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| | “ started.out, carrying their wordly ef- CH ILDREN TRAMPS. to ‘They Walk from War:aw, We. Cincinnati, 0. From theCincinnati News. Bulwer Lytton once wrote a ©, “What Will He Do With It.” The Cincinnati police are now try- ing to solve the conundrum, what will we do with them? Three for- lorn urchins, i}] kempt, half clad, in- crustated with layers of dirt, the oldest a boy of twelve, the other two un- nov- twins of six, were lett by some known arty at the residence of Dr. W. F. Mitchell, the city missionary ‘Tuesday, January 2. them up to the Children’s Home, on ninth street. Turned them over to the nurse, the girl was found to be afflic- ted with a breaking out, which she feared was contagious sore head. They were returned, to the police- stayon, and being examined by Dr. A. B. Thresher, the girl was found to have a scrofulous taint. THey were again sent to the Children’s Home, where they now are. Piti- able-looking specimens of tramp hu- manity and wandering vagrancy in- deed they are. Their tossimgs and buffetings about this world have been such a rough sort that children in good homes, with warm _firesides and doting parents, would wonder that they ever lived to tell their tale. The oldest boy .clezekiah Bogard, has a good head and is possessed of all the shrewdness and low cunning that either talls by nature or is pick- ed up by chance by people in low life. He can neither read nor write, yet his conversation smacks ef a smartness and wordly wisdom, a forethought in making his childish plans, and a hanging to the fortunes of his brother and sister, that would do no discredit to an older head. Their parents are Abraham and Su- san Bogard, farm laborers, and they lived in Warsaw Missour:. They resolved to remove eatly last fall to Millerspert, Ohio, and the tamily fects on their backs and tenting by the roadside, asdid Abraham and Laban of old. They swallowed **calomile,’’ as he pronounced it, by the quart, and from their swallow, parchment like complexion, and the distorted, lopsided, unable-to-be- opened mouth ot the girl Susaw Ly- dia Ann Bogard there is little doubt of the truth of the boy's tale. The girl is a monumental horror of the effects of mercury. Unable to open her mouth, she 1s supplied with nourishmer! taken in through an aperture in the side which is ill-shap- en, and drawn down nearly to her chin, presenting an appearance hide- ous enough to make a goblin in a pantomine or a Lugabeo to” frighten children to sleep by. The party fi- nally reached **Kiro”’ the lad’s_ ver- nacular of the parent town ot chills and tever, and there the parents sent the children onahead. They trarap- ed it to Movnd City, begging by day and sleeping neath straw stacks and in tence corners by night, and hav- ing some money, took the cars for this city. Two weeks ago they reached here, and bv the police were sent to Millersport, a town contain- ing a cooper-shop und a country store, about eighteen miles above Huntington. Barches, who owed their father $20 and they proposed to go and board it out. At Muillersport the trustees turned them over to the Children’s Home at Ironton, the county seat of Lawrence county, following the “move on’’ policy that poer Joe Gragery so dreaded in Dicken’s nov- el, and that the policeman m the “Lights of London” so charmingly illustrates. At Ironton Hezekiah took a spell of the chills and fever, and was sent to the hospital, and as the authorities could not understand the girl who is unable to talk, they packed her off, too. Hospital treat- ment at Ironton was not exactly suited to the children, so they ‘*mov- €don” to this city. When they reached the Home Tuesday after- noon ther condition was horrible. Yellow as Missouri mud, feeble from want of nourishment, wrapped { up inrags too scant to conceal their | | the were } by nakedness, their garments stripped off and put into the firey He carried | Here lived old Jackey |. land Abednago ot old. In the pock | lets ot the oldest boy was tound a/ | bottle ot patent medicine, some sort | i i vial j ilver s - horses © , ot bulsom, and in the other a via! of | bar of silver supported by horses the same metal. HOUSEHOLD DECORATIONS. A new ca:ving-knive