Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 65, Number 3, Jasper, Dubois County, 12 May 1922 — Page 7

me IReHieff FOR INDIGESTBON 6 Bell-ans Hot wafer r py ii oureneueT 25t and 75$ Packeges. Everywhere ril.l:s. I ITI I.A. l'IX'KICVTIC. IUS'1I PATION, Ll1inif. ltchlrif. rurd at home. TrUI frc. H. TAKNKY. AUIU'KN. IND. W. N. U., Indianapolis, No. 19-1922. uuw uuuy uu

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Doctor Advised Use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Happy Results in Both Cases

Bt. Joseph, Missouri. "Both of ray Eides swelled and hurt me so that I could not move or do any of my work. There was heavy pressure and pains through my lower organs ana tho doctor told me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for these troubles. He said 1 had this ono chance, and if the Vegetable Compound did not help me nothing but an operation would. After taking several bottles I felt it was helping me and now I am able to do my own work. If my testimonial will help others I shall be glad for them to read it and hopo your Vegetable Compound will do them as much good as it did me." Mrs. Wm. Lockman, 513 N. 4th St, St. Joseph, Mo. White Plains, N. Y. "I had such a Sain that I could hardly walk and tho octor said that I needed an operation. I was sick for a year before I started taking your medicine and I could not work. I saw your advertisement in a little book and that is how I came to take Lydia E. Pinkham's medicines. I have been taking the Vegetable Compound and Lydia E.

Lydia E. Pinkbam's Private Text-Book upon "Ailments Peculiar to Women" will be sent you free upon request. Write to tbe Lydia K. Pinkliam Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts. This book contains valuable information.

Next Day, All Right She (during spat) It's n story for you to say I grabbed you up quick. You know very well that when you proposed I didn't say "yes" until the next day. He That's right, you didn't. I proposed at 11:51) p. in. and you accepted me at 12:01 the next morning, r Boston Transcript. Just f?ay to your grocer Red Cross Ball Blue when buying bluing. You will be more than repaid by the results. Once tried always used. Advertisement. If misery loves company It's up to everybody to get married. Chronic Kickers soon develop a whine that won't wear off.

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 Headache Colds Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions. Handy "Bayer box of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Drugjiats. Ar!rln U tfcf trade nark of V-Aiet Mmnficture of ManoaectlcaM.lwter of SillejUetcli

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In a new package that fits the pocket At a price that fits the pocket-book The same unmatched blend of Turkish. Vjrgixia and Burley Tobaccos

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Reverted. With very realistic sobs tho wenry trump told the tale to the tanner's wife n ml she nearly believed hin. Ilut. surety. If you hav art n'l mother to Nippon." she said nip.ithetically, "you could find some hi rter way of doing It than begging? You know necessity Is tin- mother of Invention " "Not In my rase. I assure you." said the tramp, earnestly. "With me, lady, mother Is the Invention of neeess 1 1 y." I ea rso n s.

Nothing troubles soine lopIe more than looking for trouble and not Unding It. The mnn who has more than the other fellmv should do more. Pinkham's Blood Medicine, also Lydia E. Pinkham's Liver Pills and used Lydia E. PinkhanVs Sanative Wash and the capsules and prescription recommended. I am doing all my work and have gained twentypounds. I am taking the medicines still,but I feel fine. You have my permission to use this letter for the good of others. " Mrs. MAnYMARK,37HamiltonAve., White Plains, N. Y. Some female troubles may through neglect reach a stage when an operation is necessary. But most of the commoner ailment3 are not the surgical ones; they are not caused by serious displacements, tumors, or growths, although the symptoms may appear the same. When disturbing ailments first appear, take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve the present distress and prevent more serious troubles. Many letters have been received from women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound after operations have been advised by attending physicians. Brief and Comprehensive. Ben Dierks has an express agency rind transfer business in a village in Sonoma county, California. Recently he detailed one of his teamsters with a wagon and pair to take a San Francisco man and wife to their country place n few miles out of town. The bill, us rendered by the teamster. read: "Haul grip, grub, and people, three hours, three dollars." Some gins grow up and become credits to their parents and some others become lady elocutionists. There's one thing we do remember j sweet sixteen in our day didn't need ! rouge and powder. i i A wise man Is never sure when his wisdom will be found wanting. eleven cigarettes

