Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 59, Number 8, Jasper, Dubois County, 27 October 1916 — Page 8
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lUrAAbtnAtll InM uicaniaoiiumu DrinkiWater Ehqt water; a pKotphate prevent! Iljnew and keept us 'Kt'' u Oust as coal, "when it rJurns, leaves Kehind a certain "amount of incombustible material in tlue Torm of ashes, do the food and drink taken day after day leaves in tho alimentary canal a ! certain amount of Indigestible material, which if not completly eliminated from the S3fstem each day, becomes food for the millions of bacteria iwhlca infest the bowels. From this mass of left-over waste, toxins and jptomain-like poisons are formed and Bucked into the blooc . -r xGMen and women wuo can't get feeling right must begin to take inside baths. Before eating breakfast each morning drink a glass of real hot ;wter with a teaspoonful of limeetone phosphate in It to wash out of ;the thirty feet of bowels the previous day's accumulation of poisons and toxins and to keep the entire alimentary canal clean, pure and fresh. - . .Those who are subject to sick headache, colds, biliousness, constipation, others who wake up with bad taste, foul breath, backache, rheumatic stiffness, or have a sour, gassy stomach' after meals, are urged to get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from the drug store, and begin practicing Internal sanitation. This will cost ytry little, but is sufficient to make tmyone an enthusiast on the subject. .Remember inside bathing Is more Important tf than outside bathing, be- ) theBkiiL pores do not absorb urities lata the blood, causing poor tn.vwniieÄthe Dowel pores no. trat as fcoap and hot water cleanses, tree tens and? freshens the skin, so liotowateri and limestone phosphate kcfcTon th stomach, llverldojneyB and feowela HEAVY MEAT BHDS It Imi meat if you feel BtcktdrJ OT . n&vt bladdtr trouble Te glftflof Sftltl. No mln or woman who eats meal KgO läily can m .ko a. mistake by flushing tbi kidseys ocw.,Bonftlly, says a well-known authority, -.teat forms uric acid which excited the kidneys, they become overpriced fr the strmin, get sluggish and Jail to fi:t ho wwste and poisona from h bloc Inen we get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, mervousncss, dizziness, sleeplessness and mrmary disorders como from eluggiabi kidneys The moment you fel a dull ache in thj kidneyu or your back hurts or if thai atrina ia cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended DJ a sensation of scalding, ntop eating meaC And get about four ounci-i of Jo3 Salta from any pharzuiu; ; take m tableapoonful in a glas3 of water before feraokiast and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made; from the acid of grapes and lemon juke, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate iht kidneys, also to neutralize the acidfl 5n urine go it no longer causea irritation, jthua ending bladder weakness. fad Salts is inexpensive and cannrö injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-w&ter drink which everyona should take now and then to ksep the kidneys clean and active and tue blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney ; i: complications. I DARK BEAUTIFUL K Try Grandmother's Old Favorite Recipe of Sage Tea and j . - Sulphur. Almost everyone knows that vSage Tea nd Sulphur, properly compounded, brings back the natural color and lusjro o the hair when faded, streaked or rTfty. Years ago the only wav to get this mixture was to make it -at home., which js- mussy and troublesome. Newad&ys wc simply asl: at any drug fctore for "Wyeth's &apnc and Sulphur Compound.-" You will get a large bottle Wf this old time recipe improved by tho addition of other ingredients for about 50 cents. Everybody uses this Preparation now, because no one can possibly tell ihat vou darkened ynur hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge orVoft brush with it and draw jthia through your hair, takiug one small 'etrand at a time; by morning the gray fcair disappears, and after another application or two. your hair becomes beautiJully dark, thick and glossy ana uu look yeart younger. 5 rc,ilnW r-omnound is a deligntlul touec Toquisite. It is not intended for the cure, jiiUfatiog or prevention, of disease, A JBKSSF HOhM m BIL wmmWU. Hii TsBC9'lia - aBIHIh Free Trial M'tiu for w.k bj jrars Aorcr BMtaa Rt( aa4 r4 Ckffr X. 11. At yotrdetlrr i.4K Mf ipr llu WmtMOHKX B1CI I f not tltfMlr, u BOLLXIS MTQ. CO., 14 ra Ar., mat Uj, r.
