Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 5, Jasper, Dubois County, 25 June 1920 — Page 2

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wingfouUp? Arc ycu throbbing ir.pF, tirf twinges 9 ncyj arc ovcmcrl. awng with a dull, IC? 13 red Li ec mornlay; puffer torturing move? Oftca the kid.ame. A cold, strain or .cts the kidneys; poisons accumulate und mysterious aches and pains result. You may hare headaches and dizzy FpclN, too with perhaps Midder irTc?uhrity. Lfe Doan't Kidney Pills. They have helped tboaKLnd?. Ask your neighbor! An Indiana Case S. C. Wernt. horscshoer, IIS W. Sample St., South Iiend, Ind., Bays: "Some years ago I had a pretty bad attack of kldw ncv and bladder A trouble. My f S'4- I K&S was inflammation r VMVr r of the bladder, . nnd many times the kidney secreusn .m tJons woul(J con. tain blood and for three weeks I had to lie in bed. I had very little control over the kidney secretions. Finally I u?ed Poan's Kidney Pills and after I had taken two boxes I was as well and sound as ever." Gat Dotn'a tt Any Store, 60c a Box FOSTER - MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y. CTZ B disease, history

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pir.iFe HUM'S SAL VI-;, fays: "Pome people dislike to call It the Itch, but candor compels me to admit I had It badly. Your Hunt's Salve, however, cured me after many other remedies had totally failed. One box completed the cure the first application afforded wonderful relief. My advice to those who have to scratch, is to use Hunt's Salve." Hunt's Salve is especially compounded for the treatment of Itch, Eczema. IlinfTworm. Tetter and ether Itchinc skin diseases and is sold on our guarantee by all reliable druer stores, or It will be sent direct by mall if your local drugpist cannot supply. Price 75c per box. A B. RICHARDS MEDICINE COMPANY. INC.. SHERMAN. TEXAS.

WOULD MAKE AN EXCEPTION Captured German Captain Decided That cn This Occasion He Would Forget About Honor. Among the letters from France that have heen printed in the Atlantic Monthly there is to he found this entertaining episode: The code of the fJerman officers Is, never to surrender; hut of course they cannot live ip to It. In a recent raid a sergeant 'I know made a prisoner of a Gorman captain who, as they walked to the rear, cursed his luck In fluent French, saying that he was caught unawares, that an ollicer never surrendered, hut fought to the end. "Stop here, my captain, and let us consider this," said the sergeant seriously. "There are several articles of your equipment to which my fancy runs. That watch, for instance, those leather puttees, nnd that fat purse I saw you change to your hip pocket. Perhaps 'I can ohlige you and gratify my whim. Suppose you were suddenly to run a quick shot would save your honor, and me the trouble of escorting you to the rear. And J am an excellent shot. I assure you." Hut the German was not interested. Doughnuts Help College Boys. Doughnuts are paying the expenses of eight Kansas boys, students at the Kauris State Agricultural college at Manhattan. These young men were organized recently as a corporation called "The Perfect Hakery." Their bakery turn out all kinds of bread, small cakes and cookies, but the specialty is doughnuts. A Cf$

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in flavor and A

but Postum is different be cause it contains no healthdisturbing drug. A saver in many ways.

Made by Postum. Cereal Co., Battle Creek.Mich.

ASPIRIN

Name "Bayer" on Genuine 'Bayer Tablet of Aspirin" Is Pennine Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for over twenty years. Accept only an unbroken "Bayer package" which contains proper directions to relieve Headache. Toothache, Kara che, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Colds and I'aln. Handy tin boxes of 11! tablets cost few cents. Druggists also Fell larger "Bayer packages.' Aspirin is trade mark Bayer Manufacture Monoaceticacidester of Salicyllcacid. Adv. Never criticize anything at a charity bazar; you can't tell who made it.

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A WAR-TIME ILL THAT'S SPREADING BUNT'S SALVE CURES IT !

