Rensselaer Republican, Volume 21, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 October 1888 — Page 4
l\, 1888.
National Ticket.
? ■'* For PresWtasl, of Indiana. .f s S N For Vice President, J.EVI K MORTON, of New York. \ For Govorunr AI.VIS IV HOVBY For LicMcuant Governor, - IKAJ. CRASK, for Judge* of tbeSuprcmc Court, a. I* COFFEY. ,ppjx (..'UKnKfcinr.K, "' - , ~~ WjyLfEtt OLDS. _ __ for Report or «f lbs Supreme Court. JOHN L. GRIFFITHS. For AtolKor pt State, DKI'CK CARtt. for Treasurer of State, JULIUS A LEMCKE « " For Secretary of State, -CHAH.K UKIEHN. For Attorney General, LEWIS T. MICHESKU For Superintendent of Public Instruction, lIAUVfiY M LaFOLUvTTK. sos ('onercsMnan—lflU Couirrcssional Plftriet, WILLIAM I>. OWEN foe Prosecuting Attorney, 80th JudlClalCircuit, RALPH W. MARSHALL, for Representative, Jaei»er and Newton counties, JOHN F. JOHNSON. For County Treasurer, ISRAEL It. WASHBURN. For County Slier iff, PHILIP BLUE. For County Coroner, ... KIAL p. benjamin. Fcr County Surveyor, JAMES C. THRAWLB. Por'Ctuinty Commissioner, First District, PRESTON M qi'KRUY. for County Oomnib«iop?r, Second -District, i WATuuN For County Commissioner, Third District, OLIVER P. TAItER
nmiorracy Dcflunl. TMr omiiuU upon our protective system in nprn nut! deJliiKl. Protection in uftKtiiiril an unconntihitiovpl in lair, or as ricioHs in principle, and those irho hold such ririrk sincerely cannot atop short of an absolute elimination from our tariff bajfm of the ptiuiiple of protection, Thf. Mills hill is only a step, hut it is toward an object thf*t‘ the leaders of Democratic , lit oily h( tmd legislation hare dearly in mind. The important, question is not so much the length of the step as the direction of if.—General Harrison’s LetTk«- ’ A Danger Sl|nal —Democracy Means Free Trade. Judged by the Executive message of December last, by the Mills bill, by the d< hates in Congress, uud by the St. Louis platform, the Democratic party mill, if supported by the country, place the tariff lairs upon a purely revenue basis. This is practical free trade—free trade in the English sense. The legend upon the bunnrr may iced be "free trade;” it may be the more obscure motto, “ Tariff reform ;* but neither the banner nor the inscription is conclusive, nor, indeed, very important. The assault itself is the impor'ant fact.— Harrison’s Letter. Taxes and the Surplus. The fact of a Treasury surplus, the amount of which is variously stated, has directed public attention to d considera—lion nf the methods bp which a national iniomc may best be reduced to the level .nf trine'ami fwresnnrp eapenditdr*. Th&e condition has been seized upon by those i rho arc hostile to protective customs duties as an advantageous base of attack ufmu our tariff iatrs. They hare magnified and nursed the surjdus. which they affiect to deprecate, seemingly for the purpose of exaggerating the evils, in order to reconcile the people to the extreme remedy they propose. A proper reduction of the revenues dors not necessitate, and should not suggest, the abandonment or impairment of the protective system. —GENERAL llarbisok’s Letter of Acceptance.