knife bas the | some decoction which he claimed !was good for summer complaint. | When they went to throw and old | rosewood | stocking in, it was found to be heavy jand three dollars and tweuty-one cents in silver rolled out, which the | | lad said was given fo him. The | gilded wicker are the novelties, | youngest boy, Jessie I., isa dried-up | They are copies from bit of a waif, with hands no bigger | aoe of the most graceful forms. }than a baby’s. ‘*My ttle brother! | has a drying up of the marrow in his } | backbone,” was the quaint way in which he described his brother’s spinal complaint. *‘I have an older sister, Virginia Bell, whois twenty, and a brotHier, John R., who are now tramping near Cairo, and want to go along to every town un- tilwe find them.’’ At night having been bathed, the three tramp urchins were soon cuddled up ina big bed An exbuisite lady’s escritoire is of in Queen Anne style, | mounted with gold. wainscoting, with panels of mahog- ony or antique embossed leather, is decidedly the thing. A new design for a represents a window with drapery and a view in perspective, and 18 surrounded with a floral border. lace curtain we Sofa pillows whicn are intended an appropriate design in button- stich with linen thread. mone of the dormitories of the ; ' home. As the gas light was turned | | The newest chairs have pase : see on their cilkey, wezen-faced, dred intervals interwoven with the fur- niture material, making the back and up little forms, young yet old, bow- ed down with iils and disease that be- long to people at three score and ten it seemed a hard an cruel fate that | dishes, salts and peppers ure shown should thrust muocent creatures in| 1m the popular Irish oak, so highly so hard a world, heap upon | Polished that it looks like onyx, and them at the outset the sins of their and china worthless and trifling parents. Be- | in -hd most delicate designs. tween the two bovs on pillow lay the A beautiful menu card is printed bottle of medicine. the oldest lad | on white satin, and comes from be- sticking to it as a firm triend. The |neath the wings of a tiny swan. Children’s Home will keep them tor | The swans are to be retained as sou- a day or two, subject to the police, | venirs, and after their heads are ta- who if they can not send them tothe | ken off are tu be used for match House of Refuge. must come down | boxes. ‘ to the ‘‘move on’’ policy, and pass} A bronz group roup representing them along, anywhere, anyway, cn- | Hercules bearing Proserpine in his ly get them out ot sight, out of | arms as he is conducted by Cerberus from the infernal regions 1s beauti- ful. : A beautiful French inported lounge has a crimson ground-work covered with boquets of hlies and roses ands finished with old-gold plush trimmings. seat in many distinct squares. Sardine cases, castors, butter- and are mounted with nickle mind. A WILD TRAIS. Fearful Accident, With Great Loss of Life on the Southern Pacific. San Francisco, Jan. 22 -—Tehac- hopa Station, on the line ot the A long and slender vace ot Japan- Southern Pacific Railroad, was the] ese pottery in low tones of color, scene of a fnghtful accident early on when filled with dried grasses, etc., Saturday morning. The Southern is pretty to stand before the hearth Express train left here in the morn- | on either side of the brass fender. ing atg:zo a. m. Friday, reaching Teachopa shortly aiter midmght. The train stopped near the station to cut out an extra engine, taken on at Sumner to assist in pulling up Tehachopa grade. While making | have a live English lord in Lewiston the change the train got away and He appeared at one of eur hotels started hack northward dowm the | about rr o’clock the other night, and grade ot 120 feet to the mile at the | with many flourishes of the pen an- rate of a mile a minute. The start | nounced himself on the register as was due to the fact that. the air} One of the British nobility. He had brakes had been taken off and the | 0n a worn Scotch cap, and his legs men who tended the hand brakes| Were rather unsteady in a pair of were away from their posts. The| blue checked overalls. He display- coach and smoker which were ahead | ed however, a number of valuable broke trom the rest of the