Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 59, Number 47, Jasper, Dubois County, 27 July 1917 — Page 3
GREEN MOUNTAIN ASTHMA TREATMENT Thi treatment is the result of many years of suadj aiwl sxperiencein Lho special treat .sJmcDt of diseases of tholnnpg and JS throat by the lato Dr. J. II. Guild,
oratory, apractitlonerln Bellern and New Tork Oharity Hospitals, and an eminent physician. Xcand S1X0 at drQRsista. Tram Staple and practical treatise on Asthma, its causes, treatment, etc Bent on request. J. H. Guild Co. JUprt,Yt
J2
STOPS
LAMENESS
from a Bone Spavin, Ring Bon, Splint, Curb, Sid Bone, or sir.i4j trouble and gets horse going; sound. It acts mildly but quickly and good results are lasting. Does not blister or remov tn hair and hone can be worked. Page 17 in pamphlet -with each bottle tells how. $2.00 a bottle
delivered. Horse Book f M free. A BS ORB IN E, JR., the antiseptic liniment fee .mankind, reduces Painful Swellings, Enlarged Glands, Wens, Bruises, Varicose Veins; heiüs Sores. Allays Pain. Will tell you more if you write. $1 and $2 a bottle at dealers r delirered. Liberal trial bottle for 10c ttampt. W. F.YOUNG, P. D. F..310T8fsi!eSt..Sprinafletd, Mass Every Woman
FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE Dissolved in water for douches stops pelvic catarrh, ulceration anc inflammation.' jRecommended by Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co, for ten years. A healing wonder for nasal catarrh, sore throat and sore eyes. Economical. Has extraordinary elearwing and germicidal power.
1 SjBjple tree. PUc aü druggists, or postpaid fay
razH. I he f axlon I oWet -ompany, Boston, Mi
OLD FALSE TEETH WANTED Wo pay VI to 115 per sot for old false teeth. Doesn't mattor If broken. Send by parcel post and rocolre check by return mall. Hank reference. Mazor'a Tooth Bpecialty, 2007 3. Fifth St., Philadelphia, Pa,
Why, Indeed? "Is this Central 227?" "No." "Then why did you answer?"
RED CROSS BALL BLUE. That's tho idea. A pure blue, true blue, no dope. Gives to clothes a clear white, whiter than snow. Be careful, uie tho best. Barge package, sold by good grocers only, 5 cents. Ask for it today. Adv.
No Wonder. "She says her husband can't even keep her in pin money." "I know, but she buys diamond pins."
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 op the Whole System. 50 cents. Where to Stick. "Sticky weather," said the boy, who was thinking of fishing. "That's right," responded his dad. "Stick to business, son."
FRECKLES Now Is tho Time to Get Rid of These tteiy Spots. There's no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the prescription othlne double strength ir? guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of othine double strength from your druggist, and apply a llttlo of it night and morning and you should soon seo that even the worst freckles havo begun to disappear, while the lighter ones havo vanished entirely. It Is seldom that more than ono ounce 1b needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. Be suro to ask for the double strength othlne, ns this is sold under guarantee of money back If it falls to remove freckles. Adr.
Ready With Advice. A grocer man was telling a customer about some woman who had fainted on the street. He rushed to the rescue, of course, and lifted her head from the "It's a wonder you hadn't killed her 1 Don't you know that her head 'should have been lower than her feet?" The grocer accepted the information with the smile of one who like0 cold douches, and went on about how a man stopped his automobile to take her to a hospital, and how they tried to revive her with ammonia. "Worst thing you could have done ! Don't you know that when the patient is unconscious you should never " and so on, and so on. Which shows how the poor dear doctors are going io suffer from every woman's training In IL C. first aid. P. S. Also the poor, dear undertakers. Washington Star.
Human Responsibility. "I suppose you think you can reform him i you marry him." "Oh, no indeed," replied Maybclle with a toss of her pretty head. "A girl doesn't have to bother about reforming a man now. Congress and the police are now supposed to reform everybody."
The Assyrians are snlcl to have been the flrst to introduce the heel for security and comfort in walking.
Many an illiterate rnan Is able to make his dollar mark.
If I was the drocer I d sell nothin' but Post Toasties
FOR THE LITTLE LASS
Attractive Little Frock Embodies Bolero Waist Idea,
By Substituting Simple Gathered Blouse, Very Different Dress for House'or School Is Obtained.
