The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 28, 1889, Page 3

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eaten ER nee eee ee Bheumati-m and Weuratgia Two Days. The Indiana Chemical Vo. have discov ered a compound which acts with truly velous rapidity in the cure of Rheu- matism and Neuralgia. We guarantee it to cure any and every Case of acute inflammatory Rheumatism and Neuralgia jn 2 DAYS, and to give immediate reliet rh) chronic cases and etfect aspeedy cure. On receipt 2f 30 cents, in two cent} stamps, we will send to any address the | rescription for this wondertul com pound | i Cured in MAN'S GRIGINAL HOME. HISTORY OF GLOVES. Their Introduction Into England Dating Back to the Eleventh Century. Gloves date back to a very remote period, the its not being strap- gers to their use, and by the eleventh century they were universally worn. In a tomb in Egypt a pair of striped | linen mittens were found that had been worn by alady. Xenophon alludes to the Persians wearing gloves, and gives it as a proof of their effeminaoy; and Homer describes Laertes at work in his garden wearing gloves, to secure him from the thorns. The Romans were severely upbraided by the philos- ophers for wearing gloves; but these reproaches had no effect in diminish- ing their use--they were too conven- ient and comfortable to be lashed out of being by the tongue of philosophy. They do not appear to have been worn in England until the beginning A Belief That Human Life Began in One of the Plateaus of Asia. Eden, according to the prevalent idea of the teaching of the Bible, was a district of Armenia, watered by the Tigris and Euphrates. The Biblical narrative in fact mentions the Eu- phrates as one of the rivers of Eden. Undoubtedly, in the common belief, Paradise was in Asia and notin Europe or Africa’ A few ingenious persons, it is true, have located man’s birth- place in Europe or Africa, some hav- ing the hardihood to establish it in America, but those who have made the most fanciful use of the scanty evidence supplied by the second chap- ter of Genesis have been content usu- ally to find the ‘garden eastward in Eden,” within the limits of Asia. Scientists, who hold a special view respecting the mode of man’s origin, which can be filled by your home druggist atsmall cost. We take this means of ; iving our discovery to the public instead | of putting it out as a patent medicine, it being much less expensive. We will giadly refund money if satistaction is not } given. THE InpIANA CHEMICAL Co., 1O-1yr Crawtordsville Ind UNDERWOOD CLG Syme, tor YOUNG LADIES Charies, ; | | a. ¢ fo, near | are approaching. it is pleasant to ob- . fhe greta eee aor merece Bt. Louis. ny ‘ci | serve, agreement with the general | GeTman manufacture. In the course of time, a great deal of ornamentation was used on the gloves in England. The effigies of Henry H. and Richard I. had gloves adorned with precious stones, and real gloves ornamented with jewels were found upon the hands of King John and Edward I., when their tombs were opened during the last century. Gloves were even orna- mented with crests and armorial bear- ings. The ecclesiastical gloves were al- view as toits place. In his new work on evolution Mr. Alfred Wallace, who may be said to rank with Darwin as the creator of the new view of the origin of species, expresses the belief that man originated in one of the plateaus of Asia. Haeckel’s view was somewhat different. He held that man, or his progenitor, originated in a continent that once existed east of Africa and south of Asia, but which is at present the bed of the Indian GE 2 A - ichly adorned. They were made Ocean. This continent, he supposed, move ce ace z ES IL was connected on the west with Mada- CUES: linen: embroidered and ION (RTH = eee Gell NEI Gan Ga ne eled. A pair preserved at New Col- = OR He ; mu: Stet. GAgin. sgh’ it. was lege, Oxford, are of red silk, with the ee ae ph ‘DI 2) by successive migrations westward = se nt fi & Mcther eGhild, and northward that Africa and | & Ory: 4n0 emoroidered tn gole on the be al} Dregs: * r d for buck: mabe mailed free, SBancriess ZevATORCOs 2 backs. Pope Boniface VII. had gloves of white silk embroidered very beauti- fully and studded with pearls. About 1600, leather gloves appeared. They were embroidered, adorned with pearls and gems, and trimmed with lace. Perfumed gloves, too, made their appearance, and were very popu- lar