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WORTH MOUNTAINS | OF GOLD During Change of Life, says Mrs. Chas. Barclay Graniteville, Vt. —‘*I was passin; through the Change of Life and suffer OR from nervousness andother Bneoving symptoms, and can any Be that LydiaE. nkham’s Vegetable Com- pound has proved worth mountains of gold to me, as it ‘ restored my health : J and pol Re ‘ bhsary never forget to te US it my_ friends what Y LydiaE. Pinkham’s } a cog Compound has done for me during this trying pane. Complete restoration to health means so much to me that for the sake of other suffer- ing women I ain willing to make my trouble public so you may publis! this letter.” —Mnrs. Cuas. Barciay, R.F.D.,Graniteville, Vt. ‘No other medicine for woman’s ills has received such wide-spread and un- qualified endorsement. No other med- icine we know of has such a record of cures of female ills as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. For more than 30 years it has been curing female complaints such as inflammation, ulceration, local weak- nesses, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, indigestion and nervous prostration, and it is unequalled for carrying women safely through the period of change of life. It costs but little to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and, as Mrs. Barclay says, it is ‘worth moun- tains of gold” to suffering women, Harvard Men Will Try Taft. Cambridge, Mass., April 9.—At the suggestion and under the direction of the Harvard Political Club, an organi- zation composed of men of all politi- cal beliefs, students in the higher classes will be asked to cast a ballot on the question: ‘Resolved, That if the constitution of the United States provided for the recall of public ser- vants, President Taft’s record would justify his recall.”’ Members of the Democratic and Republican clubs will superintend the casting of the ballots as inspectors. There will be two precincts establish- ed, one at the undergraduate and the other for the law and graduate schools. The ballots will be in four colors, representing the Democratic, Republican, Socialist and unclassified voters. Marriage Licenses. J A Wix, Spruce Mo. Essie Cox, Spruce, Mo. W. H. Charters, _ Butler. Mae Blizzard, Excelsior Springs, Mo. J. D. Eckert, Butler, Mo. Fdith Palm, Butler, Mo. An aching back is instantly relieved by an application of Sloan's Liniment. This liniment takes the place of massage and is better than Sticky plasters. It penetrates —without rubbing — through the skin and muscular tissue right to the bone, quickens thé blood, relieves congestion, and gives permanent as well as temporary relief. Here's the Proof. Mr. James C. LEE, of 1100 9th St., 8.E., Washington, D.C., writes; “Thirt; years ago I fell from a ecaffold and ser{- ously injured my back. I suffered terri- Biv as tinaee 5 from the small of my back all around my stomach was just as if I had been beaten with a club. I used every plaster I could get with no relief. Sloan’s Liniment took the pain right out, and I can now do as much hi work as any man in the shop, thanks to Sloan’s Liniment Mr. J. P. Evans, of Mt. Airy, Ga., says: “ aftlicted for three ears with rheumatism, I used Sloan's Iniment, and was c' sound and well, and am glad to say I haven't been troubled with rheumatism since. My leg was badly swollen from my hip to my knee, One-half a bottle the pain and swelling out.” Sloan’s Liniment has no equal as a remedy = Rheu- matism, Neuralgia or any pain or por m or Price, 2. 60e.end 81.00 “es It's a Good Sound Common Sense |La Follette’s Magazine Tells Plain Truth. A recent issue of La Follette’s Magazine publishes the following jilluminating article upon Congres- sional trickery. There is many people who think something mysterious about the Al- drich control of the Senate. Why and how does Aldrich control? Those who see Aldrich from day to day and have abundant opportunity to note | his limitations are especially mysti- fied. There is nothing exceptional about Aldrich, either in ability or in personal magnetism. He is, in these | respects at least, ordinary, very ordi- nary. Only those who get close enough to the Aldrich machine in the Senate to look inside of it and see the wheels | go round can understand and appre-) ciate the character and manner of operation of this control. Of course, the great cementing forces back of and sustaining the Aldrich control is | the ‘System’’—‘‘Big Business’’ doin’ | “Big Politics." But the immediate | cohesive force, the sanction which sustains and effectuates the Aldrich control is the “cohesive force of pub- | lic plunder.” | Of course, the Aldrich bunch do | not go down to the treasury and fill their pockets with twenty-dollar gold pieces, Their work is not so coarse and, besides, that would be ‘smal pickings.”” Also it would put the “pickings” in the wrong pockets. | This is the ‘‘System’s’’ game and the! © “pickings”? belong to it, not to the | their clothes away. Senators. The ‘System’? wouldn't even trust its Senators with the) “pickings.”’ The business of the sen- | ators is to wear their honors and “‘de- liver the goods.’’ Moreover, the “System’’ plunders always within the forms of the law—or at least within the forms of law according to the best advice of its Knoxes and Roots. Aldrich is a shrewd trader, that is he isashrewd trader as the white with the American aborigines for whole miles of rich, fertile country, were shrewd traders. He is ashrewd trader as the man who sticks the muzzle of a gun into your faee ona dark night and demands ‘your money or your life’’ is a shrewd trad- er. He ascertains what you want to prefer and then he makes you pay his price for it, as he has in his pow- er to do like the man with the gun, And his price is fidelity and subser- vience to the Aldrich control. The shrewdness of the Aldrich con- trol was depicted in the tariff session. It was described by Senator Dolliver in the Senate in these words: “We have seen in this Congress a | spectacle that has discouraged my | heart, the spectacle of men being | compelled to bargain with the au-! thorities which control the Senate for the protection of the interests of their own people.” It was ‘able leadership’ and shrewd | trading for Aldrich to put into the| creases and reductions, whieh he did not want and which the House would not stand for, to trade the “‘System’’ and he did not want. But such schemes require favoring circum- stances for their successful consum- mation. And the shrewd trades which Aldrich “framed up’’ would have fallen flat indeed had not Cannon “packed”’ the House conference com- mittee—the other party to the trade— to sit in with Aldrich and play his game his way. It was the Aldrich control assert- ing itself that warned senators that if they opposed the passage of the Al-| drich Emergency Currency Bill of | the last Congress, they would do so) at their peril of having stricken from | the public buildings appropriation bill certain provisions for needed public improvements in their home states. | ] | Is Failure in Tennessee? St, Louls Times Bishop E. E. Hoss, strong support- er of the anti-liquor agitation in the South, departed for his home in Nash- ville, after declaring prohibition in the larger cities of Tennessee a fail- ure. The Bishop spoke before the district conference of the M. E. Church, South. He declared liquor was sold in Nashville, Memphis and probably Chattanooga with little or no effort at secrecy. The law went into effect last July. Because of the apathy or direct opposition of the authorities to ‘lits enforcement, he says an even more bitter campaign than the for- mer will be launched by the ‘“‘drys.” They intend, if possible, to clean out the present administration. Pat men, who exchanged a few baubles | To use medicines only of KNOWN CoMpPosITION, and which contain neither alcohol nor habit-form- ing drugs. It is foolish—often dangerous to do otherwise. The most intelligent people, and many 0 the most successful, conscientious physicians, follow this judicious course of action. The leading medical authorities, of all schools of medicine, endorse the ingredients composing Dr. are = printed on wrappers and attested under oath. There's no al policy is followed by the makers. Pierce’s medicines. These secrecy; an open publicity, s quare-de: RS AIOE ES MPS ERS toe Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription THE ONE REMEDY fer woman’s ailments, sold by druggists, devised and gotten up by a regularly graduated physician of vast experierce in treating woman’s peculiar diseases and carefully adapted to work in harmony with her delicate organization, by an experienced and skilled specialist in her maladies. THE ONE REMEDY for woman's ailments, sold by druggists, which contains neither alcohol (which to most women is the rankest poison) or other injurious or habit- forming drugs. THE ONE REMEDY for women, the composition of which is so perfect and good that its makers are not afraid to print its every ingredient, in plain English on its outside bottle-wrapper, and attest the correctness of the same under oath. We have a profound desire to avoid all offense to the most delicate sensitiveness of modest women, for whom we entertain the most sincere respect and admiration, We shall not, therefore, particularize here concerning the symptoms and peculiar ailments incident to the sex for which Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription has for more than 40 years proven such a boon. We cannot, however, do a better service to the afflicted of the gentler sex than to refer them to Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, a great family doctor book of 1000 pages, bound in cloth and given away gratis, or sent, post-paid, on receipt of 31 one-cent stamps—to cover cost of mailing on/y, All the delicate ailments and matters about which every woman, whether young or old, single or married, should know, but which their sense of delicacy makes them hesitate to ask even the family physician about, are made plain in this great book, Write for it. Address: Wort.d's Dispensary Menicat. Assocation R_V_ Pierce. M. D.. President. 