Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 51, Number 9, Jasper, Dubois County, 13 November 1908 — Page 3
17j o - , m
FOUR GIRLS
Restored to Health by Lydia E. piuklinm'sVegotnblo Compound. Harf What TAy Say,
;siUsLllllanRoM.MO Kast 81th Street, Now York, writc: "Lydia
js. nine nam's vegotaIble, Com pound over-cninolrreguUiritlos.po-riodlo BuffcrhiK, and uorvous liendaches.
after ovorythlnp elsa had failed to help me, and 1 feol it a duty to let others know of it." KatharlneCraifj.2355 , Lafayetto St., Denver,
IKiou, wmos: "i nanus to Lydia K. I'inkham'ii VoirutahloCoinnound 1
'utmrell.a'torsuiTerinj; for nioiiths from nurvouh prostration." .MIks Mari) Stoltzman, of Laurel, la., I writes: "Twos Ina run
IdovrnconditionumUuffcrod froinsupprusvlon, indlce stion, and ioor
f circulation. Lydia E. J'lnkham's Vegetable Compound niado mo well and Ktrrmg." Mit Ellen M.Olson, I of 417 X. East St., Ke-
Iwaneo, III. .says: " Ly-diaKI'Inkham'sVege-taldu Compound cured mo of backache, sido ache, and established
my periods, after tho best loral doctors had failed to help mo."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. f.ir thirty years Lydia E. Pinkhum's i'ffttalle Comioun(l, inado fr in ruts and herbs, has been tho s: ui'l.trd remedy for female ills. a!.l ha l,sit i very cured thousands of v iu -nvho have been troubled with dbpla vint-nts, inflammation, ulce rati .Ii, libroid tumors, irregularities, pt ri li'' pains, backache, that bear-ii.'-il"n feeling, flatulency, ind igesti.i!i,iiwiiKss,ornervous prostration. "h don't you try it? Mrs. Pinkhnm invites nil sick women to write her for advice. Slio lias jrulded thousands to liealth. Address, Lynn, DItiss. SICK HEADACHE
I Positively cured by
these little I'ills. TUcy also relievo Dis-
I tress ironi Dyspepsia. Indigestion and Too Hearty
Eating. A perfect remI edy for Dizziness. Nausea.
pro;v8ines3. Had Tasto la tho Mouth. Coated
iTonpue. Pain In the Skle, JtOUPID LIVEIl. The7
regulato the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL FILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear Fas-Simile Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
i r
CARTERS
Imp ittle
I IVER
n pats.
CARTERS ITTIE IVER I PILLS.
45o50
Bushels of
Wheat per Acre
have been grown on Farm Lands in WESTERN CANADA Much less would be satisfactory. The k eneral average i s above 20 bushels ".VI are loud la their praises of the ffxt i r .ys and that wonderful country " 1 tract from c rreoridenco National 1 . t .ial Association of August. ioS. I mw possible to secure a Homestead of i a- res ire and another 160 acres at ft.oopcr H n !red have paid the cost of their farms flf sei and then had a balance of from Iioäj tv !- jc ieracre from one crop. Wheat. narley.Oats. Flax-alt do well. Mird rt-n i? is a great success and Dairjriac ishiehlr Es - lent Climate, splendid Schools ar.d '-.. Kailwats bring most emy district vr t n eat reach ol market. RsiIw.t and Land Companies hare lands for a.eat ow prices and on easy terms. "Last Best Wast" Pamphlets ani maps sent free. For these and i.ifor mation as to how to secure lowest KalUay Kates apply to W ! Scott. Superintendent of Immigration, ' "a. anada, or W II Ropers, vf Floor, i a. tion-Terminal Buildinc. Indianapolis, Ind., A nortiedGorernuient Agents 11mm u; hra 7 on w thla sdTartiMmtst.
i EXCELLENT WEATHER AND MAQ- , NIPICENT CROPS.
