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LUNG HEMORRHAGES (1 TOOK PE-RU-NA.) j | | MISS NINETTE PORTER. Miss Ninette Porter, Braintree, Ver- mont, writes: “I have been cured by Peruna. . “I had several hemorrhages of the lungs. The doctors did not help me much and would never have cured me, “I saw a testimonial in a Peruna almanac of a case similar to mine, and Icommenced using it. I wrote to Dr. Hartman for advice. He kindly gave me free advice, ‘ “T was not able to wait on myself _ when I began using it. I gained very slowly at first, but I could see that it was helping me. “After I had taken it a while I come ; menced. to raise up a stringy, sticky, substance from my lungs, This grew less and less in quantity as I continued the treatment. DEAD MAY REACH 100 | Eighty-Six Names Now on List of Great Northern Victims. Wellington, Wash., March —Bigh- . |ty-six flames are now on the list of jdead and missing passengers, train men and postal employes whe were carried down by the avalanche that destroyed two Great Northern trains Tuesday morning. The number of laborers fighting the snow whe were } sleeping on the ill-fated trains varies from twenty to thirty. An estimate of 100 dead is comser- vative. All the dead were residents of the Northwest. Of the injured only one, Bishop Winget of Chicage, was from the east. No one who has seen the wreck- age has the slightest hope of finding any of the missing alive. The ex- plorations have uncovered nome liv- ing and some of the bodies are shock- ingly mangled. An avalanche of dry snow might have covered its victims \alive, but the gorge at Wellington jpacked tight with wet snow, ice, |huge trees and glacial bowkiers of enormous weight. Two of the bodies recovered were those of the electricians, who were living in a cabin at the edge of Well- ington, and who were carried 30 feet down the slope. All day a stream of men, packs is “TI grew more fleshy than I had been for along time, and now | call myself | well,” A Bad Cough. Mrs. Emma Martin, Odessa, Mo.,. writes: “I cannot thank you enough for curing me. “For two years I doctored my cough, which cost me many dollars, but still I seemed to get worse, My cough was 80 bad I could not seep. “Finally I purchased a bottle of Pes runa, After the use of six bottles I feel that Iam cured.” People who object to liquid medicines ean now secure Peruna tablets, He Lost $110,000 at Faro. New York, March 7.—That big faro game in which Marshall Bell, a retir- ed business man of Newburg, is said to have lost $110,000 on the night of November 14, 1908, came into public view agin when Mr. Bell’s affidavit, taken before the trial in a suit brought against him by Joseph Mag- er of Mount Vernon, was filed. Mr. Mager holds a note for $10,000 signed by Mr. Beil, and Mr. Bell, while ad- mitting the signature of the note, re- fused_to pay it on the ground that it was given for a gambling debt. In his affidavit Mr. Bell, who is 65 years old, says he was taken toa gambling house in this city on the November night in question by a man named Metcalf. Metcalf, ac- cording to the affidavit, persuaded Mr. Bell to sit in a game of faro. Mr. Bell says that between midnight. and 4:30 a. m. he drank a quart of cham- pagne, a bottle of whisky and some other liquors, and was naturally a little uncertain in his actions. After the game had been running two or three hours, the affidavit says, the dealer told Mr. Bell he had lost $80,000, and asked for a check. Mr. Bell says he refused to sign a check, but did sign I. O. U.’s for an amount unknown to him. Later on he was told that he had lost $30,000 more and he signed what he thought were some more I. 0. U.’s. He says that he was told by the gamblers that he was not signing promissory notes. Missouri Worth: $1,482,930,283. Jefferson City, March 7.