Liberty Express, Volume 13, Number 32, Liberty, Union County, 10 March 1916 — Page 6
it
4
SJi&t
WOMEN'
I.GE
NM
SPORT CLOTHES FROM DAWN TILL DUSK An Economical and Comfortable Notion The Sport Coat May Be Worn Over SummeT Frocks.
BRIGHT COLORS CIUC AND HAK-MOXIOUS.
Now York, March 1. If all predictions prove true tin coming summer should be a most economical one for the family with daughters. Fashion says: "Sport clothes from dawn till dusk, and after dark, an simple or as elaborate an evening frock as the fancy demanda." Besides being decidedly practical and money-saving, this regime
1 J U AIcCali.
A Middy Suit of Linen.
The President's Wedding an example of decorative art never equaled in the history of cake decorating an example of deliciousness, lightness and wholesomeness that would be a pride to any housewife. It is Another Testimonial for CALUMET BAKING POWDER This world - famous Wilson -Gait Wedding Cake was made by Mrs. Marian Cole Fisher and M i s s Pansy Bowen, both well known Domestic Science Experts. Calumet Baking Powder was used because both these experts use it exclusively in their work and know it is the purest, the safest, the most wholesome and economical to use. So do millions of housewives who use it every bakeday so will you if you try it on the things hardest to bake. Send your name and address for free recipe and history of the Wedding Cake. Then bake one just like it yourself. Received Highest A ward World' Pure Food Exposition, Chicago and Pane Calumet Baking Powder Co Chicago
should Im' comforting and comfortable to
a dtgrce; just stop for a moment and consider how many pu..led moment will be saved, and how many times one will be spared that eternal question "what shall I wear today?" A gon supply of smart linen blouses, a sport skirt or two, with a chic sport coat, and one's wardrobe troubles are solved dining daylight hours; after, it is a simple matter to select a dainty dance or dinner dress of net, or one of the exquisite summer fabrics now in favor, and don it in perfect peace. One must wonder at the sudden enthusiasm for out-of-door sports being shown by the American girl this season; we have Imh-ii gradually coming to it, but tins vear it looks an if we were one und all to take up jort for all that it is worth, or at least to look as if we adored tennis, golf, boating, swimming, and the numberless other excuses for getting out-of-doors. Some Charming Effects. We have been gradually accustoming ourselves to the vivid reds, yellows, greens, and the various startling plaids and stripes which blend so effectively and harmoniously with the blue skies, and green grass of the summer fields, the mountains and the shore, where some of us are fortunate enough to dream the summer through, and others are privileged to spend a playtime week or two. Among the smartest of the new sport suits are many of silk jersey, or, as it is perhaps more generally known, Italian silk. These suits are often made with coat of a plain color, emerald green, for instance, worn with a smart, short skirt of black and white stripes. White or
cream serge, too, is a favorite, combined
with coat of scarlet, emerald, or bright blue. The coat is usually cuffed, collared and belted with the material of the skirt. Sometimes one sees a coat of stripes with skirt of plain material. The silk jersey coats and sport coats of other
materials will be worn with all types of frock this summer; for in spite of the
popularity of the plain blouse and skirt,
there are any number of attractive tub frocks being shown just now, and I am
quite sure that they will be worn quite
as much as in seasons past, more per
haps, as they are more fascinating than
for many a year. This is another prac tical and economical notion. Charming Sport Blouses.
