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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 25 Sep 1924, p. 9

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Mange Mites of I Hogs Cause Loss S^^Pest '. *: jfV [!'.*•*^ During Cold Months When Most Troublesome Hogs Are Marketed. {Prepared by the United State* Department of Agriculture.) Heavy losses of pork products due to mange mites of hogs have been reported lately to the United States Department of Agriculture by its inspectors in the Central West. In addition to being an irritution to hogs, resulting in general unthriftiness, mange mites cause meat losses running into hundreds of thousands of dollars anuually, according to recent Information obtained. Reports by J. Q. Wilson, chief veterinary inspector of the bureau of animal industry stationed in South Dakota, are now being studied by department specialists from an economic, as well as from a veterinary standBtflht. Through the courtesy of H, i?v Veenker, superintendent of a large packing house in Sioux Falls, S. D., Doctor Wilson obtained sufficient ^evidence of avoidable losses to suggest concerted action in reducing the ravages of the mange parasite. Damage Vital Parts. Fully 40 per cent of the hogs slaughtered in South Dakota during the winter months of 1023-24 showed evidence of the mange mites, though only about one-half of that number were sufficiently affected as to cause definite losses. The mange parasites damage the hams, bacons and picnics principally--the parts of the hog that are of greatest value. The pest is most troublesome during the colder months, when most hogs are marketed. The damage to hog carcasses caused by the mites assumes the form of roughened skins and inflammation. In some cases the meat Is entirely unfit for food. In other instances the in- Jury places the pork products from such hogs in the lower grades, which have a reduced market value of from 3 to 5 cents. The observations made In South Dakota are, believed" to be typical of other Important swinegrowing states. Loaa Preventable. , The United States Department of Agriculture points out that losses due to mange mites are largely preventable. Treatment consists in the appll- Handling Clay Soils Is . Most Difficult Problem Of all the various types of soli to be found, none when properly handled are more productive than the heavy clay. The very fineness of these soils gives them a large water-holding capacity, which will adapt them to the production^ of small grains and grasses. The management of these soils presents special problems for consideration. Their fineness gives them a tendency to bake and to require more than the usual amount of labor in cultivation. The lack of sufficient surface or underdrainage makes them cold and wet In the spring, and when there is a lack of vegetable or organic matter, they are hard to work and less productive. One of the great drawbacks with this type of soil is the fineness of the -soil particles. To offset this condition, the farm practice should be so arranged that the operations will systematically open up and make these soils more porous. Special attention must be given to the time and type of plowing and cultivation. Heavy clay soils should be fall plowed when the moisture content Is right. If worked when wet, they are apt to puddle and bake. While It Is necessary to plow these soils deeply, the depth should be lowered gradually. The early working of these sails, in the spring, Is most Important. cation of various simple remedies; ranging from mixtures of- kerosene and lard to specially prepared mitecontrol dips. The hogs may be treated by hand application, hog oilers, spraying, medicated hog wallows, or by dipping. In applying the treatment swine owners should always treat the entire herd, whether all animals show infection or not. Medicated hog wallows are one of the most practical means of reducing mange-mite infection, since the' instinct habit of hogs is to wallow in water. By medicating the water In properly constructed wallows the remedies take effect with a minimum expenditure of money, time and labor. ' Farmers' Bulletin 1085, "Hog Mites and Hog Mainge." discusses practical methods of control and eradication. HAUNTED YEARS, si MAN FINDS HE IS NOT MUKQE&ER ,*• i ^ - Kefep Flies Away From Stock by Using Sprays Every day we have calls for some jsort of spray which wilt keep flies away from cattle. The following Is suggested by the New Jersey experiment station: The common cattle flies which gather on the backs of cows and annoy them so that milk production Is decreased, can be eliminated by a homemade spray mteture that costs only 1 cent a day for each cow. A spray mixture recommended by. J. K. Bartlett, professor of dairy Husbandry at the college of agriculture at New Brunswick, consists of the