Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 56, Number 40, Jasper, Dubois County, 24 July 1914 — Page 3

Boon m Mankind t.attuei Tootle lit u-d mj 1 1 on Aural Ml, who lives near tin- quiet village ot Tanke Springs U at the present time trying to out i .ink Kurbank. the wit, by gm .t rectangular watermelon. Mr :. has noticed for years that ultii oueumers nave had much trou- :.. trying lo carry waterinelous from store, inasmuch as they tthe u t.-ri unions) arc of awkward chape and rlippery, and after a at r melon .- thllen and nan kit the cement aidek its usefulness may be aaid tu be Mr Tootle's watermelon will i )tn and 111 have square corn rs. of which corners will fit li.to the l . iit elboy when the melon la carried the inside of the arm Mr Tootle ; ects to have his new melon growng and 4M the market by 127. If noth .g happens Boston Globe Hl IL IktATt Choice Agricultural Lands M .HUN lkhl BKA LT Y IV-, Mr ITU i. Wik. US A- IN OWKV -o. IStX; ruli . 4 r kowt Harn, outMdsa. lit ill tr.-esy. tic D. S Jahna. erc,r, lud i. i-ALK Al l- ITU IJ a KAHM IN ! kr co . las.. SS od Imvrov. mmta. t r hv y Uu. R 4. Or.arn I'ulni. In.i I. S A lR 124 A IN I" A t'l.I I N ; u -

wt . CUM . 4 etc. O P I.B--U A IN BHCLBl CO.. la,; it . r hutttr barn lv outtdre 1 Mrs K:tabth Thrlle. EarJin I IN I A . I.K J I A IN OCX It . 14 r bnuar ban . ate. J HiMtrtd 4 A near o;n. IE lit . tti per a . III brli red J R Blackburn. C rlerirle trd r r . a cult. I irhinerv SM. : 11 Sllla from Port X- MKlY. R . Chfrnl r. on nanr farms Id Wraaarn Canada ia pWt, some snide bemT re;xir1ei"J aa h.fh aa 60 kwahela par am A ' .a aa KV buahe 1 war recorded m some diet nets fr ofta. 90 banalaal lor bailer and tram lO to 2u but. for flax. J. Keys imwd in the itry 3 years arc Ircrn k vmh very ItttW He hon:, ad., i. f-ard la new the owner of 3 ac-r of land. in 113 had a : u o! met es. which wU realise I about 4.000 Hia waasfcaatsaiba-tothel and averasadove.- J-. I of similar in ti.isht be related of the bun isan a der in Mar.ttoba. Saa katcbewaa and Alberts Tee crop of 1913 was aa i A - jr ?e-r-t:ve Irnerature aad I soiled railwa) rates. App as Superirf-ndent of Imxniaracaoa. Ottawa, r4 sc CEO W. t tftB. 5 Trattlos Tarsi aal Bultdia. ladiaaapsUs. las. Car '..aa Goveraaaem Aceat I BOt IBOfl POCLTIY t t IE down a chkk'a throat eure Bapr A few drop la the arrakiatr water cares and prevent diarrbaaa. cbo aod o'.her chick dieae. One SOc bottle stakes 12 gaUoai of (Bedktoe At an drate t: Valuable poaitry book free cntrin. Im M. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A toilet prparmttoa r ' ami Hr.e toerarti.at 4an4rv. For Rtdona Color and Beauty to Gr r or f aded Hair. Me. a4(l a 1 "ruaTrfta. TO THE FARMER s? pu-iins bJI-be.noa- oa rant oaT-knix TW are tiw Iran awtiii aata tune: rat 1 to 4 a. per Say, r-0 tor ein-u ar t-ir. C. M. ". M4S Laarrm e Aveooo. Chlt-aa-u. Ill p;ent in Every County of Indiana , tfreateat antoanobi e 4etce ever oa aaarket, CmrUa a Scott, 77 jt Ta.teJtl Ave.. Indiana. -v. loO. AGENTS AttearUoa : Live wine aseata wanted Ires Arcadia 3 sol j Co-. aa X Arradia. leuna.LU. SOUTHERN BEAUTY'S f -aialabrtMa.r n n.1 prert ;r.g &er-iril kla. - t repaid fur Seta B B . av.a 2. .. Nvi :-au. .. 4

