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— —— . tism and Weurf!gia Cured in| MUTUAL CONFIDENCES. Two Days. | Bata Miss Malvina Trotter to her neighbor Mrs, A ; A | Potter, Indiana Chemical Co, have discov ‘Together sitting on the porch one pleasant gcompound which acts with truly summer day: “They quarreled with each other over one thing and another ‘Till her husband threw a cup of tea full in her face one day; lous rapidity in the cure ot Rheu-| “There’s quite a startling story about young le Mes. and Neuralgia. We guarantee it | Mrs. Corey— eure any and every case of acute} Don't that J repeated it—or that’s what nmatory Rheumatism and Neuralgia | People say. 0) Ca pays, and to give immediate reliet hronic cases and ettect aspeedy cure. receipt of 30 cents, in two cent) eats, we will send to any address the | escription for this wonderful comypoun eee ne eosin hich can be filled by your ome diegiet! Unsananfoara tose cise oon Ghee ve take th eans of! that’s what small cost. We take this me: people say.” wing our discovery to the public instead i tting it out as a patent medicine, it! ‘Do tell!" cried Mrs. Potter. “But I'm not ; much less expensive. We will} |, Surprised. Miss Trotter, diy refund money if satistaction is not | I Fo pephahs. thes. meren:taulte happy. Now pen. THe INpians Se ee ee | Fromme; but Deacon Draskitt stole a neigh- F10-1yr Crawtordsville ors bythe! basket, hegrd. “And his wife she is s0 cruel to that = ita Buel, ake Whom she took from out the orphan’s home! It actually occurred ‘That spe called her ‘lazy sinner,’ made her go Without her dinner, And whipped her, whipped dreadfully—or that's what I have beard.” “igh Malvina Trotter and her neighbor That liveleag summer afternoon with con- verse sweet beguiled, ‘Til no matter what their station not a shred of vopatetion ‘Was left in all that goodly town to woman, man or child. “Dear mo,” mused Mrs. Potter when Miss Mal- vina Trotter With many a lingering last “good-night” had homeward turned her way, | “It’s positively inhuman for any decent woman To be forever talking about ‘what people Say.’ CALIFORNIA. THE \ LAND OF DISCOVERIES 2CO Thought Miss Malvina Trotter as she left the house of Potter, “It’s sad how many dreadful things have in this town occurred; But worse than all together it puts in such high feather That zoasih, Mrs. Potter, to tell ‘what she has card.” —Mary C. Huntington, in N. Y. Independent. —_—— HOARDING IN EUROPE, from Circulation. J It has beon remarked generally that | thrifty people like the French, Swis:, | Belgians and Dutch hoard coin more |than the Scotch and English. The Irish were addicted to hoarding bank | Hotes, but the practice prevailed in for- ;mer years inore than now. In Italy | large quantities of gold and silver were | hoarded from 1862 to 1865, because pa- aa = uae | per money was then declared legal Hay ~<Brone t | tender, or forced on the country. In M THROAT, . INE 1881-3 the gold standard was establish- DISEASES ey Guarallet| | ea in Italy, and tho gold oOo = id Us je in Italy, and the go! necessary to UNGS Soid on Rs effect this change was drawn to a great end for circula $5] bee ttle r2 | extont from hoards. In France a great N Ept CO.OROVILLE G deal of hoarding has existed for a long time, especially among the peasantry, who are the most parsimonious in Europe. Many causes have contrib- uted to the creation of this habit, not the least being the insecurity arising from the unsettled forms of govern- }ment in France. Lately, however, these hoards have been extensively drawn on in connection with the pay- ment, at the close of the Franco-Ger- j man war, of the French indemnity of £30,000,000. Of this amount one-half | was paid out of French hoards. An | ex-Governor of the Bank of England, SANTA ABIE AND CAT-R-CURE|in his evidence before the Bimet- Sei ae Erbin x alism Commission, estimates the con- i 4 | tribution from hoards as equal to two- oe 3 ; Rice | thirds of the amount of the indemnity. RWIS Gum. fv swallow related how one of the leading French | bankers told him that atthe time of the | siege of Paris he left Paris to go and | look at his estate in the neighborhood. He went up to one of the peasants and told him that he had just come out to look after his affairs, and that he was very anxious to pay his people their wages, but that under the circumstances, he had no money. The peasant said: “If 40,000 francs (£1,600) are any good to you, I have got them in a stocking under my bed, and I will go and fetch them.” They were in gold coin. These hoards the French Government wisely attracted by offering inducements to the peasant classes in the way of prefer- ential allottment of the rents, or through premium on the price paid. Hoards are not common in Germany; but there is_a large war hoard lying at Julius- thurm, in Spundau, belonging to the ke A natu y ing the salive pro matertally aid dige WOODWARD, DIST. FAXON & CO, IBUTING 4¢ Kansas 0 rs, ooee: FEMALE OLLECE, Lexington, Mo. ‘Twenty-first Session opens Sept. 4th rough Course in all departments. 