The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 24, 1907, Page 1

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- — The Butler Weekly — = VOL. XXIX, PE-RU-NA RECEIVES PRAISE For Relieving Such Symptoms as Debility, Backache and Headache. HERE are a great many phases of| Of the vast multitude of women Dr. woman's ailments that require the | Hartman cures annually, only a small Qssistance of the surgeon, per cent, of them consider it necessary But by far the greater number of | to write to the Doctor at all. Such cases are amenable to correct| Not one in a thousand of these for- medicinal treatment. tunate women report their success. Of No surgeon in the world has relieved | those who do write testimonials, only a eo many women from the different] Very small per cent, are ever used in phases of ailments peculiar to woman- | Public print. kind as Dr. Hartman through the use While it is not affirmed that Peruna of Peruna. will cure every case of this kind, it is He receives many letters from all parts | Certainly the part of wisdom for every of the country relating to subjects of | woman so afflicted to give Peruva a Vital interest to womankind. fair trial, Ucr chances of relief are so a Tiss: By many that any woman would be doing - herself an injustice to neglect such an opportu- nity of relief, Ave., Denver, Col., Financial Secreti.y Germania Order der Moragart, writs: “Peruna bas been a great blessing to me. I suffered agonies with severe headaches and 9% weak back and could hardly drag myvelf around. Very Precarious Condition. Mrs, Lutie Ward, 617 Tracy Ave. \woman and in four months I was well, Kansas Oity, Mo., writes: “A few $peruna certainly gave mo strength. years ago my bealth was in a very precarious condition, the result of remedy.” womb trouble and general debility. I suffered a great deal and was glad to try Pe decreased and in two months I was completely restored, “T am pleased to endorse Peruna.” = Aw PII AUCTIONEER! 1 am prepared to cry sales {n this and adjoining counties on reas- onable terme. Satisfaction guar- anteed. Have been a trader and shipper of live stock 10 years. Am well posted i» pedigrees and values. Four years experience as auctioneer. ~ LYMAN HENSLEY. AMSTERDAM R.F. D. 3. @ statue of Ike Cook, his famous | trotter. In addition to this, the un- aoe Horse to Get $4,000 Shaft. i Chicago, Iil., Oct 21.—What prov- ,ed to be an unusual bequest was ‘made public Tuesday whe: the will 46.4t* Mrs. Emma E., 6 ))uu:r, 720 Santafe “A friend who was Visiting me was taking Peruna for the same trouble and induced me to try it, I soon found that I was being helped and in less than three weeks J feu iixe a different “I consider it an ideal woman's runa when it was recommended } to me so highly. J found it very beneficial. Lnashort time the pains greatly ‘of Henry Graves, one of Chicago’s ‘ ploneers, who died October 3, was ‘probated. Love of dumb animals andthe memory of his own horses jeaused the old settler to bequeath ‘$10,000 to the Illinols Humane So- | clety, besides a gift of $40,000 tothe | South Park Board for the erection of BUTLER, MISSOURI, THURSD.\Y, OCTOBER 24, 1907. GOES BACK TO PRISON. Escaped Conv ict wane Evangelist and Gives Himself Up. IS A MODERN JEAN VALJEAN. Michigan City, Ind., Oct.—Immac- ulately attired as a minister of the gospel, appearing in every way to be an upright man of frreproachable life, a stranger entered the office of the Indiana state prison and declar- ed that he was an escaped convict and had come to serve the rest of his sentence. “My name fs Allen J. Lawrenceand I escaped from this prison in Septem- ber, 1906 ” said the man. Then he told Warden James Reld | the story of his wanderings through the west, of his successful evasion of pursuit for the first few months of his Hberty and of the change in his lite which had led him to become an evangelist and resulted eventually in his determination to give himself up. He traced his wanderings as & hunted being In the harvest fields of Kansas and Nebraska, where, friend- less and alone, he sought only to keep from too close association with his fellowmen, lest his secret be dis- covered. Then he described the accidental visit to a revival meeting on the prairie where, in the flickering light of torches pitched in front of the “prairie schooner” of a wandering misefonary, there was opened a vis- {on of the comfort which came witha belfef in God. THE CONVICT I8 CONVERTED And then he told of his decision to preach the gospel and of the success which had attended his efforts to convert others as he had been con- verted. And at last, his voice brok- en with tears, he told of the lashing