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aVaas The picnic is incomplete without Ubby's good thingt lo eat. Ready to erve no rasa and bother. There are number of Libby Luncheon specialties at your grocer's. Get acquainted writh them.

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WESTERN CANADA'S

NATURAL RESOURCES PETROLEUM, NATURAL GAS, COAL ANO FARM LANDS. The developments that have taken . plane recently in the oil and -aa helds of Western Canada have but a, d another to the many previous l de noes that have been produced, showing the great wealth that has been aa unknown aaaet for so many generations. The latest reports from the oilfields at Calgary show that there Is a production there that would appear to equal the best pa;, ing letfl on the continent. Expert have been on the ground for some time. It la said that one of the wella is able to produce 2.000 gallons an hour. If this is eo there are but about a dozen wells In the world of greater production. During the past week discoveries of surface indication, have been made vhich show that oil ex nts over a considerable portion of Alberta and Saskatchewan, while in Manitoba there have alao been showings. At Hattleford. Saskatchewan, a few days ago discoveries were ma Je which led to the filing for leases on twenty thousand acres of land, all having strong surface indications. Companies were formed to carry on immediate work, and In a couple of months, or j.robably leaa. the story will be told whether oil exists in paying quantities. But there are aUo the coal deposits anl the natural gas deposits that are helping to make of Western Canada, one of the wealthiest portions of the continent. With the grain fields covering these hidden riches it is no aonder that a continued range of optimism is to be seen everywhere. Early reports of aeeding of all grains being successfully cotr.pl- td ill over the country' are followed by reports of excellent and atrong growth, everywhere. During the first wetik in June n.ost of the wheat bad reached a growth of from ' twelve to twenty inches, with the mot ' even appearance, almost universally, that bas been seen for years Oats appeared equally well, and covered the ground in a wcy that brought the broadest kind of a gnn to overspread the farmer's countenance. Barley, a favorite w.th the hog raisers, had taken pood root, and was crowding oate for a first place, as to length of shoot. Cultivated fodder grasses are getting great attention, as a consequence of the inclination to go more largely into mixed farming, and the raising of hogs, cattle and horses. The weather is reported tine, frst what is needed, and if present favorable conditions continue, the grain crop of Wertern Canada for 1S14 will be the Utreest average in the history of the country. AdvertisemenL The Airencan Farmer. All tilings recalled wouldnt it be the part of statesmanship to do congresiionally for the American farmer? lies one-fourth of your population, and the nations best hope. The American merchant burrows at five per cent The American stock gambler, producing nothing accomplishing nothing, a merest leech living by Übe toil of others, borrows for even leas. The American farmer, with all that can be said to bis good and solvent advantage, must and does pay bU per cent. And all the time the savings and postal banks are bulging with billions. If the government would make two blades of grass grow where but one has grown before and publicly it would pay the wide-flung chances lies open. Let It model action on French or German lines, and place the tanner on a borrowing par with the merchant. ;be manufacturer and the stock job ber Let it evolve a system of farm loans whicb shall put those savings and postal bank billions at a per cent within the farm rs borrowing reach. Hearst s Magazine Re happv. Tae Rel Crv Rail Rlae; muoh ktttST than hjind blue. Belights the auDires. All greeers. Adv. A Stage Career. "Who is the principal character In this musical comedy" "Little Bo-Peep who lost her sheep. According to the newspapers. '.ie lost a breach of promise salt. Of Course. Bez Bow is Farmer (awntnsssj I getting along planting his wheat? Silas Oh. Just sow sow. vSiSEr