663 Main Srroot Rufiala N Vv Constable Tames Elopers. Aurora, II., April.—They can’t fool the Constable out at Amboy, “by gum.”’ He caught an eloping pair from Hinckley, Edna Easterbrook, 17 years old, and George Beardsley, 27 ) | years old, and did not want to put! them in the calaboose, but didn’t let that balk him nor keep him up. He locked them in a hotel and took Well he knew, lhe says, that the couple would not prave the chill of outside even for liberty. The pair were taken back to Hinckley. abandoned his wife. Miss Easter- brook is the daughter of the owner of {Hinckley Hotel and waited on the ‘table. Beardsley came to Hinckley | from Chicago several weeks ago and has been boarding at the hotel. He is said to be susceptible, while Miss Easterbrook is roguish and has claims |to being a good cook. Her face and figure and biscuits made a pronounced impression and | Beardsley proposed the trip to Miss Easterbrook. “Good Painters use Mound City Co.’s ‘“‘Horse Shoe’’ Brand House Paint exclusively. W. H. Hupp & | Son. 51-52t. Young Clark to “Spellbind.” Washington, D. C. April 11.—Ben- ; nett Champ Clark, only son of Champ Clark, expects to take the ‘‘stump”’ in his father’s district, the Ninth Mis- souri, this fall. He will speak up and down Pike county first and then will go into the other counties of the dis- trict. Chairman Lloyd of the Demo- cratic National Congressional Com- mittee, would like to use the young orator in other parts of the country if he has any time to spare. Bennett is a student at the Missouri State University at Columbia. He has an excellent record asa student | | Beardsley, the authorities claim, | “= | CURE YOUR KIDNEYS. Do Not Endanger Life When a Butler Citizen Shows You the Cure. | Why will people contince to suffer the agonies of kidney complaint, back- ache, urinary disorders, lameness, headaches, languor, why allow them- selves to become chronic invalids, when a certain cure is offered them? Doan's Kidney Pills is the remedy to use, because it gives to the kidneys the help they need to perform their work. If you have any, even one of the symptoms of kidney diseases, cure yourself now before diabetis, dropsy or Bright's disease sets in. Read this Butler testimony. : Asa Morgan, Butler, Mo., says: “‘I have never taken Doan’s Kidney Pills myself, but they have been used in my family and they have been very effective in relieving kidney com- plaint. This remedy can be procured at Frank Clay’s Drug Store and I do not hesitate to give it my highest en- dorsement.”” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan's—and take no other. Kitchener's Way. They manage things differently in England. It is not to be- admitted that their ways are always superior, but the public will be pleasantly im- pressed by the manner in which Lord Kitchener—‘‘Kitchener of Khartum”’ —has arrived in the United States. He landed at San Francisco a day or so ago, having recently completed, in Australia, the work of reorganiz- ing the British colonial forces in that country after the fashion now pre- vailing in India. And upon arriving in America he proceeded to make just as little noise as possible. We need not say that this line of Senate Tariff Bill a number of in-{and asa debater and has a liking for | conduct is along the lines prescribed | polities. He has never made any by good taste, though undoubtedly | campaign speeches. The senior Clark the demeanor of the famous Field heretofore has held him in check be-| Marshal has been that of aman of cause of his youth. excellent taste. Now, however, since young Clark. But when we contrast this unim- won a notable debate in his college a pressive couduct on the part of the week ago, his father has relented. | Most illustrious Briton now on Amer- He said that if Bennett so desires he | ican soil with that of the foremost can go into the campaign this fall American on foreign ground, we and “spellbind’” to his heart’s con-| May at least be glad that there are) tent. Scott’s Emulsien is a wonderful food-medi- cine for all ages of man- kind. delicate,sickly baby strong It will make the and well—will give the pale, anemic girl rosy cheeks and rich, red blood. It will put flesh on the bones of the tired, over- worked, thin man, and will keep the aged man or woman in condition to resist colds or pneumonia in the winter. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS Bend 100., name of paper and this ed. for our SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St., New York |more ways than one of traveling into ~ remote places. | No one will wish that Col. Roose- | 'velt may grow weary of the brilliant | parade which marks his course. We {could as easily dispense with the visit ‘ofthe circus or the demonstrations ‘on the Fourth of July. And, of, course, the cases of Roosevelt and, ‘Kitchener do not forma parallel, in, iany event. Col. Roosevelt has held | ‘more exalted positions than any that | Lord Kitchener ever held. | Still, Kitchener is a great soldier and has supplied many a front page | story; and we are glad that he is |showing us, if not the right way, \then a pleasant other way, to hold himself in the presence of strangers. |We still like the big noises; but we also respect that skill and preference by which a really big man can avoig | taking his place at the head of a torch- light procession, when he gets away from home.