Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 14, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 December 1887 — Page 4

THE REPUBLICAN ••• j ■ - ' ■ ' ' Thursoiy, December 8. 1887. 3K.a.t«» Of *"Kh*:W‘»»i*wiw.*» t'er annum lor 8 '.me* •? «.v M> <ipn. tor wtfti mWifiLual line. Ij, tl dMwu, Wconjr* perlWl«rfi:*J. ir.witiol j ' r Ht* per t too tor cir.ti su!»x<Vu<-rii luimLawae* t*r <*«•»«• }*Uw«*iiniw •f ,r jutv<*rli*emwits wirtcrtUtii out* cwlulun. mAh of t*©fiir vbortisers i>*j »blv «mirierly a-v'tonlUhpalilin «U»fcuoe J.»B FHIXTIXa.—AI»iv« assortmento!lvn«‘and •u«er mitennUorinistr •-a..r|>hlel .circular and It o>rr*<l work. Vrie*s'.ow.

DIEECTOET ' “ co9rtt mitm r (vrk /,... JaMMsK.IBWIH. Sow iff ..-»*« I'’«• K ; , Ykow an. Auditor M. ItOttNHON Tmmuiw.;.- I B. W.a«h»Cbj<. Itocwrdcr . Thomas Antrim. Svpff j'or ,«. 4,,. .. ..Jamss C. Thravlb ( .toner l*nii.i.ip Bu'i. S-i nennttnleul Puhllo Srhool* J. 1* * Wakkkn l)ii«ri< t Asa C. Fhkvo, CommiMionert District J.K. Watson , «d District .O. P.Tabo*. Cijsimtwn'ioirrr 1 Court —Firrt Mnnrtnyt in Jfarck J~un«. September and Vtcembor. Judicial Circuit Judge fmtH. Wash. CrogocnOng Attorney .15. " . SlAs*UAt|,. 7>rmi nf Court—tint Xr-idxy in Janu.try; Tu-rf MmfOfln Jforrb; Fir*'. Monday in June; Tvirrf itcmhiy in Oatobor. ,■■■■■ COFPOKATION OFFICERS: Wartfxal Wm. 11. Wool). Clerk ~...! Ciia*. Wakfm Erunaurwr ■ -Crc stark r litWar.l ... ... K. r. Benjamin | id Ward ,t has. F. Wkkn Counclltnen .Ks» D. Hhoadis, 1 ithWarii ....«•». CSEENKIKtt) l s;h Wwrt.. Alkr*i> TnOMt’SoK. lASPKR COTNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION Jen «* Gwhi. Trustee AHAiutin* Grows tpR. Guild,Trustee .. ~ Gil lam tp. >Yoa S. Melser, Trustee Walker tp. J«Ub L. Nichols,Trustee Barkley tp. l‘3juur A. Grisrald. Trustee Marlon tp. i"nuiK Welsh. Trustee.. lordan tp. /saltson Freeland. Trustee Newtou tp U. F. Schwanke, trustee iieener tp. .lumen N. White. Trustee K inknkee tp,_ U. J-. .Htiirer. Trustee. . WCeaUlwo tp. t*acar M Viekertf, Trustee Carpertertp. Washington Scott, Tru>lee MOW ‘P Stephen T. Comer, Trustee, t JM.0.11 tp WH. CoftVer .. T;. ;• 7. AT. 7 V.U.... Remington - Dr. 1.8. Wasalntrn-.■:.rrrrmr. ~. .Rensselaer Frank J Wamm couuty'Supt.

Notice lo Republican*. There will be a meeting of Republicans at the Court House on Friday Dec. 9, at 7 o’clock p. in., for the purpose of organizing a republican club which will be a branch of the Lincoln Lodgeof Indiana. A.U republicans are cordially invited to be present. Meet in the Auditor’s-office. Many Republicans.