following Ingredients: 4% quarts of coal tar dip, 4% quarts fish oil, 3 quarts of coaloll, 3 quarts of whale oil, 1% quarts of oil of tar, 3 pounds of laundry soap. Dissolve the soap in water and add the other Ingredients. Mix the combination thoroughly and bring the whole up to 30 gallons by adding lukewarm water. This spray will not injure the coats of the animals. It Is well to spray twice daily; once In the morning after milking, and again in the afternoon.. Thirty gallons will spray 40 cows for ten days at « eost of 1 cent par cow per day. -- Use -of Fly Sprays and ^ Different Repellants The use of fly sprays and repellants offer some relief at milking time, but it Is doubtful if thorough spraying will affect the milk flow. Trials at the Missouri experiment station and recently at the Kansas station have tended to show no Increase in milk flow following liberal spraying. The sprays used in the Kansas test were partially successful In reducing the number of flies during milking time at a cost of one to two cents per cow per day. The decrease In milk flow which occurs during fly time is largely due to short pastures and Kot weather. To see that the cows have sufficient feed, water and shade is therefore of primary Importance. Making Harness Repairs The next time you are working In the shop on a rainy day, look over your equipment, and see if you have the material to repair a set of harness In a hurry. Fail plowing Is a strain on harness that has been used all season. You will need a vise or home-inude harness clamp, an assortment of needles, a ball of shoe or harness thread, a sharp knife, two awls, a piece of harness wax, a revolving punch, a small riveter, some leather, buckles and rings. Although It takes but a short time to drive to town, this equipment often saves a good share of the day when the unexpected break comes during the early forenoon, y FIGURING CONTENTS OF SILO MADE EASY BY SIMPLE TABLE A simple table, worked out at the lows Agricultural college. Is endorsed as practical and good by the animal husbandry workers at the New York State college at Ithaca. They point out that tables would hardly be needed if silos contained nothing but air, or water, or rocks, or sand. But silage packs down, so that the -higher the silo, tLe greater rhe pressure on the bottom layers, which means more pouflds to the square foot at the bottom of the silo. Other factors, such as time of filling and condition of corn, also cause a variation In weight. The following table shows the average weight at various depths of a cubic foot of silage; the first figure Indicating feet and the second pounds: 10-2b, 12-27%, 14-29, 16-30%, 18-32, 20-33%, 22-34%, 24-36. 26-37%, 28-38 1-3, 30-39%, 32-40%, 34-41%, 30-42%. 38-44, 40-45, 42-46, 44-47, 46-48. 50-50, 00-54. If a 12 by 40-foot silo contained 30 feet of silage after being allowed to settle and the exact number of tons left in the silo Is wanted, the area would first be figured by multiplying half the diameter multiplied by Itself times 3.1416. So 6x6x3.1416 equals 113.1 square feet. The total amount of silage was 113.1x36 or 4071.6 cubic feet. The amount fed off was 113.1x16 or 1809.6 cubic feet. from the table, the average of 36 feet of silage Is 42% pounds for each cubic foot, or a total of 4071:6x42% or 174,000 pounds. The amount fed off. however, averaged only 30% pounds to a cubic foot--as the table shows. In other words, 1809.6x30% equals 53,175 pounds fed out. The difference is 118,825 pounds remaining, or approximately 59 tons. Increase Wheat Yield Early fall plowing has been shown by both the Nebraska and Kansas experiment stations to Increase the yield of winter wheat. The tractor is the best power for this work. If the tractor overheats during the hot weather, some of the common causes are retarded spark, or late Ignition, carbon deposits in cylinders, poor lubrication, a slipping or lost fan belt, a clogged radiator due to dirty water. FADM FACTSFC Hessian Fly Infestation Volunteer wheat is one of the greatest sources of Hessian fly Infestation to fall-sown wheat. Conditions that are favorable to the germination of volunteer wheat are conducive also to the early emergence of the flyj Since this is the only food present, the flies infest It and later^ broods attack the regular crop. The destruction of all volunteer wheat before planting is, therefore, an Important step in Hessian fly control. Live stock will make the farmer's tutor* brighter by uiakiMS tfae soil better. • • • Gather eggs twice a week during the summer. The extra work will pay In better quality marketed. • • » Damage* from weevil And other stored grain Insects can be prevented. Ask your county agent how. ~ • • • For real success, farming most be recognized as a mode of life as well as a means of making a living. • • • It is Especially necessary to make use of the silo In a season when the corn crop has been damaged by hail or drought. , • • • Hog cholera caused a loss of more than $27,00(7.000 to the xwine industry of the United States during the%ear April JO, 1884. Attempts to End Life After Suffering Mental Torture Reveals Strange Story. Birmingham, Ala.