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ee (uildren Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. was sick, we gave her Castoria. a she was e Child, she eriéd for Casteria, qqhen she became Mies, she clung to Castoris, ghenshe hod Children, she gave them Casteria w. H. TUCKER, DENTIST, UTLER, MISSOURI. ce, Southwest Corner Square, over gE Lawyers. nea nee . SMITH. pLDER 5; SUORNEY AT LAW. Butler, Mo. practice in all the courts. 5; ial at- will Prention given to cellections and litigated laims. _——— Caivin F, BoxLey, Prosecuting Attorney. CALVIN F. BOXLEY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Butler, Mo. Will practice in all the courts. . SMITH JOHN 7 TTORNEY AT LAW. Office over Butler National Bank, Butler, Mo. J : LAWYER. in allcourts. All legal business rack atcaded to, Office over Bates Co. Na- tions! . Butler. Mo. ARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORN“YS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, over Lans- down’s Drug Store. AGE & DENTON, ATTORNEYS 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-1y Butier, Mo. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOBOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. All calls answered at office day or night. Special attention given to temale dis- eases. T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- ren a specialty. , J. T, WALLS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart’s Store. Residence on Ha- vannah street norrh of Pine. Missuri Pacific R’y. 2 Daily Trains 2 (KANSAS CITY and OMAHA, 5 Daily Trains, 5 Kansas City to St, Louis, THE COLORALO SHORT LINE To PUEBLO AND DENVER, NUMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS Kansas City to Denver without cnange H. C. TOWNSEND. General Passenger and Ticket Ag’t, ST LOUIS, MO. -SBUCKLES’ i. 3 package of COFFEE isa +s-..06 of excellence. LI RP =o I 4 BOLD BUT CARELESS. man six feet high, of about 170 pounds weight, dressed in common clothing and wore a slouch hat. His A Train Held up in Miississippi in Regulation Style. Twenty-Five Hundred Dollars and the Mail Captured. Mobile, Ala., Sept. 25.—The Mo- bile and Ohio southbound mail and passenger train was held up at 3:10 this morning by train robbers at Buckatanna, Miss., a station seventy miles north of here. Just before the train left Bucka- 4unna two men mounted bebind the tender of the train, and, climbing over, covered Engineer ;Jack Thor- rel and Fireman Thomas Hust with their revolvers. The robbers were disguised with red bandana hand- kerchiefs over the lower pait of the face. The leader ordered the engineer to pull out and stop at the bridge twenty five miles below Buckatunna and place the train so that th- ex press and mail car should be cn the further side of the bridge frum the rest of tne train, the bridge being a trestle over a deepcreek. ‘“‘You obey instructions or it’s death,” he said. The engineer looked down the barrel of the pistol and pulled the lever and the train ran rapidly to the spot indicated when the engineer put the train just where the man with the pistol wanted it. Then there appeared a third rob- ber disguised like the other two and the three made the engineer and fireman go with them to the express car where the engineer was forced to call out to Expressman J. W. Dunning to open the door of the ear. The wooden door was already open but the iron barred door was closed and locked. A HUGE AMOUNT OVERLOOKED. Dunning was seated with his back to the door and when he turned around he looked down the muzzles of three revolvers. The command was given and Dunning opened the barred door and the chief robber jumped, in the two remaining outside to guard the engineer and fireman. The leader made the messenger dump the contents of the safe into a canvas sack, but noticing that he was not closely watched, Dunning pushed some of the money aside so that a about a thousand dollars was hidden, the robbers getting $2,700 belonging to the Mobile and Ohio railroad company. Beside the ex- press car door was a pile of $70,000 of government money, en route to Florida, which the robbers failed to notice. Then the robbers made the ex- pressman get out of the car and go with them to the mail car. W. C. Bell, the mail agent, had suspected that robbery was going on and tried to get into the baggage car with a number of registered packages of mail, but just as he stepped to the end door of the car, he saw through a glass that the rob- bers had intercepted him. The robber leader, supposed to be the notorious Bunch, faced him, pistol in hand, and finding Bell’s arm full of packages, said: “Dump those here on my - left arm.” There were twenty-five packages in all, and Bell dumped them as requested. The robber made Bell hand him a registered pouch and ordered the agent to open it, but Bell had no key, so the robber carried the pouch off with him. The pouch was made up at Meridian and the contents and value are unknown. RARE CONSIDERATION SHOWN. Just then Billy Scholes, the con- ductor, who had been trying to find out the trouble and had armed him- self with a Winchester, came out the rear of the train, waved his lantern and shouted: ‘‘What’s the matter?’ The robbers fired two shots at him erying out: “Come up here and you'll see what's the matter.” The engineer told the robber to let up on the shooting, as the train men would open fire and be shoot- ing theirownmen. There was no| more shooting done and the train was ordered to pull out which they did, the robbers disappearing | in the undergrowth on the west side | of the road. The train pulled down | to Citroneville and swapped time | with the accomodation train and the} accomodation train's engine and car | was sent back to the scene of the! robbery with detectives and an arm- ed posse. The leader of the robbers was a| assistants wore common clothes and nothing to distinguish them. When the handkerchief slipped down a little off the leader's face the express messenger says he saw a black mustache and thinks he saw a beard. The leader of the robbers is be- Yeved to be Tobe Burrows, the not- ed desperado, a search for whom created so much excitement a few months ago. At that time it was believed he was organizing a gang to hold up some train, and the Mo- bile and Olio company, anticipating an attack armed all its train hands. This was made public, and was t --: R. R. DEACON :-- :—DEALER IN—.-——_ HARDWARE AND IMPLEMENTS | __gegcuTLERY HEARTLESS PEOPLE. SPRING 3? FARM WAGONS, doubtless what the robber referred to this morning as he said during the robbin;; of the mail car: “The Mobile und Oiio dared me to hold up atrain,and I wanted to show them L couli de it.” The -u.jected parties were seen camp 2 +e. ihe bridge for several days. ‘Tiree imen were seen this morning about Y o'clock making their way east ou foot. They were armed and were avoiding the houses by going around. They are believed to be the train robbers. An Absolute Cure. The ORIGINAL ABIETINE OINT- MENT is only put up in large two ounce tin boxes, and is an absolute cure tor old sores, burns, wounds, chapped hands, andall skin eruptions. _ Will positively cure all Kinds piles. Ask for the OR- IGINAL ABIETINE OINTMENT. Sold by F M. Crumley & Co, at 25 cents a box—by mail 30 cants. 17 1-yr CRAZED BY DESERTION. Pathetic Story of the Tribulations of a ———_————_———_ Young Frenchwoman. JOHN BROWN’S FORT IN DANGER New York, Sept. 22.—A very strange case was brought to the no- tice of the Commissioners of Immi- gration yesterday, in which a The Abohtionist’s Engine House Cita- del to be Destroyed. Harper’s Ferry, Sept. 26.—John Frenchwoman, deserted by her lov- | Brown's “fort,” the oldengine house | €" said to be a nobleman of wealth, used asa citadel by the great anti- had become insane. Late last Sun- slavery leader and his followers | day evening her eccentric actions in thirty years ago as a place of refuge|the Jersey City depot of the Penn- from the citizens and soldiers that |8ylvania Railroad attracted atten- surrounded them, is to be demolish-|tion. She complained to the peo- ed, and will disappear forever un- ple in the waiting room that they less the as yet unsubstantial rumor | had been robbing her, and finally an that it has been purchased by an asso-| Officer took her into custody. In ciation of eastern gentlemen for re- | ber pocket was found an order issu- moval to Philadelphia should be true.|ed by the Cunard Steamship Com- The Baltimore & Ohio railroad com-| pany from the office, No. 9 Water pany has determined upon a very de-| Street, Liverpool, for a second-class cided change in the location of its|ticket to Chicago. She was taken main line at this place, the new sur- to Castle Garden on Monday, where vey running directly through the old | She was detained pending an exami- enginehouse. Tens of thousands |2ation as to her sanity. The wo- have gazed with interest upon the|man said her name was Josephine “fort” from car windows and plat-|Brun, and she was also known as forms since the war, and the demo-| Mrs. Demores. She arrived at this He <a? @) Tw ED ap @« FA. sp’ E-a4P UW ECS ————The Best in the World:———___ Grain Drills Fanning Mills BUCKEYE FORCE PUMPS. a4 Gas Pipe Fitting and Pump Repairing. lition of the building will be regret- ted by many all over the country. English Spayn Liniment removes all Hard, Sott, or Callouscd Lumps and Blemishes from horses, Blood Spavin, Curbs, Splints, Sweeney, Stifles, Sprains Sore and Swollen Throat, Coughs, Etc- Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warrant, ed. old by W. J. Lanspowy, Drug- giist, Butler, Mo S-1yr. A CAVE OF SOLID GOLD. Riches Discovered that Surpass the Weaith of the Montezumas. Albuquerque, N. M., Sept.