Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 20, Jasper, Dubois County, 8 October 1920 — Page 8

M MEAT EATERS

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E3t tea meat if yon feel Dackachy or have bladder trouble Take gla3of Solu Ko an or vroman who cats meat rcpilaxly can rn.ke a mistako by flushing thd kidnrys occ-( ionally, says a well-known authority. .Meat forma uri5 acid "which excites the kidneys, they becomo overworked from the strain, get sluggish and hl to filter tho waato and poisons from the blood, then wo get eick. .Nearly all ihcumatiJM, hcvLachc3, liver troublenervouancM, lizziiiesa, sleeplessness &ncl urinary disordcra como from eluggiah kidneys. r The moment you feel a lull cchc in thd ..ulncya or your bock hurta or if thxi "rino is cloudy, offensive, full of Bedient, irregular of passage or attended by sensation of scalding, stop eating meat ind get about four ounces of Jad .'alts from any pharmacy; take a 4:iMcapoonful in a glar of w.-itcr before rrakfast and in a few dayj your kidneys ill act fine. This famous salt3 is mado -cm tho acid of frrapc3 and lemon juice, mbinod with lithia, and has been used T generations to flush and stimulate he .kidneys, also to neutralize the acida in urino so it no longer causes irritation, thus endin bladder wea!nc39. Jad Salta is inexpensive and cannot ;njurc; makes a delightful dTcrrcRcont "ithia-water drink which everyone .hould tako now and then to keep the Mneye clean and active and tha blood .urc, thereby aYPitog ecrioua kidney complicoiicEA . APPLY SULPHÜRlO HEAL UP YOUR Si Broken Out Skin and Itching Eczema Helped Over Night For unsightly skin eruptions, rash or blotches on face, neck, arms or body, you do not have to wait for relief from torture or embarrassment, declares a noted skin specialist Apply a little Mcntho-Sulphur and improvement shows next day. Because ol its germ destroying properties, nothing has ever been found to take the place of this sulphur preparation. The moment you applv it healing begins. Only those who have had unsightly skin troubles can know the delight this Mcntho-Sulphur brings. Kvcn fiery, itching eczema is dried right up. Get a small jar from any good druggist and use it like cold cream. : HER HAIR GET GRAY She Kept Her Locks Dark and Glossy, with Sage Tea and Sulphur. 7 . m.--When you darken your hair wltb Sage Tea and Sulphur, no one can tell, because It's dono bo naturally, bo evenly. Preparing? thla mixture, though, at homo Is mussy and troubleflomo. At little cost you can buy at any drug store tho ready-to-uso preparation. Improved by the addition of other ingredients called "Wyeth Sape and Sulphur Compound." You Just dampen a spongo or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. Uy morning all pray hair disappears, and, after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully darkened. RloMy and luxuriant. Gray, faded hair, though no disgrace. Is a sign of old age. and ns wo all desire a youthful and attractlvo appoarance, get busy at once jwith Wyeth's Safjo and Sulphur Compound and look years younger. This ready-to-use preparation Is a delightful toilet requisite and not a medicine. It Is not Intended for tho cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. IN THE LAND 0' COMMON SENSE T T Says it is suicide to cut corns, ; and tells how they lift right out T i i T You pimply Ray to tho drug atore man, "Give me a quarter of an ounce of freezone." This wi'l cost very little but is sufficient to remove every hard or soft corn from one's feet. A few drops applied directly upon a tender, aching corn should relieve tho soreness instantly, and soon the entire corn, root and all, can be lifted out with the lingers without pain. This new vsy to rid one'a feet of corns was introduced by a Cincinnati man, who says that while freeone is stickv it dries in a moment, and poems to simply shrivel up the corn without inflaming or even irritating the surrounding tissue or skin. fjPon't let father die from infection or lockjaw from whittling at his corns, but cut this out and make him try it We Do .ETTERHEAD PRINTING on

