The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 30, 1903, Page 7

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= Dneer Who Banished the Old| “Cow Bumper.” While at Work in Shops at § usky in Early Days of Rallronding, He Designed the Engine Pilot Almost as It le To-Day. H, T. Eastman, the inventor of the pcomotive pilot that succeeded what as known as the “cow bumper,” is ving in Union county and is 83 years Id. He helped to build the first rail- oad in Ohio, which was known as the d River & Lake Erie, and connected | nd@usky with Dayton. It is now a rt of the Big Four system. The first Deomotives on that road were fitted ith “eow catchers,” consisting of two png curved iron rods that picked up cow or other large object and car- Ré it along. The first improvement nh the “cow catcher” was the “cow yumper,” which resembled the pilot W in use, but proved unsatisfactory, nd one day while Mr, Eastman rk in the shops at Sandusky an en- eer entered and told the master echanic that unless an improvement ver the “cow bumper” could be had e would resign. “Something is needed that will throw in object to one side,” said the en- ineer, The master mechanic turned o Eastman and asked him if he could ke something that would answerthe purpose. Eastman answered in the af- rmative, went to work and the loco- motive pilot practically as it is now lwas given to the world, Mr, Eastman received no remunera- jon other than his regular wages for invention of the pilot. He wears small silver model of an engine pilot @s a watch charm. Mr, Eastman set- tled in Union county 46 years ago on a farm near Anna, where he still re- tes. He was born in New York state and comes from one of the oldest east- ern families. He has seven children, 30 grandchildren, and six great-grand- children. MUSKET WORTH MILLIONS. A Revolutionary Gun Which Will Bring Rich Inheritance to Ite Holder, Members of the Stoy family all over the United States, including ayor Franklin P, Stoy, of Atlantic yy, N.J., have been interested in fiud- g the possessor of a certain revolu- tionary musket, ownership of which will carry with it the inheritance of an estate in ‘roy, Pa., worth several mil- lion dollars, The title to the estate in question contains the provision that it shall not pass from the ownership of the possessor of a musket used by a member of the Stoy family at the surrender of the British at York- town. It seems that in some way the Stoys became dispossessed and seat- tered to various parts of the coun- try, one member retaining the musket whose relation to the title apparently had been forgotten. me years ago, when the owner of e estate tried to sell it, the curious ovision was discovered, and the search for the possessor of the gun began. A letter just received by Mayor Stoy probably settles the question of ownership of the gun, Isaac Stoy, of Sherwood, Mich., stating that he is its possessor. The hunt for the weapon shows that a few months ago it-came into Isaa. s—possession: TO USE NICKELED RAILS, Pennsylvania Railroad Finda That They Last Over Three Times as Long as Standard Sieel Rails, After two ye experimentation with nickeled steel rails, the Pennsyl- vania railroad has decided to place them on the heavy curves through the legheny mountains. order for 5,000 tons has been giv- m ata cost of $370,000. The nickeled steel rails cost nearly three times as much as rails of standard steel. The tests made by the Pennsylvania railroad have shown the durability of nickeled rails to be more than three times that of standard steel. A Needed Rebuke. Once when Queen Alexandra was re- turning from a sail with her daugh- - ters, who were then little children, an “old sailor instinctively said to one of them, who was walking up the plan “Take care, little lady!” “I’m nota lady,” haughtily retorted the child, “I'm a princess!” The queen, who _ overheard the kindly injunction and _ the rather ill-bred reply, said, quickly: “Tell the good sailor you are not a lit lady yet, but you hope to be some . Mad Straining Out a Joke. Massachusetts factory recently , im accordance with special or- 8 pair of shoes for Harvey Mur- of Tirrell, Ark. The size ofthe is 17, and it cost $18 to build them f ordinary material. In the estima- on of eastern jokers, says the Chicago Herald, the only extraordinary about, these shoes is that they de for some Chicago girl. might make quite a bit, says ‘Chicago Record-Herald, by varying ogramme a little and building a o, for instance, that are already pro- with first-class public libraries. Lese Ks Melody Then. York millionaire has married | girl because he was med by her voice. Wait, says the 2 | Herald, till she orders to get up in the night and find the baby. tees can be obtained in Paris, Vienna, Muenierm, the