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ALLEN’S WILL. Liberal Provisions for Charity by the | Late St. Louis Millionaire. St Louis, July 26. the late Girard B- Allen was read to the family last night. He be- queathed most of his property to his tour children. The tollowing legacies were made to charitable institutions; $5,000 to the musc- um of fine arts connected with Washington university; $5,000 to ‘the Home ot the Friendless ; $5,000 to the Mission school connected with the churehof Messiah; $5,000 to the RomanCatholic orphan asy- lum ot St. Louis; $5,000 to the Episcopal orphan’s home: $5,000 to the Woman’s Christian home; $2,500 each to the St. Louis child- ren’s hospital and the Augusta free hospital: $5,000 to the little sisters of the poor’ 5,000 to the conyent and aslyum ot the House of the Good Shepherd ; $5,000 to the St. Louis provident association, and to the St. Vincent De Paul society $5,000. The Perils of Riches. “Great possessions may bring great misfortunes.” The wise man is sometimes correct. Only six months ago a man in Ohio was left a fortune of $700,000 by the death of his father. And already his broth- ers, sisters and cousins have gone into court and proved that the man’s father had three wives at one time; that he died head and ears in debt to all his relatives; that his fortune was dishonestly obtained, and that he was a defaulter to the govern- ment; that he had been violently insane at several periods of his life and.was in a condition of hopeless imbecility at the time he made his will; that the man forged this will anyhow, and that he was not able to take care of such a property in any case, being himself little better than an idiot. He has still a little of the money left, but he leaves it out on the doorstep every night in the hope that somebody will come along and steal it.—Brooklyn Eagle. My liver was fearfully disordered and I felt so feeble and languid that I scarce- y took interest in anything. Tried all the so-called remedies without reliet un- til I used Pazker’s Tonic, ¥ which effected & permanent cure. 361m. David Bash, Little Rock, Ark. How dear to my heart is the loud smelling onion, which restaurant keepers provide at each meal! The color of silver, the size of a bunion, with hell and its demons wrapped up in its peel! It stings like a ser- pent, it burns like an ember, it smells like a horse long silent in death, and yet with affection and love I remem‘ ber, the early spring onion that scented my breath; the loud smelling onion, the blonde smelling onion, the all powerful onion, that ruined my breath. In Texas, the other day, a prohi- bitionist was addressing a crowd, when someone shot him in the mouth with a six-shooter, but he merely spit out the bullet and a handful of teeth and kept on with his speech. A small thing like a bullet in the mouth will not make a Texan stop expressing his views on a question. Tt only makes him more eloquent in having his say. A man who had occasionally won small sums of money by betting on his ability to swallow a chew of to- bacco without suffering any incon- venience therefrom, was recently made the victim of a very mean trick. He was induced to attempt the feat with a lump of tobacco that had surreptitiously been soaked in Cin- cinnati whisky. He lost all themoney he had and was made sick for two days. For Rickets, Marasmus, and Wast- ing Disorders of Children. Scott's Emulsion of Pure Cod Liyer Oil with Hypophosphites is unequaled. The rapidity with which children gain and strength upon it is very won- @erful. Read the tollowing: “I have used Scott’s Emulsion in cases of Rick- » ets and Marasmus of long standing, and have been more than pleased w the _ Pesults, as in every case the improvement was marked.”"—J. M. Main, M. D., New York. “I have used Scott*s Emulsion in ral cases of Scrotula and Debility in ren. Results most gratifying, “My ‘Mitle patients take it with pleasure. "—We A. Hoea.avar, M. De, Salisbugy, Ih. om The will of | Fou see proper. WASold by Druggists, 75 cents. 