Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 56, Number 36, Jasper, Dubois County, 26 June 1914 — Page 7

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5,918,098 gallon i told last year 1 ,536,232 gUo ns more than 1912 The constantly increasing use oi POLARIXH by thousands of motorists is indisputable evidence of its lubricating efficiency. It affords perfect lubrication to all makes and types of motor cars, motor trucks, motorcycles

and motor boats.

POLARISE maintains the correct lubricating body at any motor speed or tempo at arc POLARINE remains liquid at zero. POLARINE differs from all other motor oils, in

that it lubricates perfectly at extremes of temperature.

Standard Oil Company (AH MM GOEPOEATIO H , Maker of Lubricetin Oil for L -sciin a F.ncineriiiff and Industrial Work of the World

For Convenience, Economy and Safety Use the

"NEW BOSS" Blue Flame, Wick Oil Stove Burns ordinary Kercwne Oil, lights up iBBtUstly like gas, burns a perfectly blue fla ic without Mokl or olur. The intnelv h . Ire ennuis you to cx k, lake, fry or iron as quickly AS on a tras stove. Just hs simple and safe to operate as an nil lamp. Three size?' 2, 3 nnd 4 burners with or without high warming shelf. Write to-day for Catalog. Made by the HTiiefell Company. 250U hprlng Grove Are., Cincinnati, Ohio Electric-Lighted Trains to Texas If you are going to Texas on business, why not combine iuisine?o with pleasure ? If you start with the assurance that you will find Pullman sleepers of the latest design, chair cars and 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 Li.ies as your route. Just say 4 'Frisco 9 9 to the Ticket Agent. ÄRCMTC And Crew Workers know the profits frtrPiUfcH I w Dishing tnghKraib' perfumes i fuini- . cs MARTHA 1 FtASt Iv 806 I' ne. i. . Mo. Wanted 2 .500 men and ladr agents to earn 25 per week Write postal to ( A. Landwrhr. SI Majestic Bldg.. Indianapolis, lnd rinDim DAQßllHC A few ltnpmrrd Farmsand rLUniUA DärtUal no orange ftroeet forji - cup estate. W. MoCarty, West iVrre Haute. Ind. WHY GET B$ on and ONLY 3 AND 4Jb? iRJ np. Write Lock Box CI. Holla, Mo. WF -Joe for ecsea.a, tetter, all skin nt uusnäHICC diseases blood poison, old sorea. Price 1. (Ml Ujoe Laboratories, 4th, Marion. Ind. I FARM TAHCn antl 1 1,,fn Jsnees at LFJbHIIII iRROU home, i' jr n w book teaches 10c Coin. kilto rfcliUrr, ! J., SiMkui, Mam. B nmnJ (od money. Writ n photoplays lg L'rmana sparet luie -4b0 pa;l each. S f.r partion.ars L odlub Co .4a3 WaAhiuaun. 1 C. W. N. U., Indianapolis, No. 21-1914. PIMPLES BOILS CARBUNCLES

UBAJtt HB W IHM I SlSJa Ha g 9E. 3g"Ä H wo aBBMwnhfc u . I JHJHl w'

Are "Danger Signals" the human system's method of giving warning that the blood has become impoverished and circulation poor. In this condition the human body is almost powerless to resist the more serious illness. Don't delay. You need

DR.

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Thougntful. Little Delia was slowly turning the leaves of her nursery book when suddenly she looked up and inquired: 'Mother, what day was I born on?" ' Wednesday, dear." "WfUnt that fortunate! It's your day at home,' " replied the little miss. Harper's Magazine. FACE ITCHED AND BURNED 383 No. Union St., Aurora, 111. "My ailment started with a little pimple and it always itched and burned terribly. I scratched it and in a few days my face was all covered with sores. It ran up to my eyes and the day after I could not see out of my right eye. I was unable to get any rest. I couldn't go to bed, being afraid of getting the clothing all soiled, although I had my face all bandaged. "I was given two jars of salve but It kept getting worse. It was something like a running sore because every time I used some of the salve I had to wrap bandages around my neck to keep the water and pus from running down my bedy. I wrote for a sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and In a few days I received these and washed my face with the Cuticura Soap and put on some Cuticura Ointment and the next morning my face felt cool and somewhat relieved. After using the sample I bought some Cuticura Soap and Ointment at the drug store. I followed his treatment just twenty-six days and after using one cake of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Ointment I was cured." (Signed) George Miller, Jan. 1, 1913. t'uticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free. with ?,2-p. Skin Hook Address postCard 'Cuticura. Dept. L, Boston." Adv. Did you ever notice how much more congenially a lone widow seems to get along than a lone widower? ACHES I CHILLS PAINS RCE" 31 J lor wrapping and mailing.

