Pike County Democrat, Volume 28, Number 28, Petersburg, Pike County, 19 November 1897 — Page 8
^ MEAL ESTATE THAW SEEMS. Hecwrtf »f the ChMgM that hare Heea Kerwdat. John W. Todrauk to Henry Dennsraan, B hf ae qr, and se qr se qr sec 83, town S south, range 6 west, 180 acres. Felix MiUer to L. R. Bioadwell et al, ne qr se qr sec 16, town 2 south, range 6 west, .40 acres. Jeremiah Ghulish to Riley Foust, nw porner location 53, town 1 north, range 9 west, 50 acres. Jessie Gray to Amanda Lent, s side nw qr sw qr sec 30, town 1 uorth, range 6 west, 15 acres. Huine L. DeMott to Nathaniel Gilham, ee qr se qr sec 1, town 1 south, range" west, .40 acres. Anna and Albert Loveless to James S. Wilson, w hf sw qr sw qr sec 13, town 1 south, rang* It west, 30 acres. William F. Rodimel et al to Jacob Bowers A Sons, ne hf lot 38, Petersburg. Gerard M. Buse to Fred G. Doelecher, ne qr se qr sec 10, town 3 south, range 6 west, 40 acres. John P. Black to Minnie Meyers, pt s hf nw qr sw qr sec 5, town 3 south, range 6 west. 30 acres. Willard Hayes to Martha B. \N ood, lot S7, Velpen. Albert B. Rhodes to Theodore F. Rhodes, e end nw qr se.qr sec 18, town 1 south, range 6 west. 7 acres. Byron Brentoo to William Perigo, s hf se qr ne cjr sec 15, town 3 south, range 8 west, 60 acres. Sylvester Beach to Rosa Jackson, se qr nw qr, ami pt ne qr nw qr sec 17, town 3 south, rangeS west, 55 acres. Samuel M. HoUon.by admr, to William K. Ttslow, pt se qr sc qr see 36, town 1 north, and u hf ne qr ne qr sec 1, town 1 south, range 8 west, 47 acres. Heirs of John McCIary to John W. MeClary. n pt sw qr sw qr see 8, town 3 south, range 7 west. 33 acres. Heirs of John McCIary to Elizabeth MeClary,, n pt nw qr -w qr see 7, and s pt sw qr nw qr sec 5, tov. n 3 south, range 7 west, 48 acres. H. F. Brentou to Willard F. Hayes, pt ne qr nw qr sue 1, town 2 south, range 7 west, 3 a-r,-I tax id L. Watkins to Adam J. Atkinson, sw qr nw qr sec 37, town 1 suuth, range 9 west. 40 acres. ~ Nathaniel Gilham to K. J. DeMott, se qr se qr set 1, town 1 "outh range 7 west, 40 acres, and s hf w hf sw qr sec 6, town 1 south, range 6 west, 34 acres. Farmers* Institute. The following is the program for the farmers’ institute to be held at Winslow, December 1st and 3ud: WtDXESpAT. 10:30 a. in......Owning Exercise Address of Welcome... .Eiuer W. S. Brown Response.. .Chairman Farmers’ < ‘rganiz.itions. ... . . J. D. Selby Outlook in Agriculture for Tho>e Prepared for its Pursuit. .0. A.Lock ridge Household Couvetneuces. .Mr>. J.C. Erwin Announcement of Committees. JkFTKfcNOON SESSION. 1:90 What I Live for... Mrs. E. Chappell Continuous Growth the I.aw of Success .. .0. A. Lock ridge The Best legacy for the Children. ...Mr. Erwin Readme and Thinking Farmers ... ..’.B. M. Osgathorp Handling Beef Cattle at a Profit. .... .. .. .... Lockndge EVEXlJtO SESSION.
