Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 56, Number 15, Jasper, Dubois County, 30 January 1914 — Page 7

Dummies Arreste J. Dummies u.ed by a Paths director In an auto eck at Pouth River, N. J., bad the dlstl iction of bring shot at and arrested by Chief of Police Oppnber er of that place recently, according to a New r.runswick newspaper. Tb dummies, when not In use, were placed Id the store room of the Washington botel. Some Jokers toll tho cbh'f that some men were stealing cigars from the gtore room and when he arrived and Paw the dim figures in the darkness he called upon thorn repeatedly to surrender. Receiving no answer he blazed away at thm several times bofore he discovered the Joke.

Take a lose look at the people you et every day and rejoice that you were not born :i ;nniba!. Rheumatism Is Torture Many pains that pass as rheum itism are due to weak kilrieys--to the failure of the kidneys to drive off uric acid thoroughly. W hen you suffer achy, bad joints, backache too, dizziness and some urinary disturbances, get Dean's Kidney Fills, the remedy that is recommended by over 150,003 people in many different lands. Dean's Kidney Pills help weak kidneys la drive out the uric acid which b the cause of backache, rheumitism and lumbago. Here's proof. AN INDIANA c ABB M. C. Walker, !93 Grand Ave., ( 'o-inersvllle. In '. , ays; "Fur ten years I had muscular rh 'umatlsrn. I was laid up In bed and couldn't m o v 0 a limb. Plasters and bot applications failed. The first box of Doan's Kidney Tilts helped ma and two more boxes permanently cured mc." 1 a. Story.' Cef Dean's at A07 Store. 50c a Boa DOAN'S VfiTiV FOSTEK MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. Electric - Lighted Trains to Texas If you are going to Texas on business, why not combine business with pleasure? If you start with the assurance that you will find Pullman sleepers of the latest design, chair cars und coaches of all-steel construction, dining cars served by Fred Harvey; and if, in addition to this, you know that a good part of your journey will lie through the Ozark Mountains, why, then you can't hesitate long about selecting the Frisco Lines as your route. Just say "Frisco" to the Ticket Agent, Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver 13 right the stomach and bowels are right. CARTER'S UTILE LIVER PILLS gentivbutfirmly com pel 1 lazy liver do its duty. Cures Con stipation, In digestion, Sek Headache. and Distress After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS. hpsSSatOOT0990fl lV'BL N DOWM . . T lMfc. ULI ES surrt from kipnby. bcadpbb. ki kvv is diskasls, OMKONIC WtAKNESSkS.l-'LCERS.SKIN KI'PTIONS.PII.SS. wntr f r my FRkfc tx. W. THE KOSV IHSTBUCTIV HrSICAL HK EVER SITTEN. I T Ji.Vl. ALL about these E -! -FS ani tb REM .KKABLK TlRES EFFtf TEP DT THE NSW FRENCH REMEDY. N 1 N 2 N 3. THE NSW FRENCH REMEDY. THERAPION a you can uc BOB YOTRSMF - - ln vni'B ami s a 1 Imrnt Ia't MnJ A . nt. FREE. Nc f DR LECLBRO MkU. w... iAVKRSToCS RJ . hlAMjrSTaAO, LONUJS.fc.Na. rSJ PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A toilet nreprat!.n of merit. Helps toeralkate dandruff. For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. aae. anl fl a' i 'racists. DRESSMAKERS We cover buttons to ordr. Write for samples and sncet aaWFUssl BLTTvN Co, Uta part, Kj. rasa CC !n any form, quick W ar.d permanently ILL re!ierd by nir. Lacadni Plie O ntfurn'w KesulUguaiateedoriuonej refund d- Sent n i.a.n wrapper by mail, with lull diret-tun. tl per Jar Addres.o.Scbru'.'k Üereanüle Co., Columbia, Mo. ItOWl B BI4B llt'k I A t rb. 1 mutant Calif Kl r ( arnaiion. He Maderntlrrly by hndfrom Ita SowatS In all ro Ur acd tropa. trunr-iilo;xin. ForLHac. tiers o: .:oi and Violet. g-r ii.- n t.lATri.lrr a. !' "Vict- r a II by n ail. pp. t. Su BBSS. Ii AGENTS Mass M to :00 weaklr Sample 25 ctm. inamii'.'-d or mny rtnrnad. J 1 1TLK i, KM. Dept. B. Harabuo. W la. PilirCC fMIOCn v "! ' Mt knife. X -Hat r anything ViAnütn OUnCU jn ni t w rtt f r r. i M. BatUB a BBiltiiWU, 41 It. MrWl, Ua. Si nir soarraisti that will positively re more superiQni oiiit r iraarantedufl vesatisfaei ..'it. n rriurid rrt s Ssssssai Ss . Nssssas tasBBBBWasm WiPiiusT rui WJfBT aJtaona Bowen'sMtain IUbiotr.rk ite niäfir S&q po tpatd Aknts warned . . l BB Mm mm