OLD PREJUDICE GONE

Indians Have Overcome Their Fear of the Camera. Moving Pictures Responsible for Changed Attitude of the Red Men Now Take Delight in Posing for the Films. The Wild West shows and the "movies' have broken down the Indians' prejudice against being photographed. Old overland travelers will smile at the statement, but it is true. The Indian brave who experiences the excitement nl the Wild West arena and the admiring attention of the crowd, or who engages in a motion picture battle scene in which his prowess as a warrior and his skill as a horseman are exploited, almost invariably becomes a 'fan" on having hl3 "picture taken." He will pose almost without question for the "camera flend," and will travel any distance to see a film in which he appears. He is as proud of his picture as a cowboy is of a patr of new "chaps." The Indians natural dislike to being photographed was formerly a familiar fact to passengers on the transcontinental railway lines. Travelers in the West and South west will recall the efforts of the Indians to keep from being "snap-shotted" by amateur photographers. The Indian woman who clustered about the railway stations and offered pottery and beadwork for sale were keenly alert for the "kodak," and would cover their faces the moment they saw a "devil machine" turned toward them. If they submitted to being photographed, it was with fereat hesitancy and for a stipulated price, and their uneasiness during the "operation" was evident. But never, with their coiif ent. was it possible to snap a Iron Tail, Famous Old Sioux Chief. pappoose. The Navajos and Pueblos particularly believed that the "devil machine" put a blight on the children, and that they would either die young or become stunted in their growth. Explosion to Be Depicted. Five hundred pounds of dynamite, and 2,000 pounds of gunpowder will be used to blow up an island near Laguna beach, in a moving picture. The blowing up of the island is a part of a film drama, depicting several phases of naval affairs, which has its finale in the destruction of fortifications, in order to prevent their falling into the hands of an alien nation. As a prelude to the hurling of the island into oblivion by the explosive, several hundred thousand dollars will be expended in building the replica of a modern coast fortification, with officers' quarters and other appurtenances. It is expected that the island, recently purchased by the Universal company, will be wiped out of existence. A company of 18 motion picture actors, who will participate in the film drama, left here under the direction of Phillips Smalley and Louis Weber, ho will superintend the production of the photo-play, which will have its finale in the destruction of the island. Historic Battle Picture. One of the most stupendous photodramas ever reproduced is the "Battle of Waterloo," reproduced again before the motion picture camera on the spot of the original battle. It is said to be correct in every historical detail. The movements of the troops, the guns and the various details of the happenings preliminary to the actual engagement, as well as the battle itself, are based upon historically accurate documents. An army of men almost as great as that engaged in the original battle take part in the struggle and 500 cannon and 6,000 horses are utilized. This photodrama is a Kuropean importation and its exhibition is one of its first in this country. Movie Films of Seaweed. Aigin," a new produc: of seaweed, is used in the manufacture of nonintlaiiniiahh cinematograph films and the treatment of paper to make the latter water, ttame and germ proof. The lei n;ntioa was annouueed from Liverpool.

