Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 60, Number 4, Jasper, Dubois County, 28 September 1917 — Page 1

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" r JASPER WEEKLY COURIER f V Vol. 60. Jasper, Indiana, Friday, SEPTEMBER 28, 1917, No. 4. "

r ENGU3H BEAUTY CUP.

Wtak Tcj nvitta Sleep nnä Improve

; te v-omol2xic n.

I ach i- ?he who consult in

Upon tin tiftii cninjiiexion to ii

dulge in i- "ailed the Englisi

beauty cup Mr. UhuUtone took i

each nml.i nf his lue as lonsj as h

bad health, and it is the cup whicl

keeps many an hnghsh beauty go

inor t. is iimn v ton. but tea mft(l(

I j without U2 nerve destroying at

iributes. I.f properly made it in

ltes sleep.

.You take half a small colret

ipoon of ton, and you scatter it ii the bottom of a very large cup

The German coffee cups are beat for this purpose. Over this you 1 ' - . ....

pour as much boiling, bubbling wa

ter as the i up will hold.

The sam er is placed on the toj

of the cup in Chinese fashion. iNo

rvisifi Iii .rlrian fno nfTV

which must bo thrown over all. I

is an oddh .-haped cozy, made t(

cover cup I '-aueer. It stands fo

five minute- tc sdceo.

Now the scientific part ol

the cup. v"i take three very thir

slices of h" !. and you lay then1

in 8 bisr hot flip. On top of th(

slices of Imp nn vou place a bii'

maraschino, and then on top of al'

you po.ir in t lie' tea, putting it

thron tri) a strain er.

The result will be n fine, weak

hot, but healthful cup of tea witl iust the riih t flavor of lemon. Yoi

can have euar if vou want it, ane

Gladstone's rule of three big lump?

nll do vou no harm, for sugar is

rreat builder up of the muscles.

By the wav, if you are fagged out,

day or night, try eating a little

ugar. A lump of sugar will re

tore the stomach and take awa

that tired footing. Sugar is recom

mended to women whose cheoks arc

hollow. It has a way of building uj

tissue.

A big cup of tea at night is ex

cellent, but the trouble is that mos-

persons nrnkg, it too strong. . -1 h-

weaicerthebetter. Hie same tm

of cofTee, whir-h. :f taken vc.-t-tnough and with jhnty oi ?o. sugar, acte nr. n nurhtraii. Nt penon in a t -' d u niük light. In Par- rhe trench In, takes her f;rtM cup of whi chocolate !'p theater vr kiicuit, or siji- fe rt-

srhicn i n:-tv u-

. .1. .u

CONSERVATION TRUTHS.

The man at the bench is the worker of the man In the office. 1 them get together for tlio eomn food. Stick to your Job. The man v jumps from one Job to another in learns enough about any particu class of work to become valuable In

Every business has three partin Capital the employer. Laborthe t ployee. The public the consumer. . industry can thrive if co-opera ti among the three Is lacking. No bu ness can succeed that has a dishorn or indifferent partner. Each parti, owes a duty to tho others. Get t aether.

Strong Words. Big words pass for sense with some people and sometime.3 may be .very successfully used when nothing else will answer, says an English writer. Thus when a man, in great alarm, ran to his minister to tell him he could see spots on the sun and thought the world must be coming to hn end, "Oh, don't be afraid," aaid the good minister, "it's nothing but a phantasmagoria." "Is that all?" said the frightened man, and then he went away relieved. Averv smart lawyer some thru?

lince had the misfortune to lose a case for a client who had every reason to expect success. The client, s plain old farmer, was astounded by the long bill of costs and, hastening to the lawyer's office, said, "I thought you told me we should cer-

tainly gain that suit?" "So 1 dm,", answered the lawyer, "but, you see,j when T brought ii up there before j the judges they aid it was a quorum non jttd'ee."" "Well, if they said it was as bad r.s t!:at' replied the , old farmer. "1 l -i:t bonder e lost lt. And he pad tm costs and biff fee lxsidt-- ihout anothaj

laurmur.

WITCHCRAFT IN ENGLAND.

Tti Last of the Judicial PrataoutUni

and Executions. Sir Matthew Hale, it ia true, had

hanged two poor women at Cambridge in 16G4, but a few years latex

Lord Chief Justice Holt set him

self strongly against such charges

arid in every case tried before him directed the jury to bring in a ver

dict of acquittal. In a. celebrated trial at Guildford in 1701 not onlj

was the supposed witch found not

ruuty, but her false accuser, on John Hathaway, was condemned tc

a year's imprisonment and to itand in the pillory three times. Yet

horrible to relate, a woman named Hicks and her daughter, a child oi

nine, were hanged together al

Huntingdon on July 5J8, 171b, loi raising a storm of wind in league

with the devil.

