Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 59, Number 44, Jasper, Dubois County, 6 July 1917 — Page 3

THOSE AWFUL

CRAMPS Suggestions that may lave Much Suffering Maryrville, Pa. "For twelve years I suffered with terrible cramps. I would nave to stay in bed several daya every montb. 1 tried all kinds of remedies and wai treated by doctors, but my trouble continued until one day I read about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and what it had done for others. I tried it and now I am never troubled with cramps and feel like a different woman. I cannot praise Lydia E. Pinkhanrs Vegetable Compound too highly and I am recommending it to my frirnds who suffer as I did. " Mrs. George R. Naixor, Box 72, Marysville, Pa. Young women who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, neadache, dragging-down sensations, fainting spells or indigestion should take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Thousands have been restored to health by this root and herb remedy. Write for free and helpful advice to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass. Only women open and read such letters. SELDOM SEE a big knee like this, but your horse may have a bunch or bruise on his ankle, hock, stifle, knee or throat. will clean it off without laying up the horse. No blister, no hair gone. Concentrated only a few drops required at an application. $2 per bottle dcHrcrcd. Deicribe your case for special Instruction! ind Book 8 M free. ABSORBINE, JR.. the antiseptic liniraeat for mankind, reduces Painful Swcllines. Enlarged Glands, Wens. Bruises, Varicose Veins; allays Pain and Inflammation. Price SI and 12 a bottle atdruzciiu r dclircred. Made In the U. S. A. by W.F.YOUNG, P.C. F.( 310Temp!e St., Springfield, Msss. LEGAL RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE SI.OO QUARTERLY We have no Agents, Collectors, Stock-holders. Policy-holders save all commissions, ff-es, dividends, department lees, interstate tares. Aa Rood as 'old-line and cheaper than 'Industrial'. Send postal with full name, date of birth, occupation, address. AMERICAN TOILERS LIFE INSURER, 306 Cily Trust Bide.. INDIANAPOLIS. IND. The Same Trespass. A farmer, going over his land, caught an Irishman with his dog trespassing in a field, and threatened him with prosecution. Returning, however, through the same field an hour later he was surprised to meet the Irishman in another part of it, and exclaimed angrily ; "What! Trespassing again?" "No, no," answered Pat, "it's still the same trespass. Fair piny, sorr!" DANDRUFF AND ITCHING Disappear With Use of Cuticura Soap and Ointment Trial Free. The first thing in restoring dry, falling hair is to get rid of dandruff and Itching. Rub Cuticura Ointment into scalp, next morning shampoo with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Prevent skin and scalp troubles by making Cuticura your everyday toilet preparation. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere. Adv. She Understood. Certain members of the house party were describing the accidents that had happened to them during their respective careers. Adventures by flood, fire and Held had all been well received, and Mr. Brown, eager for fame, thought it was his turn. "D'you know," he said, "I had a very painful experience once. I ran a confounded splinter quite half an inch long right under my finger-nail, don't you know ! "Really. Mr. Brown," said a maiden of the party; "how did you do it?" "Well," he said, "it happened like this." As he spoke he unconsciously raised his hand and scratched his forehead. "Oh, I see," she interrupted, sweetly ; "how very careless of you !" A Sporting Eyent. At a recent sports meeting in a country town an old countryman picked up a disused program of events and was studying it earnestly when a swell approached him. "Hello, old chap, what's the next event on the program?" Old Man (looking up from his card) A donkey race, sir. Are you going to run? Willing to Share. She Ninety-nine women in a hundred are naturally generous'. He Yes; where one woman will keep a secret, ninety-nine will give it away. "Give all the kids Post Toasties They like em"

