Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 53, Number 37, Jasper, Dubois County, 23 June 1911 — Page 6

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GoodConvenient Libby's Soups have 5ft N-tt. i j- n U ; Sine norae-mauc im, Try Pi libby's Chicken Soup Dbbv's Vegetable Soup i-X, libby's Tomato Soup J)j ( at your grocers. 0j Llbby, McNeill GS. Libby J THE IDEA. Peggy Didn't the lawyer know yoa were an actress? Kitty Gracious, no! Ho offered to get my divorce without any publicity. Kissing Breach cf Peace. The better half of a respected citizen of Now Jersey recently had the temerity to hale her lord and master before the court on a charge of hairing kissed her against her will. For this heinous offense this shameless Jertey benedict was bonded over in $100 b.ill to keep the peace, and, moreover, was warned by the judge never again to kiss his wife without first obtaining her consent in due form. If he is any kind of a man, probably he will sever want to kiss her again. Washington Herald. FREE a TRADE A trial package of Munyon's Paw Paw Pill will be pent free to anyone on request. Addrem ProfMor Munyon, 53d & Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. If you ars in need of mediral advice, do not fail to write Proffsor Jlunvon. Your communication will be treated in strict confidence, and your cam: will be diagnoted as carefully as though you had a personal interview. Munyon'n Paw Paw Pills are unlikw all other laxatives or cathartics. They con the liver into activity by ftentla methods. They do not scour, they do not erlpe, they do not weaken, but they do start all the secretions of the liver und stomach in a way that rxn puts thtfc orgsni in a healthy condition and correct contipati n. In my opinion constipation i responsible for mo.t ailment. There are 20 feet of human bonds, which is really a sewer pipe. M'hen this pipe becomes clogjed thi whole system becomes poisoned, causing biliouness. indigestion and impura blood, which often produce rheumattim and kidney ailments. No woman whf Buffers with comtipation or any liver ailment can expect to have a clear complexion or enjoy good health. If I had my way I would prohibit the sals of nine-tenths of the cathartics that ari now being sold for the reason that they soon destroy the lining of the stomacK, setting up scrioui forms of indigestion, and so paralyze the bowels that they refufc to net unlesj forced by stronf purgntive. Munyon's'Paw Paw Pills are a tonio to the Etomach, liver and nerves. They invigorate Instead of weaken; they enrich the blood Instead of Impoverish it; they enable the stomach to get all the nourishment from fcod that is put into it. These pills contain n calomel, bo d. pc; they are soothing, healing end atimulating. They echool the bowels to act without phsic. Regular size tattle, containing 15 pills, 23 rents. Munyon's L-iboJory, Md Jefferson Sts.. Phtladelphk.

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Poultry House Construction By A. G. Phillips Animal Husbandry Department, Purdue Unhcrsity

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Interior of A. C. Philips, Animal Husbandry Department. The poultry honse Is the home of the hen and as such, should provide sunshine, fresh, dry air and no drafts, all of which are necessary In supplying comfort and cheerfulness. One of the requisites for the production of eggs is that the hen shall be happy and kept in congenial surroundings. Years of experiment and observation by many experiment stations and practical poultrymen, have proven that the "open front" Is the most universally satisfactory type of. poultry nouse. This type of house supplies plenty of frc3h, cold, dry air, free from drafts i and an abundanco of sunlight, the j main things necessary in any hen j house. The area of the house Is controlled by the Blze of the flock, but four square feet per fowl is generally satisfactory. Fowls should never be crowded. Thus for 50 fowls a house 15x15 feet is a good size. The foundation should be six Inches above ground and at least 12 inches , below, in order to keep out damp- , ness and frost. A good width at the , top In four Inches. I A cement floor Is a good floor for poultry, because when properly made It is dry, rat proof and sanitary. The 4"i"l"I"l"l"l"I""i"i"l"I"I"l"I"l"l"i"li,l,"l"H"l"5Shall Bread Be Baked in the Home By Prof. Henrietta W. Calvin Housvholtf Economies Department. Purdue University Prof. Henrietta V. Calvin, Household Econcmica Department. Purdue University. All intelligent women are now Interested In discussing questions relating to industries in the home, and those that can, with advantage be taken out from the home and be carried on In large factories or centers. In regard to the production of bread, certain factors must be considered, as. comparative coBt of home produced article and that purchasecT; comparative quality and comparative cleanliness and general sanitary condition. In considering the cost of home produced bread, it may be figured as follows: fnmt rt flnnrfntir lnnVM 2 lbs. ......t. 11 Cost of-JlquJd 1 qt.sklmmltk TH Cost of yeast l cane compreasea uz Cost of-salt, sugar and lard 01 Total cost of materials MSH Total cost of materials for one louf. .04i To the cost of materials must be added the cost of fuel, which will be used in the baking. If gas at one dollar per thousand Is used. It will add two cents to tho cost, making each loaf cost $.04. If gasoline, at 17 cents per gallon Is used, this will result In a fuel cost of .01 for four loaves. If the ordinary coal rnnge Is used, the actunl cost of baking will vary with the use made of other parts of tho range at tho same time, since a thrifty housewife will bake while cooking other foods or while ironing. If no other use Is made of tho range heat, then the cost of baking will be nearly tho same as when gasoline is used. Thus It Is figured that the actual cash cost of one lonf of home-made bread will be .04M. If made with compressed yeast. Home-made yeast will save about one-third ol a cent In each