with the ladies. We are told that Queen Mary Tudor had a pair of “swete gloves” sent to her by a Mrs. Whellers. The college tenants of Ox- ford had perfumed gloves presented to them, as well as distinguished guests. The ecystom went out soon after the reign of Charles I Ww Asia were peopled. Here in a tropical region, according to Haeckel, were found the conditions which favored the - | intellectual and physical development of the progenitor of the human and the monkey races. Wallace holds, on the contrary, that man originated in Asia, and in some part of it favored with atemperate or sub-tropical cli- mate. “It is probable,” he says, ‘‘that he began his existence on the open plains of high plateaus of the temper- ate or sub-tropical zone, where the seed of indigenous cereals and numer- ous herbivora, rodents and game birds, with tishes and mollusks in the lakes and rivers and seas, supplied him with Sold b WALLS & HOLT. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Mi Cicanses and beautifies the hair. F XHAUSTED VITALITY UNTOLD MISERIES Resulting from the, Errors of Youth, Folly, Vice, Ig- Gloves sre presented on various They were mat wed- occasions. re ithout fai abundance of varied food.” Here | 3. 3 norance, &¢., may be cured at home without failor | An a é at ° € ings, funerals, : vale: 5 as exposure, Intallible aud Confidentinl. Larce | je would develop not the arboreal dings, funerals, as valentines, as Treatise, 200 pages, only 21 by mail, sexled, postpa : ‘ : Easter gifts and New Year's presents. Small book, with endorsements of the press, f structure of the monkey, fitted in s Send now. Address the Peabody Medical In: or Dr. W.H.Parkez, No.4 Bulfinct Ata maiden assizes in England—that is, when no prisoner is arraigned for trial—the judge is presented with white gloves. feet hands and for obtaining ripened fruit from trees by climbing, but the structure that fitted him to get his liv- it St.,Boston, Mass, HINDERCORNS The orly sure Cure for Corns. Stopsall pain. Ensures | ink while roaming unroue scanty Gioves have played an important comfort to the feet. loc. at Druggists. Hiscox &Co.,N.Y. | woods. Mr. Wallace finds man related z part in various ceremonic originally intended simply as a cover- ing for the hand. In bestowing lands or conferring dignities, possession V given by the presentation of a glove. Bishops were sometimes put in posses- sion of their sees by the delivery of a glove. To throw down a glove was a challenge to a duel, and to pick it up was to accept the challenge. This method of challenging was in vogue down to the reign of Elizabeth. France has the credit of making the best gloves and the cheapest, but George Augustus Sala says that the eheap gloves in Paris really dear; that you will give from cight to twelve “260 CONSUNIPTIVE Rave you Cough, Bronebitis, Asthma, Tad PARK ERT the worst cases and ix ¢ from defective nutrition. : although to the anthropoid ape. It is not his pgaeee belief, of course, that he is descended from the ape as we know him, but that man and the anthropoid ape are de- scended from a common ancestor. The genealogical tree of man and the ape according to the evolutionist view, has many branches, widely separated for ages past. but if the conve could be followed back far enough, a point, it is believed, would ultimatel) be reached where the son who was the of man was the brother arising: cL Bt.00, eption the i Abso- and fir Art- at parts with Destin the tatels pros word torm SHINGLE of the country, wood shingles prices free METAL ROOFING New York first ancestor rving lines of the ancestor of the anthropoid ape. The father of them both course, neither man nor ape was, of JMROD'S GY SS vane, UMass ee in | francs for a pair with three to six but- CU RE RENTS. Borgo and prog tons, and the sume price in London, pene Bec g Oped in them-| but while the latter are good, the for selves and in succeeding gen- | former are very bad. The French kid ASTHMA |[2:fenc2 ee ees ee at now distinguis amand the ape fa! et Ce Boeor Catarrh, Hay Fever, Diphtheria, Whooping were far superior to the so-called from each other. To M is clear that man and the anthropoid apes originated inthe same region of Wallace it French of to day. from French seventy-five best gloves those made They could be had importers as low as cents andadollar. The in Europe are said to be in Grenoble.