Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 15, Jasper, Dubois County, 3 September 1920 — Page 6
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Kct rnnfmfslSTluSAPxachsi Iincral.NoTAncoTIC4 Senna I 1 h Wti SL 1 1 4,ir,f.i1 Remedy fc- ' t-tvc hp Sleep ' ' r Exact Copy of Wrapper. V TCH 17 BIG 4 Stomach-Kidneys-Heart-Liver Keep the vital organs healthy by regularly taking the world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles COLD MEDAL Th National Remedy of Holland for centuries and endorsed by Queen Wilheltnina. At all druggists, three sizes. Look for tho name Cold Modal on Trr Iws and accent no imitation Cuticura Soap The Velvet Touch For the Skin I soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50e, Talcum 25c. CA FRECKLES g PJUTWCLV OVi br tr. Fnr'. kl Ointment .Toar drucirUt or bt mall. Bf.e. rrNok. Dr. C. H. Bm Co. 27SMtcltisa AvnM.Chic. SCORE ONE FOR DIPLOMACY Vill Be General Agreement That Littie Joe Deserved the Tieat He Was Looking For Unit .Too had been told that he could not go to grandmother's house before the end of llie week. And ho wish (m1 very much to go right away, for grandmother had now kind of cooky. Ho coaxed her, hut to no avail, so he decided try strategy. "Mother," he said sweetly, "when I set to ho grown and away from home I'm stl'l n-going to conic hack and sec you every day." Mother was delighted. 'That will ho grand." she said. "I do hope you will remember that promise." "Yes," Joe was positive, "and If anything should happen that I couldn't eome any day I'm going to he sure to send your grandchildren to make' up for me. so you'll know I remembered you." He made the trip to grandmother's house that afternoon. Two Views. Pea eon A What a beautiful dispensation of providence it is that man Is so constituted that the memory of pain and trouble becomes fainter and fainter as time goes on. Doctor K Oh. I suppose so, but that's why we doctors have so much trouble collecting our bills. Koston Transcript.
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The High Price of Sugar makes one welcome foods which are rich in natural sweetness.
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the ready-cooked cereal ! requires no added sweetening, for it contains its own pure grain sugar, developed from wheat and barley by twenty hours' baking. Sprinkle Grape-Nuts over ripe fruit or berries
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For Infants and Children, Mothers Know That Genuine Casioria
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of Thirty Years THE CCNTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY 3 s Benumbed. Artie "Oh! Kxcuse me; did I step on your feet again?" Gertie "I couldn't say. 1 did not know you were off yet." Father and Daughter Get Relief by Eatonic It. J. Powell, Sweetwater, Texas, says, "Eatonic helped me at once, but it was my daughter who got the marvelous benefits. She could not even take a drink of water without awful misery, but it relieved her; she is feeling much better. All this from one box", so send me four more at once." Hundreds of people rrow take eatonic; one or two tablets after each meal keeps them in good health, feeling fine, full of pep. Eatonic simply takes up the excess acidity and poisons and carries them right out of the system. Of course, when the cause of the misery is removed, the sufferer cannot help but get well. You will find it a quick, sure relief for heartburn, indigestion, sour, acid, ga?sy, bloated stomach. It costs but a trifle and your druggist will supply you. If you don't feel well, you give eatonic a test. Adv. HONEYMOON SURELY AT END Brute's Retort Proved That the Arrows of Cupid Must Have Lost Their Sharpness. Sad it is when the brief story of the honeymoon departs, leaving only the prospect of the endless monotony of ordinary life ahead. Hut that was where" the Smlthi stood. Their honeymoon had soon waned under the stress of modern life. In fact, Mrs. Smith was already adopting the policy of masterly inactivity; even hubby's most loving endearment couldn't get a kind word out of her. The tiff happened on Wednesday, and lasted till Sunday morning, when he. attired for his usual stroll, asked her : "What is for dinner today, my dear?" His suave voice and winning smile earned for him a brief retort. The lady replied with more force than grace : "Oh. rats!" Iut he was not cnuixht unawares. With a sweet smile he countered with the remark: "Well, don't cook one for me, darling; I think 111 have dinner out!" That's the Question. MadgeI am suing a young man for a dozen kisses that he stole. My lawyer says they're worth S'JO apiece. Jack How does he know? Boston Evening Transcript.
