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ced 30 nd ll he 0g pne Girl's iss Story. Be This ts an occurrence in the life of a young girl who had a near approach to death, and of the mar- velous manner in which she was rescued. in Chicago. ‘was not able to give me any relief, The most remarkable fact about her is, ! bs alive to-day, living with her Byers years ago Miss Mabel Shields | vousness and bad state of the blood. es when I held up my hands you could al- ‘at 4846 West Congress Street, and most see through them. I was so weak Cving excellent health. that I could not walk up stairs. “I was completely discouraged, for the physical state I was in was deplorable. “One of my friends suggested that I take Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, which I finally did. Two years ago she commenced to fail, | of complications setting in, inci- to budding womanhood, Her experience and sufferings during those 9 years Were not only distressing but ter- rapes y . i At last, utterly discouraged, shefound y ¢ After having used the pills in one box jdiei and perfect health. |I felt much tetter. I kept taking the pills Her own story relating this experience | ard grew stronger each week, my nervous- Bia mater of great fterest to hun-| of Cecreased and T regained flesh) and feds of young women who are passing health. 0 : ing |" Alter I had taken the filth box of pills teoogh the vores Ob Wie Seacght wih | 1 ae cot have aay theobbing in aay Seid e ‘elds said: “Two years ago I and I was as strong 2s I had ever been. . failin health. At first did ‘To-day I have a healthy color, a good wt pay much attention to my failing health, | apretite, and the nervousness has left me. ing I would mend shortly. In the last two months I have gained flesh 4] grew worse week after week till I be- | rapidly and am in perfect health. ame so bad that I was obliged to receive; “* This marvelous change in my condi- treatment. tion is entirely due to D:. Williams’ Pink “[ went to the best hospital here for six Pitts, and I cannot say too much for them.” but was not benefited. That there be no doubt regarding this wed a terrible throbbing in my head story, Mis Suiclds made aiftiavit Lefore night: my whole system was on Notary Public L. L. James. a a nervous collapse, and for “Dr. Wiliams’ Pink Pills for Paie Peo- weeks I could not sleep. Ithen went to2 ple are composed of vegetable remedies that famous eye and eat infirmary. 2 exert a powerful influence in purifying and “The physician there believed at first that enriching the blood. JAany d'seases long ing was growing in my ear, but after supposed by the medi-al profession to be in- ing treatment from him some time, curable have su ined to the potent in- finally told me there was no such growth, | fluence of these p “This universal remedy hut it was purely a case of extreme ner-. is sold by ail drug gists. &. G. W. CLARDY, | Order of Publigation, | STATE OF MISSOURI, ? FB L County of Bates ag | } , Real Estate, arm oans | In the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, in vacation, Jul ms. Daniel Crouch AND ABSTRACTS. plaintif, vs. Amanda Crouch, @efendant. Now at this day comes the plaintiffs herein by their attorneys, Graves & Clark, before the ee ee undersigned clerk of the circuit court of Iwill continue to do business at| Rates county, Missouri, in. vacation. and the old stand back of Bates County | files her petition and affidavit, alleging Bank, and buy, sell and exchange / among other things, that defendant, Amanda | Crouch isnot a resident of the state of Mis- | souri. Whereupon itis ordered by the clerk in \ vacaton that said defendant be notified by pub- jlication that plaintiff has commenced a suit REAL ESTATE {against her in. thiscourt, by petition and af- z | jfidavit, the object and general nature of which is to obtaing decree of diverce from the defendant upon the ground of desertion, and that unless the said Amanda Crouch, be and appear at this court, at the next term all kinds of make Abstracts and Farm Loansy If you want to sell or exchange you | i i i : thereof, to be begun and holden at the court property, list with =e: Patt edver | housain tiecity of Butler. in aaid douaty on tising larger than ever this stason. | the 15th day of November, next, and on or Respectfully, t pee ae third day of ane term, if the term ere og , | Shall so long continue—and if not, then on or G. W. CLARDY. before the last day of said term—answer or plead to the petition in said cause, the same will be taken as confessed, and judgment will be rendered accordingly. ACCIDENT | And be it further ordered that a copy hereof be published, according tolaw, in the Burie WEEKL’ MES, @ weekly newspaper printed Le and published in Bates county, Mo., for four Tee cessively, the last insertion to be at | east fifteen days fore the tirst day of the next term of the cireuit court. HEALTH STEWAR’ reuit Clerk A true copy of the [seat] my hand and the seal of the court of Bates county, this 20th day of STEWART ATCHE ) (i INSURANCE. July, 1898, | | | | | | weeks su | { THE FIDELITY MUTAL AID ASSOCIATION WILL PAY YOU Ifdisabled by accident $30 to $100 per month. Ifyou lose two limba, $208 to $5.00, Ifyou bose your eye sight, $20s to $5,000, It you lose one limb $33 to $2,000, | nie are ill $40.00 per mouth If killed, will pay your heirs, $208 to $5,000, Itinsured, you cannot lose all your income when you are sick or disabled by Accident. Absolutely protection at a cost of $1 to $2 25 per month. The Fidelity Mutal Aid ggsoctation is pre- eminently the largest and ongest Accident and Health Association in the United Stutes. It has $6,000.00 cash deposits with the States | north of range thirty-two ( of California and Missouri, which, together, | cipal meridian, containing 240 acres more of with ample eserye Fund and large assets, | less, in trust, to secure the payment of five make its certificate an absolute guarantee of rtain bonds or promissory notes therein de the solidity of its protection to its members.> | scribed, together with the interest thereon as For particulars address -" | provided for in aid notes and deed otras : J. L.M.S E y and whereas, said Peter E Emery and Mary T (er Lo Emery haye made default in the payment of me Mrenccias. Gal” said notes and whereas, the principal sum of ig said notes has become due and payable; and, whereas, it is provided in said deed of trust that if the said Lucius H Perkins, trustee, shall refuse to act, the then sheriif of Bates county, state of Missouri, shall thereupon become his successor to the title to said property, and the same become vested in him in trust for the pur- poses and objects of said deed of trust, w ith all the powers, duties and obligations thereof; and whereas the said Lucius H Perkins, trustee, has refused)to act in this behalf; and is a non- resident of the state of Missouri. Now there- fore at the request of the legal holder of said note, and by virtue of the power vested in me omery and Mary T E per of trust dated ord February 1s, » recorder Missouri, in book s4 conveyed to Lucius H the following described real estate, situate, lying and being in the county of Bates and state of Missouri, to-wit The south half of the southwest quarter of section twenty-four, (24) also the west half of the northwest quarter and the northeast quar- ter of the northwest quarter and the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of twenty-five (25) allin township thirty-nine west! of 5th prin Perkins trustee, 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE by said deed of trust, and for ihe purpose of foreclosing the same, I, the undersigned sheriff Trace MaRKS ! of Bates county, state of Missouri, as trustee, Desicns do hereby give notice that I will, on a CopyRIGHTS &c. Saturday September 17, 1898, proceed to sell at public at the five o’clock p. m. of said day, the property hereinbefore described, vendue to the highest bidder for cash, front door of the circuit court house, in county of Bates, state of Missouri, to satis said debt and interest and the cost of executing this trust. Cc. MUDD, riff of Bates County, Trustee. th, attorney. Sate invention t¢ tions strictly confident sent free. Gidest avency for securing patents, Patents taken throuch Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Larxest cir- culation of any scientific jour Terma. $3 a | A- ear: four months. Sold by all newsdealers. NN & C9,2°1 Ze. Communica- Tlandbook on Patents able Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, Jonathan A. Silvers and Emms Silvera, his wife. by their deed of trust dated September ist, 1596, and recorded in the recor- der’s ofice within and for Bates county, Mis- souri, inbook No 147 page 5s, conveyed to the undersigned trustee the following descri- bed real estate lving and being situate in the county of Bates ana state of Missouri, | to-wit: ff | The east half of the southwest quarter of section twenty (20), in township forty (40), of range thirty containing eighty scres more or less, Which’ conveyance was made in trust to secure the payment of one certain note | fatty described in said and whereas, default b ment of the ann the same is now } | therefore, at the UNN & 60,26 12r020v2s. New York St.. Washington, D.C. = betw noon & | day, fe interest 5 40-4 Thave twentyffine Jacks for sale These Jacs< are b Rose, 810 7 vears years old, 144 to 16 hands t large bove, good feet and good Notice is hereby stration on the decea: ack with mealy ge head and ears. inst said estate rem for allowance one yesr after the | persons having claim are Tequired to exhibit to the administrater withi breeders Terms 5 Nor. | date of said letters, or they may be preclude feeders. Terms reasonable. Cor- | date of eatd Istirtl Jad estate: amd if re: denes sol cited, Add Claim be not exhibited within two years fr one col cited, Address, {he date of this publication, they shall be f D. A. Corer. Butler, Mo, | . This 15th day of June. 1s | ever barred tay of dune, 1 39 4% the | SIX YEARS iN COURT. | A