Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 14, Jasper, Dubois County, 27 August 1920 — Page 8
SALTS IF WM
!D Drink lota of and stop eating neat for a wMls if your Bladder troubles you. When yon wake up with batScccInj aH3 3nll misery in tho kidney region it generally means you have been eating too much meat, ay a well-known authority. Meat forma uric acid which overworks tho kidneys in their effort to filter it from tho blood and they become sort of paralyzed and logy. When your kidneya pet ßlucgiah and clog you xnugt relievo them, like you relieve your bowels; removing all tho body's urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue U coated, und when tho weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine Is cloudy, full of aediment, channels often pet sore, water scalds and you arc obliged to Beck relief two or three timci during the night. , Either consult a pood, reliable phyßi cian at once or get from yot t pharmacist about four ounces of- Jad Ealta; take ft tablespoonful in a glaia of water before breakfast for a few daya and your kidney will then act fine. This famous ealta is mado from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and ßtimulato ßlupgish kidneys, also to neutral izo. acids in the urine bo it no longer irritates, tkua ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is a life eaver for regular meat caters. It h, ineipcnsivc, cannot injure and makes a delightful, cüervweent lithia-water drink. ASPIRIN FOR COLDS Name Bayer" is on Genuine Aspirin say Bayer Insist on "Bayer Tablet9 of Aspirin" in a "3ayer package," containing proper directions for Colds, Tain, Headache, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Khcumatism. Name "Uayer" means genuine Aspirin prescribed by phy'cians for nineteen years. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Aspirin w trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacide:iter of Salicylicacid. i SAGE TEA DARKENS 9 TO E Don't Stay Gray! Here's an Old-time Recipe that Anybody can Apply. The uso of'Sapo and Sulphur for reetorlng faded, gray hair to its n;itui:;l color dates back to grandmother's time. Sho used It to keep her hair beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance. this simple mlxturo was applied :wiUi wonderful effect. But brewing at homo is mussy and out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for a bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will get this famous old preparation, improved by tho addition of other ingredients, which can bo depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair. ' A well-known downtown druppist say it darkens the hair no naturally anöt evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through our hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning tho gray hair disappears, and after another application or two, it becomes beautifully dark and glossy. - Wyeth's Sapo and Sulphur Compound is a delightful toilet requisite for those who desire a more youthful appearance. It is not Intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. inrMinn tC""M t- ......... .............. ...-.-." TELL YOUR WIFE CORNS LIFT OFF Doesn't hurt a bit to lift corns or calluses off with finders i 1 0 ä' Xot a twinw of pain or Borcness 1-efore applying or afterwards. Thia ;.my hound like a dnnm to corn -postered ueti and woitnui v. ho have Wen cutting, i'Iir.' and v.rin torturous plasters. -i Com lift out and calluses lcel :f as if ly magic, s:tys this Cincinnati authority. A iju-rtor ounce of frovone costa hut .-. ;Vv o :its at anv drill store. Apply a
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: a- drti s din-cily upon your tender , rn or rallus, and instantly tlie sorediapjM4;rs; then shortly tho corn or oallu will fo ht that it liftaofT. l'ntvonc tlri(t instantly. It doesn't at. out th corn or callus, but just fc'rrhrl it up o it lifts away without v.r. !rri:ati:i tho urrounling skin. "::.! : h u! i kiM-p it on the dreier :;: ! mur !- t a c n or callus ache twice. .EARN SHORTHAND It v. ill Kiy you f!L it is an aure I means 0 gooi t ioynn lit. It i i!oryth.i:i tli.it. It is an j!.va!u.stilr f rrs nJ c(-on?hinmnl a lice and ülr aver li.ruout your Lfe. LENN PITMAN PHONOGRAPHY Is ta::;!it !a r liable 6ch?oI.i cvrrhcTr. I-ct t:l iTmmfTiil ot.c t you. Or ve uiil a J vis yoj. (iboul c Ii -instructiuu cr lesaous by uiiL Write U3 The Phonographic Institute, Cincinnati. oiao.r k-nn ritroan, rounJer, Ja wfci II. Howard. I'.tiKdzi,
ELECTRICITY.
