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AND A FULL LIN UFAPN) MACHINERY, TOP SPRING AND F Store. Elast ARPA WA si R.R. DEACON, HARDW ARE de Square. 4 Trustee's Sale. John W. Phelps and Enama Phelps, simife, by their deed of trust dated July 2th, ass, and recorded in the recorder’s office with- jnand for Bates county, Missouri, in book } @, page 27, conve ed to the undersigned tra: velhe following described real estate lyin and bein: situate in the county of Bates and ‘of Missouri, to-wit: z ‘All of that portion of the north half of lot No. oe in the north west quarter of section No. thirty-one 31 in township No forty t) gad range No. thirty-one 31 lying east of the PM yiemi creek, containing ten acres more or less, BD which conveyance Was made in trust to secure the payment of four certain notes, fully de- bored in said deed of trast; and whereas de- fault has been made in the payment of the cipal of said notes and the annual interest gerned theron, which default under the terms ofsaid deed of trust render the whole debt du fod payableand which is now Jong past due | and unpaid. Now erefore, at the request | ithe legal holder of said notes and pursuant | tothe conditions of said deed of trust, | will | prodeed to sell the above described premises at | af public vendue to the highest bidder for cash at | 0] the east front door of the court house in the Butler, county of Bates, and state of | ay, June 22nd, 18% ? i 7 nt ween the hours of 9 o’clock in the forenoon faa o' clo in the afternoon or sree day, for F poses of satisfying said debt, interests Cally R. S. CATRON, Trustee ee RRR ro a es city of Butler, Be publi¢ to satisfy said exc Sheriffs $ By virtue and authority ofa general execution issued from the office of the clerk of court of Bates county, Missouri, r the June term, Isss, of said court cted in favor of the Aultman & T pany and against Marion Ryan Scott, I have levied and seized uy right, title, interest and claim of t! fendants, Marion Ryan and W. F. and to the following described real ©. wit: A strip of land twenty rods wide off east end of the southeast quarter of the east quarter of section one [1]. iip thirty-nine [ ange thirty-one [31], bounded as follows: Beginning at south vrner of section one [i], township th 2 39] range thirty-one [31], running north to q section corner, thence west twenty {20} thence south to section line of section > {i}, thence eastto the ple of containing ten acres, allin Ba of Missouri, I will on Friday, June 15th, 188s, between the hours of ter o'clock i the east front de so much dina, te BROOK of Bates Co ans en ene ATiwak Sone IFRANY BERNHARDT'S Soleagent forthe Rockford and Aurora watches. JEWELRY STORH, Is headquarters tor fne Jewelry Watches, Clocks, Solid Silver and Plated Ware, &e. Spectacles o 1 kinds and tor all age e cordially invited to visit his establisimea Filled C in Gold, Silve very ¢ ¢ Glasses. amit es; also fine id € his splendid display of beautitul goods and the low price ALL KINDS OF ENGRAVING NEATLY EXECUTED pemecene Se STTR EERE ERD e Fa Over Ten Thousand Trial 4 Packages mailed to pa- ‘ients a largo proportion, eof whom took a full treat! mengend were restored to health by use of wana SEMINAL PASTILLES. & |A Radical Cure for Nervous Debility, Orzanic % Weakness and Pursi cal Decay in Youme or Mid- dle Aged Men, Tested for Fight Years in 1 thousand cases they absolutely restore prematurely jaged and broken down men tothe fut enjoyment of fect and full Manly Strength and Vigorous Health. ‘Tothoso who suffer from the many obscure d SES ronght about, by Indiscretion, Fxposnre, Over-Lrain Work, or: 9 Indulgence, we ask that you send us tatement of your st d socure te RREE, with hlet.dc. Avoid the impo: dies for these t 1D thousands, does not i ention to business, or cause pain convenience in an: entific medical pri ion to the seat 0 ceis felt without delay “functions of the human organism restored. we 5 Jements of life are given back, the patient becomes cheerful and rapidly gains both strengtt and health TREATMENT.