36-1m. | A SPORTING MAN'S EX —— PERIENCE. A Chapter From the Life of T.J5- Me- | Mullan. of Corinth. Miss. | Mr. McMullan is one ot the best | known chicken and dog tanciers in | the south. His coops and kennels are filled with the finest specimens | bred f : ceil of game chickens and well sporting dogs. For many years he had a serious misfortune. which he explains in the following letter, which also tells what was the unlucky sporting man’s real Mascot. You will pardon me tor address- ing youona subject on which I know you must get numerous if not innumerable letters, but gratitude prompts me to tell you about what Mt regard my most remarkable cure ot rheumatism by yourS.S. S° For ten years I suffered from rheumatism and had about ‘‘saturated my entire body. 1 had pains in every part ot it. My left leg was the worst affect- ed. Even to-day, though I amen- tirely weli, my letc leg is a little smaller than the mght, shriveled trom rheumatism. For five years I may say that 1 was in danger of starvation from inability to work at my trade on account of this terrible disease. WhenI came to Corinth from Alabama I was on crutches for two years. Of course during all of these sad years [ was attended by good physicians. They gave me powerful doses ot dotash and sars- aparilla, which did relieve some tor awhile, but I got no permanent re- liet until, by a friend’s persausion’ I used S. S, S. I determined from the benefit I received from the first few bottles to take a thorough course of your medicine, and I took about one dozen bottles of the spe- cific. When I began taking the med- icine 1 weighed 130 pounds, and when I finished the thirteenth bot- tle I weighed 237 pounds, and I weigh that yet~ I regard your medicine as the poor man’s best triend, if he will only take itin time, and thus save him trom extravagant doctor's bills and preserve hishealth. With gratitude and with I remain. T. J. Mc- best wishes, Your obedient servant. Mullan. Corinth, Miss., Feb, 17, 1887. Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis- eases mailed free. The Swift Specific Co., Drawer 3 Atlanta, Ga. The Atlanta board of education has decided that only colored teach- ers must teach in the colored schools. Senator Brown is president of the board and favored the proposition. ee L.ife is burdensome, alike to the sutter- er and ali around him, while dyspepsia and its attending evils hold sway. Com- plaints of this nature can be speedily cured by taking Prickly Ash Bitters reg- ularly, Thousands once thus afflicted now bear cheerful testimony to its mer- its. 36-1m,. When the president comes west there will be such a ground swell of enthusiasm and flood of hearty wel- come that the Tuttle gang will be about as important as the hole where one has pulled his thumb out of a tub of water. A Case of Deafness Entirely Cured. Office of Shaw & Baldwin’s Wholesale } Notion House, Toledo, O. Dec. 11°79. f _.F.J- Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.—Dear Sirs: About three months ago noticing a letter addressed to you in the Bee trom Gen. Slevin, in reterence to the cure of his son by the use ot Hall’s Catarrh Cure, we were induced to com- mence the use of it for our daughter Nel- he, now fourteen years old, who has been suffering from catarrh tor about eight years, during which time she has been treated by one ot the best physicians in the city. We have also tried the use al- most all the known remedies for catarrh with no more suceess than temporary relief. Many nights have we lain awake to hold her mouth open to keep her from strangling Her hearing had also be- come affected. We were afraid that she would never recover. We have now us- ed six bottles of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. and we believe Nellie to be entirely cured. Ina tew days after commencing the use of it we noticed a de~ided change tor the better, and from that right alon: she has improved, until now she inieethies as easily as any one. She sleeps weil and her hearing is Ppertectly good. We feel that the disease 1s entirely remoyed We write this unsolicited letter, teeling that it is due you, and with the hope that others may be benefited in like manner We can hardly realize that such achange could be effected in so short a time after battling with the disease so long. We are still using the remedy at interval as it seems to butld up her system, You are at liberty to = this in any wae We are yours y, Mr. and Mrs. §. Barowet 220 Frankhn Avenue. Ss ss ehh hse The Revised Bible a Failure, The following paragraph is going | the rounds of the newspapers: | ment. i Philladelphia publishers say the | we are in the union ' revised Bible has fallen flat. Hun-/ nail, heel and eyebrow, corn. bunions dres of thousand of copies remain | and scalp; that this is as much our on the shelves, and the people will | country as anybody and that we not have them at any price. The | shall not lift a shovelful of earth nor Stick to | tote grass. except in the shadow and | under the folds of the flag of the “It is true.” said a gentleman to a } Tnion.