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BEET-SUGAR INDUSTRY

American Seed Is Usually Superior in Germination. Soli and Climatic Conditions Favor Production of Seed in Sufficient Quantity to Meet AN Future Requirements. (By C. O. TOWNSEND.) Our experience thus far indicates that American sugar-beet seed Is usually superior in germination and capable of producing larger and better roots than the imported seed. Our soil and climatic conditions, extending over large areas, favor the production of sugar-beet seed in sufficient quantity to meet, an uiture requirements. Well-defined strains of sugar beets of high yield and quality are essential to the development of a satisfactory seed industry. Enough has been done Type of Beet Found in Many Fields. to prove that by careful and painstaking work such strains can be produced. No intelligent study of cultural methods in the production of sugar beets or of problems involving a comparison of varieties can be made until uniform and fixed varieties with which to work are available. The production of strains having roots of uniform size and habit of growth and capable of yielding seed stalks uniform in habit of growth and maturity should make possible improved cultural methods, especially in the planting of the roots and in the harvesting of the seed, that will reduce greatly the cost of production. After seed harvest the beet roots and stalks remain in the ground in a sound and palatable condition ,for live stock feed. The present practice is to feed these roots in the field, utilizing them as pasture. The beet-sugar industry in the United States is composed of three distinct branches, namely, beet-seed production, sugar-beet growing, and beet-sugar extraction and refining. They are so linked that each is dependent upon the others, not only for its complete success but for its very existence. Without seed the sugarbeet industry, in which more than 70,000 American farmers are directly interested, could not exist, and without beets the 84 beet-sugar mills now standing, with an invested capital of more than $100,000,000, would be idle. The beet-sugar industry is, of course, the foundation upon which sugarbeet growing and beet-sugar extraction rests. Because of its fundamental character, it is surprising that sugar-beet seed production in this country has not received more general and more earnest attention in the past. The two primary causes that have operated against the development of the sugar-beet seed industry in this country were (1) the fact that a sufficient quantity of seed to meet our requirements was easily obtainable from European countries at a reasonable price and (2) the prevailing idea that conditions in this country, from the standpoint either of labor cost or of climate, would not permit the successful development of the seed industry in the United States. Recent experiences, however, have shown the folly of depending upon foreign countries for our beet-seed supply, while experiments extending over many years have proved the falsity of the opinion relative to labor and climatic conditions. MAINTAINING PIGS ON RAPE Minnesota Station Finds U Most Valuable of Forage Crops Red Clover Also Excellent. At the Minnesota experiment station more pigs have been maintained on a given area with the pasturage of rape than any other forage crop. Red clover is also an excellent pasture, more palatable than rape and nearly as good as alfalfa. Bluegrass is extensively used for a hog pasture and serves this purpose well until it becomes more or less dead during the late summer. Rye is sown fo a late fall and early spring pasture. COW'S TAIL OF IMPORTANCE Often Measured in Judging Animal Chief Purpose Is for Brushing Flies Away. The tail is often measured in judging a cow and to meet the standard requirements should reach to, or below, the hocks and carry a good switch. This renders it most useful in brushing files, which is its chief purpose.

