Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 59, Number 8, Jasper, Dubois County, 27 October 1916 — Page 1
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1 fc1 eekly 1, VOL> 59. JASPER, INDIANA. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1916, No. 8. Mb
W
Jasper
SEASON.
You can heat your houses with a FLOURENCE at a cost of from $3 to $5 for the entire
The same result that you get with a No. 153 Florence, heating 4 or 5 rooms with $5.00 worth of fuel would cost you, if you used artifical gas, from $200.00 to $250.00-J. B. Howard, Inventor of the Florence The Greatest Stove Ever Made for Burning Soft Coal, Slack, or Any Kind of Fuel
T
he
Hot
Blast Air Tight Flourence
Will Be Demonstrated.
In front of our store Tuesday afternoon and evening. Oct. 31st, by Mr. J.
Howard, the inventor.
B.
Come and let us show you the wonderful HOT BLAST AIR TIGHT FLORENCE in operation burning absolutely all the smoke, soot, and burn the cheapest soft coal or slack with the same regulariaty
and cleanliness as if you were burning artificial or natural gas. It will enable you to realize that you can burn the cheapest soft coal or slack without any soot accumulating in the inside of the stove, in the pipe or in the flue. It will enable you to realize that the FLORENCE is the
only absolute practical smoke consuming device or stove that has been created.
to any stove manufacturer or dealer who will produce a stove that will consume all the
to any stove manufacturer or dealer who will produce a stove that will consume all the
D smoke or all the ingredients of Soft Coal from the moment the fire is started outside the con
struction of the Florence. This offer holds good during 1916.
(Signed) J. B. HOWARD
The J. B. Howard Combustion Device, which is embodied in the Hot Blast Air Tight, Florence, is the reason why the Florence is the only absolute smoke consuming device that has ever been constructed in the history of the burning of bituminous coal.
$5,000 00
WILL
BE
PAID
It is
is
No Smoke! No Soot! No Dirt! EVERYTHING CONSUMED No Clinkers from Hard or Soft Coal! Ashes as Fine as Powder The Most Economical Stove On Earth
not the original cost of a stove, but it what it costs to operate it that counts.
The FLORENCE is an investment; it pays for itself in a very
short time.
The Only Jointless
The Only Jointless Leg
With full raddiation that is on the market, or that has ever been made. The result is, as a fire keeper it will be just as good twenty-five years from now.
.4-
and
Base
Remember the Florence Heats The Floor Five or six feet from the stove. If the firepot cracks in five years we will give you ONE FREE OF CHARGE. The reason for this is the Florence burns out the fuel. In all other stoves the fuel burns out the stove.
The Hot Blast
Air-Tight
Florence
Come And See This Wonderful
Stove
Operated.
will burn anything conbustidle-hard or soft coal, coal siftings, coal dust, slack coal, coke, wood, sawdust and rubbish. The fire never goes out. day or night, and a steady even temperature may be maintained. All features are patented, and the J. B. Howard Combustion Patent, which has made the Florence famous, was sustained THREE DIFFERENT TIMES by the U. S. Courts, and any stove manufacturer, dealer or purchaser using same without proper authority will be rending him, self liable for profits and damage. It is the zenith to stove perfection-the most important stove invention of modern imes.
The No. 21 will heat one small room
all winter with two tons of slack or lump
coal.
The No. 48 will heat two or three small
rooms all winter with two and three
fourth tons of slack or lump coal
The No 151 or No. 73 will heat three
or four ryoms all winter with three tons
of slack or lump coal.
The No. 153 or No. 75 will heat five rooms all winter with four tons of slack
or lump coal.
No. 155 or No. 77 will heat a large
school room with six tons slack
or lump coal , For a church less coal
will be required.
Will burn a ton less of hard coal than
Base Burner of the same
a hard coal szei and heat twice
AN ALGERIAN STORY. All and Mohammed Exchange Secrets. of Their Trade. Mohammed ben Mohammed marabout whose affairs were in a most flourishing condition. Pilgrims visited his ancestors' tomb by hundreds, leaving many and rich offerings, and Mohammed ben Mohammed grew fatter and wealthier daily. His servitor, Ali ben Ali, became tired of watching his master's increased wealth and bulk, while his own pocket was as flat as his body was thin. So one dark night he lently took his departure, riding on the back of a young aas belonging to his master. After a march of about thirty miles the ass had enough of carr ing Ali. It was a young ass and knew no better. So it went on strike, lay down and forth with Thereupon Ali dug a hole and put the ass in, piling a great mountain of stones over it. Then, ting down beside the heap, he began to pray. A traveler passing required by whose tomb he prayed so fervently. Ali war filled with astonishment. What! Had he never heard of the great saint Amar (literally "an ass, the son of n! MB")? All the people of the country around came there to pray. The traveler did not fail to mention the marabout Amar ben Amar's tomb, and soon pilgrim flocked to it with offerings, and Ali ben Ali grew fat and rich. The faithful neglected Moham med ben Mohammed, who at last furious, abandoned his marabout in order to pay a visit to his rival. Great was his astonishment wh
he recognized his runaway servitor.
