Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 60, Number 6, Jasper, Dubois County, 12 October 1917 — Page 8
Kit atST i ' W3 f SOMEWHERE " OVER THERE" loTa Bite of
Breakf astlUntil v
YoifDrink,Water Sty ft'QTau of hot water ana pfipiphate prevents Illness
and keeps us fit.
Just as coal, -when Ifc burns, leaves !
"behind a certain amount of incombustible material In the form of ashes, i so the food and drink taken day after j day leaves in the alimentary canal a certain amount of indigestible ma
terial, which If not completly eliminated from the system each day, becomes food for the millions of bacteria "which infest the bowels. From this m&ss of left-over waste, toxins and ptomain-like poisons are formed and sucked into the blood. Men and women who can't get feeling right must begin to take inside baths. Before eating breakfast each morning drink a glass of real hot Water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash out of the thirty feet of bowels the previous day's accumulation of poisons and toxins and to keep the entire alimentary canal clean, pure and fresh. Those who are subject to sick headache, colds, biliousness, constipation, others who wake up with bad taste, foul breath, backache, rheumatic stiffness, or have a sour, gassy stomach after meals, are urged to get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from the drug store, and begin practicing internal sanitation. This will cost very little, but is sufficient to make anyone an enthusiast on the subject. Remember inside bathing is more important than outside bathing, because the skin pores do not absorb Impurities Into the blood, causing poor health; while the howel pores do. ttust as soap and hot water cleanses, sweetens -j and freshens the skin, so hotwater and : limestone phosphate action the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels.v
jjETIil For Infants and Children,
t..FJtrk i i i r -tr.
IF BACK US USE SALTS FOR KIDNEYS
-Fren. ( 11 ' ot f;- - la! P-p?s. N. Y. Herewith is presented the -first photograph to roach the United States showing American army officers drinking wfne with French soldiers. Now that they see this picture, what are our prohibition friends going to do about it? America is the "Land of the Free." The United States Senate recently decided to prevent civilians from giving liquor to the Sammies while they are fighting to free the world from the Kaiser. However, after a conference with members of the House, this clause was stricken out of the army bill, the final ruling making it an offense only for a person to sell liquor to a soldier in uniform. American soldiers in uniform are now getting liquor in France and England. The British drink ale and rum, the Germans beer and the French and Italians wine. Furthermore, nobody with a thimble full of brains can say that the efficiency of the fighting forces has been lowered by liquor served in moderation. Many there are who believe that the American army itself will deal the final blow to the national prohibition movement when, after partaking of French wine and British rum, it beats the Hohenzoliern steam roller int'c an insignificant atom of Deutsches Kultur.
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Eat Ion meat if Kidneyi feel liko I&ad or Bladder "bothers you Meat forma uric acid.
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Too Grsedy to Let Red Cross Werk Interfere. With Their Graft
The Ohio Dry Federation whatever t'.n i3 Oolde from the paid profes-
Li ; U rot riners who make neat i ic out ..f their agitation that keeps .lie state in a turmoil at all time . ul: have the date of effectiveness ' r the proposed dryness set for Feb- .;:?. j'J, 4'919. And in the meantime it would seem that the people have quite enough, on their hands at this time without having the bitterness of a wet and dry contest thrust upon them. It would be more to the point that the million or more dollars that will
bo spent in this contest be devoted to
ldocfc folks forget ihaf, the kidney, tike the bowels, get sluggish nd clogged fittd a ii&iMnfi occasionally, else wo fctv backache axn dull misery in the kidn? region., severe headaches, rheumatio tvriagc8, torpid liver; acid stomach, sleeplessness and all sorts of bldder -disorders. You simply must keep your kidneys active and clean, and the moment you feel an ache or pain in the kidney region, get about four ounces of Jad Bltf from any good drug etore here, take a: tablespoonful in a glass of water before 'breakfajjti for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and is harmless to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity. It also niutralizes ih? acuU in the urine so it no longer . .iuitcä, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensive; make a delightful effervescent lithia.crater drink which everybody should take dow and then to keep their kidneys clean, thus avoiding serious complications. A well-known- local druggist says ho
nQ Toil ffolfa r fnllrn WhftTinliwn I
."-rtT -b P-poses or to any oE. the
only troub!. " lulluProus war causes that are im pending. However, such use of the
i money would not furnish the opportunity for the agitators to get their ! u'ual rake-off and they declined amy ' such suggestions. This professional ' ?.g:tating for the accomplishment of alleged reform by legislation is entirely too lucrative to be given up without
Donated $104,259,014-io Humane Project, While the "Dry" Commonwealths'Furnished C14-.375.322 Also Paid Nearly Ten Times as Much Insome Taxes Ail-Round Superior Patriotism
"Notwithstanding all the talk of the prohibitionists concerning their patriotism, it is a fact that the wet states contributed $104,259,014 to the Red Cross, while the dry states gave only $14,375,322," yesterday said Joseph Debar, Cincinnati, President of the National Wholesale Liquor Dealers' Association. "It will be remembered that recently the wets 'offered to call off their proposed campaign in Ohio next November and use the campaign money for aiding the Bed Cross and
buying Liberty Bonds, if the Anti-Sa-
"Twenty-six wet states, together , with the District of Columbia, Hawaii; and Alaska, last year paid to the Tederal Government income taxes, cor-
porate and individual, amount to 322v 425,606.98. The 22 dry states paid $34,400,620.92.