- Dr. B. Z. Leonard, of Logausport, the ' Greenback candidate for governor in 1884, has come out flat-footed and is working hard for Hanison and Morton. The gravitation of the Greenbackeis iuto the Republican ranks this fall, has been a regular land-slide. Every temperance Republican in this county and every reasonable political Prohibitionist, -is such from principle and not from political soreheadedness, should read carefully <the letter in our supplement, from Rev. Dr. Dorchester, of Boston, one of the most eminent Christian workers of the day and zealous leader in the cause of temperance. Those poor fat-witted Democratic dolts who originated and carried Oht the idea of that idiotic but harmless gutter-snipe, cm the occasion of Hon. W. D. Owen’s visit to Rensselaer, last week, were very carefnl to keep away from Mr. Owen’s meeting. They are possessed of a mighty small allowance of sense, bat still they knew enough to know that “Billy” would not leave a grease spot of them and their hand-bill, and waste mighty littie 'time over it, at that
We doubt if any political orator ever visited Jasper county whose, speeches were so universally admired and commended by his friends and respected by his op- • poneuts 86 are those of Hon. W-. jKOwen. He is truly a great pobut he is more than and- high minwho, if life and hipj. will, before he e terms in place* among the rs »f4be lion, ile is a coming W*. Matw the prediotiwffi ■nwaaiMfaMMMa N. A, Whitta|iet>4jhair man o\ the Democratic of Morgan county, has sent- dut a confidential letter to trusted works ers in his county, and a copy of it has fallen into the hands of Republicans quel been, published. The letter gives directions to the recipient in regard to taking a poll of his township, and among other things, says: “Make the doubtful 4 list as small as possible, and mark every one’ who who has to have money as a ‘float,’ Those who have to be bought are not ‘doubtful,’ but are ‘floats.’ Look closely after every one. Let no one escape.” Mr. Whittaker intends to get .his full share of the enormous corruption fund in the hands of the democratic state committee, it is evident _ The Democratic bosses in Jasper county have issued their edicts that every member of the rank 1 and ffle of their party should be kept away from all Republican meetings, if possible. Recent ogcurences have also shown that they aie inclining towards the gutter-snipe method in politics, but they have not, as yet, had the courage, or the cussedness, to issue such n hand-bill as did the Democrats of Lorain, Wellington county, Ohio, on the occasion of a speech there by Ex-Governor, E. F, Noyes, when the streets of the town were covered with little handbills containing the following matter: DON’T GO AND HEAR THE OLD GENERAL NOYES, By the Command of the OLD FOOL! THIEF and MURDERER, OLD BEN HARRISON. People who imagine that the shocking revelations of two years ago regarding the outrageous, the unspeakably wicked and shameful management of our state charitable and reformatory institutions, .under democratic control, had Drought about a reformation in that management, have only to read ,the undisputed and indisputable proof to the contrary furnished by ExiSuperintendent Fletcher, of the Indianapolis Insane Asylum, as given on the first page of our supplement. The revelations have, perhaps, caused some mitigation of the outrageous personal treatment to which the inmates of the asylum were subjected by the brutal democratic ward strikers who are made their attendants, but the systematic robbery and the persistent, prostitution of these institutions to “pest, houses of po<litical corruption” continues as flagrant as ever, and there can be do permanent reform of these evils until the Republicans obtain control of both houses of the state Legislature. John Lehmann, editor of the Crown Point Free Press, a German paper of wide circulatiofl, came out for’ Harrison and Protection, last week, and will do all in his power, hereafter, in furtherance of the good cause. He is a prominent and influential citizen, has always been a democrat and was a candidate of hia party for statfe senator for Lake and Porter counties, in 1886. Mr. Lehmann gives some very clear reasons for his change of political front; he says: “I am tin American citizen, an American laborer, and always have and now believe with Bis cqprok, the greatest German prince in the American ? system of Pr »
tection to American industry’ Bu‘ never until now could 1 make up my mind that xpy old parly was not patriotic and purely American on this subject. But ijow that I tpil convinced' that it is not, I must finji a party that is, and after carefully studying the question and parties, I am convinced that the Republican party and s Mr.Harrison should be supported upon this issue. lam no alave, and hence am not owned by any political party. But in this campaign, from principle, I shall support Harrison and the Republican ticket, both personally and with my paper, Some of my demoJtoitic friends have already- stoprpnd; Yaking the paper. I shall hjpfce financially, because from that ' *t'&Q£tp;>iut it is nqj; a good time to 1 thought twice befoul I am sure I’m right ahead.”
