Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Taxes and Taxation. (lobe-Demoerat. : The house tax in $400,000 a year. In the time of Queen Anne soap was taxed £28 per ton. Lhe tithes in England amount to £4,050,000 a year. Russia raises $1,500,000 a year by the sale of passports. A tax on dogs was levied in Rome during the reign of Nero. In 1858 the people of Great Brit- 92,200 2,2! Greece brings ian paid taxes on 4 carriages. In Portugal the tobacco tax brings £900,000 the land tax £700,000. In parts of Peru taxes ave paid in cocoa leaves and Peruvian bark. The soap duty in Holland brings $750,000 a year to the government. Charles II. farmed all the customs for an annuai payment of £390,000. A hearth tax was formerly assessed in many of the German states. The rate of taxation has nearly guadrupled in France since 18! Male servants are taxed in Great Britian and several other countries. The French people pay over $10, 000,000 a year taxes on their win lows. Germany pays $10,000,000 a year taxes on salt and $13,000,000 on su gar. ' The Australians pay £10,000,000 in taxes to support their govern- ment. Holland is the only country in Europe that admits coffee free of duty. Until about forty years ago, the Persian government levied a tax on cats. The taxes of the people of this country equal $10 to each inhabi tant. The capitation or poll tax is be lieved to have been the earliest form of taxation. Almost all the Turkish taxes are farmed out, and the resulting cor ruption is very great. Iu the early days of the Virginia and Carolina colonies taxes were paid in tobacco. During the fourteenth century, in Ttaly, a tax was levied on every one who wore shoes. Custom duties on imports were collected in England by Ethelred II. as early as 979. Most of the Asiatic countries have been ruired by the system of “farm ing the taxes,” The Sultan's representatiyes in Arabia often accept Mocha in lieu of specie when taxes are due. Great Britian raises £19,000,000 from the liquor taxes and £8,000,000 from the tax on tobacco. The first mention of any sort of taxation in Greek history is a tax levied by Solon, B. C. 540. The tobacco tax in Spain brings :8 much revenue as the tax on land; each is about $30,000,000. In Ceylon the government ducs are often settled by payments of cinnamon, cloves and allspice. The tax on coffee yields the best returns in France, £4,600,000 a year, and the poorest in Denmark. The people of Europe pay their respective governments £10,000,000 every year in taxes on salt. On the west coast of Africa the taxes assessed by the petty kings are payable in palm oil and ivory. One of the earliest tustorical ree- ords of Egypt relates to the assess ment and collection of royal taxes. The liquor tax yields the best re turns to the government in Russia and the poorest in Norway. The people of Europe, including Great Britian, disburse every year inftaxes the sum of £670,000,000. Taxes on clothing above a certain grade of excellence were levied in France for nearly two centuries. Finland is the least taxed country in Europe. The total taxes amount to only $4 per head of population. In Siam, until a few years ago, a heavy tax was levied on umbrellas. Every umbrella carrier had to pay. Peter the Great levied a heavy tax on beards, not for the purposes of revenue, but to compel his people to shave. In 1882 poll tax was paid in Rus a by 693,000 land owners and gen- + 1,347,000 cossacks and 23,542. 000 serfs. The English income tax has been changed eighteen tim varying from 2 pence to 16 pence. In most parts of Syria. Palestine and Arabia fig trees and date palms are counted, anda tax is levied on each tree. The people of Great Britian pay 120 pence per head every year in liquor tax, 30 pence in coffee tax and 60 in tobacco taxes. in the pound since 1842, | j A FATAL HAND-SHAKE. A Kentucky Lover Cuts His Success- | fal Rivai’s Throat. Lexington, Ky., June 13.—News comes from Bowen that a ferocious and desperate fight occurred near that place yesterday evening, of | which the circumstances are of more | jthan ordimary import. James Mo: jton and Dan Matthews, two weli known young men of Powell county, } } | who Lad been intimate friends, sud denly becaine the most bitter ene-| mies. A gitl was behind the trouble. | e Both wen had been suitors for her i j hand, and both were un | ;the hold be had ou her heart. agreed to fight it out with nature's | weapons, the victor to take the girl.) | Yesterday evening they met ina jwoods near Bowen, aud a bloody fight of three hours’ duration took piace. Round after round was fought, jand when time was called cach man ae the issue. Thirty rounds were ‘required to decide the contest. Mat- jthews finally knocked bis wan out with a wel! planted blow. Both