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A BALAKLAVA RELIC. | roes of the Famous Charge | TT Up in St. L William Yates. of St. Louis member of the Seventh Hussars, une | der the command of the Earl of Cardi- | gan, which was engaged in the prin- ciple battles of the Crimea. In speaking of the Balaklava chargs, ; Mr. Yates said: ‘It was a terrible ; battle; through jealousy of the other | troops our brigade had been accused of neglecting opportunities from the indecision and over-caution of our leaders, and naturally we were stung | and declared that at the first opportu- nity we would show the world that we | were not too good to fight. Our work for some time previous had been that of skirmishing and foraging. “Our work in this direction was perhaps better appreciated by the Russians than by our fellow soldiers, agon one occasion our company cap- tured 1,500 Cossacks who were guard- ing a supply train of 150 wagons of bread; this and a few minor events embittered the Russians against the Seventh Hussars, and when Lord Rag- lan’s order to charge was received the } danger of the attack was fully real- ized, but, with a determination to overcome the prejudice against us, we started on that memorable charge, our commander some distance in the lead. When our colors came into view the enemy quickly concentrated the fire of their batteries directly upon us, with what deadly effect is well known. Only fifty of the 600 returned in the saddle. In the half hour's work the field was strewn with our command; 450 were dead and over 100 wounded. I was among the latter, with a shattered leg and unable to drag myself from the field, being pin- ioned to the ground by the remains of four horses.” Mr. Yates exhibited several scars which he received in the battles of Sebastopol. a bayonet wound in the hand, a shot on the lower jaw, an in- jured eye caused by the splinters of two balls meeting in mid-air and a leg badly scarred from the pull down. Baring his left arm, Mr. Yates showed “Cardigan’s Jolly Boys” plainly tat- tooed thereon, and with a far-away look the sleeve of the other arm rolled up bringing to view the Tower of the One of the Malakoff neatly pictured on the fore-| A group of cattle and sheep (by Rosa Bonheur)- arm. ‘‘I can tell yousomething about that,” he said. siege before the capture of the Russian fortress, when fever and starvation vT. L: PESTYS,» FASHIONS IN FLOWERS. A. OF WELTON | prants, shrubs and Roots For the Rich and | ETTYS & WELTO DEALERS Staple:Fancy IN Groceries, Feed and Provisions of all Kinds. QUEENSWARE AND GLASSWARE. ICICARS ANC TOBACCO; ' i ' Always pay the highest market price for Country Produces ANOTHER SP A East Side Square. Butler, M0 re rewemere res LEANDID GIFT I! N ELEGANT WORK To every new subscriber or renewal for the Hemocra (10 Pages) ONE YEAR THE BEAUTIFUL ENGRAVING, “THE SCOTCH RAID” “THE HORSE FAIR,” which was, until recently. “During the long} the WEEKLY GLOBE-DEMOCRAT. se8"The price of the WEEKLY GLCBE-DEMOCRAT. A companion piece of the premium: with one yeal were thinning our ranks, we passed and the engraving “THE SCOTCH RAID.’ is only ONE DOLLAR. many a dreary day in tattooing one another. You see the lower part of the fort is not quite finished; my ‘chum’ and I were sitting in our tents; he had drawn the picture, and I had nearly completed the puncturing when ashell demolished our tent and the final charge coming soon after, in which my poor ‘chum’ met his fate, it was not and never will be finished.” Mr. Yates was born in London fifty- seven years ago, coming to this coun- try twenty-five years ago, and is now an American citizen, prouder of his allegiance to the United States than of his eventful war carcer.