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a ene i Ei _ Of this court. STATE OF MISSOURI, of] divided the grocery Since I have dissolved partne:ship with W. G. Wema stock, I have PUBLIC,” purchased the entire gro- cery stock of R. W. James, on west side square, next door to Lane's dry goods store, I now find that I need more room and will have to QUERIES an reduce my stock, and will sell VEENSWA for the next sixty days as cheap as they can be bought in Kansas City, with carriag Queensware and Canned goods, ge added. a fine line of I have in short, I have everything that is carried in a first class gro- cery store. in and see us and get prices before buying elsewhere. me and I will treat you weli. I extend a cordial invitation toevery one to call Try GEO. J. GRAHANI. P.S. To every customer buying $10. worth of goods I will give them a handsome present in silverware. STATE OF MISSOURI,? ., County or Batns. § “"* In the probate court for the county of Bates November term, 1888 Charles F. Pharis ad- ministrator. John Irvin, deceased. Order of Publication, Charles F. Pharis administrator of John Ir- vin deceased presents to the court his petition, praying for an orderforthe sale of so much of the real estate of said deceased as will pay and satisfv the remaining debts due Dy said estate and yet unpaid for want of sufficient assets, accompanied by the accounts. lists and inventories required by law in such case; on examination whereof it is ordered that all persons interested in the estate of saia deceased, be notified that application as afore- said has been made, and unlesa the contrary be shown on or before the fir-t day of the next term of this court to be held on the second Monday of February next, an order will be made for the sale of the whole, or so much of the real estate of said deceased as will be suffi- cient for the payment of said debts; and it is farther ordered, that this notice be published in some newspaper it this state for four weeks before the next term of this conrt, STATE OF ae A County or Batrs. Be ,J. 8. Francisco, Judge of the probate court, heid in apd forsaid county, hereby cer- ay that the toregoing is a true copy of the original order of publication therein referred to, as the same appears of record in my office Witness my hand ana seal of said {emaL] court Done at office in Butler, Mo. this 13th day of December, 1583, J.S. FRANCISCO, Judge of Prob at. Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI 8s. County or Bates, { In the probate court for the county of Bates, November term, 1888, J. W_ Ennis, adminis- trator, Ezra H.’ Beamls, deceased Order of Publication. J. W. Ennis, administrator of Ezra H. Bea- mis deceased, presents to the court his petition praying for an order for the sale of 0 much oi he real estate of said deceased as welll PSY. and satiefy the remaining debts due by said estate, and yet unpaid for want of sufficient assets. accompanied by the accounts, lists and invent- ories required by laws in such case; on exam- ation whereof it is ordered, that ali persons in- terested in the estate of said dec ased, be noti- fled that application as aforesaid has been made, and unlessthe contrary be shown on or before the firstday of the next term of this court to be held on second Monday of Febru- ary next, an order will be made for the sale of the whole. or so much of the real estate of said deceased as will be sufficient for the payment ofsaid debts; and it is further ordered, that this notice be published in some newspaper in this State, tor four weeks before the next term 2 County or Barks. { ete I,J.8 Francisco, judge of the probate court held in and for said county, hereby certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the original or- der of publication therein referred to, as the same appears of record in my office Witness my hand and seal of said court. {smat.} Done at office in Butler, Missouri, 20th day of December, A.D. 1sss. J. S. FRANCISCO, Judge of Prebate. Executor’s Notice. Netice is hereby given, that letters testamen- tary on the estate of JoelS. Wright deceased. hey Rannesce ne. Sane on the Sth of Janui , by the probate court of Bates county, Missouri : All persons havihg claims against said estate are required to exhibit them for allowance to the executor within one year after the date of said letters, orthey may be precluded from auy benefit of said estate; and if such claims be not exhibited within two years from the date of this yee none they shall be forever barred. This 5th day of January, 1839. = ALLMAN DasigL, iat Executor. 