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PEi OPERATIONS

ftlflfrJ 'TTfS Gentlemen mW&Vm? turk,SI! :!Ay U W PfKf VIRGINIA

BURLEY FIFTEEN FIFTH AVE. ntrt M (ITV

UE GRADES FOR PEAGH GOOF Only Minor Changes From Those Recommended Last Year Are Favored or 1922. MARKET QUAÜTY GÖÜK'TS MOST Color, Maturity, General Appearance and Freedom From Blemishes Are Big Factors Minimum Size Not Specified. (Prepared by the United State Department of Agriculture.) United States grades for peaches have been reissued by the "United States Department of Agriculture. The grades contain only minor changes from those recommended in In past years peaches have been graded chielly with regard to size. The United States grades are bused wholly on market quality. Under this term are included such factors as color, maturity,' general appearance and freedom from insect and fungous injuries. Minimum sizes have not been specified for the various grades, but the numerical count and minimum size or style of pack of the peaches must be stamped on each package. This is a well established practice in handling boxed apples and citrus fruits. Meet Commercial Needs. The No. 1 grade is designed to meet the normal commercial needs of the rade and consuming public by eliminating damaged stock which might ause loss in transit. It also provides that the peaches shall be of one variety, tirm, mature and well formed, and free from growtli crack, cuts, skin breaks, worm holes, and from damage caused by dirt, scab, scar, scale, hail, disease, insects or mechanical or other means. k The So. 2 grade includes peaches ! of one variety which are firm, mature and free from worm holes or serious damage caused by disease, insects or any other means. A fancy No. 1 grade is also provided for those who desire to pack an especially fine product. In this grade will be packed only peaches which are free from all damage by insects or diseases and which in addition have a specified amount of. red color. This amount has been fixed at T0 per cent for such varieties as Carman andlliley and at 23 per cent for Elberta and J. H. Hale and other similar varieties. The department's action in reissuing the grades is the result of the favorable acceptance and use of the grades last year by. growers' associations, state marketing officials, and the trade generally. During the early investigations by the department there was considerable skepticism as to tbe practicability of formulating grades which would be uniformly acceptable to both northern and southern districts, but actual use of the grades on n large scale under the supervision of specialists of the bureau of markets and crop estimates lias won over many of even the most conservative operators. Where Grades Are Adopted. According to recent reports, the United States grades will be adopted this season by the Sand Hill Fruit (Jrowers association, Aberdeen, N: C, and the Western New York Fruit 1 rowH' O H 17 W III I tr! Peaches in Baskets and Boxes Ready for Shipment. ers Co-operative Tacking association, Rochester. N. Y., both of these associations having tried them in 1021. In addition, it is practically assured that the Jersey Fruit (Growers' Co-operative association of New Jersey, a nninber of associations in southern Illinois and northern Ohio, including the Danbury Fruit company, Danbury, O., as well as certain prominent growers in Maryland. Pennsylvania and West . Virginia will also adopt the United States grades for this season's pack. The grades have been promulgated in substantially the same form as the ailicial Texas grades and marketing .tlicials in North and South Carolina, New Jersey and Colorado are considering them favorably. Partial or complete crop failures in recent years in peach producing states or. the west bank of the Mississippi river have made it impracticable for specialists of the department to demonstrate properly the grades in that territory. It Is known, however, that the specifications included in the department's recommendations will meet norir.al conditions in thest sections. and It is believed that they will be received favorably once they are known. P.uyers who have bad experience with peaches labeled "United States No 1M have expressed themselves as well satisfied with the prod-ret.

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YELLOWS-RESISTANT CABBAGE VARIETIES