IN1URY BY corn-ear' worms

Kansas Agricultural College Finds It Possible to Control Little Pest by Spraying. Nearly all roasting ears on the market in recent years have been injured by the corn-ear worm, and those known to be free from the injury can be sold at from 5 to 10 cents more per dozen. For six years the department of entomology of the Kansas State Agricultural college and experiment station has been studying the worm and has found that a large proportion of the eggs deposited in the summer are placed on the fresh corn silks. From these eggs the worms that injure the ears originate. The young larvae begin feeding on the silks and eat their way down into the ear. It is, therefore, possible to control much of the injury by keeping the silks sprayed during the silking period. Powdered arsenate of lead has been found to be the most efficient poison. A 75 per cent mixture of arsenate of lead, with air-slaked lime or land plaster is practically as good as the poison alone. The dust is shaken upon the silks from an ordinary cheesecloth bag or flour sack. Under average weather conditions four or five applications at intervals of three or four days are sufficient. MAKING MONEY OUT OF COWS Seven Fundamental Principles of Successful Dairying Weed Out AH Poor Animals. There are ten rules for making money out of cows and they all begin with 'milk good cows." To put the case in a nutshell, or rather skim the cream from the whole master, let us admit that there are, say, boven fundamental principles of successful dairying, about as follows : 1. Weed out the poor cows by means of the scales and the Babcock test. 2. Feed the good cows plenty of clean, choice stuff as close to a balanced ration as possible. 3. Eliminate competition by producing a better product than the other fellow and demanding a good price for it. 4. Head the herd with a high-class, pure-bred sire. 5. Raise the promising calves from the best cows only. 0. Develop a market for your surplus bull calves and other stock. 7. Feed the mind of the man behind the cow. CUTTING BLADES ON MOWERS Finger Bar Arranged in Which Alternate Cutters Rotate in Different Directions. In illustrating and describing a finger bar :cor mowers, invented by C. A. Johnson, 3010 Upper Stockton road, Sacramento, Cal., the Scientific American says : "This invention provides an arrangement of cutting members which correctly strike the grass or vegetable matter to be cut and without in any Finger Bar for Mowers. way interfering with the remaining parts of the device. It provides a finger bar in which the alternate cutters rotate in a different direction, the position of rotation of these cutters being such that one cutter will overlay the other cutter during the cycle of rotation though never coming in contact." PLAN TO DESTROY CUTWORMS Paris Green Mixed With Bran Is Recommended by North Dakota Station Spread in Evening. (North Dakota Agricultural College Bulletin.) Cutworms eat off the young plants at the surface of the ground, and they do this in the night. In the daytime they can usually be found buried an inch deep and only a short -distance from the last plant eaten. Plants that are transplanted can be protected by wrapping paper around the stem, covering it half an inch above and below the surface of the soil. The cutworms can be poisoned with the following: One-half pound paris green mixed dry with 25 pounds bran, then add one gallon water and one quart molasses and mix thoroughly. The set time to spread this is in the evening, or late afternoon. GUARD ALL ALFALFA LEAVES Two-Thirds of Feeding Value of Plant Is in Leaves Rake Into Windrows Before Dry. Two-thirds of the feeding value of the alfalfa plant is in the leaves. If the leaves are lost in curing only onethird of the feeding value remains. This fact is regarded as important by farmers who advocate that alfalfa hay be cured so as to save the leaves. This means that the alfalfa must be raked , into windrows before the leaves dry

&i ' 1 ijYI

and fall off. Raking can be done two hours after cutting, thus saving the leaves and preserving the green color and desirable flavor.

CAN'T RIDE ON FAST TRAINS

Italian Soldiers Resort to Many Tricks to Evade Order When Going Home on Leave of Absence. One of the most frequent causes of arrests of soldiers of the Italian army is not for drunken or disorderly conduct, but for violation of the order that when given leave of absence to visit their homes they shall ride on slow and not express trains. Soldiers exert all their Ingenuity to evade the order. They are always in a hurry to reach their homes, after many months absence, and as they generally reserve but a narrow margin of their leave for the return trip, they are in a hurry to arrive at their posts before it expires. Since the reduction of fast trains on the railroads, as a coal-saving measure, policemen have been stationed on each fast trail to prevent soldiers, who ride free, from traveling on them. Recently on the Rome-Florence express a policeman found a big, healthy-looking soldier who. of course, had no paid ticket. "What are you doing here?" demanded the policeman. "I'm going home from the hospital" answered the soldier. "You don't look as if you had ever seen the inside of one," the other retorted. The soldier silently threw back his cape with his left hand. His entire right arm and shoulder blade were missing. "I guess you've earned the right to ride on the expresses," said the policeman and passed on. PLATE BETTER THAN BRIDGE Cannot Be Used by Dentists in Preparing Men for War, However, As It Is Barred by Army. "The most conscientious dentists are avoiding crowns and bridges wherever possible," said Dr. Frank S. Delano of New York, secretary of the Dentists' Preparedness association, in discussing the difficulties the 200 members of this association are having with putting the mouths of wouldbe recruits into condition for their acceptance by the army and navy. "The navy will accept men with plates to replace teeth they have lost; the army will not, but makes no objection to men with crowns and bridges," continued Doctor Delano. "Men come to us to have their teeth put into condition, and we should like to make plates for them, but as the army recruiting officers reject men with plates, we have to put in bridges. This is unfortunate, because a bridge means the certain death before long of the two teeth to which it is anchored. "The general public ought to know this about bridgework. Many people object to a plate, but they would not if they knew they were raving money by it. After the anchor teeth die, trouble begins; very soon the teeth have to come out, and either a larger bridge or a plate is necessary. If a larger bridge be put in, it means the death of two more teeth, and ultimately you have to come to the plate." The Essentials of Gardening. The essentials for successful gardening on a small or large scale are soil, water and cultivation. Much depends also on the grower, the season and the crops selected. The soil is the storehouse of plantfood. The garden, therefore, should contain humus or rotted material in large quantities. The gardener should remember that about 50 per cent of ordinary earth is not soil at all, but consists of air and water. Water makes plantfood that is present freely soluble. Rain and snowwater are soft and contain ammonra. The magic of soft water on the plant world is one of the miracles of good gardening, as everyone who has contrasted the effect of rain with that produced by sprinkling with a hose realizes. Plants are succulent and contain large amounts of water which they have to draw from the soil. Kitchen Cars Built for Troop Trains. Kitchen cars that are individually of sufficient capacity to meet the needs of a fair-sized hotel are being carried with the long troop trains operated on one of the Canadian railways between military training camps and the seaboard. They have been constructed to facilitate the dining service so that meals can be prepared for several hundred men and served without confusion or delay, says the Popular Mechanics Magazine. Each of these mobile kitchens occupies an entire car, is equipped with a 10-foot range, steam-cooking apparatus, a spacious refrigerator and other necessary paraphernalia. This is all installed on one side and inclosed by a long table extending the full length of the car. X passageway is provided between this counter and unobstructed wall, so that waiters can enter and leave the kitchen without disorganizing the work of the eight cooks and helpers. Very Human Proverbs. Replying to a toast, Chinese Consul Moy Hin said in Portland: "When I desire to make an American better acquainted with the Chinese I quote some of cur Chinese proverbs for him. These proverbs show that we, like you, can see one another's faults and laugh at them. "Our temperance proverbs are rather good. There's one, 'It is not wine that makes a man drunk ; it is the man himself.' And another, 'A red-nosed man may be a teetotaler, but nobody will believe it.' "We have a feminist proverb 'A man thinks he knows, but a woman knows better.'"

