The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 26, 1894, Page 7

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\Those — —Pimples' if { Are tell-tale symptoms that your blood is not right—full of impurities, cave ving } a sluggish and ur tly complerion. A tew bottles of 8.8. 8. will remore all forcign and impure matter, cleanse the blood ppt a and give ackar and rosy complecion, [tis most etfect- ual, und entirely harmless. cl has. Heaton, Legh urel Street, Phila., says: “Thave had urs a hu in my blood r which made me ‘area ad to shaw small boils or would be cut, thus causing shaving to noyance. After taking three bot my face is all clear and sm it should ‘be—ap well and fee ‘ike running 3} foot race all feet the use of S. S.S ‘Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga = | 23c¢ as2 | L— Bey bn =} a3 gs23c8e § eo eo) $Rto0 BFrie ase > 3 Pees 33288 gee Bei aS ta Saeriton eo Ss == CEE Peet Te ee —) Ett Ode asb cio ess ee a5 Foeaseasse B3,;38 --338s6s 7 Bisom saaem ia Res SE ce BaF | earssse = S 22 fag @ Osh s8s ~ ESE ED PTE bat eee Ee — Baesegs2b o8P ews? PE tie eae — Serer ses SB 2e oo Seok Sstpteie > BS eae Begs asss Bsa 4425 2°08" 0 4 25 egs® BotS5oes —§ eat 2 Be. Bsacegses S| SPM it | 2.9 — Be52 by5l2202 = 3m Ba et ee ee | 4 Saosaeo7 te & FP, Mn it PiLLs YAL PILL 4 od KER'S . HAIR RBALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair. Bromotes x ‘se Parker's Ginger Tonic. Weak Lun pi a NS. HINPERCORNS. 6, or HISCOX & CO., B Ul ootbeer. makes the home circle complete. This great Temperance Drink gives pleas- ure and —, to every member of tne i family. A 2c. package makes 5 gal- lons. Be sure and get the genuine. | Sold everywhere Made only by | The Chas. BE. Hires Co., Philada, Sond 20. stamp for besutiful Picture Cards and Book. W; b,Boveras }O SQUEAKING. $5. CORDOVAN, FRENCH& ENAMELLED CALF. 94.5350 FINE CALF& KANGAROO. $ 3.39 POLICE,3 Sotes. $2.WORKI 322 iol SNGMENS $291.75 BovsScHoOlSHOES, *LADIE $332! 95032 $1.75 “BestD ONCOL, | SEND FOR CATALOGUE W-L-DOUGLAS, , BROCKTON, MASS. | Yeucas an save, monty by purchasing W. 1 Because, we are the |: {manufacturers of vertised shoes in the world, and guarantee the value by Lercon gyms the name and price on the bottom, whic you against high prices and the middleman's proate Our shoes equal custom work in st easy fitting and wearing gualities, We have them sold every~ where at lower prices for the vo any ¢ Tak Cealer cannot 5: If your y you, wecaa, Sold by WILCOX: COMPOUND ANSY® PILLS SAFE AND SURE. FAY nie Posten are coun- ‘compound the genuine are put u metal boxes ‘with registered trade mar! at bodes accept ho Worthless hostrum, insiston ese atalll pines Send 4censs c ate and receive then uve Micox NpeciiieCo.Phila.Pa, Snare, Prompt, Positive » Lose Seminal aie Sane SEXUAL gene Directions Mailed ‘Time Table, Arrival and departure ot passenger trains at Butler Station. Nortu Bovr Passenger. Passenger, Passenge-, Local eight 11:20 a.m. South Bounp Passenger, - - 7:16 a. m. Passenger, : - 1:55 pm- nger, = = 9°55 P- Mm. Local Freight - 5 Pe m. ° MODERN BURGLARY. Observations of an Outsider Upon Trade in England. Roughly speaking, burglars practice either as housebreakers or warehouse burglars. In the case of the last, the iron safe is the object of attack, and as the watchman is either absent, decoyed | away, or an accomplice, the imple | ments used are of the largest kind, and by the their use not unaccompanied noise. immies,” or steel crowbars, from | three to five feet thick, weighty, jand with hooked points lik long, beaks, ponderous “braces” for drill holes into the locks of safes, | wedges, and leaden hammers with leather to deaden sound. even canisters of gunpowder for bi the locks, are part of the e »~wing out ipment of the “safe” burglar. mily burgling’ is a separate branch of the art. The tools are far more delicate, and means of escape must be provided in addition to those of forcible entry. Neat ladders of tarred rope, for fixing to porticoes as a ready means of descent, are an old pre- aution. But the wire and string en- tanglements which are now invariably stretched across the paths and gardens of villas and country residences in order to trip up pursuers are a recent improvement generally adopted by the profession. The equipment of the warehouse burglar is too bulky for hand carriage, and is always taken to the scene of action in a cab or a spring cart. The house burglar carries his tools in his long overcoat; a broken overcoat button, of which one-half was found on a smashed window sill, was once used to identify a burglar. Some of the ‘‘jimmies” at Scotland yard are of very careful