THE TALE OF TROY.
I ft be Greatest Pieces of Ims;lntJre
Potry
4ly certain about the chief author
Jie Iliad is that he was a Greek of
'Astern Asia Minor. The weight of
Mence appeared to the ancients to
jit toward Smyrna as his native
. and modern students generally
X In this opinion. Yet the poems
sselres give no hint of any Greek
itb existing in Asia at alL On the
itrary. the poet apparently assumes
ilhis tale belongs to a period before
emigration of the Hellenes, from
Selr peninsular home, eastward across
jEgean; that is, before the gray
iwn of Hellenic history! It is not
Hkely that the siege of holy Ilios is
1 truth a far-off echo of that eastward
ionizing movement itself.
( But the more completely the Tale of
oy eludes the grasp of historian and
2mologiBt. so much the loftier is the
Mition which it assumes in its true
iaracter, as a masterpiece of imagi
native poetry. The Iliad satisfies
BOSt happily the three demands which
) may make upon every artistic ere
Hon. First, the plot is eminently
lple and complete in itself. The
ibject announced in the opening
g, O goddess, the wrath of Achilles, the off-
j spring 01 reieus
j Steadily worked out to its final re-
ulta. Even the death of Achilles
elf and tixe fall of the guilty city
foreshadowed in so distinct and
pressive a manner that all our
onable curiosity is satisfied. Sec
ondly, the warriors and matrons
whom we see acting and suffering,
whether they are real Greek men or
not, are at any rate pre-eminently hu
man. We do not demand that the con
ditions of their life shall be such as
ver existed, or could have existed, on
jour earth. Nay. we welcome romantic
and imaginative surroundings for the
poet's scenes. We only insist that
' within their environment the creatures
i Of the artist shall act as real men and
lwomen would act under such circum
stances. But thirdly and chiefly.
Homer's characters are heroic. They
tower high above the commonplace
levels of humanity. They seem not
' so much like ourselves as what we
would wish to be. Terhaps it is well
to say. as frankly and as plainly as
Impossible, that this is the final and in
dispensable test of the artist's right to
be. We ourselves know the pettiness,
t the limitations, the disenchantments of
. human life only to well. The preacher,
i the teacher, the political and social
? reformer, may, perhaps, accomplish
(some good Dy merciless analysis and
satiric caricature of our failings. The
artist is the creator of the beautiful.
He must inspire and uplift us by set
ting before us something wrought in
our likeness, indeed, but nobler than
Our ordinary solves. William Cran
ston Lawton, in Atlantic.
ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
' Two
Excellent Anecdote Told of the
v . Famous XoTeiUt's Hooks.
Two anecdotes aro told of Dumas'
books, one by M. Edmond About, the
Other by his own son, which show, in
brief space, why this novelist is so
beloved, and why he deserves our
affection and esteem. Villaud, a
railway engineer, who had lived much
in Italy, Russia and Spain, was the
person whoso enthusiasm finally se
cured a statue for Dumas. lie felt so
much gratitude to the unknown friend
of lonely nights in long exiles that he
could not be happy till his gratitude
found a permanent expression. On
returning to France he went to con
sult M. Victor Borie, who told him
this tale about George Sand. M. Borie
chanced to visit the famous novelist
just before her death and found Du
mas' novel, ' Les Quarante Cinq" (one
of the cycle about the Valois Kings),
lying on her table. He expressed his
wonder that she was reading it for
the first time. "For the first time
why, this is the fifth or sixth time I
have read 'Les Quarante Cinq' and
the others. When I am ill, anxious,
melancholy, tired, discouraged, noth
ing helps me against moral or physical
troubles like a book of Dumas'."
Again, M. About says that M. Sarcey
was in the same class at school with
a little Spanish boy. The child was
homesick; he could not eat. he could
not sleep; he was almost in a decline.
"You want to see your mother?" said
young Sarcey. "No; she is dead."
"Your father, then?" -No; he used
to beat me." "Your brothers and sis
ters?" "I have none." "Then why
are you so eager to be back in Spain? "
"To finish a book I began in the holi
days." "And what was its name?"
"Los Tres Mosqueteros!" He was
homesick for "TheThree Musketeers,"
and they cured him easily. That is
what Dumas does. He gives courage
and life to old age, he charms the half
conscious nostalgia the hcimtoeh. of
childhood. Scribner's Magazine.