tthy It Is Difficult For tha Layman t; .Understand W!iat It Is. "What b electric i'v;'' 13 a favor Ito query' with" jx r pl j v. ho desire tr; "get a rise" out n fi cntific man 'And when he to answor it in the same Finile fashion that he might treat the question "What is a biscuit?" the questioner cries out: Aha! You profess to know all about elcctricih. Why, you can't CTcn tell what it iV." Now, to "tell what a thing is" that is, to define it 13 to stato ita relations with something moro familiar. The particular familiar thing that the questioner is thinking of in this case is ordinary matter. Heat has been explained to him a-3 a vibration of material particles Light, he has been tola, ia a wai motion in the ether, and he lindert t '.nrh the ether to be a kind of matt'.T or a substance resembling matter in eorae particulars. It is not to bo denied that no euch eimple general relationship can be stated between clcctricib and matter. But, this being bo, it would be just as correct to say that wo do not know what matter is sr that we do not know what electricity is. As a matter of fact, we do not know what mutt or is, and the latest plausible theory of it builds it up on an electric basis, bo that on this theory the idea of electricity is more fundamental than that of matter. Unfortunately our cense have been evolved by contact with matter and are trained to detect only matter. Electricity they know only secondarily, through its action upon matter the light or heat thai it causes matter to give out, the attraction that it causes certain sub stances to exert, and so on. To ihr man in the street, therefore, matte is familiar, and he demands a stat ment of the latter in terms of th former, illogical though this mat be. After the scientist has stater all this the reply comes back, "Ye I understand all that, and it i most clear, I am sure, but tell me then, what is electricity anyway?" Another source of confusion t the lay mind is that scientific mei do not alwa3 use tho word "eleu tricity" to rmpan the eame thin;; The engineer often employs it U express the tiling that the thecret ical electrician calls '"electric enc nr." To find the encngy of electricitj that is, its ability to do work the electrician multiplies the quan tity of electricity by the potentia or tension under which it exists But to the engineer this product itself measures tho thing that ho calls "electricity." The work that a pound of "water nay do by falling a foot is one foot mnd. The water i3 the same after filing as before, though Ü3 energy is less. So to the electrician a quantity of electricity at 100 -tolta Is precisely the saivie a3 at one volt, though the former is able to do a hundred times as much work. Thi3 ditlerencc in meaning cause thousands of disputes among students. "Electricity is a form of energy' savs one, "just like light or heat." "Oh, no!" is the reply. "It is not energy at all, though U may possess or convey energy." Ore disputant is talking about the electricity of the physical and the othe about that of the engineer; hence their dispute is merely a matter o definition, though they do notknov. it What wonder that somo pcop'.t i re ptill content to regard thewholr 'ibj '?t civ dia 1 Yumbo Jrtn I o?- St V :d"'taa..bli. OUR, 1ERWTIMG 0, r m i on Emm "Will Save APPLY SULPHUR YOUR ran Costs Little and Overcomes Trouble Almost Over Night
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Anv breaks out of the m, even rierv, itching eczemn, can be qui&ily rue'reome applying Mcntho-Sulphur, declares a 'notcti skin specialist. Bet -1 of itf nenn il-.-stroyitu: rrorerthis sulphur r.r?r7Jio? -stant-Iv'lirinijs case trom skin irntat;.on. .o.ithe-, .vid heals the eczema right v.p atui leaves the skm dear and 't.Ycr fr.:!s to relieve the torment without tlelav. Sufferers frorn 5km trouble should obtain a small jar 0 Mcntho-Sulphur from any Rood drugKist and use it like cold cream.
Labor's First Striving for 'Place in the Sun' Was Mainly Political Early manifestations of the labor feeling in the United States were political. In 1S20 a workinjoncn's ticket was placed In nomination In New York. This political movement spread Into Pennsylvania and Massachusetts and conti Ihutcd to tho formation of the Loco Toco party which played an Important part In tho politics of that period. Political organization hastened organization for trade purposes and h: 1S3T the. General Trades union of the city of New York elected its president to congress. In 1S32 the Now England Association of Farmers, Mechanics and Worklngrnen was organized In Iloston. The three most fmportnnt labor organizations which appeared before the Civil war were organized In 1S-15: The New England Workingmen's association, the New England Protective union and the Industrial Congress of the United States.. All three organizations waned in the early '00s, and from that time
until the end of the Civil war many trades unions of tlie narrower kind were formed. During this period many trade union leaders characterized the trade union as exclusive and warmly advocated the formation of broader organizations which wculd elevate the masses by other means than tho strike and the regulation of apprenticeship. In 1SC0 their efforts resulted la the formation of the National Labor union, which attempted to found a Labor Reform party and died in 1S70 "of tho disease known as politics." The work laid down by the National Labor union fell Into the hands of the Knights of Labor, formed In December, lSbT), by leaders of a dissolved local union of garment cutters In Philadelphia. Until 1SS2 the name and purpose 0 the order were kept secret. In LSSC it bovame involved in the Missouri Pacific strike. Its membership then numbered 700,000. Thereafter, split by Internal dissensions, and weakened by strikes, its membership and influence declined. In 101-1 it had less than 100,000 members. The American Federation of Labor originated in an attempt to found n 1:011eral organization of American workIngmcn distinot from the Knights of Labor on a trade union basis. A preliminary convention was called by