The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 6, 1894, Page 7

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Musouri Pacific Time Table, Arrival and departure ot passenger trains at Butler Station. Nortu Bounp Passenger, - - 4:47 a.m. Passenger, - - 2:42 p.m. Passenge~, - - Q:15 p.m. Local freight 1:20 a.m. SovutH Bounp Passenger, - - 7:16 a. m. | rassenger, : - 155 pm. Passenger, - - p.m. Local Freight - 1:55 p.m. | Mlegant 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, 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. OLDEST anv ORICINAL Dr. WHITTIER 10 WEST NINTH STREET, {NEAR JUNCTION.) KANSAS CITY, @ @ MISSOURI. Regular graduata authorized by the s- jist in BLOOD, NERV- OUS and URINARY DISEASES. Nervous Debility With its Many Gloomy Symptoms Cured. Lost Vitality Pertectly and Permanently Restorcd. Syphilis Cured for Life Without Mercury. 2 Urinary Diseases Quickly Relieved and Thoroughly Cured. Y ’ hy makes no promises that he ee cannot fulfill, Avoid cheap cure-alls and unskilled physicians, and consult Dr. Whittier in person or by letter (giving symptoms) and receive the candid opinion of a physician of long experience, unquestioned skill and sterling integrity. MEDICINES from our own laboratory fur- nished at small cost and shipped anywhere secure from observation. TREATMENT never sent C. 0. D. FRE CONSULTATION. URINARY ANALYSIS. Office hours—9 to 4 and 7 to 8. Sunday 10 to 12. Cuide: To Health and Emergencies | for 6 cts.—stamps—to prepay. Call or address in strict confidence DR. H. J. WHITTIER, (0 West Ninth Street. Kansas City, MO THE TIMES’ CAMPAIGN RATE is Dr. H. J. Whittier invar- iably successful? Because he REDUCED! see The Kansas City "Times EVERY DAY ‘TILL JANUARY 1. Skin Eruptions and similar annoyances are caused by an impure blood, which will result in a more dreaded disease. Unless removed, slight impurities will develop into Scrofula, Ecze- ma, Salt Rheum andother serious § results of I have for some time been a sufferer from a Severe blood trouble, for which I took many remedies that did me no good. I have 2 four bottles of with the most wonderful results Am enjoying the best health I knew, have gained twenty 4 ¢ 3 $ Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free to any address. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, G2. 0 02 OC SCSSSSCSSSOSSSSSOSecec: > - = oe wn zs =~s | awl = m Ce 3 lec: 3 el Ale Se . S265 wm me 252 Ss ePOr Sc oS ®*-O2 BARBIES 4,:02a Fe ad Cgtz2essecue” LO Rtas sr Ric = Seac77s8 8 Be: Sz2GNCE-53 Ss cee oAF7sie cae 2 am S.* Eestsa 2 g2°sm : tg 7m é a] ook’sCotton Root COMPOUND. A recent discovery by an old physician. Successfully used mthly by thousands of Ladies, Is the only perfectly safe and reliable medicine dis- covered. Beware of unprincipled druggists who offer inferior medicines in place of this, Ask for Cook’s Cotton Root Compound, take no substi- tute, or inclose $1 and 6 cents in postage In letter and we will send, sealed, by return mail, Fullsealed particulers in plain envelope, to ladies only, 2 stamps. Address Pond Lily Company, No, 3 Fisher Block, Detroit, Mich. Butler and everywhere, by all druggists. Sold in in money; also other valuable premiums to good guessers. Base ball enthusiasts, this is vour opportunity See otter HOM AND COUNERY MAGAZINE, Price 25c, all newsdealers or 53 east roth street New York. A Cup of Beet Tea (the cheapest, purest and best) can be prepared instantly trom LEIBIG COMPANY'S Extract tf Beef There’s only one genuine kind and that you can know by the signature in blue on every jar tore Gray Youthful Color. Ip diseases & ha ng. ‘Bend 31.0 at_Druggi CONSUMPTIVE Use Parker's Ginger Tenic. It 5 Ww angs, Debility, Indigestion, Pi intime. 50 « The only sure cure for Cor BINDER CORN S crs: WISUR TCO: THINAGURA FOR THIN PEOPLE: Are you thin? Flesh made with Thinacure Tablets by a sci entitle process They create perfect assimi tion of every form of food, secreting the valu- ble parts and discarding the worthless They make thin faces plump and round ont the figure, They are the STANDARD REMEDY for loanness. containing no arsenic, and abso- lately harmless . $1 per box ule Price prepal Bamph! HOW ARE OUCLAS The TAINACURECO THE BEST. W.L.D $3 SHOE ssssikn. $5. CORDOVAN, FRENCH& ENAMELED CALF. 94.5359 FINECALF& KANGAROO $ Se ee SOLES. 052. 32° EXTRA FINeMeNS $2.31,73 BovsScHooLSHOES, ARIES. $a ee est DONGOL, SEND FOR CATALOGUE 'W-L-DOUGLAS, J BROCKTON, MASS. can save money by purchasing W. L. Douglas Shoes, ee oe are the largest manufacturers of advertised shoes in the world, and guarantee the value by stamping the name and price on $2 O oe The Twice-a=-Week Times ‘TILL JANUARY 1. 