The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 7, 1938 Page: 3 of 8
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ROTI
WILL YOUR
HAve ice c
ENOUGH
WHY THIS IS WONMRFUL
ICE CPEAM-SO •M0W ' ,
DO YOU THINK T COJlfc MA)
it n my refrigerator
TWMIS7
follow the
SENATORS Ol
lyil
uch of one
little «t ■
I
—
CORRECT NUTRITION
iz.a
such common foods as cereals.
Frances Langford
•bwt^per
It
is essential that .the diet
an
Moreover, she may be robbing her
children of their birthright. Dur-
veil being, t
wifi
follow the food
t jpuf family
architect
Quo'gtfons’Ai^wered
rr-
CWTIV-C
inirtl
—
In the Feed Lot
every European country,evqry „ ,
UnU°4 States and frien r.,
many other plates.
growth
not de-
expect-
it.may
d the d
famous aviatrix who
round-the-world flight
gets lost on a desert
be possible that Miss
CRIMINAL GENIUS
STEALS LAW BOOKS
OF CHIEF JUSTICE
, Ilf you
program
SHOULD CHECK ON
♦ GROWTH OF CHICKS
jtoin beans to a pole or a fence
fofcmaximum yield.
Escapades of Mysterious Rob-
ber Become Legend in
New Brunswick.
milk, eggs, fruits and vegetables.
Cellulose or bulk Is obtained
from frt^ vegetebiep and whole
grain cereals. Water comes from
juicy fruits, succulent, vegetables,
milk and other beverages,.as well
it represents 'to' opportuni
times to the extept ‘of ovei
Neither of^jfap, extreme*
which it to provide adequately
tenance and repair ftf thtnlfoo
ftiel.1 Rarely are tttenus de-
because
Tack it up in your kitchen or in
the room where you plan your
menus, -and use it to cheek the
■MM
l
i.’iti
-y-ivi
a beverage.
To provide adequate amounts of
the seven food essentials at every
meal—to avoid the ■ mistake of
serving too
flood and top
rahould be the ________
ery homemaker. You win find the
task considerably easier if you
Menjou wtere’ in New York, before
sailing fdr Europe, wMn they were
being shown, and he was none too
anxious for her to see “The Sheik”
and see how funny he looked on the
screen in those days.
—*—
Norma Shearer would like to do a
smart modem comedy, after her
Many Soybean Varieties
Needed for Varied Uses
Breeding to improve the soybean
is only beginning, but the chances
are bright, says W. J. Morse of the
United States Department of Agri-
culture. New varieties are needed,
even though the department and the
states have already imported more
than 10,000 lots of seed.
Soybeans are particular in their
local requirements, are more vari-
able than many plants, and are
grown for a variety of purposes.
A good forage variety for one area
may not do at all well elsewhere.
A good forage bean may not be a
good milling bean, or be useful
as a vegetable.
Some growers want soybeans for
forage; others for oil and meal
processing; still others as vege-
tables. The result is that each local
area in the soybean regions needs
a soybean variety that will do well
in that particular place and for a
definite purpose. Sufh ym axe a may
even need two or three var|«jies-r>
one for forage, one for High ei) w
protein content for the mills, and
a third for the table.
The soybean is a self-fertilized
plant. Artificial crossing is diffi-
cult and tedious, but it can be done.
they
off to
Ariz.,
mother
Danger in OmiHing One
' it Food Substance
:■ The homemaker who fails to
take every one of these factors
into consideration is depriving
her husband of the opportunity to
Farm
Topics
MOVIEDOM is still gasping
a little over the elope-
ment of Frances Langford, the
radio singer and movie actress,
and Jon Hall, who skyrocketed
to fame in “Hurricane" and
hasn't been seen on the screen
since.
Just after it was announced that
they wouldn’t marry until he had be-
come more firm-
£dMMMMMH ly established in
Ki pictures,
jjfiyggM^M slipped
y. .. > Prescott,
FKA —.M with her
and his sister and
£ got married. But
Ki Hollywood didn't
■ ^M know about it un-
ak til four days lat-
Bk er, possibly be-
ygsw?' d cause he used his
Hr /U re“l natne> Louis
Locher.
Even after Hall
made such a hit
in "Hurricane” he drew only $150 a
week for some time—mere chicken
feed in Hollywood—but this salary
was finally raised to $200.
—*—
Kay Francis’ last picture under
her present contract will probably
be based on a story that she herself
wrote and sold to the studio. It’s
all about a
goes into a
contest, and
isle. Can it
Francis heard about Amelia Ear-
hart?
-*—
Fashion news: Claudette Colbert
has a daytime costume of dark blue
with white floral buttons down the
side of the jacket, like one which
the duchess of Windsor likes to
wear. Recently, one evening in New
York, Helen Vinson wore a black
chiffon gown with a skirt yards and
yards wide, banded with many rows
of narrow black velvet ribbon. No
shoulder straps.