principal geologist of France, has informed the Academy of | “¢Pt by Samuel Fisher, of Hoboken, Seiences that he has been carefully ex- vard St. Martin and the result of his | 0U2¢ among the rubbish on a remote Investigation is that in this locality | elf. The gems, which are the prop- what he terms a “germ” of the volcano | *Tty of Fisher's stepdaughter, were really exists. The eminent geologist missed shortly after her marriage and reassured Parisians with the an- | * 'ewerd of $1,000 wae offered for their nouncement that no harm can come of | Tecovery- The stepdaughter’s hus- the said germ at present, though it is band. Samuel Healey, said that he be- impossible to answer for what the fue Weved they had been secreted in the , ture may bring. Z hotels in cities such as Chi-}- liquefying air by which a one horse- of liquid air per hour. This result sur- passes that of the heretofore best ping-pong poems. This, says the Chi- known method, that of Dr, Linde, bg more than 100 per cent. _ take the form of an obituary. PROPHECY FULFILLED. | GONE JUST TWENTY YEARS. Farmer of Vermont Returns After? What Morse Foresaw in 1843 Has Going Ow to Feed the j Mere Than Been Realized in the Chickeus. } Electrical World. | Abiel Patch was a soldier in the civil’ The Electrical Review in its last issue war and when the war ended he re- publishes the diary kept by Samuel F. turned to his native place, Rutland, V&é B. Morse during his earliest work on Phere he was marrieuatew yearsiater, the Baltimore and Washington tele- He bought a good farm and with his graph line in the year 1543. The book wife Lived there happily nearly 15 was discovered in the library of Thomas years. By incustry he acquired a goods A. Edison, at Orange, N. J. Under ly amount of property. , date of August 10, 1543, Mr. Morse de- Patch took a pan of cornatfour p.m, scribes certain tests he had. made and December 27, 1582, and started for tne makes the following interesting proph- poultry house to feed his hens. When. ecy: he cid not return for supper his wife| “The practical inference from this hunted all over the place for him, but iu law is that a telegraphic communica- vain, The next day a searching party; tion on my plan may, with certainty, was formed by the neighbors and the. be established across the Atlantic. forests for miles around were scoured , Startling as this may seem now, the without tinding a trace of the missing, time will come when this project will man. After.a few days the search was | be realized.” abandoned. No letter ever came nor{ Commenting on this prophecy, the was any inkling of the whereabouts of | Electrical Review says: Patch ever received, “To-day there is no ocean unspanned While Mrs, Patch was preparing by a telegraphic cable. We have com- for supper the other evening there was pleted the fitst Pacific cable and have a@rapat the door, She opened thedoor | made a good start on the second, and was at} @2d an old man with a long gray beard | Marconi has established communica- stepped in. There was nothing about | tion across the Atlantic without wires. his face or figure that looked familiar] lt is difficult to realize that this diary to Mrs, Patch, and when the old man] Was written less than 60 years ago.” told her he was Abiel Patch she thought he was playing a prank on her. When HIGH SPEED IN ENGLAND. he showed her a peculiar finger ring yc RETR which her husband had always worn Inventor Behr Expecta to Attain 110 and the scar of a severe wound on the Miles an Hour on His Monorail side of his head which he received at Raliway. Cold Harbor in the civil war there was no further doubt of his identity, “I left home because 1 wanted ex- citement,” said Patch, later, in explain- ing his long absence. “I got tired of farming and started out into the woods, I have been all over the forests of northern Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine, and have killed hundreds of deer and moose. I didn't intend ever to come back, and I hoped my wife would marry again, but I heard a little while ago she hadn't, I thought I would see her once more before | died, ‘The winters have been pretty cold late- ly and | couldn't stand it much longer in the woods,” Patch did not think his wife would welcome him home, but, as she has done so, he says he will remain. The present year will witness some interesting developments in locomo- tion, both by sea and land, Next June F, B. Behr hopes a portion of his Man- chester-Liverpool monorail electric ex- press railway will be opened and that cars will be running at the rate of 110 miles an hour, Mr, Behr will introduce a bill at the next session for a London- Brighton monorail road, which will take Londoners down to the sea in half an hour, Many big railway companies are