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WALL ST. WOMEN TOUR FOR HUGHES
"Silk-Stocking, Poodle Dog Brigade" Carries Doctrine of Plutocracy tö West. MAKES SUFFRAGE PRETENSE Many of Party on Train de Luxe Repudiated by Leaders of Woman's Movehjfent Paid Speaker : to Do Talking. Wall street is (oo busy- harvesting Democratic prosperity to go campaigning but it is sending its womenfolk. The greatest aggregation of wealth and social distinction ever represented by fuss, feathers and femininity left New York on Monday, Oct. 2, by special train de luxe, to tell their sisters of the West how to vote. Many of these women, claiming to be equal suffrage wo; iters, are repudiated by leaders of t hat movementStopping at Albany, Utica and Syracuse on their first day, thd itinerary takes the women's campaign train through the principal cities of the north route across the conti u en t and brings them back through Colorado, Nebraska, Missouri and Kentucky, a i tour lasting until November 4. The expenses aT paid by and the tour is conducted under the auspices of the Women's Committee o the National I Ilughes Alliance. "Women's Hughes Alliance" sounds innocent and harmless enough, until one examines the personnel of the organization and discovers that it represents the feminine side of the organized and Morganized wealth of Wall street. s The treasurer of the Women's Committee is Mrs. Mary Harriman Rumsey, daughter q. the lato Edward H. Harriman, rajlroad magnate and "practical man" of the days when Theodore Roosevelt . received campaign funds from the "crooked businass" which political exigency later led him to denounce. These Provide tht Funds. With Mrs. Rumsey on the Finance Committee are Mrs. Robert Bacons whose husband was translated from the House of Morgan to he Roosevelt's Assistant Secretary of State, and later Ambassador to France; Mrs. Bernard H. Ridder, wife of one of the proprietors of the New York Staats Zeltungj leader of the German propaganda against President Wilson; Mrs. W. H. Crocker, widow of the California mining and railroad multimillionaire. On the Train Fund Committee are Mrs. Daniel Guggenheim, of the Smelter Trust; Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, representing Inherited millions of railroad capital; Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, daughter of the late Cornelius Vanderbilt; Miss Maude Wetmore, of the wealthy Rhode Island family of that name ; Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworfh, daughter of Theodore Roosovelt, whose husband is Nicholas Lonj;werth in Congress from Ohio. Many of the junketers who are going along to dothe speaking are professional women, who could not afford the luxury of special trains nor the & i t : :il.. diversion of campaigning without pay But hack of them, with their money and the glamour that attaches to their gilded names, are tlie women standing as financial sponsors for this greatest society show that ever was put on wheels. Some of. these wives and daughters of the super-rich will go along on this mission and with their presence, If not with their oratory, will warn the women of the westwho are already voters that their country cannot be "saved" unless the women cast thilr vote for the candidate of plutocracy. The letterhead from Republican campaign headquarters gives only the names of the Train Fund Committee as above, but besides them there is an additional committee In charge of thisj feature of the Hughes campaign. Others in on the Junket. On this committed appear in addition to the foregoing members, the following: Mrs. K. T. Stotesbury, whose husband is a Philadelphia partner of J. i.: Morgan & Co.; Mrs. H. 0. Havemeyer, wife of the Sugar Trust and Standard oil magnate; Mrs. Phoebe Hearst, , ther of William Randolph Hearst, owner of miiiions in American mines ' and Mexican plantations; Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont, who has undertaken to I raise half a million dollars to defeat rr Toc w wnr wiiKfin: iylls. .iuilli xjluvo , Hammond, wife of the multimllHoulllre mlnlnS mau Mrs Mnry Dreler' New York sqciety leader, of a wealthy German family with strong antipathy to Wilson. A leading attorney of Pocatello, Idaho, writing to the Democratic Narinoii! Committee savs' ; tional Committee sajs i read with deep Interest of the ju-eparatlons of the Silk Stocking, Poodle Dog, Feminine Brigade that is I soon to start on its million'dollar special across the continent to awaken . tho enthusiasm of the mothers and I women who carry the button of our . , i-irr.K. uauouai Bicuiuu uu uiu suuuiuo, to vote for their idol, Hughes. It will unt be difficult for the rank and file of the common people to seo the hypocrjsy of this movement.''