No Trouble After That.
Briggs I have been hunting all the
morning for a friend of mine. Boggs.
but I can't find him. I wish he wasn't
so much trouble to git hold of when I
want him.
Boggs-ril tell you what to do. The
next time you see him. Briggs. borrow
ten or fifteen dollars. After that you
can't walk the streets without running
over him. Time. "
A little boy of three years, whose
mother played the organ in the
church, and who was obliged to be
left to the care of others, was asked
one Sunday morning what his kitten
was crying so piteously for. "I don't
know," said he, in tearful tones, "but
I 'spect the old cat has gone to
1
T. JL,; PETTYS
i
wE
101 N
UK
StaplelFancy Groceries
Feed and Provisions of all Kinds.
QUEENSWARE AND GLASSWARE
fCICARS AND TOBACCO.!
Always pay the highest market price for Countr
Produce. East Side Square. Butler, MO
ANOTHER SPLEAND1D GIFT !!
AN ELEGANT AVORK OF AH
To every new subscriber or renewal for the
n
pUent
(10
ONE
ii
Pages)
YEAR
THE BEAUTIFUL ENGRAVING,
THE SCOTCH RAID'
A group of cattle aud sheep (by Rosa Bonheur)- A companion piecof
"THE HORSE FAIR," which was, until recently, the premium v.h
the "WEEKLY GLOBE-DEMOCRAT.
see-1 lie price oi tne vvii,ui.iji UJJitt-UlUUUitAT, one nv
and the engraving "THE SCOTCH RAID is only
Subscribers desiring both pictures can have "The Horse Fair" or
25 cents extra.
1 ostuiasters and news dealers will take subscriptions, or remit diet
to the GDOBE PRINTING CO.
a?"Send for sample copy of paper.
Mrs. Loan and Mrs. Harrison at. Odds
Between Mis. Harrison ami Mrs
Logan and between Mrs. Logan and
the cabinet ladies this encampment
h is been the means of inaugerating
what is probably an all winter's
war.
The story goes that, anticipating
the importance of her intended re
ception, Mrs. Logan contrary to her
habit since her widowhoood person
ally called on the ladies of the cabi
net aud invited them to receive with
her. They all declined on one pre
tense or another, and to make it
worse, Mrs. Harrison did not invite
Mrs. Logan to receive with her at
the "White house.
Considering the invitation extend
ed to the cabinet ladies ane that bhe
was the only woman knighted in
America, her husband's relation to
the order and her own importance
on this occasion. Mrs. Logan it is
currently thought, had every reason
to expect discrimination in her fa
vor. But it is hinted that Mrs. Harri
son is to good a politician to foster
an incipient presidential boom by
pushing Mrs. Logan to the front
The hold upon the G. A. E. and the
masonic, which Mrs. Logan is evi
dently determined to maintain can
scarcely be explained on any other
ground than her well known interest
in the future of General Alsrer. of
O
Michigan. So, whatever slight is
put upon Mrs. Logan it could not
be constructed here upon any other
ground.
A very rich incident has leaked
out connected with Mrs. Logan and
her cabinet invitations. It is said
that after a presentation of one of the
invitations to the wife of on 3 of the
secretries, that lady remarked.
"Excuse me, madame, but
not catch your name."'
THE TRAIN DISPATCHER.
A . O V fcL X He Mast Know a Great Many Thing and
Do Them Well.
The position of a train dispatcher is
a very responsible one. Indeed, it is
the most responsible one connected
with the transportation department.
They are required to be good telegraph
operators, have a general knowledge
of rules governing; the movement of
trains and have a great deal of confi
dence in themselves. Train dispatch
ers as a rule are men who have served
on the road as operators and have
filmed, by practical experience, a
knowledge of the different depart
ments of a railroad. Among tha
numerous bits of knowledge a dis
patcher must possess are the follow
ing:
He must know all the grades, curves.
capacity of side-tracks and location of
all telegraph offices on his division;
must know the hauling capacity of all
locomotives running on his division.
and the reputation of all engineers and
conductors for "making time." His
duties consist of issuing telegraphic
orders to trains to meet each other or
giving one train the right of track
against another. All railroads have
a schedule, on which all trains have a
given time to make a trip over
the division. The schedule also
shows the time each train is
due to pass all stations. Trains
are classified (varying on different
roads) as follows: First class, passen
ger trains; second class, regular
freight trains; third class, "wild" or
extra" trains. The trains take pre
cedence over each other in the order
named. Also north or east-bound
trains nave tne "r:rht of wav acrainst
trains moving south or west, provided.