Itrpurta from Vrtrru Canada Are Very ICui-ournKhiK. A correiondcnt writes the Winnipeg (Mmii.) Free I'resa: 'The Irlicher Crek DlHtrict (Southern Alberta), tho original home or fall wheat, where It has been grown without failure, dry ennon and wet. for about 'JTt yearn. In excelling itwlf this year. The yield and quality ure both phenomenal, a has Inn the weather for It harvestine. Forty btiHhels is a common yield, and many ü.ds Ko up to WJ. (') and over. iumI most of It No. 1 Northern. Kven last year, which wns less favornhle. Hlmllnr yields were in uome ease obtalnetl. but owJiir to the season the (luallty was not so good. It is probably safe to Kay that the average yield from the Old Man's Ulver to the boundary will be 47 or 48 bushels jKr acre, and mostly No. 1 Northern. One man has Just mmle a net protlt from his crop of SHUtf per acre, or little less than the selling price of land. IjuwI here Is too cheap at present, when a crop or two will pay for It, and a failure almost unknown. Nor is the district dejieiulent on wheat, all other crops do well, ulso stock and dairying, and there Is a lare market at the doors in the minliiK towns up the Crow's Nest Pass, and In Itritlsh Columbia, for the abundant hay of the district, and poultry, pork and garden truck. Coal Is near and cheap. Jim Ulli has an eye on its advantages, and Ims Invested here, and is bringing the (;reat Northern Itnllroad soon, when other Hues will follow." The wheat, oat and barley crop In other parts of Western Canada show splendid yields ami will make tho farmers of that country (and many of them are Ainerlenns) rich. The Canadian Government Agent for this district advises us that he will he pleased to give Information to all who desiro it about the new land regulations by which a settler may now secure 100 acres In addition to his HJO homestead acres, at $3.00 an acre, and also how to reach these lands Into which railways are being extended. It might be interesting to read what is said of that country by the editor of the Marshall (Minn.) News-Messenger, who made n trip through portions of It in July, 1D0S. "Passing through more than three thousand miles of Western Canada's agricultural lands, touring the northern and southern farming belts of the Provinces of Manitoba. Saskatchewan and Albertn. with numerous drives through the great grain fields, we were made to realize not only tho magnificence of the crops, but the magnitude, in measures, of the vast territory opening, and to In? opened, to farming Immigration. There are hundreds of thousands of farmers there, wnd millions of acres under cultivation, but there is roo;n for millions more, nnd other millions of acreage available. We could sec In Western Canada In soil, product, topography or climate, little that Is different from Minnesota, nnd with meeting at every point many business men and farmers who went there from this state, it was difficult to realize one was beyond Uie boundary of the country."
Warts. Tp euro a wart put n drop of vinegar on It throe or four times a day and then put on tho vinegar as much baking soda as the vinegar will absorb. Keep It on ten minutes, and In n few days' time the wart will drop off and leave no mark but a tiny white spot
Kemps Balsam
Win stop any coufjh lhat can be stopped by any medicine and cure coughs that connot be cured bvunv
other medicine.
It is always the best cough cure. You cannot allord to take chances on any other kind. KEMP'S BALSAM cures
counhs. colds, bronchitis.
fjrlp, asthma and consump
tion in iirsi stages.
It docs not contain alco
hol, opium, morphine, or
uny oincr narcotic, poisonous or harmful drug.
How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for nay ca of Catarrh that canDot be rurd by Hall's Catarrh 'ure F. J. CHKN'BY .V CO.. Toledo. O. We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, nnd believe hi Hi perfectly honorable In all burliness transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by bis firm. . Waloiko. Kinnan It Mabvi. Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the Mood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials senv free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Droeclsts. Take Hall' Family Tills for constipation.
Beer in 3elgium. Deer Is the national beverage of Belglum. The country has 3,375 breweries, with an output of 433,000,000 gallons a year. Foreign beers are largely imitated.
Uo Yonr Clothes I-ooU YHIovrT If so. use Red Cross Hall Blue It will make them white as snow. Large 2oi. package, 5 cents.
