Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 9, Jasper, Dubois County, 23 July 1920 — Page 3
After you eat always use
'AT M o e . ICfC.l Y0U3 STOMACHS SAKp one or two tahlets--eat like candy. Instantly relieves Heartburn, Bloated Gassy Feeling. Stops indigestion, food souring, repeating, headache and the many miseries caused 07 Acid-Stomach EATONIC is the best remedy, it takes the harmful acids and gases righs out of the body and, of course, you get well. Tens of thousands wonderfully benefited. Guaranteed' to satisfy or money refunded by your owndruggist. Cost a trifle. Please try itl fTJXTN j PARKER'S ifäSZS? HAIR BALSAM ih-i I Restores Color and I r&Jk i Bwxtylo Gray and Faded H2rl HlMDEUCOWfJO ItemoTM Cortical. Iobm. etc., rtop ail pais, roiurts comfort to tba UU tctktt iraikinr eaar. 15c br tnall or at Vraz g;UU. liUcox Chemical Worat, ratcboae, &. T. Several Choice Tractf Land la famoas Itel Illver Valley. nar Grand For a, priced rijtht y owner. II uy direct, save com'.ilrmlun. Write Gett rinno Hou. Orand Fori:.. N. I. Ill a SCRAP chew in PLUG form MOIST & FRESH 7 MUS AM UO.MCN i:VKKVWIIKUi: are enrnin over 110. 00 every day selling new rroduct; sweetens like pufjar; relative cost rnly 3c a pound. Greatest money maklntr fla: t on earth. lixperlenre unnfrewsry. Particular frre. Write A-l PRODUCTS CO.. T'ert. K-W 17. V7t North Wcll.i St.. Chicago. it liiert is work enough "to go 11 round" then Is likely to be money en nigh. SAVE SHOES AND STOCKINGS They will lat twice an Inns 1' you Shake Into Your Hioca ALLCN'S FOOT CA3E. the AtUlfejtlc. HeallnK powder for the feet. It taken away the ft Ins of Corns, Hunion. Callou.- or. aching, swollen, tender feet. AUtTm FootsKaxe top the friction which causes the wear on shoes sn1 stockings, saves expense and makes walking a delight. Shake It Into your shoes. Sprinkle It In the foot-bath. SclJ everywhere. Adv. BROUGHT HIM TO THE POINT Maiden's Confession Was Something Most Dilatory Lover Could Hardly Affect to Ignore. Vor ninny months he bad been eating fre suppers :it her father's expense ami the fair Mabel thought It time be pot a move on. One evening as they sat together in the parlor she carried out her little scheme. "Oh. hv funny she cried suddenly, as she turned over the pages of the evening paper. "What Is It':" he asked. "Why. here' an advertisement In which It says, Xo reasonable offer refused ' "What's odd about that?" asked the youns man hi surprise. "Oh, nothing," she replied coyly, trying to. raise a blush, "but those lire my sentiments exactly." Ncte of Suspicion. "I not lee remarked Farmer Corn-tojsM-1 "Hint yon always go away up north when you make up your mind to jro fMiin' ure enough." "That has been my custom remarked the enthusiast. "Well. I dunno but It's a good Idea to get m far away that the fish can't le exported to keep so's you could show your eat oh lusthl o' braggin altout it." We All May Do It "New suit, ehT "New suit nothing. This Is n suit years because I told her I thought I might need it to go fishing In."
As A TaMe Drink
meets every requirement ! The flavor, much like superior coffee, always pleases; and when health and economy are considered, this wholesome beverage fits every need Boil Postum Cereal fully 15 minutes, after boiling begins or if you prefer a quickly prepared drink, buy the newer form Instant Postum, which is made instantly in the cup.
