Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 62, Number 16, Jasper, Dubois County, 26 September 1919 — Page 4

"BAYER CROSS" ON ASPIRIN

e milkman, .alk In oar

' demanded

i never do

Always Ask for Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"

Only Aspirin Tablets Xf ith the lafety "Dayer Cto" on them are penuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," owned and made by Americana and proved afe by millions of people. Unknown quantities bf fraudulent Aspirin Tablifc were told recently by a Brooklyn dealer which proved to be composed mostly of Talcum Towder. 'Bayer TaMeU of Aspirin" should alwavs be asked for. Thea look for the safety 4 Bayer Cross" on the packa?e and on each tablet. Accept nothing else! Troper direction and dosage in each Payer package. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer

Manufacture of iionoaceiicaciaesver

alicvhcacid.

Necetaa "It a!nf true," "that we always milk." "Do you vnpan t Mrs. Houn 3!n,

ur "Well 6 neva1 except after a heavy rair when the water pit brown and xnuddjr." Ohio StaU -tReal Need For Hurry.

DRUGS EXCITE YOUR KIDNEYS; USE'SALTS

If yonr Back is aching or Elaider bothers, drink lots of water and eat less meat

When yonr kidneys hurt and yrmr bock feels sore, dont pet scared and proceed to load your stomach with a lot of dnifrs that excite the kidneys and irritate the entire urinary tract. Ke-p your kidney cleaji like you keep your bowels clan. If Hushing them with a mild, harmless1 alts which removes the body' urinous waste and stimulates them to their normal activity. The function of the kidneys is to filter the blood. In 24 hours

tLey strain from it 600 praina of acid ; and waste, so we ran readily understand : the vital importance of keeping the kid- J Heys active. I Drink lots of water yon can't drink too much; also pet from any pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Sadts; take a tablespoonful in a pl&aa of water before breakfast each morning for a fete days and your kidneys will act fine. This famous salt is mate from the acid of frrapes smd lemon juioa, combined with lithia, and has been tued for generations to clean and stimulate dofjrd kidBeys; aim to neutralize the acids La urine so it bo longer Is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Baits ü inexpensive; cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-watcr drink which everyone should take now and then to keep their kidneys clean and active. Try thin. kep up the water drinking, ar '. doubt you will won.br what bec;.. your kidney trouble and backache.

SAGE TEA DARKENS I; HI TOM SHADE Don't Stay Gray! Here's an Old-time Recipe that Anybody can Apply.

The (.:eutlv..ij:i .nu the Luuuet l'o ron't rtop old chap: Don't stone! Ive sot n ucw h.-.t fur my wif. tn here, and If Urn no; qu! !; It'll b sut of fashion l -f- s'j- worn 1U Prawn ly II. M iw:n.n, tu Vetch jJS'-U.

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"What kind of a dog la that, tuy aeyr "It's a setter. Cant 7 ass bias

rr Hli

ILM w"' WW7 . i

The use of-Sag and Sulphur for re

storing faded, pray hair to Its natural color dates back to grandmother'! time. She used It to keep her halri beautifully dark, glossy and attrac-j tlve. Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance, this simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect But brewing at home Is mussy and out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for a bottle of "Wyeth's Bare and Sulphur Compound." you will get this famous old preparation, improved by the addition of other ingredients, which can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty

to me nair. A well-known downtown druRplnt say- It darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell It has

been applied. You simply dampen a1 pong or soft brush with It and draw' this through your hair, taking onej strand at a time. By morning thei gray hair disappears, and after an-1 other application or two. It becomes

beautifully dark and glowy. Wyeth's Bajre and Sulphur Compound la a delightful toilet requisite

for those who desire a more youthful, appearance. It In not Intended for i

tha cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. M ,

nd f:-T s bi linn . Mr. 0":?" 'b. tili. ar;i tu, Xug a Uttie mm

says;hotiwater WASHESjPOISONS ' FROmItHE LIVER - - C 'r

Everyone should drink hot water with phosphate In lt, before breakfast.

A WARNING.

Like Being Hit By" Rattle Snake Says that every time you cut or pick at a corn you invite lockjaw

You reckless tnm and women wbo ara Tttstered with corn and who hav at least once a week invited an awful death from lockjaw or blood poinon are aor told by a Cincinnati authority to ue a dru called f recrone. which the moment a few drops are applied to any corn, the soreness is relieved and soon the entire corn, root and all.lifta riffht out with the flnper, without one particle of paln This freetone is a sticky sutatsnc which dries the moment it is applied and just loosens the corn without l!nflaming or even Irritating the surrounding tissue or skin. lie eaya a quarter jd an ounce of freezone will cost very little at any of the drug stores, but this is sufficient to rid one's fect of CWJ hard or soft corn or callu. You are positively wsrned Ibat'eul ting or rlckinj at a com U lulcldal

