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® heumatism and Neuralgia Cured in Two Days. [he Indiana Chemica! Co. have di ered a compound which acts with truly marvelous rapidity in the cure of Rheu- matism and Neuralgia. We guarantee it to cure any and every case of acute inflammatory Rheumatism and Neuralgia in 2 DAYS, and to give immediate reliet n chronic case ettect a speedy cure. On receipt of 30 cents, in two cent stamps, we will send to any address the rescription for this wonderful compound which can be filled by your home druggist atsmall cost- We tuke this means of iving our discovery to the public instead Ov of putting it out as a patent medicine, it } being much less expensive. We will gladly retund money if satistaction is not iven. THE INDIANA CuxmIcaL Co , yO-1yr Crawtordsvilie Ind re Sold by CALIFORNIA. LAND OF on TE > OAT PTO RTHAN GO ke. A (Core 3 Sa THROAT! ey ONES een Guy Send for circular] per bottle 3 for 9 & | AGIETINE MED! co.oROVILLE, CAL.) ‘Gua FR CIRCULAR ABIETINE MED!C matertally att WOODIWVAR POLL! Session open: Course in all departments. 14 Exp tet Teachers. Finest Music ur jealthful Location. Beauti: 1 ome-like ro: ‘TAE BESTWHITE SOAP MADEN-AMERICA . if MAIL, g z | lAs-SKiRK 8 -&-CO- = 3 ~ 2 8 é eee : WRAPPERS Sinanee = 4 | kno ian nations of the .000 a year for Sandwich ise said to have a Christian con- of 4.590 mem —On the diffusion of education among the peop’ tion and perpet utions. —Father O Con: converted priest. is ssid to have led $00 Catholics into Protes-cntism in five years in New York City. —lIn the city of Omaha, Neb., there 5s th the Endeavor, and the number is constant- ly growing. one-tenth of the childrea in the Empire attend sshool. ; A new Hiinois law provides that no rson who can not read and write the languageshall be eligible for the office of school-director. —The American Baptist Education Society is now an incorporated bedy gunder the laws of the State of New ‘er. The charter was drawn by Dr. L. Morehouse and Secretary Gates —The Buddhists have established.a nlesignary! magazine in Kyoto. It te por English, and its object is to -r¢60mmend Buddhism to all the world for adeption in the place of Christianity. | —Itis calculated that out of 8,000,000 leonverts in all the foreign mission ds, 30,000 have gone as missionaries, | béing one Out of every hundred, while | Protestant Christendom has sent forth | but one out of every 590. | —Religious jealousy in India between i Hindoos and Mohammedans Is said to | be fit toinvolve the entire country in | war the moment the British authority ; should be withdrawn. Lately a Mus- | sulman procession to celebrate a con- | Vert was attacked with great fury, and j some fatalitios was the result. ; —In regard to popular education in | France statistics show that the compe- ‘tition between municipal or secular ‘and Catholic or monastic schoois has | had the effect of sensibly increasing the | aggregate attendance. In 1882 there | were 5,341,600 children at the elemen- , tary schools. In 1887 there were 5,526,- 000. The private lay schools, however, , have 43,000 pupils less than in 1882, while the private Catholic schools have | 143,000 pupils more. | ~-According to recent statistics there are in Cuba 720 public and 587 private | schools, with an average attendance of The an- nual cost of maintaining the public schools is $560,226, which amount is furnished by the 135 municipalities on | the island. The proportion of schools to inhabitants is one to every 1,205, and ;one child attends school for every | thirty-cight int ants. | 40,352 children of both sexes. | | i | | See WIT AND wiSDOM. —Were every one to sweep before his | own house, every street would be clean. Man, with all his wisdom, never ws who is his best friend as well as a baby. | He who puts a bad construction on a good act, reveals his owr wickedness of heart. —The multitude is like either the sea—it bears you up or swallows you, to the a. the govern the ty the man of eliigence must direct the man of la- int bo: dle r ofa to make a silk wine. Takea to a mansion and he will, still be ahog. —N. O. Picayune. —Ifaman does not make new ac- advances in life, he If alone. A man should keep his friendship in constant repair. —Johnson. —Implicit trust in the ultimate in- tegrity of human nature is all very well in a prayer-meeting, but it won't work for a cent in an ordinary grocery store. Somerville Journal. —The man who lives mainly within the limits of his physical senses cer- tainly lives on a small scale, and at a low level, as compared with his possi- bilities. —N. Y. Independent. —Our service in life should not be constrained, yet it is necessary some- times that we compel ourselves to do ourduty. When the flesh is weak, the spirit must drive it to its place and performances. —United Presbyterian. —Great talents for . conversation should be attended with great polite- ness He who eclipses others owes them great civilities; and whatever a mistaken vanity may tell us, it is bet- ter to please in conversation than to shine