Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 23, Jasper, Dubois County, 29 October 1920 — Page 7

"DANDERINE"

Girls! Save Your Hair! Make It Abundant! Immediately after a "Danderln" massage, your hair tnkes on new life, lustre ami wondrous beauty, appearing twice ns heavy nnd plentiful because each hair seems to fluff nnd thicken. Don't let your hair stay lifeless, colorless, plain or scraggly. You, too, want lots of long, strong, beautiful hnlr. A 3T-cent bottle of delightful Uanderlne" freshens your scalp, heclcs dandruff and falling hair. This stimulating "beauty-tonic" Rives to thin. dull, fading hnlr that youthful brightness and abundant thickness All druggists! Adv. Rents Hurt Ghost Industry. In Knglnnd desperate people In search of houses to rent or buy are advertising that ghosts are no drawback. Any one who happens to own a hitherto un rented house because tradition that it Is haunted Is assured that the seekers for a domicile will accept It at the rental asked for regardless of the hr.uuter or hauntess. It Is Mispected that in England, ns in several other countries, ghosts of landlord. would be less objectionable than those of other folk. Whatever Ms losses In tin? past, the landlord as a rule Is regarded In these days with deep suspicion as a profiteer. In many cases this attitude is probably unfair; there are some considerate landlords. Toronto (Hohe. ASPIRIN Name "Bayer" on Genuine 'Ilayer Tablet of Aspirin" Is genuine Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for over twenty years. Accept only an unbroken "Hayer package' which contains proper directions to relieve Headache, Toothache, Karache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Colds nnd Pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Druggists also ell larger "Hayer packages." Aspirin Is trnde tn-irk Hayer Manufacture Monancetlcacldestcr of Sallcyllcacld. Adr. All In the Open. He is a big-game hunter, and was talking of his happy experiences In the out of doors. Then the talk drifted to old friends back In the old home town. 'Whatever became of So and-So?" ne friend asked the hunter. Oh. hadn't you beard? He's In Jail." "Von don't tell me?" "Yep; I went down to the Jail to see bin the other day." "That was a friendly thing to do. What did you talk about?" "Oh. outdoor life." GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER A Marvelous Remedy for Indigestion. Those who suffer from nervous dyspepsia, constipation. Indigestion, torpid liver, dizziness, headaches, coming up of food, wind on stomach, pnlpltntion nnd other indications of disorder In the digestive tract will find Oreen's August Flower n most effective and e lüden t assistant In the restoration of nature's functions nnd a return to health and happiness. There could be no better testimony of the vnlue of this remedy for these troubles than the fact that Its use for the last flfty-four years has extended Into many thousands of households all over the civilized world nnd no Indication of nny failure has been obtained In all that time. Very desirable as a gentle laxative. Sold everywhere. Adv. Parr's Great Age Discredited. Is It vorth while, when money Is needed for legitimate objects, to answer the appeal to save from sale the ottage it; which Thomas Pair lived? His claim to fame Is that he lived to be 1."- arid that he did penance for Immortality at HH. Careful Inquiry last century discredited the tradition as to the number of his years. His age was attisled only by village gossip and by quacks who sold what they falsely tailed "Purr's Life Pills." Hrought to court in what was alleged to be his ir.'M year. Parr died In the course f a few months, killed by excessive diet. London Mall. A forced kindness deserves C unk.

