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_ CURE Bick Headache and relieve all the! dent to a bilious state of the «: Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, somarkable success has been K curing, Headache, yet Carter’s Littlo Li equally valuable in Constipation, ‘venting thisannoying complaint, wi correct all disordcrs of thestomac: sens 4 regulate the bowels. Ev: HEAD Achothey would bealmost pricelesttsthose who walks from this distressing complagt but fortu- ta cir goodness docs notend h who oncetry thom will find these i !Istho bano of so many lives that wemakeour great boast. Onr pill others do not. \ Cartcr’s Little Liver Pills aro very easy to take. One or two pills They are strictly vegetable and do purge, but by thelr gentle action p usothem. In vialsat 25 cents; five} by druggists overywhere, or sent by “CARTER MEDICINE sain seam SMALL DOSE, SI SMLLI PRICE FRIENq’ MAKES CHILD BIRTH ASY, Colvin, La., Dec. 2, 1886.—My wie used MOTHER’S FRIEND beforo he thir: “without it for hundreds of doll: Dock Sent by express on receipt of pri * tle. Book * vy 'o Mothers” mailed fre BRADFIELD REGULATO; ©” CALE BY ALL DAUGGISTS. aT Sold by ALL DRUGGIS ACE AND EXPERIENCE iw in} —— 215 W. NINTH Comsuitatioa F tor’s own ta sent anywhe: | HERVOUS DES lies, Indiscretion, F »Debtiity, Di Memory V larged. | 4 sands of cas orons. i ST. AWSAS CITI WSR LA a ES OZMANLIS of Manhood, ible incl rm, such 2 tress after eating, Pain in tho Bide, ko. With trae iaect Pills ars gand pre- they also mulatetho theyonly m= MortHers’ | from V1 | journey of | into to | men, thus che as far | Sure, Prompt, Posttin Cure for Impotence, Loss Seminal fa Emissions, Spermatorrhea, i Loss of Memory, &c ORIENTA ous Man. Boxes, $5 00. Special Directions Mat!ed Address A with each Box. Nervousness, Self Disti rt itt igbr- make you a STRONG, VI: Price $7.00, 6 Ballard Snow Linimont Co., 2919 Lucas Ave. ST.LOUIS, - Mo. toat erat i was er Eu lGeneral and NERVOUS D£: BIL lof Errovsor Excessesin Oid Robust, Noble M4NHOOD falty Nestured, Strengthen WEAK, USDEVZLOPED OILS, HOMK TREATHE: Deserintive ena Mittens GRIE MEDICAL CO.. GUSFALS “How lr {| BARNEDY Weakners of Body and Mind, © he ff ely Benefits. Im n days Sten teetl I Fo 30 States and Foreign Countries, Wri: them, — | wever hope to put the: BREN toss BS mont hatmiess berba: es that do mot tn dare health or interfere with easure. It builds up and impro Realth cleatsthostis ‘and beautifies the com No wih or Bhdorsed by physicians and Jeadi Send 6 cents in stamps oue’s busines Wes the sens Mabbiness follow this treatme: ‘society ladies. PATIENTS, | Joos BY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL Harmless, for particalsrs OR. 3. Bi surat B VICKER S THEATER, caieaso, iL SIBERIA “NOT A DESERT. A WOMAN'S INTUITION. HORSES OF ALL KINDS. Its Valleys as Fertile as Those of Western Tow it Brought a Mining Couple a Large Thousands of Them That Do Not Come America. Siberia, coupled as its name is with stories of Russian barbarity, is not the barren, terrible land of limitless des- erts which fiction and the drama have pictured it. The building of the trans- Siberian railway and the extension of lines along the northern frontier of China will greatly change the entire drama of civilization. Th stock to the will bring that station within fourt« St. Petersburg, a) tations will rapid] ain gre this route 3 2 nes and str lobe, only om, as ami engineers are convicts are employe largely penin as possible. empk i it to cost two hundred million dol is divided into six sections, comprising three or more divisions, the contract for build i these, thus employing a 1} of contractors for limited It isa mistake to suppose t! is a desert, or a glacier, or a fastness, or incapable of being made habitable. The valleys are level plains, and said to be as fertile as the wester: portion of the United States, and it is not unlike the west in the variety of its resoure in minerals, timbers ‘and in agricultural facilities. It is a marvel- ous treasure-trove of stored-up tunities. Its wealth is prac limited. With the