Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 April 1880 — Page 6
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8S&
COLONEL 8YN6E.
The Han Who Brought the Greek Brigands §60,000 Kanaom.
Constantinople Cor. New York Ban. Col.Synge I knew well. He spent lome months of last summer at Therapia, and was universally popular. He had teen an officer in the British army, but had bought a large property near Verria, about sixty miles from Salonica, where he had lived for some jears in security. I often suggested that his residence there must involve danger from thej brigands bj whom the country is infested but he assured me that he was too well known, too well armed, and surrounded by too many trusty men in his employ to incur any real risk. He was a colonel in the Turk ish gendarmerie, but as the Turkish Government has not allowed that force to be organized, he was practically unemployed, though just before the attack he.had been absent on an errand of mercy, having been charged with the dittribuiion of funds among the Mosltm refugees in Eastern Ruumelia. It appears that a band of Volaks, heaaed by a notorious ruffian of the name of Niko, came down upon his farm, but that he was not altogether taken by surprise, and defend ed himself against the band for two hours. 1 am not aware with what result, so far as the damage* inflicted upon his assailants was concerned, as the -accounts we have received are very meagre. But finding they could not capture him in any other way, they ultimately determined to burn him out, and he was thus compelled to surrender. He succeeded in getting a letter through to the British Consul at Salonica. It was accompanied by one from Niko, in which the brigand chief announced that he required a ransom of £15000, and that, if thi* sum was not forth coming within ten days, he would cut off Col. Synge's nose and send it to Salonica and wait three days. At the expiration of that time he would send down the Colonel's ears, and wov\ld then wait three days more, wnen, if the ransom was still unpaid, he would o?nd down the Colonel's head. Col. Sy. ge begged earnestly in his letter that no troops should be started out, as, if the band found they •were pursued bv the military, they would at once lake his life. Mr. Blunt, the English Conhul-General at Salonica, who is an old resident in Turkey, tonce proceeded to the neighborhood ol -he outrage, but the band seem to have taken the alarm, and the last accounts are that they have separated and that Mr. Blunt has failed to put himself in communication with the chief. He has received full powers from the British Government to pay whatever sum is necessaiy for the Colonel's release. All this causes the greatest anxiety to Col.Synge's friends, as the ten days have elapsed and Niko is notorious for the deeds of bloodshed and cruelty which he ha& perpetrated. His father and brother are in prison at Salonica for other crimes, and it if. hoped that this circumstance may facilitate negotiations. Two Engluh frigates are cruising off the coast to prevent the escape of the brigands to any of the Greek iblands, but these will probably, should they believe themselves in any da' ger, crobs the trontier into Greece. Although nd* actually Greeks,the Greeks have claimed the Volaks as belonging to their nationality in the recent controversy with the Bulgarians as to the races by which thin province is populated. However, doubi less before you receive this you will have heard by telegraph Col. Svnge's fate.
EX-KHEDIVE'S TROUBLES. From the New York World. The ex-Khedive of Egypt, who with his harem is residing at Resina, would do well to provide himself with an extra cupply of patent locks, bull-dogs, broken bottles, cat-teasers and Ethiopians with rolling eyeballs and curving scimetars. Not long ago one of the beauties of his harem eloped with a young Italian arttist, and now a fair Circassian, Miss Nasik, who is rising sixteen, has fled to mansion opposite where lives a young srentleman "who," says the report, "had fallen in love with her from seeing her at the window, and with whom she had managed to carry on a pantomimic wooing. It seems that the young man's affection is sincere. for he has now applied to the municipal authorities of Resina to publish the notice of his intended marriage with the interesting voung fugitive. But the authorities are much embarrassed by this request, for the Italian law demands that all strangers wishing to marry must produce a certificate from the authorities of their native country that there exists no impediment and as this young girl, now only sixteen year# of age, was sold in Cairo when a mere baby, no one knows to whom to apply." Who can be sure that the wily exKhedive, if not openly offering a chromo for each elopement or stimulating the export trade of wives and bayaderes by a Kberal system of bounties, is at leaat tipping the wink to the ferocious eunuchs whom he puts on guard and leaving the front door carefully unbolted at night. The charms of Unlimited female society might commend themselves to a despotic ruler in Egypt, where the inmates of the harem could be kept secluded and beyond the influence of Frankish fashion-plates, and where, if the worst came »o the worst, he could remove to another of his palaces or try the water-cure upon th$ obnoxious females in connection with a sack. But in Italy, with a fixed income, a comparatively narrow house and no possibility of extinguishing summarily the lights of his harem when they begin to flare up, it is so clearly to the ex-Khedive's interest to make reductions in the stock of spouses he is carrying that we shall not be surprised to learn by and by that, with true Oriental cunning, he has been conniving at the elopements he pretends to condemn.
