Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 51, Number 32, Jasper, Dubois County, 7 May 1909 — Page 3

J9ADE WELL AM) STRONG

DOLLAK WTIEAT HAS COME TO STAY.

By Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound HfirMown. Kv. "I suffered from

nct rtM-m and otherfemale troubles for

;;i ioug uine.

Doc

tors had failed to

help me. Lvdia E.

Piukham's Veeeta-

rccommt-nded, and I decided to try it. It cured my trouble and made mo well and st roup, so that I can do all my own work." Mrs. JosKni Hall, Ilardatown, Ky.

Another Woman Cured.

C nstni a, Tenn. "1 suffered from f w -rst f rm of fernab trouble so ty it at tirwa I thought I could not hv, and mv nerves wero in a dreadful i .-. iiti .n. 'Lydia JJ.Pinkhain's Vcgett! . Compound cured mp, and raado r f liku a different woman. Lydia L. l'lnkham's Vegetablo Compound is worth its weight in gold to suffering wmen " Mus. Mary Wood.R.F. D.3. If yu belong to that countless army of v "tru'n who suffer from some form

of f- rnalo ills, don't hesitate to try Ly ii i JE- Tinkham's Vegetable Compound, mado from root3 and herbs. Fr thirty years this famous remedy has I'' ii the standard for all forms of frtnulellls, and has cured thousands of women who have been troubled with such ailments as displacements, fibroid tumrs, ulceration, inllammation, irregularities, backache, and nervous prostration. If yon want special ad vico write

foritto.iirs.i'inunani.ijyijn.lilass It is free and always helpful.

New Zealand's Wealth. v w Zealand's wealth i' $1.500 per , and Is the highest of miy coun- .:, Ol- world.

Apprehensive. H-irrss I want to be loved for f 'ount tic Broke (apprehenMy dear lady, is there any : !' of this being a case of nilsM. ntity? Illustrated Bits.

lon(n(.rl .Ulrii' Kuo t-Kti KHUK

I- " ' A I ...

Iar to Allen S. Olmttcd. U Hoy. ' r a Fit KK sample of Allen's Footi pander to biike Into jrour tioe t.rM. weatlns. not. 1 wollen, tenIt makfa new or tlsht shoos ' i i 'ire for Corns and Itunlouv All and Shof Storm tt 23c

im Inrreaseth the fruit or toll. . man wrestles with losses.

cvc )owcs; Aeaases k system $ccuaYy ; as$ss oxvGovctcovun abvva cousXpoXotv Tc öefe betvcJvcvaV has jröcnjnro o the CALIFORNIA Fig Syrup Co, 50LD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS 50'a POTTLE Is Your Health Worth 10c? Jha' what it costs to get a-week's t ..eatflirnt of CASCARETS. They ' ,rao f,,r tou than any medicine , J;th Scknei generally shows 1, rt first in the Bowels and J I"'' SC A RETS cure these ills, r XT Ca.y t0 try-why not start to. c gnt and have help in the morning? lat "'"' M!!lon boxes month.

45 fo 50 Bushels of Wheat per Acre

haTe becn grown on Farm Lands In WESTERN CANADA Mu. h lcs would be satisfactory.

'scisaoovczu ousneJ

ill

1 x-l f , and lh!U "onJerlul country " ulAi ,1:11, '.lyr-lfwe Nstion.l " "hi AwiKUtion of Aujruit, iooä. . H 'W Ir,Sblc to rr,.r.. . II J .r

P- nln , It,',.,he, o' hir farms flf 10 iT.rli t?n had a balnce of from Hoxa V. h cf'lrm one crop. P' .,a,ra,ctcsand Dairjlos Isliijhlj

r

"71'rt...h.ra,kÄ. 4 Land Comp J " c nd on ear

rs, Thm, l , Vrr, Crmrnl t'niin.lii Will llr ( n!l.l Upon lu Suiiply II I nllr.l MttCr. A couple of years no. when the nnnounroiiient was nmdo In these colunins that "dollar wheat" had come to stay, nud that the time was not far distant whim the central provinces of 'aimda Manitoba, Saskatlunvan and Alberta would be calhtl upon lo supply larye part of the wheat consumption hi the United States, there wore many who luuj:hnl at the predictions and rldi.uip.l the Mm of wln-at reaching the biliar jwdnt and Btayln there. Both of tin!, iiredi. tlons have . nnc to a.-.s. Dolltr wheat Is here and It Is not only here, but Ih here to stav: ami

a' the same time, whatever unpleisant i Sensatlll'is It innv nnuici I.. I... .......... '

ble Compound was sensitive Amerl. :.e f Vntral Canada H I

already beliiR rail,,! ujh.ii to he'j. ke.-j. up our bread supply, and wlthm the' next live years will, ns Janus J HI 1 snys. literally "liec-nio the hre.id lus ' Itet of o.ir lia r.' i-jiis mli:iniis." There are fi w men in tlie I nlted 1 States better ti-.ii.iinte.l with the !

