.' You can tell a brilliant sun! et from a burning lumber yard. Ton can count the feet of your poemi on jour Borers, and you know tuat stethoscope and phalanx make not a goad rhyme. Yon know when a tnicg is mnnyaua when it is flit. Yon know enough to eit when you are hunjrrj'i don't you? Wsll, then, you know when a eaetcn is really funny and when it is only disastrous itm tation. Well, then," you aay, "you profess to be facny. Do you think that eyerything joa write ia really funny ?' Oh, my tender Telemacbos. if you dreded to see the tID?r ttat contains mv written words as I do; if you went out into tne uiernessaua clobbed yourself with your pen asoften as I do; if with beayy hea-t and tretainft eyes, alone and in the darkness of failure yon buried as many printed jokes, dead in the hour of their birtb, as I do, yon would trade your pen for a hand-saw and paintbrush and write spectacular drama! Way, if vou make one-half as many successes aa I bare marie, and do mat) twice as many failures, the gods will envy you. GIT I HQ THE POOR A CHAlfOI. Give tbe poor man a chance? My sou, the poor man takes about all the chances without waiting to have one given him. 11 yon give him any more chances than he takes, ne will soon own everything, and run the Texas man out of the country. The fact is, we must curtail the poor man's chacceaa little. We must sit down oa him, and hold him down, and give tbe rich man a chance. The psor mau has had things his own way too long. He has crowded tbe rich man out. Cut for the poor man this Old World would have cast anchor six thousand years ago, and ne covered with moss and lidens to-day, like a United States man-of war. Kdgar Allan Toe was the eon of strolliog players; George Peabody was a roy in ä small grocery; Benjamin Franklin, the printer, was the son of a tallow chandler; John Adams was the son of a poor farmer; Ginord, the Lrst editor ol the taarteriy Review, was a common sailor; Cen Jonson rare Ben Joneon was a bricklayer; the father of Shakespeare couldn't spell and couldn't write hi3 own name neither can yon; even his illustrious son couldn't spell it twice alike; Robert Burns was a child of poverty, the eldest of seven children, the family of a poor bank rupt; John Miirou was the sjn of a scrivener; Andrew Jackson was the son of a poor Irisbram; Andrew J3hnsoa was a tailor; Garfie.-d was a b jy of ail work, too poor even to have regular tride; Grant was a tanner; L'.ncola a keel boatman and common farm baid- and tne Prince of Wales is the sou of a Q iwn. It is his misfortune, not his fault; he couldn't help it, and he can't help it now. Bat you see, my dear boy, thaVs all th?re is of him ; he's just the Prime of Wales, and he's only that bf cauao he can't help It Be thank ful, my Bon. that you weran't bjra a prince; be glad that von didn't e.rike twelve the first time, if there is a pitch on your knee and your elbows are glowy, there 13 arme nope lor you, bat never sgiiin let me hear you say that the poor man has no chance. True, a poor lawyer, a poor doctor, a poor printer, a poor work man of any kind his no chance; be de serves to have none, but the poor man mo nopolizes about all the chances there are. Put Laban and Jacob in business to gether anywhere, and in about fif een ears Jacob will not only own about faur fifths of the cattle, but he will hive married about one half his partner's family. Go to, my son, let us give the rich man a chance. Robert J. Bt'RnKTTE. A Memory of Nasby. IGoesiper in Eansas City Times. The last time I saw D. R. Locke he sat in his room at the Lindell Hotel in St. Louis. It ia hardly necessary to add, inasmuch as the reminiscence runs back nearly ten years, that Mr. Locke was very drunk, that is to cay, as drunk as Locke ever got, for he bad a most tremendous capacity. It was during the tour of Neil Bargees in the "Widow BQolt," which Locke had drama tized, and in the profits of which he had a large interest. Although tbe weather was very cold Locke sat in his room in his shirt sletves, without a fire, and with the win dow open and exuding liquor from every pore. He was a very hospitable man, and. like "the General" in the play of 4! " it was his custom to press unon the annunciator and order drinks about four times an hour. Nobody pretended to keep up with him, and after the first two rounds they all dropped out ad heeujojeia monopoly. Mr. Locke bad just rttarnei from the theater and had h snare of the night a receipts, with other moneys, in his pscket, amounting in all to cf arly $1,000. After he had tired of ho'el liquors he went over to a saloon on Che-t-But street and began a contract to drink the place dry. He didn't succeed ia that enterprise, but he did succeed in losing $1,000, how, when and where he never asctrtained. And It never pleased him, for Lock was much more of a philosopher than his famous creation, Nasby. The most marvelous stories are told of Locke's drinking powers. It was a current joke among his friends that they should set him on fire. He would scent an ordinary room in five minutes, and the boys were wont to say that to stand by Locke for a minute waa next thing to getting a drink. That was not necessary, however, for he treated indiscriminately. An Ohio lady who knew Locke intimately said that he had drunk thirty-three pint bottles of cham pagne in a single night. Proscribed Chettnnta. Philadelphia News, The "comic papers" would do the read ing public a favor if theyÄWOuld stop printing jokes about the Chicago girl's foot. the Kansas City real estate agent, the Bos ton girl's big words, the plumber's bills, tbe married man's nicht at the club, the boarding hou&ekeepar'a butter and steak, the editor a poverty, I'miadelpnia's alow neap, the commercial traveler's cheek, the grocer's sand, the lawyer's lies, the doctor's big lees, tbe messenger boy a slowness, the barber's talkativeness, the poet's honesty, the dude's Anglomania, the female sex's entravagance, tbe caobage leaf cigar, the Wall street "bear's ' love far lambs, tbe drug clerk's mistakes, the Kentackian'a love fr whi&ky, trips to Montreal, and tbe bank cashier s Consumption Surely Cared. Please inform yonr readers that I haye a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I fhall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy free to any 91 your readara who have consumption II they will send me their express and postonise address. Respectfully, T. A. Bwcrx, M. 0., 181 Pearl street. New York. C&tarrn Cared: A clerym&n. after vears of suflerine from that lnnthonwia rfiusu Pittnh annlnl Wimwn.) VBIIUIllj BUU trying ever known remedy, at last found a prescription which completely cured and saved nun irom death. Any sufferer from this dread! ul disease sending a self-ad d reefed stamped envelope to Prof. J. A. Lawrence, 212 East Ninth street. New York, will receive the recipe free of eh arge. Advlea tw ülothsrs, lfrs. Wlnalow's Soothing syrup should always be uaed when children are cutting: teeth. It rotiere the little suoerer at once; It produces natural, quiet sleep by relieving tbe child from pain, and the little cherub awakes aa "bright aa a bntton." It is very pleasant to taste. It aoothea the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, retrolatee the ooweU, and u the best known remedy for diarrhea, whether arising fron teetkioz or a'Jur caoiaa. Twenty
PNEUMONIA!