Mr. James Gordon Bennett is a tall, thin, active young man, the hair a little touched with gray, a bachelor, with a shy, retiring manner, a firm jaw, and a prominent Roman nose, which reminds jou of a portrait of his father, and would have pleased Napoleon. He listens rather than talks.
SELF HELP.
Teach the Poor to Take Care
of
Thom-
seives.
(Sunday Afternoon.)
"What we want," said Miss Help, "is not to take care of the poor, but to teach the poor to take care of themselves. Some of what we call our charitable institutions make large collections, salary heavily several officers, and do most of their work in encouraging pauperism. Some other of our institutions are managed by ladies who give their services freely, and who only salary their employes, as matrons or secretaries. They do a deal of good, and relieve a deal of misery, I have known many rescued from ruin by their means but one great trouble with these institutions is, that the ladies do not know much about business, and next that they do not know much about the poor. In the way of business they often proceed on a basis of impossibilities, not having any business experience or practice and for the poor they regard them as all alike, differing only about as much as potatoes in a barrel, some large and some 6mall, some sound and some specked, and so all to be treated generally in the same fashion. They do not recognize individuality in their poor individuality and personal preferences seem to them to belong to good clothes and an income they don't say so, but practically they follow this view, and so doing they do not make the most and best possible out of their poor, and make them most readily self-support-tag by following their mutual bent. Now talking of the business lack of these ladies' committees reminds me of a fact. I know one committee that had in hand a country home for an orphanage. They wanted to have a house moved nearly half a mile to have it floored, plastered, painted and a three-room addition built on, and the whole building must have its siding renewed. They gave out the contract, changed their minds and delaved three tfmes, and then demanded that "the work should be done at the first time stated, giving just one month for the whole work, while the mere moving of the building and setting it on its new foundation required two weeks. The contractor protested, and pleaded the stripping arui re-siding one of the managers replied that "it should not take very long to pull off and tack on a few boards!" Not a manager of them knew anything about building or house moving, and they ended by getting a poor house for half as much again as a good one 9hould cost
Mr. Raskin On Dress.
Mr. Ruskin finds himself at a loss be f&.C no subject and talks with as much dogmatic emphasis of woman's dress as of the abomination of machinery and the beauty of earth and sky. His ideas 011 woman's duties in life are short and exact: "She is to please people, to feed them in dainty ways, to clothe them, to keep them orderly, to teach them." As for the pleasing, Mr. Ruskin is convinced that tasteful dress is necessary, and he expatiates upon this conviction in a way calculatcd to "much delight the fair." He esteems it the duty of a woman to look as lovely as possible. "Now mind," he says, "you always dress charmingly it is the first dutv of a girl to be charming, and she cannot be charming if she is not charmingly dressed. Set an example of beautiful dreas without extravagance that is to sav, without waste or unnecessary splendor.
He does not insist that the dress should be costly on the contrary, he advises that it shoulci be markedly simple, to put down the curse of luxury and waste that is consuming England. Nevertheless the dress, while simple, must be becoming and pleasantly varied and what his female reader thinks it necessary to buy beyond this for the good of trade, "buy" he commands, "and immediately burn'"
He is not a little judicious in other injunctions. He especially hates long walk-ing-dresses and declares that such dresses should never touch the ground at all. He scorns cheap ready-made clothing of any kind and condemns sewing machines, and he urges that all girls should learn dressmaking and devote apart of every day to making as pretty dresses as they can in good material for the poor people who have no time or taste to make them well for themselves.
