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renee MSE = EDISO* Inventioa V petus to Automobile Machines. Wizard Perfects Storage Battery Which Will Propel Vehicle 100 Miles Gver Average Roads Without Recharging \ need s e now g nufacture n Pa elec ery wh will ’ a gh speed re go and g ny N \ t The new ma- t ” 1} make most es hav ele 1) lem.” M mi \ \ iu “WE , ‘ yfaras Lam in- gases the stor Wy s the total weight trie machir mense motor fanit At present elec- ght. They are also at sanse they must be re- charge least every 35 miles, Mr. Edison wereome this, T mnder- stand, and h the autemob WOULD WED AN APE. Minister Tells Is Preterable ‘ Reform a°Man, ven a great Noost to le world.” Juntes What ying to “Refore | would n form him. } woul to develop.” s of aman to re- rwed anape Veter Ainsle rin the Chr Itimore tian churet gradu- ating eli " ollege at the I a-house the othe Nhe ste fron women south ers and caused a ter. He pretty irl ut matrin \ He ing the t a husi tr would union {f the ste] consice n RELICS OF THE STONE AGE. Prof. Leeds s Party of Natives Dis- cover ents in Large Cave in Washington, While pr for copper on the shores of P m_ sound, Wash- ington, Prof. Le and a party of na- tives discovered a large cavern in which they found 14 woeden canoes, each cance containing a body. Stone implements were found beside the bodies. and stone slabs covered the ca- noes, everything indicating that the bodies had been placed there during the stone age. The find proved as mysterious to the na s as te Prof. Leeds, Their tribe has hited the sh of Prince William sound for centur yet they had never heard of the cave, or of the people interred there, Prof. Leeds did not distrib the arefully marked the} An ex] lies, an ition. ion is being organized by Capt. Storey. of the Marka Packers’ assoc n, to thoronghly explore the cavern Not a Popular Diet, Loensts as ci to he con- sidere witlr the pof the variety y onee in 17 years. Most people the 70-year } ever, world prefer Lesson from Mont Pelee, Mont Pelee w 1.000 feet higher be- fore the er is now, says the ¢ Mont ‘Pelee. however, ‘is not the first thing that has lowered itself by too much blowing. Rain, The Chinese. according to Pearson's Weekly. feat? rain, believing that the rain rops byeed vermin. C52 SS EE, | TES Give Renewed Im- | in the transept S NEW MOTOR, NEY LIGHTS IN st. PAUL’s. Part of Electri lant in Magnificent Londen Cathedrai losialied aud Used for st Time. A private view « ing Paul's ralat w t en it e of installa- e years, Was giten to rep- tatives of the press the other The work is not yet completed, it is timated that it will bea year b hed, Eight hun- cre are yet to be ain featur npleted {a comprehensive idea of the scheme. Phe electricians have succeeded in making the cathe ght) without The wes ivo is light- two immense artistic bronze standards and the nave by tive smaller J ones, Reneath ight sare the deme e ¢€ | pee ) bronze pendants, while two ¢ The dom prop itions « ecupied by » beanty of the exhibith Here there s pendants*which, it fs said, entally made in the shape of out the yin ure six ng k in Tupturned mt soft- » most effective sles. entrances, consis tory manner, difficulties in piercing the walls tl soas toavoidthetombs, § 1 ke 16 n of calle, cont ing tons of copper, have been us } thus farin the work, 4. Merpont Me gan. who pays for the installation, has seen the chance! and expressed his sat- isfuction with it, The cost of the work already amonnts te $50,000, Mr. Mors agreed to pay the $35,000 nee- saury to complete it, TO HAVE WIRELESS LINE. Business Territory Asked to Su to Establish It, n oof Alaska Are veople of Alaska being The are Asked to interest themselves in wire- In its lust issue the rudy Alaskan says: less telegraphy, Bh “Wireless tele ph propositions ries of the} court and whispering gallery are not yet ¢ eted. ‘The lighting of the erypt in the basement fs completed The architects ‘encountered great | AMERCENARY SUITOR British Peer Aivertises for Ameri- can Wife With Money. Attorney for Man Seeks Aid of the American Consul General, Who Rebukes the Request as an Af- front to His Countrywomen. ted WO guine es consulate in Lon- ypy of the letter which Richard Westeott, acting consul gen- era) “Clarendon Art Depet (Old and mod- don showed the correspondent: ern masters bought and seld n). 