Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 60, Number 35, Jasper, Dubois County, 10 May 1918 — Page 8

DRINK HOT WATER BL ORE BREAKFAST

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""ClIfttODlOd to Lko up . oDgtie, foul jraath. or y headache: or if your

V, j and turn Into ,zas and

yi have a real surpriLe await- . on

sv morning, immediately n, drink a glas? of. hot a tcaspoonful of limestone .a it. This ia ii -.ended to via nnrl then vcuzh nut of

your su.aa.ch, liver, Sidneys and thirty ft of intestines 11 the indi- . gestibls aste, poisons, sour "bile and toxins, a s cleansing, sweetening and purifying .he entire alimentary canal. Those subject to sick headaches, i backache, bilious attacks, constipation I

or any rm of stomach trr ablr, are

-t fi quarter pounu nmeL.'? from the drUt ' ore fr oying this morning irtsaid that men and ry this become enthu- -it up daily. It is a measure for it is more v - bep clean and pure on than on the ouini le, because cres do not absorb impuri!ooi, cat disease, pores . j f batr inss-'o is iihlons o p o practice Mit iv?:.r and p-cleanso, Ireshoa tlie ihm," so hot : teaspoonful of limestone act on the stomach, liver, .ad bowels. Limestone phosn. ir expensive "wllite powder

"A Great Net of Mercy dxawn through an Ocean of Unspeakable Psirx"

The American Red Cross

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IT COST ONE DOLLAR TO SAVE THIS LIFE I r Perhaps It Ws Your Red Cross Dollar That Gave This V Bioken Flier His Chance to Live. ,r f.4.- '

From the ground they could see that there was something the matter with his machine. And even while they watched through their glasses he began to fall. A minute later the little Ford ambulance was puffing its way across the five miles of shell-stricken road that lay between tiem and him. They found him beside the machine. He was unconscious, but a tree had broken his fall. "Just in thd nick of time," said the doctor crisply. "He'll be a pretty sick boy for a few weeks,, but we'll have him all right again and back with his French comrades." So they put him into the little Ford

rped t

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By BRUCE BARTON Of the Vigilantes, ambulance, and less than an hour after thoy saw him fall he was safe in a clean white bed. "That's what it means to have plenty of equipment, plenty of ambulances and doctors and bandages and everything," said the Red Cross man who told me. "It means the difference in getting there on time or getting there just a minute too late." "Wonderful!" I answered. "And

how much did it cost you to make that tripto save that one French boy's life?" He flushed a little. "We don't measure it in terms of money." "I know it. But what do you think it cost," I persisted- for gasoline and

the trip and the bandages and all?" "Perhaps a dollar, maybe two. But why do you ask?" "A dollar!" I answered. 'A dollar to save a boy's life! To send him home again from the war to the mother and father who have scanned every headline and waited breathlessly for every visit of the letter carrier! Can a dollar do a miracle like that?" ( "It can," said the Hed Cross man. And then the thought occurred to mo that perhaps it might have been one of my dollars. It was somebody's dollar that did it. It might have been mine or one of yours. Who knows?

mm EM LEI RED CR0

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She Kept Her Lock- Dark sfed Glossy, with Sage Tea and Sulphur.

Three Thousand Mile Dash Across Russia to Succo'rftoumaRLa Heroic Work Required.

When yem darken your hair with Sage Tea and Sulphur, no one can tell, heUHf" i: mc so naturally, so evenly hrt-i r'ng this mixture, thpugK a! h"ine 3 mussy and troubleBorne. At little cost you can buy at any dru; store the ready-to-use preparation. Improved by thJ addition of other ingredients called "Wyeth' Sage and Sulphur Compound." Tou Just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning all gray hair disappears, and, after another application or two, your hair becomes beamtlfully darkened, glossy and luxuriant. Gray, faded hair, though no disgrace, in a sign of old try, and as we all fleslr a youthful sind attractive appearance, get busy at once with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound and look years younger. This ready-to-use preparation is a delightfW toilet requisite and not a medicine. It Is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of diabase. QUIT MEAT IF II KIDNEYS ACT BADLY

Take t&bldspoonfol of Kit if Bade kurt or Bladder hotktri DKnk lota ofcvat&&

Poor mtN Kfanp4a, once so happy and so toeauUful! Bobbed of its rich lands bj German hordes, its people driven ba.ijpo- .jymselves, the once picturesauV city of Jassy is now rowded beyond itst limits with the ountry's destitute and starving. Kothing but the most heroic efforts f the American Red Cross has kept Roumanla from .frfctually disappearing irom among .Conations of the earth. When all those who could leave the country had fled Henry W. Anderson, American Red CJross commissioner to that utraged country, stuck to his posu Diseased, starving and ragged people were all about him. The cause seeded ; hopeless. Even Red Cross money t'ould buy nothing in Roumania, for the country was stripped. So Anderson appealed to our Red Cross in .Russin. There were supplies there, but how. could they be

carried the 8,000 miles that separated Petrograd from jassy. Russia wras struggling against internal disorder, which in the Ukrainian territory wäs civil war. Even with the authority and protection of the Bolshevik government the case seemed hopeless. Yet help came a whole train load under the charge of Lieutenant Magunson of the American Red Cross in

Russia. And Anderson sent this ca

ble : "We are today distributing food and clothing to more than 10,000 people and increasing numbers every week.

