New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, June 29, 1917 Page: 2 of 8
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NEW ULM ENTERPRISE. NEW ULM, TEXAS
HAS GAINED 25 POUNDS
PLENTY TO EAT
BUT NO APPETITE
Tennessee Farmer Says He Came
Near Being Knocked Out
Last Summer.
Your Fruit Won’t
Spoil If You Use
«goD
luck
RED RUBBERS
TAetz Fit All
Standard Jan
Specially recommended for cold pack canning.
Send 2c stamp foe new book on presnrving or I Oc in
stamps for one dozen rings if you cannot get them at
your dealer a. Addreae Department 54
BOSTON WOVEN HOSE & RUBBER CO.
Cambridge. Masa.
Hit and Miss,
re-
FAVORITE OF FILMDOM
often see a man
spirited—that is,
are
her.
are
the
Reduce the cost of living by utilizing all
leftovers and having meatless dinners at
least three times a week.
Woman’s line of least
slstance is the
The turtle
chap—to him
snap.
Oh, yes, we
who is public
takes his spirits publicly.
It’s a wise lather who knows
his own son—a silly son who
noses on father.
So long as the family jars
confined to the flivver and
pantry all will be well.
Never tell a woman you
afraid you are unworthy of
Leave her alone; she’ll find It
out for herself soon enough.
clothes line.
is an optimistic
everything is a
Do you live in a bowl?
If you do, move out; and while you are preparing to move out, look
over the rim of the present.
That is what ails so many of us. We live in a bowl and never look
over its rim. We grow smaller and narrower and peskier until we are
an affliction to ourselves and an added burden to an already overburdened
world.
Nobody need live in a bowl. He can live on a plane, and the high
places are always within sight, if not of his eye, of his mind.
A fly struggling up the sides of a bowl, and slipping back at last to
be drowned in a flood of milk poured into it, typifies many men and
women?
The fly invited his own milky fate. He could have gotten out of the
bowl. He had wings. They were given him for escape from bowls and
other narrow spheres. We should blame ourselves, none other, if our
lives are narrow and unproductive and disappointing. We may have
been born in a mean and narrow environment. The fly may have been
hatched in the bowl. But we can get out because we can think.
So long as a man thinks he will grow, and so long as he grows there
is hope. Every man can travel far, for his thoughts may roam the world.
The newspapers, the public libraries, put a compartment in a train at
his disposal and give him a round-the-world ticket.
Every woman should give some thought every day to matters outside
her home. Every man should send his thoughts traveling in some chan-
nels besides those of his work, for a few minutes a day. In time the
woman will become a better housekeeper, the man a more skillful work-
man, for those mind excursions out of the bowl of their own affairs of
today.
Mother’s t
Cook Book
Great Lesson Is Taught by
Old Legend of the Hindus
The familiar mustard has a moral
tale told in Its connection by the Hin-
dus, a story whose moral is as pun-
gent as the flavor of the plant. A
mother, the legend runs, had lost her
only child, and, distracted, she carried
the little body from door to door, from
temple to temple,-crying out to priest
and doctor, to wise man and scholar,
“Oh, master, what can I do to save my
child?’’
Everywhere she was greeted by pity,
but no help came until one old sage
answered, “One thing will bring him
back to you, and one only—a handful
of mustard seed from a house in which
no child or loved one has ever died.”
With hope she hurried put on her
quest, but everywhere as she put the
question, “Has any loved one died in
this house?” the inmates would an-
swer, “Of a surety, for countless are
the hosts of the dead, and never was
there one so desolate as to leave none
to mourn the passing.”
And as she went the lesson sank in-
to her heart that her loss had but
joined her soul to the universal soul of ■
humanity; that there was none in all
the wide world to whom sorrow was
unknown, and, going back to the wise
man, she laid her little dead child at
his feet, crying out: “I Ifhve learned
my lesson. • Mine is but the common
IF YOU LIVE IN A BOWL GET OUT
OF IT OR AT LEAST LOOK OVER THE RIM
By ADA PATTERSON.
ffee tfiek
$6 XOcrk
Many Women in this Condition Re-
gain Health by Taking Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
of
MUL-EN-OL
I couldn’t do anything,
had this spell I weighed
and kept falling off until
to where I only weighed
Russians are illicitly distilling vodka
in defiance of prohibition.
“This Tanlac Just Took Right Hold
Me and Put Me on My Feet,” He
Says—Is Strong and Well and
Don’t Mind Work Now.
W. N. U., HOUSTON, NO. 26-1917.
Add Horrors of War.
A friend just phoned us, “I have just
thought of another great horror of
war,” he said excitedly. “Just think,
it is going -to take all of our chorus
men away.”
La Valliere Vanishing Cream
Will Aid You to Possess
A Beautiful Face
It cleanses, whitens and softens
the skin and prevents tan and
sunburn. Pure and absolutely
harmless. Buy it of your dealer.
If he will not supply you, send 35 cents to
The La Valliere CoM New Orleans
’T' I? HPT* 17 15 ring worm, other forms
ILi i of ECZEMA quickly
" driven out and healed
with MOTHER’S SHUB-SHOT ECZEMA
REMEDY. “Acts quickly. Works efficiently.”