of his conscience which spurred him continually to reveal his true identi- ty and return so the prison from which he had fled. “T¢ was hard,” he sobbed. “But I have won and I will serve the sen- tence which*man’s law has imposed on me, even though I am not guilty of the crime for which I am being punished. “IT cannot preach the gospel to men and women, and, with thateloquence which ts no credit to myself but agift direct from heaven, move them to tears and to repentence as long as I feel that if they knew I was afugitive from the prison they would cry that Runaway Administration. A Cleveland, Ohio, dispatch to-the Cincinnati Enquirer says: “Bishop Daniel Sylvester Tuttle, of the dio- cese of ailssourl, primate of the Eplecopel church in the United States, has joined the critics of President Roosevels’ by supporting John D. Rockefeller in the latter's complaint that the administration is arunaway affair. Bishop Tuttle tsinClevefand, to attend the dedication of the great Trinity Cathedral. Asked his views on the prevent status of national af- fairs, Bi.“ sp Tuttle said: ‘The pres- ent fs an gra of unreasonable and un- reasoning clamor, both on she part of the people generally and on the part of the federal government. To au extent | agree with Jobn D. Rock- efeller when he calls is a runaway ad- ministration. The attitude of the government {s neither just to the large corporations against which its crusade is almed nor just te the pao plowho aro behind the movement Is is exagwerated. When we as a nation settle down, there will comes wholesome, stable, though I do not say kindly, at least @ just public oplaton which will bring areasonable altuation to pass. We declare we are being oppressed—straugled, if you will—hy monopolies, This is not so. ‘aking advantage of this ery, wo have begun actions against these corporations which are not prosecutions, They really are perse- cutions #0 4 certatn extent. In a lit- tle while we will begin to see that we are going at the thing too harshly. We and tlw president will find there {g another alde to the fight and thas there is much to say for the corpora- tions. I think our railroad presi- dents, our corporation heads will be gin to see the rule of brosherly love {g etrong and that to prosper they must live up to It.” Rash 8ogers’ Experience. Poultney Bigelow said tho other day of the chicken farm that he 1s about to eet up at Malden: “I hope we succeed with the farm. I hope our experfence won’s too closely reserable that of my old friend Horatio Rogers. “Rash Rogers lived in thesuburbs. On the suburban traia one morning he said to me with a sour laugh: ““Pve got something nobody else has got, Mr. Bigelow’ “ “Have you, Rash?’ sald 1. ‘What is i?” “ ‘Well,’ said Rogers, ‘Il bought a $50 {ncubator last month, put $15 worth of eggs in it, and hatched out a blue bottle fly.’ “He trowued, then sighed. “ Yes,’ he sald, ‘I’ve got the only Telephone Line No. 2. ‘usual eum Of $250,000 was directed e to be used {n building a monument C. E. Robbins, over the graves of his family in | Graceland Cemetery. The amount set aside for a statue in Washington Park to Ike Cook was | made public several years ago, when ; the conditions of the gity were reveal- New and up-to date methods, Grad-|ed by Mr. Graves to the South Park uate of the two best Auction Schools | commiss!onera. Tho momey was to fe - a yor _— ~— | be given on condition that ¢he board an oternational Associations. ; Elghtp-sfx successful sales in the furnish asa site for the monument ist season. Terme reasonable. Pure | the plot of ground at the Fitty-fitth red stock and farin sales a specialty. street entrance of the old Garden Call on or address me at Clty race track, on which the horse Amoret, [lo. | made a record in the early 50s. The Successful Auctioneer. Heiress Again Fears Asylum. New York, Oct. 21.—Mias Alice L. Stanton Smith, of St. James, L. 1., | heiress to $100,000 and a cousin of Mrs. Stanford White, the J. P. Weth- eralls and the Prescott Hall Butlers of'Long Island, appealed to the So- clety for the Prevention of Crime for ’ protection against therelatives, who, she seys, are secking to send her to an insane asylum a fourth time. For ten years Miss Smith alleges she has been incarcerated at various ; - Ye times by these relatives and ill-used | by keepers into whose hand« they | have thrust her. At different times she has been committed to Amity- ville, Saint Vincents and Blooming- dale. “Tt started ten years ago, when I Wasa slip of 6 girl,” eaid MistSmith. “Thad just been bequeathed $100,-|° 000 by my mother’s will, Since then Felatives have kfs me no peace.” was 6 hypocrite.” BACK TO PRISON