train at a] jewels, and had a good sum in ready curve of the road, making the curve] cash There is evidence that the safely. Thesleepers, mail and ex- {| ™an really is the younger son of one press and baggage cars, were dash-| of the peers of England. He is em- ed against a high bank then thrown | Ployed asa hostler in a Lewiston back and rolled down an _ embank-| livery stable. He says he fell into ment. The lamps and stoves at] disgrace on account of dissolute hab once set fire tothe wreck. The | its, and came to this country to reap scene was frightful beyond descrip- | what he had sown across the water. ee Twenty-one Persons pert shed; He occasionally recerves large remit- Sir ken ee oy oe tances from England, and a spre limbs being found. follows. He recently deposited $100 in the hands of a friend for custody till he got over hts tear. He has an- cestral jewelry of great age and yal- traveling parties] ue in his possession. He he will one day get a fortune. A British Nob’eman Working in a Lew ston Stabie. Fiom the Lewiston (Me.) Journal. Girls, iook out! It we is said Narrow Escapes. Denver Tribune. Distinguished haye been spreading desolation all over the republic of late. The train which bore Mrs. Langtry from New York to Boston ran over and killed From Puck. feur section hands. Chmistine Nils- Jefferson said: ‘I had rather son's special car kalled a man at] live ir a country with newspapers Ogden and another at Omaha. The | and nd government than ia a coun- train in which Lord Lorne and | try with a government and no news- Louise traveled ran over three shoats | paper.’’ This kindly criticism was while entering the Kansas City} probably the result of some rural Unien depot, and knocking the ever- | newspaper saying that Jefferson left lasting pelt off’n a spotted heiter | the largest squash of the season xt down on the East Bottom. the office and that his daughter was i Genes Sulagae. the finest waltzer at the Branch and says What Influenced Jefferson. Never <aieate aes a that he was such an honest politician Store as is now at F. M. Crumley & Co., for a Trial Bottle of Dr. King’s New Die- coverv for Consumption, Coughs and Colds. All persons aftected with Asthma, Bronchitis, Hoarseness, Severe Coughs, | or any affection of the Throat and Lung., | can get a Trial Bottle of this great reme- | dy free, by calling at above Drug Store, Ne. 4. The Safest Way. The safest and surest way to restore yYouthtul color tothe hair is furnished Parker's Hair Balsam, mhich is desrv- ; ¢dly popular from its superior cleanli- furnace, like Meschach, Shadrach. { nass. 5 sim that he ought to be the candidate of all the parties. i i cst ; Three large deer made a reckless ' dash through Neosho on Monday af- ;ternoon. Some dogs jumped them | up south ot town and pursued them | until they entered the city limits on | the southeast. The deer passed i through several door yards, and sev- eral persons fired harmless shots at them. « For halls and dining rooms high | for use are made of linen, worked in | i and is lined with blue ciel velvet and | Loreley scrap-baskets in red and | | counts, lists an Etruscan j | | j ed in the estate of said deceased, be tifie| that applification as aforesaid has | | been made, and unless the contrary be Order of Pubhcation. State of Missouri, ) < (ounty of Bates, 5°" In the Probate Court for the county Rates, November term, 1882. ot E 7 Co au her The Money to Loar On Farms at 7 per cent Interest and Commission John A. Patterson, administrator of > Tas Alexander Patterson, deceased. Hl ° lei John A. Patterson, or of pial ct ainanaa' panacea On 8 to 5 Years Time i «Car | to the cuurt his petition, p ng for an Order for the sale of so much of the Real Estate of said deceased as wil! pay and satisfy the remain debts due by said estate, and yet cient assets, ccompanied by the ac- inventories required by ; On examination where- ns interest- no- law in such cas of itis ordered, that all pers shown on or before the first dav of the next term of this court, to be held on the znd Mo: day of February next, an order will be made tor the sale of the whole, or | so much of the real estate ot said deceas- | ed as will be sufficient tor the payment of said debts; and it is turther ordered, that this notice be published in some news- paper in this State, for four weeks before | the next term of this court, State of Missouri, ) __ Countv ot Bates, f°" 1, D. V. Brown, Judge and Ex-dfficio, ‘ lerk ot the Probate Court, held in and tor said county, hereby certity that the foregoing is a true copy of the original order of publication thereim referred io. as the same appears of record in my ot- fice. -+-, Witness my hand and Seal of said (ourt. Done at my office Secs * in tiutler, this 29th day ot De- cember, A.D. 1882. D V. Rrown, Judge and Ex-Officio ( lerk ot Probate. 