33 00D

25

Trophies of the Great War in Demand

g J VAR R

NKYV Y )UK. Thousands of war trophies brought from the battlefields of Franc for use during the Liberty loan and other drives are being distributed at the warehouse of the French mission here. The material Includes guns of all kinds used by the French, British and (Jermans, cavalry swords, cuirasses, shells and soldier equipment. Large demands for trophies have come from Inland cities, according to Maj. Jean Malye, director of the bureau of Information. Direction (Generale des Service. Francais aux Etats Unis, now Iti this city. One of the largest single collections, with the exception of that given to Washington for the National museum, was presented to the Army atul Navy club of America. The trophies will be preserved In a suitable environment

Zion Now Our Nineteenth National Park

SALT LAKE CITY. Zlon National Park is now the nineteenth reservation In the national park system, by formal dedication as a public playground for the people forever. It was set aside In 1!XK as the Munkuntuweap National Monument, with I.'.SIO acres. In UHS It was made the Zlon National Monument, with 70,800 acres. Congress created It a national park November 10. 1010. Director Stephen T. Mather of the national park service presided at the dedication. (5ov. Simon Pandberger and United States Senators Kee; Smoot and William II. King of Utah delivered addresses. Salt Lake City sent a delegation of I.OO citizens. Zlon National Fark is in extreme southwestern Utah. It is reached by rail from both Salt Lake City and Los Angeles by the Salt Lake route to Ltmd, thence by motor stage a distance of a hundred miles. It Is also reached by motor from either Salt Lake City or Los Angeles over the Arrowhead trail. Zlon Canyon Is the most Important scenic feature, bisecting the park from north to south.' It is 1. miles in length, varying in width from .r0 to J.."00 feet, with walls S(M to 12,000 foot "It Was Steal or Go SAN FRANCISCO. Social aspirations and a desire for a life of luxury were given as the reasons for their criminal careers by Mrs. Marie Pally, aged tlfty-seven, and Mrs. Tülle Clover, her sister, aged sixty-two. both of San Francisco, who have confessed to the Hllee that they were responsible for the, theft of women's llnery valued at close to .j.mh from Perkeley's elite colony in operations extending over a period of eight mouths. After maintaining Innocence throughout a twenty-four-hour grilling Mrs. Palley broke down and told Detective Reit Fraser how she and her sister had pilfered women's dressing rooms at fashionable Rerkeley club.

Did Pirate Lafitte Bury Treasure Here?

BISHOP. TKXAS. The legend that the ill-gotten treasure of .lean Lntitle, the notorious buccaneer of the early part of last century. Is buried upon Padre island has boon revived. This is due to tlie Unding of Jö longburled human skeletons in a sand pit on the bank of thel.egua Madre. about fifteen tulles east of here. Since then well-preserved pieces of ship timbers have been uncovered near the grewsome spot. The skeletons were discovered by Thomas Steele and O. S. Atwood of Corpus Christi. If this group of Ill-fated mon wen members of the crew of Lalitte's treasure ship the discovery of their skehvtons hoars out the tale that has been handed down by the descendants of the native Mexican population of the (lulf coast region that the pirate chief did not go to Yucatan when he left Calveston island, but that ho sought mfety from his avengers by locating upon Padre Island at a point Just opposite where the skeletons were found. According to this tradition he brought his sailing vessel Into the LnRun a Madre through the pas? Just be-

