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heumatism and Neuralgia Cured! ; | Two Days. The Indiana Chemical Co. have discovZ ed a compound which acts with truly | arvelous rapidity in the cure of Rheu- atism and Neuralgia. We guarantee it cure any and every case of acute mmatory Rheumatism and Neuralgia pays, and to give immediate reliet ronic cases and etfect a speedy cure. Qn receipt of 30 cents, in two cent amps, we willsend to any address the rescription for this wonderful compound shich: can be filled by your home druggist tsmail cost. We take this means of ing our discovery to the publicinstead f putting it out as a patent medicine, it ing much less expensive. We will jadly refund money if satistaction is not n. THE INDIANA CHEMICAL Co., 10-1yr Crawtordsville Ind " Time Table. L. &S DIVISION. TRAINS RUNNING NORTH, No. 304, passenger 4:47 a.m. “312, local S530 4° 302,passenger 3:15 p.m. TRAINS RUNNING SOUTH. No. 301, Passenger 12:30 p.m. 311, local 5:00 ff “ 303, passenger '9:40 Sr. L. & E. DIVISION. No. 343 mixed, leaves 6:45 a.m. “ “ 344 arrives 3:25 p.m. ’ E. K. CARNES, Agent. W. E. TUCKER, DENTIST, BUTLER, MISSOURI. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart’s Store. Lawyers. J. H. NORTON. Attorney-at-Law. Office, North Side square, over F. Barnhardt’s Jewelry Store.g Wo. JACKSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Butler, Mo. Office, South Side Square, over Badgley Bros-, Store. ILDEN H. SMITH, b ATYORNEY AT LAW. Butler, Mo.§f Will practice in all the courts. Special at- tention given to collections and litigated laims. Catvin F Boxu re Prosecuting Attorney CALVIN F. BOXLEY, ATTORNEYS AY LAW. Butler, Mo. Will practice in all the courts. ARKINSON & GRAVES ATTORN#YS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, down’s Drug Store. over Lans- VON, ORNEYS 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 Butier, Mo. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, THE FINE 1 | Premium Stallion MAMBRINO CHIEF JR., MAMBRINU CHIEF JR, willstand at my barn one mile trom Butler court house, Bates county, Mo., on the Rich Hill road, at the low price of $20 for colt. to stand and suck, payable when colt comes or when mare changes own- ership or about to be removed trom the county, or being bred to another herse- Ia such cases the service fee will be due and must be paid. Mambrino Chier Jr.took first premium at Nevada fair last September,in roadster ring,and also first | in general purpose ring, and second in| ring forthe best stallion of any breed, twelve or fitteen competing in each ring. Care will be taken to prevent ac- cident, will not be responsible should any occur. Breeders are invited to see the stock before breeding elsewhere. Season closes July 1oth. WESLEY WARNOCK. Agent for C. S, Concklin. > [DESCRIPTION AND PEDIGREE. Mambrino Chiet Jr., dark bay, bi points, 161 hands hight. weight :,- pounds, fine style and action, good back with heavy quarters,teet and legs as yood as any horse in the county,can show bet- ter than a three minute gait, fine quiet disposition, any one can drive him. Sired by Abbott, 1st dam by McDonald's Mambrino Chief, sire of the dams of Alice West 2:26,Stranger 2:28 and grand- sire of Veritas 2:20,2d dam by Mark An- thony thoroughbred, 3rd dam_ by Old Forester, 4th dam by Imported Bedford, McDonald’s Mambrino Chief by Old = Mambrino Chief No. [is 1st dam Big Nora by Bay Messenger sire of Jim Porter 2:28¢, 2nd dam Mrs. Caudle, dam of Ericson2.201,, Bay « « face, s amed by a hundred passions in his eyes furrowed his brow, whit- ened his hair, and bent his figure half double, during the years that Frank, his only son. was reaching AND IMPLEMENT IN R, R. DEACON, THE ONLV EXCLUSIVE HARDWARE BUTLER. i] ,ed in childish hours, when the old ;man's heart had been softened by his prattle, the nobility of the face in those rare hours, was lacking, and |8o the artist spread over the face a | tenderness which only a son’s hand ;could, as he forget the worst and |Femembered the best. But the cru- jelty of the last interview! He could never forget that. Ah, how jhe worked, mingling filial love—for, jafter all, the old man was his father | —with his later loathing and his | final forgiveness as he looked on the |dead face. Perhaps his father was jright. Perhaps he saw disaster in the boy's future. The touch of wisdom shone from the eyes. . And if he was right, he was HOUSE ART IS LONG. A STORY. j through the summer, and gone back | < |to his