—The to- tal valuation of the property of Mis- souri, as returned to the state auditor by the assessors of the several coun- ties and the city of St. Louis for taxes for 1910, is. $1,482,930,283, of which amount _ $1,118,206,067 represents real strapped to their backs, wound about jthe mountain path from Skykemi |to Scenic and Wellington, carrying /food and supplies for the injured, |Some are digging for the bodies of \friends or relatives. A few were | sight-seers, and they were told they | were not wanted. | Ifthe searchers locate the Pullmar | cars intact they, may tike out ny | bodies in a short time, but it is likely ‘that the dead are strewn thrv jacres of debris. At the present rate | of progress it will take weeks to re- cover all the bodies. | After the track is opened, engines and tackle will lift the huge trees and boulders. There are no coffins at Wellington, and the dead, wrapped in blankets on the snow, are well preserved. Snow plows and wrecking trains working east from Skykomish, made good progress and Superintendent O'Neill of the Great Northern said he expected the road tobe in operation about April 1. The Great Northern’s costly experi- | ence with snow in the Cascades has | caused renewal of the project to build a tunnel ata level 1,000 feet lower than the present opening, with its west portal at Scenic Hot Springs. The proposed tunnel was surveyed years ago by European engineers, and pronounced feasible. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES cost you no more than others, but they color more goods brighter and faster colors, Care of the Sewing Machine. From the Boston Herald. : That indispensable household friend and help, the sewing machine, is fre- quently the object of a great deai of unjust criticism and abuse. is neither easy nor pleasant to confess/ They gave the yell just as he had| gge; ‘ ; | our own ignorance or impatience, and heard it in war times. Major S. G.| Office over A. H. Culver Furn. CO. so we are wont to declare that the machine is ‘‘cranky,” “‘has fits” and “thas gone into a fit of the sulks.”” When your sewing machine has the next fit, get some oil and a brush and go over the running parts, brushing the oil into every crevice. wipe it all off, cleaning the running gear as perfectly as possible. Oil the machine, reset the needle, see that the thread is all right, and proceed with your work. It will be a very strange thing if the machine doesn’t sing away merrily as a re- ward for your patience in puting it in order. — jas rebel yell.” marta Welcome Words To Women If, you are an intelligent thinking woman, in need of relief from weakness, nervous- ness, pain and suffering, then it means much to you that there is one tried and true honest square-deal medicine OF KNOWN COMPOSITION, sold by druggists for the cure of woman’s ills. The makers of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription for the cure of weak, nervous, run-down, over-worked, debilitated, pain-racked women, knowing this medicine to be made up of ingredients, every one of which has the strongest possible endorsement of the leading and standard authorities of the several schools of practice, are perfectly willing, and in fact, are only too glad to print, as they do, the formula, or list of ingredients, of which it is composed, in plain English, on every bottle-wrapper. Is this not a significant fact worthy of careful consideration ? Women use Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription in preference to all other ad- beat ‘medicines sold by druggists for their peculiar weaknesses and ailments ecause it is THE ONE REMEDY which contains no alcohol or habit-forming drugs, is not anything like advertised secret compounds or patent medicines. THE ONB REMEDY for women devised by a regularly graduated physician of vast experience in woman's ail- ments and carefully adapted to her delicate organism. THE ONE REMEDY good enough that its makers are not afraid to print its every ingredient on its outside bottle-wrapper. It’s foolish—often dangerous to be over-persuaded into accepting a secret nostrum in place of this times proven medicine of KNOWN COMPOSITION, —World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. CERRO BORD Bir Bin hie BORE OS hy | MISSOURI PACIFIC The Officers and Directors OF The Missouri State Bank AND The Walton Trust Co. IRON MOUNTAIN ay IVe IVant to fill your prescriptions. Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION. Following is corrected time of trains: We offer you safe drugs as can be obtained in any market. Trains North ( No, 208, K, C, Stock Local gronx, | Trains South (No I L We practice absolute cleanli- ness, carefulness and pri- vacy in this department. Cordially invite their customers and friends to come in and inspect their new quarters. 