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VOL. SUL. = PURIFY & = THE ) BLOOD, CURE and all Walarial Disorders, ¢ sh medicine of wondertul ¢| Cyy Hoofland’s German Bitters. $1.60 per BoTTLeE. Six ror $5.00. JOHNSTON, HOLLOWAY 4& CO., Philadelphia. BATES COUNTY National Bank, BUTLER, MO. THE OLDEST BANK il LARGEST AND THE ONLY NATIONAL BANK IN BATES COUNTY. SURPLUS, - - S125,000 00 $25,000 00 F.J. TYGARD, - - - HON. J. &. NEWBERRY }. C. CLARK - = President. Vice-Pres. Cashier John Atkison’s Pension Agency. Over Dr Evyeringham’s store rooms West Side’ - Butler, Mo. DR. F. M. FULKERSON, DENTIST, BUTLER, - MISSOURI. Office, Southwest Corner Square, Dr. Tucker's old stand. Lawyers. eine I ye ARMOND & au ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Will practice in Bates and adjoining counties. gay” Onfice over Bates Co. Nat'l Bank. AARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORN<YS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, over Lans- down’s Drug Store. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. Ail calls answered at office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis- vases. v C. BOULWARE, Physician an T. Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- en aspecialtv. J.T, WALLS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart’ ore. Residence on Ha- vannah street norrh of Pine. Potter Bros. BRICK LIVERY STABLE. ‘ly of An amples Bucgies, Carriages, Phaetons, Drummer Wagons, &c. les in this section of t t1Gs most reasouable tern lesiring to put up their horses when in the city will tind this} barn the most convenient in town. POTTER BROS. JER, MOUND BUILDERS I Ancient est of the historic pe e Budder Phe exea the auspices of t MW the direction of Pr Patne Fa Harvard, the te s ‘ x Warren K. Mor sand people ws ie linen, one woman aud f | Five were in a good st , Vation, the ¢ jof decay Tn one grave the bones rot j Were so nearly In another ti MISSOURI, WEDN T NX re ES MAY 2 DAY I89l. NO: 27 wnat DE ERIN G, MACHINE OIL. a rt + ag Licata NUR uN we Slat bob tN yacavrat EAGLE HAY RAKES WITH POLE —| = — al q fo} n 4 iy H Q Bi H d eI SNIZ £10 UW W ‘SH190NG dOL OR SHAFTS. Missouri Odd Fellows. St. Joseph, M May 20.—The lodge I. O. O. 1 ee tR eld © { meeting t Fy Le s of Mrs. J. T f Mar Ye. was elected ‘ ny ac anany Sa ce president r of Sto Lois. secre- tary; Mrs. C. C. Mack of Salisbury tsecretary und Mrs. M. J -of St. Joseph, treasurer. Tlodge elected the fol- ‘ G i ter, J.B ( ty master, W. I secre M.S! grand treasurer, Phompsen id representa tive, TP ixey; ay rden, I P. Parson of St. L The report of Secretary Si showed a total members! p in state of 2 248; the t rever the year, § a - 38,256 of wl S54 in the jaws of whic! ere tl A HALE-MILLION DAMAGE Foor le Welton claccestare with TIMES REVENGES. was paid out in sick and death ben- | Dolishe d teeth 5 PEes be a5 GC pice ah the balance in treasury, The skeletans we mie Stonn Neiw Gaineseiine (Lexas. iy. s 30.000 strene. con Phe Fate ot General) Miguel Lopez.) 0. being six feet The burial three to four feet The skelet Around th up flat river lheighth, the tallest two inches rested or been stones, then earth hac lay rudely set has been filled in and over ail broad tat stones placed. In this rude incuse ment their bodies have reposed for centuries. There ave evidences t died in conflict. About one of the child skeletons was ! on Paar ud a necklace of bears's teeth, two or three of the graves were found tomahawke and stone hatchets but no relics of especial value, in view of the almost viously discoveres. be reconstructed exactly as found for the World's fair exhibit of Amer- ican antiquities, except that no earth will be over the skeletons Nellie Grant’s Husband. Algernon Sartoris is very near his end somewhere in France, from de- lirium tremens He land in this state, especially about Green bay, and some in this county. At one time the laud on the south side of Cedar lake was his. He will be best remembered as the English- man who married Nellie Grant. Not countless number pre The graves will owns much long before the wedding Sartoris| stopped at the Beekman here some weeks. The writer sat at his left at the table. Taking him all in all, he was the