Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 64, Number 39, Jasper, Dubois County, 3 February 1922 — Page 2
WARNING ! Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 22 years and proved safe by millions for , Colds Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions. Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists. Atplrla U lie trade nark cf Eaycr Maaufcton et Uoaoacetlcicli;tcr of Etlicjlictcid
SPOHN'S DISTEMPER COMPOUND is indiaptrumblA In tmUlnc Influenza, Distemper. Coughs and Colds no prevalent among hör wn1 rr.ule at this reason of th yar. For nearly thirty years 'sroilVM" has been Ktven to prevent these liiaset. a well as to relieve and cure them. An occasional loa "conditions" your horne and keep 'Urease away. A a remedy for cases actually u:Terlnff. "M'OII.N'.S" Is qutCK and certain. 60 cents and $1.20 per bottle at drug ptores. M'OHN MKDICAI. COM1MNY GOSHEN', INDIANA
Don't let jour automobile be your utter master. Walk a little. A Lady of Distinction Is recognized by the delicate fascinating Influence of tlie perfume she uses. A bath with Cutlcura Soap ami hot water to thoroughly cleanse the pores follower! by a dusting with Cutlcura Talcum powder usually moans a clear, sweet, healthy skin. Advertisement. Curiosity leads us Into temptation as often as covet misness. Help Your Kidneys Is a cold or grip keeping you miserable? Are you tortured with dull, -persistent backache and sharp, cutting pains? Likely your kidneys need help. Colds and grip rill the blood with puisons. Your overworked kidneys have become weakend filtering these poisons off. That's why you feel weak and depressed and "suffer from headaches, dizzy spells and urinary disorders. Don't wait for serious kidney disease, vllelp your kidneys with Doan's Kidney Pills. Doan's have helped thousands and fhould help you. Ask your neighbor! An Indiana Case Mrs. Harry Olson, ITettyman St., Knox, Ind., says: "I had severe kidney complaint. My back ached as if it -would bre-ak. It jwas Impossible to käjdo my housework. ;7 3 caused intense , rJlLilJL !Lc.ulI e pells and head aches. My kidneys acted irregularly. I used Doan's Kidney Tills and I was cured of all kidney complaint" Cet Doan's at Any Stcrs, 60c a Box DOAN'S "p'fJLV rOSTER - &1ILDURN CO- BUFFALO. H. V. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM i:3 Restores Color and intvt Cirn. I'stfh.yii.y.T HINDERCORNS Rctnjwi Oorns. Oilloars. fU"., tor all pala, enaurrs etrafort to ilia fet. icsks slktnr rtr. 1V hr mall er st Urns CliU. Hl cos ChvuilOAl Work. rtrhug-Q. N. T. W. N. U., Indianapolis, No. 5-1922.
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YeasH; Vflfamraoira TaWeits
Briimg Banishes Skin Eruptions. Strengthens The Nerves LUSTROUS HAIR BS'GHT V IS HEALTHY GLOW OP PERPECT DIGESTIOM ?IRM PLESH UNOCR SKIN
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KnriAtxiMF;; 1irr,r!c lx3ds ?nd in .options teem to NJrlAöölNtSb vanish hko magie under its purif.vinc influ NO HOLLOWS "nee. the complexion becomes "fresh and beautiful, the cheeks rosv ir.sfcnd nft!
Of what uts sra beautiful Uaturas the lips red instand of colorless, the eyes if you . oC!r Win. flabby bright instead of dull. The whole system llÄWtalTAMÖHuSZ fa 1Ed. Rviwrated. and tho6e ho Itw.ly Vurantd to fir. you n.w &TC under-wcight ben to get some firm. ! 1th. bauty and a roundad "stay-there üesh. ix rapid and amazing fsca and ficura. are the results that success is absolutely guaranteed. Be sure to remember the name Ma-'tin's VI-TA-MON the original and genuine 3east-vitaxnine tablet. There ij nothing else like it. so do not accept imitations or iubatitutea. You caa cet Martin's VIT AM ON Tablets at all good druggist.
STIN.5 y c-vrrH VCA5T VITAMINS TABLLT A AND
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No Reason. If wives only knew what stenographers think of their husbands they would cease to worry. Ufe.