STAR OF THE PHOTOPLAYS

Ruth Stonehouse Has Won Recognl tion for Her Characteristic Delineations. Ruth Stonehouse is a wonderfully in tere8ting little actress Though not yet twenty years old, she plays leads and does it so well that you are anxious to see her again. The "Colorado Girl," Miss Stonehouse is called, because she lived in Victor, Colo., where her father is an expen. in mining operations. The remarkable grace of Ruth Stonehouse. Miss Stonehouse is due to her being a dancer, a professional at that. Her ability in this art makes her apt in many roles for which otherwise she would not be eligible. It is equally groat, to meet her out of them. She is vlvjcious, interesting and pretty, and is considered one of the best leading women in photoplays today. Miss Stonehouse has appeared in such productions as "The Other Girl," "The Grip of Circumstance," and "The Hour and The Man." Object Lesson In "Movies." In The Tie That Binds," a two reel drama, Lamar Johnston plays the part of a burglar who is captured in a bank after an exciting fight with the watchman. After he is sent to prison his wife married his rival, and when the convict is released and seeks to see his child, the stepfather, realizing the evil effect that, he might have upon the little one, orders him away. The desperate man steals into the house where the little family lives. Through the window he sees some one sitting in a cha;r. He can see only the back of the chair and a man's hat which he recognizes as belonging to the other man. In reality his own child sits in the chair and has put on the hat to "play papa." The ex-convict raises his pistol and is about to tire when the child suddenly gets up in the chair and he realizes that he was about to take the life of the one dearest to him. The shock makes him resolve to reform his ways. Prohibition of Celluloid. The prohibition of the celluloid film, which has taken place in France, does not seem to be warranted, according to some of the moving-picture men of this country. The insurance companies of the United States have enacted rigid regulations for the protection of patrons of these theaters by requiring that the apparatus be entirely inclosed in a casing of metal and asbestos, and, notwithstanding the fact that there now are more than 13,000 of these institutions in this country, which are in almost constant operation, the number of film fires is very small. The quantity of film stored at one time in one of these booths is so slight that, under ordinary circumstances, no great amount of harm could be done if the entire stock of film should be destroyed. Tragedy of the "Movies. In order to perfect the films of the wreck and life-saving scenes in the coming camera production of "Hearts of Oak," the members of the company wen to Long Branch to take part in a rehearsal at Monmouth Beach, where the coasting schooner, the Charles R. Buckley, was wrecked. D. H. Turner, who plays the part of Luke in the film version, was swimming from the wreck towards the beach when he struck a dead body, which he pulled ashore with the assistance of one of the life-savers. It turned out to be the body of a member of the crew of the wrecked schooner. The camera man. Jack Corwin caught the incident and thus real tragedy, will be depicted in the mimic wreck scene of the "Hearts of Oak" feature films. Too Much Realism. Adele Iane has been having a lot of fun lately, as have also her fellow players, for the director has been putting on a burlesque entitled "Mellerdramer." Miss Lane is the "herowine." and the dangers and indignities she is not subjected to are not worth mentioning. In one scene Mi83 Iane is supposed to faint, and she threw her head back so realistically and suddenenly that her head caught the actor who supported her under the chin and nearly knocked him out AI Jennings Life to Be Portrayed. The life of Al Jennings, former bandit, is to be reproduced in a six reel photoplay.

6 ' jSwsWWEswsmSMr - f oSaarPVs3aaawStaV ' '4i3f i ' vShhrV?

NOT A SOOTHING APOLOGY

Bobby's Weil-Meant Effort Probably Made Indignant Private Soldier Madder Than Ever. Colonel Blank had a little boy five years old. and little Bobby had often heard the men in his father's regiment spoken of as "Colonel Blank's men." So he said to one of them: "My father owns you." The soldier was very angry "You little Imp!" he exclaimed. "What are you talking about? Nobody owns me" Bobby's mother heard about it, and j was much distressed. Calling the little boy to her, she said: "Bobby, you were wrong when you said your father owns his men, ami I want you to tell the soldier that you are sorry for w hat you said." Running to overtake the private, the little boy exclaimed breathlessly: "I m sorry my father owns you! ' Make the laundro happy that's Red Cross Ball Blue. Makes lteautiful, clear vshite clothes. All good grocers. Adv. And even a very tall man may not i be above criticism.

Reliable evidence is abundant that women Saasas i are constantly being restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound The many testimonial letters that we are continually publishing in the newspapers hundreds of them are all genuine, true and unsolicited expressions of heartfelt gratitude for the freedom from suffering that has come to these women solely through the use of Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vegetable Compound. Money could not buy nor any kind of influence obtain such recommendations; you may depend upon it that any testimonial we publish is honest and true if you have any doubt of this write to the women whose true names and addresses are always given, and learn for yourself. Read this one from Mrs. Waters: Camden, X.J. "I was sick for two years with nervous spells, and my kidneys were affected. I hai a doctor all the time and used a galvanic battery, but nothing did me any good. I was not able to go to bed, but spent my time on a couch or in a slccping-chair,and soon became almost a skeleton. Finally my doctor went away for his health, and my husband heard of Lydia K. I'inkhauTs Vegetable Compound and got me some. In two months I got relief and now I am like a new woman and am at my usual weight. I recommend vcur medicine to every one and so does my husband." Mrs. Tillü vVaters, 1135 Knight St., Camden, N.J. And thisone from Mrs. Haddock: Utioa, Ok la. "I was weak and nervon-. qoI able to do raj work and scarcely able to be on my feet. I had baekft ho, headache, palpitationof the heart, trouble with my bowels, and inflammat ion. SÜ106 taking the Lydia E. Pinkhanfs vegetable Compound I am better than I have been for twenty years. I think it is a wonderful medicine and I have recommended it to others." -JUrs. Mahy Ann Haddock, Utica, Oklahoma. Now answer this question if you can. Why should a woman continue to suffer without first giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial ? You know that it has saved many others why should it fail in your case?

