Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 62, Number 49, Jasper, Dubois County, 14 May 1920 — Page 3

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BY Ti M Says this Woman Until Relieved by Lydia E. Pinkham'c Vegetable Compound. Carrollton, Ky." I suffered almost tT7o years with female weakness. I could not walK any distance, ride or take any exercise at all without resting. If I swept the floor or did any kind of work it would bring my sickness on. 1 was weak and lancr(uid, had no energy, and life was a misery to me. o I was under jthe care of a good physician for sevcrai months and tried otner remedies. . . . i r I had read of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and decided to try it. After taking twelve bottles I found myself much improved and I took six more. I have never had any more trouble in that respect since. I have done all kinds of work and at present am an attendant at a otatc Hospital and am feeling fine. I have recommended your Vegetable Compound to dozens of my friends and shall alwavs recommend it." Lillian Thar?, 824 S. 6th St, Carrollton. Ky. If you have any symptom about which you would like to know write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for helpful advice given free of charjre. BIGÜLCERALL MEALED "Here Is another letter that makes me happv," says Peterson, of Buffalo. "One that I would rather have than a thousand dollars. "Money Isn't everything In this world. There Is many a biff hearted, rich man who would pive all he has on earth to be able to produce a remedy with such mighty healing power as Peterson's Ointment, to sell at all druggists or 20 cents a large box." Dear Sirs: 'I was an untold Eufferer from old running sore and ulcers. I had tried most everything without any relief from pain. A friend told me of your wonderful ointment and the first box took away the pain that had not left me before in years, and after using just nine dollars' worth of the salve I am cured. The ulcer was 9 inches by C'fc inches, is all healed and I ran walk. Never, never will I be without retcrpon's again. "You may use this to recommend your alntment, if you wish. I cannot say enough to praise t.M Yours tiuly, Urs. Albert Fouthrott. Medina, X. Y. Mail orders filled by Peterson Ointment Co., Inc., Buffalo. N. Y. NR Tablets tono and strengthen orjjana of direction and elimination, improve arpctitc, stop siclc ! headaches, relieve biliousness, correct, constipation. They act I promptly, pleasantly, milaly, yet , thoroughly. v Toaijlir, Tomorrow Alrigbt Gt 20c Bex. Let Cuticura Be Your Beauty Doctor Soap 25c, Qiatraent 25 and 50c, Talcnn 25c. HIS CHANCE TO GET EVEN Ex-Buck's Opportunity for Revenge on Former Top Sergeant Too Good to Miss. The ox-huok was hack :it his old prowar trade, in which the tool consisted of a pocket llahli-ht and black silk handkerchief. Inside the darkened house nil was silent, save for the heavy hreathlntr of the man who lay nslrcp on the bed. The hnrular gathered up his spoils watch, money and n few odds and ends of more or less value and turned to make his departure. Then, oheylii.i: an impulse, he turned the lipht on the man in the led and let it creep up until it reached the face. "My t:od!" he gasped. "My old top serireant !" Tor a moment he hesitated. Tl,,in, forming a sudden resolution, he liptoed over to the bureau and Set the alarm for 3 a. m. Home Sector. Insuperable Obstacle. "I nm scrry to hear you have left your !uHand. Couldn't you pot on with hlrnr Oh. yes. hut the dojr couldn't." me Relief IHDICISVOS lOSJ 2 fc 6 B ELI; ANS Hot water Sure Relief

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THE CHIC ELOU

Garment Essential to Complete Spring Wardrobe. Short Sleeves Preferred and Mode Is Collarlcss With Neckline Deeper at Shoulders. Your task of huyin your spring suit N not really omipleted until you have invested in at least one blouse to o with it, observes a fashion correspondent. And. although there Is r.o further doubt concerning the return of the lingerie blouse to favor, still you know that this type of blouse is not the one to select to be worn under your suit jacket. It is sure to show creases when you take off the jacket. .Moreover, If you do take off the jacket you want a blouse that gives an unbroken line with the suit skirt, and this cannot be accomplished if you are wearing a white blouse. It really is wise to have one blouse that Llmost exactly matches the suit, and the new material selected for such a blouse is tricolette or some other sort of knitted silk fabric, which seems proof against wrinkles. This season the short sleeve, elbow or shorter, will be the preference for these blouses and usually the mode is collarlcss with a neckline open at the neck, sometimes deeper at the shoulders than from front to back. However, the handmade batiste, linen or voile blousv Is in high favor and will bo worn for summer and resort wear. It reminds one of a decade ago. for now as then the well-dressed women are ordering these handmade blouses In numbers, many women having laid in as large a supply as a -dozen, all hand made, for the spring and summer season. They will be worn with the separate sport skirt. Then there are colored wash blouses, flame and green and toast, and these are to be worn often with the separate skirt of white. The blouse that extends far Inflow ; the waistline Is little in evidence. However, most of the blouses, save the conventional sort of lingerie blouses that have made their appearance and, wm i 'A X .:v.V.: O kUymSatin Blouse, Flowers in Applique. of course, the regulation skirt which Is still worn for sport wear most of the blouses have something below the waistline. Sometimes they terminate in a wide girdle that extends to the hips. Bed Jackets. Bed jackets are among the latest novelties in negligees. Colors are Nov Toast Shade, Newest of Light Brownish Tones; Pumpkin, Ruby and Brick Arc Seen. Toast is by all means the newest of the light brownish tones, though it Isn't very different from other light hrown of other seasons, it goes by a new name, at least as applied to the color. Then there Is pumpkin color, which is seen in some of the new cotton materials, and seems to bo much admired. It combines very well with some of the dull lighter greens, as well as with blues. Iluby and brick are shades of red that are much in demand and. strange as it may seem, there are reds seen in the smartest of spring suits. Tangerine, which isn't very different from what we usually call orange. i m lor eoniierarie popuianiy.

