Jasper County Democrat, Volume 12, Number 35, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 August 1909 — Page 6

North Dakota Good Crops and Prosperity on every side.'. .There never was bat one crop of land and that is nearly gone, while oar population is increasing by thousands every day. Do You Want a Home? or Desire an Investment? We own and control one of the best propositions in the Western World today. NORTH DAKOTA PRAIRIES!! I Iftin The Safest and Best LAnU Investment in the world Our Prices are very Attractive and Terms very easy. EXCURSION RATES every two weeks: Ist and 3rd Tuesday of each month. Car fare refunded to purchasers. Better buy of one who knows. Call on our agents or write H. J. Johnson Land Go., OAKS, NORTH DAKOTA. W. P. GAFPIELD, Agent Rensselaer, Indiana.

Edward P. Honan, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Law, Abstracts, Heal Estate, Loans. Will practice in all the courts. Offlct over Fendig’s Fair. RENSSELAER. INDIANA. Arthur H. Hopkins, Law, Loans and Real Estate. Loans -on farm and City property, personal security and chattel mortgage. Buy, sell and rent farms and city property. Farm and city fire Insurance Attorneys for AMERICAN BUILDING, LOAN AND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION. Office over Chicago Department Store. RENSSELAER. IND. J. F. Irwin. S. C. Irwlzr Irwin & Irwin, Law, Real Estate and Inßurancs 5 Per Cent Farm Loans. Office in Odd FelloWs’ Block. RENSSELAER. IND. Frank Folts C. G. Spltler. Foltz dc Spitier —* (Successors to Thompson A Bro.) >S| ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Law, Real Estate, Insurance. Abstracts and Loans. Only set of Abstract Books In the County. RENSSELAER. IND.

E. C. English, Physician & Surgeon. Opposite the Jasper Savings & Trust Company Bank. « Office Phone 177. Residence Phone, 116. M. D. Qwin, M. D. Physician & Surgeon. Office opposite Postofflce, In Murray's new building. PHONE 205. day or night W. W. Merrill, M. D. Eclectic Physician and Surgeon, RENSSELAER, - * INDIANA Chronic Diseases a Specialty. Dr. E. N. Loy HOMEOPATHIST. Office East Side of Court House Square. Phones—Office 89, Residence 169. TELEPHONES Office, 2 on 300 Residence 3 on 300 Dr. F. A. Turfler OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN. Graduate American School of Osteopathy. Post Graduate American School of Osteopathy under the founder, Dr. A. T. Still. Office Hours—9-12 a. m., 1-5 p. m. Tuesdays and Fridays at Montlcello, Ind. 1-2 Murray Building - Rensselaer, Ind. H. L. Brown, DENTIST. Office over Larsh’s drug store.

DR. J. H. HANBSON VETEKNARY SURGEON—Now at Renßsel&er. Calls promptly answered. Office In Harris Bank Building. Phone 443. SURE CURE *Pn> prietor. For wit at drug storm, or tent bj mall on receipt at One Dollar tor Two Momtbs TbkaTM KMT. tlte one bottle , and It not wtltfied that t here U ft?L!RPKTSI?SiSttV4i he oth er bottle and I WILL RETURN THE DOLLAR. Sekd to* TUTmogitLi AMD BiWU. OtJABAMTKKt) r*DT.B TBS PfK* Food asp Ds c« Act. Jot s s£ikji, giauLNo^fiM. For sals by A. F. Long, druggist, Renssslasr, Ind. Read The Democrat's clubbing list on another page.

