Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 60, Number 5, Jasper, Dubois County, 5 October 1917 — Page 8
WITH THE FIGHTING FRENCH
DRINK A GLASS OF BEAU HCT WATER BErö.'c UREAKFAST.
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Says we will both look and fee! clean, sweet and fresh and avoid Illness.
Sanitary science has of late made rapid strides with results that are of untold blessing to humanity. The latest application of Its untiring research Is the recommendation that it is as necessary to attend to internal sanitation of the drainage system of the human body as it is to the drains of the house. Those of us who ar accustomed to feel dull and heavy -when we arise, splitting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongiie, nasty breath, acid stomach, can, instead, feel as fresh as a daisy by opening the sluices of the system each morning and flushing out the whole of the internal poisonous stagnant xaatter. Everyone, whether ailinT, sick or well, should, each morning before breakfast, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver and bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thu3 cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entiro alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. The action of hot water and limestone phdspnato on an empty stomach is wonderfully invigorating. It cleans out all tho sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast. "While you are enjoying your breakfast the Phosphatid hob water is quietly extracting a large volume of water from the blood and getting ready for a thorough flushing of all the inside organs. The millions of people who are bothered with constipation, bilious spells, etomach trouble, rheun atic stiffness; others who have sallow skins, Mood disorders and sickly complexions are urged to get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from the drug store. .This will cost very little, but is sufficient to make anyone a pronounced crank on the subject of internal sanitation. QUIT MEAT IF Y0Ö KIDNEYS HCT Trice Ublespoonfol of Salts if Back hurtfror Bladder bothers Drink lota of water. WAcild ft nation of meat eafiars and 9QT blood is filied with nrio cid, says a "irell-known aulhority, who warns us to to constantly on guard against kidney troubla Tho kidneys do their utmost to freo the blood of this irritating acid, but become weak from the overwork; they get sluggish ; the eliminativc tissues clog and thus tho waste is retained in the blood to poison the entire system. When your kidneys ache and feel like lump of lead, and you have stinging pains in tho back or the urine is cloudv, full of sediment, or the bladd r irritable, obliging you to seek reli. ! irw? th night; when you have seveij iiuaatches, nervous and dizzy spells, sleeplessness, acid stomach or rheumatism in bad weather, get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablcspoonful in a glass of water before breakfast each morning and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous Balte is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidney3, to neutralize the acids in urine so it is no longer a source of irritation, thus tending urinary and bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-watcr drink, and nobody can make 8. mistake by taking a little occasionally jto keep thu kidneys clean and &ctivc. G0Ü SAGE TEA IN It's Grandmother's Eecipe keep her Locks Dark, Glossy, Eeautifiil. The old-time mixture of Saxe Tea and Sulphur for darkening grav, streaked and faded hair is grandmother's recipp, and folks are again using it to keep their hair a good, even color which is (fuite sensible, as we are living in an age when a youthful appearance is of the greatest advantage. , Nowadays, though, we don't have the troublesome task of gathering the sage; ana xne mussv mixing at nonie. jaji drug stores sell the ready-to-usc product, improved by the addition of other ingredients, called "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound" for about 50 cents a bottle. It is verv popular bec:mse nobody can discover it has been appHcd Simply moisten vour comb or a soft orush with it and draw tins through your hair, talc ing one small strand at a time; by morn ing the gray hair disappears, but what delights the ladies with Wveth's Sage, and Sulphur Compound, is that, besides beautifully "darkening the hair after a lew applications, it also produces that EOlt lustre ana appearance oi aounuance which is so attractive. This ready-to-use preparation is a delightful toilet requisite for those who desire a more youthful appearance It is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. Take This To Ygi WM&i1 For Trial Bi and Booklet
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French Official Photo, from Pictorial Press, X. Y. Wine is a terrible thing. Anyway, that's what the Germans think. Wine, according to physicians and they know a little about it is largely responsible for the elegant physical condition of the French soldiers who drink it at every meal. In the above picture a group of poiius are preparing to take wine barrels to the front.