men were horribly disfigured aud bloody. The crowd dispersed with the agree ment to meet last night and make |the fiual arrangements for turning the fair damsel over to the winner. When they met at 8 o'clock Morton, the defeated mav, walked up to Matthews, the victor, and extending his hand, said. “Shake bands, Dan, you are the better man, and have won the girl.” Matthews grasped the lover's hand, and to the horror of the spec tators, Morton suddenly drew a dirk wiih his left hand and made two quick, fierce stabs ot Matthew’s throat, almost severing his head from his shoulders. He then turned and ran, escaping The wounded man is, it is believed, fatally hurt. Bowen is the headquarters of the Suicide Club, by whose edict two young men of Powell County have committed suicide in the last three months, and it is rumored that both Matthews and Morton are members of the club. There is much excite ment over the affair. Facts Worth Knowing. 4 In all diseases of the nasal mycous memi rane the remedy used must be non irritating. Nothing sati-factorily can be accomplished with douches, snufts, pow- der or astringents, because they are irr toting. do net thorougl, ieach the atfect- ed surtaces and shauld be abandoned as worse than failures. A multitude of persons who had tor years borne all the worry and pain that catarrh can in- flict testity to the radical and permaneat cures wronght by Ely’s Cream Balm. Duiuggists have it. Su anded In Londor. Washington, D. C, June 14 telegram received at the Interior department today announced that four Winnebago Indians are strand ed in London and are seeking funds to return to their reservation ia Wisconsin. Ambassador Bayard ask- ed whether the Secretary could au thorize payment of a draft for their return. Secretary Smith has sug gested that the State department advauce the funds, to be reimbursed by the Interior department, and if this cannot be done, arrangements will be made for their return by private parties, to be reimbursed later by the government It is not known how the Indians reached London, but it is believed they were | left there by a traveling show. | zi = | {A Sound Liyer Makes a Well Man Are you Billious, conszipated or trou bled with Jaundice, Sick Headache, bad taste in the mouth, foul breath, coated tongue, dys » Indigestion, hot dry skin, pain in the back and between the} shoulders, chills and tever, &c. If you have any of these symptoms, your liver is out of order and your blood is slowly | being poisoned becanse your liver ¢ } not act properly. Herbine will cure disorder of the liver, Stomach or bow Ithas no equalas alivermedicine. P: 75 cents. Free trial be at HL. Tuckers drugst re. 48 1y | | | Joes Fel ali Jay Cooke, in 1866, told the foi lowing: ‘One day, when I was put ting Government bonds upon the} market, Iwas greatly annoyed by the clerks telling me that there was an old man in the effice who would! do no business with them and must seeme. To get rid of him I went out. Said he: “Mr. Cooke, I have got $3,000 in gold in this bag. I can't do any thing with itin the town where I} live; they are circulating grocers’ } checks and everything else but mon ey, and I am frightened because I think I will be cheated if I dispose | of it. Willyou tell me on your word of honor if these bonds are| sound and right?” “T replied: ‘If they are not right, | j nothing is right. I am putting all I} have in the worldinto them.’ | | “After further conversation | man concluded to take them. “ -What denominations will you have them? I asked. “This was too much for the man. He had néver heard that word used} |in connection with business He} | seratched his head and said: | joe ‘You may give me $500 in Old School Presbyterian, to please the old woman; but I will take the heft of it in Baptist.’ "—Harrison’s Mag- azine. | the! e {St ' That the wealthiest classes, who re- 1 pc j times present. He ref j dred pounds on foot, | to get out of debt and for every man j tional disease requires a constitutional |treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken ty Piece of Political Work. Jefferson City, Mo, June 13.