work, leaving behind only a ; memory and Peleg Sampson's moth- er, ayoung woman who died soon after her son’s birth. Every day after her lover left, the girl thought of him with bitterness; for Mollie Sampson was a proud, high spirited girl, as the tradition ran, and beyond tradition no one ever had the temer- | Avarice shown | ity to question the old man. BY HENRY L. May. : Peleg Sampson had a rugged old thief among which was the Nemesis of his ife—avarice. Yet, after all his son, Frank Samp- | son, for whom he showed more af-| and of whom he was proud, when he | powers. ten times stronger in its intensity than the affection for his once cher- false mistress. usurped the favor he had staked his all to gain. and as he looked about his room, he thought how common place his fail- ure had been. mother suffering an additional bur- | den in his absence. cruel as well; too cruel to one of his own blood. : Again the face worked with passion. Hatred was ;uttermostin that old face, but with jit was a fierce struggle to restrain the flood of love, nature's first les- son, parental love, the endless law of human race. It was a portrait of | his father, and Frank Sampson knew as he dropped the brush from his aching hand, that he caught the in- stant when the face before him was that of a madman transfigured by love. Jedicated his life's most vigorous A revulsion came over him shed art had evor been. Other She was a lovers had | The comedy was over, His father was estranged, and his The thought Messenger by Harpinus, son of Bishop Hambletonian, dam a Messenger m Abbott by Caliban 394 sire of C F 2:18, Cyclone 2:23). dam, Country Maid by Country manhood. Then avarice suddenly ceased in the old passionate | artist. turbulent life and hatred took its place; a hatred for his son, which had all the intensity of an inszne de- | lusion. man’s One afternoon, the old man went to the boy’s room in his ab- sence, and there, pinned to the wall, found rude sketches of every famil- The village His own flesh and blood was to | street, the dilapidated church, the the old man the most detested sight | store, the school-house, faces of his of his daily life, and, avaricious as | fellow-townsmen, a clever sketch of he still was, he would have given all | the boy's mother—all the every-day the product of three score years of | sj unremitting toil to have seen his son | swept off forever from his sight. man, sonot Rysdicks Hambletonia: 2nd dam Belle by I iban n 10, 3elle Morgan 61, Cal- 394 by Mambrino Pilot 2g, sire ot a 217 and 6 others in th a by Cas is 2: | iar sight in daily life Mambrin4 Pilot 29 by M t It, ist dam Juliett by Pilot Jr. 29, sire John Morgan 2:24, Tackey 2:26, © 2:26 and 6 others in sire ot Maud S 2 J wood 2:15; znd dam roughbredson of Me¢ Eclipse. lits of Windsor were there. Yes, his own son had the hateful | gift! Bursting with rage he tore Vindsor was a little town nestled | the sketches from the walls and among the pine woods of Maine, the | trampled them under foot, storming center of a vast lumber district, but, and cursing in his anger. The only as a village, insignificant enough. A | hope he had, his only son, who few scattered houses, an unpreten-| should have inherited the instinet tious church with few paris TIMOTHY. TIMOTHY, bay Will make the s mile trom the ¢ Mo., on Rich | of $15 tor a col ble whe changes cwner about t trom the county, when = service ill be due and must be paid. Care will ken to prevent accident, but will not be responsible should any occur. Season closes July 10, 1890. Breeders e requested to see this stock betore breeding elsewhere. WESLEY WARNOCK, Agent tor C. S. Concklin. stall 1oners | from his father, working secretly at and fewer members, a little school this sham of an occupation all the house and Sampson's store were set! time, with the knowledge of his vromiscuously along its single strag-} father’s hatred of that talent. It gling street. | was a hard blow, and, the work of Every few weeks the lumbermen | drifted into town from their camp, | . . -. * | made Saturday night and Sunday | destruction over, the old man gave the boy no chance for vindication, no alicrnative but hasty flight. The denunciations heaped upon the son in their last interview were but the outpourings of a madman’s hideous with their orgies, and retir- | ed Monday morning, leaving Peleg Sampson—known more generally DESCIRPTION AND PEDIGREE. Timothy, bay stallion, black points, was twenty years old, became an} that