Liberty Express, Volume 14, Number 25, Liberty, Union County, 19 January 1917 — Page 6
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I Fashions 4
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Women's Section
Household ! ...
Avitli very much of a surplus of nutriment. (Jood condition will come to breed in; birds more quickly if t heir meal sire varied so a to include a number of nour-
A Warning From Within
IWI5IS I'SKS Midi BLACK AND W1IITK. White Georgette With Black Satin One of the Favored Combinations.
M IDs KANON HATS AKK 1 1 KHK. New York, laiuiary IS. The hhu-k-and-white combination iS one of the very s-trong notes from Paris jut at this time. Kven while some bright colors are bei in? shown, black and white come to the front again. White tieorgette and black satin are chosen very often to carry out this effect, and while it is not looked upon in the light of a real novelty, it is so entirely pleasing that its
acceptance goes without saying. Dresses of white (Jeorgette are some
times made with a deep band of black satin at the lower ediie of the skirt. As
nose or jrav hair or bin feet, in those davs always ended:
the skirt appears to be black, but in crooked . ... I walking the colored stripes show. This' stories
arrangement of pleats in striped inateri- j "An, I they were married and livcif hapals is si-en in striped fabrics of all colors. ; ,jv ,.v,.r after." Honiance ended at the Panel effects are still considered very jaltar instead of only commencing there. giKMl style for they preserve the straight Xoxv it requires as much art to keep lines at which Fashion aims. Here and j married as it once did to reach that there. however, exaggerated pockets goal." break the monotony f the straight liues ! -As romance has chan-red ko have
Air and food are full of germs, and the digestion, lungs, heart and kidneys are tiKtin them away all the time. If one department of the body fails the whole
ihiiig foods, such as grain ration, nia-li system is upset and sickness starts in. -111,1 r.i'n stnir When anything is wrong within, a pain i'"" -M4M lun- or illness gives quick warning, but kid- . Il l - 1 I I . 1 . ...
-n excellent grain ration can ne inaue ney irouims are usuany overiooKea, tor
ine warnings are coniusmg. uaCKaciie, dizzy spells, sick headaches, are warnings
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White Georgette and Black Satin Dress.
in the accompanying sketch, there are very often additional touches of black about the dress, for instance on the belt and sleeves and the trimming on the front of the waist. Silver thread embroidery in the popular darning-stitch enriches some of these frocks. In others, bead work is used. As an example of thi.s last, white Ceorgette crepe elaborately worked with beads forms the upper part and sleeves of a black satin dress. Separate skirts of black satin are also worn with white Georgette blouses made in Hussian stvle.
Russian styles still keep at the he'ght of popularity. When they are worn with suits they appear in any of the varying lengths, from the short hip length to below the knee. A striking black satin dress recently seen was made with a slipon Russian blouse of medium length over a very full pleated skirt. The lower part of the blouse was richly embroidered in silk w ith Japanese embroidery in the cherry-blossom design. The embroidery was in white and pale green. To return to the black-and-white combination, a very effective waist of white crepe was trimmed with black crepe collar, cuffs and rcvers and, in addition, black beads. The lighted shades which
are again returning to favor are putty, j t.
sand and beige. Rose-colored beads in
deep and lighted shades trim a sand-col-
ored waist very effectively. Pleated Skirts and Panels.
and stand out at the hips. Draped effects in some afternoon and many evening gowns also show that in some instances there is a tendency to break awav from the verv straight lines. Tassels of silk, wool or beads as well as buttons, form the decoration for dresses of a simpler and more tailored type. The apron string belts on the chemise dresses are usually finished with tassels, and frocks with the loost floating panels are weighted at the ends w ith tassels on either side.
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fa-hions. and along with the bonnets and hoop-kiits that have been relegated to the scrap heap, fat has found its place. Not only has fat gone out of style but people are beginning to be afraid of it. These are days of efficiency, and fat does not mix with ellicieucy any better than it does with water. "It is not veiy comforting for the fat person to have to say, 'It is my own fault that 1 am fat.' Nevertheless the truth is that the fat person is eating more than he can care for and is working with the brain and the body less than he should or he would not be fat, while equally true is the fact that the lean person is taking in too little or giving out too much, especially in the form of nervous energy. You cannot get away from it."
you should heed in order to avoid worse
troubles. I se 1 Man s Kidney fills and help yourself by dieting, avoiding overwork and worry and stimulants. Drinking milk or water freely is good for the
Kor years and years Iioan's Kidney IMlls have been helping kidney sufferers all over the world. Surely they are reliable.
