Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 62, Number 48, Jasper, Dubois County, 7 May 1920 — Page 2

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The children love Wrlßley's and it's good for them. Made under conditions of absolute cleanliness and brought to them in Wrteley's sealed sanitary package. Satisfies the craving for sweets, aids digestion, sweetens breath, allays thirst and helps keep teeth clean. Costs little, benefits much.

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CA THE FLAUOR AS

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Texas-Ranger

Producing & Refinin;

Company Both an investment and a speculation. Twelfth consecutive monthly dividend of 2, paid April 1st Earnings of $500,000 for 1919 exceeded 55 on total outstanding capital stock.

Hospitals for Incurables. Tho establishment in tho United States of at least four hospitals for incurables, to he under church eon-

; trol. Is an important recommendation

in the hospital program now living mapped out by the interchurch world movement.

Present drilling campaign should increase above earnings in 1920. Officially listed on New York Curb. Write for uarticulars. C. D. Knapp, Jr. & Co. Established 1900 149 Broadway New York

DEWS OF EVE

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No More Gentle Than "Cascarets" for the Liver, Bowels

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a SCRAP chew in PLUG form MOIST & FRESH

It is just as neejllcss as it is dangerous to take violent or nasty cathartics. Nature provides no shock absorbers for your liver and howcls against calomel, harsh pills, sickening oil and salts. Cascarets give quick relief without injury from Constipation, Pilioiisness, Indigestion, Cases and Sick Headache. Cascarets work while you sleep, rcmov-

I lug the toxins, poisons and sour, in

digestible waste without griping or inconvenience. Cascirots regulate by strengthening the bowel muscles. They cost so little too. Adv.

H4 ACItlvs. liiu. burn, poultry house l.irK, 3 iiroh.inli, k1 iU. f 1 v mlnuti' w.!k Im''. hlifb Kfnnl. Sixty t-r arn 3 . frli;itl '.( Inrumbraiu't', in. !-. ten liU 1 1 a It r. ilronmor. futiurtf. In '

A Mean Regret. She Mr. Ikings was the man I was engaged to when you came along, lit- I always did Jost miss my luck.

There Is nothing more satisfactory after a day of hard work than a line full of snowy white clothes. For such results use Ucd Cross Hall Hlue. Removes Red Ink Stains. To remove red ink stains from table linen spread freshly made mustard over the stain and leave about one-half hour. Then sponge oil and all trace of Ink will have gone.

HANDMAE

Sheer Garments, Tucked and Embroidered, Are Costly.

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SPORT SUIT OF TRICOLETTE

Factory Work, When Hundreds Are Cut at One Time, Results in Great Saving.

, If it !s n hand-made affair of sheer pink linen, with a few tiny tucks ami perhaps a sltnplu edge nf hand crochet you pay a gcod price for It because one person has made It by Hand. If it is an elaborate. atTalr f pink batiste or voile trimmed wi:h lace insertion and edging "and made by machine, primps a dozen people have worked on it yet you pay considerably h s for It. That seems qm "!. does If t:o: V P:;t the distinetbn of tl? linen hciu'se lies In its hand-made quality and in its material ti!: , soft limn which Is a bit of a luxury but the smartest fabric nw for lingerie gan.;cnts. Have yen ever been In or.e of the factories where machine made undergarments are turnvd out? lüg. bright am! nowadays beautifully clean places are these factories, and despite the hundreds of people nt work and the whir of the busy machines, there is a wonderful order. Your pink batiste and lace chemise was first f.:shh nod by a special worker. She produced it on a special machine from a sketch made by a high-salaried designer. The garment thus produced .vns called a sample. It went into a glass case where It was displayed to buyers who came to select models for the season's business. T.efore the samp!" went to the glass case a working pattern was made from It.

DAINTY SILK POPLIN DRESS

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This striking cport suit is of rose

tricoletts. The hat is of straw and Is suitable for any sport costume. This working pattern was a chemise cut out of heavy paper and on the papvr was sketched the pattern of the lace trimming, with carefully written memorandum of the number of yards of lace required. The working pattern, or dummy, as it is called, then went to the factory. In a room 1200 feet long and half as many feet wide t lie material for the chemise is piled in layers and layers, and sometimes a hundred or more chemises are cut out at one time with an electric cutter. In another room the yards of lace for the trimming are being cut. Along go the material and trimmings to another department with the dummy sample, and the pink chemise moves along from machine to machine, when busy girls do various kinds of work; Hemming, felling seams, hemstitching, joining lace, ruflling, ami even sewing on buttons. The Haul process is the pressing and then

i the pink- chemise Is ready to go on its I journey to you. Yet all its peregrinalions from designer to cutter, to stitch

ing machines, to pressing room have

I taken less time than it took one. work

er to make the pink linen chemise by hand !

