Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 59, Number 49, Jasper, Dubois County, 10 August 1917 — Page 8
Hot Wafer for Sick Headaches
Tcllo vhy everyone'ihould 'drink" 'hot water wHh phosphate In it before, breakfast.'
HELPS CONVICTS TO REFORM
8p'ndfd1Work BeinQ Done by Official? of John Howard Industrial Horn at Eocton.
Hcaäaelio of any kind, is caused by
autointoxication which, means selfpolsoilng. Iiivor ' and bowel poisons called toxln3, sucked into tho blood, through tho lymph ducts, excite tho heart whib pumps the blood so fast that it congeals in the smaller arteries and veins of the head producing violent, throbbing pain and. distress, called headache. You become nervous, despondent, sick, feverish and miserable, your meals sour and almost nauseate you. Then you resort to acetanilide, aspirin or the bromides which temporarily relievo but do not rid tho blood of thoeo irritating toxins. A glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, drank before breakfast lot awhile, wMl not only wash these poisons from your system and cure you of headache but will cleanse, purify and freshen tho entiro alUnontary canal. Asalz your pharmacist for a quarter poun 1 of limestone phosphate. It is inexpensive, harmless as sugar, and almost tasteless, except for a sourish twincro which is not unpleasant. If you aren't feeling- your best, if tongue is coated or you wake up with bad taste, foul breath or have colds, i : ligestion, biliousness, constipation or sour, acid stomach, begin the phosp'iated hot wator euro to rid your ry?tcm of toxins and poisons. :sults are quick and it is claimed tltt those who continue to flush out tho stomach, liver and bowels even1' morning never have any headache or know a miserable moment.
' What society shall do with dis- (! S
charged prieoners is slowly but sure- p
, ly being solved by tho John H5Wrd
Industrial homo at Boston, which;
celebrates its twentieth anniversary,
soon. A most pathetic object is the discharged prisoner, who thinks ev
ery passer-by sees tho prison stigma!
upon him. This saps his courage and he slips back again until once more he is associating with criminals. The Howard home seeks to furnish him with a grip upon a new life. During tb last 20 years nearly 21,000 disc.iu.rged prisoners b'ave been cared for by the home until positions have been found for them. The home was founded in 1890 by the present er wintendent, Albert Arnold, and Fcveral oUier workers. "I am sometimes asked' says Superintendent Arnold, his kindly face beaming pood nature, "how man a men are deserving of help? I always rri;iy that all are good men Every one has good points. ''Too much criticism is directed against them for the slightest errors. All they neel is encouragement in order to forget the old life and star!
rhfl new."
i um
u h u -1 m i-m u Ft (w ui. 1 n n u un
yyy i unmuLn
HE WANTED IT REALISTIC
F0PEKA AUTHORITIES THINK
BOOTLEGGER IS ALSO MOONSHINER
Volrtol Knev How a Man Ought t Act After Being Kicked Downcialrc. Some old anecdotes are told of Count Tolstoi. Once, when one of his plpys was being rehearsed at a theater, he was invited to be present. His religion did not. prevent him from accepting the invitation, but he went to " the theater as he went to his work dressed as a peasant. It was a small company of the very select, and the doorkeeper was careful to admit onlthe prepor persons. When, therefore, a shabby-
looking peasant appeared in the en
trance hall he ordered the man in peremptory tones to get as far away
as he could in as little time as possible. As the peasant showed no immediate signs of obeying, the doorkeeper seized him and threw him down, the steps.
"My name's Tolstoi," tho peasant
FOR
SALTS B FNE
Kidneys, mir meat
STRANGE OATHS!
Slush the Kidneys at ence when Back hurts or Bladder bothers Meat forma urio acid.
jso man or woman wHo cats meat regularly can make a mistako by flushing ic kidneys occasionally, says a wellknown authority. Meat fxins uric acid vliich cjfs the kidney pores go they luri- '7 filter or strain only part of .':n - aste and poiioni from the blood, cu you get aick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nsryousnn33, constipation, dizziness, sleeplessness, "bla4der disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a 4ull ache in thi kidneys or your bade hurts, or if tha urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sodi.nGnt, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of ccalding, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a tablcspoonful An a glaos of water before breakfast for a few days und your kidneys will then" act. fine. This famous ealt is irido iroin the acid of grapea an'1 h-rev juice, combined with lithia and ' n used for generations to flush c!l; ... Mueya and stimulato them to activity, also to 'neutrally the acids in urine bo it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder dia orders. ' Jad Sf.Iis is inexpensive and cannot inju - ; makes a delightful effervescent lifchia-water drink which all regular xnout eatera should take now and then to keep tho kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications.
