Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 58, Number 10, Jasper, Dubois County, 26 November 1915 — Page 8
ill Ki V 1 PDWHX HOT TEA UNKIND : - FOR A BAD COLD Your Baby Get a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea, or as the German folks call' it, Hamburger Brust Theo," at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoon ful of tho 9 Fhe Signature of tea, put a cup of toiling water upen it, pour through a sieve and drink a teacup full at any time during tho i day or before retiring. It is the most f effective way to breaK a cold and euro grip, as it opens the pores of the skin, relieving congestion. Also loosens tho bowels, thus driving a cold from the ßyßtem. Try it the next time you suffer from a cold or the grip. It is inexpensive and entirely vegetable, therefore " safe, and harmless. is the only guarantee that you have tht t
. 4
WV"1
r
ft - i
RUß ßACKACHE AND LUMBAGO RIGHT OUT
Bub Pain and Stifhesf away with & small bottle of old honeit St. Jacobi Oil When your back is Bore and lame" or lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism has you stiffened up, don't suffer! Get a 25 cent bottle of old, honest "St. Jacobs Oil" at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it right into tho pain or ache, and by the timo you count fifty, the soreness and lameness is gone. Don't stay crippled! This soothing, penetrating oil needs to bo used only once. It takes the ache and pain right out of your back and ends the misery. It is magical, yet absolutely harmless and doesn't burn the skin. Nothing elso stops lumbago, sciatica' and lame back misery so promptly I
SALTS IS FINE FOR
KIDNEYS
QUIT MEAT
flush the Kidney at once when Bade hurti or Bladder bothers Meat forms urio'ftcid.
No man tor woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake; by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-kno-wii authority. Meat forms uric acid wkich clogs the kidney pores so they sluggishly filter or strain only part of V)q rasto and poisons from tho blood, then you get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, constipation, dizziness, sleeplessness, bladder disorders come from sluggiah kidBeys. The moment you feel a dull ache in tho kidneys or your back hurts, or if tho urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, got about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take i tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous ealta is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia and has bocri used for generations to flush cloggt-d kidneys and ßtimulato them to activity, also to neutralize tho acids in urine bg it no longer eauaea Irritation, thua ending bladder disorders. Stad Salts is inexpensive and cannot inj uro; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which all regular meat caters should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, therebyavoidiug serious kidney complications,
IF
1
TURNING
IS
GRAY. USE SAGE TEA
Don't look' old! Try Grandmother's recipe to darken and beautify faded, lifeless hair.
That beautiful, ven shade of ditrlc, glossy hair can only bo had by browing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Your hair ia your char It makes or mara the face. When fc fades, turns gray, streaked and look ry, wispy and acraggly, just an application or two of Bage and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundredfold. Iton't bother to prepare the tonic; you can get from any drug store a 50 cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," ready to use This can Iways be depended upon to bring bock the natural color, thickness and lustre of your hair and remove dandruff, stop scalp itching and falling hair. Everybody uses "Wyeth's" Sage and Sulphur because it darkens so naturally mod evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a eponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one Bmall trand at a time; by morning the gray hair has disappeared, and after another application it becomes beautifully dark and appear glossy, luitrpus and abundant.
I m$m$mmm3 l I l f f
I HEAD STUFFED FROM $ CATARRH OR A COLD 1
i
Says Cream Applied in Nostrils
Opens Air Passages lught Up.
Inf'Tt relief no waiting. fc Your 'clogged nostrils open right up; the air passages of your bend clear and you can j breathe freely. No more hawking, snufi fling, 0 blowing, headache, dryness No f struggling for breath at nighty your fcojid or catarrh 'disappears! .Get a small bottle of . Elv'slCream
palm from your druggist now." Apply
lin-ie yui Liua iragrant, antiseptic, kealing cr.eam in your nostrils. It penetrates through every air passage of the
fkcad, soothes the inflamed or wollen
mucmis membrane and relief cornea in
stantly. )It' just fine.1 Don't itay itufTcd-ug jrithir cold or nasty catarrh.V'
t.