-*—
The New York revival of those
two Valentino pictures, “The Sheik”
and "The Son of the Sheik.” was
so snceessfnl that Agnes Ayres, the
heroine, has been booked for a 2b-
weeks’ personal abpearanee tour.
And two more Valentino < pictures
will be brought forth.
<!|jj ont STJ
Speaking of those Valentino pic-
qfii. ‘yir. iiO-4 bun Tiljiri .
Blood-BuiltHng Diet
and fh^standanj anyunt^or
each food. 'There iftenfens Skele-
ton airnte otitliried by food classl-
ficptitaia. whjfch ebabfe yod to pirih
bqjancw^ menus’for every meal
bjFptnakipg a„pbpipe_p-qn>' each
group, of require^ foods. •> q
I urn ever£ • homemaker’ to
It U a part of good business man-
agement for the poultry producer
to know whether his chick flocks
are growing at about the rate which
should be expected of average, well
bred, healthy chicks.
It may be that the rate of growth
being shown by a given lot of chicks
is not up to par, or it may be that
they are growing faster than experi-
ence has indicated as being opti-
mum. Chick growers, therefore,
should have some sort of standard
so that the development of chicks
during the growing season may be
measured.
This does not mean that it is
necessary for the poultryman to
weigh all of the chicks every week
or two. He may obtain a good aver-
age by weighing any ten chicks
caught at random at each weighing
time.' Average White Leghorn pul-
let chicks should weigh 39 pounds
per 100 at the end of the first month;
68 pounds at the end of the sixth
week; 109 pounds at the end of the
eighth week; 171 at the end of the
twelfth week; 240 at the end of 16
weeks, and about 338 pounds per
100 pullets at the end of 24 weeks.
The seven corresponding weights for
heavy breed pullets, such as Rhode
Island Reds, New Hampshires or
Barred Plymouth Rocks, are 18,
43. 83. 130, 213, 304, and 427 pounds
per 100 birds.
These weight standards can be
copied on a card and nailed on the
feed room door or kept in another
convenient place for comparison
with average weights of this year’s
pullet flocks determined from time
to time. One need not worry if
pullet flocks are running at just
about the level of these standards,
or somewhat heavier, but if they
are running at considerably under
these standards, inquiry should be
made as to the probable cause. Ex-
perience teaches that unless pul-
lets develop at approximately these
rates, they cannot reasonably be ex-
pected to reach egg-laying maturity
at the normal time and be in con-
dition to continue through a long
year of normal egg yield.
Next year’s pullet layers are in
the making in this spring’s chick
flocks and this summer’s growing
pullets. It is important to keep an
eagle eye on their rate of
and make sure that it does
part too far from normal
ancy.
60 Per Cent Carbohydrates
Carbohydrate*. sHdilld form *t
least 60 per bent of the Suppl/ 'of
food ftiel.1 Rarely are ttrenus de-
ficient tn ’carbob:
. .T J;-.'. *1L—J—u
-uuU X
tfMHf arid repufrihg ffte-'mWKote'
tateK MiaF^^Lout’dWi
Carbohydrates to prdduteqirick
beat apd-^Rrgy.’Triterta nWre
tempa# form of fu«J,*htoh Rte
Hens of all ages should be care-
fury culled until September 1.
• • *
Chickens take dust baths to rid
th^fhselves of bird-lice.
Eggs are an important source of
iron. They also contain calcium, sul-
fur, and phosphorus in goodly
amounts.
• • •
A- correctly adjusted plow does
better work, saves time and pulls
easier. ' ■ .
Aged Woman It World's
Chief Collector of Bells
Portland^Qre.—Dr. Clara B. Bur-
dette, Wh6, a|, tMtage of cigHty-tw<Lj
JSSWbsB
manner in which she became inter-
ested in her strange hobby.
She was a smaU girl, at the time,
she said, and her mother gave her a
coil-operated doer bcU. A short
time later a friend gnva her a tiny
toy bell. The two gifts combined to
start her on her now famous collec-
tion, which numbers more than a
thousand bells of different tones,
shapes and sizes.
The majority of her huge collec-
tion, she said, is' arranged around
the walls of the “bell room” in her
home at Pasadena, Calif. The cob-
lection includes bells from Pales-
tine, Africa, Siam, China, Japan,
eyery European country,----------
Hggs at room temperature beat
mote quickly and to a greater vol-
ume than do eggs beaten when
eiy-Irom the refrigerator.
For fence posts, black locust is
thFtree to plant, but other kinds
abe white cedar, European or Japa-
'|arc^!'"V',b'''l”''W 5 1'1.'
Every hour of the day and night,
a thousand pound cow breathes in
and out about 2,880 bushels or 3,600
cubic feet of air. This air weighs
about 270 pounds.