30 cents. In order that no one may have an ex- cuse for not being posted on the deyel- opmerts of the political campaign of 3894, The Times has made these rates, which scarcely cover the cost of publi- cation, Its news facilities are unsur- passed, and handles political news fully and fairly. Subscribe Now. Address, ti The Times : Kansas City, Mo. Sareple (lopies Free. 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 make. Take no substitute. If your dealer cannot supply you, we cau. Sold by ‘WILCOX: COMPOUND ANSY.® PILLS encanin rere SURE. Unseru] Persons terfitting Wileox ‘Compound we jas, the genuine are put up in metal boxes with je mark of juard and ileox SpecitieCo. Phila.Pa, ry by mail. W : | terminates. | caught y | docile animal. ELECTRIC TELEPHONE Sold ontright, no rent, no jto City. Village or Country. P Sais w ted.” A . Write Harrison & Co., Clerk 10, ) 3 ‘Com; hen shipsed. Can be Tie hen shined , San be pst ep by ony time. i | the edge of its jungle home it makes j about midday as it was in tl | A Case Where the Astrology | you know? THE MARGAY CAT. An Interesting Member of the Feline Race and Its Peculiarities. The Margay, or American tiger cat, is a little smaller than the ocelot and not quite so handsome. The legs and feet are spotted in true leopard fash- ion, but the shoulders, sides and back are plentifully besprinkled with small, irregular rosettes or else big black blotehes, which on the shoulders are lengthened into semi-circular bands. The ground color is bright tawny above and lighter below. A specimen in the American museu history measures twenty angth of head and bo inches, and height at the s and one-half inches. Of all the Ame ican F. », writes W. T. Horna St. N the Margay proaches nearest to the domest in temper and In South Amer- | ica, where it of natural ‘our inches in fi cholas, ca its. is commonest, it is often tamed and > freedom of a house be ts it ex- | ke, when | treated, a very | In its wild state, how- ever, it isdeath on poultry and young pigs, and wherever a house stands at ang and well itself a great nuisance. [once shot a bold and audacious specimen on the Essequibo river in South America ie very act | a spot of carrying off a duckling fr: within thirty yards of the house The home of the Margay eat is in the heavy, low-lying forests of tropical America, from the state of Vera Cruz, in Mexico, southward through the whole of Central and South America to Paraguay. Even hunters seldom see it save along the margins of water- courses, a very favorite resort for for- est dwellers generally. SHE SNICKERED. eket Did | Not Work. The brown 1, blonde young wom- an from the west had charmed a swell young man with her large and com- modious fortune, and he was do} in his power to win her, says the De- troit Free Press. She v “t a fool by a great deal, and that mu it ninety per cent. more difficult for hit nd 1 forced him to develop all At last he struek upon a p thought had the prize pa “T have never told you her one evening, “that k re in it. he said to ng before T ever saw you fate had directed me to you.” “Indeed?” she responded, so sin- cerely that his heart beat faster, and her face blushed at the complim “Yes, and it came about ina remark- able way. Juat for fun, one day, Icon- sulted an astrologist, and she told me that I would never care forany woman until I had met one who was then only a schoolgirl, a beautiful, golden-haired ereature, with wonderful brown eyes, whose home was toward the setting sun. I laughed at the prophecy, but I found that the words of the seer were true, for I never cared for any woman until I saw you.” Then he stopped, embarrassed and palpitating, thinking she would fall into his arms. But she didn contrary, she snickered. “Are you sure your astrological friend spoke of a golden-haired school- girl?” she asked. “How could I ever forget?” he re sponded, intensely. “You couldn't, probably, ” she twit- tered; “only, when I was a schoolgirl I wasn't golden-haired. I've only been using blondine for the last year, don't °” And then a heavy weight seemed to fallon him and he staggered away. on the TRAINED FOR FIVE YEARS. How the Fighting Rulls of Spa In Are Pre- pared for the Ring. The bulls used for fighting purposes are a specially selected, specially eared-for class, says a writer in the Fortnightly Review. They are all ped- igreed. Andalusia is especially the district of the bull. Here, at the age of one year, the young bulls are sepa- rated from the heifers, branded with the owner's mark, and turned out loose on the plains to graze with others of theif