w iiea i situation than Mr. Hill, and here are few men. If any. who are Inellued to be more conservative In their

expressed views. Yet It was this greatest of the world's railroad men who said a few days nso that "the price of wheat will never be substantially lower than It Is tolny" and when it Is taken Into consideration that at that

time wheat had soared to $1.20. well

above the dollar mark, the statenieut I

peculiarly significant, and doubly bIk

nlficnnt is the fact that In this coun

try the population Is Increasing at the

rntlo of 1 per cent, while the yield of

wheat and other products Is Increasln

at the rate of only 2. jht cent. For several years pnst the cost of living

lias been steadily Increasing in the

I'nlted States, and this wide difference

In production and consumption Is th reason.

This difference must he supplied by the vast and fertile grain regions of

Manitoba. Saskatchewan nnd Alberta

There is now absolutely no doubt of

this. Kven the press of the country

concedes the fact. Results have shown that no other country In the world can ever hope to equal these provinces ns wheat producers, and that no other

country can produce as hard or as good wheat. Said a great grain man re

cently, "If t'nlted States whent main

tains the dollar mark. Canada wheat

will be well above a dollar a bushel

for In every way It Is superior to our

home-grown grain."

With these facts steadily Impinging

their truth upon our rapidly growing

population. It Is Interesting to note Just

what possibilities as a "wheat grow

or" our northern neighbor possesses. While the t'nlted Stntes will never

irrender her prestige In any manu

fart ii ring or commercial line, she must very soon acknowledge, and with as

much grace as she can. that she Is

bound to be beaten as a grain producer. It must be conceded that a great

deal of the actual truth about the rich

ness of Canada's grain producing areas

has been "kept out of sight." as Mr

Hill says, by the strenuous efforts of

our newspapers and magazines to stem

the exodus of our best American farm

ers Into those regions, it Is a fact

that up to the present time, although Canada has already achieved the front

rank In the world's grain producers.

the fertile prairies of Manitoba, Sas

katchewan and Alberta have as yet scarcely been scratched. Millions of

acres, free for the taking, still await

our American farmers; and when these

millions are gone there nre other mil

Hons in regions not yet opened up to Immigration. A few yenrs ago the

writer, who had been through those wheat provinces several times, laughed with others of our people nt the broad statement that Canada was hound to become "John Bull's bread-basket." Xow. after a last trip (and though he Is a staunch American) he frankly believes that not only will Canada become John Bull's bread-basket, but It will within the next decade at least BINOME TUB HR BAD-BASKET OF THE I'NITED STATES. Perhaps this may be a hard truth for Americans to swallow, but It Is a truth nevertheless. And It Is at least a partlnl compensation to know that hundreds of thousands of our farmers are profiting by the fact by becoming producers In this new country. The papers of this country have naturally made the most of the brief period of depression which swept over Canada, but now there is not n sign of it left from Winnipeg to the coast. Never have the three great wheat raising provinces been more prosperous. Capital Is coming into the country from all quarters, taklnj; the form of cash for Investment, industrial concerns seeking locations, and, best of nil, substantial and sturdy Immigrants come to help populate the prairies. Towns are booming; scores of new elevntors

I are springing up; railroads are sending

out their branch lines In all directions; thousands of prosperous fanners are leaving their prairie shelters for new

and modern homes "built by wheat"; everywhere Is a growing happiness and contentment happiness and contentment built by wheat the "dollar wheat." which has come to stay. Notwithstanding this, the Canadian government Is still giving away Its homesteads and selling pre-emptions at $3.00 an acre, and the railway and land companies nre disposing of their lands nt what may be considered nominal figures.

All the Points. "This boy waa born in a log cabin. Ills fnvurUo pastime Is to cut down cherry trues, which he also splits Into rails." "Good onottuh. Now lot him pick out tho rlKht college to gradual from and ho can't help being President." Iiouisvillo Courlor-Journnl.