"There's a Reason" for Postum Made by Postum Cereal Company, Inc. Battle Creek, Michigan
ra if HE AGE
Tiny Pass the Critical Period Safely zni Cornfcrtablj by Talanfj Lydia E. Pinkfcam's Vegetable Conpound. .Summit, N. J. "I have taken Lydia tt 1, UAlldUt D VCKCUlUJCViUinUUUilUUUl Fuiiij mg cnane 01 me and I think it Is a good remedy in such a condition. I could not digest my food and had much pain and burning in my stomach after meals. I could not sleep, had backache, and worst of all were the hot flashes. I saw in the papers about Vegetable r '''; -'- IIP I I1 VA" -?V Compound so I tried it. Now I feel all right and can work better. You have ray permission to publish this letter." Victoria Koppl, 21 Oak Ridge Ave, Summit, N. J. If you have warning symptoms euch as a sense of suffocation, hot flashes, headaches, backache, dread of impending evil, timidity, sounds in the cars, palpitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, constipation, variable appetite, weakness, inquietude, and dizziness, get a bottlo of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and begin taking the medicine at once. We know it will help you a3 it did Mrs. Koppl. Wanted lliotopt:, Morles, poems. We fv on acceptance. Hf-cinners also con.hlr .!. Handwritten MSS. acceptable. Univr..able work revised by experts anl sold tn commission. S?nd pterins etc., to Harvard Tlureau. 107-111 W. lierry St.. Ft. Wayne. lnl. Scenarios to Calif. Oinee, Marvin Iild., ran Francisco. Inclose stamped return env. rnPfltl f"0 POSmVtir R(MOVtDli,Ir.6MTrI (iLUlVLLll rMtock. Dr. CM. 8rrj I muilbkU Co 297 S Michigan Anu.ChlciO, Her Wish. "Is your husband fond of golf?" "I'll say so. I wish he paid as much attention to ir.e as he does to that old game." Dont Forget Cuticura Talcum When adding to your toilet requisites. An exquisitely scented face, skin, baby and dusting powder and perfume, rendering other perfumes superfluous. You may rely on It because one of the Cuticura Trio (Soap, Ointment and Talcum). 2fc each everywhere. Adv. We Say So, Too. He was a bashful young man and he wished much to propose to his best girl. Every time he called on her he' tried to give expression to his desire, but he limply could not do so. .Then he decided to And some other fitting way, and just as he was racking his brain most he happened to see In a window n postal card on which there was the picture of a bride and a bridegroom. He bought the card, addre5ed It to his best girl, and signed bis name. Then under the touching scene he wrote: "Eventually Why not now?" Then he mailed It. And she answered It satisfactorily, too. Point of Orljjln. Jerry was engaged In his nightly shelling of Varennes. A negro pioneer from the corps ammunition dump, seeking an abrl. clambered down Into an artillery P. C. and lay down beside the captain, who was catching a few moments' sleep. Aroused, the captain raised himself on one elbow and demanded, "Where the h did you come fromV Softly came the dulcet answer, Suh, I'se from Alabama' He stayed. The Stars and Strlpea Probable Reaso.i. Korelclgh I womb why Miss Kright never asks nie around on Sun day. Hangs Sbo probably looks upon Sunday as a day of rest.
MiTllffiL CAPITAL H AFFAIK B
How 1922 Appropriations Are to Be Made
fur SEE . . A UT'ON C! WASHINGTON Budget legislation, .ft which failed In the last session owing to the president's veto, will probably be enacted in the next session. A year has been lost, however, and tlie budget system cannot apply to the appropriations 'for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1921. In the meantime a new system of making appropriations will be tried, owing to a change In the rules of the house, which was put through In the closing days of the recent session as supplemental to budget legislation. This change will center in the hands of a single committee the work of pre !e Careful When You IV THE manufacturers of cigars and cigarets adopt the suggest'on of the agricultural department their new bill-board advertising this summer will hear fire-prevention slogans like these in big lettering: Don't drop FI HE when you smoke In the woods, nor throw If out along the road. Keep the forests GREEN I DANGER! Matches, pipes, coals, cigar stubs and cigaret ends start many forest fins. Help protect woods, streams, scenery. RE CAREFUL! Don't start a fire In the woods when you begin or end your smoke! Re sure your match, cigaret or pipe it OUT. DONT START WHAT YOU CAN'T STOP! Re careful with fire in and near the f erect. FIRE IS DANGEROUS! Re careful when you smoke In the woods. LOOK OUT! When you smoke In woods; don't start a forest fire. YOUR CO-OPERATION with this company to keep down forest fires Is asked. Rreak your match In two. Knock out your pipe ashes into your hand. Don't' drop a burning cigaret. FOREST FIRES cost millions a y ar. Don't start one. DON'T THROW FIRE AWAY In the woods or along the road.