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch. —— 0 e - A REMARKABLE DOG. As Good as a Time-tavie to the People of a Yankee Town. Who-o-0, who-o-0, who, who! in a way which sounded very much like the regulation whistle of the Consolidated road locomotive, and down to a little station on the Shore Line division hur- ried an old gentleman. Anxiety and perspiration were on every part of his face, for he fully expected to find the train already puffing and blowing at the station. ‘Well, I'll be darned!” he said as he looked in either direc- tion and could see nothing of the train. “I believe it is that cussed dog again.” “You see,” said the ancient granger later, ‘‘this town has one of the most wonderful dogs in the world. His owner lives near thestation. One day agentleman waiting at the depot for a train heard what he supposed to be it approaching. He listened, but no other sound came for fully five min- utes, when the train came in sight. It happened that in a short time another train would be due from the opposite direction. About five minutes before the time of its arrival across the lot toward the track trotted a large, hand- some dog. When about in the center of the lot the dog stopped, and lifting its head high in the air, proceeded to announce the coming of a train. Who-o-v, who-o-o, who, who, floated through the air an exact imitation of the whistle of the locomotive of an ap- proaching train. Dropping its head and taking a look all around the dog leisurely walked back to the doorstep and went to sleep. For more than a year the dog has kept that up with unfailing regularity, exactly imitating the peculiar whistle of many engin- eers on the road. He has learned the time of every regular train, and about five minutes before each one is due you can see him in the same position going through the same actions. ‘Whistle,’ as he is called, has fooled a great many eople.” — Bri °) (Conn.) Letter. ia en —_- +e ___ —President Diaz, during the four years of his administration in Mexico, has rendered substantial services to science by encouraging archeological investigation and taking measures for the preservation of ancient monu- ments and historical remains. The ruins of Xochicalco and the pyramids of Teotihuacan have been explored and the searchers rewarded by many interesting discoveries. “An archeo- logical map of the Republic has been made and the palaces of Mitla in- closed, for their preservation, great wall. by a | that Col. Tracey Subscribers desiring both pictures can have 25 cents extra. “The Horse Fair” for Postmasters and news dealers will take subscriptions, or remit direct to the GDOBE PRINTING CO. ses’Send for sample copy of paper. From Fremont, Nebraska. T have had scrofula until it made my lifea burden. I was inexpressi- bly miserable, sick, weak, sleepless, and unhappy: desiring that the short time which seemed to have been al iotted to me on this earth hasten to an end. I tried treatment and medicine, and travel, but none of these did me any good. for the gradually grew worse. One physician, who I trav eled far to see, and to whom I paid $150, gave up the case as hopeless after three weeks of treatment, and other as prominent physicians tried hard to cure it, but were equally as unsuccessful. I then gave up all other medicines, and took ouly S. $8. S. Four bottles of that medicine cured me, and for the past four would doctors serofula years I have had as excellent health | and I am as free from disease as any body living. Words are inadequate to express my gratitude and favora- ble opinions of Swift's Specific (S. S.S).” The aboveis an extract from a letter written under date of July 18, 1889, by F. Z. Nelson, a prominent and wealthy citizen of Fremont, Ne- braska. His Child Got Well. Swift's Specific (S S.) eured ny little boy of scrofula, from which he had suffered a long time. I had tried physicians and great quantities of other medicines without avail. A few bottles of S.S.S. did the work. He is now enjoying the best of health and has not had any symp- toms of the disease for over a year. W. A. Clayton, Addi sc Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO. Atlanta. Ga. Washington, D. C.. Nov. “Farmer” Wade that change will be made in the mars ship of the western district of 3 souri until November 24, when four year te th ine pres ¥ umbent He il 12.