elec- trifying portions of their lines. By the close of 1903 trains will be running by electricity, There are also to be some novelties in ocean travel, In May the first tur- bine-driven cross-channel steamer will commence running between Dover and Calais. In August another turbine vessel will be placed on the New Haven-Dieppe service. In April the most powerfully engined liner in the world will start running, viz., the North German Lloyd Mrs, Rufus W, Blake, the widow of steamer Kaiser Wilhelm Der Zweite. NEW PLATINUM MINES. Valuable Deposits of This Rare Metal Are Being Worked in Russia, A TEN-YEAR ROMANCE. Wedding Ia Sequel to a Girlhood Courtship Which Preceded Mar- riage to Millionaire Sultor, the millionaire piano manufacturer, of Derby, Conn., is soon to be married to Paul Schabert, a wealthy exporter and a member of a prominent family in Hamburg, Germany. It isthe ending of a romance that began when the bride to be was studying in Hamburg ten years ago. Although only a girl] discovered by a party of diggers on of 16, the daughter of Kichard Mock, | the River Gusseva, a tributary of the a restaurateur in West Forty-second | Issa, in western Siberia. ‘The news street, she received the ardent at- quickly got abroad and swarms of tention of the German suitor, But, in] miners started for the hew'camp., With- girlish fashion, she returned to New] ina month 25,000 men were on the spot York to make new friends, digging like demons, and before the po- Her marriage to Mr, Blake, a mik] lice could get to the camp more than lionaire, caused a sensation, for he $1,500,000 worth of platinum, it is ¢ was more than 60 years old, while she muted, got clear away, no one kue was little more than 20. In the fall] how nor where. ; of 1901 he was shot through the head by a revolver in his own hands. The shooting was declared to be accidental. | the regulations, and most of them Last summer Mrs, Blake went to Eu- | are leaving, preferring to return home rope and again met Herr Schabert.] rather than : His attentions were renewed, and he] wealth slowly soon followed her to Ame . Mrs. Blake’s fortune is estimated at almost $3,000,000, for her husband left her his entire estate, Vast deposits of platinum have been Matters are now being regulated by the police, but the miners do not like submit to gathering ] A few of the wiser ones remain, thinking that they will be able to “regulate” the police. It is believed that the new Gusseva mines could supply the whole world with this Valuable metal, AFTER ENGLISH HONORS. = — ——_ MEDAL FOR BRAVE WOMAN. American Athletes, Under Manages " ment of George W. Orton, to Try The Wife of Colonel Turner, United States Consul General in Can- ada, Saves Man from Bear, for Foreign Champlonships. It has been practically settled that George W. Orton, one of the University lier go Mrs. Turner, wife of of Pennsylvania’s famous runners, the United States consul general at will manage a team of American col- | Ottawa, Ont., saved the life of Game lege athletes which will make an ate Warden Cromier, who had been seized tempt to carry away English cham- | PY @ savage bear at Aylmer, Que, She pionship honors during the coming | UShed at the bear, grabbing it by the summer, fur and diverting its attention from The money necessary to defray the the warden, enabling him to kill the expenses of the trip has been prom. | beast. Cormier was badly injured, ised by Mr. E. M. Cregar, who is one | but is now convalescent. of Philadelphia’s foremost cricketers, | The attention of the Royal Canadian This gentleman will also accompany | Humane society was called to Mrs. the athletes, and it is his desire that a | Turner’s act, and by unanimous vote representative team make the joure | she has been awarded the association's ney. medal for bravery. Among the men who will most like-| Col. and Mrs. Turner were called to ly make the trip are Duffy, Jones, | Overnment house. In the presence Moulton, Grant, Maloney, of Chicago; | Of a distinguished company Mrs, Turn- De Witt, and athletes of such cal- | er received the medal from the hands iber. of the countess of Minto. Lady Minto The sanction of the Amateur Ath. | spoke highly @f Mrs. Turner’s action letic union has been asked. If any-| 40d warmly complimented her on her thing approaching expense guaran. | gallant act. PARROT A GEM THIEF. Mischievous Rird Secrets Valnadle Another Germ Brings Terror. ea Which Are Found After Be- The latest scientific discovery is 8 ing Given Up as Forever Leat. volcanic “germ” in Paris. Stanislas While a briee-brac shop formerly ‘Two months ag Berlin, Stockholm or Copenhagen, the athletes will visit these points. was being dismantled a chamois mining earth dug up near the Boule- | ©°t#ining $5,100 worth of jewels was shop by