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Canard is what you will call a blue : iasmon wrner in Harpers Hazaar. She green; that explains itself when yoi i inittntly advocates for daytime recall that canard means duck In ' frocks and tailleurs a slender silhouFrench. You know the blue green ; i'tte. skirts bo?: or knife pirdted and feathers on a wild duck's back. j fro:j even to ten inches above the Hyacinth blue Is n shade that one : '-round, and fabrics of tartan plaid or S(,n occasionally in smart evening striking Kodier stripes, frocks. .

Cold i a shad" of yellow that eems to be winning favor. It is not a bright gold, but suggests bits of -the antique metal. The White Center Piece. While colors In riotous confusion or symmetrica! shadings for aU sorts of household decoration are entirely 'ji onlc jmd permissible In almost any

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"DREAMY" GOWN FOR SPRING 4 8& wmmA This charming creatioo is of skyblue taffeta and exquisite filet lace, with just a touch of wool embroidery in contrasting co!ors. CLOTHING FOR YOUNGER SET Materials Include Cotton Poplin for Dresses for Girls and Suits for Boys. The time is certainly past when children's , clothes can be purchased ready to wear for a mere song. Making them at home is a great saving this season, especially if the stores are carefully ".shopped' for bargains in materials. Fortunately no one style dominates the style field for children (for the matter of that, great leeway is admitted in fashions for grownups as well) and variety is really the important point to achieve. Cotton poplin is in high favor for sturdy service dresses for little girls and for suits for small boys. Cotton crepe is another fabric that is a favorite when clothes for everyday wear are under consideration. The small girl will be becomingly outfitted in voile, organdie, swiss and similar transparent fabrics when really warm weather arrives that is, for somewhat dressy occasions but the sturdy percales, poplins, chambrays and cotton crepes will be selected for play hours. Vivid, rather dark, or at least medium shades-are. in great favor for service clothes for members of the younger set. Jade green is liked and is very smart when becoming. Marigold yellow and a medium blue are also much used. Mousquetaires. A shortage of imported French kid gloves is influencing mere liberal displays of the finer lightweight domestic leather gloves, says the Dry Goods Economist. Silk gloves, of course, are shown most extensively, particudarly in the lG-button length. In white, as well as in the fashionable mode, champagne and pongee shades, the finer grades of silks add a zest. in Limelisrht spot where embroidery or handiwork of any kind is used, yet one frequently turns with a feeling of" relief to allwhite pieces. They have a dignity which cannot be approached by colors. To be sure, colors have a fascination all their own. but white has something more, and there are places where :t only can be used with best results, odd centerpieces which may be cr.lled into service on my and many occasions are always a delightful addition to one's linen supply in fact they are indispensable, according to j Modern I'riscilla. For Slender Silhouette. Though Dame Fashion has not yet divulged all the details of her plans for spring and summer, she has nevertheless told enough to give pretty def inite ideas of her intentions, says a Coiffure Favors Oriental. The Spanish influence and the oriental is noted in hair-dressing a ' in gowns: iho Spanish in the coif that I piles the hair high on the head; the t oriental in the coronet effects which : have returned. Though shops are showing many lovely hair ornaments It is only with most formal eveuii-c dres that these are being worn.

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v5' ::"-::--:V'8r8H $ Western Newspaper Union Kf

