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RATTLERS AND SWINE. California Snakes That Wage Wer Upon the Porkers. An Alpine County Eackwoodsman De- scribes the Manner 1» Which the Hogs Are Pursued and Killed by Their Venomous Foes. “Among the odd things that have been told so much that everybody is familiar with them,” said a ranchman n¢ into Pomona to lay in his ¢s the other day, says the Pomona “is the one that the om of rattlesnakes bas noe fect on hogs. Now, I whether the poison bags of rattlesnakes that have their habitat up in Alpine county are filled with venom of gre: ater power than the poison rattlesn other regions, or whether the h other localities have stronger constitu- tions than the hogs of Alpine county have, but I know what I am ta king about when I say that hogs are just a pienic for Alpine county rattlesnakes. Thave read many and many a time thatthe favorite amusement and recrea- tion that hogs have in other communities where the rattlesnake abounds is hunt- ing down and destroying these dead- ly reptiles, the hogs ‘going in among them with as much nonchalance as if they were entering a corn-crib, tearing the reptiles to pieces and devouring them all but the head: “Thad an old San Bernardino back- woods friend once, who often told me, with tears in his eyes, how he had to kill a valuable brood sow of his because of her persistence in hunting and de- stroying rattlesnakes to that extent that the locality was in danger of being entirely depopulated of the reptiles, which would have seriously affected the SS, income of my friend, asthe rattlesnakes | in his bailiwick 3 annually from their oil and skins. tried to educate the sow to fetch the ielded him a snug sum snakes home that she killed and deliver | them over to him, but she wouldn't have it that way, and so he had to kill her to prevent a snake famine. “But it is different in Alpine county. The hogs up there don't hunt rattle- snakes. Rattlesnakes hunt the hogs. If | you should ever be in that garden spot of occidental climes, and should see a hog tearing over the plain like a cyclone, its eyes hanging out, its tail curled up like a cork-screw, and its whole bearing in- dicative of an overpowering wish to get in out of the wet somewhere, you need have noapprehension. Not for yourself, Imean. You may have some for the hog if you want to, for not far behind it, and surely gaining on it, you will see a rattlesnake sliding along like a streak of greased lightning, his head raised about six inches from the ground and his glittering eyes on the flying hog. “It will be something out of the com- mon if that hog gets home with its life, for even if it isin a fair way to escape from the pursuing rattler, the chances are that it will find itself ambuscaded by others. If you see the hog stop suddenly in its wild flight and tack off on another course either one way or the other, you may know that an accom- plice of the pursuing snake has risen up in front of the hog and barred es- cape in that direction. stops suddenly again in the new course it was forced to take, and makes a break in another direction, you may safely bet that a third rattlesnake has as much as said to the beleaguered porker that he can come on if he likes, but he may not like it. And so, if you see the hog try every point of the com- pass, and stop short at every one, at the last stand stilland snort and squeal and tremble, you may make up your mind that escape has been cut off on every side by rattlesnakes and he will be a dead hog in a jiffy, for he wil! have the fangs of one of the snakes in his jug- ular before youcan count ten, and he lies down, swells up like a toadfish and asses away. “T have heard of a band of these hog- hating rattlesnakes of Alpine county rounding up whole droves of hogs and driving them up to the hills and impris- oning them in the rocks, where the rep- tiles would amuse themselves by pick- ing them off at their leisure, make them run the gauntlet of long rows of snakes and have other fiendish fun with them. The snakes don’t eat the hogs, for even an Alpine county rattlesnake has not capacity enough to gulp down anything larger thanarabbit. ‘They simply seem to have an uncontrollable and deadly hatred for swine, and kill them just be- cause they hate ENR = USE LIVING SPECIMENS. Patent M © Agents Are Making a New Departure to Sell Their Wares. There are indications that the patent