however, that first-class trains moving
south or west having the right to use
the track against second or third-class
trains moving in the opposite direc
tion. First and second-class trains
are shown on the time card, while
third-class or irregular trains can not
leave a terminal station without first
obtaining an order from a dispatcher
on duty. Train dispa tchers work eight
hours per day each. The first trick
man reports at eight a. m.. second
trick at four p. m. and third trick at
twelve midnight. The chief dispatch
er's hours vary, he being required to
Do present whenever his presence mav
oe necessary.
As each train arrives and leaves a
station the operator reports it by using
the signal os os os, which attracts the
dispatcher's attention and he carries
the time on a sheet called a train
sneet. ihus he is enabled to keep
track of his trains, knowing iust where
tney are. If trains could only be on
schedule time his work would be light,
Dut as it is they are generally late.
especially f might trains. When a train
having the "right of way" becomes late
and another train having arrived
at the designated meeting point on
time, the dispatcher changes the
meeting point by issuing an order to
both trains to that effect. These or
aers are delivered to the conductors
ana engineers and they, after reading
them, sign thorn to signify- their un
derstanding. The operator thon snnrt
the signatures by wire to the dis
patcher who. after indorsing them on
the order book. "O. K ." th ,rHr
giving the sigual that it is correct.
mere are other forms of orders
a train
Consumption Cur ei.
An ok! phvsician, retired trom oratice
having placed in his IiuniK bv an
Kast India im.ionary the ronpula ot a
simple vegetable remeciv tor The speeJ v
and permanent cure ot Consumption,
Bionchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and al!
throat and lung affections, also a positive
and radical cute lor Nervous Debilitv
and all Nervous complaints, atter having
tested its wonderful curative powers
in thousands of cases, has telt it his dut v
to make it Known to his suffering fellow-.
Actuated bv this motive and a desire to
relieve h uman suffering. I will send free
ot charge, to all who desire it, this re
ceipt, in Germac, French or English,
with tul! directions lor preparing and
using. Sent by mail by adilrestnsr with
stamp, naming this paper. V. A. Noves,
MQ Power's Block. Rocheste N. Y.
-Il,i,!.J!-K!,nr WNTFD COR
MY STORY OF THF WAR
By Mary A. Zivertnore
i,ifJT?T5!EiTV VRAM KltSOJI!. KSPEKI.
Oond of nutchlM interwl and profound palW. u at
and f..r ih huliday. Cjf Ao w.p,ftft.n. 7kpar-a,
cW. 61.1 l,Wsui. r -V ..;. . ii-' , '
BATES COUNTY
National Bank.
(Organized in iS7i.)'.J
OF BUTLER, MO.
Capial paid in.
Surplus - - -
S 75.000.
$ "r.ooo
F. 1
5 rn and Woinm
TYGARD. - - - p.iArn,
HON. T. n. MEWBEKIft , Vice-Pres.
I.C.CLARK - .' Cashier
Trustee's Sale.
Whereas Sarah E. Owen in lier own rhtlit.
ami Reuben S. Owen her husband did bv their
deel of trust dated the 23rl day or December
A L. 18ST., and recorded In book 45, page 2ia
of the records of Rates countv. Missouri con
vey to Henry C. Wilson, trustee, the tollow
inir described real estate aituated in the county
of Bates and state of Missouri, to-wit:
1 he west half of the southeast quarter of
section twenty (ilti and the north half of the
uonueast quarter or section twentv-nine (2)
Mv.i"M!Sjr"JS - r 'n township forty-two (42) north and in range
W o&tiumt35a Co' IlriLC "WyrthM.wert of th. flfth (Mh) principal
9uV i'ohtrait i"rc..
line lniroaucinir our line work, if xna
us a photograph of yourself or any member of
juurmmiij, we win make you a full life-size
v.rnui runmi nee ot marge. The only
consideration inpoeed upon vou will be that
you exniDitit it to yonr friends as a samnle nt
Mu nui&, aim auibt us m securing orders
ami iuai ym jimiiiiFP in nave u iramed eui'a
hlv so that the work will show to advantace
n rue your full name and address on back of
I'nuw m secure us saietv. we cuaranten it.
