The Caldwell News and The Burleson County Ledger (Caldwell, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 3, 1938 Page: 3 of 8
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The Caldwell News, Thursday, Novemb^ b, fOTl
Dedicate Memorial to Beloved Humorist
.■ L,
t
Standing slop * lonely hill near Clsremore, Okla., Ihe home lown of Will Rogers, the 1200,0*0 Will Sogers
memorial neara completion. The building will house poaaeaalona and mementoea of the tale humorlst-phi-
loaopher. Inael shows Vice President John Nance Owner, chief apesker at dedication ceremonies November 4.
,000,000 Oil Blast Rocks New Jersey Town
WHAT to EAT «nd
C. Houston Goudiss Describes Food Value
and Versatility of Gelatin; Outlines
Its Many Uses in the Diet
WHO'S
NEWS
THIS
WEEK
By LEMUEL F. PARTON
NEW YORK.—Henry L. Stoddard.
one of the beat of all American
political reportera, friend of more
Presidents anrt cnbjnet offlcers^Uian is outstanding, not only because it is far less complex than
Stoddard on man, la the author most others, but because it is f
By C. HOUSTON GOUDISS
WHEN we try to appraise the nutritional values of any
one food in comparison with others, as a rule we have
a difficult task. Most foodstuffs are composed of so many
different substai.ces that what is lacking in one will be sup-
plied by another, and making comparisons may therefore
be misleading as well as futile. But there is one food which
Shirt-Sleeve of "It Costa to Be ¡ no exaggeration to say that-
¿Veo>epaper«ngrPre*Went'" without it, some of us might
p u b i i s h e d. its not be alive, end those of us
who are alive would obtain
mine of previously untold atories
quickly transferred it from the book
page to the news page. Having en-
Joyed a long acquaintance with Mr.
Stoddard. I dropped In at his office,
overlooking the Old Park Row which
"formed hia genius."
Close in nearly all hia life with
wing-collar statesmanship, he want
far less enjoyment from our
daily existence.
That food is gelatin!
What Is Gelatin?
Gelatin is a protein food which
ed to talk about shirt-sleeve news- has no equal as a carrier, binder
crcams
This remarkable'air view shows huge elands'of black-smoke and flameu billowing from Cities Service
Oil company plant after 111 gigantic oil tanks exploded at Linden, N. 1. Fed by milliona of gallona of petro-
leum, the domes did damage estimated at 91,000,000.
. .#r;t
an
"Ears" of Anti-Aireraft Artillery
KER-C-H-O.O!!
,"7v •
and "extender" of
a wide variety of
other nutritive ma-
terials. Chemical-
ly, it is classed as
a colloid, which
means that in solu-
tion, it can be re-
moved from its sol-
vent by filtration.
It is because of
this that it is so
useful in producing
smooth, delicious
and other dainties,
free from ice crystals.
Gelatin is an almost pure pro-
tein—a kind of protein known as
an, albuminoid. It is not a com-
plete protein, because it is defi-
cient in three of the amino acids
that are necessary both to support
growth and repair body tissuea. In
this it differs from meat, cheese,:
fish, eggs and milk, which are
known as complete proteins.
It Cannot be used as the sole
soúrce of protein in the diet, be-,
cause those three missing amino
acids are necessary for the for-
mation of new body .tissue. But It
is especially xtah in- lysine,.one of
the protein buildjng stones thai is
partioularly important in the diet
of children, Experiments indicate
that no oihpr amino, acid can take
•perhaps the place of lysine' and that it
with Jake Riis.or Eddio Riggs of must be furnished hy the food If
the New York Sun. and I remember 1 adequate nutrition is trf be main-
James Creelman, Julian Ralph and tained. " ' ' ' "
a score of then -famous politicians j- -That coupled' With" the fact that
and newspaper men. mingling with it is non-irritating and easily di-
the men from the mechanical de- ^estible accounts for the' large
partments, arguing over the world part it plays 5n the diet of infants
war scare, local and national poli- and young children.
tics—everything under the sun. It
papering. The latter allusion had
to do with Hitchcock's Beanery,
where shirt-sleeved waiters served
ham and beans to printers, stereo-
typers, reporters, editors, and poli-
ticians, who mingled in a shirt-
sleeve forum which Mr. Stoddard
thinks helped to galvanize the New
York newspapers of that day—from
40 to 50 years ago.
Sixty-two years in newspapering,
Mr. Stoddard is "up from the case, '
a printer on the New York Tribune,
an ace political reporter and ■ for
29 years owner and publisher of the ice
New York Mail.
