Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 52, Number 15, Jasper, Dubois County, 14 January 1910 — Page 3

UNPROFESSIONAL

pinPrHavo you seen that a doctor Intends to inoculato himself with tho cholora virus bo that tho ho may hava the results of tho experiment. Isn't that fine? Proprietor No, perfectly mad, 1 call It Supposing I ate tho BaniQ mails as my clients. The Difference. Our continental marriages are Just bs happy as those mado In your country," explained the foreigner. We all admit that marriage is a lottery " Well." responded the American, "we prefer to let a girl select her own ticket." 25c. Gets $1.50 map of Indiana, that shows all Railuas. Electric Lines, County Scats, Cunnresslonal Districts, Post Ofllces.all Cities and Towns and gives their Population. Size 3Gx28 in. Beautifully colored and enameled.it will bemalled, prepaid, on receipt of 25c. in Btnmps or coin by H. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago. 111. The Difference. Wifey John, couldn't you let me hate a little money this morning? Kattleigh's is advertising six puffs for a dollar. Hub Great Scott! And we men can get co delicious puffs for ten cents. Hiring tho first six months of his p.arru-d life a man pities old bachelors After that he envies them. am. rr-To-n.vTn iiousicicnnrnns I se Rf l Cnms Ball Blue. It makes clothes dean and sweet as when new. All grocers. Rrmemher that n sound argument dntsn t mean loud talk. WESTERN CANADA What Says J.J. Hilt, the Creat Railroad Magnat, About its Wheat-Producing Poweri "Tho errrtft reed of tMa eonntrr Unltetistat' In another enernlion er two w ii inn rr"Yld.ng ol aomn ir n rcrlo and producinc aCicient for the m. Ite dnj of oar pnratnencc o a wheal rxporttng conntrr are. so", funtula 1 to bo tlio great whestcoantry." Thli eret railroad rasecntn It tAkinit drnnuce of tho ltnnti-"n tr ext enlre railway Imllit luirto tlionlient fit-Id of Western Cuiimla. Upwards of 125 Million Bushels of Wheat wrro ImrrrotfM In 1009. Arerape of tlio three proinee of Altort. Bankitcherrnn nnd Manitoba will bo upward of S3 uuhelner ncrc. J'reo liomecteniW of ICO ncrc. nitd mljotnliic pre-emption of lflOnrrtnint 3 pernrn", nreto bo lind In tlio choicest UMrlcU. Schoo! conrcnlcnt. climate eieellent. Mill tho sery let, rnllnny cIiko nt linnet, liullilliiCliimtKT rlienp. furl ear to sret niul reruonnlilo In price, water enally procured: mlirtl f artnlnc n ueren. Write to IWlfc JMIM.U LOT IPHiriDPni. low railway mir. clec rlitle Illustrate. 1 "I,Tt lletWct"ent frto on apl (cat Ion t. and ot her I n formation. to bup't ot Immigration, Ottawa, Can., or to tho Canadian Uorernmont Agent. W. It. Rftfrei, tri IUr Trtftliw Termini. KW.. ldlolllk 14.1 II. II. W UUts Bm SU U M4(. , Told, 0. IÜM addrcM ncarmt too). Mj No Matter what Liver or Bowel medicine you are using, stop it now. Cet a 10a box week's treatment of CASCARETS today from your druggist and learn how easily, naturally and delightfully your liver can be mado fo work, and your boweU move every day. There's neto life in every box. CASCARETS are nature's helper. You will tee the difference! 853 nT TIlIS OCT, mall It vrlth your nddreaa to Merline Hemedy Co., Chicago. III., nnd receive handsome houvenlr gold Bon lion FUEE. "kSä; Thompson's Ey. Watir Bronchial TworwrFq S th voice in all kind, of weather. Singer and :;dc,E;kn' "nd lhm Invaluable for ctearin th Ur iL Th" no'Wng to effective for Sora Throat, P. - V lni Cough. FHty yeart' reputation. sT!r't 35 50cnt and $ 1.00 per box. ' "SOWN fa SON, Horton. Man. (I ChUdrcn Like ) Pisas CURE It is so pleasant to take stops the cough so quickly. Absolutely safe too and contains no opiates. AH DrufiUu, 25 cent.