return uur oner is goon ror a few days only
nd the sample portrait is worth $.!0, being as
on. on uc mine. Aourcss American Por
trait House, r and Washington St. CHICA
GO. ILL. Largest Life-Size Portrait House
in tne norm.
meridian, to secur payment of the aim. '
one hundred dollars, secured, to be paid bv
ttieir ten certain note of even date with said
trust deed and payable to the order of William
. ionara. one July 1st island one every
six months thereafter until all are paid, with
GRATEFUL
COMFOUTING.
ci ant
-J . -a a a a S K n 5
Vd m u lj w f
B ai W 47 VjI b$ B
BREAKFAST.
liv a thorouirh Lnowleii7M nr iku iin..i
. - , " (. ' - " UHtUtBI
laws which iruvern tne oi.i-rnt m r .1 mo
tion and nutrition, amlhy a careful applica
tion oi tne tine nronertieR of w..ii-a..i...,i
cocoa, Mr. r.pps has provided our breakfast
tallies with a delicately flavored lvri
U"hil'll T.,. .-ii.-.. .... 1 . .
. . "B mail) iiravvoocttirs' llil
It is by the judicious use of such articles of
uiei mat a constitution msV he gradually built
up until strong enouirh to r.-fcist. v
cy to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies
""niins urounu us reany to attack wherev
er there is a weak point e may escape many
iiuai nuaib iiv Rrfllllilf 111! rml ph U'ii h(
tied with pure' blood arid a properly nourished
Irame.'l Civil Service Gazette Mode simplv
"'' ooiiing wateror milk Sold only in half
Ic ?rocer laoeled thus: JAMtS
-i ijii w. . liomienatnic t iipmiata
Condon. Knland.
UJJVIRODS
V CURE
r ASTHMA
Catarrn, Hay Fever, DiDlttena, Wloopiis;
tonga, uronp ana cemioa Colas.
Recommended hv Phvatcl.iAa
gists throughout the world. Send for Free SoniDle!
merest tuereon at tne rate or ten per cent
per annum from maturity. And whereas It is
provided in and by said deed of trust that In
case of default in the payment of either of said
notes or any part thareof, when the same
should become due, then all or said notes with
interest up to the date of sale, at the election
of the legal holder or holders thereof should at
once become due and pavabie, and on request
the said trustee shall advertise and sell said
premises. And whereas the notes due and
payable on the first dav of January and July
A. 1) l$t, areuow due and wholly unpaid,
a nd all of said notes and Interest have been de
clared due and payable to the legal holder
thereof amounting, on the day of sale to the
jum of one hundred forty-six and 25-100 dol
lars, including the costs and expenses of this
proceeding And whereas by the provisions
of said deed or trust, the legal holder of said
l.otes may nominate and appoint a successor
in truct in case the trustee named, Henry C
vtilson, should decline to act. and the said
Henry C Wilson haviiii? ilii-iinail t .t ..i
the undersigned having been appointed his
successor in trust. Now therefore at the re-
tnest of the legal holder of said note. I will, as
iruM.ee HM.rei. 111,1 on 1 U CKSOAV, THE FIFTH
DAY OF DKCKMBEK A. D . IKSt. between the
hour of ; o'clock a m and 5 o'clock p m.,
of tl; : t dav. ut the east front iloor- nrn,u ........
none.-, in the citvof Mutler. rannlv m- lui.,.
am! state of Missouri, sell to the highest bid
der for cash, the above described premises,
and nil right and equity, including hnmeatoa.i
of the said Sarah K. anil fteuhen S. Owen.
LtSTtK M. HALL. Trustee.
Mary's Ltttest.
Mary had a little lamb, its tee
was white as snow, the crittensr-
ged her everywhere, ehe lovedie
lamb you know. But now, aladie
lamb s no more, aud Mary's sjits
uroop tiie sheep is metamoros
ed iuto Dr. Sequard's soup, theoc
tor caught the little lamb and kck-
ed it iu the head, and jammed in a sued, such as ivin
HIMROD MANUF'G
SOLE PROPRIETORS,
191 FULTON ST., NEW YORK.
CO.,
ChJebestcr Cb unload
CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS.
Bed Cross IlUmond Brand.