The Man Prom Home

A NoveDzatlon of the Play of the Sane Name

By BOOTH TARKINGTON and HARRY LEON WILSON

Copyright. 1909. by American Frees Association

SYNOPSIS. CHAPTER I.—Daniel Voorhees Pike, a rising young Kokomo (Ind.) lawyer, hears that his ward, Ethel GrangerSimpson, is to be married abroad to the son of an English earl. Her father was his nearest friend and he has long loved tl?e girl. He goes abroad to arrange with her the business matters connected with her marriage. ll—Ethel Granger-Slmpson and her brother Horace, have become anglomaniacs and are spending much of their late father’s fortune in travel and entertaining. They become Intimate with Lady Creech, the Earl of Hawcastle, his son, Aimeric St. Aubyn, and Comtesse de Champigny, an adventuress and associate of the earl’s. They are at a hotel at Sorrento, Italy. Ethel promises to marry the son because she craves a title. Ill —The Russian Grand Duke Vasili is shortly to arrive at the same hotel Incognito as Herr von Grollerhagen. IV—The Earl of Hawcastle is in need of money and wants his son to get a huge settlement of money at his marriage to Ethel. An escaped Russian bandit is located at Sorrento. V—For Some reason the comtesse fears the alleged bandit is one Ivanoff. Aimeric tells his father Ethel has accepted him. Vl—Horace agrees to persuade hi 3 sister Ethel to settle $750,000 on Aimeric. Vll—Ethel tells Horace of her delight at the prospect of her coming marriage into the ancient family of the St. Aubyns. VIII—Von Grollerhagen arrives with Daniel Voorhees Pike on foot, their auto having broken down. IX—Harold, Ethel and the Hawcastle party are disgusted with what they term the “American manners” of Pike. She tells Pike of her Identity, ns he had failed to recognize her In her European clothes and European deportment. X—Pike refuses to consent as her guardian to her settling $750,000 on 6r m^l c ’ E t nd Ethel ls enraged at him. Xl—the Russian refugee meets Pike and the latter shows him a place to hide from the Italian police. Von Grol,Pike t 0 do this. XII— Ihe fugitive tells Von Grollerhagen and Pike how he came to be sent to the mines. Horace falls in love with the adventuress the comtesse.

CHAPTER XIII. TRE LETTEB. j|B Lady Creech and Hawcastle entered the garden, where Horace was still holding the band of the fair countess, they encountered Aliperic, who was strolling In aimlessly from the direction of the village. Hawcastle beckoned to hfin. ‘‘Anything unusual down there?” he asked, pointing to the village. “Rawther! Carabinieri still hunting that bandit chap,” said his hopeful son languidly. “Don’t mumble your words!” snapped the old lady, and Horace and madame turned sharply .and confusedly. Almeric made a gesture of Impatience and, putting his head cloge to bis respected aunt’s ear, shouted: "Hunting a bally bandit!” at which the old woman screamed sharply. Hawcastle took him by the shoulder. “What do they say about him?” he demanded. “That he Is still in the neighborhood,” replied his heir, with a languid sigh. “What did I tell you?” asked Lady Creech triumphantly. And the earl made a gesture of impatience. “Almeric, find your betrothed and bring her here,” he said. And the young man trotted off slowly. Horace came slowly forward. “What’s the row, sir?” he asked, and the earl smiled, * "My dear yoiing man,” he said, "1 congratulate you that you and your sister need no longer submit to an odious dictation.” He was about to say more, but at that moment Daniel came down the steps and walked across the grass to the motor. As he passed the group he smiled genially and observed: “Looks to me as If It was going tc clear up cold.” “Good afternoon, Mr. Pike,” answered the earl and motioned the others to leave. Pike merely nodded his head, and Hawcastle came up to him. “It is a pity that there should have been any misunderstanding in the matter of your ward’s betrothal," he said, and Pike smiled grimly. “Oh, I wouldn’t call it a misunderstanding,” he said, and the earl went on. “It would 111 become a father to press upon the subject of his son’s merits”— he began, but Pike cut him short. “I won’t talk with you about him,” he said. “I don’t want to hurt your feelings.” Hawcastle glared at him and was about to reply when Mariano entered with a letter on a tray, which he handed to the lawyer, who regarded it curiously. There was a growing menace In the earl’s attitude, and as his anger grew his suavity grew with it “There is another matter to which I want to call your attention,” he went on, and Pike answered him at -once. “I’ll talk about anything else with you,” he replied and looked up to see Ethel coming down the steps. She came forward to the earl and said: “You wished me to come here?” "I wish to tell you that I see light breaking through the clouds. Have another talk with our friend here, and, believe me, all will be well.” With a bow he left the garden, and Ethel stood staring after him. Pike looked up quickly from the letter he was reading and crossed over to her. "I’m glad you’ve come,” he said. “I’ve got something here I want to read to you. When I got your letter at home I wrote to Jim Cooley, our vice