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HORTICULTURE

EXPERIMENTS OF L BURBANK Spineless Cactus Now of Use as Stock Food Result of Study by the Callfornian. ny David Starr Jordan. President I-. land Htnnfonl. Jr.. University.) Luthor Hurhank of Santa Rosa, Cal., Is doubtless tho most skillful experimenter in tho field of the formation of new forms of plant life by the procoss of crossing and selection. "Crossing." Bays Mr. Burbank, "is done to secure a wealth of variation By this means we get the species into a state of perturbation or 'wabble and take advantage of tho 'wabbling' to guide tho life forces into the doBlred habits or channels. "Tho first crossing Is generally a step in the direction in which we are going, hut repeated crossing is often necessary and judicious selection always necessary to secure valuable practical results. Crossing may give the best or the worst qualities of tho parent, or any other qualities, and previous crossings often affect the results. Bees and other Insects, as well as tho wind, .cross plants, but they do not work Intelligently, therefore rarely to any advantage economically to man. "All evolution and improvement are dependent on crossing, therefore naSpineless and Spiny Cactus. lure has produced more wonderful devices for this purpose than for any nthor. "Hybridizing the Icobery White blackberry with the Cuthbert raspberry has developed a plant with foliage and growth midway. About half the plants bear fruit which is red like the raspberry, about half bear fruit which Is white like the Icebory blackberry; the quality Is midway hotweon the blackberry and tho raspberry. "The white blackberry is a wild variation crossed with the Lawton for size and vigor; the result is a much clearer white than the wild one, larger and very much more productive, In these respects fully equal to Its stnminate parent, tho Lawton. "Apples brought up from the south temperate zone are entirely confused here, yielding loaves, buds. Uowers and small apples at various seasons. One of these apples in time, however, became adapted to the conditions and developed into one of the best apples. "A blackberry plant with an immense mass of fruit developed from a seedling from the Himalayas. One plant covers 150 square feet, Is eight feet high, and has a bushel or more of fruit. This is only a young, small plant; when full grown this variety Is many times larger. "The Unrtlett plum has tho flavor of a Uartlett pear, hut even more strongly developed. The rice seed plum has extremely small seeds. "The stoneless plum Is a cross of the French prune with a wild plum having jthe stone almost eliminated by a fortuitous variation. "The result thus far is a groat number of stoneless plums of good size, but In flavor inferior to the best cultivated ones. These are being crossed again to improve the flavor and now selections made. "Crossing the Japan and the New England chestnut, the trees, leaves, growth and nuts are midway; second generation and later generations as usual show more varied combinations and variations. "To breed the burs off from chestnuts is dangerous, because It allows the birds to get In at the nuts. Th burr is originally intended to keep off the birds. "The cactus has smooth cotyledons, but tho first bud is covered with thorns. These thorns have also been eluninnted by selecting the smoothest individual seedlings without crossing. "Crossing in this case generally Interrupts the process, as it brings out well-fixed ancestral traits, hut Inter, to combine the host qualities of several species, crossing and selection must be resorted to. "Examples seen were shoots of the original stock, prickly; the second generation, slightly prickly; tho third, without thorns; nnd later the specules oven with the substance of tho cactus have been removed so ns to make the cactus very excellent food for cattle." Bush Fruits. Uush fruits cannot thrive well in ground that is packed down hard or covered with a mat of grass. But if the plow nnd cultivator nre operated as they should be early in tho senson the ground Is put in condition to yield fruit nnd boneflt tho fowls, which Is the most profitable way to get two crops frora.ths land at once.

BUILDING AN APPLE HOUSE Cement Is an Excellent Nonconductor of Heat and Cold and Is Overlooked by Many. When building apple houses, root cellars. Jcohoupos, etc., many or us have ovorlookod tho fact that cement Is a most excellent nonconductor of heat and cold, if properly used. A solid wall of most any material will

