Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 64, Number 27, Jasper, Dubois County, 11 November 1921 — Page 8

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. : Absolutely ' the most healthful VhM of fruits, comes the iKA chief ingredient of VnWn AK0C3 1 tgk 77ie on(y baking powder fffl S-H'' made from 7?oja" pWJI Crape Cream 0mm. ofTartar' Jj? i

Costs a little more thin the injurious alum or phosphite of lime powders, but with Royal you are sure of pure, healthful food.

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A GOOD lWVEITiVIcPJT A Years Subscription to the Jasper CairriEr.

THE JASPER COURIER stands for the beit things in life, in the town and countrv homes. It advocates imoroveme t?, better roads, better schools, better churches, and the greatest political freedom and honesty in pub lie aifairs. The CoURlKK has not and does not hesitate to assail men or methods that stand in the way of the greatest gooJ to the greatest number. Every progress sive family in the county should be a subscriber. YoMrs is needed now. Send it in. Do it now. Subscription price $2 00 per year.

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And don't have to grease but once a week.

Made : misville by CHAS. C. STOLL OIL CO.

GREEK SOVEREIGN LAUDS VORIi OF NEAR EAST RELIEF

Cables Thanks for Christian lires Sared in "Beautiful Work" of Mercy

Atbeni, Greece. The wonderful work done by the Near East Relief organization In sarin g; the lives of tern of thousands of Christians throughout Asia Minor snd TranscaucAiia has received lirnaJ r cognition la praise bestowed by Queen Sophie of Greece in & cablegram dispatch by the Greek sovereign to Dr. Jamas L.. Barton, Chairman rand Charles V. Vlckrey. Secretarr. of the

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KING AND QUEKX OF GREECE Nesr Esst Kelief crganixatioc. 1 Madison Are., New York City. Her message reads: "Deeply touched your prrat kladV ess toH'ards Greek war sufferrrs In Straits Area and Asia Minor. Thsak you all most sincerely. BOPHIE." K A.t the same time, the Greek: queen sent her check to Dr. Darton, Chairman of the Near East Relief Commit-' tte, for 1,000 francs as a contribution to what ahe termed the "beautiful work" of feeding, clothing and housing the more than 110,000 little children who have coice under the care of the Near Plast Relief during the past year. Besides Queen Sophie, Admhal P. Coundouriotia, of the Royal Hellenic Navy, who was regent of Greece following the death of the late King Alexander, on October 25, last, has also cabled to express the gratltuds of the Greek people for the aid furnished the Christian populations of Turkey by the Near East Relief. More than $120,000.00' was raised among the Greeks of ths United States, in two weeks, and sent to the Near East by the Near East Relief, to be used in helping the widows and orphans rendered destitute by: the continuation of disturbed conditions in the former Ottoman Empire. The funds of the Near East Relief are gathered by private subscription not only among Americans, but among the Armenians and Greeks In the United States, whose countrymen In Turkey and Transcaucasia have been through indescribable suffering. In an official report to Charles V. Vickrey, General Secretary of the Near East Relief. Miss Glee HasUngs. of Spencer, Iowa, describes the pitiable condition of tens of thousands of homeless, starving, half-naked refugees, driven from their homes In the war area, and huddled In stables and out-houses, or on the bare ground, for lack of shelter. "Most of the refugees are country people with almost nothing except the clothes on their backs, stupeflejd and dazed by their misfortunes. Bread is given only to women and children at the rate of one-half loaf for a person each day. The milk Is reserved for tho babies and sick. The refugees sit around, huddled up against the walla women with dull, aad faces, little children that are blue and pinched with the cold, and too miserably lifeless to cry. One family of five sloops at niht on a bare stone floor, under one thin, ragged halfcotton blanket. In one room several women are wasting away with tuberculosis; in another are some severe eye case, including two young blind girls, who have no one in the world to tare for them. The overflow from those buildings live in a wooden shed with the walls and floors gaping with holes where the wood has rotted away and In tents Improvised from rugs und pieces of carpet." Contributions to the work of the Near East Relief may be sent to Thomas ('. Dav, Treasurer. Near East Relief, 4 03 City Trust Building.

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U. S. ARMY HEAD ASKS ARMENIAN AID

Washington. Major General juined (J. Harbord. recently 'appointed General Pershing's assistant Jhk'f of iaiT. has gone on record in up;ort of the work of the Near East Relief in Armenia. He says, la a otter to the Near Eat Relief: Of all tiie hMrt-br.king distress '13 1 exists in other muntries, I bei' that ilie Nrar East situation V"-!,i ir.ovt appeal to our charitable ii'i'i.!". Thrrc are many thousands .' hel'!i orphans -children of x; isiiiii i..r":jts In a Moslem land, . ).( v.xuri j? ht !j;od by our people ' thf-y .r? to sirvlvi. The ArfMiar.s nre-'jrve-l their race.