--Oliver Cameras has been returned to Birmingham from Portland, Ore., where an attempt at suicide gave first Intimation of the mental turmoil through which he has passed in his efforts to forget what he believed to be murder committed more than 22 years ago. A wanderer over the earth for more than a score of years, Cameron has faced almost unbelievable hardships in his efforts to forget the crime he thought he had committed. With the haunting memory always with him, hs has been traveling steadily. There Is a touch of the pathetic In his story. Always, he says, he wanted a home of his own, with a wife and children. His fondest memories Etre those of the days when he was planning his future, before the time that he is alleged to have assaulted W^J. Oay. ' / Walks Hundreds of Milee. On leaving Birmingham In 1902 after shooting Gay, Cameron says;< be walked hundreds of miles In his efforts to escape arrest He joined the navy, traveling to the farthermost parts of the earth, but always there was the mem6ry of his deed to torture him. Following the navy service he became a wanderer over the country. Pursued relentlessly by the thoughts of what he had done, he kept ever moving. Illusions of authorities following were with him constantly, and he forever was attempting to foil his Imaginary pursuers. He used a different name in every town he entered. Illusions of Authorities Following Were With Him Constantly. and made no efforts to communicate with friends for fear that he might be apprehended through the correspondence. At last, driven to desperation by what had grown to be fanatic thinking of the subject, he threw himself Into a river at Portland, Ore., with the hopes of destroying his haunting memories forever. Confesses "Crimfc* He was rescued, however, and In a moment of laxity after he had reached the hospital, confessed to the crime he thought he had committed. Portland authorities communicated with the Birmingham sheriff's office. Gay, the man whom he nad shot, recovered from the wound. Indictments on a> sault with intent to murder and carrying concealed weapons charges had been returned by the erand Jury at the time of the shoaling, but long since had been stored in the musty files of the sheriff's office. None of the present members of Jhe sheriff's force recalled the crime. A lengthy search was necessary to locate t'Jiter indictments, and after they had been again brought to light, considerable difficulty was experienced in obtaining money with which to return Cameron to Birmingham. Years of privation and mental torture have left their mark oA Cameron. He IS emaciated, his face wears a drawn expression, and his mentality has begun to weaken under the constant strain. He goes about the county Jail as a man In' a daae, D<tf sure why he's there. Rip Up Fire Escape to Free Heavy Woman New York.--Firemen were called to rescue an elghty-flve-year-old woman weighing 300 pounds when she became wedged between the ladder and railing of an upper West side tenement house fire escape in an attempt to reach th«* roof, where, she said, she often sat looking at the stars. The fire escape was wrecked hefore she coald be libers ted. 40-Carat Diamond Is Found in Arkansas Mine Little Rock, Ark.--A blue-white diamond weighing 40% carats was discovered recently In the Pike county mine of the Arkansas Diamond corporation, it became known here. The stone is tvfo inches long, an inch wide and one-quarter of an inch thick. The largest diamond previously taken from the mine weighed 20 carats mod was sold for $2,500. •, Toads Found in Mailt Philadelphia. Pa.--Four blinking horned toads from Arizona, after traveling across the continent In the malls, were discovered at* the post office by Hugh Mclntyre, dispatcher. He found them when the head of one"toad peered through a hole In the package. p. -- Boy Swallows Toy ; v Schenectady. N. Y.--Physicians t* moved from the stomach of Michael Mottolo, five years old, a brass angel which bad jf^caroivaL g Thieves Leave Gems, but, Man! That Pantry! Baltimore, Md.--A queer lot of honest thieves visited th« home of Warren Emmart, in Liberty road, Rockdale, according to his report to Catonsvllle police. The intruders forced a Vear window and made a tour of the house. Jewelry and money In the bedrooms and silver in the dining room were untouched. But what they did to a freshly cooked ham In the icebox and some home-made bread In the breadbox was a crime, according to Emmart. j«HCHWHKHCHKHWH8H5H5H«H«H0H0HKH5HW New Fall Models BOYS LOCKED IN TRUNK FOUND DEAD Baby Clasp Innocently Snap* During Game. Chicago.