Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 64, Number 14, Jasper, Dubois County, 12 August 1921 — Page 2

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A Dangerous Periotf Through Which Every Woman Must Pass Practical Suggestions Given by the Women Whose Letters Follow

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to carry women safely ihröugh the Change of Life. She says: "It is with pleasure that J write to you thanking you for what your wonderful medicine has dor.-, for me. . I was passing through the Change of Life and had a displacement and weakness so that i could not stand on my feet and Other annoying symptoms. A friend told me about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and the first bottlo helped me, so I got more. It cured me and I am now doing my housework. Your medicine is certainly woman's friend and you may use thi3 testimonial as you choose." Mrs. Mary Lister, COS Frank Street, Adrian, Mich. 'It is said that middle age is the most trying period in a woman's life, and owingto modern methorisof living not one woman in a thousand passes through thi3 perfectly natural change without experiencing very annoying symptoms. Those ?motheringspells,tJie dreadful hot flashes that send the blood rushing to the head until it seems A3 though it would burst, and the faint feeling that follows, as if the heart were going to stop, those sinking or dizzy spells are all symptoms of a nervous condition, and indicate the need for a special medicine. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a root and herb medicine especially adauied to act upon the feminine system. It act3 in such a manner as to builu up the weakened nervous system and enables a woman to pass this trying period with the least possible annoying symptoms. Women everywhere should remember that most of the commoner ailments of women are not the surgical ones they are not caused by serious displacements or growths, although the symptoms may be the same, and that is why so many apparently serious ailments readily yield to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, as it acts as a natural restorative and often prevents serious troubles. Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text-Book upon "Ailments Peculiar to AVomcn" will he sent to you free upon request. "Write to The Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts. This book contains valuable information.

Figure It Out. Young Lady Do you know where John Smith lives? I'olieenmn Yes; the third house on till? loft-hand side of the street in the next block. Young Lady Hut which is the left-hnnd-slde of tin street in the next block? I'm a stranger in the city. Flavor is sealed in by toasting Will reduce Inflamed, Strained, Swollen Tendorn, Ligaments, or Muscles. Stops the lameness and pain from a Splint, Side Bone cr Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair Rone and horse can be used. $2.50 bottle at druggist3 or delivered. Describe your case for rrcial instructions and interesting horse Cook 2 A free. W. F. TOUNG, Ic-. 310 TtapU 3l. Spruff-J. Ma. V JL CUl Ö XJilUl i Was Sick

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Now FecLs Ypund After Tukinsi Eatonic for Sour Stomach "I had sour tciii::ch ov' l" sit'1'' I h'a'l the prip and if bothered laill y Have ta!:n I'atonie only a week and urn much better. Am SO years old." says .Mrs. John Hill. Katonie quickly relieves sour stomach. Indip-stion, heartburn, bleating and distress after eating because it take up and carries out the excess acidity and ases uhieh cause most Ftomaeh ailment. If you have "tried every tiling" and .tlll suffer, do not ?1e up hopo. Eatenic has hroupht relief to tens of thousands like you. A bi;r tx cost hat u trltle with yuur dmjrlst's guarantee. V r:. V.. Indianapolis, No. 33-1921.