174 New (Ce on com- nd street, London i 1). Dear Si dme if Lknew n lady of means ¢ ling te marry @ mine has Amerie an ambiti | peer horank, middl ! widower, with nd handsome, le | am dren “Of course it wentd be f ymarris mutnal convenience, the Indy eent !uting toward Yady may he a certain amount . The yp of the family estates, a widow, but be of good repute net Vive vim to id beg { “Lam aware that Dhav ack J you to | in | you ky ess you on this matter erty T mption that to whem the n may be m taking position in quest i} able ¢ vou have a tri yr what is required aecept 1 willing party, « sne of the purpose in view any further ce- all be happy to hear from you, In any ease, Lhope you will kindly exense this intrusion on ld von desire tails on the subject Is your valuable time, Yours faithfully, F. Le Normand.” Mr, Westeott was naturally indig- nant at being the recipient of such a letter, “Persons with titles to sell need not expect to make the United States consulate a cle house,” he said, “Tshonld like itu stood Tre- sent such a proposition as a deliberate “Yes,” said Mr, Morse, a well-known lawyer of Boston, who was present, “it is certainly a grievous insult, You for Alaska are coming thick and fast. One was submitted to the chamber of commerce last night, emanating from the Alaska Wireless ‘Telegrapl vmpered. hy the im-| company, of Seattle, Robert L. Moore, manage It asks the business men of southern Alaska to subseribe $20, 000 to the undertaking, to be re- turned in telegraphic service at the rate of 33 per aerogram of ten words and ten cents per each additional word for transmission between northern and southern terminals. “The pledged subscriptions are te be paid when the line is in working order, If any competing company lowers the rate this company is to meet the rate and recoup the sub- seribers at the lowest rate. The com- pany will, moreover, redeem their subscriptions at the premium of ten per cent. off their rates, The cou- pons will be transfer and the line is to extend from British Colum- bia, touching all the larger Alaskan towns, to Valdes. ‘The line is to be completed by December.” le, RATS DESTROY COMMISSION. Lieut, Dinmont, Serving in the Phil- Ippines, Pails to Get His Papers Beenuse of Rodents, Adjt. Gen. Corbin has received a in the mail from the Philip- pines which when opened revealed a tattered and shredded parchment. It represented the remnants of a com- inission issued only a few months ago to Lieut. Dinmont, who was recently appointed an officer in the regular army. Gen. Corbin was asked for an explanation of the mutilated docu- ment, “Rats? he reptied-as-he-care- fully folded the commission out and inspected it. A strange feature was that while the rodents had eaten into the sides and upper and lower corners, they had not destroyed a siggle por- tion of any of the official signatures. President Roosevelt's was in the lower right-hand corner, Secretary Root's opposite, and Gen, Corbin’s in the up- per left-hand corner, Around each name, however, the rats had sealloped the paper to a depth of three and four inches. A new commission has been executed and will be sent to Lieut. Din- mont by the next return mail. NEGROES WANT MILLIONS. Afro-Americans Would Have €on- gress Give Them 8500,000,000 to Pay for Deporting the Race, The Colored Emigration and Com- jal association which was in ssion in Chattanooga, Tenn., unan- imously adopted a memorial praying congress to appropriate $500,000,000 to deport such negroes as desire to leave the United States to Africa or some other country. The memorial is addressed to the president and “Inter Ocean, | Members of congress. The convention pointed out the al- leged wrongs of the negro, asserting that he is not granted the rights of a human being in this country, especially in the south; that it is better for him to emigrate to some othercountry where he can enjoy more freedom, Bishop Turner, of the African Meth- odist chur¢h, is the leading spirit of the emigration movement. Plans are now being considered by the convention to raise a fund of $100,000 with which to buy ships on which negroes are to be trained to a sea life. opie; as = violate no confidence in publishing it, Tam father of four daughters, and per- sonally I feel if I get the originator of such a proposition by the neck, I should take great pleasure in wring- ing it.” FULL OF ENCOURAGEMENT. \ Manufactaring Interests Represent- ed More Largely Than Ever in Our Imports