advantag road communication and lines, a vast country is added to the world of civilization. The cultivation of the land and the introduction of all the elaborate machinery of ¢€ htened life will, as scientists depict, mc y the | rigors of the climate, although in south- ern Siberia even this obstacle does not exist. and mount tically un- of rail- WARLIKE FISHES. The Diminutive Stickleback Is a Fighter. The sticklebacks are insignificant in size and mighty in valor. They are al- ways rezdy and anxious to fight; one provoking glance from the eye of a rival and stxaightway the battle rage: In contradw.tinction of tt un race, Great says the Detroit Free Press, the male stickleback monopolizes ull the gay colors, Mrs. i con- demned to a sober, Quake adres But she has one compensation for this selfishness on his part, and that is that when her liege lord is thrashed by a stronger or more skilled foé his coat is thrashed likewise, losing all his bravery and be ning a dull gray; nor does it recover its splendor until its wearer, the worst pangs of defeat over, emerges from the corner where he has hidden himself, as pugnacious ever. The stickleback is one of the very few fish that build nests for their young. In ad- dition to its instinctive id intelli- gence the stickleback be trained and instructed by man. At an aqua- rium which I have often visited, by the the aid of an ingenious but simple de- vice, the sticklebacks had been taught toring a bell when they ted food. The bell wis suspended « tank 2 were kept, and connect- ng rope, a fine thread ving been ited, was lowered into the water be- vw. The nibbling of the bait rang the ell. Care having been taken to add yesh bait when the cord was pulled the icklebacks soon learned to summon tendants by this means. IGNORANT. Didn't Believe the nver Would Be Valuable. n his day Mr. Webster rue idea of the great west Ben Perley Poore. On one oceasi ANIEL WAS VERY West ha al avery ne om en he was in thes: © a proposi- was before it to es’ ish a mail mouth | thou- al me the extent of which the publie tlm knew no more than they did of tHinterior of Thibet. Mr. Webster, afr denouncing the mez 2 general- lytlosed with a few remarks concern- inthe country at large. ‘“Whatdo we wit,” he exclaimed, “with this vast withless area? This region of savages ar wild beasts, of deserts, of shifting sads and whirlwinds of dust, of cactus anprairie dog: To what use could e great deserts, eendless mount. able and covered to ith eternal snow? Wh can we evehope to do with the western coast, acest ofthree thousand miles, rock- boul, cheerless, uninviting and not a harir on it? What use have we for thisountry AFEATHERED FUNMAKER. hetecognized Practical Bird Family. bluejay,” says a bird s nto Mail of recent date, tsistent practical joker in the y kingdom. He will conceal him- a clump of leaves near the spot small birds are accustomed to and, when they are enjoying ives in their own fashion, will ly frighten them almost to death aming like a hawk. Of course atter in every direction, and ey do so the mischievous rascal ent toa cackle that sounds very se alaugh. If he confined his to such jokes as this, however, id not be such a bad neighbor to aller than himself, but when agmses himself by breaking the ad the nests and tearing the young 8 pies with his bill he becomes a PStileht nuisance and they often com- itt {heir forces to drive him out of the NSehhorhood. They do not always suc- Sat ar he is as full of fight as of mis- ut a severe conflict teaches him ey too have their rights, and hees him to mend his manners.” their very Joker of the i oppor- ; | | each section | | lifetime, the sum of a mil Fortune. Success in mining is popularly sup- posed co be the prerogative of men, and the prospector usually is universally pictured as a stalwart, hard-handed man, bearded pard, full of strange oaths, and a “hols terror.” As a rule this idea is not far from the truth. However, it has passed into a proverb that there are exceptions to all rules. ithis proverb has more pean or cation of its truth in annals of Colorado. There