—)| from different parts cf the State, | ine] what purports to bea cir wiitten by me and ad to the Democratic ¢ i i dries as to its letter itral com St. | Louis Monitor. on the Democratic or of the } t it happened that eu had been printed in his y the authority of my 1 plied that in Decemb written the article in published it as paper, and that my na: wise associated with it. Some miserable scamp has taken this article and attached the follow- ing headlines: “Governor Stoue’s Letter to the Democratic County} Central Comumitteemen. Governor ne has issued a circular letter to the committeemen of the State of Missouri, from which we take the following.” Then follows the Moni- tor’s editorial. In this form this article has been printed in nearly all the Republican and Popu papers | of the State. It isa mischievous forgery, and | the act of a scoundrel. I ask space in your coluius to make this state- ment. Respectfully, Wituiam J. Srone. Muddle, He re | st he bad | question aud| Aub € was in no | Another Kentut y Owensboro Messenger, Mr. Fulkerson recently married the daughter of Mr. Hendrix. Mr. Fulkerson has a comely daughter of 22, and Mr. Hendrix being a lone widower of needs some one to comfort him. He proposed to Miss Fulkerson, was accepted aud they were married. The women became sisters in law aud at the same time exch is the stepmother of the other The men at the same time became fathers in law, sons in-law and step rons to their own wives. Such a mixture of paternal, fraternal and external relations is not often found. See the World’s Fair for 15 Cts. 4 Upon receipt ot your address and fit- teen cents in postage stamps, we w mail you prepaid our Souviner Portfolio of the World’s Columbian Exposition, the regular price is Fifty cents, but as we want you to have one, we make the price nom You will find it a work of art anda thiug tobe prized. It con- tains full page views ot the great build- ings, with description of same, and is executed in the highest style ot art. It not satisfied withit, atter vou get it, we will refund the stamps and let you kecp the book. Address H. Bueklen, Chi- cago, Ill. The business men’s war on the im come tax amounts simply to tins ceive the largest measure of protec- tion from the laws of the land, are} unwilling to contribute to the main tainance of the government in the ratio of their ability and are seeking to shift the burden upon the people who are unfitted to bear it and who} increased taxation means actual hardships. The tariff system which discriminate in favor of the rich as agaiust the poor has so viulated the the public sense of j ns to make it difficult to devise y successful plan for remitting the unjust: yressive tribute which the laws im upon great i ountry.— justices nd cp e strug ¢ ie masses of this ¢ Ransas rs THE NEW SPRING HATS. are all adorned with The on your Parks’ ities, mores Ith an re roses gives h Sold An “old timer” writes the Sedalia Democrat that he recollects when were much der than at] 18357 38, when | wheat sold for 25 ceuts a bushel. hogs were worth only $1 per hun | neep brought d, the best horses} were a dull sale at $35 a head, and a| man considered himself lucky to get $10 for a mule colt. But, says “Old Timer,” men in those days lived eco- nomicaliy and put their shoulders to the load aud moved the wheels them | selves. The first remedy then was to 60 cents a | to make himself eelf-supporting. This was done, and ina few years the land blossomed like the rose The writer makes the same sensible suggestion as a remedy fcr the pres- ent hard times.—Kansas City Timez. $100 Reward $100. The readers of this paper will be pleas- ed to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in ail its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cute is the only positive cure xnown to the medical fraterni Catarrh being a constit internally, acting directly upon blood and mucous surtaces of the tem, thereby destroying the foundation ot the disease, and giying the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they otter One Hundred Dollars tor any casé that tai to cure. Send tor list of testimonials, Address F. J. CHENEY & CO. Toledo O BeB.Sold by druggists. m™m 17- the} i jman of but 1 | mu |hadn’t ver forget au ey Jerry Harralsou’s career is | Almost every mail brings me letters | STeSS, said a member of the Ala bama delegation. “Jerry was a blac nited e ch natural sh a Republican, of e¢ during the speakership of 3 dall that a bill came up f sioning of the Mexican W ameng whom was Jefferson Davis. r veterans, | acy ~To the sur; are Democrats ential Representatives change his vote to urgue wid said Jerry. ‘Jeff Davis was de t fren’ Leber had, an Tm gwive to vote to gib him de pension. Ef it bin for Jeff Davis, dere wouldn't ben anny w Harralscn would've yonder in de Alabama cotton working like de ole boy ins ar, Deen dc big money anda member of Con gress. WHY DON’T YOL use Parks’ Tea tor headache, tion and “fhat tired teeling the blood, acts on the every day- pnstipa I urifies the cor liver aud herbs and plants, sa y H. LL. Cuck boautifies sluggish 0 Washington, D.C. June 6 —The cash balance in the treasury to day was $116,654.500 at the close of $74,000,257 i gold reserve. To day's gold engage business, of which D7 18 meuts for exports, however, amounts to $1,759,000, the true amouut of the $72,230,500. exving reserve SISHSSISSSSSESESSIISSTSSS