The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 9, 1893, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Young Wives Who are for the first time to undergo woman’s severest trial we offer “Mothers Friend” A remedy which, if used as directed a few weeks before confinement, robs it of its PAIN, HORROR AND RISK TO LIFE of both mother and child, as thousands who have used it testify, “Tused two bottles of MotHers Frienp with arvelous results, and wish every woman who has to pass through the ordeal of child-birth to know if they will use MoTHERs Frienp fora few weeks it will robconfinement of fain and suffering, and insure safety to life of mother and child.” Mas. Sam HAMILTON, Montgomery City, Mo. Sent by express, charges prevaid, on receipt of rice, $1.50 per bottle SoldDy all druggists. ook fo Mothers mailed free. 2 BRADFIELD REGULATOR Co., Atlanta, Ga. Looking For a Wife at 81. New York, October 29.—Farmer Thompson Chandler, of Lyons Farm, N_ J., is over 81 years old and aman of 50 more active would be hard to find Hehas been married twice and widowed’ twice. and now thinks seriously of getting another wife. He said last week that before his first wife died ten years ago, she urged him to look around for a good wom an, marry ber and keep up the old place. He was nearly 72 years old then, and shortly afterward he mar- ried Lottie Garrabrant, aged 22 The result of the union was a boy, now 8 years old, who bas a half brother 60 years old, a nephew of 40 and grand some of whom are considerably older than himself. The boys mother died three weeks ago, and her sister now keeps houss for Mr. Chandler and takes care of the bey. Sheis going away in the spring, and the old man hopes to find another wife before she leaves. Mr. Chandler speaks of the 60-year-old son as his “boys.” Farmer Chandler hopes to live many years, avd his methods of life are such that it seems probable that he will reach a ripe old age He spends the greater part of his time in the open air and does not use tobacco or liquor. He takes hard cider in is his only tipple. nephews, "Electr ¢ Bitters. This remedy 1s becoming +0 well known and so popular as to seed no special mention. All who have used Electr.c Bitters sing the same song of praise,—A purer medic'ns does not ex- ist and it is guaranteed to do all that is claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all diseases of the liver and kidneys, will re- move pimple boils, salt rheum, and other affections caused by impure blood will drive malaria trom the system as well as cure all malarial teve For cure for sick headache, constipation and indigestion try Electric Bitters—entire satistaction guaranteed or money re- funded. Price 50c and $1.00 at H. L. ‘Tucker's drugstore. Directum is champion of champ ions. His wile is 2:5} at Nashville not only swept away all stallion rec ords but it took the honors from pacers as well. His close relatives Direct (pacer) 2:053 against time and Guys race records of 2:063 of along with the 2:053 of Alix which gave her firgt place among trotters in a contest were all wiped out.—Ru- ral World. La Grippe. During the prevalence of the Grippe the past reason it was a no ticeable fact that those who depend- ed upon Dr. King’s New Discovery, not only had a speedy recovery, but escaped all of the troublesome after effects of the malady. This remedy seems to have a peculiar power in effecting rapid cures not only in cases of la grippe, but in all diseases of throat, chest and lungs, aud has cured cases of asthma and hay fever of long standing. Try it and be ecnvinced. It won't disappoint. Free trial Bottles at HL. Tucker Drug Store Twenty Persons Drowned. Portland, Oregon, Nov. 1, 1;35 p. m.—An electric car thirty passengers went through the Madison street open drawbridge oyer the Carpin river, this morning Only ten escaped. Twenty persons found watery graves. $100 Reward $100. ‘The readers ot this paper will be pleas- ed to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is eatarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cute is the only positive cure known to the medical fraterni Catarrh being a constitu- tional disease requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, atting directly upon the blood and mucous surtaces of the sys- tem, thereby destroving the foundation ot the disease, and giying the patient strength by building up the constitution andassisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they otter One Hundred Dollars tor any case that tails tocure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO. ToledoO BB-Sold by druggists. 