Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 53, Number 2, Jasper, Dubois County, 14 October 1910 — Page 3
MEAN INSINUATION. I , ii .f Uvely-Isn't it atranso that ; Ml ba ' str Mr str h!l jilaycra aro seldom sun n l ussy Not necessarily. Sun H an affection of the brain. WASTED A FORTUNE ON SKIN TROUBLE "1 ,pgan to have an itching- over my whol body about seven years ago and this settled In my limbs, from thokneo totb' 'h-9. I went to ace a greatraany nhysHans, a matter which cost mo a forti ,Pf and after I noticed that I did n0 f t any relief that way, I went for tbrt i vc ars to tho hospital. But they wc-,. '.nable to hp mo tbt-re, I used all v medicines that I could fco hut bet vr worse and worse. I had an Infirration which made mo almost era with pain. When I showed my font to my friends they would get Te;iV frightened. I did not know vus v do. I was so sick and had Decern.' nervous that I positively lost all I , k . M! 1 soon tho advertisement of th. .ticura Remedies a great many tit.- t it could not make up my mind j to 1 them, for I had already usod so ruarv m.dlclnes. Finally I did decldo to i. tho Cutlcura Remedies nnd I tc !. w.,i that I was never so pleased as I noticed that, alter navmg useu a n il f- nal niton two On tlr. cori , ta oi uucuru. D . nt and Cutlcura Pills, tho en.flimmatlon had gone. I was I 'iy CUrUU. l tuuum uu uui; , to. id If people with similar dlseaso wo , I come to mo and find out tho tru'ii I would only recommend them to ii.-e Cutlcura. Mrs. Dertha Sachs, second Ave., New York, N. "Y., A'jk 1909.''' Mrs nertha Sachs Is my slster-ru-law and I know well how sho suffered and was cured by Cutlcura Remedies after many other treatments fail.-d Morris Sachs, 321 E. 89th St., K w York, N. Y., Secretary of
IV I'sch-Ostrowoer Unt.-Verein, Kemp- j ßnglo and In pairs, and many memm r Hebrew Benevolent Society, etc." . bera 0f the world of birds who are l natural enemies, are represented In Managing a Husband. j theso creations. They lie down In ln are like children; they want . piec0 together, as the facetious exRiai tc:ng. although you must never ' nrOBa .
M '.em dream that you think so. No , rt il l likes to bo ordered about, no ' r an will enduro coercion. But manag "t:' It le an art so subtle, so elu- ! e:. 'hat few women understand even l ti r idltnents of It. Sisters mine, let i Mason together, says Woman's I i In every human being thero la s ik of tho divine; It Is yours to f - fiat sriftrk Into a flame that la r i ring a man It Is to get the vory I- ' ut ot him thero Is to have, and r i u women iu ten can do It l o not think that there Is anything iHi.Mthy In managing a man to1 r out tho host Is a high vocation, f'rih U-l us see to It that wo aro ir'hy of It Thoro are womon who hrn.' mado angels of men, but at tho c m f their own divinity. There Is ro. :,i for more than one unselfish person in a family. Childish Reasoning. "!.' -k at tho brownies, papa!" exclatu .-d a llttlo miss as she gazed upward at a Wall street skyscraper. "Hoy nro not brownies, dearie," rei ! papa. "They aro big men, llko me. i. .it they look so tiny because they are high." If th-y wcro twlco as high, would tbc look twice as small?" she asked, tilling u,o mathematical turn not unnntural In tho offspring of a suecef'il broker. I'apa answered "Yes." S!io made a quick calculation and renarkod: "They won't amounV to much when they get to heaven, will Post Toasties A bowl of these Huffy bits served crisp with cream or milk is somctlung not soon forgotten. What's the use of cooking breakfast or lunch when Post Toasties, ready o serve direct from the package, are so delicious? "The Memory Lingers" POSTUM CKIIKAI. CO., LTD., Uttttt Creek, Mich.