ices on record of successes that m in wresting wealth from f RE Rocky mount- isp of yurag persever- the of wome © are women one nd it is hat t niners res OX- in the truth is the mining bundance of exam- the absolute verity of 1is stranger than re- rate it is considered an undertaking, oren in the commercial east and in New Yor k city, the center of commercial acti to amass, during the course of a busy n dollars, ‘and the best endeavors of the shrewd- plish that end | est men are constantly given to accom- +t ITknow women in Colorado who, in four or five years, have secured double that sum. - It is true that they were not prospect- | ors. They did not go intothe hills with | pick and shovel and pursue the evasive | “float” up hill and down dale in search | of the “mother vein,” but that they are | entitled to the credit of securing sue- | cess, and that they can truthfully be | called miners, I think no one will gain- | say when the Ss are fully and fairly | given. telegraph | 8™S ia mines will illustrate exactiy what I} mean when I say that women have proved themselves capable and suce ful miner: The Enterprise group is | near Rico, Col., and was recently pur- | chased by an English syndicate. The | | i The story of the Enterprise group of | i | | SS- amount of money paid for the property | has not been officially announced, but it is known to have exceeded $1,490,000. Not one penny of this money would ever have been reeeived by the fortunate miner for the property had it not been | for the courage and faith of his wife. | The story is, briefly, as follows: In the year 1885 Alf Waggoner, 1 well known prospector, wandered down into the San Juan country (as the southern part | of Colorado is still called) and located | several mines near the little mining! town of These mines he named | collectively the Enterprise group. The | prospect looked good, but the mineral | was slow in coming in, and Waggoner | looked around, as he said, for| some one “to help him hold| the bear.” The result was that | George Barlow became interested with Waggoner in the mines) The two men worked diligently for a year or more, and after spending all their money and finding no adequate return, that they must secure mor their * feet, and help to hold shaft was do 180 1 in sight, when ired.” La kheimer claim for a few dol- the forces of na- ture began that has become historical because of its triumphant ending. In 1890 the Swickheimers bought ous rlow who had, like Waggoner, grown “tired,” and the Enterp came the property of Das Swickheiz no mine Waggoner declared he was very and Then David a Swie! © group be- d and Laura er. It was the woman that urged the purchase, and it was her judgment, or, more truly speaking, her intuition, that prompted he: ter to the advice of friends everything she had in a that had been abandoned who began it, by the man ownership. A word of explanation as to the min-} ul formation of Dolores mountain, on | which the Enterprise group is situated, is necessary in order that the reader fully understand what rue fissure veins” exte through th and depth is The idea heimers had in view much depth in the and then rht or left, as circ require, to inte to go coun- and invest barren shaft, by the man nd was gladly given up who bad succeeded to its follows, | 1 vertic rocks raine the Swick- | was to secure as | r shaft as possible drive a “‘ceross cut” to the ances eee {strike is that underlaid with a or contact deposit of very re; but this fact was at that unknown. This, though ignorantly, every foot of depth that was achieved was just that much pro- gress toward fortune, though in a man- ner entirely outside of the plans of the miners. Swickheimer and his wife had some money when they began to work the mine. This was cheerfully spent in hiring men to work in the shaft and in purchasing tools and blasting materials One day the shaft was found to be 250 feet deep and the same day found Mr. and Mrs. Swicdheimer } without a cent of money to prosecute the work. Swickheimer was dis- couraged, but his wife was not. She believed that there