The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 23, 1908, Page 1

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\ rer nr AIMEE ete Mean ee - Sa = a Pe-ru-fia in the Home, After all,experienceis the beat teacher, Some doctors may write in favor of Pc- runa. Other doctors tovy write against it, Butitis the testimony of the mothers and fathers who are rearing families, who love their children, who must ~ economize as to doctor bills, who are ~ raising little boys and girls into{men and women of the future, it is the testimony of such people that really comnts, There is no way to positively ascertain how many fanailies in the Unite _ rely upon Perune for che many cli » ailments to which the family The number mu wa Tens al millions perh They hay how to Pecuna for ord * their homes against more eases, Such ailments xs coughs and colds, sore throat and c indigestion and los and nervousness, a'l these ailments are promptly relieved by a few doses of Peruna at the right time. Millions of provident mothers and | the first appearance fathers are guarding the interests of the | 5 Hlartman’s great | ¢ remedy, and profiting by his medical home by using Dr, Soak ts aad persoisal advi BANK ROBBER KILLED, HOLD-UP FHWARTED. Desperate Fight With Negroes, | in Citizens’ National at Longview, Tex. . BULLETS MISS OFFICERS. _ _ Longview, Tex., Jan. 20 —About) ; 8 o’clock in the afternoon, a daring | attempt to rob the Citizens’ Nation- | * Alex. Walker, who was shot, elther by Sheriff Little or Assistant Cashier 4°J.-R. Sparksman, both of whom fired Wat him. He died in the Greeg county Jail. The negro entered the bank from he rear door, through which en- nce to the inside of the cashier’s d bookk-eper’s department is hed. Sparkman looked around hen he heard the negro command, “Shell out.” The negro immediate- fesame time walking down theatsle toward the vault door. As the negro reached the vault President L. J. Everett grappled A desperate struggle took lace. Mr. Everett’s watch was broken by a bullet. Another bullet ent through a letter in his coat cket, and another powder burned his vest over his abdomen. Sheriff Little, of Gregg county, hearing the shooting, rushed to the building. Mr. Everett had broken away from the negro and the sheriff commenced shooting. Assistant Oashier Sparkman, who had secured own pistol, joined the sheriff in ourkatptaetsee'-tvesaeyadad! serious dis- croup and colic, | >of appetite, anemia al Bank was made by a negronamed | began shooting at Sparkman, at ‘Tosilade., The negro fell, shot Mrs. K. Kane, of Chicago, Uses Pe-ru-na in her family of five children, Grace, Myrtle, Edward, Reeves and George. Gatarrli: at Croup, MOTHER BELIEVES IN PERUNA. AALS PAAL ARDS PARAA OS how | could get along without it they suffered with croup, colds anc did health.” “| have Kept the Children Well. are subject to, and am pleased to say that it has ke; and it cured me in a short time, so — Perunay’ 2 S te—reatize tow trequentty + Mrs, K, Kane, 196 Sebor St, Flat 1, Chicago, Iil., writes: “Peruna has been used so long in our family that | do not know “| have given it to all of my five children at different times when 1 the many ailments that children § t them in splen- also used it for a catarrial difficulty of long standing, i have every reason to praise ‘croup is caused by ¢ stion | Ti is impossible to estimate how many | sometime the apotheeary or of the throat, Probably nine cs Lol nos have y lagainst croup | the family doet ten of croup is of the catarrhal variety. | by the proper uve of una, | Furnishin i unds dir The medical prot ion recw Now: if Remedies. to t , three formsofcroup, The There is no re iy in the world f the pract riety, membranous croup aud cata: rhal which has proven so 3 ypularforeatarrh | gun by { lyes, croup. jas Peruna, It has been used for more | Nervous p Syste aa Weeck. Nearly every case isof thecatarrhal va- than thirty years and eured thousands | John G. Wir artield. Kas, write riety,a few doses of Peruna, take of ess p our testimonials. | 6On De ®, Eo was in of the e: in th A try bya dalbch the Santa Fe R.A, an nptoms is generally sufficient to avert vf had it ii- entire mervous system was imput: dre attack of croup altogether, Croup is a | ease of chil No dis rs, laxatives and i t every rousewife, his right leg, which was shattered. A lynching was prevented only by the prevailing idea that the negro bad confederates, and the desire to have bim implicate the others ifthere |were any. Within a few minutes af- ter the sound of the shooting hun- dreds of citizens appeared in the |vlelnity of the bank armed with | Wichesters, revolvers and shotguns Walker gave the name of another | negro, who, he said, was & confeder- | | ate. He remained on the outside of the bank, but fl-d when help arrived. | A posse fs now huntlog for him. New Cabinet Positions. Bryan’s Commoner, The president received a few days ago & délegation which urged the creation of a new cabinet position witha secretary of health at the head of {t. In declining to endorse the proposition he took occasion to say that he opposed the creatior of any new cabinet positions, It is to be regretted that he has thus thrown his great influence agalnst an en- largement of the cabinet for there is one new office that is imperatively needed, namely, secretary of labor. The vast army of wage earners de- serve @ representative at the presi- dent’s council table and the new pos!