LIBERTY PROOF:
I Mrs. Addie Winter, V. Seminary St., says: 'Wly back was weak and lame and I ached steadily. Nights, I was so nervous . that I could hardly sleep, owing to this steady aching. In the morning, I was ! drowsy and languid. My kidnevs were
also irregular in action. I used Doan's
DANGER IN RAW PORK.
McCat.
Serious and Often Fatal Disease, Trichinosis, Due to Eating Uncooked Meat.
Pleats and Panels Follow the Straight Lines. Colored ribbon on white crepe and lace waists, is another new trimming which has appeared of late. Ribbons with two or more colors give very dainty effects on these waists. Midseason Hats. Now that the midseason is here, hats of velvet are giving place to those of satin and silk. Figured silks are used for some smart, colorful hats, while crepe is another material favored by the milliners. Combinations of straw and satin are likely to be very popular also. Rlack straw formed the tiny brim and the lower part of a very high crown and the upper part was of blue satin. Medium size brims on rather drooping lines are also noted. A hat of crepe was trimmed with three rows of pleated ribbon at the top of the crown with a beaded ornament in front. The veil is still the faithful companion of the hat. Embroidered veils are even more popular than the plain ones, and the flowing veils more favored than
other styles. Some of the flowing veils are worn verv sTiort.
"THE FAT AND THE THIN OF IT."
The Fat and the Thin of It." was the
subject of an interesting lecture by Dr.
I Edith 15. Lowry, of Chicago, before the
Home Economics section at the Farm-
Short Course at Purdue. "Twenty
ers
Pleated skirts, though still requiring a j years ago no man of fifty expected to liberal amount of material in the fash-1 have a waist ami no woman of fifty a ioning of them are made to hang quite j figure," said Dr. Low ry. "Fat, fair and straight. Some charming effects are seen ! forty" was the milestone to be eiicounwhere striped material is employed. In'tered by every woman. If you looked . i,n( l,l.. t.l 1. . a . 1 e . i . j . ...
JM..JM.".,,,., -iM.ici suipeu jaoric, tue j pleasant ana comfortable that was
purple stripe is arranged beneath the pleat, so that to all intents and purposes
enough. Fat was fate in those days and no more to be changed than a
CT-
AN AGENCY IS KNOWN BY THE COMPANIES IT KEEPS We Keep the Best. The Best by Test. TIME TRIED AND FIRE TESTED. We Represent Locally The Leading Fire Insurance Company of the World, the ROYAL; the Oldest Fire Insurance Company in America, The INSURANCE COMPANY of NORTH AMERICA; the Leading Fire Insurance Company of America, the AETNA; the Company with the Largest Premium Income in the United States, The HARTFORD FIRE; the Largest Fire Insurance Company in the United States, The HOME of New York; and the Oldest, Strongest and most Reliable Live Stock Insurance Company in the World, the INDIANA AND OHIO, now operated and backed financially by the TWO HAUT FORDS (Hartford Fire and Hartford Accident and Indemnity). G. W. ROBERTSON & SON Phone 114. Liberty, Ind.