TALE

23 k m

to be Included In the plans for the new $:t,lXM),iKM) clubhouse that Is to be erected in honor of the oficers killed In the war. The collection of fifty pieces include cannon, tlatne throwers, trench mortars, machine guns, boyonets, rifles, swords, cuirasses, wire-cutting machines, trench stoves, braziers, mannites, shells and shell baskets, and marine signal flags. Tanks and (lenuau Held pieces weighing from one- ton to ten have been given to Chicago, St. Louis and other cities. A huge (Jerman listening post has been given to Hloomtieid, N. J. Montclair received a whippet tank, while the National museum at Washlngtor was awarded a large 10-man tank Other valuable pieces sent to YVasl' Ington Included an airplane, sampb pieces of all the foreign artillery used during the war, uniforms and Held kitchens. The prize of the collection, a Hlg Hertha, was claimed by Mount Kiseo, N. Y. Chattanooga has been .'iven a (Jerman iro-mllllmetcr gun weighing three tons. More than :UXH) French helmets and an equal number of uniforms had been disposed of. To various posts of the American legion Held pieces have been given. hlgn. This canyon, winding like a snake, abounding In enormous peaks and domes, and glowing like a Koman sash, is one of the most striking spectacles which even America has to offer. P.ecause of its gorgeous coloring Zlon bus boon called the "Kainbow of the Desert." Mormon pioneers won? the first white men of our time to discover the region, entering in 1SÖS. In lStil Prigbam Young named the canyon Little Zlon. Capt. C. i:. Duttoii. the celebrated geologist, wrote: "No wonder tin tierce Mormon zealot who named it was reminded of the (Jrcnt Zion on which Ills fervent thoughts were bent. of houses not built with hands, (Menial in the heavens." Major Powell, noted explorer of the Crand Canyon, visited the region in 1ST0. to the Poorhouse" Mrs. (Mover confessed a short time later, and both accompanied Detective Fraser to San Francisco, when much of the stolen furs, wraps, coats and other women's llnery was recovered. Among the more expensive loot taken by the two women In their operations at the Town and down club. Rerkeley Tennis club, Twentieth Century club and in University of California buildings wore two coats valued at SÖ0O and $:t."0, several furs worth Ir excess of $1(M apiece nnd a number of pieces of expensive Jewelry taken from handbags. The two women, of motherly appearance and silvered hair, made a distressingly Impressive picture as they appeared before Justice Harry Puhifer for arraignment In Rerkeley. They asked a hurried trial on the charge of burglary preferred against them. In default of S'J.OOO rash ball each, both hie detained in the women's ward at the Rerkeley dty prison. Marital discord has entered the lives of both women, who have grown children, they told the police. it was a case of steal or go to the poorhouse," was an excerpt from the confession of Mrs. Rallev. 5P tfi 19? P4s matlow Polni Isabel and during a storm it was beached near the ramp of Latit to. Roforo the ship broke up the fortune that the pirate had gained during the ears he had preyed uikjii Spanish treasure ships as they plied to ami from Mexico, was taken off and burled In the sand. The fact that historical evidence pretty well establishes the belief that Latitte finally did reach Yucatan -and that he died then does not, it Is asserted, dlsprovo the legend that It was upon Padre 1-bind or the mainland that he burled the fortune that ho had gullied during the long period In which he committed daring deeds of piracy.

m- II wmmm

(

Bracelet

Arm Decoration is to Continue as Winter Fashion. Handbag Is Indispensable AdjunctNew Autumn Models More Etaborate Than Ever. Jewelers are watching quite ns anxiously to see what the new fashions for fall will be ns are the women who will buy the models now being created. It Is really dltllcult to Imagine the head of a big Jewelry firm feebng any anxiety about the length of a sleeve but he does; for on the length of the sleeve hangs the fate of the rale of bracelets. It Is doubtful If there ever has been a period In the history of the world when so many bracelets were worn as during the past year. Perhaps the anoieut Egyptian beauties might have competed with the modern woman In this respect, for they had the advantage of wearing bracelets on their ankles as well as on their arms. Whiles Paris shows many dresses with long sleeves nnd some with short sleeves, American women will hold to the short-sleeved frock for this winter at least. We were rather slow ln accepting It and we will probably be equally slow in discarding It. This, of course, means that quantities of bracelets of all sorts will be worn. .Tew lers will continue to reap a harvest from the sale of bracelets this winter. The handbag continues to be a most Indispensable adjunct to the fashion able toilet. The new models for auUi mr. are. If anything, more elaborate than ever. Some of the new tailored bags are being made of cordings of silk braid sewn together in circles to form the sides. The bag Is then ornamented with pendants of enameled wood beads In Hat oval shape.' 'litis, with a frame of ivory, results in a very elaborate affair. Elaborate embroideries in colored silk are seen on other new bags. A beautiful model developed In gray faille has a nouveau art Moral design done in vari-colored embroidery. The frame Is self-covered and the ha mile of silk Is ornamented with enameled wooden ball slides. HAT OF AUTUMN LEAF BROWN The sole trimming of this large velvet hat in autumn leaf brown is a tuft of henna-colored feathers. Flannel Decorations. Milady will decorate her fall blouses with flannel. A recent model Is made of white georgette, and 'as a throw collar and bell sleeves of llannel. The very plain blouse has two rows of scallops near the waistline which are bound In color to match the scarf.

er J rff B Ii ßM00mi$ Wh J .I:-- W.Vvf?. S 1 :-v ;L' .'.?v,, -?