f Dress Up -
FOR WINTER HATS FEATHERS OF ALL SORTS ARE TO BE ADORNMENT. Last Word aa to Millinery for the Coming Season Has Been Said Profusion of Strange and Beautiful Things. No work Uns been tou Intricate or painstaking for the maker of fancy feathers for the coming winter Reason. Women will certainly bo a feathered nilncry U concerned, for the stores are deluged with wings, bands, pjinpons, sprays and even ostrich plumes with new and strange mnrkingB or branched with airy aigrettes. One Wonders where all the ideas camo from and it Is ceitnin that an nrIny of ,)eoplo muat hftVe been long . f.i,iir, ti,o nr-w nnd Htrange and beautfui feather decora,iQna Smart, to tho last degree. Is the pompon (military style) of Spanish coque, such as the Italian army oS'icers wear on their hats. Miladi has borrowed this crisp, dignified decoration for her turban of fur or velvet The coque feather Is an expensive luxury, but It Is elegant and never out of style. There aro Innumerable made wings In which each separate feather is sewed to a foundation. They are Among the airiest are the new mountings of ostrich Into sprays or aigrettes. They will form a substitute for the aigrette which Is forbidden In some states and which one may not wear with a perfectly easy conscience. The mado fancy feathors aro nearly Ml the result of Intelligent designing, with feathers of domestic or other edible fowls, and their manufacture gives work to thousands of families. No one need have scruples ngalnst wearing them, or against the ostrich plume or fancy ostrich feathers. The pieces pictured, and others like thorn, make the work of tho bomemllliner easy. Given a good, graceful shnpo nnd one of these feathers, the trimming problem solves Itself. VOGUE FOR BLACK VELVET Use of the Supple Material for Garments of All Kind3 Has Now Become General. The vogue for black velvet reached Its height when some Paris designers allied It with English eyolet embroidery. People gasped, stared and then as quickly as possible went and did likewise. It Is not surprising to see how general tho use of this supple material for It must be supple Is. It edges the filmy materials of evening gowns. A broad band of velvet is used at the hem or to gather In the fullness of a tunic. This note is repeated on the sleeves that might suggest too little strength of weave to sustain the weight, but it can be done with safety and undeniable effect. Black velvet with lace Is another combination that Is charming. Spanish lace. In white, black or colors, Is relieved by strips and pnnels of velvet that gives a rich body to any nimv cown and affords contrast In textures. As rosettes, girdles or pipings tho use of black velvet Is without limit Tho color itself serves to bind together two contrasting shades into a Aealn. It gives a line of contrast batween two tones of ono color, thus strengthening a scheme and emphasizing lines. SnBhcs are a dominant note this season. Of black velvet, fringed with heavy silk or allied In unexpected ways with chiffon or tulle, a snsh will add distinction to the ntmplcst frock. Tho sensible way is to mako It adinstable, for the friendly black can be taken from one frock nnd UBcd on anether gown with great effect Black velvet hats for nftcrnoon and evening are undoubtedly In the foromost ranks. They aro shown In some Bdvnnced openings in large, low .hares with oval crowns. Frequently
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to - Oate. f thero are contrasting under surface of bright satin. For evening gowns tho black velvet models bid fnlr to carry the laurels. They are combined with gold on silver embroidery or with wonderful beaded plastrons that reflect tho colors of the rainbow. When you discover tho magnificent evening wraps of black velvet that aro friendly in that they will grace any colored costume, then, Indeed, the full significance of beauty will burst upon you. These can bo lined with metallic tullo under chiffon; they can be lined with eoft hand-painted Batln or brocaded silk, and are so lovely on tho Inner surface that many owners will bo tempted to turn them inside out for a change. But remember that black velvet Is tho fabric for this autumn and winter! VALUE OF THE CRASH APRON Smart Garment Especially Adapted for the Girl Who Is Fond of Fancy Work. Infinitely practical looking and, i therefore certain to be of comfort to the average fancy worker, are tho cretonne headrests In flowered and Dutch paterns, which need merely to be braid outlined, or the French linen block print tablo and pillow covers, which corae In cretonne patterns and require only to be braid and fringo finished. To keep these "unspotted" from the world while in tho course of their putting together, some young women aro making for themselves white and hluo crash aprons furnished with four deep pockets formed by simply turning up the lower edge to tho required depth and edging it with wide braid. Into such pockets may be placed tho materials for teacloths to bo bordered with the lace crochet, of which there nro are many beautiful patterns, in cluding a rose design not unlike that seen in genuine Irish crochet Cluny machine made laces are used to trim scarfs, tablecloths, luncheon cloths, buffet covers and dollies, while for those women who fancy the quaint rather than the novel are linen illustrating household replenlshlngs with Kate Green way stories In colors harmonizing one with another. SERGE DRESS White sergo maäoip In this style Is very useful. Tho skirt Is the favorite pleated style; the little overbodIce, -which can be worn with separate slips. Is prettily braided with white Itussln braid. Hat of mauve straw, turned up both front and back, and trimmed with wide mauve ribbon and small pink roses. Material required, 6 yards 4G inches rido. A Trimming Revival. Tho ribbon lacing of a decade ago Is being much revived. This Is much used on simple house gowns, tea gowns of negligees. Tho buttonholes may be cut In the material and workod with heavy buttonhole twlBt to match or if broad ribbon is used tho openings can be bound In bias silk or velvet. Theso are newer than crochet rings covered with heavy twist or ropo silk to match tho costume. A poft, pliable ribbon Is used, much wider than the buttonhole, to It falls Into folds. The ends aro drawn to a point with n gold or silver tassel or ornament. Draldcd Rugs. Brnldosl rugs, round and oval, In blues, whites and blacks, with a faint weaving of rose or soft red, are to bo used In front of bedroom fireplaces this winter. College peoplo will delight In tho rugs designed especially for them. They nro made up in Uie different college combinations of colors, and any special Insignia or year can be woven in to order. These ruga arc not expensive.