To feel as fine as tho nroverblal

Dddle, we must keep the liver washed clean, almost every morning, to prevent Its pponge-l!ke pores from clogKing with Indigestible material, nour bile and poisonous toxins, say a noted physician. If you pet headaches. It's your Hvtr. If you catch cold easily, It's your Hvtr. If you wake up with a bad taste, furred tongue, nasty breath or stomach becomes rnneld, It's your liver. Sallow skin, muddy complexion, watery eye oll denote liver uncleanllncsa. Your liver U tho most Important, also the must abuBcd and neglected organ of the body. Few know Its function or bow to release the dammed-up body was., bile and toxins. Most folks resC.i to violent calomel, which is a dangerous, salivating chemical which can only he used occasionally because It accumulates la the tissues, sJUo attacks the bones. .. .. Every man and woman, sick or well, should drink each morning before breakfast, a glaaa of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in It, to wash from the liver and bowels the previous day's indigestible material, the- poisons, sour bilo and

toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening'

and freshening the entire alimentary canal before putting mora food into the stomach. LImsRtone phosphate does not reRtrlct the diet like calomel, because It can not salivate, for it Is harmless and you can eat anything afterwards. It la inexpensive end almost tasteless, and any pharmacist will sell you a quarter

pound, which is sufficient for a demonstration of how hot water and lime-1 stone phocphate deans, stimulates and 1 freshens the liver, keeping, you feellnf . -y0af,we,t, e" '

The Utter Uselesanets of Tsklnf Course In German. A customer during a trying on asked her dressmaker, whose son was at college, if he were pursuing a general cour?e or specializing in any particular branch. The answer came promptly, through a mouthful of pins: ' Sanskrit, ma'am. He's Fpecialiiing in Sanskrit. I can't say but I'd Lave preferred something a bit more usual in the way of education something more plain tailor made for every day like. Sanskrit's such a fussy 6tudy." Her criticism, if oddly worded, was comprehensible and not unintelligent. Less reasonable and equally unexpected were the remarks of an old farmer in a remote hill village upon the favorite studies of his 6on. lie had always been suspicious of the higher education and was far from pleased when his Joe, whom he wisned to keep on the farm, obtained a scholarship. "Languages may be all right for folks that's born to 'em in foreign parts," he declared recently, with impressive deliberation, "but a man that ain't had better talk plain Yankee and do things. "To see that boy of mine sit down with a book ye can't read, saying over words ye can't sense jest putter, putter, mutter, mutter, sputter, iputter why, it makes me fair sick. And for all he's been at it most a year, he can't make those Italians on the highway understand three words together. He owns himself he can't." "It is Italian he is studying, then?" the listener murmured poKWv. "Xo, 'taint; it's German," admitted the old man in a reluctant growl. "Hut a precious poor excuse I call that, and so I told him. "I don't care if 'taint their own lingo, Joe,' says I. 'It oughter come a long sight nigher to it than jet United States talk. Squeeze.! all

up together the way folks K on the map o' Europe, course thy rnu.-t get used to n''iprs talk enough tv make each other out.

" 'Bet ve mv Sundav-go-t

meeting hrt,' I told him, if ve talk

ed reel German to those Italian thev'd understand vel

"But he can't. All he can do t to pet in a corner with his book, nutter puttering and sputter sputtering. "Dont ve talk to me about col

leges! Joe's a warning." Youth's

Companion.

WITCHCRAFT IN ENGLAND.

The Lsst ef the Judicial PreeeeutUns

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

hanged two poor women at Cambridge in 1T.G4. but a few years later

Lord thiei justice liolt set him

self strongly against 6uch charges and in every case tried before him directed the jury to bring in a verdict of acquittal. In a celebrated trial at Guildford in 1701 not only was the sunDOsed witch found not

cuilty, but her false accuser, ne

John Hathaway, was coi.2cm.ned to

a years impmonment and to stand

In the pillory three times. Yet, horrible to relate, a woman named

Hicks and her daughter, a child of

nine, were hanged together at Huntingdon on July 29, 1716, for

raising a storm of wood in league

With the devil.

The last judicial sentence for

witchcraft in Knglsnd was in 173 Ö, one Jane Wenham being actually

found guilty, according to the Indictment, of "con venting familiarly with the devil in the form of a cat." The judge, however, procured a reprieve for poor old Jane, and he was ultimately released, to end her days in peace. Last, the witchcraft act wai repealed for the United Kingdom in the same year. It was quite time, for only nine years earlier, In 1727, a woman was brought before Captain David Ross, deputy sheriff of Sutherland, charged with "causinr her daughter to be shod by the de D," and so making her lame both ii hands and feet The fact having beSn proved to the captain's satisfaction, the old woman was put inte a tar barrel and burned at Dornoch The weather being cold at the time we are told that she "sat composed ly warming herself by the Grc pre pared to consume her while the oth er instruments of death were get , ting ready." . The last attempt to execute witch in England ended disastrously for the perpetrators. In 1751 at Tring two old people named Oboras, man and wife, being suspect ed of witchcraft, were seized by a crowd, stripped, cross bound and thrown into a pond. Both died of this brutal treatment Bat the witchcraft act had been repealed, and, a verdict of willful murder having been returned against one Colley, the chief instigator of the a cault he waa in dus course, txira1 pJ harjged-Ocnihill I

(Christian 8denc KsaWset).