in it —Swift —Cato, being scurrilously treated by 8 low and vicious fellow, quietly said to him: ‘A contest between us is very unequal, for thou canst bear ill lan- guage with ease, and return it with pleasure; and to me it is unusual to heart and disagreeable to speak it.” —One of thesecrets of successful liv- ing isthe steadiness of aim and the resolution of will by which one bends circumstances or events to the working out of his own purpose; the other great secret of life is hearty, intelligent, and complete sybmussion to its conditions and to all that it brings. —Rural New Yorker. —Doctor,” said the patient, “I be- lieve there is something wrong with are over twenty Societies of Christian | —The latest educational report is-| sued in Russia shows that only about | | OF GENERAL INTEREST. —In Bangor, Me., Says an exchange, the electric lights resemble sunlight so closely that the people carry para- sols at night. —Three boys of Jackson, Mich., re- cently saved a girl from drowning, and the grateful father gave them five cents, telling them to divide it be- tween them. —“You are a domestic servant?” asked a lawyer of a female witness in ; a Liverpool (Eng.) court the other | day. ‘No, sir,” she indignantly re- plied. ‘I ama house maid.” —Of the street accidents in Chicago caused by reckless driving, the ice wagons are responsible for the greater share, while the butcher cart plays second to even the baker wagons. —Bowie knives are being manufact- ured as plentifully as ever, but they are altogether for show. There is no record of one being used for years. The sight of one keeps the other fel- \ low off. —The fastest regular express train in the United States runs between Philadelphia and Washington. They Maintain an average speed of forty- five miles an hour during the entire distance. —Cairo has a grocer named Tyler, and the first question he asks a would- be purchaser is: ‘Do you snore?” If the fact is admitted that ends the mat- ter right then and there—no purchase can be made. He has taken a vow not to sell even a strawberry to aman who snores. —There are said to be fifty different kinds of cycles manufactured for the use of women. The most popular kind is a safety machine with 30-inch wheels and a goose-necked backbone to allow room for the flowing skirt of} the ladies. —An alligator and an English spar- row engaged in a battle near Darien, | Ga., the other day. The ‘gator pro-! voked the fight by snapping at the bird, which in turn flew furiously at| its ugly antagonist, aiming with pre- cision at the saurian’s eyes. The ‘gator finally gave up the contest and took to the river. —When the Seminole Indians, of Florida, elect a chief, they choose the biggest fighter and most successful hunter of the tribe. If there happens to be a tie between two candidates, their method of deciding it is to have! each candidate place a live coal on his wrist. The one who flinehes first loses the office. —The Egyptians have always been| recognized for their ability in the man- ufacture of perfumes, but due credit was never given them before a vase containing some Egyptian ointment was opened at the museum at Alnwick. The perfume it contained still had a pungent odor, it was more] than three thousand years old. —There is a whistling well in Logan County, K which warns people of approaching ste ‘om six to twelve hours in advance. It 35 feet deep and sends out a strong current of air, although is which, as it escapes through the apertures about the punfp, whistles in a loud, flute-like tone that is dis- tinctiy audible to every person in the township. —The total production of coal in the world during the year 1888 is put by a high authority at 450,000,000 tons, of which the United States produced 130,000,000. Of the home product Pennsylvania is credited with 71,000,- 00C0, or more than one-half. Little coal is exported from the United States except to Canada, which took from us last year 3,250,000 tons. men doing the grading on a railroad near Atlanta, Ga., witnessed the sight the other day of a snake feeding its offspring. The baby snakes were secure in the roots of an old tree, and the mother, which caught flies by springing at them, would, when pos- sessed of a fly, rapidly glide to the young snakes, which came pell-mell, helter-skelter to meether. She caught a fly a minute, and was watched se- curing them for over two hours. —There are some queer instances of transliteration of names in the Prov- ince of Quebec. A suburb of the old city of Quebee was originally named Shepherdville, after an English resi- dent of the name of Shepherd. The French translated this into Berger- ville, which the English soon corrupt- ed into Beggarvile. Hope Cape was turned by the French into Cap d’Es- poir, which the English then trans- lated into Cape Despair. Point of Cliffs first became Pointe des Monts, and was then Anglicized, first inte Demon's Point and then into Devil’s Point. Reindeer Lake became Laca la Renne, which was soon corrupted by the English into Rainy Lake, and then, strange to say, was