7:30 Priee Essay* and l)e< lamalions. Special Music. The Sunnydde of Farm Life.... Ixa kridge Awarding of Premiums ou Essays and Declamations. TUCRSfcAV. 10.30 Pig Feeding Expeiaments. ...W. B, Anderson How lucre*,- the Cheer and Comfort of the Home.Mrs. J. C. Erwin Sanitary Measures for Preventing 1 b>ease Among Swine... O. A. Ixx-kridge Relation - f the Country Press to Agriculture. ...: I*rof. Sylvester T1 I " n Responsibility for the Success, or Failure ot our Children.. .Mrs. J. C. Erwin VITERiiooX StssjOX. 1:30 The Farmer as a t'itizen.. C.C.Cooper Our Grasses and Handling them Pn fit- * ably ..o. A. Lockridge Duties of a Farmer’s Wife .. .Mrs. E. Peed Farmers' Club and Reading Circle_ .. .Mrs. J. C. Erwin Selecting officers and place of next meet* ing. Awanl of premiums. Sale of exhibits. There will be plenty of good music all through the session, and at night then will be same special music. Ail sessions will be promptly on time. M. L li hath* an, Chairman. J. D. Uolu x, Secy. Spurgeon Items. Sherman Parker is building a new harm James Barton has received not toe that his pension has been increased. Elder Mart B* *vh |«.v i here Sunday on his way home fr< :n 11 ::iaa, 1^ preaches ; there every two weeks. Dr. MeGowi-n of D* land Cite and Dr.: Chumbly of Arthur, were here Saturday to ; see Dr. Lance John R. Butler, and John E. Butler left i here Tuesday tor PiggOtt, Arkansas, to j visit Janus Butler. Mrs. J. R. Arnold. John Oxbv and! Robert Deflendall are oa the *iek list. J. VV. McCiary was in Bocuville Tuesday pn legal business. A few nights ago we saw a young man on our streets, claiming Lynville as his home, beastly drunk swearing and using indecent language and are informed that J. W. McCiary had him settle with ‘Squire Powers. If we see him again drunk we prill give his name for publication,
The Sugar Beet as Food for Lire Stock. .Purdue University Agricultural Experiment Station, Newspaper Bulletin No.W.Nc vomber.ia.iaar.) Numerous letters have been sent the Indian,, experiment station this fall, requesting information concerning the sugar beet as a food for farm liTe stock, and its feeding value. This inquiry is no doubt mainly caused by the greatly increased interest in sugar beet culture by farmers at the present time, and 'this bulletin is intended to, in a measure, auswer the inquiry. The beet contains considerable less nutriment than our standard coarse fodders, one hundred pounds of beets containing over a pound of digestible muscle making food, while mi clover contains about six and one half pounds, and timothy hay nearly three pounds. The value of beets as a food, however, largely lies iu their j influence on the digestive organs at a time of year when stock is usually fed only dry food. The almost universal report from practical feeders and experimenters, is, that roots are valuable as winter food for stock, and sugar beets take a leading place among the roots iu this respect. They contain more nutriment than mangles, carrots, rutabagas and common turnips. Their | sugary nature makes them especially palatable. For sheep or milch cows no better roots can be fed. They keep the bowels! open and tend to prevent inpaction with | I cattle and sheep and give a gloss to the j coat and condition to the skin not secured I by dry feed. I One can hardly measure the money value I of roots by their chemical composition. For many years they had a high valuation in the esteem of British stockmen and are j extensively grown in Europe for winter I feediug. In the United States, valuations | haye been placed on beets of about $',’.00 to $2.50 a ton for stock food, but the matter of price varies slightly according to j circumstances. In feeding experiments conducted in the | United States w ith sugar beets, these root.j have been fed in connection with other foods. At this station beets have in variably been fed to advantage, and we Lave used I sugar bet ts tor \ are for c&tt ie and sheep, i At the Ohio station, where corn silage and J field beets have been compared in feeding | dairy cattle, the tails have caused the Inst | gains in weight of cows, size of milk flow and production of butter fat. The sugar beet has no quality injurious to the milk, when fed dairy cattle, while l turnips, unless fed with considerable care, will give an objectionable flavor to it. The beets can be fed to best advantage after slicing or running through a root cutter, and fifty pounds jerhtad for average cattle with other foods is an ample quantity. Now that U-et sugar factories are being erected iu this country, there will be considerable refuse beet pulp,which is regarded as a valuable food. At the Lehi, Utah, factory, a feeding company has contracted for all the pulp for a term of years, and feeds in sheds near the factory. It is said that the cattle eat from 100 to 125 pounds of pulp jng day, besides about 15 pounds of hay. Analyses by the California experiment station show beet pulp to contain nearly as much protein as c- rn silage atul somewhat le>s of the other foot! ingredients, and the feeding value is estimated at #2.02 per ton, while corn silage is placed at $11.22 per ton.