was a fortune for them in that empty shaft, and she did not propose to give up. She encouraged her husband to seek employment asa laborer in the mines and she found | this pay streak.” Now, the fi Ss mountain is vein the * Dolor time | ent irely work for herself. The Enterprise was | temporarily closed. and the honest and | industrious pair worked for more for- tunate people and saved their money. | During this period of discouragement a great temptation to part with their property came tothem. A miner who had some money and more faith offered them $500 for the Enterprise. The of- | fer was a good one, and was discussed long and earnestly by the husband and wife. It meant release from present embarrassment, from menial toil and a little capital with which to make a new venture. It seemed folly to reject such a prospect, but it was rejected. and in due course of time work. ngle-handed, was begun inthe En ete shaft by Mr. Swickheimer.—N. Y. Advertise~. A plain case of misfit—A young girl F wall Comvion j of the grow richer as | * | tion.—N. Y. Le: Under the Head of Useful Animals. Very young students in their first at- tempts at composition often inform tthe horse is a useful animal it is = There ses that rtant modifica accepted in all comm many thousands of h e their progenitors. wind where it liste as intolerable zed reg Austral are no lovers of the tamed state, and some of the ice upon his head and stimulate mover Seven thonsa toil tin New South Wales alone These rovers of the pl ischief with mestic- ated i n they come among them, and the colonists are very much disgusted to observe that the noble horse, relapsing into barbarism and forgetting his oats and the other com- forts of civilization, runs off with his wild brethren who have not enj his superior advantages. It must be confessed that our horses need the restraints imposed upon them to prevent them from disgracing their ancestors, who were certainly domes- ticated when they were introduced into this country. Years ago it used to be the custom in our southwestern terri- tory to brand the young stock, and even many werk animals, and tufn | them loose to shift for themselves for a year or two. When they were wanted they were always as wild as Mexican mustangs. Mr. Powell wrote on the best methods of taming wild horses. The specimens on which he xerted his talents as a tamer were, for the most part, formerly domesticated animals who had forgotten all about their restraints while wandering over the plains of our southwestern terri- tory. a book | Sarah A Ogle, Priscilla Baitgi Travelers in western territories are |i no longer in danger of such an eruption it | of horseflesh as Murray described in| | his “Travels in North America.” not only witnessed a stampede of thou- sands of panic-stricken horses, but the living torrent swept along toward and over his camp, trampling skins and dried meats into the ground, knocking down some of the tents and taking with | them all the horses except his riding mare, who vainly struggled to break her fastenings. They still range in much smaller herds than formerly on the plains of the upper Colorado; but wild horse, like the buffalo, has ly disappeared be the ad- vance of the white man. In spite of the experience of the ralians, ma ve beer to good the ucti fore Au- at ny people, chief le to turn the wild horses Hundreds of thon- an mustangs have been reduced to servituc he wild horse of the South pampas, which three centaur: fifteen years fter the 1s introd from Europe, had spread to regions as remote account. sands of Mex merican eS WTO, only horse v ced as Patagonia, has been tamed by thou- sands and has becom the useful ser- vant of Indian tribes. Naturalists often discuss the ques- tion whether t is now in the we aboriginal, or such acreature as an truly wild horse. We know very well ! that the wild horses of the western sphere all d ndants of sticated animals. Where, then, is the aborigina! wild horse to be found? The question will probably never be settled. Mr. J. H. Steel, who recentiy Jan interesting paper on “Wild Horses” before