own age. When a year older, the young bulls are gathered together in order that their mettle and fighting qualities may be tested. One of them is separated from the herd and chased by a man on horseback, who, by the sKillful use of a blunted lance, over- throws the escaping bull, whereupon another rider comes in front of the an- imal with a sharper lance to withstand the expected attacks. If the bull, on regaining his feet, attacks the rider twice it is passed as a fighting animal, but if it turns tail and runs off then it is set aside to be killed or to be used in agricultural work. And so with each animal until the whole herd of two-year-olds has been tested. Each bull that has stood the test successful- ly is then entered in the herd book with a description of its appearance and teceives a name. The process of year until the bull is five years old, when, should its mettle still prove true, it is ready for the arena, and flaming posters appear on the walls of Madrid or Seville announcing that Es- partero (or whatever his name is) will on such a date make his first and final appearance. A good, “warrantable” five-year-old bull for the fighting arena ; costs from three hundred and fifty to four hundred dolla: Some Queer Creatures. Not only do certain animals adopt the color of things about them, but change their habits and the require- ments of their nervous system. Thus | a Malay butterfly is well known, which | imitates the appearance of a dead leaf on 8 twig, even to the extent of a transparent spot on its wings, to rep- resent the hole nibbled by imsects. A certain spider, a class of careful workers, spins a slovenly web, so that its own body may have a proper sur- careful selection goes on from year to | | would apparen rounding for imitating particles blown in by the wind. Certain fishes stand upright in the water to represent rushes. ‘ GROWN BY THE ANCIENTS. Asparagus Is a Vegetable with Some- thing of a Pedigree. Of all the plants used for food, there is none which has been so long known, or has had, so to say, so distinguished a lineage as asparagus, says Chambers’ Journal. Its record. in back to almost the cor authentic history, as it ism by the comi . about 425 B.C., an porary of, though sl Aristophanes. An x the vegetable was Cato thee was of tioned o died poet Cratinus, 1 was a contem- ightly older than, w Romans, also held in hig r—not the gent the tasty oman wt op m that Pl 1 well, but his great-grandfather, who sted upon the destruction of Car- ge, and who was born 234 B. C.— te a work which is still extant, “De Re Rustica,” and in it he treats at length of the virtues and proper eulti- vation of asparagus. Pliny, also, in his ‘‘Natural I al too A.D. has much to say on the subject. "Of all the productions of your garden,” he feelingly observes, “your chief care will be your asparagus,” and he de- votes several chapters and parts of | chapters to its many benefic ties and the best modes of raising it. He asserts that, even in his day. the | soil about Ravenna was so favorable to its production that three heads grown in that district had been known to weigh a Roman pound. As, however, this pound seems to have been equal to | only about eleven of our ounces, it tly have required four of the stocks to reach a pound of our weight; but this result, considering the state of horticulture in those days. may be looked upon as wonderful enough, and has, in point of fact, only been equaled in our own times. THE FLYING FISH. Some Interesting Facts Concerning This Curlous Creature A very common error made in nafural histories where this fish is mentioned is that it does not fly. “Its supposed flight is nothing more than a prolonged leap; it cannot deviate from a straight line, and cannot Frise al second time without entering the | water.” This, briefly, is the sort of | thing one meets with in textbooks | } fi where reference is made to this fish. | The simplest v of dealing with it is the professor’s method of answering the query the French academy whether their definition of a crab was correct. The ste is so well known | that itdoes not need repetition. As the result of personal observation tending over a good many years, assert that the exocetus does ff) I have often seen, says a writer in Chambers’ Magazine, a flying fish rise two hundred yards off, describe a semi-circle, and, meeting the ship, rise twenty feet in the air perpendicu- larly, at the same time darting off at right angles to its previous cours: Then, after another long flight, when just about to enter the water, the gap- ing jaws ofa dolphin emerging from the sea gave it pause and it rose