E CSUIM of Sadden Death. (N. Y. World.) Very few of the sudden deaths which are said to arise from disease of the heart do really arise from that cause. To ascertain the real origin of the sudden deaths, an experiment was ti»ed and reported to a scientific congress at Strawsburg. Sixtv-six casca ol sudden death were made the subject of a thorough post mortem examination. In these cases only two were found who died from disease of the heart. Nine out of 66 had died of apoplexy, while there were 46 cases of congestion of the lungs that is, the lungs were so full of blood that they could not work, not being room enough for a sufficient amount of air to support life. The causcs that produce congestion of the lungs are: cold feet, tight clothing,costive bowels, sitting still until chilled after being warmed with labor or a rapid walk, going too suddenly from a close room into the open air, especially after speaking, too hastv walking, or running to catch a train, ctc. These causes of sudden death being known, an avoidance of Hem may serve to lengthen many valuable lives, which would otherwise be lost under the verdict of the heart complaint. That disease is supposed to be inevitable and incurable hence many may not take the pains they would to "avoid sudden death, if they knewitlriv in their power.
Vegetable Instinct.
Ir a pail of water be placed within si* inches of cither side of the stem of a pumpkin or vegetable marrow, it will in the course of the night approach it, and will be found in ihe morning with one pf the leaves on the water.
If a prop be placed within six inches of a young convulvus, or scarlet runner, it will find it, although the prop may be shifted daily. If after it lias twined some distance up the prop, it be unwound and twined in the opposite direction, it will return to its original position, or die in thejjattempt yet, notwithstanding, if two of the plants grow near to each other, and have no stake around which they can entwine, one of them will alter the direction of the spiral, and they will twin# round each other.
frcfi
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
LITERARY CHIT -CHAT.
All London is flocking to hear Mr Ruskin#' lectures. Thackeray's "Vanity Fair" will be published shortly in Italian.
A new book by Mr. Proctor will soon be published by R. Worthington.
The third volume of Mme. de Re musat's "Memoirs" will contain a pieface by the late M. de Kemusat.
There are 40,000 American books in the British museum, which has thus, in measure, become the chief depository of American literature.
Victorien Sardou gives to poor and struggling authors a liberal share of the proceeds of his own writings. And he never alludes in any way to the gifts he makes.
A statue is to be erected in the course of this year to George Sand. The site proposed is Vallee Noire, in Berry, the spot where so many of her romances had their birth.
A bookworm has discovered that Lord Beaconsfield's alliterative phrase "men of light and leading," in his letter to the Dukeof Marlborough, occurs in one of Burke's orations.
Chevalier WykofTs forthcoming work, "Reminiscences of an Idler," is said to be bright, entertaining and abounding in anecdotes and personal recollections, with nothing scandalous or illnatured.
Mr. James Russell Lowell is now just past his sixtieth year. He was born in Cambridge, Mass., and his home in that city always has been, and still ist the house in which he was born. It is a fine old mansion of the revolutionary period.
It is announcod that Mr. J. H. Ingram has in press a new work on Poe— "Edgar Allen Poe, His Life, Letters and Opinions"—upon wKich he has been en gaged for several years. Mr. Ingrain is said to have obtained much assistance from the late Mrs. Whitman, the late Mrs. Houghton, the poet's "Annie," and a number of others, among whom Mr. R. II. Stoddard is not included. Mr. Stoddard's fund of information on this subject is inexhaustible.
Writers and publishers of books often neglect to supply one of the most essential parts of the books—a good index. No author should consider hia book finished until it is thoroughly indexed. Even books of poetry and novels would add to their convenience il they contained both a table of contents and" an index. It is especially desirable that there should be an index to the characters of every novel which is worthy of a place in a book case. It is little trouble to the author, or publisher to make an index, but it is infinite advantage to the reader of the book.
IS YOUR HAIR FALLING TURNING GRAY.
"-and elegantly prepared as to make it a lasting hair dressing and toilet luxury. London Hair Color Restorer is sold by all druggists at 75 cents a bottle, or six botttes for $4. Principal Depot for United States, 330 North Sixth street Philadelphia. Sold by Buntin & Armstrong, Terre Haute.
