Jasper County Democrat, Volume 11, Number 30, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 September 1908 — Page 2
m Ml! OWII. t, t. nmn jinn n nmani. $1.60 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE. Official Democratic Paper of Jasper County. Published Wednesdays and Saturdays. Entered as Second-Class Matter June >. 1808, at the post office at Rensselaer, Ind., under the Act of March S, 187#. Office on Van Rensselaer Street. Long Distance Telephones: Office 315. Residence 311. Advertising rates made known on ep- - plication. WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 10, 1008.
NATIONAL TICKET.
Far President WILLIAM J. BRYAN. For Vice-President, JOHN W. KERN. STATE TICKET. Governor < THOMAS R. MARSHALL. Lieutenant-Governor FRANK J. HALL. Secretary of State JAMES F. COX. Auditor of State MARION BAILEY. Treasurer of State JOHN ISENBARGER. Attorney General WALTER J. LOTZ. Reporter Supreme Court BURT NEW. Judge Supreme Court M. B. LAIRY. Judge Appellate Court E. W. FELT. State Statistician P. J. KELLEHER. Supt. Public Instruction ROBERT J. ALEY. DISTRICT TICKET. Member of Congress WILLIAM DARROCH, of Newton County. State Senator, Counties of Jasper, Newton, Starke and White, ALGIE J. LAW, of Newton County. Representative, Counties of Jasper and White, GUY T. GERBER of Jasper County. COUNTY TICKET. Treasurer .... ALFRED PETERS of Marlon tp. Recorder CHARLES W. HARNER of Carpenter tp. Sheriff WILLIAM I. HOOVER of Marion tp. Surveyor FRANK HARRIOTT of Union tp. Coroner DR. A. J. MILLER of Rensselaer. Commissioner. Ist Dist. THOMAS F. MALONEY of Kankakee tp. Commissioner 3rd Dist. GEORGE B. FOX of Carpenter tp. TOWNSHIP TICKETS. Carpenter— GEOßGE BESSE Trustee; JAMES H. GREEN, Assessor. Gillam— JOHN W. SELMER Trustee. Miarion - EDWARD HERATH, Trustee; SAMUEL SCOTT, Assessor. Union—ISAAC KIGHT Trustee; CHARLES U. GARRIOTT, Assessor. Hanging Grove —WM. R. WILLITT. Trustee; CHARLES LEFLER, Assessor. Walker — DAVID M. PEER, Trustee; JOSEPH FENZIL, Assessor. Jordan—WM. WORTLEY, Trustee; FRANK NESSIUS, , Assessor. Newton— E. P. LANE, Trustee; JOSEPH THOMAS, As- . sessor. 1 Barkley— THOMAS M. CAL- • LAHAN, Trustee; JOHN NOR- > MAN, Assessor. ’ Wheatfield—S D. CLARK, ’ Trustee; HENRY MISCH, As- > sessor. >..---J . . . . - _
ff making depositors safe by guaranteeing their deposits will make speculators out of bankers, why hasn't it had the same effect on bankers who have been compelled to guarantee the redemption of uncurrent, or In other words, bank trills that are in circulation of bank that have failed or quit business for other reasons? And what are bank
examiners doing alt of thia time that they can not detect bankers that are speculating?
The objection is continually made that the democratic plan of guarantee of bank deposits will compel the conservative, honest banker to pay the losses of the "speculator and dishonest banker.” Will some of the wise men who are mouthing this silly, pusalanlmous piece of idiocy kindly Inform us what bank examiners have been doing all these years that these dishonest scoundrels are still permitted to remain in the banking business? And if these bank examiners haven’t sense enough to detect these scoundrels who are speculating with the bank's funds, what have these hon-' est, conservative bankers been doing all these years that they have not exposed these scoundrels themselves, and thereby saved their friends from ruin, and their own good names, as well as the banking business Itself from reproach?
Republican leaders in Delaware county were dumfounded last week when they found that prohibitionists were fighting this so-called "county unit local option," and profess that they can not understand why they should do so. The Reason is plain. The idiotic position the republicans have taken that a county can be voted "wet,” or in other words, a majlrlty of the voters say that they want the county commissioners to issue license under the law, and the next morning a minority who are not satisfied with the “wet” verdict can start out and with a remonstrance and upset the verdict of the day before, does not appeal to the average man very forcibly. It the majority is going to rule and a vote has been taken to determine what that majority want done, the average man will acquiesce in the decision whether it is to his liking or not.
