The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 12, 1925 Page: 3 of 8
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NEW ULM ENTERPRISE. NEW ULM. TEXAS
Childs
SEASONABLE FOOD
Cook until smooth and
SAY
Colds
Headache
Neuralgia
Pain
Lumbago
Toothache
Rheumatism
Neuritis
_ Better than a musilard plaster ,
Consider the Nurse
wash eggs unless they are to
year
and are of lower market
a
Castoria
of
of
Put, three tablespoonfuls
rice into an omelet pan,
tablespoonful of butter un-
brown, add a little water
untjl the rice is tender.
essential in marketing
as required by the new
Know
ket and
been well soaked and
used for this dish if
cannot be obtained,
four pieces of toast,
mushrooms. Make a
be operated upon is
from two to three
over six months) and
than a pound to a
The size is equally
the
It
Watch for cracks and do not have
strong drafts tn the roosting rooms.
If you neglect this, you will have to
fight colds and roup later on.
Confine the hens to the poultry
house when the yards are muddy un-
til the middle of the afternoon .when
most of the eggs have been laid. This
will mean fewer dlrty pggs.
will buy enough barium carbo-
to rid a farm of rats, and no
and money is better spent than
used in killing off these destrud-
and filthy pests.
the preferences of your mar-
strive to meet them.
Prudence is of no service unless it
be prompt.
Keep the hens off the dropping
boards by putting three-fourths-inch
wire netting immediately under the
roosts.
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of
Absolutely Harmless —No Opiates. Physicians, everywhere recommend ft
COMFORTABLE HOUSE
ENCOURAGES FOWLS
BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST I
Take Nujol regularly and adopt the
habit of internal cleanliness. For sale by
all druggists.
Reduction Is Attributed to
Decreased Plantings in
All Growing Sections.
It is estimated that between '*500
and l,0(50 lepers are at large in the
United States.
(©, 1H26, Western Aewspuper Onion.)
A nice leg of mutton, my Lucile,
I pray thee have ready for me;
Hve it smoking and tender and
juicy,
For no better meat can there be.
—Thackeray.
Emden Geese Popular
The Emden breed of geese is one
the best known and most popular
all the varieties known. b Individuals
of this breed are large, and beautiful-
ly formed. The back is fairly straight
while the under part of the body is
canoe shaped, or, almost crescent.
They have blue eyes, orange bill
shanks and toes and pure white plum-
age. Size apd vigor are the principal
features to be considered when mating
these birds. It is quite common for
the females to develop a “dewlap” or
loose pouch of skin under the body.
Actions speak louder than words.
Lots of men never say die, but they
all do it sooner or later.
Medical science has found at last in lubri-
cation a means of overcoming constipa-,
tion. The gentle lubricant, Nujol, pene-
trates and softens the hard food waste
and thus hastens its passage through and
out of the body. Thus, Nujol brings in-
ternal cleanliness.
Nujol is used in leading hospitals and fci
prescribed by physicians throughout the
world. Nujol is not a medicine or laxa-
tive and cannot gripe. Like pure water,
it is harmless.
Male Is Half the Flock
Each male bird that is retained as
breeder in your poultry flock will
contribute half the characteristics pos-
sessed by the chicks hatched this
spring. Round up your males and see
that all of them possess the traits you
want to have transmitted to your next
season’s chicks*. In case you buy baby
chicks from a hatchery, it is an ad-
vantage to buy them where some at-
tention is paid to getting eggs from
well-bred flocks.
remedy. For
medicine has
in millions of
the civilized
IAXATIVES and cathartics provide
J temporary relief only. Their con-
tinued use leads to permanent injury. In
time, says an eminent physician, an almost
incalculable amount of harm is done by
the use of pills, salts, mineral waters,
castor oil and the like.
Affectation
One is never so ridiculous by reason
of the qualities which one has as by
those which one affects to have.—La
Rouchef oucaul d.
Never
be used immediately by local trade.
In Praise of Thrift
If it were possible to inject the qual-
ity of saving into every boy, we would
have a great many more men.—Sir
Thomas Lipton.