Before Mr. Justice White too'k thi oath of chief justice he-was required to subscribe to the "oath of allegiance" required of Ml ex-Con federates entering upon federal office. When Judge Buchanan presented himself in the Tennessee supreme court as a member of that bodv anpointed by the governor a. i eV days agQ' ho was called upon.unvfer (he law of tho state, to swear that he hail not 'engaged in a duef since (hr passage of the statute on the' subject and that he would not do so during hi'3 term of office. It is well that judges on tho bench bo bound by sufficient formal obli gations and pledges. At the sam Ume such oaths as those mentioned vere formulated for times ..far. other "than the present, and it might bo well to abolish them.
And Rain Water Are Listed !n Strange Prescription Which Arresting Officers Believe !s Directions For Making Liquor and Beating Kansas "Bone Dry" Law Kansas, "dry" for 30 years, still made, sold, brought and used Hnuor Then Kansas, rent "bone dry," but Kansans still have a thirst notwith
standing. Tho following story fron' the Topeka (Kans.) Capital is one o; the many instances of individuals cir cum . enting and making a farco of tin law while dispensing vile Compound in lieu of whiskey: "Dragon blood" was included in the prescription used by "Tom" Stump ir his a.1 leered whiakv-makinir activities
!-- - , t-l V ! at the St. Charles hotel.' When Stumi
was arrested yesterday afternoon, oi information furnished by John Smith a patron of Stump's, he had in his pos session, in addition to four pint bottle of vile-smelling liquor, a formula whicl oolice ofiicials believe may have beei ased to meaufacture the whisky b( md with him, and also the whisk which he is alleged to have sold tc Smith yesterday. Stump was intoxicated when arrested. Smith was aruestecl yesterday after noon at 2 o'clock in a semi-iiitoxicatC(' r;ond'tion. Ho had just left the St Charles hotel. Before Chief Wilson ai police headquarters, Smith said he hac bought the liquor in his possessio! from Stump Smith's information led U a raid nn Rt.nrrm's room at the St. Charles at
4. Aim u ail
o ciociv yesteraay auernoon. iiion js just ar cheap I'd not be s'prised
room was filled With bottles of drugs u That we'd save money in tho end
U'-nWzvu- r9K 3rarsonW
Cf"!28drB Qry for FIetGr?s
POTES BISHOP
GRANDMA
HER
IBEil IE
Hf!H GET GM
La w.y er Takes I ssl ywR Preacher Who Vaicw "Dry" Views in Lenien Sermon
Attorney Homy Probnaco nas sont ho follov.'n letter to the Rev. -uvrge vr. Gunnell, wiokis delivern; üoonday addresses at the Lyric
mid. when he har! picked liimself up
fiain. Tlie doorkeeper, when he could and words to express his amazement.
vna profound in his apologies. There J
happened to be in the play an inci-it-nt of a similar land, and at tho lose of the performance, in a little speech he was called upon to make, the count complained that the aclor lid not" make liio most of this inoili nt. "T know exactlv what I am talfc in aijout," he said, "for I've jus son thrown downstairs mrself.w
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his perP j&f')'?'-L' sonal supervision since its infancy. ur?X 'CUCt aiiow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good V are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR I A Castoria is y harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. or more than thirty years it has "been in constxat use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Eeverishuess arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Chiidren-'s Panacea The Mother's Friend.
r
5TORÜÄ ALWAV
f Bears the Signature of
J7u
Us Im Over 30 Years
The Kind Toci Have Always Bought
THF CJNTAUn COM rAMV. NCWVCn.' I TV.