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Whose up? By JESSIE DOUGLAS t . 1920. by McCiure Newspaper Syndicate.) Camilla hastily stepped out of her little gray gingham dies and crossing the room on tiptoe opened her closet door and slipped out the pink and white dress with the short sleeves and the rufllo around the skirt. She listened almost breathlessly for a complaining voice below, to cry: "Camilla! Ca-mil-la!" as she wrestled with a buton In the middle of her back. She was safe! Still on tiptoes she went across the floor and down the stairs, to be greeted at the bannister head by an ecstatic, wriggling body of soft brown fur. "Kinks," Camilla whispered, "will you be good if I take you out? Very good ?" The üttlo -Jog stuck out its long pink tongue and tried to cover vamillä s hand with wet kisses. "Come on. then!" Camilla closed the door behind her as though she were a thief, so softly, so stealthily. Kut once down the steep white path, with flu? white gate swung behind her, she began to run lightly and gayly along the country road. Kinks was just as gay. He made circles in quest of his tail and chased Iniaginary -:ts. und dsirted about Uk' a small prisoner set tree. She found berelf thinking with a stranjro, Iminesiek hmgiiiir of that home Miat she had left a .month ago. That careless, happy, laughing household, with Ted and Winnie. Klhn and the baby for constant companionship. "Kut I'll never let them know!" she said aloud,; "come on, Kinks, that isn't a rabbit at all!" Aunt Hiiiina had written that she would like one of "the children to stay with her for a while." She had said at the end of her letter that those were her nearest relatives and "that child would find herself greatly benefited some day by the arrangement' ' So it was Camilla they chose to send. Kecause Camilla was just through school ami Ted was needed on tin? farm this summer and Winnie was engaged and Kllen just wouldn't "O She crinkled her nose when she remembered how the days went one so much like another, that tie re was only the-calendar to toll that they wert different. Kise at seven. Kathe and dress. Kreakfast at 7:ö0. In silence, for Aunt Kninm did not like conversation at her meals. Then Camilla waxed the old mahogany in the parlor and dusted each fragile knicknaek and washed the breakfast dishes and put them away in the white cupboard in the dining room. There was the porch to sweep, and best of all, the flowers to gather In The garden with the bees humming about her In the sunshine, and a large straw hat that Aunt Kmma said she must wear. For Aunt Kmma thought her freckles were "common," and It was not ladylike to have brown hands, so she must wear old gloves. Then there was mending to do and lunch to get Camilla stopped suddenly in her thoughts, for as far down the road as she could see there was no brown, wriggling furry body. "Kinks!" she called, and again: "Kinks!" She whistled and called his name again and again, but nf funny little mongrel pup appeared at her calling. Camilla could have sat rigid down in the road and cried. She had found Kinks when he came shivering to the door just a few days after she had been with Aunt Kmma. Much to Aunt Kmma's disgust she had fed him and bathed him and changed him into a soft üttle mischief from the whimpering, liny thing who had begged from her. To Camilla, Kinks was the one gay sjrot In her sober life at present. Kut when she trudged home an hour later, she went alone, for Kinks had disappeared as mysteriously as he had come. She forgot the dress with the short leeves and the pink ruffles in her distress. Kut Aunt Kmma. spying her from the porch, looked up with displeasure. She was entertaining the curate, and Camilla looked altogether too colorful and gay and careless, with no hat and short sleeves. Aunt Kmma nodded briefly, and Camilla going into the house did not see the gleam of laughter light the young man's eyes for a moment. Kut next day Kinks . had not returned to his home. The honst seemed drearier and darker than over, and Aunt Kmma more "difficult." Camilla thought longingly for home, and almost decided "I'll stiek it out a bit longer." she told herself stanchly. for he '.new how hard it was Just now at home. If Winnie had a new dress Kilon must so vithout; so that Camilla had se"rctly resolved that she would gt a position in the district school this autumn. Kut when she took her iittle pal! ami went out for the butter in the tfternoon. her heart gave a great hound, for there in the highroad was i funny little dog running along with bis pink tongue hanging out ! "Kinks!" she called; "Kinks!" . And before her very eyes some one whistled and Kinks turned tall and fled. Kut Camilla was not to be daunted. She followed, too; scrambled under a fence and went through the meadow; Jumped the brook and
came out at last In the village square to find Kinks standing beside a .young man with a soft gray suit and laughing eyes. "That's my dog!" Camilla said with her eyes flashing fire. "It is?" said the young man fn a conversational tone. "Of course, I can prove It to you by his collar. Come here. Kinks!" Camilla commanded. The little dog seemed to smile, but he did not move one step from the heels of the young man. Camilla stooped over and lifted him up und crhd: "There!" but when she looked at his collar she read with dismay: "Fi do." Then before the young man could say a word Camilla had dropped her pail of butter and squeezed Kinks into her arms and had run bcli the way she had comp. "Robber! Thief!" Camilla told herself, still seeing the laughing eyes of a certain young man in a gray suit. When Camilla reached Aunt Kmma's breathless, she suddenly remembered the pail of butter. For Aunt Kmma said staidly: Tve asked the curate to come to high tea tonight, Camilla." "Oh, yes. Aunt," Camilla said, but first she went to the shed and putting Kinks behind the door, bolted it securely. Camilla was not one bit surprised to find the curate was her thief, but she did say "Thank you," in a lowvoice when he brought her the pail of butter, so that Aunt Kmma did not notice. She found herself, blushing whenever she looked. In his diicction across tjie hot biscuits or when she passed him the ham. He had still a disconcerting way of laughing out of his eyes. They heard during tea the wails that emanated from the woodshed. When the young curate suggested that he should release the prisoner after tea, Camilla made no objection, but she watched the little dog turn a wet tongue on this stranger. "Perhaps lie remembers me!" the man in gray explained, and Camilla answered "Oh!" and blushed to the roots of her red-brown hair. Kut that hardly accounts for the reason that made Camilla sit down and write Winnie that night and end her letter with a P. S. that said; "I don't think I shall go home before the autumn, Winnie, and then I think I may be engaged " Camilla, smiling softly to herself, blew out the kerosene lamp and sent an airy kiss to a small brown dog that was lying in a diminutive dog kennel beneath her window.
