Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 58, Number 50, Jasper, Dubois County, 1 September 1916 — Page 8

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Says ah itisfcte fcath, before break-1

fast he!p3 us look and feel clean, sweet, fresh.

Clear; Peachy Skin Awaits Anyone Who Drinks Hot Water

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Snarklinir and vivacious merry,

bright, alert a good, clear skin and a natural, rosy, healthy complexion are assured only by puro blood. If only every man and woman could be

induced to adopt the morning inside bath, what a gratifying change would take place. Instead of the thousands of sickly, anaemic-looking men, women and girls, with pasty or muddy complexions; instead of the multitudes of "nerve wrecks," "rundowns," "brain fags" and pessimists we should see a virife, optimistic throng of rosy-cheeked people everywhere. ' An inside bath is had by drinking each morning, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kidneys and ten yards of bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, sour fermentations and poisons, thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening the entire . alimentary canal before .putting more food into the stomach. . Those subject to sick headache, biliousness, naysty breath, rheumatism, colds; and particulary those who have a pallid, sallow complexion and who are- constipated very often, are urged to obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store which will cost but a trifle, but is sufficient to demonstrate the quick and remarkable change in both health and appearance, awaiting those who practice in-

lermu siunitiutm. v muai icmciuber that inside cleanliness is more important than outside, because the skin does not absorb impurities to contaminate the blood while the pores in the thirty feet of bowels do. ESS MEAT IF BACK

AND KIDNEYS HURT

Take aglasa of Salit to flnih Xidntyi ifBUdder bothen you Drink lote of water.

GOOD CROP FOR INDIANA. Farmtr Find Profit In Sugar Mtbt and lncrtaitdtYi!d of Other Croptu How sugar beet growing in Indiana his worked out thus far in actual practice may be seen by a few instances of Indiana farmers who havö planted the new crop and have 'kept a record of cost and profit. H. Haggard o Monroe put twenty ares into sugar beets. He gathered "flfteentons per acre, a little above the" average crop, and made a profit of $800, or $40 an acre. John Hyerly of Bluff ton got a crop of nineteen tons to the acre from a field of thirteen acres. His profit after deducting all expenses was $62 an acre. This, he said, was the biggest profit he had ever made on farming land. Fred Isch of BlufEton kept a careful account of his different crops. His corn netted him a profit of $28 an acre, hia oats $18, and twelve and a half acres of sugar beets gave him $52 an acre above expenses. This, te said, proved to his satisfaction that "beet growing Is a money maker for the farmer, aside from the vast amgont of good his land derives from beets and the lessoife in scientific farming they teach himT' Fifteen acres in sugar beets gave a yield of eleven tons to the acre on tht farm of E. W. Bushy of Monroe. Mr. Bushy declared that he was well pleased with the ouu-ome of his first season with the crop. "AVe had nn unusual rainfall hereu bouts.' he sri id. "which injured all our crops, and I feel sure that with the usual went lie I could almost double my tunmige ior ncre. As it was, I made a profit of about, $25 per acre,

.and, although I have not h:id any personal experience of the good the land receives f'om cultivating beets; I have seen other farmers who have almost doubled their oat cm) by rotation with

beets." William Caesar of Preble had raised beets in Mh-hijrun for seven years before eomint: lo Indiana. He said that the rainy sisixt.n of last year did not E?iv a fair m 0f thr Indiana soil, yet he found -uv Inirl hotter fitted for the crop ".in 'in- farm lie had left in M!-lvr.i V--i. with last year's rainy woaihtr I - : . "raged thirteen tons of;

Eating meat regularly etefitolfe ptCh duces kidney trouble in eoma form or. other, sayg a well-known authority because the uric acid in meat excites jthd kidneys, they become overworked J get sluggish ; clog up and cause all aorta o distress, particularly backache and misery in the kidney region; rheumatic twinges, severe headaches, aci4 fctomacb, constipation, torpid liver, eltoglesaneaijj bladder and urinary irritation The moment your back hurt! or kidneys aren't acting right, or. i bladder bothers you, get about 'our ounce of Jad Salts from any good pharmacy;; tako a tablespoon! ul in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your, kidneys will then act fine. This famoud alti is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been lied for generations to fluflh clogged kidney and ittaulafce them to normal activity; also to neutralize the acids in the urino to it no longer irri-. tates, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salt cannot injure anyone; makes a delightful efferveacent lithiawater drink which millions of men and women take now and then to keep the kidneys and urinary organs clean; thus avoiding ecrioui kidney diöCÄÄC3

beflft n h He pl-nr and ill-

nnd looked for from

.! In I he cmuln? seasou. ' t',i:irri'cii acres last yepr ! w;!i plant forty.

