The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 9, 1894, Page 7

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} | particulers in plain envelope, to ladies only, 2 t RRR | Manifold Disorders Are occasioned by an impure and im- poverished condition of the blood. Slight Impurities, if not corrected, develop into serious maladies, such as SCROFULA, ECZEMA, RHEUMATISM an_other troublesome diseases. To cure these is required a safe and reliable rem- edy free from any harntul ingredie an !purely vegetable. Such It 1emoves all imouriti frou the biond and thorough ly cleanses the system. Thousands of @ cases of the worst forms of blood dis- eases have been Cured by S.S. 8. Send for our Tr mailed free toany address SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. | ' | | | id Tele- rest of and explain — ae 2 3 ts Be tis Siz fe etois wz te es kt . a i:B358 be SEBszeE Be Sisazé Ds F @ z os e CBiza~ 0 Sz we Me =e S: borat Os — rr Te a ae a oat > « DA -22 a Osis Se 32 8 § Qn. 555 £ 4 ook’ sCottonRoot COMPOUND. A recent discovery by an old Physician, Successfully used nthly by thousands of ‘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 {n postage In letter and we wiil send, sealed, by return mail, Fullsealed stamps. Address Pond Lily Company, No, 3 Fisher Block, Detroit, Mich. in Butler and everywhere, by all druggists. “FLY FIEND,” will protect horses and cattle fiom any auce from flies gnats and iusects iproves the appearonce of -oat and dispensing with tly nets. p17, ne gotlau $1.50. One gallon will last three head of horses an entire seuson. Reware of imitations. Addrass Crescent Mig. Cp.,. 2109 Ind. Ave. Phila. y in money; also other valuable premiums to good guessers. Base ) pall enthusiasts, this is your opportunity See HOME AND COUNLRY INE, Price 25c, all newsdea'ers t roth street New York 7 rker's Ginger Tenic, It cnres tI ‘Weak Lungs, enti inden, Pain, Take in time. 5 «The only sure cure for Corns. HINDERCOR NS. or HISCOX & CU., N. Y- W.L. Douc.as 1S THE BEST. $3 SHOE NO SQUEAKING $5. CORDOVAN, FRENCH ENAMELLED CALF. 94.55.50 FINE CALF& KANGAROO. $3.59 POLICE, 3 Sotes. $28 en Fins NS $2.$1,75 BoySSCHOOLSHOES, BesTDONGOL, | SENO FOR CATALOGUE F W-L:DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. You can save money by, P' rebasing W. L. Because, we on rgest manufacturers of advertised shoes in the world, ane rantee the value by stamping the name and price on the bottom, which protects you against high prices and the middleman’s profits. Our shoes equal custom work in style, easy fitting and wearing qualities. We have them sold every- where at lower prices for the value given than any other make. Take no substitute. If your dealer cannot supply you, we cau. Sold by WILCOX: COMPOUND ANSY.® PILLS v SAFE AND Laden, nscrul $ are ie Bs es uine fare pat upin mawith registered trade mark of by mail. Vi sleox SpecideCo.Phila.Ia. Musouri Pacific Time Table, Arrival and departure ot passenger trains at Butler Station. Nortu Bounp Passenger. - - Passenger, - - Passenge-, - : Local ¥ ceight Soutn Bounp jassenger, - - 7:16 a. m. 1:55 pm. 9:55 Pp. m. 1355 Pm. A CRIPPLE’S TALENT. Wonderfal Life-Work Performed Upon a Bed of Pat An indolent boy, whose schooling | had been chiefly remarkable for his re- | Sources for mischievous pranks, met with anaccident which disabled hiin for life. In consequence of injuries affecting hip and spine he beeame an incurable cripple. His life hung in the balance for many months, and when he began to mend in general beéalth it was with- out hope of his ever leaving his bed | pounds and two | One day he was seized with a strong | | purpose. “I must work,” he ex | to his mother. if I lie here | pains.” | He asked her to prop him up with pillows and to fetch his school books. laimed “I shall lose my mind counti | had interfered with serious study. y-leaves and margins were illus- th humorous faces and bold! drawn caricatures. Algebra and gi ometry were illumined with grotesque portraits of teachers and schoolmate: His Eneid contained a series of com pictures illustrating Dido's romantic career and the adventures of her lover in the spirit world. The cripple had thought of his one accomplishment, which had often brought him into disgrace at school for waste of time. He began by making pen and ink drawings to illustrate com- ical incidents and dialogues’ A dozen of these were sent to an illustrated pa- per, and six were accepted. Encouraged by his success, he became aregular contributor to several comic journals, and ended by earning more money than his brothers, who clerks in stores. He