F MIDDLE LIE

Aftcn, Tern. "I vrant other suffering women to know vhat Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me. During the Change of Life I was in bed for eight months and had two good doctors treating me but they did me no good. A friend advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,whichIaid, and in a short time I felt' better. I had all kinds of bad spells, but they all left me. Now when I feel weak and nervous I take the Vegetable Compound and it always does me good. I wish all women would try it during the Change of Life for I know it will ao them good. If you think itwill induce some one to try the Vegetable Comfiound you may publish this etter. Mrs. A.'Keller, Afton, Tenn. 31 rs. Mary Lister of Adrian, 31 ich., adds Iter testimony to the value of Lydia K. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound Literary Invention. "Yes. sir," said the author. "I figure I've got the one best seller of all history." "What's the plot?" inquired the publisher, doubtfully. "Never mind the plot," said the author. "You know everybody skims and jumps about in a hook. Well, I've just pieked out the places they jump to, and put 'em all in the first two chapters." With a cry of joy the publisher embraced the author and threw him out the window delightedly. A Celebrity Arrives. "(ireat excitement in the local room." "What's happened?" "A beautiful woman has just shot a married man who wasn't married to her. The city editor has issued orders to get all her photographs available, from her babyhood to the one taken yesterday, and two men have been sent to arrange for exclusive publication of her diary. Ho has also ealled up u friend who is in the motion-picture business who is on the lookout for new stars." nirmlngham Age-Herald. Ups and Downs. Two ineü, strangers to e;ieh other, sat side by side in a suburban train. Finally, one turned to the ether and be eaine confident ial. "I." he said impressively, "am a starter of elevators in a city skyscraper. When I signal them to '( np. they p np. And your line i -V "I." said the other, "am an undertaker. When I siunal them to p down, fhey p tlown." The American Leiriun Weekly. To Insure- clistenlncr-white table linens, use Ited Cross I.all P.lue in your laundry. It never disappoints. At all TOol jrroeers, oe. Advertisement. Chop Sucy Romance. i "You admit writing these letters to this younu' lady of the chorus "Yes," said the millionaire defendj ant in a breach-of-promiso uit. I "Ah! And these hieroglyphics at the bottom of raeh lettr are Iciss marks, ' no doubt?" "No." said the millionaire, with a riiiiu'M for "Yoars siiu erel v." " I'.irrainham Aize-Herald. 1 Shave With Cuticura Soap And double your razor el'iciency as well a promote skin purity, skin com- ' fort and skin health. Xo mug. no I slimy soap, no germs, no waste, no irritation even when shaved twite ! daily. One soup for all uses having. ! bathing and baiapol.i!. Ad ertieu.ei.t Of Course. M r v.iyx : -The hero drank beauty. Through hi- eyeI suppose.'" Ponton Tran- . like good wines, improves This in her poripr. j IVae.'. with a' Apparently. Knicker What is truth? pocker Something which should he

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SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT

By F. A.

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WASTED EXEKGY. W HAT struck Madame Curie most in America was the electric. nervous energy that she found in the cities. .She made the FUestion : If nil this power were used to further one reat work, how tremendous the result would he! There spoke the woman of science. The true discoverer in the natural world uses imagination as well as observation in finding ut things. Madame Curie and her husband knew that radium existed before they succeeded in releasing it from the material In which it ws hid. Her attitude towards the busy life around her is naturally different from that of the ordinary spectator who only looks at the surface commotion. The difference between the two is like that between a couple of visitors to Niagara Falls. To one the great rush of waters is nothing in the world but a physical curiosity. He objects to any interference by man with the appearance of the scenery. To the other the important thing is quite different. He is thrilled at the thought thnt through human Ingenuity the water has been harnessed and the energy U 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 THE GIRL ON THE JOB How to Succeed How to Get E Ahead How to Make Good E I By JESSIE ROBERTS rTt III1I11I1I1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1I1II1IIIII1IIIII iTt T KAVELI N G WO 31 AX. T II K traveling man has been an important member of our commer cial life these many years, but the traveling woman is newer. However, she has come, and she is making good. The old notion that the work was too hard for her is rapidly dying away. Today traveling is not hard. A woman is no longer thought queer when she travels alone. If you look forward to taking up this sort of work you need to ask yourself if you are qualified for the work. You ought to be a good mixer and capahle of taking care of yourself. You ought to have charm, the power of interesting people, and be an' easy talker. You must make yourself thoroughly familiar with the line of goods you are to sell. Never try to sell something in which you do not believe. It canH he done. You should begin by taking a course in some good school in salesmanship. with special work in the line you wish to follow, and you should follow this by worklnig in a store or wholesale house. Make it clear that you wish to tit yourself to travel, and do not stay with any firm that Is not willing to give you a chance to do this. Once launched, it will depend on yourself as to how far you will go. I ii t if you are a real commercial traveler you will get a lot of fun out of the life, plenty of experience, and you t:md to make a lot of money. (Copyright.)