"1 know :'-ir: du 1 experience," he said. "tV- ;i inrni'T can harvest from tweniv-livi. tu ihlrtx bushels mure oata per m t&u land he has sown to beets th:it; Uv could before growing theni." L. A. Thomm of Monroe, who wai growing bcettf for the aocond time laet year, said that hts beet crop had dropped from twenty tone to the acre to eleven on account oJC the unfavorable weather, but that be felt he had made a big profit notwithstanding. The oati which he planted on hia former" beet land yielded double the amount he had been accustomed to harvest becauie of the added fertility of tho toll produced by beet cultivation;

GRANDMA NEVER LET 1 HER HAIR GET GRAY

She Kept Her Locks Dark svhq Glossy, with Sago Tea and Sulphur,

jWheh yeu darken your hair with Sage and Sulphur, no one can tell, because it's done so naturally, 60 evenly. Preparing this mixture, though, at home is miiBsy and troublesome. For 50 conts ypu can buy at any drug store the rcady-to-use preparation, improved bv the addition of other ingredients, called "Wyeth' Sage and Sulphur Compound." You juat dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strartd at a time. By morning all gray hair disappears, and, after another application 'or two, your hair becomes beautifully darkened, glossy and luxuriant. Gray, faded hair, though no disgrace, 5s a s'ign of old age, and as we all desire a youthful and attractive appearance, get husy at once with Wycth's Sago and Sulphur Compound and look yeara younger. This ready-to-use preparation is a delightful toilet requisite and not & medicine. It is not intended for tho cure, mitigation or prevention of dUeaao,

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. . I -.st friend or your worsv. Active it's your friend I id your enemy, and in in. !-r.ilif(tliotu Biliousncjz icl ..jic, etc.

SUGAR BEET INDUSTRY. Wages and Prices of Beets Much Higher In the United States. The difference between the conditions under which beet sugar is produced in the 1'iiited States and Europe is strikingly shown by a report just published as a United States senate doc umont. Summarizing 117 reports from vnrious European countries, this document shows that 05 cents a day was the highest rnte earned by men worklug in the Europnn beet fields, while 10 cents was the average rate. In all the European countries, however, the greater part of the field labor Is done by women and children at wages rang lng from 10 conts a day for children In Russia to oG cents a day for svomen in Denmark. To these poor laborers the $2.00 a day. which represents the average earnings of field workers In the United States, must appear a princely income. Among the factory workers engaged In beet sugar production the difference Is equally striking. The men working In the factories of the great European sugar making countries, France and Germany, receive an average dally wate of SI cents, according to olhelal figures published by their own govern meats. The average American wage for employees in the beet sugar facto

ries, a day, is more than three liiije as gat. Likewise the farmers who grow the beets in Europe receive only $4 to $-i.."j0 a ton for their crops, although they pay four to live times as much rent for their laud as the American farmer does. While thte figures serve to show why it Is that Euuop.e.cnn produce sug ar cheaper thanthe United States, it Is an interesting fact thist the only Important country of Europe where tho people are able to" buy sugar cheaper than In the United States Is England KvonwOn England the price paid for the sugar most generally used Is as high as the prices paid here. On the whole, tho lot of an American sugar beet grower or worker, must be considered preferable to that of hU European competitor.

maJc active, strong anil healthy liver, preventing and relieving liver troubles. Complete Tx-o aimer.'. Qy

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Root Crop Every Fourth Year.

Few persons realize that a large portion of Germany Is bnt a sandy plain and her enormous crop yields due to the fact that for each three acres of cereals grown her farmers raise one acre of hood crops, thus producing a root crop on each field every fourth year. They grow sugar beets wherever possible and are the greatest producers of this vegotablo In the world. In sections where there ar no factories to which they can eil their sugar beets they grow beets or otlW root

crop and foe tham to

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LATEST PHOTOGRAPH OF PRESIDENT WILSON

For Your Baby. The Signature of

is the only guarantee that you have the

uenuine

v prepared by him for over 30 years YOU'LL give YOUR baby the BEST

Your Physician Knows Fletcher's Castoria. Sold nnlv in one size bottle, never in bulk

or otherwise; to protect babies.

the

The Centaur Company,

IT CAN'T BE DONE !