—Macon (Ga.) Telegraph. | Journal reporter, “that there ha | ———— > | been a falling off as compared with Order of Publication. the demand when the revised Bible first appeared, but there has not been such a falling off as to warrant ‘that statement. There is a steady sale and a slight increase has begun. There has never been the same de- mand for the Bible as for the New Testament in the revised form.” At the rooms of the Massachu- setts Bible society it was said that sixty copies of the King James ver- sion were still sold for every one of the revised. There was a tendency to criticise the change, which makes a less definite distinction between chapters. The price of the old ver- sion is also lower, and an octavo edition of the revised Bible selling at $1.50 is no better a book than that published by the society at 75 cents. “That statement is strictly true,” said Mr. Upham, a book dealer. “The revised edition has fallen flat. It has not been adopted by the Epis- copal clergy of this country or in England. Itisnot wanted. Bishop Williams hit the matter rightly when he said the revisers were so saturat- ed with Greek that they forgot how to use their English correctly. The issuing of the work has been from the start a case of how not to do it. The work is too expensive, the type . Yer ‘And. Major, Yer “And. Right here let us make a state- We want it understood that teeth and toe- CASTORIA for Infants and Chiidren. old Bible is good enough it. “Castoria is so well adapted tochildren that [recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me.” HL A Ancuga, 1.D., 111 So. Oxford St, Brookiyn, N. Y. Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhosa, Kills eee gives sleep, Eructation, STaTE oF MIssoURT, ) County of Bates, = In the circuit court ef Bates county, November m, ii x fe Alfred ‘Moudy, plaintiff, vs. William H. Wil- | cox, defendant. No’ t this da} by his attorney, dersigned cler! county, in vacation, comes the plaintiff herein, ‘ohn T. Smith, before the un- | of the circuit court of Bates and files ma pee oH davit, alleging, among other things, tha‘ Sefendaat is Se H resident of the state of Mie- sonri. Whereupon itis ordered by the clerk aforesaid, in vacation, that said defendant be notified by publication that plaintiff has com- menced suit against him in this court by peti- tion and attachment in the circuit court of Bates county in the state of Missouri, founded upon a judgment rendered in the state of Indi- ana the ba:ance due upon which is eleven hun- dred and fifty dollars, and that his property has been attached to sa.isfy the same, and that un- less the said William H. Wilcox be and appear at this court, at the next term thereof, be begun and holden at the court house in the city of Butler, in said SOmBET, on the seventh day of November, 1887, andon or before the sixth day of said term, ifthe term shall so long continue, and if not, on or before the last day of said term, answer or plead to the petition in said cause, the same will be taken as confessed and jodetaent will be Mera ciee 1 cordingly and his property so! satisfy the same.” And be it tart er ordered that a copy hereof be published, according to law, in the Butler Weekly Times, s_ weekly newspaper rinted and published in Bates county, Mo., for four weeks successively, the last insertion to be at least sas weeks before the first day of the next term of said circ! ° J. C. HAYES, Circuit Clerk. Atrue copy from the record. Witness my hand and the seal of the circuit ‘Sea..] court of Bates county, this 24th day of {iy 1887, JOHN C. HAYES, Circuit Cler! -ast.