The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 15, 1906, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

. The Butler Weekly Times. NO. 16 = s = — ie : VOL, XXVILU. BUTLER, MISSOURI, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1906, - STURDY FARMERS “""E,2%hntat ts BY TAKING Lae ORE SS 0 es Ss !Pe-ru-na, the Most Reliable Remedy For | e All Climatic Ailments. tarrh by your medicines, Peruna and Manalin, I had deen affected with catarrh of the stomach about all my life, and was taken bad every Spring and Summer. ' “T used several kinds of 4 patent medicines, but they Bid i.e no good, I then took ® treatment under an M. D, which did me but little good. By this time I had come to Chronic Catarrh of ~ Head and Throat Lasted , Thirty Years, A Letter Praising Pe-ru-na. Mr. Gustav Schmidt, Spring Valley, Ill., writes: “T had catarrh of the head and throat for wver thirty years, It became where [ could eat nothing but worse every year. About three months ago 1 commenced to take Peruna @ little soup. I.had severe and Manalin, and now I am entirely cured of that troublesome sickness, pains, had lost in weight and could 7 TEMPLE. Your medicine is surcly s blessing to manking. You can truly say that you Bot do anything. I began taking have not lived in vain, Doctor, and I thank you for the good you have done your medicinés, Perans and Manalin. I Cllmatic , By me. May you enjoy a long life to help suffering hr tty," then weighed 196 pounds, but after tak- Pe-ru-na. an taped peetee a, reruns and} war, W. J. Temple, R. F. D. 8, Dela- A TALK TO F ’ - le ‘analin, I weighed 166 ware, Ohio, writes: * “I am e farmer and 90 necessarily ‘ want to and my friends say that I look waa taken ick with Fea uae fishes world with all its flurry and immense | far. better than ever before. I will ever trouble. wealth could not exist for a day. praise ag eg = healing power.” “One doctor called it ulceration of Pade hong Wall Chas we all depend If Peruna proves efficient for pa = + ge Tsun odd Called it pom: No matter how far one may be re- _in one place, it will be equally potent mn : ped me tompo-| rowed from tilling the soil, or how lit- pee — because it is a sys- i ‘ rn mae poled ee: —_ we are vt edy. Then druggist recom cation, dependent u: The people generally are very much|Peruns and I followed his advice. 1 thinge which vsecf in the soil. ei misinformed as to the nature of catarrh. | 00k altogether five bottles and I con-| #armingis the basis of all wealth and Cstarrh is usually to be con-| #ider myself a well man. is the bulwark of all civilization. fined to the head, nose and throat,’ Lat-| “Before using Peruna, it was utterly! The farming class is rapidly becom- terly we sometimes hear of catarrh of | impossible for me to do a day’s work, | ing intelligent and shrewd in business the stomach and catarrh of the bowels,| but now I can do farm work without management, Beldom, if ever, do we hear ot catarrh | the least trouble or fatigue. I consider] The reuben and the country bumpkin of any.other organs, Peruna the best medicine and tonic ou| have disappeared and in their stead a Tt is not because these organe are not | the market. practical well-trained business man, subject to catarrh, nor that catarrh of! «7 had not eaten a meal for five years|capable of the highest form of com- ease, but simply because it is not gener-| Without distress until I took Peruana, merelal activity, has arisen. Peruna is a very popular medicine among the farming clase, vends largely upon ‘ly medicine and the ‘Some farmers are far removed from physicians, an@ in any case they are far more self-reliant and more liable to depend upon a household remedy than people who live in the cities, Dr. Hartman, who for many years was a farmer himself, and who still owns.and manages one of the best farms in the State of Ohio, is a friend of the farmer, and itis with the farmer that the immense bulk of his correspondence is conducted. The millions of booklets published and distributed by Dr. Hartman every year circulate chiefly among the farm- ing class. A large number of unsolicited testi- these organs is not a very common dis- alle kaown that affections of these|I have recommended it to several or “+s orey be due to catarrh, friends with good