6 ; THIS Preparation, without ‘RduLeP ten, Tivar-Molos be ples, Black-H Sunburn and | A few applications will render the most stubbornly red ekin soft, emooth and Viola is not a paint or powdertocover defects, but a remedy to cure. it is superior to all other preparations, and pe or mailed fy 30 : te as for 50 cents. pared _by . Cc. BITT TESS. © OO Of Rolls. The flour is giving the Having Moved my “ — Stock of DRY G0 To my new and elegant quarters on | the Southwest corner of the square, . special invitation is extend to #il wy old customers and the public Generally to call and see me. My stock of DRY GOODS Is complete and I guarantee my prices to be as low as the lowest. AARON HART. Dissolution Notice. Notice is hereby given that the co-partner- shij heretofore existing under the firm name right & Walls, grocery merchants has this Wright retiring. The business will be continued’ at the old stand by Sam Walls, who will collect of day dissolved by mutual consent, Mr all outstanding accounts and pay all liabilities. ‘This Isth day of December, Tes R. M. Wricur, Sam Watts. Dissolution Notice. Notice is hereby ship heretofore existing between W. G. W ness has this day been mutual consent. Geo. J_ Graham retir: thefirm. This Saturday. Jan. 5th, 1889. W. G. Womack, !Gro. J. Granan. Notice of Final Settlement. Netice is hereby given that the undersi Wm. and Richard Winegardner, administes: Sore. of the eatate of Henry Winegardner de- accounts with said estate as such administra- tors, at the next term of the Probate court of Bates county, Missotri, to be holden at Butler, Missouri, in said county, on the llth day of February, Isso. -WILLiaM WINEGARDNER, RICHARD WINEGARDNER. 6-48 Administrators. DIAMOND MILLS, Have made great improvements by discarding the old mill buhrs and putting in the late HUNGARIAN Short System very best sat ction, selling at bottom prices. also LT. SHAMON & C0, Entire | given that the co-partner- vou mack and Geo. J. Graham, inthe grocery busi- dissolved by efrom!of the Agricultural will make final settlement of his Who Made Him Fail? | The Liucolu (Neb.) News takes for a text ex-senator C. H. Van Wyck :f of that state and begins its lugubri- ous sermon by saying: “How the | mighty have fallen! How evanescent | is that bauble called fame! Two} yeurs ago the man whose name is in | everybody's mouth, C. H. Van Wyck, | rode high on the wave of popularity. | Now he is forgotten and his name is | but a plaything in the mouth of all. | And where 1s the man of brain and | brawn? Alas! from morn till night | ona wind-swept farm on the ely | | prairie landin the county ef Otoe, | may be seen a bent form and a pai . of legs toiling at the protruding Indeed, it isa hard where | ends of corn. task to say fame’s eternal | camping-ground is located.” But who inade this man fall, this | ex-Senator of the United States, this |C. H. Van Wyck? Who, indeed, but of Nebraska. These | leagued shamefully and most coward- | ly with the railroads and struck him | down. He had stood for their rights jin the senate us they never had a | representstive to do before or since. He made the land grabbers and the railroad grant boodlers ‘ihe farmers disgorge willious upon millions of acres of ground splendid for cultivation, and yet the poor, | cringing farmers of Nebrask: with perfect indifference the combi vation made of railroad monopol attorneys, geueral managers and the handy henchman of all dirty work, no mat- {ter what kind, put him to 2 political death. Nay more—for a few rebates here and there and a few passes handed about on the sly—they help- ed to do it. Faise, greedy aud treacherous, by aud by you sell-out farmers will not only not have a friend in the Ameri can congress, but you will not de- serve to have one. Take care in the future how you cry “Wolf!” “Wolf!” —Kausas City Times. In the Senate. Jefferson City, Mo., Jan. 23.— The two hours and a half session of Senate this morning was barren of results save the adoption of a reso lution to appoint a committee to in- vestigate the management of the State Agricultural Farm. Mr. Allen introduced biil to pro- hibit the filling up and obstruction of water courses. Mr. Major introduced a bill pro- viding for the appointment of court stenographers in counties of 45,000 inhabitants and less. Mr. Smith introduced a bill to amend the statute relating to the appointment of the committee ap- pointed to examine the accounts of the State Treasurer and Auditor, and fixing the date of such appoint- ment on November 20, next pre- ceding the meeting of the General Assembly. Mr. Sebree offered a joint resolu- tion to investigate the management College. The resolution provides for the appoint- ment of a joint committee of seven members, three from the senate and four from the House, who shall have the power to appoint a stenogra- pher and authority to examine books and send