Damage Suit Which Will Pass Into) History. | | Nevada Post. | | H.R. Oglesby, who has been the) | guest of his cousin Dr. J. F. Robin-| }son atthe Asylum, left to day for | his home in Warrensburg | Mr. Ogeleby is a grand nephew of | | Kit Carson the celebrated scout. He! lis aleo the plaintiff in one of the| {most interesting damage suits **T lost all color, had no good blood, and | brought in Missouri during the last| dreds of melons dai | decade. | The accident was on the Missouri} | Pacific, near Independence. | Mr. Oglesby was an employee of) jthe road. The ran off the| track and one of the cars fell on him. | train He was in a position where he was reached with great difficulty. Twice the car was jacked up, but the sup- ports broke through the frozen earth crust and it fell back. For two hours and a half mutilated and suffering he lay under the wreck From Sunday until Tuesday he was unable to retain water on his stom- ach but finally succeeded in keeping down iced champaign. One leg was amputated and the other was saved with groat difficulty. Suit was brought against the com pany and a yerdict of $15,060 was given in the Bates county court 1892 Since that time the supreme court has heard the case three times and will bear it again in October. Robt Raily is acting for the company and has made aremarkable defense. The principal and interest of the judge-| Is Your child puny, Does it tret and cry without seeming cause? Does ithave convulsions? It so it has worms and White’s Cream Vermi peeked and peevish? tuge willsately expel them and restore its health H. L. Tucker, A Lack of Currency, Chicago, Ill, Aug. 31.—The Post “There is a probability of a lack of currency, as the work of mov- | the immense crops Already the banks of New York are experiencing a shortage in small cur- says: ing proceeds. rency and have not only appealed to the Treasury department at Wasb- ington for aid but have sent requests to the banks of Chicagoto send all the currency they can get, offering to pay the expressage. The amount of small bills the war has putin cir- culation to gether with the extraordi- nary size of the crops, have made the question of currency a serious problem One banker in Chicago says the local institutions have care fully kept their supply of small currency and have plenty to carry them along for some time, but he predicts before the end comes the bankers will be shipping gold Ballard’s Snow Liniment will cure Lame Back, sore throat, wounds, sprains Ladi 25 & soc. Sy tw bruises cuts, old sores. H. L. cure your back-ache. Tucker. Suffered as Much as the Cabans. Sedalia, Mo.. Sept. 1.—Rev. J. M. Van Wagner, the veteran Congre- gational clergyman of this city who has been vieiting Camp Thomas, writes as follows to the Sedalia Dem- ocrat: “The soldiers of Chicka- mauga are, in conscquence of in creascd sickness and mortality, be- ing decimated very rapidly. This is not because the park is naturally en unhealthy location, fora finer lo |} cation cannot be found ia the whole | |South. The reasonsare that when the troops firs began to come, se great anumber was not expected, | |and those who came did not expect} to remain long, and so no sanitary} were taken. The of-| | ficers were recziving good pay and| | were being dined and feted at Chat-| tanooga and havirg a good time gen jerally and paying little attention to |the condition cf the common s | diers, the surgeons, "7 whom were incompetent, } ; | precautions struttiog arou SYRUP FROM WATERMELON. Capt. Hil n Hotel, of Carthage, Makes an "Important Discovery. Captain Hilyer, of the Harrington hotel bas prepared a new syrup and inoidentally has provided «a way for the saving of hundreds of dollars to the farmers of Missouri, says the Carthage Democrat At this time of the year, when the watermelon crop is ripening, hun. go to waste Capt thod both practical on account of Hilyer basa and economi over supply al of using this surplus fenitim toe manufacture of a table syrup Which will rank in looks and| flavor with the best Vermont maple syrup, though the flavor is peculiarly its own. The syrup is made from the red | part of the melon. out and mashed. This is taken slow fire and boiled. evaporates aod the solid part melon disintegrates, the forming a clear, sweet syrup, without the addition of sugar trouble of being strained, is for use. For severa! days the guests of the Harrington have been eatiog the syrup and many have upon its fine flavor. present price of melons—10 c-nts— of the which or the ready remarked the syrup can be made at less cost | than maple syrup can be purchased An ordinary 10c melon a gallon. Everyone knows how watermelon rind preserves are liked by epicures By Captain Hilyer’s method these preserves made at the bare cost of the and fue), as the red part of an ordinary can be melon melon will furnish enough syrup to pressrve the riud. Montauk Point, Sept 1—Tbe transport City of Mexico, with Gen Shafter aboard, arrived bere before daylight this moruing, «nd is chored off the eastern