"Peach Rose" Color. A color which has created quite n furor in Paris recently is of a yellowish pink in tone and called "peach ose." It is equally becoming to blond and brunet. and this reason alone will tend to make it a popular shade for summer gowns.

This tan bilk poplin drcsa is charming for the young woman, especially when it is piped with old rose and softened by a dr.inty white collar.

Fragrance. The one who likes a faint suggestion

, of perfume about her clothes may

achieve it by pouring a few drops of toilet water in the rinse water or tho starch or by sprinkling orris root or sachet powder under the ironing sheet.

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HIS Isn't one of those fnke free treatment

offers you have seen so many times. We

don't oifer to give you something for nothing tint we do guarantee that you can try this wonderful treatment, entirely at our risk, ami this guarantee is backed by your local druggist. This makes the offer one which you enn absolutely depend upon, because the druggist with whom you have been trailing would not stand behind the guarantee If he did not know It to be gu honest and legitimate one. Hurt's Salve, formerly called Hunt's Cure, has been sold under absolute money back guarnntee for more than thirty years. It is especially compounded for the treatment of Eczema, Itch, Ring Worm, Tetter, and other Itching skin dis

eases. Thousands of letters testify to Its curatlvo properties. M. Timerlln. a nputable dry goods dealer In Durant, Oklahoma, says: MI suffered with Eczema for ten years, and spent $1.000.00 for doctors treatments, without result. One box of Hunt's Cure entirely cured me. Don't fall to give Hunt's Salve a trial price 75 cents, from your local druggist, or direct by mall if he does not handle It. A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., Sherman, Texas

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Gowns Have Straight Lines

Design of Spring Flapper Outfits Affect Garment From Neck to the Border.

The chic spring fashions for the nifty young dappers are delightfully suggestive of the buoyancy of early youth. The leading llapper gowns have straight lines from the neck to the border, whieh finishes Just below the kneeeven at fourteen. Some f the gowns allow a reach to midway between ankle and knee. Some models In one piece fall straight with a belt on the hip line. This line ddined In ther modelwith a wide long ah that Is wonderfully MuftVd at the baeU ,r right side. The sleeves are elbow length for afterllon gowns. Modest little gown' have sleeves threV inches above tb' wrist. Ien eaps nre seen In some afternoon negligee gowns that are to be worn In the parks, on the beach and at bo,:.. Linen and silk lawn, organdie and swUs muHas are billowed Into gown, with a bt of living ribbons hitched midst the sweeps of fabrie still the

small garments are taut in defining the figure loosely. The coals are modeled much like those for th. "younger set" Just ahead of the tl.ippers. Their hats are the sailor. In straw. It) fiber, in metal braid. Then nre turbans and Jaunty caps. Low shoes In black and white lend and th llapper lt walking abroad Is shod In oxfords and pumps with spring and throe-layer heels.

Feathers Are Gocd. I'eather neckwear promises to ) extremely good during the spring and summer. Many of the more elaborate vening wraps show high eollnrs of os. :rb-h. eurb-d and flat, with similar or;::it:wntation at the armholes. Maral".;; is also appearing as decoration on many of the neu sp.rt wraps. Ostrich l.o:is and collars of marabou are appearing with more frequency, and would seem to he the logleal outcome of th present season's vogue for ostrich fans and similar decorations of feathers.

The New Jabot.

Very full Jabots of plaited lace are :

set in open coat fronts instead nf j tint walstcoata this spring. Some of these frilly lace Jabots are creamy

In tone, others are pure white. Almost always at the top of the Jab U a smart little tnllored bow or ribbon which makes a background for a handsome bar pin.

Coats With Cape Backs. Coats showing cape hacks are seen in all lengths, from that reaching barely to the waist to the full length model, says Dry Hoods Economist. In some of the full length coats there Is a very original mixture of the salient features of capo, coat and dolman. The dolman influence is seen most frequently in the shaves, the cape In the loose, full back and the coat In the belted front and vest effects.

fMTIOMf OHM AITÄID5

Or Incomparably the Biggest Navy on the Seas"

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WASHINGTON. A growing fear that the horrors of another and still more disastrous world war is not beyond possibility, lies behind the plans for the modem military machine now being derived for the United States, according to Washington otlicial gossip.

....1...'I...1V.., ,. 1 . ....... "menace of Japan." which Secretary of the Navy .Tosephus Daniels denied he invoked before the senate committee on naal atTairs the other day, is admittedly behind his advocacy of preparedness. It also prompted his request for immediate action In the matter of the development of submarine bases along the California coast and I'uget Sound, and the huge naval has

at San Francisco. Likewise It wai the inspiration for his general big navy policy. "I have learned a lot during the war,"-he? Is quoted as telling the hous naval affair committee. "I used to think the people of large nations would not permit a great war. I was mistaken." 'in the unsettled condition of the world today," he said previously before a congressional committee on March 0, "our navy most be prepared for any emergency." He added, later on, that either every nation must enter into an agreement to preserve the penn of the world, without competitive navy building, 'or we must have incomparably the biggest navy on the seas." The latest comparative figures on the navies of the great powers obtainaide at the navy department are dated July 1, 1011). These showed treat Uritain to be far in the lead in warship tonnage with J.V.VJ.1.'H tons of fighting craft, as against 1.1 IX),: ?.": tons belonging; to the United States, tons flying the French flag and ."80.710 tons helonging to Japan.

