Pike County Democrat, Volume 25, Number 51, Petersburg, Pike County, 3 May 1895 — Page 6
Clu fike (Sottnlt) §emo«at K. KaO. STOOPS, Editor sad Proprietor. PETERSBURG. - - > INDIANA. A company has been incorporated at Newark, K. J., with 815.000 capital, 10 per cent, paid in, to manufacture per* petual-aiotion machines. On the *2«th the supreme court of appeals of Virginia, by unanimous vote, denied the application of Mrs. Belva Lockwood, to qualify as a practitioner. Hon. George N. Cubzon and his bride, lately Miss Mary Victoria Leiter, embarked on the Cunarder Etruria, which sailfd from New York for Liverpool on the 27th. Hon. Justus F. Temple, aged 69 years, of Waynesburg, Pa., died, on the 85th, at the residence of his daughter in Allegheny. Mr. Temple served as auditor-general of Pennsylvania from 1874 to 1878. ____ Comptroller Eckels has accepted an invitation to deliver a speech at the banquet of the Detroit (Mich.) chamber of commerce on May 2. His speech will be devoted largely to the financial situation of the country. Ox the 25th the navy department received a telegram announcing that Coxswain John Johnson had been killed on the new cruiser Olympia off San Diego, by an accident happening to a five-inch rapid-fire gun. Mrs. U. S. Grant and Mrs. Sartoris and the latter’s daughter, the guests of the Chicago Press club, attended the club’s celebration of Gen. Grant’s birthday anniversary at the Auditorium on the evening of the 27w.
The department of public safety at Pittsburgh, Pa., issued au order, on the 34th, that the gold and stock tickers reporting baseball games, horse races and other sporting news will not be allowed in saloons or other resorts this seaso n. Is the British house of commons, on the 24th, Mr. T. W. Bussell’s bill, providing for the perpetuation of the existing temporary regulation closing the drinking saloons in Ireland on Sundays, passed its second reading by a vote of 168 to 69. Mbs. Mart Brown, a monogamian pensioner, died, on the 16th, at her home 5 miles from Knoxville, Tenn. She was the widow of Joe Brown, a soldier in the revolutionary war, and was bom in 1864. Her husband died fifty-one years ago. A bimetallic league was formed in Cincinnati, on the 26th, to be independent of all political parties, its principal object being to secure the free and unlimited coinage of gold and silver without waiting for the action of any other government. < The Ohio Republican state central committee will meet in Columbus, on the 37th, to call the state convention which nominates a successor to Gov. McKinley, who has. positively declined a renomination, as he desires to approach the next national republican convention as a private citizen. The earl of . Lonsdale, was summoned^ to court at Mel ton-Mowbray, England, on the 23d, upon a charge of assault in having struck a gentleman named Boden upon the head with a hunting whip. His lordship offered an apology to Mr. Boden, which was accepted, and the summons was withdrawn. i., The faculty of. Mount Union college at Alliance, 0«, have determined to prevent courting among the scholars. -Several of the young Indies and gen- , tlemen were reprimanded, on the 25th, President Marsh remarking: “It is said that matches are made in Heaven; I think a branch office has been opened at Mount Union college.” The treasury gold reserve was increased, on the 26th, by $413,841, to $91,176,251—$65,000 of which came in the ordinary course of "business and $348,841 from the Belmont-Morgan syndicate. The sy ndicate still owed the government over $16,000,000 on its contraet, but it was said to be stiU ahead of the terms of its agreement.