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t fan? than to perish, and t'iat will be their fate withtil financial and moral

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J. G I1ARBGUD. 9 M:.!nr Grwnl, l S Army." .envr:' Unrlord Is one of the .sf-j f the Nt-ar '-Iat Relief ori::U i:. now making a general appeal for funds to continue Its work imong tho destitute of Bible lands.

WAS NOT ENOUGH HELIUM FOR ZR-2 World's 'Supply of fJonexplosive Balloon Gas Would Not Have Filled Gas Bag.

PROFESSOR CADY GIVES FACTS

Tells of Government's Fxper(ments With Helium and Cost A Producing It in Experimenta1 Stages Found in Three States. Lawreruv, Kan. All the helium or non'X!ojiytr balloon jjns now avuillihle In the world would have been entirely imultiuate to lift the ZK--, thf dirigible that was to have been the nucleus of America's uir navy, according to u statement by Trof. II. l Only of the University of Kansas department of chemistry. Doctor Cady discovere! that helium was a constituent of the natural pis of Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, and performed notable experiments in the eaIy days of the World war in developing processes for commercial production , of helium. Defore the war, he said, probably not more than u hundred cubic feet of this gas had been obtained in a fairly pure state, and that was secured at a cot of $1,700 to SJ.000 a cubic foot for experimental purposes. Total production after extensive experiments by the United States government probably does not exceed ;y K l,f m m ruble feet up to the present, but while the cost of priMluction has been reduced greatly, still this cost, compared to the cost of hydrogen, commonly ucd for inflating balloons, Is tremendously high. Forced to, Use Hydrogen. "It is not strange, then." said Doctor 'ady. "that Kugland used the comparatively inexpensive hydrogen for the ZR-Ü. During the experimental stages the gas bag had to be emptied at times to allow changes in the structure. Practically the only place to get the helium is from the natural gas of Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, and thus far processes of reduction have not been perfected. Only 1 per cent or less of Um natural gas is helium. and this betiunt has to be retinel to a purity of IX I per cent or better before

it has the uoninilatnnmhlc (juality - I mandril for safety in balloon couhpi -. tion. ' ! "I ant nclincd to think helium never, will come into general Use for coin-! men ial airship". If such vehicles lie- ; come common. The limited quantity ; of the material, its high cost and its value in war balloons probably will make it imperative for the governtnenl ' to reserve all helium for its owii üil." i Doctor :nly explained thnt even the host balloon covers did not prevent entirely t he ecoe of lifting gave .'and it is necessary constantly to sntilv;; fresh gis. "litis is inue true of; f(y- j diogen jthan of Ju'lium. but the wastage is there, and I he. continued operation of even a small tl-et of war billloons' would demand a constant supply of freh helium. 1'xperiments at the Univcrsiu of Kmiin'Is showed that the helium must be nearly HI per cut pure in -order to be safe. Similar experiments in Canada showed comparatively small explosions wln-n mixtures containing only 7"i. per cent of helium were iJnitl. - t Find Helium in U. S. Tho attempts to produce hei'iim in commereinl quantities in the l'n'td States date from 101 . The year before the Knglish government h.ol sought samples of gas from America , in its search for helium for use in air- ! ships. The United States was not th m at war and proceeded cautiously. Dr. 1 lt. H. Moore oi the United States itil- j reati of mines, who had received the British communication, recalled that ' Doctor Cady und his assistant, D. U. McFarland. had discovered the gas in j unusual quantities in the mid-comi- j 1 i

nent natural iras. and later Portoi Cady and C. W. Seibel. also of the Uni- ; versity of Kansas, were employed In the plans for the construction later of three helium plants in Texas. Two small plaiUs were completed in March and May. 101 and began the ( production of helium. Their output j was not great, but -OaMMK cubic feet , of helium had been produced and much of it hiid been compressed into cylinders for shipment to France when

! the signing of the armistice made that

unnecessary. A third plant at Petrolia. Texas, near Fort Worth, was completed a few day before the armistice.

J and experimentation was continued

' there after the war until halted by i diminished appropriations.

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Tvlerchant Gets Protection oTS this the Spencer NationalBank? This is Goodwin & Company, of Springfield, Mr. Goodwin talking. A stranger has just offered a check on your bank for S30 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.

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"MEANEST MAN" ROBS GIRL

Take Locket and 25 Cents From Child on Way to Store in New York City.

New York. lot ham's "meanest mat" stole a loket and -." cents from a five-year-old jrirl. Angelina Lempo had leen intrusted with a quarter and sent to a nearhy grocery to purchase rtne butter. A man with a red mustache lured her to anottier street, telling her he knew a place when she could jret the butter for nothing. Meanwhile he took the cents from Lvr. tiok off her tiny locket' to. have it "iM.lished free of charge" and then pave tier a paper to deliver to a mythical woman in a nearby bftllway. When she returned aftfr a vain search for the woman, the man with t&t Tfw fcrtrUei bad dUnpprt4,

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52 Numbers for $2.oo. Designing1, Engraving, Prmt-iDg Let ns know what you want and e will do tlie rest.

Read the COURIER.

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