The Vernon Times, Volume 8, Number 23, Vernon, Jennings County, 16 January 1920 — Page 5
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r:rjr.:a'fl frier. 'j.Vcr:
llidsey Cozsphlst.
"I couldn't sit down without puttiz
pillow behind my back," e-iyj !e Bergman. 829 Penusytami
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Gary, lad. V. hen I L-at over it felt
as though, eomeoody had stuck a knife riiht into my back and I would often fall to the floor. . The ki.inev secretion rnai
r e get up four and five
times a night. There
Email WOlild V,"OU.Id
Before
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would be only a
amount, which burn bo that I
1 my body bloated
and ray feet were so swollen that I couldn't wear my shoes, lly (-kin
looked shiny and. when I preyed it down it left a dent. I had chills and fever. Sometimes I would eweat eo that I could fairly wring the water cut cf my clothes. Everybody said I was pcirg down-hill fast. In two months I lot fifteen pounds and was discouraged. I5y the tin.e I had finished three boxes of Doan's Kidney Tills I was entirely cured and I have enjoyed the best cf health ever since." Gel Doane at Any Store, ZZ& aCos DOAN'S "SiS FCSTUl-VJLBUZX CO.. EUFFALO.Tf. Y.
& ti t tr "! '(T- f w f . ' . j ivl ( M , I J . . !', "I hud C''2eni for r.nny yprs rn my head it'id co;'l 1 njt pet anyib.n,? to stop the asrony. I saw your ad and" pot one box of Peterson's Ointment and I owe you many thanks for the pood it has done me. There isn't a blotch on my head now and I couldn't holp but thank Peterson, for the cure is great. Miss Mary Hill, 4C0 Third avenue, Pittsburgh. Pa. 'I have had itehine; piles for 15 years and Peterson's is the only ointment that relieves me, besides the piles seem to hfcve pone." A. B. P;:.rcr, 1127 Washington avrmie. Ttaclne, Wia. T.:?o Peterson's Ointment for oil sores, .oa'.t rheum, ehaf.ns and all skin diseases. ?,r, cents. Drusjnsts recommend it. Mail orders filled by Peterson Ointment Co., Buffalo. N. Y.
It Is surprising how slow a watch can run in church.
T.niins without energy overtake prosperity.
will never
cf til dl?ordfr3 and vh:a c is apt to te nx.n r. -trees. tin'tlcs Lsw that core than thrts tlics as cscy r eerie dUi Iron L Eaeaza last Tear, as were killed i.a the greatest war the world has ever Known. For the last fifty-dree years Boschee's Syrup has been used tor cot:Shs, bronchitis, colds, throat trntatloa and especially lunz troubles. It gives the patient a good night's rest, free from coughing, with easy expectoration in the morning. Ma da In America and used in the homes of thousands of families all over the Civilized world. Sold everywhere. Adr. Impression Verified. " 'Hamlet' is one of the longest parta in the English-speaking: drama," remarked Mr. Stormington Barnes. "I never measured it," answered the tired business man, "but it certainly gives you that impression when you listen to it"
RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. To half pint of water add 1 02. Day Rum, email box of Bar bo Compound, and oz. of glycenne. Apply to the hair twice a week until it becomes the desired shade. Any druggist can put this up or you can mix it at home at very little cost. It will gradually darken streaked, faded gray hair, and wul make harsh hair soft and glossy. It will not co'or the scalp, is not sticky or greasy, and does not rub off. Adv. Their Name Is Legion. Harold bad told me that his friend Robert was coming over with him to play after school. So when ray son showed up without Robert, looking much disappointed,! asked the reason. "Oh, his mother did say at noon that he could come, but I'll tell you how it is she is one of those changers of mind." Exchange.
Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CAtSTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Rears the y' sfff Signature of CMtS In Use for Over JO Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoxia About CO per cent of the area of the United States is tillable. At present only 32 per cent is being tilled.