medieine trade, like the book trade, alling into the hands of The medicine vender i country roads, says the Lewiston | Journal. Another feature fast de- veloping im the business is the use of ‘the living speeimen, coction, miracle was performed. Now, trade are iitroducing personally sonal statement, like that of the witne: in court, tifieate could be. the officers of both agent a from the grave. tribute hi It may result in a good salary. Tass Cloth. The Chinese make what is called grass cloth, from the fiber of the common nettle. It is said to make a splendid cloth for tents, awn- ings, etc. When made into belting for machinery it is said to have twice the “chi-wa-hi,” strength of leather. don't ‘know ' He | Then if the hog i is | eanyassers. j now frequently | net with in Maine villages and on the | to furnish con- vincing proof of the efficacy of the con- From the old-time plain certi- ficate cure, the next step was to print the picture of the person on whom the the:feremost in this race for | to sufferers the cured person, whose per- | s more effective than any cer- In one Maine village } nd witness are united in thé same person, and he does a thriving business buttonholing the farmers and other visitors to the place, exhibiting himself as one rescued Under the new sys- tem, to be sick may be no misfortune, provided one gets well and can at- iscase to a patent medicine. A WGNDERFUL NEW INVENTION. The Phonophore Will Carry Many Different Ways. To told that a telegraph wire which is busily transmitting a long message can at the same time be made to convey half a dozen other messages in opposite directions sounds like a fairy tale, but that the thing has been Messages be done and is daily being done is at- tested upon the most respectable scien- tific authorit The disc ‘y which renders these ts pos- sible is due to who has for som aged in rende: and in ike to telephonic and te It to convey to the lay mind, s go Dispatch, curate of a process so ex i it m briefly in the electric L eae Davies * utilize the d the success of the | the ability of the in- ductive foree to pass through insula- series of induc ted n is found in tions which electric currents penetrate. A wire and in contact with the earth, yet so long as it is not broken it will carry a phonophorie message. By means of the phonophore messages can be transmitted with extraordinary | rapidity, and there is practically no limit to the number of messages that ,can be sent simultaneously upon the same wire. And, as we have hinted, Mr. Langdon-Davie: tem is as use- ful telephonically ly. A wire which is conveying electric signals can at the same time be used for telephonic conversation without either | the message or the conversation suffer- ing in the least. For some considerable time past ex- | periments in both directions have been proceeding with most gratifying re- sults, which are vouched for by such high authorities as Prof. Sylvanus Thompson, Conrad Cooke and Latimer Clark. Three of the principal railway companies have already adopted the phonophore; and it must be obvious, jeven to the unscientific mind, that phonophoric telegaaphy and telephony, which is so vastly increasing the elec- trician’'s power over the wires, has be- fore it a very great feature. The phonophore, indeed, increases al- most to infinity the number of words that can be transmitted in a given time. It is obvious, therefore, that it opens great possibilities in the way of cheap- ening the cost of telegrams. Solong as the number of words that could be car- ried by a wire in an hour was rigidly limited it was hopeless to look for any | Substantial reduction in the cost of tel- egraphing, but the phonophore at once increases the capacity and speed of every wire to which it may be fitted. cannot HE WAS WELL RECEIVED. Therefore Gen. Butler Did Not Deliver the Speech He Had Prepared. A good many people, says the Boston Journal, have heard the story of Gov. Ames and Gen. Butler when they had their famous ride to Cambridge after the refusal of the university overseers to grant the governor an LL. D. But jhere is a new story in connection with the dinner—ex-Gov. Ames’ own e: planation of what was rather mystify jing to a good many people at the time: “The real explanation of Gen. But- ler’s moderation in his speech at Harv- ard college after the overseers had re- fused him the degree of LL. D. has never been told in print, I think. I rode over to Cambridge with the gov- ernor in a landau, and on the way over T hinted that diseretion would be called for. Butler was rather reticent and moody, but he replied: ‘Iam well pre- pared.’ [ rather expected an outbreak. But when we arrived and the governor | was received with even more expres- sions’ of regard than usual by gradu- ates and undergraduates alike, he bi gan to be more genial and approach ble, as he was in his role of a private zitizen. At length the dinner was | served, and George Choate, the presiding officer of the day, paid a most generous and eloquent tribute to the governor in his introductory speech. “Butler turned to me and said q jly, just before he arose to spea have thrown my speech to the vy “Then followed his model oration without a fling, without a hit—a schol- arly, eloquent address. It was not till at Williamstown the next week that I learned what he meant when he said: ‘I have thrown my speech to the winds.” “He meant that he had prepared an | address which he believed he would be justified in delivering, an address that in its scope took in all the of that institution and its management, from nds.” treasurers down through succeeding generations. But the hospitable treat- ment he received disarmed him. He had expected hisses, he received cheers; he had been prepared for a snub, and he complimented. “With his quick perception he under- stood his position exactly and kept back the proposed speech, substituting for it the impromptu, and one of the most brilliant impromptus ever delivered.” The Woman Speculator. Aman standing in front of the news stand ofan uptown elevated railroad station in New York the other day found himself rudely pushed aside with- out apology, and, looking around with a scowl, found himself suddenly dis- armed, for the offender was a woman. She was a small blonde person, clad in fashionably cut plain skirt, neat seal- skin coat and jaunty hat, ornamented with a sage-green ostrich plume. She natty silk umbrella. Her rudeness was explained by her haste to get at the news stand. She already carried under her arm several of the morning papers. She bought the daiiy Wall street pub- lications, coolly pushed her way through the crowded aisle of the car to @ place where she found a seat, and rode down town with a host of fellow- Speculators, her eyes fixed upon the market column. may be blown down | is telegraphical- | the time of the defaleation of one of its | was daintily gloved, and she carried a | AFRICAN CATTLE PLAGUE. ! fhousands Have Died in the Past Year | and the Epidemic Still Spreading. Within the past year and a half a ter Numerous © Washingto , Represent ative 4 rible epidemic has destroyed millions of | setts Las knocke mo the cattle of Africa and inflicted a erust- | pons outings wh ing blow upon the pastoral tribes. The | os plague of thirty-five years ago worked | bad cont great destruction, but, according to the |over the New York Sun, it cannot be with the present affliction. be of incaleulable beneti if some me: were found to arrest the progress of this virulent disease. ‘Thou- ands of lives among the pastoral trib would be saved if the destruction whi It would | » natives compared | that a sas C Ns ere t to t R presentative Tarsne wh. wil Tarsney, is carrying off their cattl stopped. |intended or = Ps No competent person has yet reported |,.. , } gant ; jfair tomorrow, has ¢ my the upon the nature of the p : Ss i | uy apt trip. | y. and refusal of » plague has also practic: exterminated all the buffaloes in re- gions where they once roamed in great herds. The results of the epidemic have 2 | been most disastrous in all the cattle- jlast night druuk aid isamad spell | Taising countries of the Soudan, from |threwa class tumbler at his wife, the regions south of the big northern |" * 8 aus . bend of the Niger river for two thou- | missing ber and hitting his babe on} | sand miles east almost to the Indian |the head, nex y killing it Ham | jocean. The first news concernit ge mers is now under xarrest with ut} plague came in a letter written by Capt. E | Monteil, at Kano, on January 6. last | bail. | year. He said he first observed the Sori cag | | plague in the district of Liptako, west | Marshall, Mo., Sept. 21—A_ man} | of the Niger river, and that he could | say without exaggeration that not one animal in a thousand for five hundred miles along his route