The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 31, 1928 Page: 3 of 8
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NEW ULM ENTERPRISE, NEW ULM, TEXAS
The Return
STORY FROM THE START
CHAPTER II—Continued
Trent Sat
con-
em-
poor
long
list-
sis-
by
think cf the
ver-
accused
un-
One
may be dead
wool
grease or mixtures of
CHAPTER III
Nature Has Provided for Needs of Aphids
®
More was a small dys^
©
City
worn
hard
on the farm get par-
wear, since they are
mart on Broadway,
purchased from a
second-hand auto-
he had previously
this make because
Within an hour of hear-
Anthony Trent had bought
Ere the Leviathan left her
was good. It was More’B
ferret out details concern-
and habits of such as de-
furniture on the install-
stuff.”
did you
was
the
picked
north
Johansen of the
Hellen July 12.
up December 13,
coast of New
In those days More was
the credit and collection
and
Tit-
well as to the
bull with the
his side and
Keep his head
dead before
1 miss my
that Sutton
kill Grant?”
pre-
will
long
you
will be
‘or
have respect for
Accidents with
due to the ani-
but may result
Do not
being attached to
the bull’s nose. A
leading -such bulls
use a strong staff
;, while the
With His Elbows on His
Knees.
fate and had been unable to help her
except in paying his bills promptly
and occasionally settling those of Mr.
and Mrs. Clarke. Clarke had been a
celebrated Park Row character whose
last position was that of city editor
on the paper Trent had abandoned for
fiction writing. The demon rum had
been Clarke’s undoing.
than to a definite function
In very small and young
the other hand, the wings
such an extent that they
New York.—That troublesome ques-
tion, “How do flying fishes fly?” is
still pestering scientists, although
many attempts to solve the mystery
have been made.
J. T. Nichols, curator of recent
fishes at the American Museum of
Natural History, and C. M. Breeder,
Jr., research associate of the New
York aquarium, find some truth in
both sides of the argument as to
whether these fishes sustain their
flight by flapping of the wings, or
pectoral fins, or whether they merely
soar as gliders.
Writing in Natural History, the
museum’s journal, the ichthyologists
say:
“The flight is largely a planing one,
at certain times and under cer-
conditions a definite wing mo-
may enter into and contribute to
The enlarged pectoral fins or
Copyright by Barse & Hopkins .
WNU Service
SOLVE MYSTERY
OF FLYING FISH
PREVENTING BULL
FROM DOING HARM
I their credit
business to
ing the life
sired their
ment plan.
When Trent had invented his rich
uncle and was living in Central Park,
West, he found himself once or twice
handicapped by ignorance of the num-
bers and habits of the servants In
• some of the great houses he planned
to raid. Then it was he thought of
David More.
He found that More hac lost his
position owing to a fire which wiped
out his firm. Trent established More
in a little detective agency of his own
and was his first client. More had an
idea that Trent was one high up in
the secret service.
Just before the outbreak of the war,
More suffered from varicose veins and
was unable to make ends meet. Fur-
ther, his wife was ill and the small
home sold up. Timidly he appealed
to Anthony Trent, whom he had not
seen for a year, to aid him.
Trent dragged from him that It had
long been his ambition to retire from
a business which kept him sc much
on his feet and retire to the profitable
ease of a store which dealt in tobac-
co, candy and magazines.
Two brothers wh. owned such a
stor-' in the main street of Fort Lee
were selling out preparatory to going
All animals require plenty of
pure water at all seasons of the
This is especially true of the
ing cow, as water constitutes
than three-fourths of the total vol-
ume of milk. The water supply, there-
fore, demands the dairyman’s most
careful attention. Stale or impure
water is distasteful to the cow a'nd
she will not drink enough for maxi-
mum milk production. Such water
may also carry disease germs, which
might make the milk unsafe for hu-
man consumption or be dangerous to
the cow herself. During the winter,
when cows are stabled the greater
part of the time, they should be
watered two or three times a day un
less arrangements have been made to
keep water before them at all times.
car pulled up before
Beholding his
More jumped up with
He stammered out a de-
an installment on the
until they find the sap
The processes are repeated
plant harbors so many of
the northeast trades,
a book,” she assured
“It’s about old Park Row.”
” said Trent. “I’d like to see
Free From Abortion
If a herd is free from infectious
abortion the owner can, through the
application of sanitary measures, pre-
vent its introduction. Since abortion
and breeding diseases are frequently
introduced through the purchase of
infected animals, caution in buying
may prevent disaster. A clean herd
can also be developed from a mildly
infected herd, but If the herd is badly
diseased it is probably more econom-
ical to.^ replace the herd with healthy
animate.
has seven more years
property. He’s got a
down on Ocean drive
and the woman’s he's
for. Seven years is a
of them
by
drifted into the north equa-
Both Flapping and Soaring
Methods Used.
