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—— —_—_+—_—__————_@. Time Table Mo. Pacific R. R (Lexincton & SoutHerN Brancu.) Commencing Sunday,§May yatil turther notice, trains Butler as follows: GOING NORTH. 123—Texas Express. No. AM “ 1a5—K. C. Express.- pM “ 433—Accom nmodation.. ...1:30 PM GOING SOUTH. No. 124—Texas Expres +-Q:lg PM] «“ 126—K. C. Express. SiS AM “ #3e— Accommodation +-Q:55 AM All passenger trains make nection tor St. Louis and all Texas and all points sou California and all points w west. For rates and other apply to z direct con- points east » Colora and intormr Lisk, Agent. ry oY ———— Secret So tres. MASONIC. Butler Lodge, No. 254, meets Saturday in each month. Miami Chapter Royal Arch No. 76, meets second Thursday month. Gouley Commandery Knights Templar meets the first Tuesday in each month. the first Masons, in each 1.0. 0. FELLOWS. Bates Lodge No. 180 meets every Mon- day night. Butler Encampment No. 76 meets the and and 4th Wednesdays in each month —_——— Lawyers. ‘NO. D. PARKINSON, Attorney at Law, Office West side sqyare, over Lansdown’s Drug Store. ]. S. FRANCISCO. S. P. Fraxcisco. IRANCISCO BROS. Attorneys Law, Butler, Mo., will practi the courts of Bates and counties. Prompt attention given to col- lections. Office over Wright X Glorius’ hardware store. at in 29 Physiclans. DRS. RENICK & BOYD Physicians and Surgeons, BUTLER, MO. comes OFFICE: EAST SIDE SQUARE, OVE LEVY’S. Dr Renick’sresidence | Dr. Boyd’s residence, Corner Main and Fort | Fulton Street, north C. Scott streets. P. chureh, L, RICE, M.D., Eclectic Physi- cian and Surgeon. All calls prompt- ly attended to. Office up stairs over Morris’ Drug Store. J. M. Curisry, W.H. BaLtarp, DRS. CHRISTY & BALLARD, HOMOBUPATHIC PHYSICIANS Office, tront room over P.O. All c answered at office day or night. Tele- Phone communication to all parts ot the city. Specialattention given to temale diseases. AND SURGEONS, T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- ren a specialty. RUTLER ACADEMY WILL OPEN Deptember 7, '85 For Particulars Address J.M. NAYLOR, - Butler, Bates County, Mo. PATENTS! Wm. G. HENDERSON, PATENT ATTORNEY AMD SOLICITOR, OFFICES, 925 F STREET, . P. U.Box 50, washington,D. . Formerly of the Examining Corps, U- Ofice. Practices before the Patent Office, U- 8. Supreme Court and the Federal Courts Opinions given as to scope, Valinity, and in- pay amen of patents. Informa peed “cheerfully Mt prompt rnis! . Hand Bookon e) with references annexed, FREE. S.Patent ——— Beet ee eo JM'S New oe e\Agents Wanted for | BUTLER | | | WOOLEN MILLS | Bring m your Wool. Having em- ed Id to the Wool Grow ca rounding co e will do CUSTOM WORK. Snch as ROLL CARDING CARDING & SPINING AND WEAVING, We iu the very best ot satistaction. ordes Work shipped tance will be received at the depot prompt attention given to its retu Market price paid tor Tub Wool. 25 tt Butler, Mo. May 19, 1889 J. FISH LTRY rently loca Tam pert am re e HIGHEST PRICE IN CASH ——FOR Goop— CHICKENS, TUSKEYS, DUCKS, &C. And I want and will take be brought to me. APPLES WANTED Can be tound at Bennett, Whecler & Co’s store. that can re HAND PICKED:< 3 James Smith. PANCER® ured without kr ory yrs? pr EN all clr a Book sent « all on or address Drs. CARTER & RAMSAY, 1124 Main Sr., 4 hy Ww. SILVE ATTORNEY : —_— SWill practice in Bates and counties, in the Appellate Court at Kansas City, and in the Supreme Court at Jetfer- son City. gaQyrOrrice North Side Square, « A. L. McBride’s. 1 € located. Kansas City, Mo. 29-1m er W. GRAVES, Notary -:- Public.’ Om West sic with Judge John D. Parkinson, square, Butler, Mo. MONEY! MONEY. —— oe Parties wanting to borrow money on Farms remember Ist. That we can lend money cheaper than anybody. end. In any sum from $100 to $10,000, time from six months to five years. andon Srd. Interest and Principal ean be made pay- able at any day and interest stepped. 