" Down the Preacher Congressman"
Moiitioetbiffisrabl Politics and,religion won't mfx*. and Billy Owen sobtild not undetVM'e'fri: profane using it vv* a cloak with which to catch vptes. Hfchy no good in congress. Let him return to the pulpit.—Monlicello DemTerat. We wish the readers of {be whether republican democrat, to make caieful note of the above and to remember that this is the character' of the, campaign now being waged against our present congressman. It is surprising that a paper in this community should adopt such *tactics, but such seems to be der, and “Down with the preaclier congressman!” has been made one one of the war cries of the democratic campaign. It has been a satisfaction to order loving peo-| pie to know that for the past fSurj years the tenth district has been j represented by a man whose moral 1 conduct wouid always bear the j light of day and who was not! ashamed of his profession—that; the disgraceful stories sometimes ! heard of dissipation and rioting in the House of Representatives never involved the tenth Indiana district, and that its representative honored his constituents not only by his ability but by his Christian character. This does not seem to suit the Democratic bosses. They like politics in a congressman but no religion, if you please. “Politics and religion don’t mix.” It is time this piece! _ orsentTment,t6rimitatedtocatcha] a certain class of votes which Mr.! Zimmerman is supposed to be specially fitted to capture, was ex-j ploded, and we trust that the peo- 1 pie of this county will be awake to this issue.
The ileduciiGn of the mills Bill. __ The duties collected from foreign I mportations ixir the year ending .nine Bg, -1887, statistical abstract 18S7, page 10 Was, $212,032,42.".90 Additional ami discriminating duty 2,1»y,855.75 Making a total of $2X4,222,308.05 Duty equal to unpaid internal|rev—enue tax mAomestlcsplrlts and I tobacco brough t la. :k».huUn.clud.-,_ ed in’“additional, etc” , 1,990,328 .4.9 Leaving entire duties from foreign importations •.;.... $212,225,781.10 Mill’s estimated reduction by bis bill, according to tlie official - -*, statement of theways and means committee . 78,170,034.22 Average reduction 36 8-16 per cent. ~ y
A Hollow Sound.
Tlie Democratic cry of “free whisky” is shown to Ik* particularly hollow by the following section (No. 40) of the Mills bill: That all clauses of section 3,244 of the revised statutes, and all laws amendatory thereof .and all other laws which impose any special taxes upon manufacturers of stills, retail dealers in liquors and retail dealers in malt liquors are hereby, repealed. Said a Democratic workingman in New York the other day: “I would rather pay 1 cent more for a dinner pail and establish an industry worth $30,000.000 annually to this nation than continue to support 100,000 Englishmen in making tin plate;,when that number of Americans want employment.” Tho argument is sound. It is sound from the workingman’s standpoint especially, and and it is sound from the standpoint of everv intelligent American citizen. i • i The following appears in a special London cable to The New York Sun, Democratic, and will show how the English feel toward Cleveland: “He- had to make an anti-English show ,tq keep Harrison out of the White house, biit at Ixjttom lie is our friend and will do* what is right for us by giving us free trade, and so let’s keep Canada quiet and help Cleveland by giving »the appearance of his having silenced us.” . ■* 'Twelve years ago the Hon. D. J. Steyvart. of Durand, 111., was elected rej piesontative in tin* legislature. Six years : ago Mr. Stewart joined the political Prohibitionists. and was their nominee for the legislature lind came near being successful. Mr. Stewart now residi's in lrfk kford, and declares that he is well suited with Get). Harrison and will vote the Rvpublicaii ticket entire this year. The Hobart JS. Y.) Independent has beeti published For more than three years and lias lieen jicrfiirtly independent itl jtolilics. During the present caiiqKiign, however, it will support the national! state and county tickets nominated by tlie Republican partv, believing the ]niiM'i)di‘H Ret forth by that |*irty to be the true policy: Protection u> American homes and American industries.
AN IMPORTANT CHANGE.