The President’s message appears iu full, on an inside page. It deals with only one subject, the question of reducing the surplus, and is simply, a specious argument iu fatorpi. freetrade- " __ - - -y— - At the drawing of seats ril the House last Tuesday Congressman name was one of the first called', and he accordingly secured an'excellent seTtwnytT[ymfronl, R-here he cau catch the Speaker’s eye, at any time. He was among the very lucky ones iu this respect two years ago, if we mistake sot.-'

David Turpie was sworn in a CiiiieJ Scatis Senator, without protest, although it is understood rime the Senate Committee on elections will make a ftrii investigation into the manner of Ids sicalled election, lie now holds ike oiiiee of Sena: or b'J firs? ; i fan infamous Gcrrvmar. l.'r tuvT firm by the fraud ihv.i auss£Kug sf aT R*p;b <U w: la tluFStkts Sea-t Ate cud! /erasing him fey a Uaia >- *iat. avho hal.iio ‘of” right . totheieat. As-'w.n; d • the IVk.kn; has nouniuared Mr. Lam .r for the• vacant position in the U, S. Supreme Court. Mr. Lamnr is not n • great lawyer, nor hardly aay Ihv.--yer at all, in fact, and has nothing j to recommend him except that he is a rebel of the uneonstrncted tort, who thinks #el? Davis thej greatest of patriots and that the South had a right to secede and > who regrets that it did not sue-1 fceed. The Senate ought to send Sim packing. I

The National Republican Cora-i mittee will meet in Washington to-day to decide when and where! the convention for 18SS shall be! held A number of cities are can- - didates for the honor, but none of them, it seems to ns, have so much to recommend them as lias Chien-j go, the city id which more Nat-: local Repubiic'an’Con van tiops have beau held that? in tsvry other in the Union. As ah added attraction for nert year tiiO'Cifcy tenders the *se of the grand auditorium, seat-! i>g 7,500 people, in the new $2,#00,090 building now in Ufcerectioe. ' T I

THE CHARGES ANSWERED

The following article from the editorial pages of that noblest, 'truest-and bravest of Republican papers, the Chicago Inter-Ocean, so folly and conclusively answers the principal, charges now made against lbs Republican party, and also so clearly outlines the f uture duties of that party that we publish it entire and ask for it a careful reading: A correspondent, who describes himself as a ‘.Republican living in the country,” sehds an extract from his local paper which, he says, “makes one have some inward fear for 1888,” and he adds “The Inter-Ocean ought to answer these charges boldly.” “These charges” are adopted by his local paper from the New York World, and are really assignments of cause for the late Republican disaster in New Y’ork. They read thus: 1. A profound distrust by the people of the Republican party which ha 3 .for four years been nothing but a Blaine machine. 2. The disaffection of the German Republicans over the assaults of that party upon what they regarded as “personal liberty” in the attempt to save the prohibition vote. 3. And, most important of all, the difficulty in gettingout the Republican vote, because the appeal that had rallied them for twenty years was a lie. That ap peal was that the Republican rule was needed to “preserve the results of the war,” and to guard the “business interests” of the country. Three years of Democratic supremacy have shown this to be a lie, and the false appeal is now retreading with retributive justice upon the party that uttered it. The voters see that all the predictions of evil have come to naught, and they refuse to be frightened further. And for these reasons the State remains Democratic. - Nothing is ever by dodging au issue, and so The InterOcean will speak as plainly as it can to the matter presented! Charges 1 and 2 are perhaps too well grounded. The Republican party conquered as apSrtyof ideas and moral principles. It must go to the people intent upon the triumph of those ideas and principles whenever it hopes to draw the people to it. In New York the question of spoils was uppermost, and many Republican voters rebuked the usurpation by voting for the nonce with “side show factions.” .Mr. Lincoln was not nominated or elected by men who had promise * or hope of office in the event of his Success, or who had promised inspired hopes of minor office uudr them to others. The successful era of .Republicanism always has been and always will be one in which it had rather be light than victorious.

There is a great unfinished National work to be done, which only theTiepabliean party can do, and which can not be done unless the desire for place and profit be again made secondary to the desire tor the triumph of ldghteousnees and freedom. Local -Readers hav%tpo often made the poivuisi- ;■ s inferi r to the pnrjjtose of of lie a A -.id wiifSiiyoE th ‘re is a sjmit; and Son j uray if- endure, in .ire party that will ‘not hr ox ariogaii.e in its leaders. It is mnpiestioTinbfy true that the mejbrity of the German vote by natural and' accideu’iil preference, a:id that- it Was temp- -rtird v diverted by a | suspicion that the-party' organization in New York had been ma le subservient to extreme temperance ideas. It has always appeared The ! Inter-Ocean that the question of j prohifcitrod was properly outside ; the party lines. It is a question on which a majority of iio one party can agree, though a question upon which thy majority of a State or Nation may be easily determined. - Charge number .three *is false and misleading. Moral apathy may submit ta-grievous wrong, but it is the duty of the Republican party to dispel that apathy, and to appeal, as aforetime it did ; successfully, to the quickened Conscience of the American people. l*y what insolence is it said that the might of the Republican party is mot needed "to preserve the results of the war,” while iu Louisiana the Democratic party is waging a campaign for the express purpose, as its eacfiuate for Governor < feel ares, of rebuking a pre-1 vious Democratic Governor who] was so far imbued with the spirit of the age &s to say that “any policy which does not include the good of all the people of the State moot end iu Or, aS a representative of that state in the j National Senate declares ’‘to settle the question as to whether the white man shall rule LouitUoa.” j