Curious Burial Cdstom. In Assam a curious burial enstom exists. All corpses are lowered from the roofs with ropes. It being contrary to the laws of the country to carry a dead body through n door.
Mr. TiosWi Soottuai Sfra for children tthInr. softens ths rums. roJteM inflammation aÜajs pals, cures wind colic. 3e,tita a botUa.
HELp INMAT OX HAVIJte womVim Dr Marlers Preparalisn ,...,. .V4 e fcaU "Keller ftr W mm,m." nr.M it iiwuo ce., so vr. sad kc, s. t. city
Cocoanut Shells. Cocoanut shells make excellent fuel. Tho enormous amount of oil thoy contain causes them to take fire at once. Many hotel keepers in England rccogtilze the fact and buy large quantities of them to mix with coal as fire lighters.
Beware of the Cough that bangs on pmUtently. bmVtnjr, your sight's rtt and exhausting you with the vte lence of the p rot Tims. A few dotes of Hto's Cure 111 relieve wonotrfully any couc'j, na matter how fr advanced or strioiu 1 1 loothes a nd heals the Irr tated surfaces, clears the elcrged air paiuges and th couth disappears. At all drug gW, 25 cts.
I N. U. INDIANAPOLIS NO. 40. 1903.
i Clear, white clothes are a slcn that the
housekeeper uses Heu Cross nan uiue. Large "ot. package. 5 cents. Courting in Borneo. All the suitors for a girl's hand In Borneo are expected to ho generous in tlicir presents to her. Theso presents are never returned. Therofore tho wily young lndy defers as long as possible a positive selection of the happy man. Let us bo of good cheer, romcmberIng that tho misfortunes hardest to hear are those which nevor conio. Lowell. Tho only serious and formidable thing In nature Is will. Emorson,
Funny Old Edrih
STome HemarKablc TrtcJ(f of Thu Weird World Tho other day tho seacllff near L-yme Regis, in Dorsetshire, suddenly turned Itself into a pretty good Imitation of a volcano, gt oatiy to tho uiarui of the people living nearby. The cause was tho spontaneous combustion of certain Inflammable material, and ono result was that a large hoction of tho cliff tumbled into tho sea with a moat tremendous crash. Far away In the Arctic, on tho northernmost coast of British North America, a similar nham volcano is working on an enormous scale. A huge cliff, lying to the east of Cape Bathurst, is all ablazo for a distance of over 20 miles. The face of tho cliffs Is seamed with lignite, and this appears to have been burning for centuries. How it took fire, or when, no one knows, or ever will know. And there It goes on blazing year after year, covering tho everlasting ice with a pall of smoke and cinders. After years of effort It is now possible to predict the weather, with tolerablo accuracy, for a day ahead. But as for foretelling what the earth herself will do the next minute, you might as well attempt to predict whero a flash of lightning will strike. Tho forces at work below the earth's crust seem to take an almost impish delight in playing the maddest pranks, somo of which F.re totally unexplainable. Some are harmless, some destructive beyond measure. Of the latter, tho most extraordinary example on record Is undoubtedly the destruction of St. Pierre. Mont Pelee exploded. Such a thing has happened before. Volcanoes not unfrequently blow their heads off. But why that awful cloud of white, hot dust should have rushed straight down upon St. Pierre, killing 40,000 people iu less than two minutes, is not so easily explainable. The disaster was so local that Monte Rouge, the suburb on the hills close above, escaped comparatively undamaged. Lake Vernagther, a beautiful sheet of water, the pride of a valley in tho Tyrol, vanished in a night. Next morning the bed was bare mud. There was no earthquake on this occasion. The lake quietly disappeared as a bath empties when the plug Is pulled out. Speaking of Swiss lakes recalls to mind the extraordinary "tidal" waves of Lake Geneva. They are called "tidal" for want of a better name. At uncertain intervals the lake heaves itself up, and rises five to six feet in a few seconds. Why or wherefore, no one knows. Nor can