—Demorest’s Cough, Croup and Common Colds. Recommended by Physicians and soid by Drug- gists throughout the world. Send for Free Sample. HIMROD MANUF’G CO., the earth. Where, then, latter been found to be now the xisting, have e SOLE PROPRIETORS, or to have existed former ages? ] Monthly. 191 FULTON ST., NEW YORK They have never existed, it appears, in = neneeeETARS America, and did not exist in Africa EQUINE INTELLIGENCE. when it was connected with Madagas- ear and both separated from Asia. Madagascar was separated from It Can Not Be Compared With That of Dogs, Elephants or Parrots. There is an immense deal of super- SRR SSE ES TAE QEST WHITE SCAP MADE IN-AMERICA were € Maw S | Africa before the latter became joined | Stition about the intelligence of i ec ~ | with Asia by the Isthmus of Suez. The | horses. I stopped to-day at the curb- AS *D-AIRKA : animals of ancient Africa are therefore to be sought in Madagascar. But there are no traces of anthropoid apes in Madagascar. Those, therefore, which now exist in Africa must have come from Asia. There is proof that man existed before the Isthmus of Suez rose above the level of the sea, and, supposing his distribution to have been like that of his supposed relative, he must have reached Africa by land from Asia. The color of the China- man, intermediate between the black of Africa and the white of Europe, Mr. Wallace thinks, the original color of man. The suns of Africa ebonized the complexion of the African, while the winters of Europe were blanching the European. Further exploration of the plateaus of Central Asia may bring to light, Mr. Wallace suggests, the early man, the missing link, whose persist- ent alibi, so to speak, is so damaging to the case of the evolutionist. —Balti- more Sun. stone to chat with an expressman. said to him: ‘‘How much does your horse know?” ‘That horse, sir,” he replied, ‘‘knows just exactly as much as a man.” This is the way every body talks who owns a horse, or tends horses, and it seems to me to be per- fect nonsense. I have seen horses walk around a post until they had wound the bridle all up, and then stand for hours with their heads up against the hitching post, simply be- cause they didn’t have sense enough to walk the other way, and unwind themselves. I have seen them, when hitched to a ring in the pavement, get their feet over the bridle, and then go into fits because they didn’t have sense enough to lift their feet back over the bridle again. I have seen them dance around ina burning barn with their manes and tails on fire, simply because they didn't have sense enough to run out. Anybody can steal a horse with- out any objection from the horse. A horse will stand still and starve or freeze to death, with nothing between him and a comfortable stall and a plenty of oats except an old door that he could kick down with one foot, and that could be opened by removing a pin with his teeth. If this shows a high degree of intelligence, even for a brute, I can not see it. Compared with the dog, the elephant, or even the parrot, the horse seems to me to be a perfect fool.—Chicago Journal. —seo —Man is not the only victim of the combination craze. Even ducks as soon as they hatch their eggs start at orce to pool their issues.—Baitimore I GiESo 4 SMIIG-SNIVLUND-JOV1 cose and receive a *P(AICHLESS - FOR « SHAMPOCING + —~ee___ —*Do you get all the work you can do?” asked a gentleman of a negro whom he had hired to do some out- door jobs for him. ‘Yes, sah, “bout all; enI needs hit to keep my little fam’ly a-goin’, sah.” ‘How much ofa family have you?” ‘Well, lemme see: Dar’s me en my ole woman, dat’s two; en Lizy en Marthy en Berthena en Andy en Sidney en Jinny en Billy en Sally en Minty, dats nine single ones; en den dar’s de twins, Ad’naram en Eb’nezer—leben in all. Yo’ see dat's quite a consid’able few, sah.”— Youth's Companion. Co It has permanently cured THOUSANDS of cases pronounced by doctors hope- less. If you have premonitory symp- toms, such as Cough, Difficulty of Breathing, &c., don’t delay, but use PISO’S CURE ror CONSUMPTION immediately. By Druggists. 