Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 2, Jasper, Dubois County, 4 June 1920 — Page 8

Dunm not tea

' " FOE A AD Get a small package of H&mburff Drf Ait Tea at any pharmacy. .. 7&k o lableapoonful of tht tea, put O cup of tolling water upon it, pour through a lere amd drink a teacup full -at en J time during the day or before retiring. It it the most efTectlre way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores of the akin, rellerrn coaptation. Also loosens the bowels, thud dririnj O cold from the system. Try it the next time you tuffer from a cold or the grip. It Is Inexpenslro and ntlrely rege table, therefore aafo snd harmless. RUB eacHEii DGO JUCHT OUT Pain und QtifTncu away vdth a cnnll boWo cl dd honeii 01 7&cot3 Cickxz) When your back Is iiore and lame or lumbago, sciatica ot , rneumatlixn has you stiffened up, don't suffer 1 Get a 30 cent bottle of old, honest "St. J4oba Liniment" at any draff store, pour a little in your hand and rub it rljht into the pain or athe, and by the time you count llfty, the soreness and lameness is gone. Don't stay cripple! This toothing, penetrating oil nacds to be Used only once. It takes ths nahe and pain rljht out of your bock and ends the xnfrry. It U majical yet absolutely hamlm and doesn't bum tho skin. Kolbing else atopa lumbago, aclatlo ond Izns basfc xniwry 19 frompU l Xtho a gln of Baits befcro brcafcd if your ladt hurts or ttirr bothers yoo. One l&xaeilcaa men and trctiHl Cirt? purd constantly egainrt Klint j trouble, because we eat too much and all our food V rieh. Our blood is filled with uris acid which the kidneys strive to fiJUr out, they weaken from overwork, become sluggish; the eliminative tissues dog and the result Is kidney trouble, bladder weaknsca and a general decline in health. When your kidneys feel lUto lumps of lead; your back hurts or tho urine is cloudy, fuH of sediment or you are obliged to seek reliof two or throe times daring the night; if you suffer with sick headache or dizzy, nervous spells, acid stomach, or tou havs rheumatism when ike weather is bad, get from your pharmacist about four ounces of J ad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will ihea.act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juics, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate closed kidcays; to neutralize the adds in the urine so it no longer is a eourca of Irritation thus jnding bladder disorders. . ' . J ad Salts is Inexpensive; eannoi Lalure, makes a delightful effervesces lithia-water beverage, and . belongs , in every horns, because nobody can make m miaut vj umiuig a (jwvl ' ; J SUSA11 m ra Don't Stay -Gray I Here jm 1 Old-time. Recipe v that Anyn body can Apply. r The use oftSago and Sulphur for rectoiing faded, gray hair to its natural color dates back to grandmother's Urns. She used It to keep her hair beautifully dark, gloasy and attractive. Whenever tier hair took on that lull faded or streaked appearance, thlM almple mixture vtslm applied with wonderful tffect But brewing at homo la musty and out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for a bottle of "Wytth's flag and Sulphur Compound.' you will get this farnoun old preparation, Improved by the addition of other insredlents, which can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair. Q X woll-known downtown druggist say-" lc darkens the balr so naturally and svenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with It and draw this through your hnlr, taking ono strand at a time. Df morning tho gray hair disappears, and after another application or two. It becomes beautifully dark and glouy. Wyeth's Sage and Mulphur Compound Is a delightful toilet requisite for those who desire a more youthful appearance, on la not Intended for the curt, mitigation or. nrtyention of klUeass, ASPIRIN FOR COLDS Nkme "Bayer" is on Genuirva Aspirin say Ba er Insist on "Daytr Tablets ot Aspiria" la a Baycr packtet," containing proper directions for Colds, Pain, Ilcadsche, 3tura!gia, Lurabftgo, and Rheumatism. Xtne "Bsyer means genuine Ajpiria 3rtcribd br phjticlan for nineteen 7 tars. Haniy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost fsw cents. Aspirin m trad mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetie-CÖ-Orff ßtlicylicscid. O