Wyndham Martyn
Every precaution should be taken
to prevent the bull from injuring per-
sons or animals, or doing any other
damage while he is being led about.
Begin teaching the bull to be led
while he is still young. When six to
eight months of age he may readily
become accustomed to the halter. Lead
him about the barnyard, making him
familiar with different conditions, such
as the noise of machinery, the sight
of the other animals, etc. If he is to be
exhibited at fairs, train him to pose.
Do not attempt to lead a well-grown
bull without a staff attached securely
to a ring in his nose. The bull must be
trained to the staff as
halter. In leading the
staff, always walk at
never in front of him.
held high, as a bull can do little dam-
age with his head in that position.
Watch him constantly while leading or
holding him.
Some staffs are equipped with prongs
or teeth which, by turning the staff,
can be pressed on the bull’s nose.
This device should not be used except
when necessary.
Whenever a bull that is known to
be vicious, or one that behaves in a
dangerous manner, is to be led, always
employ two men. Each man may use
a staff, each staff
a separate ring in
common method of
is for one man to
attached to one nose ring,
other man uses a heavy strap snapped
into a second ring. In either case,
the men walk on opposite sides of
the bull, keeping abreast of him, and
forcing him to hold his head high.
When a vicious bull, or one whose
disposition is unknown, is kept in a
yard or box stall, make the animal
secure before entering the stall to
attach the staff. This may often be
done by enticing the bull to the man-
ger by means of some grain mixture,
and then snapping a rope or strap
in his ring. The bull may then be tied-
or held by an attendant before the
keeper enters the stall with the staff.
Treat every bull with caution and
respect. Whenever a bull is being
led, use caution and
his great strength,
bulls are not always
mal’s being vicious,
from their being frightened,
take chances when leading a bull, but
use every precaution to safeguard
yourself and others.—Dairy Cattle
Yapp and Nevens, Wisconsin.
the judge of
bad. This accusa-
his wife hurt him.
vYith wild women in gay
his wife was knitting him
judge ruled that out, but
him
“I
er,”
left
The Game Begins Again
When Trent had sent a telegram to
Mrs. Kinney bidding her remain tn
■Cape Cod until be was ready for her
be removed from the hotel to his
apartment.
Then at his bank, where the cashier
shook hands with him heartily, he
■drew a large sum of money and took
a new check book.
At an automobile
in the Fifties, he
reliable concern a
mobile of a make
owned. He bought
there were so many of them on the
road and its color was not such as to
make it remarkable.
Trent was on his way to see a man
named David More whom he had fre-
quently employed. When Trent first
beheld him,
peptic man weighted down by mone-
tary cares,
engaged in
department of a furniture house which
assumed anxious home furnishers that
Anthony Trent returns to New
York after nearly four years’ ab-
sence. Once known as the mas-
ter criminal, Trent is going
straight. The purser accuses
Trent of jumping overboard
from the Poitiania at Liverpool,
but is disappointed when Trent
shows no surprise. He learns his
- friend, Capt., Frank Sutton, is in
Sing Sing. At New York Trent
is startled to find "somebody oc-
cupying his house. The stranger
is Sutton Campbell, the brother
of his best friend, who is serving
ten years in prison. Trent is
asked by Campbell Sutton to
force Payson Grant to a written
confession, having crookedly ob-
tained all of Captain Sutton’s
possessions and later married his
wife.
Back Seat Driving Is
Not Divorce Ground
Des Moines, Iowa.—Back seat
driving by a husband is- insuffi-
cient evidence for the granting
of a divorce, Judge J. E, Meyer
in Polk County District court
ruled in dismissing a divorce pe-
tition filed by Mrs. Blanche Low-
enberg, wife of Judson Lowen-
berg, Iowa grand master of the
Ancient Order of United Work-
ers. Mrs. Lowenberg testified
that her husband found contin-
ual fault with her driving.
Bottle Drifts 7,300 Miles;
Faster Than Sail Boat
Washington.—Six miles a day, or
faster than old sailing vessels, is the
record established by a bottle report-
ed to the navy hydrographic office.
The bottle traveled 7,300 miles
from the gulf of Tehauntepec on the
western coast of Mexico to New
Guinea. It was thrown overboard by
Second Officer J. M.