Picnic Specialties

Deviled Ham Olivet Ubby, McNeill A Libby Mkjbw, Chicago

CUPID IN A STOCKING BOX

j rt Maker of Hosiery Springs Joka That Laads Mar and a Ysung Southernsr to Altar. Reading. Pa. Engaged and married within a seek aas the speed record astafclisbed by Ban King of Miami. Fla., and Miss Ruth Halen, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Boaard Sahn The romance began a hen Mr. King found tke name of Miss Salen in a box of stockings received at ths department store in which he is employed at Miami. Pia, He wrote to Miss Baden, and correspondence followed, resulting In friendship. Mr. King came to Reading a week ago and net If 1st Salen for the first time. It waa love ! at first Fight, and the marriage resulted. Mias Salen was employed at ! , the Nolde Boret stocking factory. ' and she put ber name in a box of stockings as a Joke. GOOD LUCK IN JAP TALESMAN "Fortune's Spectacles" Believed to Possess Talismanlc Virtue by ths Japanese. New York Travelers In Japai often tee curious stone rings supported on a pillar, to which have been givCurious Ring of Stone Believed to to Bring Luck. ' en the name "fortune's Spectacles " These curious devices are believed by some to have a talismanic virtue, in that if one crawls through the ring, he will be able to accomplish all he undertakes. The size of the rings is such that no great dexterity Is required to perform the 'feat Popular , Mechanics. TRYING TO STEAL A PRISON Bo d Robbers Move Fleasantville Lock L p 30 Feet "Cop" Locks Self Out. Atlantic City A new brand of thief Is worrying the three policemen ; of Pleasantville, a suburb of this rei sort. The "two by four" jail there will hold seven persons. If they sit close together One night the lockup was moved, but no particular at- , tention was paid to it But on another night it moved again at least 30 feet from its assigned spot- Then the invf s ligation b gan Now the cops are trailing the miscreants who tried to steal the jail. . To add to the troubles of the force. 1 Patrolman Krewson lost his keys, and when he made an arrest and attempted to place the prisoner in the bastile he found himself locked out. MAN GRIPS THE MULE'S FOOT Former Football Star Performs an Unusual Feat With Streunous Animal. Trenton. N. J. Patrolman John A. Silverstein, a football star when in the high school here, accomplished the unusual feat here recently of holding a mule's foot. The brawny patrolman tried to get the mule off the car tracks when the animal let fly ber heels at him. Silverstein grabbed one foot and held on with such a grip that the animal was powerless to yank it away from him. Be was dragged a few feet to a lamppost, and then managed to bold tight until others grabbed the mule by the head. Burglar Was a Chimpanzee. Paris. A policeman who was looking after a house in the Hue de Herri dur:ng the absence of the tenant discovered that a window pane had been smashed. At the same time he noticed a Bhadow in one of the rooms. Thinking a burglar had entered the building, he sent his dog to capture the supposed man. An extraordinary noise was then heard from the room, and it was soon discovered that the "burglar" waa really an escaped tfhimpanzee. The animal had done $500 worth of damage. Clock Long Idle Starts Up. Wsycross. Gs. Moving a clock about a mile to Waycross caused it to start running after it had refused to operate for seven years. Everything possible had been done during the seven-year period to make the clock, one of the ornamental variety, get busy, but when it was placed In the new house recently to which its owners were moving It started running and has been giving no trouble since. Met After 52 Years. Importe, Ind. While seated in a restaurant. Jamee Terry learned that stranger with whom he was talking was John Rlakely of (Irand Rapids Mich, whom he had nursed back t( health during the Civil war The met bad uo; seen each other In 52 jean

