Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 64, Number 2, Jasper, Dubois County, 20 May 1921 — Page 3

ASPIRIN

Name "Bayer" on Genuine Take Aspirin only as told in each package of genuine Uayer Tablets of Aspirin. Then you will be following the directions nnd losasc worked out by physicians during -1 years, and proved safe by millions. Take no hnnces with substitutes. If you see the Uayer Cross on tablets, you can take them without fear for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia. Hheuraatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for' Tain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also eil larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Uayer Manufacture of Monoaeeticacldcster of Sallcyllcacld. Adr. The Wants of a "Pioneer. Writing tu the editor of the I'allrapest, John V. Irish recounts some of the hardships of Iowa pioneer life iind telN the story of one of those pioneer women and her granddaughter, who asked: '(irandma, you were here in the ?arly days? 'Yes, I was a pioneer." "Well, were you poor?" 'Yes, we were all poor." 'Couldn't you have what you wanted?" "No. I could not." "Did you have no inat?" 'No, nothing but venison, wild turkeys, prairie rhickt'iis and quails." "Did you have no su;'nr?" "Nothing but maple sugar." 'What did you want that you couldn't get? "It was New Orleans molasses and alt mackerel." There Is nothing more satisfactory after a day of hard work than a line full of snowy white clothes. For such results use lied Cross Uall Ulue. Candor. "Hiram," said Mrs. Corntossel, 'don' let our boy Josh write any more letters to people askin' about summer hoard. Some of 'em are inquirin whether there are any mosquitoes." "At this time of year he can say, 4No with perfect truthfulness." "Put he Isn't satlslled with the simple truth. The way he answers the question is, 'Not yet.' " Sim ire X2f IN DIGEST0 mv 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief f. y hJFOR INDIGESTION Cuticura Talcum Fascinatingly Fr rrant " Always Healthful Soap 25c, 0 tat men t 23 aid 50c, Talcum 25c. 0 We Sell Direct to Retail Grocers Exclusively Fancy amttD IP(si)rfiry CdDlFIFM ROASTED Packed in 150 pound bags Freight prepaid Wm. Schotten Coffee Co, ST. LOUIS, MO. DEATH Aches, pains, nervousness, difficulty in urinating, often mean serious disorders. The world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles SOLD MEDAL bring quick relief and often ward off deadly diseases. Known tho national remedy cf Holland for more than 200 year. All druggists, in three sizes. Look tor lb n arse Co! J Medal n every box an J a;r---t r.o i a tloo