--A three-year-old girt Innocently snapped the clasp on the outside of a trunk into which her brother and a boy cousin had hidden while at play. They were found suffocated several hours later by their parents. The trunk tragedy occurred at 192Q Burling street, the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dumele. The victims were Peter Dumele, five years old, and his twelve-year-old cousin. Frank Hoelilch. The Hoellich boy's mother, who was married recently to Paul Konpas of 915 Concord place, had brought Frank and his ten-year-old brother, Antone. to play with Peter and his three-year-old sister. Rose, while she accompanied Mrs. Dumele on a shopping trip to the loop. When Mr. Dumele returned home late in the afternoon he found the little girl asleep and Antone playing with John Corn, eleven years old, of 1624 Clybourn avenue, near the house. He asked the hoys where Peter and Frank were. The boys replied they supposed they had gone over into Lincoln park to play. The father searched the neighborhood, but could find no one who had seen thenij The mothers returned from the shopping trip. Little Rose was awakened from her nap and questioned. "O, Pete and Frankle are sleeping in the trunk in the front room,"'the child explained. Father and mother rushed to the locked trunk and tore frantically at the clasp. The Hd was flung back and the huddled forms of the hoys were Inside. Mrs. Dumele's screams attracted neighbors, who summoned the police and pulmotor squad 10. The firemen worked for nearly an hour before giving up attempts to resuscitate the children. Transplant Bone From Leg to Spinal Column • Baltimore, Md.--Doctors at Johns Hopkins*hospital have performed what they believe to»t>e the most remarkable bone-graft operation In the history of the institution, in the transplanting of a piece of bone from the lower right leg to the spinal column of Forrest Wleford, thirty-eight, of Newport, W. Va. Wleford suffered a dislocated vertebra In an automobile accident three years _ago, and his condition became gradually worse until he was brought to Johns Hopkins four weeks ago. Physicians found that complications had set In which necessitated removal of the diseased vertebra. It being impossible to shorten the spine, a piece of shin bone was shaped Into the form of a vertebra and inserted in the weakened part of Wleford's back. He was then placed In a plaster cast. The operation was announced as successful. Squirt Ether Into Air Then Rob Hotel at Ease Paris.--A hotel keeper In the old Temple quarter In Paris was robbed by a new trick of squirting ether into the air In the rooms where the manager and servants slept. The Job was done so neatly that the household awoke next morning with headaches and discovered several thousand dollars' worth of jewels, currency andfurniture gone. When the police were called they found the air faintly Impregnated with ether. Shock Kills Cow Wichita, Kans--When It Is decided whether the city or county has Jurisdiction, the claim of Mrs. Elizabeth Cronk of $125 tor the loss of a cow. as she alleges through fright, will be considered. It Is claimed that the woman's cow was contentedly munching hay In the barnyard when a giant blast was set off to break an Ice Jam In the Big Arkansas river, nearby. The detonation so disturbed the animal's nerves that she died. Veterinarians will testify as to the nerves of a cow i(nd the effect of shock on them. ' . Dog Makes Long Trip Portsmouth. Ohio.--Buster, an Airedale dog which W. F. Wedehrook sold two years ago while visiting in Los Angeles, came back to Ills old home near here recently, dirty apd covered with cockleburs. After a Joyous demonstration at the sight of his old master the dog fell asleep and slept 24 hours. Buster's home with Wpdebrook Is now a permanent one. Real "Lion Tamer** * Nairobi. Kenvon Colony. Africa.--Attacked In the forest by a lion while he was unarmed. P. C. Forrester, a visiting Englishman, only escaped from the ferocious beast by stradllng Its back and riding it for several yards into a clearing. There some of Forrester's companions shot and killed It. > ' r™ Heavyweight Dead Berlin.