The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 28, 1893, Page 6

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Gent to “ bilious stato of tke Nausea, a, ead regehete the bow Is. Even if re “HEAD Achothoy would bealmostpricelessto thosewho thisdistressing complaint; butfortue Dately their goodness does notend here,and those ‘ncotry thera will find these little pills value in soniany waystuat they will not be wile yrtodowithoutthem. But after alleics head ACHE {Isthe bane of so many lives that here is where Wemale our great boast. Onr pills cureit while o Liver Pille are wery small and cr txo pills makes dose. able au’ do not gripe or please ail who wery easy t Phoy are st purae, bat by by pe ggists © sunt Pi MEDICINE CO., New York. ALL PILL, SMALL BOSE. SMALL PRICE Satie WooD’s PHOSPHODINE. ' The Great English Remedy. Promptly and permanently cures all forms of Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Sperm- atorrhea, Impotency and all effects of Abuse or Excesses, Been prescribed over 35 earsin thousands of cases; ro 1s the only Reltableand Hon a ere oa est medicine known, Ask druggist for Wood’s Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless medicine in place of this, leave his dishonest store, inclose price in letter, and we willsend by return mail. Price, one package, $1; six, 85. One will please, stzwilloure. Pampb- let in plain sealed envelope, 2 cents postage. Address The Wood Chemical Co., 131 Woodward avenue, Detroit, Mich. Sold in Butler and everywhere, by all druggists. Nature's Remeoy FoR 3a Liver Comp aint Scuencn's Manprake LiverPitts DE APE urcirns ealy, 858 Be’dway, where all all Romsedion ll, Bat ‘Held iby Fm F.HISCOX, nee VAL PILLS Gare, Talways reliable, LADIES, tak st Brand in Med ant Gold metalic Dro $4 Cures seaip disesses & hai ‘Sicand $1.00 at Drogeist The Consumptive and Feeble « and all who suffer ot st ould use Pa Ginger WHEN AT THE WORLD’S FAIR, Chicago, be sure tocallat the unique exhibit of Liebig Company’s Extract of Beef in the northeast part of the Agricul- tural Buslding, north aisle, in the Uruguay department, and get a Free Cup of delicious, refreshing Beef Tea made from the world-known LikBig COMPANY'S Extract of Beef Toby We. & $1. HIN » at Druggists. oc- been 20 to Special excursion rates for the followin easions at Pertle Springs, Mo., have made, State reachers’ Association Jun 4, 1893. State Car Association June 27 to 29 Mo. Methodist Sunday Schoot Assembly and vorth League convention July lvth to isth. Junior Order United Mecharics, Ang sth Cirenit Clerks and Recorders of Missouri, Ang. sth Cumberland Presbyterian Sunday School assembly and Synod August 15th to nh. Missouri State Bee-keepers association October I2th to 20th, Summer Tourist tickets to Pertle Springs, Mo., at rate of $2 85 for the round trip, and to Sweet Springs, Mo., will be on sale until Sept. 15, Is95. Now is your time to visit the World’s Fair; rates $20.45, tickets good for return until Oct. st, Round trip tickets with same limit will ve sold to St. Louis at rate of $12 Round trip tickets to Denver, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, Manitou and Trinidad, Colr? will be on sale until Oct. Sist, good for retun. until November I5, at rate of $26.60 and good for return 30 days from date of sale at rate of $21 60 except Trinidad, which will be $23.55. For further information call on or address W.C, BURRUS, Ticket Agent, Butler, Mo. $500,000. We desire to place out on real estate security a large amount of money. Will give the best terms and lowest rates yet offered by anyone in this line of business: Notes drawn. ror one, two, three or five years. Have some money to loan pauable on or before a Siven date. Caliand see how cheap ioe can let you have money- SCHOOL AND CHURCH. —A Young Men's Christian associa- : tion buikiing is to be erected at Kyoto, Japan. —An Illinois lady, it is reported, is to | erect a Methodist deaconess’ home at | Wuhu, in central China. | —The university of Oxford has appli- | snces for printing one hundred and fifty different languages. | —The Metkodist