About 4.00D Pounds of Seed Produced in Washington. Department of Agriculture and Wisconsin Experiment Station Been Investigating Disease and Assisting Growers. (1'reparet! by Oe Unite. 1 State Department of -Agriculture.) About 4.0(A) pounds of cabbage seed of the Wisconsin All Seasons variety, which is highly resistant to the disease known as "cabbage yellows," was produced in the I'uget Sound section of Washington during the season of VJ'2. Cabbage yellows Is caused by a fungus which is capable of persisting in favorable soils indefinitely and causes serious crop losses In Infested regions. Disinfection of the seed reduces the danger of carrying other cabbage diseases to new districts, but the investigations of the University of Wisconsin have shown that the selection of resistant varieties offers the only way of preventing loss from yellows. The United States Department of Agriculture, in co-operatton with the Wisconsin experiment station, has for some time been investigating the disease and assisting growers and packers in the production of cabbage seed of the yellows-resistant strains on a commercial scale and in the field Vx: Kv- . : v.; .... . tfVs V x5 X ' i irfiwiTn-iriini i Good Solid Head of Cabbage. inspection of the seed crops. In addition to the All Seasons, several hundred pounds of Wisconsin Brunswick seed, another yellows-resistant variety, have also been produced. One result of the Investigations thus far is the development of these yellows-resistant varieties. Through the commercial cabbage growers and kraut packers a supply of the yellows-resistant cabbage seed is available to the growers In sections where these types of cabbage arc needed. Kesistant strains of other varieties, -Including Hollander, All Head Early, and Copenhagen Market, are being developed and will be propagated for distribution in the near future. WHY PUREBRED SIRES EXCEL Ratios Between Males and Females in Different Classes of Stock Kept for Breeding. If you are ever Inclined to doubt the Importance of the quality sire, a glance at the figures below will reassure you. They represent the patios between males and females in different classes of live stock kept for breeding purposes. The figures are based on a survey of. more than 20V00 head of live stock of all kinds made by tbe United States Department of Agriculture. Cattle 1 hull to 1S.0 cows. Horses 1 stallion to 10.0 mares. Swine 1 boar to ll.H sows. Sheei 1 ram to .17 ewes. Coats 1 buck to 20.0 does. Chickens 1 rooster to LM.3 hens. Other poultry, geese, ducks, turkeys, etc. (average) 1 male to 8.5 females. These figures are taken from more than 2,(HK) farms in various parts of the country, and are believed to be typical of average conditions the country over. Since the sire Is the parent of so many more offspring than the female, the importance of using a purebred sire of individual quality and excellence can hardly be overemphasized. There may be cases where scrub darns are wisely tolerated, but It is almost criminal to propagate undesirable characteristics by using scrub males. STOCK PRODUCTION SYSTEMS Among Controlling Factors Are Selection cf Animals and Feed and Management. Wf Il-established systems of livestock production consistently followed from year to year are the outstanding needs of the live-stock Industry, according to a conference of animal husbandry and marketing extension workers held at Chicago. Keonomy of production, the conference agreed, is the most Important factor over which farmers have control. Producing live stock of the best quality at the lowest possible cost was urged nnd particular emphasis was placed on economy of production rather than increased production as the key to a prosperous Industry. Anions- the controlling factors In economical live-stock production, In the judgment of the conference, were selection of nnimaR choosinz of rations and good practice In care nnd management. Delegates to the conference included United States Department of Agriculture specialists and animal husbandmen and extension workers of agricultural ?olleges in the Contrr.l West.

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View of (Prepared by the National Geographic Society. Washington, D. C.) . It is difficult to shake the dust of the ages from the land of the Nile and to realize that there is an Egypt of the vibrant present. The recent announcement of the withdrawal of the British protectorate from the country, however, and the setting up of its first king in more than 1,IK0 years turns the spotlight squarely on the modern aspect of this long civilized region. The map lacks much of giving one the true picture of Egypt. The country is shown covering a large area of northeastern Africa. This is the nominal Egypt. The real Egypt is a narrow, tortuous strip on either side of the Nile and the fan-shaped delta surrounding its mouth. Save for a few oases outside the river valley, the rest of Egypt is but a sea of sand practically uninhabited. Figures confirm this, for of the more than :S."io,0n0 square miles of Egyptian territory only about 12,(KM) can ever be cultivated; and a considerable part of this tillable area has not yet been reClaimed. Looking only at the surface of Egypt's institutions, one is likely to decide that the changes since the days of the Pharaohs have been great, but when certain fundamentals are considered the wonder may well be at the lack of change. To be sure, the Egyptian of today speaks Arabic instead of his old tongue; and Osiris, Isis and Horus have been long forgotten for Allah and Mohammed. But in spite of numerous invasions, the blood of the great majority of the population has been altered hardly at. all. Egypt's resources are almost wholly agricultural, and in the agricultural scheme the millions of fellaheen are the ultimate units. They work long hours scratching the soil with crude implements, r tediously raising water in skin buckets attached to pivoted poles that the thin, stream may save their plants from parching. Taxes are heavy, and it is the lowly fellaheen who keeps the treasury supplied. Living conditions are very poor; mud huts house most of Egypt's thirteen millions. In tho fields they wear little more than a loin cloth, and the younger children of the villages go naked. When the fellah is "dressed up" be wears a rough shirt and loose trousers. Cairo the Wonder City. The stamp of the outside world and of "t lie Twentieth century on Egypt is to be seen chielly in Cairo, that wonderland which has superseded Bagdad as "the city of Arabian Nights." Cairo, is a living kaleidoscope, with its gleanilng and drab human fragments tumbling into a changing pattern not merely from Fast and West, but from North and South as well. White-robed Bedouin, Ill-clad fellah, shiny-black Soudanese ' and central African negro, swarthy Turk, Persian. Hindu. Mongolian, dusky Moor, Italian, (Jreek, Jew, Armenian, and the whiter folk from Euroi America and the antipodes all are jumbled together in Cairo, their various tongues making a babel that can hardly be duplicated at any other spot on earth. The life that tlows along the streets of Cairo could not be duplicated anywhere else in the world. At times the Western observer is likely to be reminded forcibly of circus parades on Main street back home. Swaying camels move along with brightly dressed riders perched upon them or .with suspended rs in which an 'veiled damsels, while drummers thunder their rhythm and fife blowers omit their shrill notes. Snake-charmers I pass along with their bass of snakes; magicians perforin in some nook; bullock-carts and laden donkeys compete for space with shining limousines. Cafes in the Streets. The al fresco cafe is one of the most characteristic marks of Cairo. It is not the more or less well-ordered affair of the boulevards of Paris. Sidewalks and streets overflow with seemingly innumerable, chair and tables until often a sinsle tile of pedestrians can hardly force its way through. One gets the impresslrv tbat few people need to work in Cairo. Even In the morninjr the chain :ir filled with apparently prosperous rarti sitting coffee r sweetened v.i-