agi turning almost directly upon its course. This procedure is so common | that it isa marvel it is not more wide- ly known | of I A flying fish of mature size can fly a thousand yards. It does not flap its finsasa bird, but they vibrate, Hke the wings of ani t, with a distinet hu The only thing which termi- n: its flight involuntarily is the dry- ing of its fin membranes and their con- sequent stiffer BEAUTY IN AGE. An OM Lady Wio Ucheves in Being Al- ways Cheerful A dear old lady of cighty-three is she who is described by Kate Sanborn, in “A Truthful Woman in Southern Cali- fornia,” as “Grandma Wade.” She says: I have wn several interesting oc- togenarians, but never one that sur- passed her in loveliness, wit and posi- tive jollity. She still has her ardent admirers among men as well as wom- en, and now and then receives an earnest proposal from some lonely old fellow. The last of these aged lovers, when refused and relegated to the po- sition of a brother, urged her to recon- sider the matter and make it a subject of prayer. But she quietly said: “I'm not going to bother the Lord} answer myself!” 1 a vked by al One the frightened waiter. as soon as she | could regain her breath: “Never mind if that did go down the wrong way. A great many good things have gone down the right way this winter.” She is invariably cheerful, and when she was parting with her son for the winter, she said: “Well, John. I want to know before you go just*what you have left me in} your will.” of the por camel to go through | home a | melting voice | it might be a Mother Goose refrain: | resented a value of about 4,000 fi | to be fed to the pigs and poultry. AMUSING BLUNDERS. | Desperate Situations of Diffident Youu Orators. Some amusing examy of uninter | tional transpositions arg given in a re- cently-published collection of “Bulls and Blunders.” Slips of the kind | usually result from r ness ra than from ignorance, but it is a ques- | tion which was responsible in the cas ervou told his flock that it was ee of an | to ent idol than Heaven.” for a r er a ase of the courtly eultiv 2 Wi it is seid, was so overcor fright when he comme | lecture that instead of to the bo ed to make, he astonished by beginning tremulously “Ladies and gentlemen, the pittom- | omless pit wt less bott— The crowning spe u in the face of elusive syllables is that of the unfortuns speaker who, at a pathetic point of his address, when his hero was about to undergo a heartrending parting from 1 friends, uttered, in his most *n of ludicrous e “Biddy, diddy—” He stopped confused; his mouth and tried flushed, set again, with a difficult resumption of the interrupted pathos: “Diddy, biddy—” Something w wrong still. Hegrew scarlet, perspired, and gasped forth a third attempt, not more intelligible. His hearers could none of them inter- pret it. It might be High German, or “Diddy, hiddy, biddy doo!” The situation was desperate; but the persistent orator rallied, paused until he had fully recovered his self-control, and trying once more, with slow utter- ance and distinct enunciation, con- quered at length the simple phrase which had overthrown him. He said: “Did he bid adieu?” ODD BOX OFFICE RECEIPTS. Pigs, Poultry, Cocoanuts and Fruit in Pay- ment for a Concert in the Pacitic. There is no more interesting subject of study than currency. People do not realize how difficult it would be to get along without it. Some years ago, says a writer in the Washington Star, Mlle. Zelle, of the Theater Lyrique, at Paris, on a professional tour around the world, gave a concert at the Society islands, in the South Pacific. It was arranged that in payment for an air fi Norma” and three or four other selections she was to get one-third of the receipts. Her share consisted of 3 pigs, 23 turkeys, 44 chickens, 5,000 eocoanuts and considerable quantities of bananas, lemonsand oranges. The live stock and produce would have rep- Ans in the markets of her native city, but it was hardly practicable to dispose of the former off-hand and the latter had A Af- Barter company, limited, now ex- ig in London, carries on a great on the west coast of Africa entirely by bartering European manu- factures for palm oil, gold dust, ivory, coffee, gum and cther raw products Eggs have been in circulation in lieu of money in the Alpine villages of Switzerland. Nails have been similarly employed in Scotland, dried codfish in joint stock company, known as the r ist business HERE is but one way in the world to be sure aving the best paint, and that is to use only a well-established brand of strictly pure white lead pure linseed oil, and pure colors. * The following