--The biggest man in many has Just died. He weighed 500 pounds,- The wardrobe of a schoolgirl, especially If she is going to boarding school. Is a far more complex problem than It once was. Life there, says a fashion writer in the New York Times, is less simple, children are more sophisticated. and their style of dress has changed with the years and the seasons just as that of their elders has changed. More and more children are permitted to exercise their own taste, to express their Individuality in dress. The simplicity which is the declared standard in fashions for children Is, In the better things, an expensive luxury--also like that Of the grown-ups. The uncomplex, straightline types that have been In vogue for several seasons blur the line between the junior styles and those more mature and many of the frocks the smartly dressed child wears these days are built on very much the same plan as her mother's. American girls have always known what they wanted, beginning with the wee ones--only In the past they have had less assurance in expressing themselves. Nowadays, however, the de? signers of exclusive frocks for children will say that quite as much thought, skill and diplomacy are required to pledse their young patrons as in gowning the leaders of fashion. Youth learns quickly. The youngsters absorb ideas. They have become qnlte the connoisseurs. From them one hears all about the "silhouette," color scheme, one-piece, ensemble and all the other terms that express the npto- date costume--also, all that anyone else could know about the shingle, the Dutch cut, the boyish bob and all the other bobs. No severer critics can be found than one's schoolmates. Comparisons may be 111-mannertd, but they are felt. The girl who Is correctly dressed, perhaps ultrasmart. Is quickly an acknowledged person of distinction. Every woman knows that, quite apart from every other consideration, her small daughter must meet this situation. Styles for children were never more attractive than the models show them to be this season. Reflecting the features of clothes for older women, the new things for girls between the ages of ten and sixteen are chic, artistic and lacking In the extremes that have already seen their day. It Is now conventional to be conservative. Kimono Pattam as Guide. The kimono pattern, after which so many gowns are cut. continues to be ditlonal vlrfue of being more Interestthe guide for informal frocks. It will jug. in a dark-blue slipover twill conbe the foundation especially used for cession Is made to the navy model, utility garments, as well as form any i blouse and skirt all In one, with a others. Anything which so simplifies la^je sailor collar and a touch of metal the making of frocks of many different in the buttons that show on a tiny vesl kinds of material will not soon be and on the long sleeves. given up. Of course, the ways in which this kimono shape may be treated, varied and disguised are numerous. Of Itself, and In plain good*," It Is s tub frock, a sport dress, a tunic or blouse, or any other sort of practical garment No pattern less primitive offers such Inducement for the most engaging styles of needlework-- peasant embroidery, Russian cross stitch, French white work, braiding, applique--every form and phase of decorative elaboration now In vogue. With the kimono, one piece Is a common mode. But there are many novel and diverging fashions to make the schoolgirl happy and proud and to give her mother reflected glory. Ix>ng, tight sleeves and several other hew styles are conspicuous In the models for fall for all practical frocks, the schoolroom and street dress. Following the latest . Parisian styles, they are shown also In many of the gowns of softer materials. With both the very long sleeve and the coat model white cuffs are worn, which match the eton or shallow round collar and give to a dark wool dress the daintiest and quaintest appearance. Next to the sleeve the most Important Innovation is the tunic blouse, which Is much liked, particularly by the girl of tall, slim lines. This Is a tremendously useful type of frock, for It makes possible several changes of tunic with one slip. Those done In needlework are an absolute fad among girls wtJo are modlshly dressed. The circular flounce, too, adds novelty to some of the, latest models, and some charming frocks , for little girls , are done In this way--adorable things for dancing ccliooL Plaiting Is Important. Some exceedingly smart frocks are shown with a I straight one-piece tunic to the hip, i lengthened with a fine-plaited flounce, I which forms a smart, piquant skirt. This sort of thing is Just what the girl needs who is adding to her Inches j rapidly, who is self-conscious and a bit J gauche. In one new design plaited material Is attached to a raglan yoke Just below the shoulder and forms the frock, with a straight-length back and front, held in slightly with a narrow strap sash and tied In a bow, with long ends at each side. One-Piece Frock Is Favorite. In design the one-piece frock Is the highest bidder for favol*--a straight model, the line cut across just above the hip by stitching on the skirt, which may be straight and narrow, slightly on the bias, or plaited. The frock, with its unbroken line from collar to hem. Is exceedingly smart. In the new models it is given a trim, almost military air by a touch of braid of a contrasting color and