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Cairo. ter. puffing cigarettes and talking. Toward noon they diappear for their siestas, but again at four or five o'clock they are out In force and remain far into the night. Among them circulates a stream of peddlers offering for sale almost every conceivable ware- from sweetmeats to mouse traps and underwear. The dweller in Cairo who has not his servant or his group of servants is low indeed in the economic scale. These serving men carry tiny bundles for their employers or m.isters. They run ahead of carriages to clear tho way; they fan away the fiies; and one after another they come In troopn into the presence of the prosperous to bring smoking materials or to offi a bewildering succession of drink and foods. Life is hard and a few cents a day satisfies them. Even the porters who carry heavy bundles and the boatmen who laboriously pole the Nile craft against the current work 12 or la hours for little more than as many cents. In Cairo Is the Oxford of the Mohammedan world, the University of El-Azhar. It seems a queer "university" to those familiar with the higher institutions of learning of the West. Its classrooms are the halls and niches of a .mosque.' Its professors receive no salaries hut are primarily religious oinciais, government employees, lawyers and the like who teach in addition to performing their regular duties. The pupils, -who nt times number more than .,(H0, squat on mats while their instructors lecture. This premier college of the Moslem world has been In existence for OoO years and hundreds of thousands of students have passed through its doors. It has been tbe center of the nationalist propaganda, which has sought entire freedom for Egypt. More, it is-the hotbed of PanIslamism, which. like its companion movement in the past Pnn- Jennanism would combine its own culture with militarism to dominate the world. But Pan-Islnmism would go further, and woidd bring the world, as well, under the religion of Mohammed. Glimpse at Egypt's Pst. The Egypt that emerges now again as a kingdom has had a checkent! history, but that is reasonable nough when one recalls that il had one of the earliest of starts. lb-re is one ni the first places in which man livil an ordered life and left records of his activities. Some anthropologists, in fact, look tiin central Africa as the place of origin of man, and un Egypt as one of the first way-stations in Ids diffusion over the other continents. After the long reign of the Pharaohs Egypt had its Crecian and Boman regimes which brought but fnv changes. Then in 011 A. D. came the invasion of the Saracens, from which time began Egypt's Mohammedan history. For a time the country was a province of the Arabian caliphs; later it was Independent, though still Mohammedan, under the Mameluk'; and finally, in lolO, it became a province of Turkey, which controlled It first through a governor and later through a sort of hereditary viceroy or khoHive. For the third time Eurer tk a hand in the affaire of Fgypt In 17IS when Napoleon won his battle of the Pyramids. The British drove the Fremh out in 11 and turned the country back to Turkey. In came the building of the Suez canal by I; Iesseps, which has given Euro; an ever-growing Interest In I'gyptian affairs. To prote-t European bondholders France and Croat Britain made a joint Intervention In lS7:i and for a while controlled finances. The uprising in 1S2 against the khedive was suppressed by the British aione, and after that they controlled finance without assistance. The government was in effect Egyptian with British assistance and with the nominal su.ominty of Turkey acknowledged. When the World war began Ireat Britain established a protectorate, abolished Turkey's suzerainty, dc,sed the lenaanophile khediw, and uppointed another prince of the family to be sultan. The British protectors! is now being withdrawn, bat li;slead of the former Turkish interest being restored, Egypt set ep as an Independent kingdom.