><My ft toeing >uilt, sod defects te
h^y. strufture are likely to arise
if. the* child is improperly aour-
(?.4/ouiton (joudia
Explains What Is Meant by
e thpj while
„ —.'etehce, you
"Whit' quantities
fedtoth6dlH4adh
common mistakes as serving
dried legume as a vegetable at a
meal in whteh meat is udteL which
tends to. concentrate too, much pro-
tein in pQp .mepl-.or choosing a
too-heavW dcssert following a main
coprse that is overly yich jn carbo-
hydrates. 'I'” r- '■ ■ " f
e InchtdfhffUtteoff <r
FomlflRlch tairdn
and Copper
• "DEADER3 are invited td
AL write tor « free bulletin,
containing a list <4 foods rick
in iron and a list of those rich in
copper. Also included are earn-
piemenus showing how to plan
• balanced diet Containing
I generous amounts of foods rich
[ ia these blood-building min- ,
oral*. Send your request—a .
postcard will do-to C Houston .
Goudisa fe East 39th Street,
Describes How to ConstructBalanced Diet, So
Essential Maintain Optimal r-bn.-
• 1 m ih- • 1 Health* /pj ;>t* ;?
iy C. HOUSTON COUtHSS ; ; < it j
S 1*4*11 St...1*ew MrWfcSWS T-l r> u;'// yfii '
TO SOME B Sinnmdita to thtr tfafner table means
nothing more thari fl chancte to satisfy tamper. To> other®,
“ ' *'l«o graW *th4 palate,'
akin^lthe' (fifeetrtlve'Mystorfi. on
•:ii How to Check the Diet
for Balance dji.fo
Perhaps you ard like the home-
makers, who tojl tn* that they do
not know a protein, from a carbo-
Ml
should be'
Slar Dust
★ Hurricane Elopement
★ Story of Earhart
★ Norma Steps Out
Dr. Burdette said her most prized
bell is a tiny affair that was made
out of metal taken from the famous
crack in the Liberty bell at Phila-
delphia |.r,,r ... , .
i ’ .....................•
Monkey Learns to Smoke
San Francisco.—Milke, a South
American monkey at the local zoo,
has learned to smoke.
aa regulators and prevent a trims,
ber of deflqiency diseases.' Water
i .wrwhjeh aervea. ** r vehicle• by
which food is carried to the tis-
sues. And cellulose or ’ bulk—re-
quired for the normal functioning
of tue intestinal tract. '■ ■' ‘ ■
Fredericton, N. B.—He stole law
books from the chief justice of Nova
Scotia and clothing from the attor-
ney general of New Brunswick. He
broke the heaviest chains and
shackles jailers could find. He made
uncannily lifelike marionettes from
straw, using his own blood tor col-
oring, and he foretold events with
startling accuracy. These are some
of the things records say about Hen-
ry More Smith, strange genius who
became almost a legend in New
Brunswick.
The mysterious stranger was first
reported at Windsor, N. S., in 1812.
Shy and pious, he said he had come
from England, and a farmer gave
him employment. He married the
farmer's daughter, later becoming
a peddler and tailor. Every time
he visited Halifax, returning with
various goods, there were reports
of thefts.
Three law books were stolen from
the office of Nova Scotia’s chief jus-
tice. He offered a reward for their
return. Smith obliged, saying he
had purchased them from a stran-
ger. He avoided suspicion until a
few days later when a Halifax youth
saw another wearing his stolen
coat, and the wearer said he had
bought it from Smith.
Turns Horse Thief.
The latter fled to St. John. Com-
missioned to buy a horse in Cum-
berland county, N. S., he stole one
at Norton, with the idea of riding it
to Cumberland, selling it, steal-
ing the other, and riding it back
to the New Brunswick buyer. But
he was captured at Pictou and
taken to jail at Kingston, N. B. For
days he feigned illness. On his
deathbed he requested a heated
brick for his cold feet. A kindly
jailer went to get one, leaving the
door unlocked, and Smith escaped.
With a reward on his head he wan-
dered around New Brunswick, steal-
ing wherever he visited. At Fred-
ericton, while Attorney General
Thomas Wetmore was giving a din-
ner party. Smith made away with
numerous articles of the dignitary's
apparel. Seen secreting them in a
haystack, he was arrested and in-
carcerated in the Kingston jail for
a second time.
During this period he demon-
strated an almost supernatural abil-
ity to break heavy chains and hand-
cuffs. Records left by Sheriff Walter
Bates reveal that finally an iron col-
lar was put around Smith's neck
with a connecting chain stapled to
the floor. The prisoner pulled out
the staple and twisted the collar
"as if it were a piece of leather
and broke it in two parts, which no
man of common strength could have
done with one end fastened in a
smith’s vice. The broken collar was
kept a long time and shown to many
a wonderer."