to Sokoto escaped. He lost his baggage animals. and for a time was hardly able to advance. Capt. Lugard, who has recently re- turned*to England, reports that the eattle.raising tribes between the Albert Nyanza and the Indian ocean have suf- fered greatly from the plague. The Wanyika, north of the Usambara moun- tains, within two or three days’ march of the east coast, have lost all their cat- milk and flesh of their herds, have lost their cattle. This misfortune, Capt. | Lugard says, has greatly tamed their arrogance. Usogo, north of Victoria Nyanza, formerly contained great herds of cattle, but now all are gone. The Wahuma, a people west of Usogo, were exclusively pastoral, living like the Masai upon their herds. Now that their cattle have been wholly wiped out the people have died in great num- bers, and those who are left are depen- dent upon the tillers of the soil near them for a scanty subsistence. The epidemic is reported to be still spread- ing north and south of its main route across the continent. HIS CHOSEN HOME. A Lovelorn Man Who Has Lived in Jail Twenty-Three Years William Rothwell has been in the Ded- ham (Mass.) jail twenty-three years. Rothwell is sixty-eight years old, and for the many years he has been in jail he has made and mended the clothing of hundreds of prisoners. Rothwell came from a wealthy family in Eng- land and was well educated. When first known in Dedham he was arrested by Offigzer George E. Morse for drunken- ness. While serving sentence at the jail he showed aptness as a tailor, although never before having had ex- perience at the trade. After serving his sentence he was gi some money by the sheriff or officials in charge of the jail, and he left town. He re- mained away but a few days, however. | Upon his return he went to Officer Morse and requested that a charge be needle through the garments worn by the prisoners. He has a brother, 2 | | wealthy merchant in New York city. | | who recently visited him. He has been | lrepeatedly entreated by his relatives, | notonly in New York, but in a- shire, Englan e his prison j home and live with them, but he says: “I am contented in the home that I jchose twenty-three years and I shall not leave it so long Tecan re- main there, either by hospitality or le- gal sentence by the courts.” | Rothwell's life h r a young man at college } with a wealthy young } She accepted his attention asa Money he had in plenty, and | Young. spixjted Akind of h many boon companions. as lie drink and the young woman discarded | him. He then left his native land and | went to Australia. For several years none of his relatives knew where he | | was, until twenty-three rs ago| lhe sent a letter to his mother | England. telling her where he was. He has the freedom of the j and the guard room Wout be lonesome to the officers without his presence. Art of Poisoning. j All that eminent chemists know about poisons has lately been told to the | crowd of interviewing journalists who have waited upon them, and the papers | of toxicology, says a Paris correspond- ent of the London Truth. Everybody | now knows that there are animal alka- ; | loids arising from decomposition which | are deadly poisons, but whose traces in & corpse are no proof of suicide or mur- | der, because a body itself produces ex- aetly the same alkaloids soen after death. M. Naquet, who. after being | ally to polities, tells us that this subtle poison can be manufactured with the greatest case by those who understand | | how to do it. Inquiring people who | have a taste for murder combined with | chemistry will doubtless master the | process asthe anarchists have already mastered that of manufacturing explo- sives. Hammers. who lives 1 e a few miles north of here, came home named Milt Harris was instantly kill | ed this morning nei Ne'son while working with dynamite, which was being used in clearing the field of struck hin ssull. tle. Flocks of goats now form their} Notice ix hereby given, that letters only wealth. On the great Masai |Cf administration on the estate of 7 qa? a ‘ Catharine Brown deceased, were plateau, farthest west, six thousand Boratto the underiencds Onethe feet above the level of the sea, the war- nd day of August, 1892, by the pr like Masai, who have lived upon the | pate court of Bates Missou said estate them for allowance totheadm gun and holden in the city of Butler, Bates county. Missouri, on the second Monday in November. 1s ndon or before the third day | thereof (if the term shall so long continue ani if vl orethe end of the term, plead to said nevition according to law, the : 3 z same be taken as confessed and jadgment made against him either of drunken- | rendered according to the praye Raid peti- ness or vagrancy. A charge was made, | Hon. and avove described real estate old to 2 satisfy the same he pleaded guilty and he was returned | “AOU 05 further ordered by sfore- to jail, and Rothwell has continued | said that acopy hereof be publ in See ss Tach bweuies | Butler Weekly Tix a weekls this course for the last twenty-three [printed Analeercnecaia years. | county, Missouri, for four we fs = er Vnape at ark. his | the l#stinsertion to be at le Although e bears its mark, his | be ve tHE AraC ee Oh Geinest countenance shows refinement. He | c true copy from the re as be » very de: ac o see my hand-as clerk a! dwith the has become very deaf, He can be seen | | Spee prune by any visitor in the guard room of the | in I th day jail seated upon his bench, plying his | | sfar. of September, 1 - Pe ne HN CHAYES, Cireuit Clerk. [In thi | and files thy | among other things that defendant John Shear | wherenpon itis ordered by the clerk in vaes- a jailat Dedham, | | the pe | the firat dav of the next | court, have published columns upon columns | = ) 7th day of 4 fascinated by toxicology, turned natur- | t Me., 21.—Burei} W Seligman, shburn stumps. There was» premature explosion, the dia part of stump ov the bead, mashing in Notice Adiinistra‘ors vunty, All persons having claims against are required to exhibit istra- tor within one vear after the date of said letters, or they may be precluded from any benefit of said estate; and if such claims be not exhibited within two years from the date of this pub- lication, they shall be forever barred. This 22nd day of August, 1893. Jounxn W. Brown, Admit Order of Publication State of Missouri + County of Bates. § In the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, in vacation, September 20, Iss" The state Missonri at the relation and to the use of 1 H Fisher, collecter of the revenue of county in the state of Missouri, plaint- James A Wilson and William R Wil- jetendants Civil action for delinquent taxes. Now at this day comes the plaintiff! herein by her attorney. before the undersigned clerk of the cirenit court of Bates county in the state of Missouri, in vacation. and files her petition steting among other things that the above nam- ed detendants, James A. Wilson and William R Wilson are non-residents of the state ot Mis- souri: wereupon it is ordered by the said clerk in vaeation, that said defendants be notified by publication that plainti! has commenced a snit against them in this court by petition the trator. SB. . v8 object and general nature of which i~ to en the lien of the state of Missouri for the delinquent taxes of the 5 Is, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of . together with interest iinission and ives upon the fol Ueseribed tract of land situated in es county, Missouri, to-wit ‘The southwest quarter of the northeast quar- terof section 7, township Ss, range 3), and that unless the said defendants be and ap- pear at the next term of this court, to be be- Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURL, + County of Bates, "5 reuit court of Bate in vacation Septembers, 184 inson and Thomas J Smit John Shearer, defendant ss. county, Missouri $. John D Park- plaintiffs, vs Now at this day comes the plaintiffs herein | Defore the undersiyned clerk | ¢ of the circuit court of Bates cou missouri, r petition and aifidavit alt xing er, is not ar Jent of the state of mi souri fencant be notitied by publi- ntifls mmenced a suit ition and at- | Camp. Arthur Camp and Clarence Camp are | lit, the object ar ; tain a decree er judgment from said court for | c, Constipation, 1, Diarrhoea, Eructation, d itas superior to any prescription as, gives sleep, aud promotes dt =e be A. pees D., stacr Company, 77 Murray Street, N.Y MM = — RESTORED! | giswonuertar reedy such as Wes s of either sex caused obaceo, optum or stim puon or Insanity. Can be carrted in by mail prepaid. With a SS onter we cto cure or refund the money. Soid by all te tor free Me EDCOn Mascuicd pie, 1, Druggist. % excessive Use ARIBSUSiG. 