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Section of Wall. conduct more or less of both heat and cold If not built very thick, writes J. E. Hrldgman In Farmers' Review. An inexpensive and highly satisfactory method of using cement for any of the nbove-nientioned structures is shown in the accompanying Illustration. Fig. 1 is a longitudinal section of the wall, while Fig. 2 is a cross section of the same wall. In Fig. 2 the illustration shows the method of building a round roof, which will bo found very satisfactory for apple houses, roothouses, etc. In fact, the round roof construction has boon found highly satisfactory for hoghouses, hay barns, nnd even dairy barns. However, when used for any of these buildings, it Is, of course, not necessary to make the walls air tight, as for the frulthouse, etc. As almost all of the work may bo performed by home labor, and any sound rough lumber may be used, the construction, herewith illustrated, is less expensive than others, and It re quires no paint or repairs, and should you by chance crack the cement, any one on the farm will bo able to repair the break at slight cost. As shown in Flg. 1 the studding are formed of two pieces of two by six inch pieces, and if the roof is to be round, they I V Cross Section of Wall. continue on over to the sill on the opposite side. The circle pieces are cut from two by ten inch timbers, and care should he used to have the pieces lap as far as possible, and be well spiked. Tho sills nre bolted to the cement foundation as shown. Three pieces of sound one by four inch strips are nailed to both edges of the studs, which gives it both width and strength; these are covered with any rough sheathing, and the sheathing covered with several layers of heavy building paper; one by four inch strips are then nailed over the studding, which should be not over 24 Inches on centers for small buildings, nnd less for largo buildings. The furring Btrips are next covered with wiro or wood lath, and tho lath in turn with two heavy coats of Portland cement plaster, mixed In the proportion of one part cement to 2a parts sand. When dry. paint with thick paint of pure cement For icehouses, root cellars, frulthouses, etc, the interior walls are finished In the same manner and salt glazed tile used for ventilators. The doors nnd windows should bo double nnd mado to fit tight nnd close. The ends of the building are studded up with two by ten Inch timbers, and finished In tho same man1 ner. If desired, tho studding for round roof structures may be built ' up of one-inch strips until the stud ia tho deBlred thickness; of course, if ' tho roof is not round, Binglo pieces are used for tho studs. The airspaces, however, should bo not less than eight Inches, and more would bo better.

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FAME AND FORTUNE OFFERED

Rich Prize for Man Who Discovers the Long-Sought Cure for Tuberculosis. Dr. George W. Bloomer of Yale university, acting as spokesman for an anonymous giver, has announced that a prize of $100,000 has been set aside, to he awarded to the first person anywhere in tho world who discovers a cure for tuberculosis. The gift Is unconditional as to time, place, or kind of cure, the only real condition being that tho new cure must have been In constant use nt least five years, and thnt tho promoter of the cure convince the investigating board of the merits of his discovery. A large number of physicians havo been working for years to perfect vaccine, or anti-toxin for tuberculosis, or to find some agent, such as tuberculin, which will assist in the cure of the disease. Thus far, tho experiments havo not furnished a product which will either absolutely cure or prevent consumption, or render tho patient immune against tho disease. Many of these serums have proved effective in increasing the resistance of tho patient and thus helping in the cure, but no scientist of repute to-day claims to have discovered a tuberculin which will produce a cure without the combined aid of fresh air, rest and wholesome food. EFFECT OF GOLF. He Golf is an awfully fine exercise, don't you think? She Oh, yes. Why, It makes the men so strong in their arms that one can scarcely breathe. BOY TORTURED BY ECZEMA "When my boy was six years old, he suffered terribly with eczema. He could neither sit still nor He quietly in bed, for tho Itching was dreadful. He would Irritate spots by scratching with his nails and that only made them worse. A doctor treated him and we tried almost everything, but the eczema seemed to spread. It started in a small place on the lower extremities and spread for two years until it very nearly covered the back part of his leg to the knee. "Finally I got Cutlcura Soap, Cuticura Ointment and Cutlcura Pills and gave them according to directions. I used them in the morning and that evening, before I put my boy to bed, I used them again and the improve ment even in those few hours wassur prising, the inflammation seemed to be so much less. I used two boxes of Cutlcura Ointment, the same of tho Pills and tho Soap and my boy was cured. My son is now in his sev enteenth year and he has never bad a return of the eczema. "I took care of a friend's child that had eczema on Its face and limbs and I used the Cutlcura Soap and Ointment. They acted on the child Just as they did on my son and it has never re turned. I would recommend the Cutl cura Remedies to anyone. Mrs. A. J. Cochran, 1823 Columbia Ave., Phila delphia, Pa.. Oct 20, 1909." For Celestials. I once visited a very rough boom town in Oregon, near Cottage Grove. In the leading saloon a man in a red shirt said to me: "Ye wanter carry yerself almighty straight in these parts, stranger. Go wrong the least mite and, by crinus, we'll lynch ye ss quick as look at ye." I smiled. "Would you lynch me," I asked, "if l killed a dog?" "Would we?" ho snorted. "Why, stranger, we've lynched fellers here for klllin' Chinamen!" Just Turned About. "With my husband," said the wife of the busy man, "it Is always a case of talking shop." "And with my wife," said the spouse of the bargain hunter, "it is usually a case of shopping talk." Rheumatism Relieved In 6 Hours. Dr. Deletion's Relief for Itheumatlam usually relieves severest cases In a few hours. Its action Is remarkable. It removes tho causo nnd tho dlneasc quickly dlsnppeara. First dose benefits. 75c. Drugclsts. Financial. Stella Isn't Mabel going to marry the duke? Bella No; ho rejected tho budgeL Quick as Wink. If your eves ache with a smnrtine, burninc sensation ue PETTIT'S EVE SALVE. All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. Those who claim that a woman Isn't so apt to indulge in crooked work ns a man evidently never saw a woman try to drive a nail. ItAKKINO, JIACKINO, KAfUMNO COtOH ean be broken up quickly by Allen l.unir llalwm. Tbl old, reliable remedy ha been old tor urer 10 year. Xik your druifgUt about It. There's a difference between dignity nnd pomposity, but some people don't seem to be able to realize it. OnntlpMlon cauet many ertön dlen'. It I thoruuahly cured by lioetor Tierce l'leaunt l'c'.loti. Öse a laxatWe, three, for citharllc. When you can't tell the truth, don't tell anything.