Tbeonlr reliable for aale. BafsaDA
arc. Lwllea. aak Drna1at for lb. IHa.
aaond lirand, in red metallic boica. aaalnl
wiUiblgaribboD. TaLenootbrr. Send 4a.
rnampa) fcr particalara an4 MKeUr tar
Ladiea," in itr, Ij mail. .Vom. j-mptr.
KBletJ Co., Madison Hq., Pkllada, Pa.
pestal till it Mas a pulpy red. .he
doctor took the mutton juiand
with a little squirt, administel it
to Mary's pa, beneath his
shirt. Aud now the old man ats
and baas, and cavorts aroundike
mad, and says that Marv's ;tle
lamb has saved her poor ofd a.
Drunlcenness or the Liquor abi
Positively Cared by adminiriBg
iJr. Haines Golden Specific. .
It can be given in a cup of coffer tea
without the knowledge ot the perttak
ingit; is absolutely harmless a will
etiect a permanent and speed.ure,
wnetner tne patient ts a moderateink-
er or an alcoholic wreck. Thousis of
drunkards have been made teerate
men who have taken Golden Spic in
their coffee without their knowled and
to-dav believe they quitdrinkingiheir
uwnireewiu. it never tails. J sys:
tem once impregnated with the tcific
it becomes an utter impossibility the
liquor appetite to exist. For tullrtic
ulars, address golden specific 185
rcace st. Cincinnati. .
13-
a given
tune to make a station against a train
of a superior elass or bavins the riffht
of way agruinst them; givinjr a second-
class train an order to run ahead of a
first-class train; giving a train orders
to carry signals for a "second sec
tion" of the train receiving the order.
etc., etc.
It requires the greatest watchful-
ness and care on the part of the dis
patcher to keep the trains moving and
from trying to "pass on a single
track. The duties are very hard and
a constant strain i9 kept upon the
mind, but by faithful devotion to duty
they in time are promoted to be train
masters, superintendents and 60 on un
1.1 1 1 1 n .
toe taaaer. umaha World-Herald.
1
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleanses and beautin th hair
Promotes a luxuriant trrowth.
"II :!'. 5 "torsi Gray
Prevent! I and ruff a,ii hair faJiinff
KAa mm aftl .aA - la I
fitfiASON & HAMLIN
Orcan and Piano Co.
BOSTON, NEW YOUR. CHICAGO.
NEW ( Contains a fiv nta Vina
Stop Acticn, famished in
1 larse and nandfom ru nr
I soiKi black walnut. Price iw
casn; aieo sold on the Easy
Public Administrator's Notice.
Notice is herehv irivrn that hi ii.i...
ord, r of the jirobate court of 'Bates countv
Missouri, made on the 1st day oi October, lt '
the umlersiKiied nublic adminiatrator rr
county has taken charge of the estate of Julia
A. Mt.dley deceased.
All persons harintr claims atcainst said es
tate, arereiiiiirwl to exhibit them to me for
allowance within one year alter the date of
said order, or they may be precluded from
any benelit of such estate: and ir said claims
be not exhibited within tun r.n. ..-
date of this publication, they will be forever
This 3rd day of October, lss;).
W. ENNIS,
(-4t Public Administrator.
Trustee's Sale.
Whereas, Thomas I. I'eirv (& tlnoU
man) by his deed ot truot d;ited May 1,
1SS0, and recorded in the recorder's of
fice within and for Hates county, Mis-
houri, in hook 52, page 3, conveyed to
the undersigned trustee the fc.Ilnwin.r '
described real estate lying and being sit-
uic 111 me county 01 uates, state ot Mis
souri, to-wit:
nncc i i, 111 uiuts iweive 1121 in
1111 iii extension ot
uon to me town ( now cit
i..v. oan.i ,0 niui Rcu :iu uesit;natcu on
ttie recorded . plat thereof, which con
veyance was made in trust to secure the
payment ot one certain note iullv de
scribed in said deed ottiust.and where.iv.
default has been made in the payment of)
me interest on saia note, and the
same is now lone since past due and im.
paid, and by tl e terms ot said deed ofj
trust, 11 default was made in the oavi
mem 01 me interest wiien said interest
.1-0 . .li.A .1... t 1 1 . . . J
uuc, men me wnoie ot tne nrincinal
. 1 '1 c- n V 1 .. I
" "CLuiiic auc ana payable
. .1 1 t 1 . .
