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t SUSTERED THREE YEARS WITH CHRONIC CATARRE. Mr. Disch,¢ f Louisville, Gives Pe-ru-na ther, Heartbroken, Dies. | Los Angeles, Cal., Nov. 21.—Myron | H. Crippen, the aged father of Doctor | Hawley H. Crippen, under sentence Crippen’s Fa‘ the Ci flis Recovery, and Redeemed 3s to His Frind. of death in London, for the murder RETreNeT Faateerevewari eran of his wife, died in this city friendless Kk. JOSEPH F, DISCH, 454 W, Jet- ferson St., Louisville, Ky., writes: “I take great pleasure in secommending your valuable Peruana as a catarrb remedy, “T have been suffering for the past three years with catarrh, and had used almost everything in the market vata Iread of your wonderful Peruna rem- ody. After using two bottles of Porn- na I can cheerfully recommend it te any one having the same disease, “f was almost compelled to give up my business, until I used your remety, and I have never been bothered with eatarrh since.” Ilon, C, Slemp, Congressman from Virginia, writes: “1 can cheerfu. say that [ have used your valuable r edy, Peruna, with benefidal re: and can unhesitatingly recom your remedy to my friends as ani orating tonic and an effective and per manent cure for catarrh.” People who object to liquid medici: ean now secure Peruna Tablets by druggists, and manufactures he Perona Drug Mfg. Co., Colum bu io Mi..-a-lin an Ideal Lax. .ive. 44 Horses Valued at $30,000 Wichita, Kas., Nov. and penniless. His death, due to the infirmities of age, was hastened by grief over his son’s crime. The elder Crippen was 88 years old. His death occurred in a room- ing-house and the only person at his bedside was the proprietress of the place. Hawley Crippen, a son of Doctor rippen, was with his grandfather during the night, but left before death came. . Doctor Crippen was the sole sup- port of his aged parent and since the son’s flight from London with Ethel Leneve and his arrest in Canada some months ago, no remittance had come. Facing actual starvation he was saved by a few persons whom he had }come to know during his residence in Los Angeles. : The landlady of the rooming-house gave him a room and a restaurant keeper at whose place he had been | accustomed to buy his meals supplied | them free. Doctor Crippen will be hanged in London Wednesday for the murder of Belle Elmore. Will Promote Beauty. Women desiring beauty get won- derful help from Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. It banishes pimples, skin eruptions, sores and boils. It makes the skin soft and velvety. It glori- fies the face. Cures sore eyes, cold sores, cracked lips, chapped hands. Best for burns, scalds, fever sores, cuts, bruises and piles. 25¢ at F. T. Clay’s. | Feats of Champion Swordsman. | From the London Dal y Mail Squadron-Corporal-Major Eggleton, | one of the finest swordsmen in the | British army, is retiring shortly from |the Royal Hore Guards (Blues) after Burn | twenty-one years years. 23.—Forty- | One of the corporal-major’s sword KEEP THE CLOSETS CLEAN Point of importance That is Too Fre quently Overlooked by the Busy Housewife. , cme. Usually there are about the house closets so dark that except at the yearly or semi-yearly housecleaning it is Impossible to tell whether or not they are dirty. They are breeders of disease, even in the best-managed households, for no maid and few mis- tresees will craw] into the dark hoie under the stairs or back in the kitch- en after perfectly invisible dust. Gne solution of the problem is to paint these closets white, ceiling, floor and walls. It is easy enough to see dirt then, and the other and more use ful contents of the closet as well. Uf one can keep the hall closet clean and find the family overshoe on sight, sim- ply by painting the closet white, thea by all means let us hasten to the paint shop and remove the cbsolete and her rible wall paper that usually incu.o bers these germ hote!s If the closet is still treatment try cleani of the electric fas! no danger of fire and losely investigated, AH of which I n advantage to the heausewife © foes not love dirt and disorder But always, when = ¢ nes, cc hor first t ost important « oping, dark, 0 cted stairs Nis zg with the aid } There i corners can b loft TWO FINE TART SIDE DISHES Especially Good to Serve With Grme | or Roast Mests—Aids to the Appetite. Sweet Pickled A;ples.