Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
STURDY FARMERS Ofte Cures Catarrh | Wherever \ Located. (/ Po-ru-na a Necessity in the Home, Pe-ru-na Always on Hand. J.B. Alexander, Publisher of thet Mr, Fred Schnell, Lakeview, Erie Co., KEEP OFF ALL CATARRHAL ILLS awe A pe Had Catarrh Thirty Years—Po-ru-na| Cured Him. Mr, Gustav M. Schmidt, Spring Valley, TIL, writes: “T had catarrh of the pete ree for over thirty years, It beea Worse every year, “About three months ago T commenced to take Peruna and Manalin, and now I am entirely cured of that troublesome cured. i. SD RSA, MR. HENRY SCHROEDER, PA USTAV M, SCHMIDT. IW ‘ e-ru-na a Household Friend. Mr. Henry Schroeder, Route 2, Napoleon, 0., writes: ««] suffered for almost ten years with catarrh of the stomach and all doctoring was of no avail. «1 took nine bottles of Peruna and two of Manalin and am now entirely «41 recommend the medicine to all who are afflicted with this disease. It is my household friend.'’--Henry Schroeder. A Farmer's Talk to Farmers. sickness, Your medicine is surely a Refore Dr, Hartman began the study | diseases, believing that obnoxious symp- At Work on the Farm.—Praises Pe-ru-na. Geo, H, Thompson, Raleigh, Miss, writes: “1 have been cured of catarrh by your | medicines, Peruna and Manalin, { had been affected with catarrh of the jstomach about all my life, and was taken bad every spring and summer. “T used several kinds of patent medie cines, but they did me no good, I then took a treatment under an M, D,, which “y rad Floral Guide, A) Masazine | N, Y., write f * published lartford) “Thad been a sufferer for more-than City, Inc. says of Peruna: “LT was afflicted with eatarrh of the throat and head for over ten years, I w treated by many physicians, but grow worse until Twas seldom able to £ in cold weather, eAboutone your avo Twas advised to try Peruna, which T did, and I am now entirely well of the eatarrh, *‘Peruna is a necessity in our home. With the first symptoms of a cold we use it, and are never afflicted with ca- tarrh, “LT advise all who are aMieted with eatarri to try Peruna, There is cer tainly nothing equal toit as a catarrh medicine.” —J, B, Alexander, Pe-ru-na is 2 Systemic Remedy. Tf Peruna will cure catarrh in one Place, it will cure it in any other place, ! thirty years with catarrh of the intes- ‘tines, [had used a great deal of medi- cine to no ayail, so I decided to try Peruna, | “I have now used thirteen bottles and can give you the joyful tidings that I have no more trouble. Ll always keep Peruna on hand."’=-Fred. Schnell. The people generally are very much misinformed as to the nature of catarrh, Catarrh is usually believed to be con- fined to the head, nose and throat, Lat- terly we sometimes hear of catarrh of the stomach and eatarrh of the bladder, Seldom, if ever, do we hear of catarrh of | any other organs, It is not because these organs are not subject to catarrh, nor that catarrh of these organs is not a very common dis-| resulting from catching cold. ease, but simply because it is not gener- blessing to mankind, lived in vain, Doctor, and 1 thank you| Pennsylvania. for the good you have done me. May you enjoy along life to help suffering | humanity.”—Gustay M, Schmidt. | Dr. Hartman Makes Personal Use of | Pe-ru-na. In speaking of his own personal uae | by the roots, of Peruna, Dr, Hartman says: lin the world, Catarrh. | sional duties have compelled me to be much on the road, traveling long dis- eating in different hotels continually, | could not content himself with doctor and through it all I have preserved my-|ing symptoms any more than his enter. “atthe slightest evidence of a cold, #| to eradicate them from the soil. {of medicine he was a farmer boy, He} tor “You can truly say that you have not | Ws brought up ona farm in Southern | disease was removed, It was here that he early learned the lesson of pulling obnoxious things out “For a number of years my profes- Dr. Hartman's Method of Treating Notwithstanding Dr, Hartman’s busy | fees well all of the time. Naturally, when he began the study ‘tances by rail, night and day, exposed | of medicine-his mind turned instinctive- | owner and manager of one of the largest praise Peruna for its healing power." | to all kinds of vicissitudes, sleeping and | ly toward the removing of causes, He] farms in the State of Ohio, with several | Geo. H. Thompson. -| thousand