IDEAS ABOUT FOODS DIFFER Delicacies Among Some Peoples Are Looked Upon With Distinct Aversion by Others. "There' no accounting for the freaks of human appetites," writes W. .7. Showalter to the National Orographic society, describing some strange foods as follows: "The Koosevelt story of how he got the best work out of the men with sharp-hied teeth by promising them the choicest bits of raw hippopotamus and rhinoceros1 steak for speed In skinning, will be recalled by many. Capt. Robert II. Kart let t. commander of the Kaiiuk, which carried Stefansson to Arctic waters, says that on his return from Herald island-to northern Siberia he found raw polar bear meat tasting better than any piece de resistance he had ever eaten in the home country. "The Frenchman likes his snails and wonders how anyone who accepts oysters can refuse them. In Canton, China, rats sell for 40 cents a dozen, and a dog steak brings more per pound than a leg of mutton. The Chinese mandarin pays SMO a pound for the birds' nests from which .his soup Is concocted. In parts of the West Indies the palm worm )s stewed in fat, while certain African tribes are as fond of caterpillars as an American i of reed birds on toast. The Turk is as disgusted with the oysters we eat as we are with the flsh the Corsican relishes. "Kating earth, or geophagy, is - a common thing in many parts of the world. In some parts of Europe a butter is made- of line clay, and in other regions various kinds of earths are sold in the open market. The Persians use some varieties of soil In making their sweetmeats, while In Mexico the eggs of certain species of flies are used by the Indians in making a food pate which is regarded as a great delicacy." , Daily Water Consumption. The quantity of water used daily in the United States for drinking, bathing, cooking r.nd washing is surprising. Statisticians say that the average family contains three members, ami that each family uses IM) gallons a day to each member of ti t? household. The consumption of water for household and personal um thus amounts to the enormous total of 4(.K),000,000 cubic feet dally. This quantity of water wmdd keep a Niagara Falls going for a period of !Jo minutes. A ship afloat displaces an amount of , water equal to its own weight. The Leviathan, with a tonnagn. of .V,fKM. displaces 1,000.C00 cubic feet of water. It would take 2Ö0 such giant steamers to displace the quantity of water that the American public is said to consume every day. Meditating Revenge. "Ah," exclaimed the brisk caller, "having a day dream?" "You might call it trat," said Mr. Dubwalte, sourly. "Yes?" "I was just thinking up it few cold and sarcastic remarks to make to my landlord if I ever pass by him In my flivver when his motor car is in s ditch." Kirmingham Age-Herald.
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Pastel Shades for Warm WeatherPale Green Coolest. Colors Play Most Important Part in Milady's Comfort on Hot Midsummer Drys. Though it is rather maddening to be told how cool we look on a hot summer day, when we are feeling quite the opiosite, after the first Indignation has worn off the remark is apt to have a psychological effect that actually makes us feel cooler, points cut a fashion correspondent. And. after all. it. is a very big compliment to be told that we look cool when the. weather makes such an appearance almost impossible, for what is less attractive than any one who is obviously hot? Col colors and cool fabrics go a long ay toward making a cool summer. This is evidenced by the usual custom of dressing our rooms in their summer clothes if we are to inhabit them during the warm weather. Heavy velvet and brocade hangings give way to cretonnes or silks in cool shades and elaborate formal curtains are replaced by simple sheer affairs. Thick rugs are taken up, too, and all this Is done because it makes the rooms look cooler. This principle holds good in dressing ourselves, too, and pastel shades in delicate fabrics "rule our lives in summer if we are fortunate enough to be out of town whore such thing;. are appropriate. Kut even among pastel shades there are some that are cooler than others, and we are not apt to take this into consideration in choosing our Swiss and organdie frocks. Pale green, the shade that has appromm k l .1:' I k lit U: : i f ; it f I PI Wlp .'. .-.V ' An outdooring frock with a skirt of kumsi-kumsa and overblouce of printed dew-kist. With it is worn a wide brimmed sailor, crown encircled with double ruching of satin de luxe. priatcly been called "seafoam," has perhaps the most cooling effect upon the eye. White, of course, x notably chilly, and pale blue has the same tendencies. Shades of rose and yellow have warmth and light, and though they are favorite summer colors on a really sizzling day their wearers will not look as comfortable as they might.