Consul In Lotulon, to look up " those Hawcastle folks and write me here bow they stand.” “Yon did that!” sbe cried In anger. “Yon had the audacity to pry Into the affairs of the Earl of Hawcastle!” “Why, I’d ’a’ done that if It’d been the governor of Indiana himself,” he replied, with surprise. “Besides, Jim Cooley’s ‘home folks.! His office used to be right next door to mine in Kokomo. I haven’t opened, the letter yet, but I haven’t much doubt but Jim ’ll have some statements in it that’ll show you I’m right about these people." “How do you know that?*’ she demanded heatedly. “Because I’ve had experience enough of life”— “In Kokomo?" she asked scornfully. "Yes, ma’am,” he answered. "There’s Just as many kinds of people in Kokomo as there is In Pekin, and I didn’t serve a term in the legislature without learning to pick underhand men at sight Now, that earl, let alone his having a bad eye—his ways are too much on the stripe of T. Cuthbert Bentley's to suit me. T. Cuthbert was a Chicago gentleman, with a fur lined overcoat, that opened up a bank in our town, and when he caught the Canadian express three months later all he left in Kokomo was the sign on the front door. That was painted on. But. there, here’9 the letter. Read It for yourself.” He handed it to her and watched her while she broke the seal and then began to read: Dear Dan—The earldom of Hawcastle ls one of the oldest In the kingdom, and the St. Aubyns have distinguished themselves In the forefront of English battles from Aglncourt and Crecy to Sebastopol. The present holder of the title came into it by incident He was a younger son's younger son and had spent some years In Russia in business under another name. Nothing here in his English record ls seriously against him. though everything he has ls mortgaged to the handle. She finished with a look of triumph. “What a terrible indictment!” she said scornfully. “So that was what you counted on to convince me of my .mistake? 1 shall tell Lord Hawcastle

“What a terrible Indictment!” she said.

that you will be willing to take up the matter of the settlement the moment Us solicitor arrives.” Pike shook his head sadly. “No, I wouldn’t do that, because I won’t take up any settlements with him or any one else.” * “Have you after this any objection to my alliance with Mr. SL Aubyn?’ she inquired, her anger at white heat “It isn’t an alllanoe with Mr. St. Aubyn you’re after.” he replied calmly. "You’re after something there ain’t anything to. If Pd let you buy what yon want you’d find it as empty as the judgment day the morning after. You think because I’m a jay country lawyer I don’t understand Why, we’ve got the same thing al home. There was little Annie Hoff meyer. Her pa was a carpenter and doing well, but Annie could not get into the Kokomo Ladles’ Literary society, and her name didn’t show up in the society column four or five times every Saturday morning, so she gets her pa to give her the money to marry Artie Seymour, the minister’s son, and a regular minister's son he was! Almost broke Annie's heart and her pa’s, too, but he let her have her way and went in debt and bought them a house on Main street. That was two years ago.” Pike paused momentarily. “Annie’s working at the deepo <faudj stand now,” he resumed, “and Artie’s working at the hotel bar—in frontdrinking up what’s left of old map Hoff meyer’s—settlement!” She flung away from him in a temper and then wheeled on him in a flash. “And you say you understand—you. who couple the name of a tippling yokel with that of a St. Aubyn, whose j ancestors have fought on every field of i battle from Crecy and Agincourt to the : Crimea!” “But you won’t see much of his ancestors!” complained Pike. “He bears their name,” she answered. “That’s it, and It’s the name you want. Nobody could look at you and not know it wasn’t him! It’s th# name! And I'd let you buy it if It would make you happy—if you didn’t have to take the people with it Don’t you see they’re counting on it? The earl—he's j counting on living on you.” The In- | dlanlan became excited. “Why, a Terre Haute pickpocket could see that! And this old Lady Creech—she’s counting on It, and this Frenchwoman that’s with them—lsn’t she trying to land yonr brother? The whole kit and boodle of them are on the track of John Simpson's money!”

'"I guv* Aimeric my promise. It was forever, and I shall keep It,” sbe answered slowly, as if ahe had been Impressed with hia earnestness. He looked at her quietly. “I’m not going to let you,” be replied. “Then I’ll throw your Interference to the winds. I shall marry without your consent.” “Do you think they’d let you?” Pike asked quickly. For a moment she stood still, and then came the sound of the guitars from over the wall. Pike went on after a time. “Sounds kind of foreign and lonesome,” he said. “I’d rather hear something that sounded more like home—‘Sweet Genevieve,' for instance. You know It, don’t you?” “I used to,” she answered, hanging her head. “It’s old fashioned and common, isn’t it?"# “That’s why I like it, I guess,” he answered. "I couldn’t get you to sing It for me before I go borne, could I?” She looked at him thoughtfully for a moment. “I’m afraid not," she answered and went quickly into the hotel, leaving him looking after her curiously. (To be Continued.)