14 eth nd Com: STEAMinevery room, each floor. Health, morals, warded and looked after jome. Terma reasonal? A.A. JONES, pupile ‘hristian Ppiy to je ae THE BESTWHITE- SOAP MADE IN-AMERICA: AS-SKinn, -&-CO- § | Government, of 120,000,000 marks, of Gos < & | £6,000,000, which goes under the name © |of the German Empire War Treasure. 3 —Chambers’ Journal. Zz — &| The solubility of carbonic acid in CLoups water is of great importance in the -Fioanna-Soas. “ | chemistry of nature, for this acid, brought down from the atmosphere WRAPPERS, dissolved in rain is able to act chem- pmireeven 5 ically upon rocks, such as granite, which contains alkalies—the carbonic acid slowly disintegrating or crum- bling down the rock, an effect much assisted by the mechanical action of the expansion of freezing water in the interstices of the rock. It appears that soils are thus formed by the slow degredation of rocks, and when these soils are capable of supporting plants, the solution of carbonic acid is again af service, not only as a direct food, by providing the plant With carbon through its roots, but as a solvent for certain portions of the mineral food of the plant (such as phosphate of lime) which pure water could not dissolve, and which the plant can not take up except in the dissolved state.—Boston Globe. —————— —The New York post-office is the largest business establishment, affect- ing the greatest number of people under the Government of the United States. It delivers and collects every ber of letters, papers, ete., = numerous as the entire _ FOR i. ConsumptlO’ | oothes permanently cured Ea sousasD® | popula of the Union. It handles in cases pronounce iv ope- amas 5 7 lesa. Tf you have peemonitory SS each year over $85,000,000 in money- toms, such as Cough, Difficulty of | order business, while its own receipts Breathing, &c., don’t delay, but use | are PISO’S CURE ror CONSUMPTION | ;, iately. By Druggists. 25 cents | ov ue of the Government is $3,250,000. And sold it for u quarter—or that is what Pve | How Millions of Money Are Withdrawn | | In illustration of peasant hoarding he | _ ably offer a -‘chaw of terbaccer.” i FOR GUM CHEWERS. How the Sticky Stuff is Made in an Ind anapolis Factory. Down in the extreme southeastern part of the city is a chewing gum fac- tory. ‘ This enterprise is a growing in- dustry, adjusting itself to a growing habit in this community. It is as nate ural nowadays for a Hoosier, at least in the Hoosier capital, to ask for or of- | fer a piece of gum.as it wz d| And vowing she would grieve him she now de- | Pp Suln.as it was for an old- time Hoosier to request or companion- Every body chews. Doctors, yers, merchants, that picturesque ag- gregation, the city council, and the en- | tire base-ball nine. When the habit of chewing gum was confined to “gig- | gling” schoo! girls it was an object of | ridicule. When the: girls’ fathers be- | gan chewing they formulated ingenious excuses for it. Now every body chews and nothing is said. Any one bringing up the old-time objections is either ig- nored, laughed at or looked upon with interest as a relic of antiquity. This chewing gum factory is nota pretentious place. One would be like- ly to pass it by many times without knowing thata process of wide interest was going on inside. The interior is much like that of a confectioner's shop, and the working is the same. The proceedings start in a large kettle fitted into the top of a stove. Here the ‘‘chicie” is boiled. This is the gummy sap of a tropical tree, which is caught much as maple sap is taken from trees in the North It is dried by the sun into a brown lumpy sub- stance. This is the part of the gum that is most steadfast. It is what re- mains when all the attractive but fickle sweetnesses have departed. It is also the part which after