Simplicity of cut, combined with the
daintiest possible of linen, voile, or
gandy or tub silk is the recipe for the
most popular of the summer blouses, to
wear with tailored suit, sport coat, or
separate skirt. One of the prettiest I
have seen this season was fashioned of a
pale pink figured batiste having deep
ft
hiine, and again they are of a contrast
mg color and material to wear wit, various skirts. Attractive Hats. In compliance with Fashion's decret
that sport clothing be supremely fav7
oied, the hat shops are putting forth, many attractive, severe little hats which
may be appropriately worn with eithei
idly for meat production. Then farmers should plan gradually to increase, aiii-improve through breeding, the cattle and otlicr live stock, so as to consume the otherwi' waste products and make our unprofitable or untillable lands productive. Kvery family should have at
least two cows, so that one can Do in milk all the time. We should set some
tailored or sport suit. Many of the' standard to winch to work, l-or a tenare hand made fabi ie hat with just ijant farmer not less than one and prebit of a ribbon, a bow or ornament, by j ferably two cows; not less than one and way of trimming. Nome chic models of possibly two sows; not less than 25 hens, cretonne ami others of ratine in soft col- preferably 50. A standard for the smallorings, are essentially sport hats, but owner farmer would be not less than two the plain hemps, Milans and hand-sewn! milch cows, not less than two sows, and hats of braid may be worn with either! not less than "0 and preferably 100 hens, tailored suit or sport costume. Angora I Ml of this stock should be well tended, braid h one of the most effective of the .V?H al"1 properly bred. new braids, in white or a soft color, When the living has been provided
combined with hemp or Milan. The prow cotton for the mam money crop.
- i a. shiny braids are much in vogue for early, -l have endeavored to lay down gentailored wear, in black or colors, trimmed jfil principles rather than to specify with flowers or ribbon. Patent leather 1 articular crops. For example, in semi-
and varnished foliage is most effective avid sections of Texas and Oklahoma the
for trimming these glazed hats.
SAFE FARMING.
Program That Means Real, Diversification and Freedom from the Risks of One-Crop Agriculture.
Seven objections to a one-crop system
of agriculture are set forth in Circular
No. 51 of the Oflice of the Secretary, which is a reprint of an address deliv
ered by Bradford Knapp at a conference of southern bankers. The reasons whv
a one-crop system is unsafe are stated by Mr. Knapp to be as follows: "First. Because the system depends upon market and crop conditions of the one crop alone. Failure of crop or failure of market alike bring serious disaster. "Second. Because it does not provide
grain sorghums would naturally be sub
stituted in place of the corn, and these, together with Sudan grass, would fur-ni.-h forage. These same general principles apply to tobacco territory and rice territory." 1o put this program into effect, two suggestions are made to the bankers anu merchants in the cotton states: 1) That they conduct a campaign for a hang in the conditions on which creut is extended to farmers, so that "safr farming" may be fostered and not discouraged. (2) To carry on an organized campaigs for marketing surplus products as near home as possible. In one case in Louisiana a farmer had a carload of lespedeja hay. He had difficulty in disposing of it, but finally, through the medium of the county agent, he sold it
n a town ten nines away to a nvery-
for the maintenance of soil fertility.
"Third. Because it fails to provide for I table keeper who had been in the habit a sufficient live-stock industry to con-I f buying all his hay in Kansas and sume the waste products of the farm and I 'olorado. . make its waste lands productive. f In ,juth Carolina about a year ago a "Fourth. Because it does not provide carload of hogs had to be sent to Rich-
for a system of farm management under which labor, teams, and tools may ie used to the fullest advantage. "Fifth. Because it brings return h
mond or Baltimore to be marketed, al
though $20,000,000 worth of pork prodtcts wcc being brought into the state every yep'r. Such conditions encourage
cash but once a year instead of turning s'.irmers to persist in the hazardous I t ii.!
the money over more than once a year.
"Sixth. Because it does not produ
the necessary foods to supply the people upon the farm and keep them in health and strength. "Seventh. It limits knowledge, narrows citizenship, and does not foster home building, but does encourage com
mercial farming."
.n of risking everything upon one crop.
Ie fanning" may b be?t promoted by
giving to it financial credit and better muketing facilities.
WHAT IS FARM MANAGEMENT.