brands are stand- ard, **Old Dutch’’ process, and are always absolutely Strictly Pure White Lead “Southern,”“Red Seal, “Collier.” * If you want colored paint, tint oO! an y of the above strictly pure leads with National Lead Co.'s White Lead Tinting Colors. Pure Lead. i us a postal car ts and color-card, NATIONS St. Lor Clark Avenue and T pa: nth Street, St. Louis, Special Rates. The Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., willsell tick ets to those desiring to attend the Supreme Lodge and Conclave of Uniform Knights of Pythias, Washington, D.C., Aug 2 to Sept 5. Tiekets on sale Aug and 24, limited to Sept.s It tickets are deposited with joint agent atterminal line they can be limited to Sept. 15. Convention Concatenated Order of Hoo Hoo at Kansas City, Sept. 9 and 10. loa, round trip tickets one and one-third fare, on certifi- cate plan. State Meeting Farmers & Laborers Union at Pertle Springs Mo , Aug. 26 to 2s, ticket wil! be sold at rate of $2.20 for round trip limited to Aug. Ist Missouri Inter-State Fair and Priest of Pal- las Parade, Kansas City, Mo., Oct | to 7, tick- ets willbe sold atone fare for roand trip, limited to Oct. sth. Johnson County Fair, Holden, Mo., Aug 2 to 31, round trip tickets $2, limited to Sep. 1 Anderson County Fair at Garnett, Kan Sept. 4 to 7, Ins, tickets will be sold at 8 tor ruund trip, limited to return Sept. sth. Miami County Fair, Paola, Kansas, Sept. 25 to 28, tickets will be sold at $220 for roun:t trip, limited for return to Sept. 29th, 1891 Kob Morris Inter-State Picnic Association (Masonic order) at Kansas City, Mo , Aug. 31, Is, tickets will be sold at %: for round trip timited to Sept. Ist. ational Encampment, G. A. R. Pittsburg. Pa., Sept. 10to 15, Ist, tickets will be sold on September Sth and sth at $20 So round trip, limited to Sept, 25. Passen- gers permitted to make one stop onthe return at any intermediate point designated State Democratic Press association at Pertls Springs, Mo.. Sept. 7 and 8, Invi, ticketa will be sold at 0 for round trip, limited for re- turn to Sept. loth Southwest Missouri Conference of the M. E , south, at Jefferson City, Mo. Sept. 1y tickets will be sold at one and one-third fare for round trip, on certificate plan. On Aug andssth the Mo. Pacific Ry Co will sell t sto St. Louis, Mo , and return at rate of $15. Tickets will be limited for return to Sept. Ith, isos For farther information please call on or ad dress W.c. BURRU Ticket Agent, Bath Trustee's Sale. Whereas Freeman Short and Betty Short his by their deed of trust dated february » and recorded in he record- r’s oftice within and for Bates e Missouri, in book No. 56 page 59 John B Brugter, trus' the following describ- ed real estate lying and being situate inthe Newfoundland, whales’ teeth in the Fiji islands, mats of rice straw in Angola, salt in Abyssinia, beeswax in Sumatra, red feathers in the isles of the Pacific, tea in Tartary and iron hoes in Mada- gasear. A century ago tobacco was made legal tender in Virginia. When women were imported ino that colony for wives for the settlers 100 pounds of tobacco per head was charged for them, the price being subsequently raised to 150 pounds. A PLEASANT EXPERIENCE. An Old Lady's Story of Being Held in Washington's Arms. In Dr. Mines’ volume of reminis- cences, “A Tour Around New York,” the author devotes a paragraph to the attractions of Battery park, and adds a pleasing little story of atime before his own: I remember a dear old lady who loved to talk about this park and tell | of the people she had met here and the scenes she had witnessed; and of these one man and one morning's adventure stood ont most prominently. A little thing in white, her nurse kad brought her to the park to wit- nessa civic ceremony, and the crowd prevented her from obtaining a good view of the pageant. As, with a child’s impatience, she tried to press through the throng, a tall and handsome elderly gentleman, clad in a suit of black velvet and with a dress sword at his side, stooped This little joke turned a tear into a smile. Even when ill, she is so bright and hopeful that a friend once exclaimed: “Grandma, I do believe you would langh if you were dying!” “Well,” said she, “so many folks go to the Lord with a long face, I guess | fie will be glad to see me come to Him | smiling!” A Striking Outfit Sir Thomas Robinson, a wealth Englishman of the last century. was a! tall, uncouth man. and his appearance was rendered still more striking by his hunting dress. which consisted of a tight green jacket, buckskin breeches anda furcap. He once set off in his hunting suit to pay a visit to his sister