workmanship, unscrewing in the center, and able to be concealed in ahat. Masks are antiquated precau- tion. One is, however, preserved, which was worn by a burglar who was detected under a bed iv a public house before closing time. Burglaries committed after nine o'clock incur a heavier penalty than housebreaking achieved before that ‘hour. For this and other reasons the time of dinner is usually selected for the looting of a large establishr t ‘This has only one drawback. It leaves little time for exploration, and the burglar must be well acquainted with the interior of the house. In this con- nection women play an important and | usually an unconscious part. It is not difficult for nice-spoken young man to get on friendly terms with the maid servants in a large es- tablishment, and se nts take a speci pride in showing their friends and ad- mirers round a well-appointed house A judicious appreciation of the taste displayed in the mistress’ boudoir leads naturally to a view of the bedroom, and not seldom to voluntary inform: | tion as to the position of the jewel bc |or safe. Nearly all the recent great | jewel robberies from private hovses have been effected during the dinner hour. —Spectator. FRENCH CANADIANS. | Their Superstitions Fear of the Prince of Darkness. In the legendary lore of Canada the devil plays a prominent part. He does not appear the strong angel, who fell through pride, the enemy of God, but as the medieval of monkish legend, the petty perseeutor of m: In the rural districts of Canada, Satan is sup- posed to y active. His company may be looked for on all oceasions. The accidental appearance of a little child in the room often betrays the | presence of the evil spirit, as the poor innocent is sure to bewail itself vigor- ously. The prince of darkness may be met ata ball, in the guise of a hand- some young man who excels all the rustic gallants in appearance. He wears gloves to conceal his claws and | disregards the trammels of convention- | ality by keeping his hat on his head to | hide his horns. He selects the prettiest | girl in the room as his partner, but his | choice is usually the village coquette, whose vanity or levity has exposed her | to the evil influence. In the midst df | the gayety a piereing ery is heard. A | strong odor of brimstone becomes | perceptible, and the attractive cavalier fted out of the window, carrying | with him some useful domestic utensil, jas, for instance, | pan. ‘The girl m serateh of a stove or the frying y eseape with a sharp claw, particularly if she |should happen to wear a cross or a crucifix. Canadian rustics never an- swer “entrez” when a knock is heard at the door; they invariably respond “ouvrez.”" This is founded upon an old legend of a young woman who replied “entrez” to such a summons, when the devil came in and carried her off.— Miss Blanche L. McDonnell, in Popular Sci- ence Monthly. * New Year Calls by Mail The custom in France of one's visiting card to acquaintances on New Year's day is rapidly increasing. Even the establishment of a society for the suppression of complimentary visit- ing cards has been powerless against the progress of fashion. The French post office officials have made an inter- esting calculation on the subject. It is reckoned that in the department of the Seine alone, which, of course, in- eludes Paris—3,750.000 siting cards were delivered by postman on the Ist of January, 1881. The following year it had risen to 9,500,000; the year after to 18,000,000, and finally, in 1S94, it reached nearly — 15,500,000. —London News A Matter of Liking “Hallo, Jack! Have you seen ‘As You Like It’ played entirely by wom- en?” “Ye “How was it “As you don’t like it"—Halla | _Customer—‘‘Look here, waiter, I found a collar button in the soup” Waiter—“‘Say, you didn’t see nothing of a pair of gloves, did you?”—Inter Ocean. music.” ‘‘What makes you think so?” “Well, whenever the orchestra played she chewed gum so as to keep perfect time.”"