Jasper County Democrat, Volume 20, Number 78, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 December 1917 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
| Catarrhal Cough Lo* Mr. W. S. Brown, R. F. D. No. 4, a f 'W Box 82, Rogersville, Tennessee, Aliy OuC my ’daty to recommend Suffering with “ M peruna to all sufferers of catarrh or Catarrh in cough. In the year 1909, I took a vaiaiiu w * severe case of the la grippe. I then ADV 10rm S . . took a bad cough. I had taken all . *.ii I kinds of cough remedies bbt got no 1 Will g , relief. I then decided to try Peruna. *J • fhpm ft 1 used five bottles. After taking five AUVibC UIEIH hotties my cough stopped and my j q fake I- 4tlVa catarrh was cured. My average —* weight was 115 and now I weigh 148%. Any one suffering with ca- ; tarrii in any form I will advise them to Those who object to liquid meditake Peruna.” cines can procure Peruna Tablets. THE NEIGHBORHOOD CORNER Department of Farm Welfare Conducted by County Agent Stewart Learning.
Farm Engineering School
The committee in charge of the Farm Engineering school has everything ready for an interesting session next week, January 2-5. The building committee has leased the Gayety theater, w’hich will afford room for the exhibits and provide a place lor holding lectures. The program committee has secured some of the best authorities on labor-saving machinery that the United States possesses to appear on the program. Among these are faculty members of Purdue, one tractor and one binder expert from the International Harvester company, H. M Craig, assistant manager of the Janesville Machinery company; L. C. Ferguson, manager Indianapolis branch of the Rock Island Plow company; a lighting expert from the Delco company; a staff of extension workers from the Atlas Cement company and a number of other experts. These men will give strictly impartial talks upon the use and care of various types of farm machinery, for the purpose of cleaning up any questions which may be asked. Sessions will begin at 10 o’clock each morning .and everyone is invited. It is suggested that each farmer arrange to bring in an exhibit to the County Poultry and Corn show at the same time that they attend the engineering school.
List Your Seed Corn
There is an ever increasing demand for seed corn as the season advances. In the short time that he was in the county, the government seed corn agent could not visit all the farmers whose corn was fit for seed. The county agent wishes to refer inquiries for seed to the men who have it for sale, and in order to do justice to all growers he must have their names and the amount of seed they have to offer. List your surplus seed and help, the men that need it.
re ♦ J ■ i 1S& X& UMK: «H®kwf it j ■■■ *. • .«a w, a. Mccurtain AUCTIONEER. A Real Live Livestock Auctioneer. Five years successful experience. Have a wide acquaintance among the buyers. It pleases me to please everybody. Terms 1 per cent. Call Rensselaer 926-R for dates. Write Fair Oaks, R-2. SALE DATES January 8, S. T. Comer, 10 miles north of Rensselaer. General sale. January 10, J. J. Fliginger, 13% miles north nad 1% miles east of Rensselaer. General sale. January 11, William O. Gourley, 3 miles east of Fair Oaks. General sale. February 1, Judson Michal, west of Kniman. General sale. February 4, Emmet Fidler, 3 miles east of Rensselaer. General sale. February 5, John Lesh, 4 miles east of Rensselaer. General sale. February 6, Harry Feldman, 2% miles northeast of Demotte. February 7, Elwood Davis, Demotte. February 8, Paul Samuelson, % mile east of Gifford. General sale. February 16, O. P. Braddock, 1 mile west and 4 miles north of Gifford. General sale. February 12, Farm Wiseman, 3 miles southwest of Roselawn. General sale. February 13, Erpest Asher, 4 miles southeast of Wheatfield. General sale. Feb. 18, A. B. Lowman, near Hebron. General sale. February 19, H. E. Gifford, 3% miles east of Aix. General sale. February 20 John R. Lewis. Hampshire hog sale. February 21, Roorda and Otis, 1% miles north of Fair Oaks. February 27, B. T. Lanham, southeast of Rensselaer. General sale. February 28, John Faris: General sale. February 26, Mr. Barber, 3% I miles north of Al*. 1
Feeder Hogs
The government is assisting in the handling of the soft corn by locating feeder hogs for farmers of the corn belt. At the present time the cheapest feeders are coming from the West, through the Kansas City yards, and are quoted from sls to sl6 per cwt. f. o. b. Kansas City. While these hogs may help solve the soft corn problem, farmers are advised not o bring in hbgs from outside sources without consulting their . veterinarian and handling their shipments exactly as he directs. A severe outbreak of cholera at the present time is one thing that we do not want. It would be .well, however, for farmers with a surplus of soft corn to investigate this source of feeding hogs. Plenty of Premiums for Carpenter The box social given by. the schools of Carpenter township lasi week to provide premiums for the members of the industrial clubs netted over S6O. This will be distributed as cash among the winners in the Corn, Pig, Poultry, Breadmaking and Canning clubs. Trustee Porter has taken an unusual interest in club work and the success of the event was due in a large measure to his efforts.