First Sweet Thing Oh, he's aw
fully gone upon her, dear, I assure you. He's been praising her beauty to me for the last ten minutes, enlarging upon her eye3, her complexion, her mor.'h-r-Second Sv- Thing Oh, I don't think he cnald possibly do that.darLEGISLATORS' PERQUISITES.
Spanish deputies, some of whom are agitating for a salary, already enjoy certain privileges. They are entitled to frank their letters and to travel on all tho railways in Spain free of charge.. Unlike the French deputies, however, they have to pay for refreshments consumed in the chamber, tho only article supplied gratuitously being barley sugar. Of this there ia an unlimited "upfly, and lady visitors to the chamber are always presented with a packet of this delicacy, -which serves to vwmr ri the debates.
R J Every! 7 Dollar j
5
you put into a aYioo should brtagyou a dHar'a worth of CQBiTort, u tlo:l.irH worth ol oerVltio. .'t dollar's worth of suUril'nr.tioii. For every Uojhir jon put into it pair of J. B. Lewis Go's
"I
esiafffs"
yrn receive honest value. Yu gtti- lies! li-uthor that money will .uy; yon et tho liest work tli:it nkil' run produce: you u't tho most com. fort tlmt Hi'U'iire f:m give. Look for -lifuis" on tho shui. Ilu(lc only by J. 15. LEWIS CO.,
Women as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney Trouble,
lip
It is sold
Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, discourages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor
and cheerfulness soon disappear when the kidneys are out of order Kidney t.ouble has become so prevalent that it z not uncommon for a child to be born afflicted with weak kidneys. If the child urinates too often, if the
urine scaled l?io flesh or if, when the child reaches an Lj;e vhen it should be able to control th? pipage, it is yet afflicted with bed-wetli.ig, t'.penct upon it. the cause of the difficulty i. kklr.e trouble, and the first step should to towards the treatment of these importr.rt organs. This unpleasant trouble is d-e to a dhear.ed condition of the kidneys and bladde-and not to a habit as most people suppc Women as well r n "?e made misarable with kidney up-a bia Ifc: trouble, md both need the ssme great remedy. The mild and the immediate effect of
Swamp-Root is soon realized.
by druggists, in fiftycent and one dollar sizes. You may have a samo'e bottle by mail
tree, also pampniet ten- nomo of swmp.iuxt ing ;;11 about it, including many of the thous?nds of testimonial letters received from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton! N. Y., be sure and mention this paper.
OW "TiZ" HE
SORE, JED FEE! Good-bye sore feet, burning feet, swollen foot, sweatj; feet, smelling feet, tired feet. ? Good-bye corns, callouses, bunions and gtn raw spots. No more shoe tight-
T" .V Trf?w2 lift mrtrA
limping with pain or drawing up vour face in agonv. "TIZ" is magical, acts ri-ht off. "TIZ" draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up the feet. Use "TIZ" and forAh ! how cornGet a 25 cent
me
'vj m m s in
prepared by hi in for over 30 years.
:''ÖU?LL g:sve YOUR hshy the BEST
Vonr Physician Knows Fletcher's Castoria.
iioio Dy feature 1 iiotu fcrvico, rse.v Yorli. Gtrmans at play alona th war front, enjoying thefr favorite drinks.
i iiuiiiui i lull iu yy LniLU
Sold only in one size bottle, never in bulk'
or ot!.rwLse; to protect-the
IS 55 K 1 s
The Ceatar Compsnyt
FOR
THE SECOND TIME IN TWO YEARS BUCKEYE STATE REPUDIATES DRY POLICIES BY DECISIVE MAJORITY
f Patoka LiiY
WO
p
TIES
I lea
!S?rT
Pfl!