for persons and papers. Mr. Mackay offered no amend- ment to strike out the preamble. After considerable discussion, further consideraticn of the resolu- tion was postponed. The motion to postpone was then reconsidered, and Mr. Clay offercd a substitute for the original resolu- tion, embodying the substance of the same without the preamble. After further discussion, the sub- stitute was adopted and the senate adjourned. They “Swore like Our Army m = Flan- ders.” may be said of many sufferers from billiousness, headache, constipation, indigestion and other resultant irri- tability, intellectual sluggishness, ennui, etc. The temptation to thus 'vialate a sacred commandment, how ever, is speedily and permanently removed by the use of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets—tiny, little. sugar- coated anti billions Granules: noth- ing like them. Qne a dose. Drug- gisls. Sir Morelli Mackenzie attends pro- jfessionally the leading actors of England. He is something of an PROP'S, | actor himself. it is said. Suffering tor Sins. Louisville, Ky., Jan. 22—An old man stopped at Henry Hart’s barber shop on east Jefferson street yester- day afternoon to get a shave. While the stranger wrs undergoing the op eration, he told a very remarkable story about himself. He said that five months ago he started out from a distant point in eastern Canada to walk tothe Abbey of Gethsemane near Beardstown. So far he had safely accomplished his journey, which. he said, was a 2,000 miles. In his long tramp he had worn out nine pairs of shoes “Iam very weary,” he said, “and distance of | wish I were at my journey’s end, where I will find sweet rest for the remainder of my already numbered day The words were spoken in a very earnest and pious tone, and na- turally aroused the curiosity of the barber. “Why did you not the barber. “I belong to a certain holy order of the Catholics, and this is a pen- ride?” asked ance imposed upon me for my sins.” he said. Ferocious Fowl. Ft. Wayne, Ind. Jan driving out on the Prairie South Bend, a few days ago. lando H. Martin heard the se of a little child near the Henry Hale. Martin at once got out of his vehicle and ran into the yard and was surprised to see a large Plymouth Rock rooster stand- ing over the prostrate form of a lit- tle girl. The rooster had savagely attacked her and that it had attemp- ted to get at her eyes was evident from the marks on the child's face. Martin's arrival was timely, as the child was almost exhausted from the contest with the rooster. The little girl’s name is Ethel and she is 24 While her mother was engaged in a remote place, the child had started out to hunt eggs and had the encounter with the enraged fowl. , near Or- MS rm of years old. Her injuries are severe but it is thought that her eyesight will not be impaired. Blackmailing Cut Short. Marshal!, Mo., Jan. 21.—John Hill a professional crook, was to day arrested on the charge of blackmail - ing, and placed in jail here. The facts connected with the charge were obtained from Judge Elliot. It appears that for some weeks past the firm of Adkison Bros., of Napton ten miles east of this city, have been retailing leaf tobacco which they had raised on their farm. Hill was one of the purchasers of this and influenced others to buy. In the latter part of December he made his appearance and played the role of a United States detective, making the firm believe they had illegally disposed of the tobacco. He deman- ded and received $20 hush mouey. A few days since he applied for $20 more, but was refused the money. He will be tried this week before Justice Miller. ‘ Rebbed Two Orphans. Lawrence, Mass., Jan. 23.—J. H. Prescott, of the firia of Prescott & Co., lumber dealers, was arrested last night on a charge of embezzle- ment. He has been serving as guardian of the two daughters of Elbridge J. osselyn, deceased, each of whom was left several thousand dol- lars by their father. Both young women have made Mr. Prescott’s house their home and everything concerning their business and social relations with their guardian appear- ed harmonious until about ten days ago, when both ladies demanded that the money belonging to them by bequest should be paid. In the police court to-day Prescott was ar- raigned ona charge of embezzle- ment, waived examination and was held for the grand jury in $100,000. Their Business Booming. Probably no one thing has caused such a general revival of trade at Walls& Holt, the Druggists, as their giving away to their customers of so many free ‘trial bottles of Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption. Their de enormous in this very uable article trom the fact that it ulways cures and never disappoints. Co : hitis, Croup, and qui cured by getting a $1. Every ly simply | Scotch-Irish. Columbia, Tenn., Jan. 24.