—Oxe Moxth, $8. Two Mos. $5. Three, $7 | HARRIS REMEDY CO., Mr’c Cuemists. S064 N. Tenth Street, ST.LOUIS, MO. T univers fections. made more for the t! cud when worms have reall from earliest infancy t «be too observing of the sirst ved from the most deldcate ii te to recommend it and use it srtsof the country, testii i + to children as a safe put harged and immediate relie! te 4 Je must look closely and thing else. New FRAXKUN, Howse Co., Mo, Schwarts € Go. Plateburg, ae ‘Lhave eednoms of that Lena ees . B.A. Pabnestock’s Vermifuge, and found it to have the desired , Boe cate emer think your can J. W. HU J.B. SCHWARTZ & 00. RD, M.D... SUCCESSORS ly acknowl! ‘ purpose of pleasing the palate than Deen the cause. It has beer refore parents—especially mothers who are were or tanuy to its uniform success. In fact. it never fails ive. not suspecting the cause of the affol 10m must B. A. Fi innestook ESTABLISHED 1827. It is now nearty sixty Years since this medicine was offend remedy for Worms, and from that t reputation has steadily in: hroughout nearly all parts of the worid t but their short lease of life is nea os When FUG eroved beyond cavt that worms: lome of worms.for so surely as they exist by the timely use of B.A Vahne-tuck'= their practice, and mapy of the most ¢n scan illness, an: |. Great cauti be used by ever, pury iz in one sense, and to examine every bottle he buys of it. The simple name of Faiertock 3s to see that the initials are B®. A. Fauxgstock, anc be satis- Cammripcr. 8D. Raving weed the original * B.A. Fahnestock” in my practice for many years, I have? tancy im recommending it asa remedy which {= « reliable and efficient in all cases where a Vermifuge is needed. THOS. H. HANDY, M.D. - { INVEN I 10 tionize d the j world during | the half century. Not last among the, wonders ot inyentive progress is a method and system of work that can be pretorm- ed all over the country without seperat- ing the workers from their homes. Pay liberal; any one can do the work; either | sex, Young or old; no special ability re-! quired. Capital not needed; you are} started tree, cut this out and return to us| and we will send vou free, something ot | great value and importance, that will} start you in business, which will bring | you in more money right away, than any- thing else in the world. Grand outfit free, Addiess Truz & Co., Augusta, Maine. lyr, has revolu- | | RALESMEN | WANTED! By the oldest. largest and best known Nurseries Wisoari | inthe West. Permanent tions; | ta STARK Ni at |Ples, Black-Heads, Sunburn and ‘white. Viola Cream Pitteburg, Pa., Sele Proprietors. receive free, a costly box of goods which will help all, of eithersex, to more mon- ye right away than anything else in the world. Fortunes await the workers ab- lsoutely sure. At once addresss True & Co., Augusta, Ma‘ae, 1j7-1yr* LEXION Dry 1OLACREAM HIS preparation,without Cir “4 T Riacr ener Piso *cuLA® lea, Liver-Molee, Pim- CE A few applications will render the stubbornly red skin soft, smooth and is not a paint or fowiics tocover defects, but a remedy to cure. it is superior to all other preparations, and is guaranteed to give satisfaction. At drng- gists or mailed for 50 cents. Prepared by G. C. BITTNER & CO, TOLEDO, OHIO. SOLD BY J. EVERINGHAM. I yr. most HOW OLD WAS SHE. Queer Verdicts. s of those who serve The Prose Ballad of he Pretty Moon- | s do shiner and the Judge. not Miss at Ss court rerself with | see you in this «wwinl predicament serion~'v to r i 2 ie 5 , ee Inany Witnesses in the case of a man Tt dovs tae. too. judge. ' : T) = j run over by a ra ine. he “How od we vou?! i Aaa ; : a . : 5 ) verdict was: “Judyve, Tam two years older tha Bey wk my inarried sist Dat robe ai She er by bomescu sag by a =u we road engine. whereby he cou has been married eighteen: months | nee hereby he could not oe breathe. hence he choked to death.” and still ~ -\ Now how old am I?” of Miesouri heard all the evidence in aa er ; the case of a man killed by a runa- {can net to biame for your math- | 2 way team, and brought in the fol- lowing verdict: ~The jury finds the dead deceased to have come to his death at the eanenical Inettciene “Why did you go into the distill- ing business? “Because I wanted to make whis- ” hands of a runaway team, the horses thereof being blameless, being “How long have you been ae