—Inter Ovean. aes sending | —*Miss Friller must be very fond of | ing his heart, the decay apd approach- | ing extinction of his race. His lan- guage is remarkably eloquent, and full of lofty metaphor and symbolism, and overspreads all his OUTHOWLED THE PANTHER. It Was Only a Baby's Voice, bat It Was Not @ Wee Small One by « Long Sight. | “I never saw a wild bear or panther, or even a wild id the colonel, ** my- ) self and mo once, | and bef. | that This was a good many ore years ago, and of course I have no personal re: lection of but I had my mother’s word for it, and that is enough. We | lived in the wil rn Penns) ts of nort my father owne vania th r 1 [ was born next door to | saw at | sawmill. I had such an uncommon good | pair of lungs, that rted in to use therm I could tenough to drown the noise of the sawmill. But it was a jlucky thing for my mother and me that I had such an expansive and per- vading style of t ing. “When I was becoming three months old mot made up her mind that she must take me to her old home to show off Her folks lived twenty m and the road there was nearly way through the woods had a horse that he called | Early in his life he had been de years, which was when we owned him, he could go like a streak if he wanted to, but he had a disposition that him a little uncertain to drive, fo and even in his ing made if he took it into his head to go you 1 to} let him go until he changed his mind and stopped. He generally went like Sam Hill when you didn’t want him to, and stood still when you were particu- larly anxious for him to do his best. There was no way mother could get to | make that visit home except by taking the chances with Spanker, and she took was in the winter, and one d father hooked the old horse to the sled, and away mother started with me to make the trip. ker buzzed along y, because mother, as she used to y. pretended that she wanted him to go slow. There were panthers in the woods yet in those ad b ne days, but none around in that 1 . fora long ed about half the distance on the journey when mother heard a fright- ful yell behind us. Looking back she saw a panther bound into the road from the It was a very large one, and only a in our rear. It was evidently hungry, it caine tearing fier pursuit of the sled. The way old Spanker was tearing along mother felt pretty sure that we could bk ahead of the panther. It would a little on us by spurts once in a while, and mother thought it was gaining a little too much, and she got frightened and so far forgot herself as to give Spanker astap with » lines hint that he sn seen or heard 1 be- had travel- rhtorhood, time. We woods. few rods very for in y along gain once asa must go fast That was a mistake, and the old horse knew at once that he was W ed to burry a 1 stopped in the read as if he had been shot And there he stood, with the yelling panther tearing toward us like a hur- ieane. Mother thought then that it was all up with her and me, and it certainly must have looked that way ther got within three mother said breast and not think The pan- jumps of us, and held me tight to her her eyes. She could of anything else to do. Whether she pressed me a trifle too tight or not I ean’t say, but somehow or other it seemed to strike me that things weren't running as smooth they ought to be, and I gave a kic and a squirm and let those famous lungs of mine loose. My mother used she shut to say that when that territie yell of mine broke out in those woods the panther couldn't have stopped any quicker if he had run against a tree. His eyes stuck way out, he was so taken aback. Then I lifted up my voice in the wilderness again, and the panther didn’t want to hear any more. He turned and made | for the woods again faster than he had come out of them, and mother said that he never once stopped to look back as she could see him cutting it | through the trees. That seemed | | satisfy me, for I quieted down right away, and by and by Spanger got it into his head that we were wanting | him to stand there in the road, and away he started on the double quick and never stopped until he got to my grandfather's The panther, mother said, was never seen or heard of again. and she always said that she believed that I had either scared it to death or out of the country.“—N. Y. Sun. | house. A NATION'S SWAN SONG. The Story of a Dying People as Told by a New Zealand Chieftain. A strange, pathetic swan song of a dying people, sung by its chief, is the plaint made to the civilized world by | Apirana Turupu Ngata, head of the | Maori nation, in a series of essays lately printed in a New Zealand paper. The chief is a well-educated man, a graduate of a colonial university, the equal in culture of the best cl of white people who oceupy his native land; but he is a native at heart, a Maori in feeling, sympathies and aspi- rations, and all his thoughts are those of his people. Atthe advent of the white man in New Zealand the Maoris, a heroie race, then sole owners of the country, were |a numerous people. Twenty years ago, although even then much diminished by diseases brought by their conquer- ors, they numbered one hundred thou- ‘sand. To-day but few more than forty |thousand of the race remain. Out- wardly it is a much changed people, too, for it has adopted the white man’s clothes, his customs, most of his vices, | here during