4th. Have almost a million dollars already loaned and doing a larger bus sth. We keep money « have good have to wait. ess than ever ) loan so if you les you don’t 6th. We have ¢y thus m: correct § nd ete é on elsewhere. th Our office ok Opera Hou WALTON & TUCKER Land Mortgage Co. 0. BRANDT, i Tlustrated with { POOR PRINCESS NELLIE. ——~~-e-—_ Mrs. Sartoris to Return to Her Family ysa 2 jo udl} ‘ ‘ Say ye JO in America. seUNEEBU; J0j St 3] < $98x04 30} | = _ oo8 f1u9 quowtury Suezsnyq as0d | : E i j W agton. D. C. — > While it is an extremel y -dnG nok pid © me, and one tl call torth | regret ae every Meee citizen, | it is nevertheless | Nellie Sartoris | been in 1 | | naicated | permanent de- | URE ] R N ® | parture trom England. One Mr } Meee gland. Or Mrs. | Bahba O Xa Ss. eo = sou Hi | j 2artoris’ most inmate friends in| - = | Europe has so written to this city. a fact that Mrs. >» nee Grant, has in these dispatches, contemplating her | A dispatch to this ettect publist hed throughout the the other cay} called a conditional denial from C east | able doubt | reat deal about the whole affair a| j Sheb D, short time ago, and seemed much touched by Nellie’s h a envious, and her only child, a very | httle daughter, who was with her, ard luc! k. spoke Pash soups only French, scarcely one suppose the whole afiair will co word of h : | ’ i rd of mother g out soon and I do not t N il es a a do not it v -Neweomb is sull a most beautiful __ | be wrong in saying t! ewill be | woms f fi | aie saying re wilt be | Woman, large and tair, of a figure lo ndie nir A Nerica.”’ } oes indignation in America. heautitully rounded now, with a ; of this letter are} promise ot coming embonpornt, to | given merely as gossip, and are not | oe it mildly, She lives very le / vouched for as being true, but when \ in America, ene is thoroughly inoc- taken nection with the general lated with tandt Anglo-mania, which is € reports in circu- | the only fault, if indeed you don’t re can be no reason -j think it a that her changed ang } fortunes hy ive © developed. Gr ant | Virtue, about. thei truthfulness. It now looks as sh gh the soon be reunited. thou tamily will MAC KENZIE LOST HE ART. - —— A Kentucky Girl's Romance. | How a Brilliant Player in the Chess Here 1s a pretty little romance of Tournament Was Once Badly vedi Grantaihembranee on Nee | a charming and beautiful woman Beaten. i } a C : . :. |Sartoris. People in AVaehington | - — society 1s much sought in the oS FS 6 regret very much that a domestic|,~~ seg rca ee There were four Americans in the ‘ y calamity should betall one ot tel er true tale,’ though it reads hke %, | members of the Grant family to such | an extent that it would create com- ee ment throughout the world, but their | sympathies lead them to talk about itin a very plain manner. torious here that Nellie, who was the pet ot her father, has been un- happy for years, It is no- and that she has intimated that she would sever her unpleasant domestic relations return to her first States. and love—the United “A great many alleged friends of the Grant family deny the story that Mrs. Sartoris with oi is li ing unhappily her husband,"’ writes a lady from England who stands very high in Washing and whose husband is a man of national reputs gton society circles, “We have been visiting n the and have had many portunities tor observing the state of affairs in the family. Nelle wis estate,’ continues retter, op- And Provision Line being WRT rf an American girl, I naturally took [ii | ut an interest r welfare, and tried | He Jie | to discover it the cruel stories circu- lated in regard to Sartoris’ conduct Of all kinds wanted. were true. ican not say they have COME AND SEE ME. been exaggerated. “It was not more than a ago that Nellie was ill with a fever, I and was off somewhere. tele; month slight husband Gihas. i believe, her RAEF, Pilly For Headache, Biliousnes: plaints, Indigestion. Mild at re iz SOLD BY SH at sedi Of course they raphed him to return home, and the answer came back that was off with a ot and it would be impossible for tim to re- he friends party turn home immediately. endeavor to get back in the of a Nellie receives a remittance from home every month, with which she pays her expenses and most of those of Sartoris. He never earns a cent, the money he gets is a beggarly allowance given by his father. Society people in London and throughout the isle un- derstand the state of affairs and try to make things as bright as possible for Nellie. She has numerous yisitors the year round, and who are, I believe, true friends, for they do not