6-4t. Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, Mrs, ‘ lara Asbury, wiie, aad J.H. Asbury, husband, of Bates county, Missouri, by their deed of trust,dated Sep- tember 29th, 1882, and recorded in book 29, at page 174, in the recorder’s office ot Bates county, Missouri, did convey to John W. Baldwin, as trus ee, tor the pur- pose of securing the payment of certain promissory notes in said deed of trust described the tollowing real estate in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit. Lot 20, block 20, town of Rockville, Mo. And. whereas, said notes hzyye become due and payable and default has been made in the payment of said notes, though the payment thereof has often been demanded Now, therefore, at the request of the legal hoider of said notes and in accordance with the provisions and terms ot said deed of trust and by virtue of the power in me vested as such trustee, I John W. Baldwin, as trustee aforeaid, wifl, on Saturday, March roth 1883. between the hours of 9 o’cluck a. m., and 5 o’clock p. m., of said day, at the court house door, in the town (now city) of Butler, in Bates county, Missouri, sell said real estate above described at public vendue far cash in hand, to the highest bidder to satisfy the indebtedness atore- said and the costs of executing this trust. JOHN W. BALDWIN, Trustee. Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, William Pearce and Lillie Pearce, his wife, of Bates county, Mi souri, by their deed of trust, dated De- cember 26th, 1374, and recorded in the recorder’s office ef said Bates county, in book No. 9, at Page 359, did convey to T. D. after, as trustee, for the purpose ot securing the payment ofa certain promissory note therein described, the following real estate, in the county ot Bates and State of Mi<souri, to-wit: The southeast quarter of section O- 33, township No. 40 of range No. 32. And, whereas, on the 2d day of April, 1881, said Wm. Pearce and Lillie E. Pearce, his wie, soldand conveyed said land to G. W. Maddox, of Bates county, Mis- souri, by general warranty deed in which said deed the said G. W. Maddox, ex- Pressly assumed the payment of the debt evidenced by the note aforesad as part of the purchase money of said land and gave his own individual note in lieu ot said note frst named. And,, whereas, said last mentioned note is due and un- paid, though the paymeut of the same has otten been demanded from said G. W. Maddox. Now, theretore at the request of the legal holder ot said last mentioned note, ani in accordance with the provisions and terms of said deed of trust and by virtue of the power in me vested as trustee, by said deed of trust and the agreement of said G. W. Maddox made as aforesaid in the premises,I, T. D. Ratte-, as trustee as aforesaid, will on SatcurpDAy, Fesrvary roth, 1883, between the hours of 9 o’clock a, m., and § o’clock. p. m., of said day at the cou t house door, in the town (now city) ot Butler, Bates county, Missouri, sell aid real estate above described or so much thereof as be necessary to sat- isfv said debt and the cost of this trust, tothehighest bidder for cash in hand at public vendue. T. D. RAFTER, Trestee. Executor’s Notice. Notice is Hereby given, that letters testamentary on the Estate of Randolph warsteller, deceased, were granted to the undersighed, on the 18th day of De- cember, 1882, by the Probate Court ot Bates county, Missouri. All persons having claims against said Estate, are required to exhibit them for allowance to the executor within one year after the date of said letters, or they mav be pre- cluded from amy benefit of such Estate; unpaid for want of suffi- | 15m 1ed on short notice. Money furni WW. E. Walton at Butler National Bank, The wee Spr nd a One ere | THE BUSINESS BOOM ~ Avg ADRIAN CONTINUES AND MeFARLAND BROS, E ARE STILL |Selling Harress at a Fearful Rate — Subscribe for the Weekly Times Only $1 25 Per Year. WONDERFULLY CHEAP! Elegant New Editions of Standard Publications Inclear cleanly printed on first-class vr, hand: ft ad dure sel im cloth, with gold and sok pide enn back stanpes ee BOOKS OF FICTION. | SACAULAVS HISTORY OF FVeLAND. Iie, with porurait of the au: ROMOLA. 