—There will assemble at Columbia on the eighth day of May next a congre-s of the Scotch Irish race. state in the Union and Canada and the United Kingdom will be repre- sented by prominent representatives of this race who will participate in the exercises of the congress. The object of the congress is to revive memories and eompile a history of the race, showing its impress on American civilization. It will be de- void of religious or political signiti- eee. Distinguished scholars will read historical papers and deliver Every | | to the ancient practice of covering the , jor, just as the converse custom of orations commemorating the Scotch | and Irish. The formation thus j gathered will be compiled into a history and perpetuated to prosper- | ity. The opening address will be delivered by Col. McClure, of Phila delphia, Pa. Dr. John Hall and others, emminent divines and schol- ars haye accepted invitations to speak. Columbia has been chosen as the place of meeting because it is the Tennessee. A feature of especial in connection with the cong of ex-confede diers. near center o s will be a re-union ate and federal sol- Piles! Pies! Itching Piles. SymMproms—Moisture, intense itching and stinging; most at night; worse bv scratching. It allowed to continue tu- mors torm, which often bleed and ulcer- ate, becoming very sore. SWAYNE: OINTMENT stops the itching and bleed- ing, heals uiceration, and in most cases removes the tumors. At druggists, or by mail, fors50 cents. Dr. Swayne & Son, Philadelphia. 420 56 Hen Fruit. Public office may be a public trust, but the food of the people is a much more serious concern. Of the half-million of families which this paper reaches there is scarcely one that is not interested in the subject of eggs. Ail are wondering at the present reduction prices. The secret thereof can be easily explained, and ought to be understood. Each fall, before the moulting season and when the hens are laying freely, the dealers gather up vast quantities of eggs and put them into the “cold stoi- age’ houses to await the rise in prices which comes with cold weath- er, when the hens will not lay. This year we have had no cold weather, and the egg dealers, aban- doning the hope of any, have been forced to put their stock upon the market to save storage dues. Are they good? Yes, if you use them quickly. But they will not keep.- -Cincinnati Enquirer. in commences, Ephoe. The transition from long, lingering and paintul sickness to robust health marks an epoch in the lite of an indi- vidual. Such a remarkable event is treasured in the memory and the agency whereby the good health has been at- tained is gratefuily blessed. Hence it is that so much 1s heard in praise of Electric Bitters. So many feel they owe their restoration to health, to the use of the Great Alterative and Tonic. If you are troubled with any disease ot Kidneys, Liver or Stomach, of long or short standing you will surely find relief by use ot Electric Bitters. Sold at soc. and $1 per bottle at Walls & Hails, Drugstore. Mrs. Clara Decker Young, one of the numerous widows of the late Brigham Young, died at Salt Lake City a week agolast Sunday. She was sealed to the late Prophet in 1843 at Nauvoo, IIl., and was one of the three pioneer women of the Utah pilgrimage. She first saw Salt Lake City on July 24, 1847. Mre. Stykkr, the spiritualistic me- dium, seems to bear a most appro- priate name. Senator Quay remarked that he owed his success to the fact that he had never tried to be a statesman. What Am I to Do? The symptoms of billivusness are un- happily put too well known. ‘They diff- er in different individuals to some extent. jer. Too frequently, alas, he has an ex- ; cellent appetite tor liquors but none for | solids of a morning His tongte will hardly bear inspection atany time; if it 1s not white and furred, it is rough, at ail events. | The digressive system is wholly out of | order and diarrhea or Constipation may bea symptom or the two may alternate. There are otten Hemorrhoids o1 even loss of blood. There may be giddiness and often headache and acidity or flatu- lence and tenderness in the pit of the j stomach. To correct alithisif not es- tect acnre try Green’s August Flower, it cost but a trifle and thousands attest j its efficacy. 