desert in trouble. When her husband goes to London to do the season bis invi- tations are limited, I assure you. I encountered him once at one of Lady Randolph Churchill’s re- ceptions. He was looking as 1f he hadn’t slept for two weeks. In fact, Ido not remember of ever having seen such a ‘tired’ looking man. It is said on good authority that Nellie will return to America next spring, if not before, and that her husband will accompany her; but if he comes she will not, and you can depend on that. She will be accompanied by | her children, and the chances are that her return will be exceedingly doubtful. In fact, I do not believe Nellie ever intends to go back to such an unpleasant life, with a man He would course few days. and PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM the populaz favorite for dre t Cough Cure you can use, ive known for Consumption. Tt her the hour of very HINDERCORNS eet , quickest and best cure for Corns, eaten Wats . Hindersthelr far. DR. HENDERSON. 606 & 608 WanooTTE St, KARSAS CITY, MO. $12 gin Chicago. ued 1 rt all jervous and Weakness (Si tt Losses), Sex ual Debility ULees of Bernal Fo Powerl,ac. GuarantyCu: 0 refunded. be scent ce ase or both sexes, iiust d, sent sealed for6c in stampa RHEUMATISW tere RHEUMATIC CUPE. 'M. cents of medicine moves fever and pain in joints: Gdre comp jeted in Sto7 days, TovPusatement of ease with stamp {OF or Circulars. Cait, live whom she has no and for | Canada to meet the impatient lover English chess tournament, the first prize of which was won scarcely a week ago by the Enghsh champion, Blackburn, says the New York Star. They were Mason, Mackenzie Lip= schutz, and Hanhau. The last three are members of the Manhattan chess club of New York, and Masons won the fifth prize, £20, and at one time it was thought he stood fair chance of taking the first prize. perhaps the strongest American player, and a foeman worthy of any man’s steel. the a pene out of anovel. My heroine i Kentuckian, ot course—nearly all charming and beautiful women come trom Kentucky. This par- ticular one came from Bardstown, where beautitul women are the rule and a plain one would be a belle if only for her rarity. My heroine’s father was a Methodist minister, and kept a little school for little girls, He wasa man of great piety and much learning; Mason is but as too often hap- pens to a Methodis } a . I t minister, aw The disappointment ot possessed of means so limited as to | tournament was the sudden ; es : SY" | who broke down after doing some manent and the youngest, a very brilliant work, and allowed a + was y beautiful, fair and | tmself to he beatten by the weakest sweet, aud fresh as a wild rose, with players in the tournament. He was yet a refinement and a pretty digaity | as much a surprise as Zukertort, and hait-couscious hauteur #AVE) who was fairly slaughtered. ou added charm to her beauty, “When Captain Macker 1s a brillant this lovely girl, whose name was/iptayer and a quick thinker, ae Mary, was about ten, there came} moves rapidly and playes at his best troublous times. The serpent of] nen he assumes the aggressive. war was tra his deadly lea Unfortunately he lacks nerve and j over the choicest part of the south. | breaks down when he has the best In another portion ot the bluegrass} chance of winning. After defeat- state a gentleman of immense wealth, tastes that we would now thetic’’ ing his most dangerous adversaries call *‘es-| and winning six games, with only and above all a devotion to | two more to play, which everybody the cause that now is ‘the lost! thought he would surely win, he cause,’’ equipped a regiment at bis | jost both. own expense. In addition, be ot- A number of good stories were fered material aid to the south, and came to be considered by the union authorities an objectionably efficient and active partisan, as no doubt he told about the captain by his old triends of the Manhattan club the other mght. One in particular is zood and shows how easy it 1s fora was. man’s vanity to get the better ot his In consequence he was, with more force than courtesy, requested | judgment. When Paulsen, the Ger- to betake himself elsewhere. and | yyan champion, was visiting this Canada was the refuge he sought. | country