Highway to Join Twelve National parks
.l A iAiJlipv - Tri rfvfr f TWELVE national parks lie In a rough circle of about S.fiOO miles berwoon Denver and the Pacific. Starting toward the north, the visitor comes in turn to Rocky Mountain In Colorado, Yellowstone In Wyoming, Glacier in Montana, Mount Rainier In Washington. Crater Lake In Oregon, Lassen Volcanic, Yosemlte, General Grant and Sequoia in California, Grand Canyon In Arizona, ZIon In Utah and Mesa Verde in Colorado. P.etween Mesa Verde and Denver are the Mount' Evans region, which Is to be added to Rocky Mountain and the Denver municipal mountain parks. These 11 parks are more or less connected by roads of widely-differing Quality. What is needed and projected Is a national park-to-park highway connecting with the Lincoln highway and other transcontinental roads. The The Lowly Corncob' PRORARLY you think of a corncob as a handy thing to eat green corn from and the thing from which the good old "Missouri meerschaum" Is made. Stop, look, read! Henceforth you must, know the lonely corncob as the source of furfural and half a dozen other things, but especially furfural. The chemists of the agricultural department' have discovered that the corncob is a regular catch-all of good things. Up t ) this time furfural has been so rare that it has sold as high as $20 a pound. Every ton of corn cobs will yield about thirty pounds of furfural as a by-product, and the chemists estimate that if ean be manufactured in this way for less than 'JO cent3 a pound. What It will sell for Is another story. Furfural Is what the chemists call a l.aslc intermediary in dyes. That means that you may make about as many kinds of dye out of furfural as i good cook can make good things to cat out of flour. They have shown at least a dozen different shades of cloth dyed with furfural. It Is highly -useful, too, in the manufacture of paints and lacquers and !n the making of bakelite, the suhtance used In pipe steins anil other trtlclcs. In addition to all that, fur-
1
paring appropriation bills heretofore handled by seven different committees. Under the new system the appropriations committee of the house will be made up of thirty-five members. There have been twenty-one members of the committee heretofore. In the past the appropriations eommitteehas handled such annual supply measures as the legislative,, executive and judicial bills, the sundry civil bills and the various deficiency bills. The six other committees whose power in handling appropriations have been transferred to the appropriations committee are those on military affairs, naval affairs, agriculture, foreign affairs, post office and Indian affairs These committees will henceforth handle general legislation relative to their various fields, but will lose their power over fiscal matters. The change in rules does not affect the committee on rivers and harbors, which will continue the preparation of the annual rivers and harbor appropriations bill, or the committee on public buildings and grounds, which will handle public buildings measures.