results,” R. J. BY ALEXANDER, A Necessity m the Home. J. B. Alexander, publisher of the | Napoleon, Ohio, write st “Fruit and Floral Guide, a Magazine of was treated by many physicians, but Horticulture,” published in Hartford | catarrh of tie-stomac City, Ind., says of Peruna: ing Was of nocvail., it ox nine bottles “I was aftlicted with catarrh of the| of Peruna and two of /susiia and am throat and head for over ten years, I| now entire!y Pe-ru-na, a Houschold Fricnd. Mr, Menry St hcoe: Route %& tten years with ho and all doctor- “Tsuffor d for aim eured, “I recommend the medicine to all grew worse until I was seldom able to| who aro aillivicd with this disease. 1s go out in cold weather, is my household friend.” “About one year ago I was advised to Qne of Or. tlartmsa's Grateful Cor- try Peruna, which I did, and I am now entirely well of the catarrh, use it, and are never afflicted with ca- “Peruna is @ necessity in our home, ; Hill Farm, and pr With the first symptoms of a cold we| and stock raiser, Gienvar, Va., writes: respondents, Mr. W. R, Calichua, proprietor of Big uinent fruit grower “I write to express my kindness tarth, toward you and your good medicine, “I advise all who are afflicted with | Peruna. catarrh to try Peruna, There is certain] 7 “) hada very had spell of sickness nothing equal to it as s catarrh medi-| and could not eat anything at all. My cine,” head, stomach, in fact, my whole body Dr. Hartman Interested In Farming. | ached, and if loolzcd as though nothing Notwithstanding Dr, Hartman’s busy | would dv me any good. 1 had almost professional career, he still continues to| given up. be interested in farming. He is the “1 decided to try a bottle of your owner an? manager of one of the larg-| Peruana and efore I had taken half the est farms in the State of Ohio, with | bottle my appetite came to me and my several thousand acres of the best tilled | h land in the Middle West, and with | all ri hundreds of the best blooded percheron | horses ever imported or raised in this | « country. t Dr, Hartman relies upon Peruna en- monials concerning Peruna come frum jtirely im causes sot Wes Eww the farmers every year, i family. Rules Governing the onexamination papers, cost of diplo- | CLINTON BOY ON “Folk’s Extirpation.” i mas, etc. Those who take part of ILL FATED SHIP, | 7707: ¥. ¥. eres ; - the examinations with the view of . cheap 4 , County Examinations for lebditas eink sate, 40h eb bans to Fearing Folk as a factor in 1908, Rural Graduation. pay a second fee at that time. the opposition press is seeking al- 10. Pupils may have their chotce|Elbert Parker and Affianced | ®2Y ° cast a shade upon his bril- 1. Only bona fide pupils in the} of place to take the examinations. liant record of achievement. The schools of the county may take these | Likewise, applicants ‘competing for) Bride Went Down With the | Republican Leslie's Weekly, a red examinations. 6 f the Free Scholarships miay select any hot Roosevelt organ, finishes an ar- 2. Only regular eighth gradepuptls| High School offering such echolar.| Valencia off Port Angeles. ticle with crocodile lugubriousness will be allowed to compete for the | ships. Clinton Tribune. by saying: “Folk’s extirpation of Free Scholarships. (High School] Examinations will be held at the| Eibert Parker, aon of Willls Park-| Fo! 984 national figure ts one of students and those who have pre | following places. In all cases the| or of Clinton, and his affianced bride the most notable cases of race sui- viously graduated are barred.) school building will be used, unless | were Passengers on the ill fated shi |eide which the politics of ourage has 8, The examinations will be held |-some other place is désignated later.