and Exports, A good deal of encouragement to the manufacturing interests of the country is found in the detailed state- ment of commerce for the month of April and the ten months ending with April, just issued by the treasury bureau of statisties. It shows that manufacturers’ materials formed one- half of the importations during the month of April, and in the ten months formed over 16 per cent. of the total; while the exports of manufactures in the month of April formed 36.54 per cent, of the totalexports, against 29.15 per t. in April, 1901, and for the ten months ending with April, 1902, they formed 24.55 per cent. of the total expor s compared with, 27.40 percent, in the corresponding months ‘al year, The total value of manufactorers’ materials im- ‘ported in the ten months ending with April this year is $348.657,061, against $280.S01.407 in the corresp ing months of last year,an increase of 855,654. or 4 percent. Exports of manufactures, it will be observed, are of the preceding fi as $67 nearly overtaking those of last year, the gain in the month of April alone being $4,500,000 over April, 1901, while for the ten months the total value of manufactures exported falls but $5,486. yw that for the corre- sponding months’ of last y Manu- factures formed rly more than one-third of the exports in the month of April, having formed 36.54 per cent. of the total, against 29.05 per cent. in April, 1901; while for the ten months the percentage which man- ufactures form of the total exports is higher than in any preceding year ex- cept 1900. SALON MEDALS TO AMERICANS Mary Shepard Green, of New York, and Others Win Honors at Paris, conside Among the American recipients of Paris Salon medals are Miss Mary Shepard Green, of New York, a pupil of Raphael Collin, who gets a sec- ond-class medal for her pieture of a young woman reclining on a couch reading a novel; Lawton Parker, a third-class medal for his portrait of Mrs. W., of Pittsburg, standing with her back to a mirrer, whieh reflects her hair and shoulders; and Miss Mary E. Dickson, of St. Louis, who is undergoing a serious surgical oper- ation, gets a third-elass medal for her picture of a mother teaching her child to read. There were no first-class medals given this year. Themedal of honor, as already cabled, went to -Josepn Bail for his Chardin-like picture, “The Lacemakers.” Several of the finest pictures were sold in the Lutz sale, including “Lago di Garda,” by Corot, which fetched $51,000, and -D'Aubigny’s “Banks of Oise,” a small canvas a little larger than the cover of a cigar box, which brought $12,000 and will svon be sent to New York. . | An American to sell one Largest Man in the World Lewis Wilkins. the largest man in the world. whose home was in Enid, Oklahoma, died in a Chieago hospi- jtalonthe 10th inst, where he had altreatment. Wilkins Y years old, 8 feet and 2 inches gone for medi was 2! tall, weighed ¢ pounds, wore a hat, a 24 shoe and ald glove. He | measured 5S inches around the chest and 52 inches around the waist. He chad been on continuous exhibition |since 1888 and had made several trips around the world. His death was caused from a swelling in his head, which began six months ago while on exhibition in Europe. He ame tothe home of his parents at Enid for rest, thinking that he would | recover, His head, however, con- tinued to swell, until both eyes were He was taken to Chicago specialists, but succumbed under an operation, The parents of the giant are of medium size, It is the belief of that his abnormal growth was a disease and his death | a consequence. At the hospital a special bed had to be ordered for him, and before the body could be forwarded to his home, a special casket had to be construct ed. It was nine feet in length and tive and one-half feet wide, closed, selentists finger of the left hand was large enough to permit slipping a half dol- lar through it. Wilkins had been on exhibition in all of the-larger muse- ume in Europe and America, He ar- rived at Hoboken from Hamburg, February 20th last, theneé home to permanently retire from the exhibi- tion field, The funeral services of the dead giant were held at- Waukomis, Okla- homa, on the afternoon of the 13th, under the auspices of the Elks, Knights of Pythias and Odd Fellows, of which orders he was a member, She Will Sell “Claim No. 2.” Lawton, Okla, July 17.