Associate Justice Jackson, of the United States supreme court, intends to leave his home at West Meade, ' near Nashville, Term., about May 4 to sit with his colleagues during the hearing of the income tax petitions. After the consideration of these petitions, he will return to his home and remain until the October term of court. Thk official canvass of the vote cast in Michigan at the April election shows that the plurality of Judge J. B. Moore, republican, for justice of the supreme court, over Justice McGrath, democrat, was 80,487. The pluralities of the republican candidates * * for regents of the university were: Roger W. Butterfield, 90,149, and Charles H. Hackley, 84,843.* Pekin advices of the 23d state that some modications in the Chino-Jap-anese t reaty of peace have been agreed upon. Of the five new commercial ports 1<o be opened, it has been decided to substitute Nankin for Pekin, and Woo Chow, on the west bank of the Canton river, for Ruchow. Wei-Hai-Wei is also to be garrisoned by Japanese at China’s expense for a term of years. The new Spanish minister to the United States, Senor Dupuy de Lome, arrived at New York, on the 25th, on the steamer Palama from Havana. The new minister said that the excitement in Cuba was quieting down, and that Capt.-Gen. Martinez Campos, who is now visiting the disaffected districts, would in all likelihood speedily succeed in quelling what little trouble there was left in the island. *
CURRENT TOPICS. I ■ f , --:- THE HEWB H BRIEF. , PERSONAL. AND GENERAL. A drill 611 all ia Hamilton county, Ind., in search of oil, struck water, which sends, up a stream through a six-inch pipe rising 130 feet above the surface and threatens to submerge the neighborhood. It is thought the war ter conies from a subterranean river. Ox the 24th the president approved the proceedings and findings of the court-martial which tried First Lieut. F. L. Leveridge, Fourteenth infantry, at Vancouver barracks, on a charge of drunkenness while on duty, and sentenced him to dismissal from the military service. Oxs huxdrki* employes> of the Cleve- ' land (O.) Ship Building Co. went oat on strike on the 5th. The company proposed to pay the old bands S3.37 and new men SSi.35 per day. The strike was for a 82.10 per day rate. The strikers were employed in the boilermaking department.
Mr. Robert R. Hitt, representative in congress from Illinois, who had been dangerously ill at his residence in Washington, was somewhat better, on the 22d, but not yet out of danger. Ex-United (States Senator James F. Wilson died, after a protracted ill* ness, at Fairchild, la., on the 23d. Another violent earthquake, accompanied with thunder, shook Laibach, Austria, on the 22d. Eight or ten buildings collapsed, and the few families who had returned to their homes fled back again in terror to the fields. Publication of Kate Field's Washington, a weekly paper established by Miss Field in 1890, will be suspended until winter, owing to ill-health of its owner. At 1 o'clock on the morning of the 23d a furniture wagon in which a party of young amateur actors were returning to Providence, R. I., from the town of Pontiac, was run into and demolished by an elecric car, and five of the party were injured, one of them, it was thought, fatally. The Nicaraguan government was advised, on the 23d, of the arrival of three British war ships at Cor in to to enforce the British ultimatum. President Seelaya cabled to Lord Kimberly, British secretary of state for foreign affairs, asking time. Much surprise was expressed that there was no American war vessel, at Cor in to. Julia Gross, aged 16, whose parents intended to send her to the House of the Good Shepherd, jumped from a fourth-story window of her home in New York, on the 23d, and killed herself. $ Catherine Scott, the oldest woman in Brooklyn, died, on the 23d, at the advanced age of 103 years. She was born in Ireland and came to Brooklyn seventy years ago. W Oscar Wilde’s valuable collection of prints, Moorish pottery and bric-a-brac was sold at auction on the 24th. The articles sold included Carlisle’s writing table. At the London foreign office it was officially stated, on the 24th, that the three British war ships in the harbor of Corinto, Nicaragua, were there for the purpose of enforcing the demands of Great Britain, set forth £n the. British ultimatum. Reciprocity between the United States, and Hawaii in shipping regulations has recently been brought about by the action of the treasury department in giving to Hawaiian merchant vessels the same advantages enjoyed by American ships. Petitions for a rehearing of the income tax cases will be heard in the United States supreme court on May 6, when, it is thought. Associate Justice Jackson will be present and break the tie. Instead of a few thousand dollars, as at first supposed, the defalcation of the late Paul Schultz, who was land agent of the Northern Pucific railroad at Tacoma, Wash, will amount to $500,000, and may be more by $200,