Used successfully in private homes over thirty
vears. First time offered to the public. Satis-
’action assured. Price $1.00 postpaid.
SURE-SHOT REMEDY COMPANY
Sox 191. Fort Worth, Texas
STOMACH SUFFERERS 11
A stomach specialist advises this
Rltubarban, —-------------
Aqua Pura ------
S Tablespoonful after meals.F It makes a,
H whole pint; Druggists prepare it —Try IK
® Z W It should be prepared for il.OOl.
no more necessary
I H than Smallpox. Army
B B I ar cxP-ricnce has demonstrated
the almost miraculous effi-
cacy, and harmlessness, of Antityphoid Vaccination.
Be vaccinated NOV? by your physician, you and
your family. It is more vital than house Insurance.
Ask your physician, druggist, or send for “Have
you had Typhoid?” telling of Typhoid Vaccine,
results from us , and danger from Typhoid Carriers.
THE CUTTEB LABORATORY, BERKELEY, CAL.
pbopuciho vaccihss a szHuas usaaa u, s. sov. uczxss
F’^u-Tonic
Sold for 4? years. For Malaria,Chills I
and Fever. Also a Fine General
Strengthening Tonic. •“
DAISY FLY KILLER placed anywhere,
attracts and kills
ai I flies. Neat, clean,
ornamontal, convenient,
cheap. Lasts all season.
Made of metal, can't spill
or tip over; will not Soil
or injure anything. Guar-
anteed effective. Sold by
dealers, or 6 sent by ex-
press prepaid for $1.00.
HAROLD SOMERS, 150 DE KALB AVE.. BROOKLYN, N. Y.
“It may sound unreasonable, and you
may believe me or not, but after tak-
ing four bottles of Tanlac I have gained
25 pounds,” said J. B. Williams, a well-
known and prosperous farmer who re-
sides at Greenbrier, Tenn., near Nash-
ville, Tenn.
“I had a bad case of stomach trou-
ble last summer, and it came pretty
near knocking me out,” continued Mr.
Williams. “It was something like
nervous indigestion. I began to go
down hill. It looked like the more
medicine I took and the harder I tried
to get well, the worse I would get. We
had pretty near everything to eat, but
nothing tasted right, and I got so weak
and nervous
“Before I
1G0 pounds,
l I got down
I 135 pounds.
; “I am now back to my regular weight
again, and feel strong and well. My
appetite is simply fine now, and I don’t
mind my work. This Tanlac just took
right hold of me, and put me on my
feet.
“Well, sir, the second day after I be-
gan taking it, I got hungry and oh,
how good that old ham did taste! I
sleep fine now, too, and am not nerv-
ous like I was. Even the barking of
the dogs at night does not wake me up.
I “I never-believed a medicine could
■ be made that would do anybody as
much good as Tanlac has done me, and
I want to recommend it to anybody
who has suffered with the same trou-
ble I have.”
There Is. a Tanlac dealer in your
town.—Adv.
The Household Antiseptic
SICJO For Cuis or Burns
1 I Alter Shaving
WK/k-1 mm As a Mouth Wash
Mrs. Lindsey Now Keeps House For Seven.
Tennille, Ga.—“I want to tell you how much I have been benefited
by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. About eight years ago I
got in such a low state of health I was unable to keep house for three in
the family. I had. dull, tired, dizzy feelings, cold feet and hands nearly
all the time and could scarcely sleep at all. The doctor said I had a
severe case of ulceration and without an operation I would always
be an invalid, but I told him I wanted to wait awhile. Our druggist
advised my husband to get Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
and it has entirely cured, me. Now I keep house for seven and work
in the garden some, too. I am so thankful I got this medicine. I feel
as though it saved my life and have recommended it to others and
they have been benefited”.—Mrs. W. E. Lindsey, R. R. 3, Tennille, Ga.
If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medi-
cine Co. (confidential) fjynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened,
read and answered by a woman anil held in strict confidence.
Summer Dishes.
Delicious as the cucumber is to the
palate it has little nourishment. Its
value lies in "its mineral salts, cellu-
lose and the cooling properties of its
water content. The salad dressing or
sauce with which the vegetable is
served does make it a nourishing dish.
The bitter principle even when not
pronounced is especially good for the
complexion taken inside or out. Cu-
cumbers peeled and cut in half length-
wise are boiled and served with butter
as a vegetable. After being parboiled
they may be dipped in egg and crumbs
and fried. They are also well liked as
fritters and stewed with a cream sauce
is another favorite method.
Cucumber Sauce for Fish.
The favorite method of serving cu-
cumbers is to keep the delicate crisp-
ness which is so refreshing on a hot
day. Cucumber chopped fine and
mixed with half as much chopped
onion, seasoned well with salt, pepper
and vinegar, makes a fine sauce to
serve with fish. -
Tomato lee.