—Mrs. C, W. Payne, who was up to Wednes- day evening Mattie Helen Beal, when she married Mr. Payne at Wichita, Kan., has telegraphed here that she will auction off her farm, beginning August 10, The so-called farm is an addition to Lawton lying just two hundred yards south of the townand has been laid off into 456 lots, fifty feet by 190. While the lots will be sold at auction to the highest bid- der, Mrs. Payne states that she will accept $55,000 for the 160 acres, if some company desires to purchase it asa speculation, This is the first addition to this town aud the lots will be in demand, since the ground overlooks the town and is in a very fine location for a residence portion. In order to bring it in the market pe- fore the usual fourteen mouths, Mrs, Payne had to pay $1,600. Had she waited until October the land would have cost her $200. Edaqecate Your Bower wou Cascare’ pcs Cathartic, cure Constipation forever, 100,25c. If CC. C, fail, druggists refund money. THE BABY AND THE BRIGANDS Miss Stone in McClure’s for July. Miss Stone's third paper ou her ex- periences with brigands, which ap- pears in the July McUlure’s, is cer- tainly the best part so far of this ex- traordinary narrative. It isdevoted eiitirely to the birth of Mrs, Tsilka’s baby and the events of the first weeks of its life in captivity, It is a story that ouly a Woman could write, and as Miss Dluue hus written It bo one can read 1) unmoved. McLiure’s, uowever, knows always how Lo go Its best une better, aud at the eud of the article is the startling announcement that m the August number Mrs. ‘I'silka herself will tell the story of the coming of the “httle brigana,” We look into a cradle and beholda male child, At the age of LU he wa nowy kid with hat tue buttons off his pants and holes 1 his pockets; and ut 15 @ devil @ print suop, with an | al eye lur meanness; at 20 tue publish- er of a newspaper, elgaged 1 pub- fishing Ue resvurces vl tle COULUrY; at Sv eluaciated aud Work OUL; ALOU a corpse mn a cheap cottin and his only resources are a Washington haud press, a lew cases of nonpariel type and a subscription buok, the hames of OUU delinquent subscribers, Who line up aud march past his cof- fin saying, “tHe was a puvlie spirited iellow Du he just coulun’t save any- thing,”"—Ex. Father Now Insane. Union City, Tean., July 17.—Hon. J. H. McDowell, the ex senator, who was compelled to shoot his Insane sou yesterday in order to save the life Of himseli and wife, is bimeelf in- sane today. He seems to believe that he has killed his son. ‘The wife} ,.¢ and mother is also prostrated with grief. How Are Your Kiaueys Do not always receive the sympathy they deserve. Their ailments are imaginary, or natural life. ated with old age. in premature old age and disease. shows itself in an ulcer, sore, but gently an SS ailments disappear. S. S. you. This will cost you nothing, an ‘ and skin diseases. Aring Wilkins wore on the little} ® To Protect Negroes. Springtield, 111., July 10.—Govern- | or Yates received word this morning | that negro outrages had been re- peated in Saline county, around | Eldorado, ‘The governor has in | nected Assistant Adjutant General | Ewart to proceed with sixteen men | and one other from Mt. Vernon to | that county and remain until the negroes are sale, | Carbonaale dispateh says a mob of | urmed men went to the home of the Rev. Peter Green, pastor of the Afri- can Methodist church at Eldorado and opened fire when the pastor de- clared he would not leave. Green | returned the fire with a shotgun and it is rumored that one white man) was wounded, ative Bromo-Quinine Taviets the remedy that cures a cold im one day yy —<—_ FRISCO SYSTEM Do not overlook the First Special Sale of Town Lots in nine different towns in the Creek Nation, along the line of (Frisco System) per- fect titles guaranteed by the government. Sale begins July 7th, continuing until July 26th, Round trip tickets at Single Fare, good going on date ofsale of tickets, only, will be sold on July 6th, good to return until July 1s, and on July 17, good to return until July 27, 192, There is Money to be made, and made quickly, by attending these sales. For further information apply to any passenger repre- { sentative of the Frisco System, JAS, DONOHUE, Ass’t Gen’ Pase’r Agt, Kansas City, Mo, Order of Publication. STATE OF MindUU Ki, ¢ County of bates, os. An the cireuit court, June term, 1#2,Josephine Shepherd plaiuel, Ve Jub Shepuera, May