000, according* to the report of the experts who are engaged in examining the accounts of the deceased. This shortage and disappointment in love are believed to have led to his suicide. Six tons of nitro-glycerine in the factory of the Ohio and Indiana Torpedo Co. at Lima, O., exploded, on the 24th, doing considerable damage in the neighborhood. No lives were lost. « Ox the 24th the president made the following appointments in the army: Brig.-Gen. Wesley Merritt, to be majorgeneral; Col. S. E. Bliss, Twenty-fourth infantry, to be brigadier-general; Col. John J. Coppinger, Twenty-third infantry, to be brigadier-general. Secretary Gresham, on the 24th, rei ceived a dispatch from Mr. Uannis j Taylor, United States minister at Mad- [ rid, assuring him that Spain would accede to the demands of the United States im the Allianca affair, and that the commander of the Conde Venadito would be put on trial for his offense for firing at an American vessel outside the zone. , Fire at Sylvania, O., on the 24th, destroyed seven building's and at one time threatened to sweep the whole town. Toledo’s fire department went to the rescue and saved the town from destruction. Mrs. Ann M. Stanley, wife of Gen. D. S. Stanley, governor of the soldiers’ home at Washington, D. C., died at the Johns Hopkins hospital, Baltimore, on the 23d, after a long illness, in the presence of her husband and daughter. A resolution, presented by Mr. OGrady, was adopted by the New York house of representatives, On the 24th, favoring the annexation of the Dominion of Canada to the United States and inviting the Canadian people to east in their lot wilh. us. , By the burning of McDonald’s tobacco factory, in Herlga, a suburb of Montreal, the largest of its kind in Canada on the 25th, a Large number of girls employed therein were compeled to jump for their lives from the upper floors. None were killed outright, but a dozen received fatal wounds, and many were less severely injured. Loss, about 1500 000; no insurance. .
A dispatch from Vienna says that the Russian government has expeled Mme. Modjcska, the well-known actress, from Warsaw, owing to a violent speech she made against Russia m Chicago. Mme. Modjeska has also* been notified that she may not again appear on the Russian stage. Mbs. VutanuA Marshall Brows has been grunted a divorce from Archibald Dixon Brown, at Louisville, Ky. The defendant is *Gov. John Young Brown’s son and secretary, and the plaintiff is a member of one of the most prominent families in the state. Whilb trying to escape from pursuing officers at Bnckhannon, W. Va., on the 35th, Everett Miller, a greengoods man, jumped into the river- and was drowned. His partner, C. D. Lewis, was arrested. Jo jin McCabk. 60 years old, ex-chief of the New York fire department, committed snicide in the MUholland club rooms. New York city, on the 85th, by shooting himself in the right temple with a revolver. Tn Nicaragua canal board met at the war department, on the 25th, and organized. No officers were elected, as Col. Ludlow, it was understood, will act as chairman and disbursing office* Application will be made for the attaching to the commission of a naval surgeon.
The complaint sworn to before a justice of the peace on which Lord Sholto Douglass was arrested for in> sanity at Bakersfield, Cal., was with drawn, dn the 35th, before the case was called up in the superior court, and the judge at once discharged che prisoner. Emily Thornton Charles died at her home in Washington city, on the 25th, in her fifty-sixth year. She was a native of Indiana, having been born and reared at Lafayette, in that state. She was a writer of much force and a poet of no little merit. She wrote almost exclusively under the nom de plume of “Emily Hawthorne.” John Pkrkpile, shot and killed his wife at Sydney, O., on the 26th. Mrs. Perkpile had been arrested, in company with several men, and sentenced to fifteen days' imprisonment. Perkpile went to the jail to pay her fine, and calling his wife to the bars drew a revolver and shot her dead. A wagon load of nitro-glycerine,con-taining 700 quarts, exploded 5 miles from Bluff ton, 0., on the 36th, with a shock that was felt for forty miles. Will Elmer, the driver, was blown to atoms, and of the team only a part of one horse’s neck could be found. Dubiks the week ended the 36th failures^ in the United States, as reported by R. G. Dun A Co., were 230, against 179 for the corresponding week last year. For Canada the failures numbered 37, against 26 last year. Fere, on .the 26th, destroyed the greater portion of Minnewankan, in northern North Dakota, near the Manitoba border. Only two business houses were left The aggregate loss is 640,000, with $15,300 insurance. An explosion of fire damp took place in a colliery at Denny, Carsterling, Scotland, on the 26th, while 177 men were working in the pit. Thirteen of the number were killed and several were injured. An attempt was made to wreck a Santa Fe east-bound passenger train near Pasadena, Cal., on the night of the 25th. A bowlder and plank placed across the track were discovered by a young lady named Wilson, who dashed into her house, seized a lamp from the table and succeeded in flagging the train just in time to avert a catastrophe.