she was uncomplainingly bear- ing another trial for his sake, was | like a dagger in hisheart. He loved her, and when his other love had forsaken him, she would take him back to her heart. It was quieting to reflect that there was arefuge for his tired soul, sick with striving and anxiety; and, as ifin answer to his reflection, a sharp knock upon his door roused him, and a letter in his mother’s handwriting was handed him. His father was dead. Sud- denly, without a word, the old man the street and died. More than this, he had died penni- less. All his rumored wealth wasa myth Whatever he possessed had been frittered away in careless specula His ate consisted of the stock of goods in fection than for any living person, | \ had fallen in tion as his avarice vrew. the little country store and Frank’s home of other days; nothing else. There was but one right way in Frank Sampson's scheme of life, and at the close of the letter he that way. His duty was at the home of his childhood, and he went chose HARD RAP FOR M.S. QUAY. Anonymously teferreed to m= the House as a Defaulter. Washington, April 23.—There was a lively discussion in the house yesterday on the executive, legisla- tive and judicial appropriation bill. Mr. Cannon, the chairman of the ap- propriation committee,took the floor and called the attention of the house to the fact that a number of demo- cratic has defaulted The republicans treasurers within a few year. cheered to the echo and Mr. Cannon feeling that he had made a point sat down. John Allen of Mississippi, who had been a quiet listener, took the floor. He remarked that the demo- c-atic treasurers have been behaving very badly of late, but he said that some of them were in the peniten- tiary and the rest would be soon. “This is how we differ from you,” said he addressing the republicans. “We send our thieves and default- ing treasurers to the penitientiary. 1614 hands high, fine style and action, good bone and muscle, a fine trotter, hastobe seen to be appreciated, aS proved to be remarkably sure, his colts last year are large and fine with good trotting Sired by lamo Jr., ist dam Nelly by Zachary Taylor, who took tst premium incinnati,O., both as asaddle stailion and as best roadster, showing a 2:40 gait in both rings. 2nd dam Old Nelly by Tum Crowder, sire ot the dams of John W C only 224, Beivia Lockwood 2:25,Cooley 2:20, Frank 726, Modesty 2:26!4, Tom Crowder by old paciug and trotting Pilot, sire of Pilot Jr., grandsire ot Maud SS 2:083;, J I C 2:10, Nutwood 2:18,Alamo Jr.,by Alamo Sr. 2.34 by Almont 33, son of Abdalla 15, | son of Hambletonian 10, dam ot Alamo Jr., by Prirze Albert, son of Imported Fyde, 1stdam py Imported Margrave, znd d Mary Seldon by Sussex, 2nd dam Exchange by Richmond, see stud books vol. 1st, page 95, Aiamo Sr., by Office, tront room over P. O. All answered at office day or night. Specialattention 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. calls J.T. WALLS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart’s Store. Residence on Ha- vannah street norrh ot Pine. Missouri Pacific R’y. 2 Daily Trains 2 (6) KANSAS CITY OMAHA, COLORALO SHORT LINE 5 Daily Trains, 0 Kansas City to St, Louis, and THE PUEBLO AND DENVER, PCLLMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS | Kansas City to Denver without cn H. C. TOWNSEND. g't ST; LOuIS, MO, al Passenger and Ticket 4 Almcnt 33, 1st dam by Brown’s Bei- tounder son of Imported Belfounder. W. W, = Agent. VIGOR SI] RENGTH OOD fail et te: acd Deseripti reat roche malted (cesled) frees ive autres ERIE MEDIGAL CO. BUFFALO, N.Y. Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOUBI,? ,. County of Bates, \ cgeee In the probate court for the county of Bates, February term, 1890. B F. Senior, Execat or, Richard Miller deceased Order ot Publication. Now comes B, F. Senior executor of Richard Miller deceased, presents to the court his pe- tition, praying for an order forthe sale of so much of the real estate of said deceased as will pay and satisfy the remaining debts due by said estate, and yet unpaid for want of suffi- cient assets, accompanied by the accounts, lists and inventories required by law in such case;on examination whereofit is ordered,that all persons interested in the estate of said deces- ed,be notified that application as aforesaid has been made, and unless thecontrary be shown on or before the first day of the next term of this court to be held on the second Monday of May next, an order will be