the holidays for $75. and ostensibly his religion. But at heart the Maori is a savage yet. In his series of essays on his people, | the chief tells much that is interesting ' of their history, their ideas, their habita, | hauisin, the Maoris in their prime, were a |P& her internally. proud, imaginative people, full of the | In the country about Wilmore at love of pogtry and story, and of pride |Jeast two dozen farm houses were jin the achievements of their tribes | ° and their feelings, but ever aml anon he comes back and dwells on the one | theme that is filling his mind and sear- '@ somberness en a a ene thoughts, and sorrow echoes inallhe| Jf j j i | lg very unjust f He writes bitterly, vet not venge- ae glee of the woes the white man has C82 papers to class Gov. Stove with brought to his people: not alone of such cranks as Gov. Waite of Colo ngs inflicted, but of the sufferings p46 Goy Lewelling of Kansas and i defeats that inevitably must come the contact of a we and Pennoyer of Oregon. The onger race. The Maor irsin Missouri ought and seine wet to be a sufficient denial of this libel them, and mira There is not an executive the t ot United States who hasa higher re gard for good law and safe methods generally than Goy. Stone. In point of statesmanship he ranks high | above the average governor, it organs ina foolish There Gov a Gov. he says, | condition of aff white le can will ker the with a in He gives an impression the says, interesting made by ¢ His countr attracted to almost wholly bee: ous career ascribed to Christ. They a great craving for the su- pernatural, and the rist took great hold on t ation. But the pri ing advan- | effert to belittle tage of sson, argely turned their people from even a semblance of | 20thing adhesion Christianity by feeding | Stone and he possesses no their craving for the miraculous, and | theories as to the functions in the lines of the old beliefs, or, rather, H ian is stand by formulating a new creed called Han- | which has spread rapidly \life and property in this state has “The feelings and motives that in- fluence the Maori’s inner and more pri- vate life to-day,” says Chief Apirana, are the same that influenced him ages /and parade over the country.—Jef- | ago, though tamed and refined by con- } formity to European customs, by con- |ferson City Tribune. tact with European civilization, and | by the far-reaching influence of Chris- | tiani Your Maori of to-day is but; Mrs. Doda, of Chicago, was sent the savage of yesterday, polished andj) » neighboring saloon for a can of | draped in English finery. Within him | accoun the Maoris. the en, e white use of were man's ¢r the mi ad and is useless fer these partisan to resort to calum imagi native bim is sensational sbout to v ague of the to protec’ goyernment. proved none the less effective be | cause ke did not hire a brass band there are raging the fierce passions | beer, which sle drank and returned | that but a while ago made him revel in| home with au empty “growler.” She | slaughter and cannibalism. His hands | : | ; ‘i wa he second t y ANC O | are bound with the manacles of civil- Be as sent the second time and John} ization and humanity, but they are! Miller started after her to see that restless to grasp once more the spear, | she did uot drink the can dry. They had some words of an unpleasant when Miller shot the woman the taiaha and mere. Ontwardly accepts the truth of Christ ings, and worships the P: he | an teach- | eha’s god | nature, most reverently, but his mind is gov-! through the body. Mr Doda then erned by superstition, his secret long- | wi ings and natural tendencies are tow: ard | join ed in the meclee and put a bul- the tohungas, the visible only {let into Miller. monu- Another man named | Can being sufficient to tint 25 por HERE is but one way in the world to be sur of having the best paint, and that is to use only a_ well-established brand of strictly pure white lead, pure linseed oil, and pure colo} The following brands are stand- ard, ‘Old Dutch"’ process, and are always absolutely Strictly Pure White Lead “Southern,”“Red Seal, “Collier.” * Tf you want colored paint, tint any of the above strictly pure leads with National Lead Co.'s Pure | White Lead Tinting Colors. These colors are sold in one-pound cans, v nds of S Pure White Lead the desired shade ; they no sense ready-mixed paints, but a combinatior of perfectly pure colors in the handiest form to tnt Strictly Pure White Lead. Send us a postal card and get our book on paints and color-card, tree. NATIONAL LEAD CO. St. Louis Branch, Clark Avenue and Tenth Street, St. Louis. Trustee's Sale. Whereas Marion Todd and