was not strong enough to work more than a few hours morning and evening; but when his pencil was idle his mind was conjuring with grotesque fancte: Not satisfied with the wages received ‘for quips and cranks and hu- morous cartoons, he resolved to learn to etch, and finally became expert in the use of tools andacids. Perceiving that confinement indoors was restricting his work to interiors, he designed a bed on were wheels which could be rolled under trees. His health gradually failed, but am- bition spurred him on. ‘Work has kept him alive,” said his physician; ‘the will die without it.” When too weak to use his pencil he passed quickly away. A life of physical anguish had been ennobled by heroic persistence in turn- ing his one talent to good account.— Youth's Companion. AKIN TO NATURE. A Place Where Men Grow Up Perfectly Chaste and Simple. Aman of the north who has a local reputation as a lazy man should see a nded by thousan is. try it and | Mexican “puneher” loaf, in order to eof fly fiend includ-| comprehend that he could never achieve ; Ws, $1-00; half gallon distinction in the land tiempo means forever. The baile—the song—the man with the guitar—an@ under all this dolce far niente are their little hates and bick- erings, as thin as cigarette smoke and asenduring as time. They reverence their parents, they honor their patron and love their compadre. They are grave,and grave even when gay,they eat little, they think less, they meet death calmly, and it’s a terrible scoundrel who goes to hell from Mexico. The Anglo-American foremen are another type entirely. They have all the rude virtues The _ intelligence which is never lacking and the perfect courage which never fails are found in such men as ‘Tom Bailey and Johnnie Bell—two Texans whoare the superiors of any cow menI have ever seen. I have seen them chase the “mavericks” at top speed over a country so difficult where poco that a man could hardly pass on foot out ofa walk. On one occasion Mr. Bailey, in hot pursuit of a bull, leaped a tremendous fallen log at top speed, and in the next instant “tailed” and threw the bull as it was about to enter the timber. Bell ean ride a pony a gallop while standing up on his saddle, and while Cossacks do this trick they are enabled to accomplish it easily from the superior adaptability of their saddles to the purpose. In my association with these men of the frontier I have come to greatly respect | their moral fibre and their character. Modern civilization, in the process of educating men beyond their capacit often succeeds in vulgarizing them, but these natural men possess minds, which, though lacking all embellish- ment, are chaste and simple, and utter- ly devoid of a certain flippancy which passes for smartness in situations where life is not so real.—Frederic Remington, in Harper's Magazine. A Story of Virginia's Black Swamp. Three and a half miles west of Aldie, Loudoun county, Va., is the locally fa- mous “black swamp,” and a strange story has been current thereabouts for the better part of this century. Jesse MeVeigh lived long ago inan old stone house on the edge of the swamp, and there came to him once a stranger ask- ing shelter. The stranger is taken in and he lived there for five years. He never went beyond the swamp for ex- ercise and he took elaborate precau- tions at night to guard against sur- prise. When he died a stranger from a neighboring village came and claimed the body, professing to recognize the dead man as an acquaintance. The stranger who claimed the body was the dead man’s son, and he afterward became chief justice of the United States supreme court. The father, a wealthy and well educated Maryland- er, but a man of ungovernable temper, had slain a guest at his own table by breaking his skull with a decanter. The homicide’s place of hiding was hardly more than fifty miles from the scene of his crime.—N. Y. Sun. —Mrs. Twitter (listening to phono graph—‘‘Its just like having your hus- band here at home, isn’t it?” Wife— “Mercy, no; it needs an attachment to smoke, growl about the dinner, lose a | hat, kick the dog and swear to make it perfect.”—Inter Ocean. —The man who is standing up for you soon gets tired and sits down.