History Sov the Lombay thinks the evidence is existence of the wild tral A Gesner, the g yon zoology of the s | t of the same | opinion, but the has often been | questioned, and the assertion cannot j positively be made that the wild horse n which the Rus- ngand of which secured some specimens, fthe descendant of ancient ted anim: -Goldthwaite’s phical Mag: mountain 1 sians are now explo! have is The question asked: How 4 eee ssed woman should hav This. se, depends largely on where ss, and how s he | li For that is, for a good < be used for church, formal dropping nothing is pr semi-dress wear— »stume, iwh outings or v one’s friends, are economical or more desirat ay thana Priestley si p Henrietta, or, if a Sie s desire clairette. Tastefully of, such adr entire yer the greatest only the ve: enter into its sheerest foll; nd make it ings and cheap trim sofrequently doae that it is no wonder that women who never try the other al- ternative grow dis*ouraz: and feel as though they never could dnd anything to wear that would civ taken care me for an le with ta! s should It is the material atte best bay good AM He Seece ‘Iam trying to raise sick family,” said a ragged looking specimen to a man wai son avenue car, ‘“‘and if a little I shall be greatly “You don’t want me to entire five, do you?” “No, sir: only enough toma five. I've gota start, sir” on ean help me you the 2 man. 2 out the asked u need s hand “How much money do 5 The seedy one put in his pocket a moment. “Only 34.99, s the man broke Free Press. 4 $B ~ he sa for the mech : ear. s petrol based? surance man to “Sure Oi waz wai Tiath s the ey plates bounced me.” @ not been able to do any worruk since, eee no one will give. it me.”"—Harper’s Bazar. He! Natural |‘ and | % > them satisfac- Fs] to send my; ng for a Jeffer- : Wealth does not necessarily make’ rts. Baron tothschild of Paris is s aid ta rea West Ward Stock Farm, ug statues. —THE HOME OF— Mamorino Chief dr 160 BRONZE TURKEYS FOR SALE, “FANCY BRED, Harrison, Reid, Weaver » born in Ohio. way. and iwe.l Were naming Coun TN: So In the cire in Vacation July plaintin a WA Badgley. Wamesia Madeley. Celia d c iiels, Sarah A Ogle, Beile Badgley and | i? riscilla Badgt ndants. uu Now at this day comes the plainti! herein | 5 by her attorveys, Parkinson & Graves before | the undersigned ‘clerk of the ¢ Bates county, Missou on’and a enit court = 5 SSAIC, MO. and James A Badgley are not residents of the state of Mis- souri: Whereupon it is ordered by the clerk in vacation thatsaid defend. 8 be notified by publication that plaintif has commenced aeuit | gainst themin this court by petition and af- | tidavit the general nature and object of which j is to partition and divide between the plaintiff and said defendants herein the following de- | Ua 1 a bed real estate situate in the county of ates and state of Missonri, to-wit » southeast quarter of © northeast rier and the northeast quarter of the north nty-n Proprietor of Elk Horn Stables section s) all in tow nship io, range m the multiplicity of in- aid real est cannot be divided anc itioned in kind, that an order of sale of aid real estate may be made and the prooeeds of such sale divided among said parties plain- tiffand defendants, and that unless the said | Celia J Daniels, Sarah A Ogle, Priscilla Badg- yand James A Badgley be and appear at this | court, atthe nextverm thereof, to be begun and holden at the court house in the city of Butler in saidcounty on the first Monday in No- vember, Is, next, andonor before the third of said term, if the term shall so long con- nue—and ot, thenon or before the last day of said term—answer or plead to the peti- tion in said cause, the same Will be taken as sed, and judgement will be ren- accordingly, And be it ieee or- ithata copy Hereof be published, Ww Butler Weekly 1 y hewspe Re printed and publish vunty, Mo., for four weeks succe ve last insertion to be at least fifteen days fore the first ¢ of the next termof the cir- JOHN ©. HAYES, Cirenit Clerk. Ilaving purchased the Elk Horn barn and Livery outfit ot J. W Smith, and | having