EAT LESS AND TAKE SALTS FOR KIDNEYS

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TON OAYO DEVOTSD TO APPEAL WILL QIVH PUDLIC CHANCE TO HELP HUMANITY UEED 3454,000 III IIIDIAIIA Indians polls. (Special) Although the .elfjan "A Man May be Down but He's Never Out" is widely known in connection with ths work pf tho Salvation Army It has never been adopted by that organization as its motto Ths official slogan of ths Army Is "Blod and Fire" but during ths next few weaks the cry uoit heard in Indiana lu connection with Salvation Army work will be "Home Service." Ths Home Service Appeal, whloS will be conducted in this state from May 10 to 20 to raise funds for the Army's home service and othe? activities has been planned for the purpose of enrolling the friends of the Army and each will bo riven an opportunity to give something substantial toward the support of the relief work carried on for the benefit of destitute and unfortunate persons which the Army is called on to help in every community. "Home service" means Just what it vafe1rt f ni- t ft a vloHma rtf lrV. i r I nest and disease and a chance to get back to normal. Milk and Ice for sick infants' 4urlng the hot summer months, fresh air for weak children, medicine for sick mothers and -food and rent for families left without a bread winner are some of the other things which the Home Service Appeal must provide during 1920.. STATIC, PRINTING Oft IF SKIN BREAKS OUT BURNS AND ITCHES APPLY THIS SULPHUR Just the moment you aw1y Mcntho-Sulphur to an itching, burning or broken out skin, the itching ' stops and healing begins, says t anted skin specialist. This sulphur preparation, made into . a pleasant cold crcain, gives such a quick re lief, even to fiery eczema, that ncth ing has ever been found to take it? place. . Because of its germ destroying pro pertics, it quickly subdues the itch ing, cools the irritation and lua? the eczema ripht.up, leaving a clou smooth skin m pl?cc of ugly cm; ions, rash, pimpjeor roughness. You do not. Ijavt to wuit for -in provemcut. It Quickly shovs. Y can get a litt! jar of Mcutho-Si1 phur.at any drug stoic. ! OPEN NOSTRILS! END A COLD OR CATARRH v ITow To Get Relief When Head and Nose ire StuCcd Up V Count fifty I Your col In ncad or catarrh dinappcari. Your clogged nostrils will open, the air passages of your head vrill clear and you can breath freely. No .more ßnufllinft hawking, mucous discharge, dryness or hoadacbe;; no struggling for breath at night,' Get a immll hottl) of. Kly's Cream llalru from yotir druggist Od PpV little of this fragrant antiseptic cream In your noatril. It penetrates through crery air paago of tho head, 6oothiig and healing tho swollen or intlatred mucous membrane, giving you instant relief. ltfiul colds and catarrh yield like magic. Don't stay stullcd-up sxd tniftarable. Kclief Is eure. SO EASY! LIKE ROLLING OFF LOG Sore, touchy corns stop hurting, then lift right out with fingers You compcstered zaeii and woaen need suffer no longer. Wear the ahoss that nearly killed you before, tayi this Cincinnati authority, because few drops of freexone applied directly on a tender, aching corn stops soreness at once and soon the corn looteni to it can be lifted out, root and all,. without pain. A quarter ounce of freexone costs Tery little at any drug ctore, but is fufidcat to take off erery hard or soft corn or callus, 0 This should be tried, at it li Inexpensive and is said not to Inflame or eTeq.lrrltate:the surrounding tissue or skin.. Aiter you lift away the troublesome corn or callus the skin underneath la as plnk, Arn öj JCfci $ rux ,, .n,..