A Scientific and Accurate Description et this Dreaded Blood Disorder. "It la generally supposed that pneu"monla ia due to the accidental penetrat"Ing of specific microbes into the sys"tem.but the "observa"tiona of M. "J a c c 0 u d "ßhow that "the disease 'really r e "suits from "the "opmcnt.tm'der favorable conditions, of "microblc "germs jr"manently "present in the tystem. A chief condition of such development is a sudden chill, "which explains the frequent coincidence "of lung affections with abrupt changes "of temperature." ScientiJUs American. Another prominent (American) authority ascribes pneumonia to an excess of ozone, ozone being produced by passage of electricity in the air. A distinguished American physician tells the New York Tribune that the prevalence of pneumonia indicates the universality of a uric-acid condition of the blood, sudden chills always being characteristic effects of too much acid, of one sort and another. The disease, as M. Jaccoud observes. ! undoubtedly in the blood, but if in the form of permanent microbes or germs, these germs must be developed by the uric-acid condition of the blood. Indeed, they cannot presumably exist In alkaline blood. Uric-acid is the name for the waste matter of the system, which the kidneys, through evident though unsus pected Impairment, have not been able to filter from the blood, the filter being foul and stopped up in many of its littla hair-like tubes. The Tribun' authority savs that rmrumonia i3 a secondary disorder, the exposure and cold bein? simply the agents which develop the disease, already dormant in the system, because the kidneys have been but partially doiDg their duty. In short, pneumonia is but an early Indication of a bright's diseased condition. This impaired action may exist for years without the patient suspecting it, because no pain will be felt in the kidneys or their vicinity, and often it can be detected only by chemic al and microscopical examinations. Nearly 150 of the 740 deaths in New York city the first week In a recent March, and in six weeks 781 deaths, were caused by pneumonia alone. If one has occasional chills and fever, a tendency to colds in the throat and lungs, rheumatic and neuralgic pains, extreme tired feelings, short breath and pleuritic stitches in the side, loss of apfietite, back-ache, nervous unrest scaldng sensations or scant and discolored fluids, heart flutterings, sout stomach, distressed look, puffy eye sacs, hot and dry ekin, loss of strength and virility, pneumonia is likely to strike him down any day, and his recovery will be doubtful. These indications may not appear together; they may come, disappear and reappear, for years, the person not realizing that they are nature's warnings of coming calamity. The disease is very quick-acting and if the accompanying kidney disorder ia very far advanced, recovery is impossible, for the kidneys give out entirely, and the patient is literally suffocated by water. The only safeguard against pneumo nia 13 to maintain a vigorous condition of the system and thus prevent attacks by using whatever will radically and effectually restore full vitality to the kid neys, and for this there is nothing equal to Warner's safe cure. If the kidneys are rot sound pneumonia cannot be prevented. This remedy is known to millions, used, probably, by hundreds of thousands all over the globe, and commended as a standard specific wherever known and used. It docs not pretend to cure an attack of pneumonia, but it does remove the cause of and prevent that disease if taken in time. When a physician says his patient has either bright's disease or pneumonia, he confesses his inability to cure, and in a measure he considers his responsibility ended. In many instances, indeed, persons are reported as dying of pneumonia, heart disease, apoplexy and convulsions, when the real cause of death, and so known by the physicians, is this kidney consumption. Thousands of people Lave it without knowing it, and perish of It because their physicians will not tell them the facts. The same destiny awaits every one who will not exercise his judgment In such a matter and be true to himself, his family and to society. Sheriffs Sale. By virtue of two executions to me directed by the Clerk ol the Superior Court ol Marion County, Indiana, one in cause No. VI, 543, wherein Georee Jackson la plaintiff and Dandrldge H. Oliver and George Bruce are defendants: the other in;caueNo. 21,602, where a Alfred Harrison et al. are plaintiffs and Ur :ge Bruce et X ate defendants; nd also, by . .rtu? of a decree in uun No. 37.601, wherein Mason J Osgood is plaintiff and John W. Bruce et al. are defendants, reviving sail judgments, requiring me to make the several sums of money named in Raid executions, for the oeof said Osgoad, I will expose to sale to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, TBE 17TH DAY OF MARCH, 193", between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'ilotk p. m. of said day. at the door of taj Court-house of JUrion County. Indiana, tha rent and profits for a term not exceeding seven ytara ol the following real estate, situate ia the county of Marien, State of ludtana, described and bounded an fol ow. to wit: Beginning at the center of Mori lian atret. In the Ulli lice of the northwest quarter, of the northwest quarter, of section twenty-five (2) township fixtetn (16), north of rauge fme (3) eaft, running thence esst ten chains and tventr six hnmlredtis of chain (10 JG-IO)): theace south eight fhlns and gixty-to hundretha ot a cbcin ( Ci-lCO), more or leas to te ceater of Fall Creek: thence north sixty flva degTeosand Ulrty minutes (65 :), west two Vi) chilis: thence north lorty-six decrees and forty five minutes (46 4"), west two chains and fwy threa
hundredths ol a chain 'i 4HU0); thence north fourtei-n degrees and fifteen minu es (11.15). west three rhs ins and eighty tvo hundredths of a chain (3 82-100); thence rorth lif y Gve degrees (65), west one chain and tixty hundredths of a chain ( 60-100) ; thence south seventy-four degrees and fifteen minutes (71 15), wen two chains and forty-five hundredths of a chtin (2 45-100): thence south fifty-four decrees and fif-een mlnntes (54.15) west to the center of said Meildlan street; thence north along the center Of taid street to tbe place of beginning. And, on failure to realize the full amount of raid judgments, interest and coat, I will, at the same time and place, expose at public salj the fee simple of said real estate. Taken as the property of Geor?e Bruce, at the suit of Mason J. Osgood, reviving, said judgments. Eald sale will be made without relief whatever from valuation or apprai sement laws. HA AO KING, Sheriff ot Marlon County. February 22, A. D. isas. Johns. Thkington, Attorney for Plain tiff. Notice ot Appointment. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has daly qualified aa administratrix of the as tat of Charles X. Judaon, lata of Marion county, Indlaaa, deceased, all estate U supposed to to be sol teat. ASSY 0, jddsvn, AtelSJitxatoti
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A PROFITABLE 0PP0ETU1TITY FOU : INVESTMENT.