corrupted by the French into Lac a la Pluie. —_—_—_+seo——— A Mine of Valuable Wood. Forty miles above New Orleans is the old bed of the Bonnet Carre crevasse. Fifteen years ago the Father of Waters burst his bonds and swept through there to Lake Pontchartrain. Five years ago the State of Louisiana, with the assistance of the Mississippi Valley railroad, rebuilt the Bonnet Carre levee, but it could not restore altogether the conditions prevail- ing antecedent to the crevasse. The river in the ten years it passed HOW FLIES MULTIPLY. ian, it seems that the about our ancestry is 4 er all side remark. To the point in which the fly figures. Mr. Wallace points out some facts, or a great many, rather, to show there is a continual | Competition, struggle and war going not s | acting over the whole field of nature, and no single species of plant or ani- mal can escape from it. Says Mr. Wallace: -‘This results from the fact of the rapid increase, in a geometrical ratio, of all the species of animals and | plants. In the lower orders this in- | crease is especially rapid. a single | flesh fly producing 20,000 larvz, and ; these growing so quickly that they the great Swedish naturalist, Lin- nh2us, flys as quickly as by a lion. these larve remains in the pupa state about five or six days, so that each parent fly may be increased ten thou- sand fold in abouta fortnight Sup posing they went on increasing at this rate during only three months of summer, there would result one hundred millions of millions of millions for each fly at the commence- ment of summer—a number greater probably than exists at any one time in the whole world. And this is only one species, while there are thousands of other species increasing also at an enormous rate; so that, if they were unchecked, the whole atmosphere would be dense with flies, and all ani- mal food and much of animal life would be destroyed by them. To prevent this tremendous increase there must be in- cessant war against these insects, by insectivorous birds and reptiles, as well as by other insects, in the larva as well as in the perfect state, by the action of the elements in the form of rain, hail or drought, and by other unknown cau yet we see nothing of this ever-present war, though by its means alone, perhaps, we are saved from famine and pestilence.” So you see the fly, like every thing else, when made the subject of scien- tific study a very interesting little nuisance. He has to fight the whole world, and the world comes very nearly being beaten sometimes. I think it is nip and tuck now, with the in fly a trifle advance. Is not the whole matter strange? Without a fly we might have pestilence and with too much fly, and let alone, we would have famine. Eat or be eaten is the law of nature, and somehow we just eat enough not to let any thing get an advantage.—Chiéago Journal. ——_~o+—__ SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. The Progress of Electrical Invention— Laba aving Devices. An expeditious way to lower the temperature of a small vessel of we is to drop into ita few crushed ¢ tals of nitrate of ammonia. The crystals will reduce the heat about fifty degrees. From exp nts made in Rich- mond, Vz., electric heaters, it seems probable that a passenger coach can be kept warm at an expense of two cents an hour, the current being supplied by adynamo on the locomo- tive or tender. Inventor Edison is at work on a “far-sight” machine which he hopes to have perfected in time for the world’s fair in 1892 By its aid the inventor says it will be possible fora man in New York to see the features of a friend in Boston. Recent experiments at the Royal Polytechnic school at Munich show that the strength of camel-hair belt- ing reaches 6,315 pounds per square inch, while that of ordinary belting ranges between 2,230 and 5,260 pounds per square inch. The camel-hair belt is unaffected by acids. A natural bed of substance resem- bling shoe-blacking is reported in Rush Valley, Utah. Analysis shows that it contains 16 per cent. carbon, 34 percent. aluminium, and 50 per cent. clay. When properly applied to leather it produces a fine polish that is not easily destroyed. Builders are now making doors of two thick paper boards molded into panels, glazed together with glue and potash, and put through a heavy roll- ing process. Covered with a water- proof coating, they are hung like wooden doors, and are both beautiful and serviceable. They possess the additional recommendation of being comparatively noiseless. French stee!