Farm management as a branch of ag
ricultural science is defined as follows in
l 1 4 Illing i ( The remedy for these evils is diversifi- n address recently delivered in New-
Plain Coat and Striped Skirt. cuffs and sailor collar of white. It was made with open throat and was closed down the front with a white silk cord slipped under a tab on either side of the blouse. The colored lawn and organdy blouse is growing in favor; in fact, the colored waist scema to be taking preference over the plain white waist to a marked degree. There is something particularly pleasing about a softly tinted blouse of crf'jH de Chine, Georgette, or one of the new wash fabrics, combined with 'a tailored suit, that makes its appeal to all. Strictly tailored linen waists of white for morning or sports wear are unusually smart and much in vogue, but for the tailored suit and more dressy wear, the tinted blouse is the favorite. There are any number of attractive middy blouses for all sorts of summer daytime wear. Oftentimes these are made of the same material and color as the skirt, thereby forming a complete cos-
cation. Diversification, however, means
something else than a change from gro ing cotton to growing something else
One Louisiana man, who believed that he was a convert to diversification, planted 500 acres of tomatoes. In other
instances farmers turned from cotton to
corn and had nothing else for sale in
the fall. This, of course, is not diversification at all. The term is defined in
the new circular as "an agricultural system through which the living of the people upon the farm is first produced and then a number of products suited to the soil, the climate, and the market conditions of the country are judiciously sel
ected and made the main items of profit
through sale in the great markets of the world, always keeping in mind the necessity for maintaining the fertility of
the soil." This is practically the same thing as "safe farming." The essentials for its attainment in the South are stated as follows: "1 A home garden for every family on a farm. From one-tenth of an acre to one-fourth or one-half an acre, well located, welltilled and tended as carefully as any other crop on the farm, is what we mean by a home garden. It must be planted in rotation so as to have one continuous crop, thus providing something for the family table as many days in the year as possible. To this should be added one-fourth of an acre of potatoes, either Irish or sweet potatoes, or both, to be used as food for the family. An acre of sorghum or cane should be produced to supply the family with sirup. On the subject of gardening, bulletins may be obtaired from your agricultural colleges and from the Department of Agriculture. "2. Produce enough corn to last the family and the live stock, with certainty, for one year, with a little excess for safety. "3. Produce sufficient oats and other small grain to supplement the corn as food for a year, with certainty. Remember these small grains conserve the soil in winter and provide some grazing for live stock. "4. Produce the hay and forage crops necessary to supply the live stock on the farm for one year, not forgetting i the winter and summer legumes, which not only produce hay but also enrich the soil. I "5. Produce the necessary meat foxj the family by increased attention to poultry and hogs. I say poultry and hogs, because they can be increased most trap-
I 1 1 1 -. C il,. IV.,...ln.,iu
lingiaiiu one ui me i vjiai iim in o specialists: , "The -farm management investigator gets his information direct from the farmer. The solution of many of the practical problems of agriculture are found to have already been solved generations jtgo by large groups of farmers; particularly is it true of farm management and organization. Every farmer is of necessity more or less of an experimenter. The results of thousands of such experimenters gathered by the farm management investigator, classified and interpreted in their bearing on the community's problems and on the individual farm's problems, yield not only many fundamental broadly applicable principles cf good farm organization, but also show in more or less detail in just what respect a successfully operated farm differs from one which is a failure or only moderately successful. "In previous decades the agricultural investigator largely concerned himself with the study of how to accomplish certain ends. How best to feed a pig or
cow; now uest to raise, potatoes or iruu. The farm management investigator is concerned with determining whether to
keep cows or pigs; whether to raise fruit
or potatoes; and, if an industry be found
to be desirable, to what extent it should
enter into the farm organization, and
with what intensity it should be pursued. All of these problems have in the aggregate, been solved by the farmers. Farm management is merely a science for classifying and interpreting the collective experience of the farming people as to whil. constitutes business efficiency in far J ing. .Farm management' considers farming jas a business. It attempts to analyze the Various factors having to do with the success or failure of that business as it is found conducted on the individual farm, and in so far as possible to determine the broad outstanding factoids for efficiency which admit of gen
eral application for a region."