BEDFAST EVERY ' WINTER; STOMACH

TROUBLE GONE! Mrs. Mershon Found Speedy Relief . After 18 Years' Suffering. 'I had suffered from stomach trouble for 18 years, and had spent hundreds of dollars doctoring. Every winter I was bedfast most of the time. I commenced taking Milks Emulsion last fall, and bofore I had taken six bottles my stomach trouble disappeared and I have had no return of it since. This is the first winter in IS years that I have not been bedfast. I also give Milks Emulsion to the children for croup, with splendid results." Mrs. W. G. Mershon, Brazil, Ind. Thousands of people who have suffered for years from stomach and bowel troubles, as Mrs. Mershon did, have found the same wonderful relief and lasting benefit from Milks Emulsion. Milk3 Emulsion is a pleasant, nutritive food and a corrective medicine. It reStores healthy, natural bowel action, doingaway with all need of pills and physics. It promotes appetite and quickly puts the digestive organs in shape to assimilate food. As a builder of flesh and strength Milks Emulsion is strongly recommended to those whom sickness has weakened, and is a powerful aid In resisting and repairing the effects of wastingdiseases. Chronic stomach trouble and constipation are promptly relieved usually in one day. This is the only solid emulsion made, and so palatable that it is eaten with a spoon like v ice cream. No matter how severe your case, you are urged to try Milks Emulsion under this ruarantee Take six bottles home with you, use it according to directions, and it not satisfied with the results your money will be promptly refunded. Price COc and $1.20 per bottle. The Milks Emulsion Co., Tcrre Ilaute. Ind. Sold by druggists everywhere. Adv. Money of the Vorld. From oilicial data supplied by the director of the mint the monetary stocks of tifty-ix of the principal countries of the world have been estimated in terms of American dollars. The computation shows the money of the world was approximately $50,CC655S,000. All work and no plagiarism Is apt to make a dull sermon. The unfortunate man's friends live a Ion it way off.

Gtiaranteed "by

rnn n. mnnrö)HAN TOBACCO ) SM- wmi iyj v. y SNk- 1 1 -V V-- : J

W5'?$'ls aa Protab, as Grain growing. Successes as wonderful as those from growing wheat, oats, barley, and flax have been made hi yP raiting Horses, Cattlo, Sheep and Hot. Brisht. sunny climate, nutrttuS& ous Krasses Kod water, enormous fodder crops these rpell succrsa to the (ffilrti5 farmer and stock raiser. And remember, you caa buy on any ttnna

Farm Land at Yid'M land equal to that which through or wnaii io in x-ra Krazir. inr.a m a ,a i ; Kram farms at proportionately low prices. every rural convenience: Rood rchocls. Hl .iL nhones. rtc. close to live towns and cood :V& If you want to get back to the farm, or scale than is possible under ycur present gate what Wostern canaca naa to

'1 t"f lH.H2cL2cUaD,215 Traction-Tcrcund Ol Canadian Government Urn. Incubating Cooties. An incubator for hatching cooties lias recently been devised that a scientific slmly might be made of these posts that came into such prominence during the war. Since human blood is the food of the lice, volunteers sncrilied themselves for the causo, and as many as 4,000 were fed at one time on the forearm of one person. As result of the experiment it has been found that several diseases are carried by the cootie, Serbian typhus fever being among them. .: MARTIN ANQ MARTIN ESTAB. 1882 CHICAGO V I N C R P O R AT

fc i For uoetroted l.terr tare witn ma&f and partcCArt reffircicff rioeed IV- reilww rmt, location of lud, etc.. apply to Deptrtzacbt cf Immiffr

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BULL" Durham cigarettes; you roll them yourself from genuine "Buir' Durham tobacco; fifty from one bag. No machine can even duplicate your "own" rolled from genuine "Bull" Durham tobacco. Good old reliable "Bull". Always genuine; since 1865 he's been everyone's friend. GENUINE

"15 to 930 An Acre many years has yielded from 20 to 40 feusIa - cenventtnr in rooa These lands have cCS7t churches, roads, telemarkets. -?v. to farm on a larper A conditions. Investi oner you. ' BIfcS2H2?olI$,bi! Asrent 80 At'HUiS, large house, barn, poultry hou. i'.trku. 3 orchards, roo1 soil, live minutes' walk 'lepot. hiph school. Sixty pr nrr, 42(5 a. for trad. N Incumbrance, nnls rentals, a. R. r. Hramr.ior. t)wonbursr, lni. FRECKLES POSITIVtlT RtMCVCO br Dr. Brrr rcfc t)tutDet tovr li uf f t r bf f,. r bock. Or. C. H. arr Co.. a7S MchlMi Awmm. Chtcä A(ii:.NT.S: Llft'htrun Haier tor cuts, burnt, bolls, akin troubles. Evry ho:n. Kvery factory. Apents" larfre ?atnpl 25c. TIIIOCO, Box 160. Jrfy City, N J.. 23 Montjrr.mery, Texan Oi! Leases. $100 buys 10 a. J1 Javin, $10 mo. Invest with bi irol ucer?. Hank ref Tex-Uu-Mex Syndicate. Wichlt.i Fall?. Tv. Millions Iiartly Open Field (imTii Cahbaco ami Tornato I'lunts, mall, postage collect: 100. ivc; 500. $1; 1.000. $1.7.'.. Southern rfuni Specialist. K7. Malison. l'lorbl;. POLÖS0H

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Save time and hard work by using E-Z Stove Pblish; absolutely dustlcss, smokeless, odorless; gives a durable ebouy-black shineTry a 10c box of E-Z Oil Shoe Polish. All colors and white. It saves the leather and prevents cracking. Dorit risk cheap polish. To open hex j;it lift the latch. '

SHOE POLISH

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FOR IND:GESTIOr3