Mary P Todd his wife, by their deed of trust dated November 25, 1891 and recorded in the recorder’ s office within = ‘for Bates county, Missouri. in book No. 107 page 301 conveyed to the undersigned trus- tee the following described real estate lying and being situate in the county of Bates and ate of Missouri, to-wit The east half of the southeast quarter of sec- tion twenty (20) in township forty-two (42) of range thirty-three (33 containing $0 acres more or less which conveyance was made in trust to’secure the payment of one certain note fully described in said deed of trust; and ments of his old priestly regime.” - . ; ively, | Whereas,detault has been made in the payment The Maori, says the chief, hates the Taske wie! ded an axe quite lively, | 7c principal of said note and the accrued sistibly drawn to his settlements and |g full of holes and choppac 9 | the tenet "holder of sail note aud. pur- Rees ao ah aogca kine RS t full of holes and chopped into | ihe, eke somditions of sald deed of trast. I SEES on Cee EEG ation of) oval fragments in short order. And | Will proceed to sell the above described prem- the worst of his ways of life, which} e ises at public vendue, to the highest bidder eventually kill off the pure race and {all beeause Mrs. Doda drank the} tor cash, at the east front door of the court ; bt house in'the city of Butler, county of Bates leave only the degenerate half-caste} beer and the crowd of visitors at her | and state of Missouri, on pestle. ficken whom Chief Apirana is|) 056 were thirsty. Evidently there Friday, August 3, 1894, eae (esse Se ” cy: | between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore viee and immorality are some very hard citizens in Chi | pGon ‘and five o’clock in the afternoon of that rec 2 rity of the « > ep ree tist ‘ d debt, etroyed Wie purity of th |cago and some of them need killing. | (8%; {or {hq RaTnoees Ot ee Te have stunted a race once famons for E Sieat Trustee, its physique; have rooted out whatever | —Ex industrial tendencies survived other | ae are emp es pernicious influences and degraded the | A Quarter Century Test. Administrator's Notice. characteristics it once 7 + Notice is hereby given, that letters pitality, teenies bravery and manli-} For a quarter of a century Dr. King’s | testamentary on the estate of Ebe ness.” The only hope of improvement | New Discocery has been tested, and the | nezer Carver, were granted to the he sees is in ie deportation of all the | millions who have received benefit trom | undersigned on the 25th day of June lower whites, and this he de- | its use testify to its wonderful curative | 1894, by the probate court of Bates clares to be impossible tion | Powersin ali diseases ot throat, chest] county, Missouri only renders the Maori untit to take |@¢ lungs. A remedy that has stoodthe} All persons having claims against part in the wr life in whieh | test $0,long and has given souniver-| said estate are required to exhibit give sal satisfaction is no experiment. 4 his race is engaged. outer away the it takes | tle is positiy anteed to show « - ‘Kes | reliet, or the money will be refunded. It away at thes : stamina. | jg ed to be the most reliable tor Notable Maori men and women there | Coy RUIGEM “Diisl untles REC at have been, educated and enlightened | }]. L. Tucker’s drug store. Large size toa high degree, but in the majority of | s iSt.oo ses the has eventually been a tot relapse of ostens edue = Maoris into vs the Au Oval Cloud. fathers. And now this once powe ; s ? people is on the ve of extinction | Lexington, Ky. July 20.—Wil- Explanations to a it for the fad- |more, a small town in Jessamine ing out of existence of the Maoris is | bse go leounty, was badly damag y not hard to find, and one seems to be | ‘ pesos diye daneged .bygs near the truth: that is, that the race cyclone yesterday afternoon and is perishing uncholy and heart- least 2 dozen people were injured, break. There is in all the Polynesian | Fata and Melanesian races a strange and |0U Of them fatally. strong liability to despair. Entire in- An oval-shaped cloud swooped depen e and unhampered imagina- | down on the town at 1 o'clock and il to their vitality, | and when these attributes are subdued and cowed by the obvious superiority of an intruding as by the white man, they seem to give up the wish to hardly a house escaped complete wreck or The holiness camp meeting was struck and every damage. race, . to lose even the capacity for liv- | tent and cottaga destroyed. Mrs. slessness has been clear-|Sarah Gortmap, an old lady, was 1e Australian tribes, lifted into the air, carried nearly 100 pee and thrown against a_ tree, | breaking one of her legs and injur- and is akin to that felt by conscript ers engaged in an expedition for which they have had no heart. It seems to have been especially strong in Hopelessne na herein greatly damaged, and some of them ak, one must | conclude from the remarkable essays |wrecked entirely Trees were by Chief Apirana Turupu Ngata 3 s : Bee mowed down by hundreds, cr the melancholy explanation of the fad- | MOWeS by noon ote ing out of exist of the once power- just barvested destroyed and the ful and numerous Maori race.