Of late years a good deal Was

talked and written about the weed far a treat religious revival. Ks 4sbt

this used Is presslna. but these whe write and talk shout It slmaly da Bet realise that the greatest rsllgtews re

vival of the csnturles. sines the advent of Christianity, has been la progress for the past fifty years. Just half a century ato Mrs. Eddy discovered the Science of Jesus' teachings, and later she promulgated this Science for the benefit of all mankind. The result of this has bet-n a eenulne revival of

primitive Christianity, which has enriched the lives of hundreds of thousands of people and rescued them from all manner of disease and sin. Not only has this revival been participated in by those who In their extremity had blindly sought Ood In an almost helpless way, but also by many who, hopeless and unbelieving, had said in their hearts, "There is no God!" Not the least valuable lesson of this particular revival has been the marked absence of spectacular propaganda. There has been from the platform and in the literature no studied or frenifed appeal to the emotions, no preaching of eternal damnation, no playing upon the fears of excited or discouraged men and women, no denunciation sf persons or classes, no bitter arraignment of other religions. On the contrary, there has been a quiet and confident statement of the omnipotence and omnipresence of God, the reality of good, the immortality of man In the image and likeness of God, the divinity of the Christ, the fatherhood of God, and the brotherhood of man. Not only has this statement ef Christianity been made to the ear and eye, but also, combining precept with praotlee, its truth has been demonstrated in the healing of the sick and the reform of tas sinful. Jesus said that certain signs should follow them that believe, and that these signs have been manifest in the practice of Chrlstlaa Science Is now too firmly established to be contradicted successfully. Surely this is a revival that is worthy of the name, and one la which all mea would willingly Join if they hut appreciated lta far-reaching effects. Thsr are those, however, who love to discourse of Christian Science and its text hook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mr. Eddy, la a critical way. To auch crltloa, of course, the revival has not ytt come, even though they apparently sea much to commend in the Uvea and eharacter of Christian Scientists Ts them Christian Scientists are Kood people despite their religious beliefs, aad it has not yet dawned upon, them that Christian Science ia the foundation of whatever goodnss they see displayed In the dally walk and conversation of these people. Mrs. Eddy must have had such critics In mind when she wrote the article entitled "The Christian Science Textbook," commencing on page 109 of "The First Church of Christ. Scientist, and Miscellany." In this article she says: "Christian Science teaches: Owe no saaa; he temperate; abstain from alcohol aad tasacco; be honest, Just, and sure; cast out evil and heal the sick; In short, Do unto others as ye would have ethers do to you. Has ene Chrlstlaa Scientist yet reached Us naxlmum of these teachings? And if not, why point the people to the llvss of Christian Scientist and decry the book which has molded their lives? Simply because the treasures ef this textbook are not yet uncovered ts the gats ef many mea, the beauty ef holiness is sot yet won. . . Is It too much te say that this book is leavenlag the whole lump ef human thought? Tou can trace lta teachings in each step ef mental and spiritual progress, from pulpit and press. In religion and ethics, and find theee progressive steps either written or indicated in the book. It has mounted thought on the swift and mlrhty chariot of dlvino Iyve, which today Is circling the whole world." To this statement every Chrlstlaa Scientist will say, Amen!

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WILTIAM A. WILSOR General Insurance and Real Estate

Sppctal ritf-a on Farm L tn i d InFU'anc fo Du oi- pike nd ijo d u'l C' (iiiM. K i r e-, l o. lo Hail, Life, Accident. Plate, Gl"-?, ut. mobile. Burglary aDd Liabili y Insurance, Bo ding ('-, rperer-entdd. Phone 116 2.

Ik Que of Pilok Li

ESTABUSHEW84T7k

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I 0 1 rn?,Tr3

1 LJW.t

Sie -J'Xrkt Ä 'lß A.ECKERTV PROPRIETOR "Yf&y

Wo are better equipped than ever to handle wheat. We offer you fair weigüt and grade less unloading and courteous treat nent Come

and see us. We always pay Highest market pri

Jasper Roller Mills. Andrew W. Eckert Propr,

TTCd fe)ir Mirier

the Best

AITDtound papek

GäiHiiiV Orcfs

Head the COUBIEB