Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 29, Jasper, Dubois County, 10 December 1920 — Page 3

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LAST NIGHT'S DREAMS

WHAT THEY MEAN

DID YOU DREAM ABOUT MUSIC? TO PARAPHRASE Klichtly the poet: t When tl-.e nlht Is filled with mualcthe cares which Infest the day Khali fold th;lr tents like the Arl and as tilently steal away. For lream music, say the seors, portends Kood fortune to those .who hear the phantom strains. When, through the world of the visions of n!t;ht, wander harmonious melodies, happiness and money are hovering In the near future waiting for you. It doesn't matter whether you' dream that you are producing the music yourself or that you simply hear It the omen Is good. Among other things It Indicates that you are shortly to receive news of a chevrful sort about a friend whem, for a long time, you have neither seen ncr heard from. If you are as yet unmarried and In love It Is a sign that your sweetheart Is kind and true there Is a wedding and happiness nhead of you. To married people It Indicates good-tempered JIIIIIIIIIIHIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIU 1 THE GIRL ON THE JOB 1 5 How to Succeed How to Get E 5 Ahead How to Make Good E 5 By JESSIE llOBERTS ?i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 m i i m 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ( 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r: MODERN ADVERTISING A DVKRTISINO today is very friend ly to women. Women are dohicr a great deal of it and doing It well. There Is n discrimination In that huslness at least against woman per se. She gets paid for what she does, not for what she Is. There are many sorts of advertising, and women are In all of them. The artist who makes the pictures that' make the ad go Is about as often a woman as a man. And woman writes as many nds as her brother. Some women already are managing advertising olliees of their own, and many art acting as advertising agents. Some confine themselves entirely to one form of advertising, specializing on magazine or newspaper ads, or display ads. Others take orders from any 11 nr. or individual and suggest the medium best suited, afterwards placing the ad where it will do the most good. In the form to which It Is best adapted. Many of the large Arms that cater to the wants of women always have a worrwn on their advertising staff, for they rcallze that a woman will understand how to talk to other women In a way to interest and convince them on subjects that are distinctly hers. Hut advertising Is not a hit-or-mlss thing, which you can take up at a day's notice. Like anything at which people earn money. It takes time nnd hard work and training. There i:re fundamental principles that must be understood, there are Intricate questions concerning colors, types, expenses, efTects on the eye or the ear, appropriateness. The wutnr.n who wants to become a successful advertiser, w hatever branch she may elioose, ought to know something, at least, of i ll branches. She should know the cost of producing what she draws or writes, she should know what types best suit hn picture, or whether or not Illustration will help her write-up. She must understand the psychology of advertising. Hut here Is r. tine Held for women, p MO i H&K'S , P COOK BOOK y To -ach man la given a day, anil hia work for tin day; And oth'o and no more, ho la given to travtl this way. And wee If h tiles from his task, whatever the odds; For the tak Is appointed to him on the scroll of the gds. IM win Markham. CHRISTMAS SWEETS. This year, as the supply of sugar Is ample, we may again indulge In some of the dellvlous home-made candies and cakes. In homes where there Is an abundant supply of maple sirup and honey (if you keep a tree and a bee) you are independent, as most dainty sweets may be made from these. Maple sirup makes the inot creamy, tine Uavored fondant If boiled undisturbed to the soft ball stage. Hour :v usual - MILIJANT- MARY IH'COUId renoYQte-ny-IHe Iknow-bow'Id BEGIN-rd-toucb-cHew deep -shadows -out AND -DAB SOME -HIGH LIGHTS -IN'