Mm a Ik

SLOW

INGESTIONS 01! RAISING CABBAGE

Plant Contains Large Quantities of Mineral Salts So Essential in Diet. GIVE ATTENTION TO VARIETY Select Richest Portion of Garden and Work Into Soil äs Much Rotted . Manure as Can Be Spared Prevent Work of Cutworms. (Prepared by. the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) Mot peojh have a fondness of cabbagi, served In one wuy or another, as It contains lare quantities of the mineral-salts so essential in the diet. Karly cabbage Is especially desirable, as it furnishes green food at a time when It Is needed. In giving suggestions on growing cabbage,. garden specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture say the proper variety must be planted. Some kinds require a longer period for their growth than others. Jersey Wakefield and Charleston Wakefield are most universally planted for the early crop, Jersey Wakefield being considered earliest of all. The variety known as All Seasons has a round, flattened head and is a good intermediate sort. Copenhagen Market Is a large, round-headed early cabbage that is very much in favor among market gardeners. Late Flat Dutch and Danish IJallhead are considered the leading late varieties. Start Plants Indoors. Plants must he started indoors, In a hotbed, or be shipped from some point farther South where the season is advanced. If extra early cabbage Is to be grown. One or two cigar boxes filled with fine soil and placed In a south window will form 'a seedbed for starting 100 to 20O cabbage plants. The, little seedlings must be transplanted to larger boxes or to a cold frame when they begin to crowd each other In the seed boxes. Cabbage plants are quite hardy, and along the South Atlantic coast are grown In the open by the acre. Plant early cabbage In the richest part of the garden, having previously worked into the soil all the rotted inanure that can be spared and then added high-grade commercial fertilizer at the rate of ten pounds to every 100 Good Solid Head of Cabbage. feet of row. The fertilizer should be well mixed with the top 4 inches of soil over a space Ihe full width of the row, which Is generally 3 feet. Do not plant cabbage on land where It was grown last year, especially if any of the heads were diseased or showed any kind of trouble. It Is always a good plan to rotate crops, even in the small home garden. Cabbage is subject to several diseases, but fortunately these do not do .much harm in small gardens. Insects, however, play havoc with tlie crop from the time it Is planted. Cutworms are generally waiting In the soil during early spring to cut oft the stems of the cabbage plants just at the surface of the ground. Protect Plants From Cutworms. The best remedy, or rather preventive. Is to p'.ace bands or tubes of stiff paper around the stems of the plants as they are being set in the garden. Thin cardboard makes ideal plant protectors. y cutting the cardboard Into strips about 3 inches wide, sections can be cut oiT and rolled around a load pencil to form a tube. The protectors should extend an Inch below the surface and at least 12 inches above. After the stems of the cabbatre plants have become toughened and begin to grow rapidly the protectors can be taken off. Cabbage worms, the eggs for which are laid by tho light-yellow butterflies that are often seen Hying about the cabbage plants, do a great amount of damage. Ducting the foliage and the heads with air-slaked lime, to which a little paris green has been added. or s;rayiiv lliem with arsenate of lead, one ounce to a gallon of water. are both effective. There is no danger a the heads grow from the inside and the outer leaves, to which the poison !s applied, are all removed. PASTURE LAND ON HILLSIDES If Properly Taken Care Of Steep Inclines Can Be Made to Return Good Grass Yields. Many of our pasture land are so hilly that they cannot be used fop cropping purpose, but if properly taken ran of they can be made to return substantially profitable jrass yields

B ' . x -ua v.o...; :. v.. .

VEGETABLES ENTIRE YEAR FROM GARDENS

Accomplishment of Women in One New Mexico County. Everything Tried in Dry-Land Section and Given Proper Attention Brought Good Results Much Fruit Was Canned. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Women In Union county, New Mexico, are working to have on every farm a irarden large enough to supply the family with vegetables the entire year, with a sufiicient surplus for each housewife to can or dry enough vegetables for winter use. The United States Department of Agriculture reports that the' following Is a part of what was accomplished last year In this county under the supervision of the home demonstration agint: A great many Vegetables new Products of Garden in New Mexico. to the community were tried out, such as Swiss chard, Chinese cabbage, asparagus and celery, and fruits like ever-bearing strawberries, rhubarb, garden lemons, and other varieties not previously raised. . These were grown successfully. Crapes, peaches, plums, apples and apricots have been planted by many people who had not thought these fruits would grow in their county. This is a dry-land section where practically no attention has been given to the home garden. Everything tried, and given proper attention, brought good results. Some failures were reported, due to lack of moisture and lack of care. Reports also showed that, besides all that was used fresh on the table, from 25,000 to oO.OOO quarts of vegetables and fruits were canned in this county last year. AVOID DODDER INFESTATION Farmer Should Use Plants Kn,cwn.to Be Immune to -Attacks of Pestiferous Weed. The necessity of selecting plants immune to dodder Infestation when cultivating newly cleared land was emphasized by a report which recently reached the United States Department of Agriculture concerning the destruction of an entire field of eggplant on a newly cleared field in Pennsylvania. So bad was the infestation that not a single fruit was formed on the parasitized plants and" the entire field was destroyed. The dodder was determined as hazel dodder, a species not uncommon on hazel and other wild shrubs and on tick trefoil and other wild herbs, but never previously reported on cultivated plants. The department recommends that on land known to contain the seeds of dodder, fanners should use plants which are Immune to attacks of the pest. The following plants are not susceptible to injury by dodder; corn, soy beans, velvet beans, cowpeas, and small grains such as oats, wheat, and rye. Potatoes and buckwheat, crops commonly usid on newly cleared land, are not very likely to be injured by dodder, but truck crops should not he planted on land known to contain dodder seed. GOOD COLLAR IS ESSENTIAL Every Farmer Should Plan to Prevent Sore Necks and Shoulders of Work Hcrses. Now that tlu busy season is here, every fanner Should .make a careful examination of the supply of horse collars on hand and see to it that he lias a god fitting collar for every horse he purposes to put to work. Sore shoulders and sore necks on farm horses are generally caused either by collars that do not fit or by hames that are not properly adjusted. CAREFULLY SAVE DROPPINGS Either Use for Fertilizer or Dispose of to Persons Who Can Mak Good Use of Them. No matter how small the dock the dn ppings should be carefully saved. stored, ami either ued as fertilizer for plants or disposed of to persons who can so use them to Increase tho fer tility of the soli.