ann ‘tapscoul, George Suepheru, hate barih, Mary A, GOUWIn, sucharu PF Shep- herd, Anna & Covey anu Lhe unknown heirs of hinney Shepheru, detenuants, Urder vt rublication, Dow at this uay comes the plaintiff! herein by her atlurney, Jamies. Suduell, and tiles her ainended petition aud afliasvil, alleging, among Ober Lungs Wal deienuante, ue Leite ut Kine | bey Shepherd, deceaseu, are unknown .o this plant 0 snd for Wat reasun Laer hames CanDot ve luserted iD plaiuuitl’s peuon. Whereupon ivisoracred by the coure in term ume that euid defendants be Owed Ly pusuicauon tual plaiDUt Nas commenced & eM ByauMst them io ibis court, the vbject aud general nature of Which 1s to oUtain & Uecree in partition, accord- ing lo he respective muberests and mgnts of ine parties FO Uti suit, of the following described real estate lying and being situate in the coun- ly OF bates and state of Missouri, uescribed tullows, to-wit; ‘The northwest quarter the southwest quarter of section twenty-five (2d) and northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section twenty- Six (26) all in township furty-two (42) of range Uurly-one (1); Wat tue plainuil is unavie Lo state Whether or not the said Kinney shepherd lelt any children OF Uescendants and that if he tid they Bre together enutied tO aN Undivided one-seVenth inverest Of, in and ww all suid real estate and that unless the paid unknown heirs of the said Kinney Shepherd, deceased, be and Appear at thiscourt at ine next term thereot,.to be begun and holden & the court house in the city of butler, Mo, in said county,on the Lith day of Noy. Dext, and on or betore ine first day of said term, answer or plead to the petition in said cause, the same will be taken & coniessed and judgment will be renderea. accoritingly. Aud it 18 further ordered thats copy hereof Ly Taos petty wccoraing te law, in Lod, BUTLER , 8Dewspaper published in said county of Bates tor four weeks successively, published at least once a week, the last inser- Uon to be at least fifteen days before the tret day of said next November term of this court. A, B. LUDWICK, Circuit Clerk. A true copy from the record. Witness (smaL] my hand and seal of the circuit court of Bates county, this lst day ofJuly, S64t «=u? A. B. LUDWICK, Cireuit Clerk, Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all creditors others interested in the estate or Willan County Probate court, in Sates county, state of Missouri, to be neld at Butler, Missouri, on the ith ae f of August, A. D., lvoe. #& CAMPBELL. Bid Aaministrator. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all creditors and others interested im the estate of Florence boswell, deceased, thati, SA McDaniel ad- Minieirator, Of said estate, inienuto make nal settlement of said estate atthe next term of the Bates county Probate court, in Bates county, state ot Missouri, to be held at Butler, Missvuri, on the lith dey of Aug. A D., 1902, S. A. McDaNIEL, + Shoat Administrator. : Executor’s Notice. Notice is hereby given that letters testa- mentary upon the estate of Roselar Jane Beaty,” deceased, have been granted to the undersign- tion of this notice, they will be forever barred. HENRY MUDD, s3-4tt ~~ Executor, and unavoidable at their time of Disease and infirmity should not always be assoct- The eye of the gray haired grandsire% may be as bright and the complexion as fair as any of 2 his younger and more vigorous companions. Good Blood is the secret of and controls every part of the body, muscles elastic and supple, the bones strong and the flesh firm; but when this life fluid is polluted or poisoned and loses its nutritive, health sustain- ing elements, then there is a rapid decline of the vital powers, resulting Any derangement of the blood quickly wart, tumor or some other troublesome growth upon the body, and guatin and a pee almost constant, accompanied with r digestion and cold extremities. : ys ss. Ss. ie purely vegetable, is the safest and best blood purifier for old people. It c or hurt the system like the strong mineral remedies, stimulates the S. is just improve a weak digestion and tone up the Stomach, I E tary taint, or the remains of some disease contracted in early life, S. S. & wiil search it out and remove every vestige of it from the system. Write us fully about your case and let our physicians advise and h and attention which regarded as purely healthy old age, {0 it