Old Joe Cannon—and we have no apologies to make for using this disrespectful term rather than that of "Uncle Joe,” so generally used in refering to this subservient too) of the trusts, for we have no more respect for Old Joe Cannon than we ever had for that other old fraud, Old Alf McCoy, whom so many people of Jasper county were swindled by and whose vulgarity was only equalled by Old Joe Cannon—seems to have started a boomerang when he attacked W. J. Bryan’s wealth and property holdings. Mr. Bryan states that his wealth is rather less than $150,000, every dollar of which he came by honestly through his writings, lectures and personal efforts, and he then turns on old Joe and asks if his reported $5,000,000 has all been saved out of his salary as congressman which office or some other pap-suck-ing job he has held for the past 40 years? As a matter of fact Mr. Bryan's personal assessment as shown by the tax duplicate in his home’county Is $82,625, while that of his traducer, old 40-years-ln-office millionaire Joe Cannon, is but $15,150! Not all republicans are taxdodgers, but some of them evidently are.
We doubt if the Vermont election made the impression that it ought by all tradition and that it was hoped it would. The Republicans got their big majority, but the point is that the American people are not so impressed with Vermont as they ought to be according to political managers and forecasters. If there was the big Republican majority, the Cleveland Plain Dealer jJoints out that the Democrats gained strength in the Legislature, and the paucity of the Independence party has been demonstrated, if Vermont is to count. If 1200 is the Vermont measure of “Independence" the indications are that there will not be enough to hurt elsewhere. But more than this, we have little faith in Vermont as an indicator. It gets little of the Immigration - that flows Into the country generally, and changes slowly from year to year the way of looking at things and doing them. Vermont utterly failed to forecast the landslide for Roosevelt four years ago, nor did it give a pointer to the rout of Bryan eight years ago. Two years ago It elected its Republican Governor by the small majority of 15,000. Yet this was followed by the sweeping Republican victories later in the same year In the congressional election. So we doubt Vermont as a barometer or thriller or whatever use in this way politicians wish to put it to.—lndianapolis News (Rep.)
In Memory of Bishop Potter.
New York. Sept. 15.—The memory of Bishop Henry C. Potter, of the Protestant Episcopal diocese of New York, who died at his summer home in Coopertown. N. Y.. July 21 last is to be honored by an Imposing funeral and public service in Grace church on Oct 20, next
We had the only car of peaches last year and the year before. CHICAGO BARGAIN STORE.
BIG SLUMP IN MAINE.
Continued from First Page.
has construed that to mean that some Schedules will be lowered and some raised, but there Is no Ihtlmation that the average will be lower or higher thnn it is now. And so oh in regard to all the questions which are at issue. Mr. Tuft must make his position known. He cannot rely upon the president's indorsement. An indorsement on ■ note is not necessary if the maker of the note is good, and the Indorsement is only good when suit can be brought against the Indorser to enforce ft “If Mr. Taft had a reform record of his own he would not need to be Indorsed by the president, and the president’s indorsement is of no value unless the president will agree to stay in Washington and see that Mr. Taft makes good. We ought to have some definite statement as to what the public is to expect from Mr. Taft No such definite statement appears in the platform and no definite conclusion can be drawn from Mir. Taft's speeches, and It does not answer the. purpose for the president to say that he feels sure that Mr. Taft will do what la right or what is just for there is a wide difference of' opinion as to w'hat is right and as to what is just. A few plain, simple sentences from Mr. Taft will be worth more than the eulogy that the president pronounces."