1
Adv
SHREWDNESS AND ABILITY Hop Sitters so freely advertised in all the papers secular and religious,?are having a large sale, and are supplanting all other medicines. There is no denying the virtues of the Hop plant, and the proprietors of these Bitters have 6hown great shrewdness ana ability in compounding a Bitters, whose virtues are so palpable to every one's observation —[Examiner and Chronicle.
No. 11,853. The State of Indiana, Vigo County, in the Vigo Circuit Court, at the April term, 1880 Oliver R.
Holcomb vs Louis M. Cook, Phoebe A. Cook, Horace Durrie, John C. McCarty, Louis A. Guereneau and Addelaide Guereneau, guardians of Mary Gueraneau, in foreclosure. Be it known that on the 25th day of February, 1880, it was ordered by the court that the clerk notify by publication said Louis M. Cook, Phoebe A. Cook Horace Durrie and John C. McCarty as non-resident defendants of the pendency of this action against them. Said defendonts are therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action against them and that the same will stand for trial a the April term of said court in the yea 1880.
JNO. DURKAN, Clerk.
C. E. Hosford, Atty for Prt'flf.
Daniel, Ernestine Rothschild, and Emanuel Rothschild in foreclosure. Be it known that on the 27th day of March, 1880, said plaintiff filed an affidavit in due form, showing that said Albert McDaniel and Mary E. McDaniel are non-residents of the state of Indiana. Said non- resident defendants are hereby notified of the pendency of said action against them, and that the same will stand for trial on Friday the 4th day of June, 1S80, at the April' term cf said court, in the year 18S0.
Attest: JOHN K. DURKAN, Clerk. Black & lack, PlTfs Attvs.
APPLICATION FOB LICENSE. Notice is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo county, Indiana, at their Jane term, tor a license to sell '"intoxicating liquors" in a less quantity thaa a quart at a lime with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises .for one year. My place of business and the premises whereon said li juors are to bes old and drank are located on lots 188 and 139 in Rose's subdivision of 84 acres, situated on the comer of Tenth and
Chestnut streets, in Terre Hante, Vigo cevnty, Indiana. I DAVID BBONSON.
"TIE WIltTt
OR
"London Hair Color Restorer," the most cleanly and delightful article ever introduced to the American people. It totally different trom all others, it sticky or gummy, and free from all imB pure ingitdients that render many otiicu preparations obnoxious. It thickens thiu hair, restores gray hair, gives it new life cures dandruff, causing the hair to grow where it has fallen off or become thin, does not soil or stain anything, and is so
Sewing Machine
THL BEST OR ALL.
Unrivaled in Appearance. Unperalleled in Simplicity, Unsurpassed in Construction,
Unprecedented in Popularity, And Undisputed in the droac Claim of Being the VERTBF.STOPKKHno,
QVICKKN I' SKLfj'NG, II ND.Mi.1ILS I ANII
Most Perfect sewing Machine IN THE noiiLK. Every machine warranted for five years. For sale only by
Nitro Oxide 'an excellent and safe anra theMt.) utven. All op4*rarioT.« 10 our "Specialty'' wih receiv*-prompt. areful and successful tttentHi)-.
Neurnlirl rifctioiiK Treated.
Ensey's Boarding House, No. 122 north Ninth street, is rapidly filling up with a clas* of good and respectable boarders. Applicants not pos sessing the above named characteristic* will not be received. We are prepared to accommodate a few more with board and lodging, and a goodly number with out lodging. We have employed a good professional cook, one that cannot be excelled in the city. Come and try some of her good dinners and be convinced Resp«?c:fullv, S. T. ENSEY.
£. F. Stetson, D.
Office No. 521 Ohio street, lietween Filth and Sixtu. Itmideasc 812 south Fourth
10
k.