The Purdue Short Course
Every progressive farmer owes it to himself to attend the State Corn Show r and Farmers’ Short Course at Purdue January 14-18. This promises to be the most important farmers’ gathering ever held in Indiana. Our farmers will be called upon to push production to a heretofore unheard of degree next season and the inspiration received from such a week will do much in this direction.
Farmers’ Clubs
The Gillam Farmers’ club will hold its regular meeting Wednesday evening, January 2, at the Independence school. President J. 11. Guild announces a full program. The Parr Community club will hold its regular program on Thursday evening, January 3. The program committee has arranged the usual live feature.
Livestock Breeders to Meet
President Fred Phillips has called a meeting of the Jasper County Livestock Breeders’ association to be held at the Gayety theater Friday, January 4, at I o’clock. This meeting is one of the most important ever held by the association and ig called for the purpose of securing a sales and show pavilion to take care of the increased business of the association. The association has begun to feel the need of public sales to dispose of the surplus pure-bred animals produced. A central sales pavilion will do away with the necessity and expense of holding these pure-bred sales on the farms. Individual farmers often find that the expense of providing suitable selling facilities on their farms and proper transportation to the farms is prohibitive. The association hopes to overcome tlhese difficulties by making arrangements fop a building. Every member is urged to attend this meeting.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, ?.> they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a local disease, greatly influenced by constitutional conditions, and in order to cure it you must take an internal remedy Hall’s Catarrh Medicine is taken internally and acts through the blood on the mucous surfaces of the system. Hall’s Catarrh Medicine was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years. It is composed of some of the best tonics known, combined with some of the best blood purifiers. The perfect combination in the ingredients in Hall’s Catarrh Medicine is what produces such wonderful results in catarrhal conditions. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. All Druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.—Advt. '." \-
Every farmer who owns his farn ought to have printed stationer? with his name and the name of h’s postoffice properly given. The prin’ ed heading might also give thf names of whatever crops he special izes in or his specialties in stock Neatly printed stationery gives you personality and a standing with any person or firm to whom you writ* and insures the proper reading o your name and address.
Sale bills printed while you wait at The democrat office.
ink IVviCh-A-WEEK DEMOCRAT
Many Historic Events Have Happened on New Year's Day
By RENE BACH
EVENTS of utmost historic importance, many of them tragic in character, are associated with New Year’s day. It was on the first day of January, 1513, that Juan Diaz de Solis, the explorer, coasting in a sailing vessel along the eastern shore of South America, discovered and entered the mouth of a mighty river, lie called it (by reason of the date) the January ilyer, or Rio de Janeiro, the name it bears and which is also borne by the city at its mouth, the capital of Brazil at the present time. The tragedy, in this instance, came later. Three years afterward the same adventurous explorer again entered the river mouth. The natives were suspicious of his intentions, and when he landed they captured and killed him, and within sight of his ship roasted his body over a fire and ate it. Thus perished a man who, in his day, was reputed the ablest of living navigators. Bartholomew Esteban Murillo, greatest of the Spanish painters, was born on the first day of January, 1618. For many years his services were employed by the churches and convents of Seville, which were enriched by his incomparable masterpieces. He earned by his art a considerable fortune. When at the height of his fame he was invited to Cadiz, arid there executed his magnificent picture of St. Catherine, the mother of Jesus. Just as the work was on the point of completion he fell from a scaffold and was killed. It seems rather odd that history should take the trouble to record the death, on January 1, 1630, of so unimportant a person as Thomas Hobson, a carrier of Cambridge, England. He made a business of hiring out horses. Hobson was merciful to his beasts, and enforced a rule that required for each one of them a certain measure of rest. Those which had not had their proper time of rest he would not allow to go out. “This