Beet .pulp is entirely suite*: to ?ne sikv and in the vicinity of beet sugar factories, it is kept ensiled. In the future growth of the beet sugar industry in America, the residue pulp' trill la? regarded as au important addition to the feeding rations ot | the live stock of the neighborhood. Other root> can be grown lucre cheaply ! that; sUi’ar beets, but where the latter are I grown, they may be fed to stock to great advantage. C. S. Pn mb, Director. The City Markets. Eggs—15 cents. Butter—15 cents. Onion'—5>0e ]<er bu. Potatoes—75c jk r bu. lemons—S3 cents jvr do*. Omrges—50 cents j*er dor.. Itanannas—15 cents jkt dor. Chickens—Chicks 6c. hens IV. Turkeys—Hen turks Sc. young 7. Cider—15 t ent- per gallon. Navy I: aits— $1.00 per bu. Prunes—9 cents. Shoulders—S cents. Seles-—9c. I»ard—7 cents per lb. P rk—Hams smoked, 13 cents. Wheal—S5 cents per bushel. Corn—30 cents j»er bushel. Oat*—20 cents per bushel. Kye—40 cents {- r bushel. Clover Seed—$3.00 aud $2.50 bushel. Sait—05c* per bid. 4—90 cents. Hog*—#3.00 ami |3.50 per 100. Cattle—$2.50 to $4.00 ji-r UK). Sheep—$3.00 U> $3.50 per 100. Ciuriunati Markets. Wkonesoay, Not. 17,1«97. Wheat,91 to 92 jc. com, 26 to 2>?r:oats.: 22 4 to254c: rye, 43 to 464c: hay, #\75 to j $0 25; cattle, heavy, $4 40 to $4.60; hogs, good shippers, $3 SO to $3.50; sheep, $2.85 j U« $4.50. How to Prevent a Cold. After an expos re, or when you' feel a; cold coming on, take a dose of Foley's j Honey and Tar. It never fails. Bergen ; A. Oliphant. n lAKHIAUC MdEASEX. Mansou E. Roy and Cordelia C. McKinney. ■ John Maxev and Miouie Butler. Haller M. Hardin and Pertuelia Humble. Oscar W. Hayes and Hattie F. Decker. Kphriam Roterts aud lx>uisa Miller. John E. Ward and Eva F. McGillem.
Julius Jandebeur and family of near Petersburg, were in the city Friday to attend the burial of his mother, Mrs, Mary Jandebeur.—Huntingburgh Independent. S. H. Fettinger, superintendent of the county farm, butchered several fine hogs Tuesday, and taking pity on the editor, brought us in a fine mess of pork. And say, the way we have stored it away is a caution. Thanks. Elijah Hightower, aged 55 years, a resident of Logan towuship, died last Sunday of stomach trouble. The funeral services were conducted at Mt. Olive church by Rev. Cooper Monday morning and the remains brought here and interred iu Walnut Hills cemetery. The members of Pike Lodge No. 121 F. & A. M. are requested to meet at the hall promptly at 12:30 p, in. Friday, November 19th, for the purpose of attending the funeral of Brother Peter I. Breuton. Visiting brothers invited to join with us. P. K. Hkvrixo, W. M. The wind engine on the court house square was removed yesterday. It will be replaced by a hot air eugine, which w’l! be used to pump water iuto the jail. The commissioners will have a drinking fountain placed on Eighth street for the use of farmers in watering their horses. This will be quite a convenience to the public. The farmers’institute on December 1st and 2d. at Winslow should be attended by j every tiller of the soil. There is much to | be learned at these meetings which is of vast importance to the farmer and those j interested in agricultural pursuits. The1 chairman, Mr. Deathman, has secured able instructors for this sessiou and they should be heard. The merchants of Petersburg enjoyed a ; very good*trade la>t week. Extra inducements iu the way of low prices drew buyers from neighboring towns to purchase their fall and winter goods. Petersburg is one of the beat trading points-in Southern Indiana ami the merchants are very accommodating and carry stocks of goods to suit i the demands of the people, i -;-— The job printing department has teen' very busy during the past week with orders i for stationery and printed matter for the | businessmen of Petersburg and neighboring towns. Remember that when you need, i printing of any kind that you must go to j a printing office to have it done. The! Democrat job office has an excellent corps j of printers who thorough' understand the art in every branch, tdall and see us. Peter 1. Breuton. age.! 00 years, living five miles of this city, died Tuesday night : of consumption. Mr. Breuton had been ill I for the past'two years. He was one among the prominent farmers of the county and had amassed mite a fortune. The funeral j services will be held at the family resrdeuce j Friday afternoon and burial at Walnut j Hills cemetery. The services will be con- | ducted by the Masonic lodge of this city oi j which he was a member.