pan tiller?” frightened by a dog. “Ever since I was 16 years old.” r oa ‘Ql “When were you 16 years old?” he sat stolidly and stupidly on a cor- “The year my father died.” “What year was that?” ~The year my Uncle Henry moved to Texas.” oner’s jury and listened evidence, after which he walk toward the corpse with some degree Lifting the cloth he of curiosity. started be “Miss Smith, you are a woman, but Tinsist that you shail yen or answer amazement and affright. that if convicted of this awful charge. you my questions. Remember, and cried out: : “Mine Gott, shentlemen, dot is dead.” ah wili be sent to the penitentiary. What did you do with the whisky ; a nity deliberated Pounade three hours over “Who bought it?” “Well, judge, it would be rather hard to tell who bought it all. Some | time ugo a party of gentlemen came into 1 the corpse of a woman burned by The following verdict was then announc- explosion of a kerosine lamp. ed in writing: That burnt to deth. The joory.” Resolved, diszeased was neighborhood to hunt deer. The party got out of whisky and Aman, supposed to be a tramp, s ¢. as fe id dead p + found it difficult to buy any. Aftera | W285 foun t dead in the woods, out while I told a man if he would jut |W st. A jury inquired into the cause | his jug down on 2 dollar and go| of his death and reported as fol away he might. when he came back, | OW* find the jug full of whisky. He did “The jury does uot tind that the dead man has been foully dealt with, and is of the opinion that he died Would you know the man?” Oh, yes sunply because his time had come sir; I recognized him in erent and there was no getting out of it.” You are the man, judge.” The Palmy Days of Minstrelsy. lier, J. F. Blondin, famous through- I was reading that the wife of out the wored for his daring exploits Jack Haverly, the once well known upon the tight rope, arrived in this induced | city yesterday on the steamship Ari- him to give her $10 every night out negro minstrel manager, of the receipts of the show, so that \ when he went into bankruptcy she possessed a fortune of about $30.- 000. He begged her to jend him the money, but she refused him, and to-day they are living comfortably on her savings. An hour or two af- terward I met Bill Foote, who was a boomer for Haverly when that sky rocket of a manager was high in the air. Foote now runs a boarding house in this city, and is the custo- dian of Dockstader’s theater during the absence of Dockstades’s min- strels on a tour. “O, Yes; those were ‘halcyon’ days,” said he. “There was a time when the manager of a minstrel company had to do hardly anything else than open the doors of a hall and let people pay to come in. The five or six years after the war were especially profitable. New towns, of 3,000 or 5,000 inhabitants, were constantly being discovered by house. Those who saw him this morning could hardly believe that the short, strong man before them was the same who twenty-eight years ago repeatedly performed the feat of crossing Niagara Falls on a rope. Blondin arrived at the hotel in com- pany with his agent, S. A. De Para- vicini, and Imre Kiralfy, under whose management he proposes to give exhibitions at St. George, Sta- ten island. His face was browned from the voyage, and his hair and heavy brown mustache and imperial showed but a few streaks of gray. His stout but erect figure was dress- ed in a blue coat and wastcoat, with tight colored corduroy trousers. Three immense diamonds ornament- ed his shirt front. On the whole the Chevalier looked much more like traveling for pleasure, than a veter- an performer of 65. ARE CEN Cues cel pees of Rheumatism and Neuraigia Cured in that sort were dead sure to yield a Two Days fine audience for anything in the way of minstrelsy. But it isn't so now. The meat is all gone out of the cocoanut, and the man who can make a negro minstrel company pay has got to hustle for it."