The Right Done. "Prod, dear. I fe, l u In my hones hat you ure going to take me to the theater to-night." "Which bone, darling?" "Im not sure, hut I think It's mv wishbone!" Kansas City Independent.

THE SUNDAY SCHOOL

The Senior Berean Lesson for Sunday, May 9, 1909.

'VtR,iiL'!"a,? f'enai'i Schools and

apanlc hat landt lot

on ni, tr.

I ---J mi. I m m 4 . .

I' J..c relowclR'lr Kales applr iU . .! jWl'Pnflfnf of Immiirritioo.

T'f1 Tfrmi.l0B-.V:i-."- ,Koffr- M.ooc;

tuZL "1C?"Bnt Aetata.

Uiaaa

Can't Grow Two Crops at Once.

"The trouble with a lot of lonjj haired geniuses,"" Mr. Taukawav sava. "is

that tho Insldes of their heads never

produce as well as the outsldes do." Kansas City Times. Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications, at thry cannot roach the dleal jwrtlon of the ear. There Is only one way to cure diafnesa, and that U by conntltutlonal remedies. Deafness Is rausfd by an Inflamed condition of the mucous llnlns of the Kimtarhlan Tube. When thU tub n Inllauied you have a rumbling mind or Imperfect herln?. and when It Ih entirely elod, Deafness I the result, and unless the Intlammatlon can bo taken out and thU tube restored to Its normal condition, bearing will be destroyed forerer; nlno caes out of ten are caused by Catarrh, wblch U nothing but an Inllamed condition of the mucous surface. We will -Ire One Hundred Dollars for any cae of Deafness (caused by Catarrh) that cannot be cured by llall'a Catarrh Cure, oend for circulars, free. K. J. CHUNK V A CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggist. TSc. Tale Hall's Family fills for constipation.

Plays and Novels. The naughty literature we see Has left us apprehensive That "raw" materials may he Too free and yet expensive. Washington Star. Many n IJiijr In Spoiled By a cough which cannot be broken by ordinary remedies. Hut why not try n medicine that will cure any cough that any medicine ran cure? That la Kemp's Halsnm. It Is recommended by doctors and nurses, and it costs only 2T cents at any druggist's or dealer's. K-ep a bottle always in the house and you will always be prepared to treat a cold or cough before It causes any suffering at all.

Use For Uniforms. "Do you think we ought to have n bigger army and a larr-r navy?" "Oh yes," replied the oeautiful girl. "It would bo so nice If all the boys at tho dances could appear in uniform, with epaulets and braided collars"

Chicago Record-Herald.

The way Hamlin Wizard Oil soothes

and anays an acnes, pains, aorcness,

swelling ana inuammation is a surprise and delight to the afiticted. It is simply

great to relieve nil kinds of pain. Both Out of Business.

Dan Cupid drew his tiny bow

And aimed his fatal dart.

Now they are brothers in their woe

She had a marble heart. J. J. O'Connell.

If Von Hare Common Sore Eye,

if lines blur or run together, rou need I'RTTrrS EYE SALVE. '.V. All dru--

gists or Howard llros., Huftalo, N. 1

Wood and Coal.

Wood yields one-fourth of the heat

of coal; charcoal about the same heat

as coal.

LAXATIVE FOR

WOMEN FREE

Learning Is ever In tho freshness of youth, oven for tho old. Aeschylus.

air. M'lnttow's Soothing Syrup for children tfcthlrttr. roflena the (rum, reduces Inflammation, allaya pain, turf srlnd eolle. 25 cent a bottle. Evil comes by talking of it. Irish.

There Is a great difference In the

purposes to which a laxative should be

put. Tablets and pills, salts, etc., are

usually violent purgatives or cathar

tics, nnd altogether too powerful for

the average pen-on.

A woman at all times needs only n

mild laxative In fact, none other Is

needed by anyone, weak or strong though they may be, for the object is

simply to move the bowels, nnd If n

gentle laxative will do It, what Is tho

use of a violent one?

Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin has

earned a well-deserved vogue among

women and children and old folks

people who must necessarily be careful of what they take.