Take the pulp and juice of a quart
of tomatoes, rubbed through a sieve
to remove the skin and seeds, add the
juice of three lemons, sugar to sweet-
en and a cupful of finely chopped can-
died ginger. Add a quart of boiled
water and a half-cupful of chopped
maraschino cherries, and freeze.
— I
Cheese and Olives.
Beat two tablespoonfuls of sweet
cream into one cream cheese or the
equivalent of cottage cheese, add salt
and paprika to make it pink and a
tablespoonful of chopped chives. Roll
and chill and serve on head lettuce
or cress with French dressing.
How Many Deaf Mutes “Hear”
. And Are Thrilled by Music
Deaf mutes love music. It thrills
(hem. They feel it by placing their
hands and elbows on a piano while the
teacher plays it. The vibrations not
only give sensations which enliven
the body, but they actually stimulate
them. The parts most sensitive to vi-
brations are the chest, head, lungs and
feet. “An exciting feeling comes up
through the floor,” is the way one deaf
boy describes it. according to the Pop-
ular Science Monthly. “Without music
1 would be lonesome,” wrote a little
Italian deaf rnute. “It gives me. a
strong shock through the feet to the
head,” stated another. Others when
asked to explain their sensations, said:
“I feel it in my temples and in my
legs,” “I feel it through my body,” and
“I feel it in. my chest and lungs.”
When her auto injured a tramp dog,
a New York woman carried the animal
eight miles to a doctor.
A quaint little pathway that twisted and
turned
And passed from our sight at the mill,
Then wand^ted away where the wild
flowe^^rned
Their the slope of the hill.
How silent It led, with the alders above,
Till splashed by the sun streaming
through,
It ended its way on the threshold of love,
Of an. old fashioned cottage we knew.
Each flower that bloomed ’round the lat-
tice way there
Came down from the gardens above—
Each new opened blossom gav^ out on the
Fresh tokens of tenderest love—
Each sigh In the trees of the breeze pass-
ing through.
Each call of a bird for its mate.
Befitted this old-fashioned cottage we
knew
And the old-fashioned folk at the gate.
Pearl White
Pretty star who has won high place
in the world of the movies.
Suggestions for the Patri-
otic Housewife
z
By MIRIAM M. HAYNES.
Specialist in Home Economics, Colo-
rado Agricultural College.
Use cheaper cuts of meat, cooking
them thoroughly and seasoning them
carefully.
Use dried, salted and pickled meats
and fish.
Use. in a variety of ways, meat sub-
stitutes such as cheese, (commercial
and home-made) nuts, beaus, peas,
milk, eggs.
Use milk in all forms for it is a
nourishing and cheap food. Don’t
scorn skim milk. ..—
Use corn products In diet, such as
cornmeal dishes, hominy, corn grits.
Use rice and starchy pastes (mac-
aroni, noodles, etc.), as potato substi-
tutes.
A few hens in the back yard well
cared for will help reduce the high
cost of living.
Use some dried fruits as desserts,
peaches, apples, prunes, etc. Wash
fruit thoroughly, soak in cold water
and cook fruit In that water.
Until Ino Cliukei finished his labor
of love In 1821 nothing like an au-
thentic map of Japan existed. His
career was remarkable, for it was not
until he had reached tlie age of fifty-
five years—having been a sake brewer
from boyhood—that he turned his at-
tention to surveying. His maps were
found to be so good and so free from
errors that they were adopted as the
basis of the trigonometrical survey of
Japan. During his work he-surveyed
137,000 square miles, using instru-
ments which he made himself; but lie
met with no reward during his life,
for on the termination of his undertak-
ing he was thrown into prison by the
Shoguns, and he remained there-untll
he died. He has since been honored
by a monument, erected to his merry
ory in Tokyo.
Same Observations.
The reason so many people kill time
is. because time never puts up a holler.
There isn’t much to the fellow who
doesn’t get mad enough to fight once in
a while.
To live a decent life is not all that
is necessary; a man can be decent and
not be particularly useful.
The bees have a way of dealing with
the drones. When food gets scarce
they kick them out of the hive.
The man who thinks he knows it all
is always running into something that
wasn’t in the book when lie studied it.
Of all the foolish notions in the
world tlie notion that you can avoid
wdr by getting married is the foolish-
est. ■
Convincing Proof of This Fact.
Ridgway, Penn. — ‘{I suffered from female
trouble writh backache and pain in my side for over
seven months so I could not do any of my work. I
was treated by three different doctors and was
getting discouraged when my sister-in-law told me
how Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound had
helped her. I decided to try it, and it restored my
health, so I now do all of my housework which is
not light as I have a little boy three years old.”
— Mrs. O. M. Rhines, Ridgway, Penn.
The gourd at the wall, the bucket and
sweep,
The something that whispered of home.
The warmth of the welcome they treas-
ure and keep
To greet a son given to roam;
Aye, each little thing, each joy and care
That passes in distant review;
May we find the old-fashioned cottages
there
And the old-fashioned couples we k«$w.
—John D. Wells, in Buffalo Evening
News.
The Geography of Japan.
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Brown, O. M., Jr. New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, June 29, 1917, newspaper, June 29, 1917; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1193604/m1/2/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.