The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 26, 1908, Page 3

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ae VOL. XXXI BUTLER, MISSCU#I, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1908. Are theOn Many a matron has lengthened the days of her comely appearance by taking Peruna. To be beautiful, the body must be kent clean internally as well as externally. Peruna produces clean mucous membranes, the basis of facial symmetry, and a clear, healthy complexion, life and made a new woman of me, much less work for anyone else. All treatment.” <Q] MRS. 0.D.ROBINSON Pe-ru-na Prolonged Her Life. ) PPP PRP PRP LRP PLP PRP PLP PPP Mrs, O. D, Robinson, 43 St, Felix Street, Brooklyn, N. Y., writes: } “T have taken Peruna and it did me more good than all my two years’ treatment by special physicians, I can really say that I feel like another person. No moreswollen feet and limbs, No more bloating of the abdomen: No more shortness of breath. No more stiff and sore joints. You have no idea what your treatment has done for me. It certainly has prolonged my “0, such a blessing I have received through your kindness, doctor, and the assistance of the medicine which you have so kindly prescribed. Lamable to work since I began your treatment, but before I was uot abie to help myself, Those Who Have Used Pe-ru-na ly Ones Who if MISS NETTIE E.BOGARDUS Internal Gatarrh Mrs. George C. Worstell, 11 River Road, Clarksburg, W. Va,, writes: “T trust that noone will think from this that I want my name in public for any cause only to let, sufferers know where they may find relief from many ailments, “Tecan truly say I have been much benefited by the use of Peruna. 1 feel better than I have for two years, Itis the best medicine that I know for internal catarrh, “Ll have taken medicine from the doctors and found no relief; but when I began taking Peruna I could see that before I had finished taking the first bottle it was doing me good.” Pe-ru-na Tablets. For two years Dr, Hartman and his assistants have inc ntly labored to create Peruna in tablet form, and | their strenuous labors have just been crowned with suc People who object to liquid licines can now secure Peruna tablets. Each tablet is equivalent to one average dose of Peruna. * £2 praise is due to Dr. Hartman and his 60-Mile Hike Ordered For Offi- cers of Navy. Washington, Nov.—Acting Secre: | respondent for the Columbia (S.C.) hausted and tary of the Navy Newberry has been directed by President Roosevelt to order every officer on the active list of the navy to put on his land legs and to make # walk of 50 miles in 24 hours, divided between three conse- ecutive days, to prove his physical fitness to continue In the service. Officers on foreign service are to be ordered to take the walk at the first; portinto which their ships put. It will be & hard task for the sailors who have to hike the 50 miles in the tropics, but the order makes no ex- ceptions of climate. Speaking to the Washington cor- | State, John Sharp Willams com. lefsin the country {s found in the|/tlons {in private might not have {mented upon the farcical prepara- | tion for “tariff revision’ now being made by republican leaders. Mr.) Williams sald: | “Tariff revision? Yes, I suppose they will have to make some sort of | 8 felnt at carrying out their pledges | to revise the tariff. But the country | need not expect changes in the sched- | ules that will permit anything like | genuine foreign competition and | bring about a lowering of eres, None of the larcenous advantages, |'Topeka, Kas., Seeretary Triple Tie | | ments, whi It {s a long time since 4 naval offi- | the protected industries now enjoy- cer trudged anything but a deck or | will be taken away from them by the the paved street of a port. | Republicans. Wherever schedules are lowered {t will be because the in- dustries to which the echedules relate VINOL CURES CHRONIC COUGHS, have no need of the amount of pro- COLDS AND BRONCHITIS tection now given them. And there- After Other Remedies Fail - duction will be made only to such a ‘point thatthe manufacturers can “I have been troubled witha chronic’ P° cold and bronchitis for a long time | Continue to eell their prodicts at the and have tried many remedies without ame heavy margin of profit they finding relief. Through the kind sug- ; have enjoyedin the past and now gestion of a friend I tried Vinol, and! after taking four bottles, am entirely cured.” A. H. Wilde, 733-8th Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. §.. McDonald, 147. W. Congress 6t. Paul, Minn. writes: “I con- tracted a severe cold last winter and thought I would never get rid of it. 1! tried Vinol