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PROFIT BY GOOD CARE

Poultry on the Farm Receives Indifferent Treatment Close Watch Should Be Kept on Business All Round and Every Comfort Provided to Prevent All Infectious Disease. (By R. Q. WEATHERSTONK.) No matter how good the stock may be ir they have not the proper care they will pay you no bette- than mongrels. Poultry on the farm, as a rule, rec ives indifferent treatment. What does care" mean? It means a close watch on the business all round. It provides every coLifort, prevents disease by keeping the premises perfectly clean, never overcrowds, and keeps tho fowls busy, sorts out the drones and gives the workers better attention. In short, "care" means using bubiut88 principles in every sense of the word. The farmer is not giving the proper care when he allows hia fowls to roost on trees, in wagons, wagon sheds, or ou tho board fences. Th-.i proper care is not given if the appetites and conditions of the fowls are not studied. System and regularity play an important part in care. Economy in labor, the saving of step?, the saving of muscles, the saving of time all are important. Shift lessness causer, expensive experiences. There is sure to be pvolit in anything we take care of. Success is accorded to management. Profits depend upon the quality and quantity of brain work put into the enterprise. If a man performs his work in u mechanical way he will not be apt to do it well. There are too many w ho go by 4 luck." They do not stop to tii ink. They do not take notice of the little matters. They are always hurrying to get done. It is said quality makes prices, but it cots considerable labor and brains to make quality. Good management curtails expense. Successful poultrymen use good common sense methods, some others but little method, and alas, some not any method at all. Hard luck is generally brought about by mismanagement. Disorder creates disgust. Study and care, and not luck and big talk, are the elements of success. To quote Judge Brown: There are too many poultrymen who let their enthusiasm go down as the mercury in the thermometer goes up or down. The men who make the marked success in poultry raising are those who never flag In their attention those who know that the increased labor and close attention hot weather brings must be religiously observed, the same being the case when the cold weather is with us. It is the man or woman behind the hen rather than the breed that brings success. Scrub treament will bring about scrub results. The best paying breed is the one that is best cared for. Zeal in the prosecution of the work should be the characteristic of every poultry breeder. In conclusion, it must not be forgotten that success depends on management. Business attention given to a flock of properly housed liens would be a revelation to many, especially to the farmers themselves. TO AVOID STRAWBERRY LOSS Plants. According to Wisconsin Expert, Should Be "Heeled-ln" by Being Set in Sheltered Spot. (By prof. J. G. MOORF, Wisconsin College of Agriculture.) Failure to get a good stand of strawberries may often be traced to neglect of the plants when they arrived from the nursery, as plants arriving in perfect condition may be ruined by carcass handling before planting. Packages of strawberry plants should be opened as soon as received, and the plante "heeled-in" by being set in soil in a location protected from sun and wind. Heeling-in is accomplished by spading up the soil, pulverizing it, and making a broad V-shapod trench about F re Basket of Strawberries. eight inches deep. The plants are then distributed along the trench just far enough apart to allow the root system of each to come fully in contact with the soil. The trench is then refilled and the soil compressed, care being taken that the crowns are not covered nor the upper parts of the roots exposed. Plants may be kept in this way for some time without being injured. Varieties should bo labeled properly. Charcoal for the Hogs. A few coals from the wood fire of the kitchen put into the houses now and then, where the hogs can grind them up to charcoal, help to keep tne bog heaithj