acres of the best tilled land in -| the Middle West, and with hundreds of | self from any derangement of the body | prising father could have contented himself by pulling off the tops of weeds | imported or raised in this country. ally known that affections of these | few doses of Peruna invariably checked would disappear if the cause of the | qiq me but little good, By this time I had got where I could eat nothing but In other words, Dr. Hartman 4p=), jittle soup. 1 had severe pains, had He belonged to that industrial, suc-| plied the common sense of the practical) |... in woight and could not do an cessful class of farmers known as the|f@rmer to medicine, and after much 8 sd Pennsylvania Dutch, the best farmers thing. y som- — rr 2 “IT began taking your medicines, The sensible farmer does not think of | Peruna and Manalin, I then weighed cutting off the tops of weeds to kill 126 pounds, but after taking 17 bottles jthom, He pulls them up hy the roots, of Peruna and one bottle of Manalin, I | Fy ; weighed 166 pounds, Dr. Hartman Interested in Farming. Uh man ew at work onthe term abd 1 eat all I professional career, he still continues to | want to and my friends say that I look be interested in farming, He is the| better than ever before. I will ever A reward of $10,000 has been deposited the best blooded percheron horses ever | in the Market Exchange Bank, Colum- bus, Ohio, as a guarantee thatthe above Dr. Hartman relies upon Peruna en-| testimonials are genuine; that we hold because it is a systemic remedy. organs may be due to catarrh. it.” ‘ =—OTC_HOnr[][ ———r“vle—aeG6QeaGQVvT—WmnmianaeaeaS 535358585 BUTLER WEEKLY TIMES In consequence of the effort being] DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION made by the Kansas legislature to J. D. ALLEN, Eprror. establish a state refiaery the Stand- 900 pipe line men and tank men and the product of Kansas has been cut off for the time being. The Standard Oil company rules or ruiis. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: Jne Weskiy Times, published eyery rsday, will be sent to any address me vetr, vostage pald, for $1.00, It isestimated that there are 45 millions of eggs in cold storage in Chicago. The big meat packers are By a yote of 65 to 50 the lower | » Kansas lovishi ture pars: | | wiving women the right | j wr presidential electors. ket and householders are paying 38) cents per dozen, The eggs the pack- ers are holding were bought early in! The Sopreme court of Kansas in a decision handed down last week, held, in effort, that it is not a crime for a ard Oil company has laid off ever|Nominates A. L. Ives For Coun- county Democratic Committee, the (ee county convention to nominate a Township Primary. A primary election for theselection of a Democratic township ticket for Mt. Pleasant township is called for Saturday, March 11th. The hours of voting will be from one (1) to six (6) p.m. The place of voting will be in the basement of the court house. Judges of election will be ty Schoo! Superintendent. Pursuant toacall of the Bates Coal Famine is Threatened. St. Joseph, Mo., Feb. 12 -This city is threatened with a coal famine by reason of inability of railways to move fuel in fast enough, due to the extreme cold. The Federal building has less than a week's supply on hand and many manufacturing plants will have to suspend unless relief is afforded this The Doctor turned his attention early |tirely in case of sickness in his own|in our possession authentic letters cer to the science of removing the cause of ' family. tifying to the same, A Field For Legislation. Among the last of the 600 bills thus far Introduced in the Missouri House of Representatives is one pro- viding for a laboratory for thestudy ofcriminals atthe penitentiary. This would make a snug berth, with a salary of $3000, for some hungry office seeksr. Other bills on similar Called to order at 2 o'clock p.m. by School Superintendent was held in Butler, on Monday, February 15th. suid to have a coroner on the mar-|J. A. DeArmond, Chairman of com- mittee. On motion Prof. H. 0. Maxey, the present county superii- tendent, was elected temporary chair. fall at a cost of fifteen to seventeen|mun and Arch L. Stone, of Osage George Titsworth, C. H Thompson and J. Ro Ford. All Democrats and other voters who will support the Democratic ticket are entitled to vote. Rules for the conduct of the