The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 28, 1908, Page 1

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Che VOL. XXX. BUTLER, MISSOURKI,-THURSDAY, MAY 2s, 1908. Never Without Pe-ru-na in My House So Writes Mr, C. G. Convers, Hot Springs, Arkansas. There Are a Multitude of People in the United States Who Have Been Restored to ‘Health By the Use of Pe-ru-na, There are a multitude of people in the United Btates who have been restored to health by the use of Peruna. There is no use trying to deny this fact, Asa rule, doctors dislike to admit it, There is now and then a courageous doctor who does admit it, how ever. In such cases Peruna is prescribed by the @octor himself, Even though the doctor suffers pecuniary loss by such a transaction his patient is benefited, which ought to be the doctor’s chief concern, We do not claim that doctors generally prescribe Peruna. But we do claim whenever Peruna is in- telligently prescribed it rarely disappoints either the doctor or patient, Colds and Stomach Trouble. Mr. C, G. Convers, Pres, Cold Storage Ice and Coal Co,, Hot Springs, Ark., writes: “Thad been troubled with a very serious case of catarrh for a number of years. Having tried many prescriptions by good physicians, I found myself no better, “On the advice of a friend whe had used Peruna with good results I purchased # bottle, The results were so good that I continued using it, Have, perhaps, in the last three years used a MISSOURI DEMOCRATS. One of the Largest and Most Harmonious Conventions Ever Held in State. Jefierson City, Mo., May 25 —In| the most harmonious State Conven- tion held in Missourt in thirty years, United States Senator William J. Stone, Governor Joseph W. Folk, former Governor D. R- Francis, of St. Louis, and former Mayor James A. Reed, of Kansas City, were named as delegates at large here to the Democratle National Convention at Douver, July 7 Will A, Rothwell, of Moberly, was re-elected National Committeeman from Missourl without opposition, and former Governor Alexander M. Dockery, of Gallatin; Lon V. Ste- phens, of St. Louls, and Thomas T. Crittenden Sr., of Kansas City, and Colonel Moses C. Wetmore, of St Louls, were chosen, by acclamation, as alternates at large. The presidential electors at large are: Samuel N, Dickey, of Webster county, and former Congress tian M, | i, Benton, of Newton county. DISPRICT DELEGATES TO DENVER | 1—0 € Clay, of Lewts; N W Moody, of Macon. 2—Thomas A Dodge, of Sullivan: John H Taylor, of Livingston, 3—J W Sullinger, of Gentry; RL Hamilton, of Ray. 4—J W Milton, of St Joseph; BF dozen bottles, which have kept me from the try- ing troubles of catarrh, I am never without a bottle of Peruna in my house, “One always gets relief from colds and indiges- tion if you have Peruna,” § Nasal Catarrh and Indigestion. } N | fr, JamesP, Bracken, 610 Tenth Ave., New York City, N.Y. has occupied the office of Water Inspector of New York City for the past fifteen years, He carries on an extensive plumbing business at 610 10th Ave. He is Post Deputy of Grand Knights of Reigna Celia Council Knights of Columbus, N.Y. He writes as follows: “For nearly a dozen years catarrh has bothered me in one form oranother, I was troubled with nasal catarrh that had affected my stomach, which troubled me most in the morning, My appetite was poor, and I did not seem to relish my food. Indi= gestion bothered me at times, also, I was advised to take Peruna, and I took it as prescribed for a month when my cure was almost complete, Today there is not a trace of catarrh in ny system, and I can say without hesitation that Peruna cured me.” Catarrh of Bladder. Mr. Michael Rouney, 26 Fifth St., Watervliet, N, "Y., writes: “If IT had known of Peruna years ago I should have been saved much suffering, Under carelessness and | exposure in my younger years my system got intoa very bad condition before T was aware of it, “My doctor thought that IT had catarrh of the bladder and duly prescribed for me, but nothing did me any good, ““My friends advised me to try Peruna, for which T am very thankful, as it has cured me in two months, and I am in perfect health."’ Catarrh of the Head and Stomach. Mr. Frank Richter, of 300 Hast znd St., Winona, Minn,, writes: “I take pleasure in recommending Peruna for catarrh of t ach, Peruna cured me, and ‘I know it willecure any one else who suffers from this disease. y rrh was principally “din Kidney Disease. Mr. Samuel A, Paxton, 1118 Troost Ave., Kansas City, Mo., member I.0. 