GRAB NEVER LET

SAUCE FOR THE TURKEY

.W PI- I : i L r-:r v. mmM- j n UK - fc.- ; . is i ........... .. , - ' ':t.ii A': ; ' ... . . ;: ... ..... .. ..... . .... ...... V.A.. V. .i r'ninliiTry pirUi-rs in tlu los at Carver and Tromont, Ma?s?.. are busily enaja'd in picliin the crop for tla roniin holidays. Mt-ri and women pickers cam 7.1 rents an hour, while the children are paid "." rents a box. in the photograph ' old native of Carver is shown at work in the screening house where all the h rries are sorted. Kassian women are to be forced to marry and the regulation of mnrriano generally Is to he taken over by the state. The people who started the most radical government of the hour, and "of the people," are discovering that It Is tho most despotic and far worse to live under than the governments of established democracy they have been trying to overturn as oppressive and tyrannical. Threat of a coal famine docs not create much of li panic when the easygoing public is trying to find money for Palm Beach suits, hut it should know that a coal shortage now foreeasts calamity in tho coming winter unless reserve stocks are speedily built up. A London magistrate recently told n complaining wife that she should be more assertive. London is lucky to have one of her kind left. Its magistrates should not disturb the happy peace and quiet of Its rarely exceptional homes by such Injudicious advice. mum. A PROMPT, EFFECTIVE PI REMEDY FOR ALL FORMS OF RCÜSUC3 ATlSKi i Lumbago, 8oltlcs, flcuralzis, K Kindred DIo39ca. Lf stant relief Irom ram, while permancn; results are belnj: effected by taking It internally, purifying the blood, dissolving the poisonous substance and rexnovius U from the system. 1 DR. C. L. GATES nancock, Minn. writes: A little fjlKhereha! nucha weak baekcausM bj Kheumatlam and kidney Trouble that he could not itand on her feet. Tue moment Vwy put her down on the lloor fhe would nrreaxa with iain I treated her with "MmoilS" and today sle ran around a well and happy as can bo I prescribe 5-lKOl'b, lor my patlcati aad. use it la my pr&cUco." Large Pise Bottle "S-nKOPR" (BOO Dotes) fl.VO. qt bale by lmgglu SWANSON RHEUUAT1C CURE COMPANY, Dept 80 174 Lake Street, Chicago Vi a SWANSON POLLS Act Quickly and sreirtly upon the disestive organs.' carrving off the disturbing dement anil establishing a healthy condition of the live:, stomach and bowels. THE BEST REMEDY FOR CONSTIPATION A Sick Hmadschm. Sour Stomach. Heartburn, Belching, Llvor V Trouoio, otc. j 23 Cents Par Box A? AT DRUGGISTS -6 ASPIRIN FOR COLDS Name Bayer" is on Genuine Aspirin say Bayer InsUt on "Haver Tablets of Aspirin in a "Bayer package," containing proper i directions for ColJi, Pain, IleaJ.icho, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Ivheumatism. Name "Uaycr" means genuine A.-pirin prescribed "br phyiciana for nineteen years. Ilandy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Aspirin w trado mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidetcr of Salicvlicacid. O

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FARMERS FROM ABROAD. Evidently the fame of America's thousands of Idle acres of rich soil Is spreading abroad. An influx of Spanlsh fanners Is predicted by a Barcelona business man who Is In New York with ISO Spaniards, who have come to the United States to engage in agriculture. Tho Barcelonan explains that thousands of Spanish farmers, who deserted agriculture :o enter industry because of high wacres paid mechanics during the war, find shop opportunities decreasing since the armistice and are anxious to return to tho soil, says Cleveland Plain Dealer. In Spain chances to engage in farming on a largo scale are limited, much of the soil Is ioorer than America's, nml n considerable number believe that fortunes await them In our vn.t agricultural regions. The arrival of ajrrlculturlsts from tills new quarter should serve as a lesson for this country. Agriculture Is the biggest business In America. Prices of farm products are higher than they have ever been before. Men seeking a chance to serve the country and to assure a profitable future for themselves can ilnd such an opportunity In almost any part of the United States. Fanning offers Americans Just, as pood opportunities as it offers Spaniards.

