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A Sound Liver Makes a Well Man/ Are you biltious, constipated or trou- bled with Jaundice Sick Headache, Bad Taste in Mouth. Foul Breath, Coated Tongue, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Hot Dry Skin, Pain in back and between | the Shoulders’ Chills and Fever, ac. It you have any of these «ymptoms your liver is out of order, and your blood is slowly being potsone' ‘because your liver does not act properis Herbise will cur any disorde: ot the Liver, Stomach or Boweis. It has no equal as a Liver Medicine. Price 75cts. Free trial bottles at HL fucker*s drugstore 2e-) vear WANTEN--AGENTS willing totravel, id who will devote their whole time to soliciting for Nursery Stock. Permanent paying positions for hustlers. Customers get what they order and the best quality. Ad- dress, Mt. Hope Nurseries, (most complete on this continent.) Ellwang- er & Barry, Proprietors. Rochester, New York. 3-10 tS Elegant World's“Fa Views GIVEN AWAY -—BY—— | The St. Louis Republic TEN PORTFOLIOS of WORLD'S FAIR VIEWS, each portfolio con taming 16 views and each view ac. cuvately described. Views of the . Mail Buildings, State Bui! lings, the Midway, Views of Statuary, ete These ten p ortfotios will be given without cost to anyo.e who will send five new yeurly subscribers to The Twice» Werk Repubiic, with $65 00 the regular subseription price. Address THE REPUBLIC, St. Louis, Mo. | C. HAGEDORN The Old Reliable | PHOTOGRAPHER North Side Square, Has the best equipped gallery in Southwest Missouri. All ‘| ] | | | Styies of Photographing executed in the highest style of the art, and at reasonable prices. Crayon Work A Specialty. All work in my line is guaranteed to give satisfaction. Call and see samples of work. C. HACEDORN. “Trastee’s Sale. Whereas William A_ Hartsell and Mary Hartsell, his wife, by their deed of trast dated December Ist, 1838, and recorded Te- corder’s office withtn and for Bates count: Missouri, in book 8t page 474 conveyed to L' _ clus H Perkins, trustee the following descri! 4 ed real estate lying and being situated in the county of Bates and state of Missouri, to-wit: ‘The northe: quarter ofthe southwest quar- ter, and the southeast quarter of the north- ‘west quarter of section eleven (11), township forty-two (42) of one thirty-one (31) contain- ing 89 acres more or less. ce was mi avment of one certal oupon note fully described in said trust deed; and whereas default has been made in the payment ofthe principal ot said note and the last two interest coupons thereto attached,.ow past due and paid; and whereas said deed of trust provides that in case said Perkins was absent, or nvable to act id trustee, then thi en acting sheriff of Bat county, Missouri, should act in his _ stead. And whereas the said trustee, Lucius 8 eenae is absent! ed prem- ises at public sale to the highest bidder for feash at the door of the court honse, in the city of Butler,county of Bates and state of Mis souri, on Monday, February 26th, 1894, 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. 1 A COLYER, Sheriff of Bates County Mo., acting Trustee. ig Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI County of Bates. fos. : In the cireuit court of Bates county, Missouri, in vacation, January 9th, 1394. “The atate of Missouri at the relation and to the uee ofS. H, Fisher, ex-officio collector of the revenue being aggh eo plainti® ys. A.C. Widi- combe, defendant Civil Action for delinquent taxes Now at this day.comes the plaintif® herein by her attorneys. before the undersigned clerk hy circuit court of Bates county in the state fissouri in vacation, and files her petition among other things that the above defendant, AC Widicombe, t of the stateof Missouri. it isordered by the clerk in vacation that said defendant be notified by publication that tiff has commenced a suit against him in court by petition the object and general of which is to enforce the lien of the * gtate of Missouri for the delinquent taxes of the year 1892, amounting in the ecaregate to “‘gthe sum of $20 50, together with in ., , commission and fees udon the follow- ‘@escribed tracts of land situated in Bates ounty, Missouri, to-wit: The southwest q ter of section 3 of township 33 of range 38, and northwest quarter of secuion 17, of town- 33, of range 30, also the northeast quarter southwest quarter of section 17, town- and that unleas the 38, of range 30, defendan: term ofthis court, to be begun and holden oie of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, second Mon: in vane 1894, and onor the third day thereof (if the continue and if not then before the end d plead to said veviti - Coie be waren as confees- judgment wi rendered according : faaid petition and the above eatate sold to satisfy the same farther ordered by the clerk afore- hereof _— in the But- MES, a Weekly newspaper ed in Bates A SHREWD LAWYER. He Was Not Above When He Saw a Possibi+ P. Telling stories fit “My prospect,” said the lawyer with animation, after he bad | “Why, sir, they were never so good as they i I have the McWillizer will case, and there is certainly $500 in that. Then I} have been asked to act as junior counsel in the Interoceanic railway