207. We are able to meet any com: @ [* Frelaht 2b... petition in price, quality ity considered. ( Vest, departs ) Kast, arrives... )seeueye depart arrives, Freight trains do not carry passengers, All freight for forwarding must be at depot notlater than eleven O’ciock a m or be held for following days forwarding Freight for Interstate Division must be delivered before five o’clock p. m, No freight billed for this train in morning, E. U, VaNpERVOORT, Agent, ’ Interstate ES EGE BE HEME OE: We excel in promptness, and accuracy is our safeguard. ¢ CLAY’S NORTH SIDE SQUAR:. ° “The right place.” They will be extended Every Courtesy. Qe v® Missouri Pacific have through i) sea ~ | package car service which delivers GEORGE N. BABCOCK, ercennniee pom New York ss But- er on the fifth morning out, fourth | ; AUCTIONEER ;morning delivery from Cincinnati General Live Stock and Farm Sales. | and Cleveland, third morning from Graduate of the Mo. Auction School! Indianapolis and Chicago, ‘second at Trenton, Mo. Your business so- morning from St. Louis. Will be | licited. Let me arrange your bills. glad to furnish you routing orders 16-2m* Spruce, Mo., R. F. D. I.) which will insure quick time. RUE BOk EE ROE BB OOEEO The IT Is NO SECRET! It is plain to be seen why the PEOPLES BANK CONTINUES TO GROW ABOUT THE “REBEL YELL.” | OR. J. M. NORRIS, k se Eye, Ear and Throat Specialist Macon Veterans Give Opinions Byes Tested Free an d Glasses Pro | s to Its Meaning. erly Fitted. ice on south side bat ning 49-tf over Times Office Macon, Mo., .March.—Some veter-; = seas ans were discussing the other day the | “rebel yell,” Captain Newton Ketch- DR E. N. CHASTAIN am, who was in many of the fiercest Butler, Mo battles of the war, said that the old Office over American Clothing House yell was even worse than the rebel) — —_ Residence High Street bullets. He had not heard it since | Office Phone 213° Res. Phone 195 the war until one day when a Middle | Fork delegation came to town to take | DR. J. M. CHRISTY part in a Democratic rally. | Diseases ot Women and Children a Specialty | 1st—Its officers are men who have been tried long in positions of trust. They have prov- en themselves to be conservative and economical. 2nd—It has a board of directors composed of seventeen successful farmers and business men. 3rd—It prohibits the loaning of its funds to its officers and employees. 4th—It has for the convenience of its friends 4 and patrons a daily live stock market re- MISSOURI port. House Phone 10 T at ' Brock, who was with the Sixty-sev- | Office Phone 20 ‘enth Ohio, one of*the 300 fighting! — ‘regimenté on the Union side, said he| had heard the rebel yell time and a9 i Sapepmned & ot somnetting ‘Entrance same that leads to R. L.| t : 7 | Liddil’s Studio | “Y-e-e-e p-p! Y-e-e-e-e p-p! {North side square Butler, Missouri He said it was- a harsh staccato! Ki ; sound like a screech, that the rebels always used it when about to make a| charge. Captain Ben Eli Guthrie, who'serv- ed throughout the war in the Confed- erate Army of the West and was right in the thick of the fight, said: | “Ifthe rebels had any peculiar yell, T. C. BOULWARE |Idon’t know what it was. On going »Physician & Surgeon /into battle some of the boys would/Office North Side Square, Butler, screech out one thing or another, just}Mo. Diseases of women and chil- as the Yankees did, but if there was dren a specialty. any copyrighted, individual war cry} - on our side I don’t know it. I don’t believe ever was any such thing 5th—It gives to its patrons without cost the protection afforded by one of the latest burglar proof safes. r 6th—It always has ample funds to loan to de- serving borrowers. 7th—It is (in fact) ‘‘A Bank on which you can Always Bank."’ DR, J. T. HULL Dentist DR. H. M. CANNON DENTIST Butler, Missouri East Side of the Square Phone No. 312 HESS DRUG STORE The Rexall Store The Chi-Nam-El Store The Eastman Kodak Store The Lowney’s Candy Store The Lee’s Incubator and Stock Remedy Store The Prescription Drug Store CoC. WW. HESS, Druggist. 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE PATENTS ‘The encyclopedia gives this as the} ; ‘Wo-wo.”’ s aoe Peoples Feed Yard SOUTH-WEST CORNER SQUARE. >