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ESCAPE COLLAPSE Wc Must Aid by Extending Credits, Says Davison. GRAVE MENACE TO U. S. A. European Ruin Would Involve America Starvation and Disease Rampant. Des Moines, la. Speaking before the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Henry P. Davison, cLitrman of the Board of Governors of the League of Red Cross Societies, said: As chairman of the. Convention of Red Cross Societies, composed of representatives of twenty-seven nntlons that met recently In Geneva, I am custodian of authoritative, reports recording appalling condltlorO among millions of people living In eastern Eu rope. One of the most terrible tragedies In the history of the human race Is being enacted within the broad belt of territory lying between the Ualtlc and the Black and Adriatic Seas. This area includes the new Baltic States Polund, Czecho-Slovakla, the Ukraine, Austria, Hungary, Roumanla, Montenegro, Albania and Serbia. The reports which come to us make It clear that In these war-ravaged lands civilization has broken down. Disease, bereavement and suffering re present la pructically every household, while food and clothing are Insufficient to make life tolerable. Mn, women aud children are dying by thousund9, and over vast once-clvl-Uzed areas there are to be found neither medicinal appliances nor medical skill sufficient to cope with the devastating plagues. Wholesale starvation Is threatened In Poland this summer unless she can procure food supplies In large quantities. There art now approximately 250,(00 caaes af typhus In Poland and In the area occupied by Polish troops. Warst Typhus Cpldsmlc In History. This Is already one of the worst ty: phus epidemics In tht world's history. In Gallcla whole towns arc crippled and business suspended. In ouc districts the no Is but one doctor to each 150,000 people. lu the Ukraine, we were told, typhus and Influenza have affected most of the population. A report from Vienna, dated February a! said: "There ore rations for thre weeks. Death stalks through the streets of Vienna and takes unhindered toll. . . Budapest, according to our Information, Is eue vast city of misery and suffering. Tht number of dt actis Is double that of births. Of the 100,000 children in the schools, 100,000 are dependent on public charity. There are 150,000 workers Idle. Typhus and smallpox have Invaded the four countries composing Czechoslovakia, and there is lack of medicines, soap and physicians. In Serbia typhus bus broken out again and there are but 100 physicians to minister U the needs of that entire country. in Montenegro, where food is runnmg short, there are but Ave physicians for a population of 450,000. America Overflowing With Richss. Returning to the United States a Cow weeks ago with all these horrors ringing in usy ears, I found myself once iuo? In a l und whose granaries were overflowing, where health und plenty nbounded and where life and activity and eager enterprise worv In the full flood. . I usked mynelf : "What If this plugue mill famine" were here In the grut territory between the Atlantic M'uhouid and the Mississippi .valley, which roughly parullelN the extent of tlu'M ravaged countries and that CVMhMmh) of our own people condemned to Idleness by lack of riv uiateiiul und whose tlolds hud been devastated by Invasion und ruplne were rucked by Mturvatlou niid pestilence und if we hud lifttvl up ut.r voices and luxokcd the attention of our brothers in Imp pier Km ope to our own deep lulsrric m.d our cries hail falleu on deaf ears, w.uld ve not In our dexpulr exclulin ut ulnst their heurtlessness !M Only Three Waya to Help Europe. Tlrvrc are, only three ways b which tluse trickeii lumls can secure supplies froiu'the outside .world. One Is Im pa incut, one by credit, und the third Is by exchange of commodities. IT these people tried to buy materials nml supplier in America at the present i, iiuket value of their curreucle Austria would have to pay forty times the original cost. (lermuny thirteen times', (Ireece Just double, Czecho-Slovakla fourteen times und Polund tifty times. These figures are otlkial uud are n true Index of the economic pllcht of these countries. It Is clear, therefore, that they canuot give us cold for the things the must have, tor have they either products or securities to offer In return for credit. If only they could obtuln raw material which these idle millions of theirs could convert Into manufactured products they would have something to tender the world In return for Its raw material, food nud medicine. Hut if they have neither money nor credit how are they to take this first great step towards redemption One-half the world may not eat while the other liulf siarve. How lung do yu believe the plague of typhus that is taking a hldedus death toll in Ksthonla and I'oland and the Ukrulne aufi eating aloug.'the fringes of Germany and CichpSlovak!a will copflue Itself to these remote loadsT . Only last Saturday our health com-

