Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 52, Number 16, Jasper, Dubois County, 21 January 1910 — Page 8

Jas u er Roller Mille,

THE COLORADO DESERT. DEVICEtf'OF THE BODV.

ESTABLISHEDM847

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Tsj . . -r I on a conversation in an or ''fl? ' " sitoue of voice' particularly if

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Make the Celebrated Pik! OKA ULY PLOUii Best Gerade in tne State of Xndiana, ChevAlso Want Sour WHEAT ' dad uav the Bigliest Merket Price m u;

lour and Ship Stuf! ier Sale al all iiu3

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'MASOACTCREKS

WA GCNS

CARBIAGES,

-Aad Dealer Ia-

Agricultural Implements and Pertilizerw.

Genoral Repairing fc Horse Shot ir g

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North Alain Stree!.

Jasper,

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! How flound Carries and tho Way MIj rages Come and Go. j Talk about wireless telephones! , The Colorado desert goos science , one better in that line. According I to travelers in that nock of sand j and sagebrush, you can dispenso ' with any kind of telephone, with or without wires, at least up to a ccr- ! tain distance.

Two mon a mile apart can earn

conversation in an ordinary

there

boh i nil

.-j- each, writes liarvey Hull Kessler in

'.. - - 1 inr silence is so intens that it

! i might be called deafening.

Perhaps, after aU, tho weirdest among many strange features of the dosert is the uurare. Wo have

; camped perhaps and gone to bed

early in tho evening with the thermometer registering not far b'elow tho hundred mark. We awake, ' shivering with cold beneath our j blanket, and look toward the east, j There is the slightest sug?e:tian of light in the sky there, which as we watch grows slowly in strength. A ernvish naze marks the horizon's

J edge, which stands out more sharply ! at one point, from which broad, j pule rays creop up and out high ( i above in the sky. These again j slowly fade as a point of brilliant j j light appears at their base. This I point grows to n half circle, then ' ; breaks and runs along the sky line j in a surging, golden lake.

j Upon the shores of this lake : cities spring up. towers, spires and

solid blocks. Ihese fade into fields and forests and farming scenes fields of golden grain, cattle standing in green alfalfa, shvots of water. The mountains near the edge of the lake separate from their bases and float upward, topple over and stand on their heads, their uu-

j wieldy feet in air. j Soon our lake begins to contract j and collect into a big round ball of dazzling brilliance hung just above I the horizon. Farms and forest disI appear. The mountains, as though ! abashed at being caught in such an

unseemly attitude by the broad J light of day, quickly "resume their normal position, while all the stark , landscape stiffens into nnstirring en-

uurauce oi me gansn ngnt ana blazing heat of the desert sun. The mirage is gone like a bubble. Only the gray desert remains. PARIS PAWNSHOPS.

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R ACT1CA.L R IN TING- for ARTICULAR EOPLE RETTILT' RIX TED.

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PRINTING is the ambassador of trade. It is sent out to acquaint your customers with your business. It goes where you cannot be; it tells the story you would have told had you been able to go in its stead; it is the means by which you hope to attract attention to your house: to interest the public and secure patronage, if at all possible. In order to achieve these results and secure adequeat returns for the money invested, it is vitally essential that your printed literature have qualities. Ordinary.'printing is forgetable prining. Distinctive printing impresses itself upon the mind and brings results.

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Run by ths State, They Are a Boon to All Classes of People. The "mont-de-mete." as tho

j French equivalent of the pawnshop

Isequently there is not that friendlv 'communion between the lender and the client that one sees in London, j There is no "private office" where the person temporarily embarrassed for money may screen himself from inquisitive eyes, i If you are in want of money and you have any portable property of the value of 3 francs or more you j take it to the nearest branch ofiice of the "mont-de-piete." The first thing that meets your 'gaze is a "guard municipal" patrolling up and down the pavement eut- ! side the entrance. 1 With a feeling of wholesome re'spect for the majesty of the law, you now enter a large room, of , which one side is occupied by ,' benches (very hard anS uncomforta'iblc ones) and the other by half a dozen employees behind a counter, j Having handed your property to a clerk whose desk bears the inscription, deception of Articlee," ; you receive a numbered metal check lln .1 JI 11... It I

' wtuuiigu ami men join me ranKS

The Cough, Sneeze and Sigh Are Measures of Self Protection. One of the mot interesting factabout tho human body is its powoi of self preservation its power u, evading or overcoming the thou sand and ono conditions uhieh, unless corrected, would be injurious or destructive. Among the most common of these acts of self preservation are the cough, the sneeze and the sigh. Every ono is familiar with these acts, yet few people ever ask themselves the cause, and fewer still could explain them. Ono of the simplest of the body's devices for self protection is tho! cough. The cough v morel v a blast! of air propelled from the lungs in such n manner ns to forciblv dis-,

lodge some foreign substance which j has been drawn into the throat, the

windpipe or the tubes leading to I the lungs. j membranes lining theso I parts of the body arc very sensitive, and when a foreign matter comes in contact with them an alarm mes- ; sage is at once seht to the nervous . "headquarters," and the result is ! the sudden, spasmodic expulsion of breath which is called a cough, i Verv often the coujm is produced

i by the irritation of the accumulaI tion of mucus on the surface raenI tioned. In this cnac, as in tho Case ' of a foreign body, the cough is merely a means of expelling the matter. I So, you see, a congh is merely one of nature's methods of self protec

