The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 20, 1920 Page: 6 of 8
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IN BUYING ASPIRIN
ALWAYS SAY “BAYER”
Look for the name "Bayer” on tablets,
then you need never
worry.
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,’’ can be
taken safely for Colds, Headache,
Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Lum-
bago, Rheumatism, Joint Pains, Neuri-
tis, and Pain generally.
To get quick relief follow carefully
the safe and proper directions in each
unbroken package of “Bayer Tablets
of Aspirin.” This package is plainly
stamped with the safety “Bayer Cross.”
The “Bayer Cross” means the gen-
uine, world-famous Aspirin prescribed
by physicians for over eighteen years.
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost
but a few cents. Druggists also sell
larger “Bayer” packages. Aspirin is
the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture
of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylic-
acid.—Adv.
Always Growing.
Interest is the only thing that grows
and flourishes all the year round with-
out attention. Thrift and intelligence
are guaranteed to destroy the pest.
FRECKLES
Now Is the Time to Get Rid of
These Ugly Spots.
There’s no longer* the slightest need of
feeling ashamed of your freckles, as Othine
—double strength—Is guaranteed to remove
these homely spots.
Simply get an ounce of Othine—double
strength—from your druggist, and apply a
little of it night and morning and you
should soon see that even the worst freckles
have begun to disappear, while the lighter
ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom
that more than one ounce is needed to com-
pletely clear the skin and gain a beautiful
clear complexion. v
Be sure to ask for the double strength
Othine, as this is sold under guarantee of
money back if it falls to remove freckles.
War Graves Maps Popular.
The war graves map is now a popu-
lar publication in Europe. In its larg-
er form it shows 2,000 military ceme-
teries, and in the more detailed edi-
tions it shows the numbered graves.
6H READY
for fair
/ ,
Keep Your Liver Active, Your
. System Purified and Free From
Colds by Taking Calotabs,
j the Nausealess Calomel
Tablets, that are De-
lightful, Safe and
! Sure.
/• ____________________
F
' Physicians and Druggists are advis-
ing their friends to keep their systems
purified and their organs in perfect
working otder as a protection against
the return of influenza. They know
that a clogged up system and a lazy
liver favor colds, influenza and serious
complications.
To cut short a cold overnight and to
prevent serious complications take one
Calotab at bedtime with a swallow of
water—that’s all. No salts, no nausea,
no griping, no sickening after effects.
Next morning your cold has vanished,
your liver is active, your system is puri-
fied and refreshed and you are feeling
fine with a hearty appetite for break-
fast. Eat what you please—no danger.
Calotabs are sold only in original
sealed packages, price thirty-five cents.
Every druggist is authorized to. refund
your money if you are not perfectly
delighted with Calotabs.—(Adv.)
Platinum.
It would appear that there has al-
most ceased production of Russian
platinum. In normal times 90 per
cent of the world’s output came from
Russia, and the United Stales takes
about one-half of the world's protec-
tion.
Sensible people find nothing useless.
—La Fontaine.
Ciiticura Talcum
Fascinatingly Fragrant
And sprinkle in the Foot-]
Bath. It takes the sting,
out of Corns, Bunions,;
Blisters and Callouses
and gives rest and com-;
fort to hot, tired, smart-,
ing, swollen feet.
More than 1,500,000,
A pounds of Powder for;
Mhe Feet were used by!
our Army and Navy;
during the war. !
Alien’s Foot-'
Ease, the pow-^
der for the feet,;
'takes the friction from the shoe,fresh-
'ens the feet and makes walking a de-
: ught.
; Nothing relieves the pain of tight or
,new shoes so quickly or thoroughly.
[Try it to-day. Sold everywhere.
iAlLEH’S FOOT-EASE
The Antiseptic Powder to Shake Into Your Shoes
Always Healthful
Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c.
Great relief and solid
eye comfort for those
akiicted with weak. Bore
eyes or granulated lids.
£5c—k t All Druggist*,
or by mail from
HALL & RUCKEL, Inc.
215 Washington St., N. Y.
Mell
iSalYefoSOREEYK
DAISY-FLY KILLER attracts'and^kills
i^i i in.-.M mi ,i. uL!F'ti ALL FLIES. Neat,
clean,ornamental, con-
venient, cheap. Lasts
all season. Made, of
metal, can’t spill or
tip over ; will no t soil
or injure anything.
Guaranteed effective.