THE STORY OF PETROLEUM. The history of oil reads like a fairy tale. It has made more millionaires in ten years than mining made in fifty, and offers an opportunity to the small Investor never before equaled in the history of the world. Why not join The Capitol Petroleum Company at the start? Stock only two cents per share. Address The Securities Finance and Investment Co., Fiscal Agents, 323 Foster Bids., Denver, Colo. Adv.

Rare Case. "This criminal has a streak of honesty, anyway." "Eh?" "He says he's sane and guilty." Many a man who thinks he is ready money resembles a dollar minus 70 cents.

Save the Babies INFANT MORTALITY is something frightful. We can hardly realize that of all the children born in civilized countries, twenty-two per cent, or nearly one-quarter, die before they reach one year; thirty-seven per cent, or more than one-third, before they are five, and one-half befora they axe fifteen I We do not hesitate to say that a timely use of Castoria would sav many of these precious lives. Neither do we hesitate to say that many of these infantile deaths are occasioned by the use of narcotic preparations. Drops, tinctures and soothintr syrups sold for children's complaints contain r ' . i J mi r J i.z.:

more or less opium or morpnme. xney are, in cunsiuerauio quanuuss, deadly poisons, t In any quantity, they stupefy, retard circulation ant! lead to congestions, sickness, death. There can be no danger in the use c f Cas

toria if it bears the signature of Chas. ... , . ms iL contains no opiates or nurcuuca Genuine Castoria always bears the Expectations Realized. "Look'ee, George, didn' I tell'ee my boy would make th' folks sit up an' open their mouths when 'e got to Lunnon?" "Zo you did, an has 'e done it?' "Aye. 'E've started business us a dentist 1" Passing Show. A Slight Mistake, x "This punch his seems a tre weak." "Go slow, old man. You're dipping into the goldfish globe."

Raise High Priced Wheat on Fertile Canadian Soil

Saskatchewan and Alberta. This year wheat is higher but Canadian land just as cheap, so the opportunity is more attractive than ever. Canada wants you to help feed the world by tilling some of her fertile soil land similar to that which during many years has averaged 20 to 45 bushels of wheat to the acre. Think of the money you can make with wheat around $2 a bushel and land so easy to get Wonderful

FRONT PANK

Steel Furnace automatically ventilates your house while heating it ; and heats it perfectly, to any temperature desired, upon an absolute minimum of fuel.

