Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 61, Number 16, Jasper, Dubois County, 13 December 1918 — Page 8

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COMFORTS, SMILES AND CAKE

LIKE MOTHER USED TO MAKE

Thus Every Red Cross Canteen Becomes t Bit of HomJ

for Our Soldiers in France.

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GIFT

A Years Subscription to the

Jasper Courier,

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IC e?f onrld Va Vmc?4- 4"Vvnrra in li-fö

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in town aim country iiuiues. It advocates improvements, bet1 1, better schools, better ; 1 and the greatest political i . .? jdom and honesty in public afiairs. The CoUKjEit has not y'and does not hesitate to assail L men or methods that stand in the

way of the greatest good to the ffUtrtvufa Every prugr,,i.. MTe 'fiiJin1 the county should I bö ft ditokfflber. Your? is needed 3 now. v &m in. - Do it now.

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TiF. JASPER COURIER

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:Subsfcriptionride $1.6fr per year.

ORQGa EXCITE Yl

USE

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OLD-TIME COLD CUSfcDSiNK HOT, TIA!

V Jitf Bide it Mfei&f tr Haiti tr

fciiTt hurt aa! tfif fifcafc

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Get a small package of ''Hamburg Breast Tea at any pharmacy. Take a tables poonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling- water upon it, pour through a lere and drink a teacup fall' at any time during" the day ot before retiring. It fs the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the porea of the skin, relieying congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking np a cold. Try it tho next time you suffer from a cold or the grip. It ia inexpensive and entirely vegetable, therefore safe and harmless: '

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BUB RH RUHT SM. ROV ,

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il JtftfiM to kid

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naä litaia. Mi im been

Nmh t'b4ta Ml &UmulaU

my; :mkm to 'KcutraliM Urn 'mU'M

m. bo Jorser i a aowat' at im

raHA.ioaJLQ wadtur irmkaeaa..

BDdtrataad i

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STIFF ACHING JOINTS

ub Soreneu from joints and muscles with, a imali trial bottle of oldSt Jacobt Liniment ;

Tad 'SaKi'i icerKmaiT;

ttM W c' deliphiful

jLitwxattr drini ris- i ercrrome

lak xni il - . kep their kU Try thia, ako -f .nuking, ad a

avwht :'.Wr V ' what Umm C

mitiiliaw'f-ii' . :

Stop "dosing" Rheumatism. It's pain only; not one case in fifty requires internal treatment. Rub

jj soothing, penetrating- "St. Jacob Liniment" rifl'ht on the "tender sDot." and

, bv the time vou sav JaclT.Robinson

out cornea the rheumatic pain. "St,

J Jacob's Liniment" is a harmless rheu

matism cure ubich never disappoints and doesn't burn the skin. It takes pain, soreness and stiffness from aching joints, muscle and bones; stops ciatica, lumbago, backache, neuralgia. timber up i Get a 80 cfent bottle of i old-time, homt St. Jacobs Liniment"N from any dru store, and in a moment you'll ba tree from pains, achei and sÜJCn Don't suffer ! Rub rheuxna-

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What could possibly be more gladdenlEf than the light of real American doughnuts, hunks of IuhcIous pie, real hunks? Nothing uuless it might be the sight of an honest-to-goodues American IrL And tiie combination of the three, and maybe a couple of mugs of good hot coffee thrown in for good meusure nobody but & reully tired, hardworked Yank can really appreciate this food for the gods and comfort for the heart of man. "It ain't the coffee nor the pie nor the doughnuts, not even the pretty ffirla," said one young soldier; "It is the sight of a woman who looks like your mother with her little cap a trifle nfskow sometimes, and maybe a loclfc of hair straightened out of curl, just like mother m to have lies corue when she was hurrying too hard that's the thing that makes a fellow glad he hnpponod to be with this particular b'inch. And when that woman eays, 'Here, son, have another plco of pie i It goes right through your heart and makes you feel that If you ever do get back to the old ü. S. A. again you'll not forget mother birthday and you'll remember to say the kind things every alngle day of your life." The Red Cross serves the lads of all the nations, of course, but It Is particularly partial to the khaki clad youths with a bit of slang and the call for the matches and the cigarettes. They are the ones who apprecla the American crackers and Jam. , There are the canteens close to the trenches, of course, and the huts where the men may go and bathe and have their clothes freshened up, and the

railroad station canteen ferric.

the big canteens with tha writlBf rooms and showers and Libraries, ad lounges where a fellow can rest ft while, but the boys wherhave tee there insist that they love the llttit rolling canteens that just naturally spring up where you least expect thua most of all. Many well known names are oa the lists of canteen workers, for American women were quick to selae the ep-' portunlty for service. The poorest soldier on his leave may be serred by an American woman whose hospitality was formerly dealt out by her maids anil butlers and whose guest llsta Included only the most faahlonabls names in the social register. Now It Is she who hands over the pie wKJi her own hands and then gathers up the dishes yes, and oftentimes washes thorn when help is scarce, for they have to be washed and made ready for the next lot of soldiers and one cannot disappoint the boys who are never too tired to respond to the call of' duty. Another part of the canteen service is the "store," where the soldiers are supplied with their needs, where tljlngs they have lost In the heat of buttle are replaced, tooth paste handed out, razor blades, towels, toothbrushes, all sorts of things, not forgetting the post cards to send home and the ever wanted packages of cigarettes. Taking It all In all, the canteen does far -more than fill the stomachs of the nuMi it puts something worth while Into their hearts.

At r.nHOL-3 PER GHHT.