The last judicial sentence foi

witchcraft in England was in 1736. one Jane Wenham bc.ng actually

found guilty, according to the in dictment, of "conversing familiar iy with the devil in the form of a

cat. The judge, however, procured

ft reprieve lor poor old Jane, and

she was ultimately released, to.end her days in peace.

Last, the witchcraft act was re-

T2aled for the United Kingdom1 in

the same ycur. It was quite time,

for only nine years earlier, m 177.

a woman was brought before Cap

tain David Itoss, deputy sheriff oi

Sutherland, charged with "cauim her daughter to be shod by the dev

D' and io making her lame both it

hands and feet. The fact hanng been proved to the captain's atis-

faction, the old woman was put into

a tar barrel and burned at Dornoch. The weather being cold at tha time,

we are told that she "sat composedly warming herself by the fire prepared to cons.ime her while the oth er instrument of death were get ting njadv. Tlie hst attempt to execute t witch in Fnghuul ended disastrously for the pt r't rator.. In 1751 a. Tring two old people named (b borne, man and wife, being suspect ed of witchcraft, were seized by c crowd, stripped, cross bound and thrown into a pond. Both did ol this brutal treatment. But the witchcraft act had been repealed, and, a verdict of willful murder having been returned against one Colley, the chief instigator of thi a aault, he wai in due count trie '

amd hanged. Cprnhill Matnj,

What Attracted the Attention af ffc Solemn Faced Man. One of our southern salesmen brought home the following from his last trip: The proprietor of a tanyard built a stand on one of the main streets of a Virginia to wo for the purpose of Belling leather and birpag new

nides. i

When he had completed tht building, he considered for a long time what sort of a sign to put up to attract attention to the new establishment. Finally a happy thought struck him. He bored an auger Hole through the doorpost and stuck a call's tail into it with the tufted end outside. After awhile he saw a solemn

faced man standing near the door

Provad Hsr FlirtSanator Penrose at the dedication of Pensylvania's splendid cap Hol at Harrisburg said of a certain! peech that had been made at a private dinner before the dedicatory ceremonies : "That speech was pregnani with meaning. It revealed in every sentence its author's character. BrieJ and full and illuminating, it ref winded me of the beautiful young ady who murmured to herself one afternoon as she paused uncertainly on a street corner: '"What a bore! For the life o1 me I canH rei jmber whether Fn to meot Morris Tasker street o; T'aaker in Morriß atrt " Tha Black Sesp. What," asked the man who had returned to his native town aftei an absence of many years, "became of Ed Ferguson T "Ed? Oh, he's doin' fine. Got the best livery stable anywhere around hero- and runs the depoi hack." "Let's see! He had a younger brother, hadn't he?" "Y es Lern. He never amounted

to much. Wrote poetry and painted

pictures. I guess the family Kinö of disowned him. At least he wen1 away several years ago, and I duinu what ever became of him.'1 Chics p Tribuns.

IT

xamine Carefully

Tha Truthfu-i CW

'

I i ' each Walk-Over Shoe and yon will ünd each detail is i taken care of from top to back of keel. Graceful curves, careful attention to each detail and i right materials give 100 cents worth in wear and looks, for each dollar spent.

W. Melchior & Son

Bast Side Public Square.

Jasper, ind.

r Auntie (upon her returnto somewh&l pessimistic nephew) Did Tommy ploj nith you while I was out;- Ja! Ö lldn't make you cry? Nephew He made mo er r JSf'li Mt. TommyOh, Philip, I made you laut all the time mother was outl Well, I laughed till I ca

Harold Will you take my seat, lady -Ally Sloper.

Nursery Rhyrn.

loolanc: at the sign. The tanner

watched him a minute and then etepped ou and addressed him. 6ood morning, sir !" he said. 'Moni'!,, said the other, without takint his eyes off the gn. 'Tant to buy leather ?" asked the tanner.

'in o

"Got any hides to sell?" "Xo." "Are v'i a farmer?

'Merchant?"

"No." i(T - 0

ii

9f

1

"No."

"Doctor r9 "Xo." "What are you, then ?" "I am a philosopher. Pve been standing here for an hour trying to figure out how that calf got through that auger hole." Boot Strap.

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Barke ty, bark! Old üog Tray Took to his paws and ran away Over tne hilltopi fresh and gTeexv Jicd since then he's not been ee SSarkety. bark.1 0M log Tray.

i?ljäQ come back to your horn a.

y&mmmK yum

- &

SomeiKincJ

Hamilton Bqwh

ToSell?

ft mm

lAdveirtisit

ttooudn üuf

l:oluitins

i

1 Year Daily by Mail SJ.OO Regular Price $5.00.

Courier OCTOBER Bargain

fAmtAto SON

One Year Daily and Sunday by Mail $6.00 Regular Pries $7.50-