0, F, and National Annuity Association, writes: “Tama well man today, thanks to your splendid medicine, Peruna, “T was troubled with eatarrh and kidney disease of long standing when I first began using Peruna, [soon found I was getting better, th. Ltried many remedies with- and continued taking it forfour months. Itcleaned out thesy nD, | out suc T read of Perunwin the papers, and five leaving me well and strong and feeling better than I have in years,” | bottles cured me.” EEE John T. Buchanan is Dead. A WOMAN KILLS Did Murder to Steal $1,000? New York, May —John T. Buchan- AN ELEPHANT. Springfield, Mo., May.—Edward anywho for eleven years wae princi- ee Killfan and Frank Shelton, young pal of the Dewitt Clinton High The Feat of John D. Archbold’s farm laborers, are {n jail at Ozark in School, died Thursday morning at a j ‘Christian county, charged with th» his home in this city. He was born {n+ Daughter in East Africa. ‘murder of William Bowen, a huckster Virginia {n 1847, was educated at we ‘* . near Nixa last Tuesday. Killlan N . May 25.—B 4 {tb Central College, Fayette, Mo., and Meee bongerl§ pn a has made a confession to Shertii began his career as & teacher when & Hon pelt and two lion cuba Mrs Wileon and the prosecuting attorney Anmard Saunderson, daughter of young man. He became principal of Mr. Barress. the Carroliton, Mo., High School. | yon H. Agchbctl cl she Bhandard Killlan sajd that a week before Letts, of Nodaway. 5—Joseph B Shannon and Fred W Fleming, of Kansas City. 6—J D Allen, of Bates; Peyton Parke, of Henry. 7—Dean Duggins and Guy G Kir- by, both of Saltne. S—Sam B Cook, of Cole; William H Thompson, of Boone. %—James Booth, of Franklin: Colonel Green Clay, of Audratin. 10—Joseph Hannauer and Charles P Higgins, of St Louis. 11—James H Lee and John Soy, of St Louis, 12—Thomas E Kinney and James J Butler, of St Louts. 13—Sam Byrnes, of Jefferson; Ed- ward Robb, of Perry. 14—Thomas R KR Ely, of Dunklin; Samuel Robinson, of Christian. 15—A B Cockrell, of Vernon; WH Warren, of Jasper. 16—J W Farris, of Laclede; James Mc Castile, of Texas. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS 1—John W Beal, of Knox. 2—Stonewall Jackson | Carroll. S—R W Steckman, of Mercer. }—W H Robinson, of St Joseph. 5--J C Callahan, of Jackson. 6—F M Woolridge, of Johnson. Jones, of 7—Horace Blackwell, of Lafayette. | S—Willlam Hirth, of Beone. | brother of Lieutenant General Adna In 1880 he resigned to become princl- pal of the grammer schoolin Kan- sas City. | Several years later he became prin- | elpal of the Central High School in| Kansas City, and held that post un- 1897, when he came to this city as principal of the New Boys’ High School, which later becarre Dewitt Minton. In the eleven years of his service here the number of pupils in the school grew from 200 to 2,000, and its success had much to do with the founding of the other high schools, the High School of Com- merce and the Stuyvesant High School. The widow, two sons and a daugh- ter survive him. The funeral will be held at 3 o’clock Saturday after- noon. Dr.J.M.Norris SPECIALIST ON THE Ear, Eye, Nose and Throat Catarrh and its effect on the ears, throat or lungs given special attention. Those in need of Glass- es¥can have their eyes tested free and proper- ly fitted. joes Bowen was slain Shelton proposed to him that they murder the old man for his money. Shelton told him, he said, that Bowen had hidden $1,000 in egg cases in his cabin and |that it would beeaster to put the fists down the lion’s throat. , lold man out of the way than it Mrs. Saunderson told with Mra | would Reto wall dor siOnke Ont eet tat es Ter EERE OS yeea | Killian asserted that he re- Two of the elephants were killed by if 4 40 4a te sua blot bot her husband, while she took credi¢) (wo _*0 Sake Pars in She plos bus! feasblia ANd gualied atid: thedion ag | SUAS Shelton with a revolver, forced | ; {him to go to the Bowen home with the trophies of their trip in East While—he A sballe—b Africa, She told how she etood the)" "ole he stood outside, he charge of the pachyderm, sending |“ Shelton entered the cabin and %—J O Allison, of Ralls. 10—Joseph Pauley, of St Louts. 11—Willlam LD Robinson, of St Louis. 12—Lawler P Daly, of St. Louis. 138—William R Edgar, of Iron. 14—Willlam H Miller, of Cape Glrardeau. 15—J M Long, of McDonald. 16—W W Brannock, of Webster. Oll company, arrived on the Lusl- tania. With Mrs. Saunderson were | her husband thelr daughter, Lydia, 2 years old, who amused herself on the | way across by sticking her chubby A Californian’s Luck. “The lucktest day of my life was when I bought a box of Bucklen’s Chaffee the Confederate. springfeld Republican. There recently died In Kansas City, Mo., Major General Orestes P. Chaf- fee, once a conspicuous soldier of the Southern Confederacy, and an elder R. Chaffee, retired Chief of Staff of the United States Army. His had been @ career of vicissitudes. Born {n Obfo, he moved fn childhood to Montgomery, Ala., and when the Civil War broke out, he was a rich planter there. He threw himself {nto the Southern cause with great ardor, and had part in some thirty of the bloodless bat sles of the war. In the battle of Lookout Mountain he fought on the Confederate side as a Colonel, while his brother fought as a Lieutenant on the Uaton side. Toward the close of the war it fell to the lot of General Chatiee to serve his army tn the mat ter of securing supplies, This meant foraging !n the enemy's country, and so many seizures as contraband of war were made by him thas avr! close of the struggle he was one of the list of six men to whom the Ualted States Government did not extend umnesty in the general dk sand bo save his Iife General Chaffee Med fn disguise to Brnzil. There, for eigl teen years, away from friends and with health broken by the war, the former soldier employed himself in the rubber industry at Para. Final- lyin 1582, through the efforts of per: | sonal friends, {neluding Cienerals! “Joe” Wheeler, Brag and Long- street, and his brother, Adna Kh. Chaffee, be was restored to citizen- ship and allowed to return to the} United States. He was a man of attractive per- sonality and fine education, and his intimate knowledge of the Spanish language stood him in good stead. It enabled him to make a livellhood with commercial enterprises, and in| the service of the Government. Gen- erul Leonard Wood found him a valuable assistant fn 1900 fn helping to shape affairs in Cuba. General | Chaffee left Cuba in 1902, and had | since been a part of the time in Gov- | ernment employ, most recently !n} New Orleans. Though this Genera! | Chafiee remained to the last one o the few unreconstructed Confeder- | ates, he could not be brought into) any discussion of the Civil War tines, which he dismissed as ‘‘all past.” + .A Ball Club Adopts a Child. Galveston, Texas., May 26.—The| adoption ofa 19 month-old baby by a professfonal baseball! club is! Galveston’s latest. On a train which mother and baby were riding were the members of the Houston elub of the Texue league. The movh- er requested W. EE. Hoster, & big} on! good natured plecher, to hold the! ehild for a few minutes. The moth stepped into another coach and lefts the train at the next station. A note found on the child gave {ts name as Edmund Winters, and the ball play- er decided to adopt the boy. Before the end of the journey every member of the club fell in love with the aban doned baby and entered into a com- pact tocare for the child, eleet h the mascot to care for the club an provide a good home for him. } Valued Same as Gold. B. G. Stewart, a merchant oj Cedar View, Miss., says: ‘I tell my custome era when they buy a box of Dr. King” New Life Pills, they get the worth of that much gold tn welght, ff afflicted with constipation, malaria or bilious Arniea Salve, writes Charles F. Bud- aha, of Tracy, California, “Two 25c. boxes cured me of an annoying case of {tehing piles which had troubled me for years and that ylelded to no osher treatment.” Sold under guar- an*e at Frank T. Clay's drug store. three shots through his armor plate killed the old huckster. skin, one bullet reaching his heart. The lion, she says, she shot ata family reunion of the lion family fn the jungle. Two of them escaped, but the Saundersons caught the other two cubs and brought them Alice Cuts Up (Down) Again. Washington, May.—Mrs, Alice Roosevelt Longworth created a sen- sation In the National Theater, not back with them to present to the|>y anything she did but by what Bronx zoo, The Saundersons came|she wore. She had ona flaming red from their castle in Ireland to visit} gown, cut extremely low, especially Mr. Archbold and other relatives. /in the back, and with no sleeves at The World’s Best Climate all. It {s not customary {n Washing- is not entirely free from disease, on the high elevations fevers prevail to,wear very low-cut gownsin the while ited ‘twee levels ih = theater, and Mrs. Longworth divid-| hood of Ekalerisnoslav. The men ed the attention of the audience with belonged to the association which the Aborn Opera company, which /|syore to drive out the proprietors of was producing “Robbin Hood.” She | lauded estates. . occupled @ prominent position inthe|, At the time the peasants drove the the most conspicuous box in the theater, Sedan oak tesnsatiohoanen the lower right-hand one. With her M were rendered homeless and tive and Mre. Bourke Cockran and|made desolate. The authorities tee | Secretary Charles G. Bennett, of the severe measure at ore of death is a new departure. = 22 Peasants Hanged. Kperson, Russia, May, 25.—A wholesale execution of peasants tuk place here, when the authorities hanged 22 men who took part in the agrarian disorders in the nelghbor- ness.”’ Sold under guarantee av |, T. Clay’sdrug store. 25¢. He’s Been Walking 3 Years. St. Louis, Mo., May 25.—Wearlng a thick, bushy beard that almost conceals his features and extends from shoulder to shoulder snd down almost to the waist line, H. M. J. Nikoloff, a professor of Vidin, Bul- garia, who started In 1903 to sour the earth afoot, reached this city. He intends to continue his pilgrim. seven more years. | Steffens makes a remarkable contes t When the Hair Falls Then it’s time to act! No time to study, to read, to experi- ment! You want to save your hair, and save it quigkly, too: So make up your mind this very minute that if your hai ever comes out you will use Ayer’s Hair Vigor. It makes} the scalp healthy, The hair stays in. It cannot do any- thing else. It’s nature's way. nd ofa testimonial over siaty y } anufectu 4 , } ‘ The best ki 9 SARSAPARILLA “Sold tor ers A Confession by Lincoln Steftens. lu bhe June Amertean Magaits Linvolu Steffens publishes Apology for Gratt.” Itty an exp nation of temptations that conirou’ politebens, business men aid other who give and take bribes. it { wonderful in its toleration and tt- breadth of sympathy. At the beginning of the artice \!~ ’ sion, Coming, as tt does, from tue man who has done more than any jother to expose graft, itis a signif- cant stutement, Mr, Steffens says “Sympathy and understanding are the need of the hour, We Americane have been out on a man-hunt. Some of us still are avit. We are eryloy to have somebody put tn jail; to make some individual suffer; and we may, mob-like, catch some vietis some day and we may wreak upo him our hate. Thate this hate az this hunt. I bave bayed my bay ix is, and | am sick of ff, 1 am con- vinced shas.{f 1 should follow far enough the human trail | was on, should catch myself. For 1 have wone far enough already to see wher Tam to blame; how Lhave Gone oF neglected todo shingawhtch have contributed to the gullecf the most {ntellivent rascal in the nit jStates. And, ff | have not don: wrongs as great as his, ] wish never again bo forget that] have lackes his ability and his temptation. Hay pening into cleaner business, the only temptations I have fa efor: are those of my business.” bus the of vengeance upon men, whether of {the law or of the mob, fs wrong. It is bhings not men, that hurt us: te fe }bad conditions, not ill-will, shat us the victims (of the law can see in San Francisco jand seelog {t, they put the truth int thelr prayers for pity aud pardon— for bhemseives. Why not for others make men do wrong Mr. John Rtha, of Vining. [a.,says *\“Thave been selling DeWits's Kidney and Bladder Pills for about a year sud they give bester satisfactlo than any pill | ever sold.” Sold by C. W. Hess. | Ruef Jury Evenly Divided. ; San Frenciseo, May 25 ing out for forty-three and hours, the jury in the trial of Abra |ham uef, the former political boss j of San Franefseo and central figure in the bribery-grats prosecution againss whom wholesale indictments were returned, falled to agree upon & verdict and was discharged by Judge Maurice T. Dooling. The specific charge against Ruef in bribe of $1,000 to former Supervisor Jennings Phillips to influence bie vote favorably upon an electric rai} Nikoloff started with two compa- nions, but they were slain in Turkey. He continued alone. Later he was joined b; they walked across # Sahara in eixty-elght days. Niko- loff traversed Africa and Asia, vieit- ing the principal cities. He took steamer to Victoria, toured Alaska, thence by steamer to Seattle and but the| overland to St. Louis. He will rest) Salve. Is ts po 4 Bold by C. W. here for eeveral days. ’ road franchise applied for by the | Parkside Realty Campany The jury which went out at 9:30 other oe and | Tuesday night stood six to six upon desert of|the fires ballot and remained so without a change during the thir teen ballots taken. whole hunt, the hate and the spirty the trial just closed was the offer ofs, Inelet upon DeWitt’s Witch Hagei’ good for pilee..

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