LABOR Almost in tears himself at the strange recital of the returned pris oner, Warden keld ordered that Law- rence’s clerical garments be taken from him, and replaced with the pric- on garb. In less than an hour after he had entered the prison office the man was back with the prison labor- ers. He was sentenced in April, 1906, from Laporte, Ind., where he had been employed asa laborer. Hewas found guilty of attacking 4 girl and and was sentenced to serve from two to fourteen years. He protested his innocence, but was convicted on circumstantial evi- dence. His wife believed in him and made great efforts to secure pardon, but without success. In September, 1906, after he had been in the prison less than five months, he was madea trusty. Almost immediately he es- caped from the prison yard. When Lawrence went west he took the name of James Williams and af. in the Methodist church, he was known as the Rev. James Williams. A Criminal Attack on an innoffensivecitizen is frequent- ly made in that apparently useless ttle tube called. the “appendix.” Iv’s generally the regult/of protract- ed constipat e, ver por. King’s New Life ¥ the liver, prevent ‘ $65 blue bottle fly in the world.’ ”— Philadelphia Record. DOCTORS MISTAKES Are said often to be buried six feet under ground. But many times women call on their family physicians, suffering, as they imagine, one from dyspepsia, anocher from heart disease, another from liver or kid- ney diseaso, another from nervous pro® tration, another with pain here and there, and in this way they present alike to emselyes and their easy-géing or over usy doctor, separate Gtaeases, for whieh a, assuming them to be such, prescribes his pills an ee In reallt: , they are If only symp isease. The cause of suffering, until large bills are patient gets no bette: wrong treatment, but pro bly wo uf e Dre 2 cian, ‘gnorant of the Treatment fering the have entirely Ten there sé o Sing symp- toms, and institutin vomfort instead of rolonged misery bapa well said, eu at “a disease Town ith aa Dr. Piorce’s Favorite iption is a ms caused by some uterine | NO. 52 Your Hair Sick? That’s too bad! We had no- ticed it was looking pretty thin and rough of late, but naturally did not like to speak of it. By the way, Ayer’s Hair Vigor is a regular hair grower, a per- fect hair tonic. The hair stops coming out, grows faster, IT’S ROOSEVELT. Senator Stone Says Bryan and Roosevelt Will Be the Op- posing Presidential Candidates. K. ©, Post. “The Republicans are going to| nominate Roosevelt,” sald Senator | William J. Stone, who was a visitor, jin Kausas City, “and we Democrats are going to have Br) an to make the race against him, Roosevelt ts 25.8 keeps softand smooth. Ayer’s percent weaker and Taft te 20 perf Hair Vigor cures sick hair, cent weaker than Cannon, Hughesor'# makes it strong and healthy. Falrbanks, but Roosevels will be the|}} ‘Tho best kind of a testimonial— candidate in spite of the assertion) J “Scld for ovor sixty years.” that he has made to the offect thas! Mado by 7-6. Aver Con Towall, Mase. he would not acceps a third term, If we Democrits were real wise we would ship some cub bears down to | Roosevelé. He has said that he will ae _ remain in the jungles until he has| Shackled Skeletons Found. Killed a bear, whieh might mean that) Now York, Oct, 21 —Skeletons wi he will be compelled to stay there un-| pela rig 4 {fron shackies about thelr crumbling til after the election. ¢ We don’t want) waieia were unearthed near Cham- him to do that Roosevelt ought to bere street an. Broadway, along the h ' A be nominated ff the Democrats want City Holl Burk slde of Chambers ; ” to elect thelr man this time street. Each of the shackles was a The senator sald that he did not} Mar ot toch thick i ly know whether this river tri would | aren © per thigeste ng aleqen veers belo i ~ sc dn iat ny two Inches whe, whieh had tn tteday elp Roosevelt In Miseourl or not.| hoon covered with a veneer of wood When asked his opinion on this par-|;,, protect the flesh from the euld a 1 said: Vicular question he said: touch of she iron fn winter and to “Tdon’t know whether the recent) 1 age is leas galling in eummer. In atand that Roosevelt has taken in many cases the bones were broken, reference to river Improvement will] 4 several showed places where they help him or not, but even 80, Mis-| aq knitted sogether after being frac- souri will be against him tf Bryan tured. One skull had a small, round will run, There is nothing under the hole through she sop us though sun that can stop Bryan tn this} 1 de by u bulles state. It is belleved that the skeletons are “Yoa, the Republicans are very | of prisoners