The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 25, 1952 Page: 7 of 20
twenty pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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INCINC you
greetings
for a most
pleosont ond
hoppy Christmas
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LOUIS VACEK
PEARL BEER DISTRIBUTOR
Thanks for saying “Bottle of Peart, Please”
BELLVILLE, TEXAS
I
GOOD WISH
FOR A
MR. and MRS. DENNIS A. KRUEGER
TEXAS
NEW ULM,
TEXAS
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‘ S. SCHMID STORE
SHELBY, TEXAS
L. A. Reichle
Consignee. Magnolia Petroleum Company
NEW ULM,4
Our Christmas wishes to you
carry with them all the com*
foiling warmth and radiant
good cheer that we can possi-
bly forward to you.
A
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1,600 Texas Adoptions
executive
a
of
M
I he Methodist Church
INDUSTRY,
TEXAS
—
Interwoven as is the love of
liberty with every ligament of
your hearts, no recommendation
of mine is necessary to fortify
er confirm the attachment.—
George Washington.
Among the larger industries
in the city of Louisville, Ken-
tucky, are the manufacture of
tcba^co products, cement, wag-
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st®
miay -tfu True Peace of*
(Tirirfvnat oTide wirfv ^ou dTwayi
Some 9,000 square miles in
central Kentucky contain num-
erous underground passages and
caves of which the best known
is the "Mammoth cave, now de-
signated a national park.
n
The freedom of mankind has
found an asylum here which it
could find nowhere else. Free-
dom of conscience i3 enjoyed
here in the fullest degree—
James Monroe.
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parents was unknown in 20 per
ct nt of the cases.
Average ages of couples seek-
ing to adopt children was thir-
ty-six for husbands and thirty-
director of the Welfare Depart- four for wives. However, the
---. „— j n_. >.•-----i—I range of husbands’ ages ran
from nineteen to eighty-two and
of wives from seventeen to six-
ty-eight.
Two out of three cuupies want
to adopt children less than six
years old. Older children, Latin-
Americans and Negroes were
hard to place. Four per eent of
the requests were for Negro
children and 9 per cent for Lat-
in-Americans.
Only 14 per cent of the place-
ments were made by licensed
agencies.Step-parent adoptions
totaled 35 per cent and own-
parent placements reported to
the Welfare Department were
17 per cent.
More than 1,000 applications
are pending. ' .
ment said the figure is mislead-
ing, ho a ever, because of incom-
plete information.
“We don’t know just how
many of those actually were il-
legal adoptions.”
He explained that many place-
ments made by the natural par-
ents of children probably are
among the 1,600. Such place-
ments are legal under the state
licensing law, but in many cases
complete information is not sent
to the Welfare Department.
Winters does not believe
change in the law is needed.
“It is mainly a matter
educating the people,” ne said,
“and showing them the advant-
ages of licensed agencies.”
A licensed agency investi-
gates the prospective parents as
well as the background of the
natural parents, he explained.
“The problem is complicated,'
Winters added, “by the fact that
many of the states have no li-
censed agencies.
Winters does not believe
“black market” adoption activi-
ties are very extensive in Texas.
“It springs up from time to
time,” he said, “but is usually
stamped out pretty quickly.”
The Welfare Department con-
siders as “black market” any
adoption in which prospective
parents simply are ordered to
pay a certain amount of money
for a child without any investi-
gation being made of prospec-
tive parents or natural parents.
Requests by Texas couples to
adopt children have risen sharp-
ly in the past 5 years.
Applications were made for
4,702 children in the year end- —J
ing last August 31, compared ons, plows and leather.
, to 3,327 in 1948.
. m« 1 Of the children sougnt for
Said Contrary To Law adoption, 51 per cent were born
* Ito legally wed parents. Twenty-
. ai ™ u i u n*,,€ Per cent were born out of
Austin.—Figures complied bv W1.d.lock. Marital gtatug of the
the Department of Public Wei- ------
fare indicate that 1,600 Texas
children have been adopted this
year'contrary to the state li-
censing law.
John H. Winters,
••for
Rev. and Mrs. L. D. Hardt
INDUSTRY, TEXAS
The Interstate Commerce com-
mission was established by Con-
ood*>
Hi*
Kentucky was admitted as a
c of the United States in
only*”*0'
4*.’***
on baby
housing,
ties and assures a steady source St. Louis, Missouri, was
of income. Large scale produc- founded by the French in 1794,
tion results in higher profits, | and was named after Louis IX
better markets and the maxi-! of France. It come under Am-
mum use of labor and equip- erican control in 1804.
ment, says the specialist.
Included in the bulletin is in-
formation on baby chicks, stat^,
brooding, housing, feeding, 1792.
H. (M‘
4«.n S’°'
,<b * '
year more than 50 million broil-
ers were marketed and the in-
dustry is still expanding.
As an aid to broiler growers,
the Texas Agricultural Exten-
sion Service has released a new
bulletin, “B-204, Broiler Produc-
tion,” and it is available at all
county extension offices. Ex-
tension Poultry Husbandman W.
J. Moore is the author.
Moore says broiler production
in Texas has become a specializ-
ed industry. Modern breeding
and feeding methods, he con-
tinues, permit year-round pro- : gress in an act passed on Feb-
duction and this enables the ruary 4, 1887.
grower to utilize all his facili-
ties ar.d assures a steady source
H» |
i<4 >“**
New Bulletin On Broiler I lights, sanitation and a discus-
Production Is Released sion on the use of battery
----— brooders. The latest research
Broiler production in Texas is I findings and experiences of
big business. During the past ' broiler producers were used by
~:7_ ?? Moore in writing the publication.
The Texas Agricultural Experi-
ment Station and Poultry Hus-
bandry, Department of Texas A.
and M. College have contributed
much to this research especially
in the use of antibiotics and
vitamins.
Persons interested in secur-
ing a copy of the bulletin should
contact their local county agent.
It is available without charge.
Hit liar in the east.
and are come to
nor-
ship Him."
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Mr. and Mrs. Melvin R. Spiess
Sharon and Yvonne
Radio — Television & Electrical Service
INDUSTRY, TEXAS
. for we hsie seen
■ '■eywwa tv
THE NEW ULM ENTERPRISE, NEW ULM, TEXAS, THURSDAY, DEC. 25, 1952.
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 25, 1952, newspaper, December 25, 1952; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1225765/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.