Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 6, Jasper, Dubois County, 2 July 1920 — Page 2

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Ran-n-dom' Reels

By HOWARD Tili: COLD SORE TIIK cold sore is a Finall, pink growth on tin? human lip which Is mont painful to a sensitive, shrinking nature than npsttln;r the consomme at a six o'clock dinner. It Is one of nature's efforts to humble pride, anil Is sometimes so successful that the victim will not appear at the moving-picture sh.nv for a week. AH meilirnl authorities ajrree that the cause of rhe coM sore is harder to I've DittovfRlD lATf Too MUCH IkJT CoWi-OM-TVC-Cot "7VE IHFIAMMATIOM WILL M ACfrfcAVATtD CXJL CcLlZACvt'S PtfOSEKV IS OF VAST JMfOKTAAC "TO TH EPICAL WCALD Authorities agree that the cause of the cold sore is harder to locate than the relation of the average sermon to the text. locate than the relation of the averne sermon to the text. Some investigators declare It Is caused by the same Kenn which brings on the hot-riveted hay fever, while others say that It Is due to eating the self-rising pancake. This latter theory seems to be dlsproven by the fact that thousands of people cnt layer after layer of pancakes every morning in the year without Incurring a solitary blemish, while others who live an abstemious life on oatmeal crackers and last night's milk are oftentimes stricken with a cold sore which resembles a blushing young onion. The cold sore chooses Its own time Last Night's Dreams What They Mean QUARRELING. DOCTOR COKIAT says "Everybody dreams and ridiculous It may appear Rut with regard to the prophetic quality of dreams he says: 'Trom a strictly scientific standpoint such an interpretation .would be very Hiipcrticial in that It 1 i 1 not take Into full cognizance all the complex facts which may produce a dream." For instance it must be proved what the event "foretold" in the future never existed as a wish in either the con scious or unconscious thought of the ! dreamer. In my experience I have yet failed to find one genuinely prophetic dream. Yet all the scientists agree that the Mudy of dreams from a scientific standpoint is still In its infancy and one scientist goes so far as to suggest that as (Mir waking thoughts frequently contain the germs of our future actions so our dream thoughts may have in them similar germs. Ir. Charles Mackay, in his wellknown hook, "Extraordinary Delusions." scoffs at ho belief in the prophetic quality of dreams but' remarks: Ithas subsisted through all the changes that normal or physical revolutions havt operated in the world and tlu record of five thousand years bears testimony to the universal diffusion of the belief." The scientists would explain l dream of quarreling with a friend as tlie sprinjiins to life of sonn dormant idea, regarding that friend lurking in the sulieonseiousness. Ciiven the whole MOTHER'S COOK by )uxnr"ii"ir " KmeniM earth and azure Uuay Wo and dragon Sly. Hobollnks slnfiing in thf prass, Palsies ncKUlir.g in a :nas. Fruit Cake Baked in Fireless Cooker, j . , , . lse anv prel erred fruit cake; place. 1 i Ii rt i. in round pans or use the shallow cookin i mm i er kettle. Take for two hours be1 A ... i tween two soaptone radiators, heated JO minutes over an ordinary gas flame. open the cooker the first l." minutes to allow the first bent and steamto escape. Fruit cake thus baked has something o the old brick-oven iiavor. Thi method can be used for wedding cake or for any dough mixture which requires long slow cooking. Seasonable Dishes. A change for the always good strawberry shortcake will be found in the following: t i Strawberry Dumpling. j Put one liut of Hour into a howl; I add to it half a teaspoonful of salt and a teaspoonful of baking powder; rub in carefully a ablespoonful of butter and add sufiVicn: milk to moUteo. ; Knead lightly, and rolL out into a sheet about a sixteenth of an inch in : thickness. Cut with a large round cut- ' ter, put three large berries in the ceil

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for budding. It Is very particular to put In an appearance the day before some "Voluptuous social event, and when worn with a decollete gown and pink carnations makes a captivating color scheme. Every once In a while we read in the newspapers of some high society wedding havingo be postponed on account of the groom's absence, but In nearly all of these cases It will be found that the bride-elect lias come down with a luminous cold sore which cannot be hidden behind a tulle voile with any degree of success. It requires great fortitude and will power for an enraptured groom to stand up at the altar and run his neck throuj-'lrtho yoke, under such circumstances, but It has lK?en done. There Is no known cine for the cold son? except patience and hope. Some victims carry a camphor bottle and apply the contents in a stealthy manner, while others go forth defiantly into the world wearing a quarter section of black court-plaster. When a cold sore settles on the upper lip of man he can always circumvent it by growing a thick", branching mustache, but woman is denied this precious privilege and Is obliged to suffer in silence. The cold sor-? is probably given so that we ivlll not become too proud of our looks. The man who can showpride with a bulbous cold sore on his lower lip has reached the point where any further inllation would result in a blow-out. (Copyright.