TAFT TAKES A HAND, TOO. He Thinks the Nebraskan Has a Past of His Own. Cincinnati. Sept 15.—After asserting that his official record, his sj>eeeh of acceptance and his subsequent utterances nre ample indications of his own political position, William H. Taft replied to Bryan’s comment on the Roosevelt letter by suggesting that Bryan examine his own record—- “ From which he seems to be struggling to separate himself with all the adroitness acquired in a twelve years’ hunt for an issue on which he can be elected president. The readiness with which Mr. Bryan in successive presidential campaigns passes from one paramount issue to another shows that the chief consideration which Las affected his selection of an issue has been its plausibility in attracting votes. “He presents tlie remarkable spectacle of one who has been seeking the presidency for twelve years without success and without official responsibility, and without the opportunity to test the various propositions which he has advocated for reforms, and yet of having the event demonstrate what a colossal failure he would have made in each instance had he been permitted to his proiKwals in the policies of the country. “‘He does not now say whether he is still in favor of the free coinage of silver. He does not now answer the question whether, if lie were president and an exigency should arise in which he would he called upon to exercise hi« discretion affirmatively to main talning tlie parity between gold and silver, lie would exercise that dis re tion He has not permitted himself to discuss in this campaign the issue of anti-inqierialsni, wltcli was the [vara mount issue in 1900 as he declared, and in respect to which tlie policy of tiie Republican party has been vindicated. • • •
“He now says that he favors the more rigid regulation of the railroads. In 1896 be expressed the view that the railroads could not be regulated because the railroads would own the regulators appointed by law and therefore he was in favor of government owner ship. We hear nothing from him on this subject. Instead • • * he has attempted to give a bond to keep the peace with respect togoverninent ownership. which by its mere announcement showed its lack of the vote-catch-ing quality. “He professes to have been the father and now to be the heir of the Roosevelt policies, apd yet in no campaign of three in which be lias taken park and two of which he himself led, did he make them tlie paramount issue. “Mr. Bryan professes to be the great friend of labor, and yet he was one of the chief supporters of the passage of the German Wilson bill, that made labor helpless for four years/ He then proposed as a remedy for the disasters to which labor was thus exposed the issuing of a 50-cent dollar, which would have cut in two such wages as there were, and would have led to tlie hardest kind of a struggle on laUr’s part to restore Its wages to Its proper equivalent under tlie gold standard. “Tlie country has l>een most fortunate that tlie fallacy of Mr. Bryan’s railroad preposition has been ex|K>sed without tlie cost of putting them into actual governmental practice, and it will be fortunate, indeed, if the danger of four years’ depression, to which it would be exposed in ease of Mr. Bryan's ejection, may be averted, and if by Republican succeea in November, and subsequent prosperity; and by a clinching of tlie Roosevelt policies, lie may l»e again shown to lie a prophet without honor.!’
McC’arren Again Defeated. Rochester, N. Y.. Sept. 15.—The Democratic state committee voted to seat in the state convention the contesting anti McCarron delegates in the sixth and ninth districts of Kings county. Only five members of the committee voted with McCarren. The unseated men threaten to bolt.
NEWS FACTS IN OUTLINE
John Reigle. a young farmer living near Peabody. Kan., choked his
wife to death and then shot and killed himself. Insane probably. Tlie common and select councils of Pittsburg Lave passed bond ordinances to the am,mint of over $6,000,000. The international congress of applied electricity has opened In the Electrical Exiwsitipn building at Marsallles. Eleven countries are represented. William B. McNemar, a civil war veteran aged sixty-five years, shortly after receiving a pension check was found dead near Weston, W. Va.; probably a case of murder. Dr. Koch, the famous German scientist has arrived at Winnipeg, Man., on his way to New York from Japan. Francisco Marlona Quinones, one of the leading figures in Porto Rican history Is dead at San Juan. The Republican territorial convention of Hawaii has renominated Johan Kalaniananole congressional delegate. A case of yellow fever in Havana is officially reported.