in Paris. and he arrived at the house while there was a large company at dimmer. The servant announced **Mon- sieur Robinson.” and in walked this re- markable figure, to the amazement of the guests. One of them, a French abbe. lifted his fork three times to his mouth and each time laid it down with- out tasting the food. Unable at last to restrain his curiesity he burst out eagerly: “Excuse me, monsieur, are you the famous Robinson Crusoe, 60 Temarkable in history?” | trouble, down to her, inquired pleasantly about her trouble, and then lifted her upon his shoulder and held her there until the procession had passed. Delighted with what she saw, the child thought little about the gentle- mar who had brashed away her county of Bates and state of Missouri, to-wit All of lot thirteen (15) in the northeast quar- ter of section two (2) township thirty-nine (39) range thirty-three (33); also commencing twenty-five and (6-10) rods west of the south- east corner of lot nine (9) of the northeast quar- ter of section two (2) township thirty-nine (39 range thirty-three (33) thence weet twenty-one (32-100) rods, thence nort! thence east twenty-one ( south seventy-five rods to beginning; contain- ing fifty-two acres more or leas, which conveyance was made in trast to secure the payment of ten coupon notes fully described in said deed of trust and whereas default has been made inthe payment of the principat of said note and coapons attached; now past due and unpaid; and whereas said deed of trust provided that in case said John B Brug- ler Was absent or unable to act as trustee, then the then acting sheriff of Bates county, Missouri, should act in his stead. And where- as the seid trustee, John B_ Brugler refuses to act as said trustee. Now therefore, at the re- quest of the jegal holder of ssid note and pur- suant to the conditions of said deed of trust, I, D A Colyer, sheriff of Bates county, Missouri, acting as trustee aforesaid, will proceed to sell the above described premises at public vendue to the highest bilder for cash at the east front door of the court house in the city of Butler, county of Bates and state of Mis sonri, on Friday, September 7, 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 D. A. COLYER, Sheriff of Bites County, Acting Trustee. Trustee's Sale. Whereas J.B Mekeal and Emma E. his wife, by thei~ deed of trast dated Aug it ith, 1s, and recorded in the recorder’s office within and for Bates county. Missouri, im book No. 26 page 32 conveyed to the undersigned trustee the following described real estate ly- ing and bet: 5% jtuate in the county of Bates and state of sourt, te-wit: The south half of the north half of the south- west quarter of section eighteen (14) in town- abip forty-two (42), of range thirty (30) con- taining forty (40) acres more or less which conveyance was made in trust tosecure the payment of one certain note fully deserib- ed in said deed of trast; and whereas default bas made in 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 theabove described premises at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash at the Mekeal but thanked him when he | released her with a kiss and set her down upon the ground. As he moved | away, the nurse, in an awestruck voice, asked the child ‘arms had held her, and then told her if she knew whose that it was President Washington. The little eyes watched him out of sight, and never forgot his stately ap- pearance. I think dear old Mrs. Atterbury was prouder of having been the heroine of this incident than of all the social honors that afterward fell to her lot. The German Wife-Dester. In Germany when a man is convicted of beating his wife he is allowed to continue his work, is looked after by the police. and arrested every Satur- y and locked up until Monday morn- . when he is again delivered over to his employer. His wages are given to his wife. If he won't work he is taken to jail, where he has to work harder | than outside. east front door of the court house, in the city of Butler, county of Bates and atate of Mis- souri, on Saturday September 15, 1894, between the hours ef nine 0’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. J.D. ALLEN, Trustee. wat Administrator's Notice Notice is hereby given, that letters of administration on the estate of GW Cowley, were granted to the under- signed on the 23d day of Augnst 1894, 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 vear 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- lication, they shall be forever barred. This 224 day of Angust, 1594. J. N. CHAMBERs, or.

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