RED in the war trenches of Kurope, a wave of ordinary ITCH is pnreadinc ever the countrv. This skin

fIiowp, has always prevailed, following

wars and the concentration of armies. It was common " ring the Civil War and following that conflict. There is an epidemic of the Itch after the Spanish-American far. Now history is repeating itself after the great i.ropean struggle. Returned soldiers and those with whom they come in contact will find a recognized remedy for the Itch in Hunt's Salve, commonly known as "Hunt's Itch Cure." Many a veteran of the lite '90's will testify to its merits. If directions are followed HUNT'S SALVE will prove a never failing cure for all forms of the Itch, and your druggist will tell you fo. He sells BUNT'S SALVE under a strict guarantee to refund the purchase price to an dissatisfied user. A Med ford. Oklahoma man, among thousands who

KEEPS FLY PAPER IN PLACE Device That Will Be Appreciated by Anyone Who Has Sat on the Abomination. A New Jersey man has invented a device to keep fly-paper In one position nnd from being blown by the wind on to father's favorite chair or mother's most treasured lace curtains. It consists of a frame having grooves at each end to permit the insertion of the sheet of fly-paper. A narrow strip of wood Is forced down Into the groove over the paper to hold it taut. At the lower end of the frame three grooves are located for taking care of any varlaflons In the lengths of the fly-paper. When the fly-paper Is In its frame. It may be placed up in any convenient place, and will be so conspicuous as to be readily seen before being sat upon. In addition to being useful as a holder for fly-paper, the device can be used as an embroidery-frame or as a stretcher for cloth or paper. Popular Science Monthly. An Observant Victim. "You say you wore held up by a footpad with a revolver this morning. At what timer "Five minutes to one." "How can you lis the time so precisely?" "Hecause I could see the church clock and 1 noticed the hands were In the same position as mine." London Tit-Hits. People who try to stand prosperity are foolish. They should sit down and take it easy. appearance

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KNOWS NO PERIOD OF JOY Camel Famed f.s Possessor of Perpetual "Grouch." Frem Its Birth to Its Death. In selecting the camel as their emhlem. antl-prohibitlonlsts display a sense of fitness. According to some authorities, though Hie camel generally fills his tanks with water, when he has the -chance he substitutes date Juice, which, fermenting In due course, gives hirn a portable store ot alcohol to draw on as opportunity allows. Kven with "soft" drinks the camel's powers of absorption are phenomenal. Watering a camel train on the march Is a prolonged business, seeing that some camels require as much as 20 gallons to satisfy their thirst. On esthetic grounds, however, objections might be raised to selecting for an emblem an animal whose face has been described as "a sculptured sneer." The camel itself Is said to be so little in love with its appearance that it never drinks from a pool without first foulIns the water so as'to be spared the sight of its own reflection. Nor does Its character boar Inspection. "The

camel." says tin oriental proverb, i "curses Its parents when It has to so uphill and its Maker when It goes down." Camels are born sad (even youn-j camels are never known to play), and their life is one Ions protest against being made to work. Manchester Cuardian. SAVAGES WORE BODY ARMOR Gilbert Islandcrc Used That Form of Protection, but It Was Limited to Leaders. Only one tribe In the South Pacific Islands ever rose to the height of inventins armor to be used In their warfare. Put even this tribe, the Gilbert Islanders, turned out only a few suits, owins to the work entailed in the manufacture. Francis Dickie says, in the Scientific American, that ti e suits were limited in number, and that every villase was the proud possessor of one. At the outbreak of a conflict between villages, not all the Inhabitants went to war, but the most doughty warrior was dressed In the villase armor and sent against the champion of the rival place. The brown-colored fabric covering the body and legs, which formed the Gilberts armor, was made out of coir string taken from the husk of the coconut, so closely woven as to make a protection stronger than board, and having greater lightness to recommend It. A further breastplate, invulnerable to any native weapon, was made from the dried skin of the st Ingaree, or ray fish, which dried as hard as metal. In the last few years peace has settled over the Gilberts and the armor has ceased to be manufactured. The few suits In existence have all been seized by collectors of rare articles. "Flower of the Devil." 'Flower of the Devil" is a strange growth upon trees found on the sides of Fucgo volcano in Guatemala, one of the few daces In the world where it is known to occur. It has beautiful foliation, veining and stem, and appears full blown when just unfolding from the bud. This effect is formed by a parasite which enters the wood and dies after eating portions of it away, a process which in time produces the results described. Tradition, however, ascribes a different origin. Years ago, when the Spaniard ruled the country, a fair Indian maiden was supposed to have betrayed certain tribal secrets to her white lover. Her people threw her into the fiery water of Fuego in expiation of her sin, and once every j year, on Midsummer's day, she ap- j pears to throw annfuls of the devil's llowers over the mountain's slopes a solemn warning to all of the sane- i tity of tribal secrets. Woodpecker a "Home Bird." Anions the natural guardians of the trees are the woodpeckers, which pither their food as they creep round the trunks and branches. As the foo of the woodpecker Is nearly as abundant in winter as in summer, they are seldom migratory. They never f erase In ilncks, like some of the omnivorous birds whose food is more plentiful, but scatter out over wide areas, and thus better their fare. They bear the same relation to other birds tliat take their food from trees as snipes and woodcocks bear to thrushes and quails that Is. they bore into the wood as the snipe bores into the earth, while thrushes and quails seek their sustenance on the surface of tlie uround. "Devil's Darning Needle." The darning needle, or devil's darnin j; needle, is one of the names ivei: to the dragon tly. which belongs to the order odonatn. Other popular names for this Inject are "snake feeders." "s::a!;e doctors." "horse stingers," "flying adders," etc.. though dragon Hies are harmless, as well as Useful In kill inj; mosquitoes and little tiles. Young dragon tiles ami the young of other insects, such as many tiles, while In the intermediate stage between the eggs and th- mature insect, live in water and are called "nymphs." Many of them live for a year in this stage In ponds before transforming Into ndult dragon Hies. Knows All the News. Those people never rend n newspaper from one year's end to the other." "That doesn't matter; they've engaged a maid who's lived In about cverv other familv cn the Med:."