Episcopal charch | has 120,000,000 of church property, and | | proposes to do its own insuring. —Over 11,000 people attended the | Young Men’s Christian association an- ! niversary exercises at Rochester, > —The universities of Oxford and | Cambridge are together worth about | $75,000,000, and the university of Leipsie about £20,000,000. —William Thompson and wife. of | Washington, recently @iied on Bishop Hurst and presented him a $25,000 cheek for the American university. —A Christian Endeavor society week by week send a load of flowers 400 miles toa hospital that is situated ina dis- trict where flowers, trees and even grass will not grow. —The Helensburg (British) Presby- terian church recently decided by a | vote of two hundred and seventy-five to sixty-two in favor of the introduc- tion of instrumental musi —The Clergymen’s Retiring Fund so- ciety of the Episcopal church provides an annuity for aged clergymen. It has | assets amounting to about 2100,000, and a cash capital of 874,000. There are 640 inem bers. —A religious census of Australia, just compieted, shows 1,485,066 members of the ehureh of England, $0,118 Catho- lies, $93,369 Presbyterians and 364,594 Methodists. These are the four most numerous denominations. —According to the latest available of- ficial returns, there are in this country 58 training schools in cities and towns of more than 4,000 inhabitants, with a student membership of 958; 45 private normal schools, with 4,500 students; 138 state normal schools, with nearly 25,000 students. —The report of the committee ap- pointed in England to investigate the + 30 for the round trip, | financial affairs of the Salvation Army as conducted by Gen. Booth has been submitted. The report is a great vic- tory for Gen. Booth. The committee considers that the property acquired for the uses of the Salvation army is safe in the hands of Gen. Booth and his associates. —The tent work of the Chicago Evangelization society, of which Mr. Moody is president, for the past season is summarized as follows: Evening meetings for adults, 252; special meet- ings for men or women only and street mectiugs, 51; children’s meetings, 143; number of adults professing conver- sion, 924; number of children profess- ing conversion, 616. —The number of Christian Endeavor societies enrolled in each denomina- tion are as follows: Presbyterian, 5,- 363; Cumberland Presbyterian, 549; United Presbyterian, Reformed Presbyterian, 43; Scotch Presbyterian, 24: Westminster leagues, 2; Congrega- tionalists, 4,368; Baptists, 2,94: Free Baptists, 155; Seventh Day Baptists, 49; 6 Advocates of Fidelity; 8 Baptists Unions; M. E. church, 1.859; Method- ist Protestants, 485: Methodists of | Canada, 150; M. E, Church, South, 120; African M. E., 74; Primitive Methodist, 41; Epworth leagues, 285; Christians and Disciples of Christ, },858; Luther- ans, 366; Evangelical Lutherans, 314; Keystone leagues, 20; the Reformed Church in America and the Reformed Church in the United States, : the Friends, United Brethren, 201; Church of God, Moravians, 44: Re- formed Roiconal: i copal, Mennonite, to the above there cieties in small pla 276; In addition on union 33; so- not given us their denominational affiliations, 59 in publig institutions army and 3 “floating societies,” mak- ing a total of 2: 163 societies. | | 1 schools, 3 in the United States | | | } | WAR CORRESPONDENCE. The "eginnings of an Important Depart- | ment in Modern Journatiam In a sense Julius Cr: correspondent: “Commentarie was a war only he did not send his piecemeal from the “theater of war.” but indited them at his leisure in the subsequent peace- time. The old “Swedish Intelli- gencer” of the Gustavus Adolphus period was genuine war correspond- ence; published indeed tardily, pared with our news of to-day, but neverthele fresh from the scene of action, full of distinctiveness, quaint and racy beyond compare. The first } modern war correspondent profession- ally commissioned and paid by a news- | paper was Mr. G. L. Gruneisen, a well- jknown literary man, only recently |dead, who was sent to Spain by the “Morning