or none,” he would say, indicating the horse that was available for hire. Whence came the familiar term, “Hobson’s choice, this or none.” On the first day of January, 1776, the town of Norfolk, Va., was burned, not by the British, who were threatening the place, but by its American inhabitants. Lord Dunmore, the royal governor of the colony, having abandoned the town and sought safety on board of a ship (one of a- number of vessels that were under his command in the harbor), found himself in distress for provisions. The frigate Liverpool, on arriving, threatened to turn her guns loose upon Norfolk, because the people refused to furnish food supplies, but in response the inhabitants set fire to their houses and even wiped out the plantations for a long distance back from the water, in order that nothing in the way of subsistence might be obtainable by enemy. Exactly five years later, on January 1, 1781, an incident very alarming to the < ;.use of the American colonists occurred at Morristown, N. J. It was nothing less than a revolt of troops of the Pennsylvania line, who had enlisted for three years’ service. The term having expired, they demanded their discharge. The incipient rebellion was promptly suppressed, however. On the first day of January, 1801, the astronomer Piazzl, at Palermo, discovered Ceres, the first of the minor planets, or so-called “asteroids,” revealed by the telescope. It is less than 500 miles in diafneter. Since then a great many of these baby sisters of the earth have been “spotted” by enterprising star-gazers, though none of them is so big as Ceres. One of them, Eros, is twins, two little globes revolving about each other. Up to date, 822 of these minor planets have been discovered.
The first day of January, 1810, was made memorable in East Haddam, Conn., by a happening that was in its way wholly extraordinary. There were in the town nine unmarried young women, and it had been decided that husbands must be found for them. Accordingly, in the spirit of an enlightened public enterprise, nine men agreed to marry them, and on the above-mentioned date all of them became wives, an elaborate ceremony and much rejoicing signalizing the event. On New Year’s day, 1914, Londoa experienced a. most remarkable fog. The city was immersed in a sea of suspended moisture that extended for a distance of 70 miles beyond its outskirts. Business was at a standstill and many people lost their lives by falling into the Thames river and into canals. Four years later, on the first of January, 1818, the White House (which had been burned by the British troops in August, 1814) was for the first time thrown open to the public after that tragic event, at a New Year’s reception given by President Monroe. Even then, however, the building was still undergoing repairs, which were not completed for more than a twelvemonth. It had newly received its first coat of white paint, to conceal the marks of fire that marred the brownish stone of which it was built. The cost of reconstruction was $246,490. On the first day of January, 1825, Great Britain recognized the inde-
When New Yeah’s Calk Were Made
i Col. 'Terwilliger Bluegrass LoI quitour. | Folks somehow aren't as sociable 4 As in the good old days, f .’When, sah, a certain grace an' I cha'm f Distinguished social ways; | Fo’ instance, sah, on New Yeah’s J Dey, I 'When chivalry arrayed ? In leatkas fine would gathah, i sah, ? An’ New Yeah’s calls were • made. • i We greeted one anothah, sah, ? With smile an r cotiy bow, i An’ round the brimming punchbowl sah, 4 We gracely mu’mu’ed “How!” 4 And conve-sation sparkled, sah, f With wassail’s kindly aid^ — I But that was in the golden days When New Yeah’s calls were i made. ; Pure nectah was that New Yeah’s ? punch— I How generously it flowed! ? The season’s compliments were | passed; One’s heaht, sah, fai’ly glowed. ; The recent gene’ations, sah, ? Old customs have betrayed— I But, ah those olden, golden days When New Yeah’s calls were J., _ made. ? —Paul T. Gilbert in Cartoons i Magazine.
fence of the South American republics. Paul Revere, hero of the famous ride, was born January 1, 1735, Mason and Slidell, the Confederate •o-inniissioners. left Fort Warren for England January 1, 1862. President Lincoln issued his proclamation emancipating the slaves January 1, 1563. These are only a few of the many notable events that have marked New Year’s day in history. To give anything like a comprehensive list of them here could not be attempted. Some of the most important happenings of ancient times, in Rome, in Greece and elsewhere, are also associated with the first day of the year.
New Year Hint.
Was it Confucius or Lao-Tse who said, “Good resolutions, like fainting women, should be carried out?”— Philadelphia Ledger.