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Introduced by Dr.ycrw to Physicians la 1C00
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Yen w?.r.t genuine Aspirin tha j Neuralgia, Lumbago, lliieuniatisiE. ' Aspirin rrcficribc i by physicians J Neuritis and for Pain general!for nineteen y ear a. Tha namsl '.L. t
is.g Aspirin. Then look for th
1 safety "Bayer Cross" On the pack
Bge and ca the tablets. 4. Handy tin boxes of twelve tab- J
- ; lor nineteen yeara. ina nam 2
'ycr' mt'ina the true, wa'rlifamous Aapirin, proved eaf by millions cf people. Each unbroken package of
f "Bayer Tablets cf Aspirin" con-
- tains proper directions for Colds, , lBV9 cos OUJ- lsw centa. umg'
A.piria is trade mark of Eayer Kaaufactxire Monocetjcacidcster of SaJieyliekI 4. "I ;-3-fJ-i' .-j-4. 4rZ4r4r'&4Z4r
M A , j EeadAche, Toothache, Earache, gists also sell larger packages.
COULDN'T FiriD LADY'S NAME
Young Man, However, Had Done His Best, and Probably the Editor Appreciated It.
The editor was busy writing an article on the evil effects of the excessive xise of tobacco and how it affected the heart. But he needed Information on a certain medical point. "Baxter, find out all you can about angina pectoris," he said to a budding young journalist, "and be quick as you can." Twenty minutes passed before the aspiring journalist returned. "Well," queried the editor, "you've been long enough about it; what have you learned?"' "Well, I've done my best," was the answer. "I've looked in all the local directories, and the London directory as well, aud there is no such name as Angina Pectoris. Then I made a thorough sen rch through some of the biographies in the ofiice library, but found nothing. No one in the building has heard of such a person. Perhaps she's married now, and that was her maiden name. ' Are you quite sure you've got her name right, sir?" London Tit-Bits.
The Pessimistic View. "They s;iy even rich men now declare they will wear patched trousers." "Yes, but thev can afford the patching."
Learning About Nitrogen. Recent experiments with the alpha ray have led to the discovery, says the English Mechanic and World of Science, that nitrogen, which for a century and a half has been regarded as an element, may not be an element at all, but a compound of hydrogen and helium. It is an interesting coincidence that Doctor Dalton, according to the now accepted account, was led to his theory of the atomic structure of matter by a study of the physical properties of the atmosphere. Sir Ernest Rutherford, by experiments on the same gases, cow sees in each of Dai ton's atoms of nitrogen an atomic system in which two distinct elements play a part( and nitrogen itself apparently is to disappear as an element. Youth's Companion.
Conversation. This business of conversation is a very serious matter. There are men that it weakens one to talk with an hour more than a day's fasting would do. Mark this that I am going to say, for It is as good as a working professional man's advice, and costs you nothing: It is better to lose a pint of blood from your veins than to have a nerve tapped. Nobody measures your nervous force as it runs away, nor bandages your brain and marrow after the operation.
Be noble in every thought and In
J every deed. Longfellow.
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supplies what many breakfast cereals lack solid nourishment including the vital mineral salts so necessary to encourage normal rodh. in children. A body-bHiidlng food tfeat tastes real good
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tllliitllriiiillliiUlllIitiiiailltllallUUiUiMtl Lafayette. Tippecanoe county farmers are killing wolves on the prairie Kouth of the city, and reports are being received here daily of more wolves
roaming over farms in the vicinity of
Granville: This is the first time in 25 years that so many wolves have been eeen in the county.