Yankee Flyer Goes "Under Two Flags" Two Better WOIID comes from Wars-aw that MaJ. Joseph C. Stehlln, a twenty-three-year-old aviator of Brooklyn, N. Y., who already has fought In three armies, has gone to Itiga to enlist under the Lettish flag in the war against the Russian bolsheviki. If his services are

accepted he will have served under four Hags in four years. Since last fall Major Stehlln has been lighting in the aviation branch of the I'olish army and In that service took part in the I'olish drive which threw the bolsheviki out of Dvinsk. Stehlln, who was formerly a life guard at Sheepsheud Iay, Urooklyn, went to France in January, 1017, and joined the French flying corps, where

he won two citations' and was promoted to be sergeant for aiding fellow aviators attacked by Cerman planes. When the American army went over to France Stehlln transferred his allegiance 1 1 the American flag, received a commission as first lieutenant of aviators, and took part in actions in the Champagne, Verdun, and Soissons sectors. After the armistice he rejoined the aviation section of the New York police as a captain. Last September he joined the Folish forces recruited in New York, was commissioned as captain, went to Poland, and was assigned to duty on the northeastern front. He spent four mouths with a I'olish flying squadron, the only American with the Poles on thar particular front. Stehlin lias flown over parts of France, P.elgiwm, Spain, ltuss'ia. Poland. Lithuania, and the United States and lias hopes soon of seeing Letvia and Kiga from the air In his service with the Letts.

Radical Preventives of Depopulation for France FKANCK has J.0XMM)O young women who will have to go without husbands under the established matrimonial customs. In consilience, noine extremely radical preventives of depopulation are being proposed. Socialization of men and the elevation of girl moth

ers to national heroines has been proposed by Professor Carnot of tho Academy of Medicine. He would form a "voluntary maternity corps" of girls willing to bear the pangs of motherhood to present children to the state. To obtain n "perfect race," Professor Carnot proposes that these girl volunteers choose the men they dsiro as fathers of their children, and that no man can reject such offers.

but must accept all. The plan provides for state support for the girls before and after confinement, while the children are to be reared at the expense of the state. Married women are indignant, claiming Professor Carnot Is "trying to take our husbands away." They say the plan would disrupt morals and break down the whole social system. Odette Duhic, suggest a "maternity curd." Issued on a doctor's certificate to every expectant mother, married or unmarried, who makes a request for one. Such a card entitles a woman to shorter working hours or lighter work, medical attention and. eventually, hospital room and a physician's care. The child Is to be cared for by the state. The maternity card glves-n woman right over her child, doing away with paternal authority and making motherhood worth while for women. Collotto Willy believes a wisely organized polygamy to be the solution of the present crisis In the marriage problem. Old-fashioned marriage Idea have outlined their applicability under present conditions, she huvs. She thinks that the common Interest in the betterment of the race and the legal equality of the different children would gradually overcome woman's present repugnance to the idea of sharing the same man.

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U. S, Mounted Service Cup Endurance Test for 1920 CONDITIONS and details have been made public of the p.rjd endurance ten for horses for the I'nlted States mounted service cup, over a course of ,M.m miles. The winner of the llrst prize this year vW get a log on the mount service cup. which has to be

won three times by the same owner to become his property. The winner will also receive the Arabian Horse dub medal. In addition to .i0o and the hlue ribbon for lirst place. This ear's event will be held from October 11 to 10, the route being from Tort Kthan Alien. Vt., to Camp Devins, M;i. The fixture is sponsored by the Arabian Horse society, tie National Steeplechase and Hunt

club, and the Morgan Horse club, and If. approved by the war department and the agricultural department. It is designed primarily to stimulate Interest In good saddle hor.es poss sstl of stamina and hardiness, and at the same time l aving the necessary quality to render them suitable for use In the mounted services of the I'nlted States; as a coequal purpose It has been sought to develop many points of interest in determining what blood will produce a mount which will satisfy the many ami xactlng requirements demanded of a charger. The contest Is open to civilians. Kach rider 1 required to feed and care for hi own mount and to tnke care of his own equipment. Horses are to carry a rider weighing not lesi than 143 pounds find complete cavalry equipment or its equivalent 100 pounds. The horses must be purebred, crossbred or grade und at least four yean old. Condition, speed und feed consumed are the points considered iu making the award.

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