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PARADISE FOR THE BIRDS

Providence Seems to Have Provided Temperate Zens for tne Feathered Friends of Man. I'p in the far country where the ! til ter teilt, the calendar is respect-j ed There is no summer before the official day set for it. The ground is i held fast by frost until June is well s'arted. There are flurries of snow, , w.ld bitter winds, a sky that has no mercy. And then, suddenly, the wlud shifts and comes out of the south- It Is summer then with a leap The interest of th- temi.rate zone in the Lorthland is that it Is there that nave gone a great many of the migrating bird whi h paid us a few d.t visit and passed on. For all ita Inhospitality to man. that country in summer it a paradise for birds Its mfcrlu-s are safe refuges from two and four-footed enemies. There is exhaustless material for nests. And out of the pools come myriads of insects, food that doe not fail until the time for the southward b.rd movement arrives. Some man has said that there Is no (iod north of latitude 19 Be did not inquire as to what the bird might have thought of that. Toledo Blade. ECZEMA ITCHED AND BURNED R. F. D. No. 2. Seymour. Mo "My scalp broke out with fine pimples at the start They itched and burned so much that I w as compelled to scratch them and they would fester and come to a head and break out again The trouble was attended by such burning and itching I could not sleep, also when I sweat it burned the tame M; hair fell out gradually and the scalp kept roi'gh and dry with Itching ar.d burning. After about two years the pimples broke out l-etwe.n my shoulders My clothing Irritated them. 1 waa troubled with that eczema five or six years. "I tried every hing that was recommended without any benefit until I used the Cuticura Soap and Ointment according to directions, ar.d Cuticura Soap and Ointment cured me sound and well In two weeks " i Signed S L Killian. Nov 22. 1M2. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world Sample of each free, with 32-p Skin Book Address postcard "Cuticura. Iept L. Boston." Adv. Makes Jobs for Detectives. Probably the only people to benefit by recent suffragete outrages are private detectives, many of whom are doing little else just now but guarding pictures ani other treasurers of well-known hosts and hostesses from attacks at social functions, the London Globe states. The head of one private detective zgency told me the other day. says "The Carpenter" in the Express, that he had been obliged to engage a special staff for this work, and that to some receptions he has sent as many as a dozen faultlessly attired ' guests" to look after the pictures and china of the host. IUI. S I WWy SBBBJ "Why are you watching that fly so Intently?" ' I was Just wondering If men will ever be able to tango up and down the walls like that. Wouldn't it be fine?" Pittsburgh Post. i

Years of Experience Makes Perfect CA5T0RIA Mothers may try new remedies on themselves but Baby's life Is too delicate, too precious to try any experiments. Genuine

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BECAUSE it has been made under his personal supervision for more than 30 years to the satisfaction of millions upon millions of Mothers. Sold only in one size bottle, never in bulk, or otherwise; to protect the babies. The Centaur Company,