"nt auu li ic noiuer 01 saia not
having declared the principal duJ
rsow, therefore at the request ot the U
iweive 12; m
Williams addi-
ity) of Butler, as
I designated on I
STYLE
It is alleged that the barbwire
trust has augmented the ooslthat
commodity at the rate of SSjton.
The rods which enter into thian
ufacture of this valuable feuc ma
terial are protected by a ty of
more than 13 a ton, so that eign
barbed wire is excluded frconi
petition with the new true The
farmers of Kansas and of ot ag
rieultural states which susa the
policy of protection are thuiabl
ed to see. how much they ; for
the privilege of voting agailtheir
own interests K. C Star.
The Cronin matter widt In
the course of time it will pably j
embrace the whole citv of icaso !
J ra one way or another as sect.?, ;
"I am Mrs. Logan,- responded fa aud belaud.
T "I f . .. . t
oiu. ! j u '-'t s ur witnesses. nap me
j ease will mainly be confine. Chi- i covered with plaster, but it has since
Baltimore's Columbus Monument
Baltimore is the possessor of the
only monument in this country to the
memory of the discoverer of America.
Mrange to say, it was set un bv a
foreigner, the first French Consul to the
port of Baltimore. He was an eccen
tric man, possessed of great wealth and
an ardent admiration of Columbus.
The existence of this monument is not
generally known, and it has particular
interest now in view of the accumulat
ing importance of the coming Exposi
tion of the three Americas. It stands
upon an elevated plateau on the
lawn attached to the Samuel Ready
Female Orphan Asylum, at the inter
section of East North avenue and th
iiartford road. It was erected nearW
a century ago. yet it is in a fine state
of preservation after having withstood
tne storms of so man v vears. It is the
design of the management of the
asylum to appropriately, decorate the
monument in October, 1892. the time
of the great Exposition of the three
Americas, as a help to emphasize the
circumstances under .which it was
erected. The monument is built of
brick said to have been imported from
England or trance. At first it was
MA sox
&
HAMLIX
PIANOS
gal holder of said note and pursuant
.) J . r . . . -
me conditions ot said deed of lrust.
will proceed to sell the above descriM
premises at public vendue to the hiV
est nicoer tor cash, at the east frol
door ot the court house in the citv
Butler, county ot Bates and state
Missouri, on
cuurauav, uctuuerou, 100:1. ;
between the hours of nine o'clock In tfe
forenoon and five nV1r-L :n . 1 -f. .
S"Uw lh & O,. purpose, of
""5 ucui, interest ana costs.
F, J. TYGARD, I
46-4 Trustee!
Order of Publication.
STATE OF MISSOURI,
In tn circuit court of Bates county. Misori,
m.j9 ilenryWat
on, William rarrell and John E. liayner,
Annie k. taocock and F. I
1 1
2214. I pan becomes nronertn ot rter.
taon hiring.
( The Mason & Hamlin
I"Stri b fter." invented and
patented by Maaon & Hamlin
in 1x82, is used in the Mason
- Hamlin pianos exclusively.
Kemarlcable rennement of
tone and phenomenal capacity
to stand in tne characterize
I. these instroments.
POPULAR STYLES ORGANS AT $24, fcS2..10
Sik) $78 jsKi AND UP.
Organs and Pianos sold foj cash. Easv Pay
ments, and Rented. Catalogues free.
by
onty. defendant.
Now at this day comes the plaintiffs herein
1 ;vcy, i. n . savers, imiu., Derorc
HI
How Lost! How Regained,
KN0WTHY5ELE
I HE SCIENCE OC 1 lee
A Sdentiflc and Standard Popular Medical Treatise
.f JS!10!" ftT,0?lh'Iremtore Inline, NerroB
and Pbyaical Debiiitr. Imparities of tie Blood.
the visitor
eyebrows.