SCORES ON THE BALL FIELDS
Chicago, Sept. 15—-Following are the standing of the big league cluba and the dailv baseball scores: NATIONAL. P. W, L P.O. New Yorkl2B 82 46 .641 Chicagol34 83 51 .619 Pittsburg 133 82 51 .617 Philadelphia .128 71 57 .555 Cincinnati 134 63 71 ,474 Boston 133 56 77 .421 Brooklyn 130 44 86 .338 St. Louisl3l 44 87 .336 At New York— Brooklyn 3 00000000 o—3 New York ~..0 000020 10 Ten innings. Hits—Brooklyn, 8; New York. 8. Errors—Brooklyn, 0; New York, 2. Batteries —P.rooklyn, Pastorlus, Dunn; New York. Wiltse, Bresnahan. At Philadelphia— Boston 0 0 1 02 000 I—4 Philadelphia ....0 0010002 o—3 Hits—Boston, 5; Philadelphia, 7. Errors—Boston, 1; Philadelphia, 6. Batteries —Boston, Cliappelle, Bowerman; Philadelphia, McQuillen and Moren, Dooin. At St. Louie and Pittsburg—No games scheduled. AMERICAN. P. W. L. P.C. Detroit...l3l 75 56 .573 Chicagol34 75 59 .560 Cleveland 135 75 60 .555 St. Louisl32 73 59 .553 Philadelphia 131 64 67 .489 Boston .133 65 68 .489 Washington ........129 58 71 .450 New York 131 43 88 .328
At Cleveland — Cleveland 0 1 0000 6 1 2—lo Chicago 0 20000020—4 Hits—Cleveland, 18; Chicago, 9. Errors—Cleveland. 1; Chicago, 2. Batteries—Cleveland. Joss. Bemis; Chicago, Owen and Manuel, Sullivan, At St.-Louis— Detroit 0 0400 190 o—2 St. Ixiuls ........1 » 2 1 1 0 0 0 x—s Hits —Detroit, 9; St. Louis, 9. Errors—Detroit, 3; St. Louis, 0. Batteries—Detroit, Donovan. Schmidt; St. Louis. Powell, Smith. At Boston — New Yorko 0 1 00000 o—l Boston 0 0020000 x—2 Hits —New York. 5; Boston, 7. Errors—New York, 2; Boston, 4. Bat-teries-—New York. Lake, Kleinow; Boston, Steele, Donohue. At Washington— Philadelphia ..0 000 1 0000 o—l Washington ...0 10000000 I—2 Hits—Philadelphia, 10; Washington, 10. Errors —Philadelphia. 2: Washington, 1. Batteries—Philadelphia. Salve, Towers; Washington, Keeley. Street. Second game—Called, darkness. Philadelphia .0 1 0 0 0 1 2 I—s Washington ..0 000 0 00 o—o Hits —Philadelphia. 9; Washington. 3. Errors—Philadel[>hia, 2; Washington, 2. Batteries Philadelphia, Coombs. Lopp; Washington, Keeley, Street.
Association: At Indianapolis—Louisville 5. Indianapolis 10; at, Milwaukee, Minneapolis and Toledo No games, the season having closed with the game at Indianapolis, where the pennant goes this year. The percentages of the leading teams are: Indianapolis, 601: Louisville, 575; Columbus, 559. Western:* At Sioux City—Omaha 0, Sioux City 8; at TJncoln—Pueblo 2, Lincoln 2—eleven Innings, darkness, at Des Moines —Denver 4. Des Moines 0. These games close tlie Western League season. Sioux City winning the pennant by two games.
In liana Man Set Free.
Leavenworth. Kan., Sept. 15.—Wilson Collins, ex-cashier of a Iwtnk at Elkhart. Ind., was released from the federal prison here this morning after a six year sentence for violation of the national banking Jaw. Collins was sentenced at the same time with A. N. Broderick, president of the bank and Walter. Brown, a financier who borrowed heavily from the bank.
Sven Hedin Is “Found.”
v Simla, Sept. 15.—Sven Anders HedIn, the explorer who started in 1906 from Chinese Turkestan on a journey though Tibet, and concerning 'whose whereabouts there was great anxiety for many months. Iras arrived here. He will he the guest of Lord Minto, the viceroy of Indian, for ten days, when he will proceed to his home in Stockholm.
Aged Woman Burns to Death.
Evansville. Ind.. Sept. 15.--Mr\ Philip Fogel, aged sixty-eight, living near here, was burned to death while burning refuse. ?
LONG LIST OF INJURED
But Only One Killed in a Rail Collision Caused by the Smoke Fog. DANGER CAME FROM THE REAR Dummy Engine Plunges Into the Hindi Car of an Excursion TrainNames of the Worst Hurt. Chesterton. Ind.. Sept 15.—Denso fog and smoke that hung over the Lake Shore tracks at this place caused a wreck in which one woman was killed and many persons, nearly all of them from Indianapolis, were Injured, five perhaps fatally. Mr£ Esther Hacox, the woman killed, was en route from Chicago to Indianapolis with her daughter. Mrs. Belle Haft, and expected to make that city her future home. Her little granddaughter, who was riding in the seat with her, escaped with a slight bruise on the elbow.
How the Accident Happened. The excursion train, which was bound for Indianapolis from Chicago over the Lake Erie and Western railway, was stopped on the main line at Chesterton because a freight train, through error had been backed on to the line. The Chesterton local train, which is known as the theater dummy, crashed into the rear car of the excursion train and tiie scores of passengers in the car were hurled from their seats and buried under the wreckage of the demolished car. Th? excuse of the train crew of the dummy was that tlie fog of smoke from the forest fires that hung over the track shut out all view of the danger until too late to avert tlie crash. Names of Those Injured.