Post™ with the ‘Spanish Legion,” which Sir de Lacy Evans eommanded in 1887 in the service of the queen of Spain. But this new de- parture was not followed up, and no English paper was represented inthe great battles of the first and second Punjab wars. When, at the outset of the Crimean war, in the early summer of 1854, William Howard Rus- sell presented himself to old Sir George Brown in the roadstead of Malta, an- nouncing himself as the correspondent of the Times, and tendering an author- ization from the minister of war, the apparition was regarded not so much jin the light of a revolution, as of an unprecedented and astounding phenom- enon. But Russell's credentials could not be ignored, and all the world knows how he became the pen of the war, and how his vigorous exposure of | abuses, deglect and mismanagement contributed mainly to the rescue from absolute extermination of the British | army wintering in misery on the Sevas- topol plateau. Other papers followed | the lead given them by the Times, and the Illustrated London News had its | artist-correspondent at the Crimea in | the person of Mr. William Simpson, mow a veteran, but still traveling and com- The Bankers Loan & Title Co P. C. FULKERSON, Menager. sketching for the journal with which he has been identified for nearly forty years.—Archibald Forbes, in Century. ORIGIN OF A SLANG PHRASE. How «To Eat Crow” Passed Into the Language. The origin of the express “to eat cruw” caused some dispute in an up- town clubhouse one evening recently, and one white-headed old politician ac: counted for it in this way “Years ago,” he said. ‘a soldier sta- tioued en Governor's nd wandered up into the city and out upon the past- ure lands just north of Chambers street to have some fun. There he spied crow hepping about among the cows. and he instantly aimed his gun at it and shot it dead. As he didsoa r: little boy, who had been w: dashed off with a wild yell in the d tion of a distant house. The soldier laughed at what he thought to be the boy’s terror at the report of the gun, and laying it down careful the root of the tree, he went to y » the crow. “After that something else attracted his attention, and he did not think of |* an angry | his gun again till he heard voice behind him, and turning around, found himself gazing straight down the barrel. A furious Dutchman was at the other end of the gun. The soldier had shot the Dutchman’s pet crow, the boy had borne testimony to the deed, and now for the penalty. “Sparing you a recital of the heated | conversation which followed, the result | was that the Dutchman spared the sol-! life only on condition that he | dier’s would straightway eat the crow he had shot. The soldier argued vehemently. but to no purpose. He finally secured permission to pluck the crow and cook it a little over a tire made with a few chips. Then he began to eat, but before he had eaten more than half of | the carrion bird, he became so sick that he swore he would rather be shot than finish it. “The Dutchman's wrath seemed to be appeased by this time, however, and he restored thé soldier his gua and bade him begone. The soldier took the gun, but instead of begonning he instantly took aim at the Dutchman's head and vowed to blow his brains out if he did not at once eat the other half of the crow. The Dutchman was com- pelled by fear of death to swallow the the rest of the loathsome flesh, and then the soldier departed, leaving the injured Dutchman ready to burst with rage and chagrin. “The latter swore vengeance, and next day appeared on Governor's island and made complaint to the commandant that one of his soldiers had wantonly shot his tame crow. The commandant? told the Dutchman to pick out the offender and he should be punished. The Dutchman pointed to a soldier not far away and identified him. “Calling the soldier to him, the com- mandant said sternly: ‘Did you ever see this man before?’ pointing to the Dutchman. “ ‘Yes, sir,’ replied the soldier, with a laugh in his eye, ‘I dined with him yesterday.” “This answer so amused the Dutch- man, besides reminding him of how alt his friends would laugh at him should the story get out, that he refused to push the complaint against the old sol- dier, and ‘to eat the crow,’ meaning to suffer anything mortifying or humil ing, passed into a proverb from tha day.”"—N. Y. Tribune. AT THE PHOTOGRAPHER'S. If We Could Only Be | Natural When We Are “Taken! If you want to see humanity in al the glory of its personal vanity just spend an hour at a popular and fashion- able photographer's, and note the be- havior, one after another, of the sitters, | whether they be young or old, men or women. The first. one to arrive is an elderly lady from out of tewn, who came early, | soas to have the aninterrupted atten-| tion of the operator—sounds like dis-| She is} lack silk, | secting-table talk, doesn’t it? attired in a stiff and rustling her thin, gray locks are parted in front and slightly waved. What there is of her own and about ten dollars’ worth | of somebody else's hair at the back is | uncompromising | | nged in a hard, has stopped on the way bought a tortoise shell pin in the s to her satisfaction. ifere is where the trouble begins—her coiffure is most un-| satisfactory. She appeals to the co ored attendent for advice as to the most | becoming way of adjusting that mil ornament, and wWien together they get it fixed to suit her the poor old lady sents such a*rakish appearance that her respectable husband and her numerous sons and daughters will never rec nize the picture and will lay all the blame on the leng-suffering artist. A man in his first dress suit next en- ters the studi He is ill at also is his collar. He is ease; as anxious to pose himself after a photograph of |} Mantell which pleased him immensely and which was the cause of the rash expenditure for a suit that is about as becoming to him as doublet and hose would have been to the late lamented Jumbo. A very pretty woman who has been told she had a most fetching smile is | possessed to grin like a ‘‘chessy cat” in order to get in her best point She manages to “look pleasant” to a degree soul-satisfying even to the most exact- ing poseur, and whether it will be a picture of asmile anda face ora face and a smile isa matter of grave doubt that the proof alone will reveal. Atiny baby only four months old, } yet imbued with the universal weak- ness, cooed and gurgled gleefully over its shoulder knots of white satin ribbon | that its fond mamma thought made it look *‘so stylish,” but which detracted | from the beauty of the dear little face peeping out above two knobs tha looked like coachmen’s wedding favors. If we could only be natural whea we | go to be “taken” how much better would be the result, but anxious to be so wonderfully good looking we primp} and fuss until we don't look like our. selves or any other respectable person. —Chicago News. —Sleepy Parent—“I don’t think much of Mr. Longstay’s manners” Fair Daughter—‘‘No; they are just like his calls—they lack finis.”—Yale Record and | ape | of a fan, which she proceeds to adjust %| McKibben deceased, were granted to the} A Vetinessre and care a@ preventive for Costa eee of ere Is Uifestings | Par »murders and a | ' jbold ap of 20 mea by three is one {day's record. | j Canton S Dis agitated over the} discovery there cf what is suposed! to be a case of Ieprosy. | John Q Adams shot hilled | Jobn Thorutou at Greenvilie Til, in} aud a drunken row, Fellow fever in epidemic in Bruna-| wick, Ga Ehy.n mew cases were ved Sunday. 0% the three negroes who murder old man Hall. near Rome Ga. te wes killed ard tau in pu What doth it protit a poor mar with family, tu strike ned live lt sunmer without any wages, and when winter cons, pay for coul at a& plic: inereused because the output wan dinamelied by refusal to —Carthage Demecrat. Iv the ten years between 1882and 1891 the Genuuy army. his work? there were 2.353 +uicides in Five hundred deis for India attended Canterbury cathedral sailing. Rau es on der or- ecbhureh at jist before Caton Holland uf Canterbury ca- thedral preacked in Grace church New York, last Sunday on his way back to England after a visit tu the exp sit on. Miss Clethiide Donar a pretty Now York sehioolieachor, with) blue anested one ever ing last week for eyeling eyes nnd goldeu smls, was with ber Jantern urdighte d. A Fariner’s thorrible Dy Joseph, Sep*. 