-makers are manufact- uring steel containing a variable por- tion of copper, two to four per cent., which is capable of far greater resist- ing power and is more elastic and malleable than simple steel This alloy is to be used in making artillery of large caliber, armor plates, rifle barrels, and projectiles. It will also probably be valuable for making gird- ers for building purposes and ship plates. The relative hardness of woods is calculated by the hickory, which is the toughest. Estimating that at 100, with we get for pignut hickory 86, white oak 84, white ash 77, dogwood 74, This is a On in nature. This struggle is ever reach their full size in five days; hence asserted that a dead horse |? would be devoured by three of these Each of | 54' Tu: ALWOK of the A former inmate Med Asylum } Mo., wit Findlay. O., decides that the Standard Oil Co cannot ¢ of the surface Sheriff's Sale. ; By virtue and authority of two special exe- cations issued from the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri | Feturnable at the November term, 1889, of said court, to me directed one in favor of BW | Oneal and against L S. Henderson and one in |favorof Andrew Fr mn and against LS | Henderson, I have levied and seized upon ail i right, title, interest and claim of said defend- | ant, L. 'S. Henderson, to the following | described real — pine situated in Bates — F ‘ ng at @ point 25) feet north of the | southeast corner of the north half ef the north- | east quarter of section th (30), township forty-one (41), range twen nine (29), ron- | ning thence west 245 feet, thence north 165 feet | thence east 245 feet thence south 16 feet to the | place of beginning. containing one acre more | or less, in Bates county, Mi ri, Ll will, on | 1 Friday, November 15th, 1889, between the hours of ninee’clock in the fore- | noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that the east front door of the court house in city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, sell the same, or so much thereof as may be aired, at public vendue to the highest bid- derfor cash to satis: id executions and coats. GEO. G. GLAZEBROOK, 45-4¢ Sheriff of Bates County. Sheriff's Sale. By virtue and suthority of a 5; execu- tion issued from the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, re- turnable at the November term, 1889, of sald court, to me directed im favor of E. A. Ben- nett and against D. C. Barrett. I ‘e levied title, interest and claim of the t, D. C. Barrett of, in and to the following described real estate being situated in Batea county, Missouri, to- wit: The south half of the southwest quarter ot section three and north If of northwest quarter of section ten and southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section four, and north half of the northeast quarter of section nine, and northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section nine, and southwest qu: ter of the northerst quarter of section nine, all in township forty-one, range thirty-three in Bates county, Missouri, I will, on Friday, November 15th, 1889, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that day. at the east front door of the court house in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, sell the same, or so much thereof as may required, at public vend ber for cash to satis: fi GE ‘NOSfIs¥Y "H 40q089 1 SMOTJOJ SB BJOIM put ‘AJaINDe Pasapins ‘aA arg 1 asmMEUsIS BsoYym ‘OBEY. JO JOABIA 97L]{ 941, ay mKAOA S40(SOCT PUBS He TInAG7 hy PIOK “PM ‘Qs0mNIIVg ‘ANVANOD YIT390A “V SITUVHD SHL sobeajyg go s0key Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, as County of Bates. $3 In the circuit coutt of sald county, in vacae tion, 12th day of September, 5 5 Long, plaintify, vs. Daniel W. Long, defend- ant. Now at this day comes the plaintiff herein : Francisco be her ai pormerss & }» before undersigned clerk of the circuit court of Bates county in the state of Missouri, in vecation and files her petition and affidavit, all among other things that defendant, Daniel W. Long. has absconded and absented ‘himself from usual place of abod. this state so that the ordinary process of law cannot be served on him. hereupon it is ordered by the clerk in vacation, that said defendant be notified by publication that plaintiff has commenced @ suit against him in this court by petition end affidavit the object and genersl nature of which isto obtain a decree of divorce from the bonds of matrimony heretofore entered into and con- tracted by and between plaintiff and defend- ant and for the care, custody and trol of itoy Long, the infant child born of said mar- ri upon the following grounds, to-wit: t defendant has absented himself from -| plaintiff without a reasonable cause for the space of one year and been guilty of such conduct as to constitute him a vagrant within the meaning of the law respecting vagrants. and that unless the said Daniel W. Long, be and appear at this court, at the next term thereof, to be begun and holden at the court house in city of Butler, in said county, on the fourth day of November next, and on or be- an, retired trom pratice ylaced in his hands by an he sixth day of said term, if the term ionary vula ota long continue—and if not, then on or simple vegetable remed the speedy ay. Of Asie tore See jon in said cause, the same 4 3 ae | 1 : and permanent cure of Consumption, | will be teken as confessed and judgment will Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and be rendered sccordiagly a i “ throat and lung affections, also a pos Acad be it further ordered that s copy pene : a S h pad