— States ho n of will expire pointed. A man near Pottstown, Pa.. prides himself on attending 4.600 funerals He is very cheerful man too. Sor people really ne enjoy a funeral. Mrs. U.S. Grant will probably succeed Mrs. R. B. Hayes in the presidency of the Woman's Home Missouary society of the Methodist church. The descendants of the Celts are still proud of their antiquity. There are six public schools in Ireland , Where old Erse or Irish language is still taught. Emile Zola is opposed to the gill- tine. Still it would not great!v dis- tress him to see it at work on some of his audacious critics. Zola is not tender hearted. “He knew Napoleon” is the print- \ed orbituary of Captain Christiau |Emson, just died at Lakewood, N. J. The men of whom that may be said are becoming decidedly scarce. One man in Ohio thinks of going to Siberia. He says they are never troubled with elections there. The constant elections in Ohio begin to make some people tired. Occasionail sign, but it is seldom. B. Loring talks of throwing up his position 2s minister to Portugal. Of course there are plenty of meu to accept it. Probably the young w York state at the present time Mrs. William Martin of Summit- ville, who a few days ago gave birth to nine pound girl. Mrs. Martin is 13 years and 7 months old. t mother in N Ballard’s Horehound Syrup. We cesjreto call your atteation toa remarkable article which we are selling alarge amountot. One that ot in the hest terms of pr: who have used it. It gives crous reliet i worst cougl cu e where al se by ali lo grand remedy. Ds. E. Pyre, Agent. OF ART) spoken } | | censure us with —agrimony. i clover. | nutmeg. | (in a) mist Poor, the Old and Young. The family flower is the poppy. The flower for the dominie—elder. The flower for the late clerk—dock. The blossom for the tramp—locus(t). | The telephone girl's flower—‘‘Aloe.” The flower for the colored belle— ebony. i The flower for the old maid—ever- , lasting. The flower for the bunco victim—! evergreen. The drunkard will find his blossom | ¢ in corn The blossom for the millionaire—| current-see? The religious flower will be found in-carnation. The flower for a bald head in sum- mer—catehfly. The flower always hateful to a lazy man is a-rose. The som for the professional humorist—chestnut. The flower for women’s rights wom- en—Belvidere. The flower for the cowboy to wear in winter—cowslip. The flower our friends should not ble The proper thing to wear when kissing a pretty girl will be found in The flower for a Connecticut belle— The flower for the german—hop. The fiower for landlords—house leek. The flower the young man needs in summer—ice (cream) piant. The flower for an angry man—iris. The flower for the man who is more s0—madder. Two flo leader of the Two flowers for Rider Haggard— lilac Judas. Th« flower the small boy never wants —lady’s slipper. The blossom the girl should give a bashful lover—lettuce. The flower for anglo-maniacs—Lon- don pride. The flower for 2 jilted lover—love The flower for ‘tan old man’s dar- ling’”’—marigold. The blossom for the Wall street lamb is not often mint. The flower for the unwilling bride— mock orange. The flower moonwort. The flower mushroom. The flower for Pasteur—dog rose. The blossom for collegians—cane rush. ‘The blossom for Cornell girls—sage. The flower for waiters—service (tree). The flower for brekers—stock (ten weeks’). The flower for all who mourn for Mary Anderson—a mary (i) ill is. The flower for the beggar to wear when asking alms—-*tanemone?” The flower for disappointed office seekers—balm. The blossom for soldiers—grape. The blessom for freshmen—haze(l). The flower for the man who pawns his Christmas decorations—hollyhock. The flower for any one ‘‘tossed over the ridgepole” by an angry cow—horn- beam. The flower for people easily sold by honey-tongued speculators—wax plant. The flower for great talkers who never tell the truth—lichens. The flower for the bilious man— liverwort. The flower for stupid people—poke (root). The flower for anarchists—hemp. The flower for the traveling man— skull cap. The flower for young America— sassy (bark). The flower for the reader of all these —rue. — Desroit Free Press. —___+ ee —___ Don’t Know Every Thing. for the honeymoon— for the Neuriches— Some one says you might read all the books in the British Museum, if you could live long enough, and re- main utterly an illiterate, uneducated person. Then, again, if you read ten pages in a good book, letter by letter —that is to say, with real accuracy— you are forevermore, in some measure, an educated person. It is only ina measure that a person can be educated. When there were but few books it was possible for one person to know their