SO1GdbvyFXP& °r
Q Dy ISAjc XClhoo,
_________________ prepaid, $1.25.
HAROLD SOMERS, 150 De Kalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. Yo
NEW ULM ENTERPRISE. NEW ULM. TEXAS
POOR POLICY TO KEEP STOCK “AS GOOD
AS AVERAGE” WHEN AVERAGE IS LOW
A Piney Woods Rooter and an Example of What the Use of Purebred Sires
Can Accomplish in Two Generations.
(Prepared by the United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture.)
“What is the use of all this
noise about ‘Better Sires and Better
Stock ?’ ” It was one of the well-to-do
farmers of the couhty who was talk-
ing. “Look at those steers over yon-
der. No purebred sires among their
ancestors so far as I know. But they
are good enough for me. I tell you,
Bascom,” he said earnestly, coming
over to the fence beyond which the
county agent sat in his flivver, ‘I’ll
admit we’ve got a lot of help in a
scientific way f’U,m the information
you’ve brought us, but on this stock
proposition it’s different. I believe in
good stock, of course, and take a rea-
sonable pride in my animals, but what
is the use of overdoing it? We better
move along the way we have been for
the past 20 years, I say. Sometimes
we get some poor animals, of course,
but the creatures on my place suit me
pretty well. My father, on the old
farm back East, never worried about
purebred sires and he made a fair liv-
ing. W’hat was good enough for fath-
er is good enough for me.”
“Hold on a minute,” said the county
agent, stopping his motor and coming
over to the fence. “You’ve always
listened to what I have had to say in
the past and I want you to listen to
me now, for the simple reason that
it means dollars-and cents to you. It’s
nothing in my pocket, but it will mean
more profits for you when you sell
your live-stock products.
“Now here is th6 dope, as the hoys
say: United States department of
agriculture men, ..other animal hus-
bandry specialists, poultry specialists,
and all the rest have figured this thing
out on a broad basis. There are no
two ways about it. Better sires mean
better stock; that means better mark-
etable products, and that means bet-
ter profits I” ,
Boy Converts His Father.
For an hour Bascom, the county
agent, and Sam, the farmer, talked
over the better-sires campaign, the
county agent skillfully citing examples
from his own personal knowledge and
•from reports he had read. He told, for
instance, of a New Jersey boy who
was influenced to buy a high-grade
coiy for $155, quite to the disgust of
his “practical” father who owned five
?ows, which he claimed, and truth-
fully, were “as good as the average in
the neighborhood.” On freshening, the
boy’s cow gave 24 quarts of milk, and
kept it up for a long period, while
none of the father’s cows was able
to make any such record. Finally the
father saw the point and confessed
that it was a deal more profitable
to expend his labor and feed on well-
bred animals than on his so-called
average cow.
The incident set the county agent’s
friend to thinking, and the former
lost no opportunity to press his point
home.
Breeding Counted.
“Sam,” he went on, “you don’t be-
gin to realize what this thing will
mean on your place. Right breeding
counts every time. The United States
department of agriculture tells of an
Oklahoma farmer who owned two reg-
istered Shorthorn ^yearling bulls that
he prized highly for breeding pur-
poses. A butcher saw those bulls aqd
on asking the.price learned that they
were registered and that it would take
$200 to buy the two. What did he
do but pay the $200, and when lie
killed them he said they were the
cheapest cattle he had bought for a
long time, because they cut the bet-
ter kinds of beef, and more of it. My
private opinion is it was too bad to
deprive the community of the use of
those purebreds, even though the
butcher was willing to pay the price.
But this is the big point: Breeding
counted in dollars and cents in that
case, and it does every time.”
Hogs Pay Despite High Price.
Turning from the subject of cattle
to hogs, the county agent told of what
North Carolina boys had been doing.
“Even though hogs had never been so
high,” he said, “hundreds of boys
bought pure-bred pigs with the ex-
pectation of selling their offspring.
Those lads were not disappointed.
Through their county agents, the pigs
were sold at splendid prices and more
than one of their dads was converted
by the experience to the use of pure-
bred sires.”
“See here.” said the county agent,
pulling two photographs from his
pocket, “these were taken down in
Mississippi. This one here”—indicat-
ing one of the photographs—"shows a
typical Piney Woods rooter. You
know this kind of razorback, Sam.
Now look at this picture,” handing
over the second photograph. “Here
is what two generations of breeding
with purebred sires brought. There’s
some pretty good Berkshires. Be-
lieve me, when the owner, standing
back there, takes those hogs to mark-
et, he’ll appreciate the money value
of the ‘Better Sires—Better Stock’
campaign.”