accordi: law, in the Berrien and radical cure for Nervous Debility Utica ct isis Timks, a weekly newspaper printed in Bates coun Missouri, for i the last insertion to fore the first day of it court and all Neryous complaints, atter having tested its wondertul curative in thousands of cases, has to make it Known to his Actuated by this motive relieve human sufferi ot charge, to all who d ceipt, i with powers this duty be at least four week: the next term of cire JOHN C. HA from the A true co} record EAL of Septembe Frencis Notice of Resignation. STATE OF MISSOURL, ¢ County of Bates (es fo the November term of the probate court. ins) Inthe matierof the estate of James Beattie and Mary Beattie, miners. notice that ratrix the estate of Mary Beattie, minors, Tm next of said court atthe court house in the city of But- leounty of Bates, on the Hib day of T, Ins, apply to said court for leave zu the office and trast of curatmix of I minors. Dated the 0th day of September, Iss), t exe- “rk of the her ROSELLA J. x BEATTIE, Witness mark 43 W.S. Mepp, Bridge Letting. In pursuance to an order made by the coun ty its August adjourned term, and to 1 for the letting of the contract for Iding of a bridge over Mound branch Curatrix, ition to the town, now city, of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, Iwill, on Thursday, November 14, 1889, betwe Monat | we dire . | the day, at the cast d : <¢| on or near section line en section 35 Paipees sasoun's | 34 in township 40 ra he bridge to be requires highest bid- itchell Steel V ple pattern, accord- won file at the county H reel to let the contract above work at public vendne to the and best bidder, at the east front door court house in the city or Batler, on Weduesday, October 16, 1889, der for cast 43-4 Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is here! en to all creditors and | potween the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- others interestedin the estate of Addison Price] joon and tive o’clock in the afternoon of that deceased, that ] Wm. M Daiton, administra-} gay Ali bids subject tothe approval of the tor of said estate, intend to make final settle- | Gonty court 3 Dp. HAGGARD, ment thereof. at the next term of Bates county retry Bridge Com. probate eourt, in Bates county, state of Mis- ees souri, to beheld at Butleron the llth day of November, 1889. WM.M. DALTON, 43 Administrator. Notice of Fin Notice is hereby given, tha AB. Owen and James Owe of the estate of Creighton . will make final settlement of his accounts with said estate and such administrators, at the next term of the probate court of Bates county, Miesonri, to be holden at Butler, Mo., county, on the Ith dey of November, A B_ OWENS, JAMES OWENS, 44-48 ‘Administrators. HINDERCORNS. DIALS ST ETD AZS NSUMPTIV | Brmeeae eon ome ies | Sioen Setechive Bairitions “Takei tine,’ bee. and @L9 ANTED At Once--Every where.. sad Pouresvouas. Profitable Dasinam, LIBERAL Pay. All time not necesssry. Special inducement offered until December 2th. Givereferences. RB, H. WOODARD & CO., Baltimore, Md. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses = beautifies the hair. Dandruff and hair falling! $1.0 at Drogyists. HIMRops CURE f" KSTHMA Catarrh, Hay Fever, Diphtheria, Whooping Cough, Croup and Common Colds. Cee eres, GTi Bead for Free Sample. HIMEOD MANUF’G CO., SOLE PROPRIETORS, 191 FULTON ST., NEW YORK. oO in Jenther, fall Bound Price, only one dollar, by scaled in plan wrapper, postpaid. CONFIDENTIAL. Hzsar Do Most, M.D., Nor iat Columbus Avense, me sources, si. ie SIOLOCY EF csbestaiely completo i 7 This isthe ot TRO-MEDI through the swamp piled up the sands | scrub oak 73, white hazel 72, apple i ‘This is the only ELEC “mans against the big cypress forests there. | tree 70, red oak 69, white beech 65, | mares It has left behind a buried forest. The | black walnut 65, black birch 62, yel-; ever ‘as it reaches the very roote and vitels of Gissans- DOSITIVE my stomach.” “Not a bit of it,” re- plied the dector, promptly. ‘God made your stomach and He knows how NDS y i k 60, white elm é i Ithas tly cured SAD - u piled up sand has deadened nearly all| low and black oak 60, it of cases pronounces ne Sonties Hape to make them. There's something | the trees, and a shingle mill is now at | hard maple 56, red cedar 53, cherry | For = ee be ig hee less. If you have premonitory symp- | Wrong with the stuff you putin it, may- | work there manufacturing them into | 55, yellow pine 53, chestnut 52, yellow | 4 XIR OF LIFE AND THE foms, such as Cough, Difliculty of | be, andsomething wrong with the way shingles with all the rapidity with | poplar 51, butternut and w which that machine works.—N. Q,| 44. and white fTimes-Democrat. Breathing, &c., don’t delay, but use PISO’S CURE ror CONSUMPTION tely. By Drugyists. 25 cents € Es 5 j be te birch | SENCE OF MANHOOD, P27 eer 35. —Chicago } Molise intrmary Sso.551 Columbus Av., Boston, Mase. pine News. | “1 HEARD A YOICEs IT SAID, ‘(COME AND SEE.'” you stuff it in and tramp it down, but your stomach is all right.” \