Vincennes. According to . reports from other parts of the '.state, Allen
Harbin of Wheatland holds the state
record for ten-acre apple production. His ten acres of Winesaps brought him
a net profit of So.400. Trees on two
acres are more than 40 years old, and trees on the other eight acres are 20 years old. Muncie. City firemen, by agreement of the common council, will receive an increase of 20 per cent in wages for this year. Under the new salary arrangement the chief of the fire department receives $175 a month. Use assistant chief $140; chief engineer, $140; captains, $130; lieutenants, $12,V, drivers, $120, and pipemem $1C5 to $115. Seymour. Wheat in Jackson county is in bad condition, and the 'crop next year will not be more than 50 per cent normal, according to estimates by well informed farmers. Much of the early sown wheat was practically ruined by the Hessian fly and a large part of the late sown did not mature sufficiently to stand the freezing weather. - , Evansvllle. The 1019 internal rvj nue receipts for this district total $SG0,740.S1, as compared with 020,S24.2S in 191S. The report for January, 1018, before prohibition we.it into effect, was $103,405.70, as compared with $45,311.25 in January, 1010. The December .report of 1010 was $81,810.05 and for December, 181 S. $47,308.30. Walter E. Foley, local collector, says the increase was brought about by increases in the sales of tobacco. Indianapolis. In order to handle the demands for speakers from county farmers' associations over the state, the board of directors of the Indiana Federation of Farmers' Associations decided to employ 20 additional speakers. The directors also decided to in
tensify the campnign for members,.
hoping to enroll every farmer in Indiana in the federated associations. The speakers will be farmers, it was announced, and will aid in organizing the county .associations. Goshen. Although Mayor Charnly of Goshen has endeavored to oust Dr. Albert J. Irwin as head of the citv
health department .here and supplant him with Dr. Herbert K. Lemori, a Goshen physician, Doctor Irwin has declined to vacate, holding that the mayor does not "have the power to oust him. Doctor Irwin will probably continue as secretary of the city board of health, although the mayor in making his appointments announced the name of Doctor Lemon, his personal physician, as secretary. Seymour. High prices paid for furs have encouraged trapping to such an extent that local trappers believe fui--bearlng animals will b hard to find In a few years unless stricter laws are enacted. It is estimated that furs worth $20,000 have been shipped from Jackson county since November 21, when the open season started. A few red fox pelts .have brought $25 each, compared to $5 a few years ago. Mink pelts sold for $S to $12, while the former price was 1.50 to $2. The increase in other pelts is correspondingly high. Hammond. On contention of the defense that the railroad company could enter into contracts as a private carrier on interstate shipments and accept waivers of liability for damage to any part of shipments, Judge Walter Hardy, in the Hammond superior court,- instructed the jury to find for the defendant in the personal injury suit of Joseph Diericks against the Michigan Central railroad. The suit is the first of a long string arising from the Hagenback-Wailace circus train wreck at Ivanhoe in June, 1018. Claims of the various actions total a half-million dollars. Chicago. 111. Newspaper publishers of Ind-iana and Illinois pledged themselves to a 10 per cent reduction in consumption of newsprint. A conciliation committee was appointed to investigate conditions. A committee will work in each congressional district. A resolution was adopted recommendingminimum subscription rates for daily newspapers of $5 a year for six-day issues and $0 for sevenday issues, for mail editions, and 15 cents a week for six-day papers and 20 cents for seven-day i.-sues delivered by carrier. These changes will be effective February 1. Wabash. Taxpayers of Wabash county will pay $,"0.45S.S5 more this year than last year, according to the tax duplicates which were returned here. Indianapolis. Members of the American Legion are instructed ret to oppose German opera and Hungarian music "where the spirit, language, and personnel are American and where no attempt fis made to arouse pro-German feeling.", n a bulletin issued by the state department of the legion end made public here b;5 Franklin D'OIIer, national ccruminder of the orgaaiza-
f rfh IV Erery owner of a ts- " ' 4 : t l:i FVr.l .will be re- ' - I t! 1 13 ci'tii; organizations ; : cl.y to ir.roie the property 1 ' ' .r it hct-.-e. They will be asf : 1 : ? t.f act" .1 erection begins 1! : ..' " 1 n Tty vill be rented er 1 . ' :Lr:z t ; : e-; at plans.