SCHOOL DAYS

do, Ketch.. bvt-i tCvU feller doWn m by Vendöv to dream Freud would, doubtless, see it tinged with neurosis. What say the mystics? They say that to dream of quarreling with your sweetheart means that you are going to love each other better than ever. To quarrel with a friend means that your friendship is secure, and that you will shortly enjoy yourself in his company, though some of the mysticare unkind enough to add thut it also means loss of money. If you quarrel with a stranger it is an omen that you will soon make the acquaintance of an undesirable person. Any dream of quarreling signifies the reconciliation of estrangements and constancy in friendship. So quarrel all you wain to in dreamland and keep the peace in the waking worhh OCopyrlsiht.) j " ter of each round; fold over the dough, rolling it carefully so that the opening Is closed,- stand in a greased baking pan. brush the top with milk and bake ' " 'I " f 13 minutes. Serve mi Mrawnvm miner, iuaue ov ueai- ' ing to a cream two tablespoonfuN of ' . . butter and adding one cupful of pow . .. 1 dered suirar gradually. Add one mashed berry, beat well; add another until four good-sized berries are added. Dish and stand asieV to harden. (CHyriKht. 1 ? 20. Western Nf wspaprr Culon ) O MILITANTiMARY-lyqorden-used to yield -6weet-pea5 to-decK-my-youog friends-C0AT5: But-now-ibe-Hind ofped-!' raise GO -DOWN 'MY YOUNG -FRIEND5' THROATS'

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Pioneers Dy GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS .1.1, ..... i WHAT you are and what you have you owe largely to the bloodsweating efforts of Pioneers. Every notable name In History,. since Time started, represents Pioneering of some sort. Not all were Finishers, but all were Starters. If you want to be a Pioneer Start Something. Watt was a Pioneer In revealing the powers of Steam. He got his first Ideas from his Mother's stove kettle! Sir Isaac Newton evolved the Idea of (Jravitation from throwing an Apple into the air. Today he is recognized as one of the world's greatest Pioneers in the field of Science. Thus It has always been. Hy Thinking, even YOU may Start 'Something. Woohvorth, the Pioneer In Five and Ten cent stores, received his Idea from a conversation in a small New York country store where he was at the time a Clerk. The idea was free to everyonebut Woohvorth had the Nerve and Initiative to Start Something. Kernender this: if an Idea comes to you that you consider valuable and you don't work it out, some one somewhere, at some time Is almost sure to do so and receive the Glory for it! So. day by day, keep the Pioneering instinct alive, lie known as one net afraid to Start Something. :- w i - i nTTt If Jut Folks By EDGAR A. GUEST SINCE JESSIE DIED. We understand a lot of things we never did before, And it seems that to each other Ma and I are meaning more. I don't know how to say it, but since little Jessie died We have learned that to be happy we must travel side by side. You can share your joys and pleasures, but you never come to know .lust the real depth of loving till you've got a common woe. We're past the hurt of fretting we can talk about it now, She slipped away so gently and the lever left her brow. So softly that we didn't know we lost her. but instead We thought her only sleeping as we watched beside her bed." Then the doctor, I remember, raised his head, as If to say What his eyes had told already, and Ma fainted dead away. L'p to then I thought that money was the thing I ought to get And I-fajicied. once I had it, I should never have a fret. lut I saw that I had wasted precious hours in seeking wealth, I had made a tidy fortune, but I couldn't buy her health. And I saw this truth much clearer than I'd ever seen before: That the rich man and the poor man have to let death through the door. We're not half so keen for money as one time we used to be I am thinking more of mother and she's thinking more of me. Now we spend more time together, and I know we're meaning more To ach other on life's journey, than we've ever '.ueant before. It was hard to understand it! Oh, the dreary nights we've cried! lut we've found the deptn of loving, since the day that Jessie died. (Ccp rU;l t l y IMirnr A. Gutst.)

