Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 53, Number 52, Jasper, Dubois County, 6 October 1911 — Page 3
SHE GOT WHAT SHE WANTED
This Woman Had to Insist Strongly, but it Paid rhlcatro Hl. "I suffered fromafemalo weakness and stomach trouble, r, JuaA'T n and I went to the storo to get n uottlo of Lydia E. rinkham's Vogotablo Compound, but the clerk did not want to lot mo havo It bo said It was no food and wanted mo o try something elso, but knowing all about it 1 insisted and finally trot it, and I am so glad I did, for it ba3 cured mc "I know of bo many cases where women have been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound that I can say to every suffering woman if that medicine does not help ber, there Is nothing that wilL" Mrs. Jaketzki, 2W53 Arch St, Chicago, 111. This is tbo age of substitution, and women who want a euro should Insist upon Lydia E. Pinkham'B Veeetablo Compound Just as this woman did. and not accept something elso on which tho druggist can make a littlo more profit. "Women who aro passing through this critical period or who aro suffering from any of thoso distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of tho fact that for thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which Is made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female Ills. In almost overy community you will tind women who havo been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, SILENCE IS GOLDEN. Mrs. Roley Poor dear, ho hasn't said a word for thrco weeks. Dr. Bull-Frog Well, you don't want him to croak, do you? Exchange. The Old Love Possible Mrs. Clarence H. Mackay, at a garden party at Hampstead, praised tho working girl. "How much nobler," she said, "to work than to marry for moner. 1 know a pretty girl who gave up a good position to marry a man of sixtytight "'I am marrying for love,' she told her chum. '"And the old fellow.' said tho chum, disgustedly, 'is worth $7J)00,000!" "'Yes,' was tho reply. 'It's the 7,000.000 I'm In love with."' Ready for It. "Young man, have you made any preparations for tho rainy day?" "Oh. yes," replied the son of tho prominent millionaire. "la addition to ray roadBter, 1 havo a corking good limousine that will easily hold six girls." Fnw nf ii i-nn rtn more than ono thing well. Many a man who has no difficulty In making money is a dm mal failure as a spender. Easy Breakfast! A bowl of crisp Post Toasties and cream the thing's done! Appetizing Nourishing Convenient Ready to serve right out of the pacKage. "The Memory Lingers" POS1XJM CEREAL. CO., Ltd hallt. Citek. Mtek,
The Farm Brood Mare By IL E. ALLEN, AdIbuI Hatbscdry Depvtarat, Perdue Scbool of Azricaltcre Purdue UwTcnity AxrictJtcral Eitcaiica
Good typo of 1,600-pound farm br of colts and farm work. Our horse stock has been Influenced and somewhat Improved during the past few years by the campaign that is belnc conducted against the scrub. unsound and grade stallions. Through this work many farmers havo been benefited and encouraged In the production of a higher class of horses. Pure bred, sound EtalllonB have, to a great extent, crowded out tho undesirable typo of grades and scrubs in the more intelligent and up-to-date sections of tho country. This has accomplished much good as evidenced by the appearance of a greater per cent of high class, high priced horses on our farms-' and In the markets. However, It Is a lamentable fact that, as yet, too many of our horses are unsound and undersized individuals, fitting Into no markot class and so commanding only very ordinary prices. This condition will continue to exist In sptto of the use of pure bred, sound Ktnlliona until farmers discontinue breeding tho undersized, unsound. mongrel mares that aro found on so many of our farms. While many farmers are beginning to appreciate the importance of the pure bred, sound stallion, the equal imnortnncG of uslnc good, sound maros is not generally understood. Too often a mare is eet aside for breeding purnoses when by reason of unsoundness she is no longer fit for anything else. So lone as this ruinous policy con tinues we will have a surplus of un-
RAISE YOUR CALVES By P. IL CRAKE, Dairy Dtpirtawt, Parikc Eiptrmcat Sutie Purdue UslTeriUy Arrirakari Extnuwo
Essential to Increasing Dairy Thn methods followed by a great! many of the farmers of Indiana are such that after years or farming meir iiv tnolr is no better than It was when they began. This Is especially true of a class of men known as aairymen. At present there is qulto a distinction made In tho uso of the terms "dairyman" and "dairy cattle breeder." The dairyman should be a dairy cattle breeder, and vice versa. The dairyman that depends upon other men to produco his cows will always have about the seme grade of "stuff," and can never depend upon any Increase In production, duo to his own selection and breeding. Too many so-called dairymen are merely dealers, who buy up large cows duo to freshen In a short time. When . rnws come fresh, the calves are vealed and the cows milked whllo being fattened, going to the block after a m,in- noriod of three to eight months. This method Is very -harm ful to permanent dairying ana puis a of beef on the market. Better results would bo obtained H either beef or dairy cattle were kept for their specific purpose. Instead of trying to mnko poor Individuals serve tho purpose of both dairy and beef animals. If one expects to follow dairy farmIns, It la well to decide what breed of dairy cattle lb ttt adapted to his partlcular conditions, and then, by the use of a good, pure bred Hro of this breed, and by raising the heifer calves, he can soon build up a good grade