—St damage from wind and the pouring Louis Globe-Demo rain that followed is very great Coal Before the Christian lt is not known when, whom coal was first ¢ The earliest record we ha f this mineral is in the writing of Aristotle and of his pupil, Theophratus. a Greek author, | who lived about 255 B.C. The latter mentions ¢ as being found in Liguris and in Elis, on the road to Olympus overthe mountains There is evidence coal was used in England as early as 852, and. according to Bishop Pudsey (1180), Esecomb and Bishopwearmouth were two of the earliest coal mining settlements. Newcastle cove appears” to have come into notice about 1254, in which year Henry III. granted the in- habitants a charter to dig forit The Chinese knew of and used coalin the thirteenth century. The earliest refer- ence to coal in Belgiun 9S.when a blacksmith at Liege is said to have first used it forfuel. Paris received its first coal from in England. i 0. In Seotiand coal wa as worked as early as the fth century.—Wa- verley. where and by peat an arbitrary word used to designate the y bow (ring) which cannot be pulled of ¢ watch, cra Here’stheidea The bow has a groove oneachend. Acollar runs down inside the endant (stem) and its into the grooves. firmly locking the bow to the pendant, so that it cannot b= pulled or twisted o7. AES It positively prevents the loss of the warch by theit, and avoids injury to it from ng. IT CAN ONLY BE HAD with Jas. Boss Filled or other watch cases bearing this trade mark— as bought watch dealers sell them without ext-a cost. Iam _ ‘>< your jeweler for pamphiet, or send to ne manufacturers. ..eystoneWatch Case Co.; | PHILADELPHIA. After the Holidays. Young Man—This ring w in need of a little money and I'll let you have it for $50. Jeweler—The price of that ring was only $15. Young Man—But, my dear sir, the Price mark, $75, is still on the box. Jeweler—I know it is I changed it from $15 to $75 at the request of the young lady who bought it. I'll give you $3 for it if you wish to sell. Young Man (after recovering from X—_|neirhber— Fine instruments, no tors, < anywhere, -ny ditta~re. Complete. ready for his astonishment)— Hand out the [J Es SSE | bs Werranted_ money meter. Wri money.—Texas Siftings P. Harrison & Co Care 10, Colcmaus. 0 ee 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 if such claims be not exhibited within two years from the date of this pub licati they shall be forever barred This hday of June, 1894. SAMANTHA CARVER Administratrix. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given that all creditors and al! others interested in the estate ot Cornelius Natus, dec ed, that I, G. G. Henry administrator of said estate, intend to make final settlement thereof, at the next term of the Bates county probate court, in Bates county, state ot Missouri, to be held at Butier on the 3th day ot August, 1894. 3. G. Henry, 34-4 Administrator. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all creditors anit allothers interested in the estate of J: Pearce deceased, that I, trator of said tlement thereof, at the next term of the Bates county probate court, in Bates county, state of Missouri, to be held at wale _ the iste day of August, Inv. J. EARCE, 3b Aamintetrator Fllegant World's Fair Views GIVEN AWAY ROE Ss aon The St. Louis Republic TEN PORTFOLIOS of WORLD'S FAIR VIEWS, each portfolio con- taining 16 views and each view ac- curately described. Views of the Mail Buildings, State Buildings, the Midway, Views of Statuary, etc. These ten portfolios will be given without cost to anyone who will send five new yearly subscribers to The Twice a Week Republic, with $5.00 the regular subscription price. Address THE REPUBLIC, St. Louis, Mo. C. HAGEDORN The Old Reliable PHOTOGRAPHER North Side Squa rey Has the best equipped gallery Southwest Missouri. All Styles of Photographing execut +d in. the highest style of the art, and at reasonable prices. in icons | CTAYON Work A Specialty. All work in my line is guaranteed t» give satisfaction. Call and see samples of work. C. HACEDORN.

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