—Yes- terday miners struck a cave in the Lincoln mines at San Pedro that for richness surpasses anything in reality or fiction. The mine has shown up an immense body of rich carbonates and the assays have been high. The cave is about 100 feet long by 50 in width andthe sides sparkle with gold, silver and sap- phires. Large boulders of carbonates were found scattered over the floor. This is the mine the company re- cently refused $25,000 for. J.C. King had recently leased the mine. The camp is thoroughly excited. Fatal Fall From a Window. Mexico, Mo., Sept. 25.—Samuel Northern, a prominent mule dealer of this vicinity fell from a third story window at the Ringo hotel into a rear court at 4 o'clock this morning and was instantly killed. James Ray another stock man oceu- pied the room but he has no idea how the accident happened as he port last August with C. Demores, who she says, is a wealthy noble- man. They traveled together as man and wife, and visited the lead- ing summer resorts, returning to this city August 22. The next day, atter they had put up at the Hotel San Francisco in Washington square he disappeared leaving a letter for her, as follows: “Josephine: 1 do not wish you to return with me, for I fear you drink. When you do not drink you are one of the nicest of women, but unfortunately you can not abstain from it. The life you led me since yesterday has decided me to send you back to St. Ettieune. My broth” er will always pay you a pension of 150 francs per month, and in case of my death you will have the income of my estateas long as you live, be- cause Ihave so arranged it in my The man also handed $100 to the hotel clerk with which to purchase for her a ticket to France and left 100 francs for the woman’s incident- al expenses on the voyage. She took passage on the French steamer sail- jing on August 28, but instead of pro- ceeding from Havre direct to St. Ettienne she hurried across the chan- nel and at Liverpool she bought an | intermediate ticket trom the Cunard | Line andalso an order for a ticket |via the Pennsylvania Railroad from | New York to Chicago, saying her | intention was toreach Dakato, where ‘some of Demores’ relatives resided. Sailing on the steamer Bothnia, she knew nothing of the fall until awak-| ened by those who found the body. It issupposed that Northern had | started to get a drink of water and/| arrived in this port on the same day The poor woman evidently became insane on the voyage over and when she landed here she wandered about being weak froma spree the night before staggered and fell through} the streets aimlessly. . She had the open window. plenty of money for her immediate Bene Penn ee es needs. Corporal Tanner's misfortunes all the time multiplying. Private Dal-| Collector Erhardt ordered her re- turned to Liverpool, as the law zell keeps right on defending him. directs that no insane person be al- AND GUNS$9g3—— {lowed to land here. In pursuance |of this order Policemen Connolly | and Congdon yesterday took the un- | fortunate woman to the Cunard dock |and made a prisoner on board the | Bothnia. The steamer sailed to-day ‘for Liverpool, but it is a question / whether the British authorities will | allow the woman to land on the oth- It is claimed that the wo- | man has lived in this country; that | she may rightly claim citizenship | here, and that consequently her case does not come under jurisidiction of the Collector of the Port or the Cas- tle Garden authorities. (er side. | Bucklen’s Arnica “Salve, Bruises,Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum Fever Sores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Chiblains Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi- tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cts per box For sale by all druggists. and bounded into his arms. move astonished everybody present The Best Salve inthe world for Cuts | Chairman Calvin Brice. Among the bankers who came in this morning were S. R. Baxter, president, and Calvin S. Brice, vice president, of the First National bank of Lima, O. Calvin S. Brice is a famous railway builder and the chairman of the national democratic committee and managed the last Cleveland campaign. Regarding the important cam- paign now on in Ohio, Mr. Brice said: “I can’t give you an unbiased opinion, you know, for I am an un- compromising democrat, but, cast- ing as much of my prejudices aside as possible, I will say that I have every expectation of James E. Campbell the next governor of Ohio. | and all that, but Campbell is a star in the firmament of Ohio politics. He is popular, able and aggressive, and will make the best gubernatorial officer the state ever had. Foraker is a friend of both Mr. Baxter and myself, and what I say about the outcome I verily believe.” “Do you think Cleveland will be a candidate in 