made forthe sale of the whole, or so much of the real estate of said de- ceased as will be sufficient for the payment of said debts; and it is further orde: that this notice be published in some newspaper in this county of Batesfor four weeks before the next tetm of this court, and that a copy of this order be served on each heir and devisee of deceased, being in this county, at least ten days prior to the first day ofthe next term of this court. mates STATE OF MISSOURI, i en County of Bates. is I. J. S. Francisco, Judge of the probate court, held in and for said county, hereby cer- tify that the foregoing is a substantial copy of the original order of publication therein refer- edto, as the same sppearsof record in my | ottice. i coke Witness my hand and seal of said court. {szat] Done at office in Butler, this 25th | y of March, Is. ba acres J. S$. FRANCISCO, Judge of Probate. | he Bohemian Girl has beena ' source of profit to many and yet the among his customers and the towns- wrath, but, unforgiving as they were, 2 ? 3 5 J people as Peg—some dollars richer back to his mother, her support in declining years We do not make them United States senators or any of them the chair- id one way a con- and more miserly than before their brief sojourn. Year after year rolled by, and Windsor’s miserly storekeeper was growing richer; but the wretched spicuous suce: a son of unswerv- ing filial devotion. He took charge of the little store; and, although no lumberman’s money was exchanged over that counter for liquor, the young man made a living sufficient, expressed but part of the old man’s passion. His face, seamed and wrinkled, working with rage, livid with hot blood, expressed it all, and looking upon that face, Frank knew that forgiveness was hopeless, arbi- man of our national committee.” This palpable hit at Quay the re- publicans did not understand for a time, but the democrats did and they cheered to the echo. liquor he dispensed over his counter to the wood-choppers was a fruitful source of periodical trouble to the town, and Peg Sampson grew older | shunned and despised, assuming gradually that most pitiful of all] sights, an old man without a spark | of self-respect, and with nobody's | her husband’s; and while she had esteem. inever given her son open encour- Among the curious features of | agement in his secret work, he felt Windsor’s only store was the ab-| gure of her approval, tacit though it sence of the illustrated advertising | was. And so he went away to strug- placards, so common in every other gle and fight against poverty, with country store down East. Nobody's | ideals which, under the most favor- soap was highly recommended by a ing circumstances, could hardly be pictured face wahed by the latest | realized, and in his case well nigh brand; no lithographed stove shone hopeless. with dazzling brightness from the} He had no reasons for making a use of a special trade-marked polish; | mediocre success of his new life. A no flaky biscuits raised their fac sim- | home and popular favor were among ile deliciousness before a chance vis- | the least of his wishes. There was itor’s eyes. The lumbermen, sitting | no love of woman in his life, except around the stove, had often enough | that for his mother. An enduring seen the old man, as he pried open | and unqualified victory was his only a box of merchandise, seize the ad-| real desire. vertising sheet that lay over the) The struggle began in a distant goods, tear it into shreds, and de-| city, and was prolonged month after posit the fragments into the blazing | month, until he saw that modified fire. | success even was out of his reach. Peg hated a picture. He was fren- | He had worked, contrived, battled zied if a chance artist, with his pal-| and was forced at last to accept the ette, easel and umbrella, strayed into | bitter truth—he was not an artist— his store during the summer. The | simply that. He was not only not a walls of his house, where he and his genius, but not even a painter of invalid wife had lived for years, were | merit. When at last, at the end of as bare of ornament, even of wall | his recourse, he staked his last, at paper, as the day they were fresh { chance and lost, he thought it all from the plasterer’s hands. | out or tried to, and again and again It was a madness of the blood, a/ it occurred to him that with the ar- |part of his being. When the spell | tistic taste transmitted to him from | was upon him, his face was a terri- his