i Is SENTIALX% ‘Good a HEALTH. BI d You cannot hopeto be well 1S IMPURE, — ag you are troubled witht BOILS, ULCERS or PIMPLES, SORES BSSSSSSSISSN SSSSSSSOSH' % % % % K A few bottles of S.S.5 ny ‘All manner of blem3% % CLEARED AWAY by ais use. It is the best blood rer ly on ¢: ‘Thousands who have used it say so. pet ¥ your blood is ba thoroughly cleanse the you up- % rat 00 Ty sumonials, i Name Paper. Chemie] Con Maal Jeon Square, ane PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and b es the hai Use Weal NDERCORNS, + Parker's k Longs, D e only sure cure for € r HISCOX & CO., N. ¥ and Jerry | whi | Nervous De bein’ up here in Washington drawin’ ook Coton COMPOUND. ‘A fetent discovery by an cld physician. Successfully used onthly by 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 | rs In plain envelope, to ladies only, 2 stamps. Address Pond Lily Company, No. 3 Fisher Block, Detroit, Mich. everywhere, by gists. OLDEST ard ORICINAL thousands of | Now Ladies, Is the only perfectly 3 safe and reliable medicine dix | Dr. WHITTIER 10 WEST NINTH STREET, ‘ JUNCTION.). S CITY, © © MISSOURI. — * Regular graduate —authorized by the }P | note has been fully paid state, and conced-/| ed to be the lead- ing and most suc- cessful Specialist in BLCOD, NERV- OUS and URINARY DISEASES. bility With ts Maay Gloomy Symptoms Curec. A |Lost Vitality Perfectly and Permarertly Restored. Syphilis Cured for Life Without Mercury. |Urinary Diseases Quickly Kélieved and Thoroughly Cared. cure-alls ar Dr. Wb ptoms) physician of long experience, ung skill and sterling integrity. MEDICINES from our own laboratory fur- nished ail cost aud shipped anywhere secure from observation. TREATMENT never sent €. 0. D. FRE CONSULTATION. URINARY ANALYSIS. Office hours—9 to 4 and 7 to 8 Sunday 10 to 12. Cuide {To Health and Emergenct { for 6 cts.—stamps—to prepay. Call or address in strict confidence DR. H. J. WHITTIER, Owest Ninth Street, Kansas City, MO person or by stioned at sn: Sheriff's Sale. By virtue and authority of a transcript exe- cution issued from the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, returnable at the June term, Isv4 of said court to me directed in favor of J Bryant, R| Bryant and S 3 McDaniel and against E. Miller, Henry Miller, and Robert = Mil- ler, Ihave levied and seized upon all the right, title interest and claim of E Miller, Nenry Miller and Robert Miller, in and to the following described real estate situated in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: Southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 25 and the south half of northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 2s and north half of northeast quarter of southwest quurter of section 28 and north half of northwest quar- ter of southwest quarter of section 28 and southeast quarter of northwest quarter of eec- tion 2s north ialf of southwest quarter of southeast qi r of sect all in town- ship #2, range sv, in Bates 3, Mo ,l will on Thursday, July 5, 1894, tween the he in the fore- and five 07¢ afternoon of that day at the east front door of the court house in the city of Butler, Bates unty, Missouri, sell the same or so much thereof as may be re- quired at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash to sati said execution and costs D. A COLY Sheriff of Bates County of rane o'clock ock ih the Sherift’s Sale. virtue and authority i from the off of thee urtof Bates county, Misso rnable at the June term, IsM, sted ia fave f a transe iller, Robert Miller and to the following tuated in Bates county, thwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 23 and the south halfof northwest quarter of the southwest rter of section 2s and north half of north- ter of the southwest quarter of sec. north halfof northwest quarter of | southwest quarter of section 2s, and south east qu of northwest quarter of scction 23 north half of sou t Thursday, July between the he Effervescent, too. Exhilarating, appetizing. Just the thing to build up the | constitution. H i res’ Rootbeer | Wholesome and strengthening, pure blood, free from boils or carbuncles. General good health —results from drinking HIRES’ Rootbeer the year round. Package makes five g: Ask your druggist or grocer fc Take no other. ons, Send 2-cent oe the Charles E. Hires Co., 117 Arch St., Philadelphia, for beauti ful picture cards. W.L. Douctas S3 SHOE weiniikn. $5. CORDOVAN, FRENCH& ENAMELLED CALF $4, 53552FINECALFE KANGARDD. $3.S9POLICE,3 Soies. 293852. WORKINGwEy $2.