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-J children.' If you hear some one running over the scales, either on a musical Instrument or with the voice, something good will happen to you through pure luck. As to n choice of musical Instruments to play on, a. dream-guitar, singing at the same time. Is specially favorable to lovers, though If you hear some one else playing the Instrument watch outyou are too susceptible. Playing a dream-guitar Is especially recommended to induce happiness In the family. A banjo !s almost as good as a guUar, though If you simply hear the banjo Instead of playing It yourself you may have some slight worries which will soon be over. A flute foretells n birth in the family, and an organ Is an excellent omen unless it Is a church-organ playing a c?irge. In that case you may hear of something that will "make you tired 01 of the death of a relative, cay the pessimists. The optimists say a dream-dirge on a dream-organ In a dream-church only means a slight annoyance soon past. The music from a dream-piano Is an excellent omen marriage for those In love, domestic happiness for the married and thrift and,, fortune for all. The worst that even the kill-Joy oracles can say about dream-music Is that If It Is harsh and discordant some temporary vexations await you. (Copyright) SCHOOL L jl&fc and one that Is growing every year. America Is the greatest advertising country in the world, and she is not slackening her pace. Modern advertising Is telling the truth the day for lies and exaggeration and misrepresentation Is over hut It Is also a romance, and is endlessly Interesting. Moreover, and this Is not without Its appeal. It Is excellently well paid. (Copyright.) () California has more than double the area of all Xew .England. -u . -v Atu tVUion a marble slab or buftered platter and when cold beat to a cream and linlsh in the usual manner. Pralines. Holl one pound of dark brown sugar with just enough water to dissolve it, until it threads a line strand from the end of n fork. Stir In one pound of pecan meats and when evenly mixed j drop by spoonfuls on a marble slab or I buttered platter. Flatten and round I each one and, w hen cool, take up and pack In a cool place. They keep any length of time if kept dry and cool. Peanut Candy. Shell and roll with a rolling pin. one quart of peanuts. To two pounds of light brown sugar add six ounces (twelve tablespoor.fuls) of butter, boil t stirring constant v ten minutes, countlog the time front the first bubble. Add the nuts Just before turning out. M:rk in squares before It gets hard. Molasses Candy. Take three cupfuls of molasses, one cupful of brown sugar, beat three minutes. Holl until it hardens In water, add one tablespoonful of butter, one teaspoonfMl of soda, and one tablespoonful of boiling water In which-the soda is dissolved. Remove frpm the lire, pour on buttered plates and cool, Pull when cool enough to handle. Peanut Butter Fudge. Place two cupfuls of sugar and twothirds of a cupful of milk in a granite sauce pan, stir until dissolved, then

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BY DOUGLAS MALLOCH

POSSESSION. There's some of us has this world's goods, An some of us has none But all of us has got the woods, An all has got the sun. So, settin here upon the stoop, This patch o pliie beside, I never care a single whoop Fer I am satlsfled. Now, take the pine on yonder hill: It don't belong to me; The boss he owns the timber still, It's there fer me to see. An' twlxt the ownin' of the same An smellln of Its smell, I've got the bes-i U that. there game, An' so I'm feel! well. The boss In townunrolls a map An' proudly says, "It's mine." . Rut he don't drink no maple sap An he don't smell no pine. The boss in town he Aggers lands In quarter-sections red; Lord! I Just set with folded hands An' breathe 'em In instead. The boss his forest wealth kin read In cent an dollar sign; His name Is written In the deed But nil his land Is mine. There's some of us has this world'9 goods, An' some of us has none Rut all of us has got the woods,' An ali has got the sun I (Copyright.) DAYS cjuirrci aul tt THE ROMANCE OF WORDS "FOOLSCAP." I IK use of this word to designate paper of a certain T size dates back to the reign of Charles I of Kngland. This monarch, being desirous of increasing his revenues which had been sadly depleted by extravagance, disposed of a number of governmental privileges, among these the right to manufacture paper. At that time, as proof of the fact that paper was made by the crown, each sheet bore the royal coat-of-arms as a water-mark. The parliament, under the protectorate of Cromwell, ridiculed the royal house in every possible manner even going so far as to degree that a fool's cap and bells be substituted for the coat-of-arms. The proroguing of the rump parliament nullified this law. hut, meanwhile, the change had been made and the paper used in the parliamentary journals, approximately 17 by 14 inches, retained the title of "foolscap" the title by which the larger, or legal, sheets, nre known to this day, though individual watermarks have taken the place of 'the original cap and bells. (Coryrlght.) -.V boll until the mixture forms a soft ball in cold water. Kemove from the lire, add four tablespoonfuls of peanut butter, stir until melted then beat until creamy. Add one teaspoonful of vanilla and one-third of a cup of seedless ra sins. Turn into a greased pan while 't is still smooth enough to pack nicely. Cut in squares. Orange Straws. Weigh oranges whole and use pound for pound of sugar. Peel the oranges and cut the rind in shreds. Holl until tender. hanging the w ater twice and heat grad hilly to boiling point, then boil twenty minutes with the peel. Rv move from the pan and roll while hot in granulated sugar. Then place on paper In the oven to dry. Keep In a tightly covered receptacle. (. 1920. Western Ne wispier Union.;

