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BEHIND CLOSED boorRS. FRANZ BERNHARDT’S | | The Notorious Sophie Lyous Has Been Inside Prisons in ry Country. | the notorious thief who is feared by | many prominent citizens of Detroit | and other cities i returned from atwo years’ j in Europe. day: sojourn Mrs. Lyuns said yester- “Tran over from Paris to see | my children, who have been separat- led from me for two years, and give my Little girl her 14th birthday. on the Um- OR! a) bia acd landed in New York San —— 2 day nig 1 didn’t have even the p <asu « s#leagent forthe Rockford and Aurora watches. iu Gold, Silver and Fi a kiss JEWELRY 8&7 Is headquarters tor fue Jewelry Watches, Clocks, Solid Silver and Plated Ware, &c. Hed Cases, very creep. ou I came over ig upon any of those astute New York detectives who made me out such a daugerous per- Spectacles of all kinds and for all ages; also fine O; Y so. tot Paris police. Ive had are cordially invited to visit his establish P iB ¥ : a aes his splendid display of beautitul good SO 4 in my two years tour. H b Iv jail of course. ALL KINDS OF ENGRAVING NEATLY ENECT eer: einarnable faculty for getting od 3 Sees there evers t Iso abroad. Ive au eve getting cut i inore teuarkable faculty for After all, there is no place like home, not even the jail. Ive been behiud the bars in half the civilized countries on both sides of the Atlantic. The prisons of Paris are bad, but I didn't object to go to a single one, because I want- ed to see what they looked like. I've made the tour of Europe eight times and haven't missed seeing the inside of a prison once. every time. Ret e Butler Lodge, No F @ | Saturday in cach mo. | Miami Chay pter Roy Arc | No. 6, meets secc ond ‘Thurs month. | Gouley Comman | meets the first Luesd -ceses garrTO SAVE MONEY SI ou I've been in every country in Europe this time except Turkey. I spent several weeks in Vienna about the time of the arch duke’s death, witnessed the grand pageants at the funerals of the two German emperors, number of ares A. C. SAMPSON, Rich Hill, D. H. HILL, Hume é J. G. McPEAK, Foster. Cc. PUTNAM, Adrian. p HUGH M. GAILY, J.S. PIERCE, Virgini D. W.SNYDER, Butler, For a Policy of Insurance in the DWELLING : HOUSE :CO., -O. GO, FELLOWS L ae e No. day night Butler Encampment No. znd and ath Wednesdays in 1So meets s every Mon- ets the h month 6m ea was present at a in Medrid going on in Par is that was worth seeing. grand fetes and saw everything Tmet Gen. DENTI=T, Boulanger and listened to his ad BUTLER. z MISSOURI dresses iu several of the cities in : i “| France. I first saw him at the Ho- OFFICE OPERA HOUSE. tel Normandie, where I live Paris.” Just here Mrs. Lyons’ two beauti ful children appeared, a boy anda girl, and after caressing them she said: “Ive had twelve children, and these and one more, who has entered a convent, ure all that are left to me. Tam going te take them to France and send them io the best French schools. I will send Victor to the Corneille at Petit College de Joyeuse at Paris. It isa branch of a larger college xt Rouen. I want Lottie to go there to complete her education, so that she will be able to grace the walks of life from which her mother is excluded.” when in ", Boxtey, A. L. Graves. “+h Pacific Ry.|msseie"e aves ATTORNEYS S AT LAW. Butler, Mo. Will practice in all the courts. 2 Daily Trains 2\— KANSAS ane OMAHA, 1 ed yous T. SMITH ATTORNEY AT LAW. Ofiice over Butler N W. O. JACKSON, Attorney at Law. Office, West side square, over Jeter’s Jewelry Store. Texas and the Southwest. T H. CROCKETT Medical ‘enn Not Wanted. —— ' | Detroit, April 10.—Sophie Lyons, | in the state, has | 9 Daily Trains, 5 pe Kansas City to St, Louis, THE COLORADO SHORT LINE To} PUEBLO AND DENVER, PLLLMANSRUFFETT SLEEPING CARS Kansas City to Denver without change H. C. TOWNSEND. General Passenge: and Ticket Ag’t, War e P) G2 uv a — 3 H 5 @a@s 7 3 KS a — x 32m Q 3 = & 5 ei 2 dq : 5 < : ee eoy> & 7m 3 2 0 Q ’ "Fy tee ST LOUIs, MO. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Ofhce North Side Square, over A. L. MeBride’s store, W. BADGER LAWYER. Will practice in all courts. All legal business strictly attended to, Office over Bates Co. Na- tional Bank. Butler. Mo. pas SON & GRAVES, ATTORN<YS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, over Lans- down’s ig Store. AT’ ToRNEY AT LAW. Office North Side Square, over A. L. McBride’s Store, Butler, Mo. Physicians. J. R. BOYD, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Orrice—East Side Square, over Max Weiner’s, ; Ig-ly BuTLer, Mo. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, | HOMOEOPATHIC | PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, | Office, tront room over P- O. All answered at office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis- ses. calls T C. BOULWARE, Physiciar « Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesot womenand chil- ren a specialty. J. . WAL } Boston Daily Globe, Feb’y 7th, 1889. “In the legislature of Massachu- setts a bill is now pending whose object is to prohibit, under penalty of fine and imprisonment, the prac tice of ‘medicine, surgery, or mid- wifery” by any other than the “reg- ular” physicians. The attempt to pass such a bill has been made be- fore. but it failed. It is a measure which ought not to pass, because it invades the personal liberty of the citizen; not the personal liberty of the ‘irregular’ physician only, but of the patient. Only yesterday Dr. Holt, in a pa- per read before the Massachusetts Medico-Legal Society, an organiza- tion of regular physicians, complain- ed of the ignorance of his profession- al brethren as shown in the notori- ous Robinson poisoning cases. “This crime.” said the doctor, “one of the greatest in our medical history, would never have been dis- covered but for the suspicions aroused outside the profession.” And he called attention to the fact that in five of the poisoning cases the regular physician certified the cause of death to be pneumonia. ty- phoid fever, meningitis, bowel dis- ease and Brighi’s disease respective- This shows how far the ‘revular’ allible. It would seem to be more ir cordance with justice and eo: sense were they to pe | knowledge before t! law to prohibit others physicians are from being inf: ago a Globe reporter | from ten different diseases and gave him ten different prescriptions, each utterly inconsistent with the others The implied claim that there any certainty in is “regular” medicine as at present practiced is absurd. All medical practice, the simplest complaints, is more or less guess-work outside of 1 experiment. whether regular or irregt ; “When Garfield was shot five of i | the most famous regular physicians in the country spent three months probing for the bullet in the region of his left hip, and after his death it was found under his right shoulder blade.” We have but above is EW prietors of War fought f past a word to add, whic} the doctrine & Co. pro fe Cure, hav the © rand promulgated for We know does the reader, have treated They say adv. eannot b of cases have cured with Warner's Safe the medical px sion that the majority of them will not use it, although they know they could thereby ten years of seores of cases, and so where doctors the | wrong disease. Kidney anced Disease cured, yet thousands been vet Cure; | so bigoted are save valuable . forsooth, it is against ilized Out upon bigotry. method to 1, and many lives, becaus their such code. Every prolong life should be utili the regular profession should be the first to welcome it instead of encompassing themselves in self conceit and bigotry, doctor lug symptoms medical instead of disease, and seuding their patients to the cem- etery, poisoned with drugs. but the death certificate that they from typhoid pheumonia, or on died fever, meningitis, some other equally foreign cause. A Noted Outlaw Killed. Oregon City, April 10.— The ex- pedition which left here last week to hunt down the outlaw who has been the terror of Clackamas county for a month has returned with the dead body of the maurauder. The last of February farmers along the Malala river in Oregon began to complain of thefts of provisions. Then horses were stolen. The thief always left a poorer animal in place of the one he stole. Finally, last month the unknown thiet appeared at a farm house and demanded food of the woman, He was described as tall, stout, with a ferocious face and black, stubby beard, and a reg- ular walking arsenal of pistols and bowie knives. He always got what he demanded, and he began syste- matic visits to farmers’ houses when the men were known to be off at work. Last week he called at a house near Malalla, and two young women, after