LATE NEWS ITEMS. Tjik report that tue AUtanca affair nas been settled b; Spain's conceding the American claims was confirmed officially, on the 2Sth, by a dispatch from Madrid. The Spanish government will give the United States satisfaction for the mistake, and admits the Alliance was outside of territorial waters when the Conde de Vanidito fired upon her. Commanders of war ships.in Cuban waters have been in* structed precisely not to fire upon vessels outside the three-mile limit. By the bursting of a reservoir at Bouzey, Frunze, on the 27th, 130 human lives are known to have been lost and many others were reported missing. More than 200 families were left homeless and destitute. The path of the flood was strewn with wrecks of buildings and covered with heavy layers of mud which made the search for the bodies of the victims very difficult. The statement of the associated banks of New York city for the week ended the 27th showed the following changes:' Reserve, increase, $5.605,700; loans, decrease, 5216,800; specie, increase, $1,566,100; legal tenders, increase, $5,648,400; deposits, increase, $6,415,200; circulation, decrease, $17,200. No further shocks of earthquake have been experienced at I*aibach, Austria, for some days, and the people who had been camping in the open fields are returning to their homes. The whole town presents an aspect of activity which promises its complete rehabilitation in a short time. A dispatch from Madrid,on the 28th, said: “Caph-Gen. Martinez de Campos has telegraphed from Cuba for more army surgeons. He will start in a few days for the eastern provinces, where, it is said, he will make haste ha deal the insurgents a decisive blow&sfore the rainy season.” The Constitution grand lodge B’Nai B’Rith opened at Cincinnati on the 28th. The session will cover a period of one week. This lodge meets but once in five years and embraces in its territory the United States and the whole of Europe. The Fall Mall Gazette of London^ in an editorial on the China-Japan situation, says: “As Japan’s troubles drop asunder she moves nearer to America. Let us also move nearer to America.” AN uprising of half-breeds and Indians is reported to have occurred at St. Johns, N. D-, near the Manitoba boundary line, i? On the 27th the associated banks of I New York city held $25,270,675 in exge&s of the 25-per-cent, rule
INDIANA STATE NEWS. William S. Iurr. of Richmond, sec* retary of the Indiana Fish and Game association, has received word from the United States commissioner of ^sh and fisheries at Washington that 500,000 pike and perch have been assigned to Wayne county, and will be delivered within sixty days. Arrangements have been made by which 2,000 small-monthed black bass will te bought at Warren and placed in the streams of the county at the same place. At Decatur, an attempt was made to assassinate County Clerk John H. Lei* hart. He was sitting in his parlor reading, when some one from the ou> side firejdi a revolver at him, the bullet crashing through the large plate glass window, passing about six inches above Mr. Lenhart’s head. - Farmers near Decatur captured a tramp who confessed that “he” had burned a barn. The indignant grangers were preparing to whitecap “him” when “he” was discovered to be a woman. She won’t tell her name, and is now in jail. Arthur Snyder, of Alexandria, was shot dead on the streets by Officer Harvey Painter, who immediately gave himself up. The two had an old grudge. A stray shot from the officer’s revolver struck a third man in the head and he will die. , Mbs. L. E. Tatlob, Bedford, was found lying in the yard unconscious. Had been splitting wood. Stick flew up and struck her on the temple. Will