suit, and there is sure to be a bg! sunin that I received a retainer today to take a libel suit against the Weekly Whoop, aud I have sone} bills out that I ought ro get remit taue+s on wu week or two. Yes, sir, things are booming with me, and iuside of sixty days I will be ina better financial condition than I ever was in my life before You know how it yoes when a man does get started up” Then be said “good day” to the} busivess maa and passed on with} the friend who was with him. And the friend thought the matter over and then said: “See bere! That's a very different story from the one you told Bilkins yesterday.” “OF course it is,” said the young lawsver. “You told Bilkins that nearly discouraged; that hard work getting what was due! you, and that new cases that had any money in them wee few and far between.” “Exactly. I intended to ask me for a loan’ “But you've just told Wilber that things never looked so promising, and that you'd have money to throw to the birds within sixty days.” “Certamly. I expect I'll have to ask him for a loan of $100 or so ina day or two” “Which story was right?” “Neither wholly and both partly.” young gre-ted the business mat. are now been retained in you were you had was afraid Bilkins Clinton, Missouri. Mr. A. L Armstrong, an old druggist and a prominent citizen ot this eater prising town, says: “I sel! some forty different kinds ot cough medicines, bnt have never in my experience sold so much of any one article as I have ot Ballard’s Horehonud Syrup. All who use it say itis the most pertect remedy for cough, cold, consumption, and all diseases ot the throat and lungs. they hayeever tried.” It is a specific for croup and whooping cough. It will re- lieve a cough in one minute. Contains no opiates. Sold by H L Tucker, drug- gist. 3 Finarcial Items. An extremely thin lady, the wife! of a prominent New York banker, who was somewhat embarsased, made her appearance at a so-al gathsring in a very low-necked dress Her appearance created some re- mark. Mr Lenox Hill called the attention of hie friend Pete Amster dam to the lady with the remark: “She seems to be in the same fix that her husband is in his business.” “How is that?” “Neither of them seem to be able to cover up thair deficiencies.”— Texas Siftin, A Million riends. 1 | A faiend in need is a triend indeed, | and not less one million people have found just such a triend in Dr. King’s New Discovery tor Consumption Coughs and Colds.—If you have never used this great cough medicine one trial will con- vince you that it has wonderful cnrative powers in all diseases of the throat, chest and lungs. Each bottle is guaranteed to do all that is claimed or money will be retunded. rial bottles free at H. L. Tucker’s drugstore. Huntington, Ind., January 31.— Philip Williams was sentenced to two years in the penitentiary for forgery. Much sympathy was ex pressed for him because Williams has a wife and seven chiidren in des- titute circumstances, and it was when he saw starvation in the fami- Whereupon ly that he committed the crime. The| scene of misery presented when of Hiek's Predictions for February. February, from first to close, will be under the growing power of Mars equinox, that planet reaching its equinoctial center on the 28th. Mer- cury will! be centrally at a disturbing node on the 4th. The moon will be new on the 5th. Reactionary dis- 'turbances are due on and next to the! 2d and 34, reacbing a crisis in the centrai valley and in the east on and) about the 5th. Heavy sleet will be| a feature of the period. Look for! blizzards in the north. The general | serturbations will wind up with al very cold wave, to be felt in varying degrees to Florida. About the 6th,} b«rometers and thermometers in the west will show the presence of storm making forces It will turn warmer, cloudiness will grow, and storms of rain and snow begin their eastward march about the 7th and during the 8th to 10th will run their course to the Atlautic, closely followed on western and northern flanks by cold wave and clearing. Very cold thereafter, generally, until temperature rises for reactionary storms about 13th and 14th, after which renewed cold will follow from west and north, and remain until misplaced by the next storm period. By the 17th there will be a return to growing storm conditions in west- ern extremes. Warm, balmy weath- er will appear, with south winds and falling barometer. Farther to the east, chill, easterly winds will pre- vail, until storms organize and ad vance from the west By the 20th disturbances will reach the central parts, and cold winds from west and north will have set in behind the storms. Warmer weather will ap peareast of storms, with winds shifting southerly, and growing cloudiness culminating progressively in storms of rain and snow. The period runs from 17th to 22d, by the close of which, all the various phenomena in the growth and pre- gress of a storm period will have passed from west to east across our continent, leaving cold weather be- hind This order is to be relied upon during the progress of all regular storm periods in winter months. Hence we may learn when to expect the varying phases of the phenome na in our various lecalities. Indica tions always warn us in ample time of the close approach of the actual storms and experience will teach us the fully 0: seing unprepared for the cold which is sure to follow. Re- actionary storm about 25th are apt to be prolonged. A sweeping cold wave ends the month. Avert loss and suffering by due attention to the foregoing. will A High Liver. Usually has a badiiver. He is billious eonstipated, has indigestion and dyspep- sia. It there is no organic trouble a few doses ot Parks’ Sure Cure will tone him up- Parks’ Sure Cure is the only liver and kidney cure we seil on a_ positive guarantee. Price $1.00. Sotd by H. L. Tucker. Owensboro, Ky., Jan. 31.