$1.75 BavsScHoa.SH0es, *LADIES- SEND FOR CATALOGUE » W-L*DOUGLAS, ‘ BROCKTON, MASS. You can save money by purchasing W. L. Douglas Shoes, _ Because, we are the est manufacturers advertised shoes in the world, and guaranice the value by stamping the name and price on the bottom, which protects you against high prices and the middleman’s p Our shoes | equal custom work ia le, ea: nd | wearing ¢ ¢ them sold every- | where at lower prices for the value given than anyother make. Take no substitute. If your dealer cannot supply you, we cam. Sold by | of JC Hick, Pree | between the hours of nic court house Missouri, ieee bidder ution and costes A. COLYER Sheriff of Bates Bou Sheriff's Sale. be clerk of t » Misscuri, re- ‘4, ofsaid court, n favor of W. W. Kimball Co have levied interest and claim owing bed ijn Bates county ssouri, h half of the northeast quar. and egainst Jol seized upon | | clerk un | ter of the northeast quarter and the southwest | the. north- , township Mo., I will on Thureday July 5, 1894, ck in the fore- nand five o’clock J. at the east fr e city of © same or = Sheriffs Sale. y virtue and hority of a general execu- ed from fice of the clerk of th Missourl, re- ¢ June term. . of said court. din favor of Bank of Amsterdam acsinst WS Chandler, Mary W Chendler WA Lebo, [have levied and seized upon u and claimof W SChan- andW A Lebo in and bed real estate situated the following dea in Bates county, Missouri, t quarter of section i. tow 1 in Bates county, Mo., I Thursday. >41 of range on | between the hours of nine noon and fire o'clock in the sfternoo: day at the east front door of the court hou: the the same or so much thereof as may quired at pal for cash to 0-48 fy said execution and costs. D. A. COLYER, Sherif of Bates County. 40, - afternoon of tuat | li | disebarg | dered released and reuit court of said county, in vacation May Si, Iss W A Searfus plaintig, The unknown heirs of Felin Bonnett, deceased defendants ‘ st this day comes the plaintid herein attorneys, Graves & Clark, before the igned clerk ofsaid court in vacation, and dies his petition snd affidavit stating among other things, that one Felin Bonnett is now dead % the whereabouts and names of the legal heirs of the said Felin Bonnett are unknown and for that reason cannot be insert- ed in the petition herein fled That on Ocg. 23,169, Reuben W Seartus and Amanda K Sear- fus his wife, made, executed and deliveredto sad Fe Bonnett a mortgage or deed of trust conveying to said Bonnett the east half of lots twoand 3) of the northwest quarter of sectio township thirty-nine of range thirty- (Gi) in Bates county, Mis which deed of trv is re pd in the recorder’s office of Bates county in book No 3 at page 23 thereof. s plaintif. W A Searfus is the owner lund and in the possession thereot; that ortgage or deed of trust was given to the payment ef a note for $2) in said ‘ust or mortgage fully described; that note and interest has been fully paid and : thatif the same had not been fully nd discharged, the heirs ofthe said Felin tt, would be interestedin and entitied to the same; and in which petition plaintif® prays that the court find and declare that s nd discharged; ¢ that said mortgs; ed and for nanght said discharged a at it be ordered and deer or deed of trust be cance: hel hat the a eek lien created by said rigage or deed of trust be ordered and de- ereed released; ant for such er and turth- er owner and SS at the court seem right and proper. Whereuponit is ordered by the im vacation that said defendants, the wn bh of Felin Bonnett, deceased, be iby pablication that plaintif® has com- dan action against them in this court the general purpose of which is to have said mortgage described as atoresaid ordered and decreed canceled and for naught held; and to have the court find, order and decree that said note described therein has been fully paid and and that the apparent lien of said mortgage or deed of trust be declared and or- that unless the said de- fendants, the unknown heirs of Felin Bonnett, deceased, be and appeat at this court at term thereof to be begun the court house in the in said county, on the ber vert, and on or before id term answer or plead to use thesame will be a Judgment will be ren- sixth day o! the petitio taken as confes dered according And it is further ordered that a copy hereof be published according to law in the Bat- lerWeekly Tive-, a Weebly newspaper printed and published in the city of Butler, in Bates unty, Mis for tour Weeks successively just insertion to be at least fifteen days be- fore the first day of the regalar November term, Is, of eaid circuit court, STATE OF MISSOURI County of Bates 1, sohn U Hayes, clerk of the circuit court of Bates county atoresaid, hereby certify that the above isa true copy of the original order of publication, in the gause therein named, as the same appears in my office Witness my band as clerk, and the SEAL} seal of said court. Done at office in Butler. wo on this Sist day of May, int. ” JOHN CHAYES, Circuit Clerk €s Trustee's Sale. Whereas ed ==sman, Tommie G Shee an unmarri- by his deed of trust dated June sth, Ise, and recorded the recorder’s office within for Bates county. Missouri, in book No. 107 page 505 con- veyed to the undersigned trustee the follow- ing described real estate lying and being situ- ated in the county of Bates and state of Mis- souri, te-wit: Southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section four 4) and northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section nine (9) In tcwnship forty-one (41) of range thirty-three ontaining eighty (S0) acres more or less which conveyance was made in trust to secure the payment of five certain notes fully describ- ed in said deed of trust; ana Whereas default has been made inthe payment of one of notes and the annual interest on the remain- ing four notes on account of which defanit the principal of all said notes have become dueand payable, Now therefore, atthe re- quest of the legal holder of said notes and pursuant to the — conditions said deed of trust, will proe: sell the above deseribed premises at vendue to the highest bidder for cash at the east front door of the court house, in the eity of Butler, county of Baves and etate of Mis- eouri, on Friday June 22, 1894, the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- lock in the afternoon of that rposes of satisfying said debt, est and costs. FRANK ALLEN. in betwee Trustee. Sheriffs Sale. By virtue and authority of a general execu- tion issued from the office of the clerk of the cireuit court of Jackson county, Missouri,re- turnable at the June term, ix. ‘of said court to me directed in favorof F.G. Farrell and against John Fry, Jr , Thomas J Fry and A & Matthews. I have levied and seized upon all the tight, tithe. interest and claim of 4 fendants, Thomas J Fry, John Fry Jr, and AB Matthews, in and to the following described real estate situated in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit ‘The east halfof the northwest quarter of sec- tion 25, and the south half of the southwest quarter of section 26; north half of the south- west quarter of sec! ; the south half of the southeast quarter of section 27; also the uorth half of the southeast quarter of section 27 and the northeast quarter of section 34, the northwest quarter of section 45, township 40, * of the north lot S of the northwest quarter of section 3, and the south half of the east half of lot 4 of the northwest quarter of section 4 of township 39 of range 30 andthe south haif of the northeast quarter, and east half of the southeast quarter and the north quarter of the northwest quarterof the southeast quarter of section 26 and the nor! east quarter of the southeast quarter of sec tion 1, of township 39 of range 31, all in Bates county, Mo., Iwill on Thursday, July 5, 1894, | between the hours of nine o’eloek in the forenoon and five o’eloek in the ternoon of that day at 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 publie ven- due to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy said execution and costs. D. A. CoLyEr, Sheriff of Bates County. is-4t @ ee Sheriff's Sale. and authority of an execu- office of the clerk of the k at Kaneas the October term ected in fayor of inet Jno Fry, Interstate Gal- Cattle Company, & coproration have levied and seized upon all the Ight, title interest and claim of defendants Jno Fry, Jr, Tho J Fry and Inters! loway Cattle © and foliowing deseri estate situ Bates county, Missouri, to-wit ¢ east half of the northwest quarter of sec- ion 25, and the south helfof the southwest Fry an¢ | qaarter of section 2, nerth half of the south- | 7 and the northeast quarter | northwest quarter of section 35 The north | of Butler, Bates county, Missoari. sell | in be re- | sell the lic Vendue to the highest bidder | quired at publie vi | for cash, to satisfy said exeention weet quarter of section 25, the south haif of the southeast quarter of section 27, alao the north baif of the southeast quarter of section Section 24, the towrship 45, ange WH, and the west halfof lot = of the north er and the esst halfoflot s of orthwest quarter of sectio’ and the south half of the east half of lot 4 of the northwest quarter of section 4 of township 5) of range 9 and the south halfof the no and eset bail of the sou north quarter of the northwest quarter southeast quarter of seciion 2 and the southeast 4: of range SI ty, Missouri, { will, on Thureday, July 5, 1894, between the bours of nine o’clock in the for: d iteo’eclock in the afternoon of t! iF, at the east front door of the court hous of Latier, Bates county, Missouri, ame OF 80 Inuch thereof as may be re- endue tothe highest bidder D. A. COLYER, WA Sherif of Bates County.