tion, i flugn cures contuin some

druir which, bv narnlvzintr tht

nerves, prevents "tho cough and al

lows tne mucus to accumulate. Thus the cough medicine does only harm. The cure for a cough is to cough to cough until the ex

cessive deposit is removed. Meantime, of course, measures should be taken to prevent added deposits. A sneeze is exactly like a cough,

save tnat tne obstruction occurs in the nostrils owing to the deposit of some irritant or foreign matter and that the blast of air is thrown out through the noe instead of

through the throat and mouth. Why do we sigh? When grieved or depressed the tendency is to hold the breath. This means that the body suffers for oxygen, and the long, deep breath which we call a sigh is merely a uienn3 by rhieh the body obta'n- fr itelf the r.ccessary amouut of owm. Ir. W. K. C. Latson in lh.iith Culture.

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CASTORty

ANl'gctablc Prcparalionfbr As similating UicFoodandRcöiilaling the S lomachs andBowcis of

Promotes Digcslion.ChcerfuInesrandnest.Conlalns neither Opium.Morplu'ne norfiivcraL Ts'otTaiic OTIC .

finite i(vcj Jit tarvia4titt CtifiU Sugar

ADcrfecl nemedv fnrrnnc;

Tion, Sour Stotnach,Dinrrlioca

worms .tonvulsions .Icvcrishncss nnd Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature or

NEW YORK.

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For Infants and -,re(l The Kind Yoü Bai; Always Bought

Bears the

Signature

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EXACT COPY 05" WSAEfiEa

Curing z Doctor. An eminenf p!iv.- in of London, who W8 rcniarun'j- fnr ronf nuing his visits to Jus rich patient- after he had turnt- l thc r disorders out of doors, attended a lo.lv u ome celebrity in the world of wit for three months after her rcc very and resrularlv slaved with her until

4 y - - - in the English manner, he received his dismissing fee of 5 miinox.

t o Weary of his expensive calls and concluding that to lessen the fee would ba to lose the visitor, sh

j vertfaircfd to give him 4 guineas at

tne conclusion oi his next call, lie looked anxiously in his hand, then on the carpet and stood for some time in evident embarrassment. "Have you lost anything?" inquired the lady. "Why, madam, I thought I had dropped a guinea." "I t is only a mistake in the person, sir," rejoined the fair patient. 'It is I who have dropped the guinea." The doctor, of course, dropped his visits.

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TH CCMTAUH OWMNT. NEW TORI Cm

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I AMPERT & BOÜKELMÄH I

General Merchandise.

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Shoes & Clothing, Dry Goods Motions, Staple and Fancy Groceries.

nnilTI-vriTr Tna3n "TT L 3 1 f

u ui Lixt Li y z, X u 1JL Li. Li c im till Liz ill Elve us a Gall.

Both Phnes. Free Deliverv. t

West Sixth Street. JASPER, - IND.

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CfJie Courier (Printern, By BenEdDoane,

Jasper. Indiana,

ronage, if at all possible. In OX iThöTöaronlH,,,

of men and women, from the work girl who brings her Sanday hat to the great lady who brings her jewels and whose motor car is waiti ing in the street.

: But if there is no fraternity

1 tho "inont-dc-piete" there is at least equality, and no precedence is given ( to wealth or fashion, j When tho value of your property ; has been estimated in another room ' a clerk calls out your number and the amount offered, which you can accept or refuse. It is never more than half the lowest selling price of the object, as the valurr is responsii ble for anv loss arisino- -frnm rnirn.

I deemed pledges. If you accept his offer your name, address and profession are taken down by another clerk, and you must produce papers

NEWSRARERS AND M F?C Tho interest charged is only 7 per 'r'Vö cent per annum, and there is no Received at the Courier Oftice ÄÄ1: French people. London Standard.

Any Periodical Published in Anv Cor utrv irc mJonr bo IMakto oncyr J ul'ULy "No; culy three. Two were fhot by wi nuv Ldnguage, me was run over by an automobile. They nil recelvcl pensions, but my Uier boy la good for noUung.,'-Fll. ißiiüe Blattsr.

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Patronize the COJTRJKR'S Ad vcrtiscr's for bargains.

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SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR ALL

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Sensitive Golfer (wlio lias foozled)Did you IiuiBb at me, boy? Caddle-Xo, sir; I wis laugbln at anltlier mau. Kcnsltlre Golfer And wbat'a funny about bltn? Caddl-IIe plays powf aufu' Ilka fou, slr.-runcb.

THE GLO EXCUSES, "There's no hurry," "I can wait a little longer for my insurance" have left many a family to face a bitter fight with poverty and privation. If there is one thing that should re; h first-, consideration of married men, it is LIFE INSURANCE. Now is the time to apply for a policy. Arch C. Doane Jasper Indkna

Stains on Laathtr. Stains from leather arc removed by the use of paraffin. It likewise gives a brilliant polish. To remove sugar and Birujj siaim wash the stained part Yith warm water without5onp, then rub with ammonia diluted with warm water. If not washable, us dilated alcohol.

ME SAFES f AND QUICKEST WAY )!) TRANSFER MONEY

IS BY

laoxig ,Dj stance Telepko

For Ilatos Apply To ILocaOIuiinser of

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Incorporated.

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