25 cents. i | | | i said in Washington that j Hadje Hassein Ghooly Khan will |returnto this country in October. |He will receive a lively welcome from funny men. Consumption Cured. An old physician, retired trom pratice having liad placed in his hands by an Kast India missionary the tormula ot a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure oat Consumption, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and al! throat and lung affections, also a positive and radical cure for Nervous Debility and all Neryous complaints, after having tested its wondertul curative powers in thousands of cases, has telt it his duty to make it Known to his suffering fellow. Actuated by this motive and a destre to relieve human suffering. I will send free ot charge, to all wno desire it, this re- ceipt, in Germac, French or English, with tull directions for preparing and using. Sent by mail by addresing with stamp, naming this paper. W. A. Noyes, 149 Power’s Block, Rocheste N. Y. Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, County of Bates. In the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, in vacation. The state of Misseuri at the re- lation and to the use of Oscar Reeder, ex-of- ficio collector of the revenue of Bates county in the state of Missouri, plaintiff, vs. Robert Morton, defendant Civil action for delinquent taxes. Now at this 20th day of July, 1889, comes the plaintiff herein by her attorneys, before the undersigned clerk of the circuit clerk of Bates county in the state of M ari, in vacation and files her petition, stating among other things that jbove pamed defendant. Rob- non-resident of the state of . ‘Whereupon it is ordered by the said clerk in vacation, that said defendant be notified by publication that plaintiff has com- menced a suit against him in this court by petition the object and general nature of which is to enforce a lien of the state of Missouri for the delinquent taxes of the year 1887, amounting in the an xregate to the sum of S32 59-100, together with interest, costs com mission and fees, upon the following described tracts of land situated in Bates county, Mis- souri, to-wit: I 42-100 acres being the northwest quarter of section four (4) township thirty-eight (5s) range thirty-three (33), and that unless the said defendant be and appear at the next term of this court, to be begun and holden in the city of Butler, Bates county issouri, on the first Mond: in November, , and on or before the sixth day thereof (if the term shallso long continue, and if not then before the end of the term,}) and plead to said petition according to law, the same will be taken as confessed and judgment rendered according to the prayer of said petition, and above described real estate sold to satisfy same And it is further ordered by the clerk afore- said thata copy hereof be published in the BorLer Wrerky Times, a weekly newspaper printed and published in Butler, Batescounty, , for four weeks successively, the last o be at least four weeks before the the next term of said court. A rom the record. Witness my hand clerk aforesaid with the seal of purt hereunto attixed in Butler on this the 2 JOHN C. HAYES, Cireuit Clerk. Att'y for Plaintiff. Done at day of July, W. W. Graves, Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURL, } .. County of Bates ea . Missouri, at the col- y inthe . The unknown defendants. * t taxes . comes the » the of Bates use of O} e of Bate reigned f county in the state of Missouri, in vacation and files her petition, stating among other things The un- are non- Whereupon thatthe above named defendants, known heirs of Joseph H. Parrott, residents of the state of Missouri. it is ordered by the said clerk in vacation, that said defendants be notified by publication that plaintif has commenced a suit against them in this court by petition. the obj and general natue of which isto enforce the lien of the state of Missouri for the delinquent taxes of the years IS85 and Jss6, amounting in the ag- gregate to the sum Of $4 interest, costs, commissi 1€ following de ibed tracts of land sitnated in Bates count lissouri, to-wit: 49 acres, lot f on three (3) in township thirty- range thirty-two (32)and that unless the s: defendants beand appear at the next term of this court, tobe begun and holden in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, on the first Monday in November, ts, and on or before the sixth day thereof (ifthe term shall so long continue, if not before the end of the term), and plead to said petition according to law, the same will be taken as confessed and judgment rendered according to the pace of said petition, and the above described real es- tate sold to satisfy the same. And it is farther ordered by the clerk afore- saidthata copy hereof be published in the ButLer