"It aeems to me that every re-
porter ought to know the smell
of printer's Ink," he said. "The
great newspaper of today, with
all Ita marvelous efficiency, has
loot something stimulating and
vital In no longer having this
mingling of the crafta. I re- .
member that, at Hltchcpck's, a,
slovenly reporter might be
called down by one of those om-
niscient old-time printers, or
perhaps It would be ihe other
way about, with one of the news-
men berating the press room
foreman, and asking him why
he couldn't manage a decent
make-ready.
"Theodore Roosevelt used to go to
Hitchcock's frequently,
was something like the free speech
common in early colonial America,
where you could step into the en-
closure and say what you thought
How It Is Made
Contrary to old wives' tales, gel-
atin is not made from hoofs and
about the king or anybody or any- horns. In fact, there is no gelatin
thing else. ;jn hoofs or horns. It is extracted
'The gusto with which T. R. would from connective tissue in the skins
dump a bottle of catsup and a slath- and from the bones of food ani:
er of mustard on a plate of ham mals.
and beans, or corned beef and, Every homemakcr who has
beans, was something worth secingjpade soup by simmering a
and retr-mbering. knuckle bone for hours, and has
"Frwmll,. Ih . .M.ioM .1 "" ■y..Tl¥' 'US
small scale. The same principles
¡are followed by the gelatin manu-
facturer, only he operates in o
much larger food kitchen, and
Photograph shows one of Ihe new streamlined sound detector* the
army tested during the air corps and aircraft defense maneuvers In
North Carolina. The listening horns are made of balsa wood with rounded
edges and a cellulose acetate covering. They have no greater hearing
power than Ihe old style, hut arc more cffecllve In shutting out all but
plane noises. Thus searchlights and guns of the anti-aircraft batlcrics
can be trained more efficiently on attacking planes.
Pretty Jean MeNally has tossed
her hankie Into the ring to vie for
honors as "hay fever queen" in the
novel contest conducted at Galves-
ton, Texas, among the hay fever
colony. Galveston'* medical author-
ities say that this Is one of the
mailt virulent seasons in years for
sufferers of the allergic aflllctlon.
Miss MeNally was ghen odds to win
by a nose.
Officiates at
Eucharistic Congress
CAMERA SHY
on the paper, just after press
time, In which any story of un-
usual distinction or a clean-cut
news beat was sure to get a
cheer, and quite as certainly
any of us wlea had stubbed his
toe was in for a raking over.
My work has made me an ob-
server of our efforts to estab-
lish true democracy in America.
1 have never attempted an exact
definition of democracy, but,
whatever It is, 1 am sure It
was exemplified In this craft
ideal of the old-time newspaper.
The spirit seems lost In the
highly departmentalized, mech-
anized and specialized charac-
ter of modern large-scale enter-
prise, not only of newspapers,
but of business in general."
Stoddard's family newspaper tra-
dition goes way back into the flat-
bed days. His great-grandfather es-
tablished the Hudson. N. Y.. Regis-
ter, in 1787. He learned the print-
er's trade in his grandfather's print-
ing oflice at Hudson. A proofreader
on the Tribune at 15. he read proof
on the famous Tilden Cipcr dis-
patches, a reporter soon thereafter,
on the Tribune and the Philadelphia
Press. He wrote the first daily tele-
graph Setter ever sent out from New
York city.
each step of the preparation is
Pillow and Chair Set
Of Crocheted Lace
I ALWAYS thought «he reason
Alice Paul never stayed in Jail
long was that she was just a wraith
and floated through the bars. The
*
n
scientifically controlled so as to
insure a uniform finished product.
Gelatin is sold in two forms:
the unflavored, granulated prod-
uct which requires the addition
of flavoring, and when used for
dessert purposes, sweetening; and
the gelatin, dessert powders which
contain added sugar, color, flavor
and fruit acid. So popular are
these convenient gelatin desserts,
that about 10,000,000 pounds of gel-
atin are used annually for this
purpose.
From Infancy to Old Age
Nutritionists recognize gelatin
as a food possessing many unique
advantages in the daily diet, and
it is prescribed by physicians for
a variety of special diets. New-
born babies, for example, are
aometimes given a gelatin-sugar-
salt solution which provides readi-
ly available protein to raise the
protein level of the blood. When
an infant cannot readily digest
milk, owing to the formation of
hard curds, the doctor may rec-
ommend the addition of 1 per cent
of gelatin dissolved in the milk.
This usually causes it to be as-
similated easily and satisfactorily.
When it comes time to change
a baby's food from liquids to sol-
ids, gelatin also proves useful, for
its soft, semi-solid texture makes
an Excellent transitional food.