THE WAIL OF A MALE WHO BOUGHT. BY MAIL
Ma was reading out loud fron her magazine, When she says to me, "The best I've seen For all the things that musi be had Is this here low price mail house ad. "litre's Cross Grained Oats, 9 cents no more 'Gainst 10 they're charging at the store. And if all the rest that's advertised
iiid liquors, according to the chief of police. Two entire drug oases were rilled with bottles. A whisky glass with which it is thought that Stumi served his patrons, was found in the search. "Drag and Blood." The search at police headquarters uncovered Stump's formula. Here if the Avay he had it written: "Prescription: 5c Snake Root, 5c Idine Potash, 5c Ginsang root, 5c May Apple root, 5c Drag and Blood, Bittei apple, Pint rain water. ' Boild twe half pints with, gin, one pint. Dose teaspoonful." Late last night Stump had not sufficiently recovered to explain the prescription. Stump has been boarding and rooming at the St. Charles hotel for the past year and a half, according to H. B. Lowe, manager of the hotel. During that time he has had no' business except trading horses. Lowe himself disclaims any knowledge of Stump's alleged activities He has seldom visited Stump's room, he savs and, according to a statement by him last night, he was not aware
f
his week:
I heard vou at the Lyric Theater at that any illegal transactions were be
She Kept Her Locks Dark and Glossy, with Sage Tea and Sulphur.
tho roonday services, and touching
v' ot you have to say in relation to i-.v.-i Oion, I want to offer a very can-
vJ- criticism. A tew months ago l v;ro!e a letter to Bljliop Tuttle, in which I expressed genraÖyriy oriti-i-'ü-i of proliibition.tlijch received the reply in which lie said: "Yos, I entirely agree with you about 'prohibition.' 'Temperance I' C all means support it yourself and
urge it upon others. It is 'self con-
Wlien you darken your hair with SagG Tea. and Sulphur, :o one can tell, because it's done so naturally, so evenly. Preparing this mixture, though, at ho.me is musay and troublesome. For 50 cents you can buy at any drug store the ready-
f f n. ;wri;nnf P.nHori "WvP.th's trol. But prohibition is extenoi con
Sage and Sulphur Compound." You just I trol and Liberty cries aloud, 'have less offect Qf prollibitlon un(ler war C01ldl dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and less of that I ontreat, rather than ÜQm Jr abQut tQ nQtify workmen il
and draw this througn your nair, casing more anrt more or u, at oivuisauou i nilinjtiors plants fanners in the con one small strand at a time. By morning ml Dr0gress advance.' " I nfi aui in the Mn nil
T 11 1111 ll LI i 11 Ulli.' lUl ü i &.1 hi&W -ww
cpected to give
be deprived
ing carried on.
Stump was arrested by the count authorities a little more than a yeai ago on a charge of violating the pro hibitory statutes, but he was released because of lack of evidence.
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ESTABL!SHEE?M87
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THE DIFFERENCE. fM.irninc 1Vlemh N. Y. City. 3 England, after three years of war, is going to increase the amount of grain that may go into beer; the United States, v with no experience
whatever enabling us to judge of the
ll Hicnnnn'ira n nil n I inr nji- ' . -i . - -Y...
ii gr i au uit-;- j v,-as surprised 10 near yua iluvu ! nn,i all others th?t are 63 nft.n nnl.'nntinn nr f.wn. vonr hair 1)2- . . . . .. ... , tiuu un ULiiuiij tuui hiu cj
"iMw Lrk. olossv and Ul u?e ot 10rce 10 . . .. 1 ' at their best, that they will
l"urHi.t - yv.'lon. lor everyone wno uouovoa , - b
Grav, faded hair, tliouga no uisace, . rm n to Til ake ootL honest or sober i ,
1? H. 1 L' 11 Ul J i ikv . " - " " I s
sire & youthful and attractive appear- )y "Corco."
ancc, get busy at once with Wyeth's Sage p i alld my family are Splscoand Sulphur Compound and look years palaIls Cincinnati (O.) Times-Star, vouncer. This readv-to-use preparation
is a delightful toilet requisite and not a. medicine. It is not intended for the cure, -
mitigation pr prevention of disease.
n n- mi-n-i - J m " ' HAMILTON BlfQW
lK i
I
T' .K f mfknm
W. H. TAFT POINTS OUT
FAILURE OF PROHIBITION
l i la
n n n fXrffffAo SOff
In an address at the annual commemoration day exercises of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, former President oi the United States, William H. Taft, observed, m part, according to the Cincinnati TimesStar: Referring to national prohibition the former Presidontsaid he did not
j want to put himself in opposition ' to prohibition in states where a
majority of the people favored it. He thought it fair, however, "to cite the Instances of failures in this regard in some parts of such stated as nn a fortiori argument to show the failure and the demoralizing failure that must attend an attempt by the national government to en
force prohibition In what are now
Mr. Taft said he fully approved thelocal option system.
NO CIGARETTES FOR
ARMY, SAYS W. CT. U.