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HOt Airs Fa san gt TE to There is no weekly paper offered tor | double the money possessing the excel- | | ROUTE to HOURS the Quickest WASHINGTON lence and merits of the POST-DIS PATCH. “dt is a paper for the family, , for the merchant, the mechanic and the farmer. It yo have notseen it secure a Pee Coaches trom St. Low copy from Postmaster or send tothe of- jt, T Cincinatti timore fice tor it. and Washington, without change. Sample Copies free on ar te Special BUT ONE CHANGE TO NEW YORK. th masters Agents. f Address, a ei z k : SREAET CS ire | ‘The O. & M. is the Only Line running POST-DISPATCH, 3D: Trains to Louisville and Cincin- No. 6. tt St. Louk. ; Heti in direct connection with all trains SSS | from the West Southwest and North- p | west. i S72u Week. $12 aday athom, 4 ily made. Costly outfit tree. A ddre True# Co., Augusta, Maine. 16- 1 ~-THE— eo j Onto & Mississippt 9) | Is the only line By which you can se d Philadelphia | cure tickets to Baltimore, Washington, and New York, by way ot the Capital of eur Country. For 36 page catalogue, free, address, H. C. TUNISON, Cincinnati, O., N. Y. City, 5 of passengers through without change of cars to Louisville and Cincinnati. can avoid a Midnight ween St. Louis and if you ‘cave St. Louis on unless you pay extra fare in n to money paid for ticket. Via Cincinnati, making dirrect connec- tion withail roads. gagg712 Hours lay- over by other routes. . H The Sedaiia Democrat Is the only rnorn: kansas ¢ ity and St. Hannibal, which publiat ted Press dispatches. large, cig column, Handsomely printed paper, is- sued daily and weckly, The telegraphic, editorial and local contents of the Daily | are complete including the latest Mamket Reports, proceedings ot the Supreme Court, and a variety of Politica! intorma- ! tion not to be toundelsewhere. Its mus- | ASK ANY TICKET AGENT ceilanous reading is extensive, and it spares no pains to secure the latest news | PLE: j and it such claims be not exhibited with- | or every character. Special attention is! , rking for ca ting in two years from the date ot this publi- | paid to the Weekly Democrat, a j hone | wOreas Or Oe cation, they shall be forever barred. { moth paper ot 48 columns, which is is-! bs ; 1 Best Route q Jacon A. WriGcut ) | sued every Saturday morning, at $1<0 per | 7 is 8 she eget t == and ‘Executors. | year. The Weekly contains all the im-! sae secede Washia retinee sha yee Mary A_ MARSTELLAR. | portant news of the week, a large amount | Sle, Baltimore, © Missiceioot. Stee -4t* {of Miscellany, a t i ast | Will be told the Ohio & Mississippi Ks 74t j of iscellany, and matters of interest | ¥? a Ticket - - 5 ade ‘and e ; to the home} Whee purcha: piste ae t0r ic! mod Final Settlement No' > circle. Denocrat is the , PY this road, fe ao Spuideregney 257 Notice is hereby given that the under- | Official paper of the State, and in it are | N Forth St aes iit : i: ~ co = i the rocl + e pT we arth ot. signed administrators of the estate or 4. | Published all the Proclamations of Re- | | wards tor the apprehension of criminals, ! H. Ha wil make final sed, dece on : * P settlement ot their accoupts with said! andail the Estray notices of every county | ss estate as such administrators, he next | im the The terms ot the Daily | W- W- PEABODY, tern of the Probate court ot Bates-c _, Bemc are as follows: By He : a‘ 2 ‘the age paid, per year, $10. Gen’! Pass. Agent Missouri, to be holden at ti in Butler; A z Democe per year, $. ot Fanaa Pees Addr: all Ommun to Cincinnati, Ohiv- eee ee : Tous D. Risser, F +manager, G. D. BACON. General Western Passen- 33-tt. ‘ = #0 400: & ELS, Ha Sedalia Mo. | ser Agent. St. Louis, Mo-