hastily burled from the — {n evidence just now. With) old town prison of Now Amsterdam pete Se ee a ry fu the day 8 of Peter Stuyvesant, or : possibly Continental troops who and Root in South America, they are died in the Sugarhouse Prison of the quite in evidence, There should be English. Anosher suggestion isthat ho paramount issue In the nex cam-| roy were the bones of pre-Revolu- palgo. I hope that there {s none. slonary slaves. The presence of Roosevelt has pretty well threshed bones that appeared to have. been any that there might be. those of mere children gave some Senator Stone sald thut he was not strength to this supposttion, though going to Washington for some tlme. | tne giz of the ekulla end the height Benator bss leaves to-day. “| ot gho foreheads did nos indicate the haven’t any President or secretaries negro type. to report to,” sald Mr. Stone. any eereat rs Name the Good Ones. Take something now and then to | The Commoner, help the stomach. Kodol will dothis.| The Wall Street Journal quowe 16 1s & combination of natural diges| 24m Jot Sherman to sh chakin tants and vegetable acids and con ; pier sane a tains the same juices found in a introducing what {8 called the Sher- healthy stomach. It 1s pleasant to!man anti-trust law he “aimed at take. ‘It digests what you eat. Sold! making {t strike only at unlawful by Frank Clay, druggist. combinations.” The Journal adds that the Sherman law should be QUAIL PLENTIFUL amended so as to provide for “rea sonable combination ” IN OKLAHOMA. ' SARSAPARILLA, > y er. PULLS. Y CHERRY PECTORAL. awe or In the same editorial the Journal says “Sherman did-not-seem+to—have_aclear idea of what was & good combination and what wars bad one’ Well, others The Hunting Season Began at Midnight, Ends January 31. than John Sherman have failed to designate the good and bad trusts. Guthrie, Ok, Oct. 21.—The open Perhaps the Wall Street Journal can season for shooting quatl in Okla-| oyjighten tts renders on this point. homa, which began at midnight and | w4}) 4s geil them the nemos cf same willcontinue until midnight, January | of the good truets? | 31, 1908, 1s without precedent for | the number of birds to be found ev- |. lerywhere in the new state, Quail have increased so rapldly 1a the last jfour or five years that each succeed- ing season left an ever-increasing sur- plus of old birds for breeding. Quail may be found tn practically antold . numbers anywhere in Oklahoma. They abound by thousands. The birdeNgre thrifty, and fifteen and twenty young birds in a brood OB EPS Ee BoB EAB BB EE Do you know that there are 3 ter ho was received as an evangelist | scientific gre care’ experiei sk ie! te daniel 16 Wemknien dalicale fy sient frequently hatched. Unfortnnately, erican lnal | the later brood often {s too small for ee ies cc aeeee. jans dis- | fix the beginning of the open eeason | § worked, “worn-out,” ‘matresses, ® ris,” Each year finds a better enforce- nursl mothers, erally, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription ts the test earth! being un- | severe. Quail may not be sold or peer he BN ag ing cordial and r | civen away or shipped to points out- @ soothing and strengthening nerv- | efi at Ro ab net ben! ng bh tide the state or from one point in She rane AE taut nervol nervous exhaustion, nervods Y+ |statv. A strict enforcement of the ‘sterla, dance, and other” di 9 5 epoe portunity to eat quail; unless they 7 t ‘ fanedioual and orgiale. of the | personally killed them. This protec-| § loves mental anxi , Son has enabled quail to increase | & } ey Pierce's Pleasant Pellets i | rapidly in numbers. Hunters are |§ terus. It induces refreshing sleep and Soom ied Namee - ‘hot required to pay a license. | it g tally, devised by j{s not uncommon. Two broods are|® sport at the beginning of the season, | % . and for this reason it is possible that | & vorite Prescription opens strength to | the first legislature may be asked to| § run-down,” debfl- | about November 1, fifteen days later. | j feeble women gen- | ment of the game laws, which are! § the state to another point in the/% ee Tie law would deprive citizens of the op- | & people who never have colds? ¥ X There's no reason why you P should have them. Wien you feel a cold comipg ou do as they do, take Stop-Cold Tablets. Keep & box on hand at all § times, ready to begin treat- @ ment at the start It only g takes a few doses to complete & ly route a cold aven if t has quite a stars Your money § back if you are not satlefied. PRICE 25 CENTS. , Clay’s PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST. What You Buy we Swand By.

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