primary will be announced by the judges. The names of those who will be candidates will be given to T. K. week, | The railways today confiscated all {eoal in their yards o on the way | here. The power plants of the street j railway company are deficient in fuel supply. lines may be suggested. Why not provide for racetrack gamblers and touts? Why not have a laboratory for the study of }drunk- ards? A scientific investigation of the cigarette-smoking boy, ,might turn up something} of interest. A Washington, Feb. 18. —Statehood for Oklahoma and New Mexico, will public officer to solicit a bribein that atate, cents & dozen. It is reported that a subpoena has been issued for former chairman Gov. Folk has appointed as man- agers of tne Confederate Home, Chas Tl Vundiver, of Higginsville; James MeClintic, of Munroe City. taining an official explanation of the ia charge that the “government was Oi] ,roducers at Chanute, Kansas, ext nd an invitation to Thomas W *Lawson and the Pure Oil Com- | pany of Pennsylvania to aid them in their fight on the Standard Oil company. porter whose name was placed on the sub-treasury pay-roll.—Ex. The State probably will place Thomas J. Reaves, who claims to have seen a woman thrown from the New London bridge, on the stand in rebuttal to the Watson case. —_—_ The state Senate passed a bill haus when it is known that they are on the pay roll of the Republican a week. Forty of these heelers were township, was elected secretary. following committee on permanent Thos. J: Akins, of the State Republi-| O™anization and credentials: Bauicrman, of St Louis; and W.S. | can committee with the view of ob- Allen. J. B. March, Geo. J. Moore; Charles Spillman and H. W. Jenkins. taxed for the services of a private the temporary organization be made permanent. State Committee at from $30 to $50 | ed’and committee discharged. « temporary | Lisle on or before Wednesday, March \8 a, in order to be printed upon the ballot. James A. DEARVonp, Committeeman. On motion the chair appointed the J.D. Three Trains In A Ditch. Gypsum City, Kas., Feb 14.—Five Missouri Pacific engives, two freight trains and % relief train are in a It was found that all the townships | ditch here and twelve train men hurt This committee recommended that = were represented by regularly elected | as the result of an accident. It is not so much of a wonder that delegates or their duly accredited the enthusiasm continues among the|Proxies, with the exception of/gines ran into a snow drift near this heelers at Jefferson City for Niedring-| Prairie A freight train drawn by two en- place this morning. A relief train, No contests were reported. running a double header, was sent The committee's report wasadopt-|from Council Grove. The wrecked train displayed no signals and the Judge Jno. J. March of New Home | relief train crashed into it, being bad sent out by the committee in the in-| Placed the name of Prof. A. L.,Ives |ly wrecked. terest of Mr. Niedainghaus for senat-|!2 nomination and L. L. Coleman of or. This is not a Democratic story. | Mingo performed a like eervice for | freight which also became a part of Followiug the relief train came 8 congress, unless it be on lines pro- vided in the house statehood bill. This was decided yesterday at a conference of Republican members of + .e house *The human heart, in a healthy man weighs long but eleven ounces. It beats from before birth until de: in an average lifetime, about sevet mil! times, allow- ing seventy beats to the minute. Every twenty-four hours this slight organ per- forms labor equivalent to material eighty feet into the air. Could it be ey tine to the man it would raise him over hundred feet from the ground | This it does, day in and day out, for years, There is no Heche 4 or stopping till death. But to do this work the heart requires fuel and water the same as the steam crane. ing @ ton of not be granted during this session of law to provide a bacteriologist for every burber shop would be in line. And a laboratory to investigate and classifiy the stray cats and dogs would not be amiss. There are plenty of self sacrificing citizens who would be willing to de- vote themselves to these studies— for a fat salary.