17-1m moderation, and that containing | ; INSURANCE AGAINST BORES. One Form of Imposition, at Least, Has Found a Kemedy. From London comes news of the or- ganization of a Social Demands Insur ance company. ‘The society arises out of the question that each man and wom- an puts to himself: “How much can I give without seeming shabb: when asked to give money to objects for which they have no sympathy, but to which tradition or some s¢ ef reci- procity obliges contribution. There are always restless people about getting up statues, testimonials, anniversary gifts, from silver dinner services down to quill pens, whom one wishes in Jericho, but are impossible to refuse. To thus lighten these burdens of life comes the mands Insurance company. According to a writer in the London Times this society, on receipt of a sub- seription graduated according to the in- come and needs of the members, will transact for them the whole busine the cheapest possible scale. The so- ciety will not be afraid of being called } shabby, having no corporal delicacy of feeling. Members (who have paid in their sub- scriptions) will merely send to the sec retary each week their social begging letters. The society, doing a ready | money business, can easily buy in bank- rupt stock of clocks, epergnes, bric-a- brac, silver, books. Thus it will be able to furnish suitable presents at reduced prices. The London society goes far in engag- ing a staff of sculptors, ghosts, impres- sionist painters, in acquiring a collec- tion of painters’ misfits that can be easily altered to suit the occasion, and other artistic refuse that may be util- ized at reasonable terms. The subscription of a duke, for ex- ample, to the Social Demands Insurance company is put at £10 10s, while a per- son of letters would not be charged more than 6s. 8d. In this country, until the tariff is re- duced, the subscription of the rich men ranking with the English dukes would be approximately $70, while writers would be proportionately charged not more than 82 a year. ‘These sums, how- ever, are initiation fees, and engage only the services of the society. Moneys paid out would have to be subsequently reimbursed. needless Social De- on A DIFFICULT JOB. The Mending of the Suspension Bridge at Niagara. The cables‘of a suspension bridge are subjected to great strains, and are therefore firmly anchored to heavy masses of masonry by means of long bars of iron or steel having holes at each end by which they are bolted or pinned together. The Engineering News says that one of the bars in the anchorage of one end of the smaller suspension bridge at Niagara was found recently to be broken. ‘The problem of replacing it was difficult, since the wires attached to it had to have the same ten- sion when it was in place that they had when the old bar was intact. The new bar was formed of a piece of steel twenty feet long, six inches wide id three-quarters of an inch thick; with a hole in one end and a band bolted to the other. This band was designed to pass around an iron bar in the abutment and resist the pull of the wires. When the band had been placed about this pin in the masonry and bolted to its bar the bar was carefully heated by a wooden fire ina trough below until it had expanded sufficiently to allow the end of the wire cable to be connected with it. As it cooled it contracted until, when it reached its normal temperature, the wires attached to it were strained tothe same degree as the others, and, in this way, a difficult problem was easily and cheaply solved. RHODE !ISLAND’S ODD CUSTOM. The Election of Black Governor in the Old Colevial Days. A rollicking time in Rhode Island in the old colonial days was the election of the “Black Governor,” described in the New England Magazine. After the white people had elected the governor of the state, the slaves had a curious eustom of gathering together on the third Saturday in June and electing a black governor. To this election the negroes went in fine style, on Narra- gansett pacers, with their wives on pillions behind them. A1l were dressed in their finest clothes, with swords and with powdered hair, and often a long false queue tied on behind. When all had gathered together, the vote was taken by the opposing parties forming into two long lines, with the respective candidates at the head; the lines were then counted, and the longest line elect- ed its candidate. After the election a supper and dance were given,.for which the white owner of the newly elected black “governor had to pay. The last election of a slave governor was held in 1800, but the custom of “Nigger *Lec- tion” day did not die out through New England until many years later. Dificuities of Our Language. “Kt is unusual for a person who goes into a foreign country after he has grown to adult years to acquire the language of that country well enough to conceal his alicn