— Atchison Globe. a g my aches and | | it is embod | | ‘The pages disclosed an industry which | ‘ called “pops” being rejected. This i: SCIENCE AND AMERICA. The Glowing Tribute of a British Maga- zine to Our Industries. Science is supreme in American pro- duction, and the Americans have ou run us all in its a cation The were the first tou merely in the dev phy and the kindred powerfal ally in manufacture. welding of metals, for instance plays an important part It duced the price of aluminum from onund now in consequen common uw t enters into the fabric of the bicycle: it is made into shoes for the horses of Russian . but as a} In the | it no has re- two nd | ings a y the metal has passed into sd in the enigmatic Shaftesbury which crowns the rial In iron | and developed machinery, which is nomore than the application of science, has ‘utionized production. The new drop-hammer has brought down the pr of American plows to less than one pound. and in the making of all sorts of agricultural implements it is caleulated that six hundred men can now produce as much as two thousand one hundred and fo ty-five a few years ago. Where a single workman make three dozen pairs of sleeve links in a day, a boy can now make nine thousand. The manufacture of pins still holds its own as an but whereas Adam $ h notes with aston- ishment and admiration ten men turn- ing out forty-eight thousand pins a day, the modern American manufactur- er finds no difficulty in supplying seven and a half millions in the same time, as the result of the labor of five pai of hands. Compare this with the stz of things at the time of the war of in- dependence, when imported pins scid for seven shillings and sixpence a doz- en, and when, to encourage home in- dustry, the government offered fifty pounds for the best twenty-five dozen of pins made in America equal to those imported from England.—Edinburgh Review. could “object lesson:” n A COSTLY DISH The Peacock at the Feast in Ancieat and Medieval fimes. informs us that the flesh of the young peacock is very delicate, and has “ta wild odor” which is very agree- able. He thinks an old bird fit only for stewing. The Greeks must have found it marvelous costly feeding, if it be true, as Aelian says, that a single bird was worth a thousand drachmas— nearly sixty pounds sterling. The es- teem in which it was held in the last ys of the n republic did not di- nish under the imperial regime Vitellius and Helic jlus served up to their companions enormous dishes of peacocks’ tongues and brains, seasoned with the rarest Indian spices In medieval days it was still held in favor, particularly as a Christmas dish, and minstrels sang of it as ‘food for lovers and meat for lords.” ‘To fit it for the table nary culinary operstion. After the skin—and plumage—had been carefully stripped off, the bird was roasted; then served up again in its feathers, with gilded beak. No, I have forgotten that it was first stuffed with sweet herbs and basted Brehm boon was no ordi- spices and with yolk of egg. It floated in a sea of gravy, as many as three fat wethers sometimes supplying the unctuous liquor for a single peacock. No vulgar hands carried it to table, but the fairest and most illustrious of the dames and damsels present at the feast, and its arrival was announced by strains of triumphal music. Had the bird known the honors reserved for its obsequies, surely it would, like Keats, have fallen ‘half in love with easeful death.” “By cock and pie!” exclaims Justice Shallow—little knowing that his every- day ejaculation referred to the old chivalrous usage of swearing over this lordly bird to undertake any grim en- terprise worthy of a gallant knight. Did not the royal Edward make oath on the peacock before he entered upon his invasion of France?—All the Year Round. PLANTING PEANUTS. The Berry First Brought to North Carolina by a Trading Slave Ship. There is much doubt as to the orig-| inal home of the peanut. Some claim | that it is indigenous to Africa, others that it was a native of South America and was carried by lier explorers of that country to Spain and thence to Africa. The earliest authentic tradi- tion tells of its appearance in eastern North Carolina, probably brought there by some of the slave ships land- ing cargoes along the coast. The na- tive Africans recognized and used them. Peanuts grow upon a trailing vine with leaves much resembling a small four-leaved clover. The small yellow flower it bears is shaped like the blos- som of the pea family; indeed the agri-| cultural bureau in Washington does not recognize the peanut as a nut at all, but classes it among beans The soilin which it is cultivated must be light and sandy: after the flower falls away the flower stalk elongates and becomes rigid, curving in such a way as to push the forming pod well below the surface of the earth; if by any accident this is not done the nut never matures. They are planted in rows about three | feet apart, and the vines spread until the