MOTHER! CLEAN CHILD'S BOWELS WITH CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUPi:ven a sick child loves the "fruity" taste of "California Fig Syrup." If the little tongue is coated, or if your child Is listless, cross, feverish, full of cold, or has colic, give a teaspoonful to cleanse the liver and bowels. In a fewhours you can see for yourself how thoroughly it works all the constipation poison, sour bile and waste out of the bowels, and you Jiave a well, playful child again. Millions of mothers keep "California Fig Syrup" bandy. They know a teaepoonful today saves a sick child tomorrow. Ask your druggist for genuine "California Fig Syrup" which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother! You must say "California" r you may get nn imitation tig syrup. Advertisement. One is never criticised by anyone whom one asks to do it when it might tin some good. DYED HER BABY'S COAT, A SKIRT AND CURTAIN'S WITH "DIAMOND DYES" Hieb package of "Diimond Djes" contains directions fo fimple any woman can dye or tint her old, worn, faded things now. Even h she ha. never dyed before, she can nut a new, rich color into shabby pkirt., drösle, waist?, coatf, ptockings. fwc-ater, covcrincfS, draperies, haninps, everything, l.uy Diamond Dyes na othci kind then perfect home dyeing is guaranteed. tluet tell your druggist whether the material you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton, or mixed good.. Iiamond I)yes never streak, fpot, fade or run. advertisement. I iii i rAnii ,11ml i 1 1 hi fii hi hi n i you obtain them ready made. e&uty Puts On Firm Fleshr and Increases Energy,
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Concentrated Tablets Easy and Economical to Take. Results Quick.
If ou want to quickly clear your Vin end cornrlciion, put some Mrm, healthy flesh cn your Ivinos. increase your nervo force nnd power, ar.-l hok and feel lOO pr cent, better, simply try taking two of Mastin's tiny yea?: VITAMO.V Tables vith each meal and vatch results. Mastiu'a V1TAMON contains highly concentrated yca?t vitamines, es well as t!ie other two still more important vitamines (Fat Soluble A and Water Soluble CA.
Are Positively Guaranteed in Put On Firm FImIi. Clear the Skin and Increase Energy When Taken With Every Meal or Money Back
PREPARATION
m FOR HARKET Producers Have Suffered Great Losses Because of Use of Improper Methods. VITÄL INFORMATION LACKING Product That Grades Highest and Brings Prices Is Th-t Havinc Natural Green Color Time of Cutting Counts. Prepaied by the t'nited Statea Department of Agriculture.) What to do with low-grade hay has long been a vexing problem to the hay trade. Losses running into the thousands of dollars annually have been suffered by producers because of the difficulty encountered in disposing of hay that is Improperly prepared for market, or is of a mixture that causes it to be regarded as of a low grade. In Department Bulletin 077, 'Marketing Hay at Country Points," recently issued by the United States Department of Agriculture, the failure to remedy this situation is ascribed to two chief reasons: The producer and the dealers do not yet agree as to what constitutes quality in hay, and many producers lack vital market information regarding the preparation of hay for terminal and consuming markets. Color Counts Most. Quality of bay Is at present Indicated largely by Its color, which Is used to gauge the stage of maturity nt which it is cut. The hay that mm .- mrn Inspecting a Car of Hay. grades highest, and consequently brings the most money, is usually that having the best natural green color. Hay dealers can often tell from the color whether hay was cut early, medium, or late, and in their opinion the best hay is the early eut h"ay and the poorest that which was cut late. The average hay grower, however, In some section at least, does not agree with the terminal market theory of quality as Indicated by color. Many producers prefer medium or lato cut iia y7 especially for horses, because it Is easier to cure and not a "washy" as early cut hay. In some markets size and weight of bales is an important factor, since there Is sometimes a difference of several dollars a ton in the same grade of hay In small or large bales. The reasons for the demand for certain sizes and weights are numerous and not always baed on facts, It is said. However, as in many other kinds of trading. It pays the seller to aim to j meet the desires of the buyer. Undesirable Mixtures Cause Loss. The production of undesirable mixtures for the market will cause a loss to the producer as long as the market docs not want mixtures. Certain of these are discriminated against regardless of their true nutritive or feeding value. The producer may know positively that certnin mixtures are palatable and contain more total dl- j gestlble nutrients' than the kinds now ; In greatest demand, yet he is powerless to make feeders realize their value. The Introduction and general use of a new kind or mixture of hay is a very slow undertaking, as In the case of clover and alfalfa. About the only vn to avoid trouble with undesirable mixtures, says the bulletin, is for the producer to cease growing them and to produce wdy the kind In demand in the markets to whieh Iiis hay is usually shipped. Copies of the bulletin may be had free upon application to the department at Washington. D. ADVANTAGE OF VELVET BEAN When Properly Dried It Is Distinct Addition to Protein Concentrates for Cattle. When properly dried before shipment, velvet bean feed is n distinct addition to the protein concentrates at the disposal of northern feeders. In the opinion of Dr. J. 15. Lindsey of Massachusetts station. It has proved slightly better than wheat bran for making milk. It may constitute ax high as 40 per cent of the grain ration for cows; but 20 per cent for pigs and horses Is considered enough. Doctor Lindsey recommends for cows a ration of -10 per cent velvet ber.n fee!, 40 per cent com or hominy meal or ground oats and 20 r cent cottonseed meal or some other high-grade protein concentrate.