any one tell what Is happening in the Caspian Sea. For years past its waters have been falling, and it has been supposed that the great Inland sea was gradually drying up. Recent soundings revealed the astonishing fact that tho'Caspian is at present actually deeper than It was a century ago. There is only ono possible hypothesis. The bottom of the sea must be dropping ouL In 1905 potroleum was struck near the town of Dalton, In Texas. Belleving that an oil deposit actually underlay the town, a trial boring was mado just outside the city. The result was alarming. At a depth of 250 feet the drill points fell into what was evidently a gigantic subterranean cave, of which soundings failed to reach the bottom. Presently the earth bogan to fall away, and drop Into the fearful abyss. A huge pit appeared, which constantly extended. Then all the water In the town reservoir poured away, leaving not ono drop In the place. Some of those natural phenomena are quite bej-ond explanation. In tho northern part of Polk county, Wisconsin, there are five big holes In tho ground, natural wells, varying between 120 feet and 1C0 feet deep. Whenever rain is coming these wells go crazy. A current of air comes roaring out, with a sound that can bo heard nearly half a mile away. Tho air Is sometimes so hot that ft will boil a kettle, and. again, so cold that it will freeze water.
BOY KEPT SCRATCHING.
JUST A CHEAP ONE. Spellbinder Delivered Great Speech, but Could Have Done Better for $25. He had made a fair speech In favor of his political candidate for governor and against the other, and when he had finished a friend stepped forward and shook hands with him and said: "I want to compliment you on your effort It was great." "Then you liked my remarks, eh?" "They were bang up. I didn't know It was in you to orate the way you did." "Oh, I did fairly well, I guess! But you must remember at the same tlmo that this was only a cheap speech. The regular orator failed them, and they rung me In for $15. Of course I could not spread myself for that Say, I wish I had been making a regular twenty-five dollar speech. If l had been I should have called the opposition candidate n liar. "I should have shown his utter unfitness for office. "I should have proved that his election would ruin the country. "I should have advanced statistics to chill tho blood. "I should have appealed to my hearers not to bring about- a state of anarchy and bankruptcy. "I should have summoned every patriot in the audience to go to the polls early nnd die for American liberty. "I should have trotted out Bunker Hill, the American eagle nnd the star spangled banner and waved them around until men would have busied a lung in cheering for them. "As I said, this was only a cheap efforta few remarks for $15 but If they have pleased you and strengthened your belief In our cause, why why" And thoy drank together and figured out that the country was Bavcd again. Cincinnati Enquirer.
Refuso another's burden and you
lose your own blessing.
Rose run I.astrd 7 Years -Kare Was All ItnT SUIrt Six-rlallata Failed, lnil C'utlrurn KHrtt-il Cure. "When my little boy was six weeks old an eruption broke out on hU face. I took him to a doctor, but his face kept on getting worse until It got so bad that no one could look at him. Ills whole face was one crust and must have been very painful. He ovratched day and night until his face was raw. Then I took hltn to all the best apecialIsLi In skin diseases, but they could not do much for him. The eczema got on bis arms and legs nnd we could not get a night's sleep In months. I got a set of Cutlcura Remedlen and he felt relieved the first time I used them. I pave the Cutlcura Remedies a good triad nnd gradually the eczema healed nil up. He Is now seven years old and I think the trouble will never return. Mrs. John G. Klumpp. SO Niagara St.. Newark, N. J., Oct. 17 and 22. 1007" Nothing Impoverishes a good deed quicker than thinking of Its profit. Cheerful sinners ttw work less harm than the sour saints.