contents. Science has widened. and the butter of intelligence must be spread thinner. The ripe scholar is one who is ready to dropoff. Only boarding-school girls finish their edu- cation. The bald-headed professor, who has been studying all his life, feels ignorant in the face of many things he does not know. A child can ask him questions he can not answer. The young man goes to college to be educated. The most college can do for him is to put him on the road lead- ing to knowledge. Ittakes every body to know every thing. and very little of any thing is yet known. Run away from the man who claims to know it all. He will make you tired exposing his ignorance.—N. O. Picayune. —Governor Ross, formerly of Kan- ; Sas, and one of the United States Sen- ators who stood by Andrew Johnson in the impeachment proceedings, is now employed as a printer in the office | of the Santa Fe New Mexican. | cream that has been See —When ready to serve a j ina mold, set the mold in tepid water, or wrap a warm cloth about the mold for a mo- Piri hysician, reti placed in ary the 10) remedy tor cure of Consumption, Catarrh, Asthma and al! 4 lung affections, also a positive | alcure tor Nervous Debility} Neryous complaints, atter having | test its wonderful curative powers in thousands of cases, has telt it his duty} to make it Known to his suffering fetlow. Actuated by this motive and a cesire to ve human suffering. I will send free all who desire it, this re. sermac, French or English, directions tor preparing and nt by mail by addresing with stamp, naming this paper. W. A. Noves, | 14a Power's Block, Rocheste N.Y. OCK AGENTS WANTED FOR ¥ STORY OF THE Wan d i Mary A. Livermo? ‘OUR YEARS PERSONAL E:! Rsk" in Hospitals, Camps, and on the Batth hock has drawn so many tears. Bright, Pure less interest aud profound pathos. i scile at * booming to jake money on now > compenten. FOO pags, i Batile-Flage in tw.nty C5,000 more Agents Wanted— iatance mo hindrance, for we Pay Fatra Terms. V rite for circulars to GTON & CU., Martferd, Coan. CRAY OS $30: PORTRAIT E R E While introducing our fine work, if you send us a photogra) f yourseM or any member of your family, we will make you a full life-size r n Portrait Free of Charge. The only eration inposed upon you will be that you exhibitit it to your friends as a sample of our work, and assist us in securing orders. that yeu promise to have it framed suita- so that the work will show to advantage your full name and address on back of to secure its safety. we guarantee its 1 Our offer is good for a few days only, and the sample portrait is worth being as tine as can be made, Address American Por- trait House, 5 and 6 Washington St. CHICA- GO, ILL. Largest Life-Size Portrait House in the Wo Narrative of * el Plates, st thousand. 1 Wo we | 4a s fer the man who's just} 3 ! struck a lode—Iv(y) jessamine. BREAKFAST. “By a thorough knowledge of tke natural aws which govern the operations of diges- ion and mutrition, and by a careful applica- ion of the fine properties of well-selected ocoa, Mr. Eppshas provided our breakfast nbles’ with a delicately flavored beverage vhich may save us many heavy doctors’ bills. is by the judicious use of such artic’ that a constitution may until strong enongh to r se. Hundreds of ng around us ready to at rthere is a weak point’ Wem escape Mal a fatal shatt by keeping ourselves well for ied wi riv nourish Made simply i Sold only in half sound tins, by grecers labeled thus: JAMES HIMRops CURE f" ASTHMA Catarrh, Hay Fever, Diphtheria, Whooping Cough, Croup and Cemmon Colds. Recommended by Physicians and sold by Drug- gists throughout the world. Send for Free Sample. HIMROD MANUF’G CO, SOLE PROPRIETORS, 191 FULTON ST., NEW YORK. zland. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS, Cross Diamond Brand. The only reliable pill for sale. Safe and - Ladics, aak Droggtet for the Diae nd Brand, in red metallic bores, scaled with biveribbon. Takeno other. Send de. (starape) for particulars and “elie for Ludies,” in ester, by mail, Name Paper. Chichester Chemical Co., Madison Sq., Philada, Pa. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair, Promotes a luxuriant growth, Never Fails to Restore Gray! Hair to its Youthful Color. WIASON & HAMLIN ORCAN AND PIANO Co. BOSTON, NEW YORK, CHICAGO. NEW ( Contains a five octave. Nine Stop Acticn, furnished in a jlarge and handsome case of {solid black walnat. Price $99 ORGAN ,< cash; also sold on the Easy Hire System at $12.37 per quar STYLE ter, for ten auarters when or- gan becomes propertp ot per- ‘son hiring. ( The Mason & Hamlin | pate nger,’’ invented and MODEL 22244, MASON patented by Mason & Hamlin in ]1882,is used in the Mason & < Hamlin pianos exclusively. Remarkable refinement of HAMLIN | tone and phenomenal capacity to stand in tune characterize PIANOS \ these instruments. POPULAR STYLES ORGANS AT $22, $5: $6) $7= $96 AND UP. & Organs and Pianos sold for cash, Easy Pay- ments, and Kented. Catalogues fres. THE GLORY OF MAN STRENGTH.VITALITY ! How Lost! How Regained, a THE SCIENCE OF dard Popular Medical Treatise FXHAUSTED VITALITY “UNTOLD MISERIES Resulting from Folly, Vice, Ignorance, Excesses or for Work, Business, the Married or Social Relation. Avoid unskiilfal pretenders. Possess this great work. It contains 390 es, royal 6vo. Beautiful inding, embossed, fi it. Price only €1.00 by mail, postpaid, concealed in plain wrapper. Lins- trative Prospectus Free, if #3 apply pow. The inguished anther, Wm. H. er, M. D., re- ed the GOLD AND MEDAL from the National Medical Association for NERVOUS and this PRIZE ESSAY en PHYSICAL DEBILITY.Dr.Parkerand accrp3 f is ans may be consulted, coni- éentisity. by Saat at the office of THE PEABODY ICAL INSTITUTE, No. 4 Bulfinch St., Boston, Mass., towhom all orders for books or letters for sdvice should be Girected as above. of COFFEE :_ e. ARIGSA COSTEE is kept in all first-cle s + ores from the Atlantic to the Paci:, COFFEE is never ecod when exposed to the aur, } etic Ly AGES, -————— Trustee's Sule.! Whereas Sarah E. Owen in her own and Reuben S. Owen her husband did by ee deed of it dated the 23rd day of A.D.1 suasecrniey in book 45, of the records o! es county, Missouri, vey to Henry C. W mn, trustee, the follow. ing described real estate situated in the county of Bates and state of Missouri, to- wit: The west half of the southeast quarter of section twenty (20) and the north half of the northeast quarter of section twenty-nine (33) in township forty-two (42) north and in range thirty-three west of the fifth (Sth) principal meridian, to secure payment of the sum ot one hundred dollars, secured, to be paid by their ten certain notes of even date with said trust deed and payable to the order of William F. Leonard, one July let 1886 and one ev six months thereafter until all are paid, wil interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent per annum from maturity. And whereas itis provided in and by said deed of trust that in case of default in the payment of either of said notes or any part thereof, when the same shonld become due, then all of said notes with interest up to the date of sale, at the election of the legal holder or holders thereof should at once become due and payable, and on request the said trustee shall advertise and sell said premises. And whereas the notes due and payable on the first day of January and July A. D_ 1889, arenow due and wholly unpaid, and all of said notes and interest have been de- clared due and payable to the legal holder thereof amounting, on the day of sale to the sum of one hundred forty-six and 25-100 dol- lars, including the costs and expenses of this proceeding. And whereas by the provisions of said deed of trust, the legal holder of said notes may nominate and appoint a successor in trust in case the trustee named, Henry C. Wilson, should decline to act, and the said Henry © Wilson having declined to act and the undersigued having been appointed his orin trust Now therefore the re- of the legal holder of said note I will.as aforesaid on THURSDAY ,THE FIFTH OF DECEMBER AD iss), between the hours of 8 o’clock a.m and5 o’clock p m., of that day, at the east front door of the court’ house, in the city of Butler, county of Bates state of Missouri, sell to the highest bid- oreash, the above described premises, homestead Owen Trustee, page 21g Public Administrator's Notice. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an order of the probate court of Bates county, Missouri. made on the Ist day of October, 1889, the undersigned public admin‘ ‘ator for said county, has taken charge of the estate of Julia A. Medley deceased. All persons having claims against said ee tate, arerequired to exhibit them to me for allowance W in one year after the date of said order, or they may be precluded from any benefit of such estate: and if said claims be’ not exhibited within two years from date of this publication, they will be forever This 3rd day of October, 1889. JW ‘IS, tat Public Administrator, Truste Whereas, Thomas J. Perry (a_ single man) by his deed ot trust dated May fice within and tor Bates -ouri, in book 52, page 33, Co! the undersigned trustee the following described reel estate lying and being sit. uate in the county of Bates, state of Mit -ouri, to-wit: Lot three (3) in bloch twelve (12) m Williams extension of Williams addi tion to the town (now city) of Butler, as the same is marked and designated on the recorded plat thereot, which com vance was made in trust to secure the payment of one certain note tully d scribed in said deed of trust,and whereas, default has been made in the payment of he interest on said note, and __ thej same is now long since past due and up} paid, and by tie terms ot said deed off trust, if default was made in the pa ment of the interest when said interes was due, then the whole ot the principal was to become due and payable once and the holder otf said no having declared the principal due Now, therefore at the request of the gal holder of said note and pursuant the conditions of said deed of trust, ¥ will proceed to sell the aboye described premises at public vendue to the hig est bidder for cash, at the east dvor of the court house in the city Butler, county ot Bates and state Missouri, on Wednesday, October 30, 1889, between the hours of nine o’clock in terenoon and five o’clock in the noon of that day, for the purposes of si isfying said debt, interest and costs F, 1. TYGARD, Trustee. count 46-4t Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, ¢ ,, County of Bates. i Inthe circnit court of Bates county, Mi s, in vacation, October Sth, 1889 Henry Wt son, William Farreil and John E. Hayae@s laintiffa, ve. Annie R Babcock and F. uty, defendants. Now at this day comes the plaintiffs by their attorney, T. W. Silvers, Esq., bem the undersigned clerk of she circuit cout # Bates county, Misscuri, in vacation and their petition alleging, among other thi! 4 the defendante, Annie 2. Babcock snd F-& Prouty are non-residentsof the state of MB souri Whereupon it is ordered bs bipea re in vacation, that said defendants by publication that plaintiffs have comm eda suit against them in this court by peti the general nature and object of which i adecree of this court declari eeured by a trust ceed fore executed by the plaintif, William to the defendant Annie R Babcock upom nor*>east quarter of the northeast quarter. the = “aif of the southeast quarter of nor. ‘Tr of section eight (s). ship thire, : (33, range thrirty-three @ in Bates couniy, Missouri, and which trnst deed is recorded in book 16 at page of the records of trust deeds and mortgag?s the office of the recorder of dees of Bator ty, Missouri. have been Sally pein c charged, and that by reason of the pr 2 said notes said trust deed became and null and void, and that the cloud on to said land caused by the record of deed be removed. And that unless the defendants be and appear at the next this court, to be begun and holden at thee house in the city of Butler, Bates Missouri, on the third day of Fel D_ 13%, and on or before the sixth said term,if the term shali so lop tinue—and if not, then on or before day of said term—answer or plead to the tion in said cause, the same willbe takes confessed and judgmer.t will be rendered cordingly. And it is farther ordered by the clerk said. that a copy hereof be publish according to, law, in the Butler W 2 ‘ime: weekly newspaper prin‘ ‘ished in Butler, Bates county, Missourl, four weeks successively, the last insert be at least four weeks bef the firetd the February term, 1300, of said Bates a court. E JOHN C. HAYES, Circuit Cierk, copy from the ‘record. Wi my hand and the of the cif {SEAL] conrt of Bates count of October, Int or A true T. W. Silvers Att’y for plaintifs.