added to the same a number of tof the {sea1] circuit court of Bates county,this 16th | first-class Buggies, and horses, I can say July, Ise. JNO. C. HAYES, blic that I now ve the Cireuit Clerk _ — = | 4 + and Sarah E Davi i , trust date: tober Lon the 26th day of ES e recorder’s office of Bates ibook No 42 for re-|In southwest Mo. Horses and mules eefollowing Geseribed | POUgHt and sold, or stock handled on ein Bates county and + commission, Stock bearded by the day a) A ; week or month, With 16 years exper- ee eens, Southeast |ience Mr Lewis teels able to compete and the northwest quarter of the | With anv Livery barn in this section. quarter, and the north thirty acres | Call and see him c BLEWIS & CO e northenst quarter cf the northeast quar- pt section twenty-six (25) all in township ——S (49) of range nty-nine (29), ecntain- all one handred and ten acres, in trust ure the payment of three certain coupon in said deed described, an® payable as n stipulated as, said deed of trust provides defeuit be made in the payment id conpon notes or either of them or either erest coupons;or if default be made tof taxes, as they become due, hole debt, at the option ofthe legal Be ler thereof, shall forthwith become due ei nd p , and whereas, default has been made P payment of all of said coupon tes when they became due; and said debt and interest are now past due and unpaid, Now, therefore, public not is hereby given that, BB Ing », at the request of the teal nolde Idebt by virtue of the powers tom n said deed of trust, will, GREAT. fon Jength) “y al Note, The sold dalty. STATUETTE OF vorn St, Chicago, 1 August 24, 1892, » property to the high rt house door in F the hour herein described + bidder for cash g county, Mo. of nine o’elock in the fore- «in the afternoon of said irpose of paying said debt and rued interest thereon together with the and exy of executing this trus! HOINGRAM Final Settlement. given to all ENCLISH REMEDY jor Coughs. Colds and Consumption, at ee uestion the greatest of all modern edies. Notice of Notice is hereb: creditors and others interested in the estate of Grant Tousey . that! J W Ennis administrator of it willstopa Cough Inone night. it willcheck? intend to make final settlement Coldinaday. it will prevent Croup, relieve erm of Bates county ind CURE Consumption if taken in Pp of Mis- THE LITTLE ONES HAVE oo WHOOPING COUGH Publie Admir Use It Promptly. 5 ! e Cornelias Nafus, | 1T WILL CURE . Were granted to the undersigned. on | WHEN EveRY- of Auzust. by the probate | THI against 1 es pit sie for allow ° year af- r may be precinded from any benetit of said estate; and fsuch claims be not exhibited within two sears fromthe date of this publication. ll be forever barred js Sth day of August, I=. G. Att can't = fe : rb A260. bet may save $100 in Doctor’ fe theie lives, ASK YOUR DRUG. dois T FOR IT. _ fT TASTES GOOD.; thes H L Tucker, Agent® SS-4t Grade Educa ARMADUKE 22°25 MILITARY San “ AGRDEMY WES f | EQUITABLE LOAN AND INVESTMENT SOCIATION — ors | MADTKE, SWEET | EPRINGS, KO. | | ' | OEE The Equitable Loan & Investment As sociation issues a series of 1,000 shares jeach month and offersto investors an | opportunity to save money and receive ja nandsome interest on their invest- jment. The investor ot id: eee mo. for 1900mo’s rec’ $ 200 co aus o. gass 34° 5 yee 3 rh > —* «ee Ii. MARQUESS. Fulter, Wo 5 kt Para ae x <p eine . Suen ne é) pee and General Debility | 75, resultant from it We also ue pa stock and pay a WILL BE CURED | | interest s¢tai-annval ‘We have money by nsinz JOMMSON'S CRILL AND FEVER TONIC. Onedor- | to loan on good city property. Anyone ee oe TYPHOID | desiring a good profit Chills and Fever. and ell other Matarial | FE RSor MONEY REFUNDED. 7 bottles | sold last year. Ungnalifed endorsements from | leading physicians. If noz forsale by your droggist | We will send aan aa Rane a aD per Dott 3. TAKE NO SUUSTITATE. ~ THE BEST Tow JOHNSON TOWIC CO,, 133 Clark St., Chicago, le investment or loan will do well to call and see us. R. C. SNEED, Sec'’y., Sedalia. Mo" J. H. NORTON, Agent, Butler Mo. i