Net Contents 15Pluid Praeter.

Hip

at rrnnoL-3 PER CENT, tl 1 AVcccuhlclYcpafauOTi ! - m m ' tinthcStomariis aridBwsaJ 8 ThcrcbyIrwnoün4Ditc5te j ChccrfulnwsandRcstCoata i neither Upturn, motv 1 Iincral. Kot ahcotiv i Saver a u m nf id Remedy fcf and FcTrtsnnc - t ncc np Sleep . jnsCnrrAijiCoKrsix. Exict Copy o! Wrapper. HAD THE TEACHER GUESSING i Small Wonder That She Didn't Understand, but There It Was in the Bock. Georgie surveyed with puzzled eyes a sentence In his reading lesson. -At last he raised his hand: "Well, Georgie. what is It?" asked the teacher. What Is a feebly. Miss Smith V 4 A feebly !" repeated Miss Smith, in astonished tones; "What do you mean, Georgle? Feebly is an adverb, not a noun." Georgle was unconvinced. "It's somethilng that grows." he said. "It says so 'here'." "Bring me your book," said the mystified teacher. Whereupon Georgie complied and laboriously read out the sentence: "The man had a feebly growing down on his chin." BOY'S SUGGESTION ALL RIGHT Thirteen-Year-Old Had Remembered What He Had Been Taught ' About Electricity. ' The family wishing was going through its regular Monday ' electric washer route. Incidentally the basement was damp, because there had been no furnace lire. ' When the lady of the house started to wring the clothes she found an electric current In the water, due to a short circuit In the motor. After several attempts to wring the clothes before the current got in its work, she was ab.uit ready to give, up and wring them by hand. "Shucks, mom." said thirteen-year-old Harry, who knows all about Edison and Franklin, "I'll bet if you put on your, rubbers, so the current can't go on out of your body you won't get a shock at nil." ' And when "mom" tried the suggestion she found the embryo electrician knew what he was talking about, for she worked in safety while wringing the rest of the clothes.

i i

1

m Don't Count Your Night Hours Counting the clock strokes at night means losing the day hoHirs in drowsiness. A cup of tea or coffee at bedtime often results in

dreary wakefulness.

TOM

is a hot, cheering, meal-time beverage, fully satisfying to the taste, and you can drink it at any hour, of the day as many cups as you likewith no irritation to nerves. Better nights and brighter morn' ings usually follow a change to Postum as the table drink.

41 There's Made By Postum Cereal

Special Care of Baby. That Baby should have a bed of its own all are agreed. Yet it is more reasonable for an infant to sleep with grown-ups than to use a man's medicine in an attempt to regulate the delicate organism of that same infant. Either practice is to be shunned. Heither would be tolerated by specialists in children's diseases. Your Physician will fell you that Baby's medicine must bo prepared with even greater care than Baby's food. A Baby's stomach when in good health is too often disarranged by improper food. Could you for a moment, then, think of giving to your ailing child anything but a medicine especially prepared for Infants and Children ? Don't be deceived. Make a mental note of this: It is important, Mothers, that you should remember that to function well, the digestive organs of your Baby must receive special care. No Baby is so abnormal that the desired results may be had from the use of medicines primarily prepared for grown-ups. KOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT IS AROUND EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHER'S CASTORIA GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS

oears the

THE CKNTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY.