MOTHER'S COOK BOOK

ft Ja Po not fc;ir Today. And b t nil worry Mide. All tilings that do r.ot count let them go, too. Work and kelp and love Today. l"or this Today will never dawn again. George .Matthew Adams. MIDSUMMER JAMS AND JELLIES. Somi: seas O.MK of these fruits will be out of on but with canned Juice? one may make delicious jellies: Apple and Raspberry Jelly. Cut up apples after washing them and removing the blossom end. Ho not pare or core. Jut cover with water and bring to a boil, cook until the apples are very tender and can he mashed easily. Diain through a jelly bag. To the apple juice add any amount of raspberry juice as a tlavor. Measure the juice and boil hard for twenty minutes, skimming often. Allow three-fourths of the measure of sugar to the juice. Heat the sugar and add to the boiled juice, cook five minutes or until it jells from the poo:i. A shaving of orange peel may he added if desired. Grape Nuggets. Take wild grapes green and crirp. halve and seed them. Add thnnfo'irtlis the weight of sugar and boil thirty-tive minutes. The product will jelly bur the halves of the grapes will be apparent. Seal with parafiin. Blackberry Jam. Put one quart of blackberries in a pan with one-fourth of a cupful of water, boll until the berries aro soft then add sugar to taste, a grating of

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Walker tupped and stored up. This is carried long distances and made to do all sorts of useful work. The triumph of man's mind over nature Is as great as the triumph of the vast stream over the rocks through which It forced its way in the course of countless years. It is only necessary, for instance, to watch the crowds going to work in opposite directions in a great city to got the idea. To a Francis liacon, a Iienjamin Franklin, or a Madame Curie taking these as representative of the scientific spirit the world must look like a place that is largoly organized for inefliclencj. 7 A large part of the work done by men and women in the course of a day has as little result as the beating of the waves of the sea on the shore. Whether a machine is good or bad, comparatively perfect or imperfect, depends on the question of waste. In the physical as in the industrial world, progress depends on the success with which means are adopted to ends. fc?o.' the old saying is true: 'Success depends on tritles and success is no tri tie. (Copyright.) SCHOOL Realism. Make That man Sphagetalh is certainly a naturalistic singer. P!air What do you mean by that? Illake Why, last night he sang "Holling Waves" with such realism that twenty people In the audience bad to leave, on account of seasickness. orange peel or a bit of stick cinnamon. Cook until well broken, thicken with i a table-spoonful of cornstarch mixed with cold water, cook until smooth. I This jam will keep but is nice for immediate use. Serve with breakfast cereal and cream. Mint Jelly. Prepare apples as above and let drip over night. Measure the juke and add a bunch of mint or a rose geranium leaf, boil hard, skimming frequently, for twenty minutes; add the sugar, using three-fourths measure of sugar and boil five minutes. Pour into glasses and seal with pa ratlin when cold. (, 1921. V.'eptPin NtwfD4pr Union.) o TrtL CHEERFUL CHERUB my wo as "to TlotKer Ertrv, She cheers me up when 1 m stA. The "trees eil whisper in tKe wind , ,re you sorry TW"ts too td." 1 Vi .

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LYRICS OF LIFE ' Ey DOUGLAS MALLOCi:

GIVING. H H PUT his uame on every list. He was a true philanthropist And yet a mighty lot he missed In giving of'hls pelf: He gave his gold, but let a few Cood friends disburse the check drew. And so one joy he never knew He never gave himself. His money did a lot of good: It found the needy neighborhood And yet he never understood The thing we have to give. The thing we need to give to men, liesides our money now and then. The thing wo have for giving when Men's lives are hard to live. 01. wealth is much, but much the hand That linds the fallen brother and Kestores htm to the solid land Wb.en tossed upon the" seas; Oil, wealth Is much, but much the smile That lifts the other man the while You give a little of your pile For his necessities. So go yourself and do not send: P,o both the giver and the friend; Po not too rich, too high, to bend To lift the man you aid Seek out the soul that is adrift, Iiring gold to help but love to lift, Atid you shall feel, for every gift, A thousand times repaid. (Copyright.) "1 DAYS THE ROMANCE OF WORDS "HURRAH!" THO HOUCill apparently of Ansloxen origin because it i an exclamation used .principally by English-speaking people, "Hurrah:" is of Teutonic ances try, being derived from the word burr, also the bads of the English verb -hurry." It is, in fact, only an amplification of this (lennan word, which made its first appearance in English in the form of '"Hurray" a pronunciation which is probably more popular today than the use of the broad "a" indicative of the 'ah" ound. Examination of the marching songs and martial literature of Cermany at th time of the Napoleonic wars shows that "Hurrah!" was frequently used by the Prussian soldiery at that time and even began to seep into the French language in the form of hourra. Put the residents of the other side of the Rhine preferred to cling to their "Vive!" un ejaculation which is interwoven with French history for centuries past. The Germans also soon abandoned the exclamation in favor of "Hoch!" but the English took it up and English-speaking people have found In it an extremoiy satisfactory means of expressing their enthusiasm and approval. CCup right.) t ( Foreign Talk. 'The hardest working foreigner 1 ever saw drove prist hen yesterday in his new ear with some visitors." "Hardest working how'" "He was trying to tfilk to his friends and still keep his hands on the wheel hug enough to steer the car." O Happens That Way Sometimes. The man who sat on his woodpile land told a funny story, expecting the wood to split." remarked the Observer of Kvents and Thing, "evidently did not strike a responsive eord." Vonkers Statesman.

T1TT7 t Vi kill I NO DIFFERENT. The regular conductor of the advice to the love-lorn column being away, the red-headed oihee boy had been temporarily promoted to tliat job, under the general supervision of the sporting editor. "Here's a gin!: who wants to know how long girls should be courted," the office boy reported. WhafH I tell him?" "Use your own brains, boy !" the sporting editor growled. "Toll him just the same way as short girls, of course." The Tripping Tonrjue. Artist (meeting friend at exhibition) Well,-how do you like Prown's picture? She That one? Why. I thought it uas yours but since It isn't, I can speak freelv. Miserable daub, isn't It? And it wasn't until an hour later that she realized that she had gieu him a back-hander. Conservatism. "What sort of business is dipping in now?" "He says he's doing a little something in oil." "Kemarkable!" "Why so?" That's the first time I ever heard of an oil operator who didn't claim to be juggling with millions." Not Very Deep. He (calling) Heading povtry are you? She Yes, I'm wading through Tennyson. He (glancing at page) Ab! And you've Just got to the middle of Tho Prook.' " NO INDEED "So you wouldn't want to marry an old guy, eh?w "Not If that wa6 his only qualifiestlon. A Trial Then. A motor car Is lota of fun Unless the blamed thing Will not run. Hoping for a Benign Review. First Show Manager Do you helieve in the influence of environment? Second Ditto Yes; on my first nights I always put the grumpiest critic In Seat 119. What It Cost. "Your wife looks stunning to-ilght, her gown is a poem." "What do you mean," replied the struggling author. "That gown is two poems and a short story' Preserving an Appetite. "When I was a boy my parents did not allow me to read dime novels," remarked a serious citizen. "Neither did mine'," replied Miss ! Caenne. "I'm very grateful to them i - for not allowing me to Indulge in sensational fiction to an extent that might spoil my taste for the modern motion pieime unou-i. And Then the Storm. Modiste Keally. madam. thLs gown makes an entirely different woman out of you. Customer's Husband Take It, Helennever mind the price I Human Dynamo. "That Judge, i a human dynamo. He electrified the courtroom during the trial." "And what is he doing now?' "Charging the Jury." Fine for Writers. Inspiration ink It Hows freely. This is a sign wo haw never .-en, but we hope to see It some day in a notion store. Importance of Little Things. She Just think of it! A few words mumbled by the minister and people are married. He Yes, and, by (leorge, a few words mumbled by a sleeping husband and people are divorced. A Mere Trifle Nowadays. "The largest contributor to our campaign fund wants his money back." "Have you spoken to our candidate about that 7' "Yes. He wants to know wbit'j t million between friends."

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