When tlie unconscious and wounded people had been dragged from the wreck the list contained the following names, with others less seriously hurt: From Indianapolis—William Sprieng, right arm broken; Walter Roller, rigrtit: leg broken, injured internally;. Catherine Gill, widow, both hips broken; Paul Miller, both legs broken, body bruised: Mrs. Alice Miller, both legs broken: C. Minnick, head cut and body bruised: Esther Hacox, daughter of Mrs. Esther Hacox, injured internally; Mrs. L. Grover and Aletha Austin, injured internally: Myra Short, bruised on the head and body; Homer Smith, badly in jured wrist: Mrs. William Wheeler, fractured leg and internal injuries; B. S. Hawkins, injured on head and face; Oscar C. Muller, Injured on head and face; Mamie Prentiss, head and face cut; Arthur Scherer, left shoulder and back wrenched; T. R. Prentiss, eightytwo, left arm broken; Julia Conley, cut and bruised on the head and face; Mrs. John Conley, hurt internally; Miss May Starkey, cut aud bruised on head, back and face: Ada Johnson, left crushed. From other points—William Gilman. Chicago, left leg broken, injured internally; 11. E. Stockwell, engineer Chicago, body bruised and cut. injured internally; U. J. Elliott, fireman, hurt on head, face and hands cut. Injured Internally; William Fawcett, conductor, hurt interna Illy: Jessie Partridge. Tipton. Ind., left shoulder broken, isvtb legs lacerated: T. B. Bartholomew. Tip ton. Ind., right wrist broken: Miss Rose Scott. Haugthville, both arms aud head and face cut.
INDIANA STATE FAIR FIGURES
Attendance Largely Increased Over That of Ijast Year and Receipts , $4,000 Higher. Indianapolis, Sept. 15. Treasurer Jasper Lagrange, of the state board of agriculture, has revised his figures on the attendance at the state fair week and gives the total for the exposition during the day and the horse shows at night as 129,602. Although there •was a slump in the number of visitors on Thursday and Friday, as compared with last year, the increases on tlie earlier days of the week sent the totals higher than for the fair last year, when 107,400 paid to see the expos! tion. While it will be ten days before the exact figures can be reached It is thought that the receipts for last week amobnted to $.85,000, mostly from gate admissions, an increase of aliout $4,000 over the fair a year ago. The profits ■will probably reach $15,000. The profits may be SB,OOO or slb,ooo less than last year, although the earnings were larger. One reason for this is that the premium list carried last week was $7,000 more than a year ago and that there were a number of other additional expenses last week.
THE MARKETS
Chicago Grain. Chicago, Sept. 14. Following were the quotations on the Chicago Board of Trade today: . Wheat— Open. High. Low. Close. Sept. .. .$ .98% $ .99% $ .98% $ .99% Dec. (nt .98% .97% .98% .98% May . A . 1.01% 1.02 1.01% 1.01% Corn— . . . Sept ... .80% .81% .80% .80% Dec. ... .69% .69% .68% .68% May ... .67% .67% .66% .67 OatsSept 49% .49% .48% .48% Dec. ... .50% .50% .49% .50 -May... .52% .52% .52%, .52% Pork— Sept. ...15.15 15.15 15.12% 15.12% Oct. ...15.25 15.55 15.20 15.25 Jan. ...17.15 17.20 16.95 17.00
CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED. The amount thus far paid in to The Democrat for the Democratic National Campaign fund, and which’ has been sent to National Chairman Haskell, Is. $20.00 • ««•**• ******
Lard — Sept ~10.10 10.22% 10.10 10.20 Oct. ...1027% 10.30 10.22 10.22% Jan. ... 9.07 10.12%; 10.00 10.02% East Buffalo Live Stock. East Buffalo, N. Y., Sept. 14. Dunning & Stevens, Live Stock Commission Merchants, East Buffalo, N. Y., quote as follows: Cattle—Receipts 160 cars; market strong; best export steers, $«[email protected]; best shipping steers. [email protected]; cows, $3.00® 4.25; heifers, [email protected] Hogs—Receipts 90 cars; market steady; heavy, Yorkers, [email protected]; pigs, $6.25(<f6.50. Sheep and Lambs—Receipts 50 cars; market steady; beat lambs. $6.25; yearlings, $4.50®4.75; wethers. [email protected]; ewes, [email protected]. Calves—Best, [email protected].