.MIES People Themselves Should Decide Questions of Public Welfare, Says Top.eka Journal The following is an editorial from the Topeka Journal, printed in Prohibition Kansas: "The submission .of- a prohibition amendment to the -Federal Constitution to the states for ratification -opens up a new phase of legis1 ation. All pre vious amendments have dealt with pol-' icies of admin Istrati6iu All matters relating to tdfe public welfare have) hitherto been left to Congress or tot the State Legislatures. ' I "There is much loose thinking about j the Constitution nowadays and agood deal of it arises from the numerous proposals to amend that document with the addition of matter which is suhject for statutory rather than constitutional action. The fathers of the republic purposely raacje the ConsMtu tion difficult of amendment; but persistence is overcoming difficulty. What was designed as a charter of rights may be endangered if - it is to be tinkered as though it were merely a code of police regulations. "When Conress'decided to curb the use of narcotic drugs it did not submit an amendment , to the Federal Constitution to the states for endorsement. It passed a law which became effective at once, instead; of . heing delayed s:x years. If Congress be convinced that i tho country wants a 'bone civs' statute, why d- :s it net enact onet and end the' , whole matter? Vakens the Constitution. "Tt mav - "uc3tion that an amndniet to - nstHution should be favored which t: ds to weaken the forof tint instrument by making it a col lection of statutes rather than an outline of fundamental principles, i "It is remarkable that an amendment of this character should have been adopted, while the suffrage amendment, which concerns rights denied to a large' class of citizens, can not obtain a lock-in. There appears to
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be no hesitation in trying to take from to the people rights which they have held from the foundat'on of the government, but the lawmakers balk when it is proposed to grant to one-half of the citi
zens rights which have been withheld frnm them since the foundation of the cenator Calder of kqw Yoi . prefacing his negative vote on the pro hibition amendment with an explanation, said that he would never vote for an alteration in the fundamental law unless he felt certain that there was ail overwhelming demand for it on thej part of the people of his state. This is an echo of the old state's right doctrine which still is strong in many sections, and may turn the temporary victory of the prohibition leaders into a defeat!" Topeka (Kan.) Journal, j PROHIBITION AND CRIME. Virginia has been dry for nearly twelve months, but there have been several brutal murders and assaults in that time, and the first lynching in many years. We observe also t'hat in the county of Pittsylvania there are 44 divorce cases on the docket, 27 having been added since tho la3t term of the court. Prohibition does not make human nature intrinsically better. Herald, Newport News, Va. John Barleycorn is getting kicked, bumped and jostled every time we look in his direction, but there is somebody chucking him under the chin on the sly. Tho government's statistics prove that much.-lIoustoa Pot
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Philadelphia Bispatch Insists That the "Wet" Victory In "Old Dominion" and Woman's Suffrage Defeat in Pine Tree State" Presage Universal Downfall of "Brys"
The tide has turned. The lep 4 iuokedfor reaction has set m. Fanaticism and social regeneration has run its course. There are signs on all sides' of a return to national sanity. Virginia led the way by electing governor of that state a candidate who dared to affirm that he wlis in favor of leaving to mankind some choice as to its manner of living. This temerarious candidate, although bitterly opposed by the Anti-Saloon League, the prohibition partisans and all the various ramifications of fanaticism, was elected by a considerable plurality. The bone-dry element affected to regard the result in Virginia as a fluke and attempted to explain it away -on grounds local and parochial. Then came the test in' Maine. Female suffrage was the Maine is JUST READJTH'rS ! To the Editor of The Louisville CourierJournal. The Rev. Dr. Powell of . your city, asserts that it is the essential, indisputable unquestioned right of ö,emoo. racy to have its will done in legislative action on the Liquor question, and claims that if a majority of .the people vote for prohibition such action is in accord with fundamental democratic j principles. j The notion that a majority Ijas a j right to dictate to the minority in a j matter of their personal tastes and j habits is wholly without justification With your permission I would like to ask Dr. Powell the following .questions: ! First Do you believe that a majority of vegetarians have a moral Nright to enact laws prohibiting the production, sale or use of meat? Second Do yon believe t'hat a majority of Hebrews have a right to prohibit the sale or use of ham and bacon? Third Do you believe that a majority of rationalists have . a right to prohibit the exercise of their religious functions by Christians? Fourth Do you believe that the majority rule of the Mohammedans in Turkey justifies the suppression of Christianity among the Armenians? Fifth Do you believe that a majority of nonsmokers has a right to deprive the minority of the pleasure they derive from smoking? Sixth Do you believe that a majority of infidels have a right to abolish Sunday-schools? Seventh Is there a chapter, verse or line in the Bible that justifies the resort to law, the policeman's club and the jail as a means for making men temnerate or moral? Eighth Did Jer- Chr?t say: "This is the truth: Y.t .-.n elieTe it or we will fine, imp- i yoa. jtnd if'Vou resist, kill you?" Ninths-Has the individual no rights that the majority must respeet? Tenth Is the fundamental principle of Christianity the law of love, of sympathy, of toleration, of kindness, of the regeneration of mankind through the salvation of the individual, or is it a gospel of hate for those whose habits are different from those calling themselves Christians, but whose ideas of government are wholly those given to the world by Mohammed? . WHIDDEN GRAHAM. New York.