' : tte. i.at i I eueved to be a
wo r la's record price for a spotted Po-j-'-.ri China hog was paid here for Q'teen Miss at the Wallace and Baugh ! the price being $7,100. The hog was purchased by Daugherty & Shoemaker of this county. The first 23 head of stock at the sale brought $20,Indianapolis. The state highway system, which under the law must be designated by the state highway commission before April 1, has been practically decided upon, according to L. IT. Wright, director of the commission. The system comprises 3,156.5 miles and reaches every county seat and important city of Indiana.
Eiwood. The city council, which-
previously turned down petitions from
city employees for increases m pay, granted an increase to all departments. The police and firemen will get $10,. more a month, the city engineer and the street commissioner $2Gi) a year more, and the men working on street and garbage forces got an increase of 33 1-3 per cent. Lafayette. Fuel economy saved the Monon railroad $50,000 in its annual coal bill last year, according to II. C. May, federal manager of the railroad.
who has written the local officials of the Monon a letter acknowledging the company's debt of gratitude to the officers and employees who made possible the saving. The period covered was the year ending November 30, 1010. Indianapolis. -The state board of tax commissioners has turned down the Pike county petition for authority to issue $250,000 of bonds, with which to finance the erection of a new courthouse. , The board, in its order, stated that it found 5.050 voters in the county; that after withdrawing 177 names from the remonstrance, 3,140 remained and that the number of signers to the petition for the bond issue was 2,444. The board found also "that out of a total of 874 miles of public roads only ninety-two miles are improved roads in the county. The board further finds that in addition to the demand for more improved highways, demands for schools and drainage purposes seem paramount and that the amount asked for a new courthouse is excessive, and the board having considered all these things now disapproves said bond issue." Petersburg. G. W. Fallow, a coal operator oi Pittsburgh, Pa., Is attempting to lease land in this county for coal stripping, and will start a number of large shovels stripping No. 5 coal as soon as the coal leases can be obtained. The first ground to be -.stripped will be a large tract east of
WinsloW on the Southern railroad, he says. About one mile of track will be built. The Pike County Coal company has bought and leased 7,000 acres of coal land. Logansport. The report of the food test conducted at the Tipton school here during the six weeks prior to the Christmas holidays has been made public. At the midmorning lunch period 170 of the 221 pupils in the school received a half-pint of milk and a few Graham crackers. According to the report, 135 children gained weight during the period, while ten lost weight. A smaller per cent of the children who were fed were affected by an epidemic of measles than the children who were not fed. Washington, D. C. Patents have ben granted the following Indianians: Ella L. Anderson, Indianapolis, kettle; Kent W. Bartlett, East Chicago, strainer ; Albert J. Edwards. Indianapolis, advertising machine ; Ilerveh Ilentzell. Gary, electric motor having improved side frames; Louis T. Koerner, Evansville, chair; Julius A. Niewland, Notre Dame, dye and dyeing ; Clark Orr. Fort Wayne, assignor to General" Electric company, rotary refrigerating machine; Walter Warriner, Fort Wayne, feeder for water softening plants. Lawreneeburg. ' Dearborn county farmers plan to put in a large crop of tobacco. Prices for tobacco this winter are an incentive and every available piece of land which can produce tobacco will be plapted. It is hardly probable that as indifferent a crop will be produced again in many years as the crop now being marketed. It is frost-bitten, decayed, house-burnt, in fact, it has about all the ills known to the culture, but it is bringing the growers, as a rule, fancy prices. Tobacco on the local market has ?een ranging from 10 cents to more than $1 a pound. Early crops are grading out well, late crops are darker, but will weigh- heavy. The yield an acre Is light, slightly over half a crop. The frequent rains caused much tobacco to be stripped from the tier. Some small crops were not bulked at all. Many have bulked down now and will work on the tobacco stripping job, in order to he ready for the market, when it is expected prices will be better. Monticello. Physical examination conducted in "the Mnfieello public schools show that out of SO!) grade pupils, only 20 are normal. It was shown that 1-15 are above normal in regard to measurements and weight, and 195 are below normal.