ood mares, give doublo returns by way
sound horses on our farms and on tbo markets, keeping the average price ot horses down to the minimum. The Farmer's Type of Mare. Market prices indicate an urgent demand for larger and bettor horses. Now, sinco the farmer must havo horses, why not keep good. big. sound draft mares, which after all make tho flnost farm teams in the tforld? And besides, they will raise colts each year at little extra trouble and expense, the geldings of which will command high prices la the market that Is making these urgent demands, ir given a trial, any farmer will find such a policy a good profitable business proposition. According to the accepted laws at Inheritance, colts from unsound, undersized mares are Just as likely to inherit the undesirable features of their dams as they aro the same or any other bad qualities from their sires. It is necessary then that tho wideawake, prosperous farmer keep his best mares, weighing not less than 1,400 pounds. Heavior ones would bo better. They should be sound wltb. plenty of good dense bone, and have gentle dispositions. They should always be mated with tho best puro bred stallion available regardless of the service fee, for what Is 55 or $10 in the price of a horso when the difference between colts from a puro bred and a scrub stallion Is often from J 50 to J 100? Profits. Calves In Purdue Herd. herd that will bo highly profitable as producers. If the product of the dairy Is cream or butter, the heifer calves may be raised largely on skimmed milk and grain without a great deal of expense. The secret of raising calves by hand successfully Is in taking especial care that the stalls and palls are kept clean; that tho calf Is not over-fed; that there Is no great change In the quantity or temperature of tho milk fed the calf at ench feed; that thero Is a chanco for ererciso where the calf has access, to water and salt; and that the quarters are. dry and well lighted and ventilated. If these precautions aro taken at all times, there Is not much danger of loss, but one exception may prove fatal. Ground corn and oats makes an excellent grain supplement to tho Bkimmed milk, and should be fed dry. Where a number of calves are being fed by hand, stanchions are very conrnninnt The calves can bo put In tfanehlnnS. 3 ShOWH in the T.Ccompanying illustration, and fed their skimmed milk and gram, ana anor thnir mnuths have dried, they can be allowed to run loose In the pen. t?nAnr this manacement they do v nicely and very seldom form the habit of sucking eacn otner s enr. Tniiiridn.il trouehs for sows aro best mado square and heavy Instead of V shaped. Then tbey do not iay ia them and cannot root them around so much.
IM
E OF A SIGNER Old Taylor House Will Be Mado a Museum. One of the Two Remaining Rhodes of Those Who Put Their Names to the Declaration of Independence. Easton, Pa. Ono by ono tho nation has permitted the homes of the signers of the Declaration of Independence to bo sold into uncaring hands, or altered or torn down. Today, It is said, there remain only two of these homes as they appenred In 177G. Theso arc the former homo of George Taylor in this place, and Charles Carrolltoa of Baltimore. Tho Carrollton mansion, rich as It is In memories, has been a tenement bouse, inhabited principally by foreigners. The lower floor of tho Taylor houso was last used as a butcher shop. It is aulte nrobable that there is more interest attached to this Taylor houso than to the home of dny other signer of the famous document. It is for this reason that the Easton chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution are making such efforts to preserve this once famous building. This society has purchased the home and will convert it into a museum. As a nucleus for tho proposed collection, they already have some relics of Taylor and Revolutionary days. . These consist principally of suits of clothes, the sword, books and the inkstand used by the signer, as well as a number of shot cast at Taylor's furnace at Durham. This house was bullt In 17&7 as a home for William Parsons, the founder of the city of Easton. Shortly before Parsons died, George Taylor came to America with a man named Savage, who established a furnace at Durham, near Easton. Savage paid l for Taylor's passage to America, and 1 the latter then worked seven years I for Savage, to reimburse him. Then Savage died, and Taylor married his widow, and camo into possession of the furnace. Taylor now found himself on the road to fame and fortune. The Taylor House. Tho Durham furnace was kept busy making shot for the Revolutionary cannon. Taylor moved to Ea8ton and bought the Parsons home, at the north east corner of Fourtli and Ferry streets. Here General Washington visited Taylor when the former came to this city to visit the sick soldiers that had been housed In the