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sue, and the fight of the women had the support of President Wilson and of ex-Prefcfdent Roosevcfit. Maine is a prohibition state. So confident were the forces of ''morality by legislation" that a pivotal value was in advance placed upon tlve Maine result"As Maine' goes," quoted the agitator;, "so goes the Union." Well, Maine went in the direction of sanity. jVIaine defeated female suffrage defeated it with a decisiveness that admits of no argument. Maine, fresh from her experience with the prohibition crowd, was enabled to meet without illusions the female suffrage pleas. The pendulum is swinging the other way. The faddistic element has overplayed its hand. Philadelphia Sunday Dispatch. WE HAVE ENOUGH WHISKY 1 TO LAST TWO YEARS "Friends of a year when the world seems lost, and the star of hope is a damn dim thing, Let us rejoice, at whatever cost, and seek the theme of a song to 'sing! The Russians run. and the dogone Hun holds to a dozen fronts at once; The French, it is said, ajre all but done, and cvon the Briton sometimes grvnto. There i.i wir at ea, there is war cf hore; tho whole wide world is a vale of urs; But gloom . not wholly closed the door we l.ve enough whisky to last two years! ' s Whisky, they say, is an evil thing; and so it" is when you try to make The stills run nights by electric lights and can't keep count of the drinks you take; But all "the same, in a world of woe where there's nothing good that can cheer one up When any moment the thing may go the way of the Kaiser and of Krupp-r-Wheii the days are dark and the flights are bad, when sleep is a long nightmare of fears, What i the matter with being glad there's whisky enough to last two years? It isn't much we will grant you that; but something still at a time of earth; A ray of hope when a four-eyed bat couldn't find his way about the earth. You have l)een in a tunnel and seen tne light far, far off, like a distant star; Weil, it's just that sort of a cheering sight where gloom has left the door ajar. On a sea of soft drinks, soda-pop on a wascQ of water and sweet nearbeers 4 sail! What ho! Bid the captain stop! There is whisky enough to last two years! Ciark Mc Adams in St. Louis PostDispatch YES, INDEED, BROTHER. The nation's bill for smokes and drinks is the highest ever. Which proves that prohibition is really with us. We paid taxes on alcoholic drinks last year to the tune o $lS6,5S3,055f which Implies an increased allowance by 26,000,000 gallons. Florida Timos-Union.
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Xftf e ire better equipped cli an ever to handle whet. We oner you fair weights and grades, less unloading and c our teems treatment. Corns and see us. We always pay Highest market pries, Jasper Roller Mills,. Andrew W. Eckert Propr,
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So Da It Now'- Advertise in the CDÜRIER.
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Tor Infants and Children, tliers Know jM -Genuine Gastofia Always Bea "the Signatur THE C tNTAUH COMPANY. flCWYOBH CfTT. world is with you! will never pay great Unknown. ' J1 iL f i
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