Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 62, Number 50, Jasper, Dubois County, 21 May 1920 — Page 8

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DRINK HÖT TEA FOR A BAD COLD Cu t a small packapo of Hamburg llrrast Tea nt nny pharmacy. Take a labliMjK)onful of the tea, put a eup of I toiling unter upon It, pour through a Kifvr and drink a teacup full at any timo during ho, day or before retiring. It is the most effective way to break a cold und cure grip, ns it opens the jjore of the kin. relieving congestion. AIm loosens the lxiwels, thus driving a cold from the Kystom. Try It the next time yon suffer from a cold or the grip. It Is Inexpensive ami entirely vegetable, therefore safe Mid harmless. Rib Pain and Stiffness away with a small bottlo of old honest Gt. Jacob liniment When your back la acre and lame or lumbago, sciatica or, rheumatism has you stiffened, up, don't Buffer I Get a 30 nt bottle of' old, honeat "St. Jpobs Liniment" at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it right into the pain or ache, and by the time you count fifty, the soreness and lameness is gone. Don't stay crippled I Thia soothing, penetrating oil' need to be used only once. It takes the ache and pain right out of your tmck and ends the xnUery. It is magical, yet absolutely harmleaa and doesnt lurq the skin. Nothing else atop lumbago, sciatica and lame back misery so promptly t LESS MEAT IFW Take arlass of Salts to flush Kidneys if Sladder bothers you Drink lota of water. E.atln;? meat rep larly eventually produces kidney troul.'e n some form or Ow.ior, Fy.4 n v.'olM.uotvn authority, N run tliC uric m id i:i inrnt nxcit tl l.idney, t 'noy !:; i owrv jrkil , put r!'ivjisu; rt ur in. I mir..- ull 'rrt of V'tn,5. ;.. ! ii mk: !y ' v-nj i I nii, I.- iv tbo i. .'n .' i'v'i r'M nj.ih .. t in :(.. ."Vr'r M.. .!,.. . id tni ;i, n. J ho in"., it, ,u; K c! K; . t? or kid-li'-7 ;ivt't itt'ir.' n m. . if I I ultl'i b'iMiei 4 ,5, t ;iIm...v o : "-4 v , 1 t-.iiV i . r t t :ui. jo m ' ! -ti iirv T..i til'jli'-jMMi!!! i "1- v:t' i rc -,-f.' '.-.1 i u :.v u-. ija u I s'llrVi .'il 'I i f AitJC 'j 1 i . ! . :?M ' , r . ' .1 : .ii..o ' i h 'i' hi: ' ii ... J i v, .t. V i uil.c '.'n( j " nop .-. ' " ; "I r w it r.! A , . . U in ' ' i . luiiivf ' i'i t u r ? . 'S .4 'ii'l i . . I , ' I . 'I -IriT;'. . t " i' -t ' ;.. M TB DllEtl HI She mixed Sulphur with it to Restore Color, Gloss, Youthf illness. Common garden aapo brewed into a heavy tea -with sulphur added, will turn fTTav, streaked ana faded hair beautifully dark and luxuriant Just a few applications will prove a revelation If your hair la fading, streaked or pray. Mixing tho Sago Tea and Sulphur recipe at home, though, is troublesome. An easier way is to get a bottle of Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound at any drug store all ready for use. This is tho old-tlmo recipe Improved by tho addition of other in gredients. While wispy, pray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful appearance and attractiveness. By darkening your hair with Wyeth's Fajce and Sulphur Compound, no one can tell, because it docs it so naturally, so evenly. You Just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking Dne small strand at a time; by morning -U gray hairs have disappeared, and, fter another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, clossy, soft and-luxurlant This preparation Is a delightful toilet requisite and is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevenUon of dlaaso. . LADY PINK TOES HAS HER INNINGS 4 t 1 .There is nu excuse today for women to have ugly, I painful corns t For a few cents you can get from any dru atore a quarUr ounco of the magic drug freezono recently discovered by a Pinrinnnti chemist. Apply a few drops of this freezone upon a tender, aching corn or callu and - instantly, yes, imir.ed i&tely, all noreneei disappears and ihortly you will And tb eorn or callut bo loose that you lift it out root and all. with the finger. Just think! Not ne bit of pain be-. fore applying freezone or alterwara. i doesn't even irritate tie eurrounding kin. Ilard cornj, oft c-rna or coma tethe toei alüo hardened calluiet on bottom of feet, juit ceem to ahrirel tip nrt fll off without hurtinir a particle.