Poultry House.

Utter on the floor will keep the hens from becoming cold. Thorough sanitation is absolutely necessary. The height of the house 13 controlled by its depth. It should be high enough to allow sunlight to strike the rear of the house sometime during the day. A house 15 feet deep should ba nine feet In front and four and onehalf feet deep in the rear. A large amount of air space is necessary. The walls should be absolutely tight, except the front, which should be open. Double walls are not necessary. An open front with tight walls, allows no draft. The front should contain a glass window through which light may pass when the cloth windows are closed. The remainder of the front, with the exception of the bottom two feet, should be open, covered with wVe, and supplied with muslin curtains that should be left open except on stormy or cold nights. The interior fixtures should all be above the floor and the rooäts movable. The coop can be used for extra males or brooding hens. The feed platform allows cleanliness of all water and feed vessels. Any person building such a houss will find It cheap, easily constructed and entirely satisfactory. loaf, or the actual cost will be about .03;. This loaf will weight one pound. A baker's loaf weighs about thirteen ounces and will cost five cents, that is. four pounds of baker's bread costs 25 cents or four pounds of hosie-mado bread costs about ISM: cents, or a gain in money raved of nearly seven cents. The time required for making bread is about one hour. There are many hours of a housewife's time that do not net her seven cents saving. There is little doubt but what the majority of housekeepers can so manage their duties that home baking will pay from the cash standpoint A wage earning woman, such as a teacher, cannot afford to make her own bread. If it Is considered from the money side only, nor could the overworked mother "afford" It If seven cents was all that was gained. Then we come to consider the question of quality. The highest grade of materials have been used in the homemade article. It has the highest nutritive value. It, if rightly made. Is sweet, well baked, palatable and attractive. Baker's bread Is too often slightly acid, over-raised and under baked. Under-baked bread contributes to dyspepsia and all It's attendant evils. So It pays to make good home-made bread for digestive reasons. Watch tho baker's wagon being loaded In the early morning hours. The coat, tho gloves that were worn when the horses were harnessed, are still on. The bread Is piled high upon the sleeves of that arm. The bread Is handled by those gloves. Is the bread wagon very clean? Does the man pile a good deal of bread on the front box and then pass the lines over !? In the hot summer dayB, do the flics rise from the filth of tho road when the wagon stops and swarm Into the wagon? Are you certain that tho bakeshop kitchen is as clean as your own! Did you ever find something unattractive in your bread? Perhaps It pays to make home-made bread because of better sanitary conditions. Money Is not the only measure of worth. The seven cents gain Is but a part of thi total gain.