18.—Last night, while intoxicated, William Pendman, a farmer, started to drive from Lake Cor trary to Hali He fell jout of the bugg vd his leg caught tn the Station wheel, he was dragged a dis | When [tance of seven antles. found | he was dend es with sta: z CONFIDERTI for particulars ®, CHICAEC, F Order of Pubheatior. STATE OF MISSOURI,/ County of Bates, 5 In the circuit court of Bates ¢ in vacation September 6, i$ inson and Thomas J Smith, John Shearer, defendant is day comes the plaintiffs herein | s. before the undereigned clerk | of the cirenit court of Bates county, missouri, | and files their petition and affidavit alleging among other things that defendant.John Shear er, is not & resident of the state of missouri whereupon it is ordered by the clerk in vaca- | tien that said defendant be notified by publi- | cation that plaintiffs have commenced a suit st him in this conrt by ion and at- nent founded upon an account fer a bal- ance offourbnndre: ana ten dollars |$410] | alleged to be due ai. owing to them from said lefendant and that his real estate and proper- | t ss. ¥, Missouri, John D Park? plaintiffs, ve in townsh s-one [31 ed under said at- | | tachment to satisfy said debt amounting to the | of four hundred and ten doliars together costs, and that unless the said Jebn | Shearer be and appear at this court at the next term thereof, to be begun and hoiden at the | court house in th ty. on the 13th day of November next, and on jor before the third day of said term.if the term shall so long continue—if not then on or vefore | the petition in said cause, the same will be dered accordingly. And be it further ordered | ¥ that acopy hereof be published, according to law, inthe Batler Weekly Times, a weekiy newspaper printed and published in Bates county, s0., for four weeks successively, the last insertion to be at Jeast fifteen days before the first day of the next term of the cireuit court, JOHN C HAYES, Cirenit Clerk. | —~— _ A true copy of the record. Wit- < seat > ness my hend and the seal of the ~~ circuit court of Bates county, this} 7th day of September. I=. 46 JOHN C. HAYES, Cireuit Clerk. | | Executor’s Notice. | i Notice is hereby given that letter ot | ltestamentarv on the estate of fohn C lundersigned on the 3ist day ot July 1893, by the probate court of Bates coun- \ty, Missouri. All persons having claims } | against said estate are required to exhib- jit them tor allowance within one year) | after the date of said letters, or they may | be preciuded from any benefit of said! estate; and if said claims be not erhibit ed within two years from the date of this publication,they shall be forever barred. This 31st day ot July 1893. JAMES M. “McKIBBEN, Executer. Columbias, tos geod f read—comprebeusive—free at Columbia agencies—by mail for | northeast $1 1-2 red. the last day of said term—answer or plead to | * | taken as confessed and judgment will be ren- | § for Infants and Children. “Castoria is so well adapted tochildren that 3 itas superior to any prescription a sae - ARcE M.D., Ww St pocket. Si per bo: bor ees { ixive a written guare sts ke no other, Tas TeNTacr ANHOOD RESTORED! {to cures. nervous disease Waker ee Lost alossar outhful errors, excessive use of tobacco, opium or stim: SB ead to Intrmity, Consumption Or Insanity. Can ‘Sa. b mT Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, Sour Stor h, Diarrhasa. Eructation, Kilis Worns, gives sleep, and promotes di gestion, Without injurious medication, Comp sy, 77 Murray Street, N. ERVE SEEDS." his Wonderful remedy has Weak Memory, Lossof Brain, janbood, Nightly Emissions, Nervous. powerin Generative Organs of either sex caused be carried tn St y mail prepaid. With aS3 order eto cure or refund the mon: ‘Sold by Write for free Medical kK sent seal VESEED CO., Masonic Tem pie, CHIC x cca Ban, Fog TH = POSITIVE CURE. B84 ery CuOTHERS. 