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; f ' 3 a NEW GOODS | ROC And Provision Lin COUNTRY PRODUCE: Of all kind. G wanted. COME AND SEE ME.! Chas. Dennev. The ideal young people’s magazine. It holds the Gast place among periodicals of its class Boston Journal ST. NICHOLAS An illustrated monthly periodical for boys and girls, appearing on the 250feich month Eilited by Mary Mapes Dodge. Pride 25 cents # number, or $3.00 year in advance. Booksell- ors, newsdealers postmasters, and the publis ors take sabscriptions, which should begin with the November number, the first of the volume St. Nicholas aims both to satisfy andto de- volop the tastes of its constituency; and its Ke- cord for the past twelve years during which it haa always stood as it stands to-day at the head of periodicals for boys and girls, is ® sufficient warrant for its excellence during the coming season. The editors announce the following as among the LBADING FEATURES FOR 85-86 The A Serial Story by Frances A. Burnett. sirst long story she has written for children A Christmas Story by W. D. Howells. With humorous pietures by his little dsughter George Washington by H.F. Scudder. A novel and attractive Historical Serial. Short Stories for Girls by L. M. Alcott. The irst—**'The Candy Country’’—in November. New ‘Bite of Talk for Younge Folks,’’by H Ht. This ee; forms @ gracious and fitting memorial of a child-loving and child helping sole, Papers on the Great English Schools Rugby and others. Hlustration by Joseph Pennell UBA Sea-coast Serial Story, by J. T. Trowbridge, will be life-like, vigorous and useful. any’s Boarding House,’’ aserial by James Dealing with news-boye life and enter- Otis. prise. F. BR. Stockton will contribu.e several of his aumorots and fanciful stories “*Crill,’? By John P. True. story for boys. The Boyhood of Shakespear, by Kosa Kings- ley. With illustrations Uy Alfred Parsons. = . Short Stories by scoros of preminent writers, including Susan Coolidge, H. Boyesen, N Perry, T. A. Janvier, W.’Gladden, EB. Johnson J, Miller, 5. May, H. Butterworth, W. O. Stoddard, H P, Spofford, and many others. Entertaining Sketches by Alice W. Rollins, ©. G. Leland, H. Elkford, L. Schwatka, Ed keggleston, and others. Peoms shorter contributions, departments will complete what the Rural New- Yorker calle the best magazine for children inthe world. ’’ THE CENTURY CO. New York. Trustee’s Sale. Whereas. John T. Henshaw and Mary M Neushaw, hie wife, by their certain deed of trust, bearing date August 2-th, iss3, and duly recorded in the Recorder’s office of Bates county, State of Missouri, in Book No. 32, in, conveyed te the undersigned trustee the follow. ing deecribded real estate, situate, lying and being in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: The soubnweest qeatter of the northeast quarter and fof the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section seventeen (17), ‘ownehip forty-one (41) of range thirty-two (32), containing sixty acres more or less, in trust, bowever, for the following put > In trust %© secure the payment ofone certain promissory note of even date with and in said deed of trust deacribea: and, whereas, by the terms of : deed of trust it is provided that if the | interest be not annually paid upon said note, | shen the whole of said note should at once be- vome due and pa: le, and the trustee therein named might sel! the land aforesaid; and where- se, the annual interest on said note is teas | i | i { } ' A capital school- mast due and unpaid Now, therefore, at the request of the legal holder of said note, and br che power and authority in me vested by the ‘ems of said deed of trast, I will, on Thursday, December tJ, 1985, Detween the hours of nine o'clock in the fore- 3eon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that i day, at the east front door of the court hosse in | he city of Butler. county of Bates and State of + iri, sell said real estate.oreo much there | of as may be necessary to y said note, | \atereet and costs of sale. at public vendue, to } tee higheet bidder for cash in hand €.C. DUKE. | which bathed the «keepers in a of | Tases over --— - ees glory. My God! how beautiful iny wife ers. coe Farm for Sale. looked. One ronnded arm was thrown | * 5 tom Sie te $2. : ping infant. Hea H the sk and Twill sell my tarm, siostec lightly parted, ber breath crime a to. ami MWrshin H p ee abe’s = : i schoo tr, in ae atom nshin, aay and regular asthe babe her: ceiver! from the Exnuperer tres. Diwided re jors .