The funeral of William llisgen, who died at Albany. New York, on Thur.-dayof la>t week of heart trouble, took place from the residence of George B. Ashby Sunday ; uternoon. couduetcd by Rev. William j Omelvena, and interment at Walnut llills I cemetery. The remains arrived here Satnr-: day morning, lie was for more than thirty I years a resident of this place and was i engaged in the jewelry trade. Of late years j he has been engaged in the manufacture of tlu famous Hisgen axle grease. Here is a good suggestion offered by an exchange: If parents were to encourage their children to pay more attention to the reading of newspapers by subscribing for and taking one or more of them into the family, they would soon discover how much their children hn-rea-ed their knowledge. Books soon become monotonous to the child, while the newspaper is fresh every day and ; is looked for as a promised present. The home paper is the |*>or man's library ami [the children's fort of knowledge'. Any man ran save enough money in a month to supply his family with reading matter in the shape of a newspaper for one year. As the Klondike region is now admittedly inaccessible, the gold field boomers have transferred their activities -to districts nearer at hand. We now begin to hear of phenomenally rich diggings in Montana, of marvelous placers in Idaho and of a whole mountain of gull in Wyoming. Ail tiie>e may be set down as gross exaggerat ions i f not absolute fabrications, devised to attract j gold seekers who can no longer reach the Yukon. Adventurous spirits will do well j to save their money. Certainly no more! can be accomplished during the winter in ; Montana, Idaho and Wyoming than in i Alaska. The profits that can accrue from a rush to the new fields will be garnered by the transportation companies aud the outfitters, who probably set the stones afloat. The surveying corps of the BlaekPiamond railroad reached here Monday and pitched their tents near the Borer coal xniue on Samuel Stuckey's farm. Several prelimi- J nary lim s have been run about town, and at this lime it is not definitely known just where the line will pass through the city. The route has been established to within two miles of the river. The editor made a visit to the camp Tuesday afternoon in company with G. J. Nichols. It is a model camping outfit consisting of five tents, all nicely arranged. There is the cooking and dining hall, the main office, sitting room ' aiul sleeping appartments, which are heated j #rith small stoves. The party have with i them three wagons, a spring wagon and a | buggy. The engineering corps consists of fifteen men, under the supervision of £. E. Watts, chief engineer. They will remain in camp here for about ten days.