Hai! Acconnucnution
1 /I Li*
1 40 a 111
indiauapolis Accommodation. -. jlfast Line UtHatcrH press iui tan spoils AccomKioiie.tit'ii. .. (Arrive Xro:a li^u) rA'fctji-crii i'oss
.. 3 40 is Oo
A 20
Arrive
a. W
a iu a ii. & 11: 7 11O Ui
Mail Ktui ivxprcas i?'av» .yio «.!!»polls (Leave (ium* West. /:is j.ine
as a it
.ill 03 a. 3 lit t-
frtm
•%j\
West.)
1 32 a 111 60 a it S 45
•"inlnim Accommodation c.xpretis fi ANSV1LLK. riSiiKEll AUTE A CHICAGO, (Depart for North.)
Kxpreso 7 10 a
Lijuville Accommodation 8 lu 111 fw iirtit Kxprette 10 60 (Arrive from North.) .. i. Kxpreas 420 Uriv llaute Accommodation 11 10 a ••i\ Kxoress 6 30
INDIANAPOLIS ST. LOU It, (Leave going Bast.) Aooommodatlon 8 a i»ay Jfixurcss 8 10 New York Kxpress No. 6 12i am (Arrive from Bast.) uay.Kxpress 10 63 a Act'ommodftUon 86 Vew York Express No. 0 1 88 a 1'Leave vointr West./ IDay Express 10 am
Ap-oommolation 6 37 it )New York Express N0.8 188»m (Arrive from West. wc* unrr.odation 44 a ro •Jsjr press '. 0* rr. ^.-w York ExpressNo. 6 1 Jit a
VKRKK EAUTS AND LOWANSPOKT. (Depart-' D*v Mall 10 SO am Aicomodatloa 4 00 tn (Arrhe.) Day Mai 1 00 re Vooommodation „... 10 00
rKuKK HAUTE AND EVAN8VILLK. (Depart. 1 Nash vilie Express
:ay Exrress
r'
No. 11,909, The State of Indiana, Vigo County, in the Vigo Circuit Court, The -Etna Life Insurance Company vs. Albert McDaniel, Mary E. Mc-
4
Mail act Accommodation Indianapolis PasaenKer
80 a
8
Admiration
a
J. N. Hickman,
3»4 Main ttreet. Terre Haute, Indiana,
Dr. Ouo Wilde's I. Rooms.
626. Marble Block, Terre Haute, Ind tt£r*Dr. Wihie is prepared t« make all kinds of lenta' •*!Hfe*jWoik of superior excellence. t'i silver, Vulcanite, C-oral-iteaud Amber Plates, Carved flTork, Artidcial i'alate*, Ac.
St.
OFFlCt-'. HOUKs:
M. t.i S P.M and to 4 P.M.
H. BARTHOLOMEW,
If
II. HALL.
Drs. Bartholomew & Hail,
Dentists-
ain street, up stairs.
RAILROAD TIKE-TABLE
1 ii S re
r.* i.riiuiH tixutipil. & til. 1.., C. A T. 11 in'J troiKNts. iaiti Uvu uinuites fivjtt.r thai Cerfi: iiauto time. I'cpol oi l. & bt. 1. coii«r Tij.ucwi.uof Sixth streets.
Depot, of l'. & S. b, ourncr rst am Mfiu xfcuret*. Explanation of Hefereu-" c: riatu.-iia ixcopled. *Snnuay oscupu [Mm..lay
sptefl. iDaily.
va
VANOAUA LUNK. -.Leave going ILast,)
AFSMS
WORLD.
A JtOTABLE EVENTi
Mrs.S.A,Aliens
WORLD'S
HatrRestorer
isxatEBcrBur.
A Noble Record: near half a Cenlurj Established 1832. Improved 1879. The nature of the great improvement is in its wonderful life-giving properties to faded or falling hair, and MORE Q.UICKLY CHANGING GRAY OR WHITE HAIRtoite natural youthful COLOH and BRAUTY.
IT IS NOT A DTE.
requires only a few applications to restore gray hair to its youthful color and lustrous beauty, and induce tuxurian growth, and its occasional use is all tha is needed to preserve it in its highoi perfection anri brauty. DANDRUFF I* quickly and permanently removed. Sold by all Druggists, $1.35 Per Bottle
MANUFACTORIES AND SALESROOMS:
114 & 116 Southampton Row, Londo Eng. 37 BouJcvaid Haussman, Paris, France 35 Barclay bt. & 40 Park Place. New York.