"We must be as courteous to a man .13 to a picture, which we are willing to give the benefit of a good li'ht." It was Emerson who wrote that trenehant sentence. "Who else could say as much In so few words? All the philosophy of charitable human intercourse Is contained in It. I low it re hukes us for our snap judgments of the people we meet casually, but do not know. T always know right away whether I am ßolnij to like anyone or not. My first impressions are generally right." Think of our prattling away like that, as we do so often, without stopping to think whether wo are giving true first Impressions of ourselves to others. Sometimes tho man whom we have most heartily ei'.ndemned at first sight seems, when we meet him later under different conditions, in hN home, for Instance, to be an entirely different, creature, says Ohio State Journal. Let us wait, at least, until we get our subjects in a "good light," before we ty to judge them, if we can ever pretend to judge. It is to bo hoped the horrible story of the burning alive of the czarina of Uussia and her family is untrue. So many tales have been told of the disposal of the czar and the imperial family that one is not more entitled to credence than the other and, especially are the tales of mUrder to be doubted which offer -as part proof the fact of jewels being found with parts of human bodies. Such men as the murderers are represented would never leave jewels lying about to tell the awful tale. It now svems likely that the real mystery of the unfortunate KonianofTs will never be solved. It Is six years since Archduke Franels Ferdinand was assassinated hy the fanatic, Prinzip, an act that was seized upon by madly ambitious junkers to plunge the world Into the most destructive war of history. And it is one year since the sinin of the peace treaty. The world well may solemnly nsk itself how much it has advanced since the beginning of that mad orgy of hate and horror and how much of the benefits of peace It has realized in the year of nominal peace. The motor crashes and casualties are becoming more frequent, and the plea of unavoidable accident cannot ho accepted hy any who observe the narrow margin which the average motorist leaves for accident. Only constant vigilance will avail, and this, under the stimulus of speed, becomes too Irksome to be the cheek on the hand which holds- the wheel. The doughboy and the poilu will s'tay brothers, says the national commander of the American Legion. French and American soldiers fouirht ! side by side in this country and Amer- j ican ami French soldiers at a later (!ny, fouu'lit side by side in France. This makes a loubb tie which even time will find it bard n brm!;. It is said that former Prenrer Clomenyeau may return to public life. The great old "Tiger" cannot settle down, probably, to a r.oiinto:. us obscurity any more than the old war horse can be content with a jogtrot existence. The medical man who has cut meat and sugar from his diet schedule would seem to be In a position to laugh hilariously at the pretensions of the II. C. L. Philadelphia's modest increase In population doesn't give any Indication that the municipal bosses controlled the census machinery. One of the perennial puzzles for In vestors Is how to tell when a very good ! thing becomes Just a little too good j to be real. . iVvV J '