THE PROGRESSIVE YOUNG CITY OF THE NEW SOUTH
. This prosperous wning city, which is now attracting investors, rr.anuracturers and settlers froa every section of the Union, is situated in the ' Pieuinont repton of western Georgia, four milefrom the Alabama line, in the heart of the richest iron, pold, marble, agricultural and timber district of the South. Its population has doubled in the lost six months, and with the present rapid increase will be 8.0ÜÜ before the close of the present year. Its location is on the Georgia Pacific Railroad, 3 miles from Atlanta, 40 miles from Annision and 1W miles from Birmingham, and is already the objective point of three other railroads now building or already surreyed. There arc nearly fifty business houses, express, telegraph and post office, one newspaper, three churches, three hotels, eieht saw aad planing mills and wood working establishments, schools, cotton pins and factories. Nearly $ 4,0m,000 is represented in the capital stock and money invested in the city at the present time. Its elcva:ion is 1,'200 fect above the sea, and the city is noted for its remarkable healthtulness, being- out of the limestone district and entirely bevond the range of cholera, yellow fever, or any epidemics. The purest nnd best oi freestone and mineral waters abound, and the natural drainage and location of the city is perfect. The climate is a happy medium between the subtropical climate cf Horiaaand the extreme cold of the North, the average thermometef being in Winter 5i and in Summer 78". The city is surrounded with the highest grades of iron ores, manganese aad marble, and the gold deposits of Tallapoosa are at thi present time attracting wide-spread attention. Over f 100,000 has already been inverted in one mine which will begin operations by April 1st. The eold ore of this region assays from $5.0) to 300 per ton. and the supply of iron, gold and marble is inexhaus tible. Soon to te a Large Mannfactnrmi City. The Tallapoosa Furnace Co., capital stock ;00.OX) is already organized, and are under contract to have their lurnace in blast by December 1st, lt-SS. The Tallapoosa Malleable Iron Co.. authorized capital $100,000, are under contract to have their worlts in operation in eight months. The 1 ailapoosa Mcara Brick Manufactory is already putting in an enormous p lant lor brick and terra cotta work, with a capacity oi 50,000 daily, ?id arrangements have been completed (,ra wapün factory, sash, door and blind factory, boiler manufactory, broom factory, rope factory, and negotiations are in progress for a silk null, io employ 3X) hands, cotton mill, rolling mill and several other industries, with favorable prospects for their locatiun here at an early day. Enerrr.ous Advance in Rs'c! Estate. Ths recital of the advance of real estate in Tallapoosa in t'.e last six months would seem like a fairy t ile to those not familiar with the rapid growth of tine ... tUia rich mineral belt of the new South.
V. fiefeir, Press&Bi TaÜ3pcosa Land, Qining 6 EitenTg Go,. Tallapoosa, 5 s:i2::::s:.B':n :.h; ku; c:;;.s::s :b:miü lb :arn :a: a LErnrnin ;b:;e':h::c::u':e E'lDTBrBrsrc;
w) 'u y n k ä t. a'srir ..ad .
TT'TJ
LAND ts the Basis of all WEALTH. THE LAND OF 9
THE GRANDEST COLONIZATION ENTERPRISE EVER OFFERED TO
THE PEOPLE'S HOMESTEAD
WARRANTY DEED, TREE OF INCUMBRANCE. TITLE TERFECT.