"iSUM

CREPE VERY LATEST THING , -Y

Material of Various Weaves and Styles Now Having Pronounced Run of Popularity. In the matter of silks crepes are the very latest thing crepes of heavy, luxurious sheen, those woven wlts satin surfaces and 5atln backs ami those woven with stripes and figures and patterns. Satin had Its vogue (and It can never be wholly pushed from the center of the stage), but now crepe In various weaves and styles Is having Its heyday. Many evening dresses undoubtedly will be made from Its lustrous folds ami for afternoon wear It will be altogether fashionable. The surprising thing about this fabric Is how wonderfully It has been developed. It Is heavy or light; thin and 111 my or positively stiff, ns in the brocaded varieties that will be used for formal dinner gowns and for furtrimmed evening wraps for sumptuous occasions. Some of the new brocaded materials are done with threads that are not metal, but which are so cleverly handled that they give every appearance of being metal. And In this we have an Innovation of value because the tjonmetal threads will not tarnish, but will last from season to season with the same freshness as does the foundation weave of the handsome fabric. Colorings in Fall Fabrics. Printings In multicolors are Introduced with success into new fall fabrics, which are both brocaded and lame. Among the silk voiles and georgette crepes are lovely things showing

and

Bag

BEADS ADD TO THIS FROCK Blue satin in the shade called midnight, and bead embroidery form this chic frock. The beading is done in gold and blue. BROWN AND RED COMBINATION Colors Used Together With Success and Smartness in Some of the New Frccks. Urown and red are colors that have been combined with real success and smartness' in some of the new frocks. says the New York Kvoning Sun. We used to see this combination occi sionnlly In little girls' sailor suits. There wert brown serge sailor suit with red anchors and braid trimmings on sleeves and dickeys, and nith to say the combination often scorned par tlcuhirly ugly. Much smarter did red on black or roil on navy blue soom In children's sailor or middy suits, but the brown ones bad the advantage known to the careful mother as not showing dust or wear so readily as the more distinct tones of blue or black. Hut in the new frocks the combination is really Interesting. Sometimes brown tricolette is e.sed with red tricolette In a smart frock or blouse. Citron, purple and orchid Is n color combination seen in one of the new separate blouses, and what Is more. It was used with embroidery of blue wool. The Tarn in Favor. The favored hat for the small girl, as well as for her mother, this autumn Is the tarn. Nothing Is quite so practical for fall and winter wear. It can be made from velours or velvet or of felt. Often It Is made to match the coat, as in one very chic set of navy cheviot where the coat Is trimmed with a cape In back, both coat and enpa lined with red llannel. The tarn Is also of the cheviot piped with red. the combination of metal brocade with hand printing In colors. Dresses made from these look exactly as If they were hand painted, so exquisitely are the colorings distributed over the surface of the metal and silk brocaded patterns. It could not be possible to give the same soft color gradlngs In a weave. Two lovely dresses made from these materials recently arrived In America. Hoth have cascade draperies, one In the form of nn apron effect and the other a side panel tunic. These materials are of necessity made up on very simple lines in order to show the full value of the gorgeous fabric. Labor Saver. Cotton crepe can be used to keep down the Ironing bill. For underwear It should be made up with rather l.cavy lace to look well, for If It Is combined with some lace or embroidery which needs Ironing- to look Its best, either the garment so made looks Illmsy and unattractive or else. It defeats Its own purpos' f making Ics work for the laundress. There Is nothing more serviceable than cotton crepe In pink, brown or blue and white for children's rompers. Made with n little colored braid at the neck ami wrists and belt, theso rompers are pretty as well us practical. Always a Favorite. Challls Is always a favorite for little girls. These little cotton, or cotton nnd wool frocks, come In the prettiest of tlgures In both light and dark shades. They can be trimmed with organdie.