rows of buttons. For example, this little tailored affair is presented by an American designer in Dutch blue kasha made in straight, unbelted llnea, the sleeves tight-fitting and to the wrist. Down the front from collar to low waistline and at each side, outlining the top of a pocket and at right angles to the knee, Is a strip of scarlet braid two Inches wide with a row of dark pearl | buttons sewn In the middle. With this practical, stylish dress for the girl of fourteen to sixteen are worn collar and cuffs of plain, unstlffened linen, finished In white needlework. The sailor suit which became almost a uniform a few years ago has been superseded by other styles of much the same character, which serve the same occasions, but they have the ad- DEMAND Over IM^M kav* testified that TANLAC r e l i e v e d t h e m e f t Stomach Troubifc Rheumatism, Hal-Nutrition, Sleeplessness Nervousness, Loss of Appetite^ Loss of Weight, Tn-pid Liver or Constipation. Ask Anyone Who Ha* Taken TANLAC «• MILLION BOTTUHI •QUI LADIES WANTED to work whole or part timo sell- , K ing various lines of high-£rad<^ V f merchandise to their friends oi|> big commission. Write the Whitf "' i Dove Co., Oconomowoc, Wis. *, [• 1 ' ' ' ' I • m ' Returned to Native Sod I With shells screaming overhead and the rattle of machine guns in the air, an officer of the Irish guards in the front line trenches near Givenchy In 1915, noticed some pinks growing In the garden of a shell-battered cottage between the lines. That night he succeeded in digging up some of th». plants with an entrenching tool. Eventually they reached a garden in Sur»' rey, where they have bloomed and ii»* creased. Now plants grown fro* * J these war refugees have been takes hack to Givenchy by an officer of th* Imperial War Graves commission, and their white flowers are to be seen hi the Guards' cemetery, and by the Memorial of the West Lancashire territorials.-- London Times. A French model along these lines, designed for a young lady of fifteen, has several rows of braid added to the collar at the back, which form a trimming of several perpendicular straps at each side, well below the hip, and down to the hem In a single row. leaving a space the width of a panel In the front. This frock has the popular narrow strap of the cloth loosely tied at one side. This trimming with braid and buttons Is quite the thing and Is done In many different and delightful ways. One of the prettiest of the new models for little girls is a brown wool rep in coat-frock lines, straight and boxy, with a wide belt of the material stitched on, and finished with one end turned up and stitched In a point. Short pieces of scarlet and white braid are sewn at close spaces upward from the belt, and a tied strap and ends of the cloth finish one side under the arm. Large red buttons close the dress at one side, from belt to shoulder. Collar and cuffs of white cloth bordered with red are worn with It. Ribbon Used for Trimming AH of these simple frocks, suitable for school, for the street or for gen eral wear In the antnmn--whether they are cut In a tailored one-piece coat frock or a variant of the sailor su'f--are trimmed with braid, buttons or ribbon*. A few of the more severe type are stitched or tucked. These new braids and fancy ribbons are a distinct feature of the fall market In trimmings. They are displayed with commendable effect on frocks for girls of all ages, from the kindergarten kid to the grown-up college freshman. Ribbon is. of course, used most to trim the softer materials, the crepes, voiles, satins and all the novelty fabrics of which the afternoon frocks and the pretty dresses for dancing parties snd young people's teas are made. In the latest Imported and American designs, fancy gauze, metal and plain satin ribbons, are shown In (lutings, gathered frills and plain bands. However it may be Introduced, ribbon Is youthful. It Is dainty and gives a dressy finish to the simplest frock. In a sweetly pretty little dress a young lady might wear to tea or dinner, built of crepe de chine of aquamarine blue, the long-walsted tunic bodice has short kimono sleeves, and an apron front ties at the back over a slip of the same material. Silver and rose ribbon Is fluted In short strips to form a border around the bottom of tunic and sleeves, and on the ends of a long, narrow strap of the material which Is caught at the back of the round neck and loosely tied In front. Taffeta and Velvet White taffeta and black velvtt,>,»l* ways a lovely combination, are at their best at present in an evening wrap. The wrap Is of white taffeta with a wide black velvet footing. Tiny black velvet flowers are scattered hit or miss over the wrap, which fastens with black velvet streamers of very wide ribbon. ~ .. Brings Out Luster of Bronze A little sweet oil applied to bronze* after they are dusted, followed by a brisk rubbing with a chamois skin, will bring out their rich tones. Waistlines Scarcely Exist, Says an Authority In the morning frankly short. In the afternoon often ankle length and even trailing on the fl<»or In the evening, skirt lengths vary according TO the type of wearer, style of costume and the occasion. But all lengths agree on two thttogs. says a fashion authority In the Indlannpolls News, that hacks must be quite flat and. If waistlines are Indulged in at all. they must be very, very ions. Only the merest bint of a returning dlrectolre period Is shown in a few Jabots and high collars. 