DEMOCRATIC LAWS 1 THAT HELP FARMERS
Federal Employment Bureau i i But One of Many Achievements of the Wilson Administration. MONEY FOR CROP MOVING Rural Credits, Federal Reserve Act, Good Roads, Grain Standards and Many Other Benefits. By FRANK G. ODELL. Editor of the Nebraska Farm Magazine Do you know that your post office j is now an employment bureau? That is one of the new things Uncle Sam has started during the present Administration. Secretary Wilson of the Department Of Labor has tackled the task of bringing the jobless man and the manless job together, and now every post office is an agency of the United States employment service.. The postmaster is equipped with, blanks for listing applications for labor or for employment and is instructed to help get the worker and the job in contact. While this might appear to be principally in the interest of the worker, it is really one of the numerous farreaching things started for the bene fit of the farmer by the Administration of President Wilson. The increasing scarcity of farm labor has become a problem to the farmer, especially in the wheat-growing and fruit-growing sections. This labor, which is of a. seasonal character, necessarily must be performed largely by itinerant workers. Some agency which wilL meet this demand and relieve the laborer of the graft of employment: agencies is necessary. Uncle Sam bus f started it. A single illustration will show how the system works; in the Willnniettj Valley of Oregon thousands of tern-; porary workers are needed in hoppicking time. On August 20 the Oregon Journal of Portland printed ft news article ahout the new government employment agency, statute that six hundred families could (retain immediate employment in tlu hop yards by applying at the Portland division ol the r euerai employment j -service. This is another item added to the mass of accumulating evidence which j shows that the Wilson Administration: J has tried to give both labor and the farmer a square deal. For the first time in history, this Administration has placed the needs of rural districts'! squarely before Congress as of equal importance with the interests of financial centers. And why not? -.Financial center? would not amount to much withont the nine-billion-dollar crop or the American fanner. But the interests of the farmer have not always been so prominently and favorably considered by Congress as they have during the past three years. The record of Democratic claims for farmer support h a record of accomplishment. It reads like this in the passage of laws and administrative acts : What Has Been Done for the Farmer. CUKltlONCY ItEFOllM: The Federal Iteserve Act under which the farmer's paper is given special consideration, including permission to National Banks to loan on the security of farm lands. RURAL CREDITS: An epoch-making legislative measure which will relieve the farmer of the incubus of the short -time loan at extortionate interest. This measure alone, when in full force, will save the farmers of the United States one hundred and fifty million dollars annually in interest charges. GfoOD ROADS: Seventy-five million dollars made available for the development of roads from the farm to the market, under conditions which will prevent wasteful use of the money. AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION : The passage of the Smith-Lever Act brings to every American farm, through the joint co-operation of the Federal Government and the States, the help of these agencies in solving the business problems of the farmer. COTTON FUTURES! ACT: Deals a death blow to gambling in this great staple. " UNITED STATES WAREHOUSE ACT: Enables owners of stored products to obtain loans on warehouse receipts more nearly approximating the full value of the product. GRAIN STANDARDS: A law enacted last Ausust authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to establish ofliI fiim c;fott-1.i1v; Till IJIW IS workin? The farmer who has been robbed through juggled grain grades for years wni appreciate its value. prop MOVING : The surnlus funds 0r tue Treasury Department have been placed directly in the banks of the South and West to aid in moving crops during the customary season of money shortage. TVTTn?TTT nV ttnVF.rc VMENT DE'i - v POSITS: Banks holding government deposits are mw required to pay two per cent interest. This cuts .64 a big graft which formerly came from the free use of huge sums of the people's monev. More than one million dollars revenue annually is now derived from this source alone. IMPROVED MARKETING S1SThe fannPr lms for years felt the poW(?r of the market combine, u.trh lts Wnsti. inefficiency and dishonesty. The office of Markets and the Rural Organization Service, estnblished in Che Department ot A0n: culture during this Admlnls working on scientine lines to promote better marketing and cooperatle bubiniss orgunlzntlon among farmers, , These btuehcient measures, with nmny others, show why the farmer la pretty well satisfied with the Wlh son Administration.