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i TH E "PIGS IN CLOVER" MAN

Sam Loyd, the Inventor of Numerou Puzzles and Chess Problems, It Desd. Brooklyn. N. Y. When Samuel Loyd. the puzzle export and Inventor of chess problem, passed away at hU home in Brooklyn, the world lost a man whose contributions to the publie havo nrobably entertained more j people than those of any other man of the age. Young and old. rich and poor, alike, have wrestled with the . fantastic creations of his fertile brain. Born In Philadelphia In 1SU and educated In the schools of New York clt. he early disptayod tho gifts which were to brlni; him fame and wealth At the age of six he was proflc.ent at chess and was untangling: the hardest mathematical puzzles of the dav. When a young man he began hts contributions to the newspapers and the invention of mechanical puzzles, some of which attained an almost universal craze. On of the first inventions to bring him fame was the "Fifteen Puzalo." Later came "The Tigers and the Men." Pigs In Clorer." "Parches!" and "The Disappearing Chinaman." Mr. l.oyd'3 roost profitable Idea was "The Donkey" puzzle, of which 1, 000.000.009 were sold. Mr. I.oyd took the view that there was something more In his puzzles than the simple amusement of the mo ment He believed that he had In his devices come across something which would sharpen the wits of the aver age man. He pointed out that they could Interest and amuse men who re garded ordinary mathematics with dis gust, and that the boy who had at school shrunk from the very Idea ol an algebraical square root, would de vote his spare moments to the solu tion of a puzzle which Involved the same principles as the sum. Just he cause he was Interested. Consequent ly. he maintained that he supplied something which the average system of education had missed. Apart from his puzzles Mr. Love" was for a time the editor of the San I tary Engineer, and a shrewd operatoi ro Wall street. He also wrote for a number of magazines. He was a mem ber of the New York Press club, the Brooklyn Chess club and the Brook lyn Whist club. He Is survived by a widow, one son. Samuel Loyd, Jr. and two daughters. THE FIRST WOMAN MAYOR Mrs. Susanna Salter of Argonia, Kann Holds This Distinction Her Sugar Policy Worked. Topeka. Kan. The troubles of Mrs. WI!son. mayor of Hunnewell. Kan., recalls the fact that Mrs. Susanna Salter was the first uoman mayor of the wond. She held office for one year a Argonia. Kan., a town located In the same county with Hunnewell. Mrs Salter was elected mayor of Argonia In 1SS7 and served for one year. She is an active suffragette and believes that women should hold office, but should not be on the police force or hold offices of a similar nature, no more than a man should cook the meals and keep house In their homes. Mrs. Salter believes that sugar catches more flies than vinegar, and says that while she was In office, by applying the sugar, she had little trouble. "I JUBt made those men of the conn ell beHove they were the nicest men In the world, and we got along admirably." sho said. "When Mrs. Wilson was elected mayor of Hunnewell I wrote her a lettor and advised ber to adopt this policy, but she Is having lots of trouble. I was very anxious for Mrs. Wilson to make a success Just to demonstraV! that women are capable of holding office."

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POOR RETURN FOR CHIVALRY

Incident That Probably Has Forever Discouraged KInd-Hcarted Mr. Jones. Chivalrous Mr. Jones purposely dropped a 50-cent picco at tho foot of a poorly dressed woman who passed through the aubday turnstile loudly lamenting that the ticket agent had cheated her out of halt a dollar, then ho picked the money up and gave it to her. "Excuse me. madam," said Mr. Jones, "I think you dropped this." "Oh, no," sho said, "it can't be mine. Perhaps you dropped It, yourself." "Oh. no," said Mr. Jones. "It Is yours, I am suro. I picked It up Just as you passed." "Sho took tho money, and hurried after another man who had paBsed at the time the money dropped. "Excuse me. sir," she said, "I think you lost this." "Thanks," Bald the other man. and Jumped aboard a train that was ready to Etart. " !" said chivalrous Mr. Jones. Now York Time3. DOCTOR PRESCRIBES CUTICURA REMEDIES "I wish to let you know of a couple of recent cures which I have inado by the use of tho Cutlcura Remedies. Last August, Mr. of this city came to my ofllco, troubled with a severe skin eruption. It was dermatitis in Its worst form. It started with a slight eruption and would affect most parts of his body, thighs, elbows, chest, back and abdomen and would terminate In llttlo pustules. The ItchIng and burning was dreadful and ho would almost tear his skin apart, trying to get relief. I recommended all the various treatments I could think of and he spent about fifteen dollars on prescriptions, but nothing seemed to help him. "In tho mcantimo my wife, who was continually suffering with a slight skin trouble and who had been trying different prescriptions and methods with my assistance, told mo sho was going to get some of the Cutlcura Remedies and givo them a fair trial But as I did not know much about Cntlcura at that time I was doubtful whether It would help her. Her skin would thicken, break and bleed, especially on tho fingers, wrists and arms. I could do nothing- to relievo her permanently. "When she first applied tho warm baths of Cutlcura Soap and applications of Cutlcura Ointment Bhe saw a decided improvement and In a few days sho was completely cured. "I lost no tlmo in recommending the Cutlcura Remedies to Mr. , and this was two months ago. I told him to wash with warm baths of the Cutlcura Soap and to apply the Cutlcura Ointment generously. Believe me, from the very first day's use of the Cutlcura Remedies ho was greatly relieved and today ho Is completely cured through their use. I have great faith in the Cutlcura Remedies and shall always have a good word for them now that I am convinced of their wonderful merits." (Signed) B. L. Whitehead, M. D.. 108 Dartmouth St.. Boston, Mass., July 22, 1910. He Is happy whose circumstances suit his temper. But ho Is happier who can suit his temper to any circumstance. Hume. Somo girls are afraid to go downtown by themselves for fear a man may not try to flirt with them. When a laxative i needed, take the always potent Garfield Tea. Composed of Herbs. The love of a man for his wlfo may be the real thing, but It doesn't seem ' to Interfere with his appetite. ItB easier to PUt UO a bluff than . , It IS to put Up the Stuff.