Norwegian steamer
1924, and
1927, on
Guinea.
Caught
the bottle
torial current setting westward, its
drift passing Clipperton island, be-
tween the Hawaiian islands and Pal-
myra island, through the islands of
the Marshall group, thence southward
of the Caroline islands across the
equator to the Hermit islands, off the
north coast of New Guinea.
1 Out of 5 Weddings
Gets Airing in Court
New York.—A least one out of ev-
ery five new marriages in the United
States results so deplorably that the
case comes to court according to re-
ports handed to the meeting of the
joint committee on Domestic Relations
Courts of the National Probation as-
sociation. The matter is so serious,
the report of the United States chil-
dren’s bureau in Washington on the
Domestic Relations court of the Unit-
ed States affirms, that the bureau
has made exhaustive study of the
problems underlying family disruption
and divorce and is formulating meth’
ods of correction.
Find Greased Shoe
Stays Dry and Wears
Washington.—Farmers who grease
their -shoes to make them last longer
are following a sound scientific prin-
ciple and not a “fallacy of the hinter-
land,” the Department of Agriculture
insists.
Greasing shoes, experts say, not
only prolongs their life, but helps to
keep the feet dry. They recommend
neat’s-foot, cod and castor oils, tal-
low and
these.
Shoes
ticularly
subjected to mud and water and at
times to extreme dryness. All these,
it is observed, ruin leather, whereas
oil and grease preserve it.
’em
Clarke,
Didn’t you know
for an hour, moth-
His wife smiled and
The Clarkes had not al-
ways been on such amicable terms.
Prosperity has much to do with
jugal happiness.
“It was my adjutant who got ten
years for attempted murder and
bezzlement. Sutton was the name. It
was almost three years ago. I sup-
pose you read it?” Trent began.
“Every line.” Clarke returned, “from
the editorials on it to the slush
ters’ sob
“What
diet?”
“Sutton
fairness; that was
tion of cruelty to
Hooked up
Paree while
socks. The
it sticks.”
“Clarke,”
but
tain
tion
it.
wings are on anatomical grounds and
structurally—from an engineering
point of view—ideal gliding 'planes, so
arranged as to be easily held rigid
at the proper angle.
“The wings of large flying fishes
are sometimes seen to vibrate or flut-
ter, a motion more reasonably refer-
able to tension in setting them, or to
the wind,
in flight,
fishes, on
vibrate to
blur, like those of a flying insect.
“It seems that with an increase in
age and size, a buzzing, beelike flight
is replaced by a true soaring flight
and that the former is very likely a
function of absolute size as are so
many larval specializations.
“Flying fishes fly more freely in a
strong breeze and attain greater ele-
vation, speed and distance than in
calm weather. The conclusion is al-
most inevitable that they utilize the
wind to some extent to lift and pro-
pel them, even though it is difficult
to understand how this would be ac-
complished.”
The observations were based on the
collection of flying fishes gathered
by William Beeb’s Arcturus expedi-
tion.
It was after he had been gone for
some years from the Sauer abode that
he learned she was at last to lose her
house. This he found out a little
time before he enlisted, and this, too,
was one of those sudden charities
which meant little enough t* him but
spelled salvation to Mrs. Sauer. He
settled her debts in full, Installed her
In a better house, and made the sug-
gestion, which the grateful woman
followed, that she should take Mrs.
Clarke into partnership. He had been
-told since that the scheme had been
successful. Mrs. Clarke was a natu-
ral-born cook for whom ovens ran
true to form and culinary marvels
happened as matters of course.
It was to this boarding house in the
old Chelsea district that Trent took
his way after having seen More. His
old landlady insisted that he take cof-
fee and cake with her and Mrs. Clarke
after the first greeting was over. She
assumed that he had come to talk
about some form of repayment.
“Forget it,” he said, smiling. “You
and the Clarkes were always kind to
me, and it was fortunate that I dis-
covered a way of proving my grati-
tude. I have been in America less
than a week, and I only came in to
see how you all were.”
He rose as Mrs. Clarke, flushed from
the heat of the kitchen range, entered
the room. She was a large, dignified
woman, now completely hqppy for the
first time in twenty years. Prohibi-
tion had aided her. Her husband was
always at home now. No more haunt-
ing visions of seeing him crushed by
trolleys or automobiles. No more
humiliating moments of inquiry at
saloons for him.
“He’s writin,
Trent.
“Fine,'
him. Is he in?”
“He’s absolutely engrossed in the
book,” said his wife. “There are times
when he won’t leave his room.”