It Is a Mould laintlve tonle and ad

mittedly the greatest stomach, liver nnd bowel remedy before the American peo

ple. The price Is only 50 cents or M a bot

tle, as it comes In both sizes, and nil drug

gists aell It. Its pleasant taste and gentle action make It an Ideal remedy for women

in constipation, torpid liver, sour stomach, alrk headache, heartburn and such like

digestive complnlnt. Its tise for a short

Ime will remove the trouble entirely so

that future medication will be unnecessary.

its tonic properties build up the stomach nnd Intestinal muscles so that they act naturally again. That this Is so Is the experience of many heads of families, like Mrs. Hrannan. of Alvnrado, Va. ; Mrs. K. I Stout, of IOiilsvllle. Ky., nnd numerous others; In fact, way out In Williams, Cal., as Mrs. J. B. Itlackmore, of that place, writes, the whole town seems to be using It. If the remedy Is new to you t and you wnnt to mnke a trlnl of It before buying, send your name to the doctor's nddress ns below and a free test bottle will be sent

you. men, it results arc satiarnctory you

can tuy u oi your druggist. If there Is anything about your ailment that you don't understand, or If you want any medical advice, write to the doctor, nnd he will nnawer you fully. There la no charge for this service. The address Is Dr. W. H.

Caldwell. 202 Caldwell bid.,

Moatlcello, IIL

PAUL'S MISSIONARY JOURNEY ANTIOCH IN IMS I DIA. Acts 13. 13 52. K!. Now when Paul and his company looked from l'aplm.s. thev came to I'.-iku in Puniphjlia, and John dpaniiiK from th m returned to Jeriisalt m. 11. Hut when they departed fiom IVrga. they came to Antloch In I'lsldla, and went into the synagogue on the Sabbath da . and sat down. 15. And att-r the reading of he law and the prophets the rulers ; the snaj!Kue sent unto them. a HiK Ye men and brethren. If hate am word of exhoi tatioi. for the peop - on. ! Thin Paul stood up. and h-ck-Mi.ii-: with his hand said Men of Is.

i i. and e that f ar Uod, give aud in. He it known unto you tlwref '. ln.-n and brethren, that through Ins man is pr-ahed unto you the forgueii ss of sins: And by him all that believe are juhtilled from all things, from which

could not be Justified by the law of Moses. 10. Hewnre, therefore, lest that come upon you, which is spoken of In the prophets; 41. Behold, ye despisers, and wonder, and perish; for 1 work a work In your days, a work which ye shall in no wise believe, though a man declare It unto you. 42. And when tho Jews were gone out of the synagogue, the Cent lies besought that these words might he preached to them tho next Sabbath. 43. Now when the congregation was broken up, many of the Jews and religious proselytes followed Paul and Barnabas; who. speaking to them, persuaded them to continue in the grace of God. 45. But when tho Jews saw tho multitudes, they were tilled witn envv, and spake against those things which were spoken by Paul, contradicting and blaspheming. 40. Then Paul and Barnabas waxed bold, and said. It was nocessary that tho word of God should first have been spoken to you, and Judge yourselves unworthy of everlasting life, lo, we turn to the Gentiles. 47. For so hath the Lord commanded us, saying. I have set thee to be a light of the Gentiles, that thou shouldest ho for salvation unto the ends of the earth. 4S. And when the Gentiles heard this, they were glad, and glorified the word of tho Lord; and as many as

were ordained to eternal life believed.

49. And tho word of the Lord was published throughout all the region. The Lesson Explained.

Verses 13. 14: From Pnnhos to An-

tioch in Pisidla. Paul and his company (literally.

"those around Paul") loosed I "set

sail" from Paphos Henceforth Paul

appears as tho leader of the mission

ary band. The town of Paphos was, as we havo seen, the capital of Cy

prus, and stood on the western ond of the Island. Came to Perca In Pam-

phylia Pamphylla was a Roman prov

ince on the southern side of Asia Minor between Clllcln and Lycia, close

to tho sea; Ferga was its capital.

Apparently the apostles did not now

stop to preach in Perga; they did so on their return visit. John, denart-

ng from them, returned to Jerusalem

Wo aro not told why. but Paul did

not approve of John Mark's return

(Acts 15. 3S1. nevertheless In Col. 4. 10 Paul speaks of him with affection. They come to Antloch In Pisidla the province of Plsldia laynorth of tho province of Pamphylla. This Antloch had been built by the

same man, Seleucus, who built tho greater Antloch In Syria, from which the missionaries had started. The Journey thither led Paul through a very rough mountainous district, and it is to this time that Dean Howson refers the "perils of robbers" which made such a deep impression on the apostle's mind (2 Cor. 11. 20). Verses 14-33: The Sermon in the Synagogue. Paul always regarded the law of Moses as a "school-master to bring men to Christ." The Sabbath day here means, of course, the Jewish Sabbath, our Saturday. In the synagogue service regular lessons were read from the Hebrew Scriptures, and translated Into the language of the people. From the opening sentences