. RECIPE FOR CRAY HAIR. "jTo half pint of water add 1 o. Bay R'lm, a mall box of Hirbo Compound, und 4 oz. of glycerine. Apply to the hair twice a week until it becomes the desired hade. Any druKRlst can put this up or you can mix It at home at very little cost Full directions for making and use com in each box of Uarbo Compound. It mill gradually darken streaked, faded gray hatr, and removes dandrufT. It la excellent for falling hair and will make harsh hair oft and glossy. It will not color the scalp, la not sticky or greasy, and does not rub off.
Solid Aluminum Griddle-Full 10K-inch Size
$2.25 Aluminum Griddle Offered For Only 85 Cents And Labels From 50 Cents Vorth of Karo GET 50 cents worth of Karo from your grocer and send labels from the cans to u- t-i1 with 85 cents 0X1(1 we w11 send you this $2.25 Aluminum Griddle by prepaid parcel post a clear saving of $1.40. Thousands of housewives all over this country have already taken advantage of this offer for you may be sure that the women of this country know a real bargain when they see one. At Zf?0 we are seeking to place a Karo Aluminum Griddle in the homes of all Karo users, so that Karo the famous spread for griddle cakes and waffles may be served on the most deliriously baked cakes thatcan be made. So if this money-saving opportunity appeals to you and if you want your family to use Karo, the most popular syrup for griddle cakes then get 50 cents worth cf Karo from your grocer and send us the labels and 85 cents. Youll get the Aluminum Griddle by prepaid parcel post. Remember this Solid Aluminum Griddle needs no 4reasin4 It doesn t smoke up the kitchen. It can't rust; it is clean; and cakes baked on this grid die are more digestible than when fried in the old way If you haven't sent for your griddle already, get 50 cents worth of Karo from vour prnrer tnnr .,1 . v . it t
- Dciiu us mo uiueia and 85 cents (P. O. money order or stamps) as quickly as possible so as to bo sure of getting yours. We will also send you free a copy of the famous Corn Products Cook Book. Put your order In as early as
possible for the griddles are going fast. CORN PRODUCTS REFINING CO. P.O. Box 181 KewTwk DeftPX
r1
d
4
The Spring McCall Book of
Fashions
beautifully illustrating hundreds of smart new designs
. x 1 :.
V
NO WON SALE
mm
Practical Spring Dress McCall Patterns Nos. One of the nianv mit k--siiius at our patieri. i-....u;vr.
CiiBrr.iini ;rinu Model ?c .;i ::'tcr- X- 70'.- Mar iut .--i' :... : ' 1 1 .11 I ) f f u,' ... ..v.iii luun'.
New Issue of
McCall Patterns
faithfully reproducing all the latest decrees of fashion easy to make simple and accurate in detail
C. F. BOND
LIBERTY, INDIANA
DR. J. A. WALLS, THE SPECIALIST 21 South Tenth St., Richmond, Ind. Office Days MONDAY, TUESDAY, FRIDAY anJ SATURDAY of Each Wek. Consultation and one month'a Treatment Free. TREATS LMSKASICS OK THE THROAT. LUNGS. KIDNEYS. LIVER and H LADDER, RHEUMATISM. DYSPEPSIA and DISEASES OF THE BLOOD. EDilensy (or falllnt
(Its) cancer, private or nervous diseases, female diseases, loss of vitality from indiscretion Diles fissure and ulcerations of the rectum, without detention from business. , y KU1TURE POSITIVELY CURED AND GUARANTEED.
MR. FARMER W'liert you absolutely know that you are taking a long chance in allowing your marcs and best horses to go without insurance against death from any cause, is it not good business to insure them in THE OLD RELIABLE INDIANA AND OHIO LIVE STOCK COMPANY, with
ROBERTSON & SON AND (1KT A IDLICY AS GOOD AS GOLD in case of death of any of your horses, l'hone 111. East Side of Square. LIBERTY, IND.
Ii-,
V..V- J-.y
r r