REQUIREMENTS FOR SUCCESS

Clean, Dry Place With Plenty of Fresh Air and Sunshine Among Essentials in Wintering Sheep. There are four very essential things necessary in wintering a flock of breeding ewes. The first is a clean, dry place with an abundance of air and all the sunshine possible. The house or shed must be sufficiently warm for the lambs to do well from the start, should they come in March or February, but there rxust not be a hothouje warmth. The second essential i pure water, and plenty of It. Sheep that eat snow for water will be found in a very different condition from those whieh have access to water at all times. Remember that a sheep drinks but little Rambouillet Ewe. at a time, and often. A flock having pure water is seldom found with parasites, the worst enemy with which we contend. The third essentia; is feeding. The writer, says an exchange, has obtained the best results by feeding hay and clover mixed. The sheep like this very much, and if the mixture is put into the barn in good shape they will more than thrive on it. Sheep relish a good corn fodder, and it should be given to them at least once a day. About six weeks before the ewes are due to lamb they should be fed a mixture of bran one part aud oats two parts. BREEDING STOCK FOR DAIRY Cow Is Machine to Convert Food Into Milk Should Possess Large Udder and Strong Constitution. In selecting dairy cattle the real test must be the scales and the Babcock tester. The cow is a machine to convert food into milk; thus she must Aberdeen Polled Angus, Calf. Cow and have a large middle and a strong constitution to insure the best results. She must also have a large udder, large milk wells, large crooked milk veins and good-sized teats. Her head should be clean and angular in appearance, with the eyes standing cut prominently. The neck should be rather long and lean; the shoulders pointed and the backbone rather prominent. The skin should be loose and soft to the touch. In selecting herd bulls either mature animals which have already demonstrated their worth as sires or youn ;er animals from high-testing dams and sires only should be used. The best and surest results will always follow the use of a mature sire which has sired heifers with good records. A good dairy bull should be kept until he is twelve or fifteen years od; in fact, as long as he is a sure sire. Real good sires are so rare that when we do find one he should die only of old age. All breeders of dairy cattle should secure yearly tests on each and every cow in the herd. Shorter tests do not really mean very much. It is the cowthat stays by her job that is really valuable. Breeding Trotting Horses. The only man who can breed trotting horses profitably is the man who is breeding on a large scale and who s beet uppic supplements m i bredintr with racing? and sacrifices so-called "culls" or nonwinners, at public sales; a dead letter to tha breeder, as the auctions of the past few years have proven. Avoid Scaly Leg. Don't alluw your chickens to har scaly le-gs. Clean and apply a good disinfectau. then rub in plenty of j good greaue.