APPLICATION FOK LICENSE. Notice Is hereby gfiven that I will appl/ to to the board of Commissioners ot Vigo connty, Indians, atthfir extra term, for a lice nee to sell intoxicailog liquor* in a lees quantity than a quart at time, with the prlvilegeof allowing the same to be 'Irank »n my premises for onoyear. My place of tHifllness and the premises whereon said •quorrt are to be sold and drank ate located upon 20 feet and 0 Indies off tne wcjtaide of lot 120, Chauncey Hone's subdlsision of 44 acres and two rods off tho east side of the west half of section 22, tswoship 12, range 0, Terre Haute, Indiana.
WM. J. BEISMAS
No. 11,866, The State of Indiana, Vigo County, in the Vigo Circuit Court. February term, 1880, John G. Funkhouser, vs. Benjamin F. Swafford, e' al.
Be it known that on the 3d day March, 1880, it was ordered by the court that the clerk notify by publication 'aid George W. Jackson and Sarah J. fackson, a9 non-resident defendants of the pendency* of this action against them. Said defendants are therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action against them and that the same will itand for trial on the 30th day cf April, 1880, the same being in the April term of said court in the year 1880.
JOHN K. DURKAN, Clerk.
Daunii'ia S on "t*. tf Aitys
^It^iUu* tra'tel with photographic
10 pin
.Arrive.)
ilailand Express Z0 46 Express
'i
60 ci
ILLINOIS MIDLAND. (Depart.)
7 07 am 4 07
Hail and Aeommidatlon 7 83~p Indianapolis Passenger 110pm TEBBE HAUTE A bOUTHEASTERN K. H.
Depart:
No 1,Mail and|Express 7:ooa.m A rrlve: No. 1.Mail and Express Sroop.m
J.M.4I. R. P..
Louisville a InuianapolJs Short Lane Arrive. Madison Mail Mail and North Kxpit-ss Day Express Night Express (Leave.,,1 Louisville St Madison Jix:riv a Louisvillejfc Ex £60 a Col. &Mad. AC |-Wp Soath A Eve. Ex 45
hnNo.
11:00 a ro 12 :W) 6 lb 10:50
Tbe only route between Indianapolis a**u •Lenisvilte. Nashville, Chattanooga, Atlanta Ma^on Jacksonville an»l all points south
A HEOTS V1NTED. We want a reA liable Agent in every town in lodlana, Illinois, iowa, and Kansas, to sell our medicines. No capital required: bat we do re aulre *ood recommendations. Agents can S!kke%ftvto on« hundred dollars a month, with a little work at home. For farther tic*law, ad'Iress BBOOK3 A CO.: 16# lumbers St., New York Citv. tP, O. Box,
LEGAL.
ADMINISTRATOR*' SALE
Physicians say they are in every way Superior to ths ordinary low-acting Porous Plasters used for this purpose.
rr
IM. J. ASIIF.KMATV-IS THE ORIGIN A 'J V'/J-IHN !OF\REAUN'*D|TRURNRETBWFUIlie for tint past 35 years or more through
h'8
8111
cure, and malle.1 to those why send 10 cents. Save this, and remember in writing or cut ing tho address is
Dr. A. Sherman,
251 Broadway, cor. Murray st ew York.
UAUTIO*—The reputation of DR..J.AM,5?SlS'
r,om rcn^bMnfbllUand'newspW^rs w^pat'v Since tboT' they hare been oiscoveredat 241 Broadway, New York, where they recently, by base deception deframltd an aged Clergyman.
A POSITIVE CURE WITHOUT MEDICINES."
ALLAH'S SOLUBLE HI
PATENTED OCTOBER 10, 1876.