ancestor was mingled also his ble study in the intensity of passion. father’s hatred for art. Here was He lost all self-control. For the \ the secret. Justas a physical taint time he wasa madman. And yet he | generations back will fall upon oth was the son of an artis sort pr his door in the leafy summer, catch- | from his fathe tration useless. He left home with little regret on bis father’s account, but with an aching heart when he thought of his mother, a gentle wo- man, whose illness, endured with resignation for years, had given her characteristics the direct opposite of ; the same | erwise vigorous stock with obably, that passed idly by force, so this mental trait, de nd blighted compeser of the opera is in distress by reason of poverty. ing up a bit of nature hereand there . better aspirat Tt bad withheld \for future use. His own father had | success from his grasp. and now he strayed up here years ago, lived | loathed the very art to which he had though slender as it was. Mr. Cannon asserted that nothing had been proven against Quay, and Mr. Washington of Tennessee re- marked that the same proof was against Quay that there was against the treasurer of Maryland, the treas- arer of Missouri or the treasurer of Mississippi, namely, newspaper re- port. Mr. Dockery took the floor and in- formed the chairman of his commit- tee thatthe defaulting treasurer of Missouri, as soon as he was discov- ered, was turned out of office by the democratic governor of Missouri and criminal proceeding inaugurated against him. He made a prophecy that within six months the default- ing treasurer of Missouri would be within the walls of the penitentitry. He said that the tax payers would not suffer the loss of a cent, as the bondsmen of the defaulting treasur- er had covered the amount of his knavery into the treasury. Mr. Dock- ery incidentally called attention to the fact that when the republican party was driven out of power in Missouri |the state was saddled with a lavish His mother in her secret heart thought him a hero; others admitted that he had sacrificed the chances of a career fora sure living, and he alone knew how little a pang the re- nunciation of his struggle cost him. He remained several years in Windsor, with but an occasional restless day, congratulating himself with the the thought that the hurt he had sustained in the conflict was but passing, for on the day he gave up his art study, he had been too near desperation to have since felt the reaction which would have sure- ly come to an artistic temperament surrounded by more faverable cir- cumstances. The past was growing dim, as every past, however strewn with wrecked ambitions, is sure to, but through t&e mists of the past, he remembers every detail of his fath- er's wrathful face as the old man turned away from him on that terri- ble morning. He might forget all else of the past, but that—never. : eae oy pis pain mea = | debt of 20 million dollars. strange request—strange for her, | ‘The house to-day went ints oc since she never mentioned her dead | ssithee “of the aisle Gates 55 husband's name, aud by her gigceieg appropriation» bill: Ga Hise acknowledged her son’s right in the ee ic ge the moticar ak old quarrel, Kuowing that Frank | a nn of Minnesota, to strike had long since given up all thought ae the clause providing clerks for of painting, she nevertheless—per- | dictation. -sAftes -eousiiaeabies iam a — — esi a. ae bate the motion to strike out was. asked him to paint a porirait of hi lost by a vote of 85 to 87. father, and consented. There was} no former portrait to guide him and | he worked entirely from memory. | The work grew in magnitude un-| der his touch, and, as it grew, he; snew the picture was a failure. The aoew Bd % Salve and Electric Bitters, and have s not that | never handled remedies that sell as well, hide- | or that have giyen such universal satis- euih hatred a faction. Werdo not hesitate to guaran- i aire | tee them every time, and we stand ready the eye convulsive scowl | to Ee ero : ase price, it satisface — i cps SEs ie | tory results do not follow their use. These | and working features, that was not | ;omedies have won their great p : the head of the father he remember- | durely on’their merits, all D Merit Wins. : We desire tosay to our citizens, that tor years we have been selling Dr. King’s — New Discovery for Consumption, + Sa King’s New Life Pills, Bucklen’s Arnica — | ce upou the car gh £ fae the the of his fath