DESERT CITY OLDEST

Acoma, in New Mexico, Is Many Centuries Old. Was In Full Bloom In 1542 Has Three Story Houses, Outside Stairways and 1C0 Foot Wide Streets, Chicago. Acoma. the Pueblo Indian city down in New Mexico, is claimed to be the oldest city in the western he misphere. It was in full bloom when Coronado in 1542 came across it on an exploring tour northward from Mexico. He found the Pueblo Indians doing th n what tl y are doing today, and doing it in the same fashion, and tho houses on the rocky islands that rise several hundred feet out of the plains are the same houses that Coronado's eyes rested on as he came on the Indian city. St. Augustine, which is often referred to as the oldest city in the United States, was not discovered until 15C3, when Menendez came on Florida w hile chasing a French ship under Rebaut. Years before Coronado found it Acoma was a recognized abode of the Pueblo Indians. The Pueblos told Coronado that their first city was on Katzimo, the rocky is!and three miles away, which is also called the "Enchanted Mesa." Many yeais ago, they told the Spanish explorer, the original Acoma rested on the top of Katzimo. One day, while all but three women weie in the plains below the tableland, a great cliff fell, destroying the trail from the plains to the ancient city. The Indians took this as an indication of the Great Spirit's displeasure over something they had done and to punish them had cut off the path to their city. Instead of clearing the path and returning to their old home on top of Katzimo the Pueblos went to the adjoining tableland and there set up the present city of Acoma, the same city that Coronado visited in 1542. The Pueblos look at the old city on its roky site nearly 400 feet in the air as a sacred place, and woe to the person caught trying to penetrate its precincts. The present city of Acoma is on a plateau that rises 350 feet, out of the arid plains of New Mexico. The sides of the plateau, a mass of brown sandstone, are almost straight. To get to the top one must climb a crude stairway cut in tho stone. On top one w ill find three or four rows of primitive apartment houses. These houses are

three stories high aud are built on ! poses. In the middle of the illuminaeach side of streets 1,000 feet long. ted fleid tnere js a sman dark spot The houses follow the line that seeni3 which coincides with the line of the even straighter than the building line bullet's flight. This enables the inexln big cities, since the houses are all ' perienced shooter to hit a selected of the same type of architecture and I of the burglar's anatomy with are built Up close to the line. The i m0re certainty than he could display

Pueblo Indian Squaw and Baby. streets, too, are 100 feet wide, which may be another feature that modern city builders may have copied from tho red men of the southwest. Houses are built of mud, ordinary New Mexican mud shaped into blocks and baked hard. After centuries under the fierce rays of the sun the blocks get as hard as stone. The walls are seamless. After the blocks were placed the Indian builders smeared the joints with mud, which in time became part of the blocks. The walls of most of the houses are eight feet thick. In the early days they were often attacked by the warring Indians of tho southwest, as they knew that the Pueblo city was always well stocked w ith foodstuff. In the city is a cathedral 40 feet wide and 50 feet high. U has two towers in which swing bells. The cathedral is built of mud, just as the other houses in the settlement. The roof is supported by rafters that would serve as masts in the big sailing ships. These rafters the Indians pulled 20 miles across the plains from the San Mateo mountains. HIT BABY TO MAKE HER PRAY Pittsburgh, Kan., Man Haled Court anc Fined for Excessive Spiritual Fervor. in Pittsburgh. Kan C K. Winsby. a painter, was convicted in police court of abusing a three -year-eld stepdaughter. He was fined $20 aud sentenced to fifteen days in Jail. Several neighbors testified that Winsby beat the child with a board. Winsby denied most of the charges, but explained that he frequently punished the child because she was reluctant about saving her prayers.