The f1 jjONT Steel Furnace automatically maintains the correct humidity of the heated air by means of its ample Water Pan. Pure air from out doors, thus heated and moistened, gives the most healthful heat. pggMTJjNg Is a "Fool-Proof" Furnace

This Furnace is so simply and strongly built that even an unskilled operator can't get into trouble with it. It stays in order: is easily cleaned, burns any kind of fuel; and is most econom

Goodbye! We're so in home Fg$g5E&Jä5 Write for illustrated literature if your it too hot for US. dealer doe'nt handle the Front Rank.

Haynes-Langenberg Manufacturing Co. 4052 Forest Park Blvd. St. Louis, Mo.

TRADE MARK REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. Grimly Classical. "Do you regard the study of Latin as an advantage?" "Not now," replied Mr. Growcher. "But sometimes I wish literature had stuck to the oid language. I can't imagine anybody writing best-seller stories or ragtime in Latin." Whenever You Need a General Tonic Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a General Tonic because it contains the well known tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents. I know what pleasure Is, for I haw brne good we rk. R. L. Stevenson. Sore Granulaled Eyelids, Eyei inflamed by exposure to Sun, Dust aud Wind Eyes I luickly relieved by Marine lyeRerncsy. No Smarting, lust Jive Lomrort. At

Druggists or by mail 50c per Bottle. HuriiW Eye Salve in Tubes 25c. For Book ! lhc Eye fill uk Muri yc Remedy d., Chicafi j

FRECKLES Now Is the Tlmo tn Get Rid f The t'ply Spot. There's no longer the slightest need ot feellns ashamed of your freckles, as the prescription othlne double strens'.h 1 guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of othlne doubl strength from your druggist, and apply a little of It night and morning and yoa should soon see that even the -worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely, It Is seldom that more than one ounce Is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength othlne. as this Is sold under guarantee ef money back If It falls to remove freckles. Adv.

Speaking without thinking is shooting with the eyes shut. H. Fletcher c l;o ul uuy amu. signature of Choosing His Words. Wine "Why are you speak..; so sharply?" Hubby "Because 1 want to get a word in edgeways." RED CROSS STORY. Red Cross Ball Blue and what il will do seems like an old story, but it's true. Red Cross Ball Blue is all blue. No adulteration. Makes clothes whiter than snow. Use it next washday. All good grocers sell it. Adv. A woman's shoe is usually large for j It size.

Canada extends to you a hearty invitation to settle on her FREE Homestead lands of 1 60 acres each or secure some of the low oriced lands in Manitoba.

yields also Ot Uats, Barley and Flax. Mixed farming in Western Canada is as profitable an industry as grain growing.

The Government this rear is asking farmers to put Increased acreage into grain. There is a great demand for farm labor to replace the many young men who have volunteered for service. The climate is healthful and agreeable, railway facilities excellent, good schools and churches convenient. Writo for literature as to reduced railway rates to Supt. of Immigration Ottawa, Can., or to J. M. MacLachiaa, 215 Traction. Terminal Oidg., Indianapolis, End Canadian Government Agent

ical because is has the longest fire travel and gets more heat value from fuel. It has no direct draft to warp and buckle; is smoke-and soottieht. KttTHl TRADE MARK DAISY FLY KILLER ir'Zh,eZl ti all nies yt -. r&&4Mfitl, cor. - ',' ChMB. UlU All or Up Ter. will n tM or irijsr layuu a rfctlerm. r ft Mntty m 2ra prtpud (v. ?t.C4,j KAR OLD SOMCKS, ISO DC KALB AVE.. B4KOKL U. N. Y. FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE Dissolved in water for detxehes stopj pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflamExation. Recommended by Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co. or Sen years. A healing wonder for nasal catarrh, ore throat and tore eyes. Economical. K extra ordinary deaiicu enJ certr-ivx'.'! pnwer. DRinpia i-rc. Uc. all druiryrsti. : ptrd by J ne t axton 1 otM Lrf-upany. Lktc. Mjb. A PATENT! 'nnuon S. CoJsnH a, Washington, 1 C Huoxitrea MbH i rclereneus. results.

APPROVED BY

( Every Woman Wallt

W. N. U., Indianapolis, No. 27-1917.