Smoke in the Woods SIT CAKE" fill. KATCH IS CUT FIRE IS DAHflKfiilJ FOREST FiRES COSTMIUICNS n. HELP PREVENT FIRES. Seven of the leading tobacco companies In this country have been asked to give their co-operation in enlistin smokers In a campaign against careless use of fire in all forests. Smokers, statistics show, are annually responsible for a large number of conflagrations in timbered areas, causing Immense losses. The letter suggests that the tobacco companies can render an Invaluable service In this movement by including In tobacco packages brief printed legends urging smokers to take every precaution to prevent the spread of fire from matches or burning to.bacco. With millions of tourists visiting the nationtd forests and national parks each summer the question of the careless smoker Is one of national Importance. visitors last year to the national parks numbered over 7r'MXH) and more than SO per cent of this travel was by private automobile. June 1 A. L. Westgard representing the national park service and the American Automobile association, left' Washington by automobile for Denver. From there he started on a pathfinder"' circuit of the national parks limned, seeking the liest route for the park-to-parl: highway. In August he will report at Denver. Then a large party will go under his guidance over his preliminary roiil'e and make selection of a permanent route. This party will Include Director Stephen T. Mather of the national park service; Gus. Holm of Cody, Wyo., president of the National Park-to-Park Highway association; various officials of the states of Wyoming and .Montana and of organizations interested in the project, and an official staff. Including writers and photographers. The purpose of this trip Is threefold: To select a parkMo-park route, which is to be improved by state and county organizations pending assistance from the federal government'; to secure data for maps and publicity matter and to promote travel by the people to the, national parks. and Its $20 Furfural fural Is such an excellent Insecticide that it has been used to a considerable extent for that purpose, even though the price was $10 a pound. About a bushel of cobs is produced for every bushel of shell corif and they have been almost a complete waste. Commercial plants are now being equipped to manufacture half a dozen products from them. One of these products Is an adhesive of exceptionally high quality said to be better for a nun her of Important uses than any adhesive previously known. Another Is cellulose, suitable for use In the manufacture of dynamite and various other things. Paper has been made, using a pari of the corn cob product as filler. Another product Is acetate of lime, from which acetic arid U made.
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ADVICE BOYS
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m GlEii; Club WorkJs Important Because It Has Such Large Possibilities, Says Secretary. LEARN TO BEST ADVANTAGE Department of Agriculture and Others Endeavoring to Make Fa cf Country More Profitable and Home Life Pleasant. (By E. T. MEREDITH, Secretary of Agriculture.) I want to say just a few words to the farm boys and girls, and the older people need not. bother to read It at all. Now, you and I know that the boys and girls' club work represents one of the most Important lines of agricultural activity in the United States today. I believe It is important, because it has such large possibilities. We men and women who are trying to improve farming and farm life will be out cf the game when you boys1 and girls are just reaching the prime of life. You have the advantage of us, because you are learning the principles of good agriculture and homemaking while you are still young enough to learn to the best advantage .1 vi kMl Wi id S9 Club Boys With . Their Purebred Calves. and to apply. in a practical way the knowledge thus gained throughout your whole lives. Accomplishing Much Good. Even as boys and girls you are accomplishing more good than can be measured. The good that you will be able to do will Increase an you grow older and, when you become full-grown men and women, you can supply for the agricultural forces of this nation n leadership such as the world has never known before. I congratulate the hoys and girls' club members. And I would like to ask a favor of the boys and girls who are not members of the clubs. We are trying the United States department of agriculture, the state agricultural colleges, and a great many other people to make the farms of this country more profitable and home life on the farm more pleasant. I wls-h the rest of you boys and girls would join with those who are already members of the dubs and help us In accomplishing this great service for our -common country. It is a patriotic thing to do; and It is a service that cannot be rendered hy anybody except you boys and girls. Biggest Year In History. The year 1920 should be the biggest year In the history of boys' and girls' club work, and I am confident that it will be. The country Is facing a diflicub; situation, because so many men have loft the farms to work in the city. The good work that the club boys and girls can do will help to overcome that handicap, and the club boys and girls will do that kind of work this year. It may hearten you to know that many of us here in the department of agriculture look upon the boys and girls' clubs much as Caesar must have locked upon the Tenth Legion or Napoleon upon the Old Guard. The other forces may fall, but we know that we can- rely on you. I might not be willing to see you undertake such serious service If I did not know that, while you work hard, you play joyously together. I am sure that the boys and girls in the clubs have better times than the boys and girl.9 who are not In the clubs, and that Is an additional compensation to you for the hard work you do In the club work. AID FARM BUREAU CAMPAIGN Connecticut Boys Given Purebred Holstein Calves for Fine Work in Behalf of Bureau. ' Boy and girl club members secured more than half the farm bureau memberships In a drive made In FalrtiL'ld county, Connecticut. The quota for the town of Fairfield was 115 members. Raymond Ranks, a member of the boys and girls' club In that town, secured 100 members. In North Fairfield, whose quota was 12, Leon Ryvolt, another club boy, obtained 50 memberships. Recause of the fine work which they did In behalf of the farm bureau, each boy was given a purebred Hereford calf and thus became the envy of all the other boy and girl club members Ui Fairfield county.