AVcclabtefrepartuosfcfAs

tmtSUicStwMcksandBorfj

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ThcrcPromoÜniüScstion

Cheerfulness and neither OpiümMcjrpbln"

llineral.NoTNAHCOT

silx Sri JhcUUS9 Rita ri&Hml iMw Hint JW

AhclpfulRcmcdylbf J r.ctiniiiiAn ind Diorrnoci.j

I and Fcvcrlshncss ana n Sleep m

legating thcrcfrwTHnJnfancy. 1

Jac-Similc Sinfawc

The GEKTAiniGoitPAHv;

NEW

CASTORIA For Infants and Childrtn. Mothers Know That Genuine Castcria

Always Bears the

Signature

of

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I AT Ab use

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Exact Copy of Wrapper.

For Over

Thirty Years CASTORIA THE CKMTAU MPAMY, HtW VOU CITY.

TOBACCO FOR THE BOYS

Tlzr- ID ' " ' ': ' '; . .:::i'v.'.;' :

AN AMERICAN RED CROSS TRUCK BRINGING CASES OF TOBACCO FOR OUR SOLDIERS AT THE FRONT.

BEST CHRISTMAS GIFT.

What finer Christmas gift could the American people give to t stricken world than the announcement on Christmas föve that the entire nation aas answered the Red Cross Chrißtmas Boil Call. It would signify to the

starving, sick and homeless that mix humanity does not depend upom tht excitement of war, but that neighborly uess Is just as strong in us In times of peace. A unanimous response will hearten the whole world.

AMERICA'S WOMEN JOINED ! IN ANTHEM OF SERVICE

Millions of Red Cross Workers Do Multitude of Little Things at Home Which Enable Our Boys to Do Great Things in France.

Under the banner of the Red Cross American women are working In homes, churches, clubs, schools, shops, theaters, factories, hospitals and In thousands of Red Cross work-rooms.

The hum of sewing machines, the

whizz of muslin torn to accurate strips, tht rat-tat-tat of volunteer typewriter, the purr of boiling kettles in canteens, the rumblinc of automobiles of

th Motor Corps, the soft ciicic or Knitting needles in lonely cabins and farmhouses, all blend Into a great anthem f service. About 8,000,000 women working i through Red Cross Chapters and branches are making with their hands .relief supplies surgical dressings, knitted articles, hospital and refugee garments or working ar volunteers

subject to any caL day or night, at 5001 railroad stations throughout the coun

try and at the ports of embarkation, or serving In volunteer Motor Corps. Truly here Is an army with banners banners of a red cross on a white field. For the period up to the first of July, 1913, American Red Cross Chapters, through their work-rooms, had produc

ed 192.748.107 surgical dressings, 10,-. 134,501 knitted articles, 10.7S6.4S9 hos-j

.pital garments and other hospital sup- . plies and refugee garments, making a total of 221,2S2,838 articles of an estimated aggregate value of at least $44,000.000. Last spring muring tht Red Cross war fund drive, when thousands tf women workers U eitle In every state format their great symbolic processions, those who ltoked on saw them as the repretentaÜTei of all our Amer lean women wtrking in this war, and heard in ,4The Battlt Hymn of the Refabllc," to which thty marched, tht

varied sounds of all their eager labor. The things they made, which carried a message of love from the women of this country, quite apart from their great money value, went from their work-rooms on great adventures. They have gone into front line trenches, t emergency hospitals In foreign villages and into the most modern operating rooms. They have wrapped lost and frightened children in warmth and sheltered aged refugees from tht cold. They have gone tverseas into strängt and sad places, Into Russia and Serbia and Palestine and Italy and France. They have gone into our own huge cantonments for our own young soldiers. u The Department of Nursing of the American Red Cross Is the great recruiting agency of the United States Army and Navy Nurse Corps. By the first of October it had assigned over 18,000 graduate nurses to active military service at home and abroad. It has provided over 700 nurses for the Federal Public Health Service and the Red Cross Town and Country Nursing Service, which co-operates with the Iqcal health boards in the communities which it serves. , The statement of the Home Service of the American Red Cross to all of our fighting men that it is prepared to help in any emergency that may arise in their homes help In legal ways, medical ways, business ways, friendship ways would not be possible without tht vision and tht active co-operation of thousands of American women. In every dlvUioa tf tht Red Cross, from coast tt coast tad from Canada to Mexico, thty hart seen this service at tht elemental right jdue front tht American peoplt 'to their defenders.

Oils. Pastels, Water Colors Crayons.

i All Sorts of Pictures Copied

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and Enlarged.

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116 E. Fifth St,

Jasper, Indian, 7

WEtlAM A. WESOE General Insurance and Real Estate Sill lIlSIiiillliK Special rates on Farm Loans and lneurance for Dubois Pike and-' ' adjoinngi counties. Fire, Tornado Hail; Life, Accident, Plate, GIkbs, Automobile, Burglary and Liabili y Insurance, Bonding Co, rpereaented. Phone 116 2.

Thi

Home of Fatoka Lily

ESTABLISHED

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We are better equipped than ever to handle wheat. We offer you fair weights and grades, less unloading and courteous treatment. Come and see us. We always pay Highast market prict Jasper Roller Mills. Andrew W. Eckert Propr,

Tear Out Fill In Hand Letter-Carrier or Mail to Post Office TO THE LOCAL POSTMASTER : Kindly have letter-carrier deliver to me on . for which 1 will pay on delivcrv -.$5. U. S. WAR-SAVINGS STAMPS at $ Mck v... ...:..:.25c U. S. THRIFT STAMPS at 25c. each.

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AT ATT a

V OOVUMMEKT

W. S. S. COST DURING I9II Apiil $4.15 I July J4.18 I Oct. M.y 4 16 Aug. 4.19 85. June 4.17 1 Sept. 420 i fW

W. S. S. WORTH 55.00 JANUARY

$4.21 422

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