WEEKLY TiMEs, a moe newspaper rinted and published in Butler, Bates county, Missouri, fdr four weeks successively, the last insertion to be at least four weeks before the first day of the next term of said court. A true copy fromthe record. Witness my hand as clerk aforesaid with the seal of said |seaL] court hereunto affixed. Done at of- fice in Butler on, this the 20th day of July, 1889. JOHN C, HAYES, 38 Cireuit Clerk. W. W. Graves, Att’y for plaintiff. . upon Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, ¢ 4. County of Bates. s < In the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, in vacation The state of Missouri at the re- lation and to the use of Oscar Reeder, col- lector of the revenue of Bates county in the state of Missouri, plaintiff, vs. C, W. Bra- shear, S. H. Farrer, S. W. Peach and F, K Mountcastle, defendants. Civil action for delinquent taxes. Now at this 23rd day of July, 18s9, comes the plaintiff herein by her attorneys, before the undersigned clerk of the circuit court of Bates county in the state of Missouri, in vacation and tiles her petition, stating among other things that the above named defendant, F. K. Mount- castle, is a non-resident of the state of Mis- souri. Whereupon it is ordered by the said clerk in vacation, that said defendant be noti- fied by bublication that plaintiff has commenc- ed a suit against him in this eourt by tition the object and general nature of which is to en- force the lien of the state of Missouri for the delinquent taxes of the years 1386 and 1887, amounting in the te tothe sum of $17 46-100, together with interest, costs. com— mission and fees, upon the following described tracts ofland situatec in Bates county, Mis- souri, to-wit: 4@acresthe northwest quarter of the northeast quarter and 40 acres the south- east quarter of the northeast suerenr and 40 acres the southwest quarter of the northeast uarter and 30 acres the south three-fourths of the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter, all in section nine (9) in township thirty-nine (29)0f range thirty-two (32),and that unless the said defendant be and appear at the next term of this court, to be begun and_ holden in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, on the first Monday in November, 1889, and on or be- fore the sixth day thereof (if the term shail so g continue, and ifnotthen before the end of the term), and plead to said petition accord- ing to law, the same will be taken as confessed and judgment rendered according to the prayer of said petition, andthe above described real estate sold to satisfy the same. ‘And it is farther ordered by the clerk afore- said that a copy hereof be published in the Butter WEEKLY Times, a weekly newspaper printed and published im Butler, Bates coun Missouri, for four weeks successively, the 1 insertion to be at least four weeks fore the firat day ofthe next term of said court. A trae copy from the record. Witness my band “aeclerk aforesaid with the seal of ssid court hereunto afixed Done at office in Butleron this the 2ird day July. Iss. JOHN C. HAYES. ete Circuit Clerk. W. W. Graves, Att’y for plaintif. SEAL! t north side Barber Shop, I hope to | SJACOBS oll FOR RHEUMATISM. $20,000 LOST. COL. D. J. WILLIAMSON, Ex-U. S. Consul at Callao, Pers, whose fac-simile signature from his testimonial is here shown, states: Mrs. R. C. Love of Brooklyn won the gold medal as best mer at Asbury Park. the the STOP AND READ J. R. Patterson having purchased the re- tain all tormer customers and a tair share of the public generally. Special attention given to Ladies an childrens hair cutting, and also, Pompadour hair cutting a specialty. Barber always on hand. supp McElree’s Wine of Cardui and THEDFORD'S BLACK-DRAUGHT are for sale by the following merchants in “Twas a help- Bates County. Elliot Pyle Bailer, less cripple for Wood & Gilmore “Adrian M, Otto Smith e years from rheuma- = b eee ws ; - . cher se Bio Crawtort Altona tism, speat $20,000 y. W. Morlan & Co. ard W,SiMudd eco, Bunlette in vala, then used St. J. essenger ‘oO ame JW. Choate Jacobs Oil, and itcared Johnstown, 8-ly Sold by Druggists and Deal- evs Everywhere. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., BALTIMORE, MD. I CURE. FITS! When I say Cure I do not mean merely to stop them for 9 time, and then have them re- turn again. I MEAN A RADICAL CURE. 1 have made the disease of FITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS, A life-long study. I WARRANT my remedy to CURE the worst cases. Because others have failed is no reason for not now receiving acure. Send at once for a treatise and a FREE BOTTLE of my INFALLIBLE REMEDY. Give Express and Post Office, It costs you nothing for a trial, and it will cure you.” Address #.G. ROOT, M.C., 183 Peant Sr., Hew You Order of Publication. STATE OF wt ss. County of Bates d In the circuit court of Bates county Missouri, in vacation. The atate of Missouri at the re- lation and to the use of Oscar Reeder, ex-of- ficio collector of the revenue of Bates county in the state of Missouri. plaintiff, vs The Exchange Bank of Macon, Georgia, defend- ant. : Civil action for delingent taxes. Now at this 20th day of July, 1889, comes the plaintiff herein by her attorneys, before the undersigned clerk of the circuit court of Bates county in the state of Missouri, in vaca- tion and files her petition, stating among other things that the sbove named de- fendant, The Exchange bank of Macon, Georgia, is a non-resident of the state of Missouri Whereupon it is or- dered by the said clerk in vacation, that said defendant be notified by publication that plain- tiff has commenced a suit against it in this court by petition. the object and general na- ture of which is to enforce the lien of the state of Missouri for the delinquent taxes of the year 386, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $4 98-100, together with interest, costs, com- mission and fees, the following described tract of land situated in Bates county, Missou- ri, to-wit The northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section two (2)in township thirty-eight (3s) range thirty-three (33) and that unless the said defendant be and appear at the next term of this court, to be begun and holden in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri. on the fi Monday in November, | and on or before the sixth day thereof, (if the term shall so long continue, and if not then before the end of the term) ,and plead to said petition ac- cording to law, the same will be taken as con- fessed, and judgment rendered according the prayer of said petition, and the above de- scribed real estate sold to satisfy the same And it is farther ordered, by the clerk afore- said that a copy hereof be published the Bur- WEEKLY Times, a apis: news) ri, for four wee insertion to be ati first day of the next term of from the record. Witness my erk aforesaid with the seal of into affixed. Done at in Butler, on, this the 20th day y,. the ks before the said court entific and t popular sel wl specimen trial, & way, N.Y, tor JOUN ©. HAYES, “ it Cirenit Clerk. . Graves, Att’y for plaintii. aniernre © pr ROWITECTS & LU Edition cf Scier A gre : Mthograpt cea or und tall pi 1 such as contemplate Bects.acopy. M Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURT, ¢ . County of Bates. Bes In the circuit court of Bates county, Missonri, i cation ‘The state of Missouri at the re- nandtothe use of Oscar Reeder, ex- © collector of the revenue of Bates coun- the state of Missouri, plaintiff. vs Sheperd B. Philpot and Susan Penn, defend- ants. Civil action for delinquent taxes. Now at thi iday of July, ISs8, comes the plaintiff herein by her attorneys, ‘before the -d clerk of the cirenit court of Bates the state of Missouri, in vacation i tiles her petition, stating among other things that the above named defendants erd 5. Philpot and Susan Penn, are no! dents of the state of Missouri Whereupon it ordered by the said clerk in vacation, that said s be notified by publication that commenced a suit against them in this court by the object and general nature of which i force the lien of the of Missouri for the delinquent taxes of ears Iss# and Iss6, amounting in the ag- ‘ate to the sum of $5 61-100, together with commission and fees, upon the following described tracts of land sitaated in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: The east half of lot eleven (11) of section five in township thirty-nine (39) of range thirty-two (32), and that unless the said defendants be and appear at the next term of this court. to be begun and holden in the city of Butler, Bates county Mis- souri, on the first Monday in November, Is, and on or before the sixth day thereof (if the term shallso long continue, and if not then before the end of the term), and plead to said petition according to law, the