Pudding. — Cut sponge
slices, put together in
raspberry jam. Cover
cream and sprinkle with
A nurse has a greater opportunity than
any other professional woman to he of real
service to the world and at the same time
command a better income. Our graduates
are holding responsible positions all over
the country, and some are in foreign fields
as missionaries.
The first
quality eggs
egg law is quality production. When
proper methods are employed it Is
easy to produce and market quality
eggs.
Don’t wash dirty eggs. Washed eggs
spoil quickly
value.
Management of Wood
Lot Is Better in the East
Eastern farmers are ahead of their
western brethren in the management
of the farm wood lot. There the wood
lot is preserved from fire and insects,
and furnishes the owner with his fuel,
fence posts, rails and even building
timber for repairs. Mafiy could im-
prove and the average western farm-
er should do much better than is cus-
tomary by making a study of the
science of forestry as It applies to his
own small tract. National Bulletin
No. 42, issued by the forest service of
the Department of Agriculture, gives
much valuable information in the care
of trees and how such a useful adjunct
to the farm may be made to yield
proper returns. The supply of timber
in the United States is decreasing rap-
idly and an investment in growing
trees is abotft as safe as government
bonds and much more fun. The pres-
ent annual consumption of lumber in
this country Is 50,000,000,000 feet. It
will not last forty years at this rate.
Better set out some trees.
Not Now
Rastus—Was dat yo’ girl Ah seen
■yo’ with las’ evenin’?
Rufus—Yes—las’ evenin’.
Applicants between the ages of 18 and 35, who
have a High School diploma, may enter now and
receive, FREE OF CHARGE, their education, room,
board, uniforms and a monthly cash allowance for
ordinary needs. NO OTHER PROFESSION MAKES
SUCH AN OFFER. ACCEPT NOW. Write to
MRS. R. JOLLY, Supt. of Nurses, Baptist Hospital, 602 Lamar, HOUSTON, TEXAS
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are
not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for
Barium Carbonate Kills
Harmful Rats and Mice
According to Kansas State college
authorities, rats and mice in the
United States destroy $200,000,000
worth of food and property every year.
Rats are a menace to grain, poultry,
household property, human safety, and
human life. They ruin all kinds of
food, clothing, and other property.
Fires are started by matches gnawed
by rats. They carry disease.
Barium carbonate is a cheap and
effective control. It has no taste or
odor, and it acts slowly on the rats.
Rodents poisoned by it wander outside
of buildings to die. One bushel of
corn
nate
time
that
tive
ly recommended for_______________,
and the ‘Favorite Prescription,’ a cele-
brated feminine tonic, and I improved
right from the start, and by the time
I had taken a few bottles I was well.”
—Mrs. Jas. J. McNamara, 723 Ave. I.
Obtain Dr. Pierce’s Remedies now
from your nearest dealer. You will
•oon feel their beneficial effect-
The poultry house is both the home
of the hen and the factory where win-
ter eggs are produced, and unless it
provides suitable living and working
conditions the hen cannot be expected
to lay well. To be comfortable the
house must be dry, well ventilated,
well lighted and have sufficient floor
space to provide exercise by scratch-
ing. Dryness is insured by having a
good roof, keeping the floor of the
house higher than the surrounding
ground, and by providing good ventila-
tion. Ventilation must supply plenty
of fresh air without drafts. This is
secured by having the south side rela-
tively open and the other three sides
absolutely tight. The importance of
light in the poultry house has not been
properly emphasized in the past. Re-
cent experiments with artificial lights
show that by furnishing more light so
that the working period for the birds
is lengthened the egg production can
be materially increased. In many
farm poultry houses no windows are
provided and the house is in constant
twilight on cloudy days even when the
door is left open. Needless to say,
this condition does not favor activity
on the part of the hen. To insure good
natural light in a poultry house the
openings in the walls should equal
about one-fourth of the floor space of
the house. At least half of these open-
ings should be for open-front ventila-
tion, and the windows should be so
arranged that the maximum amount of
sunlight will be available to the birds.
Wherever possible windows should be
placed in the east and west ends of
the building so that the early morning
and late afternoon light will be se-
cured. To insure room for scratch-
ing not only must sufficient floor, space
be provided but the droppings must
be kept off the floor and a deep litter
of straw or similar material be sup-
plied so that the birds can be made
to scratch for their feed. To keep
the droppings off the floor every
poultry house should be provided with
a droppings' platform arranged under-
neath the roosts to catch the manure.