Inc
:apolis. The t tal of Decem
ber, 1010, settlement of the counties with the state is $4,115,014, according to compilations completed by Lewis C.
j Johnson, settlement clerk In the office j of the auditor of state. The total for 1 the December, 1018, settlement was
3.S42.2CS. or ?273,6ia less than the 010 figure.
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iie competition that exists among the hundreds of meat distributors, large and small, means Rivalry in Prices Rivalry in Service Rivalry in Economy Rivalry in Quality Swift k Company sells meat at the lowest possible price, consistent with quality and service. Our profit of only a fraction of a cent a pound on all products is evidence of keen competition. Swift 8c Company must provide the best service to your dealer or he will buy from our competitors. This means a supply of fine fresh meat always on hand for you at your dealer's. Swift z Company must keep down manufacturing and selling costs, and use all bjr-products to avoid waste, or else lose money meeting the prices of competitors who do. Swift & Company must make its products of the highest quality, or seeyou turn to others. This means better meat for you and a greater variety of appetizing, wholesome food. We are as glad for this competition as you should be. It helps to keep us on our mettle. Swift 81 Company, U.S.A.
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Ancient Football. China played football long before Japan, so long ago that the football was stuffed with hair until the fifth century, when the Ingenious Chinese thought of inflating it.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured by LOCAL, APPLICATIONS, as the? cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh ia a local disease, greatly influenced by constitutional conditions. IIAL.LS CATARRH MEDICINE will cure catarrh. It is taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE ia composed of some of the best tonics known, combined with some of the best blood purifiers. The perfect combination of the ingredients in HALE'S CATARRH MEDICINE i3 what produces such wonderful results in catarrhal conditions. Drue: cists 75c. Testimonials free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, Ohio.
No New Thing. "Do you think doctors have a right to kill when they can't cure?" "They have always been doing it."
Encouraging. "Shall I settle the bill now, doctor?" "Not necessary. I can arrange with your widow."
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WAVTFI SALKSMKX, COl'MY AM) IITK1CT MANAdKKs to eell our littls pocket check protestor. Inks and perforates equal to high-priced machine. Retails at $2.60; Fhould L fold to every owner of a. check book. KxperlTice pseiuial but not !!-'."" a ry. S100 pr w '. msllv made. Small capital fmTic-i.-nt. Write J. 1. Ktr en., p.m. 415 r.f HMir., Terre Hauf-. In4.
FRKK Copy of our latest 40c Piano lluplcal Saccp?. Inclos 3c postair!. ('!.') rk Pub. Co.. 4S2 East l'-Tth St.. N'w York City.
PtWITIV'lT REMOVED hr tfr. Kmr' 1 r" 4 a l.i.'Trin: ;.- cri. . -'.e M Ei.il, r - t-w. Or. C H. -r . y C., 2.7$ McAiiLn lwnn, Criejutu.
FRECKLES
V. N. U-, Indianapolis, No. 3-1320.
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1 k I t v ' 4 VTOiiences ot old settled district
are helping their husbands to prcsoer are clai "" S.wi
they encouraged them to go where they could make a faotr.e of their v -3 own save paying r&it and reduce cost cf living where tlicy could reach prosperity and independence by buying est easy tarrna. Fortils Land at 010 to Q30 an Aero -laM similar to that which through many years has yiafdad frem 29 t 4S bushel of whast to tha acre. Handreds of farciTs i" V""tern Canada have rased crops in a amsle season worth more than the whole cost ot their land. With such crops come prosperity, indepenriepe r-xxl homes, and all the comforts and conveniences which make for bappykvin Farm Gardens Pcult ry o a f rf I n re sources cf income second only to rram growics and stock rais" Good chmate, good ceighbor. churches, -t rv r-.-' "' schools, rural telephone, etc., R.ve you the ' '
fk oppcrtunitiea ot a new land w;tii tUs con
Xmprsmmt cf I i&iaigratuia. (nun, Caa.. tar 3. II. I-factACITIN 21 S Troctioa-Iermjaal illlj.
cuaaiaua fd Canadian Govrrtniect Agent