same will be tak- en as confessed and judgment rendered accord- ing to the prayer of said petition, and the above described real estate soldto satisfy the same. And it is farther ordered by the clerk atore- said that acopy hereof be published in the Butler Weekly Times, a weekly newspaper es and published in Butler, Bates county Missouri, for four weeks successively, the last insertion to be at least four weeks before the first day of the next term ofsaidcourt. A true copy from the record. Witness my hand as clerk aforesaid withthe seal of said court hereunto affixed. Done at office ere grberienog and & wade OFED Me © applications for American and ton 20 patents. Send for Handbook. Currosin ude ence strictly contidential. TRADE MARKS. In case your mark is not registered in th ent Office, apply to MUNN Ce. and immediate protection. Send for Hanabook. COPYRIGHTS for books. charts, maps, etc. quickiy procured. Address MUNN & CO., Patent Solicitors, GENERAL OFFice: 961 Broapway, NX. ¥ THE POPULAR ROUTE —TO— {seat} in Butler on this the 23rd day of ae July, 1869. JOHN © HAYES, TEXAS, MEXICO & CALIFORNIA 35 Cirenit Clerk.. : W. W. Graves, Att’y for plaintiff. SEDALIA, HANNIBAL, q ST- LOUIS : AND THE NORTH AND EAST. © Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, } .. County of Bates. § In the cireui: court of Bates county, Missouri, in vacation. The state of Missouri at the re- lation and to the use of Oscar Reeder ex- officio collector of the revenne of Bates coun- ty in the state of Missouri, plaintiff, ve. John . Pitman, defendant. Civil action for delinguent taxes. Now at this 20th day of July, 1x89 comes the plaintiff herein by her attorneys, before the undersigned clerk of the circait court of Bates county in the state of Missouri, in vacation and files her petition, stating among other things that the above named defendant, John B. Pit- man is 8 non-resident of the state of Missouri. Whereupon it is ordered by the said clerk in vacation, that said defendant be notified by publication that plaintiff has commenced 8 suit against him in this court by petition, the object and general nature of which is toenforce the lien of the state of Missouri for the delin- quent taxes of the year 187, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of 87 92-100 together with interest. costs, commission and fees, upon the following described tracts of land situated in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: 60 acres the north half of the southwest quar- ter of the northwest quarter and the northwest quarter of the northwest “vies? of section twenty-two (22) township thirty-eight (35) of range thirty-three (33), and that unless the said defendant be and appear at the next term ofthis court. tobe begun and holden in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missour:, on the first Monday in November, 189, and cn or be- fore the sixth day thereof (ifthe term shall so long continue, and if not then before the end of the term,) and plead to said petition accord- ing to law, the same will be taken as confessed and judgment rendered according to the prayer of said petition, and the above described real estate sold to satisfy the same. ‘And it is farther ordered by the clerk afore- said that a copy hereof be published in the Butter Weexcy Tings, weekly newspaper rinted and published in Butler, Bates county | issouri, for four weeks successively, the last insertion to be at least four weeks before the | first day of the next term of said court. A true copy form the record. Witness my hand as clerk aforesaid with the szaL} sealofsaid court hereunto affixed Done at office in Butler on. this the 2th day of Jaly, i= JOUN C. HAY DOUBLE DAILY TRAIN | SERVICE OF Hanpsome Day Coacues, » —And— : PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPING CARS, ST. LOUIS, SEDALIA, AND KANSAS CITY TO TEXAS POINTS, : With direct connection for Califor- | nia and Mexico 4 ELEGANT FREE RECLIN- ING CHAIR CARS ON ALL TRAINS —Between— SEDALIA A N D HANNIBAL —Andon Night Trains— FORT SCOTT TO SAINT LOUIS,” Making Direct Connection in Union Depot's with Express Trains In All Directions. For Tickets and Further Informa- tion, Cali on or Address, Nea (MO. KAN. TEXAS), Ticket Geo. A. Eddy and H.C. Cross, R J. WALDO, GASTON MESLEB Gen, Traf. Man. Gen. Pas. & T’k. Sedalia, Missouri. W. W. Graves, Att’y for plaintit.

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