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Chicago as the Center of Pure Speech

CuICAGO. A thousand years hence your posterity reading a new Gibbon will encounter along about page ten, chapter two, volume six, a passage something like this: "But In the history of the American republic, it was not the Revolution, nor the World war, nor even prohibition which provided the , supreme spectacle for mankind to view throughout all time and eternity. No. It was In the fall of 1020, when Boston petitioned Chicago to teach her the art of talking the English language. This undoubtedly constituted the western Athens greatest esthetic achievement. Previously Boston had been her debtor In slight measure

Has This Woman Motorist a Conscience?

DENVER. Has a woman a conscience when she drives an automobile over the body of a nine-year-old hoy and leaves him In the street to die? So questioned Mrs. Thomas II. Tulley, 1045 Race street at an inquest by Coroner Thomas M. Hunter, to place the responsibility for the death of Mario Camplglla, nine, 1G3S Williams street. Mrs. Tulley is the mother of Patrick C. Tulley, nlne-year-old playmate of Mario. Young Camplglla was run down anil killed by a small touring car on Sixteenth avenue, near City park. "My son, Patrick, told me that after the automobile struck little Mario," she said, "a woman got out of the car and walked back to where the little fellow lay in the street, unconscious and bleeding. I asked him: 'Did the woman pick him up or help him?' He-sald she did not, but that she turned around, went back to her machine and drove away. Is there anything more inhuman? Is there a woman in the wJorld who could do a thing like that?" According to testimony the woman was accompanied by a man, who did not get out of the car. The woman

He May Have Wanted to Save His Face

NEW YORK. American artists are exercised over the recent indignity suffered by Augustus John, Welsh portra.lt painter, whose suit against Lord Leverhulme of London, soap and fish multimillionaire, attracted International note. Mr. John, one of the most famous artists of Europe, brought suit for danages when Lord Leverhulme cut the head out of a portrait the artist had made for him. Although the wealthy barrister had paid for the pa'inting, Augustus John took the? Ftind that a painting by an artist sh()uid not be altered, mutilated or chunged In any way during the lifetime of the artist creating It. The Guild of Free Lance Artists Imp cabled the following resolution to him: "Resolved, That this guild Is In hearty sympathy with Augustus John

Let's Hope the Court Isn't Too Serious

COUNCIL BLUFFS, IA. Miss Lorraine Wycoff (as was) daughter of H. B. Wycorir, 12:W Fnirmount avenue, is i eventeen and pretty. She and Donald Milliron had been sweethearts a long time and had been engaged about a year. They were to have been married at Christmas. Donald was very proud of his pretty sweetheart. 'He frequently brought his older brother, William, down to call. One night not long ago the Milliron brothers were calling. The entire Wycoff family vre present. "Say, but I think you'd make a davidy wife," Willlamremarke 1 to Lorraine. "Let's get married." "All right," laughed Lorraine In turn. The others also laughed. Then, .till In a Joke, they discussed plans for the wedding. "Iii be best man," said Donald. The next morning at the appointed hour William came to claim his 4,bride." Lorraine joined the two brothers. Mrs. Wycoff went along. The four went down to the courthouse and got a license, still laughing and joking. Then they went on to the preacher, Itev. J. Frederick Catlin of the First Baptist church. William and Miss Wycoff took their places before the preacher. Donald stood up with his brother as "best man." But the laugh-