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juät Folks! By EDGAR A. GUEST THE FISHING OUTFIT. You may talk of stylish raiment. You may beast your broadcloth fine. And the price you pave In payment May be treble that of mine. But there's one suit Pd not trade you Though It's shabby and it's thin, For the garb your tailor made ycu; That's the tattered. Mud-bespattered Suit that I go fishing In. There's no king In silks and laces And with Jewels on his breast AVith whom I would alter places There's no man so richly dressed Or so like a fashion panel That his luxuries to win I would swap my shirt of flannel And the rusty Frayed ami dusty Suit that I go fishing in. Tis an outfit meant for pleasure, It Is freedom's raiment, too; It's a garb that I shall treasure Till my time of life Is through Though perhaps it looks the saddest Of all robes for mortal skin. I am proudest and I'm gladdest In tint easy Old and greasy Suit that 1 go fishing In. (Copyright by Edgar A. Guest.)

SCHOOL DAYS

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. Last Nigbt's Dreams What They Mean i 1

DID YOU DREAM OF FALLING? THIS is one ofhe standard or typical dreams and one over which the scientists have expended a vast amount of "gray matter." They are generally dreams of peculiar vividness. Lucretius 55 IJ. C, the celebrated Koman philosopher, In his workon psychology speaks of this dream and Cervantes In "Don Quixote" makes the Innkeeper's daughter say that she lias many times experienced this dream and awakened to find herself as weak and shaken as If she had really fallen. Some think that the classic myth of the fall of Icarus into the Icarian sea originated hi a dream of this kind by some ancient Greek. Havelock Kills is inclined to attribute this dream to purely physical causes. He thinks It may be due to the fact that our respiratory action (breathing) becomes depressed and F.t the same time the outer nerves of our skin are reduced to a sta of insensibility so that the skin becomes abnormally Insensitive to the contact nnd pressure of the bed ".and the sensation of falling is necessarily aroused." Treud. on the other hand, regards the dream of falling as purely psychological. It is a dream repeating impressions from childhood. "What uncle." says he. 'has never played falling with a child by rocking It on his knee and then suddenly stretching out bis leg. or by lifting it high anri then pretending to withdraw the support? Again all children have fallen occasionally ami then been picked up and fondled." The mystics accept the dream as one of direct symbolism. If you dream that you fall from a height and pick yourself up quickly you will attain to honor and riches. P,ut if you stay whore you fell troubles and losses threaten you. To wake up before yon strike bottom, as many dreamers do. would appear to save the day for you. though this Is not quite so fortunate ns to dream that you pick yourself up after the fall. (Copyright. O Being Right Sufficient for (he rieht Is the conrc!or.?rnss of being right.

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By HOWARD L. RANN

THE FA KM TK ACTOR THK farm tractor is an automobile which is minus the Joy rider attachment. Nobody ever tried, to take a joy ride on the currugattd Iron sea: of a modern farm tractor without having Ids spine caved in farther than the entrance to the grand canyon of Arizona. The mission of the farm tractor Is to jtrk four lGMnch birring plows over a cornfield without showing any spavins, ringbones or other signs of wear and tear. For many years the American fanner was obliged to rely upon the obedient but sway-backed work horse whenever he wanted to plow corn, and whenever the horse became Indisposed or short of breath he had to be laid up for repairs and tinkered with by a veterinary surgeon at per tink. Kvery once in a while a horse would die by leaning up against a bolt of lightning or as a result of eating . something which was not intended for his stomach. This mde farming almost as expensive as feeding Russian prisoners in Oermany. The farm tractor will do the work of six horses when It Is hitting on all cylinders. It decs not have to be harnessed, hitched up or bedded down, neither does it stop In the middle of Taming Them Down. A great many interesting and quarrelsome men are made dull and placid by a happy marriage. Life.