—Post Dispatch. Mr. Bryan’s Pleasant Frame of Mind. New York World. “My position at present” sald William Jennings Bryan to some friends in Washington a day or two ago, “is that of the young mandown south who was in love with a fine young woman. He proposed one night and she accepted him. After the protestations of undying affection had been made @ hundred times the Ate mais ~* sian at Jefferson City from $900 to Friday which provides for two as- aistants for the attorney general at a salary of $2,500, each, and a chief office has been conducted with one — aseletant. The tariff is put on eggs when the hens stop laying. Thirty-eight to forty cents a dozen for eggs in the ' cities isa pretty stiff price. A few days of warm weather and the hens Will cause the price to drop material- ly. Friday the lower house of the Missouri legislature passed a bill in- creasing thesalary of the state libra- $1,500 ayear. Itis said the state librarian has little to do except to part of his time in thecomfort-| railroads work together in Kaneas| F, Rozzslle will go to the senate for |eighty of the most prominent ‘teach- and further west to California, 7 able quarters of the library. Mail. It is’ taken from the testimony of Prof. 8. M. Gragg. On roll call the | the wreck, owing to the inability of Heeler McCoy before the legielative| Vote stood, Ives 77,Gragg 38. Chatr- }the engineer to control his train. All committee, Mr. McCoy {s still in the|™69 Maxey announced the result of |/ of the engines are badly smashed clerk at $1,500. Heretofore the | employ of that committee.—Nevada | the vote and declared Prof. Ives the | The Missourl Pacificauthorities have : party nominee. Prof. Gragg moved | secured help from the Rock Island that the nomination of Prof. Ives be|in the way of a steam wrecker and Thos. W. Lawson, of “Frenzied made unanimous, which was carried. |¢he track will be cleared in a few Finance” notoriety has entered the Prot. Ives addressed the convention, fight as a champion of Kansas pe pom bee against the Standard Oil Company, tes for the honor it efforts to the addressed the convention, graceft accepting the verdict of the conven- tion and pledging his support to the It is an- Jefferson City, Mo., Feb. 14.—Gov- the names of A. E. Gallager and F. confirmation. hours. The most serious injured are Chas. Johu and Peter Rose, trainmen of and announces that he has certain Seo OMelt thaeh ond ecling ths Council Grove. evidence which will be of great value| united and enthusiastic support of to the legislature of that state in ite|the party at the polls. Prof. Gregg fight against the octopus. tully nounced that within afew days, every {mportant man in Kansas from| nominee. Governor down will receive literature specially prepared by the Boston The Association of Teachers of Mathematics in Missouri will be held at Columbia on May 16 of this year. ‘ The purpose of such an organization 1s obvious,and every teacher of math- ematics in the state who possibl Copper man, showing how the|ernor Folk has settled the Kaneas| an should join this selina. The Standard Of] people and certain iy pomme a meer 4 membership already comprises at-out ers of the state. yy tery ee ay cine vad young man went out Into the night metal are lifted high into the air and ewung | and looking up at the stare raised Ry rh yA ‘ore his arms above his head and. said: The steady puffing of the engines in the | ‘Oh, Lord, I aint got nothing agin little house seems ” Penteent; rates tae an essential part of nobody. to be but an accom. machine. But without generous plies of food water, engine 2 If the blood Poor and filled with poisons from diseased — the heart is Jefferson City, Mo., Feb. 14.—The s800n Desomes usted and unable to meet | Senate this morning passed the joint. pn yam gp | Seay care ti og be | and concurrent resolution introduced the kidneys to working; tone up the feeble | by Senator Brown placing the gener- stomach! Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical re prety i the blood, relieves the | 2 aseembly on an annual salary kidneys and tones up the alimentary canal. basis instead of on @ per diem rate of life. yy a vote of 28 to 5. Theresolution ho have been of heed teat, iungs aphipeeteptag cree | provides for a constitutional amend- . en mi ie j £ rly. healed the stomach and cleansed the blood, | means that the men shall virtually. agit yas attacked wa at fever,» writes receive $2,000 a session instead of — ree $5 a day, which amounts to from eM: ee eee Tused ten of Be Eire Golden Medica! Dicevery. end $350 to $400 a session,