read oru rnorosrriox. This Company own and control 20,000 erc of land In Marloa Count j, t'lorldn. 17 feet böte the pb level, and cuusialmjj ot high, drjr, rblllug, lerI tile pine land. To ennaact the v&lue ot all this Inn 1 by larpe and I diversified ownership, the Company propose tu rive way a portion r I Iii property In cottujre ft ., anil Ave, ten, twenty and forty acre 1ru,t. uitalile for oraujre prove ftnd vegetable ealture, nnd to ; those who aceept this olfer and send their Eiaie and aiMross we wiuseud a numbered WABBAHTY SEED OPTSOM ECHO, wtiieu entitles tue liulJtr U ul lo IwUuuuig UkU ai srociiied : 4t At ltF. TiiCTS, CO ACRE TRACTS, II ACKK llttCTS, b ACKK TU.M'Ts crji i.vtr: ni; a"t niMNKst i.uih. T;ie ttbove tracts, cottinre mt.a mid business lot conI ai.it nf a'x'Ut one hail our muds, i:y grivins away cneiiaif ani reervin2 the lalaricv. we Htwt the Mire - to uuii.irn i e within a year, aa many will unriotibtI r ily kt.J iuiprovr. although thi ia optional tv- i !' v'ii f lee, with iio cuudiuoiis M to eUieII,.-.,. i . i iVi ineiits. ? f TMU AM tQtlTAJLJLt ilAAMIK. and a . j '. V-.icreneta. f m mm for the lbhd. Aili jt u.,ti your Ufiiu, li vou will till i: nut Willi (uil l .-ac-jrclinir to uutinctiuiu. and re turn t tl", v.e " '.I tnen exeeute and forward to you a WAIMi.kVt V l'r- a hich makes you absolute un ueriiH t-v.-r .,!i:rn' w nBiever is maue ior i ne S V.-rr.nY lire' On.iun lived, but we rt'iuire al 1 to K-itd S.xrols i"ti.i .vote r Iwb, .r V rcat Ii PMhi.i,. -, " i'l heatior is ent for the dayd bond, Tin. in. m - is a r-o rata charee to helD ravfor this ad :: ertwf -.,-,. nntw. and also a handonmelT UlnaI Imiod fco , I-lorlila. ita climate, eoil. orancre cul. turr n:. i i'in no aeii- a cliorire lor tne oeu toiiu orthetmdit valla for.You are uot Uhfrated to have 30 Days Trial Given. P.uptnre retained and Cured. We ajrt-e to re tain any case reducible or refund your inoney;f.:Jlw also, to cure any acLepte4 f!L.Zf. i vui iucuitklfiu out. l ad and Rapture Solution eures bad eases vi uuai auu ct .vi.ai uaumiiiu- a cut knife or needle, verlcoeeie suecsiuny treated, eitner at ornee or by corre poncence. For circulars, rules of measure' meat, and elf-instrnction call ou or addreai 8AHITJI RTF if, 77 East Market Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. it;' o rrrt ' our fauth wt c cum you,tlmr ".suHtinrr. w w.IiDi&ilcoorirh tocoBTinc. mm. R. S. KHiK raba?fi .Iii rf:sON f.vx LlüSi Ö Vuet ?m AHD ORGAN Tit is. vaatävävu e vv. . . a. ax...... Pa. . ithe ni.l of a teacher br nsina- Soner'a Inatuntaneon ftiitde to the keys. No previous knowledge of music whatever riuired. Send for book of testimonials. lltrK. Address SUI'IZIC ML SIC Co., liox KliW VOliK. K. V. FOR BALS, or part trada, 413 acre farm, Owen County, Indiana. nnr Terr Hute and Vorthii'irtoi:. coavealent to PjntolTice, Church and school: aHo t rllroil far Chicago, Si. Louis and Indlanar-olu xnirkets. Good lenres. 150 acres tttrtxr, 8S acra in tise sfnts of cultivation, balance seeded to clover and timothy; well waters ; commodious house aad barua:good pr. ejocti for cial, Aa excelloat lam for ftrain ot Thli Is & lar?a!n. For mt and further informatlf-a adi'.-rss (Jjo. C. Bailey. 1141 N J.Ktrent. Uwrsuce. Kaans. . Cur $!5 Shot Gen now $13. ' $15 Breechloader" $9.03 AH kind Gudi rc&rAtileol lower than rlafpwbere. roi iiui Cor 1llvitrfttsJ eaurae. rOWEll A ClfMt.T, 1 U MiUm bk, iwclKwa.0. O tu. ÜSINESS ÜHS'JERSITW INDIANAPOLIS, IliO. ( EIaWislied 37 yrars. It st p'.iice to strtire t thor. sillily r. tu-ul and HMii'.d l'iineK nnd .Sh irtharal ili.L-.uum. Cttoirti aiid .:utn::i'rrmi Ctirrent, Ie. inn per rKOriT & SAMPLES FRER CkMT. to men canvassers for lr. Meott'a Oeuulne lectrio Belts, Itrush. ea, Ac. Ladyagenta wanted for Electric Corseta, Quick aalcs. Write at once for term.. Dr. Bcott, Ml Broadway, N. Y. JOIIL'E OF APPOINTMFST, Notice Is hereby tlven, that the undersigned ha. duly qualified as administrator with the will annexed of tbe estate of Nancy 8. Liepew, late of Marlon County, Indiana, deceased. Said, estate la anppored to be solvent. ALEXANDER C. AYRE3, Adm'r. ATBE5, Browh A Habviy, Attorneya. CARDS Book of HIDDEN NAME Cards,' IS Pnay Burk. tM TnM, m IHH " a. tlrwkM. Tim., InllMVf f it txlf flllMt-mt .lltesScalaaia. MUM K AAD a OuTU, Caals, Oitasa jnri jrunny aelertioaa, Bcrap Pic tnree, etc, DIR) and oloe Sample Caxda lot 2c, UUl tab,
I M a iii yi , fc Marion Count,, Florida, Is hieh, dry, rolling pine land WfeJ Jated on t ß,W,0, F. DUNN, ! V b r r i r n n p n n n n h a a b b h n a a m n a n n B n n II 11 n H B Tr 11 Ii H n ?i
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Residence and bulldintr lots which sold for S 300 six months ago. are changing hands at $1,5A now. rropcrty on the leading business streets has advanced irom 500 to l.Ouo ter cent, in the last few months, and is still on the ground floor in comparison with prices of property in other cities. With the present rapid growth of the city, property must len-ioia ia vaiue curing tne next year, ana 1015 mat are selling to-day at from $00 to f 300, should bring live times that sum before the close of the present year. This Company have invested over $T5,OuO in improvements in the last Jew months; over 100 new buildings are in process of erection or nearly com pleted in the city, and bustle, push and enterprise 13 cverywnere apparent. Aeariii S I.vuu.wv tor mannjacmrtHg enterprinea and improvements is pledged ior uie city to De located Here in tne next tnree years, and this alone means a population of irom ten to twenty-five thousaud. Literal iElncements ta Manufacturers. This Company is prepared to offer the most lib eral inducements to manufacturers who will locate their works tn Tallapoosa. They will donate land on railroad front for plant, and other valuable considerations ; raw material and cheap labor are abundant, and a home market assured. The South is fast becoming the great manufacturing centre of the L'nion, and Northern manufacturers thinking of changing location wilt find it to their advantage to communicate wr.a this Company. GCME TO THE SOUTH. & It is the most desirable section for settlers and in vestors in the United States to-day. Fortunes are being made mpidly by the advance in real estate and land company's stocks, and we have as vet seen but ttte beginning of an era of wonderful pros perity in this but partially ceveloped, though greatly favored, section. In climate it is the Italy ofAmer ica, in healthfulness it is the Eden of the earth, and in fertility cf soil, abundance and diversity of min eral products, and in growing prosperity and progressivcncas, no section ol the country can equal it. PnltatlB IiYestnezts. Enonaons Meiiis. We would ca1! the special attention cf either large or small investors, who have been accustomed to small rates of interest, to the advantages of Talla poosa as a place of profitable and absolutely safe in vestment. Real estate and stocks in Tallapoosa are rapidly advancing, and investments can be made here to-day that lire sure to doubl and quadruple before the close of the present year. Investments made in real estate in a rapidly growing and prosperous manufacturing city are sure to return handsome profits to the investor, and are absolutely safe investments. We have yet to know of a single instance of investments made here, that have not returned large dividends to the investor. As the city is but yet in us infancy, real estate is selling at law
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FLCNVERS, OF ORANGE CROVES, OF PERPETUAL SUMMER! PEROUS. DELICHTFUL! NATURE'S SANITARIUM!