recover. At Kokomo, Mrs. Elizabeth Cassidy was granted a divorce a few days ago from Thomas Cassidy, who she thought until recently, had died twenty-eight years ago. The couple were married in 1865. Caxxellton is maintaining a quarantine, backed by armed guards, against Tell City, which has four cases of small-pox. Farmers of Madison county propose to fight the Richmond Natural Gas Col's efforts to pump gas. Bruno Hans, who fell from a trapeze at Ft. Wayne, died. Diphtheria is raging in Washington township in the southeastern part of Shelby county. As a result of fearful burns received the other day, an 8-year-old daughter of George W. Patterson, of Jackson township, Cass county, died. Harrison* Collins, of Point Isabel, Marion county, was bitten-a few days ago by a' dog. He was immediately sent to the Pasteur institute at Chicago, and word came the other day that the symptoms indicate a case of hydrophobia. Rabbi Lyons, of Terre Haute, attacked the reformers there for bringing ex-Gambler Quinn to the city. Twot bloodhounds will help out Anderson’s police force. Granville Gunn, a farmer of Wabash county, who has been deranged at times during the past seven years, committed suicide by shooting himself through the head. Mr. Gunn had a sunstroke several years ago, and has made two attempts to kill himself
previous to this. The monument near Westport which marks the center of population of the United States has been badly defaced. The act creating" a new superior court in Lake, Porter and La Porte counties will be tested. Charles Summers died at his home near Winchester the other morning", aged nearly 89 years. Mr. Summers was a native of Virginia. He settled southeast of there on a farm between sixty and seventy years ago. All the old settlers who entered land about him in that long ago are dead or gone. Henry J. P. Dykes, one of the oldest ministers of Henry county, died at his home in Middletown recently, after a protracted illness of diabetes. He was nearly TO years old and had spent many years of his life in the ministry, being a member of the Christian (New* j light) church. He probably officiated at more weddings than any other man in Henry county. One of the biggest gas'wells in the Indiana gas belt was opened on the farm of W. R. Fleming a mile south of Middletown. The well outclasses the old-time “gushers.” being estimated to have a daily output of ten to twelve million feet of gas. The roaring of the well can be plainly heard in town. The Irondale Steel and Iron Co., which has a tin-plate plant here, employing 400 men, has recently opened several good wells, and altogether Middletown has a brilliant outlook for the summer. This excellent well is highly encouraging as it puts to rest any existing doubt that Middletown is not in the very heart of the gas belt. The town is booming. The new superior court in Lake county is in full running' blast. The six coal mines at Carbon are in operation again. The eight hundred plate glass workers at Elwood are jubilant ever the fact that the plant there is to resume operations in full May 1, with one thousand operatives. Postmasters appointed the other day. J. A. Stagg, Harris, Decatur county, vice C. E. Sturgis, resigned, and Washington Newton, Wickliffe, Crawford county, vice T. S. Riley, resigned. One hundred Terre Hauters filled out income tax. South Bend says her post offiee business is increasing $10,000 a year. At the funeral of Mrs. Edward Ethel ^at the family residence. Mnncie. a floor gave way, dropping many hundreds of people thre^feet to the ground. Excited men and women leaped Out of the windows, and a half dozen ladies fainted. The Broadway Lloyds Fire Insurance Co., of New York, and the Council Bluffs Fire Insurance Co., of Iowa, were blacklisted, a few days ago, by the state auditor, who claims that they have not complied with the laws of Indiana. Hagerstown will lay two miles of cement pavement this summer and is considering a plan for water workt.