PRICES FROM SALES IM HARKET REPORTS Predictions As to Probable Future Figures Hot Given.
Not Possible to Give Quotations on Car Lots Because No Basis to Ascertain Price Most Interest In Jobbing Trade. The prices quoted In market reports, supplied by bureau of markets. United States department of agriculture, represent actual sales, not prices asked or quotations given, or predictions as to probable future prices, rjvnce it may be that on a rising market tho prices quoted may seem low when tho reports are received, and vice versa, on a declining market the price may be high by the time the reports are received. Quotations usually represent the condition of the respective markots up to approximately 9 a. m.. local time, but reports are not Issued until about noon. Consequently It Is Impossible to Include fluctuations which may occur between these hours, in the market reports.In many Important markets It would bo Impossible to got car lot quotations because very few or no cars are sold Intact by the original car lot receiver in that market to the local jobbers, hence there would be no basis for actual sales upon which to report n, car lot price. In most important markets, however, there Is a fairly defined jobbing trade which buys at the prevailing jobbing price for the day. Keturns to a grower o: shipper who may have consigned a shipment to a commission merchant are usually made on a basis of the jobbing price received from which, of course, freight, commission, and other expenses are subtracted. Hence shippers of consigned products are usually more Interested In the jobhing prices prevailing In a given market than In car lot prices quotations. STORAGE OF FOOD PRODUCTS Cellar of House Should Hold Winter's Supply of Various Kinds of Fruit and Vegetables. Farm buildings usually offer ample space for the storage of food products raised on the farm. The cellar of the house should hold a winter's supply of potatoes, beets, carrots, onions, and canned fruits and vegetables, as well as such articles as a barrel of salt pork, keg of kraut, ami Jar of eggs in water glass. The thrifty farmer faces the winter season with a well-stocked cellar and with a store of dried fruits and vegetable's and possibly some Jars of apple butter in his attic. Specially constructed root coliars, or "caves," may he found on sonic farms Potatoes and other vegetables are sometimes carried over the winter in Vttifflatitj Hn V ' It Is Not Too Early to Begin to Plan for the Storage of Your Fruits and Vegetables Here Is a Root Cellar That Can Be Constructed at Small Cost. earth pits, or "tumps." The barn nfay also serve as a storage place for vegetables. For more information write the United States department of agriculture, Washington, D. C. TO AID RASPBERRY GROWERS Specialists to Make Thorough Investigation of Diseases in Middle West Region. Raspberry growers, particularly ln the lake region of the middle West, have encountered dlfliculties resulting from diseases not thoruoghly understood that .have seemed to threaten the existence of the Industry, unless effective methods of control could be worked out. The United States department of agriculture has been Investigating the situation for some tlmo past and Is about to begin more intensive studies. Specialists will spend practically the entire season In the field, thoroughly Investigating the disease to determine the causes and habits of growth and to devise control measures by spraying and otherwise. KEEP OFF HARMFUL RABBITS Trunks Painted With Mixture of Coal Tar and Crpcsote Oil Will Discourage Rodents. v Where rabbits are likely to gnaw young fruit trees, paint the trunks with a mixture of coal tar and creosote oil. Use two-thirds to threefourths heavy roal tar and balance of creosote oil, or enough to thin It to the consistency of. thick paint. Thee materials can be bought ' at paint stores. A paintbrush with stiff bristles which are prett well worn down Is best to apply the inr. I: Is said that rabbits will not gr?aw trees which have heen painted with this mixture. It Is the best paint to use on pruning cula or wounds.
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