an hour or two gives one’s jaws a blase feel- ing that is quite rebelious to the ur- gent demands of a hungry stomach. An ample amount of sugar and flavor- ing is added to this substance, and when cool it is kneaded and other- wise treated like bread. It is laid on one of those large smooth | stones common to ccnfectioners’ shops and printing offices. Here it is smoothed thin by a large polished iron roller, and made still smoother by a wide double- roller pr Over the large sheet is then rolled a rod on which circular knives are arranged at intervals equal to the length of the future stick of gum. These quickly long strips. The are passed | through another roller press, whose width is equal to their width. In one of the rollers are grooves at | regular intervals, which are fitted into law- | eut the gum into | the roller above. By these the strips are compressed at a distance equal to the width of : k of gum. It is thus easy to < the strips into sticks. This is done by young ladies, | who wrap them in small printed labels, | stretch a small band of rubber about | five of them, and ve the packages pl in boy neat s ho ne one hundred sticks each, such as are seen in the drug stores. e flavors of the gum are made—licorice, mint, pine-apple, winter-green and sarsaparilla. The industr. every other Indianapolis enterpr is thrifty. —Indianapolis News. ——— GOWNS FOR BUSY WOMEN. The Loose Blouse and Straight Skirt Seem to Be the Favorites. The business women of New York are actively discussing the style of dress best suited to self-supporting women. With competition in every } line daily growing keener they find that they can not afford to be ham- pered by their clothes. The woman who makes a success in any occupation is not the woman who is a bundle of nerves. An unyielding bodice which prevents full deep breathing, the high “dog” collar which is heating in sum- mer and which rasps the neck all the year round, the absence or inaccessi- bility of the pocket in which to carry the articles which business life re- quires are sources of annoyance and nervous irritation. It is not long since one of the largest working girls’ so- cieties of the city adopted the blouse and straight gathered skirt as club dress for members. Mrs. Jen- ness Miller, the successful dress re- former, has among her costumes an office-dress for business women, the principal features of which are a full Fedora vest front of surah silk with short jacket of fine wool, and straight, undraped skirt laid in wide box-plaits in front and gathered on to the waist behind. Another dress is a modifica- tion of the Directoire gown, with seven pockets, almost as many as are owned by that lucky creature, the boy, with his first pantaloons. Four of these pockets are inserted in the vest, one for the watch, one for a pencil, two for car tickets and small change. Under one of the panels on the right side is a long pocket for the purse and hand- kerchief. Two pockets for memoran- dum-book and card-case are tucked away among the rear draperies. When the owner has another dress made she proposes to add an eighth pocket on the left side for keys and miscellaneous belongings. Think of such luxuffes, ye women who have no pockets at all, but carry umbrella, handkerchief, three bundies and a baby in one hand, while you hold up your skirts, open doors and pay fares with the other.— N. Y. Mail and Express. —_—_<+ > —__ —He that is habituated to deceptions and artificialities in trifles, will try in vain to be true in matters of impor- | on to obtain her permission. | obtained. FOREIGN GOSSIP. —The said to be F > of the royal family is cess Victoria of Teck. —A society has been formed in China by women to oppose the binding of women’s feet. It is called ‘The Heavenly Foot Societ: —Rents in Scotland are getting lower | and lower. Four farms recently relet in the South for the approaching term brought less than half their former | | rent. —The Prince Regent of Bavaria is | the founder of anew school which will impart to its pupils the art of restoring pictures. The schoo! is the first of the kind in the world. —The Eiffel Tower is now declared, even by those who feared that it would be unsightly, to have a “light and graceful appearance in spite of its gi- gantic, size, and to be an imposing monument, worthy of Paris.” —The money paid now to the British royal family amounts to £543,000 a year. Out of this, £385,000 is‘paid the Queen