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Tho French povernment hns opened ft system of restaurants In Paris capable of sorvln? -100.000 men Is a dny. A model scientific ration of three meals for nn nvcniu tnnn costs 30 cents in ther eating places, and inot of the fool eonios from AniTlcn.. Th:? man who would try tf live on IV,) cents n day In .an Anienean restaurant us the prln-s arc today would soon become so euiacl.ited that his own creditors would scarcely know him, says Thrift Magazine. Why the Trench restaurant can sell a jjood square meal of American fond for l.'l cents, when It costs more than this much for n few slices of ossified toast In the average food resort here. Is a question that several million poor down-trodden ham-and-ev Iminds In this couutry would like to have answered.

An npjent of the Jlusslun. soviet pnveminent explains its financial syntem by saying that ns soon us they can pet enough machines from America they will print so much money that It will become worthless and nobody will want It. Then the strife will produce everything and n man can pet anything he wants simply by asking for It. Even the league of nations pales Its Ineffectual altruistic Ares before this remarkable and eminently practical establishment of universal brotherhood. It is to lie hoped there will be no war for this country at least for a generation or two to come, but still, one never knows wlmt may happen, and in ttie way of preparedness ns many safeguards as possible should be thrown around ,the pedestrlun, ns he is the man who will have to do the nghtlng. ' fc Farming Is a Business And like cvcrybusiness.it requires forms, records and blanks that give you the facts about your farm, just as a business man has them about his business. We print forms and letterheads (every business farmer should have his own letterhead) on Hammcrmiil Bond, the Utility Business Paper. ) Let Vs Show You What We Can Do for You APPLY SULPHUR TO L UP Broken Out Skin and Itching Eczema Helped Over Night For unsightly skin eruptions, rash or blotches on face, neck, arms or body, you do not have to wait for relief from torture or embarrassment, declares a noted skin specialist Apply a little Mcntho-Sulphur and improvement shows next day. Because of its germ destroying properties, nothing has ever been found to take the place of this sulphur preparation. The moment you apply it healing begins. Only those who have had unsightly skin troubles can know the delight this Mentho-Sulphur brings. Even fiery, itching eczema is dried ri-ht up. Cict a small, jar from any good druggist and use it like cold cream. 4 4. 4. 4.44H,XtHH HEAD STUFFED FROM $ CATARRH OR A COLD i iSays Cream Applied in Nostrils 1 Opens Air Passages Bight Up. Tnstnnt relief no waiting. Your cltged nostrils open right up; the air passages of your head clear and you can breathe Ireely. jno more nawKing, snuiüing, blowing, headache, dryness. No struggling for breath at night; your cold or catarrh disappears. Get a 6mall bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply m nine ui tins iitttttb, uuuci'i.i kfl1inr- rrefljn in Tour nostrils. It pen etrates through every air passage of the . 1 11 bead, eoothes tne lnnameu or awoncn mucoua membrane and rcliel conies mstantly. It'ft inat fine. DonH stay stuffed UP with a cold or pasty ca-tanh. ASPIRIN FOR COLDS Name "Bayer" is on Genuine Aspirin say Bayer Insist on "Haver Tablets of Aspirin" In & "Bayer package," containing proper direction for Coh'i, Pain, Headacne, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and liheumatim. Name "Haver" means genuine Aspirin prescribed br physician for nineteen year. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets coit few cent. Aipirin 5 trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Mqnoaceticr acidssir of ßalieylicacid. O !

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Tnii photograph shows men In Salvation Army Industrial Home sorting waste paper to be returned to mills for re manufacture Into print paper. More than 7,000 tons waste paper was sorted and baled by these men Iri Indianapolis In the past year. SALVATION ARMY HELPS COUNTRY . IN CRISIS jjMPAPER SHORTAGE ORGANIZATION WHICH PLANS APPEAL FOR FUNDS MAY 1020 HAS BEEN COLLECTING PAPER FOR YEARSRECORDS COME TO LIGHT WHEN FRIENDS INVESTIGATE ARMY ACTIVITIES.