= “] Fe crt ee and sate clover in guid. with a diamond dew r Terms casy i s out % 3 4 : tes lave their ears shay—} i@ its centry, and inscribed: : hurriedly to and fro for at Jex~t an hour eee te ee a} = ee <A. aan rox. = P cake face=. Lin custom | Dmperial Meje~w RW The moon was Let what gra’ Let what light WASHINGTON CELEBRITIES. Mrs. Leland Stanford and Her Wonderfu’ Collection of Costiy B-illiant« Mm Le! ‘onl th So little does care for DREAMT OF MURDER. Relates How He Killed Hl's Wife and Child. A Trav-ter A party of gentlemen were seated the lobby of the Windsor hotel, 1: ing, telling stories. Some oft able, but the majority of them so ¢ of th the narrators @ arm ot preva: “ras time grows older rentlemen,”’ dh lf eof tr s belonging to tl rs whic! > ser child?” ne group look! at him wonderins and one or two. shi i . but did not leav ntilemem away from hi wasn't Ivnchad, but I thing abor The non sed every ons. but he was eyed i dunce of t Not av «nian nony ord was k than one hand ul ket- ward. The gentleman silently be cigar fora few moments an resin his story. “In I ned a law 0! in Jnck- | sonville, Fl y there f dilladeo- ville, Ga., where Iwas born In a few years 1 had) work: crative practice, and thou; ing a wife. I was a pre E young man and could have had my pick, but those I could get I didn’t want, and the one I nted I couldn't get. [laid siege to her heart in the most approved style, but couldn't capture it. make 2 prac! of asking bh: me once 2 week, thinking cept to get rid of me, buts cept. 4 ight idn't ac- Milledgeville to settle connected with my father’s - The night before I left, expecting to be ab- sent 8 month or more, I went to see my obdurate lady-love, and asked her again to be my wife. She answered no, as usual, but laughingty told me, when bid- ding me good-by at the gate, if sho changed her mind before I returned she up some business T used to | a83sured me that w to have | “In November, 1879, Iwas called to | and fled to ex } ¥ not one of you Ww Ho condemn me. When I ‘ s fully aw en i if-n- I a at ow iear of detection. 1 ES vd I knew 1 ar itt a Ta he he more, nr: How n ev me well; thet I ile, Ga.: that Dhed nly from home, de- serting nd ebild, and that I Was ey much of a scoundrel any- | me. He as being something. aad been away months, and he left Milledge- begged him to tell : was easily done. I from home for ouly ~ ville my wife and well, and that thought I des story, how I child we y wife had alv [told him my ad killed her and the child punishment for the crime. + ¥ou ‘he said. ‘Write home and s t told you the truth.” “I wrote to my wife, and very shortly afterward received a reply from her. Other letters followed, ead the result is Tam on my way baek home, where I ex- pect to resume the prac: of my pro- alive and | tinds nc Sena men in and the richest is to occupy Chas the ress will be n the square street to nal own- em were Mr, Hallett K archi- tect, Mr. Mr. Pou meron ot ard mansion, and was 21 op, Which now the there three + i The sto run rout ‘They not return to ond is promoted iy family isa toa pean cr great loss to society Not for many years, ot 3 re, had th table Russian miuister,or one with whom it was pleasant to have sucial jutercourse, and itis said by the gossips that European courts have rather enjoyed: our own con- tretemps in this re SOOT ths a for a foreign the De nceep- ne sis mention mission, mischievous persons write | ters to the diplomats and court officials, i relating gossip and scandals if eny exist Long before the late Mr. Hant reached St. Petersburg ull the people whom he | wasto meet officially were informed | that he had been married four times, and that a divorced wife had a suit concern- ing the legality of the divorcee and his marriage with the lady who accompa- nied him as Mrs. Hunt. This knowledge ‘ produced some unpleasant results, which were administered as retaliation on | count of the De Ca ies and Barthole- The same thing is done in Europe nd the ministers who are appointed to this country. There is profound sorrow felt here for the atiliction which of ex-Senaior Augus Cameron, tor - thet has Lefallen the wife | of Wis} perhaps would write me.” j fession. Every werd I have told you.) 0°” sia ti Agghets dao wade wih the wailing? | eentlemen isthe Gach. | Uesplainiethis | COS Mrs. Cameron was one of the | at's that te with the killing? 5 fs ay handsomest and most charming women ked an impatient listene: way: That night 1 went home consum- | : asKe@’an impatient listencr. _ 4 1 eds tsGse. LT suddenls: lost .