(Prepared by the United States Depart-
ment of Ayr 1 culture.)
Production of all types of tobacco
grown in the United States was smaller
last year than in 1923, reports the
United States Department of Agricul-
ture. The total crop was 1,243,000,000
pounds as compared with 1,515,000,000
pounds in 1923. The cigar types show
a cut of 24,000,000 pounds, and the
types used for chewing, smoking, snuff,
and export show a reduction of 248,-
000,000 pounds.
Decrease in Planting.
The reduced production is attributed
to decreased plantings in practically
all the important tobacco growing sec-
tions, and by decreased yields in many
areas. The biggest decrease was in the
Bright or flue-cured tobacco portions
of Virginia and the Carolinas, where
production of what are known as the
Old Belt and New Belt type was 441,-
000,000 pounds or 152,000,000 pounds
less than last year.
Of these two flue-cured types, the
New Belt type showed the heaviest de-
cline, production being placed at about
220,000,000 pounds as compared with
320,000,000 pounds last year. The de-
partment points out, however, that
sales data in South Carolina are as yet
incomplete and the production figures
in that state may be raised several
million pounds.
Burley Production.
Production of Burley, which is the
most important single type of tobacco,
was 311,000,000 pounds or 15,778,000
pounds less than last year. Production
of One-Sucker, air-cured type was un-
der 31,000,000 pounds as compared
with 51,000,000 last year. Decreased
acreage of Clarksville and Hopkins-
ville types was partially offset by a
somewhat better yield, production being
placed at 106,000,000 pounds as com-
pared with 96,000,000 pounds in 1923.
Production of Henderson type shows
a cut of 25 per cent, and of the Padu-
cah type a reduction of 31 per cent.
Total production of types used for
cigars was 169,641,000 pounds as com-
pared with 194,124,000 pounds in 1923.
Production in the Connecticut valley
was 4,332,000 pounds less than last
year. Pennsylvania shows an increase
of approximately 1,000,000 pounds, and
Wisconsin a decrease of 11,432,000
pounds.
0. P. Jackson Seed Co., Inc.
305 Travis St. Houston,Tex.
Poultry Facts
1 I 1 I 11'I'l-I-I-H-H-F
Keep strong, healthy, vigorous stock
and care for it properly.
Green’s August Flower
The remedy with a record of fifty-
eight years of surpassing excellence.
All who suffer with nervous dyspep-
sia, sour stomach, constipation, indi-
gestion, torpid liver, dizziness, head-
aches, coming-up of food, wind on
stomach, palpitation and other indica-
tions of digestive disorder, will find
GREEN’S AUGUST FLOWER an ef-
fective and efficient
fifty-eight years this
been successfully used
households all over
world. Because of its merit and pop-
ularity GREEN’S AUGUST FLOWER
is found today wherever medicines are
sold. 30 and 90 cent bottles.—Adv.
Stomach Distress?
Galveston, Texas—“One year ago
I was suffering with indigestion.
Everything I ate
hurt me and I
had almost con-
stant headache.
I tried several
remedies which
did me no good.
Then I decided
t o t r y Dr.
Pierce’s m e d i-
cines. I took the
‘Golden M edi-
c a 1 Discovery,’
which was high-
stomach trouble,
Production of
Tobacco Small
Physicians advise lubrication for
Internal Cleanliness
Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions.
Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists.
A spir’n is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacldester of Salleylicacifl
MOTHER:- Fletcher's
Castoria is especially prepared
to relieve Infants in arms and
Children all ages of Constipa-
tion, Flatulency, Wind Colic
and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by
regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of
Food; giving healthy and natural sleep.
Age for Caponizing
Fowls hatched any time of the
make fine capons, but the best age for
the cockerels to
when they are
months old (not
weigh not less
pound and a half.
as important as the age. June, July,
August and September are the months
generally taken for caponizing, for the
reason that spring chickens arrive at
proper age and weight during these
months.
While oranges are plentiful let un
use them freely in our menus. They
add vitamines, min-
eral salts and fruit
acids to our diet
which are very es-
sential to health.