« [Keep the Largest Stock, Atthe Lowest Prices in, arness and Saddle Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, J. D. H.Butler, by his deed of trust, dated November 6th, 1356, and ree corded in the recorder’s office within and tor Bates county, Missouri, in book No. 40, page 570, conveyed to the undersign- ed trustee the following described real estate lying and being situate in the county ot Bates and state of Missouri, to— wit. The southwest quarter. and lot two (2) and the south half of lotone (1) in the northwest quarter of section thirty- i sms § ot oe ean (30) in township numbered _ thirty- : is too small, and it is otherwise un-] Sine (39) of range numbered thirty (30) wan desirable. We have no demand for | being two hundred and eighty (280) , it.” acres, more or less, which convey- iT ia ance was made in trust to secure the payment ot a certain note fully de- scribed in said deed ot trust; and whereas, detault has been made in the payment of said note and the same now long past cue and unpaid. 2 Now, therefere at the request of the legal holder of said note, and pur- suant to the conditions ot said deed of trust, I will proceed to sell the above de- scribed premises at public vendue, to the highest bidder tor cash, at the east front i] door ot the court house, inthe city of Butler, county of Bates and state of Mis- souri, on Wednesday, July 6th, 1887 between the hours of g o’clock in the forenoon and 5 o’clock in the after- noon of that day, tor the purposes of satisfying said debt, interest and costs F. M. ALLEN, ‘TRUSTEE. “It sells very slowly, indeed, with us,” was the answer at the Univer salist publishing house. ‘There has been some little call for the re- vised New Testament, but I see noth- ing that indicates any general use of the book.” —Boston Journal. Adjusts itself to any Horse’s Neck, has two rows ot stitching, will hold Hames: place better than any other collar. SCHWANER’sS Its Delicacy of Flavor And the efficacy of its action have rend- ered the famous Calitornia liquid truit remedy, Syrup ot Figs, immensely pop- ular. It cleanses and tones up the clog- ged and teverish system. and_ dispels Headaches, Colds and Fevers. For sale by Simpson & l President Cleveland's letter to Mayor Francis, of St. Louis, declin- ing the invitation to be present in that city on the occasion of the na- tional encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic, which is pub- lished elsewhere in this paper, is one of the noblest and most courtly doc- uments that ever came from the pen of a President of the United States. No comrade of the order, unbiased by selfish or political motives, will hesitate to condemn the mischief makers, whose insults and obnoxious interference forced upon the Presi- dent the necessity for writing such an epistle. But there is this about it: The President's dignified course and manly communication has punc- tured somebody's political balloon, and the accumulated gas of the past two months has turned into vapor. —Boston Grand Army Record. Pimples, Boi imples, Boils, And Carbuncles result from a debilitated, impoverished, or impure condition of the blood. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla prevents and cures these eruptions and painful tumors, by removing their cause; the only effect- tal way of treating them. Order of Publication. State or Missouri, County of Bates In the circuit court of said county, June term, 1887, Elizabeth J. Abel, plaintiff, vs. Wilham D. Abel, defendant Now at this day com ee pa herein, by her attorney, and it appearing from the re- turn of the sheriff on the summons herein. that defendant cannot be summoned in thisaction, and alsofromthe affidavit of the plaintiff, that defendant is not a resident of the state of Mis- souri: wheretore it is ordered by the court that said defendant be notified by publication that plaintiff has commenced a suit against him in this court, the object and general nature of which is to obtain a decree of divorce from the bonds of matrimony heretofore contracted and entered into between plaintiff and defendant, -upon the ground that the defendant on the l0th day of November, 188, without reasonable cause abandoned the plaintiff and has failed to provide for the support of plaintiff and has ab- sented himselffrom plaintiff forthe space of one year next before the filing ofthe petition