First Reformed church, which was temporarily used as a hospltaL In 1764, Taylor was a member of the Provincial assembly, and one of tho committee which thanked King George for repealing the stamp act The Taylor house Is a two and a half story structure, built of sandstone. The mortar Is so hard that It can hardly be chipped oft with a chisel. The floors are of one and onehalf Inch oak planks, and fastened vith wrought Iron nails. Large oaken shelves adorn the room used by Tay lor na his library, and tbo second hna a snnrloiis fircnlnco whero uuwi " 1 hang the colonial Are tongs. The chimney Is yet straight and soiiu, ana thn window sashes and panes are ai most invariably the same as ,they were in Taylor's time. A short time nrn a small marble slab, giving the time of erection, and the date of death nf tho owner. George Taylor, was i.wi on tho building by the new owners, the Easton chapter of the Daughters of the American itevom tlon. CLEVER WITH HIS FINGERS Negro Mall Distributor Could Tell What Letters containea money, and Took Over 1,000. cv Postofllco Inspectors 000 letters, containing small sums of money, have oeen tauen iroiu tho malls by Franklin B. Scott, ne j . ... . gro, a night distributor at tne posioihör Scott had six unopened let ters In his pockets when arrested, the officials say. s.r vn nhlfi to nick out letters containing currency with astonishing accuracy. His nnger i were aononnally sensitive ana no nau tnmhi. nnlls so that tho nerves were nearly exposed. It was his slender, tapesing fingers that ieo inspct.-ra to suspect him. sin Crane the Flih Thief. ..i.t,in Pn Tyoenl fishermen UCUllCl"""! " havo wondered what has become of all the trout distributed In Monocacy Creek last year, and discovered the cause when a Dig crane wubu feeding on the na.
wsg& -a mm I
THE DECEIVER.
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Sergeant 'Alt Take Murphy's namo for talkln' In the ranks. Corporal W'y, sergeant, 'o weren't talkln'. Sergeant Wasn't 'c? Well, cross it hout and put 'lm In tho guard room for deceivln' me. The Tattler. THE TRUTH ABOUT BLUING. Talk No. 1. Avoid liquid bluing. Every drop of water, Is adulteration. Half a cent's worth of blue In a largo bottlo filled with water Is sold for fivo cents or 10 cents in many places. Always uso RED CROSS BALL BLUE, the blue that's all blue. A largo two-oz. package, all blue, sells for 5 cents or 4-oz. for 10 cents. Delights the laundress. AT ALL GOOD GROCERS. j Cause of thz Excitement The sons of tho rich wero all enthusiastically following sotno ono down tho street "What's up?" somebody asked. A rather more accommodating young nabob than the others turned around. "Do you see that tall fellow up front?" he asked. "Yes." "Well." ho said, "he's discovered a new way to spend money." Not All Smoked. L. White Busbey, secretary to former Speaker Cannon, was explaining that tho speaker did not Bmoko so much as people thought he did. "My understanding," suggested one I of the party, "Is that ho gets away with about 20 cigars a day.' "dh xeoM" said Busbev. "but he ( eats half of 'em." Sunday Magazine. TOMMY MURPHY, The prcat horseman who Is wlnnlnff most of the blc races for fast trotters with that farm horse. "R. T. C." record I Sayn: "SPOHN'S DISTEMPER CUKE Is tbe beat remouy lor an lorms or Distemper and coughs I have ever known. I have used It a number of years." All druggists or send to manufacturers. SOo and $1 a bottle. Spohn Medical Co., Chem ists, Goshen. Ind., u. s. A. Plenty of Biz. 'How Is your son, tho young doctor, making out?" "First rate, since ho learned to adapt himself to circumstances. He started out as a lung specialist, but bo's a green apple specialist now." " When vre read tho lives of distin guished men In any department "we find them always celebrated for the amount of labor they could perform.Kverett. Stop the Pain. rrv. V. nf a Ktm nf n rut pttnn Yrltftn sti... J"irksllsfil vv la nnnllMl. It hnl.t quickly and prevents scars. 25c and 50c by drojrglBts. For free snnple write lo J. W. Cole & Co.. Black Ulver Falls. Wis. Bean Porridge Hot. "Would you call soup an edible?" "Yes, an audible edible." Woman's Power Over
Women's most filoriooi endowment is the power to awaken aad hold the pure and honest love of a worthy man. Whea she loses it and still loves on, jk one in the wide world can know the heart afony she endures. The woman who suffers from weak cess and derangement of her special womanly organism soon loses the power to sway the heart of Mfr rfamrral health suffers and she loses
ber food looks, her attractiveness, her amiability end her power and prestide as a woman. Dr. R.V. Pierce, of Buffalo, IN. I., wtUi the assistance of his staff of able physicians, has prescribed for and cured many thousands of women. He has devised a successful remedy for woman's ailmeats. It is known as Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It is a positive specific for the weaknesses aad disorders peculiar to women. It purifies, re iites, strengthens and heals. Medicino dealers sell It. No htnett dealer wiU advise you to accept a substitute ia order to make a little larger proit. IT MAKES WEAK WOBCEIf STRONG, SICK WOMEN WEIX. Dr. PUrcw's Ftutat PelleU rsawte ttrtmgtbm Stommcti, Ltrer tnf Bern!.