—Indianap- The Indiana Chemical Co. have discov- ered a compound which acts with truly marvelous rapidity in the cure ot Rheu- natism and Neuralgia. We guarantee it ‘o cure any and every case of acute inflammatory Rheumatism and Neuralgia n2 pays, andto give immediate reliet in chronic cases and effect aspeedy cure. “We find him to have come to his | A coroner's jury in the backwoods | It is told of an old German that j to all the} over | k, turned to the other ju- | A jury in a Missouri rural commu- | ~ % -—Detroit Free I ish Spavin Liniment removes Rheumatism and Neuralgia cured in ,» Soft, or cd Lumps and] 1 to 3 days tor 75 cents by Detchon’s | ‘shes from: Blood Spa | “My Cure.’ Do not suffer and waste | Splints, Sweeney, Stifles, Sprains | money on other remedies. This abso Swotlen Throat, Coughs, F lutely never tails. Id by W. J. LANs- $50 by use of one bottle. Warrant. | pown, Druggist, Butler, Mo. — $-@m. by W. J. Lanspowy, Drug- r, Mo. S-ivr. svadier Blondin. New York. June 5.—The Cheva zona and is stopping at the Hoffman | a French officer of 45 or 50 years, ! DECIDEDLY FISHY. A Chil’s Hand Found In a Fish’s Saturd: Way very sim It was sz i, the fingers, six in number, being about a half or three fourths of an inchinlength. Though there were no nails on the fingers, there were indentions of the proper size and shape, as though made ex- actly for tinger nails. Dr. Jennings and a number of others were called in to the phenomenal freak, and all pronounce ed it the most perfect imitation they 'had ever seen. It was the size of an infant’s hand. The fish contained | no other intestines at all. view The curious and wonderful speci- |men would have been preserved had some one have known its true value, | but as it was it was thrown away. The fish was caught near Clinton.— Henry Co. Democrat. | Bucklen’s Aruica Salve, The Best Salve iotike world for Cuts, ores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum Fever mores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Chiblains Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi j tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction oney refunded. Price 25 cts p | For sale by Walls & Holt, the dru Money in Small Fruits. Strawberries as well as pretty girls flourish around La Grange. It is intere: sting in this line to know what a single woman, Mrs. Sarah B. Marby, has accomplished. Last year she averaged 20 cents per quart This year she had about half an acre of straw- all the berries she sold. berries in full bearing, from which she has already sold 3,000 quarts, which has brought her in the neigh- borhood of $374 or as much the value of six or seven bales of cotton. as Some of these berries were sold 20 as high xs cents per than 10 cents quart and Wedues day last 220 quarts were picked froin | this half acre and sold for 10 and 15 noue less cents per his work with h quart. Besides doing all hands she the addi- y own has selected and set out 30,000 ional plants, every one of them alive beginning of the year land promising abundant yields next A few berries will be gath- j ered from these vines this year and another crop of 3,000 or 4,000 quarts will be sold from the old vines this | year. season. From half an acre she has sold | over three thousand quarts of straw- berries this Next year she will have four and a half acres of vines just as productive, and, giving the lowest estimate, she will gather 27,000 quarts, which at 10 cents a quart, the lowest price she has ever received for her berries, will bring her $2,700. Besides this, she has over 400 vines of raspberries, now covered with fruit, which she will sell for 25 cents a quart, and which will prove a source of considerable income. No one will be surprised at the value of the crop and the productive- ness of the soil, but the fact that | a weak woman, with the weight of sixty years upon her shoulders, should have demonstrated the possi- bilities of small fruits in this sec- tion is surprising. She is the most enthusiastic fruit culturist in Geor- | gia, and in the work she finds recre- | ation and happiness. She has an un- | tiring energy and thoroughly under- ‘stands berry culture. During the | heat of the day, when she is com- | pelled to rest indoors, and in the | evenings, she is not idle, but with | her own hands makes thelittle wood- year. Announcement . 