Trent followed Mrs. Clarke to the
top floor. Clarke literally fell upon
his old reporter’s neck and dragged
in.
want this boy
he said,
them.
to France,
ing of this
the place,
dock the More family was install :d.
The new
More’s little shop,
benefactor,
eagerness,
sire to pay
property.
“Nonsens.-,” Trent said, smiling;
“you can’t pay an installment on a
gift. Don’t mention it again. I’v<
come to take you for a ride if you’- o
the time.”
Trent did not mention the subject
that brought him until they were go-
ing down the hill into Leonia.
“I want your assistance,” he began.
“Can you go down Afcbury way for a
week?”
“Glad to,” More said eagerly. “Any-
thing at all, Mr. Trent.”
’•Fine,” Trent exclaimed. “The Gug-
gensohn place at Deal Beach has re-
cently been bought by Payson Grant.
I want to know his habits, diversions,
Criends and how and where he passes
his flirt. Also, how many servants
sleep indoors and their names. Verify
their references and draw on me for
what money you need. Here’s a hun
dred as a starter. Before you go down
there look in the offices of Sutton and
Merton, 28 Broad street. Capt.
Frank Sutton was my adjutant; at
present he’s in Sing Sing. Get some
old employee to talk about him and
his brother Campbell. Let me know
what you find our concerning them
before you go down to Deal. I’m anx-
ious for accurate information about
Frank Sutton’s intimate friends, if he
had any. Learn in the office what
they think about his guilt.”
He dropped More at his store very
well satisfied. More would bring him
a clearly written report in which
nothing was incorporated that had
not been learned from some source
outside himself.
When Anthony Trent had aban-
doned journalism for magazine writing
he resided for two years in the board-
ing house of a Mrs. Sauer, whose
main weakness was poor judgment in
the selection of her cooks, and a too
narrow range in her bills of fare.
Trent had seen her struggling against
“‘And I have looked upon him as one
of my few friends I”
“He is your friend,” the other said
earnestly. _ “And it is because he
thinks you are his friend that he ex-
pects you to do this. He has enor-
mous faith in you. He remembers
how you outwitted them all. To one
■so skilled as you, so resolute and
highly trained, he believes it will be
■child’s play. Have you thought what
your success means to him?”
Trent sat with his elbows on his
knees, his face buried in his hands. It
was one of the bitter moments. He
felt himself trapped. There was no
■reason to doubt Campbell Sutton’s
statements. And believing them, what
escape was possible? Those good res-
olutions, founded not on fear, but a
gradual spiritual rebirth, must be cast
to the winds. He knew that Sutton,
maddened by injustice and three years
a convict; would be in no mood to
listen to what would seem only
excuses born of temerity.
“Well?” said Sutton after a
silence, “What is it to be?”
“You win,” Trent answered
iessly.
“I shall expect to be consulted in
what moves you take,” Campbell Sut-
ton said.
Trent allowed his growing dislike ot
the intruder to flame out. "Then you’ll
be disappointed,” he snapped. “I’m
forced into this thing and I’ll do it
my own way. I’m not in the habit of
being dictated to by anyone. You are
Captain Sutton’s brother. I owe you
nothing at all, yet you presume to
command me to do this, or that, as
though it were.for you I have had to
alter my whole plan of life.”
“It is the same thing,” Sutton’s
brother said carelessly.
“Emphatically it is not,” Trent re-
torted, “and*! shall teii Captain Sut-
ton so when I see him.”
“He doesn’t want you to see him.
We talked that over. Grant has a
<lread of what my brother may do; he
has not forgotten those threats ut-
tered in court. Without doubt he has
his spies there in the prison who re-
port to him what visitors my brother
sees. Your value will be nullified if
you first go to see Frank and then
take action against Grant it would
never do to incur the risk; choose
your own path in anything but this.”
Trent thought a minute; it was not
necessary to see Captain Sutton if the
visit entailed danger. “All right,” he
said. “I suppose you know everything
■about this Grant?”
“As much as my brother,” said
•Campbell.
It was nearly midnight when Trent
left Campbell Sutton in possession.
He was now perfectly familiar with
every detail of the trial. The innumer-
able questions be had asked concern- I
ing I ayson Grant had been answered
fully. There was no doubt but that
the prisoner had confided everything
to his only brother. &
Aphids are the tiny insects that live
on the tips of tender plants and the
under side of leaves. The extraor-
dinary thing about them is that al-
though they can exist for generations
without wings, when the need arises
they can grow them in a night. The
aphids are sap-suckers. They settle
down, drive their beaks into the bark
until they reach the sap, then sit con-
tentedly drinking their fTU. They are
so contented, in fact, that they often
s' their skins, casting off legs and
eyes, and cling there blind and help-
less. Clinging thus, the helpless moth
ers give birth to their young, who
having eyes and legs, run about quite
actively
streams,
until the
® ®
®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®
nonchalantly replied Skln-
“1’11 go to hell and
Animals Require Plenty
of Fresh, Pure Water
good,
year,
milk-
more
Best to Vaccinate Calf
Immediately After Born
Vaccinating- cows before they come
fresh will not prevent calves from
getting white scours. However, vac-
cinating calves just after they are
born will prevent white scours in
many cases.
White scours in young calves is a
germ disease. These germs are in
your barn and in many cases get into
the system of the young calf through
the navel cord.
Thoroughly clean and disinfect your
barn and when a cow comes fresh put
her into a clean box stall that has
been disinfected. As soon as the calf
is born paint the navel with iodine or
dip it into a solution of a good disin-
fectant and then tie a string around
the cord. This will prevent infection
through the navel cord. The udder of
the cow must also be washed and then
disinfected with some disinfecting
solution before the calf is allowed to
drink.
Cleaning and disinfecting the barn
and taking proper precautions to
vent infection of the young calf
save most of your calves. So
as these germs are in your barn
will have trouble with your calves
unless you take precautions to pre-
vent infection of calves.
these tiny creatures that they drink
all its sap, and the plant dies. The
aphids, having to seek new sources of
food, produce a generation of aphids
with wings. These they unfurl
then fly to a live plant.—London
Bits.
said Trent impressively,
“Sutton was absolutely devoted to his
wife. He had no thought for any one
else. There’s nothing in that wild
woman stuff, believe me. It was in-
vented by Payson Grant, who has
since married Mrs. Sutton. Sutton’s
wife urged him to go to France be-
cause she was in love with a slacker
who had one of the fifty-seven varie-
ties of flat feet that were invented in
1917. He threatened Grant, as any
red-blooded man would. Grant’s afraid
of him, but he
to enjoy stolen
superb mansion
at Deal Beach,
been hankering
long time,
by then.”
“One of
that,” said
guess,
swore he’d break jail and
“That hurt his chance,” Trent said.
“I suppose they’ll put him under extra
guard or something?”
Clarke looked at the younger man
with a slight frown.
“Where do you suppose your friend,
Sutton, is?”
“Ossining on the Hudson.”
Like h 11 he is,” Clarke retorted.
“He escaped two weeks back.”
Trent stared at him for a moment
without speaking. if Clarke were
right why had Campbell Sutton per-
sisted in the deception? a dislike he
had formed for the man seemed to
him now some intuitional sense which
had warned him, and not merely a prej-
udice.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
of
Anthony Trent
Still Worse
“That, sir, is a falsehood 1” severely
said the schoolma’am. “Do you know
v, hat will happen to vou if you tell
ties/?’’
“Yes’m,1
ny Simpson.
burn,”
“Worse than that! You will be ex-
pelled from school!”—Kansas
Times.
THERE Is nothing quite like Bayer
Aspirin for all sorts of aches and
pains, but be sure it genuine Bayer;
that name must be on the package,
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is on every box. You can’t go wrong
if you will just look at the box when
you buy it:
No more Heartbum
For correcting over-acidity, nor-
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Sweetens the Breath
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Restores Health, Energy
and Rosy Cheeks. 60c
Loyal
“I was reading about your boy
friend’s big engineering feat.”
“Big feet or not, I like him!”
COULD NOT GET
OUT OF BED
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound Strengthened Her
Elkhart, Ind.—“I had a tired feel-
ing and was unable to get out of bed
without the help
of my husband.
We heard of the
Vegetable Com-
■nound and de-
cided to try it.
I am still taking
it and it sure is
a help to me. I
can do my work
without resting
before I am
through. I know
that if women
will give the Vegetable Compound a
trial they can overcome those tired
and worn-out feelings. I cannot ex-
press the happiness I have received
and how completely it has made over
my home.”—Mrs. D. H. Sibert, 1326
Laurel St., Elkhart, Indiana.
BSMEj Robust
Health
depends
upoiv
proper
od
assimilation. Keep
the digestive pro-
cesses active with
Wrights ^Pills
E TONI C - LAXATIVE”
At Drufifcists or 372 Pearl St., N. Y. City.
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 31, 1928, newspaper, May 31, 1928; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1205428/m1/3/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.