giving him food fled to aneigh- bors and reported that the terror was at their home. Constable Shaf- er and several deputies started out and surprised the fellow while asleep in the house, but he instantly covered them before they could get the drop on him and ran them off. The sheriffs of other places or- ganized a strong posse, and swore they would not return without their man. He led them a lively chase of nearly a week through the Cascade Mountains, which he seemed to know very well. On Tuesday night he was surrounded in thick woods, and, when morning came, he started out evidently confident his pursuers had missed hin They opened fire at once, and he was riddled with buckshot and bullets, although he ran 50 yards after receiving mortal wounds. As one of the party said: “He was too full of holes to skin.” They brought him back here and buried him. Noone could identify him, but he was evidently au Italian. Besides a Martini rifle, four revyolv- ers and larg ge stock of knives, he had many su al truments, which | he carried in a broad belt An Absolute Cure. ORIGINAL ABIETINE OINT T is only put up in larg 0 OL and is an absolute cure tor o/c ns, wounds, chapped har i eruptions. Will positi re ali kings piles. Ask for the O . ABIETINE OINTMENT. Mt Crumley & Co, at 25 cent yy mail 30 c> Smallpox Three or four city $500. Atchison comes high. there cost the cases tbe no fears from boomers. | steamer was made out to be a Capt. Stubbs says nothing | _was heard by the Bucknam’s crew of | THE pon E DON'T w ORK. Santa Fe Employes Devise 2 Scheme but Find They Are Left. Arkansas City, Kan., April 10.—J. H. Bow + landlord for the board- | ing car for the Fanta Fe carpenter gang, arrived in the city to-day from Guthrie, I. T. He spondent that depot at 25x160 feet of platform The building will be Tuesday. The informed your the completed by ticket agent has ha supply of tickets. There need Mr. for the ter country over, and on April 22 throw jobs and take them and thus get ahead of the settlers on the of this st Jobs on the section with this but they have not carry it out. man siuys that men Sauta Fe comy working any while in the y would look sel lanns, up their borde r. A number of men city idea in view, that they car of its found None allowed off ght of way. If loyes are company's ri of the any one men after meal time menee to saunter around, then der off the wan ys land, 2 b ant orders him back does not return lis name to the Mr. Bowman been at Guthrie two weeks and not a} states. Santa Fe inaa is permitted off the y section men norning and scouts the country scour for miles in every direction from Guth- rie, Oklahoma City and other sta- tions in Oklahoma if any are found, ind all intruders, are ejected. As off the train a soldier demands his business. If he has none soon as a passenger steps in Oklahoma he is sent out on the same train on which he arrives. The boomer camp in this city is still increasing in numbers. It is located on a ninety acre track of land, and is almost all occupied. The report sent out that this city would not accommodate the crowd coming here is false. Arkansas City can accommodate 20,000 more peo- ple until the 22nd. The non estab- lishment of a postoflice at Kingfisher station has caused many boomers to come to this city from border towns west of here, and they will go in with the big crowd to Guthrie. estate sales continue quite lively. Fired at an American Schooner. New York April 10.—Capt. Stubbs of the schooner Carrie A. Buckham, which arrived to-day from St. Do- mingo City, reports that on March 21, when off Saona Island, at about noon he sighted a vessel steaming toward his vessel fromm the land, then distant six oreight miles. The craft proved to be a Dominican war ves- sel. She laid her course to intercept the Bucknam, but could not do so, owing to the strong breeze then pre- vailing, and fell astern half or thiee- quarters of a mile. When nearly in the schooner’s wake, much to the surprise of the crew, she fired a shot which struck the water only a few yards from the Bueknam’s stern. She then gave chase, but with a good strong breeze the schooner soon distanced her. After keeping up the chase for about two hours she gave it up, and, putting about steamed for the land. She was a low, rakish, three-masted steamer of about 500 tons burden, apparently of French