regulates, , strengthens the nerves, makes the It does not shock d thoroughly cleanses the blood and debilitated organs, when all bodily such a tonic as old’ people need to If there is any heredi- d we will mail free our book on bl THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga. Will clanu Uke prepemt ecaouk vl Avus at my DATH Odes WUE Cae UE util, auto & aD PUN Uh UnUee Ma DUMEr rum Blu De 6 Week ui opruce, scuiplon ou £Gigree;—Blamo 18 coal iy MYOe Buu vo LUC Liew Ul dy BROS Ligh BLU LE Wepueu ae0y POURS, Was BIrOU DY tae nae Wie PBLR Uiteck LUMA Opel, Wr UUgbe ly Coupul Lu, 6) Caaries Levbards die Mal Ue MMLAY Wad BU GUE UA BL MApUrbou 0 Belk BLU DIACK KMIBUS Ubi UWleU by a. Peper, LiaPeevUrg, abu. A cua SMUD Wil be Kept ab the same slabies. Abdio ho LU LRDUPe & Coase WO ol uu Bld BUCK, Abe davis) is Uue Wack Cudbie dyad, 2a COLE With SbBMG KOU 404 Like cemOUM, Aller BerVIOe [We UEUL AMULLEK OM) UE CEAMip, MeuiDy OF LUKE WW LEIWUVe Haase 1UEIES eu bMOe BML AWUHEY MLude BE Pala, Abese ie bY Lewer bred vauk iu tae siete ot MirooWPt, CACCp. Mae Lasker Wav Wile Aaporled Iu opal, cue peupae WhY patulagou bd Jaca Bie Weil paca Cu Wadle hud COals aul 1086 UE (HCH B48 CULL DALA. Ame Vakue Ud a pur bed SULA td WeiuUlo dled UY Uae Lack, Una Oa vedere UE UAUPUNB LUE O4 CAKE pole oxUea We Aoop Up We breeu Ul Une Leis. breeuele oMUUit CULE LALLY Wu the 1OUPbAig OF abe us Le evens 1g. . DbeWiLL McDANLEL, A Most Liberal Utter, AM OUP luliner leautis shoud tak bing oler We Luis year lake, which luciudes Wilh Lis paper ‘Lie Live Dock Ludicwlor, bs ppeciai farmers’ dusttute huiuous aud Lue £oultry barmer, ‘bese Ulree puvucauons are the best of their class und should be un every lari Hole, ‘Lo Lue We add, lur luce, coumly wud general ews, Our OWL paper, Bld Make the price of the tour une yeur only 91.25, Never befere was sv juch superior reading matter oltered lor 50 siuall an amount of money, ‘Lue turee pa- pers named, which we club with our own, are well known throughout the West and commend theluselves to the reader’s tavorable atteuwon up- ou mere mention, ‘ke Live Stock Indicator is the great agricultural aud live stuck paper of tue West and Southwest; ‘he Loultry Farmer is the most practical poultry paper for the larmer, While ‘Lhe Special b’arm- ers’ lustitute Editions are tbe most practical pubiicatious tor the promo- ton of good farming ever published, fake auvablage Ol Us great offer, as it will hold good for a shore time only. Samples of these papers may be examued by calung at tuis office, 5-6 A Most Liberal Offer, The St. Louis Mirror is a twenty- eight page paper, in magazine form, edited by Wiliam Marion Keedy, as- sisted by a staff of conutributorscom- prising the best writers and literary authorities on all currént subjects, social, religious, scivntitic, financial, literary or artistic. The Mirror is a weekly review of men and allairs; & treasury of short stories and good ; i which the best peumn Neb peetent best music are ably reviewed, and all topics of contemporary interest are given careful attention. 1t is theup- to-date paper for the merchant, the teacher, the professional man, the“ student, the politician, as well as for woman and the home, If yon will send us 10c, in silver or stamps, we will mail the Mirror to your address for ten weeks, THE Mirror, St. Louis, Mo, en Administrator’s Notice, bh admin. istration With wi shachou, apse he eee William M, Griggs, devessed were granted to the undersignea on the lish day ot April, Aw, v5 the probate court of sates county, iseourl. against said es- All persons baying claims (ote, are required to exnibit them tor allow. ance to she administratrix within one Biter the date of euld letters, or they msy be . precluued trom any benent estate, rf Soon co be hot cxhibitea witate’ eae eare [rom the Wate of they Will be foreyer varreu. /tcstion, A. H BEEL 20-46 With will annexed. — Avmipistrator, Notice. Notice is hereby given that letters of admin- pave been grant ed to the undersigned, 4 y ny ance within one year from the date of sald let. hibited within two years istration with will annexed Henry Luwenhizer, di In Bates Goeat 4 All persons havi against said Pie, are required to exhibit them to me for tere, or they may be precl from any bene- fit of such estate; and if sald cline be not ex: ublication of this notes they will be moore Therese DEL LU1SENHIZER, BU-dt Administrator with ‘ /