A Well-Known Indiaria Democratic Editor Declares tor Harrison. ! ■ j Howard lleraoer»ti« Hcmlirr at , 11m Stale Hancvolont BuaitK * . I(r]iubUcan. Mr. Howard Briggs, of Green castle, Putnam county. Is well-known throughout (ltis county and state. For' years he ‘ has Urn one of the brightest editors j among the Democrats of this state, and . for several years hits been a Democratic j truster of the state blind nsyllim. But tigs position the Democratic i»arty upon the tariff, its treatment of our oenevplent institutions and its indisposition to niiike needed reforms in tlie managcmetll of those institutions.,have porqpeth’d.. him to renounce his party allegiance/ and td"* declare himself in favor of the election of Harrison and Morton. 4 That he finds it impossible "to follow his party this yepr is noliurpri.se lo those' who have had his ncqaintance and confidence. Asa trustee of the blind asylum Mr. Briggs Iras lieen a faithful and strenuous servant of the public,- and, together with Superintendent Jacobs, has stood as a breakwater against , tire tide of corruption that has overflowed others of our public institutions under rtjhc rule of the llari ison-Sullivau gang. accession to the Republican year is simply a \U« nhßoinjiromlsing integrity as a man an<\a partisan. On .iatunlay evening (Reps. 20) bis friends and neighbors in Green castle assembled in large numbers ,to hear his for cliatigingf ms j»olitica.i faith, and, asAygs ex jxScted, he made one of the ablest addresses delivered during the campaign. .. SCANDALS AND OUTRAGES. Speaking of his connection as a Democratic tuemWriof the board of trustees of the Indiana blind asylum, Mr Briggs said: “But it is of the scandals and outrages that are of almost daily development in the penal, reformatory ard charitable institutions of Indiana, in which the (.are of the unfortunate is prostituted to purely partisan ends, that ”1 desire to speak. I will not rmdertaker nor is it necessary, to prove the truth or falsity of this or that is enough forme to know- that the abuses are inseparable from the system, and that Uke causes produce like effects. An exuenenoe of several years as trustee of the Indiana institution for the blind’ has i served to confirm and strengthen my convieti'ns on this subject. I join with my Republican friends in their demand for the application of the provisions of the civil service act to all our penal, reformatury and benevolent institutions. Tlie Republicans of Indiana stand pledged to the enactment of such a law, and a local option law as*well. I believe that they .will give us both, and I would be false to my convictions of duty to the helpless and unfortunate if I did not vote to secure those reformatory measures. [Cheers.] b 7 ' '‘Their candidate for representative from Putnam county assures me of his earnest friendship for the proposed en- ; actments. All who know Joseph B. L Sellers know that liis word is as good as j his l>ond. I am pot unmindful of tlie peculiar relations of the chief executive ! of the state to its legislative department, no less than to the public institution? for J whose proper management he is presumed to care, even if be should not be, as he ought to and doubtless will be, invested with an official responsibility therefor. Gen. Hovey, as governor, of the state, would prove false to the pledges on which he was elected if he interposed the veto power to defeat tlieir fulfillment.” [Cheers.] FAILURE OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY. Mr. Briggs was particularly happy in liis treatment of the tariff issue. Nearly every sentence was punctuated with applause and cheers and laughter, and lie sent liis friends away with the belief that he was not only an honest man but had the courage of his cbhvietions. -Amongi other 'thingsjihesaid; —— “Cowing to questions, or perhaps I should say the only question, of national concern—a wise and just revision of the tariff, and the proper disposition of the surplus under it, I find myself in sympathy with the Republican party and its standard-bearer, Gen. Harrison. [Cheers-,] “If there is a more commanding issue than that in this canvass, I do not know what it is. It’ is enough for me to know "that the Democratic party has failed — utterly and repeatedly failAl —in its duty to the peoply who trusted it. [Cheers.] The country seeks repose from this constant and fruitless agitation. [Cheers.] It is destructive of the interests of capital and labor alike. [Cheers.]. The policy of the Republican party is clearly and unmistakably defined —that of tlie Democratic party is involved in doubt and uncertainty. [Renewed cheering.] “The New York Sim, which supports President Cleveland, and which ought to accepted as high Democratic authority, Ims lately indulged in an open confession, which is said to be ‘good for tlje soul.’ It says, ‘the Democratic party is not a free trade party; it is not a protection party; it is simply the Democratic party.’ [Laughter,] The declaration is as true as the definition is ldcid. It reminds me of the Kentuckian who managed to maintain a jiosition of strict neutrality during the war by declaring that ‘lie wasn't a Union man, and he wasn’t a Confederate —he was just nothin’, and d—d little of that.’ [Tumultuous applause. [ Therein is the weakness of the Democratic position on this question. It is masquerading either as a protection or free trade party, or else, like the Ken'tuckian. ‘it is just nothing, and d —d little of that.’ [Renewed and long continued applause. ] > \ “But m the light of its record, it will not do to say that the Democratic party is for tariff reform. Henry Watterson, Frank Hurd and Henry George assure us that the party is ‘headed in the direction of free thide.’ It is like the toper who was seen supporting himself against a church and when asked if he belonged to it, replied that he "leaned that way.’ [Laughter.] . “I object to the Mills bill because it Is in the interest of the monopolies, is sectional in character, and discriminates against the agricultural class. The declaration of a venerable Democrat, who stands high in tlie councils of his party, atid for whose learning and geumen I have the highest respect, is so pertinent in this connection that I trust I violate no confidence in repeating it. I expressed to him my belief that the party had sold itself to tlie trusts and monopolies. Listen to his reply: ‘Having granted protection to New England, said hr. ‘wo must,row protect the south.’ Tho concessions to the rice and sugar
trust- snow tt»er peculiar nature or tne favoritism in tlqj. direction. Protection j fqr rice aiuji fylt free trade in ] wool! The trusts must wax strong even though tlie lambkins go bare. The very I specious ; len by which this discrimina- ; tion is justified is not unlike the sheep thief who wiis caught with the carcass on |ps Uipk. ‘What, (lid you kill that j sheep for ?’ demanded the owner. ‘I will kill |in\body's sheep that bites me as I pass along the road.' ’’ Laughter. *
"SWEATING AND SWARMERY."
j What FrM Trade H»< Drought tho Toot of London To. If any evidence could thorough ' free trader In America toils senses surely .that presented by the report of a recent
BRUSH DRAWING.
parliamentary committee on the so called “sweating system” would do it. If free traders did not too often belong to that incorrigiblo class —men who adopt a phras- < ingly plausible theory and adhere to in >-spite of overwhelving evidenco of its folly —tho evidenco now offered from every part of England would shako even their Anglomaniac convictions. A London workingman, asked by the parliamentary committee what ho considered the greatest evils now threatening him, promptly replied, "sweating and swannery,” by .which ho meant that workmen driven odt of, their own trades by German,, Belgian and other competition had!‘ ‘swarmed’* into, tho eitics and were employed on the “sweating” system. ...... .. And what i 3 the 1 ‘sweating’ ’ system? Well, as tho regular workshops aro badly overcrowded, and the desperate workmen in them cethbino to exclude new men, a multitude of small employers has sprung up; the needy laborers in small rooms, Ilium-escaping tho inspection ordered by the factories acts, and pay them half or less than half tho current rates, thus underbidding the legitimate employers and pocketing tho enormous profits. Tho evidenco before the committee reads as if it were wrung out of racked bodies and written in blood. 0 One woman, for instanco, employed in putting tho bristles into hail' brushes, earned just five farthings (about two and a. half cents) per hour, working in her own room, and had to deliver tho brushes every night, as the middle man would not trust the poor starving wretch with more than one day’s materials. In another room a man mado twelve 'pairs of Shoes for four and a half shillings (nearly $1.10), and delivefed them. I? 6 wai '& sort of aristocrat among the “sweated,” as he could bo trusted with stock enough for such a big job/ Tho stories told by matchbox makers, cliair makers, bird cage makers and lniir sieve weavers were simply heartrending. One man furnished his own wood and wire, worked in his own room and made small linnet cages for nine pence a dozen! And these were not the worst cases; for it was found that scores of small, unventilated rooms were, taken by tlie middlemen as workshops; that in them the victims were crowded as thick as they could work, and in more than ono instanco, as it was proved, the air was so loaded with disease that tho clothing made there was -infected with it. and diseases of a nature so peculiar that physicians could not diagnose them were thus introduced into the houses of comparatively well to do people. In other instances tho trusted women who were allowed to take tho clothing to their own rooms were found “in unwomanly rags,” toiling till faintness overcame them, barely sustaining life on the poorest food and sighing tho weary refrain: O Q/d, that bread should be so dear And llesh and blood so cheap i Perhaps tho saddest feature of the caso is that many of those, sufferers were from the country, where they had once been Tosy and stalwart farm tenants or laborers; but tho agricultural interest has declined so rapidly under free trade that the exiled ruralists aro now crowding tho cities. Tho agricultural reports continue tho dreary detail that from .150,000 to 200,000 more acres every yeas are"changed from grain to grass lands, and the cuiti-
SHOEMAKING.