Evil is fast brewing under Democratic rule. The utterances in Louisiana are in defiance of those amendments to fehe National Constitution which were heedful results of the war. In Texas and Mississippi there is open and forcible suppression of the negro vote, and in most of the other States in the Southern tier there i 3 ill-con-cealed 'and fraudulent suppression of it. How long is it since humanity was shocked by the all but unanimous adaption of the Glenn bill by the House of Representatives in Georgia? Nor is it true that commercial interests of. the country are safe under Democratic rule. So far they have suffered but little, because Democracy has not yet dared to depart from the Republican policy. But it certainly threatens departure, and if it should conceive itself indorsed at the n6xt election it would make a quick departure. The president and his Cabinet are free traders, and so is the Speaker of the House, And so is a majority of the Democrats in Congress. A Republican Senate and the timidity of the first term of power in a quarter of a century have been safeguards to business.

Too Much Reform even for a Mossback.

"HonTfceTTo fiemocratr \Ye believe in. turning the rascals out, but r,« are not in favor of filling their places with ignoramuses whose carlessness and ignoiance serve to detract from the efficiency of the mail service. One of these clumsy specimens of reform, having a run on the Panhandle to State Line and back, almost invariably makes several mistakes. Last Friday morning the Democrat package addressed to Reynolds was carried past, and thus it goes. We advise the young man to brace up or give place to one more competent and less careless.

The Rensselaer Message has departed this life, and the law of the survival of the fittest i 3 again illustrated in the continued health And prosperity of the Republican. s —Monticello Herald.