as a last resort, and it has! completely cured me.” Vinol combines two world-famed tonics, the healirig, medicinal proper- ties of cod liver oil and tonic iron, de- liciously palatable and agreeable to the Weakest stomach. For this reason, Vinol is unexcelled as a strength- builder for old people, delicate chil- dren, weak and run-down persons, af- ter sickness and for Chronic Coughs, Colds and Bronchitis, »- FRANK T. CLAY, Druggtes Batler, Mo. enjoy. The consumers need not hope to gain anything in the way oflower priced commodities asa result of Republican tariff revision. And in many cases the revision will be up- ward instead of downward. This will be the case especially with rela- tion to certain agricultural products of which small quantities are export- ed. ,On these the tariff rates will be increased, for the purpose of making the fi believe he is getting a share in the benefite of the revision. The whole thing will bea mockery and a delusion, and when itis all done the country will be lets just as much at the mercy of the protected manofacturers and the truste ae- it ‘is now. Perhape the duty on lumber Really Know acti Gio te Omaha, (My Sister Advised Me to Try, NU His Favorite Wife, Peruna. 1 Took Your Treatment and My Appetite Returned Speedily. | Gained Strength and Flesh and | Am in Perfect Health, | Am So Thankful Your Medicine | Has Done Me So Much Good. —So Says Miss Julia Butler, Of Appleton, Wis, Sick Headache, Miss Nettie E, Bogardus, R. F, D. 21, | Westfield, N. Y., writes: “LT have been a great sufferer from sick headaches, but am now entirely free from that trouble, I have not felt so Well in ten years as I do now, “I woyld recommend Peruna and Manalin to all sufferers, I will say, God bless Dr, Hartman and his wonder- ful remedies,” Weak, No Appetite. Mrs, Ruth B. Brent, Holmes, [11 writes: “T was in poor health three years ago. I kept getting worse, and I finally was so weak that I could not sit up all day. My feet and hands were always cold, [ had no appetite, AN OLD INDIAN ROMANCE, Beautiful Indian Girl, Who Was) Married to the Old- Chief} Against Her Will, Was At- tracted to Her Death by Young Brave. From the Omaha World Hearald, About the old chief Blackbird of the Omahas there have been told many amazing tales. Stories of his cruelty, of his justice and of his au- thority over his tribe are many. One of his descendants on the Omaha reservation tells of the old chiet and a favorite young wile of his. “They tell many tales of my grand- father that are not true,” said the Omaha. “They tell of his having been burled sitting on his favorite horse, This {s not true. The old chief died of smallpox and one of his wives, In fact, I think his oldest wife, died of the same disease. He was buried !n the usual manner on a mound that they call Blackbird Hill. PRICES ing Powder A grape cream of tartar powder. Makes pure, healthful, delicious food. Noalum, no lime phosphate. There is an infallible test by which every housewife may detect the unhealth- ful alum baking powders— The label will tell Study the label. If it does not say cream of tartar the baking powder is made from alum and must be avoided, “T consulted one of the best doctors, | They killed his favorite pony and left | years. But Chiet Blackbird’s anger fulness that at least he was to die who said I could not be cured. nervous, my heart would flutter, and | had a pain in my left side and also had chronic constipation, “I gota bottle of Peruna and one of of the Indian; but he was not burted in a eltting posture on his horse. “This is the story of his favorite I was | food on his grave, after the manner| became so ungovernable that he, with the girl he loved, wud with her grasped his mother-In-law by the make the long journey to the land of shoulder and demanded of her to tell the happy hunting wrounds him of his favorite. She gasped out ‘His wives started at the chief Manalin and wrote to you for advice. | wife, a beautiful Indian girl, who| she aews and the women bens lower, ; when he lowered the gun and spoke While under your treatment [ gained three pounds a month, “I took several more bottles of Peruna {her will. She had a lover among | followed. married the old chief much against No one could under. He shuddering at the awful tempest that to the runners, Well as they knew him, stand why the man was spared, and now Lam well. Tamabie todo all | the braves, but such was the terror] they had never seen the dreadedehief was sent to the outskirts of the vil- my housework—cooking, washing,iron- | with which Blackbird Inspired his|{o such # rage. ing, baking and mending. “Every body compliments me on look- ing so much better than I used to, and now [havea girl baby six months old, as fat as she can be, “She is what I call a Peruna baby, for IT know ifit had not heen for Peruna she would not be here.” For Suffering Women. | Miss Esther Lee, 302 Madison Street, | Social Club, writes: “Fourteen months ago I began to be troubled with internal catarrh, which | left me pale, weak and nervous, I de- cided to give Perunaa trial, “To my great relief [found that my general health improved, I kept grow- ing stronger, and within three months | I was in my usual normal condition, I cannot recommend Veruna too highly to suffering women.” Will be removed or greatly reduced 4 4 - But this will be because she tlmber| Peas was thelr fear of him that they | torture that velther could conjecture this tepev and saw the smoke curling supply of the north fs practically ex- about all the thmber south ” Pleasant, sure, safe little Itver pills, are DeWite’s Little Early Risers. Sold by C. W. Hess. The Modesty of Women Naturally makes them shrink from th indelicate questions, the obnoxious aminations, and unpleasant Some phy essential in the treatm lox women. Yet, if help can t ad, better to submit to this ordeal than let the disease grow and spread. trouble is that so often the woman undergoes all the annoyance and shame for nothing. Thotsands jerce’s Favorite Prescrip- gpyreciation of the cure which dis, SIN the examinations and local treatment? There is vo other medigi 50 sure nd safe Jicate women_as "Favorite Prescription.” it cures debilitating drains, irregularity and female weakness, It always helps. It almost always cures. It is strictly non- alcoholic, non - secret, all its ingredients being printed on its bottle-wrapper; con- tains~ no deleterious or habit-forming drugs, and every native medicinal root entering into its composition has the full endorsement of those most eminent in the several schools of medical practice. Some of these numerous and strongest of pro- fessional endorsements of iis ingredients, will be found in a pamphlet wrapped around the bottle, also ina booklet mailed free on request, by Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y. These professional en- dorsements should have far more weight than any amount of the ordinary lay, or non-professional testimonials, The most intelligentgvomen now-a-days «nsist on knowing what they take a8 med- icine instead of opening their mouths like a lot of young birds and gulping down whatever Is offered them. “Favorite Pre- seription” is of KNowN composition. It makes weak women strong and sick women well, Dr. Pierce's Medical Adviser is sent free on reeeipt of seampe ‘WO pay expense of mailing only, Send to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., 21 one-cent stamps for pa- per-covered, or 31 stamps for cloth-bound. If sick consult the Doctor, free of charge by letter. All such communications are held sacredly confidential. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets invigorate and regulate stomach, liver and bowels. ~|love will break through all reesric- tribe thas neither she nor her lover dared protest against her marriage with the old chief. “He was véry indulgent with her. Not one cf his other wives dared ap- proach him or speak befure he ad- dressed them. But this favorite young squaw had all the privileges of w child. He took her with him constantly and bought her all sorts of finery from the traders. One of the finest of these presents was a pair of gaudy gurnet earrings, of} which the young wife was very proud. ; She displayed them ‘with triumph | to the old squaws, who had no such | adornments, but who were forced to restrain thelr jealous wrath because | she was the favorite of the ehfef. So] bowed in enforced loyalty to the fa- vorite wife, alshough their conversa- greatly pleased the beautiful equaw. THE REJECTED SWAIN'S RETURN. | “Once his wife, the chief supposed that she, too, would bend tn fearand trembling to hiscommands. I nev- er occurred to him that the rejected swain would dare make love to the wife of the powerful Blackbird. But tions, and within a few months the rejected suitor was clandestinely meeting the squaw at the spring or in the corn patch that was planted in front of she chief’s tepee. Some of the older wives knew of the meetings, but dared not brave the wrath of the chief by telling him. “On one of his frequent absences to settle disputes between warring fac- tions of his tribe, Chief Blackbird left the young wife at home, When he returned he sought her immediately. In his hand he held one of the garnet earrings which he had found on the path in the woods as he came home thinking eagerly of his favorite and of his delight at seeing her once more. “But when he stepped into the big tepee and asked for her, a strange silence prevailed Not one of the wo- men dared tell him that his favorite had been gone for two days and that lage and there @ tepee Was erected “When he had become calm, he forhim. He was not allowed to take sent for his best hunters and dis part tn any of the hunting partles or patched them {n search of the guilty the batéles or the councils. Even the pair. Then he repaired to his tepee, cure of the village grew to avold the where he sat for hours awaiting thelr outcast and his tepee, There he ly. return, No one dared speak to him ed and smoked alone and mourned His women brought him food and over the death of the benutifulsquaw set {t before him, fearing lest he note whom he had seen murdered under their presence and beat them. Two his very eyes. An Tudian would nev- days passed and food had not pass er dream of committing sutcide to ed his lips, nor had he sleps. end his troubles, and he accepted his “On the third day the runners fate with the fatalism that le a part brought back the eloping couple. of the disposition of the true Indian. “Silently they came through the ‘My motlitr has often told ns of ‘camp, even the children realizing the bim and of his lonely iffe there In the inomentous signiticance of the oc. Oubeask sepee. Wi ‘ry the village casion The yirl stepped straight, went, the ouscass went, a solitary beside her lover. Both knew that prisoner, She has told us of the Vthe bh death awalted them. The old chief gleam of triump! was so {inventive in his modes of the old chtef whe: ‘yesof ooked toward what manner of death it was ta be. fromthe top. And she has told us Both were led into the tepee and shat to his death the fieres old chtef stood before the old chief stofeally. carried with him that solitary war- nesearring he found that morning when he returned to bis tepee after A CRUEL FATE “He gazed eagerly {nto the face of : his favorite. He noted the loss of MS long journey, eager to meet hts the earring, and his features became adured yvonne nelle; Only bo ng sae convuleed with wounded pride, with *@ one being on earth on whom was rage and jealous fury. The lover centered all the alfeevwions of this stepped between them in an effort to rg eng aaa shield the girl from the blow that op , _ o the day of his death he loved a pine ed oo. > - her and there was something pathet- which he was very pc It a fe, after all, {in the fact, when he lay (oie nudieheroant is he hnats {Il of smallpox, {6 was his oldest and on tit = 4 ugliest wife, the first of them all, the "Sila ca & with a fiendish | °2° he had married when they both grin and turning buried i¢ to the were young, who came to him and hilt in the girl's. breast, Straiaht| took care of him pnd died for him, {nto her heart, the knife leaped, and They Want One Ruler. as she fell she looked {nto the eyes of | Phiiadeiphia Record. her lover and laughed as she died.) A movement is on foot fn Wash The young brave, with o dramatic | ington to substitute » single execu- gesture, tore away the shirt from bis | tive head for the three district com- breast and stood waiting for the missioners who now control the same blow. mansgement.of municipal affairs in “Leaving the knife still buried in thatclty. Like the Israelities of old the breast of the dead girl, the chief the diesatistied ones-want a king to snatched up his gun and aimed {¢ at| rule over them, and will not be dis- the breast of the lover. With his suaded. They may fare as badly as finger on the trigger, he hesitated. |the Israelities did if the Congress He noted the look in the eyes of the | shall be prevailed upon to let them young Indfan and detected the thank- | try the experlment. her lover was also missing. They sat with heads bowed low and lis- tened mutely to his demande for hia young wife. His rage at theiratlence became so great that he transgress ed one of the sacred customs of the Indian and addressed his mother-in- law. “Now, no [ndian will address his mother-in-law, even though she may ‘have been an inmate of his home for, The Doctor’s First Question “How are your bowels?” This is generally the first ques- tion the doctor asks. He knows what a sluggish liver means. He knows what a long list of distressing com- plaints result from constipation. He knows that headaches, bilious attacks, indigestion, impure blood, and general debility are often prompily relieved by a good liver pill. We wish you would talk with your own doctor about this subject. Ask him at the same time if he approves of Ayer's Pills. _Do as ine says.

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