AFTER PHELAN'S SCALP. Christian EMamrcn and Ep worth iMfMn Aikhp. satoUi to Tarrock lb* I Cdltor-Priest. - Asbcht Park, N. J., April 29.—In the Westminster church of Asbury Pjixk last night a petition was circulated among the congregation as follows: “T* His Reverent* Mgr. SdtoUi, Roman Catholic Vnitsrtitg. Washington. D. C.: "We, the undersigned, Christian Eadtmvorers of Asbury Park, X. J-, respectfully call your attention to the wicked, false and slanderous statements published by Father Phelan, one of the priests in St Louis. This base and inexcusable assault is made upon more than 3,000,000 earnest, godly and irreproachable young Christians in America. It Is unparalleled in its baseness and enormity, and should consign its author to everlasting infamy and contempt. We therefore ask that the creature from which it emanated be degraded, unfrocked and deposed from the high position which he has so relentlessly disgraced. “We are encouraged to make this petition from the many protestations which you, as well as the holy see you so ably represent, hare recently fully and earnestly made, with full confidence that you will give it your immediate and careful consideration. " To-day this petition will be taken in hand by the Epworth League and Christian Endearorers for signatures in this place and Ocean Grove. When this is done the petition will be forwarded to Mgr. Satolli at Wash ington.
SILVER CERTIFICATES Not Local Tender, Accord Inc to Jadec Garrison, of Xtw Jersey. Camden, N. J., April 28.—An interesting case came up in the supreme court Friday, that of Walter M. Wood against the Camden Horse Railway Co. Wood sued for 5500 damages for being put off one of the defendant’s cars because the conductor could not change the 85 bill which Wood had tendered. Ex-Judge Armstrong, for the ^defense, wanted to known the character of the bill, but the plaintiff could not recolSect what it was. Judge Garrison granted a non-suit to the defendant on the ground that Wood would be competed to prove that he offered legal money. The company would not be competed to accept a bank note, that was a promissory note,and a silver certificate was not a legal tender. ' THE LAW OF LIBEL. Am Important Point Laid Down by Judy* Kerr, of Minnesota. St. Paul, Minn., April 28.—In a 85,000 libel suit against the Pioneer Press, Judge Kerr threw the case out of court on a ruling of the utmost importance to newspapers and people libeled. It was shown that the plaintiff’s notice for a retraction was served on a reporter. Judge Kerr said that the law contemplated that a legal notice for a retraction must be served on the publisher. Had the notice been served on the city editor, the managing editor, or even the editor in chief, it would not have been sufficient unless the editor in chief was also an officer of the company, or at least interested in it financially.
CAN NOT COLLECT. Fraud Orders Issued Against the Publishers' Collection Agency. Washington, April 2a—Fraud orders hare been issued to the postmasters at St Paul, Pittsburgh and Chicago, forbidding the delivery of any mail mat* ters to the “Publishers’ Collection Agency.” The agency, which has offices all over the country, has persisted in attempting to enforce the so-called “newspaper laws” in spite of the warnings of the post office department. One of the chief clauses of these “laws” is that if a person takes a paper from the* post office he is I iable for the subscription price of it, whether his time is out or not, or whether he subscribed for it originally or not. SPAIN MAKES HER BOW, * Acknowledges the Truth of Capt. Crossman's Statement, and Concedes American Claims. Madrid, April 39.—'The report that the Allianca affair has been settled by Spain’s conceding the American claims is confirmed officially. The Spanish government will give the United States satisfaction for the mistake, and admits the Allianca was outside of teritorial waters when the Conde *de Vanidito fired upon her. Commanders of war ships in Cuban waters have been instructed precisely not to fire upon vessels outside the three-mile limit. SCHWEINFURTH’S “HEAVEN" Broken Up by a Sheriff’s Levy and the False “Christ” Indicted for Adultery. Rockford, 111., April 28.—Sehweinfurth was indieted for adultery by the grand jury after three days investigation, and in default of $1,000 bond was confined in the county jail. Officers and deputies, accompanied by draymen, have gone to Schweinfurth’s Heaven, south of the city to levy on Schweinfurth’s personal property to satisfy a judgment of $50,000 recently secured against Schweinfurth in Chicago by George W. Coudrey for alienation of the aiiectlons of the latter’s wife. This will probably break up Schweinfurth’s Heaven which he 'has conducted for so many years. ARKANSAS CATTLEMEN Overrunning South Missouri with Their Herds—Trouble Expected. Galena, Mow, April 29.—The whole southern parts of Stone and Taney counties are being invaded by cattle from Arkansas. There are now over 12,500 head of Arkansas cattle, on the range in one township of this county alone. The people are indignant, and trouble is sure to result. The law is defied by these men. They pay no taxes in either state, and the present law cannot be enforced. If relief is not afforded the cattlefwill be killed.