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ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT ÄVcCdaMc Preparation for A? -similat ing ihe Food and Regula tm fhc Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digcstion,Cheerfulness and Rest Contains neither Opium. Morphine nr Mmcrjl Not Nar c otic Frp, 0 OU ÜrSAMUElMtfiS Ann SttJ Hrpptrmiii Horm Sitd CtrSii SuffI- - A perfect Remedy forConshpa lion , Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverishness and LOSS OF SLEEP Facsimile Signature of The Centaur Company. NEW YORK rem Guaranteed under the Food .11 Exact Copy of Wrapper. MAKES AIM ALMOST CERTAIN Invention Said to Guarantee Every Shot a Bullseye. Even in the Dark. Charles Pechard, a police official of Paris, has invented an attachment that enables one to shoot a revolver more accurately In the dark than in broad daylight, the New York Independent states. This attachment consists of a metallic tube with a lens at one end and a tiny electric lamp at the other. By means of mirrors tho light is directed out through the lens as a slender cone, and is sufficiently strong at a distance j of some four ro(js for an practical purin ordinary target practice. The electric current is supplied by a small dry battery or a storage battery, which the officer can carry in his pocket or which the defender of the home can place under his pillow. The light tube can be attached to an ordinary pistol, and it may be used as a hash with peaceful intent or merely as a show ot force. Necktie Magnate. Twenty-flve neckties at $10 each. $250. The above is the 6mallest item which the "king of necktie manufacturers" will allow to anuear In his i books. He has just reached Paris on i his annual tour of the capitals of the 1 world, and his taste is regarded by the most exclusive set of male society äs 1 the last word in necktie design. The 1 super-tie merchant, whose cheapest tie costs $10 and who will not accept an order for fewer than 25 ties, is re- ! puted to make a profit of $110,066 a year. He is delighted to be In Paris, which he says is the capital of the j world as regards elegance and dandyism. One of Many. Briggs Rogers ckaimi to be an ag nostic, doesn't he? Griggs Only as to religion; as to everything else he Enowi it all. SKIN CLEARED. By Simple Change in Food. It has been said by a physician that most diseases are the result of indigestion. There's undoubtedly much truth in the statement, even to the cause of many unsightly eruptions, which many suppose can be removed by applying some remedy on the outside. By changing her food a Kan. girl was relieved of an eczema which was a great annoyance to her. She writes: "For five months I was suffering with an eruption on my face and hands which our doctor called eczema and which caused me a great deal of inconvenience. The suffering was almost unbearable. "The medicine I took only gave me temporary relief. One day I happened to read somewhere that eczema wa.s caused by indigestion. Then I rea l that many persons had been relieved of indigestion by eating Grape-Nuts. "I decided to try it. I liked the taste of the food and was particularly pleased to notice that my digestion was improving and that the eruption was disappearing as if by magic. I had at last found, in this great food, something that reached my trouble. ' When I find a victim of this afflic tion I remember my own former suffering and advise a trial of Grape-Nuta food instead of medicines." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellvllle," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the Hove letter? A sew one nppeBrs from tint to time. They are genuine, true, smd lull or ut