The Pike county natural gas and oil company hare abandoned their No. 1 well on the Omelvena land at Rogers station for the present at least. The directors held a meeting last Friday evening and decided to stop work and cancel the contract with the Greenfield lumber and ice company, which firm had the coutract for drilling the well. Mr. Gordon, the superintendent, put the drillers at work to pull the 4-iuch casing and to take down the derrick. The work of pulling the casing was completed Monday evening and by tonight the machinery will all be loaded on the cars and shipped back to Greenfield. The well was drilled 1,785 feet deep and with only small indications of either gas or oil. The best indication of gas was at a depth of 1,227 feet, when a small flow was drilled into. There still remains two strings of easing iu the well which belongs to the prospectors. We have been infoi ed that nothing will be done by the company this winter, but that in all probability the well will be reamed out and drilled to a depth of over 2,000 feet next spring. The well is now cased to a depth of about 1,200 feet., Joseph K. Watnseidler died at an early hour last Saturday morning, at his home iu this city, aged 83 years, 5 mouths and 9 days. Deceased was born iu Germany in 1814 aud came to this country when a young man and was married at Evansville. He came to this city about 85 years ago and was one of Oakland City's pioneer business men. The funeral services were conducted by Rev. Lockhart at the family residence yesterday morning and the remains were taken to Petersburg for interment. The aged wife and five daughters are left to mourn the departure of their husband and father and they have the sympathy, of the citizens of this city in their bereavmeut. The daughters were all present at the funeral. They are: Mrs. Lottie Crayton, ami Mrs. Anna Vogt of Evansville; Mrs. A. G. Troutman, this city: Mrs. Fonia Scales, Topeka, Kausas, and Mrs. Peter Drof of Petersburg.--Oakland City Journal. The Hicks 180$ Almanac aud Paper. We are informed that the 1898 Almanac of Prof. Irl R. Hicks is now ready, and judging from its past history, it will not be many weeks in finding its way into homes and offices all over America. It is much larger and finer than any previous issue. It contains 116 pages, is splendidly printed and illustrated on fine book paper, having the finest portrait ever given of Prof, llieks. It can no longer be denied that the publications of Prof. Hicks have become a necessity to the family and commercial life of this country. His journal, Won! and Works, aside from its storm, weather and astronomical features has taken rank with <:he Ust literary, scientific and family magazines of the age. Do not believe hearsay and reports. See the Flicks Almanac and paper for yourself. You will then know why they are so popular. They are educators of the millions, and unrivaled safeguards to property and human life. It is--matter of simple record that Prof. Hicks has foretold for many years all great storms, floods, drouths and tornadoes, even the recent terrible drouth over all the country. The Almanac alone is 2'> cents a copy. The paper is $1.00 a year with the Almanac as a premium. Send to Word and Works Publishing Co., 2201 Locust street, St. Louis, Missouri.
Florida Excursion Rates. Excursion tickets to Florida and other Southern resorts are now on sale via the Southern railway, from 1 and through Louisville and Cincinnati, in connection | with the Queen & Crescent route. Best routes and schedules. For particulars, address, \V. II. Tayloe, Asst. Gen’i Pass. Agt. Southern Railway Company, Louisville, Kentucky. Delays Are Dangerous. Many of your friends, or people whom I you know of, have contracted consumption, | pneumonia or other fatal diseases by neglect of a single ypld or cough. Foley's | Honey and Tar, a safe, sure and pleasant cough medicine, would have saved them. ! It is guaranteed. Bergen & Oliphant. n ! CURE HEADACHE INDIGESTION BILIOUSNESS CONSTIPATION I Dillon greene, t.h. union V. K. Greeue Attorneys and Counsellors at Law Will practice in Pike and adjoining counties. Careful attention given to all buxine*.*. Collection* given prompt attention. Notary Public always in office. Office in the Burger block, Petersburg, lnd. yy M HUNTER. Physician and Surgeon. Office in Carpenter building, first floor, opposite court house, Petersburg, lnd. Alt calls promptly answered. rp W. BASINGER, Physician and Surgeon. Office ovct Bergen A Oliphaut’s drug store, room No. it. Petersburg, lnd. All calls promptly answeredTelephone No. t£, office and residence.