the Knights of Industry and the Amalgamated Labor union the latter composed iargely of soceders from the Knights of Labor and met In Terre Haute, Ind., August 2, 1SS1. The first olllclal convention met at Pittsburgh, Pa., in November, 1SS1. The American Federation of Labor has practically taken the place of its former rival, the Knights of Labor, the organization which was all-powerful some twenty-five years ago. sent3 progress while the old guard "has Its eyes to the setting sun." Worsts Heckler in Crowd. Cox displays absolute mastery on the platform. He is never at a loss for words and he hurls epigramatic phrases at his ence . with startling suddenness. For instance, while addressing the open air meeting at South Dend he badly worsted a heckler amid the plaudits cf the huge crowd. The governor declared for the federal regulation of the packing industry in order to limit the period'' in which foodstuffs can be kept' in cold Morale. Some one In the audience asked why President Wilson had not done that. Pointing his finger at the man Cox shouted: "Hecauso the party to which you belong l:a3 been in control of congress for the past two years." He gladly accepted the challenge presented when the Republicans repudiated the league of nations and took their stand for a separate peace with Germany. He described as falsifiers those who declare the covenant would take the war making powers from the hands of congress and place It in a super-government across the seas and labelled the Republican efforts to pervert the meaning of the pact as "pure moonshine." His pledge to bring about disarmament under the league with a consequent reduction in taxation, and an illustration of the arbitration features of the covenant evoked prolonged cheers from the audience. Praises League to Top. Opinion sounded in the wake of the Cox speech shows that he has raised the covenant issue from the depths of misrepresentation where it was 3ent by Republican propaganda, to Ihc supreme issuo of the hour. His incontrovertible facts and his willingness to declare from the platform that tho old guard statements "are not predl - had a telling cated cn truth" has effect. The South Rend meeting was held in a tabernacle that had been erected for an evangelist. Cox, glancing about the structure and noting its design, said: "I am glad to start my campaign in a .tabernacle. This is a great crusade," and then, turning to the crowd, he said: "I would like to ask Henry Cabot Ledge one question in all rev erence: . 1 1 . 1 w hat would Christ hici?clf say of , , v- .1 - ,ru.. o League of Nations? Why, tho th
angel that announced his coming sang. 'Peace on Earth, Good Will to Men."
FINE ME
OF
M DDIMTCD ii 1 1111 11 Li Institution of Which Organization Has Right to Be Proud. NEARLY THIRTY YEARS OLD Beneficent Work Done in Palatial Abode at Colorado Springs Would Be Hard to Overestimate Union Has Glorious Record. In the year 1S."0 there was a gathering of union printers in the city of Xew York, compot.Ml of representatives from a dozen different cities, and the foundation was there laid for what was destined to become "the world's greatest labor organization." From this modest little meeting the International Typographical union was called 'into being, and ever since that time it has been the purpose of union printer to spread the gospel of trades. unionism throughout the world. In the early days of its cxlstcr.ee the International Typographical union met with problems that threatened Its very life, but those self-sacrllicing pioneers of the trades union movement, through patient and painstaking effort, overcame the perplexing difiiUnion Printers' Home. culties encountered and launched a movement that since has taken root in every Industry In the land. In fact, the union printers were the first to appreciate the necessity of a national body and were primarily responsible for organizing the American Federation of Labor. The history of the International Typographical union is one of achievement. Among the more progressive and humanitarian measures adopted and put Into force may be mentioned the sanitary workshop, a living wage, the eight-hour work day, arbitration and conciliation, woman suffrage, one day's rest In seven, initiative and referendum, equal wages for men and women, prohibition of child labor, old age pensions, mortuary benefits, supplemental trade education, a home for old members and a tuberculosis sanatorium for victims of the white plague. Of all the beneficent features connected with the International Typographical union the Union Printers' home perhaps has given the organiza tion more publicity than any other one activity. Tills unkiue institution was erected and is maintained by the membership of the union. It was dedicated in 1S02. Since that time hundreds of old printers have passed their 'closing days In this haven of rest. Many members who have fallen victims to the dread white plague have been nursed back to health at the tuberculosis sanatorium and returned to their families as useful and self-supporting members of society. ft In the Grounds. It Is the boast of union printers that their members do not become public charges when overtaken by age and adversity. They have their own home to go to, a home for which In the days of their earning power they have paid, a home which is theirs as a matter of right and not as a matter of charity. Everything that Is necessary to comfort nnd contentment Is supplied without cost; the members at work pay tho bills. The home Is located at Colorado Springs, Colo., and lias been visited j by over a quarter million people in ' the l)ast y1 anu" these pilgrims. Journeying from all countries and reircsentlng all classes and walks yf life, have paid their wealth of compliments to the home. James J. Hobnn In the Cleveland Sunday Leader Magazine Ih Unshakable Position. The justice of lahor's cause ami, the pride which Americans feel In their 1 country as the best country of workv" - ,, CT5 UuUl'i luv sun aiv liuiu iuillc approval steadfast in support of
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