The county agent paused a minute
as if to let the thought sink in.
“Sam, you better sign up. This
thing will mean a lot to you—even
more next year than this — because
you’ll have more good animals on your
place.”
“You win again, Bascom. Times
have changed. We have got to pro-
gress or we lofce out. Count on me in
the campaign.”
TWO BIG FACTORS IN
Education of horse
Future Value and Usefulness De-
pend on Training.
Broken Colt Is One That Is Safe to
Handle in Stable or on Road and
Will Promptly Obey Orders of
Driver or Rider.
The breaking and training of colts
is of prime importance, says the United
States department of agriculture,, be-
cause their future value and useful-
ness depend to a great extent on
whether or not they are well broken.
By a broken colt is meant one that is
safe to handle in the stable or on the
road and that will promptly obey the
orders of the driver or rider.
Memory and habit are the two main
factors with which we have to deal iri
training horses. A horse acts through
instinct and habit, and one of its great-
est characteristics is uniformity of con-
duct. What a horse is once trained to
do he will nearly always do under like
conditions.
The first thing in training a horse is
to/get his attention. The second is to
make him understand what is wanted.
The education of the horse is based
on reward and punishment. The re-
ward, a pat on the neck, etc., should
immediately follow the act of obedi-
ence. The punishment, to be effective,
must immediately follow tbe act of
disobedience.
Few horses are inherently vicious.
Many horses are made vicious and un-
reliable by the carelessness or unnec-
essary brutality of their trainers. If
a horse kicks because the harness
hurts him, or shies at something of
which he is afraid, punishment is not
justifiable. If, however, after being
stopped, a horse starts before receiv-
ing the command to do so, he should
be punished. Horses are naturally
obedient, and when ^thoroughly trained
their conduct is uniformly good.
A horse should be trained so that
he thinks there is no limit to his pow-
er to do the things required of him,
and believes that he has no power to
do that which is against the wishes of
his driver. Above all, never ask of a
horse something he is unable to per-
form and then punish him because it
cannot be done. If during the first
year of his work a colt is hitched only
to loads he can pull, he will develop
into a good work horse, while if he
is overloaded a few times he may be-
come balky and worthless.
Livu Stock
NOTE'S
Grass is the limiting factor in beef
production.
♦ ♦ *
Breed sows to farrow about the
same time.
* * *
Liberal feeding is an insurance
against disease.
♦ * *
Castrate lambs when from eight to
sixteen days old.
♦ * *
Stockmen who have cattle to dehorn
should be sure to complete this work
before warm weather begins.
* * *
Sheep can only become infested with
scab through coming in contact with
infested sheep or quarters.
Lift off Corns!,
c ___________
Doesn’t hurt a bit and Freazone
costs only a few cents.
With your fingers I You can lift off
any hard corn, soft corn, or corn be-
tween the toes, and the hard skin cal-
luses from bottom of feet.
A tiny bottle of “Freezone” costs
little at any drug store; apply a few
drops upon the corn or callous. In-
stantly it stops hurting, then shortly
you lift that bothersome corn or cal-
lous right off, root and all, without
one bit of pain or soreness Truly!
No humbug!—Adv.
Most people want justice for the
purpose of passing it on to those who
need it.
AVOID INFLUENZA,
COLDS, LA GRIPPE, ETC.
By keeping the bowels and liver active.
The best remedy for this Is BOND’S
LIVER PILLS.They not only act di-
rectly on the liver, but remove all poi-
sonous matter from the bowels. At
the very first sign of a cold, take a
Bond’s Pill at bedtime.—Adv.
Perhaps.
Hardnut—Young Smith is a live
wire.
Softnut—Aw, yes; that probably ac-
counts for his shocking manners.
ACUTEINDIGESTION
SOON RELIEVED
Arkansas Lady Says She Was In
a Serious Condition, But
Promptly Recovered After
Taking Thedford’s
Black-Draught.
Peach Orchard, Ark.—Mrs. Etta
Cox, of this place, says: “Some time
ago I had a spell of acute indigestion,
and was In a bad fix. I knew I must
have a laxative, and tried Black-
Draught. It relieved me, and I soon
was all right.
“I can’t say enough for Thedford’s
Black-Draught, and the great good
it did for me.
“It is fine for stomach and liver
trouble, and I keep it for this. A few
doses soon make me feel as good as
new. I am glad to tell others the
good it did.”