—A delicious nickle Is this, made ‘rom sweet apples. | the stem, leav Put Sut in halves throvg! ng the core in and the skin on four harness horses valued at $30,- | feats is to cut in two an apple resting 000, among them some of the best on |on the neck of a kneeling assistant. the Kansas-Oklahoma circuit, were |After a swift downward sword cut burned in a fire which destroyed the | the halves of the apple roll away and main.barn at the fair grounds here | the assistant arises unharmed. An- Sunday morning. The fire started in, Other feat is with a horizontal stroke the loft above the horses and was to sever an apple placed on a man's burning so fiercely when discovered head. ; that it was impossible to remove the| The corporal-major has won many animals. None of the horses were | Prizes at the military tournament and incured. The loss on the barn, har- | has given displays of his skill before ness and fixtures is estimated at/Queen Victoria, the late King Ed- $22,000. | ward and King George. ound ? Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound? We can furnish positive proof that it has made many remarkable cures after all other means had failed. Women who are suffering with some form cf female illness should consider this. As such evidence read these two unsolicited testi:nonial letters. We guarantee they are genuine and honest state- - ments of facts. Cresson, Pa.—* Five years ago I had a had fall, and hurt myself inwardly. I was under a doctor’s care for nine weeks, and when I stopped I grew worse again. I sent fora bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, took it as directed, and now I am a stout, hearty woman.” — Mrs. Ella E. Aikey, Cresson, Pa. - ago I was sick with kidney and weakness. The doctors gave me u let me go as easily as possible. I was advised by fr to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier. I am completely cured of my fils, and I am nearly sixty years old.”— Mrs. Sarah Leighton, Baird, Wash. $ Evidence like the above is abundant showing that the ism which breed all kinds eek Auk gaa does not of miserable feelii i i ice does " ne di that give way to Lydia E. the very disorders aie! with males poulles after remedy, up. All they could do Women who are hree cloves in each ball as in pickling | allowing | aches, then make a si or every 8 ounds of sv an \dd a few cassia buds ‘or pieces ot ick cinnamon, put the fruit in and ook the sirup a little longer until hickened and pour over the fruit Grape Relish.—Pick from the stems even pounds of grapes, rather under ipe, end separate the pulp from the kins. Put the skins in a preserving ettle over the fire, with just enough vater to prevent their burning. Place lie pulp in another kettle and cook intil the seeds loosen. Press through 1 sieve and add to the skins with a 1alf pint of vinegar; three pounds of sugar and a teaspoonful each cloves, ulspice and cinnamon. Boil until hick. This is fine to serve with game ” roast meats. ap, ounds of apples thrve IN BOTTLE TO TIE CORK Tirst make a loop in a piece of strong twine and pass both hrough at B and A. Place the loop over the neck of the bottle and draw t snugly at A and tie in a hard knot at B, when there will be a string on roth sides of the bottle to tie firmly over the cork, also a handy loop to ends 1andle the bottle with. Delicious Breakfast Muffins. One-third teaspoon salt and one-half easpoonful of soda dissolve in one-half sup of hot water, one tablespoon of nolasses, one tablespoon of melted yutter, one well beaten egg, one cup of milk, one cup of bran meal and one und one-half cups of graham meal. 3ake in gem pans 25 minutes. This will make nine. Cheese With Peppers. Melt two heaping tablespoonfuls of utter in the chafing dish, add five ‘ablespoonfuls of chopped onion, quarter cupful of cream of milk, sea- ‘oning of salt, pepper and paprika, ind four well beaten eggs. Cook till horoughly mixed and serve hot on suttered slices of toasted bread. Ant Remedy. Here is a sure remedy for the _ re noval of the little ant pest: Remove yaper from shelves, then wash them vith hot water. Prepare some strong alum water and take a small paint srush and cover the shelves, cracks ind corners a few times, and you will soon be free from them. Egg Plant Fritters. Parboil an egg plant, remove all the 3eeds and mash it. Stir in three table- spoonfuls of flour, one minced onion, an egg and salt and pepper to taste, Beat to the consistency of pancake yatter, drop from a large iron spoon nto hot boiling fat and fry brown. Cracker Pie. Pour boiling water over four or tve crackers and let soak. Press ont he water and: pour in