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GASTORIA

For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Thirty Years GASTORIA HEAL EVT.4TB LOKIDA PKACS EITKH I IT fWJST ABL Lafl - HoDtJt ern highland; low prlr; qan Mi y guar. ; gruTos day el opHl . De i p W an UMl . arwll A Ssaa J Fala PI . I n Qnini lots formal. Honw bullt fur por rlllKI'IA rh:isrs on atvsj payment. Address I LUIIlUn Owner, Bus hl, Oranj princs, t SB I OR Sll.K !0 A. IN 1M.I ; , MO ; tiu a. cult., now housr. outbldcs . 4 a bearing oreh . ate $2.206. J. R. Wallace. Wood. Bio FOB si Ktt A. IN DECATUR CO.. IA-: 25 a. cult.. houB. barn, outbldas.. .' fruit treea, etc A. sf. Paul. B. 717. Tatter. la FOR MALE M A. IN WHITE CO.. ARK . It a. cult., 4 r. house, bsrn. utbldgs . etc. A snap V HII.KY, UK KHK. ARKANSAS. I OK KAI.K 110 ) N ! I a. cult., s r. lious.-. outbhlss., 800 fruit trees. E. Sanderson, 1704 N. tth St.. E. St. Louls.ll. FOR SALE 160 A. IN CHOUTEAU CO.. Mont.; 0 a. cuit.. nous. cHIsr. barn, outbldgs.. orch.. etc. H. V. Arndt. Carter. Mont FOR SALE B K8T ALL CI LT. Ill A IV Plka Ott., in., ono 6. on 4 r. house. 2 barna. granary, etc. Doane itros . c igKsviiie. 111. I OK NAI.K 160 A NEAR K1PLIX SK . (an. ; 60 a. cult . bnua barn. 2 K'aii iHfS mach. G. Mask. . Kipling Sta . Sask . fan. FOR SLK IN THE CITY OF SAN OIKQO al.: mod 4 r bungalow. Addraa M. J. HOI FM AN. Mfi Imj st . Whitewater. Wla FOE ALEIS! a. cult., dr.rs J. I --Oil A. IN DOUOI.AH CO.. ort hous. born, outhldgs . etv Ad -LUKE. SIJTIIKRI.IN OREXSON IOR SALE ICO a DAIRY I KM IN ORE gon Co.. Mo.; 60 a. cult, 5 r house, ban. outbldgs It. A Hla.lsoe. Koal.k..n..Mg. II Ft IK SLL 320 A. NR CLAPTON, SASK Can.; all cult., house, granaries, outbldgs . hora. fi. et'v K. Page, 'lapton. Saak . ran. Kit GRAND! W I IV IKKK. Mr I LANDS, as good ss there Is. for sale at VSCf low priees. on very easy terms. In iargs or small tracts. Nothing Ilka It for truck or diversified fnrmlns;. rieh loam, srith just enough sand, plenty of water, easy t J'i vate, climate Ideal for wife and family. Poultry, hogs, dairy eos and forag CTOjpsl flourish twelv months In th- :n Address BOX IIS, SAS BENITO I I M. 0060t ft Mt0000f FLORIDA! TitusviHe Fruit St Farm Lands Co., Indian River City, Florida Offer the only tract of drained land in Florida black soil, marl sub-soil, no expensive clearing. Kod roads everywhere. Groves beintf planted row. $1U0 to Sl.OfQ being made per acre by farmers in this vi inuy. In dian River district, rail and water X transportation, railroad fare and exY rx-nsos of 15 dav tun raid by comi pany to buyers of 10 acres or more. V Invcäigne. Write C. J. WEST. Sec re- f I taty of the Company, Room A 22 Y X Pembroke Arcade, Indianapolis, lv.il. J 35 BUSIES PERM was the yield of WHEAT nun van '" 1 cm many farms in Western Can -da in 1913. some yields being reported as high as 50 busheb per acre. As high a 100 bushels were recorded in some districts for oats. 50 r usbels for barley and from 10 to 20 bus. for flax. J. Keys arrived in the country 5 years ago from Denmark with very little means. He homesteaded. worked hard, is now the owner of 3LD acres of land, in 1913 had a crop of 200 acrt s- which wül realize him 371 about $4.000. Hie wheat weighed 66 lbs. to the buabel and averaged over 36 buihels to the aero. Thousands of nmQar in stances might be related of the homesteaders in Manitoba. Sasv katchewan and Alberta. The evoo of 1913 was an abun dant one everywhere in Western Canada. Ask for descriptive literature and reduced railway rates. Apply to Ci Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or GEO. W. AIRD. 215 Traction Tereilnsl Building. Indlanaaoiis. Im Canadian Government Agent LADIES pen a Beauty Paruir. lauBX Di-Uta. Otnplei" in.. ru- i smaraJited forum la rr nn.(x, tlletwaien,creajuv4aiHlrLlJ reo r etil r r Andreas T.W. Harris. 1391 S LawlDetlt..Svla..a. HU. II ( I.AKrt 1KTEIT1 r!S Is lr l M ompiete course of instructions, boat pu&i aw Basil AGGRESSIVE A6EITS Bail sugu-graoe spe veritable boon toat'to wa era; DlgseUer. Write Km., tSl a. .is. HAVANA BALSAMIC TUBES Not a eras bat relieves bronchial irooh and ' on. flea Ibe brain Sample pacsage of 10 tu Sent receipt of loc tooover epencti Send ' r e a for free booklet about our lino of clear Havana .la-ars A. KAMIHEZ A rOMP ANi . ra. ton 1616 1 7th .street, lpt M, Tamp, Morula

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W. N. U., Indianapolis, No. 3-1914.

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