CO. ISraurn the deed executed if the location or land dopsnotsrtityon nnd the 25 eta. exrense will be returned iu such case. But i t Is hoped you will accept this proposit ion in the spirit in V'nlOIl It IS )irvseuitru,iUUbUl rcvuiniK l'iujfri L , iui juai" reif or children, which must incna.se in vaiue from yt-ar to year hy reas m f rnpid stttiernent and improvem-nta LEROY, nABlura CCUHTT. rLüfilDA. ATToiirTiJvlaMuäiida lAKION ., FI.OKIIA. ten miles from Cicala, t ii ci.unty s-at, a thriving town oi 3,.mjo mnaunanis. It is all hhh, dry, rollinir pine land, tree from wet spn'a. anl on" or trie neaiiniesi locations in riunra iuc ML Ht lKINU,OCALA& ü LU' KA1LU0AD, runs tni'oiin iu jar. A. I'. Jltfnn, ur., ienerai manager of this railroad, in speaking of this land, saus: Q " I should think SS.OOO no extraordin ary price for our one-half interest of only ICO acres so favorably situated, for a town tcith a handsome and ornamental depot already established, and such fine prospects of local imjtortance. It is all high, dry, rolling and fertile pine land, and there is no more healthy location in Florida. The surrounding country, as well as this land, is especially adapted to ORASGK and VEGETABLE culture, as well as tn upland rice, long staple cotton, corn, and choice varieties of tobacco.' GLIRATE AHB HERUM Ti.o inuiito of this Kjc.tiou id unsurpassed by any In the world, not even exec ptina- Italy. Cool, balmy, lehlitful breezes are com-tantlv ulowiner letween the Gulf and tbe Atlantic. Tbe thermometer rarely pnes above 90 in Summer or below 40 in tbe w inter. No sunstroke ter on nr in Bummer, ann nipnts are delightfully cool. This immediate neighborhood. U well adapted for a Summer aa w ell aa w uiter resort. THE niNGEE & CONARD CO'3 Leading speciuties. fOA rsssa r V-aV LA A. H afn U Mi ALL VARIETIES, SIZES AND PRICES FINE EiER-BLÜQmlNU tthftlURL, CLIMBING AND MOSS R03ES. NEW AND RARE FLOWER SEEDS HARDY PLANTS, Wew Moon riower, Clematis, CpriBg Bulbs, JAPAN LILIES, K.w Chrysanth, aaas'aour WONDERFUL ORNAMENTAL VEGETABLES. .ruir.7 nt enfely by mail Or Storell fl" p"inu. HjolfrrClOlCS NEW THINGS s" 8TERLIHC NOVELTIES .u departmenU. Our NEW CUIDE.l'VPP.. lgantly Ulue1rate4. dweTibea over ISOO NEWEST and CHOICEST Varieties Of ROSES. SEEDS, PLANTS and BULBS, at d teils bow to grow the Free. It oa wish to clunt. anythin z, acr.d forit 20 Yars Fst:il;i;inc uredl. c-Z-htZ. THE nrNCF.S eV CCW ARD CO. r.0S: GRO"VEl43. WaoiGrova, Ceftter Co.,fa 'vrOTICK Is hereby tlven that th'Barl of IA (;oarciFSi-ners of Merioa Cimutv, S-jite of Indiana, w'll rct e ve soalod pro,oals at the County Auditor s oR'.ce, ia Indian! oM, until April U. loSi, at 12 o'cl.rk m . for cicavatioos, timber for the foundation of the pier and abutmtn'a and itiasonry of the pier and shu'mentg for a bridge over White River, on the Flack Free t. ravel R. ad, near North Indianapolis. Plans aud speHCcAttous can be seen at said oflioe on or after March 7, 1.8. Alio sealed proposals for the Iron superstructure, to be In two spans of ISO fret each In the clear, with an 18-foot cl?ar toadway; total length of the bridge from face to face ot tbe abutments to be 365 feet. Bidders to luriiish their own plans aad specifications therefor, and complete strain sheet toaoora-pf-ny each plan. Tbe superstructure must be .ufficlent in all its parts to sustain 80 pounds rolling loal per square Icotof floor aurface; no member lu tension to be strained more than 10,009 pounds per square inch of sectional area.and in compression not more than K.COO pounds par square inch, reduced with a proper ratio of length to diameter. Tbe Board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. By order of the Board of Commissioners of Marlon Couniy. Indiana. THOMAd TAGSART, Auditor. PAINLESS CHILDBiaTB LOW A(XXJali'l.I.SHKD. Btott LadyafaouM k-novav
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prices, and those who invest auring me next icn months will reap the harvest before values are forced to the exhorbitant ti pures which will surely follow the rapidly growing prosperjty of the city. To TLoss LcolLliis foraraToralile Place far LocaUcn . . . . . . . If you are wholly without money, do not come to Tallapoosa. Don't co into any new country without at least something to give you a Start, but if you have a little money, be you fanner, mechanic or laborer, and desire to locate in a section where the winters are mild and equable, and the summers no warmer than the North, where j crfcct neaiin is secured tor yourseii ana lamuy : wnere you can build a house for one-half the cost of building the Same house in the Nona; where you can live in comfort at much less than in New Erjnd and the West, and are willing to use your energies ana innuence in co-opcr.iiion witu triers lor tne prosperity of the city in which you ate located, and appreciate a thriving, industrious, progressive