6r here snd there s slim. waistcoat. Some of the frocks and roost of the coats hang straight from the shoulders, hut some cwats flare out widely and frock fullness varies considerably below the waistlines. There are not many side drapes hut godets and circular pieces abound. And what a surprise not to see more tailored suits! However.. their cousins, the " coat dresses, resemble them closely with their .waistcoats and blouses and at- The three-piece costume Is exceedingly smart and the demand for them I is brisk. Stamped Garments Shown Among Summer Novelties A thrifty suggestion is cutnained in the quantities of stamped garments that are shown among the summer novelties. Lingerie gowns, negligees, blouses of silk, voile, crepe, musllu. linen, are stamped in pretty patterns, to be • crobs-stitched, traced, embroidered by clever women sccomplished In needlework. Overblouses of crepe de chine, bstiste, voile or pussy willow, ready made, are stamped about the neck and sleeves with some needlework design to be done^ji colors, after the Idea of the peasant embroideries so much in vogue. And '»y way of Inspiration, "peasant blouses" ready .to wear; these being simple white blouses, smocked In yoke form about the neck and shaping cuffs at the wrist la bright colored eeiMM «C Am* Sea Lion's Good Appetite An adult sea Hon has been known (• eat 44 salmon n dav. THIS PRESCRIPTION FOB KIDNEYS No Drags--Jut Roots aad Rote 6 Ounce Bottle, 75 ceata Tears ago Dr. Carey said, "Wh«i, backache comes get after your kidneys --and don't waste any time." "Right at the start, go to your drug* gist and ask for Dr. Carey's Marshroot Prescription No. 777; take It as directed until backache ceases and yoff eyes are clear and bright." For more than 40 years Dr. Can* specialized In di* eases of the kidn«y and bladder, and when in the helglfet of his remarkably' busy life he deciied to dispense his most effective kidney and bladder p r e s c r i p t ! o a through the bettor druggists, he helped t h o u s a n d s w f y n could not afford (a go to him for trea£> ment. Thousands of unobservant peopts have kidney ailments and never kn It until too late. High colored urlnfc getting up in the night, and puffy ey«S tell the story. If you even suspect--start today wltk Dr. Carey's Marshroot Prescription No, 777. It will drive the poison from yonr kidneys and your druggist knows n|| about it. Druggists dispense lots of it It comelt both In liquid and tablet form. It will help you as it has a host of others. U it should not, if you aren't glad in oa* week's time that you bought it, mpney gladly returned--and only 75c. Ifyoar local druggist hasn't It he can get It from the Carey Medical Laboratories at Elmlra, N. Y. H DasialG. Cany, ILD. Pesky Bed-Bugs P.D.Q. Try Just one© P. D. Q--- Peaky Devils «}uietu»--as preventive or to rid B«d Bugs, Ko&chea. Fle»s ana Ants. Every family should use P D. Q. house cleaning time to guard against the Pesky Devils and to preveat moths. P. D. Q. Is not wi insect powder, but is a new chemical that kills inaects and their egg*. Each package contains, free, a pateaft spout, to enable you to gM to the hard-to-get-at places and saves the Juice. A 36 cent packase makaa one quart, enough to kill a million inserts ami their egna. Your druggist has it or get It for you. Mailed pre upon receipt of price br Owl Chemical worka. Haute. Ind. CLEARS COMPLEXION Recoov* *il UJuKXtiafsaaos. Hm a \ amootb. aolt ikifi baauOfttl. i ii ill--iltiII U Or ms* | prepaid. U«*uu (r»a, iMMi Writs ' Keep Stomtck snd Bowels Riglft , By ririn* baby tka hannlasa, fvdr Vasetable. infants' and children'•regulator. Mf&WNSiOirS SYRUP bring* astonishing, gratifying rcsolta tn baby's sumach digast Eftobo«dy sahnodu lbdo awte ltse emthoianf fa s tfana. Guaranteed from narcotics, opiates. alcohol and ill harmful ingrsdi. ants. Safe i satisfactory. At Alt Dtmmrn Use Mecca Compound Ointment TheGREAT BURN KF.MKPY for ALL KiNDSMjl SOKES. HURTS. PAIN and IN Ki AMMATtOHL 2 os. box Stc; 3 ox. tut* tOc: 6 os. tv* 7l>e: 18 ets. box *1.®, Hemorrftoidine Pile Treataeal for RECTA i. I KOI B! KS $'• ». H not su»jb1M £3

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