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Beneficial, GentfoandEffGctiTO,

CALIFORNIA FIG SYBUP CO. in 1fi Circfe. on evenj Pacftao of tho Genuine. DO NOT LET ANY DEALER DECEIVE YOU, rmif of ncs and cuxix or socu has oven UrflVTXSAL SATISFACTION FOR MORE THAN THIRTY YEATJ AST. AND ITS WOfOEXFUL SUCCESS HAS LEO UNSCRUPULOUS MANUFACTURERS Of IMITATIONS TO OFFER rrrZJUOK PREPARATIONS UNOCR SIMILAR NAMES AND COSTING THE DEALER LXSSs THEREFORE, WHEN BUYCNC,

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Grateful. "How does Slithers feel nbout that chauffeur who ran off with hla car a d his daughter?" asked Wilkos. "Ho's mighty grateful." said I j. dad. "Ho says the poor Idiot relieved him of his two most oxpenslvo p0sessions." Harper's Weekly. You enn't reform a man by .,r. Resting that he ought to bo as g0,,(i as you aro.

Your Liver Is Clogged Up That's Why You're- Tired-Out of Sorts iurg mo svppeuie. CARTER'S LITTLE. LIVER PILLS will put you right in a few days. They do. their duty. CureCon-' stipation. Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick I leada . -ia SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, S5IALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Why Rent a Farm and hm fomn.ltt n . V . . of your hurd-earncd profit? Own yttrw, anttooa, BBtkatchcwdfi r Alberta, or p.t.hn, land in one cfUcx dutrlcta and bank a profit of 510.00 or SI 2.00 an .era erjr year. Land purchuH j yeara a to at Si JO an acre haa recent y chanted handi at $25X0 an acre Te crojittrrown then i ana a warrant the advance. You can Become Rich by cattle raltlne.dalrylnr r- tt farmlnr and grain crtwliic -the provinces of Manitoba. Saskatchewan and Alberta Free homestead and preemption areas, aiwrll nit d held by railway and larj r - Fanle. will prolde boinei or millions. ,H Adaptable, soil, healthful climate, splendid school and churches. doodrollai I. r ettirn' rate. Irl. . tc literature Lait Ht i w t. rrarlithrcountrjaod. h-t4-t ec a1, write u i.p t i ' I i tj fr rn Ottawa, ivaruida i snadun IjOTernmeol A.ri i Q0. Uti, Iti Iber Trxtta Irrckul EtCrti. laSMKKls. UAiu. af U UMU tOUMtM AUM. Utvf feOäic. I 4. CUt. Instead of Liquid Antiseptics or Peroxide 100,000 pcoplo last year used Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic The nevr toilet germicide peurder tob dissolved In water as needed. For all toilet and hygienic uses it Lt better and more economical. To save and beautify the teeth, rcmOTO tartar and pre rent decay. To disinfect tho mouth, destroy disease perms, and purify the breath. To keep artificial teeth and bridgework clean, odorless To remove nicotine from the teeth and purify the breath after smokinp. To eradicate perspiration and todj odors by sponge bathing. The best antiseptic wash known. Relieves and strengthens, tired, weak, inflamedcyes. Heals aorethroat.woundi and cuts. 25 and 50 cts. a box. drucgists or by mall postpaid. Snmplo Free THE PAXTONTOILETCO.,BoaTOH.Maa. SELF' LOADING HAY-RACK On man does It all. No one owning a Loader can afford to be without. Bend for clrcu ar. DAILEY & NICHOLS, Delavan, III. HTOMACII.nOWEI., I.IVKK AND KlirtSl.lTIMM cored by ew American 1iUcot-t i loU. Unarantred remedy. J'ot a relief bat a ' r iiuBtj refunded If ltdont. Many bate been rn -4 fur iuu. Pr- c, aciu c. BiartM, i.i.t n ICttll IM) I1UIIM ATTHTlOlt Krerrfberfl Iber la a telephone you can make ble money New ear Her Sar le. particulars and Inatrn. tl. ns f' ' in coin or nam pi .Cosr4i..nHtrrt.tPiRUQ Internments Houston. Texas Thrown l linlg welrar. If Interewed In the ei)l 0 for Tie Practical fanner. U. s. TilLOtt, H....Ti"Mi.tIA.TURC riCTUM: or rACKAcx

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