4i-Ivr. €ow. ; A billious man is seldom a breakfast eat- j | salutation in certain parts of Africa ig | sticking out their tongnes at each | mon occupations of life, do not let us WHEN FRIENDS MEET, Various Forms of Salutation Among B baric and Semi-Barbarie P, ] A striking salutation in the South Islands is to fling a jar of Water over the head ofa friend. This be termed a rather cool reception, bug in that hot country it is Probably done with a good intention. t Among certain tribes of Africa salutor relieves the saluted of his Scant ; attire and dons it himself. © ; writers credit the origin of this custom face when in the presence ofa super. Africa of unclothing one’s self is in terpreted as an extreme form of tak. ing off the shoes. The custom of taking off the shoes at meeting pre. vails among the Japanese. A submissive and dramatic form of where an inferior prostrates hi face downward and arms extended, at the feet of his superior. The Australian natives practice the singular custom, when meeting, of other, The salutation is seeming! inexplicable, this act with us being generally regarded as expressing de- rision. In the Orient the salutations by ges- tures vary with the dignity of the pen. son saluted. We may mention that of Turkey, in which the hand is put first to the forehead and then to the breast, © probably implying the homage of the intellect and the heart. Sometimes the hand is laid under the beard of the person saluted and then the beat raised to the lips. It is common ig Arabia Petra to put cheek to cheek, A race known as the Kaimucks re sort to nlute very similar to that of the Esquimaux. ‘T hey, toe, rub noses, — but before they reach the same spot they sink upon their knees and creep together, when the salutation culmim ates in un energetic contact of the ok f: ory organs. Still another salute is that in whieb — the Gond people pull the ears of their friends. These may all be classed, possibly, as miid forms of the old-time custom of embracing. It is a well known fact that the desire to possess or the sense of possession is gratified and intensified by the embracing. Nose-rubbing, ear-pulling, ete., are ~ evidently mild forms by which, for the sake of politeness or propitiation, such desire for or sense of possession is pro fessed. Kissing, as originally prac- tised, evidently arose from desire to give rather than take. Thus it is re lated that in some of the South Sea i» lands they spit on their hands and then rub the face of the complimented per son. A feeling that actions speak louder than words probably gave rise to the practice of saluting by gesture. If we go back to the ages when words were fewer and the language less expressive than now, we will find that such salut ations were more manifold and more frequently indulged in, giving a vivid representation of the feelings and de- sires.— Boston Herald. a —-—2 +e ___ FEMALE EDUCATION. Phrases Frequently Employed to Extin- guish All Love of Knowledge. There are a few common phrases in circulation respeeting the duties of women, to which ve wish to pay some degree of attentior. There is nothing which requires more vigilance than the current phrases of the day, of which there are aways some resorted to in every dispute, and from the sov- ereign authority ef which it is often vain to make any appeal. ‘The true theater of a woman is the sick cham- ber,”—‘‘Nothing so honorable to & woman as not to .e spoken of at all” These two phrase, the delight of Noo- dledom, are grow into common-places upon the subject, are not unfrequently employed to extnguish that love of - knowledge in women which, in our humble opinion, t is of so much im- portance to cheish. Nothing, cer tainly, is so ornanental and delightful in women as the benevolent virtues, but time can notbe filled up, and life employed, with ligh and impassioned virtues. Someo these feelings are of rare occurrence,all of short duration, or nature would sink under them. A scene of distess and anguish isan occasion where te finest qualities of the female mind nay be displayed; but it is a monstrous exaggeration to women that tha are born only for scenes of distres and anguish. Nurse father, mother, dster and brother, if they want it; it vould be a violationof the plainest duies to neglect them But when we ar: talking of the com mistake the accilents for the occups- tions; when we are arguing how the twenty-three hars of the day are be filled up, it isidle to tell us of those feelings and agiutions above the level of common exigence, which may em-~ ploy the remainng hour. Compassion, and every othe: virtue, are the great objects we all aght to have in view,” but no man and no woman can fill up the twenty-fow hours by acts of virtue. But or is a lawyer, and the other a plowmn, and the third merchant: and hen acts of goodness. and intervals o passion and fine feek — ing, are scatteed up and down the” common occupaions of life. We know = women are cospassionate: but they can not be corpassionate from eight o'clock in the norning till twelve at night, and wha are they to do in the. interval?—. 1 Ledger.