of Paul's discourse It Is evident that

the lessons for tho day wero from Deut. 1 and Isa. 1. which wero ap

pointed for the forty-fourth Sabbath

of the Jewish year, and from this wo

perhaps may infer that the eventf

hero recorded occurred In July or August. If ye have any word of exhortation for the people, say on the word

for "exhortation" is elsewhere trans

lated "consolation"; to the Israellter

the word of exhortation concernlnc

the law was a word of consolation In their troubles. Compare Heb. 13. 22

Reckoning with his hand Compan

Acts 12. 17. What followed is tin

longest report given us of any of thi speeches of Paul. His hearers are addressed as men of Israel and y that fear God, that 1s. Jews, Prose-

lytoH. and devout Gentiles.

Paul's historic argument bears n

noteworthy resemblance to those of

Peter (Acts 2. 14-391 and Stephen I Acts 7. 2-5nj, and the three addresses

taken together would of thomselves give us a fairly good understanding of the apostolic concention of the

Messiah to what we call tho "Old Tes

nment dispensation." God's cholco of

tho Israelites to he a peculiar people, his merciful dealings with them down

o the time when David ami his fam

ily were selected; the Davldlc descent of Jesus, and his acceptance by John the Baptist as the Messiah; tho death and resurrection of Jesus, and the

prophecies of this resurrection these

wero the facts around which an argu

ment was wovon, which in this report

Is hinted at rather than reportod. The omitted vorsos, 17-37, should ho care

fully road.

fool

WW

mi

:t;"s,ty

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For Croup Tonsilitis and Asthma

3

A quick and powerful remedy is needed to break up an attack of croup. Sloan's Liniment has cuf d many cases of croup. It acts instandy when applied both inside and outside of the throat it breaks up the phlegm, reduces the inflammation, and relieves the difficulty of breathing. Sloan's Liniment gives quick relief in all cases of asthma, bronchitis, sore throat, tonsilitis, and pains in the chest. Trie, ssc boc, and si.oo. Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass.

Your Last Chance to Get Good Land Cheap lies in Idaho. Good land at such prices will soon be cone forever. Fine farm tracts can be had now at low prices, on easy terms. By the time your last payment is made the land will havo doubled in value, at least. New towns needing trades are growing up fast in the wonderful Snake River country. Men who went there poor a few years ago are now well to do. Own An Idaho Farm Idaho's variety of resources is unsurpassed anywhere in the world money is made easily and quickly in farming, in fruit, stock and dairying. Alfalfa alone is making hundreds rich. Save money, that might otherwise be spent in tickets and hotel bills, by going direct to Idaho and buying a farm now. Write today for our free booklet. E. L. LOMAX, G. P. A. Union Pacific Railroad Co. Omaha, Neb.

Longwood. Longwood, tho house Nanoloon oc

cupied on St. Helona, was given to tho Kronch by Qucon Victoria.

Cost of Big Game Shooting. In tho Gt'rman possessions In Africa a pormlt to shoot costs $200. Special permission Is required to kill more than two giraffes, four rhlnosccroses and six zebras. In tho case of olephant shooting the authorities must ho given one tusk from each animal killed. Tho hunter receives a small payment If ho shoots a lion, panther, wild hoar or hyena. A permit to kill gazelles, antelopes nnd monkeys costs only $10.

Good Fellowship. Mrs. Jonos (a Suffragist) I don't ask special privilege, Mr. Jones. What I do ask Is that you. for Instance, a mnn, should treat mo exactly ns you would another man. Instead of talking small talk and treating mo llko n thing to bo protected, and all that, assume toward mo the attitude you do to Mr. Warrington. Troat mo like a good feller. Mr. Jones (quickly) Why, certainly, old chap. Iicnd me a fiver, will you? Pearson's Weekly.

FOR OUT DOOR WORK IN THE WETTEST WEATHER

NOTHING EOJJALS

MO?

,11

"did: fc3r

3$ BRAtf

GARMENTS

THEY LOOK WEIL-WEAR WELL

AND WW NOT LEAK

LONG COATS -322. 312

SUITS 322 501 D tVCfTYWHlRC CATALOG rC

A. J. Tower Co. bostom.ua. Tcwtr Canadian Ca uwrto -Toronto, car

llallllcled wllb Sere Eyes, use

I. N. U., INDIANAPOLIS, No. 19, 1909.