EVENTS OF FIVE DAYS

Program of Indiana State Fair Is Brimful of Features For Week of September 6. FINE DAY AND NIGHT SHOWS Band Concerts, Parades, Vaudeville and Many Other Conspicuous Features Will Mark the Big Exposition. —All Entry Lists Close on Aug. 24. —Acres of New Farm Machinery. The Indiana State Fair opens at Indianapolis on Monday (Labor day), Sept. 6, and, under a rigid A-ule fixed by the state board of agriculture a few years ago, the exposition will be on for five full days. All of the entry lists close on Aug. 24. and the exhibitors may enter the grounds on Sept. 2. That its rule may be enforced, the fair management will start the judges to work tying ribbons early Tuesday morning, and exhibits which are not in readiness at that time stand a good chance of missing the prizes. The program shows that each day of the Fair will be filled to the brim with interesting features. The Fair will be formally opened at 9 o’clock on Monday morning. The first day will be Labor day and practically all the events of the week will be given, including the concerts by Natiello’s band of Philadelphia, the Indianapolis Military and the Indianapolis Newsboys’ bands, which will play every day. The vaudeville features, including the most sensational open-air show that has yet been given at the Fair, will each afternoon be given before the grandstand. The races will be started at 1:30 every afternoon, those for the first day being: Three-year-old trot, purse |600; the pacing division of the Western Horseman stake No. 2 for three-year-olds, $2,000; 2:30 trot, $2,000; 2:06 pace, ssl,ooo. Hedgewood Boy, 2:0£%, and Lady Maude C., 2:04%, full brother and sister, will be driven by Dick Wilson to beat the world’s record for pacers to wagon. The night shows will start on Monday evening at 8 o’clock and an elaborate program of horse shows, vaudeville and band concerts will be given each evening. Tuesday will be Old Soldiers’ and Children's day, and they, with teachers in charge of pupils, will be admitted free. The day horse and cattle shows in the coliseum will be marked by the awards of ribbons. Concerts will be given in the coliseum, grandstand and near the Administration building. The races for Tuesday include the 2:22 pace, purse, $1,000; 2:19 trot, SI,OOO/ 2:15 pace, $5,000; 2:11 trot. SI,OOO. We4nesday’s program will be flavored by the show of coach, Hackney, saddle horses and ponies, as well as cattle. An outdoor parade of horses and cattle will be given at 1 p. m. An extra display of flowers will be made In Horticultural hall, the band concerts and vaudeville will be continued, and the races are: 2:25 pace, purse $2,000; 2:20 trot, $5,000; 2:13 pace. $1,006; 2:16 Jrot, SI,OOO.

Thursday will see the Fair at its height. Light harness horses will be among the features of the coliseum program. The grand champions in all livestock departments will receive ribbons. An extraordinary display of cut flowers will be made in Horticultural hall. The second parade of horses and cattle will be given outdoors, the band concerts and vaudeville will be given, and the races will be as follows: Three-year-old pace, 2:25 class, purse $600; the trotting division of the Western Horseman stake No. 2 for threeyearolda, $4,000; 2:10 pace, $2,000; 2:07 trot, $1,200/ Hedgewood Boy, 2:02%, will attempt to beat the world’s record for stallions. Friday will see the last ribbons tied in all departments. The band concerts will, as on previous days, begin at 9 a. m. and continue through the afternoon and evening. With the exception of the outdoor livestock parades, Friday's program will equal that of any other of the five dayß. The races will be a 2:09 pace, purse, $1,000; 2:24 trot, $1,000; •free-for-all pace, $1,200: 2:13 trot, $2,000. Lady Maude C., 2:04*4, will be driven to beat the world’s record for peeing mares. The Fair will close with the horse

and cattle parades, vaudeville, band concerts and horse show on Friday night. The purses for the week amount to $37,600 and the total premiums $75,350. Year by year the mechanical department of the Fair keeps pace with the growth of pther divisions of the exposition, and overshadows some of them. In the amount of ground room occupied, the machinery displays far outrank any other department, being literally pleasured by the acre. Before the snow was oft the Fair grounds last spring the demand for space on the part of manufacturers began. Old exhibitors have asked for larger space, and many new ones have entered the lists. About twenty-five aares will be used for the .mechanical displays. Including every sort of machine which will lighten the work of men and women on the farm, and all will be of the newest designs which the manufacturers are producing. The newest Ideas in engines, plows, wagons, windmills and other power pumps, harvesting machinery and dairy appliances will be shown for the enlightenment of the people from the farms, and all machinery pavilions will be crowded.