city and people come to J ailapoosa. it you are oi i his class you are wanted hrre, and the little you have can be invested ia the building of a home that will rapidly increase ;n value cn your bands, or in the channels of some busings or enterprise that will earn the most gratifying dividends. Gems and Investigate. Nine out of ten of those who come and personally investigate the merits of Tallapoosa, as a plaee cf profitable investment and location, either become investors or permanent residents, or both. The wonderful advantages of this Piedmont region and i;ch mineral belt are as yet comparatively unknown to Northern investors and settlers. An accurate description by us would be looked upon with incredulity. TT fifl cheerfully pay the trarelinff expense of any person visiting Tallapoosa trio does not find it and its swrrbundiuii, and the property of tt.it Company, na represented hy its. We court the tnost rijiil personal investigation by investors and those looking for a desirable place of location, and urge all rio can to come and sre for themaelres the many advantages of Tallapoosa as a place of profitable and safe investmentf location of business or manufacturing, or for residence, SEND FOE PROSPECTUS. We have issued an elaborate prospectus, accurately describing the city an J its surroundings, and the pioperty of this Company, giving illustrations cf many of the buildings, residences, etc., also plat cf city, price list of lots, latest quotations on stock of this Company, and other information of interest to investors and settlers, which we will mail lrce on application. Address Mill i id LI il . . ä.. 3 ' C . y .. iL äi IT FREE HOMESTEADS For YOURSELF, your WIFE and our CHILDREN. HEALTHY, PROSA HOME-LOVING PEOPLE.
LAND AND LOCATION UNEXCELLED.
HftMttf I flEMCn ThiSCotn.panyisrref. linr I P-Utilitli. rareatoloan money n ''" """ lor lmcrovementa I upon properly cur d from the Company, civinjr five yt-ars to py for same. Flans of houses win je rurnisnarplicatin to those wisiiine I 1 1 is entiiclyopiional with owners oi land whether they a uuua ornot, ine comi any wui aisoeoniraet io sei om -and take care of oraug-e grove tracts for five years. T' VT? Dim The Company will pay all tares I MALd rKlUs upon this property until ls.V. ? ElflTC Marion County is one of the riefest I rni 1 counties in Florida: contains excel I-nt ? . nv V gol, Änil rjw.. mor(, thB- hair tt-e I umnKo and lemon crop of tbe Mate. l.t KUl ; i s the centre of ('lit cf the heanhient and moot fVr- k tile eections. So swamps no malaria, and so f.ir south M to be below what is termed the "frost line, r The celebrated Withlaeooehe Kiver, close ty.isnlled rhnü-a varletii'z of fish, while deer and other ranitS flil tbe forets for milts around. Blue frprlne, within fiftca uiliUWa v?f ttroy, is one of the woodersof the btate. m ... . f LOCAL CLUBS. &j5 io ncs wiMiin iu g clubs iu their ; e will rend five warrauiv u--u oluom " - - - - . . . - Ooll üJd7tc Tn nV Ä-Li If III I & iw 1 iu a dub and liave IU aa tiuu aaiavi v mT. 1 1 4a.A ipinpl r TorTneiids iulensttd aim jou. Yi Z f " ii ..l h.n .mi. nrrier la receiveu, monrv nir be retwrwed. The more owners the more values are .' i - mmit- rMl Htat in OUT 1 cities so vahialile, and it is our only reason i foi ; making fiV'il" .r. iirf ffer. Send money by Postal .Note, I Increased, inis .1,1 nn.ralleled Offer. SellQ mOlltJ DJ Money order or Regifitered Utter. Addrea?, j THE PEOPLE'S HOMESTEAD CO., P.O. Box 2196, ' 45 BltOADWAY, NEW YORK. j and around Ueroy, ? efcoLD Watches J UM iM-raona. te.ling 7 fa f J &, &, a 4 'I !- a IKnJm. Mlver .N lekel V ateh (all .WinwindiD( aaa sb-is-KUinr): aad ta .ack of Ih. ntitl Si utiwui Rolled Uoiii Ktneer Iliaasrtitt ) Tarqaait, ten ,rnf t, or tea Ptreuui Kabi. W ith your anaa.r i.n.1 tKInP potiai-BOta or tuv.ri ror woico El wawillMOd von our Elrmllv 11 lnttrat.d Ctaloni. 9 monthly euMieatloni la N whica papr willsnnosaca tha i r llint inr. liuuaciiui.i l ii.Jl,on, or uiacma. Injland, lor nz nonliii. Id raiullof tha eontrat. The O abovt liberal o2rll mads solely te introduct eiir Caulotne PS a late rood bomes, v. itn, w. fe.l Mr, or rood, will and ia aar.a'lyfsle. fl'' jetiaa gasrated er aura.y ret unded. Yle Art Wrka. Xew Haven, 'oaa.ty WINN BOILER COMPOUND, Purely vetrotabe and non-Ir jnriona. Itemove acales nd preventa format. oa of same. Corres pondt-nce solicitöi"1. BAKKK. COBB & CO., A?enti, Lima, Ohio. cm :i d o r'ECK'8 I'ATIM IM .rfrt1v Itilfiri' ! v,:i ( -tiNE! Lar DBrjrj) lie:ri.-7, and perform ths) ir... Ii:.. oonifiirtaliia ao4 .i.pve)rj'.,,ji and ewa whiSDeri vor of tha r. it ..,! - aJwavs in piv-ition. ' i hard distinct y. fh.; f I'lM-ir-t-xl tx.-k wit h tistimrmad als, hUHL.. Addrew, r. Ill COX bJ irovlvra, N. Vi Mention this paper; CINCINNA13 Eye.Ear.Kcse&Throat 1 niSTITUTt . aOlVm FOCBTH BTRKET CROSS-EVES, Cataract. Plnrrlaeaw Craanlap IJda. Scrofalaaa lorj Eres, Irbwharwca rrora Bars. Peareis, Polyp,, btaatmeriof. Nasal Caiarra, aad all diacaaes of IB I ye. Ear, Noae, Thrvat and Vale saoeasanilly uaaled br sew aad palalewa mrtaoda. The Sue aad laraeet sapoljaf Inapartod aurtlSrlal cyea ia U. 8. FrleM KeaMithla, eprt"lr adja.ted. I nulutlaa fr. Head iitini twr bvok. A. Ii. BAUklll, M.1K. OnU.1, awl W. 4tk at, Ua'tl. U. WEAK IMm Free I Hew lolctli rJ Ixart Vipor and Manhood restored. rn) J Ut-TirfvE n,.tnri ltnelius and runrtiocal diasrdnra mattirs ltrcliue aod fanrtiocal aiatrasra caradantAoatSlotnachaiodiciDoa. SaaJsd Traatiaa saot fraa apoa apslioaüokaDsat