O N E O
will cure any case in four days, or less. No. 2 Wj.17 cure the Most Obstinate Case, HQ matter of now long standing,
No nauseous doses of Cubebs, Copaiba or (m of Sandalwood, that are certain to produce dyspepsia by destroying the qoahngs of the stomach. No Syringes or Astringent^ Injections to produce other serious comphcations. •_
Price $1.50. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS or mailed on receipt of Price. For further particulars send to druggist in your city for Circular. J- C. ALLAN CO.,
P. O. Box 1,533. No. 83 John St., New York. We offer $500 Reward for any case they will not cure.
,s 1
Quick. and Sure Cure.
OF
LAND.
Vi
Stat»* of Indiana, 1 4 Vigo County,
Notice is herebv given that th- undtrsigned a* udminitrntor the cMute of Marvin M. 1 .ickcox, late of Vigu County, Indiana, decea»ed, by direction of lie Vigo Circuit Cuurt, will seli at public auction, at the court houne door said county, on the 1st day ot Mav, i8So« between the hours of 10 o'clock." A. and 4 o'clock P. M, of ha id day, the folio wing Oe.cribed leal eiaite, subject to iens and inciimberarce* at thr time of the death of decadent:
DcKc.ipiion of land:—In McGuyhctt and Roachero' subdivision of purt of the sonthwest quarter of section I5 in township north range 9 west in Vigo County, Indiana lots 1, 2, 3,4, 5, 6, 7, 111 block one (IJ, less portion reduced by railroad.
Albo block number three (3) in the same ubdivision. AUo lots number 1,2,3, 4»5* 7« 9 being all t(iat portion of said lots west of the railroad, all in block eleven (11) in said subdivision.
Alto, lot 12 in &ub-divition of lot 58, infection 16, town 12 nortn, range 9 west in Vigo county, Indiana. _»
Also, 6 acres on the ea*t si^oof the south-east quarter of the 6outhvvitt quar-. ler of siction 21. town 13 north, range 3 west, in Vigo county, Indiana.
Also, the west halt of the srfuth-eaat qjaitcr of section 23, town 13 north, range 8 west, in Vigo county, lnuiana.
Aioo, the south-east quarter" of the south-west quarter ot section 23, (own 13 north, range 8 west, in Vigo county, In-f diana.
Also, part of the south went quarter of section 15, township 12 north, range 9 west commencing at a point 34 rods ,vest of the north-east corner of said quarter-
1
section, running thence webt 34 rods, thence scuth 20 rods, thence east 34 rods, thence noith 20 rods to the place of beginning in McCabe's su -divitioi. of part of said quarter-section.
Terms of sale:—Said lands will be offered in separale parcels and subject to specific and general liens, and ailcrwards, if not nold, one or more tracts will be united ind sold subject to lieus, and if not sold will be offered geneiallv subject to liens, and if not sold will be offered subject to all liens, and will be told for one-third cash in hand, and tin* balance in three equal payments of 6,
12
and 18
months for all amounts over the amount of the incumberances, the purchaser giving secuiitv for the payment ol liens assumed and notes with security for deferred pa\ments bearing 8 per cent, interest from the day of sale until paid and five per cent, attorney's fees and waving valuation laws.
ALFRED PKOG,
Administrator of Marvin I!lUkcox'g estate. J*
"R.TT
^e9 I1,,#
ont the annoyance an4 injury tmeses inflict. His syaicui 7
No man is safe who has ft rupture,
no
(Mirrt
matter
every man who has -He.l from it ouoe .layered^nd every man who now suffuri from it an-i tha iDjurv ui n» _f..on»irtn ,»T i« not A lire has no enjoyments, once regarded it as
nt»worthy
stnnd-still affliction it is proRiessive, even unto death. Rt gir .a .n the city, who have been iured. During tmatment no hi
from abroad can receive r.rpaiment and leave for hune Bti.uo y. His BooDs On :EeTj/©ru.xe giTCHthemo.1 reliable proofOrom dUtlnjnlsnel hVooz'hont'the^oounand merchants or his sueceaaiul practice and P°P"1,ir t,^ themselves af the certainry ami the West Indies. Theafflicted should read tt and iBfarm themselves sitne certain
likenr
sseiof ettrcmely had
kv I0?-»» external ID-
iv..n' t«r xi-ntlemea
la(xr-
agir
caff