J. T. KIMS, M. IK Physician and Surgeon, PETCTtSBUBG, USD. -_ in Bank buiidlne, flm floor Wit le found at office day or Bigot. GEO. B. ASHBY* ATTORNEY AT LAW PETERSBURG, HID. Prompt Attention Siren to nil Bournes* 49*Ottca onr Barrett A Boa's tAtra VuacnB poor. DrnrmrQ.cutmu POSEY A CHAPPELL. Attorneys at Law, Petersburg, Iks. Will practice in all the court*. Special attention given to nit bulnett. A Notary Public constantly In the office. earOlPoe* On first Boor Bank Building. t a. elt. a a. DiTxxron ELY & DAVENPORT, LAWYERS, Petersburg, Ixo. fiSPOfflcc over J. R. Adams A Son*# drug •tore. Prompt attention given to alibi a P. Richard sor. A. H. Ttnoa RICHARDSON A TAYLOR, Attorneys at Law, Petersburg, Iso. Prompt attention given to all business. A Notary FuSlife constantly In the office. Office in Carpenter Building, Eighth and SCaln. DENTISTRY. / We H. STONECIPHEK*
Surgeon Dentist, PETERSBURG, TND. Office In rooms* and 7 in Carpenter BuildIn*. Operations Drat-class. AU work war* 1 ranted. Anaesthetics need lor painless ex* < traction of teeth. ' NELSON STONE, 0. V. $., PETERSBURG, IND. Owing to long practice and the possession of a fine library and case of instruments, Mr. Stone is well prepared to treat all Diseases of Horses and Cattle STTCCESSincnLX*Y. He also keeps on hand a stock of Condition Pow* ders and Liniment, which be soils at reasonable prices. Office Over i. B. Tons & Co.*s Stare.
V(liiull«frwVmtnkt<rinitScnta kr UMi bar* V. JinOKSS, FttbUahn, aiutlttklt,, 5«« Sac TRUSTEES’ NOTICES OF OFFICE DAT. NOTICE is hereby given that I will attend to the duties of the office of trustee of Clay township at home on EVERY MONDAY. All persons who have business with theoffice will take notice that I will attend to easiness on no other day. M. M. GOWEN. Trustee. NOTICE is hereby given to all parties interested that I wilt attend nt nay office* in Stendal, EVERY STAURDAY, To transact business connected with the. office of trustee of Lockhart township. All persons having business with said office will please take notice. J. S. BARRETT. Trustee. NOTICE is hereby given to ail parties eoncerued that I will be at toy residence. EVERY TUESDAY, To attend to business connected with tbsoffice of Trustee of Monroe township. GEORGE GRIM. Trustee. NOTICE is hereby given that I will be at* my residence EVERY THURSDAY To attend to business connected with the. office of Trustee of Logan township. WPositively no business transacted except on office day a SILAS KIRK, Trustee. NH OTICE is hereby given to all parties concerned that I will attend at my resident* ML EVERY MONDAY To transact business connected with theoffice of Trustee of Madison township. eg-Positively no business transacted ex cept office days JAMES RUMBLE. Trustee. NOTICE is hereby given to all persons interested tbat I will attend in mj office i» Velpen, _ EVERY FRIDAY, To transact business connected with the office of Trustee of Marlon township. All persons Raving besiness with said offie*wili please take notice. W. F. BROCK, Trustee. N! OTICE is hereby giver* to all persons concerned that I will attend at my office* EVERY DAT TO transact besiness connected with tlw> •ffice of Trustee of Jefferson township. JLW. HARRIS, Ttuste*