—Near Crow Hickman, on the Owensboro & Nashville railway, 9 miles south of here,, this morning a boiler in the portable mill of John Mercer ex- ploded, killing five men and fatally injuring another. The explosion was caused by running cold water into the warm boiler. The engineer foresaw it and urged the bystanders to run, but they regard his warning as a joke. The bodies of two of the men were found torn to atoms in a tree 75 yards from the scene. All of the victims were horribly mangled. John Mercer's body is an unrecog- nizable mass. Park's Cough Syrup. Has been so highly recommened to us that we have taken the agency tor it and ficera arrested Williams at his home was said to have been heartrending. Facts Worth Knowing. 4 In all diseases of the nasal mvcous memt rane the remedy used must be non irritating. Nothing satisfactorily can be accomplished with douches, snufts, pow- der or astringents, because they are irri- ed surtaces and shauld be abandoned as worse than failures. A multitude of the worry and pain that catarrh can in- flict testity to the radical and permanent cures wronght by Ely’s Cream Balm. Duauggists have it. The iate M. Waddington, French now ask our friends who are suffering with a cold to give it a trial and it it does not give satisfaction your monev will be refunded. Every bottle is sold on a positive guarantee. Price 50 cents ard ' $1.00. Sold by H. L. Tucker. San Antonio, Tex., February 1.— It has been the firm belief among it, be and appear at the next | toting.do not thoroug!, ieach the affect- | the Mexicans of Sau Antonio for the past balf century that the Alamo term shall} persons who had tor years borne all| Mission and fort in which Bowie, | Croekett, Travis and the other Texas | patriots were massacred by Santa Anna's forces, is haunted heroes. Since the establishment of a sub- county, ay ved ambassador to Great Britain, who) police station in the historic build- the last insertion te tore the first day of | died in Paris a fortnight ago, was a/ing afew months ago the ghosts it court. . Witness the ciroait ‘cout ee YES, Ciren t Clerk foot player of renown at Rugby in his day and rowed on the winning | the police officers on a night duty there claim to have seen the spirit Cambridge crew in 1849. have been holdiag high carnival and forms of Davy Crockett on several occasions. At midnizbt last night Officer Heron wis in charge of the station, when he heard the viice of a woman in the aj ining room, but upon making an investigation found noone. A few moments later be heard a woman crying. avd thes heard the footsteps of a man over head He became frightened and | left the building. When the mounte officers arrived, at 1a m., they wer informed of the the strange sounds and looked over the eutire building but could vot find any one Abou: Soclock this mornimyg Officer Br gen was seated near the stov- in th Alamo, when suddeuly he heard the RANA CASTORIA for Infants and Children. “Castoria is so well adapted tochildren that I recommend it as superior to any prescription knowntome.” H. A. Ancure, M.D., 111 So, Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Castoria cures Colic, Souriromech, Marben Eeentin, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and prouoies de = Cewracr Company, 77 Murray Street, N. ¥ same strange sounds, but paid ue | = a= ——— za attention to them. Another sour was heard, aud the stove door fl- open and the fire went out Mr Bergen is uot a believer in ghosts. but is xt a loss to know what extin guished the fire in the stove. Loe Spiritualists claim that the strange sounds are produced by spirits who want to be released from their con finement in the Al.mo. Will do it? 3 Medical writers claim that the success- tul remedy for nasal catarrh must be non-irritating, easy otf application, ana one that will seach the remote sores and ulcerated surtaces. [he history to the eftorts tu treat catarrh is procf positive that only one remedy has completely met these conditiohs and thaa is El?’- Cream Balm. This sate and pleasa t remedy has mastered catarrh as nothing else has ever done, both physicians and patients freely concede this tac}. Our drugyists keep it. Springfield, Mo., Feb. 2.