"It is obvious from tne figures shown that the dry states are mjfeor- j
ity factors in financial standing, in patriotism, in liberality and in their support to the Government, and yet they are seeking to impose their fads
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SAGE TEA DARKENS Hl 10 ANT SHADE
Don't stay Gray! Here's Old-time Recipe that -Anybody can Apply.
an
, a struggle. Mansfield (O.) News. i
QUART OR BONE DRY ?
Granted that the decision of the
Federal Judge in West Virginia who held that a citizen of that state
The following are extracts from The Birmingham News, published in "dry" Alabama: "When The News called attention to the backset the Virginia Anti-Sa-loon League got in the rocent election, it was confident that some one of the prohibition loaders in Alabama would be so dissatisfied as to make reply. "The reply is on this page, coming from that estimable gentleman, Mr. P. M. Jackson. He does not like the quotations from Mr. Seibold's Washington correspondence in the New York World. His reasoning is that because The World and Mr. Seibold
are wrell known to be against prohi-
their statements are to be rewith suspicion, that they are
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linpruvcu uj tau .luuuivu w venting m maiiu.anuie, aie, im- y.ol?v1 th-t Mr ceibnid nas truthfully gredients, which can be : feppon to m .8xporlation of distilIed that I Se ,bo d truthlu y
J J LU iliV VA. wuw w x. ington takes of the political aspect of the Virginia election. "The facts may he disagreeable to
The use of Sage and Sulphur for reninrinrr fadod. prav hair to its natural
color dates baek to grandmother's time, might, under th local statute, bring
She used it to keep her hair beautifully in a quart of alcouolU beverage cacl
dark, s'ossv an(i attractive. W henover month for persora: use, is sustained
Jier hair took on tnac aui , i&aea or , th Q11Dreme (,urt of the United
streaked appearance, this simple mixture statc a 8ituation o:- interest is ereÄÄtÄ and a Ohio Through separate. n.iW.flato. Nowadars. bv askine at brethren it is learned that the organ-
loon League would do likewise. On j upon the brains, the patriotism and
behalf of the Ohio Anti-Saloon League, : the constructive ability of the great Dr. James A. White, Columbus, State and forceful majority who cary the Superintendent, turned down the sug- burdtns, financial and otherwise, of
gestion, thereby proving the unpatnotism of his organization.
the country." Cincinnati Commercial
Tribune.
THE SOUTH SPEAKS
anv drug 'store for a 50 cent bottle of izc(i temperance loroes tnrougn tneir bition "Wyeth 's Sage and Sulphur Compound;"- leaders rejected a proposed form, of, , '
tnn ti'i i i rrrT tiiiu tm niiiiiti iiifi 111 i'ti i it i.iuii. ninnimnnn aiiinnnmti,I; uitwm miv -i 1 1 i.i.
wll Hill 11 VI ViJ limivux v.u. r --j ui U111U ft Iii V. 1 1 vi iu 1 v uubuiiiiiwi; im v
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restore nmurw cuiui aua - fermented liquor in Ohio. Instead Vwell-known downtoum druggist says there was adopted one which provides ifc darkens the hair so naturally and that if may be brought in for medicevenly that nobody can tell it has been inal, commaxiaUuid sacramental pur-: applied. You simply dampen a sponge poses. ThAugÄtie interpretation of or soft brush with ifc and draw this tho Reeti amendment, so-called, to the through your hair, taking one strand at war measiires in Congress, all states a tims. By morning the gray hair dis-. prohibition laws were made appears, and after another plication or J illuminating extwo. it becomes ocautimUy dark ana rt ... . glossy pression has it. In the preliminary Wyeth'B Sage and Sulphur Compound discussions of the pending amendment is a "delightful toilefc requisite for tho3o both sides to the controversy have as who desire a moro youthful appearance, sumed as settled that if adopted it
It is not intended for the cure, mitigation wiU mean the total exclusion of alco
or prevention oi uuease.