MIIIHMB WITH the November, 1887. isSitb Tun C'es ] rricv commrfntjfs it.-thirtv-liltii volume with a regular circitlatinr, of almost -So,ouo. The War 'Papers ami tire Life of I.iaeola iuertasert ‘Jt3 monthly edition by lrto.twy. The latter IrisUnv having reooanted the ey -nti of Lincoln’s early years, and given the necessary survey of (lie political-condition of the country; reaches a new period, with which his secretaries were intimately acquainted. Under the caption, of LMa iii tie War the Writers now enter on tire more important tell tof Umrr oiirinTive -Via: the. the War and President Lima,hits part therein . IW War Papers. following the -'battle scries - ’ bv distinguished I generals, wiH-describe interesting iciituros of *mv life, fuuneMing from Libby lVi>,m, n>u - naiives i-dpersiinal adventure, etc, Gen. Slier m m will write on "The Grand Strategy of the Kiip’iri on SIBERIA. Except the'ij Life of Lincoln” and the War Articles, no more important series has ever been undertaken by the The Cb.ni'i kv than this of Mr Ivefluah’s. Witii the previous preparation «f four year’s travel and sin lv in u us _ J sin and itboria, the author undertook a journrv of 10,00.1 miles fur the qi-eia! investigtiiou lu re | required An tiitrodtteti.Q.n from tho-h«ssitMi j Miiii-tor <if tiie Interior admitted him to the j principal mines ami prisons, where he hecamo actjmiiwte'l .wuh some three hundred State ites.—l.iic.rals. Niiilljsts. and others.--and the series \, ill h? a , tei fling as well as ah amirstie r. •i■ -i a til-,! <■ flic ev; \ a the many ilijtstra tetrs ifEsiliv ari.-t- cipt phat-ograpaer,. Mr. GY- »rg • \. > - r;u't.Ar’>»u ‘te-atii fftinlifj-tlßnuriiAK iv»i • an ■ gn.otj e. ihe \a!t,e of tin- arthtev.A M ffgeSM, 'Ml l*. i r bHrrHUbh the. vrrr-~ "ii rt. r in»v*v ' •; u \ f.-lUw-1)..* o*i>?y k\m[ j u*r fL-rims will apjitiNir iriontb;;. ; FgflaM ! -vt 1 e -m-wis - several ilinsthtUtd. aid-ic-te- -m f tTy l .. Tl. 1.. I‘y ' i(aril“ ,O'. -..—.tTKtehl’i'-r a licit tiie Sitmluy tv,it ml i.a-smw. i'la.--tra.-ed *,v in. I. I-on; .Wo-torn i.ite >y Tliea- : 'io.’ e o" !<1" ts tiie Li: .rliski.v: rth njeats, - drs Aan ,;e isoiacr i i>,. HttrktevVs VulaaMo PH;s-rss.M •Ir-ants. spiritaatis-n ah.! CW.irv.iv-’ ' ;::!ee ; essty in 'crj icisin. art travel and biograph> ; piit'ms ; i';i!ln.irts c e. Hy a speeia I od'er the numbers for the nest -year {eomaini’ig the Lincoln history! utav |,o , s'ecui'.-ti c. lull a year's sidtscriptiotr from '\-k j i-eiliin.lss.-. iwraity-fnar issues iu all. tor f,i, I • r. vv.Ui the last vgar’s nnmb-jii handsomelv I 'hoi.-.-ji. t 7 :.o • ; l-übi. ia.d !iy T«e UrsTt uT Co .S 8 East 17th *>reet. New Vers. st/MchglasT' foe YOUNT, folks, itpice its first issue iu IHT3. tlva ittUfftitiita ’i'S.s~ ;innfli»«in<wW-wHh undisputeil rrcox'uitinii, tiie 1-osiUou u took at the beginning—that ol being the most excellent juvenile periodical ever prioted. The best known'names iu literature were on its list of contributors frmn tito start Brvanr. Uingtelbiw. Thomas Hughes. O-oriie MaeHdnuld.HrtJt Carte. ISaVani Tavlur, Frances liodgson Buin ALduines T. Kiel is. John tT; Wiiittier: irntnyi tbedi-f is so li>ng that: it l " , U!d Ik- ea der tttteil th-few abtilers of rote ; w ho contributed to “tite Worid s'fluid i uta car/, y., e.' las Eiilor. If? lapes Dafigs. SRthor of “nans r.riliier; or Th‘e Silver States,” an-! .other popular books tor youfttoifcs;—and for growt.-up folks.—too, has'a -e----markt'tdc fa ulty for kte'wiug and entertaining chioiiea. I'fcder her skillful ieadorship, Sr'. N iCno MS thousands of homes mi both “i slie waterkv.ee.ledge and delight, ' Si, SIMM KligiSUd.it i--No; uhias in .Vine: tea that s T Ntrrrn. las uas utade its great success. The IA etna Tiaussay- : ‘‘Rtis iilkivo tutyildog n enr.niu.-o iwAire sguM- Hue.” The %wkm.uu!.sitys: '• Th -r-j -if bo nuigisittethat- cab successfully ttojsrtserw with it.” ' Tie siting te of St. Kictote. The SfiomMh year begins with the number for Xovetaber INsf. and the (labiisher nan amtounce Serial and i-liort Stories by .\fW. I r-.nces liodgsau Iturne t. Frank It. 'Sto-kson. 51. H. Boyea«o, dotii Uiiaivllcr Harris. -I. T. Tr >whtidge. tViL Richard M. Jthriso-, Louisa AWbtt. t"w >.ssor AUrcd Church. Wta. ft. Uah, Htg.. Waslilngtou t.l-dden. Harriet I’rosetrtt Sptfffonl, Anieiia H-. ilarr, Fraiscca ii, hotwe-

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WILLEY & SIGLER, Rensselaer. IndLIVERY, FEED & SALE STABLE. W. R. Parker, Proprietor. . ’> A ~ - . ' ' (DUVALL’S OLD STAND,) RENSSELAER - - - - - INDIANA Teams furnished at all hours, and horses fed and cared for, at reasonable prices. Give me a call. W. R. PARKER.