Ivory Jelly. Tho Jelly was singularly pale. It almost resembled Junket. "It Is ivory Jolly," said tho invalid. ".My English cousins sent mo a case of it from Sheffield." "But why is It called ivory Jelly?" they inquired. "Precisely bocauso It Is made of ivory. A third of England's Ivory goos to Sholllold. and In the process of grinding and cutting It for knife handles, and so forth, a lot of Ivory dust remains, a fine dust, similar to tho best flour. Of this tho Sholllold folk have made Jelly for many yoars. "The Jelly for some reason Is nourishing, oxtromoly so. The doctors prescribe It for the anaomlc. And of lato a Sheffield firm has taken to manufacturing it on a largo scale. Sheffield ivory Jelly is now on the market "Out of courtesy to my cousins I tried it. To ray surprise I fouud it good. My doctor, sampling it, found it good too. He told me to take tho whole case." Buffalo Express. Monopolized. Was Gaul. But nowadays bookagents have Once divided In three parts It all. Detroit Free Press.
One of ihe of the happy homca of to-day Is a vast fund of information aa to the best methods of promoting health and happincaa and right living and knowledge of the world' heat products. Products of actual excellence and reasonable claims truthfully presented and which havo attained to world-wide acceptance through the approval of the Well-Inf onned of the World; not of individuals only, but of tho many who have the happy faculty of selecting and obtaining the best the world affords. One of tho products of that class, of known component parts, an Ethical remedy, approved by physicians and commended by the Well-Informed of the World as a valuable and wholesome family laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, nnd for sale by all leading druggist.
Physicians Recommend Castoria OAST0EIÄ. has met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharmaceutical societies and medical authorities, It is used by physicians with: results most gratifying. The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably tha result of three facts; First The indisputable evidence that it is harmless? Second That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, hut assimilates the foods Third It is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor OIL It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Moiphine, or other narcotic and does not stupefy, It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman's Drops, Godfroy's, Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, however, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. Tho day for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health,, by regulating the sysxem not by stupefying it and our readers are entitled to. the informations -Hall's Journal of Rcaltlu
Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chicago. Ills., says: "I have prescribed your Castoria often lor infants during my practice, and find It very satisfactory. Dr. William Belmont, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: "Your Castoria stands llrst in its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have found anything that so filled tho place." Dr. J. H. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: "I havo used your Castoria and found It an excellent remedy in my household and private practice foe many years. Tho formula Is excellent" Dr. R. J. Ilamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says: "I prescribe your Castoria extensively, as I havo never found anything to equal it for children's troubles. I am aware that thero aro imitations In tho field, but I always eee that my patients get Fletcher's." Dr. V7m. J McCrann, of Omaha, Neb., say a: "As tho father of thirteen children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aside from my own family experlenco I havo In my years of practico found Castoria a popular and efficient remedy In almost every homo." Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: "Tho name that your Castoria has made for Itself In the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the presence of children, scarcely needs to bo supplemented by the endorsement of tho medical profession, hut I, for one, most heartily endorse it and believo It an excellent remedy." Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says: 'Thysiclana generally do not prescribe proprietary preparations, but In tho case of Castoria my experience, like- that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an exception. I prescribe your Castoria In my practice because I hare found It to bo a thoroughly reliable remedy for children's complaints. Any physlclan who has raised a family, as I have, will Join rae In heartiest recommendation of Castoria."
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
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Worras.ComTilswmjcTrisfr
ncss and Loss OF SLEEP. IsxSimfc Si$narare of NEW YORK.
mTTTifi "TTn LiaaBTaTi
Jaearg tho Signatare of
Guaranteed under the Foodi
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
Tie KM You Have ilwajs Bought
sn use For over yu Years. TMcetKTAuaeoHMHY, tt MuassrsTwerr, n rw yo h crrv.
The "Straight-A way" Route To Portland from Chicago. Daily through service. Pullman Drawing Room Sleeping Cars, Pullman Tourist Sleeping Cars, Free Reclining Chair Cars, Coaches and Dining Cars. Electric Block Signal Protection the saf road to travtl Union Pacific Ask about the Alaska Yukon-Pacific Exposition at Seattle, Was., 1909. SJt trip, taring a$on, to YtUowttont Park, at low rate en a7 through tick U. Writ for Bor.KUta E. L. Lomax, General Passenger Agent, Omaha, Neb.
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