No mother Is so blind to beauty that ehe falls of desire to make her little lass represent the spring blossom of nature, so typical of what she is in human life, and this pattern of a small girl's dance or "company" frock Is calculated to give the appearance of a frilly pink rose or a ripple-cupped morning glory to your young daughter. In the design, which is easy to follow, there Is the full skirt and the
FOR TOP OF WRITING TABLE
Receptacle for Stamps, Paper Fasteners and Odd Bits and Ends Can Be Easily Made.
Some spare moments may well be filled up by making tho useful little article shown in the accompanying sketch, and it can be easily prepared with three small cardboard boxes. It Is intended for holding stamps, pins, paper fasteners, and other odds and ends, and a small bottle of ink. Tho three boxes aro fastened together side by side with paper fasteners, and this is shown accomplished in the small sketch at the top of the illustration. The sides of the box are covered with dark green silk, the material being fastened on just inside and underneath with a strong adhesive. The three compartments are loosely lined with thin silk neatly sewed to the silk covering the edges
does not object to the cap and apron badge of servitude, the worker in the bank dons an overall cheerfully, women in various organizations wear their khaki, and the Ked Cross and volunteer aid workers are proud of their uniforms. An expert French designer, discussing those changes, says: "There always will be the women who want fripperies, the women who try to insist upon something quite different from the style of the moment, but nowadays their number is greatly diminished. The uniform idea has arrived. It may mean the total extinction of dressmaking as a creative art, but there will be developments on other lines. "There has never been a great war which has not influenced fashion in a picturesque or even grewsome fashion, and this world war has done its share. We had a fashion adapted as a compliment to each ally, the Kussian caps and tunics, the Bersaglieri hats of the Italian soldiers, and the Serbian colors. Scotch plaids have given the Parisiennes great joy. "Khaki shades are in vogue for spring and summer costumes, and the blue-gray, with touches of crimson of the French uniforms, is seen here and there."
Party Frock for Small Girl. bolero waist idea, although the pattern also furnishes a simple gathered waist for a plain house or school frock. It is convenient to own a design suited to several purposes. By the omission of the bolero blouse, or waist, there is quite a different dress. While pongee silks of the different colors now obtainable in pongee are used for clothes for children, there is nothing more charming and appropriate for a child than white wash materials. These, of course, come In a great variety of weaves. A suggestion for this dress Is to b :y enough embroidery flouncing of i üne weave for a bolero. Edge the neck and armholes with very narrow embroidery of the same general character. Then sew two
little ruffles of embroidery or even of '
plain goods on the ful1 plain skirt, and shirr the puffs of the sleeves and edge them with the embroidery that trims the bolero. Dotted or figured lawns and Swisses are cheap and attractive and wear better than plain white goods. They furnish their own trimming and can be worn over colored slips, with colored sashes, when the little girl entertains her friends at a doll party.
SEASON'S NECK LINES VARY
May Be Cut in Any Way That One Likes Providing It Is Becoming to Contour of the Face.
Occasionally one sees a gown that is cut very high at the back and sides of the throat and opens sharply into a long narrow slit at the front. The high military collars offer a sharp, almost startling contrast to these more feminine neck lines, but here, too, one finds variety. A few of them are half open in front, and others have regular standing ruffs which frame the face and fall away in soft revers of lace. One thing is comforting to know about this season's neck line. You may have to cut any old way you like, providing it is becoming to the contour of your face.
QUAINT MILITARY BONNET
KEEP UP ANCIENT CUSTOMS
This smart bonnet just strikes the right note in the season's styles. The touch of the military is seen in everything wearable, but nothing can equal the distinct martial air that surrounds this straw "helmet." A broad peak shields Miladi from the burning sun. The red star embroidered on the white straw commands attention and dedares one a loyal patriot. The crown is raised high in front suggesting the officer. The idea is further carried out by the chin strap which secures the bonnet and keeps it at just the right angle.
FASHION'S FANCIES
Useful Addition to Writing Table.! of the boxes. The edges are next finished off with a fine gold silk cord, which is arranged in two little loops at each corner of the tray. : In front of each division the word ' indicating its contents is worked with gold silk, and this must, of course, bo done prior to covering tho boxes. '
UNIFORM IDEA IS ACCEPTED
Adoption of Standard Styles Has Been Most Marked Effect of War Upon Dress in England.
Summer hats are made of satin. Veils are very much ornamented. Lacquered flowers are the latest. Bathing suits are made of soft rubber. Linen hats are covered with braiding. The small, snug hat always holds its own. Taffeta woven like straw makes a sport hat. The soft tailored suits frequently have sashes. Very deep liuen cuffs are trimmed with buttons. Plaits still appear at the sides of chemise dresses. Tailored dresses aro more severely plain than ever. Satin or tulle hats should bo worn with muslin frocks. There aro very smart coats made of white serge, unllned. Buttons are among tho most interesting parts of a dress. The square neck is very fashionable and usually becoming. The narrow double or triple belts aro as much liked as ever.