vatorn sit adrift. In sixteen years the area cultivated lias shrunk by 2,000,000 acres. In Wiltshire alone 40,496 acres havo gono out of cultivation, and $303,700 per year in farm wages have been withdrawn. The hop farms in the south of England are going into grass lands also; anil in all Great Britain the shrinkage in farm wages is summed up at $14,780,400. This gives us some idea of the mass forced into tho cities to compete with those already there. American farmers have, on the whole, greatly prospered since I 860; they are now Appealed to to vote against the manufacturers. Do they admire the picture of tha Britkh farmer under free trade? Do they covet a share of his “blessings?” Chancellor Sims, of Syracuse university, is stronjfly in favor of the pro* tection or American industries, He con* riders H.trrimn “oha ffie great men of aw nation."
Public Sale of Short Horn Cattle October 45th aiidj 20th. I will dffer at public sivlo at my residence, fuur miles north-east of Chalmers and six miles south-west ol Monlicello. Indiana, or.e hundred and twen-ty-five head of Short Horn cows and ! heifers, from yearlings up to six years old; All that are old enough have been bred to Greenwood Champion No. 60340 by Commander 8., a very finely bred aoinfal, and can be seen on day of sale. In addition to the above, ! will also offer a number of very fine bull calves that will be one year old nrxt spring. Nearly all in above mentioned herd are dark reds and represent the finest strains of blood, For twenty-live years I have been engaged iff breeding Sho\t Horn Cattle, and I think I can show as fine a herd .as can be found in the sjate. IVill sell on f 2 months time without interest if paid at maturijy; if not paid at mrtu rity interest must be paid from date. All notes must ho secured with good free hold security. A discount of 5 per cent, will b.e given to purchasers paying at once. S ock must not be re moved from premises until settled for. Sale will commence at 10 o’clock sliqrp Oct. 25th, and continue until all aro sold. All who are interested in raising eattle and stocking their farms are invited to come, as this is a rare chance for good bargains. WM. BURNS. John B. Gault, Auctioneer. 2t.