the prohibition leaders, but there can be no successful contradiction of what the facts are. The Anti-Saloon League was defeated in Virginia. It did not
regard Mr. Davis as a prohibitionist, and th probability is that few prohibitionists voted for him, in spite of his declaration as to enforcement of tho laws. "The people of Virginia cast aside
WHiSKY AND PNEUMONIA
We are better equipped than ever to handle wheat We offer you fair weighte and grades, less unloading and courteous treatment Come and see us. We always pay Highest market pric Jasper Roller Mills. Andrew W. Eckert Propr,
To the Editor of The New York World. I have read a lot about prohibition
lately. I want to say that I raised a family and always used whisky as a preventive of pneumonia not as a punch, but taken in cold water as soon as the first chill was noted. There is no medicine to equal it as a preventive, ; which is better than letting the disease j come to a crisis, as the doctors do. j I have seen people die under medical treatment when this simple remedy would have cured them if taken In time. I have proved this time and again, and none of my family are invalids or drunkards. Those adulter- t ated soft drinks are what make people sick. Of course.it is the, -abuse, not the use, that does harm. How often has a little liquor taken people from
death's door in-cases of collapse? A WOMAN WHO BELIEVES IN COMMON SENSE.
SPEAKING OF MAINE
LEARN SHORTHAND It will pay vou well. It is an assured mans of kockI employment. It 13 more than that. It 13 an iavalc bic prrsonal accomplishment a time ana labor saver thruout your life BENN PITMAN PHONOGRAPHY la tau :ht in reliable schools evetywhere It 03 recotn irnd one to you. Or we will -wiv.je you about t if-instruction or leseoos bv mail. .te J The Phonographic Instimte,
cxncikkah, lScnn Piütnaa, Pmn&cr.
jLroroc 11. Urward. r.til
1 holic beverages from the state and is saloon domination a year or two ago,
ana now iney na siui luhi iuev uu not intend to substiuiie in its place
ir,w;? Wirf, hnlrfs flint th TJpaH Antl-SaiOOn league QOUiiuauua,
A A j-ww - - - ' ,
t being alternately used as a stimulant ' and a deterrent. The learned West
amendment applies only to interstate
commerce in liquor, but does not contravene the right of interstate transportation for personal use. It vould follow, therefore, Ümt if this view is supported Sy the Washington Judges, and prohibition is adopted in Ohio, the terrors of Sahara would not befall tin bibulous. They wouM be ablo to se "euro, through extra offforts, it is true a continuing supply of the- materia ' nought. Then Ohio would 'becom
or,ö of the galasio of states whicl
cially when it forms an unholy alliance' with the state political machine which it had terrorized into subjection. The Southern people will not stand anybody as boss very long, whether ordinary politicians or preach er-politicians."
I take issue emphatically and sincerely with those who would maintain and enforce a state prohibitory law Without the people behind a law, in each community where it is to be en-
' are "quart dry" and not '-bone dry."j forced, that law is impotent. Rty. 1 ClÄOinnAti Enquirir. Georg Eliot Corley.
To the Editor of The New York World7: After their decisive defeat in Maine, wonder what the Woman Suffrage leaders will do for an argument that it is the liquor people who have prevented the women from getting the vote. It is absurd to say now that in Maine, which has been a prohibition state lor sixty years, it was the liquor dealers who defeated Woman Suffrage. What
is true in Maine is true of the other J
states. All the southern states which Ml f . X
are now dry reiuses to give women tho vote. The "wets" are the best friends the women have, but some of the Suffrage agitators seem to think they can make more votes by insulting their friends who happen to be in a business which is so well patronized, by their "dry" friends. K. W. WILLIAMS. New Wirk.
tvl ly-M -
The saloon 'in relation to the wageearning classes of America is an organ of high development, adapting itself with perfectness in catering- in a hundred ways to the social and 'political j ntds of man. WalUr A. tykff.
Taverns Nourished Liberty The colonial inn played an important role during the Revolution and the stirring times preceding it The tavern keeper was the leader of his community in defying the English crown. His tavern was the meeting place of the little patriotic bands, which later wera assembled into an army by Washington. The tavern was used as a recruiting station, constantly sending men to the firing line to strengthen the ragged, untrained American army. Under the laws of the colonies, the taverns were required to keep for sale alcoholic beverages for the accommodation of guests and the townspeople, themselves, addition, most of the landlords brewed malt liquor for their trade, the colonial governments especially encouraging them in this. Indiana Brewers Association
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