T TO FLY
WAN
HIGH
Undoubtedly Most Fascinating Form of Air Navigation. It's an Exciting Sensation to Soar Up the Invisible Aerial Stairway Until Out of Sight of the Earth. London. The most fascinating form of aviation Is undoubtedly ' the high flight One watches tho machine rise from the ground and climb steadily up an Invisible stairway, winding round and round In wide spirals. From the size of a monster the vessel diminishes until it looks like an eagle, then a wild duckV then a pigeon, a blackbirds, a lark, a bee, a fly. a raldge and so It Anally disappears out of sight: for men have now flown to over a rnllo. and It needs a strong glass I and a clear atmosphere for a specta tor to detect a machine at 6uch stupen dous heights. One waits In amazement asking how the daring aviator will return safely to earth from the clojds. Suddenly the machine darts Into ?lght, and it is seen plunging downward at an alarmingly steep angle. It is the vol plane, or dive, tho most sensational of all aerial feats. Having climbed to his maximum, the aviator abuts off his engine and deliberately steers downward by the aid of tho elevator. He plunges through the aerial sea at terrific speed, but not at hun-. dreds of miles an hour as some ini-1 aginative writers have put It As tho air resistance underneath his machine j increases with the speed and the ! amount of surface presented to It by j the planes, the vessel is automatically j led bac'K to Its normal gliding angle, i and the downward path becomes less steep. In order not to get too far away from his starting point the aviator thereupon makes another spiral at a gentle angle and then starts upon another plunge. Thus by a succession of these maneuvers he comes to a position from which he can make a final glide and reach the ground smoothly nnd without shock. The world's record In high flying was broken by Brooklns ovor Atlantic City, when he rose to the height J.---A The Vol Plane. ot G.200 feet It took him 56 minutes I to reach this point, or in other words he had to reach It by traveling over a distance of about 30 miles In a . succession of long spirals, for his flight speed can be assumed to have been about 35 miles an hour all through. His descent waj mado In eight minutes and was composed of sev- , eral high-speed dives and short spirals. Brooklns used u Wright biplane. Tho prettiest high flying Is dono by tho monoplane, and at Rheims Latham, when he soared to 5.540 feet, afforded a Bplendld spectacle. Morano reached a height of 1.107 feet nt Bournemouth and also gave a superb t display. Captain Dickson is one of the most accomplished men at the vol plane, and he shows masterly skill and Judgment Mr. Drexel Is also a very ; daring air climber, and In his descent j from a height of 2,400 feet at Bournemouth he made a steep glide. NOW AMPUTATION BY SHOCK Eminent French Surgeon Suggest That Operation May Be Performed Without Cutting. Paris. Though It is not pleasant, of course, to have an arm or a leg amputated, no matter how painlessly this operation may bo performed, there aro cases where It Is absolutely necessary, and then tho question of how to do It Is Important. A French surgeon. Prof. D'Arsonval, suggests a method which Is quite novel, and not only painless during the operation, but without the slightest trouble afterward. Neither knife, saw. nor any other cutting Instrument Is to bo used. The limb Is simply to fall ofT as If by magic, with the wound completely henled and cicatrized. The amputation suggested Is by means of electric currents of high frequency. Prof. D'Arsonval explains that ho has been able to send currents of high frequency through animals, and to raise the temperature of their bodies to a very high degree, without any apparent effect on their sensibility or tho contractablllty of their raupclcs. Tho animals seemed to feel nothing whatever. In some cases, ho says, the calorific effect was such thnt certain members were literally cooked, and. strango to say, tho animal did not betray tho least feeling of pain. When tho members fell away after some days, as It were, by their own actloa, thfl stumps wcro perfectly cicatrized.
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Trouble In the Treupe. They'vo bad a frightful time in the No. 5 Tom company. Hear about IlT" "Nope." "Busted aa walkln hack. That's right. Went to smash on the Vincennes Circuit Utility feller they picked up at Sawvllle got mad cause he was doubled aa Marks an' a bloodhoupd, an sawed the leg3 off tho ladder, an Eva fell out o heaven an landed on Papa St. Clair, an' Simon Legrco landed on Unc Tom, an' tho real dog Bit a hole in Aunt Ophelia, nn thcro was merry hades to pay until the local manager called the patrol wagna and had tho wnoJo bunch dragged up tho pike and dumped in tho woods. An tho worst of it was there was a record house with nineteen good dollars in the box!"