Acute indigestion is a serious matter
and needs prompt treatment or dan-
gerous results may ensue. A physi-
cian’s help may be needed, but a
good dose of Thedford’s Black-Draught
will be of benefit by relieving the
system from the undigested food
which is the cause of the trouble.
Thedford’s Black Draught is purely
vegetable, not disagreeable to take
and acts in a proifcpt and natural way.
So many thousands of persons have
been benefited by the use of Thed-
ford’s Black-Draught, you should have
no hesitancy in trying this valu-
able, old well-established remedy, for
most liver and stomach disorders.
Sold by all reliable druggists.—Adv.
Only a Theory.
She—I don’t think it is right to say
a woman can’t keep a secret.
He—Whafi makes you say that?
She—No woman ever tried.—The
W idow.
“DANDERINE”'
Stops Hair Coming Out;
Doubles Its. Beauty.,
A few cents buys “Danderine.” Af-
ter an application of “Danderine” you
can not find a fallen hair or any dand-
ruff, besides every hair shows new
life, vigor, brightness, more color and
thickness.—Adv.
Pleasant Method.
He—“It makes me a better man
every time I kiss you.” She—“I’ve
been hoping, dear, that you would
reform.”
DADDY! EVENING
I.FAMM
DEER TALK.
“It’s nice,” said the Dybowsky deer,
"to have four horns.”
“And it’s nice,’’.said the Axis deer,
“to have two curved horns in front and
two long ones. Oh, yes, that is very
nice.”
“I’m glad,” said the Dybowsky deer,
“that I’m not an Australian whistler,
for example.”
“And I’m glad I’m not a screech
owl who calls .the other birds about to
fight or to play or whatever it is he
does call them for,” said the Axis deer.
“I’m glad, top, I’m not a jealous
cockatoo,” said the Dybowski deer,
“or a goat four years old and fully
grown, with the stupid home that he
has, even though he may live long.”
“I’m glad,” said the Axis deer, “that
I’m not a prairie dog and that I don’t
dig holes in the ground where I stay
all winter.
“When the turtles are in the zoo be-
cause they are indoors they don’t knoNv
that it is winter so they don’t go to
bed for the winter any more than the
snakes do.
“And the bears don’t sleep for the
winter because they’re not allowed to
get a great meal ahead which will last
them for months.”
“But,” said the Dybowsky deer,
“what makes you talk about the crea-
ture's who go to bed for the winter
when it is spring? Why don’t you talk
of the ones getting up now that spring
has come?”
“I thought I would be a little differ-
ent in my talk,” said the Axis deer.
“But I don’t mind what we talk about,
do you?”
“Not in the least,” said the Dybow-
sky deer.
“Then we can talk about anything,”
said the Axis deer.
“We can even talk about nothing,”
said the Dybowsky deer.
/‘How can we talk about nothing?
If we talked about nothing there would
be no talk.”
“Youre’ wrong there,” said the Dy-
bow’ski deer. “Lots of creatures talk
about nothing, but they talk right
along.”
“How?” asked the Axis deer.
“They talk, but they say nothing
that is worth while. That is how they
talk about nothing. See?”
“Ah, yes,” said the Axis deer.
“I’m glad I’m not a lion or a tiger
running for cover. If I were free and
if there -were danger then I’d have
to hide.”
“Gracious,” said the Axis deer, “why
are you glad of so many impossible
things?”
“Well, aren’t you?”
“To be sure,” said the Axis deer.
“And,” said the Dybowsky deer, “I’m
just talking to hear myself talk—I
mean. I am talking for the sake of
hearing my voice, not because I have
anything special to say. It isn’t be-
cause I think my talk is fine, as you
might imagine.”
“It would take too much imagination
to think that,” said the Axis deer.
“I’m not in the least insulted,” said
the Dybowski deer. “But I wouldn’t
“I'm Glad I'm Not a Screech Owl."
have been able to say all these things
I have said if I didn’t live in the zoo
and so know something of zoo life.”
“One thing about your talk I have
liked,” said the Axis deer, “is that
you’ve talked and chatted about other
creatures and you’ve been glad you
weren’t like them, and so have I been,
and yet you haven’t said mean things
about them. As far as that goes,
neither have I.”
“Well,”' said the Dybowsky deer,
“our whole' famity are supposed to be
rather sweet and gentle - -I mean the
whole deer family. There is a word
which is like our family name which is
spelt differently but which has a nice
meaning I hope we live up to in spite
of the different spelling.”