68 Warren st. New York. Price 50ct “IT IS SO NOMINATED IN THE BOND. Warranted Columbias. With every Columbia is a warrant— backed by the oldest bieycle house in America—the largest in the world a f.ctory whieh does not turn out poor work—a plant of superiative excellence in machinery and skilled work- men—a reputation unmatched in eycledom—all these things guarantee the Columbias—fo ks make no mistake in Columbia boying—book about ra catalog ue— 5 beautiful engravings—easy to 2c stamps. ‘(BOOK OF OUTDOORS. Unbiased articles, with no advertising in them, on all high grade outdoor pleasure. Cychn, by Copeland, Menill. Beals, Gallag he} colors, by G. H. Buek of New York. Julian Hawthorne; base bail, by J_C. Morse; rowing, by Benjamin Garno; cano ing, Bowyer Vaux; Lawn Tennis, by F. A. Kellogg; Yatehin Stewart; Horsenanehip; by H. C. Mervin foot ball, by Walter Camp; by C. hy George A. Maguiticently illustrated by and Shute, with covers in ten water All for 5 two cent stampe. POPE MFG CO. Boston, Now York, Chicago, Hartford, 65 Cents Per Month. If you would keep posted, subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY TIMES, The best daily paper west of the Mississippi River. 7,00 A Year. Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, County of Bates In the circuit court of Bates county, in vacation September Is, Is! ands B Kash, her husbard plaintiffs, vs. © P Coleman etal. defendants, Now at this da, come the plaintiffs herem by their attorneys DeArmond & Smith ana Box- | 86 Missouri, Ella Kash | ley & Horn before the undersigned clerk of the | cirenit court in vacation and file cheir petition and affidavit, alleging among other things,that | defendants S A Camp, JW Camp. Nannie Stewart and Ril tewart her husband, Mol- W Taylor her husband, James A Camp. Mattie King her husband, Itosa Kirk and Kichard Kirk her husband. Josie Kirk and B F Kirk ber husband, Rath Camp. RKuana Camp. Arthur Camp and Clarence Camp are 8 of the state of Missouri: Where- upon it is ordered by the cierk in vacation that Ne Taylor and — said defendants be notified by publication that | plaintiffs have commenced a suit against them and others in this court, by petition and aflida fit, the object and purpose of which is to ob- tain a decree er judgment from said court tor the parti of the following described real estate in Hates county, Missouri, to-wit: The northeast quarter of section 13, township 41, Tange 31, the north haif of the southeast quar- ter of section township 41. range 29, the southeast quarter of section 33 in township 4), Tange 29, and two acres unded as follows: commencing at the nort t corner of north- east quarter cf section 4, township 49, range sand running thence south 54 rods, thence hence west to beginning st side of the south- west quarter of the 1 ast quarter of sec- tion 4. townsh!p 41, range 29, and 4 J-s acres bounded as follows: commencing at southeast Also ten acres off t | corner of the northwest quarter of the north- | east quarter of section 34, township 41, range 29 | ranning north 34 rods, weet 20 rods. south 34 Tods, east 20 rodsto beginning Also north hall of the southwest quarter of the rontheast quarter of said section 34, and aleo 15 acres of the south end of the east halfof the suutheast quarter of the northwest quarter of said sec- tion 34, also the half of the southeast quarter of s > 41 and the nor! ship 40, range 24, a © northeast q ownship 4 range 24 neust quarter of the northeast q’ on 3M, township 41, range 24 and the south at AES of the prods quarter and the northwest quarter of the nortl qu 2, ail in Bates county, Missouri. ter of section township 41, range that unless th z eeident defendants pear at thiscourt, at the next tobe begun court house inthe city ty on the Lith day of Nor Mmber next, and on term, if the d if pot then on or before the iast day of eaid term. answer or plead to the petition in said cause the same will be taken ae confessed and judgment will be rendered sccosilingly. ‘And be it further ordered that a copy hereof be published, according to law, in the Batier eoun- | Weexly Time=, a weekly newspaper printed and published in Bates county. Mo., for four weeks successively, the iast insertion to be at least fifteen days before the first day of the next term of the circuit court. JOHN C HAYES, Circuit Clerk. A true copy of the record Witness my hand and the seal of SEAL) the circuit court of Bates county, this Isth day of September, 156. dl JOHN C. HAYES, Circuit Clerk. Three negroes were lynched and one beaten to death by a mob near New Orleans as a sequel to the mur- der of Judge Estopinal by a negro, | | August, 1s. Fridsy. Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, + County of Bates.‘ § ** In vacation, Aug. Isv3. Edward © Wright. Wm B Wright, Samuel O Wright. James HW Wright, Charles A Wright, Mary E Epperson, Martha G Tinsley, Kittie A Cogs- well, Sarah B Crockett, heirs of Rebecca E Wright, deceased, Join M Wright, one of the three heirs of Elizabeth Wright deceased, and pard N Allen, a miner by RT P Allen his guardian, one of the two heirs of Mattie Allen. eatin: plaintiffs. vs Obe Hawkins. Wm Hawkins, Martha Hawkins three of the four children and heirs of Anthony Hawkins, deed Emma J Drysdale, oneof the two children of Mattie Allen, deceased, daughter of An thony Hawkins, deceased, Wm W Wright, James L Wright, two of the three heirs of Eliz- abeth Wright, decd., JO Clark, Sallie Cox, heirs of Patsey Clark, deed, ina Sneed, Suean Sneed, MK Laughlin. «aroline Sum- mers, Hannah Hedden, heirs of Polly Blanton, Farmer, Jobn'G Farmer, Mary 't Wise, H M_ Cecil Cook, mer and William FC 500%, Farmer, decd. J W Slaughter, A Durham, Mattie Basbtord, McKee, decd. 0 E Hawking Hawkins, defendants Now at this day come the plaintiffs herein by their attorney, T W Silvers and J A Silvers, before the undersigned clerk of the cirenit court of Bates county, Mo , and file their peti- tion alieging among other things that defend- ants, William H Hawkins Martha Hawkins, Em- ma J Drysdale, Wm H Wright, Jas L Wright, Hannah Hedden, H M Farmer. Kate Farmer, JW Slanghter, O B Carlisle, J A Durham, voted! Bashford, OE Hawsins, Wm G Haw- ins and Sallie Cox are not residents of the i. Wherenpon it is ordered by O B Carlisie, J A heirs of Sarat and William G ration, that said detend- 2 be notified ‘by publication th plaintiffs have ‘commenc eas agai them in this cout by petition, the gen- eral nature and object of which is to partition and divid ng the said plaintiffs and de. fendan Ts of Samuel F the following described real estate situated in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: The south- West yuarter of the southwest quarter of sec- tion twenty (20) nehip thir rapge thirty and that Drysdale, William H Wright, James L Wright. Hannah Hedden, H M Farmer, Kate Farmer, J | WiSlaughter, O B cariisie, Ja Durham, Mattie aebford, OE Hawkins, Wm G Hawkins and Sallie Cox, be end appear at this court. at the next term thereof, to be begun and holden at the court house in the city of Butler, in said county, on the Lith day of November next, and on or before the third day of said term, if the term thall 60 long continue—and if not, then = or before the last dsy of sia term—answer oF pleed to the petition in said cause, the same ill be taken as confessed and judgment will be aa eee And be it further ordered that a co} ere: be published according to law. in see Batler Weekly Tize~, a weekly newspaper printed end pobdlished in Bates cou: uissouri, for four weeks successively the last insertion to be st least fifteen days before the {first day of the next term of the cirenit court. JOHN C. HAYES, Cireuit Clerk. A trae copy of the record. Witness my SEAL] band and the seal of the circuit court of Bates county, this 2ud day of Aug. 41 JOHN C. HAY ES, Cireuit Cierk. Notice of Fiual Settlement. Notice is hereby given to ali creditors and ali others interested intheestate of Kila Atkins di , that T a W Ennis. administrator of said estate, intend to make final settlement © thereof, st’the n a term ofthe Bates county probate court, in Bates county state of Mis- souri, to be held at Butler, = — 14th day of hes. Aamineeaese:

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