Skillful at Making Moving Dolls.
Under sentence to die as a horse
thief. Smith made the first of bis—
extraordinary straw figures of .a
woman. "My wife,” he called it.
The cheeks were painted jwitto itrisi t
blood, and the eyes and hair marked,
with charcoal. In the 'Tollowing
months he devised hie-“family”—
moved simultaneously. Sheriff
Bates wrote:
“But the most extraordinary, the
most wonderful and mysterious of
all is thaUto |Ais Urge jig.has pre?.
pared, .undiscovered and at once gx«
hibited the tho?| striking p ctuge oC.
genius/brt, taste, anti invention Alai’"
ever was, and, I presume, ever will
be produced by any human being
placed in his situation, in a dark
room, chained and handcuffed, un-
der sentence of death, without so
much as a nail of any, kind to work
with, but hands, nakrid.”-'
Interested in hi| -geniqs, official^,
obtained a pirrtlorr bn condition he ',
leave the.proves. He' Was taken M
to St. john andrput on a ship leaving. ,
for Nova'Bcotia. -ria
Mrs. F. C. T—Dried figs con-
tain from 60 to 70,Pfr cent sugar
A. F. B.—When thorough chew-
ing is impossible, food can be fine-
ly minted ot- put through a sieve,
to make it easily digestible.
Mrs. A. G.rrPrunes axe a fine
natural laxafite- fotri for' those in
normal health. They furnish vita-
mins A, B and G. But they must
n<>4 ofltomgfces
WHAT t
• in iHl » |
NORMASHEARER
whicji had a long run as a
ful play before being handed
to motion pictures. Norma
way of getting what she wants—as
Marion Davies found out when they
both wanted “Marie Antoinette” and
Norma got it.
—*—
Remember Eric von Stroheiqb
who used to make pictures
(‘Greed” and “Foolish Wive*”
among them,) that cost milliotoft
He’s acting in French pictures now
—which usually cost not more than
$75,000.
Incidentally, Jean Hersholt was
reminiscing about "Greed” the oth-
er day—how it was way over the
right length, and von Stroheim felt
so badly about having it cut that he
wouldn’t even look at the film that
was finally released.
•day.'.il7 .*.tM bna .i:< '
i< WikUteWrfrw* tarii of serving
GODS 4WD KV0S -4 radio oelor
dirrrlor uho Irarned mnrieen lantuago
is on the air—at • dialcrt nooge and
imitolor oj animal* . . . Many of the
imfanioniil radio announcer* are bed,
nut after hearing a doien amateur* fry
out the other day the worst of than
rounded man-elou* . . . Bette Darit -em
fused to be included in a list of moMS
rfom's ln> most beautiful girl*; said *'B|>
idea is silly, because I'm not even a natr
as a picture, and finally abandoned it—
whereupon it wa* houfht foe the Hoge,
where it's ■ tremendous suvrrss.
• Weatern Union.
Food May Fail to Food
You can satisfy hunger without
providing correct nutrition. You
to the point of over-
Wnilg indulgence — with-
/ Jgmml out meeting bodily '
f re9tarements.
The mere spend-
ing of money will
not insure good nu-
trition, for ex-
fpjj tremely poor diet*
can be rbund te
> households where
the income is large
and thq fopd budget, is ample.
What counts is learning to provide
the right'foods In the correct pro
portions. The return in health wiH
be more than worth the invest-
ment of effort in acquiring this
knowledge. >/ , tri •.
A Balanced Diet
Science has discovered what
foods are necessary to hek>-build
top health and keep us 100 per
cent fit The amount of food rei
quired by a nian for a day’s work
can be accurately determined. We
know that a specific disease may
be produce^ by bne diet and cured
by another; that growth can be
influenced through changes to the
<'quality of the dietary; that old
age may be deferred by choosing
i •' the food with care.
< •11 Wo know that the body is a
working machine which never
stops but may slow down or - get
out of order unleks the daily diet
includes every elepieqt, every
mineral, every vitamih tiWded to
... maintain health and avoid the de-
'ficiency diseases.
•|, Sevan Essentials
There are seven factors to be
considered' in planning a balanced
diet.., J’ro^qinfor building body
Flocks May Be Developing
T6o Slow, Too Fast.
By Dr. W. C Thompson. Poultry Husband-
man. New Jsrsey Agricultural
Fatsf
tent of I
diet. T1______ __
ter, margarine, cream, egg yolk,
salad dressing* Vegetable oils and
j A protein food should be prOviih*
ed at eerii mrial Meat, poultry,
fish, eggs, cheese, milk and most
nuts supply complete protein. Ce-
reals and: |egqmes furnish incom-
plete protein which may be sup-
plemented by the complete pro-
tein of milk.
1
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 7, 1938, newspaper, July 7, 1938; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1207507/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.