—An at tempt was made here yesterday to blow up the reservoir of the Spring- field Supply company on the Sxe river. Dynamite was the explosive used and the perpetrators of the dastardly deed succeeded in loosen ing a large lot of earth, but vo dam age was done tothe masonry Offic ers are on the trail of the parties and it is thought will capture them soon. The Water works officials are very reticent about the affair, but it ir thought the attempted destructivn was the work of former employes Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, The Best Salve inthe world tor Cuts Bruises,Sores, Ulcers,Salt Rheum Fever Sores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Chiblains Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi- tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cts per box For sale by H. L. Tucker, druggist. $1,000 in Premiums. The Kansas City Times offers $1, 000 in premiume to the ten person who send in the ten largest num bers of yearly subscriptions to the Twice a Week Times. The first is a $350 Vose and Sons upright grand piano; the second $120 in gold; the third is a $100 Mason & Hamlin or- gan; the fourth a $100 pneumatic tire bicycle; the fifth a $90 L C Smith, Parker, Lefever or Colts hammerless shotgun, the sixth a $70 Haviland china, hand painted dinne: set of 140 pieces; the seventh a $75 mezzo tint engraving and frame; the eighth a $50 gentleman,s or lady’s solid gold watch; the ninth a $25 Washburn guitar and case; the tenth a $25 Websters unabridged diction- ary and adjustable stand. This extraordivary offer remains open until midnight of May 31. June 1 the list will be canvassed and the awards made to the persons sending in the ten largest lists of yearly subscriptons to the Twice a Week Times. The paper is issued | Tuesdays and Fridays, and the sub- scription price is $1 per year, 50 cts. for six months and 25 cents for 3 months. Two six months’ subscrip- tions or 4 three months subscription count as one yearly subscription All who enter this contest not only have an opportunity to gain a handsome premium, but will be paid for their work in addition. Ofeach subscrip tion taken they may retain 10 per cent, thus on each yearly subscrip- tion they may retain 10 cents and remit 90 cents. Write for supplies and sample copies which will be sent free of charge. Address Tse Tres Kansas City, Mo. TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS. The SpectaL ANNOUNCEMENT which ap- in our columns some time since, an- 2g a special arrangement ee Enosbu y sending tbeir psing a two-cent stamp for my » Dr. B. J. Reneail Co.. is ren ed pericd. “We tryst all will} selves of the epportuni able work. To ev . 2S ii treats} afflict this noble animal. Its phenomenal sale throughout the United States and Can- ada makes it standard authority. MEN- TION Tuts Parex WHES SENDING FOR THE TORED “NERVE SEEDS* MANH ‘This wonderful remedy uaranteed to cure a.| nervous diseases, such as Weak Memory. Loss of Brain wer, Headache, Wake/ulness, Lost Manhood, Nightly Emissions, Nervous ness,ail drains and loss of powerin Generative Organs of either sex cause@ by overexertion, youthful errors, excessive use of todacco, optum oF stim ulants, which lead to Indrmity, Consumption oF losanitz, Can be carried in vest pocket. 81 per box, @ for $5, by mail prepaid. With a SS onder Deive a written guarantee to cure or refund the money. Sold by droggists. Ask forit, take no other. Write for free Medical Rook sent seal SIM. inpluinwrapper. Acdress NER VESEED CO., Masouic Tewpie, CHICAGO, For sale in Butler, Mo., by J. H. FRIZELL, Druggist, “HE THAT WORKS EASILY, WORKS SUCCESSFULLY.” CLEAN HOUSE WITH SAPOLIO “IT IS SO NOMINATED IN THE BOND.” Warranted Columbias. With every Columbia is a warrant—backed by the oldest bicycle house in America—the largest in the world a factory which does not turn out poor work—a plaut of superlative excellence in machinery and skilled work- men—a reputation unmatched in cyeledom—all these things guarantee the Columbias—folks make no mistake in Columbia buying—book about Columbias, too good fora catalogue—45 beautiful engravings—easy to read—comprehensive—free at Columbia agencies—by mail for 2c stamps. “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; cano ing, by C. Bowyer Vaux; Lewn 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, = —ELY’S SREAM BALM Cleanses che Nasal the Sores, Restores Taste and Smell, and Cures lief at once for Cold in Head. It is Quickly Absorbed. ruggists or by mail. ELY BROS.. 66 Warren St., N. ¥.| Apply into the Nostrils. It is Presit 65 Cents Per Month. If you would keep posted, subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY TIMES, The best daily paper west of the Miasiseippi River. 7,00 A Year. FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! ——— St. Louis Globe-Democrat, Eight Pages each Tuesday and Friday, 16 pages a week. A Great Semi-Weekly Paper! Only one Dollar a Year Any reader of this paper can get it free by securing a club of three sub scribers and forwarding their names, ON THIS BLANK, with $3 Dollars To GLOBE PRINTING CO., St. Louis, Mo. Remit by Bank Draft, Post-office or Express Order, or Registered Letter. Sample copies will be sent free on application. ORDER BLANK. To GLOBE PRINTING CO., St.§Louis, Mo.: Herewith find £3.00 and the names of three subscribers on blank clipped from the Better Weexiy Tras, published at Butler, Mo. Plerse send the Teusday and Friday Glohe Democrat for one year to me and to each of the subscribers named. Denali OF Ramee 5 As we oo co ee ae Se Names of Subscribers. 2 TREATISE. i