point an Washington, D C, Sept 1—To day’s statewent of the evondition of} the treasury shows: Available ca-b balance $294 474 O84; gold reserv~, $217,964,484 00 Reward 00. aper will be fto learn ded disease th able to cre in all Catarrh. H only positive cure kn raternity. Catarrh bei al di tires, treatment internally, blood and tem, thereby ot the disease. strength by t and assisting nat mucous surtaces ot undation destroying the giving the patient x up the constitution : in doing its work Tr roprietors ha faith in its curative powers, t er One indred Dollars tor any case that it sto cure. Send tor list of testimon- Address F. Cuexey & Co., viedo, O. geg7Sold by druggis t75c. Ask your DRUGGIST for a generous 10 TRIAL SIZE ELY'S CREAW BALM contains no cocaine, mereury nor any ee eY injurious = t is quickly absorbed COLD ™ HEAD Gives relief atonce It opens and cleans the nasal passages, allays inflammation heals and protects the mem- brane- Restores the senses of taste and smell Price We, ; trial size Ic, a ELY BROTHERS. 5 CATARRH CENT Order of Pub STATE OF MISSOURI Count of Bates, In the circuit court n vacation, A Missouri at ¢ Owen, ex-offi Bates county the r of Missouri, n the sta: with their eoldier straps on as lords} ing peeree of creation. Of eourse, there are| fe Z many exceptions, among whom is| > Lot thr K Dr Grasford of. Sedalia. “To. his |icas - os fenda general attributed the good itn of bis regiment, the most fav- orable of any in the camp. He bas saved many a poor boy’s life and well deserves the gratitude of the soldiers the poor of Sedalia. Our bave suffered as much as Cuban.” CASTORIA. The Kind You Mave Abwess Baught vigilance, skill and faithfulness can | 1 tsear) } 1898 41-40 The seeds being | removed, th» mash is placed over a! The water | whole | Even at the! will make a} pint of syrup, which is but 80 cente| AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT To IVE USE OF THE WORD «CASTORIA,” AND CASTORIA,” AS OUR TRADE MARK I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massach was the ¢ nator of “CASTORIA,” the same that WE ARE EX ITCH VPs nm € ry LOOK CAREFULLY <? ’ ne No one to use my name except The Centaur Com H. Fletcher is President. min. °° | Ai crcccell c Lo rn ps Do Not Be Deceived. Do not endanger the life of your child by e which some druggist m kes a few more penn ac cepting offer you it), the in- a cheap subst (because he n on gredients of which even he does not know. | “The Kind You Have Always Bought” BEARS THE SIGNATURE OF ° Insist on Having The Kind That Never Failed You. THE CENTAUR Company. TT Y STRECT. NEW YORK CITY. FOR LITTLE MORE TH BOTH THE PRICE OF ONE. This is the best offer ever made by We will give to the THE TWICE-A WEEK REPUBLIC, as a special in- ducement, the new and superb Republic Sunday Magazine, 52 complete numbers, 15 pages of the choicest illustrations and miscellani- ous reading that money can buy. THE REGULAR PRICD OF THIS PAPER IS $1.25 A YEAR We offer both publications ONLY 1.80 When you renew your subscription do | not lose sight of this splendid offer. Address all orders to THE REPUBLIC, eR tg THE NEW YORK WORLD THRiCE-A-WEEK EDITION, —— oes x 7 any newspaper. | | | | subscribers of j j | | | RIRTTICO EF IDOE IW tude svl-s- ur til PruUSi. aq / "ed - which alone is $1 00 # year avd \ Year pueners tos eer seey Se for Both which alone is #1 25 a year WANTED, The Post-Dispatch wants an Agent in eyery hamlet, every vil- lage, every town. every city. This is the opportunity of a lifetime to establish a profitable business. It costs nothing totry. You can get the support of your leading citizens, who will be only too giad to see you start. The Post Dispatch is in great de- mand. Itsagreat paper. It's a member of the Associated Press. No other St. Louis eveaing paper enjoys thie distinction. The Post-Dispatch has war correspondents at all pointe of interest and with the fleets now in the world, | the Pacific and Cubsn waters. By mail only 60 cents a month. Write at once for particulars. 18 and Sometimes 24 Pages a Week. 156 Papers a Year. FOR ONE DOLLAR. Published every Alternate Day except Sunday ck Edition of Th is first among all i frequency ot on, anc th ess, accuracy its contents. It has al! great $6 daily at plete, accurate and its readers wiil testi vlies and fo: Thric York kly’? papers in ati dt and variety ot the merits of a liant ill has bri trations ors, capital humor page, Address, arkets, departments for the The Post-Dispatch, ST. LOUIS, MO. ld and woman’s work and other s of unusual interes aled newspaper a Times together regular tthe two PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM | and, teastifies the bails. — ae ‘6 lcxurant growtt. ©. Gray OF MISSOURI) .. ve Lacuna Diamond Urasd. PeiiiyaovAal Pitts righ Mak " r aie nerter Chemical (o-Matiown 5 r rm “ PHILADA.. PA WHE GREAT NEWSPAPTR 10,000 7 Fonext. & thir THE GREAT WEST! The Kansas City Star. By Mail, Daily and Susday, $4.00 a Year The Weekly, One Year - ~ ~ 25 Ceats Cirexit Clerk ee . g