y y . . : . ft

y vl '4 --Iff J- I umMi m ., )

Tost Nagging Dochache Are you tortured trith a throbbing backache? Suffer sharp pains at ererr udJcn move? Kvcning find you 'all played out?" Ferhap you have been working too hard ana Retting too little rest. This may bare wcakrned your kidnevi, bringing on that tired feeling and dull, naming backache. You may have headache and dizziness, too, with annoying kidney irregularities. Don't wait. Help the wcakenM kidnevi with Doan's Kidney Pills They hare helped thousand and should help you. A k your ncighborl

An Indiana Case Wm. It. Smith. 4!5 llrown St, Columbus. Ind., Fays: "I was seriously bothered with kidney trouble, and at times was lame through my sides nnd back. I had a great deal of backache and was caused other pain due to my kidneys V'T-l " A A regular. I used Wrr V h ; Doan's Kidney K W-. rui8 and ,t wa8 nol long: before I was as well as over." Get Doan's at Any Store, 60e a Box DOAN'S "pTJLV FOSTER. MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y. . To N I G hT Tomorrow Alright NR. Tablets stop sick headache, relieve bilious tttacks, tone and regulate the eliminative organs, make you feel fine. -'Better THaa PiUt For Llrer Els' Womemi Madle Ycramg Bright eyes, a clear skin and a body fiill of youth and health may bo S'oura if you will keep your system In order by regularly taking (GOLD MEDAL Th world's standard remedy for kidnsy, liver, bladder ond uric odd trouble?, th nemles of life and looks. In use eine 1096. All drussists, three sizes. Look for tb nam Cold Medal on rory Los uad accept no imitation 1 if1- - - rrir or Mofoclsy !fM Want a dear, healthy complexion, regular bowels, and a perfect working liver? All easy to obtain if you take CARTER'S Little Liver ZX Pills, the sure A nafe and eaw Ci OVER POLLS acting remedy. For headache, dizziness, upset stomach and despondency, they have no equaL Purely vegetable. Small Pill-Small Dose-mll Price THAT LEGACY HELPED SOME Of Course Newspaper Man Really Had Done Well, but Not Entire, ly by His Own Effortß. When I sop n hikimI man." Faid I the chnlrmun. virtuously. "I hay to mywlf thrre goes one of life's warders. There kium a man who has refused to make the most of his gifts. There In no excuse for poverty, gentlemen, everyone .should rise " 'Henri Hear!" cried hlii henrer "Everyone," exclaimed the chnlrman, "tuny carve out n good position for himself If he wishes." "Perhaps you are rlcht," Interposed a member. "Omy today I met n newspaper man who told me that 20 years nßo he came to Chicago 'A-fth exactly $." In hl.s pocket. He 1 now worth $10.000 nnd he owes this entirely to his own ability and energy, combined with good health and n high code of ethics, and to the fact that his unci! recently died and left hl tu $.TJ.0i)5." Chicago New. Under Surveillance. Mrs. Llttlellat Tilly, you've lef t my lingerie scattered all around this room nnd I'm expecting company nny minute. Tilly the Maid That' nil right, ma'am. I'll keep my eye on 'era nnd see they don't pinch nothln. Odd, Isn't ItT She-"I Fee bicycling Is naln on the rLe." He "Yes. In p!te of the falling off." Morning eepVour EVes Glonn - Cloor HooltrW O rr 1m Cvt Car Bh KMmm C.CMta.UÜ

i;i

G.t J 2 Sc Box. CitrX )

CARTEETS

K