3 yJ. 2. PRIZELL “IVE CURE. t.. New York. Price 60 cts.auts THE BOND.” ‘IT IS SO NOMIN Warranted Columbias. With every Columbia is a warrant—bac+ed by the oldest: bieycle bcuse in America—the largest in the world u factory which does not tum out poor work—a plant of superlative ¢xcellence in machinery ard skilled work- men—a reputation unmatched in cycledou—all these things guarantee the Columbias—folks make no mistuke in Columbia baying—book about Columbias, too good fora catalozue—45 beautiful engravings—easy to read—comprehensive—free at Columbia ayercies—by mail for 2c stampa. {BOOK OF OUTDOORS. Unbiased articles, with no advertising in them, on all high-grade outdoor pleasure. Cyciing, by Julian Hawthorne; foot ball, by Walter Camp; base ball, by J_C. Morse; rowing, by Benjamin Garno; canoeing, by C. Bowyer Vaux; Lawn Tennis, by F. A. Kellogg; Yatching, by George A. Stewart; Horsemanship; by H. C. Mervin. Magnificently illustrated by Copeland, Merrill, Beals, Gallagher, and Shute, with covers in ten water colors, by G. H. Buek of New York. All for 5 two cent stamps. POPE MFG CO. Boston, New York, Chicago, Hartford, VTED IN 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 vacation, Aug. 23, Invi, Edward © ight, Wm B Wright, Samus] O Wright, James H Wright, Charles A Wright, Mary E Epperson, Martha G Tinsley, Kittie A Cog: well, Sarah B Crockett, heirs of Rebecca E Wright, John M Wright, one of the three heirs of Elizabeth Wright.deceased, and Richard N Allen, a miner by R'T P Allen his guardian, one of the two heirs of Mattie Allen, deceased, plaintiffs, vs Obe Hawkins. Wm FE Hawkins, Martha Hawkins three of the four children and heirs of Anthony Hawkins, deed Emma J Drysdale, one of the two children of Mattie Allen, deceased, daughter of An thony Hawkins, deceased, Wm W Wright, | James L Wright, two of the three heirsof Fliz- abeth Wright, deed , JO Clark, Sallie Cox, Order of Publication. | STATE OF MISSOURI, County of Bates. In the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, | in vacation September 1s, } Ella Kash | w; 5 3 Kash, her husband plaintiffs, vs. C | P Coleman etal. defendants, ow at this da, come the plaintiffs herein by Armond & Smith ana Box- ; ley & Horn before the undersigned clerk of the | circuit court in vacation and file uheir petition ; and affidavit, alleging among other things,that defendants 8 A Camp, JW Camp, Nannie Stewart and Riley St ther husband, Mol- lie Taylor and J’ W Taylor her nusband, Charles E Camp, James A Camp, Mattie King and Thomas King her husband. Rosa Kirk and | Richard Kirk her husband, Josie Kirk and B | ‘Kirk her husbend, Reth Camp, Kuana not residents of the state of Missouri: Where- | heirs of Patsey Clark, decd, Levina Sneed, up Phe: ones by the clerk in vacation that | Susan Sneed, MK Laughlin, Caroline Sum- said defenda mers, Hannah Hedden, heirs of Polly Blanton, John'G Farmer, Mary T Wise. H M Farmer Cecil Cook, Lala CStone, J & Couk, Kai mer and William F Coox, heira of © Farmer, decd. J W Slaughter, O BC A Durham, Mattte seis heirs of § plaintiffs ha acd others in menced 8 suit againet them | court, by petition and aflida- | purpose of which is to ob- } } notified by publication that | | the partition of the following described real in Bates county, i, to-wit: The hortheast quarter of eect township 41, } ze 31, the north half of the southeast quar- section 32, township 41, range 29, the st quarter of section 53 in township 41, ing and two acres bounded as follows commencing at the northwest corner of north- Now at this day come the Eee herein by their attorney, T W Silvers and | before the undersigned clerk court of Bates county, Mo . J A Silvers, of the circuit and file their peti- tion alleging amorg other things that defend- cunt fora bal at this court at the nex i hoc Jen at the a Gant answer tion in said cause, the taken as confessed and judgment will be ren- | dered according! And be it further ordered that a copy hereof be published, according to | law, inthe Butler Weekly Times, 8 weekly | newspaper printed and pablished in Bates | county, mo., for four weeks successively, the Jast insertion to be at least fifteen davs before TM of the circuit JOHN C HAYES, Cirenit Clerk —~—_ A true copy of the record. Wit- | SEAL > ness my hend and the seal of the cirenit court of Bates county, ptember. 