asy Baylor, Harriet Upton aml many others . Edmund Aiton will write a series of papers on the “lioiitine of the Repubtift,” -how the FresiUent works at the White House, and how the a-ltairs of the Treasury, the State and War He paitancots etc., are wndaeted/ Joseph O. Brlen, a well known Australian, inurnalist, will. descrTlie “The Grjstt Itdiihd Co.uisent;” Blitahem liolibins Fennell .will tell of ‘•London Christina- I’oiitohiines ” John Burroughs wili write • Meadow and Woodland, Talks with Young Folks.” etc. Mrs. Burnett’s short serial Will be, the editor savs. u’.voi-thy successor to the fane,us “Little Lord Kauntieroy," which appeared in St. Miraous. why not fry St. Nicholas this year for the voting people in the house? Begin with the November number. Send us |:s i»,or subscribe thnusyiv booksellers uni uowsdealers The Utnturv Co.. East 17th 5... New York, Not All Alike. ' Nearly all tka heterodox men I have Seen believe' all men are coming to the Rctne destination. Tom Paine and I Whitefiell, Jezebel and Florence J Nightingale, Charles Guiteau and i James A. Garfield, John >Vilkes Booth ; .and Abraham Lincoln, side by side! If j tins be true, I torn from such a heaves with loathing. 7 --jße?i. Jr, Talmage, ' „ •'jj'' ' ' "LaM' '• (A... ITCH. MApGi i.ul SCKATCHES ofeeerv kind on tinman or auitoaN •• Loured in 31 'uinn eA :»v ff-OtHtfOttO'S] j SANITARY LOT'KJN. This never j ! foils. . Soid ny, E, Ivanna), druggist | I Rensselaer, lud. • li)-49i f, H. IE. EIOiIL MANUFACTURERS • ZD DEALERS cr -cost r : THE STEEL GEAR DUG GIT, No Wood to shrink, break, decay or wear out. No bolts or dtps to become loose or radio. A gear made entirely of steal, riveted together, cu> not be broken, will last forevsr. _ _. MANUFACTUaCO BY WE ASsztT BUGGY CO., CHICAGO. UARX|iSS, 5.4 05? LJES, C* LLIRS. WnilLS, TBFXHS F FLISES, BJ 4SRETS, tv- aOBKS.CAKIiIAGETHIMKISGS. *f ASSESS OIE, ett " Domestic and ,\eu l’orib singer Sewlnar Machines 1 ——AT THEIR HARHTESS SHOP. _ OUTH SIDE OF WASHINGTON oTRET BeaiseJto. Indian* . ■ :. .u.. -

Lire Agejft.vi Wanted. To sell Dr. Chase’s Receipts; or Information lor Everybody, iu every county in the United States and Cana (la L Enlarged by the publisher to 648 pages. It contains over 2,000 household feheipts and is suited to till classes and conditions of society. A wonderful book and a household necessity.. It sells at sight. Greatest inducements ever offered to book agents Sample copies sent'by mail, postpaid, for $2.00 Exclusive territory given, Agents more than double their money. Address Dr. Chase's Steam Printing House. Ann Arbor, Michigan. 0 3m. M HHfL THE STATE OF fYiHAXA.i - * Foitiirairi <• jiM'ty, tu,iin Jasper Circuit Court, to J«V»uai'y tori))-, A. It . HWi ■ ■ - , Bciij.uniit IV.- Lawson, l v.s„ i xo. arr<. _ ;T-;iiza JL r i:ii-PB t _i —-—t : . ( 'ui"ru*l jimi , r iiior, - I i tiivi: lust; re Thwmiiiß Fuvtsif. ) Tito plaintiff ID tit,- above oiUitix! cait.-e iiiiviugJUfc!l.ku/eouite'.ojut thtreOi.- togeih.-r with •tm siMavil Thar tin- Ji-fot-ilsots. Ehz ; J . (.ooper, <"i i-noi:u> Ccov cr tuxl 'ftwui a: i- tura'- are each nbti resiilent- of Hm> E'-ate ,«f tr.tlia m : that the 0100-r of tills aet'cn is to cnfnms a lien i ttpoit.real-estate in this slate, to-wit. tp. foreclose- :i mortgage tln-tvo -. Now. therefore, 'he'VuiJ d'Atetul ants are hereby iiotitieil tli.it i.c less tlieyktuiil euc'h>*f them, be aiul a|:iK>ar on tii-ilist i&v of they Jituuir.i te-runtLtlie Jasper Uin iiit Court, to l«e holilon oi' the tliSt Itfomioy of J: no.-try, 16SS,no-tl-efour House irt kensseiucr, hi saitl county itjitl sti te. arni answer or ciennir to saiu eompl.iint. the same will be heard aliJ dctemiined in toieir absence. \ WITNESS, My hand aud t'.w-eeal of IVV »T \ s*.;d court, affixed «fc -oflipe in IteusI ) selaer, on tills nth (thy oi Oecem(KTi A n. '1.7K7. , .vr... - JAHEs l-’. lItVl IN, Clerk. Graham « NTarliu, AtQ's, ivt Plf. - Dec s-fC-ai. liakeever Hours. Rensselaer, Ind. and pleasant rooms. T. tbles supplied with the best the market afic rds. Good Sample Rooms on first floor. 1 ’ree Bus to and from Dcnct. PHILIP BtUEr XV-35-ts. Fropvit t or ~—- ■? j luj li. q-g-v PION iAid It MEAT MARIE C Rensselaer, - - Indiana J. J. El GUESS ACC, Prop’r. BEEF, PbrV, Veal, Mutton. Sansaugc, Bo logna, eke., sold in quantitte? to salt pur-* shatters Rr -oe lowest prices. None but the tic, •to; l -V.ithicrcd. Everv.ho,lv is invited gik ' S h / TSI/LeA Price Paid so» hood Fat C attle. J. J. EIGLESBACH. '