Gil IMPUGN

ALSELYADVERTiSED Series of Articles Disprove Claim That Republican Nominee Is a Farmer Known In Heme County as Dcard of Traie Candidate. WAR RECORD UNDER FIRE A scries of live articles distributed for publication by the Indiana i'ublicity Hureau this week show beyond alt doubt that Warren T. McCray, the Republican nominee for governor, has been falsely advertised by the Republican state committee as a farmer candidate. The articles, based on facts presented by McCray's Kcntland neighbors, show the following points: 1. That he is not a "dirt farmer," as advertised, but that he Is a stock broker, a banker and grain dealer. He was born on a farm, but has" resided in the town of Kentland since early youth and has never "followed a plough." The Board of Trade Candidate. 2. McCray is known in Newton and surrounding counties as "tho Hoard of Trade candidate." He is vice-president of the Sawyer Grain Company, a firm that deals in grain futures on the Chicago Hoard of Trade, and according to his neighbors much of his huge fortune was netted in this business. 3. The tax sheets in Kcntland show that the Republican nominee has little cause to be disgusted with the Goodrich tax law. The assessment of hid personal property on his great Orchard lake farm, including his tine herd of cattle, stands at $120,32.1, yet one month later he sold a part of his stock for $22."). 000. One of his prize bulls brought $25,000 at the sale, or twenty-live times more than it was listed for taxation purposes. 4. McCray was credited in the 1919 assessment with holding $1,S00 worth of Liberty bonds. More than a year later he filed an affidavit declaring the assessor had been mistaken and that ho "had purchased $1S,000 worth of bonds during the war," and three months later the assessor filed a similar affidavit, llefore the affidavits were filed, however, some ono had mutilated tho records in the county auditor's office hy adding another cipher to the $1,S00 worth of bonds credited to McCray. 5. The Discount and Deposit Rank o Kentland, controlled by McCray, purchased only $2,000 worth of treasury certificates of indebtedness when the government was preparing for the Third Liberty loan. His competing bank bought $20,000 worth of the same issue and every bank in Newton county lead the McCray institution. Red Cross Society Stirred. t. McCray was chairman of the finance committee of the Newton County Red Cross society and collected all the subscriptions through his bank. He is said to have sent the money to the national association with his personal check and as a result his home county is net credited with its quota. Members of the society have repeatedly requested that he give an accounting of his transactions, but to date the records do not show what has become of the funds. No one, of course, questions McCray's honesty in the transaction, but the fact that he has refused to make a statement on the matter has lead to much adverse comment in his own neighborhood. McCray's tax records contain much illuminating information. For instance in 1917 he listed 2C5 head of cattle, four horses and twelve mules. yet he had on hand only $200 worth of oats to feed them. The saa.e year he listed his harness for $7" In 1918 it had ris.-n to $90 and in 1019 It was overlooked. This year, howeve?, he valued it at $500. List- a Billiard Table. In Kentland, where McCray has resided all of his life, ho pays taxes on $S0O worth of furniture while at hi3 farm he has only $15 worth of household goods. Among his possessions in Kentland is a billiard table which he valued at $70. It is interesting to note that while the total assessment of his personal property on the farm is given in for taxation purposes at $120,325. he carries $150,000 worth of insurance. In connection with McCray's relations with the Chicago Board of Trade it is pointed cut by Kentland people that the manager of the Raub Grain Klevator Company lost nearly J 50,000 speculating with the Sawyer Grain Company. The attorney for the Raub concern refused to allow the payment of the debt on the ground that it was incurred In "gambling transactions." It is worthy of note that the Sawyer Company has net taken steps to collect this debt, although reports here are to the effect the matter will be taken up after the election. Many of the facts relative to McCray's "business methods" were exposed in two articles, said to have been inspired by James W. Fesler, his primary opponent, last spring In the Chicago Herald and Examiner. McCray has been campaigning ever since, yet he has never denied a single one of the allegations.

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Merchant Gets Protection o 'TS this the Spencer National Bank? Tins J is Goodwin Sc Company, of Sprinnriickl, Mr. Goodwin talking, - A stranger hnr; just offered a check on jrour bank for $30 in payment for some goods. Says his name is John Doe. Has he an account and is he

good for that amount?.

By telephoning to the bank, the merchant can always protect himself from loss by worthless checks.

GTOIBERLAND TELEPHON

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INCOIiPORATED

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For Infants and Children. Mothers Know Ti Genuine Castoria Always Bears tlie Signature of Use For Over Thirty Yeas re t.j luu ix tmc ccNTAun eoMMHY, nr vcn nrr. " Lm. 'II' k m j 1 i ri t I 1 ' ) J TI I' ' " ' k. 1 1 ir ' 7 .; . . , j

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