REAL LIFE IN THE COUNTRY

Fact Is Shown by Man's Eagerness to Escape Fron- Congestion of the Crowded City. Why is it that railway magnates, presidents of banks and beads of great enterprises wbo must perforce do business in cities, almost all try to hare homes on farms in the country, where they develop soils, plant crops and breed animals? It la because there is wearisome monotony In piled up brick and stone. There is confusion in crowded streets and clanging trol ley cars and hot smoky railways These things man hm made and they are needful, but they are not life, much as the farm boy may imt'"' them to be. Life is in the open country Life Is in the growing grass, the waving fields of w heat, the springing of corn Life is In the trees and birds, life is in the developing animals of the farm. Any man who works with the land, ho feed6 a field and watches the re suit, gains a real fundamental knowledge of the underlying foundation on which rests all our civilization. It makes him a sober man. a thoughtful man, a re rent man, and if he experiments wisely a hopeful optji&L Life is where things are born and live and grow. On the farm is real life. Breeder's Gazette New Modern IatsttaM The lead.n Hl; -en aod Instructor n Ne York City, vnie -Hear Sir -I have card Aixim r'irtTaei the aat.aeptie powder to be .hak a kSk Iba eboe. fur the neat tea year. Ii i a b.ca. t: all who aracoaapAled to be on their feet. I dance eifbt or tea hours, daily, and and that A) t r.KiT-BiSi keep aay fret eoL take the friction f ruan the thoe nreveota o mtand Sure. Achlas fart I reo 'mroer. J it to ail aay pup 1 " tiTed. K Kl.Sm IlKi; HAl.I.AM.'HB tp.t'titrt Allraaa Alle! O.maleJ.lr B-i The Way cf Progress. dog barking at a passing auto mobile is generally supposed to be as telling a symbol of futile objection to the march of progress as could well be imagined. In almost tbe same category, however, belongs the strike of the stevedores In New Orleans against the introduction of the elec trie truck to transport freight be tween ve.-sels and warehouses. The wonier is that this improvement has been so long delayed instead of only now appearing and then as a source of a new labor difficulty. One cannot have much sympathy for opposition in this particular instance. The motor vehicle in sll of its forms has come to stay and the rest of the world has been rather rapidly adjusting itself to the new condition. Engineering Record. rorn own iinn.risT t. ii.i Ti t i miTry Marne Xve Kerned? ( r Red. Weak. Watery Byes and oraiwlated lyr'.ld; Bu rLnjc rot Bye r.-rutufi Write f,.r B.-a of the k bl mail Kreau Marine H)e hraurlr QB Ckleaan Rubbing It In. "Why does that lady grin eo every time she sees you?" "She knows I m only getting 110 a week." "But why the grinT" I was iip tA;. l to lo r or.ee and broke it off. and she afterward married a millionaire." Ten am ilea for a nickel. Always buy Red Cross Ball Bine; have beautiful clear white clothes Adv. A man who believes he can't be in me wrong may yet. oe in tne ngni sometimes by accld- nt. Albany Journal.

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WOMEN CAN HARDLY BELIEVE How Mrs, Hurley Was R stored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham'e Vegetable Compound.

- " I was troubled with ment, inflammation and female weakness. For two years I could not stand on my feet long at a time and I could riot walk two blocks without eodurir. cutting and drawing pains down my right side whicb increased every month. I have been at that time purple in the far - and would walk the floor. I could not lie down or sit still sometimes for a day and a night at s time. I was nervous, and had very little appetite, no ambition, melancholy, and oft-n felt as though I had not a friend in the world. After I had tried most every female remedy without success, my mother in-law advised me to take Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I did so and gained in strength every day. I have now no trouble in any way and highly praise your medicine. It advertise itself. ' 'Mm, S. T. Hurley, Eldon, Missouri. Remember, the remedy which did this was Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetabl Compound. For sale everywhere. It has helped thousands of women who have been troubled with displace ments, inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing down feeling, indigestion, and nervous prostration, after all other means have failed. Why don't you try if Lydia E. Puikham Medicine Co Lynn, Mass. Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver ig right the stomach and bowels are CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS . gently but firmly pel a lazy liver to. do its duty. Cures Con stipation, In digestion. Sick Heida. he.' and Diatresa After Eating. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE Genuine must ur Signature DAISY FLY KILLER KS? ZI'ZZ tr, llM eat. nan oe1 aataaaaSaa MMaM ilMM a amp. 1 a 1 1 II ah aaa Mad ( BMtal. eaa tpliirts over, will nt sell or injur aay t h I as. tiuaraateed ef?.-tla, 1 AH dealers iprM i o r. r a, ML BAkuLC fOMLkS. 1M DXalk Ava . Sreol.r. - T. BEST NOHttlTiai II U. $. ft .-a and er ic I'loNUKKMtO OU. AGENTS S to KM sally aelll nt aelf4 n iri.uir:i nt n.e w hr not row' Bow 1 rat W. UdtfllAKi Mlddleport. . I. W. N. L .. Indianapolis. No. 27-1914. NfcaQaBa aaCeV SJ BBLlBaBBBsVbT.K Always Treat.

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