or Spanish build. Her decks were crowded with men. What her errand was can only conjectured, | as the Bucknam was far outside of their jurisdiction and on the high seas, where they could have gitimate right to overhaul her. | The American flag was flying at} the schooner's peak all the time, it | having been hoisted as soon as the! no le- war their rebellion at vy. The better class jof people there hesitate to speak | \ i ds even toforeigners. They | are afraid of compromising dival called ‘ (never rains but it pours. sn appointed and will be on hand |‘ Bow- ! the ; com- | If he| is taken, | sent to Santa Fe company and the | man gets his discharge and is sent has | There are twenty- | the soldiers | Real CLOSE THE SCHOOLS. The Ohio Law is Causing Serious Trouble. O., Apri L— excitement here over the enforcement of the state law 1 arate schools for inthis place 200 chool children. s consented to re ite rooms except the James Ringold. Ring eaused the x uatter to be broug to the courts, sv ent of schools for Last Thursday the cireuit court gave Ringy tof Leent damages ar All the blacks then rush ed to the schools and a reugh and tumble tight ensued, which ended on Satarday in the school beard elesing the schools until next though thr tex Septembr, ee months of the school rin rem and feeling runs t Each side p esto fear viclenc ifrom the other. The teachers threat- Fen to heir salaries for the ren aha there 1s | that a mandamus will be asked for to | the } a ‘ Iso a prospect day to © rd to mpel the ‘hool | re-oper | } i schools Tricked the Confidence Men, Twe contidence men who on last old Saturday i John W eof Inde ft uee out of $3,000 by the lottery were caught in their own trap on Monday by Mr. Ed Nie conductor on the railway betwee swindled gentleman } trick, formerly a Pacific ere and Independ- son, | Missoni ence, now a re Two men Whose description tits that sent out from Independence of the opera- tors who fleeced Mr. Wallace, met Mr. Nicholson at Sedalia and invited him to try a chance on their lottery. He did, and drew a ticket which eall- ed for $700, The same old game into and Mr. Nicholson was told that he must show a sum equal to the face of the ticket. He and held to it. The sharks began to see their way into their own net and proposed to go to another place where the prize would be paid. The intended vice tim demurred to a shift and backed up his position by a 44-calibre revole ver. The S700 was handed and the swindlers hy town.—K. C. T ent of Sedatia. Was gone produced the money to him pried from the 1mes. Jewels and Laces. Oh, maid with the laces rare!” What are your jewels and what are your laces worth to you? You would give them all if you could get back your health. Well you can and you can keep your jewels and your laces too. Thousands of women know by happy experience that Dr. Pierce's Favorite ~Oh, girl with the jeweled fingers, Prescription restores the health. It is a positive remedy for those | derangements, irregularities and weaknesses so common to wo- man. In fact it is the only medicine for women, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee, from the manu- | facturers, that it will give satisfac- tion in every case, or money will be refunded. This guarantee has been printed on the bottle wrapper, and faithfully carried out for many years. Ex-Congessman John M. Glover will return to St. Louis in a few days and make his residence there. He says he hasn’t decided whether he will return to the active practice | of his profession. He is still con- ducting the Glover Legal Index and says it is good for an income $50,000 ayear. His manuscript collection of general precedents and authorities now numbers something like a half | million jackets, and on these he car- ries $100,000 insuranre. The plan upon which the Index works is sim- ple, the idea being to save labor for jattorneys. A correspondent writes | giving the legal proposition he wishes to maintain, and from the Index which is kept up with the latest de- there is fu the best | authorities the Mr. nished ibj ject ' cisions on | Glover says that he has never failed to f an in (juire r with one or i more ex precedents for his case, | which goes to show that there is jnewin the legal profession after ‘all and scratches oi every or animals cured in 30 tord’s Sanitary Lotion. Soldby W. J. Lans- . Me. 1i-Om