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COLORS IN HOME ROOMS
Many Tints to Pick From, but Harmony Should Be the Watchword for Cheerfulness. "This is the blue room" so many people who are showing you their homes will say to you, "or this is the pink room," and the only thing you can think of is how could they think it necessary to tell you, you couldn't possibly make a mistake, it certainly was blue or pink, as the case may be. The trouble Is that they do not realize that every room needs splotches of different colors to give it character. For example, one young woman wanted a rose bedroom. She bought white furniture and had the walls done in pale pink and white striped paper. There was a rose rug on the floor with a darker rose border, roses ran riot Over the white curtains, the chairs were upholstered In the same rose cretonne, there was a rose lining under the lace bed cover, and a rose chiffon shade on the reading lamp at the head of the bed. Everything was lovely, and yet she didn't like It, but she didn't know why. Uer first guest was an interior decorator and she was able to put her linger on the difficulty from the very start. She made her put the rosy cretonne curtains In another room, and get a black and white striped material for the windows, bang a stunning black lacquered mirror over the low boy. change the lamp st.-ade for a French blue one with rosecolored trimmings and put a few dashes o"f the French blue about In little accessories, a quill pen on the
CHIC COAT FOR TRAVEL WEAR Here is shown a Parisian traveling coat of soft undyed clcth with white and blue stripes running diagonally across the waist. ATTIRE FOR GIRL WHO HIKES Knickers, With Long Coat, Low-Heeled Shoes, Tarn, Long Cane, Among Requisites. Kathing is far from being the only or even the most popular summer sport. Walking especially for the devotee of the mountains has a great many passionate followers. Tr.vre are girls who are really not the least little bit afraid of a ten-mile stroll In the forenoon. Of course, to thoroughly en Jot walking one must be dressed accord Ingly. No long or tight skirt, no high heels, these would spoil this healthy pleasure. Nowadays knickers are being worn quite frequently for mountain climbing. They are prettier than ever and the girl with- the athletic figure? and most walkers possess it looks charming In this boyish outfit. A loely costume of this sort consists of dark brown laced shoos rpiüo heelless. heavy woolen sport stockings and lijzht tan and dark brown chocked knickers. With this is worn n dark brown coat which reaches almost to the bottom of tl:e knickers. A pongee blouse in the natural shade tied with a Windsor bow of checked taffeta :.Ma note of brightness to the otherwise rather somber outfit. A t am o' shanter of bright tan suede cloth, a long cane, a heavy pair of gauntlet gloves ami there you are. Worn Over Underslips. Frocks of white organdie daintily embroidered with white are worn over underslips of vivid taffeta the organdie, which is a new and exceedingly transparent sort, locking like a mere white mist over the bright colored un. dcrdrcss. Bloused Back Effect. Predictions for fall coats point to the bloused back effect. Metallb stitching and fulness which docs not dlstand the sides are other character istics. Short Sleeves for Fall. Short sleeves are shown' on man silk frocks for fall. desk, a couple of candles on the dres. ing table, and it was perfect. In a blue room, of course the bin? predominates, but if there isrt anything else but blue it Is terribly coid and gloomy. A very lonely blue livins room has chintz over-curtains In blues, yellows and greens, there is a yellow shade on the floor lamp with blue bands, the rugs are In soft oriental colorings, and there is a great, glowing Maxflehl Parrisl:- print over the couch, which has a black cover and blue and yellow cushions. Black Lace Over White Satin. Some of the black laces are made i:p over white satin. Constance Tal mud siuses a metal cloth for foundation in her pretty black lace worn In a popular picture. Metal cloths are lovely under either white or black lavs, nnd the moving picture actressy nro very much addicted to them for the rM.Hon they photograph so handsomely. There is only one other material which i as much favored by screen ürtisN. This Is velvet. Kut metal cloths are so very dressy and so much associated with winter costumes for evening that many like the satin and taffeta foundations best because they make a cooler looking costume for summer wear. Gray Trimmed With White. Dotted Swiss frocks of gray are piped with white organd'e or Swiss. The dotted surface and the touch of whM- mi enough trimming for diarming frocks.
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