a purrot owned by his wife. Tee Cold te Need Coal. A Chicago man climbed the summit of Mount Aetna the other day. He re- ports that he found tio suffering there on account of of fuel. Reduces Cost of Liquid Air. The Frankfort Engineer reports that a French scientist, George Claude, of Paris, has invented a new process for | Time to Bary It. Somebody has published a book of power produces more than a quart cagg Record-Herald, might..properly | dry.” -} reat, healing and soothing treatmen: y} aud the patient needs fresh air, good as cheap ae some 6o-called newspa- to sell a first-class newspaper. It printe all the news that is worth Queer Superstitions. The following are some curious su- perstitions that are still extant among Euglich-speaking people If you kill frogs your cows will “go | Tickling a baby will cause thechild to stutter. To thank a person for combing your hair will bring bad luck. Tokilla ghost it must be shot with @ bullet made of silver coin. To dream of a live snake means enemies at large; of a dead snake, enemies dead or powerless. To dream of unbroken eggs signi- fies trouble to come; if the eggs are broken the trouble is past. If you boast of your good health, strike wood immediately with your fist, or you will become ill. To allow a child to look into a mirror before it is a month old will cause it to have trouble in teething. A child will have a nature and dis- position similar to those of the per- son who first takes it out of doors.— Philadelphia Inquirer. Stops the Cold and Works off the Cold. Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No cure, ne pay. Price 25 cents. To Modify the Dipping Order. Topeka, July 25.—Governor Bailev announced Thursday that the order providing for the dipping of cattle of the Western Kansas counties would be modified. Some of the counties assert that cattle coming from Coiorado are not afflicted with the mange, and that therefore the order works an unnecessary hardship on them, CASTORIA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of German Syrup. We want to impress on ourreaders that Boschee’s German Syrup is posi tively the only preparation on the market to-day that does relieve and cure consumption. I+ contains the specifics, such as pure tar, extracts of gums, ete., which have been su highly endorsed for the cure of colds, coughs and consumption by the great medical congresses The con sumptive, whether his disease is i: the throat or lungs, must have rest at night, and be free from the spasm of dry and racking cough in the morning, The di-eased parts want food, ete. German Syrup will give free and easy expectoration in the merning with speedy and permanent relief. Small bottles, 25 cente; regu- lar size, containing nearly four times asmuch, 75 cents, At H. L. Tuck ers drug store - G. G. Grrex, Woobury, N. J. A Most Liberal Offer. All our farmer readers should.take advantage of the unprecedented club- bing offer we this year. make, which includes with this paper the Live Stock Indicator, its Special Farmers’ Institute editions and ‘The Poultry Farmer. These three publieation- are the bestof their class and shoul¢ be in every farm home. To them we add, for local, county and genera) news, our own paper, and make the price of the four one year only $1.25 Never before was so much superior reading matter offered for so smal) an amount of money. The .three papers named, which we club with our own, are well known throughout the west, and commend themselvee to the reader’s favorable attention upon mere mention. The Live 8tock Indicator ie the great agricultural and live stock paper of the west. The Poultry Farmer is the most practical | a_.,’1: poultry r for the farmer, while the cd on; Institute Edi tions are the most publica. tions for the promution of good farming ever published. Take ad vantage of this great offer, as it wili hold for a short time only Samples of these papers may be ex- amined by calling at this office. 7-6m The Best is the Cheapest. Not how cheap but how good fs the question. The Twice-a Week Republic is not pers, but 16 is ascheap asitis possible printing. If you read it all the year round you are posted on all the im-}'q t and interesting affairs of the | ‘ world. It is the best and most rel able newspaper that money and brainscan produce—and thoseshould be the traite ofanews- paper that is designed to be read by| , all members of the family. Subscription price, $layear. Any newsdealer newspaper or postmaster will receive your subscription or you may mail it direct to Tar_RePvstic, “ St. Louis, Mo. OLD PEOPLE, attention which arded as purely unavoidable at their time of s y should not al s be associ- ated with old age. The eye of the gray haired grandsire may be as bright and the con i air as any of Z@ his younger and more vigurous compagions. Good Blood is tho secret of healthy ofd age, for it regulates and controls every part of the body, strengthens the nerves, makes the 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 im premature old age and disease. Any derangement of the blood quickly shows itself in an ulcer, sore, wart, tumor or some other troublesome growth upon the body, and rheumatic and neuralgic pains become almost constant, accompanied with poor digestion and cold extremities. ~ S.S.S. being purely vegetable, is the safest and best blood putifier for old people. It does not shock or hurt the system like the strong mineral remedies, but gently and thoroughly cleanses the blood and stimulates the debilitated organs, when all bodily ailments disappear. S, S. S. is just such a tonic as old people need to improve a weak digestion and tone up the Stomach. If there is any heredi- tary taint, or the remains of some disease contracted in early life, S.S.& will search it out and remove every vestige of it from the system. Write us fully about your case and let our physicians advise and hi * you. This will cost you nothing, and we will mail free our book on bl and skin diseases. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga. oe] hw mpathy a Do not always receive the < nts $100 Reward $100. Order of Publication. The readers ot this paper will be pleas- | STATE OF MISSOURI, ed to learn that there is at least one| County of Bates, dreaded disease that science has been Inthe eiroalt segrtoe Dewees couniy. Missoast, une term e state of Missouri at the ee ey Giiek Gun ge reanes fae to the oy of W. T. Jonanen, ex- . ofMicio collector « f the revenue of Bates coun- only positive cure known to the medical} ty, in the state of Missouri, plaintiff, va, fraternity, Catarrh being a constitution. | Bawin © Webster and,George G Green, de- al disease, requires, a constitutional Civil Action for Delinquent Taxes, teatment. Hall’s Ca~arrh Cure is taxen Now at this day comes the plaintiff by her at internally, acting directly upon the | rorney before the cireuit court of Bates county, blood and mucous surtaces of the sys- | in the arate of ar, ena ss appearing to the tem, thereby destroying the foundation | court thatthe dstendants Bdwin (. \\ebster and George G, Green are not residents of the of the disease, and giying the patient | state of Missouri, and the court being further strength by building up the constitution | satisfied that process cannot be served on said and assisting nature in doing its work, | defendants Kuwin © Webster and George G. . a * “| Green ia therefore ordered by the court that The proprietors haye so much taith in lthe saiddefendants be notitle by publication its curative powers, that they offer One | that plaintiff has commenced a suit against Hundred Dollars for any case that it, them - this hegre Ry etition, = ahen and S general nature of which is to enforee the lien of tails to cure, Send tor list of testimon: | fhe'‘siate of Missouri for the delinquent taxes als. Address F, J. Cueney & Co., | of the year 1001, amounting in the aggregate to Totedo,O, p@pSold by druegis 7cc | the sum of $115.44 together with interest, costs, coMMiosiODS ANG fees, Upon the following de- — ~ | scribed tracts of land situated in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit The southeast quarter of the southwest quar- ter of section tive, lownship thirty-nine, range thirty one; the northeast quarter of section sev. n, township thirty-nine of range thirty-one the southeast quarter of section seven, town- ship thirty-nine, range thirty-one; the east hall of the southwest quarter of section se . township thirty-nine, range thirty-one; south- east quarter ot the northwest quarter of section seven, townsuip thirty nine, rauge thirty-one; the west halt of the northeast quarter of section eight, township thirty-nine, range thirty-one; the southwest quarter of section eight, town= ship thirty nine ge thirty-one; the north- West quarter of 8 jon eight, township thirty- nine, range thirty-one; the west half of the southeast quarter section eighi, township thirty nine, range Bor baton one hundred and twen- ty acres the northwest quarter of the north: ast quarter and the porth ualt of the northwest re quarver all in section seventeen, township The Only Guaranteed Kitney Reme | thirty-nine, range thirty-one,the north half uf dy the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter ye of section seventeen, township thirty-nine of Your druggist will refund your | range thirty-one and that untess the said de- money if after taking one bottle you fondania be and Spear ot the nest sare of thie . court to be begun and holden in the city o! are not satlefied with rorults Butler, Bates county, Missouri, on the first Price 50 cents and $1.00. For sale | Monuay in Uctober, 103, aud on'or before cue by all druggists. third vay thereof (if the term shall so long con then betore the end of said Ato said petition accordicg to ill be taken a8 contessed and dered accoruing to the prayer of Notice is hereby given to all criditors and a oper prog he av edeeerl bad Feel eatate sold to satisfy the same gia ia Nersaved a ee ate of). K- Natas, | And itis further ordered by the court afore- of said easate intends to ‘make tinal settlement sete ern EM Pa ego r oe thereat, @tnexs term of the ae pay halen priuted aud published in Bat ct ae . 