Wy-lo-Wear Hems! Have you not wanted to go somewhere am! put off the trip “because you hadn’t the time to make the necessary clothes?" Well, it’s different now for we can offer you a remedv. We Have Nice Ready-to-Wear Goods # # # # # * * t # # * # # # # * # \ * At $1.50 we show nice Black Brocade Skirts. At 52.00 we show nice Colored Plaid Brocade Skirts. At 52.50 we show beautiful Check Brocade Skirts. At 5a, 52.50, 53. 53 50, 54 and $5, Black Brocade Skirts. At 56.oo handsome Silk Skirts. Capes. Capes. Capes. The largest variety of Cloth and Plush Capes in town. A few left from the big purchase. Nice Black Cloth Capes, collar edged with fur, only 75c. A nicely Braided Black Cloth Cape, at 5i.oo. A Pleated Back Cape, handsomely shaped and trimmed in fur and braid, 51.75. Braid Trimmed Double Cape, at 52.25. Pleated Back, new Collar Cape, at $3.00. Plush Capes at 54.00 and upward. While our line of Jackets can’t be matched anywhere. All the new things in Green. Royal Blue, Navy Blue and Black are among the colors we display. Our stock of Heavy Winter Goods embraces everything necessary for your comfort. Call in and see us. SOL FRANK’S (big store with little prices.# i \ * ( _1 PETERSBURG, IND.
Administrator’s Sale of Personal Property Notice is hereby given that the undersigned administratorof the estate ot Henry Fenner, deceased. wil' offer tor sale at public auct ion to the highest bidder, at the late residence of the d ceased, iu Marion tow u ship. Pike county. Indiana, on Sat unlay, the 4th day of December. lfvt. All of the personal property of the decedent, not taken by the-widow, consisting ot one span of work mules, hog-, corn, wagon harness, farming implements and other articles too numerous to mention. Tkkms of salk—On all sums of five dollars and over a credit of nine months will be given, the purchaser giving note with approved surety, waiving relief from valuation and appraisement laws, with -ix per e* nt Intersil after maturity, and upon all sunis ot less than live dollars cash on the day of sate, and no projawty removed until the same is paid b>r or a note given. Sale to begin at 10 o’clock a. m. SASSER SULLIVAN. 38-8 Administrator. Riehardsou A Taylor, attys. Notice of Administration. Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned has been appoint c 1 by the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Pike County, State of Indiana. administrator, of the estate of Henry Penner. late of Pike county, deceased. Said estate is supposed to bo solvent. SASSER SULLIVAN. Nov. 5. Is1? .M-3 Administrator. Richardson A Taylor, attys. Notice of Filial Settlement of Estate. In the matter of the estate of Sarah J. Ash, deceased. In the Pike Circuit Court,November term, isirr. Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned as administrator, with the will annexed, of the estate of Sarah J. Ash. deceased, has presented and filed his account and vouchers in final settlement of said estate and that the same will come up for the examination and action oi said Circuit Court on the 3rd day of Deoembet, lsiff.at which time all persons interested in said estate are required to appear in said court, aud show cause, if any there be. why said amount ami vouchers should a ot be approved. And the heirs of Said estate, and all others-interested, therein, are also hereby required, at the time and place aforesaid, to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate. K P. RICHARDSON. Nov. 10,1*87. 27-3 Administrator. Notice for Application for Liquor License. The subscriber hereby give* notice to the voters or Patokatownship that he will apply to tlie board of com mil* fou era of Pike county. State of Indiana, at their December term, 1>P7. for a license to sell Intoxicating, vinous, malt and opiritous liquors in less Quantities than a quart at a lime, with the privilege to allow the same to be drank on the premises. My place of business wherein -aid liquors are to. be sold and drank is located in a room fronting the Louisville, Evansville and Louis , Air Line railroad, on the first Boor of a one story frame building, situated on onefourth of an acre of laud, a part of the southwest quarter of tue southwest quarter of section thirty-one, i«»n one south, range sev^u west, and described by metes and bounds as fellows: Beginning at a point one bundled and forty-eight and one-half feet north of the southwest corner of said quarter section: theuee north one hundred and forty-eight j and one-half feet; thence east seventy-three and one-baif feet: theuee south oue hundred i aud forty-eight and one-half feet, and thence ] west seventy-three aud one-half feet to the I place of beginning, containing one-tourth of i an acre in Patoka township, in Pike county.1 iu the State of Indiana. Not. lt«7, 3W? JOHN W. CARET. luted lady Agents «"od standing, busineen ability and some capital to act as local or general agent*, to open schools and teach Mrs. Flesher’s Indies’ Tailor System of Dresseutting. Previous experience not necessary. Agents taught by matt free. Secure territory now white it may be had. A. B. Weaker A Co., |1» W. 8*4 81J. I,