FOUR DIE IN A CRASH
Twenty-Six Others Injured, Some Very Badly, in a Railway Wreck tn Mississippi. Qarkesdale, Miss., Sept 15.—Four persons are known to have been killed and twenty-six were Injured in a wreck on the Yazoo and Mississippi Valley railroad, two miles south of here when two coaches of a passenger train rolled down an embankment. Two or three passengers are unaccounted for and it is possible their bodies will be found under the wreckage. Tlie known dead are: Mrs. Virgie Graham, Glendora, Miss.; Miss Amber Russell, Andlng, Miss.; Mrs. Robert M. Gay. Glendora, Miss.; unknown white woman, under debris. The most seriously injured are: Mrs A. J. Jackmore. Mattson. Miss., internal and severe cuts; two small children. seriously cut and bruised; J. H. Perkins, Memphis, internally; O. E. Harris, district attorney of Sumner, Miss., probably fatally; Conductor E. S. Sharp, two fractures of arm; Miss Sharp, his daughter, seriously cut; child, badly cut on body; Miss Raynor, Lexington. Miss., internal.
Red Pepper Ten Inches Long.
MlltorM Ind., Sept 15.—Miss Cora Brown, of this place. Is a champion grower of red peppers. Miss Brown exhibits one ten inches long. It is named the “South American Goat Horn.” and in shape resembles a goat’s horn. We are showing the finest line of new, nobby clothing at money saving prices. CHICAGO BARGAIN STORE.
Notice of Letting Contract for Completing Stone Roads. No. 2849. Notice Is hereby given that the Contractors, Glidewell Son, having failed to complete the work of constructing the Gillam Gravel Roads, petitioned for by Larkin C. Logan, et al. within the time specified in the contract and within the time extended by the Board of Commissioners, the Board of Commissioners of Jasper County, Indiana, will on Wednesday, the 7th day of October, until 12 o’clock noon, receive sealed proposals for the completion of said roads, according to plans and specifications on file in the Auditor’s office. Said uncompleted portion is as as follows:—Near Independence church, at or near stake 78 plus 50 to stake 85 plus 39, a distance of 689 feet, has not been graveled; from stake 133 plus 25 to stake 171 plus 65, a distance of 3,843 feet has not been graveled; from stake 335 to stake 350 a shortage of 94 1-3 yards of gravel. Making a total of 1,604 yards to complete work. Bidders will be required to file bond and affidavit as provided by law. The Board of Commissioners reserve the right to reject any and all bids. By order of the Board of Commissioners of Jasper county. JAMES N. LEATHERMAN, Auditor Jasper County. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Jasper County, State of Indiana, administrator of the estate of Joseph J. Miller, late of Jasper County, deceased. Said estate is supposed- to be solvent. WERNER MILLER. August 29, 1908 Administrator. Sept. 2. 9, 16
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT. To All Whom It May Concern: Notice is hereby given that I have been appointed Trustee of the estate of Gamaliel G. Garrison, assigned, and of all the property and effects of the said Garrison, and that I have duly qualified as such Trustee, and I do require: All persons indebted to said Garrison to render an accounting to me, at my office in Remington, Indiana, and to pay amounts due said Garrison to me. All persons having in their possession any property belonging to said Garrison to deliver the same to me. All persons having claims against said Garrfsoh to file same with me by October Ist. 1908. H. R. HARTMAN. Dated September 4, 1908. septs-12-19 NOTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS AND LEGATEES. In the matter of the estate of Margaret A. Beaver, deceased. In the Jasper Circuit Court, September term, 1908. Notice is hereby - given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Margaret A. Beaver, deceased, and all persons Interested In said estate, to appear in the Jasper Circuit Court, on Monday, the 28th day of September, 1908, being the day fixed and endorsed on the final settlement account of William H. Beaver, administrator of. said decedent, and show cause If any, why such final account should hot be approved; and the heirs of said decedent and all others interested, are also hereby notified to appear in said Court, on said day and make proof of their heirship, or claim to any part of said estate. - WILLIAM H. BEAVER. Administrator. Folts & Spitler, Attys for Estate. Sept. 2,9, 1«.