1892?” “Of course I believe it. He is the only man to nominate. There is a great deal of thinking going on in Ohio and the western states over the tariff question, and this issue will predominate over the old dead and dried war issues which have im- pelled the western farmer to vote land forced this issue. | —K. C. Star. } The Discovery of the Age. | For the infallible and permanent cure of rheumatism, kidney affec- tions. dyspepsia, general debility jand blood diseases, Hunnicutt’s | Rheumatic Cure is without a rival orapeer. It cleanses the blood, beautifies the complexion, builds up | the system, increases the appetite, :and restores harmony to the consti ,tution. Itis, without a doubt the | best medicine now before the pub- lie, and has stood the test of years, 'as thousands of certificates in our possession will verify. For sale by | all druggists at $1 per bottle. Hun- nicut Medicine Co.. Atlanta, Ga. | Manufacturers. 46-1 m Foraker is a brilliant man, magnetic | | set Cox. {Pathetic Scene in Court During the | Trial of a Couple of Alleged { Child Beaters. Sedalia Bazoo: The trial of Cash White and wife at Houstonia yes- terday for beating an adopted child in an inhuman manner, took a rew turn and it begins to look asif the charges against them are true. The bail in the sum of $1,000, for their appearance for trial at the Novem- ber term of the criminal court. After the bonds had been signed and the crowd began to leave the court room a stranger crowded his way forward and the instant the child got her eyes upon him she gave a scream This and the White’s in a half-dazed manner attempted to take possession of the little one, but she clung close into the stranger's arms and refused to leave him. He claimed that he was her uncle and having heard of the case had come from Kansas City to see whether there was any truth in the report. The child had been so completely cowed and whipped by the White’s that she declared that there was no truth in the re- port that she had been abused, but now she was safe in her uncle's arms she told the truth. The story of her abuse is shocking and it is hard to believe that anybody could be so utterly heartless as to inflict such abuse upon alittle helpless child. Her story brought tears to many eyesas she detailed in an artless way the particulars of her wrongs. Everybody believed the child. The uncle took charge of the child and will look after the prosecution. It is claimed that there is plenty of testimony to convict the Whites. William’s Australian Herb Pill. If you are Yellow, Billous. constipated with Headache, bad breath, drowsy, no appetite, look out you: liver is out of order. Onebox ot these Pills will drive the all troubles away and make a new being out of you, Price aye: 47-yr. Dr. E. Pyle, Agent Warner Positively Refuses. Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 24.—Maj. William Warner returned home this morning from Washington, whither he had been called by special tele- gram from Secretary of the Interior Noble, at the request of President Harrison. In reference to the pen- sion commissionership, Maj. War- ner said: “I have positively and un- conditionally refused, all reports to the contrary notwithstanding. I wired the president at Deer Park this afternoon, on my arrival home, the fact that I absolutely declined to accept the office. My reason for declining are purely my own, and not because I differed from him in regard to the way the pension de- partment should be conducted. Such reports are unauthorized and whol- ly false.” Valuable and Timely. The Harnsburg Telegram is pre- paring a complete history of the Johnstown disaster, which will be published shortly in an elegant vol- ume. Itis proposed to make the book a valuable souvenir of thegreat calamity, exactly alike in matter and illustration. The text will be from the pen of the editor, who is thor- oughly acquainted with the sub- ject and with the district, while the most emmiuent artists will furnish portraits and views engraved from the original drawings and portrait drawings. We advise those whode- sire a superb volume, worthy of a place in any library, to wait for the forthcoming work. Experienced canvassers are desired as local agents | to solicit subscriptions and should with the republicans. Mr. Cleve-| ¥tite at ouce for territory. He is the! standard bearer and will be elected.” | Ex-president Cleveland has been suggested as the successor of Sun- The people will probably hold him fora larger position and one requiring superior executive. ability. A Safe Investment. Is one which is guaranteed to bring you satisfactory results, or in case ot fail- ure areturn of purchase price. In this sate plan you can buy from our advertised Druggist a bottle of Dr. King’s New Dis- covery for Consumption. 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