Automobile LIVERY We have just purchased another touring car and will place both cars at the public’s service. We drive our own cars and guarantee satisfaction. When in need of a car we will be glad to serve you. Our prices are right and our cars reliable. Phone 262 - 141 or call at our shop fiß

Millions to Loan! We are prepared to take care of all the Farm Loan bualneaa In thla and adjoining countlea at Loweat Rates and Beat Terms, regardless of the “financial stringency.” If you have a loan coming due or dealre a new loan It will not be necessary to pay the excessive rate* demandad by our competitors. FIVE PER CENT. small CMiissl - prompt service Irwin & Irwin Odd Fellows Bldg. Rensselaer. mini eaeatt—aaaoaittaitaoteoaooeaaeessaosaateaaeea—eeeeeeaeaeeeeeaaeeee .We have a supply of money to loan on farms at Five Per Cent and a reasonable commission, and shall be glad to answer inquiries by mail or by ’phone : : : : MilSllOlM North Blde Public Square

Cough Caution Never, positively never potion your lungs. If yon cough—ovon from a simple cold only—you should Always heal, soothe, and ease the irritated bronchial tubes. Don’t blindly suppress It with a stupefying poison. It’s strange how some things finally come about. For twenty years Dr. Shoop has constantly warned people not to> take cough mixtures or prescriptions containing Opium, Chloroform, or similar poisons. And now—a little late though—Congress says "Put It on the label. If poisons are In your Cough Mixture.” Good! Very good 11 Hereafter/or thisvery reasonmother*. and others, should insist on having Dr. Shoop’• Cough Cure. No poison marks on Dr. Shoop’s labels—and none In the medicine, else It must by law be on the label. Audit's not only safe, but It Is said to be bT thosethat know It best, a truly remarkable cough remedy. Taka no chance then, particularly with your children. Insist on having Dr. Shoop’s Cough Core. Compare carefully the Dr. Shoop package with others and note tbe difference. No poison marks there! You can always be on the safe side by demanding Dr. Shoop’s Cough Cure “ALL DEALERS”

NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTB. County of Jasper.) State of Indiana, ) ss - In the Jasper Circuit Court, September Term, 1909. ' John Putt vs. Catharine E. McKenzie, et al. Complaint No. 7479. I Now comes the Plaintiff, by Foltz & Spltler, his attorneys, and flies his complaint herein with an affidavit that the following named defendants, to-wit: Catharine E. McKenzie and Mr. Mckenzle, her husband: Mr. McKenzie as widower of Catharine E. McKenzie, deceased: John Garretson and Mrs. John Garretson, his wife: Mrs. John Garretson as widow of John Garretson, deceased: Elizabeth D. Thompson and George G. Thompson, her husband: George G. Thompson as widower of Elizabeth D. Thompson, deceased; James P. Beal and Mrs. James P. Beal, his wife; Mrs. James P. Beal as widow of James P. Beal, deceased; Elizabeth Bartlett and Mr. Bartlett, her husband; Elizabeth Bartlett, the former widow of James P. Beal, 1 deceased; Emma Stott and. Enoch Stott, her husband, as heirs of James P. Beal, deceased; Joseph M. Beal and Mrs. Joseph M. Beal, his wife; Mrs. Joseph M. Beal as widow of Joseph M. Beal, deceased; Sarah Beal as widow of Joseph M. Beal, deceased; Wilber Beal; John Beal; Ruby Beal Morris; Homer Beal; Sarah Beal Poehlman; Lou Beal Holliburton; Lou Beat Halliburton, as heirs of Joseph M. Beal, deceased; Sarah A. Beal; Amy E. Beal; Martha J. Beal; Martha J. N. Beal; and all of the unknown heirs, devisees, legatees, creditors, executors, administrators, receivers and assigns of each and every one of the foregoing named defendants; and all of the unknown heirs, devisees, legatees, executors, administrators, creditors, receivers and assigns of all at the unknown heirs, devisees and legatees of each and every one of the foregoing named defendants, are non-residents of the state of Indiana... Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants, that unless they be and appear on Monday, September 27, 1909, being the nineteenth day of the next term of the Jasper Circuit Court to be holden on the 2nd Monday of September, A. D„ 1909, at the Court House In Rensselaer in said County and State, and answer or demur to said complaint to quiet title and cancel a mortgage on real estate in Jasper County, Indiana, the same will be heard and determined In your absence. In witness whereof, I hereunto set my hand and affix the seal of said Court, at Rensselaer, Indiana, this sth day of August. A. D., 1909. C. C. WARNER, [SEAL.] Clerk. Foltz & Spltler, attorneys.

NOTICE OF FILING AND DOCKETING DITCH PETITION. State of Indiana. ) County of Jasper,) 8a: - In the Jasper Circuit Court, In vacation before the September Term, 1909. In the Matter of the Petition of Francis W. Powers, et al, for a Publjc Drain In Jasper, Porter, LaPorte and Starke Counties, in the State of Indiana. CAUSE NO. 101. To Henry Amsler, Joseph Brennerman, David A. Collins, Nancy B. Dunn, Winifred Finn. William Fitzgerald, John Finn. Jesse E. Gerber. Noah Gingrich, Henry Gingrich. Lavina Gray, Robert Hail, Milton Jones/ Conrad F. Meyer, Samuel Maguire, George E. Price, George Stalbaum, Reinhold Schmidt, Carrie and Samuel Seegrist, Eliza Vandercar, Elizabeth Weinkauf, August Wills. Estella M. White, Oilie M. White, Lemuel Ross White. Nativia White. John Shirer, as Trustee Kankakee Civil Township, Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad Company. Tou. and each of you. are hereby notified that the petitioners in the above entitled cause have filed In the office of the Clerk of the Jasper Circuit Court, their petition praying for the location and construction of an open drain upon and along the following described route, to-wit: Commencing In the line of a drain already established at a point about forty (40) rods west of the Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville Railroad, and near the northwest corner of the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of Section five (5), Township thirty-two (32) north,. Range four (4) west, in Starke county, Indiana, and running thence southwesterly' to a point near the northwest corner of the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of said Section five (5), where It crosses the line of the Kankakee river into LaPorte county, thence in a southwesterly direction through Sections five (5) and six (6) of said Township and Range to a point near the northwest corner of the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of Section seven (7), in said Township and Range, where It again crosses the Kankakee river into Starke county’: thence southwesterly to the north line of the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of said Section, seven (7), where it again crosses the line of the Kankakee river, into LaPorte county. Indiana, thence southwesterly on the north side of the Kankakee river in LaPorte county, to the county line, at a point near the northwest corner of the southwest quarter of said Section seven (7); thence in a southwesterly direction across the easthalf (%) of the southeast quarter of Section twelve (12). Township thirtytwo (32) north. Range five (5) west, in Jasper county. Indiana, to a point about thirty (30) rods north of the northeast corner of the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of Section thirteen (13). Township thirty-two (32) north. Range five (5) west, In Jasper county, Indiana, where it enters the channel of the Kankakee river; thence in a southwestery direction to a point about thirty (30) rods south of the northwest corner of the northeast quarter of Section thirteen (13), Township thirty-two (32) north. Range five (5) west; thence southwesterly, through the west one-half (%) of said Section thirteen (13), south of the Kankakee river, and through Section fourteen (14), Township thirty-two (32) north. Range five west, south of the Kankakee river, to a point in the channel of said river Immediately east of Dunn’s Bridge, to a point about twenty (20) rods north of the northwest corner of the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of said Section fourteen (14); thence westerly following the channel of the Kankakee river to a point near the northwest comer of the. northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of Section fifteen (15), Township thirty-two (32) north. Range five (5) west: thence northwesterly. across the west one-half (%) of the northwest quarter of said Section fifteen (15). in Jasper county. Indiana to the channel of the Kankakee river, near the northwest corner of said Section fifteen (15), where the proposed drain will have a good and sufficient outlet In tfie Kfenkakee river at or near the source of the Marble ditch. Cause No. 89 of the Jasper Circuit Court. You are further notified that you are named In said petition as being the owner of lands which will be affected by the location and construction of the proposed drain, and your lands are described therein. You are further notified that said petition is now pending and will come un for hearing and docketing before the Honorable Charles W. Hanley, sole of thG Jasper Circuit Court, at the Circuit Court Room, in the Court House, in the City of Rensselaer, County of Jasper and State of Indiana, on Monday, the thirteenth (13th) day of September. 1909. the same being the first Judicial day of the September Term. 1909, of said Court. FRANCIS W. POWERS. Et Al. ... .. _ Petitioners. Attest: C. C. Warner, Clerk Jasper Circuit Court.