for the expenses and salaries of her household, retired allowances, bounties, alms, special services, ete. For Her Majesty's privy purse £60,000. is allotted. In addition to this she re- ceives from the Duchy of Lancaster about £45,000 a year. The Russian Government has offered a prize of 5,000 rubles ($2,500) for the best inquiry into the nature and effects of the poisen which develops in| cured fish. The competition is open to | all and the memoirs must be sent in by | January 1, 1898, in the Russian, Latin, ; French, English or German language. —Canton, China, has the largest mint : in the world, the plant consisting of ninety coining presses, while the Paris mint has only twenty-two, and that of London only nineteen. While the Paris mint has a capacity for turning out every ten hours 594.000 coins, the Can- ton mint can produce 2,700,000. —According to the Persian custom, |; the Shah has his mutton killed in his own palace. He wanted to do this while staying in Buckingham Palace, but the Queen would not permit it, | though long negotiations were carried In the end it was settled that the royal butch- ering should be performed at Prince Malcom Kahn’s house in Holland Park. —There is a curious museum at St. | Petersburg,to which access is not easily It contains all the imperial state and private carriages, but the | cution issued from the office of the clerk of the | be at lea most interesting among all is the brougham in which Alexander IL was killed. The back of it is all in ruins, and inside it looks quite dreadful. One of the cushions, however, is still good; here and there splashes of mud are on j it. —The number of in England crease, and the sport is otter hunting. Otte is done on foot and requires an equip- ment of short petticoats and thick boots. The otter almost the only ing species of t wild Sngland, with the exception of the badger and the roedeer, and there is something sad in seeing the war of women who hunt is m of the hunting test v termination begun against him as a fashionable fad. —The Empres army of seamstresses, but it i delight to preside over and ass manufacture of her childre garments. She is a person of great taste, and generally picks her own and her children’s hats to pieces and makes them over after receiving them from a renowned French modiste. She is also an adept in fine embroidery in white and colors, and is as industrious as many a woman of limited means. ——. SCHOOLS IN TURKEY. How Boys and Girls Learn Lessons and “Treat All Around.” Turkish boys and girls are of the race which has given the alphabet and the sciences of numbers, navigation and astronomy to the world; but they study only one book now and learn only one science. They study the Koran, from which they learn to read, and the science of Mahomet’s religion, as soon as they can commit sentences to memory, either by having it read to them or by readingit to themselves. They study aloud as hard as ever they can, each beginning with a different sentence, rocking to and fro, ‘‘weav- ing trouble” meantime. If they falter in their shrill repetitions the master’s duty is first to admonish, and, if this is unheeded. to spare not the rod. There is alull when the ‘‘muezzin’s” call is heard atnoon from-the mosque minaret near by, and then the master and pupils, with faces turned toward Mecca, drop te their knees and say a prayer. When the priest’s call ceases and the prayers are over, the voice of the art her st in the 3 ful candy man is often opportunely | heard near the school, for candy is ped- dled about on trays there, and not sold at shops as with us. The new scholar is permitted to “treat all around” on | the first day, and there are no better | sweets than “Turkish delights”— | pasty, creamy, crackly things made uf | from rose leaves, violets and poppies, nuts, dates, grapes and pomegranates, | delicately mixed with honey, sugar, | sirup and spice. Pure cold water after sweets is known by all Turks, young | and old, to be the most delicious 0: | luxuries, and this the school childrer | often enjoy, for the water man is cun- ning enough to follow closely in the | wake of the candy vendor, anxious t& tance; for truth is a thing of habit, | lighten his burden and draw a profit, rather than of will. You can notin any given case, by any sudden and single effort, will to be true, if the —F. W. Robertson. as well as spring water, from the tanned skin of a pig, which he carries strapped to his shoulders like a bag er $5,009,000, and the net reve- | habit of your life has been insincere | pipe—the Turkish water bucket— , Wide Awake. ur by year on the in- | fauna of | of Germany has an | Electric Bitters. ' becoming so well r as to need no ho have used} same song ot praise-—A pu not ex-| stand it is guaranteed to do that is ectric Bitters will cure all) e Liver and Kidneys, will mples, Boils, Salt Rheum and! other affections caused by impure blood. | —Will drive Malaria from the system } | and prevent as well as cure all Malaria | !tevers.