KIRKS White / WJkww. \\ . ( Hsiiipl The only brand of Laundry Soap awarded a first class medal at tbo Hew Orleans Exposition. Guaranteed absolutely pure, and for general household purposes is the very best SOAR HIT U THE STATE OF INDIANA,) oc , .Jasper County i No* In Circuit Court, to January term, A. D , 1888. Gorg# Davidson, ) vs I William L. Pattoe, >N6. STST, Cornelius Shea, [ Abraham Patec ) BE IT REMEMBERED, That on this 28d day of November A. I).. 18S7, the above named Idaintiffby Mordecal F. Chilcote, his attorney, fllod in theofflceol the Clerk of said Court hla complaint on a promison- note against said defendants, and also the aiuaavit of a competent person, that said defendants, William L. Palitee and Abraham Puttee are non-residents Of the State of Indiana, said non-resident defendants are therefore hereby notified of the pendancy of said suit, and that said cause wilt stand for trial at the January term of said Court. 1888, to-ivit: on the 16th day of January. 1888, the s'iimc being the lStfa judicial day of said term. WITNESS, My hand and the seal /an- stNoI said Court, affixed at oflh’C_ in l jEen.sselaer. on this 2Srd day ot Novembor, A. D, 1887. JAMES F. IRWIN. Clerk. M. F. Chilcote, Atty. for Plf. Nov. 34. Dec. 1-8.

Sheriff’s Sale. BY VIRTUE of a certified copy of a and uxeentitm Jo me ifirected front tue Clerk ot tiie Jasper Circuit Court, in ti cause No. 37M, wherein J.-rno Bofeee was plaintitr ami M'llliamF. Arnistrong. Reviio W liubbarl, Julia Hubbard liis wife, Elbridge J. Keith, Joint lieiiliain. John l>. Dezctidorf, David J. Tltompson, John it. VanVoorst and Mary, K. Van Voorst bis wife, were defendants, requiring me to make the smn of six hundred and uiueteen doliars.au 1 fifty-six ebTit-s ($613.56) together with interest and costs. I will expose at public sale on Saturday, tlie 24th A :vy of December 18S7, between the hours of irt o'clock A. M. and 4 o’clock l*. M, of, said day, at t'.!- doorof tiie Court House, in the Town of. Kei.s-ielaer, Jasper County, Jftdi.iiia. tiie ren'ts und profits, for i term not exceeding seven (7) -yoara, by tiie tear; of the feHowiag described real-estate, wn,•Hjo east ha If (JJ) o£ the southeast quarter (V) of section tea (10) ia township twenty-seven . (MVnnrtliUraiutw seven“f7)' xvesf, in Jasper county, Indiana And should such rents and profits not sail for a sum sufficient to discharge said copy of decree arid execution, interest ami costs, I will, at tiie same time and-place, and in the manner . aforesaid, expose at public sale the fee simple right of said defendant in and lo said, realestate or so much thereof as shaft be sufficient to discharge said copy of decree an t ixceutlou, interest and cos'te,. - .. - bttHl SaliTiYiribe made without relief and in accordance with the order of Court in aid copy cf decree and execution.

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