5 nt Chicago having consistently supplied the eastern seaport with excellent pork as a concomitant of her noted beans but never before " "Anyway, as Mrs. Henry Boon, M23 Dorchester avenue, put It, 'it's wonderful, isn't It?' Ain't It, though? Boston! And to toss Ossa on Pellon, the newsboys of Pittsburgh, as well as Boston, wish dicta as tothe correct procedure In purveying wares. Should one, for example, they ask our loop purists, exclaim: "Will you have n public print, slrr Or "Shall you have a , etc.?" The problem ramifies. Should tlie bartender interrogate one with, "Whatil It be?" or "A little of the same?" And may not the tonsorlalist be utterly crass In stating "It looks like rain," when he has choice of the tasteful "Meteorological observations, I Infer from perusal of the newspapers, betoken precipitation?" Solutions of these problems will be supplied, Boston and Pittsburgh hope, by the American speech committee of the Chicago Woman's club. O r came back to where the boy was lying In the street and asked several witnesses what should be done. When it was suggested that the youth be taken to a hospital, the woman said : "I am going for a doctor," entered her machine and drove away. Officer C. 0. Lewis told the jury he took witnesses with him to the homo of Miss June Kennedy, daughter of P. E. Kennedy, 1475 Race street, and that the witnesses Identified the car. Miss Kennedy took the stand and testified that the car, to her knowledge, had not been out of the garage on the afternoon of the accident. She said she did not know who could have taken the car out. Miss Kennedy was released when the authorities were convinced she was not driving the car when It struck the boy. in his controversy with Lord Leverhulme and extends to the artist Its united appreciation of his legal fight, sincerely hoping he will be successful." The guild here Is affiliated with the Authors' League of America and numbers among the members of Its council such well-known artists a. W. TBenda, Franklin Booth, Arthur William Brown, C. D. Falls, Frederic R. Gruger, Wallace Morgan, Henry Reu terdahl, Tony Sarg, F. G. Cooper and R. F. Schabelitz. In Europe the artists went further than adopting resolutions of sympathy. The Latin quarter of Paris, Italian art circles and European art circles generally were greatly aroused. The Con fed erat I one Generale des Ritartistl Italian called a strike of Ü4 hours as a mark of protest. Painters, sculptors, canvas weavers, picture dealers, models and others of the crafts joined the strike In sympathy. An effigy of Lord Leverhulme was carried in a big street pageant at Florence, Italy, and then burned. The reason for Lord Leverhulme's mutilation of his portrait has not beet made known. Augustus John baa painted portraits of some of Europe's greatest celebrities, including Lloyd George. ing and joking didn't prevent tho preacher from tying the knot. William Milliron and Lorraine Wycoff were man and wife. "I woke up In about t o days anö realized I had married the wrong brother," says Mrs. William Milliron. But William was just as magnanimous as was Donald. That day Wil Ham took his things and went down Id town to board. Lorraine took her things and went home to hf-r parents to live. "William is goluK to bring suit against" me on the ground of cruelty, the proof being that I won't live with him," said the young bride. "Just as soon as the divorce decree is signed Donald and I are going to get married. That . won't be until next spring, though."