Taking him aside, he whispered . . 11 1IM
"Tell me tne trutn. uo
I stole from you. And
now tell me who is your marabout?"
"Tim mother of the ass yyou itoie
f Trim Trt A "Afxf "Eh-neriencei lr
Algeria' by Baroness de Boeno, ui Wide World Magazine,
TUUl
The No. 155 Ex. Top is most generally used for heating a large space add takes same amount of coal as No. 55 OUR GUARANTEE! If by operating this stove according to instructions you find at the end of the season any soot in your pipe We Will Return All Your Money and make you a present of the stove. No other dealer would dare to make such an offer.
LH
STÜRM
HO'WE
CO
Public Square
Jasper Ind.
A ROTTEN REPUBLICAN SHOW
if
. -XBV rORK WO
The Right Wy to Proved In Washing Dftlicate China. A big wooden 1 ' filled with wann, not bo:!r oapsuds, to wliicli a few u;y,w of household ammo) tic 173 oeen added should bo ovtt'.cov1, and each p.o of china
sb..vi senaravn ii inis,
funre c;. c!ä liannol id plain pfa'.is, civ., aar a unit briv; (a jwiulöf'i brush io best) iov elab-
Hilter i, cither vooden bowl of clear.. . rv '.'i wair nxid itvy With linen clott ?. Ur.'iv. o laments may he wash--; in ;3 -.me way, but should be r.rdi polished with a
2iian:oJs lau .er. borne people con-
" ' witn a rag on which
ast suspicion of parze a nice appearance. ne .-??Ved in warm
a ittloiii.nnia in
-ip, and then ;inr;j in .te;-. Cit glass rfiouid ih v. msn or U ehbc nnu Tory 5"rtj it U ! plan net tr n.ish It :uh a imstc n whitmjj
1 nicr v t-!l into it, fcl.V.-v-ing it
jp! -t WWWMWPrH.WWlillll "I IIM.I.W I IL. . Ii I ill - i ' 'm - -
$J5 FOUR MONTHLY MAGAZINES $ .75 And Our Paper Ali One Year
h 1. Grlr.. he . .
I Ol..'-
0.i
ti.l!
ii tho Mughly, Uicti emoring :t:i t'.ean brtish ?d finallj fiinT Htf.h nlrV eilr IianrlVM.
polishing with in old &llk handkir
Get The Most For Yoar Money
By taking advantage of thb remarkable offer nor.', you make a cash saving of $1.10. You $et q year's subscription to our paper and to these four splendid magazines a total value o $2.85 for only $1.75. This offer is open to old end new subscribers. If you ere already a subscriber to any of these magazines, your subscription will be extended one year from date of expiration. i This offer also includes a FREE dress pattern. Whea'ypu receive your first copy of Today's, select any dress pattern you desire, send your order to Today's Magazine, fcivinfc them the size and number of the pattern and hey will send it to you frea cf charge. Never before has any newspaper been able to offer magazines of such hi&h character at this price. We are proud of this offer and we urge you to take advantage of it at once.
175 Send Your Order Before You Forget It $ - Til Hinrlnii Will SfeaPrfliiitUWkiiTliii Ulli JL
IT SHOOK HIS NERVES. Incident That Made a Man Fee)
Queer For Awhile. "One niht' said a lawyer, " was preparing some tedious pleadings which had tofhe submitted tc court the following morning, and, knowing that I would need everymoment of my time, I locked myaelf in a email private- consul tatiou room in the rear of my suit, whero no choncc caller could interrupt mc The room is very diminutive, wilii only one window, looking' into court, and no furniture except ' table and two or three chairs. Wo!; I worked on steadily hour after hour long after the city had bcüIM into sleep and silence. The buihiing was so still I could hear even n occasional mouse scamper acro.--i the floor alone. At last I conclude! the tak and, sitting erect in chair, began to stretch my cramped limba. "As I did po my eyes happened to fall on a lighted cigar stump lying on the carpet not four feet away, and I stopped stock still frozen with amazement. I do not smoke. T had been sitting for hour: in that little locked room. I couh? swear that no one had entered. Th window was tightly closed, yet then right at my feet lay a half con umed cigar with a great live cor. I till glowing at the end. It seen ' ridiculous to confess, but a thrill ur horror ran through me like a gt'vanic shock. tA hallucination of nr kind is an appalling thing; it mak no difference how grotesque r homely the subject. It carries su. i frightful suggestion of breakdor-i in one's rcntal engine room"Well, I finally summoned wq enough nerve to stoop down and amine the tump, and what do v think it woj? Why, a tin foil c.i.ule from the top of an ordirr quart bottl of mucilage. In sh ping it off it had assumed thn .? ciliar twist of a cigar and, tho f'r being bron, was just the right or. The rd se-al at the top forr. the coal, and yard or so pway illusion was perfect. I dre.- a dt-r. breith of relief, but it was nctur.v several days before my nerves -turned their Lormal tension New Orlins Tin-es-Democrat
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