"Ah! Loan,
liostess slov.lv
"Well, I will try not
name."
received a coatinsr of cement, hv th i
Ready Asvlum trusts. Tt is onai. I
sligbily elevating her I ore tbiin sixty tramps wcject- j rangular in form, and slopes from a
uos,e 01 six and one-half feet in diameter
Resoltinfr from Folly, Vice, Ipioranee, Excesses or
Overtaiauon, Enervating and unfitting the victim
Logan,"
ami impressively.
your
to for-
; ed from the train betweenthrop
lid the ! Fresno, Cal., a few di ago. ;
j Ihe I resno yj.il is crowded from ;
I twenty to thiifv arrests made
daily. It is getting near vr and ,
tramps go to a warm climai j
lor w ori, Easiness, the Ifarried or Social Relation
Aroid uaskiHfal pretenders. PoeseES this creat
work. It costains 3-J0 Da?f-a. rural firn Ti.rT.;i
.Mninf. a 1. 4 .-r -v.-. :
mail, pos:pi:o, conceaied h
I"rice only tUK) br
m plaia wrapper. Ulns-
"c uuuersiifnea ciere or the circnit conrt i
Bates coanty, Miss, uri. In vacation and nieV
ttieir petition alleging, among other things that
the defendants, Annie K. HeUcock and F. L.
uoii-resiaentsor tne state of Mi
onn Wherennrm it i& ri.uri i. .iv
1 I - -- w . 1 , v, ,uc mi.
n vacation, that said 1r.nw.t ntittA
bv unblication thxt .lir.tiira kA
ed a suit against them lr. this conrt bv petition,
the general nature and object of which is W
obtain a decree of this court declaring that
certain notes secured by a trost need hereto
fore executed by the plaintiff. William Farrell
to the defendant Annie R Itnl.i-... ir nn the
tior-ast quarter of the northeast quarter and
tne ,. 1 lf of the SOU t Leant im.n.r nt the
'."J1"1 'rot section efght (). town
ship thir.7 n!r. fw, range thrirty-three (3S).
In Lates county. Missouri, and which said
trust deed is recorded in book 1 at page 4.
of the records or trust deeds and mortgage
the office of the recorder of deeds of Eai.
ty. Missouri, have hnn fnllv ...1.4 , A A
charged, and that by reason othe p n.eato
said notes said trnst deed became and now I
null and void, and that the cloud on the title
e? . ,sn'! caBfJ ly the record of said tmst
.if 5 Ae ren'ved And that unless the said
lwft8.bev an1 PPr the next term f
t.iis court, to be begun and holden at the conn
house in the city of Iintler. Rates comity.
Mi.souri. on the third day of February. A
i Ji??,0? or before the sixth day rf
, '' "e frm snail to long eo-tinue-and
ir not. then on or before the last
ay at said term answer or plead to the peti
tion intaidcanse thnu -i,i i, .va m.
confessed tnd jndgmett will be rendered
cordingly.
..f-fd IV fnrtner ordered by the clerk afors
at. .Py hereof be published."
ccording to law. in the Butler Weekly
i lmefi. & wpf-tiv : . .
Iished in Butler. Rti mn. . lor
i . . " t,M Piayjci. OJIU9
Tfl ttPA n-wJt 1 1 m .... - . wau6 tiU!s'J,UB ffP. If VIO wis. T-V-.fr s
" .JU. a uau reet at tne top. and 13 ! distinished anthor.Wm irC m iv JT ! i 'ul. .V ccssively. the last insertios
ceiTeataet;oi.DAXlJEVEI.I.EnTTrr.r. i
about fifty
American.
feet hifrh. Baltimore i
Bates countv.
s before ihe first aay
rA n f Ins.t "
Avn jrimi i weess oerc
frosa the NaUonal PfedicnJ TXZXiZZSZ. ' i-6"3 term- of ai'i Ra's eireait
r -. . i- T r t r- j . .... - . . . -
. ... . '"..ii r.r-. j on nLllVHl il rt
IOH.V C. HAVKS.
The bell that calls the arithmetic
class is the school boys' dread sum
mons. Merchant Traveler.
Circuit CJerk,
Witce
eireatf
rTTi-irr- --'"" ia;es coudiv- sms sin oj
orde for books oxtesas tor aivii gioald fci ! 4- -IOHS C. HATES. ;
directed as above. t V c-, Circuit Cltrk.
: ' Silvers Att'y for plaintiOs.
FUYSICALDEBII.ITV.Dr.PaA;,...: . . "'Jtl V- "A1KS.
or Aeaatazt i:hsiciass suit be conniJ i K c 01 -. m,m the record.
: S.UV-LL01 '"Person, at thefflce of ' l,,.,- M J!a5'i a"J ti,e seal of tte
i