ground iscovered by them. Harvest- | ing is done after the first frost, and the | yield is often one hundred bushels to} the acre, making this a more profitable | crop than wheat or cotton. The vines, | with the nuts clinging to them, are) torn up with pronged hoes and allowed | to dry in the sun for a day or two, and | then sacked to cure. In about a fort-| night the nuts are picked off, the empty ones, which are technical], done by hand and is slow work, as an| expert laborer can pick only three bushels a day. They come into mar- ket in a rough, dirty state, unassorted | and with vine tendrils clinging to the Eastern Virginia and North Carolina produce all the peanuts consumed in| the United States and Canada —Blue! and Gray. { t | over the sawdust and across from side | | turbed for a few hours, when it will be | stationary one T “A NATURAL CURIOSITY. What a Fortress Jeffrey's Cliff? Would Make Against Foes. Jeffrey's Cliff, located four m of Hawesville, and a wonder. from two h is a natural curiosity el ndre¢ feet high all around Providence had but s down on the fa is a soil on top of it fror feet deep. and before it cleared off a he adorned it. There is probably more than a hundred acres of good land on top of it. Nature man with a modern vel but at an expense of hur lars a Wagon way has be the solid rock and the to meetit. In two ott paths have been prov traveler. On this wonderful natural f the towns of Cloveport, Hawesville and probably oth plainly seen, as well as a scope of surrounding country. Cattle in the bottom look like mere midgets, and! one’s head swims with the dizziness of | the height when buzzards, which make the cliff their roosting place. way down thesides. ‘Salt I and other points of interest make up its | peculiar wonders. There isan aperture in the cliff on one side of but a foot! or so wide that sends out the year! round a cold breeze. The warmest, sultriest day that can be imagined in August, this constant flow of cold air, | greets the sightseer. It s in the/ middle of the upper bott and the/ Ohio river curves more than half-way round it at a distance of a mile anda} halfaway. Truly, this is a home won-} der.—N. Y. Recorder. f the ¢ to th parti ten was timber no way for a roduction Cannelton, ers can be INTRODUCED BY MOORS. Former Use of Staff for Decoration ta Eu- | rope. There is a general staff, the material so for the rich-looking architectural works | of the exposition, is of French ori Kut it appears to have been introduced | into Europe by the Arabian Moors, and} much beautiful work composed of this | or kindred material is still extant in! Spain. Some of the finest examples are | to be found in that grand _ historic old | Moorish fortress, the Alhambra, at Granada, which wa finished and deco- | rated about the year Washington | a note ink ae tful vol-| »an unpracticed eye the lig! lievos and fanciful arabesques which | cover the walls of the Alhambra appear to have been sculptured by the hand, with a minute and patient labor, an in- exhaustible variety of detail, yet a gen- eral uniformity and harmony of design | truly astonisfing; and this is especial- ly so of the vaults and cupolas, which are wrought like honeyeombs or frost work, with stalactites and pendants which confound the beholder with the | seeming intricacy of their patterns. The astonishment ceases, however when it is discovered that this is al stueeo work; p! s of plaster of Pari molds and skillful as to form patterns of ete form. This mode of diapering walls with and the | vaults with grotto work was invented | east in joine ze and arabesques stuceoing in Damascus, but highly improved by the Moors in Morocco, to whom Sara- | cenic architecture owes its most grace- | ful and fanciful details.” American | | seei = the World Move. It is possible by a simple experiment to demonstrate to the eye that the | earth really moves; a fact which most | of us at present take largely upon here- say. Place upon the floor of a room, with closed doors and windows, a large bowl full of water. Sprinkle over the surface some powder that will not readily sink by wetting. The finest pulve d lust is excelleat. Take care that it is placed in the middle of the surface of the water and does not touch the edges of the dish. Carefully seatter a very narrow line of charcoal to side of the bowl. Place a long. slen- der stick on the floor in a parallel line with the chareoal 1k upon the saw- dust. Leave the bow! and room undis- seen that the floating line is no longer in the same r e position to the e explanation given of this is that the earth in its motion | carries the room and the bowl, but the | water. having a slight inertia, moves more slowly, and revolves, as it in the bowL entire were, To make this experiment | successful, it is necessary that | there Ml be no drang or currents of air in the apartment and no per-| ceptible jarring of the building. —N. | Ledger. | A Fish with a Rubber Corset. | There was recently a curions find in| the Cape Ann fish market. at Glon-! cester, Mass It was nothing less than a mackerel with a rubber band around the body. The band had been put on | the fish when quite small, and stayed there in spite of the rapid growth of the wearer. The fish’s body under the | band did not grow, which caused a de- | pression in the full-grown body of | about three inches in depth. The de- pression was covered with a healthy | skin in no way unlike that on the rest! of the body. The fish measured in| length fourteen inches, diameter of body each side of the depression, seven | and three-fourths inches, diameter of ! depression, five inches. The fish was | undoubtedly in a healthy condition, | and the band was sound and could be | stretched like any other band.—Forest and Stream. —A Good Customer.—Smail Boy (to grocer)—“If you please, Mr. Wellby, my mother wants to know if you will give her an almanac” Grocer (lean- ing over the counter)—**But, my little man, your mother does not get her groceries here.” Small Bov—*No, Mr. Wellby, but we borrow your wheel- barrow.”—Tit-Bits. —A Hindoo who has written a book about England says that “John Bull | lets his people hear sermons Sunday | Mornings and get drunk in the after noon. Why do the English spend twice as much for drink as for bread?” ito four hundred Joseph ¥ pointed, v leredit of the State in the least. jbut the South. It is entific | | disorganized.—Ex. ‘of Mr. Ingalls from the state canvas Kidnapped by « Rascal. Princeton, Ky., Joly 27.—Dolly {mules east’ Jones of Laura Furnace, Trigg Co., It consists of ahuge @tranged to elope with her lover Colton, naming the time. it ** Casius Hicks, a rival, overbeard the » arrangements and on the night ap- ith a confederate, decoyed Miss Jones to his own buggy and forcing her to enter, he drove her to the kept a prisoner for ten days, each ,ouse of a friend where she was day refusing his daily proposal of Meantime marriage notice was conveyed to her father, who hasten ed wit daughter armed posse to release Her ously tled and now Miss Jones is to old lover without an elopement. | captors iguomini ma! ber “A state of | Dick Bland and democratic majori- | the Washington Post says: The} reputation of Missouri as a_ silver State, with a free coinage delegation Speaking of the great in congress, ineluding the most con- spicy leader of the free coinage cause does not appear to hurt the Mr. Stephens, the State treasurer, is} promptly paying off the pubhe in- lebtedness as it matures, neunees that after the uve paid be will have money enough left to turn about $800,000 into the school fund This looks as_ though payers of Missoun we and an July bonds stand- ing up to their obligations, notwith studing their financial heresies.” Cure for Headache. 2 Asatemedy tor all torms of Head- Electric Bitters has proved to be every best. It ettects a permanent and the most dreaded habitual sick headaches yield to its influences We urge all who are afflicted to procure a bottle and give this remedy a tair trial. ses of habitual constipasion Electric 1s cures by giving the needed tone to the bowels, and tew cases long resist the use of this medicine. Try it once. Large bottles only Fitty cents at H. L. tucker’s Drug Store. It is stated that the banner Re- pubtican Congressional district of the country is not in the North the Second ressional district of Tennessee, trict formerly represented by ffornce Maynard, William G. Brown- ow and Joh C. Houk, and now by the younger Houk. It is situated not in any “Black belt” but in the mountain country of East Tennessee where the population is overwhelm- The district has given 13.000 Republican majority.—K. C Star. ingly white. A queer complication of affairs ex ists in St. Clair county, this state. The judges of the county court are in jail by order of Judge Philips of the federal court because they will not make a tax levy to pay interest ona fraudulent debt Circuit court is in session in that county, but as the judges of the county court are in jail no grand jury can be sum- moned. If this thing is to be kept up, St. Clair county would better be Some of the colored republicans | in Kansas demand the withdrawal | on account of the letters in which he | took the position that the negroes| ought to be deported. It is not of ten that anything which the irredes ent statesman says or writes membered for twelve K. C. Star. is re months.