Notice of Final Settlement of Estate. Notice Is hereby given to the creditors, hens ami legatees of Lewis Orubb. deceased, t> appear in the Pike Circuit Court, held lit Petersburg Indian'.en tiie 80th day of Novetsi her. i -:<T, use! sfiow cause, f any.why the final settlement awmmis with the estate of ,stid decedent f»: ■ not be upproved; and said heirs are notified to then ami there make ;>r H>f of le-lrship, and receive their distributive shares. Witness the clerk of said court this 2nd day , of November, ls07 -M-J J. \V. Bill’M FIELD, Clerk Pike Circuit Court. Uolcoiub A Holcomb, at tvs. V OTICE is liereby given to all parties eon- ^ cerned that 1 will be at my residence EVEKV MONDAY To attend to business connected with the office of trustee of Monroe township. J. M DAVIS,Trustee, Post office address: sspurgeou. Notice of Application for Liquor License. Notice is Hereby given to the citizens of the town ot Winslow and Patoka township, Pike county, in the State of In liana, that the undersigned. who now is and has been continuously a resident ot said Patoka township for more than ninety days last past, and who is a male person over twenty*one years of age, and who is a person of good moral character , and th. actual owner and proprietor of the business hereinafter described, will apply to the board ol commissioners ot Pike county, in. the State of Indiana, at their December term, ISC; for a license to sell at retail, to barter and give away intoxicating, spiritous. vinous and malt liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a tint*, to he dnuik in the house and on the premises where sold, .which bouse and premises are exactly and specifically described as follows, t i-wit: In the one room, i one story frame building situate on the southwest corner of lot number one hundred and six ,ICS . in the town of Winslow, Pike ' county, and State of Indiana, said room and budding being eighteen feet wide on Main | street, and forty-eight feet deep on Jefferson ! street of said town, and the part of the lot on which sakt building is located is twenty-nine feet wide on Main street and sixty feet deep ■ mi Jefferson street, on the said southwest ! corner of said- lot one hundred and six. iu said : town of Winslow. And the said applicant 1 will at the same time and place apply to said i Ijoard of commissioners for a license and per- ! unit to carry on a lunch counter in connection with his said saloon in said room. 3tv-d ' Aspriw Evans, Applicant. Notice of Application for Liquor License. Notice is hereby given to the citizens of the town ol Honour and of Patoka township. Pike county, in the State ot Indiaua, that the undersigned. Eri Demic. a male inhabitont of the Slate of Indiana, who now is and has continuously been.a resident of said Patoka township for more than ninety days last past, and who is a person over twentyone years of age. and who is a person of g< od moral character and not in the habit of becoming Intoxicated, and is a fit person to be iutrust»*d with the sale of intoxicating lluuors and the actual owner and proprietor or the business hereinafter described, will make application to the.board of county commission- - ers.of Pike county, iu the state of Indiana, at their December term, ISff, tor a license to sell at retail, barter aud give away intoxicating, spiritous. vinous and malt liquors, in a less quantity than a-quart at a time aud permit the same to be drank in and on my premises where sold. My plats- of business wherein said liquors are to be sold and drank as aforesaid, are exactly aud specifically described as follows, to-wit: In the one-story frame b biding situate on the southwest corner ol lot number sixty-one 'M , In the town of Hosmer. Pike countv. State of Indiana, and the room wherein said applicant desires to sell Is located on the ground floor, and being the tu-ain room of said building and said room is twenty-two *2b leet long aud fourteen c 14) feet wide there being adjoining thereto a. side room ten feet wide and twenty-two feet long, and said room is so arranged with glaast windows that the whole of said room may be. viewed from the street, said room bavins one draw and two windows on west side, and one* window in south end. H-i SRI DEMIC*