A dispatch from Omaha, Neb., to the Dayton (0.) Daily News says: Whether American soldiers in Franco should depend on Jieir French and English comrades for their cigarettes has caused a controversy between local Red Cross workers ar.d members of tho Women's ChrUiian Temperance Union. The lar.- :--e unalterably opposed to placf:.;, tto papers in com fort kits stuw to private soldiers by the local Red Cross. But the sentiment seems about evenly divided. While the W. C T. U. members have expressed themselves against sending the papers to the soldiers, leading women of the city have taken a stand with the Red Cross workers, saying that "it is utter foolishness to attempt to deny the men fighting on tho field and in wet, cold trenches tho comfort of cigarettes. Consequently the Red Cross workers announced they would continue to send the "makinV to the soldiers, regardless of. "utterly foolish protests."
By trading with our tow price friend."
'So I shot an order Into the mailIt carried my name, it carried my kalo. I ordered a lamp and a rocking chair, A pail of prunes and some underwear. My wife, she ordered two petticoats. A new false puff and some Cross Grained oats; A Noah's Ark ftr baby's toy, A pair of boots for Bub. the boy; Stockings for Nell, a waist for Lizzie Just writing that order kept me busy. Well, we shot the order into the maU 'Twas all of a thirty dollar sale: We figured out three days was enough To fetch us that dodblasted stuff. Theygot my coin, but not a pep Did I hear from the firm of Grab & Keep. 'Twas all of two weeks maybe three Before them goods arrived for me. I got a notice, hitched the ma'ar And drove three miles to the railroad car. I found a whacking big box there Some smashed up, but I didn't care. (When you've honed for prunes until it hurts And your back is cold for lack of shirts. When the goods in front of you 's labeled "Must," You crab 'em if the box is bust!) So 1 heaved the wreckage into the cart And headed for home, feeling pretty smart. My goods had come from a town that's real. And I'd saved four dollars on the deal! We soon got It ue and opened the case And looked at .ir purchases, face to face Well. sir. "twr an eye opener, you can bet.. And one that I shan't soon forget! The p ireel of oats was torn to rags But we'd saved twelve cents on a doen bags! The prunes seemed good, and the baby's toy Pefore It broke he bad one day's joy! My wife's false puffs was some horsehair stuff. And her petticoats 'wa'n't half large enough. The s:nr kings for Nell looked thin and frnl i. The wnist was ruined by a rusty nail The lamp was as lurid as a three weeks hull And iiHd 'bout a teacup Cull of oil The boo 9 for Bub cost the same, no more.
Than Hopkins asks at the vfllagc store J RutJh rocking chair, "bu'iit of solid oak." j Was t! funniest part of this wholesale
Oh. 'tr, as just like the picture, rod and ni :r But thu sise of tho thing's where we got stunje. Ma tried it and found 'twas a 'fals alarm 'Twas a foot too narrow from arm to nrn; N'ell Und more luck; she wedged right inBut we pried her out with the rolling pin' Then 1 set right down, and figured the sate That "ad" had made through the Ü. S mniL I fingered an hour, and then soiru more. And found we had nothing on tbe villagt store! I'd sent thirty dollars to Chicago, 111., And saved twelve cents on the totaf bill' Then I seen at once 'twas them nine cent oats Had taken our dollars and made us goats' So I sworo by all that wns holy and pure I'd read no &ds with a low price lure. ( stopped ma's magaxine on the spot Wilt I take it asain? I reckon not;
Leastwise not till they put a ban I On that "coms-on" stufl of the mall house ' nianl J
AMERICAN IN LONDON.
lira. Miller GraJiam, who is now one of the wealthy hostesses of j Grosvenor street, will take the place j of Mrs. Keppel, who was such a , great favorite of King Edward. She Is the widow of a California million- j aire and one of her ball novelties ;
was a huge watermelon whichwafl
A.ECKhRTr PROPRIETOR fm. ' .4.
We are better equipped than ever to hanöle wheat, We offer you fsdr weights and grades, Igsb reloading and co'urteoas treöjent C 3m.e
"zaid see us. We always pay Highest market price
JasiM-'F Roller Mills.
is.
Andrew W. Eckert Propr.
JOB pa
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L1NT1NG J
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.PRINTS
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vSEND THAT fiEXI PRINTING ORDER TO THE JOB "PBITING -DEPT. THAT WILL GIVE VOU HIGHEST QUALITY IjOWESI PIUCES & SUPERIOR. ERVJCEr
rputa inw ino miaaie oi tne Tt&j&