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with LOCAL A.TUCATIOXS, a thr cannot tMcl Ihr ml ot the 2li.f . Catarrh ts a b!oo4 or constltutktaal dweaac. aal la order to rare It joy moat taa Internal rtiaedk. Hair Catarrh Cure Is taWn totma.Hr and aeu dlrectlr upon the biood and mucout turfacts. llali'i Catarrh Cure is not a quark medlIt waa preacrlUd tr n ' tu Dl pujucua im Mtiifrv ni l rrT rirriialloQ. it t composed or the bwt tonic mown. coaWBs W eh.. kl i litt t lf I V Aft t f murou mrfarra. The rrirt combination Of the wti4 .-; KB WtWU ' wa I av. v ait-i h . v -- two lacrtdlenu ts what producta aurh wonderful rte rolU la vttinz catarrh. rVnd lor twllmonUSs. fre-. F. J. CUEN'EY & CO.. rropt- Todo. O. fold br DniertitA. prtre lie. TaXs UaU'a FaalJr 1111a lor eoastlatioa. Indications. "I might know thlB conservatory belonged to a baseball enthusiast." "Why?" "Because it has so many pitcherplants." clean and aweet aa when new. All grocers. If In search of a closo friend select ! one with a closo mouth. m i ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT uh II AVcctabjcPreparaiionTorAspjtu'i similatmg iheFoodandKcgulating the 5 loraachs and bowels cf or Promotes DisfionChcerfutncssandRcsl.Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral Not Narc otic frtij tfOldDrSAMl'EltmfiSX Ml 51 ft? JtU9 SJ .t A perfect Remedy forConslfpai.V Rl? i! T Simile Signature of 1 ST TrE Centaur Company;, NEW YORK. 5 ISIS rantccd under the Foodaa 3 Exact Copy of Wrapper.
Wjl lion . Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, j Worms .Convulsions .Fcvtrish-
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lt Prize Cold Watch 2nd Priz Diamond Ring: 3rd Prix 1 Cunmetal Watch 4th Prize Pair Roller Skate 5th Prise Pair Roller Skate
and to each and every one sending in a correct answer will be e'ven a nice Mivenir ABSOLUTELY FREE
THE MOTHEB 1IE.V HAS IB CHICKS CAN YOU I ISO OK THUMt DIRECTIONS Trace the outlines of the chicks' heads on this or a seperate sheet of paper and number them 1-2-3, etc. The 10 neatest correct answers will be given the awards above mentioned. To every person sending in a correct answer will be given a nice souvenir upon calling at our store. All answers must be mailed or brought into us by Thursday, Oct. 20, 1910. Winners will be notified by mail. Be sure your name and address is plainly wntteu ou your an wer and send it to STORY & CLARK PIANO CO. 250-252 WABASH AVE.. CHICAGO.
The Wretchednett of Constipation Cut qweUy be orareora hj
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Pure!' vegetable met mreJr mad Beady on the brer. Core BS eke. Dim. aew, tad Iigcriku They do Uwk dar. SaaB PS. Small Do. Snail Pric. '' Genuine wutfcet Signature A man is judged by his appearance KNOWN THE WORLD OVER Free! Glad Feet? Free! Tho World first ronriao of Tonttlro Kellef fot Ilarl torn. Kofi form ami Calloua.a U tha dlacorerr or tho Scientific trcaUoflit Ä , Tlier Vanish. VCeGosrO ADIiin ET -T anteoThoTVatiUh. Oat uUnHUr I Pclieofr-.furlh-aainc, UUlllIWi toCTer7 uBierinthoU.lK Will yon Htro to and trr tbW tree aa tuple. Ol mntinue to an-Vr' Mt.t x-rxl 2c tarn tor retnr pjitmge. torr ui-Tki.iTuaio., .Hrf-i, r. , T. . r... lti. : aoroeVa i noinpscn CI IfeUir W. N. U., Indianapolis, No. 42-1910. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought CASTORIA TMf eairraua imhit, r Toaa crrr. 6th Prize, Solid Gold Cuff Button 7th Prize 1 Locket 8th Prize 1 Brooch Sth Prize 1 Set Ch nu Dishe 10th Prize 1 Doll
Hill U1
JBaM bbitti r I
Signature AÄJ1 cv $ In W For Over Thirty Years