From England The Swifts Specific Co. Atlanta Ga: Gentlemen —For over two years I have been suffering from disfiguring chronic affection of the skin which has been a source of great annoyance, and rendered me very miserable indeed. I have tried every method, including visits to a skin hospial, where I was treated as an out door patient for three months, and matiy remedies without beiDg relieved in the slightest. Seeing one of your advertisements I began to gixe Swift’s. Specific a trial, in hopes it wouid at least benefit my general health, if not cure my skin disease. I continued to use it for four months, and for several weeks I could not notice any improvment, though *1 seemed to feel better iu myself. This was the only encouragement I had and I entinued it, and am now delighted to inform you that a short time afterwards the skin cleared up, the blotches disappeared, and at the time of this writing there is no trace whatever. I have not only got rid of the skin affection, but gained in flesh, and am altogether pleased with the result. I shail be pleased to answer any letters that I may received respectifig this, if apyone has any trouble of a similar character and doubts my statement. I am gentlemen yours L. Watts, 1, Westminister Chambers, Victoria Street, Westminister, S. -W. October .27, 1887. Treatise on Blood and Skin diseases mailed free. The Swift Specific Co. Atlanta. Ga. A s awfelflj&flst men Is one whien is guaranteed to bring you satis.'actorg results, or uS- cu*e ot' failure a return of purchase prioe. this safe plan you can buy from our 1 advertised Druggist a hottle_of,X)r, King’s New Discovery for Consumption. It is guaranteed to bring relief in every case, when used for any aiiec tion of throat, lungs or chest, such as Consumption, inflamation of luug or Bronchitis, Asthmai Whooping Cough, croupe etc.,etc. It is pleasant and agrerable to taste, perfectly safe, ancl can always be depended upon, Trial bottles froe at F. B. Meyer’s drugstore. — •• • »i - ■■ ■ Merit WinsWe desire to say to our citizens, that for years we have been selling Dr. King’s New Discovery for consump- | lion, Dr. King’s New Life pills, Bucklen’s Arnica salve and Electric Bitters, and have never Handled remedies that, sell as well, or that have given such universal satisfaction. We do not hesitate to guarantee them every time and we stand ready to refund fee purchase price, if satisfactory results do not rollow their nse. These remedies have won theif great popularity purely on their own merits, F. B. Meyer, druggist.
MR MICE. Ed A. Lowman. Leo. J. Lowman, Jacob Kronacher. Ben Wise. Julius 8. Glaser,’ Samuel Kuder. Abo. S Straus. Benjamin K. Felix. Thomas Marston. Jr.. Edwin A, Giddon, Joseph Heuver. Charles Packer, Bobert Hniltli, John Simp kiuson. Alfred Simpkinaon. Henry 11. Sjmpkinsoh, Niels Mattsou, (I us tarns yV. Aeppli. Max Newman, Henry Ullmin.“Tthit-l P. Farnurn. George C. Farnuin, Henry La nr. AaronS. Steam, Henry Kuinlskopli, Samuel Arlh, Charles Shall 1. Orlando C. Smith. William H. Simmons, George 11. Peabpdv, K. Nelson Blake, Wtlttara.il. shaw, 0. H, Marshall, Steele, Wedles Co , W. J. Quail, Thomas E. Delelmnt, D. 8. Burlcv.W. It. Usher, Merrick I Threadier, Wav no MeVeogh. Franklin IMoVeiigti, It.A. Keyes, Walter T Chandler. W, F. McUugblin. John I V. Farwell. Charles B. Farwcll John K. HnrI mon, John T. Chumasero. John V. Fanvell, Jr.. ! S„ Baumgardner, Kdsrttl \V. Bnum- ; gardner, 'Samuel Bliss. 8. O Blair. H, W. Dudley. G. H Clark. E. It. Mill**, American Advertising Co . Lewis O.cese, Jo.in Lagorio, Dow Gill mail Hatie.-ck Co., I) 11. Lester, H M. Lester, W, Childs. It. It. Lee. Henry W . King, William C. Browning. Edward W Dewey, vs. O. Dean A Co., and Alfred Hhimpton & Sons, are hereby notified tuM ltohert Parke lias filed Ids complaint in the Circuit Court Of -Jasper county. Indiana, to foreclose a chntte 1 mortgage in which Henry C. Goldsbe r/, the persons nbote named slid other* are made parties defendant, iio > that said cause is set for trial, in said Court lot November ind, MW. at the Court House In Hensaelaer. ludtina. Wimess the Clerk and the Seal of . jAof said Court this October loth *IBB, ( J „ 4 VMEB K. IUWIST Clerk of Jasper C reuit Court, Hatnmond £ Austin, Palmer«ttitlc, ' ' , ,„ _ Oct. li-w-aS. Attorney* lorl ihlntiff.