There has never been a time when women were more willing to accept
standard dress or uniform.4) than they j
nre at present. That 1st the most marked effect of the war upon woman's dress, says a London correspondent. All uniforms have acquired dignity In women's eyes. The housemaid
Rules of the Skirt. Skirts do not stand out at the hem. In the first place, they are no longer cut circular. Secondly, they appear to Imug In about the ankle toward the hem. This is because they aro cut on the straight of the goods. The petticoat, worn underneath tho floppy thin dress, Is of do chlno with perhaps deep chiffon ruffles.
Widely Separated Communities, Venice and Cork, Maintain Curious Ceremony of Throwing Dart.
In widely differing communities Venice and Cork there obtains a curious ceremony, that of throwing the dart. In the first case this is an ancient custom signifying the marriage of the Adriatic. Every year since 1177, on Ascension day, Venice has been made the bride of the sea, and the throwing of the dart is a picturesque feature of a picturesque ceremony. Equally interesting are the circumstances attaching to the similar function on the first Thursday of September in Cork harbor, Ireland. By virtue of a clause In the city charter the mayor of Cork is constituted admiral of the port. Every three years he must evidence his jurisdiction by throwing a dart Into the sea. At two o'clock in the afternoon the mayor, the town council, all the civic officers, and the band of the Cork civil artillery embark on a vessel and proceed to a point between Poor Head and Cork Head, which is held to be the maritime boundary of the borough. The mayor dons his official robes, and, attended by the mace and swordbearer, the city treasurer and the town clerk, likewise wearing their official robes, goes to the prow of the vessel and launches into the sea a dart made of mahogany tipped and winged with bronze, in this way asserting his authority as lord high admiral of the port.
R0DAYA LOWEST OF CASTES
Those Who Survive Are to Be Found Today in Kandy, the Old-Time Capital of Ceylon.
The old-time capital of Ceylon is a city rich with the usual picturesqueness of the East, and having two or three unusual points about it as well. In Kandy you will find the Rodaya caste, one of the few Buddhist castes whose origin is a matter of history. Kandy, too, contains the most sacred object in the Orient, no less a relic than a tooth of Buddha. These two features are Kandy's principal claims to fame and interest. It is written that the Rodaya had their origin in the sentence pronounced by an old-time king, whe charged that they served his table with the flesh of pigs instead of the flesh of deer. For this crime he made them the lowest of all castes, and their lot has not been a happy one. There are perhaps 500 of them left today; they may be seen daily around the outskirts of Kandy. They are not allowed to live In houses, but inhabit miserable leantos. They have no recourse to native courts of justice, although under the English law they are not discriminated against. They may not use a bridge, but have to swim all streams. They must kneel when addressing the higher castes. When the shadow of one of them falls upon food, the food cannot be eaten.
American Pin Globe Trotter. The American pin goes the wide world around, and our exports are pretty equally divided between the ordinary pin and the safety pin. Missionaries from Africa and Asia say that the American safety pin Is so highly valued that it takes the place of currency. Manila is said to be faking 200,000 gross annually, and Italy bought last year 2.160,000 safety pins. The reason for this is the shortage of supplies from European countries. England, France and Italy need the metals for military purposes, and Germany and Austria will not make pins even if they could get them out of the country, because they need the metal too badly for guns and shells. The American pin made by machinery is of superior quality, and the machines nre so developed that they can be furnished even more cheaply than by the cheap labor in Europe.
Selfishness. Wo are practical beings, each of us with limited functions and duties to perform. Each is bound to feel intensely the importance of his own duties and the significance of tho situations that call these forth. Rut this feeling is in each of us a vital secret, for sympathy with which we vainly look to others. The others are too much absorbed in their own vital secrets to take an Interest in ours. Hence the stupidity and injustice of our opinions, as far as they deal with the significance of alien lives. Hence the falsity of our judgments, so far as they presume to decide in an absolute way on the value of other persons' conditioHS or Ideals.- William .Tames.
Woman School Director in Peking. Peking has its first woman school director In the person of Mrs. Chu Plng-hsla, who has just been appointed director of the Peking Girls Normal school by the minister of education. Mrs. Chu Is a young Wellesley graduate, who left a brilliant record behind her In America. Since her return to China she has been editor in chief of the Women's Magazine, published In Shanghai.
No Exceptions. Ho (scornfully) A woman can't keep a secret. She (bitterly) -Not with the mean military census taker making her tell her real age.