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Eat no pork or pork products unless they are cooked if you would be certain of avoiding trichinosis. This is a warning issued bv the Rureau of Animal Industry of the United States Department of Agriculture, especially to those who are in the habit of eating raw ham or special forms of sausage containing raw pork and made to be eaten uncooked. The records show that the number of cases of trichinosis a serious, painful, and often fatal disease resulting from trichina1 increases during the holidays, partly because of bog-killing time and partly because farmers frequently make up special forms of sausage which are eaten without cooking. To avoid trichinosis no form of pork in the raw state, pcluding dried or smoked sausages and" hams, should be eaten. All pork used as food should be cooked thoroughly, as trichiiue, the minute organisms which cause this deadly disease, die and therefore become harmless when subjected to a temperature of 140 F. or higher. The fact that these organisms may remain alive and active in uncooked pork makes the latter, say Department meat specialists, a menace to life and health wherever it is eaten. Everyone should remember this simple rule of food hygiene: t'ook pork well. A practical rule is to cook pork until it has lost its red color throughout all portions, or. if a trace of this color is still p.esent at least until the fluids of the meat have become more or less jellied. The Federal meat inspectors do not inspect pork or pork products to determine the presence or absence of the organisms causing trichinosis, as even careful micioseopic examination it unreliable. In inspected establishments the inspectors do, however, require that pork which is to be made into products
to be eaten raw shall be heated sufficiently or subjected for considerable periiods to extreme cold to destroy the harmful organisms. This requirement does not reach all pork products made to Im? eaten raw, since the Federal government inspects only establishments preparing products to be shipped in interstate commerce. It should be noted that the special treatment required by the Hureau of Animal Industry to be given to pork
products meant to be eaten raw must not be interpreted as an indorsement of such dietetic practices. The measures are taken primarily to reduce the risks taken by persons who ignorantly, carelessly, or willfully eat such products. It remains that the safest plan is to eat no pork products of any kind raw.
for them by mixing equal parts of cracked corn, oats and wheat. Feed this in avdeep litter, so that the birds will have to scratch it out grain by grain.
land thereby get the exercise that is so ; kidneys
necessary to their good health. Any breeding flock will relish and be benefited by a mash made by thorough -
jly mixing:
(0 lbs. cornmeal (iO lbs. wheat middlings 30 lbs. wheat bran 10 lbs. alfalfa meal 10 lbs. oil meal 50 lbs. beef scraps
1 lh eilt ! Khlney 1'iUs. procured at the I'alace Drug i io. s.ui. .Store, and they relieved me."
reed this mash dry and place it before ( the birds for several hours through the !
middle of the day. One of the most important factors in any mash for breeding birds is beef scraps. They contain a high percentage
of protein which not only help to put
the birds in good condition but enables them tojmpart strong vitality to the hatching eggs. Oreen material for breeding birds may consist of the stuff that can be obtained or prepared most easily, such as sprout
ed oats, cabbage, beets, mangels or small i
potatoes. " This method of feeding will put breeding birds in splendid condition by the time eggs are desired for hatching and they can then be given a bountiful supply of each of the different kinds of food, so as to furnish them with the large surplus of nutriment necessary for the production of a sufficient number of hatching eggs. Their grain ration and supply of green food should be increased to as large a quantity as they will clean up and the mash can be left before them alj the time. If a liberal supply of either buttermilk or skim milk can also be fed regularly, it will prove very helpful. Each of these is rich in protein and will therefore make it possible to decrease the amount of beef scraps in the mash about one-half.
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A !U'S KIDNEY
PILLS
Sold by all Dea!ers.FVice50c Foster -Milburn Co. R-ops. Buffalo.N.Y
partmciit to demonstrate the commercial feasibility of producing potash and byproducts from kelp with a view to put the industry on a sound economic basis. I'lans have been formulated for erecting and operating, at some advantageous point on the coast of southern California, a plant with a daily capacity of not less than 2( Ml tons of raw kelp, in order that
the necessary experiments may be conducted. It is Imped that these experiments will result in the establishment of a potash industry which will prove profitable and M'rmanent and render this country independent of foreign sources in normal times. Annual Report of Secretary of Agriculture.
addition to the
regular
food
s.
In
plenjof grit, shell and charcoal should be supplied, as each of these is of gonie benefit to the breeding hen and-will make it easier for her to produce a goodly supply of desirable Tiatching eggs. The ground oyster shell is especially important, as it is absolutely necessary to the production of hard-shelled eggs. Hardshelled hatching eggs are much more to be desired than thin or medium-thick shelled ones, as they are not so likely to get cracked or brokeu during incubation, do not get chilled as easily, and their contents are kept from evaporating too rapidly. There is no element of "luck" in the feeding of breeding birds. Results a maximum number -of healthy, vigorous chicks are sure to come to any poultry owner who realizes that breeding birds must be got into tip-top condition before they can produce the right kind of hatching eggs, and then uses good judgment in feeding to obtain such condition.
POTASH FROM KELP.