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OF SALE LAND OF STATE Thi Statk of IiintiN, 1 Oi-rich, or Aiimotut Ctat. J N '.ice is bereby given tbat In conformity wit) ti e ptovhiens of aa set of the General Aw.-nriy f tbe State of Indiana, approved Mart h7, 1SH3, entitled, "An act authorizing the sale and conveyance of certain lauds belonging to u e FUte cf Indiana, alpodiug of the pro-cc-tds then of. and piovlding for the n cover? of the pofcfeMiion ot iut landa of the 3ia.teu.ulawlull v cccupicd, aid for the rent of at.y of th .'anäncf the Mate uLtll iold," I will oaer lor tale, to tbe higheet bidder, at the door of the out l Hiidm, iu the toD cf rieoiuburtr, at from 9 a. in. to 4 p. in., on the 3d day of March, loS-S, tl e foIicwiEK described tractor parcti of lind Fitnritn in sM ott County, belougicg to tbe Hula of Tudiaua, and authorized. u be told by uaj actPepiDn'!? twenty-f iRht and one fourtn roda et of the houtheafct corner of Sectios thirty two (32), township three (3), rjocih of raDee seven (7) ea&t; thence north to the laaJs ol Wn. tlavens, sr , tbeuce west along the line of the thiä Cravens' lands to the lands of Mar Kret Bridgewattr, widow of the late Christian Bridge waters, deceased: tbenne i-OUta .loll? the tat line of the landa of taid Jiarjaret BridgewateH to tha state roaa leading from l-exingtoa to Salem, lud .. thence east a lore raid road to the place cf beRinning, containing in ail about twelve ( 12) arrea more or lese, l or a more full descrfi -tion of this, referetce is hereby made to the reed by Christian Brldgewaters to Jamea T. FurnUh, recorded in deed record book V, page 104, In the Recorder", ofiice of Scott County, iudiana, and this is the identical land mentioned In Kaid conveyance. Appraisement 860. Tbe said 'and waa forfeited to the State of Indiana for Don payment of taxes, as provided by Ktction two (2) of an act of the General Aembiy approved March C, 1S.S.S. entitled. "An act to i meud Sectious 222 and -i7 of an act euttlled. An act concerning taxation.' " the Mine being Sft tiots tm and fl of tbe Revised Statutes of '!. end to provide f r tbe s-le of lota aid larrin to the highest bidder for cash in ccttaia 1 BKS The above df K iibed land will be MId to the bit-hot bidder for ca:-h. hut no bidder tor a atle Ks- tr-aa tiie appiaiied value thereof wid ba reC"1Ttd' BRUCE CA1R, Auditor of d'.ate. Jr.öiar.RpoliF, Ind., Febiuary , l!ft. USAzz of Sale ol State Lands. Th k Static of Indiana, citice of the acditob ok state, f Notice Is hereby given tbat la conformity with the provisions of an act of the General Assembly of the State of Indiana, approved Urcn. 7, lb83. entitled, "An act authorizing the sale i,r.d conveyaur of certain lands belonging t the fatate of Indiana, disposiug of tbe proiveda thereof, and providing for the recovery of the pOoK-tsion of any landa cf tbe State uaUwfuliy otcni'led, end for the rent of any of the laa is until toid." 1 will offer for aale ti the highest blddvt at the d.or of the Court Uoasa ia the town of JlariiEfevllle. at Irom 9 a m. to 4 p m , on the '25th day cf February. ly8 the following detcnttd tracts of lctid. Bivuaud Ij Motrin countr, beloupiug to the State of Iad aua, aud authoiized to be bold by stid act: Tbe Northeast quarter of fie Southeast quarter of section numter three '), in Township iiumber tweWe (12) North, raDge wo (2) Kant, appraift rcent SKO AIfo tbe Southeast quaiter oi tte Southeast quarter of section number three (S). in township nnmbertweive (12) North, rat ge tiro (2) Kast, appraisement $210. Tte said land was lor felted to the State of Indian for non-payment of principal and interest due tbe College fund. 1 he above described land will be ol J to tha Mpbet bidder for rauh, but no bid for a sale It si than the appraised value thereof vriil be received. Bri ce Carr, Auditor of Siate. IrrMwrapolis, Jauuary 31, 1SS8, Atiachiuent Notice. STATE OF INDIANA, M af.ics CorKTr, ss: Before John C. Johnston. Justice of the Peace for Centre township, i said county. William I. Kiplev vs. Martha L Wright, lor meriv Martha T. Lowe: Be it known, that on the f ist Jay of Decern ler, lsST, that the plaintitT fiied Li6 complaint, affidavit and brni for a writ of attachment ajtainst the property of the