Expecting shipment of lour more cars

of food from Odessa this week. By

extraordinary effort we believe we can

continue purchaserof suQicient supplies to carry on work. And so our Red Cross is showing all the world tbat not only are our men ready to fight for the right, but are ready to help all those others who are in this battle lor freedom.

A GRUELLING NIGHT . FOR THE CANTEEN MAN A Red Cross Canteen man wearily banked the fires under the kettles. Their bület is in an old house near

by. By the light of a candle the Red

Cross convoyer undresses and rolls

into his blankets. Suddenly there comes a sharp, cracking sound, and a red flare lights up the room. The convoyer rolls quickly out of his bunk, catches up his blankets and runs down the rickety stairs to the cellar. There he finds his French assistant and a lot of soldiers. They exchange nods and then seat themselves on boxes. Four more sharp, cracking noises follow in rapid succession, and a mournful roar. This is only the beginning of an artillery duel which lasts all night At break of day the Red Cross man bestirs himself, shakes his assistant and tumbles up the stairway out into the yard. It is strewn with debris. A shell struck (he next house in the night and blew out the wall. The convoyer

and his man set to work gingerly, foi the air is chill. They poke the tires and throw on fresh wood and then set to work to prepare the food. Within an hour the canteen is ready for bus) ness. This Is a sample night of a Red Cross Canteen man at the front

'THE NEW JOAN

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W.ÄM ft nation of röBafc eaters an3 Wir blood is filled with tm4q acid, says a well-known authority, who warns ua to be constantly on guard jgainat kidney trouble.

The kidneys do their tttmo to froo the blood of this irritfcühg acid, bufc fotcome weak from the orarrork; they get sluggish; the climinaMve tissues clog and thus the waste is attained in the blood to poison the entim y stent When your kidneys aot and feel like lumps of load, and jem have stinging pains in the back or the rine is cloudy, full of sediment, or the Hadder is irritable, obliging you to soot relief during the night; when you hay severe headachea, nervous and dizzy iells, sleeplessness, acid stomach or rnwtmntism in bad weather, get from your pharmivciat about

four ounces of Jad Baits; taxo a ablcspoonful in & glass, ff water before breakfast each morning and in a few days your kidneys wiU cfc fine. This famous salts ia made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia. and has been used for eeneratrona

to flush and stimulate dogged kidneys, , to neutralize the acids Jtn urine so it U pto longer a source ci irritation, thua I coding urinary and blaiWer disorders. Jad Salts is inexpewdrc and cannot f Injure; makes a delightful effervescent . Htkia-watar drhdc, nd fetbody can make : a rniiMak fcj tafcii ; a Bttle occasionally , ! kacs iae kddncjoi ckj aid active.

I SO EASY! LIKE ! ROLLING OFF LOG

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I Sore, touchy cornt top hurt- j I ing, then lift rfcht out I . wHh fingers

You corn-pcßtercd ntm and women need Buffer no longer. Wear the shoes that nearly killed you afore, ayi this Cincinnati authority, because a few drops of freezone applrcA directly on a tender, aching corn sof 8 Borenew at once and Boon the com loosens ao it can be lifted out, root &d all, without pain. A quarter ounce of fnwaone costs very little at any drug ßtoru but ia sufficient to tako off ever' hard or sott corn or callus. Tli is should ba tried, as it ia inexpensive and ia said not to inflame or even irritate the surrounding tlftgue or ikin. After you lift way the troublesome corn or callus th& akin underneath li as piuk, firm and hoafthy P1 ml yur han4v . - j

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Coutribuivd by YV. U Starre tt.

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SSVÄÄ 41 ALCOHOL- l't" t. -i i&lS j) AVoictnolcPrcparafioaforAs-. AiWaVS I sitnilatintherood byBcgula-; J Sil irai rTlicre-ojÄöünpcsüon; Signature

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THE CCNTAUH COMFAHY rlCW YO" CrT'

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' Ii I i 'Vl A, WiLiOiV

General Irsuraiice and Real Estati

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Special nue on Kann ' n. and lusiuanco loi Hu ois Pike a d ndj .'onai contii-F. IMre, Ton a n Hail, Life. iceiäet.t. Pinie, G??? Automobile, iv.irgiary and Liabih" y Tnpurance, Kouclin 0 ), rperesentacl. Phone 116 2.

1 .

I Friedman "V Schmutzler,

I Undertakers and Licensed Embalmer !

Lady Assistant for women and children. Motor Hearse FurnishedGalls answered at all hours day or night by . By K. B. Fried man

Phcne No. 205

Jasper Ind,

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ESTABLISHEDU847 "

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3äli... . A.ECKERTV PROPRIETOR" H

We are better equipped thau ever to handle wheat, We offer you fair weights and grades, less unloading and courteous treafrnent. Come and see us. W e always pay Highest market price, Ja six r Roller M ills. Andrew W, Eckert Propf,

The h&st lulricotum

without carbon

antnranhtl. MaiIa from illf-t PonUflTl

i-Rnla Onidn. A ca!n. tbin. hiük Are tet Oil whlCA

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first nnrrhiiM nf nnn tihl. of No Carb Auto Oil 'willfnr-

nhh KHKK one &5 iral. tiol barrel with fuct. fta to na bf

tou lac aersxaneat storaes. Price of oil la irwi fcfcU.,45 r

Oritr (rMMjtr (ihTih, cip CHAS. C. STOLL OIL CO. -E.cUin- , grtMe. UrJ Ü. (tummm 3. mflaorrJt Kirrem! PO tnWt W fMlkt i