Full Measure. Pat -I hear Kelly lost a foot in that railroad accident. Mike He lost a yard one of his own feet and two of his wife's r Town Topics.
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CASTORIA
For Infants and Children, Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria
Always Bears the
Signature
of
Gohpäot-
Exact Copy of Wrapper,
For Over
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WARM AIR HEAT Is a Success If You Use a
FRONT PANK
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Burnt any kind of fuel. Gets splendid results.
No direct draft to warp or buckle.
Fill Out This Coupon and MuH li Today I Haynes-Langenberg Mfg. Co., 4052 Forest Park Blvd., St. Louis Please send me, at once, your latest catalogue and Uterature.
Name... Street No R. F. D. No
..State
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Canada's Liberal Offer of Wheat Land to Settlers
is open to you-
to every farmer or farmer's son
who is anxious to establish for himself a happy home and prosperity. Canada's hearty invitation this year is more attractive than ever. Wheat is much higher but her fertile farm land just as cheap, and in the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta 1 60 Acre Homestead Are ActuiIIj Free to Settlers end Other Land Sold at from $15 to $20 ptr Acre The great demand for Canadian Wheat will keep up the price. Where a farmer can get
near $2 lor wheat and raise 20 to 45 bushels to the acre he is bound to make money that's what you can expect in Western Canada. Wonderful yields also of Oats, Barley and Flax. Mixed Ffcrminjr in Western Canada is fully as profitable an industry as grain raising. Tho oxcollent prasses, faU of nutrition, aro tho only food required either for bef or dairy purposes Good school, churches, markets convenient, cliuiat excellent. Thero Is an unusual demand for farm labor to roulaco tho many younu men who barn volunteered for tho war W rite for iltoratnro aoi f artlcnlars aa to rednced railway rates to Supt. jf umlgratlou, Ottawa, Can., or to J. M. MccLachtaH, 215 TraciionTermioal Dldg., Indianapolis, Ind.
Canadian Government ArpM
TAU ü5-!
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The Average Consumer. "Who's this man who Is tolling rao to eat the luxuries of the table so as to snvo the staples?" "Why, what's the matter with you, man?" "He's either got to give mo the money to buy the lobsters with or tell me I'm one myself!"
The Organizer of The Capitol Petroleum Company have now contracted for the drill ing of the first well on their 507-nrro o.l tract in Kansas. Stock now only 2 cents a fiharo while it laste, one-fifth cash, balance four monthly payments, or 5 discount for all cash. Make all remittances to The .Securities Finance & Investment Co., Fiscal Agents, 329 Foster Bldg., Denver, Colo.Adv. An Injury to tho tongue is more rapIdly repaired by nature than any other part of the system. Ami-the Murine Is for Tired Eyes. I MOVieS Red Eyes Sore Eyei wmmmmaommmm Qramlated KyelldS. Hä3tS 2 Hef reshes Restores Marine U a Farortte 5 - Treatment for 1703 that teal dry and eta art. GIto your Bye as much of your lorin card H is your Tooth and with tho eamo regularity. -x CAREFOftTHtM TW CANN9T ItiY KEW ETESI a Bold at Drag and Optical Stores or by Mall. 3 Ask MurtM Eyt fttoetfy Ca., Chlcag, fer Frw Bmx S KUlUHlMMIIHIiHIIIIIHUIIIMIHIIIIIUIIIIUIIIIIIiilHIHMD
ECZEMA
Äfonev back without qucHtlon If HUNT'S C rKE falls In the treatment of ITCH, ECZKXA, RINGWORM TETTER or ether Itching skin d leases. Price 60c at UrusffflHlH, or direct from A. 3. Richards Mrictae Co. .Shermci.Tci
DAISY FLY KILLER "XT l"1"'
all flies. st in.
erinmenUl, cUTHlnt, elip. Luit all itn. aJ. erf tntl. mu tat.111
j o' t p etr , wilt t M
0" injur aiiyUtlB. Guar tottwi SrcVl. Befcl by llr. r 6 hh( ty 1prtM ptnpui It 1 1 W.
HAK OLD SOMCRS, IS DE KAUB AVE., BROOKLYN. K. Y.
RETAIL BUYING AT WHOLESALE RATES Send us your full name, date of birth, occupation, on a postal and we will give full information how to buy an absolute necessity in snujl quantities and pay only wholesale rate. AttER. T. L !., 306 City Trwt BMf., IidUsupeUi
Watson 1C Co leuiun .Was -Inston.U.C. Book t ren. IllKteei reftfraacw. tfest ratuM.
PATENTS
W. N. U., Indianapolis, No. 29-1917,