| in Washington. She was as lovely in “It leads to it. Don't be impatient. ; °¢ ee s eee Sue } es my | character as in form and face, and was : - } mind, ima M committed ¢ orri- | zs z a ss e 1 was at my old home about six weeks, | ble Betas Akon fll. For four years and beld in the highest esteem by everyone and wus making pr tons to remain | over T have been snderer, imagining | Who knew her. She expressed many re during the holidays, out I received a let- | [had the brand ‘ron my) grets wien bre r home tn re ter one day which caused me to take the } brow. [was sane @ else, | last April, thet leave Whsi+ | fue nae beck home. The letter was! and [hardly know wh ne on{ ingtoa, und pert never to return. aay sdy-love. She to she had j that point now. “Teri When her friene her good bre they relented, and if I would > "| fect, 1 never hoped that she w: at lenst visit W would marry me at ones. Ere I ” 1 } i roul y { story. n and all hoped to didn't ask her any questions ej “Well, old man, ntle- he suiumer she vis as eager i marry 23 Iw and Twas so | nan who w 2 rope. | and whik infatuated with } at T never auspoet- | “you ought to ! fel and become | crossing from New York to Jersey el anything wrong. [wanted 2 | a'drummer. {story of yours would i wadding, but she wanted a guiet Piatra thas rer News. The ferry. so quiet. in fact, that we sHppAi of i : as or boat and.althoug eay and married so secret } injures Week or two bet nyone baniiy knew | i E aasthing about it. $ Crepe ye wal BS pn “We lived together happily for a year. | t reeeny¢ My boy was born, aud T considerai my- j self the most world. About t ti teld me a story about never heard. it my was to tire while she was attending a fernale semi | nary she eloped with a handsome young | rogue, was captured and brouckt back home, and that she was never weaned ot her affection for him. My f nd in- formed me that the fell. sonville before i married, and that my wife was known to have met him fre- wently in private places. and. further. at she had been seen with him sevrera! times since her marriage. “I was furious, and it was wi eulty that I refrained from elutching him by the throat and forcing him to swaliow that lie. I don't know why I didn’ strike him dead at my feet, but I did not. Iwent home crazed aint delirious. 1 walked to snd fro in front of my by for hours. It was afier m: Tentered and made my wa sleeping apartment S With her babe pillowed bining brightly ed the shutters and let in a flo swriwe tf) reacan niwscelé > inkine w was in Jack. | of bei} inthe sterzm fer his proee-< veached muslin. Lieachat or dyed ness hy +, \ | that dreadful crisis, she exac would «¢ Betore she react “ln band that woul m. News comes from mine from her hr hot opel steph L. to Crariot ; marks and appraised :F. Tabor and}. N. Tabor at cig tue date of the publication of this seme dellars, this igth day No bes, {ll be forever aul : Fis b. W. Crovp. The - Famous - Tebo - Flout Dumps ON EXHIBITION, — 107 BEDSTEADS, 29 STYLES, 49 IN WAREHOUSE. ‘One Car Load 400 on the Road, The best ever offered for the money, Rail you ever saw on a Cheap Bed. The Heaviest Opera House Furniture Store, PHARIS & 80 —DEALERS IN Groceries, Flour, Feed, &¢ PRICE PAID FOR POTATOES THE HIGHEST MARKET BUTTER, EGGS, And All Kinds ot Country Produce. We Sell ; we can do you goal Farmers, come and see us. MISSOU! SOUTH SIDE SQUAKF, ° . LER, 100,000 BUSHELS CORN WANTED - a Ew John A. Lefker & Co's. Elevat NEAR DEPOT. inity that we are now We have recent- mple facilities Our We desire to say to the tarming comm prepared to receive Corn in any quantity.- ly overhauled our Machinery, and now have tor handling Corn easily and expeditiously. Are Convenie Grade very easy and perfectly -+ To those who tase the past so liberally favored us, we return our hearty thankn and respecttully ask a continuance of their patror To those who have not heretofore di «'t with us, we desire to s#¥ that we earnestly solicit a trial, teteving that our mode of so, shall en roval, and, if We have a large doing bus deayor to merit @ sb seet your ap are of your patronage. quantity of apne alt EE EE. S| XK Se BOe! jally selected for sowing purposes, to loan tor the seasot pee of 1855, and! we invite all parties who contemplate sowing 5 Flax next vesr to come and see v- betore making their af rangement. fur sced. as we Ano We Can Do You Govt. does is the thing. uot what he #7 e and - une JOHN A. LEFKER & CO. ‘ot a man Stray Notice Taken up and posted by D. W. 1 Spruce township, Bates cour and posted betore James W of the Peace. O red, with crumply h in fore- head, white stripe on ict: hip, wh bush of the tail white, no bran by S. S Note. $ hereny gives. th Mo non the estate of Adie ie eh ve been er Justice county Probate Coat, cow, coloc nourt, bearing dete , ainst said estate are ebelly {Shim tor allowance date of said letters. from any benefit of claims be not exhibited within ?