origin, but there are exceptions. There is a German in New York,” says the Sun of that city, “who has been her* only six years who |} speaks English withont a trace of ac- cent, although he never studied the tongue until he arrived in America. A professor of French in this city says that Englishmen and Americans betray themselves more by stress on the letter ? when they try to talk his language than in any other way. Frenchmen are more ‘stumped’ by the sound of #4 than by anything else in English. One of them who declared that he could pro- nounce anything in our tongue, was sked to say “Theophilus Thistleth- ite. He threw up his hands and ex- claimed: *Ah, barbarian! This sound is trying to the Germans like . and one of the early things in Puck, when that was a German paper, was a series of pictures representing a Teutonic waiter twisting his neck and cracking histecth in the attempt to say ‘thanks.’” ee ee MEXICO NEEDS IMMIGRANTS. People From Northern Europe Would Set a Valuable Example of Thrift. There is a rumor to the effect that an effort will be made in Mexico to turn the eurrent of European emigration from the United States to that coun- try. There is room in Mexico for many but itis bited a no means as country as many , Says the Denver Re- i out one-fourth as the United States. ulation is 12,000,000. in the United States would give this country about 48,000,000, which is but 2,000,000 less than the census of 1880 showed our population to be in that yea Mexico needs population, About one-h blooded In The same densit a different kind of rather than an increase. lf the people are full ns, and of these one-half are uncivilized. There are about 1,000,- 000 whites, the majority of whom, of course, are of Spanish descent. The negroes and Chinese, are of mixed blood. Probably 9,000,000 of the in- habitants have Indian blood in veins, two-thirds of this number being full blood. The hope of the country is, therefore, in the people who have In- dian blood. If they shall not develop toahigh civilization the country will always be governed by a smali class, composed chiefly of the whites. Fortunately the civilized Indians of full blood are a quiet, orderly people, capable of performing a great deal of labor and attaining to proficiency in the mechanie arts. Juarez, one of the greatest of Mexican statesmen and gen- erals, was a full-blood. The hybrids, like hybrids generally, are worse than their parents of either stock and have caused a great deal of trouble. Immi- gration of a good class from northern Europe would do Mexico good, because the immigrants would set an example of industry and thrift to the natives. But there is not much inducement for immigrants of the laboring, mechanic or agricultural classes to settle in Mex- ico. The demand for labor does not equal the supply, and the farmers would find but poor markets for their prod- ucts. Mexico is a good country for men with money to invest in mining and other industries requiring large capital, but to immigrants without means the field is not inviting. ARE WINTERS COLDER? It Seems So in Europe, While Ours Are Growing Warmer. It is often asked, regarding the sea- sons, whether they alter from year to year, whether there is a positive change in climate from century to centur; The general opinion seems to be, ac- cording to the New York Press, that the springs and summers are cooler than they once were, and that the win- ters are less cold. The records of thermometrical obser- vations show tiiat the temperature of the month of May is diminishing, but that the temperature of the year, taken together, rather tends to: increase. Taking into consideration a period of fifty or sixty more years, there has been observed an actual diminution of the mean temperature in the climate of France. But observing a longer period —comparing, for example, the earliest eenturies of French history with the present time—no sensible difference of the seasons can be established. For example, the Roman emperor, Julian, was very fond of living at Paris, and about A. 1D. 360 he made several long sojourns in t city. In his Mis; opogon he relates that he was greatly surprised one fine morning to see the ine stopped in its course and its waters changed into blocks of marble. So we see that there was at that time, as well as to-day, winters severe enough to freeze the rivers, and that the cli- mate has not changed much if any. Perhaps the men of the present time have a more sensitive epidermis than LIFT YOUR HATS. Neglect to Do So on Meeting a Lady Is a Breach of Good Manners. “There are two occasions upon which I never will recognize a gentleman, not even my own husband.” said a well- known society woman the other day to a New Orleans Picayune