BEFORE YOU BUY A CAR SEE THE COLE EIGHT
The car that takes all the hills on high 73 horse-power, 127-inch wheel base, tires 454 by 35.. The only 8-cylinder car with the power and class on the market for less than $2,000. Seven Passenger Cole Eight Touring Car, $1,695 . VourSAsvr Cole Eight . J Roadster, $1,095 Seven Passenger Cole-Springfield Toursedan, $2,395. -Four Passenger Cole-Springfield Tourcoupe, $2,395. One thing about the Cole they put out a good car every year.. The factory being at Indianapolis you can get repairs back the same day ordered.. Fifty hour service book with every car.. Good at any garage.
FOR DEMONSTRATION CALL Chas. Farlander or W. L. Wood Phone 145 LIBERTY, IND. Phone 15R
FEEDING POULTRY BREEDING STOCK.
Dry Zensal Moist Zensal
The fact that Zensal is made to reach the two distinct types of Eczema should appeal to all skin sufferers. Tetter, salt rheum and dry eczema should be treated with Dry Zensal.
For weeping skin use Moist Zensal. 75c a jar. H. G. RICHARDSON
(Rv (J. E. Conkev.) Improper feeding of breeding birds is often responsible for their inability to produce a sufficient number of hatching eggs or enough fertile eggs possessing the vitality necessary for the production of strong, vigorous chicks. Such los and woiry could to a great extent be very easily overcome, for it is not at all difficult to feed breeding birds properly. What they need is to be fed first for condition to be fed for a gain in strength and vitality, so that when hatching eggs are needed they 'w ill be able to produce a maximum number of large, even-sized, fertile eggs of strong vitality. To necure these results the method of feeding is perhaps more important than the food itself. As a feed, good laying rations cannot lie improved upon. Feeding for condition should begin with the selection of the breeding birds. Do this about the middle of December. During the latter part of December and the early part of January do not attempt to get eggs. Feed the birds enough to keep their strength and vigor on. the increase, but not enough to upj fv them
In 1911 the Rureau of Soils was authorized by Congress to make a survey of the nation's resources in fertilizer materials, particularly in potash, for which
this country was entirely dependent upon I the German mines. As a result of this!
reconnaissance it became evident that the largest and most immediately available source of potash in this count ry was the giant kelps of the Pacific coast. As a result of the Department's investigations and the prohibition by Ger
many of the exportation of potash salts American manufacturers have erected eight large plants in southern California for the extraction of potash from kelp. On September 1, 1010, about 123,000 tons of raw kelp had been harvested and treated, yielding approximately 10 of dry kelp. The plants now in operation, owing to the present abnormal prices for jotash, are devoting relatively little attention to the elaboration of processes for the recovery of by-products. If this situation continues, they probably will not be able to produce potash at a profit when conditions become normal. In the circumstances it seems desirable for the De-
IN THE UNION CIRCUIT COURT. JANUARY TERM, 1517.
Rtate of Indiana 1 8S Union County j Charles K. White, Tlalntiff
vs.
So. 5197. J Divorce.
Jessie n. White, Defendant
Notice is hereby Riven, that the plain tin in the above entitled cause has this day Ided in my office his petition and allidavlts ntr.ilnst defendant for divorce. And it ap
pearing from nald complain and affidavits,
that sain oeienaani is a neeesnury puny to said suit and that she Is a non-resident of the state of Indiana. Therefore, said deiendant is hereby no
tified of the pendency of said suit and j
that the same win De cauea tor inai on the 2nd day of April. 1917, the same belnj? the first Judicial day of the April Term 1917 of said Court, to be begun and held In the Court House in Liberty, Union County, Indiana, on the 2nd day of April, 1917, at which time said defendant Is required to nnswer or demur to said petition or stand In default. (SKA LI Witness the clerk and seal of said Union Circuit Court at Liberty, Indiana, this 29th day of December, 1916.. THOSi. J. TKMl'LKXN. Clerk of the Union Circuit Court. Walter F. Possert, Atty. for plaintiff. 5t 22
Styles That Speak Emphatically of
Smartness
i) ' i' v l V. . , 1 1 I
MfC.Il P.urn. N. 7577-7585
Two of the many McCall Designs for February
End-of-the-season dresses that are practical, attractive and easily reproduced at small expense hy the home dressmaker.
McCH P.tlwn N'o.
McCALL PATTERNS FOR FEBRUARY NOW ON SALE
The Hutcherson Dept. Store Successor to C. F. BOND LIBERTY, INDIANA