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y by Italic Ve?. count me a lover of Earth With Its tears or its mirth; Its wine that !s bitter or bread that Is sweet With the pink apple trees and the brown honey hoes. With the far purple lantfs, And the warm poldcn sands And Its queer little, love-hallowed things That ere sacred as archangels' wings Or the 5tars that are seven! Ixuise Bowman. Baked Mackerel. Take two medium-sized fish, split and remove heads. Tut Into n buttered dripping pan, dot with butter and pour over one and one-third cupfuls of rich milk. liake twenty-five minutes in a hot oven. Good Cakes for the Family. A good fruit cake which may be kept six months and a square of which may be iced when it Is to be served is a good economy. Ginger Drops. Heat one egg; add one cupful of mo- ; lasses, one cupful of sugar, one cupful of sifted flour, and one-half cupful of melted shortening. Dissolve one and one-half teaspoonfuls of soda In one Ml UTA NT-MARY Dame Nature s dressed -the- trees m-stunning-BLUE; And'hete -Lorn in-laat-yeors frocK-I-WISH SHE'D -DR 55 ME-T00'

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a furrow on a hot day to remove a blue bottle fiy with its rear hoof. I: will do any work there Is on the farmexcept washing dishes and making beds, although these attachments will probably be put on later. Owing to the difficulty of eetir!ng horses which will not die in an offhand manner or give out at h knees in the middle of the afternoon, the farm tractor is bound to be more popuIt WiM Do Any Work There Is cn a Farm Except Washing Dishes and .Making Geds. lar than the candidate for congress who decides not t run njzain. It makes life easier for the fanner and sweetens the lot of the petulant hired man, therefore It has come to stay. (Copyright.) O Mystery f- GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS ONK of the most powerful Incentives In human life Is the Mystery that is locked away as a sort oi Core, buried within every Thought every Aspiration, every Action. It is the Mystery, that you cannot understand, yet which exists In your Friend, that makes that friend interesting; it Is the force of Mystery In your business that keeps you constantly at It. and for which you sacrifice and tirelessly work. It Is the Mystery, all wrapped up in every manifestation of nature it Is the Mystery that hangs like a dense fog about the very thought of Kternlty that makes It fascinating. It Is the element of Mystery entering Into every avenue of conscious life that makes lifo jvally wonderful. It is the Inspiration of Mystery that Is able to Immediately fire and wann your efforts nnd make your fondest dreams attainable, if you will but stop long enough to recognize this fon-e and make it save you. Periodically stop and consider for a moment thb factor In your Success. The two great Poles of life itself are bounded by Mystery from Hirth to Ioath. about the only really unmysterious thing in life is this that Sue eess n.nd Honor and Happiness, surely follow Work well performed. IfVUurttfL cupful of sour milk, add three and onehnlf cupfuls of Hour and n tablespoonful of ginger. When all the ingredients are added, add one tablespoonful of molasses. Drop from a spoon onto n grensvd, floured dripping pan. IJake in a moderate oven. Mexican Potato Salad. Mix one tabiespoonful of flour with one tabiespoonful of melted butter or bacon fat. add one-half teaspoonful of salt, two teaspoonfuls of chill powder and one cupful of vinegar; cook until smooth. Cut potatoes Into small dice, add finely chopped onions to senson, then the dressing and serve. Panned Tomatoes. Select firm, evei sized tomatoes, cut In halves, dip In flour and put cut side down in a pan in which has been melted two tablespoonfuls of butter. Cook over a hot fire until brown; remove the tomatoes to n hot dish and mir In a pan of sauce made of two tablespoonfuls of flour, one cupful of milk and one teaspoonful of chill powder, with one-half teaspoonful of salt. Holl ten minutes nnd pour over the tomatoes. Bread Sticks. Remove the crusts from sfices of stale bread, cut In strips five Inches long and one-half Inch wide. Roll in melted butter and brown delicately In the oven. Serve with salad or with cheese, in place of crackers. Escalloped Noodles. ! Prjire noodles the hornor.inde j kind are much belter for this dish: put I a layer of noodles In a baking dish, add a white sauce, using broth and milk, season well and cook until ' smooth. Tut n layer of the sauce over i th( noodles, another layer of noodle ; and llnKh with buttered crumbs, r.ake ' until the noodles are well done. Chicken broth or veal broth re especially good with this dMi.

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