—St. Louis Times. Worse Than Bullets. ‘ Bullets a _— op less i ing to soldiers e eczema W. Harriman, Burlington, Me., got in the army and suffered with forty years. ‘But Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cured me when all else failed,” he writes, Greatet healer for sore, uicers, tod piles “beat. Clay's, MAN LOSES SUIT FOR HIS OWN SKELETON. Court Rules Pauper’s Contract With School is Binding When He Becomes Rich. Stockholm, April.—Albert Vy- stroem, who accepted a fee several years ago from the Royal Swedish Anatomical institute for possession of his skeleton after his death and who subsequently met with a refusal from the institute when he sought to buy himself back, has appealed from the decision of the lower courts, which held that the institute had a right to Vystroem’s ‘“‘framework,’’ which it need not relinquish unless it chooses, Vystroem was destitute when he made the bargain with the institute, but has since come into a fortune. He argues that the agreement is of a na- ture to puta premium on murder, in case the purchaser should become im- patient to pos: his skeleton and, as such, is contrary to public policy. The institute maintains that there are peculiarities in Vystroem’s construc- tion which it desires, in due season, to investigate more closely than is possible except table. Another thing particularly annoy- ing to Vystroem in the lower court's decision was an order he pay dam- ages to the institute for having had two teeth extracted without the insti- tute’s permission, the latter having put in the counterclaim when Vy- stroem began suit against it. Such Stuff as Dreams. “Tm beginning to believe that therg is something in the claim that} dreams go by contraries,”’ says Ralph | Martin, the railroad man. “The other night I dreamed that 1} found a $5 bill, and the next day | lost a ‘V’ somewhere between the Hollenden and the Lake Shore of- fices, “The next night I dreamed that I had been hurt and that an accident insurance company’s agent was hand- ing me $25. When I got down to the office 1 found on my desk a notice from this company that my annual $25 assessment was due and unpaid. “A night or two later I dreamed thata man who had borrowed $10 from mea year ago was paying me back, and.may I never vote for Billy Bryan again if the chap who borrow- ed the $10 didn’t meet me on the street next day and make another touch.’’—Cleveland Press. on the dissecting MISSOURI PACIFIC IRON MOUNTAIN Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION, Following is corrected time of trains: Trains North ; No, 20¢ (08am, i ‘ 12:36 pam, nine “.< 11:08 pam, K, C. Stock 840 pan, Local Freight 00 pam Trains South ( No. 208, So4am, no ee " 12 1S p.m 94tpm Local Frei Uso pam St Louts Stoe 145 a ( West, departs 7 a.m, Interstate .) Rast, arrives 5200 pm. Sundays departs 73 pm, t arrives 205 a.m Freight traing do not carry passengers All freight for forwar Not later than eleven o'¢ tor tollowing dats forw Interstate Division must fveo'clock p.m, No freight train In morning, koe must be at depot ‘ka mor be heli ing Freight for islivered before Milled for this VANDERVOORT, Agent, The Missouri Pacific have through package car service which delivers merchandise from New York in But- ler on the fifth yning out, fourth morning delivery from Cincinnati and Cleveland, third morning from Indianapolis and Chicago, second morning from St. Louis. Will be glad to furnish you routing orders which will insure quick time. OR. J. M. NORRIS, Eye, Ear and Throat Specialist Eyes Tested Free and Glasses Prop- erly Fitted. Office on south side 49-tf over Times Office DR. J. M. CHRISTY Diseases ot Women and Children a Specialty Office over A. H. Culver Furn. CO. BUTLER = - — MISSOURI Office Phone 20 House Phone 10 OR, J. T. HULL Dentist Entrance same that leads to R. L. __ Liddil’s Studio North side square —_ Butler, Missouri DR. H. M. CANNON DENTIST Butler, Missouri East Side of the Square Phone No. 312 T. C. BOULWARE . Physician & Surgeon Office North Side Square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- dren a specialty. That the best body-building and strengthening tonic for old was| “My two children, who were puny weak, pale, and had no 1| and ailing, i flesh and deg hig y hed evialy Vi ol. edd ee Vinelioe: = once. | Vin a » play oF geo ” — | did tonic for delicate children” — Mrs.W.H. GILMORE, Mich. |)’ --. C. ALLEN, New Bedford, Mass. Vinol builds up healthy flesh and makes thin little limbs round and plump. Children love to take it. does not ‘all we claim for it." Try tt, please. FRANK T. CLAY, Druggist, Butler. without ion ff Vinol =) %