-—- Water Valley, Miss.. July hailstorm of unusual severity swept over this portion of the State last night. The stones were of enorm ous size and fell so thick and fast that ditches on plantations were) damaged and lowlands flooded. The damage to crops is incalculable. When Traveling, Whether on pleasure bent, or busi ness, take on every trip a bottle of AINT cracks.—It often costs more to prepare a house for repainting that has been painted in the first place with cheap ready-mixed paints, t! to have painted it twi ly pure white lead, ground in pure linseed oil. Strictly Pure White Lead forms a permanent base for rep: ing and never has to be burned « scraped off on account of scaling or cracking. : and clean. e with Tt is always smooth To be sure of getting | strictly pure white lead, purchase any of the following brands: \“Southern,” Red Seal,” “Collier.” For Co: mat Lead Co.'s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors, a one-pound car ad keg ¢ i and mix your own nnovance in matching est paint that it is pos- eet our book on will probably save NATIONAL LEAD CO. St. Louis Branch, Clark Avenue and T t, St. Louis. Whereas David P Thomasson and Martha J Thomasson, his wife, by thei> deed of trust dated ovember ‘iith, Iss!, and recorded in the recorder’s office within. and for Bates county, Missouri, in book No, 92 page Iss con- veyed to the undersigned trustee the follow- ing described real estate lying and being situ- ate inthe county of Bates and state of Mis- souri, te-wit The northeast quarter of the southeast quar- ter of section thirty (30) and the east half of the southwest quarter of the southeast quar- ter of section thirty (B)) all in township forty- one (il), of range thirty-two (i) contain- ing sixty (60) acres more or less which conveyance was made in trust to secure the payment of one certain note fully descrit- ed in said deed of trust; and whereas default has been made iu the payment of said note, now past due and unpaid Now, therefore, at the request of the legal holder of said note and pursuant tothe con- ditions of said deed of trust, I will proceed to sell the above described premises at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash at the east front door of the court house, in the city of Butler, county of Bates and ite of Miss souri, on i Ze % Friday August 17, 1804, 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. at F. M, ALLEN, Trustee. Administrator's Notice. Notice is hereby given, that letters testamentary on the estate of Ebe- nezer Carver, were granted to the undersigned on the 25th day of June 1804, by the probate 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, orthey may be preeluded from any benefit of said estate; and if such claims be not exhibited within two years from the date of this pub- m, they shall be forever barred. This 23th day 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, deceased, 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 Butler on the 13th day of August, 1894. G.G. Henry, Administrator. __3+4t tor. Notice of Fiual Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all creditors anil allothers interested in the estate of Jasper Pearce deceased, that I, J. 8. Pearce adminis- trator of said estate, intend to make final set- tlement thereof, at the next term of the Bates county probate court, in Bates county, state of Missouri, to be held at Butler, on the 13th day ot August, Invi J. PEARCE. at Administrator “Blegant: World's Fair Views GIVEN AWAY -——-BY——_ 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, ete These ten portfolios will be given without cost to anyone who will send five new yearly subscribers to The Twice x» Week Republic, with $5.00 the regular subscription price Address THE REPUBLIC, St. Louis. M C. HAGEDORN The Old Reliable Syrup of Fige, as it acts most pleas- autlv and effectually on the kidneys. | liver and bowels, preventing fevers, | headaches and other forms of sick- ness. For sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading druggists Manufac-' tnred by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. i li i Es itt i a i HF i full i UH | PHOTOCRAPHER North Side Square. | Has the best equipped gallery in Southwest Missouri. All Styles of Photographing execut-d 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. Ca!l and see samples of work. C. HACEDORN. {

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