SWEET POTATO CROP DAMAGED BY WEEVIL
Outline of Successful Measures of Eradication. Review of Werk Done in Florida and Georgia Where Situation Was Worse Use of Cle2n Planting Stock Is Urced. (Prepared by t!ic United States Department of Apiculture.) A method of rendering negligible the heavy damage that would otherwise be inflicted by the sweet-potato weevil has been found by the United States Department of Agriculture. A review of the work done in Florida and (leorgia is contained in department circular Ü01, bureau of entomology. United States Department of Agriculture. Measures successful In the eradication of the pest in that section are outlined briefly as follows : The old field should be thoroughly cleaned over at harvest, the vines being fed to stock or burned, and the field hogged over. The potatoes should be banked as far away 'as possible from the old field and from the site selected for the next year's potato field. All potatoes on the farm slypuld be disposed of early. No potato or plants from the old crop should be used ou the farm and no draw-bed should lo planted. Old potato banks should be cleaned as soon as empty. Only draws from sources known to be free from the weevil should be used. The Georgia-Florida location was selected for the test because the situation there was serious, the section inland, climatic conditions adverse, and many growers unused to ways of cooperation. Xo more unfavorable conditions, it was thought, were likely to ho encountered anywhere in the country. All these, and other minor difficulties, have heen surmounted. however, and the department, in its circular, announces the following conclusions : "The results of the work offer convincing proof that the same methods, followed with painstaking care, will be successful in eradicating the sweetpotato weevil in almost any infested locality where abundant wild food plants do not offer a fresh and continuing source of new infestation. Careful sorting of the crop, the use of clean planting stock, and an annual change of location for the main planting, even in a continuously infested locality will reduce infestation of the tubers to a practically negligible quantity. "There is no more reason for allowing a sweet-potato crop to be destroyed annually by weevils than there is. for letting the weeds take it. .and conscientious neighborhood effort in the application of the principles that have been outlined may five any district from a heavy annual tax." A copy of the circular may be obtained free of charge upon application to the department at Washington, D. C. SIMPLE AND EFFICIENT POKE Device Recently Invented to Prevent Animal From Forcing Itself Through Fences. The Scientific American in illustrating and describing an animal poke, the invention of II. denies of Henkelman. Neb., says: An object of the invention Is the provision of a poke of simple and efficient construction which is formed Showing the Invention as Applied. with spurs mounted to automatically engage the neck of an animal when he attempts to force his way through a fence; by means of a lever the spurs are so held that they will not engage the neck of the animal under normal conditions. PRODUCE HIGH-GRADE SEEDS Many Farmers Are Not Careful to Prevent Mixture and Keep Out Harmful Weeds. i:cn in communities where a single variety of a crop is raised almost exclusively there is a place for the production of pure seed for local sale, says D. W. Frear, extension specialist in field crops for the Missouri College of Agriculture. Many fanners do not go to the trouble to keep their seed up to a high standard but allow it to become mixed, weed-infested and diseased and are glad to pay a good price every few years for hiah grade seed. Those who ate favorably situated can produce pure seed to meet this local demand. Seed produced for this purpose must be of high qur.lity and considerably better than the average In the community, because fanners will not pay an advanced price for seed that Is very little better than their own.
New Lace Shawl
Models From Paris to Replace Silk for Summer. Foundation is Brussclc Net and Sometimes a Net With Fine Thread but Coarse Mesh. That lace tdiawls in exquisite coloring are likely to replace the now popu-! lar silk ones for summer wear seems evident from models brought over from Paris. The foundation for thee shawls Is Brussels net, and sometimes j a net with a fine thread but coarse ! mesh that reminds one of veilings. This is black with color introduced J through embroidery. j One model Is a -large square, em- j broidered with a wide border of Pais-; ley design and coloring. The net is i black, while the warm blues, yellows, . and especially rose of the silks are repeated in the silk fringe about six Indies long. Several of the shawls are shaped similar to a half moon because, it is said, this type drapes more gracefully than the square or oblong. A model of this kind comes in black net with black silk fringe. The body of the shawl is braided in a running design as a bonier, and with scrolls and plumes. WhiU wooden beads are used to emphasize the scrolls. (Jauze fans with painted birds, butterflies and flowers compose an interesting part of one collection. The 'colorings are very soft, quite different from those of the vivid feather fans recently used. In dull blues, greens and yellows, they are designed BL0USED WAIST; FULL SKIRT . t. ... r 'i:y: .-Fl rv ik 3 j K .'.'1 V." ' - Vv- :.v 1 The smartness of the blouscd waist and full skirt arc shown by this coat model. The collar and cuffs are of gray wolf.