- tion ought to be created at once. We might with advantage estab- lish two other cabinet positions, namely, secretary of raflroads and secretary of mines and forests. With more effective railroad regulation we need @ secretary who can devote his whole time to the great subject, while the extension of our mining in- tereste and the preservation of for- ests require increased attention. Separate departments can attend to these matters better than new crowded. : % bureaus in departments already over- | by the same, ‘The help of a@ phys was useless. I believe I tried every in t icinity, but all wer Mr, Ji “For several able to do anythit “When | commen r Pe | took six bottles, ¢ i in winter | had gained 63 - nds, “Lowe | to Per “ y + e years old, and hn M, Stansberry, A rs | gy and cc 1 us minene ld not and builder.” ‘THE 2-GALLON DEBUTANTE. “of the bull antes or the anneres dasinetinn a Is it Possible That the Impru-. dent Young Thing Swigs _- Wine by the Bucketful? From the Louisyille Courier Journal The habit of drink among women may be lamentable, but the habiv of exagweration by “eminent specist ists” is moreso. Prof. John Dancan (Quackenbos of New York declares thatmany young women— mere girls, are brought to him for treatment “hysterically drunk.” Granted He declares thas he knows New York society women whose personal cham- pagne billsron up to $100 a week. Swaliowed cumgranor sails. He as- serts that one woman of his acqnain- tance drinks & quart of champagne before going shopping, takes a quart with herin her carriage and tanks up on highballs from time to time, and thas at a recent ball four debut- tantes drank thirty-six bottles of champagne and smoked seven dozen cigarettes between dances. Here credulity chokes. The New York debutante may be rather devilish young person, but she cannot waltz again and again with Willie while outside of two gal- lone snd one quart of champagne. There are certain physical Iimita- tions which preclude the possibility ofeven the most imprudent debut- ante swallowing a water bucketfal of wine in anevening. The young wo- man who ¢an drink a quart or so of any liquid and engage in the some- what strenuous exercise of two-step- ping to the strains of & lively march {is an exceptionally capable drinker. The nine-quart-capacity debutante {es just as much of a myth as the tim- ‘Der wolf who bites through the chest lynx that hunts human game. “The tendency ofthe Am man fs to vo to extremes,’ ‘good Quackenbos, “ldo to preach asermon, but mercly tc state facts. faker Is moved to cut loose froin dry statistics and indulge in hyberbole for the better driving home argument. We shall then hear of ons debutante drinking thirty-six cases of champagne in order to wet up before going to an afternoon tea. an Wi *suys the not wish braced Catarrh Cannot be Cured With local applications, as they can not reach the seatof the disease. , Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and {n order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cureis taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mu- lcous eurtaces, Hall’s Catarrh Cure! isnot quack medicine. scribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years and isa regular prescription. It {s compos- ed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two tn- gredients is what produces such won- derful results in curing Catarrh Send for testimonials free. F. J.Cuenry & Co , Toledo, 0. Sold — Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for con- stipation. Tree Clasped in Death Hug. Warrensburg, Mo. Jan.—Edward T. Mason, & well-to-do farmer resid- ing six miles north of this city, was found with his throat cut in his door yard this morning. A pocket knile lying near was the instrument with which Mason took his life. He made his home with his grandniece, Mrs. Ben Gains. When found the body was crouched at the root of a tree to which the frozen arms of the dead man clung. Mason was a cripple. Wait until this nature , of an | ; the exhaustion of cur bunk lt was pre- | Natural Reewress, From the Reader Mas Tutianay The United the world | f development. sisterhood of ust! hes astounded rapldivy into th by its epeebacul We came ms anevanyel of liberty ands herald of better days to the Rus we ure tl a hations. Spendthrifs, the Wasser, the \ Wo-Well” of nathons Beytunfag | modern times with fneomp rich natural resources, we lave rav- sued acontinent of its wood ard coal and iron, and wesmillngly face “oun in these things like a boy tn the midet of his sowlog of wild nts Our forests are gone. fragments left twenty years. The ‘ing coal fields has begun; children or our grandchildren who will have to face a future without coal., of water-| power, coal, fron, and lands capable) We have vast reserves of reclamation aud reforestation, but we seem to have no adequate | conception of our duties toward them, to ourselves, our country or) Our soil is being washed; away Into the rivers, and by them! carried ‘6 the sea, aud our boasted | fertility of soil fs thereby being les | posterity. sened year by year; but the irrepar- able drain {s ignored. Our neglect {e almost equal to our active waste. The vast potentialities of our water- ways in bearing commerce and in furnishing power have been neglect- ed. Buta newera seems dawning. President Roosevelt is bringing these matters into the field of practical statesmanship. The Inland Water. ways Commission has been constitu: Catarrh of Stomach. eo OT ETE illo, Tex., write catarrh of the stom: It can The scattered i will disappear fn), piach of exhaust | and the! best authorities are computing the time of the end Of our supply, trying” to determine whether it will he our, ror eat with any satisfaction, runa, | weighed only 110 pounds, the spring, and by tha fol not be praised too hig! my occupation is ihat of architect i catarrh of the head, digestive organs, T+ piysicians, but they did lecide d to try Peruna a r use cured, hild- in| ree these ted by himas a great apen ‘er pointing out the nstonel dangers and coordinating t! ver ntal plans for conserving our iat sources, Inco { It hip, the work i ® moat exalted plat Le demands t attention of every A in tr coke the 1 subordins thos yrouch. Sold by Clay’a drag There is one thing that will cure it—Ayer’s Hair Vigor. It is a regular scalp-medicine. It quickly destroys the germs which cause this disease. The unhealthy scalp becomes healthy. The dandruff disap- pears, had to disappear. A healthyscalp means a great deal to you—healthy hair, no dan- druff,no pimples, no eruptions. The best kind of a testimonial — “Sold for over sixty years.” Ayer Co., Lo Rees seo asus a ers iss CHERRY PECTORAL. ra

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