1-03. JOHN C. HAYES, Circuit Cler: the last r plead to} same will be Executor’s Notice. Notice is herebv given that mentary on the estate letter 07 ot John C | McKibben deceased, were granted to the undersigned on the 3 day of J 1$93, by the probate court of Bates co: All persons having claims | state are required to exhi n tor allowance within one vear aid letters, or they may) n any benefit said | estate; and if said claims be not erhibit ; ed within two years from the date ot this | | publication,they shall be forev er barred. i This 31st day ot July 4% JAMES M. McKIBBEN, Executer. { it the j after the date of be precluded fro of | the soath end of the east half of Si ono | will be taken as confessed and judgment will be rendered accordingly. ‘And be it farther ordered that a copy hereof be published, according to law, i Weenly Tras | next term of the circuit court. rast quarter ef section 4, township 40, range | ants, William H Hawkins Martha Hawkin Em- sand FunMINg thence south 39 rods, thence | ma J Drysdale, Wm H Wright, LY et 41 1-2 rods, thence west to beginning | Hannah Hedden. H M F » ten acres off the east side of the south- yf the northeast quarter of JW Slanghter, O B Carlisle, J A Durham) Mattie Bushford, O E Hawsins, Wm G Haw- kins and Sallie Cox are not residents of the Bec- | state of Missouri Teupon it is ordered by quarter oft | the rk,in vacation, shat ssid detend- ion 34, township 4) Tange al be notified by publication that ts. weet 20 rods. south 34 | pigintiffs have commenced a uit against to beginning Also north! them in this cout by petition, the gen- suthwest quarter of the eoutheast arter of said ses on 34, and also 15 acres off the southeast the northwest quarter of said sec- on 34, also the sonth half of the arter of section 32, township 41 d the northw eral nature and pect of which is to’ partition and divide among the ssid plaintiffs and de- fendante as heirs of Samuel F Hawktr | the following described real estate situated in , Missouri, to-wit: The south- arter of the southwest quarter of sec- f range juarter of sections 4, tow northeast quarter of range 2. Also the theast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 34, township 41, range 29 and the south West quarter of the northwest quarter and the William k Drysdale. William H Wright. James L Wright. Hannab Hedden, H M Farmer, Kate Farmer, J B carlisle, JA Durham, Mattle northWeet quarter of the northe: quar- ‘shford, OE Hawkins, Wm G Hawkins and 29, all in Bates county, Missouri. and lie Cox, be and appear at this court, at the ter of section township 41, range ext term thereof,to be begun and holden at that unless the said non-resident defendants | the court house in the city of Butler, in said and appear at thiscourt, at the next day of November next, and ereof, tobe begun and’ hoiden at the 4 term, if the ouse in the city of Butler. in said coun- | term +hall so long co: dif not, then on the tth day of November next. and on on or before the last « fore the third day of said term, if the or plead to the petition in said cause, the same will be taken a=confesseed and judgment will be rendered secording!y. ‘And be it further ordered that a copy hereof be published ee tolaw.in the Butler Weekly Time-, 8 weekly newspaper printed and published in Bates county, missouri, for four week= successively the last insertion to be at least Ofteen days before the {frst day of the next term of the cirenit court. JOHN C. HAYES, Circuit Clerk. A true copy of the record. Witness my nd and the seal of oe errenit eourt * of Bates county, thi day of Aug. JOHN C. HAY cait Clerk. term shall so long continne—and if rot then before the last Gay of said term. answer or pléad to the petition in said cause the same a weekly newspaper pri n Bates county, Mo., for four ssiveiy, the last insertion to be ay fteen days before the first of th JOHN € HAYES | A true copy of the record Witness my hand and the sea! of Cirenit Cie sat} the eirenit court of Bates county. - this Isth day of September, 1=6. sth i = a JOHNS C. HAYES, Cirenit Clerk Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all creditors and al: others interested nthe estate of Ella Atkina ati. J W Ennis, trator of tate, intend to make final settlement thereof, at "the next term of the Bates county Probate court, in Bates county state of Mis- souri, to be held at Batier, = = 14th day of A W ENNIS, Three negroes were lynched and one beaten to death by a mob near New Orleans as a sequel to the mur- = = Judge Estopinal by a a yanks $0 bo sneer eee eer a