0) . r four we to be held at Butler, on he Wth day | terion sv be at of August, 103, MI ENA‘Us, first Cay of th Bundt stratrix, copy of the rect Witness my hand as clerk aforesaid eye [skAg] with the seal of said court hereunto Notice of Final settlement RES ames. Done at oftice in Butler, Notice is hereby given to all creditors and | on this the Iithday of july, 193 others inte estate of Alexander | J. A, PATTERSON, MeDonald, dee that! C. Scanian, | 37-40 = , clreult Clerk. executor of said intend to make final | CHAS. M. BARKLEY, b, C, settlement thereof, the next term of the probate court in Bates county, state of Missouri on the 10th day of babies | sd Notice of Final Settlement, Xtlerm of eaid court. A true Trustee's Sale. ihe Whereas, DN Carnes and Florence Carnes hia wife, by their deed of trust dated June 23, 1H), and recorded in the securder’s office within and for bates County, Missouri, in vook No, 167 page 504 conveyed to the uadersigned trus- tee the following described real estate lying and being situate in the County of Bates and State of Missouri, to-wit: Fifteen acres, the bast port of the north « east quarter of nort! t quarter north of Probate Court, in Baws county, State of Mis- | river, and also ten acies suuth half of the west idea to be held at Butler, Missouri, on the | hair of the nurthwest quarter of the northeast 10th day of August, Ins. J.B. DURAND, quarter, all in section swenty (20) in townshi at tor. | (uirty eight (38) of range twenty-nine (29) whicl cnidetipiaaeianicmaacs conveyauce Was nade in trust lo secure the pers re nt * ment of one certain note tuily deseribed in sai Notice of Final Settlement. dood cf trust; and whereas, detanlt Ras besa Notice ls hereby given to all creditors, and | made in the payment of saia note now past due allothers interested tn the estateof John | e Atkison, deceased, that 1, RK, A. Atkison, administrator of said estate, Intend to make i sher- final settlement thereof, 81 the next term of | til of fates county may proceed to execute this the Bates County Probate court, in Bates | trust and whereas the trustee EF D Kipp re- county, state of Missourt, to be held at Butler, | fuses to act, Now therefore, at the request of Missonrl, on the lUth day of August the legal holder of said note and pursuant to -4¢ R.A. AJ KISON, Administrator. the conditions of said deed of trust, 1, Joe T. smith, sheriff of Bates county, will proceed to sell the above described premises at public vendue, to the highest bidder for cash at the Notice ol Final Settlement. West front door of the court house in the city of Notice is eby given to all oreditors and Butler, county of Bal nd state of Missouri on others interest in the estate of William Saturday, August 22, 1903, L, Feeback, deceased, that I, Eliza J. Feeback : adminietratrix, of said , intend to make | between the hours of 9 o’clock in the forenoon final settlement of said estate atthe next | 40u 5 0’ciock in the afternoon of that day, for term of the Bates county Probate court, in | the purposes of eotietying, ae eit interest and coot . 'T! Bates connty, state of Missears. to be held St sheriff of Bates Co. and Acting ‘irustee. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all creditor others interes\ed in the estate of 1 Short, deces ati, J B. Durand, « of said estate ni to make final s thereof, at the next term of the Bates County Butler, Missouri, on the l0th day of August, . \< ELIZA J FEEBAOK, Administro rix. Administrator’s Notice. Notice is hereby given that letters of adminis- tration upon the estate of Jane N. Melton, a ‘ted to the undersiga- ed, by the Bates county probate court, in Bates bearing date the 7 i dj ; ; fll 8 i i f : 3 ¥ pobligation of this moticn, they will be forever 30-48 Kreoutrf. A iministrator’s Notice. unaen amne n Maae ofc: b 8 : fers ng ey . persons against said es- sete, are to them allow. thes to the. sdministratrin withic ns year after the date of said letters, or they may poe py og bog 3 ald etate; and roaea fvean the date of tne atten they ‘ bs ar a ' nat ates: ‘

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