to' a

Think of this if offered siibstitutes .and. imitations instead of

Blackmail's Medicated Salt Brick

DON'T EXPERIMENT

Dr. Bbckman discovered the exact

needed, and for 15 years Blackman's has put new life into live stock. Ask any veterinarian about the merits of ingredients

as printed on the package. To avoid

package bears the name BLACK MAN

BLACKMAN STOCK REMEDY CO., Mistaken Identity. The morning was cold and foggy when old Farmer Giles and his man started out to drive a bullock Into the market. The farmer, being uncommonly stout. left the work to his employee. After tramping about eight miles in silence, hardly able to see each other for the fog, the man was startled 'to hear a voice in front of him exclaim: "We're getting along in good style, aren't we, Bill?" "Lordy !" cried the farm hand, "be that you, maister. Whoy. Ah bin a-droivin' ye for the last hour!" And the bullock had vanished In the fog, while Bill herded his bulky master to market. Somewhat Miffed. "What do you think of that fellow? Had the audacity to have his secretary get me'on the wire. I never talk except to principals. Why didn't he call e himself?" "How do you know it was his secretary?" "My secretary answered." Louisville Courier-Journal. CEREAL a Reason CoJccBattle Creek,Mick "

hi

Signature of

Would You Lend Your

HORSE Stranger to Test the Effect of Some New Drug? hi proportions of medicines pi is imitations see.that thd CONDrriowe Chtttaioog i; TcBncmejfe! UVI STOCK SALESMEN YoTefi Our West Virginia Grown Nursery Stock. Fine canvassing outf. t FREE. Cash Commission Paid Weekly. WRITE for terms. THE GOLD NURSERY CO. Moson City. W. Va. SO Years Old Was Sick Now Feels Yound After Takinä Eatonic for Sour Stomach "I had sour stomach ever since I had the grip and it bothered me badly Have taken Eatonic only a week and am much better. Am 80 years old," says Mrs. John Hill. Eatonic quickly relieves sour stomach, indigestion, heartburn, bloating and distress after eating because it takes up and carries out the excess acidity and gases which cause most stomach ailments. If you have "tried everything" and still suffer, do not give tip hope. Eatonic has brought relief to tens of thousands like you. A big box costs but a trifle with your druggist's guarantee. Reduce Bursal Enlargement, Thickened, Swollen Tissues, Curbs, Filled Tendons. Soreness from Bruises or Strains; stops Spavin Lameness, allays pain. Does not blister, remove the hair or lay up the horse. 52.50 a bottle at drugfcUts or delivered. Boole 1 R free. ABSORBINE, JR., for mankind an antiseptic liniment for bruises, cuts, wounds, strains, painful, swollen eins or glands. It heals and soothes. 51.25 a bottle at druggists or postpaid. Will tell you more if you mite. Made in U. S. A. by W. F. YOUNG. Inc.. 310 Teei!s JL Soringf Id. Mass. Lady .xrnt No capital, no disagreeable canvassing. SptendU income for rart tu.i. ! Glanoidal Concern. S03 Plum. Cincinnati. O. Slf-Thrfallnx llfs. Necessary fur gooi elsht; invaluaM for faillnp ii;ht. 2Zv pr pkg-. Well Specialty C.. Owenaboro. Ky. (HIT IX (H ICK-Make IIS 00 per day. Sdl Haywood Kord Ka!lator Cap". Every Kurd owner will buy. lOO'o profit. Kre particulars. Haywoo Vs, S3Q N. Capitol. InJIar.apon, Ir.J. LI)II Senl 25c for S-ounc. SI 00 alz bottle of highly prfume-l Compiexion li'autlSer. and get FHEE for th r.'xt ten dayi three piec, trold rilled auty I'in St . Aildress J. S. KINO, ELKTON, KENTUCKY. i Ag-entfc. Earh Community -fplendl. I e o m m ! -Ion. UooJt prepaid. Incnitted. Wonderful seller, rpeater. Wade-Cartmell, Howe, Inl. Women MaJte Money aelilng a hlsh-erad. popular toilet article. liberal proSt; nie work; easy seller; always repeats. Karo iroo! li'iriir or etra money Addrea LA VA I.I.I f! HE CO.. NEW ORLEANS. I.A. Uülli) YOU INVEST SISO TO MARK S.OOO. Proposition will stand strict and thorough Investigation. Particulars für nishe.l without obligation. AdJres II. 21. Haverbeck & Co. 32 ITway. New York City. FRECKLES OSmvtlY ffHOVtO " Dr. BUrry't ! JUtmmt . T r 4rwrnt r ? MO. S.v. rM Wm. De. C. M. a.n , ! W. N. IL, Indianapolis, No. 21-1921.

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