1888 lisea » of Swift's Specific, hop- . wh at I was suddenly attacked with excruciating pains in my feet, knees and hand attack that I took to my bed imme- diately, and in two or three days my joints were swollen to almost double their natural size, and sleep was driven from me. So severe was the After suffering the most excruciating pain for a week, using liniments and various other remedies, a fend, who sympathised with my helpless condition, said to me: “Why don't you get Swifts Spe- cific and use it? Iwill guarantee a cure, and if it does not the medicine shall cost you nothing.” Tat once secured the 8. S. 8S. end after using it the first day, had a quiet night and refreshing sleep. In a week I felt greatly benetitted. In three weeks I could sit up and walk about the room, and after using six bottles I was out and able to go Since then I regularly at my post of duty, and to business. have been stand on my feet from nine to ten hours a day and am entirely free These are the plain and in my case, and I will from pain. simple facts cheerfully answer all inquiries rela- tive thereto, either in person or mil. Tuomas Marxitire, 11 W. Isth street, New York City. Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis- eases mailed free The Swift Specitie Co.. drawer 3, Atlanta. Ga. by Outlaws Attempt Assassination. Hugoton, Kan., June 6.—About 4 o'clock this afternoon three out- laws centered town and attempted to murder county commissioner, J. B. Chamberlain, the « narshal and deputy United States marshal Sam- uel Robinson. Some thirty shots fortunately were fired, but no one was wounded, The Hugoton people immediately turned out and were in hot pursuit when the would be as- sassins left their buggies and mount- ed their horses into the nd made good the escape murderer's retres Wooddale. A Wir captured with the buggy as was also rifle was a coat The band was lead by the well known outlaw Ed. Short. An Essay on Genius. Genius and talent differ, I think, ina good many ways. Genius is a gift whchh will crop if not cultivated, but of course it is better to cultivate it. Genius is something like what talentis whea cultured, only genius is given to you already to use. The reason you have to cultivate genius is because it has to take some definite form. If you have a genius for writing, of what use is it until you know all about that branch of art, and have studied it, for even genius will occa- sionally overleap the strict bonds of common sense, or rather uncommon sense, and Jo other things equaily as bad. Talent is an ability to do things well, but genius is an inspiration. Genius generally twines round the trellis of fame and admiration has to bow before it. Genius develops itself the first chance it gets. It does not lie dor- mant.—Gertrude E. Watson, in New York World. Matthew Arnold left all his worldly possessions, consisting of about 25,000, to his wife in a will of one line. It is the shortest will on record. What has become of frowsy-head- ed, red-nosed and blear-eyed anarchy? out even olis News. English Spavin Liniment removes ail hard, sof, or calloused lumps and blem- ishes trom horses. vlood spavin, curb, splints, sweeney, Stifles, sprains, rore and swollen throat, coughs, etc. ave fifty dollars bs use of one bottle. Warranted. Sold by W. J. Lansdown, Druggist, But- ler, Mo. XIel yr On receipt of 30 cents, in two cent stamps, we will send to any address the Drescription ior this wonderful compound which can be filled by your home druggist at small cost. We take this means of giving our discovery to the public instead ef putting it out as a patent medicine, it being much less expensive. We will gladly refund money if satisfaction is not Tue Inprana CHEMICAL Co., given. - IO-1yr Crawtordsville Ind \en quart baskets in which the ber- ries are sold. The farm consists of | 40 or 50 acres, and all except four and a half acres is cultivated in or- dinary farm products, cotton, corn, | : sera’ ‘ Aah : kind on human or animals cured in 30 millet, oats. ete, which Mrs. Marby | vinutes by Wooltord’s Sanitary Lotion. looks after very closely. The berry | This never tails. Sold by W- J. Lans- = = wap “, | down, Butler. Mo. 116m (farm is wonderful withinitself. That Has not the ugly thing taken a long walk into the gloomy shades of ob- livion? Itch, Mange and scratc ot every