For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkharns Vegetable Compound has been the Standard remedy for female ills. No one sick with woman's ailtnent8 does justice to herself if she does not try this famous medicine made from roots and herbs, it has restored so many suffering women to health. IBWritetoI.YMA E.PINKHAH MEDICINE 0. &FhF CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., foradvice. Your letter will he opened, read an! answered by a woman and held In strict confidence.

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which have relieved t An Indiana Case Mrs Mary E Toy. 219 Broadway. Loptnsptrt. lad . ays "My back achd constsTitiy and tbs least exertion or cold mads sat worse. I couldn t get mach rest. Doctor tad dtrr ' rent medicines failed, but with Doan Kldny Pill it was different Thej- brf quick r lief and sines then I have bM fres from the backache and other aüxnenta," Get Doan's at An r Stare. 50c s Box DOAN'S VAW FOSTER-M1LB URN CO-, BU iALO. H. Y. Mail Order Men and Agents aSffi safety ruK.n.; 160 to 2QUfc profit. Full peitleuN.rt and sample 15c. L. BUY BN. Roselle. New Jersey Snavitl 1lDtone. PbU-BvU, Ftstnla, all bm1? he iv moved In days Hn re cure, oocta little. Write uie Kd Hopkins, t. Franv lsvllle. Mo CUm fJYfn Makeiwto fl50 month for one hour UU I tu w,,ra day pla.-lr.fl Ciaar rVUmg ar is. Bham. Trade Bunder, Bos 616, B.rminbatu. A. a. REAL ESTATE COME TO MASSACHUSETTS XXüÄ table and dairy farsns; sell a' cot t of but tdtng Neaf trollej aud H R. Address, W. . Lewis, Stow. Mass. Free Oklahoma farm of Vf, aiw !n 3 for rlfiir.un 14 V c-v Writ own-. K. ft. r I K, ToU-hu, OkUboi CWCW TT Q,nart'-r--tVon bt wheat land; v-rvJaSIl central Saskatchewan. I&u sores cultivated. Write os ner A.vin Lt-bmaii, Ottawa, u. BIO SACRIFICE rS firm ; Wae res; cv rated; boose, barns, ore turd . near R. R town; slckness; II. luu. worth docbie. S. TttrrtM. CYPUJIU&CC What have yon. A'sofams f r hlWIIMItSlb sate !n ralntn it rado ; to t&j : ere KIW W ARD k7or, Ouio. CflerSfles) Choice qnarter-saeüas) S. IIa, cm, wSlvllllOV al fa; fa firm Hia-s toti : finn locali ty ; 1? acre; easy terms, a. r. asseosa t FOR 8AL.E 110 A. IN WAUSHARA O Wim.; ISO a cult.. S r. house , bam. orchards W. Hutoekl. 1011 th St., MUsraokee, Wie FOR 8ALK -S20 A. IN GRAHAM CO., KAM 180 a. cult . & r hous . barn, outbid . granary, etc. kirn il h. hiad. r. Farm I u gton, Kan. FOR SALE Si A. IN TEHAMA CO., CAlk; all CSU . & r. house, barn. oitbMgs uivh . stock. ma h R D T!or, I-o V ..l m.a "al. I H SALE A. IN IOSCO. MU M . J$A cult . sll tillable, hous. stable, franst ) out bids, orch . etc Wro P. Tllley. Hals. Mich FOR SALE 160 A IN POTT A W ATOM I K m Kan . 1!0 a. cult. bal. uaaiar-. barn. tc Wm. UttU fVid. Hrlvtie Ks FOR SAI.'. -11 A IN STARK O I4t a. cult., bal pasture. It r house, oeth etc F L Perry. LekrisnJ. F Ida FÖN BAUE M A. IN VAN BÜREN Mich . 15 a. cult , all tillable, house, barn, etc. tl.SSe. 1 CiewaH. Rl, Lawrence. Micb FOR RALE 4SI A. IN POPE CO., ILL. ; a. cult . ai! tillable. 7 r house, barns, out bldga. on h Tom Neely. Hamietsburg. III. FOR SALE St A. IN MANISTEE CO.. Mhh ; I a. cult, ba! timber, house, harnj orchard, etc J O. Stelter. Dublin. Mtvh. i 'R S 'lt EXCf 'Ind ; 23 a. cu -37 hoo A i barn. Starke co. orchard. t 1 1 1 ar la. R FOR 8 ALB tOt A. IN Pl'TNAM CO 1N1 St a. u!t 7 r house, bars, esMbldgSt, stk orch .t R K Shan-, RS, t'l ' rdsle. lud H It SXLK 104 A IN OCI.AV. RK CU. Iowa; S5 a cult . all tlllabls. IS r hs . barn, silos, ouU lelfsj U L. Hojrla, Manchceu.. iss