blackest sheep we ever saw. The Sartorises were aw old English family and very wealthy. Algernon’s father came to America and married an American actress,taking her back to England. There were two boys, Algernon being the younger and wild. He was furnished plemty of money and bought much Wisconsin land. While he was here, the elger brother was killed in England by be- younger went back to England tak- ing Nellie G The family home was one e mos ashis wife. t} ti beautiful in Fug gernon proved | husband, b could for N ‘ children. For several years he been home but very I gan, (Wis.) News Clay Gwinn. a son of e Sprague’ 1 te jer brother, through the th bullet, the ba ve Ex Gover said io have been bh jmailed eut of $20,000 by his form- jer | mand. Fota, is , | by th ioe ing thrown from his horse. und the | coaehman on an unknown de- Worse Than First Reported | ers arriving in tl y to-day jVarlous parts of the section vi | , destructive hil Jreport the iter It is to the he sec g |than was at first supposed. | atthe da {crops will reach $500,000. now believed t jtion damaged lies in portions of } Montague, Cook and Denten coun | | ties, andis said | to be about fifty miles in length and from two to tive | miles in width. The only hope thesé | farmers have. Host almost their entire possessions, | jis to plant cotton in the tields where j the crops were destroyed, and so far jas learned most | menced that crop. many of whem have of them have com- preparing the ground tor | Houses, fences and or- ble storm. Rabbits, birds and other person is reported as having been hurt. THEY TAKE NO PRISONERS. Opposed to Them in Warfare. Chicago, Ill., May 19.—General Themas L. Osborne, ex-United States minister to the Argentine Re- public, arrived here yesterday. said: | knew. | the Argentine Republic during my |time there. Very shrewd he is, too. jand intelligent. I think eventually jhe will You probably know that the revolution was occa i by the C succeed. an congress re- The Are: feated. No pris Everybody is live his palace. eooke lis meals, says she wants | Hee he there. if he must die. , Bros., the big bankers, worth '5 million dollars, over favored the insur- | gents and they are now comparative- i |chards were laid waste by the wind | jin ever locality visited by the terri- | th Balmaceda, he will hold nsurgents are trying hard to form aiand force. and if they succeed the tide will be tured against Balmaceda For this pur- pose they are buying arms in the United States. The Itata probably has a big supply. “Was anything in Balmaceda’s administration criticised by the Chilians?” | ~No, it) was satisfactory But they feared by his wanting to ap- poiut his successor that he had something to cover up and congress objected. The war will set Chili back fifty years.” “On which side is the church?” “Neutral. About ago j Mont, the then president, sent the SIX years people's representatives bag and | baggage back to Prior to} that time the pope ran things in Chili. Mont insisted that the state, Rome. |not the church, was supreme, and small animals were killed by the} thousand by the hail stones, but no | Chilians Believein Killing Those | He | tress. has been in South America fer the | ment comes the one, : past thirteen years and is well qual- | Prsing, that the play in which she like a rabidhound. He will rave iu ified to speak on matters pertaining | 38 to appear will set forth the dra-/ his paroxysms of maniacal frenzy. to the country. He is an .imtimate | matic life story of friend of President Balmaceda of !™an who is supposed to have met Chili. In speaking of the latter, he | his death among the tangled weeds | tr: “A more determined man I never | He was Chilian minister to | turbed the serenity of one of the most since then it has been.” Referring to the financial situation in Argentine, General Osborne says the worst time has been passed and an upward mevement is continuing | | and it will soon be on its feet. ' Would Disgrace the Stage. the dramatic developments in the | mysterious case of Robert Ray Ham- \ilton, comes the announcement that | | his alleged widow, Eva, is about to, | make her debut in the role of an ac- Coupled with the announce- even more sur- the unfortunate | of Snake river. Again the skeleton which has dis- historic families in this country is |to be dragged forth and exposed to view. It is promised that the stage portrayal will bring forth new and heretofere unsuspected features in tuis remarkable case. Eva will ap- 1a conspicuous role he Pineville of Ind improve Tw Ce a spirit town. The Nation: ri ties and 2 made ar- rangements fora uvique display at the Chicago Fair. sonference ! bas eorr i) i Who Betrayed the Enmperor Manimihan. It is now fully a yuarter of a cen tury since a merciful dispensation of Providence so clouded the p Carlotta’s mind that she was) spar- ed a single pang of grief when her royal husband was slaughtered in | Mexico For nearly a generation the widow of the unfortunate Maximilian remained in ignorance of his fate. But slowly. and by almost unpereep- tible degrees, her mind has beceme clarifies is more the of faculties. Looking backward through the long nd she in once enjoyment her years of darkness, that sad Mexican business in which she played a part of a heroine seems to her nearly a dream. It is well that it is se. Car lotta is not an old woman. She is hardly 45, and something in her fu ture may yet compensate her for her bitter past. But the same day that her recov- been bitten bya mad-dog and was under Pasteur treatment. This Lopez was the trusted offi cer who betrayed Maximilian to his bloodthirsty enemies-the wretch whose evil work caused Carlotta’s New York, May 19.—Following | insanity. After living all these leng | j:5, years, despised even by his own countrymen, and scorned by his wife for his treason, he has, perhaps, met his doom. What fate would be more fitting | for this false friend, who sold his | benefactor? It is hard to believe | that he will be cured. He will snap ‘and snarl and foam at the mouth | He will tear his flesh in hismad con vulsions and die like a wild beast. Time brings its revenges. As the aitor Lopez sinks out of sight in | the lurid shadows now descending upon him, his victim, Carlotta, come | once more finto the light of day, se- renely beautiful. once more herself, the most charming woman that has | worn a crown since Eugenie in her happiest days. Dissolving views— lights and shadows—they make up has | Phe repert ter Rixey showed that the order in nearly ev- ,ery county was ina prosperous con- dition. To-might at Turner jail ration the deca- conferred and tw of chivalry was upon four Odd Fellows daughters of Rebekal o Bathed in Cod) Liver Oil. Star The Lizzie Meadows, tho , 12 year old daughter of Asn Mead- {K.¢ ¢ case of ows ef Independence, who is alleged to have lived “without nonrishment of any kind” for fifty-six days, ap- pears not to be so remarkable after all. Dr. John Bryant, who ' 0s, hes j been practicing in that city fer over j thirty years, and is the attending | physician, was seen this morning land stated that it would have been | impossible for the pil to have lived {that long without food. She was | suffering froman attack of tubereu- ‘losis combined with meningitis. She | ery wasannounced also brought the | has not been entirely without food | intelligence that General Lopez had | for pine weeks, | morning’s papers. as stated in the On the contra- \ry she bas been kept bathed with | cod liver oil and has frequently tak- en drinks of cream. The cod liver | oil was of itself sufficient to sustain He further expressed the opin- }ion that she could not survive. A Female Stage Robber. | Eureka Springs, Ark., May 20.— | Walter Markle and his sister Mrs. | Edgar Rose, were arrested by depu- | ty United States marshals yesterday evening, near Batavia, Boone county and brought here this morning, charged with holding up the stage ,and robbing the mail, between this city and Harrison, last September. Markle confesses the robbery and says Edgar Rose, who was found dead near Kingston, some two weeks ago, Was accomplice. Miss Daisy Reynolds. a school teacher. was found dead in an empty negro hut near St. Marys. O. Her leath is a mystery SHIRLEY CHILDS SELL S TRE WHITLEY BINDERS, MOWERS AND HAY RAKES, And a Full Line of Repair s for Champion Machines. Buaaies, Phetons, Spring & Road Wagons Ard a Full Line of Leading Cultivators. Shirley Childs