b
1 KP1 ULuiliHs
Akron and Youngstown Reversed Prohibition Majorities o
Last Year and Strongly Endorsed Liberal Form of Government
f
Ohio has again defeated a statewide prohibition amendment by a majority of some G0,000 votes. Reports from every county, most of hem official, indicate that the wet majority was in the neighborhood of GO,000. Many of the returns from tho larger cities were delayed and on this ground the Anti-Saloon League immediately,made their usual claims of enormous gains. The later official roturns utterly demolished the claims of prohibition agitators and shows that the wet majority falls but little short of that of last year. So far as this slight falling off iu the wet majority over lata year is concerned, it is easily explained by all those familiar with the conditions that existed during the campaign. Indeed, Wayne b. Wheeler, National Counsel of the Anti-Salcon League and one of the biggeat "dry" factors in the Ohio campaign admitted, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer, that the motive of revenge on the part of the Democrats against the liquor interests for the 'Cincinnati deal" was responsible for part of the result As usual the big cities and large industrial centers of. Ohio rolled up big majorities against state-wide prohibition. Summit and Mahoning counties, containing the cities of Akron and Youngstown, reversed their prohibition majority of last year and reverted to the wet column. Characteristic of the methods of the Anti-Saloon League, before the votes were counted, paid leaders, according to the nowspapers, were making plans
for another campaign of agitation on the prohibition question next year. Notwithstanding the fact that statewide prohibition has been defeated in Ohio two years In succession by decisive majorities, that leaves ab'ute no possibility of doubt regarding t;;. wishes of the voters of the BuIcoyo State, it seems that paid reformers are already planning a campaign for another fight next year. Tho former decision oC the "drys" to make another canvass will be announced when the trustees of the or-
( ganization and afliliated societies that 1 make up the Anti-Saloon League meet j together later in the month. This is ; in keeping with their previously announced policy of keeping up the dry ' fight, regardless of the teal sentiments j of the voters until such a time as they may be able to take act vantage of complicated political coüJhioiis and ri e Into power on. some split in the big po
litical parties. The following statement was made by Morris F. Welheimer, distiller, former president of the National Wholesale Liquor Dealers' Association and at present A member of the Board of Control of that organization: "In view of the ciir.paign of vicious misrepresentation and sensationalism conducted by the Anti-Saloon League,
the rejection -of state-wide prohibition t by a majority of 60,000 is' again proof , that the people ot Ohio will not mj dorse confiscation without compensa
tion of distillery, brewery and saloon properties, and that tliej'" prefer the legal licenced sale of wine, beer and whisky to the illegal, boot-leggiiig, blind-tiger system in vogue in the socalled dry states.'
We are better equipped than ever to handle wheat, We offer you fair weighlw ääü grades, less unloading and court ous treatment. Come ancl see us. We always pa r Highest market price. Jaspt r Roller Mills. Andrew W Eckert Proor,
i
druggist or
Have
got your foot misery, lortablo your feet feel
box of "TIZ" now at any
deprtmit store. Don't suffer.
good fset, glad feet, feet that never swell, novcr hurt, never get tired. A year's foot comtorfc guaranteed or money refunded,
Visit
mem
Don't miss the wonderful f4 opportunity for educational
and pleasure travel afforded by the
Panama-Pacific Exposition San Francisco Panama -California Exposition San Diego Tickets are on sale every day at Very Low Excursion Fares via
öuthern Railway
Premier Carrier of th South
For full information, see Ticket Agent, Southern Railway ior write B. H. Todd, District Passenger Agent, Southern Railway, Louisville. Ky.
PiLOLo by Feature Photo Service, New )Tork.
5n. .wxini in ait, cnjoyina a jCiPPltt from tht' tMjuiii
Es In Ma Home Iiiasiriss d Mail Orflgp The Jasper Courier, is the only paper in Jasper that is owned, edited and published by a citizen of Jasper. Don't kick about Mail order concerns if you spend your money for your printing to concerns that are owned and bossed by non-citizena of the town.
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