juice of a lem- m, with teacup of sugar. Pour in vuff paste and bake. Use Paraffin Twice. can be used the second time’ © cover jelly and jam if it is wash: abe yoy nl bofled before being turned wer the fruit again. da pint of vinegar | Farmers Ba.k SAVINGS DEPARTMENT It will help you save your money and the bank will will pay interest on what you have. Try saving money, you will enjoy seeing your account grow. The bank always favors its customers. Start Today by Opening an Account with the Farmers Bank Buckwheat Cake Decline. Scholey’s Mountain, N. J., Nov. 21. |—Hardly has the populace bere had | time to assimilate the information that Jersey lightning is rapidly becoming extinct, when along comes the report, *|backed by statistics, that the effete ' latter-day Jerseyman has lost his capacity for the time-honored buck- wheat cake. The fact of the matter is, according to the millers in this part of the country, that the consump- tion of buckwheat has fallen off not less than 30 per cent in the last five years. The farmers have failed to note that, and the result is that buck- wheat has become a drug on the market. Good, old-fashioned winter-morn- ing appetities appear to be gone. Where once the mounds of well- browned flapjacks, flanked by the, molasses jug or the maple syrup, reigned supreme at the breakfast table, now the patent breakfast foods alone are to be seen. If yon use PUTNAM FADE- LESS PYES you can do your own dyeing just as well as a pigeeae. Kemember we al- low no one to make a failure with Putnam Fadeless Dyes. Monroe Due Co., Quincy, Il. Cousin of Governor is Dead. Emporia, Kan., Nov. 21.—Mrs. Abner Hadley, a cousin of Governor Hadley, of Missouri, died here at the home of a relative, Albert Coate. The Hadleys came to Kansas from Indiana in 1855, and Mrs. Hadley was the first woman on the townsite of Emporia the day the town was sur- veyed, February 17, 1857. She was born in North Carolina in 1830. The Hadleys lived in Emporia} twenty-five years, then moved to, Garden City, which has since been their home. They came here two months ago in the hope that the low- er altitude would benefit Mrs. Had- ley’s health. Mrs. Hadley was a charter mem- ber of the First Methodist Church of Emporia and an active worker in the W. C. T. U. M. U. Science Building Started. | Columbia, Mo., Nov. 21.—Twenty teams started work grading for the foundation for the $25,000 veterinary science building of the University of Missouri, on Bouchelle avenue. The building will be of stone with slate roof. It is to be 69 by 120 feet, with two wings; each of which will be 60 feet long. The south wing will con- tain the laboratory and demonstration ‘ We have just received a fresh stock of the newest Perfumes These goods are wonders and have given best satisfaction. Any odor you prefer at 90¢ an oz. They satisfy because they last CLAYWY’S Prescription Orug Store NORTH SIDE SQUARE. “The right place." Lacking in Wisdom. The person who has every re but doesn’t isn’t much of a _ pher. . Deposit $1 in the Farmers Bank é> get one of these Steel Savings Banks Office Phone 3. Realdence Phone 28, H. E. MULKEY, Registered Veterinary Surgeon BUTLER, MISSOURI Office at Harley Smith’s Livery Barn } A Good Position Can be had by ambitious young men and ladies in the field of ‘‘Wire- less’ or Railway telegraphy. Since the 8-hour law became effective, and since the companies are establishing stations throughout the , country there is a great shortage of telegraphers. Positions pay begin- ners from $70 to $90 per, month, with good chance of advancement. The, National Telegraph Institute operates * six official institutes in America, un- der supervision of R. R. and Wire- less Officials and places all graduates into positions. It will pay you to write them for full details at Daven- port, Ia., Cincinnati, O., Portland, . Ore., or Memphis, Tenn. 48-tf wireless fan | What do You Think a’ SHOULD BE CONSIDERED IN OPENING A Bank Would a STRONG, NEW, CLEAN and GROWING BANK appeal to you? A bank that has seventeen directors, successful farmers and business men; a bank that does not loan its funds to its officers or employees; a bank that gives you absolute safety for your funds, and can meet the demands of the deserving borrower; a bank where the child is as welcome as the man, the poor as welcome as the rich; and everything which is entrusted to it is held in the strict- est confidence. Such is the bank on which you can always bank ‘PEOPLES BANK Butler, Missouri Account