EIGHT-HOUR ATTACK
GNOEILF. SAYS OLNEY Hughes "Hadn't the Nerve" to Demand Filibuster in the Senate Against the Law. WILSON'S ACT COURAGEOUS Member of Cleveland's Cabinet Praises President's Domestic Achievements and Policy of Averting War. No American can speak with higher authority on the issues of this campaign than Richard Olney, who was President Cleveland's Attorney General during the railroad strike of 1S04, and President Cleveland's Secretary of State when the Venezuelan message was sent to the British Government. He should know whether President Wilson's action in averting the, railroad strike was a "surrender to force" ; whether the Wilson foreign policy has been "timid and vacillating". Mr. Olney seeks no political preferment; his interest is that of a retired statesman, of a wise, experienced, dispassionate patriot, who is concerned only with the welfare of his country. Mr. Olney has written for the New York World a signed article in which he warns the American people against the danger sure to result from turning over their affairs to Mr. Hughes and the interests which would dictate his policies, foreign and domestic. Where Was Hughes' Nerve? Discussing the passage of the Adamson eight-'hour law, Mr. Olney points out that the Republicans of the Senate, if they had really wished more time for consideration of the bill, could have obtained it by means of a fiiibus- J ter, as a recognized Senatorial weapon, and adds: "Why did not the Republican Senators resort to it and get all the time for deliberation they wanted? What was Candidate Hughes doing that he did not make the wires hot with messages to Washington warning against the law the seventy-four Republican Representatives who voted for it and urging the twenty-eight Republican Senators to filibuster to the last ditch? "But neither he nor the Republican leaders generally had the nerve to face the situation. With ample means in their hands to prevent legislation until after its due consideration, they deliberately elected that it should -appear to be enacted under coercion in order that, after the great national deliverance had been effected, they might object to the mode of its accomplishment. "A pettier and more ignoble game of politics never was conceived. In comparison, and in view of the sudden and extraordinary exigency sprung upon the country, President Wilson's course was characterized by both courage and common sense." Of Candidate Hughes' conduct in the campaign, Mr. Olney remarks : "No sooner was the nomination as sured than the robes and ermine of the Judge fell from the candidate as if by magic, and there appeared in their place' the motley wear of the ordinary office seeker a transformation as sudden as that made by the wand of Harlequin in the pantomime, and a transformation showing how thin is the judicial veneer, and forever discrediting the United States Supreme Court as a training camp for high political office." Has Kept Rudder True In its conduct of foreign relations the Wilson Administration, Mr. Olney says, "Ikis kept its rudder true and has won and deserved the respect and gratitude of the country." The principles and objects of the Wrilson foreign policy as stated by Mr. Olney have been : First To keep the country out of the great European war. Second To insist upon the existence and vitality of International law as determining its own status as a neutral, and defining its rights and obligations as such. Third To deal with the Mexican situation in a spirit of perfect fairness and friendliness to the Mexican people, now suffering from civil dissensions and revolution to an extent which leaves a large part of the country' in a state of anarchy. , Mr. Olney shows that all these objects have been attained through the wise, patient and courageous diplomacy of Woodrow Wilson; that the President has kept the country at peace without dishonor; that under .his leadership "the United States has I rendered an inestimable service to ! belligerents and neutrals and to all mankind" in "steadily bearing aloft j the banner of international law as j tho standard under which all civilized : peoples must eventually gather." Mr. Olney finds particular cause to . commend Pres! don t Wilson's Mexican j policy. He stands with the President ! in declaring that the Mexicans have the right to work out their own destiny oven through revolution. Closing hy asking what is likely to happen if the "Presidential tiller passes into new hands," Mr. Olney .says that Hughes' inducement to elumge the existing foreign policies of the country will be very great. 'The American people can hardly fall to realize the danger and to reuse to put at risk the continuance of a foreign policy which, as a whole, must have their hearty approxRl,"
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