The Home

ESTABLISHED!

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Patoka Lil I

Thre 'i'a Vo fcaueo for Democrats and Progreieives lovers of peace arid' opponents of the horrors and crimes of war to feel other than" the 'greafejf confidence in the re-election of Praidont Wilson. Friends- ol hie Republican opponent have beeh making vociferous endeavor to impress the voters of the country witli a fictional strength for "Mr. Hughes' candidacy. President Wilson has the Democrats of the country enthusiastically behind' him. He has the friends of preparedness and peafce. He has every Progressive who really holds policies above prejudice and deeds above vague promises. He has the women voters of the states where suffrage is an accomplished fact, who hold their country first in their esteem and who are able to see more in the support President Wilson has already given suffrage, than in the opportunist espousal of their cause by a candidate who before never has shown by his acts even the most condescending sympathy. There are but a meagre few states where Mr. Hughes' tampions can give him more than a doubtful chance of securing electoral votes. No issue haß been joined by the speeches of the Republican candidate which is of sufficient worth to merit serious consideration. Behind Mr. Wilson there is a long record of deeds done and legislation enacted which puts him far up abreast of the times and

popular demands. For President Wilson to be defeated there must develop such a reaction from present sentiment as would be startling indeed. He has the record of achievement. Ho has ihe shibboleth of peace. He has the accomplishment of preparedness. v He has a Congress which has stood nobly behind his policies and has written laws that the great masses of voters will surely indorse. He has been direct, diligent, assertive and dominant. No public man ever cherished loftier ideals or did more to win to them tli public approval. Beat him? IT CANT BE DONE! - Beat him, and restore to power in the Government the old order, the Republican reactionaries, the guardians and agents of privilege and prerogative? Beat him, and blot from the statute books laws that register a century of progress? NO, INDEED! Beat him, with the harvests rjpening into such wealth as the country never knew before? Beat him, with the Government's credit the talk of the world? Beat him, with labor employed, wages good a"nd happiness the

outward semblance of nation-wide contentment? Beat him. with the vaults of the banks of the country

and legislation already enacted which is the guarantee of low in

terest rates? Beat him, with his neutrality achievement which have made us the -one nation secure from the criminal effusion of the red blood of the sons and fathers of the land? Beat him, when the law is highly respected, when the national honor is respected, when the flag has been made the signal at once of preparedness and peace, and our people home-loving, God-fearing ind ready for the higlwr achievements in the future than we,re ever chronicled in the past?

We are better equipped than ever to handle wheut, We offer you fair weights aotl grades, less unloading and courteous treatment. Come

and see us. We always pay Highest market price.

Jasper Roller Mills. Andrew W. Eckert Propr,

A WAY up in the mountains of Western North Carolina are the teautiful and attractive resorts of Asheville, Black jSfountain, Hendersonville, Brevard, Lake Toxaway, Saluda, Waynesvillc, (Lake Junaluska), Flat Rock, Hot Springs, and Tryon. Spend your vacation at one of these cool and delightfuL places or at Tate Spring, Tenn. Round trip Excursion tickets are on sale daily, good until October 31st, via

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Special denominational Missionary anf3 Biblo Conference! at BUck Mountain. Ridtfc Crest and Waynesvillc, N. C. (Lsko JunaluakaJ

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iöUTßESK SA1ÖVAY

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Stop-overs allowed at all points. Three special Low Fare Excursions will be run during the summer. Ask for details. For full information cce Tickot Agent, Southern Railway, or write B. H. Todd, District Passenger Aßent, Louisville, Kentucky. Only $9.75 for the round trip to The Mounain Of Western North Carolina 'The LandOf The Sky" Train leaves Jasper 7;57 or 11:54 Wednesday August 23, 1916 Tickets good Fifteen Days. New features, including viriiblt route tour via Chattanooga (Lookout Mountain) Extension of limit, etc. For full particulars see Local Agent

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IT CAN'T BE DONE!

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