W. L. DOUGLAS
2.50, 3.00, 3.50 & 4.00 nrniirM UT1 T !:. I. fitting;, easy walkinr boots, because they long wear, -use as VY.uuougiu mB
THE STANDARD Op QUALITY FOR OVER 3Q YEARS The workmanship vvliich has madcW. L. Douglas shoes famous the world over is maintained ki every pair. If I could take you into my large fa ft cries at Brockton, Mass., and show you how careiuly V.L.Douglas shoes are made, you wrvidrl lVin iinAirtixnA wViv thrv are WBT-
ranted to hold their shape, fit bcllcr and wear Ion ger than any othermake for the price PlirriflV Tho Renulne have W. I- PoBclas VAUIIUrl n.mn .ml nrleo stamped on bottom
1 . . TS V fUmstaa VZrIrtM8h t
rem fsetorr in wMttr, 11 eaarjre prepaid. W.T- M.OQ 81IOKH uipmhiwv" JT?. Li 1 ' .7 . .... ' ..... f, . . i, . u... Ttvn iMiuuof tunälaarr bora'ai
Cement Talk No. 7 Newspapers print ncarl3r every day the story of some fire disaster involving the complete destruction of great property values and sometimes the loss of human' lives. The annual fire losses of tho United States arc measured by tho millions; in fact, it is stated that over two hundred and fifty million dollars worth of propety vrai wiped out by fire in ths United State List year. While it is truo that the precautions to prevent fire and firo fighting syttems are often inadequate, the main uoublc lies in ßimsj, non-fireproof, t , . T 1 1 f but Ming coniirumzn. experience mi jjiuycu that fireproof construction is both practicable and economical. In some industries fireproof building is compelled by law. Reinforced concrete has come to the front as the most important agent in building against fire. Ths use of cement in building is becoming mora and more common, due to its fircproofnessJ durability and economy. When building anyJ thing from the back porch steps to an offics buildinr, concrete construction may be safeljn adopted. The use of Universal Portland. Cement in the concrete will insure cement of the best quality possible to manufacUtre. Unvver sal is handled everywhere by the best dealers.) UNIVERSAL PORTLAND CEMENT CO. 72 W. ADAMS STREET, CHICAGO ANNUAL OUTPUT 10.000.000 BARRELS Own a Profitable Farm Why pay from 1100 to t200 per acre for wi when you can buy better land for tlO to 850 pe acre, where conveniences are as good, opportunities much greater, variety of producta mora numerous, peasons longer. The Southern Land Exchange furnUhe description and loca tlon of hundreds of farms la the southern States, containing from 10 acres to 10,000 acres that can be bought from $ 10 to tM per a ere, and rent from 85 to $ 12 per acre. These land are In, creasing In value from Si to&0 per annuia. and fortunes can be made at toe present price. If jrou are Interested In these great land bar gains, send us 20c In stamps for particulars. THE GREAT DELTA MORTGAGE LOAN i GUARANTY CO.. JACKSON. MISSISSIPPI MONEY IN HOGS Adding molasses to your feed,wlll market your hogs two to four weeks earlier than you could without feeding molasses. Price 17 cents per gallon. Write for particulars ana leed price ust. J. G. HERMAN, Indianapolis, Ind, PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM I ClflEi. sad tttaUTief th bfc lromoc lsitm&nt cravBu Kerer Falls to Sectors Ory Hlr to Its Youthful Color. Cunt Kilp ditru-x hiir IUs. SOcmdSlJast DrfwrUti linilCV xnad quleklrby smart men. Kentlckrf mUnCl wsrdoeslt. lMnsnfe and sure. Send Sc. stamp for particulars. K. S. UO.,Maldrufc, Kf. NOTICE For InfonnsUon ecnc?rnlnc Improred farms In tho famous Minnesota Valler, Bonlbcrs Mino wrlU UbuuUaS Lu4 A Lm 4c?, BJWw, SUaa. SMARTNrC sen uk ACTS AT PATENTS WatsetiK.Celt-man.Ws.it lncum.n.U Books fre. ll!t eet references. Uest results. W. N. U., Indianapolis, No. 39-1911.! Man SHOES t. give ÄL, - iisoei. IBASS I rt direct ONE PAIR of my :BOW . : twest
I) T J of this paper de- II I Readers as;-js I II teed ia Us columns thotkkl ianfl Upoa II II hinag what tkey ik lot, refuiiag all II II tubßklricj or tHutiDow. II
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