PUTNAM FADELESS DYES teter mere oeods britMsr and fssier colors thin any other dm. One !0c package colors all fibers. The drain cold water better than an; other dra. You can dys IM naM xttHttit riwtftfl art. Writ tof um bUt Mar to By( Wmcr sad Mix 4f s. MO KfW E DHU CO , Qulney, lllhtolm. 1

A Pessimistic View. Among tho patients In a certain hospital of Harrisburg there was recently one disposed to take a dark view of bis chances for recovery. "Cheer up, old man!" admonished the youthful medico attached to the ward wherein tho patient lay. "Your symptoms nre identical with those of my own case four years ago. I was just as sick as you aro. Look at mo now!" Tho patient ran his eyes over the physician's stalwart frame. "What doctor did you have?" he finally asked, feebly. Illustrated Sunday Magazine.

Got a Good Start. "To what do you attribute your unvarying success?" "To being- picked early for the village fool. Nobody evor tried to get me to indorse a note or to go into a scheme." Washington Herald. IIKAD. HACK AMI I.KOH ACHE? AebealloTrrl Throat tore, with chlll? That U La (irlppe. 1'errr Davit l'alnklller will break It Uli It taken promptly. AH dealer, ttc.SSc and &oc bottle. A pessimist by any other name ' would be a fault-finder just the same. ONLY ONK"IIHOMO QUININE." That la LAXATIV K IIKOMO QÜiMNK. Iunk for the Ignaturo nt K. W. ÜKOVK. t 1 thu WorlU oyer to Cure a Cold In One Iay. ZSc. The best of plans fall out, and the best of friends get married. Mr. 'WInilow'a Sootlilnc Syrup. Forchlldrrn teethlnir, aoftenithetrun. reduces In UamiuaUun.ailayt pain, cure wind cullc. 2Sca boiue. Following cheap advice is apt to provo expensive.

Welcome Words to Women

Women who suffer with disorders peculiar to their sex ihould write to Dr. Pierce and receive free the advice of a physician of over 40 years' experience a skilled and successful specialist in the diseases of women. Every letter of this sort has the most careful consideration and is regarded as sacredly confidential. Many sensitively modeit women writo fully to Dr. Pierce what they would shrink from telling to their local physician. The local physician ia pretty sure to say that he cannot do anything without "an examination." Dr. Pierce holds that these distasteful examinations are generally need

let i, and that no woman, except in rare cases, should submit to them. Dr. Pierce's treatment will cure you right in the privacy of your own home. His " Favorite Prescription" kas cured hundred of thousands, some of them the worst of cases. It is the only medicine of its kind that is the product of a regularly graduated physician. The only one good enough that its makers dare to print its every ingredient on its outside wrapper. There's no secrecy. It will Jear examination. No alcohol and no habit-forming drugs are found in it. Some unscrupulous medicine dealers may offer you a substitute. Don't take it. Don't trifle with your health. Write to World's Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R. V. Pierce, President, Buffalo, N. Y., take the advice received and be well.

Don't Suffer and Complain Nothing is so wearing on the nerves of your family and friends. Ask us for a sample of PISO'S TABLETS a modern scientific home treatment for the diseases of women. They may be used in the privacy of one's own home, thus avoiding all embarassing situations. A Michigan woman who has given them a thorough test writes, "I cannot reccommend these Tablets too highly for what they have done for mc. 1 have had no return of tho disease, and don't know what it is to have an ache or pain. f I am perfectly well and I owe it all to your wonderful Tablets.'

For sale by all druggists. Trial package and a treatise entitled sent free on receipt of accompanying coupon. Write your name and address tlainly r.nd address THE PISO COMPANY, DEPT. A., WARREN, PA.