defendant, which has been by me issued, and return thereon made, showing certain personal prtxrly fcts be-en attached, aud on the 4th day of January, lSs, the plaintlir tiled tha affidavit of a disinterested party, showing the above named ?fendant to be a non-resident of the .tate of Indiana. Now this publication is e;iven to notify Martha L. Wright ttormeriy Li we) of the filing land ptnlency of this action, and that the tame is set for trial on tbe Tin diy of February, lc&S. at 9 o'cIock a m.. at w ich time said defendant must appear and defend, or I will proceed and bear and determine the matter in issue in h?r absence. In witnens whereof 1 nave hereunto Eignen my iicme, this ith day oi January. " w x r - lArr a,T vT Jurtice of the Peace, H. J. Eve.etL Attorney lor I'laintiff. Notice to Heirs, Creditors, Etc In the matter of the estate of Frederick H. Hall, deceased. In trie Marlon Circuit court, r eoruary Term,lSi6. Kotice iB hereby civen that (ieorpe T. Porte;, as administrator of the estate of trederlcK d. Ilall, dereased, haa presented and filed hi account and vouchers in final settlement of said es tate, and that the same wid come up lorexaaiination and action oi said circuit toun u mo 12th day of March, ISsK, at which time all heira. crtaitora or legatees of Raid estate are requi'el to appear in said court ana snow cause, ii any there be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. And the heirs of sai l esUte are also nereby reqclred, at the time and place aforesaid, to appear and make proof of thoir LellEilIP- GEORGE T. POSTER. Administrator. George T. Porter, Attorney. k Notice to Heirs, Creditors, Etc. In the matter ot the estate ft Michael Btekel. deceased, in the Marion Circuit Court. Februr j term, 18S8. Notice is hereby given that Joseph F. BIckel, as administrator of the estate of Michael Bickel, deceased, has present and fiied hia account and vouchers in final settlement of sail estate, and that the same will come up for examination and action;of said Circuit Court on the nth day of April, 1SS3, at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are lequiied to appear in aaid Court and show cause, if any there be, why aaid account ana vouchers should not be approved. And tbe heir, of said estate are also hereDy required at the time and place aforesaid, to appear and Holeproof of irheirshtp.Epn Ki.titGCSSttrm & Atkiksox, Attorneys. Notice to Heirr Creditors, Etc, In the matter of the estate of Frederick: A. Reiebinmeyer. deceased-in the Marlon Circuit Court, February term, 188S. l"otice ia herebv given that Clemens Vonnsput sr.. at administrator of the estate of Fredericka Ileichrnmcyer. deceased, has presented and filed his account and voucher, in final settlement of aaid estate, and that the same will come up for examlLation and action of said Circuit Court, on the 6th day of April. 18S8, at which time all heirs, creditors or legatee, of aaid estate are required torpearjin saidcourt and show cause, if ant there be, why said account and voucher sbi uld uot be approved. And the heira ot aaid etat(realK Hereby required at the time and p ac aforesaid to appear and nrne proof of tbelr I oirsbip CLKMaN VOXNKCiUT. Notice to cirs, Creditors, Etc. In tbe matter of the estate of Edward Morler, riit-eat d. In tbe Marian Circut Court, f earuary Term. 18-s. ..,- Notice L hereby dven that Iloward M. FoHz, U Admlnirator of theestate of Edward Morley, ü erased, haa presented and file1 his account and Touchers in fin at settlement of aaid eitate, and thüt the same will come up for examination and ct!on of said Circuit Court ou tbe fk day cf March, UHi, at which time all hairs, creditors or leKtecis of aaid estate ate required to arP-rin 681(1 Court and ahow cause, if any there be. why sali account and vouchers .hou 11 not be approved. And tüe heirs ol and estate are alao hereby required at tne time and olace aforesaid, to appear nd make vrooi ol xhHt telrshlp. HOWARD M. FOLTX. Jno.8. TARKISC.T05, Attorney. N TOTICi: OF AFPOIKTMEST. Kntfrxtic herebv civen. that the undersitnei has duly qnal'fled as adminUtrator. wi'h the will annexed, of theeatateoi Elizabeth Caa by, late of Marion County, Indiana, deceased. SjtiO, estate is supposed to be solvent. ALEXANDER C. AYRF3, Adm'r. Atrep. Brown & Habvet, Attya.
notice:
JOTICE OF APPOINTMENT. Kotice ii hereby eiven th.t the nndersifnfvl ba dulv qualified a Administrator ot the estate of William H Hamlin, late of Marion county, li!iana. deceased. Said Eitate ia .uppose to be tolTye1DLIAM a 8Mock. Administrator. JOIICE OF APPOINTMENT. . " Notice I. hereby riven tSat the nndenigTiei haa duly qualified at Administrator Of the estate of William Wlilard, late of Mario a couaty, Indiana, deceased. Said Estate ia supposed t be solvent WILLIAM N. BURT, AimialatnUc. .P.fyjuut, A.Wrncy, i . , . ..t?3l
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