he was the guest of one ot harbor and haven of p.underers and thieves, and Mr. Newcomb, this warm south- ern sympathizer, went into exile a sort ot hero among those to whom he had given aid and comfort In due course another Kentuckian *so- journing in Canada showed to Mr. Newcomb a picture of a young girl so marvelously beautiful that Mr. Newcomb, whose heart and thought were apparently bound up in the struggles of his native land, It had not then become the the swell clubs. After he traveled beating everybody who had pluck enough to give him battle, he was introduced to Captain McKen- zie, who was then in his prime. A game was arranged between the two over, gentlemen, which the captain con- sented to play only to please his triends, as did not haye the. slightest hope of winning it. That evening a large assemblage of chess lovers were present to encourage the capta.n, who was a very strong play- er. He kept his wits about him,and he fell as suddenly and as desperately in love as the veriest callow youth. Through | from the start played with unusual the possessor of the ture, himself brilliancy. After the twentieth move church, | the captian, by a beautiful combina- so pro- | tion, made a desperate assault upon saic a word in affairs of the heart, | Paulsen’s men and weakened his were begun with the beauty’s father. | ine, He followed the advantage he Inquiry on the latter's part showed | had gained, to his own surprise and that Mr. Newcomb was a man of| that of his friends, and forced Paul- birth, great wealth and unblemished | sen to capitulate. reputation; and very soon, almost after the fashion of royal alliances, a betrothal was a minister ot the Methodist negotiations, if one may use It was a big victory, and the cap- tain felt proud. Some evenings ant the | atterward, just before * Paulsen lett bride elect and her father went to | the other side, he was asked to give arfexhibition of blindfolded playing, at which he was yery skillful. He agreed to play eight games simul- taneously against the best players that could be pitted against him, without seeing the board. On the | evening the games were to come off solemmized, who had never yet seen her. The marriage service was read over this oddly united couple by the tather ot the bride, and this ‘‘simple little village maid,’ whose most elegant gown had probably been a dotted respect. No high-spirited American girl, such as she is, would do it. | DrHenderson, G06Wyandotte St. Kancas Ci PATTERNS OF ANY SIZE. UNPARALLELED OFFER! EMOREST’S THE BES all the Magazine her face only too vividly. You will readily discover toris ever used his v or I recollect when ight before with Original Steel Engrae- ings, Photogravures and Oil Pictures. compan- it. Se g man next m to Mrs uld end unhapp wild ways. You have come true. speaks very dis- She told me 2 e€ot was en ONLY TWO DOLLARS attern | See MY pre tayearand | 7 aay i y NewYork | ,aragingly ot ers. at - on Loa The death of her father and her | wedding tour to Europe stretched present trouble combined show 00 | ;tself into a sojourn ot One can} abroad, and only aft not} | return to Kentucky. in| Swiss, became the owner of count less wealth and jewels galore. The one of the players was taken sick and Captain Mackenzie was asked” to take his place. He regarded this” he light of an affront, and whea Paulsen personally asked him te play he remarked half angrily: never) But, sir, you forget that I have | bilities removed, | beaten you over the board.” ted States, Paulsen insisted that it would bea miany years of | int r the close the war s. Newcomb | Se a He has had is nota en of but a British subject. His wealth | compliment if Mackenzie played, has gone on increasing, and is now | and at the. sane me assured bank !tabulous. When last I saw his fortu- | that it never entered his mind that. nate wite she was en route to Eng- | | he could vanquish an expert lke land to pay visits to halt a dozen| yin, Mackenzie sat down, intend- tamous country houses there. She img to make rt work of the Ger- was attended by a retinue of ‘“‘maid | man, who at times played better | servants and men servants’ that | blindfolded than wit = eyes wide | would have made the queen of | open. Things went along nicely