VThe Salvation Army which Is planninir a nation-wide appeal for 110,000,000, May 10-20. to carry on ita relief work for another year, comes to the foreground In the present paper crisis with figures to show that It has done inoro than any other organization to help out tho newspapers and magazines In the paper situation. Computations made at Saltation Army headquarters indicate that 50,000 tons of waste paper haro cono hack to tho mills from the various Army corps rconntitutlng a vast ayinc of valuable material for print paper manufacturo. Realizing the importance of savins waste paper and returning it to tho mills, the Salvation Army ten yean 1 ar.o hecamo a pioneer in the business of collecting and baling paper for return to tho mills. Since then tho Army has been responsible for saving more than a quarter of a million tons, according to computations made recently at national headquarters, 122 West 14th street. New York city. Had tho Salvationists, not gathered this enormous volume of waste paper, baled it and returned It to the paper mills to be romanufactured, much of it into newsprint, tho paper would have been destroyed by householders and stores, or otherwise destroyed and lost to the publishing industry. C$ Gives Jobs to Unemployed. Collection and sorting of the paper was originally put in the hands of the countless unemployed men whom the Salvation Army never refuses to help. Money raised from the sale of the baled waste paper maintains eighty-four industrial homes in various parts of the country. Although no record 'of the vast amount of paper collected in Indiana alono has been computed, the books of . Staff Captain Catlin of Indianapolls corps show that more than 7,000 tons of waste paper and 31,115 hundredweight in rags have been saved and sent out from that city. This represents the amount collected within a radius of 30 miles from the heart of the city, and the work of men and six horses and wagons kept constantly busy gathering up the paper. Homeless men, living at the Salvation Army Industrial home were employed to do the sorting and baling. None of the $429,000 which is the Indiana state quota, set by the citizen's state committee under the direction of Major Arthur R. Robinson, veteran of the world war, to be raised during the home service appeal in Indiana, is used to promote the gathering of waste paper. This branch of Salvation Army work is kept up merely as a means of giv4ng employment to men in search of work, and to help support the Industrill home. At the present time when waste paper Is much in demand At all paper mills, the revenue from bales of waste paper figures in helping offset the expenses of maintaining the Industrial home, according to Captain Catlin, of Indianapolis. The task of sorting the paper after it is collected in the wagons and brought to headquarters at 24 South Capitol avenue, Indianapolis, is given to unemployed men who come to the Salvation Army offices looking for work. a Use Care In Sorting. The paper Is dumped from receptides in which it has been collected 40 0lt top tails 'iittiag beiMt- a

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hole in the floor about four by feet square. At first the crumpled newspapers are taken six uaout and sent down tho holo.in the floor to the baling press directly below la the basement. After the press is full of paper up to the floor, it is closed and the loose paper insldo is compressed by the machine, with the aid of a great lever. Then it Is tied automatically and when the press is opened a bale is ready to go1-weighing on an average of eight to nine hundredweight to the bale. o After that the straight sheets and flat pieces, such as old envelopes and letters are sorted and tossed Into the hole, where they In turn aroeoza pressed and come out In bales weigning about 800 pounds. Next craft paper the brown wrapping paper, valuable because of its qualities of toughness, is separated and baled. Hales of this paper usually weigh between five and seven hundredweight, owing to tho bulkiness of tho paper which prevents compression. Return Paper to Mills. Finally the crumpled paper is left on ; the tables. It follows the samo process as the rest, making bales averaging five hundredweight. Tho bales are sent directly to the mill by the carload, whenever twenty-four bales are ready to go. An averageshipment at Indianapolis headquarters, according to Captain Catlin, is one carload a week. "We would have obtained this year three times the paper we did if the thousands of men formerly given work in house-to-house paper canvassing were not in good paying industrial jobs, and if the number of schools, churches and other organisations, had not taken some of our "trade" away from us, by soliciting paper ahead of us for money for school libraries and pianos," said Captain. Catlin. "People who do not know that Industrial homes are not helped by the home service fund do not reaJize that Viey are greatly curtailing our opportunity to help the down and outer by refusing to let us have their waste paper as they did in the past. The Salvation Army can handle the return of the paper to the mills more efficiently than' other organizations because it has made a business of doing this work and has all the equipment for baling and sending it out." Repays Benefactors. Captain Otto Beasley, commander of the Terre Haute post of the Salvation Army, tells the following story in connection with his work in Terr Haute. "Five months ago, the Salvation Army gave aid to a man In trouble. It was only one incident among many forgotten by everyone except on man." "Shortly after, the Army bought a piano for our headquarters from a leading merchant in Terre Haute. Being short of funds, we bought it on credit" "A few weeks later a man, plainly one to whom money camo through real labor, and evea then not a surplus, called at the merchant's store and settled the Salvation Army's account, which amounted to about 5150. He didn't give his name; but simply said: " 'Five months ago they helped mt; now I waal to do Uli for Uin

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