Look at the Clutch of any cream separator you think of buying-. bo how It la thrown Into Rear. Then compare it with the National'' A M tuple llltlo prink' near tho clutch on the shall wliere you cun Kotatlt docs tho work on the National Cream Separator Tbeclntchalwaysirrlpa with tba start of the crank no a! I pplnc and 1 1 doeant break once In ten years, lflldlcl you couM replace It tor 6 rent. This uprtiurlBancxclaMrn ' National ' patent. Tho hidden friction inechnnlfra noJ it others coMs as high as Slto replace. Insist on your dealer deraonMraUnc tho National without expenm to juu. Illustrated Cataloguo ot full particular free on request. THE SiTlOJAL DiIBT JUOIUK COSrsXT Gutta, lad. ftlr, lit.

Staple Li,Üa

$125,000 net from 1200 acres grapes. $15,000 from 22 acres peaches. $3,200 from 20 acres raisins, in the San Joaquin Valley, California A cow and an acre of alfalfa will earn $120 a year in the San Joaquin Valley. Grapes will yield from $100 to $300 per acre; peaches nnd apricots, $150 to $500; while oranges will produce from $250 to S500, and in many instances more than Sicoo an acre. There aro ten million arahle and irrigable acres here. You still may buy unimproved land for $50 an acte. Ten acres are enough to comfortably support a small family. Twenty acres afford a fine living, with money in the bank. Forty acres should make you rich.

You pay from one-fourth to onethird down, balance enally cub be pnld for out of tlie crop. Almost anything can be raised In the San Joaquin country oranges nnd wheat, iK3 and apples, dcllcato grapes and hardy potatoes. Ifroduct of the temperate nnd acml-troplc zones nourish side by side. l'lenty of wnter for Irrigation drawn from the near-by Sierra unow. It In rnny far one to mnke n ntnrt. Land between the rows can bo used, tvhlle orchard I youtiir. for many proiltnblo crops. Tho point Is to make every aqtmrc foot henr nomef Iiln-. Whnt mime fnrmera linve done: Frnnk Tliomns, of Kresno. Cal.. bought twenty acrps of land five yearn ngn. He had hut $300 to ntnrt on. Today his place Is paid for and ho lias an income of over $2.000 a ytmr, William Shrayer. It. F. D. 7. Fresno. Cal., bought his flm ten acres nix years ago. Now owns sixty ncres all paid for, and refuses J 12,000 for his place. M. F Tarpey, of Fresno, owns vineyard of 3 200 acre, from which ho takes an nnntinl profit of 112! 000. On the Harold estate, twenty-two acres of peaches yielded a 115.000 crop.

Make the Liver Do its Duty NifiC time ia tea when tic Liver ii ri4t ÜW (totaled aad bowel are ngkL

CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS ee idly but firmly mr1 toaH Carters Cmet CoBalipation, IadigeaUon, Siele Headache, and Diatreai aftw Eat lay. Small Pitt. Small Don, Small Prica GENUINE mtut bear signature: A Clean Face Will be a Habit NO STROPPING NO HONING - mrm nn n e asn jm KNOWN THE WORLD OVER

PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM ClraoM and betBÜfl th hitr. Ironioa a lsnriiDt gnnrth. Merer 7alla to Betore Oray Hlr to Ita Touthral Color. Curu MaJp dlnM it hair ttUlof. fnc.tndai.O0M Prugtn

PATENTS!Wataaa K. Col em a n ,Wa h. InrtoD.D.C. Uookalree. lllfhW. N. U.. Indianapolis, No. 2-1010. Name Post Office. State No Hard Liftkz Liffatest Raaaiag Easiest Geaacd dosest Skimmer Carson Iteed, Itcedlcy, Cal., from M twenty-acre crop of Sultana ralsln netted 3,200. I know this vnller from end to end. I havo seen crops planted nnd harvested In every one of Its counties. I hav Interviewed farmers, ranchers and merchants. I have collated the testimony of crop experts. All this valuable Information is con. talncd in the San Joaquin Valley land folder iHsued by the Santa. Fo Hallway. Write for It. giving full namo nnd address. I will also send you our immigration Journal, The Earth, six months free. Tho Santa Fe employs me to help settle up Its Southwest lines. The Company has no land to sell, but I will gladly refer your Inquiry to reliable land owners who have. Lost fnre nre offered by the Santa' Fo dally. Comfortable tourist sleepers and cl.alr cam The Journey nlso may bo made nt other times for a reasonable cost. Stnta F tourist service to San Francisco is quickest. C. L SEAGRAVES, General Colenixatiea A(( A.T &S. F.Ry.SyaUm 1 1 50 Railway Eacbuga Chicago, 9.

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