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BUTTONS ARE USED AS TRIMMING
Demand is Heavy for New Idea in Decoration for Gowns; Wonderful Effects Obtained. In recent years we have heard and seen little of buttons. Their use has 1-een confined to utilitarian purposes. Xow. observe a fashion writer, makers are exjtjoiting them as trimming. Wonderful effects can be obtained through buttons, and when the attention of Ihe fashionably dressed is turned toward them a great demand !s created which gives designers in this field ::n incentive to work out new effects. No doubt, liie recent vogue for enameled novelties is accountable for the beautiful enameled buitoiis that ornament many of the new model gowns. Kntire girdles are made of buttons that are either painted or Miameled. For suit velours l;j laSne, serge, broadcloth and gabardine are favorite The New Sleeve. The leg o' mutton sleeve is one of the new spring style features, being Vponsored by the same Trench designer who was responsible for the very wide, straight sleeve of the present season. The ncvest leg o mutton differs fro ft; the o!d time sleeve of tliat name in that the flare or width appears on the under arm rather than on the shoulder. The sleeve by this name, first brought out ever s- many years age. wa voluminous on tlie upper or slioqlder part, with a normal line underneath, the whole taj-Tin? to th wrist
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GIVE LIFE TO PLAIN FRCCK tr ;-.: 'if. - ; A M. " Ii' All-over cpen embroidered net ccnibined with val lace makes this ccl!ar and cuff set a dressy feature of an otherwise plain frock. with an oy- to harmonizing with li;:ht summer frocks. Ono iiumIcI hovs throo lird iainted on satin and appliued. The entire fan is in various hal' of ray. while two others are the s;:n:c design in blue and dull orange ro-jw. t ivoly. A phea'-ant In soft bro;vn. peacock, a dragonfly in deop !h: nak mtifs for other designs. A few of the fan ire embroidered lightly in silk of th same color as the gauze. These ue .-pang!e sparingly. One Dresden model is banning with its delicately carved and painted ivory sticks, its painted garlands of i!nv Howers and npplMp'' of tvo-tonel narrow ribbon. NEW SATIN EVENING-WRAPS Softest and Mcst Clinging T.tatcrir.is Are Used This S;ascn fcr Dress Occssions. Some of tlie evening wraps for the season are made of the softest and most clinging materials. One. for instance, was of dark blue crepe. It was fashioned In cape effect and had large rovers of pure white ermine. On the lower part of the cape and at the sides were placed shaped panels of the ermine fur. Another wrap was of opera satin to" which was attached at the shoulders an ovciinantl' of hue, headed by cord and fiill of the lace. Tile liier was threaded with steel-colored metal threads. A second mantle was of rapberry-coh.fed silk and trimmed with gray fox and garlands of roses. Kvening frocks are of gorgeoussilks and laces. One exceedingly pretty mdel was of apricot sii-. trimmed with g!d lace. Another was of white I satin over a silver lace skirt, which I was caught up with a bouquet of blue and cherry-colored roses. Capes of Full Length. Any number of black, full Jei.gth, j fur-collared capes are being -worn, j These are generally of one o.r the i pil fabrics like duvetyn, and black i caracul is "the favored pelt for th j choker collar, though some mole has i been used for this purpose. No .one length i favored for thoe sport capes. Another was full length, showing only about an Inch of tlie plaid i skirt chosen to accompany th" colored cape. pl'itn materials. Maroon or chestnut brown is exceedingly popular. Of course, there is the sober black suit, but this otten is enlivened by a bit of o'or in the form of embroidery or narrow trimming bands of a contrasting bright colored matt-rial. Dark blue, gray and beige are close seconds to brown. Waistlines of suit coats are long and sleeves are wide. Monkey fur still plays its part and nn important part it is. to as a trimming for suits :;s well a other garments-. HINTS TO HOUSEWIVES In making iNli cakes have potwtoes dry. Always save scraps of soap; put in a jar and till with water. L'sc baking powder can iM.-rfi.ru ted at top for chopping iotaues f,r hush. To remove fat from hut soup, pour it through a cloth that has been rinsed in roh water, and th- fat will remain in the cloth. l"o paper fr cleaning bottoms of cooking kettles with cleanser and soup. This saves time, soap, water and the labor of washing cloth. Keep a- piece of sandpaper near tbo kitchen sink. You will iind it very handy to clean pots and pans. Hut do r.ot use It on aluminum Utensils. The stel wool should be u d for this ware. To clean white felt hats and make them look like new. take the ..oft inner par of a stale loaf of v. bite bread and rub ail over the bat. It does the work perfectly and t-r.ej very little tin. 4.