—For cure ot Headache, Constpr-} tion and Indigestion try Electric Bitters | —Entrre satisfaction guarantied, or mon- | | ey retunded,—Price 50 cts. and $1.00 per! Sheriff's Sale. bottle at all druggists. $ | By virtue apd authority of two special acest cations issued from the office of the clerk of | the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri returnable at the November term, I889, of said court, to me directed ona in favor of B. W Oneal snd inst LS. Henderson and one in favorof Andrew Freeman aud against L. 5 Henderson, ! haye levied and seized apen all Tight, title, interest and im of said defend- ant, L. 8. Henderson, te the following described real estate being situated in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: Gommencing at a point 20 feet north of the southeast corner of the north haif of the north- east qnarter of section thirty (30), township forty-one (41). range twenty-nine (29), ran- ‘ ming thence west feet, thence north 165 feet thence east 265 feet thence south 165 feet to the place of inning, containing one acre more or less, in Bates county, Missouri, I will, on | Friday, November 15th, 1889, | between the hours of ninee’clock in the fore- | Doon and five o’clock inthe afternoon of that day. at the east front door of the court house ‘inthe city ef Butler, Bates county, Missouri, sell the same, or so much thereof as may be required, at public vendue to the highest bid- {der for cash to satisfy said executions and costs KO. G. GLAZEBROOK 15-4 Sheriff of Bates County. Sheriff's Sale. } By virtue and suthority of a special execa- tion issued from the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, re- } turnable at the November term, 1889. of said court, to me directed in favor of E. A. Ben- nett and againet D. C. Barrett. I have levied ‘and seized upon ali right, title, interest and | claim of the said defendant, D. C. Barrett of, in and to the following described real estate | being situated in Bates county, Missouri, to- | wit: The south half of the southwest quarter j of section three and north half 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 quar- ter of the northeest 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 inthe afternoon of that day, at the east front door of the court house in the city of Buder, Bates county, Missouri, | | sell the same, or s0 much thereof as may be | required, at public vendue to the highest bia. ber for cash to aid execution and cost ! - GLAZEBROOK Sheriff of Bates County 5-40 | Sherifi’s Sale. | By virtue and authority of a transcript exe- | j circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, re-! | turnable at the November term, 1389, of said | | court, to me directed in favorof Wm. E. Wal- ton and against D. M e, 1 levied and | zed upon ail right, t 1 celal» the said defenda D.M = Valeof. in and | he following deseribed real estate being | din Batescounty, Missouri, to-w i in block tive (5) in Warner's ad- | now city, Iwill, on ovember 14, town, of Butler, Bates N 1889, lock in the aftern » east front door of the y of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, | as may be highest-bid- GEO G Gti BROOK, 13-4t Sheriff of Bates County. Administrator's Notice. Notice is hereby given, that letters of ad- ministration on the estate of William ‘ ed, were granted to the ande ith day of October, nt by Missouri | against said es them for atlow- or within one year rs, or they may be i tof said estate; and | hibited within two publication, they ims years from the date of thi shall be forever barred This 4th day of October, 1 - MOSHER, Administrator. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all ereditors and others interestedin the estate of Addison Price edt tor of said estate, intend to make final settle- ment thereof, at the next term of Bates county | probate court, in Bates county, state of Mis- souri, to beheld at Butleron the lth day of November, 13889. WM.M. DALTON, | 45 Administrator. | PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM (Cleanses and beautifies the hair.