Orange Charlotte
Russe. — Take six
round sponge cakes,
baked in gem pans
and . scoup out to
make baskets. Peel oranges, remove
the white membrane and cut into
small pieces, reserving all the juice.
To one cupful of diced orange add
one-fourth cupful of powdered sugar
and allow to stand for thirty minutes.
Whip one cupful of heavy cream and
moisten the cake baskets with the
orange juice, then fill with the fruit.
Pile whipped cream on the fruit and
garnish with pieces of orange.
Eggs and Mushrooms.—Dried mush-
rooms that have
chopped may be
the fresh ones
Take four eggs,
and a cupful of ___________
white sauce of two tablespoonfuls each
of butter and flour and one-half cup-
fuls of milk. ________________
thick; season with salt and pepper,
adding one tablespoonful of caramel.
Toast rounds of bread, cover with the
sauce to which the mushrooms have
been added, then drop an egg on each,
place in the oven long enough to cook
the egg. Garnish with watercress.
Rice Pudding.—Well cooked rice is
one of the most easily digested cereals.
Put two tablespoonfuls of rice Into a
quart of sweet milk with one beaten
egg, salt and sugar to ta^te and a
handful of raisins and bake for sev-
eral hours in a slow oven. Serve with
a hard sauce.
Tomato Rabbit.—Melt one pound of
rich cheese over hot water, grate one
onion and add to a can of tomato
soup; add the hot soup to the cheese,
season with one-half teaspoonful of
mustard, salt and pepper to taste, one
teaspoonful of Worcestershire sauce
and lastly fold in a stiffly beaten egg
white. Serve on crisp crackers or but-
tered toast. '
Eggs With Rice.—When eggs are
scarce and high this makes a good egg
extender:
of washed
Stir with a
til a' light
and steam
Now add three eggs and one-half cup-
ful of rich milk. Stir and cook until
the eggs are set. Season with salt and
pepper and feerve at once.
Simple Desserts.
A dessert that one need not fear to
give to the little people is:
Date Pudding.—
Wash and cut into
pieces one package
of dates. Add a
quart of milk and
cook in a .double
boiler until slight-
ly thickened, add
a speck of salt and
serve cold.
Figs With Lemon Sauce.—Soak or
steam figs until soft and plump, add
one-fourth of a cupful of lemon juice
to a cupful of figs, simmer until the
figs are tender. Thicken the sauce,
chill and serve poured over the cooled
figs. Garnish with whipped cream.
French Pie.—Into a baked pastry
shell put a layer of well-cooked ap-
ple sauce that has been sweetened
and a tablespoonful of butter added
while hot. Cover with a layer of rasp-
berry or currant jelly and top with a
meringue, set in the oven to brown.
If a meringue is not liked, whipped
cream may be used irfstead.
Canned blueberries poured over
sliced bread and allowed to soak,
.then served with sugar and cream
tnakes a fine pudding for the children.
Chocolate Bread Pudding.—Soak a
pint of bread crumbs in a quart of
scalding milk for half an hour. Melt
two squares of chocolate, add one-
third of a .cufiful of Sugar, and milk
from the bread crumbs to make of the
consistency to pour. Add to the bread
mixture with another third of a cup-
ful of sugar, one-fourth of a teaspoon-
ful of salt, one-half cupful of finely
minced almonds, two eggs slightly
beaten and a quarter of a teaspoonful
of cinnamon. Turn into a buttered
baking dish and bake one hour. Spread
with a meringue,' brown and serve
with any desired .sauce.
Bordeaux
cake in thin
layers with
with whipped
chopped nuts.
Baked Bananas.—Remove the skins
from as many bananas as needed.
Place in a baking pan and baste while
baking with butter, a little water and
iemon juice. Serve with broiled beef-
steak.
Coffee Tapioca.—Take three cupfuls
of coffee infusion to one-half cupful
each of tapioca and sugar, one-half
teaspoonful of salt and cook as usuat
Mc»ld and serve cold with cream and
sugar.
Dried Buttermilk Found
Profitable for Poultry
At the Indiana experiment station
several tests have also been made
with dried buttermilk for laying hens.