Preparing

1 REVERE William Dawes Had Glorious Part in Events That Led to Independence. In order that long-delayed recognition may be accorded a patriot, Hev. Georpe A. Gordon, in a review of the old South church, recently urged that n tablet be placed in the church in honor of William Dawes, Jr., a member of the church, who rode to Lexington and other Middlesex villages on the same errand on which Paul "Revere rode, the fame of the latter perpetuated In the poem by Longfellow, the Boston Globe states. The Daughters of the American Revolution and Rev. Mr. Gordon are of like opinion that for too many years the other brave rider has remained in oblivion, and recently the D. A. R. appointed an organizing regent to form In Massachusetts a chapter to be named, the Maj. William Dawes, Jr., chapter, D. A. I v. Here are the circumstances of the thrilling ride made by Dawes: For some days before April 10, 177", It had been known that the British were preparing to move. The destination was suspected to be Concord, for at that place were stores of war material, and also Hancock and Adams and other revolutionary lenders. Warren Ready to Flash News. There had been a number of false alarms, .and, while" Warren kept the patriot leaders well Informed, he naturally waited until information had become complete and attack certain before sending out to arouse the country. He had trusty men for two routes of exit from Boston and signal lights arranged to call out the men on the other side of the Charles river if direct communication with the country people should fail. On the afternoon of the day before the attack Warren learned that -the British were about fo move. The whole town was on watch, every citizen, a detective, and Warren vns kept well informed. . He waited until the Iirltish Pecan actually to move their boats and then he sent out Dawes at once hy the land route over the Xeck and across the river at the Brighton bridge to Cambridge and Lexington. Then ho sent Revere out by the water route through Charlestown to Lexington to arouse the country and especially to acquaint Hancock and Adams of the movement. Revere Beat Him There. Revere arrived In Lexington a half hour before Dawes, and the latter met Revere on the green when he arrived. Dawes had starte! on his ride at once after receiving hif orders from Warren and had eluded-the guard at the Neck with difficulty, coming out by the longer route- of Brighton bridge i and the Cambridge road and arousing all the houses In his path. After a' little delay for refreshments. Revere and Dawes rode on to Concord. Abnut half-way along, near Hnrtwell's tavern, they met British officers. Dawes, chased by the soldiers, dashed up to an empty farm house, shouting: "Hello, boys, I've got two of them!" His pursuers were frightened and made off. Dawes got to Concord about two o'clock that morning and probably took part in the hat tie of that day. Revere never got to Concord bridge at all. Whipped a British Soldier. From the Hps of Dawes and those of his two wives, for he was twice married, his children often heard the tale while the events were freh In the minds of all. About the time of his marriage in 17GS he became major In the Ancient

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trA i iZ&rtiKift and Honorable Artillery company. The British troops garrisoned in the town soon became a great annoyance and Dawes was not a man to submit tamely to insult. One night he and his wife were returning through Cornhlll about dusk and he had moved a few steps In advance with an acquaintance, when a British soldier caught Mrs. Dawes up in his arms and attempted to carry her off bodily. Her husband, however, turned upon him and gave him a beating. As it became more evident that the oppressors must be met in the open field he scoured the country in the attempt to organize and aid the Revolu tion. On these rides he sometimes borrowed a dress of a farmer, and' had a bag of meal behind his hack on the horse. Defied General Gage. About this time he undertook therti daclous and well-planned exploit which saved the cannon of Capt. Adlon Paddock's company in the Ancient and Honorables from the British. Somen! the mechanics of the company were determined to prevent the surrender d their two small field pieces to Genera; Gage. William Dawes was their leader. The men forced iheir way Into t!.guard house and carried the rannen off to the free school on what is ihv Mason street, where they were hidden for a fortnight in a wood box under the master's feet. .Soon after the affair of the cannon came the memorable ride and the siege of Boston began. Dawes at once joined the Continental troops at Cambridge and, it is said, fought at Bunker Hill. When Boston had become unsafe he moved his family to .Worcester and when the siege ended he was appointed commissary at Worcester by congress. j While in Worcester he went Into part nership with his brother-in-law as grocers and when, at the end of the war, he returned to Boston, he carried on the same business in Dock square. After having married a second time he moved to Marlboro, to the farm previously occupied by his father. His stay there was short, however, for he died February 2.". 1700. He was buried in the King's Chapel burying ground. PUT LIBERTY BELL IN PLACE Claim Filed by Man Whft Was Responsible for Work Makes Interesting Reading Tcday. An odd memento of the Liberty bell whose replicas on every side today re mind us that the battle for freedom has always to be fought. Is the bill for food served the workers who set It In plac It was first hung In the steeple of the Pennsylvania state house, according to a claim filed by Edmund Wooley, dated on April 17. 17o3. "for sundrys advanced for rals Ing the bell and frame and putting up the bell." Wooley declared that he had on that date supplied food and other refreshments to the workmen engaged In the task, the list including; the following: "Forty-four pounds bef.four gammons two pecks of potatoes, r00 li men. thirty-six loaves of bread of Lacy ye Baker, three gallons of mm of John Jones, mustard, pepper, salt, butter, a cheese, cooking and wood, eartheu ware and candles, and a barrel of betr of Anthony Morris." This formidable list cost the province a total of A 13 shillings 10' ponce, or about $2.75. a modest figure Judging by present day prics. Lafer the bell was recast from the same metal, hut with slightly different combinations, to give a better tone. The bell Itself cost a littte over ?:!0O.