“What is that?” asked the Axis deer.
“You see,” said the Dybowsky deer,
“the word dear means something very
sweet and nice and, while it is a word
not meaning our family and not mean-
ing any animal, still I do believe the
whole deer family have always tried
to be like the word which is just like
their name as far as its pronunciation
goes.”
“What does pronunciation mean?”
asked the Axis deer.
“It means the way a word sounds
when it is said. Don’t you think we’ve
all tried to be like the word?”
“I do,” said the Axis deer; “it’s a
nice word—that word dear—and I Say
let’s always try—each one of us—to be
a dear deer. Wouldn’t that be nice?”
“It would, and we’ll try,” said the
Dybowsky deer; “yes, even we will
try.”
REMARKABLE “
RECOVERY
Extraordinary Curative
Power of Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound.
Philadelphia, Pa.—“ I want to let you
know what good Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com-
?ound has done me.
had organic trou-
bles and am going
through the Change
of Life. I was taken
with a pain in my
side and a bad head-
ache. I could not
lie down, could not
eat or sleep. I suf-
f e r e d something
terrible and the doc-
tor’s medicine did
me no good at all—my pains got worse
instead of better. I began taking the
Vegetable Compound and felt a change
from the. first. Now I feel fine and ad-
vise any one going through the Change
of Life to try it, for it cured me after I
had given up all hopes of getting better.
You can publish this and I will tell
any one who writes to me the good
it has done me.”—Mrs. Margaret
Danz, 743 N. 25th Street, Phila., Pa.
It hardly seems possible that there is
a woman in this country who will con-
tinue to suffer without giving Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial
after all the evidence that is continually
being published, proving beyond contra-
diction that this grand old medicine has
relieved more suffering among women
than any other medicine in the world.
Strength in Faith.
It is the man or the woman of faith
and hence of courage, who is the mas-
ter of circumstances, and, who makes
his or her power felt in the world. It
is the man or the woman who lacks
faith and who as a consequence is
weakened and crippled by fears and
foreboding who is the creature of
all passing occurances.—Exchange.
The Exception".
“I notice the temperature is taking
a drop.” “Then it is the only thing
you can notice doing it.
Prayed for Cure
Finds it After 10 Years
Food Would Sour and Boil
—Teeth Like Chalk
Mr. Herbert M. Gessner writes from his
home in Berlin, N. H.:
I had stomach trouble over ten years;
kept getting worse. I tried everything for
relief but it came back worse than ever.
Last fall I got awfully bad; could only eat
light loaf bread and tea. In January I got
so bad that what I would eat would sour
and boil; my teeth would be like chalk.
I suffered terribly. I prayed every day for
something to cure me. One day I read
about EATONIC and told my wife to get
me a box at’the drug store as I was going
to work at 4 p. m. I took one-third of it
and began to feel relief; when it was
three-fourths gone, I felt fine and when it
was used up I had no pains. Wife got me
another box but I have felt the pain but
twice. I used five tablets out of the new
box and I have no more stomach trouble.
Now I write to tell you how thankful I
am that I heard of EATONIC. I feel like
a new man; I eat what I like, drink plenty
of n-nfl if, npvpr hurts me at all.
Tan-No-More
Skin tBeauiifiiev?
■ always -
between you
and the «Sun.
Is a sure protection
against the beam-
ing sun or blister-
ing wind. It brings
to the skin the vel-
vety softness of youth |
Used before going out I
__ the evening, it assures
a faultless complexion.
_____ Your druggist le authorized to re-
— fund your money IfTou-No-Moro foils to please you
Baker Laboratories, Memphis.'Snn'
MONEY BACK
without question if Hunt's Salve
fails in the treatment of Eczema,
Tetter, Ringworm, Itch, etc. Don’t
become discouraged because other
treatments failed. Hunt’s Salve
has relieved hundreds of such cases.
Yon can’t lose on onr Monty
Back Guarantee. Try it at our risk
TODAY. Price 75c, at drug stores.
A. B. Richards Co., Sherman, Texas
EZ
STOVE POLISH Shines Quick
Easy—D unless—Odorless—Durable
E-Z Metal Polish for the Nickel
E-Z Iron Enamel for the Pipe
MARTIN * MARTIN, Mfrs., CHICAGO
W. N. U., HOUSTON, NO. 21-1920.
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 20, 1920, newspaper, May 20, 1920; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1194491/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.