| Promotes a luxuriant growth. Never Fails to Restore Gray Hair to its Vouthful [Prevents Dandruff and hair falling! ]MRop's ‘ CURE f" ASTHMA Catarrh, Hay Fever, Diphtheria, Whooping Cough, Croup and Common Colds. | ioe bs tna Re HIMROD MANUFG CO., SOLE PROPRIETORS, 191 FULTON ST., NEW YORK. SSS TRICIT “RICE | ene eet al ses foes ELECTRO-MEDI se tock. Heke tavaluabie to all orby | SJACO deceased, that | Wm. M_ Dalton, administra- | ¢ TERRIBLE SUFFERINGS. Perhaps no man ever wit- nessed more physical suffer. ing than H. H. MEIGGS, the Great Railroad Contractor of S. America, whose autograph ts here shown and wha writes: “St. Jacobs Oil has accem- plished wonders. It hasmy positive indorsement.” As an example—During e@ 1979 and ‘1871 twe thousand Americans died from mala- ria and rheumatic fevers out of feur thousand in Pera, attracted thither by large wages paid by Meiggs, who had contracts amount ing to $136,000,000. In this field there- after St. Jacobs Oi] did its good work. Sold by Druggists and Dealers Everywhere. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO. BALTIMORE. MD Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, { Coanty of Rates. sake > In the cireuit court of seid couaty, in vaca tion, Ith day of September, Is83, Emma J. Long, plaintiff, va. Daniel W. Long, defend- ant. Now at this da: jarntiff herein by her sttorneye, mm » before the undersigned clerk of the cirenit court of Bates county fn the state of Missouri, in vacation and files her petition and affidavit, alleging among other things that defendant, Danie! \\. Long, has absconded and absented himself from usral place of abode in this state so that the ordinary process of law caunut be served on him. Whereupon it is ordered by the clerk in vacation, that said defendant be notified by publication that plaintiff has commenced a suit against him in this cenrt by petition and affidavit the object and cenarns 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 control of soy Long, the infant child Gorn of said mar- riage, upon the following grounds, to-wit: That defendant has absented himeelf from plaintif without a reasonable cause for the space of one year and has been guiltv ef sach 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 -reof, to be begun and holden at the court of Batler, in said county, on the fourth f November next, and on or be- fore the hday of said term, if the term shail so long continue—and if net, then on or before the last day of said term—answer or ito the petition in said cause, the same Il be tak ssed and judzment will comes the a honse in iagly r ordered that ‘ding to law weekly ne county copy hereof pn the BuTLEeR aper printed lissouri, for insertion to ‘our Weeks before the first day of term of circuit court the neat JOHN ©. HAYES, Cirenit Clerk Atrue copy from the record. Witness my hand the seal of the cirenit Bates county. this lth day ember, ISS JOUN © HAYES, Cirenit Clerk Notice of Resiguat: STATE OF MISSOURI, ¢ County of Bate he November In the m ° iM r court. e of James e that state of minors, aid court v of Bute lith day of said conrt for leave trust of curstrix of Dated the oth d tember, } ROSELLA J. x BEATTIE, mark Ss. Mepp. « ratrix Mary Witness 8 UW ratrix. ige Letting to an order mad ned te the coun m, and to th on ¢ ahi ti endue to the east front door 16, 1889, peck in the fore- Wednesday. between the b . HAGGARD, ridge Com. al Settlement. tice of F N Notice is hereby given, that the andersigned AB. Owen and James Owen, administrators ofthe estate of Creighton Owen, dec will make Snal settlement of his accoun' with said estate and such sdministrators, the next term of the probate court of Bates y. Mistouri, to be boiden at Butler, Mo., county, on the ith day of A B_ OWENS, JAMES OWENS, Administrators. “2 HINDERCORNS. cate ay, Tan tect ie ot Dragmiste Hiscox &Co., ¢ 4 238, CONSUMPTIVE Kens Oinege, Tom Botrition. Take in November, s defective At Once--Every where. Prefitable Business A Bepresentstive MAN OR WOMAN. All time not necessary. LIBERAL Pay. Special inducement offered until December 2th. Give references. WUODARD & CO., Baltimore, Md a Bt his Eiectro- 0.251 Columbus Av., Boston, Mass. as “*] HEARD A YOICEs IT SAID, “COME AND SEE.