THE MISERY OF

MAGH. Removed by Lydia EL Pinlcham's Vegetable Compound. Mosfcegon, Mich. "For six years I was so weak in my back at times that I HHtUUWiymiiil could hardly walk. Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound was recommended to me and it made me good and strong again so that I am able to do all 0 6 my work. I highly recommend your medicine and tell everyone I meet what it did for me." Mrs. G. Schoo tili, ,!. d ?. .1 1 . V - - v V 2 P A. field, 240 Wood Ave, Muskegon, Mich. Woman's Precious Gift The one which she should most zealously guard is her health, but she often neglects to do so in season until some ailment peculiar to her sex has fastened itself upon her. When so affected women may rely upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, a remedy that has been wonderfully succes3iul in restoring health to suffering women. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound will help you, write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass., for advice. Your letter Will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. in New York City alone from kidney trouble last year. Don't allow yourself to become a victim by neglecting pains and aches. Guard ogainst this trouble by taking GOLD MEDAL 1 Tho world's standard remedy for kidney liver, bladder and urid acid troubles Holland's national remedy slnco 1535. All druggists, three sizes. Guaranteed. Look for the n&rae Cold Medal on eittj box and ccpt do imitAÜoa When Doctors Disagree. John Jiinson was very ill. He called In n doctor, who hemmed nnl hnwed and called in a second doctor. Then, while. John Jiinson lay and suffered, the two quarreled about his case. "You are wroiifr," said Dortnr No. 1. . "I'm rlht," retorted Doctor No. 2. "You're wronp," repeated Doctor Xo. i. Here the patient pave a sroan an( hroupht the medical men to a realization of the needs of the moment. Int poctor Xo. 2 couldn't resist a last swipe. 0 "Go your own way," said he, "hut I'll prove I'm riht at the postmortem !" From the Argonaut. Cutlcura for Pimply Faces. To remove pimples and blackheads Piuear them with Cuticurn Ointment. Wush off in five minutes with Cuticurn Sorp and hot water. Once clear keep your skin clear hy usins them for dally toilet purposes. Don't fall to In elude Cuticura Talcum. Adv. Mere Talk. "Where did you say the Hlithcrhys were planning to spend the summer?""With relatives in the county." 4Tt:t I thought " "Regardless of the fact that their breezy conversation with friend and acquaintances would had you to think that the largest hotel at America's most fnshionahlo resort would soon house them." 15!rndngh:iin Age-Herald. No, Alfred, a ;rirl never suspects a young man's intentions until he asks hr whether she can co!c. Back (Giving Out? That I'bad back" is probably due to weak kidneys. It shows in constant duh, throbbing backache, or sharp twinges when stooping or lifting. You Lave headaches, too, dizzy spelli, a tired feeling and irregular kidney action. It is usually capy to correct these early troubles, and avoid the moro serious ailments by giviDg prompt help. Ute Doan's Kidney Pills. They have helped thousands the world over. Ask your neighbor! An Indiana Care Mrs. A. S. Keed, tt3 Watt St., Jeffersonvllle. Ind., says: "I had kidney complaint and suffered constantly with my back. I was sore and lame and had dizzy kidneys were lrreg-uly ular in action and$2 DOthered me quiter vised me to useAr", W Doan's KldneyVl.J Pills, so I bought them. Doan's relieved the backaches and other symptoms of kidney trouble." Get Doen't at Any Store. 60c a Box FOSTER. MILBURN CO- BUFFALO. K. Y. Kill All Fiies! 711 CY r THE AD disease: r.y where. DAISY KLY KILLER VMteU al kiJ mil fii. N. ornamental, coartntent and ccar laa ta al t aea K. Jvl ef metaJ. eta't Dill pet;poT: not aoil or inicr acjlhlrff. CuarmntecO. Ü A IS X FLY KILLER at yoor dealer or CATJOLD SOUCK3. Ua L Elb An.. Ii rook Ins. N.T. W. N. U., Indianapolis, No. C5..1920.

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