SAWGHUM ’LASSES TIME
Don’ talk tuh me ’bout maple sap, An’ soggy buskwheat cakes, Co’n syrup, too, ain’ wuth uh rap, Wis all de time it takes Uh tastin’ on fo’ sumfin’ slweet, Dat somehow isn’t thga'h. But good ol’ sawghumcam-Lbe beat, In dis worl’ anywheah. y New Awlins ’lasses may be fine, Es sawghum yo’ ain’ seen. 01’ blackstrap draw dis mouf ob mine, Jes like uh simmon green. But es yo’ gwine talk sweet tuh me, Fo spreadin’ on mah bread, An’ mention swghum, lawsy me! Ah’d come back f’um de dead. Bring in de hot bread f’m de fiah, De sawghum jug an’ plate. Ah’se reached the hight ob mah desiah, An’, man, ah’se heah tuh state; Uh smokin’ biscuit in mah han’, De ’lasses stringin’ down— Dey ain’ no king in all de lan’, Dat weigh uh half uh poun’. Hot griddle ackes an’ muffins, too, An’ brown, sweet gingah bread, De Lawd know when Ah’m gwine git thoo’ Uh feeddn’ mah ol’ head. But when de sawghum jug am dry, An’ all de cakes am gone, Ah’d jes’ as soon lay down an’ die —- Until tomorrow mo’n. —Frank Markward. Twenty years ago a Korean schoolboy named Cynn was imprisoned because he had organized a literary society to discuss matters of general interest. Since completing his education in America, Mr. Cynn has been made principal of his old school, the Seoul Methodist Episcopal School for Boys.
Do you use the want ad. columns of The Democrat? If not, try an ad
I W % ea 1 Ikb Sfi IT s B'B = s W- isle ” a = This fifty year old remedy eases Sore Throats arid Bronchial affections; ‘ soothes, heals arid .gives quick relief. =§ jg? gSold by all druggists s S~ : _A Jg =gTT=S ? E S & AiW , I for Coughs e Colds Keep your Stomach and Liver Healthy A vigorous Stomach, perfect working Liver and regular acting Bowels, if you will use Dr. King’s New Life Pills. They correct Constipation have a tonic effect on the system —eliminate poisons through the Bowels. 25c. ■a ~ . -s NOTICE OF DITCH PETITION. To Whom It May Concern: Notice is hereby given that a ditch Xietition has been filed with the clerk
Farms For Sale
60 acres. 50 acres black land in cultivation, ten acres pasture. Five room house, barn, well and cellar. Buildings new. $75. Terms. Union township. 80 acres. This farm is near pike and school. 60 acres black land in cultivation and 20 acres in pasture. New four room house and outbuildings. $67.50. Terms $1,500 down. Walker township. 83 acres. This farm lies on main road near two stations. 35 acres in cultivation and remainder timber and pasture. Small set of buildings, young orchard and well. Price $35. Terms, S6OO down and long time on balance. Wheatfield township. 40 acres on public road. 25 acres in meadow and 15 woodland. Price, $35. Terms, S3OO down. Walker township. 53 acres. All level land in cultivation, clay subsoil, tiled, near pike, school and station. Has six room house and outbuildings. Price $65. Terms, $1,200 down. Barkley township. 75 acres. This farm is all in cultivation, tiled, five room house, outbuildings, on pike four miles out. $125. $1,500 down. Jordan township. 156 acres. 140 acres In cultivation, remainder pasture. On pike and has twelve-inch tile for outlet. Five room house, good barn, well and fruit. Price SBS. Terms, $2,000 down. Union townsfiip. 31 acres. This lies on pike and dredge ditch. It is all good corn land, clay subsoil, and all in cultivation. $75. Terms, SSOO down. Barkley township. 100 acres. This is a nice piece of land, lies ten miles out near pike and dredge ditch. It has five room house, outbuildings, orchard and good well. Price $75. $2,500 down. Union township. 40 acres on pike in Barkley township. 30 acres of fine young timber and ten acres in cultivation. 'Price $65. Terms, ;SSOO down. 80 acres. This farm is the best of "soil, well tiled, splendid improvements, lots of fruit and only three miles out. $lB5. Marion township. 100 acres, three miles from market On jdredge ditch. All black land in cultivation except
George F. Meyers j HARVEY WILLIAMS b | • AUCTIONEER I I; Remington, - - Indiana I Yours for Honest Service i; I will be selling nearly every day of the season and if you intend to have a sale it will pay you to see me at once. 1 1 Large sale tent furnished to customers. PHONE FOR DATES AT MY EXPENSE