Qhisioner of New York, Dr. Copeland, sailed for the othtr side Just to measure the danger and take precaution against such an Invasion. This Is one menace at our threshold. The other, more threatening, wore terrible. Is the menace of the world's III will. We can afford to die, but to be despised foreVer as a greedy end Pharisaical nation Is a fate that we must not incur. The French government has many serious problems "to solve, but the French peasant Is working and the French artisan, while still sadly In need of raw materials, has not lost his habit of Industry and thrift. The mcst encouraging fact about France today Is that her people are alive to the seriousness of France's problem, and they are going forward bravely to solve that problem. Italy, despite her great shortage of raw material, is looking forward and not backward. Italy can be relied upon to do her part ! England Is meeting the problems of reconstruction Just as those who knew her past should have expected her to meet them. Plan to Aid Central Europe. It Is not for me perhaps to give In detail a formula for solution of the world's ills, but as I have been nsked many times, "What would you doT I am glad to give my own answer. Accordingly, I would ask: 1. That Congress immediately pass a bill appropriating a sum not to exceed $:00,000,000 for the use of Central and Kastern Europe. 2. That Congress call upon the President to appoint a nonpolltlcal commission of three Americans, distinguished for their character and executive ability and commanding the respect of the American people. Such a commission should Include men of the type of General Pershing, Mr. Hoover or ex-Secretary Lane. 1 would Invest tha't commission with complete power. 3. I would have the commission instructed to proceed at once, accompanied by proper personnel, to survey conditions In Central and Eastern Europe and then act for the restoration of those countries under such conditions and upon such terms ns the commission itself may decide to be practicable and effective. Among the conditions should bs provided that there should be no local Interference with the free and untrummcled exercise by the Commission of Its own prerogative of allocating materials. Governmental politics should be eliminated; unreasonable and prejudicial barriers between tho various countries should be removed, and such substantial guarantees as may bo available should be exacted In order that the conditions imposed should be fulfilled. 4. As to financial terms, I should make them liberal. I would charge no Interest for the first three years; for tho uext three years, C per cent, with provision that such interest might be funded If the economic conditions of the country were not approaching normal or If Its exchange conditions were so adverse as to make payment unduly burdensome, I should make the maturity of the obligation 15 years from Its date, and I should have no doubt as to Its final payment. 0. Immediately the plan was adopted I would have our government Invite other governments In a position to assist, to participate In the undertaking. Q. To set forth completely my opinion, I should add that In the final instructions the American people, through their government, should say to the commission: "Wc want you to go and do this Job In such a manner us, after study, you think It should be done. This is no ordinary undertaking. The American people trust you to see thut it Is done right." I would also say to the commission : "Use so much of this money as is needed." Personally, I urn confident that with the assistance and co-operation which would come from other parts of the world the sum of $r00,000.000 from the United States would be more than enough to start these countries on their way to self Mipport und the restoration of normal conditions. The whole plan, of course, Involves many practical considerations, the most serious of which is that of obtaining the money, whether by Issuing additional Liberty bonds, an Increase In the flouting debt or by taxation. Hut I think we could properly say to the treusury department; YVc know how serious your financial problems are; we know the dimcultles which are Immediately confronting you; we know the Importance of deflation, and we know that the government must economize and that Individuals must economize, but we nl"o Unow that the American government

advanced $10,000,000,000 to Its allies to attain victory and peace. Certainly it is worth making the additional advance in order to realize the peace for which we hove already struggled, for nothing Is more certain than that until normal conditions are restored In Kurope there can be no peace."Above all things, I would say that whatever action is taken should be taken Immediately. The crisis Is so acute that the situation does not admit of delay, except with the possibility of consequences one hardly dares contemplute. The situation that I have spread out here Is far beyond the fccope of Individual charity. Only by the action of governments, our own and the others whose resources enable them to co-operate, can aid be given in sufficient volume. I am also confident that our action would be followed by the governments of Great Britain, of FTolIand, of the Scandinavian countries, of Spain and Japau, and that France and Belgium and Italy, notwithstanding all of their losses, would help to the best aj their ablJJtK.

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The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for. over over 30 years, has borne the signature of

All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good " are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiments What is CASTOR I A Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil,-Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups, It is pleasant. It contains . neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishhess arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural Bleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUDWE CASTORIA ALWAYS

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