In one of its bulletins on this subject,
A. C, Phillips, who conducted the tests
in which dried buttermilk was com-
pared with liquid buttermilk, says:
“The income from the liquid butter-
mil k-fed pen was $7.13; from the dried
buttermilk-fed pen, $8.21; and from
the no-milk-fed pen, $2.39.” Stating
the same facts in different words, Mr.
Phillips continues: “The profit over
feed cost from the liquid buttermilk-
fed pen was $4.92; from the dried hut-
termilk-fed pen, $5.69; and from the
no-milk-fed pen, 78 cents.”
Thus we see that the pen fed dried
buttermilk as a protein carrier, made
the largest profit per bird per year.
The pen that received no milk of any
kind netted less than $1 per hen per
year. In addition to getting more
eggs front the dried buttermilk than
from • the liquid buttermilk, that in-
stitution also obtained greater hatcha-
bility in the eggs from the dried but-
termilk pen than from the one fed
liquid buttermilk.
The
KITCHEN
CABINET
Nuj ol
REG. US. rXr. OFF.
For Internal Cleanliness
Weather Note
“Did you get home before
storm broke last night?” “Yes.
broke just as I got inside.”
Grandmother Knew
There Was Nothing So Good fot
Congestion and Colds as Mustard
But the old-fashioned mustard
plaster burned and blistered while it
acted. Get the relief and help that
mustard plasters gave, without the
plaster and without the blister.
Musterole does it. It is a clean,
white ointment, made with oil of mus-
tard. It is scientifically prepared, so
that it works wonders.
Gently massage Musterole in with the
finger-tips. See how quickly it brings re-
lief—how speedily the pain disappears.
Try Musterole for sore throat, bron-
chitis, tonsillitis, croup, stiff neck,
asthma, neuralgia, headache, conges-
tion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago,
pains and aches of the back or joints,
sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chil-
blains, frosted feet, colds of the chest
(it may prevent pneumonia).
To Mothers : Musterole is also
made in milder form for
babies and small children.
Ask for Children’s Musterole.
35c and 65c, jars and tubes; hos-
pital size, $3.00.
Tested Seed Corn
Southern grown, White Wonder, Sure-
crop, Giant White,GiantYellow, Squaw,
Bloody Butcher, Strawberry, $1.15
peck; $2.00 % bu.; $3.75 bu. Iowa
grown, White Pearl, Yellow Dent and
Silvermine, $1.00 peck; $1.75 % bu.
$3.25 bu., all F. O. B. HOUSTON.
Large Free Seed Catalog
ThirtyRunningSores
Remember, I stand back of every box.
Every druggist guarantees to refund the
purchase price (35 cents) if Peterson’s
Ointment doesn’t db all I claim.
I guarantee it for eczema, old sores,
running sores, salt rheum, ulcers, sore
nipples, broken breasts, itching skin,
skin diseases, blind, bleeding and itch-
ing piles, as well as for chafing, burns,
scalds, cuts, bruises and sunburn.
“I had JO running sores on my leg
for 11 years, was in three different
hospitals!. Amputation was advised.
Skin grafting was tried. I was cured
by using Peterson’s Ointment.”—Mrs.
F. E. Root, 287 Michigan Street, Buf-
falo, N. Y. Mail orders filled by Peter-
son Ointment Co;, Buffalo, N- Y.
BRINGS YOUTH
TO OLD FOLKS
One of Tanlac’s greatest bless-
ings is the new life and vigor it
brings to old folks. Men and women
up in the seventies and eighties are
writing to us every day to thank us
for Tanlac’s wondrous benefits.
Tanlac is a natural tonic. -It
drives poisons from the blood, stirs
up the lazy liver and puts digestive
organs in working order.
Made after the famous Tanlac
formula from roots, barks and rare
herbs, it is nature’s own tonic and
builder—harmless to man or child.
If your body is weakened and
run-down, if you lack ambition,
can’t eat or sleep, you’ll be de-
lighted with Tanlac’s quick results
Take Tanlac Vegetable Pills
for Constipation
TANLAC
FOR YOUR HEALTH
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 12, 1925, newspaper, February 12, 1925; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1200497/m1/3/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.