man. “If he is sitting on a street corner to have his shoes blacked he might bow at me till the crack of doom. but I would not of a saloon.” asked a friend. “Once or twice, but I nized that individual again. makes a habit of not raising his hat to some ladies he knows. He would not ments that are made on his boorish manners.” “Perhaps he forgets,” said a man who was ready to defend his sex. “That is no excuse. I would not ex- pect an armless man to lift his hat to me on the street, but nothing less could excuse him. A gentleman has no busi- ness to forget at least the appezrance of good breeding. A woman feels a man has treated her with almost famil- when speaking to her, and if she has any spunk at all she will never bow to him again.” | A Decidedly Lucky Accident. It was a fortunate accident that led to the discovery of the method of trans- ferring handwriting to iron. A Pitts- ing with molten iron’ in different con- ditions, accidentally dropped a ticket intoa mold. He presently found that the type of the ticket was transferred to the iron in distinct characters. Fol- gested, he procured a heat-proof ink, with which he wrote invertedly on or- dinary white paper. This paper wasin- troduced into the mold before the mol- ten iron was poured ip. When the mold cooled the paper had been consumed by Its pop- | | | | remainder, with the exception of a few | their | Sold in WHEN AT THE in Mining. neering, Chemistry and Metallurgy, CURE Bick Headache and relieve all the troubles inci+ Gent to a bilionus state of the system,such as Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating. Pain in the Side, ic. While their mos$ yorm=rkeble success has been shown in curing SICK Headache, yet Carter’s Little Liver Pills are equally valuabiein Constipation, curing and pre- venting thisannoying complaint, while they also 5 of thestomach stimulate tha anf sa many lives that here fs where > Loust, Our pills cureit while X WEGIGINE SO., New York. LL BOSE. SMALL PRICE ook’sCotton Root COMPOUND. A recent discovery by an old Physician. Successfully used of ynonthly by thousands ‘Ladies, 1s the only perfectly safe and reliable medicine dis- covered. Beware of unprincipled druggists who offer inferior medicines in place of this. Ask for Cook’s Cotton Root Compound, take no substi- tute, or. inclose $1 and 6 cents in postage in letter and we will send, sealed, by return mail, Fullsealed particulars in plain envelope, to ladies only, 2 stamps. Address Pond Lily Company, No. 3 Fisher Block, Detroit, Mich. Butler and eve all druggists. Nature’s ( Scuenck:: Remepy \—— a <= ‘Manprak: IVER = ( LiverPive: Comeraint ) = Chicheater’s T PER/ROVAT PILLS 4 ‘Sarc, always reliable. LADIES, ask Druggist for Chichester's English ‘Dia- mond Brand in Red and Gold metallic no other. Refuse dangerous mubstitu- ons and imitations. At Druggists, or send de. particulars, ‘testimonials and Ladies,” én letter. by retarm 00 Testimonials. — Ni |e and ker'’s Ging: Debilit INDERCOR ® WORLD’S FAIR, cnicago, be sure tocallatthe unique exhibit of Liebig Company’s Extract of Beet in the northeast part of the Agricul- tural Busiding, north aisle, in the Uruguay department, and get a Free Cup of delicious, refreshing Beef Tea made from the world-known LikpiGg COMP! NY’S Extract of Beef “MISSOURI School Of Mines. n Institute of Technology. Courses Civil and Mech. Engi- ywhere, by recognize him. Or if he was coming out “Did you ever have a man greet you in the street without lifting his hat?” never recog- One of the best known clergymen in New Orleans feel flattered if he could hear the com- | iar contempt who does not lift his hat | | | burgh iron founder, while experiment- | lowing up the idea which this fact sug- | Math. and Phy Special Courses in Assaying. Land Surveying and Electricity. Excellent Chemical Lab- ratory, and $25,000 Mining Labratory about erecting. Tuition $14.00 a year. Expenses low. Next session begins September 18th. For catalogues, &c., address, SCHOOL OF MINES, Rolla, Mo. PECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. We have made arrangements with Dr. B. J. Kendall Co., publishers of ‘‘ A Treatise on the Horse and his Diseases,” which wiil enable all our subscribers to obtain a copy of that valuable work /ree by sending their address (enclosing a two-cent stamp for mailing same) to Dr. B. J. KENDALL Co., ExospurcH Fatis, Vt. This book is now recognized as standard authority upon all diseases of the horse, as its phenomenal sale attests, over four million copies having been sold in the past ten years, a sale never before reached by any publication in the same period of time. We feel confident that our patrons will appreciate the work, and be glad to avail themselves of this opportunity of