of the Circuit Court of Benton county,. Indiana, and that the petitioners in said petition have fixed on the 12th day of February, 1918, as the time for docketing said petition. Therefore this notice is given to all the following named land owners and corporations of the filing of said petition and the day set for docketing the same: Barnhard Alberts, Rosa Alberding, Henry C. Beeks, Henry Beckley, David A. Bickel whose only heirs are Mary A Bickel, Agnes Bickel, Jason Bickel. David Bickel, Elsie Bickel, and Ruth O'Connor, Samuel Belsey, Thomas Blake. Blanche Burger,, Clarence I. Babb, Albert J. Bellows, Edward D. Bellows. George Barter, Charles Bullis, Nellie Bullis, Edward M. Brown. Thomas Blair, Webster Bowdy, Cynthia Barnett. Cynthia A. Barnett, August Bornhardt, William Barnett, Jasper Barnett. Joe Barnett. Dexter Barnett, Cora Baken. Lucy' Baken, Hattie Baken, George Besse, Keever Clymer. Chris Christenson, Martin Cain. Charles Dluzak. Joseph Dluzak, P. E. DuCharme. Fred J. Deno. Joseph Deno. Henry Deno, Clarence A. Doland, Philip Davis, Martha C. French. Sarah B. French. Mike Foley, John Ferguson, Lotis G. Frankowiak, James H. Green. Samuel S. Galbraith. Charles S. Galbraith. Albina Galbraith. Clara Goodrich, George Gibb. James H. Glass, Joseph Graham. Peter Geib.. Henry Gilkerson. William Gladden. Myrtle E. Gladden. Albert Gray, Edward Gray. Edward Y. Gray, John W,. Garber, Joseph E. Garber, Elmira Harf. Sterry G. Hand. George Hardy, Henry C. Harris, Samuel: Huggins, Margaret Mabel Harris, Joseph Hall. Jr.. Lewis W. Hunt, C. I. Mcßeynolds, George Hensler. Chistian Hensler, Charles L. Hensler. John G. Hardebeck. Florence M. Johnson. Margaret Jordan. Edgar O. Jordan, Tabitha B. Jordan, Mary A. Jordan, John Jordan, Howard B. Jones. Dexter It. aone.s, Alice A. Jones. Fannie Kay. Pearl Green, John Keller, John F. Kelley. Phi, lip Knochel, John Q. A. Lamborn. Jena B. Lamborn, Brown Lamborn, Merle Lamborn. Goldie Dtdlake. Charles Lucterhand, David Lamie. Mary Lamie’, -James V. Lilves. Henry Alisher. George Hr May, Martha E. Mathew. Rachel Milligan. Jacob May. ClrutdA W. May, Charles V. May. Robert AV May. Patrick J. McLaughlin'. Susan McQuegg. Clarissa Mitchell. William T. Myers. Mary S. Myers. Ross Myers. Emma Wortley, Dick H. Meyers, Rebecca McQueen. Lillie A. Medworth. John G. Morris. Andrew Nussbaum. Catharine Nafzinger. John M. Oft, John J. Porter. Burdett Porter, Thomas A. Porter. Dollie Porter, Jacob Rich. Charles Robi-nson, Laura M. Robinson. William E. Scott, Isaac Shannon, John Rodifer, Charles Spenard, Irene M. Smalley. William C. Smalley, Meddie Sigo, Moses Sign. Charles Sigo. Rosa Sigo. John Schneider. Sr., John Schneider, Jr.. William Sandnu er. Henry Stitz. Fred Shoenbeck, Thomas Smock. Margaret E. Spenard, Amelia Sawyer. Albert P. Swartzell. Maggie Kersten Swartzell. G. F. Schuster. Bertha J. Teter. John R. Wilson. Ella Wilson, Ona Bellows. Jacob Wasner, Max Weller, Mary C. Wetherell, John M. Young. Joel. Zinser, Martha Zinser. Clara] Tyler. Harvey D. Zinser, Mary Welsh, I Caroline Winsor, Reuben Zimmerman, I Tillie Zimmerman. Hall Zimmerman, J Harry L. Zimmerman, Laura M. Junk,
SATURDAY, DEC. 29, 1917
eight acres of woodland. Good five room house, good barn, and other outbuildings. $75. Union township. 80 acres, eight miles from this city in Jordan township. It ig all in cultivation except eight acres. Four room house, good barn and orchard. $65. Terms. 100 acres. This is all black prairie land in cultivation or pasture except a few acres of young timber. There is a good four room house, out buildings, silo and well. Good outlet for drainage. Can sell at the low figure of $57.50 per acre on terms of $1,200 down. 166 acres of timber land on pike, of which twenty acres is cleared and in cultivation. A small set of improvements. Price $27.50 per acre on easy terms. Keener township. 240 acres. This is a big bargain at $57.50. There are a lot of good buildings, seven room house, good barn, cattle sheds, grainary, cribs and orchard. Two windmills. 210 acres in cultivation. Terms, $2,000 down. Might divide. 75 acres on pike six miles out. All cultivated, tiled, hog fences, eight room house with basement, two good barns, windmill and orchard. $125. Terms. Union township. 98 acres on pike six miles out, tiled, small house, splendid barn and a bargain at SBS. Terms. Jordan township. 160 acres. 140 acres black land in cultivation. 20 acres pasture with some timber. It has new nine room house, good barn, orchard, windmill, and is an all-round good farm. $125. Loan SB,OOO. Owner will trade for good brick business property. Union township. 40 acres. This farm is all black land in cultivation and has blue grass pasture. Has four room house, small barn and well. It is in good neighborhood. Price $65. Terms, SBOO down and five years on remainder. Walker township. 80 acres. This farm lies seven miles out and is all cultivated, tiled, hog tight fences, six room house, large barn and many good outbuildings, windmills and tanks. A splendid home. Price $137.50. Terms, $4,000 down. Barkley township.
Daisy DeVoogt, The Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Co., Carpenter Civil Township (Burdett Porter, Trustee,) for the benefit of highways, Jordan Civil Township (John Rohloff, Trustee,) for the benefit of highways. The corporation of the town of Remington; that your lands are described in said petition as affected by said proposed drainage. That said petition asks for the construction of an open ditch upon and along the following described route, tpw it: Commencing at a point in Carpenter's Creek, about 65 rods east of the center of Section IS, in Township 26 north. Range 8 west, in Benton county, Indiana, and running from thence in a northeasterly direction, following as nearly as practicable the line of said Carpenter’s Creek, across Sections 18. 17. 8 and 9 in Township 26 north. Range S west, in Benton county, Indiana, thence continuing in a southeasterly direction, following the line of said Carpenter's Creek, across Sections 10. law and 14, in Towi'.-litp 26 north. Range 7 west, in P' ntc- county. Indiana, to a point in said Carpenter's Creek which is about 40 rods west of the northeast corner of said Section 14. in said Townshi i 26 north. Range 7 west, in said Benton county. Indiana, and thence continuing in a northeasterly direction, along the line of said Carpenter's Creek, across Seetmia 11 and 12. and one. in Township 26 north. Rahge 7 West, in said Benton co’.mty. Indiana, to the County Line between Jasper and Benton counties, and thenoe continuing in a northeasterly direction, following the line of said Carpenter's Creek, across Sections 36 an < 25. in Township 27 north. Range 7 west, and Section 30. in Township 27 north, Rahge 6 west, in Jasper county. Indiana, to a point in said Carpenter's Creek near the Northeast Corner of the Northwest Quarter of said section 30. in Township 27 north, range 6 west, in Jasper county. Indiana, and thence continuing in a northwesterly direction. following the line of said Carpenter's Creek, across Section 19. in Township 27 north. Rang<j 6 west. Sections 24 and 13. 12. 11 and 2. in Township 27 north. Range 7 west, in Jasper county, Indiana, to a point in said Carpenter’s Creek which is about 5(» rods west of the Northeast Co-.t >r of said section 2. in township 27 north. Range 7 west, in Jasper county. Indiana, which point is in the line dividing said Carpenter Township from said Jordan Township, in said Jasper county. Indiana. • and thence continuing in a northwesterly direction, following the line of said Carpenter’s Creek, to a point in said Car-’ penter's Creek which is about 1150 feet north and 400 feet east of ■ the Center of Section 35. in' Township 28 north, Range 7 wbst. in said Jordan Township. Jasper county', Indiana, where the same will have a good and sufficient outlet tn said Carpenter’s Creek. JACOB VILLINSKI. JOHN V. BARTOO. G. D. LAMBERT. FRANK KUBOSKI. JAMES BULLIS. PHILIP KNOCHEL. Elmore Barce, P. R. Blue and Jasper Guy & Co., Attorneys. d-22-2>