herein, and that unless the said Wilham D. Abel be and appear at this court, at the next term thereof, to be begun and holden at the court house in the city of Butler, in said coun- ty, on the seventh day of November next, and on or before the sixth dey of said term, if the term shall so long continue—and if not, then on or before the last day of said term—answer or a to the petition in said cause, the same will be taken as confessed, and judgment will be rendered accordingly. And be it farther or- dered, thata copy hereof be publishhed, ac- co) ng tolaw. in the Butler Weekly Times, a weekly newspaper printed and published in Bates county, Missouri, for four weeks suc- cessively, the last insertion to be atleast four weeks before the first day of the next term of circuit court. JOHN C. HAYES, Circuit Clerk. ee A true copy from the record. Witnesss my hand and the seal of the circuit SEAL.] court of Bates count, this lith day of une, 1887. JOHNC. HAYES, Circuit Clerk. 88. Prevents braking at end of clip, and loops from tearing out. USED ON ALL OF OUR HARNE SOUTH SIDE SQUARE BUILER MO. FRANZ BERNHARDT’S =< Three ounce Elgin, Waltham and Qo . p epuick Hi Hampdensilver stem winding watch- es, trom $11 to higher prices. American ladies stem winding gold watches from $25, up. All silverware. clocks, jewelra, Z ; Xe, at cost prices. Sole agent forthe Rockford and Aurora watches, in Gold, Silver and Filled Cases, very caeaPe Ayer’s Sarsaparilla has prevented the SA a ee JE E L R S ORE ° 5 mn for sevei : lontana, laho, Wash- rs tor fne Jewelry te years. — Geo. Scales. i ington and Ore; the Free G: 2 i 7 ca a Mich. wilow A Oregon, the FreeGovernmentLands | Watches, Clocks, Solid Silver and Plated Ware, & tie tase: spi ed = Pimples oh aise count :_ The Best Agricultural, Graz- Spectacles of all kinds and for all ages; also fine Opera Glasses, You skin, which showed itself in on mailed tree, Addrets CHAS’ Be LAMBGR SS are cordially invited to visit his establishment and examine = patches. No external treatment did more | 95 f4™4 Com. N.P.R.D., st. Paul, Mine. his splendid display of beautitul goods and the low prices, 3 Hilla eftected ©” S°% Aver’s Sarsape- ALL KINDS OF ENGRAVING NEATLY EXECUTED — } A Perfect Cure, and TI have not been troubled since.— ae eer River &., Laweh, Mase. 9 SEAT a de Sere I was troubled with Boils, and my 8ST. LOUIS, MO., | we remedy for Worms, aud frou as Cotes sally arclgn remeag? Was Cte Toughout nearly ail parts of the world to be the sam disease. i more for the purpose of pleasing the disease. have been manufactared ail over other canse‘ priate then of ersreeek sak their short lease of life is nearly exbaset ily. Children often look pale and sickly fi ime. the eruptions all country; but and da IO k's Vermifuge continues to grow in f: health was much im —— using Ayer’s Sersapetiiie end” in due Ayer’s Sarsaparilla Is sold by all druggists and dealers in med- icine. Ask for Ayer’s and do not be persuaded to take any other. | Prepared by Dr. J.C. &Co.,Lowell, Mes. | e Price 1; eiz besten arr i ive. not ie re, Bot suspecting the cate rery bottle he bnys of it. carefully to see that the init New FRaxxutx. How. "Co. Pittedurg. Pa. oo Teat eastion my health was don, es ‘New trorms, and spasms are most frequently the. ern and nehne ps York and Giessen, Ger- they are irritable and feverish. sometimes ly the result of these hidden sappers and mip See woe Elkins, Editor Stanley Observer, | ey canbe Rate and others that | mgmt Testlesaly in sleep. moaning and grinditig ties pet ia ea again po‘uring wie as ae, Lest and ali | a helpless - nor which appeared on as'ines nies | SoSh ee | eee on my face in ugly rhove and Primary, | disease wi ‘caused Hoi ad tne or eee | Seer seer | ERS ee ee bi d me. I consider it the trouble and | exist in the haman system from earliest inf, See conte: 1thns bes es! blood purifier in the world.— Charles H. Foes saotersin. "Donenitation Fee, inclading | Pith their chiidren. Cannot be too observing of the nest ms 7 c » Vt. phrscag guesretion gu Norsone Debary and H seltont Physical Exhaustion scat on of one. | | | | | | Weaknesx & Lost Man. | hood quickiy uad posi | tively cured. Send for Seok mailed FREE to all afflicted. Address, Howlin Medical Co., Buffalo, N.Y.,U-S.A.