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it ne Bed Fed 25425) SS3555 BE a Se A woman who is sick and — Sow thy suffering, and won't at least try a medicine which has the record of —— E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, is to blame for condition. There are literal er own wretched ly hundreds of thousands of women in the United States who have been benefited by this famous old remedy, which was produced from roots and herbs over thirty years ago by a woman to relieve woman's suffering, Read what these women say: Camden, N. 3. —* It is with pleasure that I send my testimo- nial for Lydia B. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, hoping it may induce ether suffering women to avail t benefit of this valuable remedy, “suffered from pains in my back and no appetite, was tired and nervous all the could hardly stand, made me a well woman —and always have my praise.” — Mrs. Ave., Camden, No, Erie, Pa. —™ lsaffered for five ‘at last was almost helpless. me no good. My sister advised Vegetable Compound, and it hope all suffering women will Since we gt lish are genui Pinkham’s V these women ing from the sa it not fair ble Compc e trouble, For 30 years Lydia FE. Pinkham’s Vegetable andard remedy for an does justice to . famous medicine, Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and has thousands of cures to its credit. Compound has been the s female ills. No sick wom herself who will not try this If the slightest trouble appears which you do not understand, write to Mrs, inkham at Lynn, Mass, for her advice — it is free and always helpful. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Ve hemselves of the side, sick headache time, and so weak etable Compound this valuable medicine shall W. P. Valentine, 902 Lincoln years from female troubles, and I tried three doctors but they did me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s has made me well and strong. I just give Lydia E. Pinkha Vegetable Compound a trial, for it is w Bi > — Mrs. J. P. Endlich, R. F. D. 7, Erie, : aawe ee tee that all testimonials which we pub- to suppose that if Lydia E. yund had the virtue to help | help any other woman who is suffer- Nearly every farmer, when he has | paid for his farm, edwoated his chil-| dren, laid by some spare change for | rainy days, begins to think about, moving to town. Here with side-| walks and other conventence, he con-} celves that life would be fdeal, And {it {s—till he tries tt. Nearly every | city man hopes at some time to be able to own & country home where he can spend his declining years in quietness aud complete rest under the soothing influence of apple blos-} somes, songs of birds and hum of bees. Here he thinks shat life would be complete. And ts ts—ttll he tries {6 Which is righs?—Ex Here ts @ tine story from life told | in an Associated Press dispatch un- der date of Dayton, O., April 8: her than run down a little girl ho was in shetr path James L. Dinsmore and F. 0). Probasco turned heir automoblle down s thirty-foot embankment ar plunged into the waters of Mia! river. The men ere driving the car along the top of he levee only eight feet wide, when he child was seen a few feet ahead of the car. Probasco, who was driv- ng, said: ‘Is tt the child or the riv- er, Jim?’ Dinsmore replied: ‘The Belated Praise. President Taft {s quoted as paying & tribute to Ex-President Cleveland {n a speech made {n New York on the latter’s birthday. The belated praise which fs now heaped upon Mr. Cleve- land by Republicans would have been very much appreciated by him dur- ing his life. In 1896 the Republican leaders blamed the democratic ad- ministration for the panic of 93, and ever since that time the Republicans have called i¢ a “democratic pante”’ because it occurred under the admin- {stration of one who was elected as a Democrat. Mr. Cleveland was de- nounced by the Republicans for the issuing of bonds tn the time of peace, although the republicé&ns are prepar- ing to do the same thing now. The tariff which Mr. Cleveland favored was denounced as & menace to the country and as disastrous to our in- dustry and as a concession to the foreigners. Nothing that Mr. Cleve- land did was supported by the Re publicaus except what he did on the money question, and that was en- dorsed only because he adopted the policy of the Republican leaders on that subject. Mr. Taft says that 16 was a relief river for ours.” Although the river as ata high stage and the current wift, both men escaped {njuries.”” How To : Gain Flesh Persons have been known to gain a poundaday by takingan ounce of Scott’s Emulsion. It is strange, but it often happens. Somehow the ounce produces it seems to start i 5 is a Fae : i f z i ; E g §3 ge 4 fe : ! E i y z : 1 g & E tothe Resublican party when the leadership in the party passed from Mr. Cleveland, and this in forgetful- nese of the fact that the Republicans had larger majority in congress during the second half of Mr. Cleve- land’s administration than they have ever had since. It was not nec- essary in that congress to secure the support of a few Democrats {in order to carry out the policies of a Repub- Hean speaker.—Commoner. Stone County Shortage Paid. Springfield, Mo., April 19.—John C. Hayes, ex-collector of Stone coun- ty, will not appeal from th> decision in the Jasper county circult court in a suit instituted against him by the county to compel the return of funds tothe county treasury. Judgment tor $2,741.27 was rendered against him and his bondsmen. The amount was paid. Hayes was charged with embezzle- ment, but the information against him was quashed as it was alleged to be faulty. An appeal on the part of the state is pending in the eu- preme court. The civil sait followed the quashing of the information. Stone county has paid $1,100 for the work of expert accountants in | going over the records. As & result | $5,500 has been recovered. Saved Him From a Mob. McAlester, Ok., April_—A mob of 200 men fought their way onto an| interurban car at Hartshorne in an attempt to secure and hang Mike’ Zanone. Officers on the car had a| hard battle to keep off the mob and the trainmen turned on full speed and saved Zanone, who {s charged with having killed his mother-in-law, Mrs. George Doss, and her 17-year- ald daughter, Miss Willle. Zanone left here and went to see his divorced wife and baby, living with Mrs. Zan- one’s parents. She refused to let him see the baby and ran into another room when the shooting began. Both women were killed instantly. Zanone then ran and was shot in the head by his father-in-law after he had exchanged shots with the offi- cers. He will recover. He ie in jall here. The young woman killed wes in this year’s graduating clase of the Hartshorne high school. Tried Suicide in Court. Ridgeway, Ill, April—Fearing a sentence of death was about to be imposed on him, Arch Smith, on trial ona charge of slaying his brother-in- law, slashed his throat {n the crowd- ed courtroom here while the judge was instructing the jury. The judge, after waiting only a brief Interval for the excitement to subside, continued his charge to the jury as though nothing had happen- ed, while a deputy sheriff summoned @ doctor. Almost before the doctor had stanched the flow of blood and finish- ed dressing the wound the jury had agreed on a verdict of guilty and fix- ed Smith's punishment at fourteen years in the penitentiary, Smith killed his brother-tn-law, George Robinson. g | | | | Won't Tell Who Shot Him, Pine Bluff, Ark., April.—Lynn But- ler, former vice-president of the Leola Lumber Company, shot while walt- ing to take @ train for Leola, Ark., has not yet given out the name of the man who shot him, although he insists that he recognized the man by the flash of the pistol. He still ts in bed suffering from the effects of the bullet in bis right shoulder, I¢ is not expected Butler will give out any further information until he {t able to appear in court, The Grand Jury will meet next Monday, and {t is expected that this body will investigate the shooting. Many highly sensational rumors are afloat, but no arrests will be made until Butler makes public the secret which he is keeping regarding his assailant. a Marriage Licenses, R. L. Griffin, Bessie Martin, Appleton City, Rich Hill. We will Examine That Watch of yours and tell you just what is necessary to be done and what it will cost to put it in PERFECT RUNNING ORDER then you can leave it or not, as you please. In all kinds of repair work, we do only the very best work and you need have no hesitancy in leaving the finest article in our care. Watch I N. B. JETER WEST SIDE JEWELER ~Jany claim he might have on the Some people in this state do not like Gum Shoe Bill Stone, but all of them have to acknowledge that he has plenty of gray matter inside his head. He never uttered a truer say- ing, than when he was elected to the senate, and addressed both houses of | the legislature, he cautioned them to look well after the expense account | of the state, and they would not} have to ralse nore taxes by all kinds | of taxation. There was a time in state and nation, when expenses were kept down and taxes made easy, but there seems to be a running riot on | the question. The national govern- | ment cannot get enough money, the | state cannot find enough money to | psy her bills. The public will stand just about so much and that is the | end of it. Taxation beyond a cer- tain point is confiscation, and while we may expect the courts to give re- Hef to railroads and other corpora: tions, it the state tries to cut their profits, no court will help the people or protect them from unjust taxa tion, the power to do this {sin the bal- lot and the people will have to pro- tect themselves.—Carrollton Demo- | crat. pea “ey acter een i In Five Minutes, | Take your sour ssomach—or may- be you call {t indigestion, Dyspepsia, Gastritis or Catarrh of Stomach; !t doesn’t matter—take your stomach trouble right with you toyour Phar-} macist and ask him to open a 50- | cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin and let you eat one 22-grain Triangule and see if within five minutes there is left | any trace of your stomach misery. The correct name for your trouble {e Food Fermentation—food souring; the Digestive organs become weak, | there is a lack of gastric jutce, your food 1s only half digested, and| appetite, pressure and fullness after eating, vomiting, nausea, heartburn, | griping in bowels, tenderness in the sleeplessness, belching of gas, billous- | ness, sick headache, nervousness, | dizziness and many other similar) symptoms. | It your appetite fs tickle, and noth | fog tempts you, or you belch gas or it you feel bloated after eating, or! your food lies like a lump of lead on your stomach, you can make up! your mind that at the bottom of all this there fs bué one cause—fermen. | tation of undigested food. | Prove to yourself, after your next) meal, that your stomach {sas good. as any; that there {s nothing really wrong. Stop this fermentation and | begin eating what you want without fear of discomfort or misery. Almost instant relief is walting for you. It‘s merely a matter of how soon you take a little Diapepsin. Srave or Ouro, City ov ToLepo Leeas County, Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he {s sentor partner of the firm of F J Cheney & Co., doing business in| the City of Toledo, County and State aforesald, and that sald firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL- LARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the} use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENNEY. Sworn to before me and sabserib- edin my presence, this 6th day of December, A D. 1886. (SEAL) A. W. GLEASON, | Notary Public. | Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, and acts directly on the blooa and mucous surfaces of the system Send for testtmontals free. F, J. CHENEY & CO, Toledo, 0. Sold by all Druggtsts, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for con- stipation. _ |ss. Here fs 8 good story from life told | in a Loulsville, Ky., dispatch to the | Nashville (Tenn.) Banner: “A spe- cial from New Orleans says that Jobn Bellis, of that city, who is heir toa $100,000 estate, lefts by his aunt, Mrs. Lizzie Watson, of Louisville, has announced thas he willsurrender estate in favor of his two foster cousins, Mrs. Thomas Swan, wife of the assistant’ general passenger agent of the Rio Grande raliroad at Denver, and Mrs. George Venus, wife of & New Orleans business man. Mrs. Swan and Mrs, Venue had been rear- ed as daughters by Mrs. Watson, and it was not until after her death that they learned that they had been Especially necd “Nature's Remedy” (NR Tablets); need it to take the Rheu- matiom out of their joints; ne: Bowels in good order; need the strength t Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and and vigor it gives. Let “NATURE'S REMEDY” Be Your Doctor. Take atablet now and then that disease cannot take hold. ‘the purchase price retunded, Bvery your system in such good condition box is guaranteed to give satistaction, of qcemeeee GET A 25<t. BOX, oe Better Than Pills For Liverllls Bar Orr’ ETS- For Sale by C. W. HESS, Druggist, Butler, Mo Aged Woman Killed By Hogs in| a Field. | Elkton, Md., April.—Miss Eliza-| beth Woods, 75 years old, became! lost while going from a neighbor's} home to her own, and was attacked | by hogs, permitted to run wild. Her |« dead and badly mutilated body was! found by her nephew, Harry Davie, | who had been searching for her. | The tragedy happened at Charlee! ton, Cecil county, where Miss Woods | MISSOURI \ » PACIFIC ... oe IRON MOUNTAIN Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION lived alone. She vislted her nephew’s | THLE CARD ErrECTIVE Noy, 8, 1908, her home. She was seen last crossing a field | K. ©, Stock | to take a short cut through the! woods to her farm. Like a Bargain Counter. Saturday Evening Post, “Le 1s true that many ofthese Mor mons have half @ dozen wives each?” | & policeman who was stationed near the temple. “Sure,” sald the polleeman a dozen wives?” | house, and leftat dusk to return to! pysing North (N Trains South (No, SEZ sttte Zetia ee Local Freight = ee ce PEP. Local Freight | 21. , Zeke ow Be West, departs Interstate } east,’ arrives Bs BBBB BBpEp The Missour! Pacific have through package car service which delivers ° ; : ; merchandise from New York in But- you become affected with loss of | asked a visitor to Salt Lake City of! jor on the fifeh morning out, fourth morning delivery from Cincinnatl jand Cleveland, third morning from Indianapolis and Chileago, second ow 4 {morning from St. Louls. Will be pit of the stomach, bad taste tn Well, will you kindly tell me why gind go furnish you routelng orders mouth, constipation, pain in limbs, | on earth & man wants to marry half whieh will Insure quick ime, “I dunno,” said the policeman, Low One Way Colonist Rates. “unless he thinks that mebbe he can’ To points In Arizona, British Colum: get a good one out of the bunch, F yow’re building a new house, to be painted ; or bla, Colorado, Idabo, Mexico, Mon- tana, Nevada, New Mexteo, Oregon, Texas, Utah and Washington, fare greatly reduced through services op- erated over the Missourl Pactfic via if the house, or barn, or Pueblo and the Scenic Route, The other property you now have needs painting, g ed with the facts about Devoe Lead-and-Zine Paint. It will save you a good deal of money; takes fewer gal- lons for a given surface, and lasts longer than ordinary paint ; saves painter’s time for mixing—better mixed than by hand. It's economy in first and last cost. Insist on Devoe Lead- and-Zine paint; of your painter W. H. HUPP & SON, Agts Sl CHARLEY A fine Percheron stallion bay, good style and action, $10 to insure colt to stand and suck. BRIGHAM A coal black jack, mealey nose, about 16 hands high, 31 inches from tip to tip of ears, heavy bone, 4 years past. $10 to insure colt to stand | and suck. ROOSEVELT | Coal black jack, heavy bone, |} 15', hands high, 3 years past, | 30%, inches from tip to tip of ears. | $10 to insure colt to stand and suck. i BOB CARL Coal black jack, mealey nose, , coming two years old, will) breed a few mares latter part of season. | Price will be told at barn. | All of the above stock will stand! the season of 1909 at my barn, 8} miles east of Butler. Care taken to prevent accidents, but I will not be responsible should any occur. Colts will stand good for service money. | DEWITT M’DANIEL dark adopted by her when {ofants. Mrs. Watson was a aister of Bellis’ father. Bellis says he has a good business and is comfortably fixed and believes { ht that Mrs. Watson’s estate should go to the children she adopt- ed; though he {s really next of kin and the legal heir.” General Harvey C. Clark has speci- fications for a large dam site on the government rifle range near thiscity. The lake will cover 15 acres and will be constructed on the past side of the government site.—Nevada Post. TABLER’S PILE BUCK EYE UINIMENI CURES NOTHING BUT PLES, A SURE and CERTAIN CURE known for IS years as the BEST REMEDY for PILES. SOLD BY ALL DEUOGISTS. Denver & Rio tirande. If you are contemplating a trip West let me get acquaint- figure with you to-day. 1 can save you time, trouble and money, Call at office or write me I will be glad to aeasiss you, B.C. Vaypervoort, Agent. | ) PPPS PPPPDD-LL DOCS PODER OS O00 O09 | erect ae DR. E. N. CHASTAIN. Mo, t OMce over American Clothing House z Residence High Street, Bur.er, » Office Phone 218. Residence Phone 196, DR: |. Ma CHRISTY, Dieses of women snd Children # Specialty Office over A. H. Culver Furniture Company, Butler, Mo. Office Telephone 2 House Telephoneld, B, F. JETER, Attorney at Law and Justice, Omce over H. H, Nichole Butler, Mo. Gast side square, DR, J. T. HULL DENTIST Cntrance, same that lead to R. L. Liddil’s studio, north side square, Butler, Mo T. C. BOULWARE, Physiclan and Surgeon. Oftice North Side Square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and children a specialty. Drs. Cannon & Sparr Dentists, BUTLER, - MISSOURI. East Side of Square Telephone No, 812 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trace MARKS Desicns fing axon decree rone sending as! el qutculy nour opinion free whet! org Invention ts probably mmunica- tions strictly confident! idest on Munn Teoetve inthe A handsomely iItustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any gotenriig sow ‘erms, $3 @ for ag Hil ogi F St. Washington, vey RAKIM Bi TNE I a Sas cee Sea