| Valencia, which sank in storm seen.” This is absolutely exclusive, at the places designated on the sev-| Hume, Foster, Amoret, Amsterdam, | near Port Angeles in the vicinity: of for nobody but the versatile imitate ond and third Setardays in April | Adrian, Butler, Rich Hill, Rockville, | Seattle some days ago. of Leslie's sanctum has heard of They will begin-at 9:00 o’clock and | Pleasant Gap, Spruce, Altona, Mer-| Mr. Parker was a broom maker by Folk's “extirpation,” or of any eet close at 4:00 each day. _| win, Sprague and Hudeon City. ‘| trade and wont to Los Angeles trom | "°K to his great popularity as a re- -* 4 The subjects will not be given Arrangements will be made‘or ex-| Clinton some two yeare ago where former who has the courage of his ‘atany other time than the day and |.aminations at. other places, should} he has been working at his trade, |convictions. But if the great reform hour fixed in the schedule. (If for! there be a demand for them. ‘ On January 20th, Mr. Parker re. sentiment of tho nation should cen- : @ pupil can not takea| “ree Scholarships have been offr-| ceived a letter trom his son mailed at | T@ 2P0 Folk asa candidate for Ahe time given to it,he|ed by the following High Schools:|San Francisco stating he was then 1908, not an Improbable cantin ; Rich Hill, Butler, Adrian and Rock- en route via steamer for Seattle, ae- geucy, ‘it will be necessary for tie sille, each one to the boy and one to companted by his affianced bride, Republican organs to swallow what thegirl making the highest standing; | Mics. Ivy Shafer and her mother they have said in bis behalf, und pic- Foster and Merwin College, each*one| where the two were to make their ture him as a bad, bad maa, whose ‘scholarship, A. L, Ives, fatore ‘home and. the couple to ba election would upsets the country, : Co, Supt. of Schools. | married. ate: etapa it would up- ee Mr, Parker thought no more ofthe | %°* Se Brafters of Missouri. Woman Was Two-Thousandth | matter until ss astesd Sead Se BAR ‘With the aah Miss Alva | message from Frank Logan, of Ex-Mayor Frozen. rollmen: } | Cooper, Texas, Feb. 12 —Ex.May = Baa ot Yo ph n of the fact that his eon Elbert or Robert D. Bennet was found dead ‘sitting in chairin the City Hall ch theehip Valencia when th F “or poner who per- R. oral YR ‘ 4+ Taeeday morning, where he had fumbia, jlghed together with that of Migs) to5.n todesth during the night. * [He wae seen entering tho building af- “bp}tef midnight and is supposed to . i Phave intended to remain only ashort +, } time iu bie old office, but fell asleep ie chair. Hunting Decision Rehearing. The St. Louis Court of Appeals, says the Republic, has eet aside ite decision, holding that all persons {a Missourt, except owners of property and tenants, hunting on their own land, must take out license to hunt, and has set the case for a rehearing. | The decision was handed down January 16 in the case of Virgil Helton, of Marion county, who was | fined $25 for hunting. without a li- | cense. He was committed to jail in default of payment of the fine and | applied to the Court of Adpeals for | | ead bi entl rght. In fact, | was Vleover, Peruna cured ne," > Perris t: net confined to any mot, vet it is probably th te foe ing class more thas INY otaer, rely pot Pernao f - wee of ali cs ®& writot habeas corpus for hie re hase The. Appellate Court remanded Helton tu the custody of the sheriff and jailer of Marion county. Presiding Judge Bland, who wrote the opinion for the Court of Appeals, said itis obvious that the Legisla- ture intenced that tle law chould apply to #!l hunters, except owners aud tenauts, hunting on their own lands. He said the sections of the law should be treated as one section, and that be regarded the construc- tion ziven to be a concise condensa- tion of their obvious meaning and purpose YMcFarlan Bros. | on Keep in stock everything that horse owners need. Double wagon harness from $10 to $30. Single harness $7.50 to $25. Second ALAR wa ow HB The pioneer Harness and Saddle men of Bates county, 1874 on Columbia or Sayers and Scoville Buggies, and an elegant flat pad single or double buggy harness. hand harness $3 to $15. Saddles of all styles and prices from the cheapest to the eteel fork cow boy and sole leather spring seat saddles. Lap robes, horse harneas oil and soaps, liniments for man or beast, coach oils, axle grease, tents, wagon covers, trim buggy tops new and re- pair old ones. Bring in your old harness and trade them for We have the largest retail haress and saddlery store in the southwest and our harness are all made at home. Sole agente for the Columbia and Sayer and Scoville buggies. We slso car- ry @ foll line of buggies, Surries, Rodd and Spring Wagons, n> cheaper grades. Bee us before buying. os. | blankete, dusters and fiy nete, | oe ae Fi 4

Other pages from this issue: