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nt ae The Butler Weekly Times. rust to Nature. NOT 50 ALLURING. “ON tHe Wing” A great many America: both men Eek ~ {in the Old Country. Spor cireulgtion, beseae they hove il Fronted their stomachs by hasty eating AF Mi " Writ London, England, July 16. 1906. Og ne the age icge enp : er Missourian rites Res gh MES. We traveled] ment to home, office or factory, and in Of Our Departed Friend, Harry 4 roug tland staying afew days + opage meee cy wo Sm — f About Oklahoma. each at Edinburgh and Melrose, | # circa mistakes.» The ‘ausces in| Hardin, Died July 21, 1906, an 5 5 P. J. Underwood, who formerly | _4¢ Melrose visited the home of Sir] thin’ and thineblooded person, do. thle lived near Windsor, has tried Okla- homa ana found it not so alluring. Walter Scott, work with t difficulty, As a result r Scott, called Abbotsford, ead fatigue, comes early, is extreme ond [asie an Age Twenty-two Years. He writes from Granite, Greer IN MEMORY Do you pin your hat w your own hair? Can't do it? Haven't enough hair? It must be you do not know Ayer’s ne tomb at Dryurgh Abbey. Scot- long. ‘The demand for nutritive ald is ‘eee = and isa beautiful country and in-| Shead of the supply. To insure perfect | The Vicksburg Morning News, health , bone, v" di . habited by a thrifty and very intelli- Suscte aouta boa wy Tg a Rocall two weeks of my lifethat have county, to the Windsor Review, and ee cesteriats Gad sana . a prials rn to it certain sare ’ : " relates thofollowing tacts which may | 8°2t peopl. others. It is necessary, to prepare, the passed, _ | Hair Vigor! Here's an intro- Two daysat Warwick, England. | stomach for the work of taking up from | And let me gaze on dearest mother’e |B duction! May the acquaint- well make one pause before risking all in a new country: “This is a beautiful country. pretty as one would wish to see, perfectly level except the range of Granite mountains, which rise up out of the ground, itis claimed, to a height of 400 feet. Crops look very promis- ing at present; wheat {sa fair crop (have seen better in Mo.,) oats will the food what is necessary to make good, From here our party were driven in| rith, red blood. ‘We must go to Nature) ,_ fe once agaln Tallaho coaches to Kenilworth and} for, the remedy. There were certain And let our hands be, as they were roots known to the Indians of this th ly el Stratford on Avon and visited the country before the advent of the whites Oe) r gently clasped, which later came to the knowledge o! a! ¥ home of Shakespeare, the Church of] the ‘setijers and which are now rowing nly God! our Heavenly Father the Holy Trinity, that contains his} rapidly In professional favor for fhe cure knew {t was for the last. tomb and the bs hat h of obstinate stomach and liver troubles. an 6 houve that he went to Theve are found to be safe and yet cer-| My dear father and mother, while ain in their cleansin vigorating j ; school in, These and other buildings | ‘#".' upon it camath, liver ann Weck, lying fn pain and distress, pertaining to Shakespeare belong to These, are: Golden | al Took, Queen's My heart throbbing with unbroken i root, Stone roo root, Mandrake, the British Government and are root, Then there is Black Cherrybark. reat, ance result in a heavy growth of rich, thick, glossy hair! Use this splendid hair-food, stop your falling hair, and get rid of your dandruff. The best kind of a testimonial — “Sold for over sixty years.” Macety aC. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. | Also manufacturers of SARSAPARILLA. make @ good crop. I heard before I|°#retully guarded and preserved for) The medicinal principles resale ih these} My mind wandering, and my eyes l Je rs PILLS, ad 'e To $ y wy acu " be C- ¢ ” came here last spring that oats future generations. erlne as solvent make the most reliable wazing through the midst of CHERRY PECTORAL, oft 8 ch toni liver in- made last year as high as 90 bushels Now in London, where we stay @| Yir.. ee iia coat oy don the Space, week, and then to Paris. England] right proportions, as in Dr,’ Pierce's} Trying to see you dearest mother in i , has rich goll and fs beautifal to look | {s"hcnuupt vitality sve as nervors| your old familiar place, The Little Country Paper. at, but the le are in classes. Wej| exhaustion, bad nutrition—and thin Pim sin) giee 3 in? . peop! Hou, the body eoquires vigor and the When the evenin’ shade is fallin’ at per acre, but I have never found the farmer that raised them. We have had an extra good seasonso far, old MRS. MARSHALL i SUFFERED WITH SYSTEMIC CATARRH. Mother this may often cause you PE-RU-NA SAVED HER. | sottlers tell me it {s uncommon, and|V!slted the Houso of Parllament, nerves, blood andNall the tistues feel the grief the endin’ o’ the day, Mrs, Viola Marshall, 1117 East Jeck- |] can tell by the talk and actions of Trafalgar Square, Buckingham Pal. | fav rable offect of y | But God’ i will, h k An’ a feller rests from labor smokin i gon street, Springficld, IN., writes: ace and many other places of inter- ; Jods good will, has taken me ot hi A ice the people that a good wheat crop trom your eldeand avo let at his pipe o' clay, wt “Two months ago when 1 sought est, among them the “Kings Stables” above a m your sideand gave mereliel, Th : . ae } Wes your advice, and you told me that | |‘8 uncommon also. My landlord used pure glycerine az a solvent ond] Bear these troubles with a firm| (Ue § Buen ome: hiniao mgce i was suffering from systemic catarrh, |\ives in Granite. He has 170 acres centaining two hundred of the finest} usually the doctors’ prescriptions called good, be fortune up or down R Thad gotten so bad that I could not t wh h ti Ii thorough bred horses the world can| {F,'hs ingredients in varying amounts, hand, ko tha Mike: count Saath Mon rs bear the jolt of walking and had to lie of wheat on the farm. Ve ene- with alcohol, Re For we will soon meet again in some | * e little country pay \ ® furnish, used by the royal family in} The "Golden Medical Discovery” is a en : down most of the time. halt mile south of town. There has . scientific preparation compounded of the other land. a “[ began taking your Peransand now | heen but few days passed since wheat riding and driving. The gold and glycoric extracts of the above mentioned % Z or I feel like a new woman, silver mounted harness with the| Ves*table ingredients and contains no} Thine beloved brother, [see you ove I . began to head up to last week that Jeohol or harmful habit-forming drugs. g Home “I can walk just as far as 1 please | 6A . hundred or more various kinds of} me gently leaning, nie: without feeling any fatigue and I have |he didn’t have some one out from taken only three bottlés of Peruna. town looking at his crop of wheat. 4] shall never cease praising Peruna, | He would make two to three trips a pO ay Dr, Hartman for his Kind | 44 very ofter. He sald he did not Systemic catarrh claims many victims want to diseourage us Missourians, but we would not find such a season because this disease is not always un- derstood, and therefore not correctly as this every year I have seen two Trying to solve this sad meaning. With moistened eyes and tear stain- ed cheeks, Don’t think of the present but think of the gone by weeks. wheeled vehicles was a sight of splen- dor I will long recollect. I will close by saying the further I travel in Europe the more I think of the United States. We had the pleasure of meeting The Deacon’s Sermon. Say, my young lady friend, I notic- ed that you took occasion to ridicule that old lady who just passed you on the street, says the Deacon. It It ain’ta thingo’ beauty an’ its print alp’t always clean, But it straightens out his temper when a fe!ler’s feelin’ mean, It takes the wrinkles off his face an’ i Farewell my beloved brother and brushes c ff the frown, treated. kinds of land here, one they call tight Miss Bessie Parkinson @ former But- | gave you a lot of pleasure, I have no friends ; { hatis needed I internal catarrh ? “ ” , That little count aper fr onus Meh orerts @ healing effect |land, which !s nothing more than|/¢r girl, now known ae ‘Parkina” on doubt, but let me tell you something | The hour of deauh has arrived, hie eee eee re on the mucous membranes of the entire | gumbo, the other sandy. I have|*he stags. She stands right at the|abouther. Shes old and wrinkled) ang with it I shall journey to my or ' : a A remedy is Peruns. The sin: | been told the sandy land will wear top asa singer and sings leading} and bent now. But once she could) Heavenly homefor everlasting end, Home cere letters of those who have expe- parts next to and with Carmos and|skin you a block for good looks. | Qn} ; " Jout in four or five if itis not nly this life onearth it has de- ‘ fienced ita benefits in such cases arc yeare Town. veidence of its medicinal value, manured, The crops are often ruin- Melba in Grand Opera. She,was married to a man she loved prived. 4. ee eed by tho sand blowing until it cut Yours truly and hada happy home for years. J.LM, | 18 tells of all the parties an’ the baile ‘ DR J M NORRIS {¢ off close to the ground. Corn on Wu. E. Watton, | Three children came to bless them of Pomkin Kow, ¥ One night the husband was brought ’Bout who «pent Sunday with who's P ht land is no good and wheat and scesniihdiaiileimassibiiaiis ie rt i : % 4B de Z pr very psi It man wants AM Sijesa home dead. When grief had spent A Model Young Man. girl an’ how th’ crops ‘ll grow, mm to farm here he has got to depend Tee) neiyen {te self ahe taced the world penailess,} The following letter was written | An’ how it keeps a feller posted ’bout a t ‘lon cotton, milo maize and kaffir| “How to keep off periodic attacks} with three, little ones to feed. She/to Mrs. G.M. Hardin, by Jobn L. who's up an’ who is down. % pean hake aceite wath crops, pach eng ge aed ee wy Pimad tolled with the needle and over the| Martin, of Vicksburg, with whom| That little couniry paper from ; , n was.8 mystery that Dr. ‘8 i & ON THE EYE, EAR, NOSE while cotton 1s king of all. | Life Pills vetoed | for me,” vila tub. She kept the wolf from the | young Harry L. Hardin was board- his 4 “An implement dealer told me last | John N. Pleasant, of Magnolia, Ind. door, but you see at what pbysical | ing at the time he was killed: Vi f The only pills that are guaranteed |cost. Through the long hot days| Vicksburg, Miss., July 22nd, 1906. Hime ‘A ol week that he had taken mortgages y P si trom farmers in January and Febru- | *° !v¢ perfect satisfaction to every-|and far into the night she worked) Dear Mre. Hanvix. Harry had Town. i ent, Gives special attention to the treat- body or money refunded. Only 25¢}on, Amid her labors she found time | been rooming at our home for so-ve-| Now. I ik ’ u tof Gatarrh and ite eflect upon |®TY on the crops that are to belas Frank T. Clay's drug store. , ez De-| Now, I like to read the dailler an’ the Fe te Bas Moat aod es Pp grown this season for tools to work to teach the children good and|time and we had become quite at- atory papers, too, aa need of inn an have | with. Now, ifthisis sucha money wholesome trathe—to be honest and| tached to him. He was {n every] An’ at times the yaller novels an” : the eyes tested free, and properly fit- | making country, why are the farm- Hard Luck Story. square and look every man {n the| way a home boy and enjoyed being eome traet—don’s you? ted. ers so far behind? Intereston money hia atita wh bl eye. The children are now grown|there. You can rest assured that| But when I wantsome readin’ that’! - Office on the South elde, over El-| ong as high as 24 per cent. I think The girls whose main troubles are| and the mother lives with them. Her | he was what you would call a model Lach atasa hoen i ; mer Dixon’s store. there are but few farms in this com- inducing boys to buy themice cream yo are growing dim with the sweet | young man, steady and no badhab-!1 want that little paper from 4 \ Office hours from 9a.m.to4).™-|Vontity bat what are for sale. sodas might be Interested {n the consciousness that not one of her |its. ay ie Farme eell for $20 per acre up and troubles of Mrs. Nora C. Williams, )chtidren ever brought the blush of|. It was indeed edifying to see the a ian A Ciiisel Fell in Dynamite. tis wank noce TROY drowned at Cawker City,| shame to her cheeks. When you get | devotion that existed between him- gone ie ge 7 7P L4 ’| Kansas, Monday of last week. When! 44 and ft hi If hi . ‘ Xe LaGrange, Ga.,- July 86.—While| very seldom ever see a barn; some old and can face the world and hold | self and his brother, and Mr. Robert Town. ra mined . Me 2) she was four years olp her mother yp guch blessed fruits of your labor | has been prostrated with grief since —Denver Post. 3 have a shed to fead under, some only a windbreak made of boards about five feet high. It aman has force enough of his own to handle a good cotton crop, I think hecan makes little money here, but it he has got to rent and hire his help he had bet- ter be some where else, for old cot- ton rafeers tell me there is nothing in it where a man has got to hire all his help. “T have not seen a stock ‘buyer since I came here. Calves are very cheap, no market for hogs only at butcher shops, and farming tools William Stewart, an employee of & local hardware dealer, was showing a customer a chisel. he dropped i in acase of dynamite, causing an ex- plosion. Stewart was killed and several men inthe store were badly hurt. The stock, of guods, valued at $26,000, was badly damaged, and the storehouse, Masonic hall and the Elm City clabrooms, all overhead, wore damaged. Pie it bade A Ea Has Stood The Test 25 Years. The old, bh vel GRO Ee tonic. You know wi ‘ou : an ee Ibis ironend quintss to ng Si fh thie bh in a tasteless form. Nocure, nopay. 50c Now, Iwill say ooh aegis seer ali es wet gard to this country: While lama Commission has trouble | Kentuckian by birth, o Missourian Indian Territory, as|by adoption, and an Oklahoman by! every town wants to be a county aceldent, if I owned 40 acres of land oat. Bie asec 18°) 40— bs give it (earn y for 160 acres to make a perma-| . | cent and in - Fred. Monmontb, - Mrs. Williams. Married when aix-|°"* men and women ina true man IL, os Eagan ale found dead nent home on. We have drawbacks _hapabiyprecradiy mae A Moess of character that will make with ballet in bis brain ot Pullman, | bere. that con never be Overcome. aren before she was thirty, and | hie trlendship valuable and his pres- There 1s bat very listle good WAR. | 41149 trom home by her husband, |¢0ce and companionship desired. og hy inne rca ane oat . |This young man should contribute Baya l io in country. , ar + ‘1to soclety’s happiness and welfare | brand snatched from the burning,” postoak post sells for 10 cents each, The Pek ee sj "| thegrace which comes through study, | Who requested the pastor to explain hedge poste 20ceets each, coal $8.00 |: Sage asta bigeye olf, } oil and honest thought. to him, and reconcile, the conflicting per ton. The most of any one thing | of | a Gaten, tos ae usefulness} | : doctrines of free moral agency and § we hare her andooet lo wid. er ihe vo Jere | In'Self Defense |reteetination, both touete of she keeps | is rather. expensive when it gete to would nevor have sti ales ass. sities be fateenes. The pastor took “the fall count,” twisting things. od had I not taken | it) Ky., when he waa fiercely attacked, | anda bueb fell upon the congrega- ' siso cured ma of genétal four yeare ago, by piles, bought &|too, inally, an old deacon aroee hich he saye; “apcured. Salve, of} snd said: “The church loves sinners op since.” Gaiskeoe | and fe willin’to gin um all possible his death. It was allso sudden and unexpected. Itis indeed a verifica- tion of the saying that “In Lifewe) Stole Daughter’s Love Notes. are in the midst of death.” * * * Ho was not killed outright and he| Jefi#rson City, July 30—A. A. no doubt felt the {inevitable nnd} Materson and wife of Steadman, (al- made his peace with heaven before |! away county, were brought here by givinguphisyounglife * * * My|® deputy United States marshal, T. wife and young son Harry join me in A McKenna, on she charge of taking ; sending condolence to the entire letters from a rural route mail box ‘ family. Believe me, dear Mrs. Har- of their neighbor, Tom Marshall. It din, I am very respecttully youre, fs charged that Materson and his Joan L. Martix, | Wile objected to a correepondence between their daughter and a young man in st. Charles, and that they re- fused to allow letters to pass through their box, eo the girl mailed two letters in the neighbor's box, and it is alleged that Materson took one of them and his wife the other. They were held for the federal grand jury by Commissioner Giesberg, before whom they were’ arraigned. The arrest was made after an investiga- tion by a postoffice inspector, A. D. ran away, married another man and you will not have to concern your- died. Her grandfather stole her gejt about the world to come. from her father, whom she did not again see for twenty-seven years. She was married at the age of six- teen; was the mother of eight chil- dren before she was 30 years old. Her husband wasa drunkard, abused her, and finally drove her from him. In spite of her own big family she took in Reub Longacre, an orphan boy,who grew up and helped earn the living for the family. She got out of a sick bed into a wagon which Longacre had backed up to the door, but the flood overturned it and Mrs. Williams and two children were drowned. Girls who are crasy to get married and are willing to marry old thing of es phar hood, a steady, honest energy which order to escape being an old ought to sean ty experiences will enable him to associate with de- Does the World Owe You Anything? The Norton, Kas., News answers the question In this style: We heard 6 young man remark last week that, “The world owes me a living.” It-is hoped for that young man’a good that he'll get the notion out of his head.— It is a mistake, a grave mis- es He never entertained a more foolish idea nor one that will bring iim a emaller] measure of respect. The world owes the young man noth- ing, but instead he owes the world and society an active noble man- Settled by the Deacon, From the Beston Herald. The late Colonel Norman W. Bing- ham of Somerville related the follow- ing: Ata revival, held in his native state, Vermont, many souls were brought to Christ, and for the bene- fit of the ignorant in theology, con- verte were invited to propound any questions touching their newly-found faith, Agreeably there arose “a te, and |Ald, but it fe very difkilt to impart