obtaining a valuable book. It is necessary that you mention this paper in sending for the “* Treatise.” This offer will remain open for only a short time, 26-2m Why Suffer?" When you can be Cured Thousands are suffering with Torpid Liver-the symptoms are Depression of Spirits, Indiges- tion, Constipation, He = Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator is a reliable remedy for Liver Disorders. It cures thousands i | eve year; ot «try the heat, but the ink, which remained | £V°lY 5, te Pe a y intact, had left Eve j | Dr. ‘ord’s Liver Invigorator? . left a ch impression on | = at the iron. | Your Druggist will supply you. Sheriffs Sale. By virtue and authority of a general execu- tion fasued from the office of the clerk of the cirenit court of Bates county. Missouri, return- he November term, INS, of said court irected in favor of FH Luddingten and jase and against Mary A Shannon Morris P Shannon anc Frank Shannon Ihave | j d and seizel upon all mght, tithe, interest and claim of in ana tothe fcHowing describ. ed realestate situatedin Bates county, Mis- | souri, to-wit } Abeut two acres m of the west one-four’ terof the southwes township 49, range 3l, | sad forty acre tract upon known as the Shannon Mill is | n the southwest corner of said forty {tract Als: the northwe: | east quarter and northeast quarter of the south i uarter of section No 29 township 41, | Also lots five and six of the worth TO! section 2. township 54 of range allin Bates county, Mo., Iwill on | Tuesday, Noveuber Lith, 1893, nz & pars 2 t quar. | wrter of seetion 14. beiag that pertion of past quart day at the east front door the city of Butler, Bates cou Hrssourisell the same or so much thereo may be re- quired at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy said execution and costs, b A COLYER, Sheriffof Bates County f the conrt honse in ustee’s Sale. Whereas Andrew J) Fulk by his deed of trust dated October 8, 1892, and recorded in book 110 at page 164 in the recorder’s office of Bates county, Missouri, conveyed to Wim E Walton, trustee, to secure the payment of the 12 notes in said deed of trust: men- tioned the following described real estate in Bates county, Missouri, to- wit: The south half of lot two (2) of the northwest qutarter and that part of lot two (2) of the southwest quar- ter which lies north of the Marias- Des-Cygnes river all in section seven township thirty-nine (39), range thirty-one, and whereas three of said notes are past due and remain un- paid. Now therefore, in) pursuance of the terms ard conditions of said trust and at the request of the legal holders of two of said past due notes ] will at the east front door of the court house in the city of Butler, be- tween the hours of 9 o'clock a. m and 4 o0’clock p. m.on WEDNESDAY the 22nd day of November, 1893, sell at public av n for cash, to the highest bidder, the realestate in said trust deed and these notes herein above described to satisfy said debt, interest and the cost of sale. Wm. E. W: Trustee's Sale. Whereas, Win. N Crouch and Alice A Crouch, his wife by their deed of trust dated August 31st, 1891, and re- corded in the office of the recorder of deed&S of Bates county, Missouri, August 31st, 1891, in book No. 102 at page 189, conveyed to the undersign- ed trustee the following described real estate lying and being situate in the county of Bates and state of Mis- souri, to-wit: The east half of the northeast quar- ter and the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section ten (10) in township forty (40) of range thirty 30); subject to a deed of trust to the Missouri State Bank for the sum of two thousand dollars: which said con- veyance was made to secure the pay- ment of one certain promissory note, for the sum of $875 dated August 31, 1891, and due twelve months after date, with interest from date at the rate of eight per cent per annum, as deserided in said deed of trust and whereas default has been made in the payment of said note,and interest Now therefore at the request of the legal holder of said note 1, the under- signed trfistee, do hereby give public notice, that by virtue of the power in me vested by said deed of trust, will on SATURDAY, December 2d, 1893, between the hours of nine o’clock in the forenoon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that day, at the east front door of the court house, in the city of Butler, in the county of Bates and state of Missouri, proceed to sell the above described real estate at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash to pay said indebtedness and costs of this trust. Butler, Mo., Oct. 30th, 1893. P. K. Huns, Trustee. GRAVES & CLARK Att Sheriff's Sale in Partition. By virtue andin pursuance of a jadzgment and decree of the circuit court of Bates coun- ty, state of Missouri, rendered at the June term thereof 153, in a certain action in partition wherein Margaret E on, James Deaton her husband, W A Wright, JK Wright, Malinda Frazee, and D L Frazee her husband, Nettie Allman and —~ Allman her husban Harriette D Cobb and Fred Cobb her h and, Mary A Marsteller Chris- tina Maddy and W F Maddy her husband,C D Denny, Cordelia Denny, James Denny and Malinda Denny and William Denny their guardian, Harriette Ida Butler and Fred But- ter her husband, Nora C Dark,C W Dark and Dollie Darx and Preston lark their guardian, plaintiffs, against Alvin Hill, Elia Hill, Milo Hill, Eanice J Wright, Newton E Wright and Frank Wright, are defendants, a certified og of which decree has been delivered to me by the clerk ofeaid court commanding me as sher- iff of Bates county. Mo., to sell the real estate hereinafter described at the November term, 1-83, ofsaidcourt Therefore in pursuance of said jadgment and decre+I, D A Colyer, sher- if of Batee county, Missouri, will on Saturday, November 25, 1893, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that day, and while said circuit courtis in session. offer for sale at public auction for cash, to the highest bidder, at the east frort door of the court house in the city of Butler, the following described rea! estate to-wit: Lote nine and ten ig & 10} in block five [5} in the city of Rich Hill. andthe west half of lot seven [7] of the northeast quarter of section five (5) of township thirty-nine [39], range thirty-one (31). D. A. COLYER, Sheriff of Bates County. Administrator's Notice Notice is hereby given, that letters of administration on the estate of James S. Payne deceased, were granted to the undersigned on the 5th day of October, 1893, by the pro- bate court of Bates county, Missouri. All persons having claims against said estate are required to exhibit them for allowance tothe administra- |tor within one year after the date of said letters, or they may be precluded from any benefit of said estate; and two years from the date of this pub- lieation, they shall be forever barred. This 5th day of Oetober, 1893. { W L Kass, Administrator. i i H | t which what has been | S¢ribed real estac cated, and be- | county, Missouri, to-wit acre | quarter of the south |, 2 Wat of tlie west half af the west }southwest quarter of section No between the honrs of vine o'clock in the fore- | noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that | if such claims be not exhibited within } Sheriff's Sale. By virtue and authority of a gesar al execution issued froin the office of the clers of the circuit court of Bates eouuty, Missouri, returmabie at the Nov. term, 1893, of said court: a me directed in faver of David A BeAr- mond and Thomas J. Smitle and against Mary A Stgneen and Merris D Shan: Lhavelevied andseed upon ali right, title, interast and elanu of, in and to the following de- Situated an Bates About two acres, more or hess, be- half of the southwest quarder of the Wy, township 40, range dSeing that portion of saad west haif of west half of the southwest quarterof the south West quarter of section Lyupon whiet } what has been known as the Shan - jon mill is situated, and being in the jsouthwest corner of said forty acre tract. Also lots five and six of Ue | northeast quarter of section 2, towe- | ship 38. of range | Also the northwest quarter of {the southeast quarter and northeast \ quarter of the southwest quarter of section No. 29, township 41, range 31. jallin Bates county, Mo., | wilh on | Tuesday, November 14, 1893, between the hours of ning oelock in the forenoon and five o'cloek in the afternoon of that day at the east front door of the court house in the city of Butler, Bates county, Mis- souri, sell the same or somuch there- of as may be required at public ven- due to the highest: bidder for eash to satisfy said exeeution and costs, D, A. Conver, Sheriff of Bates County. is-it Trustee's Sale. Whereas George D Burch and Ann E Barch his wife, by their deed of trast dated November 26th iss, and re “fin the recorder’s ofice within and for Bates county, Missonri, in book No 92 page S3t conveyed to the under- signed trustee the following described real es- tate lying and being situate in the county of Bates and state of Missouri, to-wit The west half of lots one (1) two (2) and three 3) exe +pt three (3) acres cutof the northeast corner of sau lot three all of the northeast quarter of section five (5) also nine (#) acres of ot the east side of the east half of lot three of the northwest quartero section five (3) all in township thirty-nine (39) of range thirty (30) containing in all one hundred and twenty- six acres, which conveyance was made in trust to secure the payment of one certain note fully described in id deed of trust, and whereas, default has been made in the pay- ment of the principal of said note and the ac. crued interest thereon nc t due and un- aid, Now therefore at the request of the egal holder ‘of said note and pursuant to the conditions of said deed of trust I will proceed to seil the above described prem is { public vendue, to the highest bidder for sh, atthe east front door of the court house in thecityof Butler, county of Bates and state of Misrouri. cn Friday November 17, 1893, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that day, for the purposes of satisfying said debt, interest and costs. 49 4 J.D, ALLE! \, Trustee. Order of Publicatior. State of Missouri, ¢ County of Bates, § In the circuit court of Bates county. Missouri. in vacation, October 20, 1803 W W Kimbali Company, plainti®. Jobn C Hicks, defend- ant 88, Now at this day comes the plaintiff herein by it attorneys, Graves & Clark, before the and files its petition and affidavit among other things that defendant, John C Hicks is not a resident of the state of Missouri. Whereupon it is ordered by the said clerk in vacation, that said defendant be notified by publication that plaintiff! has commenced a suit against him his court by petition and attachment founded upon a promissory note, or obligation in writing, execute by defend- ant to plaintiff on the 26th day of October, Is#2 whereby defendant promised to pay plaintif® 50, aa follows: $37 on May 15th, 1893, and on December Ist, 1803, with interest on eace payment from date at the rate of eight percent per annum, together with an attor- ney’s fee of ten per cent of the amount ifnot paid when due. That aefendant’s property is about to be attached and that unless the said defendant, John C_ Hicks, be and appear atthe next term of this court, to be be- gun and holden in the city of Butler, Bates county. Missouri, on the second Monday in February 184, and on or before the third day ot said term(if the term shall so long continue and if not then on or before the end of the term, and an rT or plead to the vetition in said cause, the same will be taken as confessed and judg- ment rendered accordingly. And be it further ordered that a copy hereot be published according to law, in the Butler Weekly Time-, 8 weekly newspaper printed and published in Bates — missouri, for four weeks successively the last insertion to be at least fifteen days before the firat day of the next term of the circuit court. JOHN C. HAYES, Circuit Clerk. A true copy ofthe record. Witness my {seat} hand and the seal of the circuit court of Bates county, this 20th day of Oct 1893, 49 JOHN C. HAYES, Circuit Clerk. Sheriff's Sale. By virtue and authority of a special execu- tion on mechanic’s lien issued from the office ot the clerk of the circuit court of Bates coun- ouri, returnable at the November of said court to be directed in fay- orofD W Drummond and sgainst LH Lam- bert, I havalevied and seized upon all right. title, interest and claim of, 1m and to the fol- lowing described rea] estate situated in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: jo. one (1) block tour (4) in Willia second addition to the city of Butler, Mo., I will on Saturday, November 25th, 1893, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- noon and five o’clock in the alternoon of that day at the east front door of the court house in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, sell the same or so much thereof as may be re- quired at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy said execution and cost D. A. COLYER’ Sheriff of Bates Connty . 42-4¢ SS, Something New. The Kansas City, Pittsburg & Gulf | raijroad is now open and ready for both passenger and freight traffic \from all stations on its line between | Sulphur Springs, Ark., Neosho and | Joplin, Mo., Pittsburg, Kan., and Kansas City, Mo. j If you are going to Kansas City, 'St. Louis, Chieago, or any point north | hortheast or east, or to Denver, Og- iden, Los Angeles, San Francisco, | Portiand or any point in the west jand northwest, give the new line a jtrial. Magnificently equipped pas- senger train daily through to Kansa- City without change, connecting with lines from Kansas City to ali pointe. insuring the traveler quick time, low | rates and excellent accommodation: | Merchants are requested to remem- ber this line in giving routing order- | for freight shipments, as the expedi- tious and careful handling of all con- | Signments will be guaranteed. For | additional information, call on near- ‘est agent of the company, or address the undersigned, As. Doxyoure, Gen. Frght & Pass. Ag’t, Kansas City, Mo. { | ' |

Other pages from this issue: