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ApS ee a What are the Peruna Tablets good se ory seri for? Has anybody used them enough Emporia Gazette Gives Descrip- ion pow what ena ELA the following letter and see. If you have any doubt as to the genuineness of the ing For. | letter, write to Mrs. Lohr, enclose a | ted \y +g} stamp for reply, and see whether her “Your reporters are no good”’ said | ,.s:imonial is genuine or not: a citizen this morning, with virtuous | Ravenna, Mich., June 16, 1908, jindignation. “My aunt Henrietta) The Peruana Drug Co. and her two daughters Gladys and| In regard to the Peruana Tablets, I visiti | have used about ten boxes in all. Imogene, have been visiting at my the ie toon th CRLAREEMES isitont house for several days, and there | daughter ‘was bothered with @ cough hasn’t been a word in the es all the time, She has had it for four Gazette about it.” years, Sometimes it would go away, | A good many similar kicks are | pie a eS ee bot lig hed heard in the course of a long summer | 1),,+ she had consumption, and the only day, and although the management | way to give her any relief was to per- of the Gazette has taken a good many | form an operation. reporters into the basement and shot} I spend so much money for different them down in cold blood for neglect | medicines, and for doctors also, Noth- ‘ - «.. | ing seemed to help her. of duty there is still room for criti-| "SPS"E\s the Peruna Tablets adver- cism; tised in the paper, and I got a box THE PERFECT REPORTER. The miracle of motherhood is often overshadowed by the misery of motherhood. - The great functional changes which are incident to child bearing leave their mark for life on many a mother. Some women offer up their lives as a sacrifice on the altar of motherhood. A far greater number live on in ceaseless misery. Their strength fails, their beauty fades, they have no ambition and no enjoyment in life. To every woman Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription Offers escape from the pains and perils of motherhood.. Taken during the period of waiting and anticipation this medicine strengthens the body, nourishes the nerves, and prepares the whole womanly system for the coming of baby. It also insures an abundant supply of ntourish- ment for the child. The mind feels bright and buoyant. There is no anxiety, no dread, but in its place a happy anticipation of the baby’s coming, which counts for the future happiness of the child unborn, The use of ‘Favorite Prescription” makes the baby’s advent easy, and gives abundant vitality to nursing mothers. There is no alcohol or habit-forming drugs in “Favorite Prescription.” vegetable medicine. Accept no substitute for “Favorite Prescription.” tion of the Man It is Look- It is a purely INVALIDS’ HOTEL and There is nothing “just as good” SURGICAL InsTiTuTe, | fF Weak and BUFFALO, N.Y. A mode! Sanitarium with every equip- ment and appliance anda Staff of experienced and skilled Specialists for the treatment of the most difficult cases of Chronic ailments whether requiring Medical or Surgical treatmeat for their cure. stamps ve address for THE INVALIDS’ GUIDE BOOK, 40 the utmost his profits. FARMERS BANK OF BATES COUNTY. So) Hn rm estan oe We are protected against robbery by insurance and our large CORLISS SAFE, guaranteed by the manufacturer to be Burglar Proof. DIRECTORS: Clark Wix, Frank Holland, O. A. Heinlein, ° E. A. Bennett, Homer Duvall, J. W. Choate, F. N. “Drennan, W. F. Duvall. WE WANT YOUR SUSINESS. E. A. Bennett, President, Homer Duvall, Cashier, W. F. Duvall, Vice-Pres., H. H. Lisle, Asst. Cashier 200-0 000-0 000000-0-0 0-00-0000000000000000000000000000008. sickly women. The larger success of doctor or druggist is never won by putting love for the dollar above duty to the sick. Protecting the sick, giving them what they ask for when Dr, Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is called for, will enrich him in respect, if it does not swell Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WELL. | | J. J. McKee, All its ingredients printed on its bottle-wrapper. JEWETT GRADERS. Seed Testing For Missouri Farm- ers. A seed testing laboratory for the! What Some of the Users Have to! benefit of Missouri farmers and seed- | men is being operated at the Agricul- | Say of Them. tural College sat Columbia, in co-} “I having been using a Jewett opeaation with the U. S. Department) Grader on the streets of Hume for of Agriculture. The farmers of Mis-|some time. I find asa grader it is a souri are wasting annually thousands | success and cheapens the work at jof dollars in buying seeds of poor least one half. It’s all right.” quality and a large share of this could| ELL MILLER, Street Commissioner. | be saved by having all seeds testedat We endorse the above. the laboratory. This work is done J. O. BOTTS, Mayor. free of charge and it is to the advan- R. M. DUNCAN, Alderman. | tage of every farmer to have this E. MARTIN, Alderman. ; work done. J. B. THOMPSON, Alderman. | Seeds should be sent in care of the My observation is that this road Seed Testing Laboratory, Columbia, grader is a decided success. Mo. For small seeds like grasses J. C. BRIGGS, and cloversta tablespoon full is suffi-, Cashier Commercial Bank, Hume, Mo. ,cient. For large seeds such as wheat, |oats, etc., three or four tablespoons Adrian, Mo., July 29th, 1909. |full should be submitted. These To whom it may concern. |samples should bear the name and) Wilson Adams, Mayor and Wm, S. |address of the sender and a letter Mahan Alderman, and President of should accompany them _ stating the Board of Alderman, of the City of |whether a purity test is wanted or Adrian, Missouri, say that the city | whether the seed is to be tested for purchased of P. J. Jewett one of his DUVALL-PERGIVAL TRUST 0. | Farm Loans We have money to loan on real estate at a low rate | of interest with privilege to pay at any time. | | We have a complete set of Abstract Books and will fur- \ Abstracts nish abstracts to any real estate in Bates county and I examine and perfect titles to same. | ! Investments We will loan your idle money for you, securing you | v reasonable interest on good security. We pay interest on time deposits. | W. F. DUVALL, President, Arthur Duvall, Treasurer. J. B. DUVALL, Vice-President, W. D. Yates, Title Examiner. The Rexall Store The Chi-Nam-E] Store | both purity and germination. | Where a purity test is desired, a | report can be returned within a week. | Where a germination test is desired, |it takes a few days longer. | | The number of pernicious weeds that are being distributed over the | | State in the various kinds of clovers, | | grasses and other seeds are many of | them dangerous pests, and it is to the ily what he is sowing. He should |also know the germinating qualities |of the seeds he uses. j tion is at the disposal of the farmers |of Missouri, with no cost to them. It |ples of seeds from the various |sources; have them tested, and then | interest of every man to know exact- | This informa- | is frequently possible to secure sam- |buy on the results of the tests.—M. street or road Graders, after,a thor- ough trial, and after the Street: Com- missioner had recomended it at being sufficient to grade the streets of | Adrian, and recommend it to be sav- ing inthe way of teams, light and easy to work and does the work as well as a large grader, WILSON ADAMS, Mayor. WM. S. MAHAN, President Board. rue Livingston, Mont,, Aug. 10, 09. Mr. P. J. Jewett, Butler, Mo. Dear Friend Jewett: Iwas outto the ranch for two weeks and while there we set up the road grader, a Jewett, and proceeded to make about 5-8 ofa mile of road and about 1-4 of a mile of ditch. Will F, Miller, College of Agriculture &|Say that the grader worked like a Experiment Station, Columbia, Mo. | Recovered Mortgaged Property. Tuesday of last week, a young man residing in the neighborhood of The Eastman Kodak Store The Lowney’s Candy Store The Lee’s Incubator and Stock Remedy Store The Prescription Drug Store C. WW. HESS, Driggist. Missouri’s Shame. | Yegods and small fishes, but it makes a stalwart son of the great west hang his head in shame to see the splendid States of the Mississippi valley trailing along behind the lead- ership of Rhode Island, sacrificing their interests upon the altar of the § greed of Eastern Trusts! Why should > Senator Warner, of the imperial com- monwealth of Missouri, play the mere > puppet to Senator Aldrich of the in- > significent trust borough of Rhode 8 Island? Why couldn’t Warner have 8 been a leader? Why couldn’t he have stood up and made a fight for @ the rights of his people? Why wasit _necessaay for Warner to assent to the s pilfering of his own constituents? The trouble with most of our public men these days of Mammon suprem- acy is that they are not men at all, Prickly Heat Can be Cured by Using our Blue Tar Soap Excellent for toilet and bath. Makes you forget the warm weather. 5 my with a load of apples to sell. He put | his team in the Wm. Moore barn. He jand Moore tried to make a trade of |horses and Moore claimed that he} jhad traded for one of the horses he was driving when he went after the |team. Moore refused to give up the horse. : The young man returned to his home, and W. C. Stonebraker, vice- president of the Commercial State Bank of Ce Hill, came here to re- cover the Horse, as he had a mortgage of $140 against it. He filed a suit of charm on both road and ditch and the longer we worked with it the better pleased we became. It worked so nicely that I handled it myself and am going to bring it to town some day with it on the streets. 1 believe it is going to be an unequaled success. Yours truly, JOHN T. SMITH, 48-2t Per. L. M. L. Money and Happiness. Mabel Gilman Corey is not happy. So it is reported. For her sake the multimillionair steel magnate divore- edhe wife of his youth, the faithful little woman who had stood by him and helped in the days of his poverty replevin which was heard before Judge Smith and recovered the pos- session of the animal. Mr. Moore claims to have numer- ous witnesses that he traded for the animal in a perfectly legitimate man- ner and he now has a case against the young Missourian for disposing of mortgaged property if he cares to prosecute him for it.—Ft. Scott Trib- une of Thursday. and his struggles up the ladder of fame and wealth and power. He laid a princely fortune at the feet of his actress-wife. She ‘‘can go into the shops and buy whatever she pleases, gowns, jewels, any- thing.”’ She ‘can have horses and “fives ina palace, but can havea bigger one if she wants it.” But still she is not happy. She has been socially os- tracized. She is a social outcast. her reported complaint. With bursting heart she confides to afriend of former days the story of her disappointment and misery. ‘All Tcan do with my money is to buy, buy, buy—things that I really don’t is a good ay happiness and a lot of other Tknow by heart the things long one. I’m so’ un The Gazette has long been looking for the ideal reporter, and when he is found expenses will not be consid- ered if he can be signed up for regular service. : The ideal reporter, to begin with, should be a mind reader. Most every man in ‘town knows something that would be interesting if he would tell | it; and when he meets a reporter he always forgets it, and says that he doesn’t knowa thing. Then in the evening he says that there isn’t a jimdasted thing worth reading in the paper, and he rolls it intoa wad and throws it at the cat, and holds an in- dignation meeting. An expert mind reader would get a lot of information from such a man. The ideal reporter should be trip- lets. It is absolutely necessary, at all hours of the day, that he should be in three places ‘at once. He should be atthe depot taking notes of all arrivals and departures, and he should also be at the hotels copying bug- house signatures from the register, and he should be simultaneously at a meeting of the Ministerial Associa- tion, for a great deal of hot stuff has its origin there. The ideal reporter will have his private aeroplane, so that he can soar, at great speed, over the town in every direction, making notes of all the doings in the various back yards, and putting down accurate descrip- tions of the family washing which may be hung on the clothes lines. This machine will also enable him to andtried them, She could get some sleep by taking them. She would be up allnight and cough. Soinall she took six boxes, and never was bothered any more. I will leave this for any one to in- | quire at our old residence, where we lived in Chicago, All our neighbors would say that she could not live with such a cough, You don’t know how thankful I am, She is eighteen years old. My oldest son also was bothered with his stomach, throwing up, and his bowels so loose all the time, He was all run down for four months, I also doctored with him, One would say this and the other something else. Istarted in to give him the Tablets, and now he is all right and healthy looking. He took four boxes, That is all he wants to take whenever anything ails him. SoI praise your Tablets just as high as I have your Peruna, That is all the medicine that ever comes in my house, Whenever I travel I take some with me. I have had three of my chil- dren sick with scarlet fever two months ago, and that is all I used, was the Pe- runa and the Tablets, I did not lose any of them. If there is any more information you want, why just let me know and I will be glad to doso, Yours truly, Mars. L. Lour, Raveana, Mich, A Disgrace to Missouri. Hadley has used the State Institu- tions to build up his personal ma- chine; and his course has evoked this stinging rebuke from the St. Joseph Observer: There is not a physician at State Hospital No. 2 who has ever had ex- perience or a knowledge of the in- sane. Not one of them has hereto- look into second story windows and! fore had practical experience. Not see whether people keep their bed rooms in respectable order. The ideal reporter will be a clair- voyant, and capable of going into a trance at any moment, during which trance he will read the future and thus be able to be on the spot when ever anything important happens. He will also be a prize fighter and a doctor of laws; and he will have a thorough knowledge of the millinery business, so that he can write up re- ceptions; he should be a_ practicing physieian and a private detective and a good cook and he should have a pair of seven-league boots. § Any young man answering these require- ments can have a steady job on the Gazette, and he can name his own salary. ‘ The Road to Success has many obstructions, but none so desperate as poor health, but Electric the world has ever known. It com- lls perfect action of stomach, liver, thing, but it can’t} idneys, bowels, purifies and en- riches the blood, and tones and invig- orates the whole system. Vigorous body and keen brain follow their use. You can’t afford to slight Electric Bitters if weak, run-down or sickly. Only 50c. Guaranteed by F. T. Clay. ney Henry County Farmer is Killed by Lightning. . Charles Starbrook, a farmer living a mile and a half south of Browning- ton, was struck by lightning and in- stantly killed about 6 o’clock on Sun- day evening. : As the thunder storm came up, Mr. Starbrook started to the pasture to do his evening’s milking when the light- ning bolt descended and laid him low in death. Deceased was about 60 years of age and had lived there about seven years, coming from Iowa. He leaves a wife and three daughters.—Clinton Democrat. There is an immense health; that’s a tonic. Tonic or Stimulant stimulant. Up one day, way eat er van somuian progress oe by fo arg ts fa one of them has ever heretofore been placed in contact with a large num- ber of helpless unfortunates who need and require the service and ex- perience of men trained in that direc- tion. The fact that a Republican po- litical board should inflict unncessary suffering upon 1200 helpless unfor- tunates is a sad commentary on Gov. Hadley’s Republican board and an outrage on Missouri. $100 Reward $100, The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cyre in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, re- Pat a constitutional treatment. all’s:Catarrh Cure is taken internal- ly, acting directly upon the blood and | mucous surfaces of the system, there- | by a the foundation of the 5 giving—the—patrent |strength by building up the constitu- | tion and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so mueh faith in its curative powers that they joffer One Hundred Dollars for any |case that it fails to cure. Send for | list of testimonials. Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO, Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti- pation. | Gold Strike in Arizona. Morenci, Ariz., Sept.—The richest strike in years in this section has been made in the Gold Gulch district. -|The newly discovered one body, which covers the entire face of a six- foot drift, runs 30 per cent sulphide ore, interspersed with very rich oxide and native copper. The richness of the strike, how- ever, is not considered of¢much more. importance than the fact that the. strike was made in a new and prac-- tically undeveloped field which hare-- tofore has been neglected. > @e a a