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A LETTES

FOR UiLlfJ From a Wooaa VLo:e Serious IDneis Was Overcome by Lydia L Pinliham's Vegetable Conpound. Garaett, Kaa. "I first took Lvdla E. PinkhanVa Vegetable Compouna for a mm ii ra&sji?" ij 1 IUI WVOAUVnU WUWM 11 r v. v.;-fVi f tt oldest child I got up too soon which caused serious female trouble. I w&s so weak that I was not able to be on my feet but very little and could not do my housework at all. I had a bad pain in my left side and it would pain terribly if I stepped off a curb-stone. One dav one of your booklets was thrown in the yard tmd I read every word in it. There were so many who had been helped by your medicine that I wanted to try it and mv husband went to town and eot mo a bottle. It seemed as though x felt relief after the second dose, so I kept on until I bad taken five bottles and by that time I was as well as I could wish. About a year later I gave birth to a ten pound boy, and have had two more children since and my health has been fine. If I ever have trouble of any kind I am coing to take your medicine for I givo it all tho praise for my good health. I always recommend your medicine whenever lean." Mrs. EVA E. SlUY, Garnctt. Kansas. . DEAD) Lifo is a burden when the body !a racked with pain. Everything worries and the victim becomes despondent and downhearted. To bring back the sunshine tako GOLD MEDAL Tb national remedy of Holland for over 200t years; it is an enemy of all pains retaking from kidney, liver end uric add troubles. All druggists, three sixes. Look for the name Cold Mol on 17 bca and ccert ra imitation Eatwiio VJorks f.laglc "I have taken only two hoxes of Eatonic and feel like n new man. It has done me more K)od than anything else," writes C. O. Frapplr. Entonic Is the modern remedy for acid stomach, hloatin?, food repeating and indigestion. It quickly takes up and carries out the neidity nnd pas and enables the stomach to digest tho food naturally. Thnt moans not only relief from pain and discomfort but you get the full strength from the food you eat. Hig box only costs a trUle with your druggist's guarantee. will reduce inflamed, swollen Joints, Sprains, Bruises, Soft Bunches; Heals Boils, roll Evil.Ouittor.Fistulaand infected sores quickly as it ii a positive aatiieptie and germicide. Pleasant to cies does not blister or rrooff (he ba!r. and yracan workt&c tone, t. SO per bottle. drUrered. Book 7 11 free. ABSORBING. JR.abe ntlir?tic Uaimcnt for oa&klai. ttdacei Painful. Suvilcn Velni. Went. Straina. Bmlacai Kopi 1 tin aid ln'inmatloo. Price 11.2$ per bottl at 4ea!eri er delivered. Will tell yea omc if job wrSta. Liberal Trial Bottle for 10c la atampa. W. F. YOUNG. Inc.. 313 Uifo IU Springfield. Mttt TlpSnpores Remember. I stand back of every box. Every drunrMst puaranteea to refund the purchase prico (35 cents; If Peterson'! Ointment doesn't do all I claim. I pruaranteo It for eczema, old eores, running sores, salt rheum, ulcers. ore nlrples, broken breasts. Itching sl:in, skin diseases, blind, bleedlnjr anl Itching piles as well as for chafing, burns, ücalUs, cuts, bruises and sunburn, "I had 30 running seres on my leg for 11 years, was In three different hospitals. Amputation n-as advised. Skin grafting was tried. I was cured by uslnir Peterson's Ointment." Mrs. F. E. Root. 281 Michigan street, Ruf.'alo, N. Y. Mall orders filled by Peterson Ointment Co., Buf falo, N. Y. Indian River FLORIDA Farn otis juicy po!den fruit from grove to you from the Indian Hirer Orange Country. For 15 money order we will send you by prepaid expresA four fifth bushel box genuine Indian Hirer Oranges. Safe arrlral guaranteed. TituTlll5 bnnk references. Addreaa INDIAN RIVER ORANGE COMPANY T17USVILLE, FLORIDA Wanted, A Good Maß in This County to distribute stock and poultry remedies to fanners. Pleasant work, good pay. Writa SOUTHERN PRODUCTS CO. Box 470 PaducaK Kjr. rrir"nil fO PO$mVCtVtMOVtObDr. rWr kU Lai .If I a lrr-kUOus'at Unft t 1 UL.UIVi.LU nail. rrMlwnfc. Or. C. M. Ittm Agents for FORD rertaannt Non-Sxld Chile UU deJTrr!. jntUtulr t& acd off. tilg sale, ttowi u.( riactSTil Uoc Bronchial Troubles Soothe the irritatiou and you rtlirre th dittret. Do both quickly and eCecthrcSy by uunj promptly a dependable remedy

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