With toddlers and school chil-
dren, gelatin—the carrier and
"extender"—provides a splendid
method for offering foods that are
disliked. Vegetables that draw
forth protests when presented in
the usual fashion are eaten with
relish when molded into .a spar-
kling lime- or lemon-flavored sal-
ad. The cosirse texturé of certain
raw vegetables, such as carrots
and. cabbage, or the tart flavor
of some fruits, may likewise be
modified by serving them hi a
gelatin base.
And it doesn't require statistics
from nursery schools to tell Moth-
ers how readily children eat gela-
tin .desserts when they are bril-
liant with color and flavored with
Building, Maintaining
Healthy Teeth
By C. HOUSTON GOUDISS
It is an alarming fact that al-
most every adult in this great land
of ours is affected by some form
of oral disease, and that more
than 90 p^r qpnj, of our school
children have decayed teeth. A
prominent medieal authority made
the statement that if dental decay
became rare, instead or almost
universal, more than half of all
sickness would be eliminated.
Remarkable and widely herald-
ed advances have been made in
our knowledge of how to control
and prevent many dangerous and
debilitating diseases. A decayed
tooth is a poison factory, distribut-
ing its noxious product to every
part of the body. In the body,
that poison attacks and centers
in the weakest spot. It may lead
to neuritis, rheumatic ailments,
dyspepsia, or duodenal ulcers. It
may even be a contributing cause
of heart disease.
Only a small percentage of our
population is yet aware of the far-
reaching effects of teeth upon
health. There is a close relation-
ship between healthy teeth and
healthy bodies, and between de-
cayed teeth and sickly bodies.
By learning something of the
importance of caring properly for
the teeth, some men and women
of middle ane look and feel young-
er than their parents did at the
same age.
I have endeavored in manv of
the WHAT TO EAT AND WHY
articles, which have appeared in
this newspaper over my signature,
to point out the close relationship
between diet and dental disease;
between frequent and thorough
brushing of the teeth with an effi-
cient dentifrice so as to remove
all food particles, and strong,
beautiful teeth.
I have received many letters
Pattern 6168
Spend spore moments profitably
with your crochet hooU und some
y- p • • , *'an; ,r''gllc. litu<; string and add charm to your
Ttnyt*min t feminist, locked |lomc with crocheted accessories
Sot One Coal "P many times in tjiat match! Interesting to make from readers of these articles,
For Suffrage dayi Past- now and inexpensive, too, you could showing that homemakers are
fans up her Na- ma|<e e¡ther chair set or pillow eager for sound, authoritative ad-
Uonul Woman's party to the World ajonc or niake a pillow with vice on the proper care of the
Woman's party, of which she be- match¡nK soarf ends. Can't you teeth. To help these and other
comes temporary chairman. Its ob- gee what nUention they'd attract readers to know how to properly
loallna la lit A nKnlllinkt nf Mil L.nnl * m >■ ■ . a m
George Cardinal Mundeleln of Chicago Is shown with the sspcrsorlum
In hand ar he blessed the crowda upon entering 8t. Louis cathedral during
Ihe ceremony which marked hia formal assumption of the role of legate
for Pape Plus XI at the Kacharlatlc congress at New Orleans. The oa-
Uwdral, hnllt la 1794, Blanda an the apet where the Brst Catholic char oh
jm Um Mississippi valley had been erected It years previously.
This lioness mother at Chicago's
Lincoln Park soo carries her three-j
week-eld cuh to safety when the
photographer appears. It looks
daageroas far the youngster but!
nether la mighty careful nat to
scratch her offspring In tranalt. An
Intruder would Bad the same Jaws
aiorcllaaa.
Jective is the abolition of all legal
distinctions between men and wom-
en, to which goal she narrowed tri-
umphant suffrage and to which she
has held it ever since. A tiny wisp
of a woman, she is the living refu-
tation of Schopenhauer's contenUon
that will and intelligence never go
together.
• Con^^jrsrsoturM
at a bazaar? Pattern 6108 contains
charts and instructions for mak-
ing the set; illustrations of it and
stitchcs used; materials needed.
To obtain this pattern, send 15
cents in stamps or coins (coiri
preferred) to The Sewing Circle,
Household Arts Dept., 259 W- "th
St.. New York, N. Y.
Please write your name, ad-
dress and pattern number plainly.
care for their teeth. 1 have pre>
pared a booklet on BUILDING
AND MAINTAINING HEALTHY
TEETH which I am offering
FREE, because I feel so strongly
that this information should be in
every home, knowing as i do, that
the salvation of the human race
may lie In saving their teeth. Ad-
dress, C. Houston Goudiss, tit 8.
Desplatees St., Chieage, 111.
lUOTlRHp
orange, raspberry, cherry, atraw*
berry or other well liked SavaeaJ!
Every mother knows this Aram fea*
own experience—and I rather i
pect that many mothers
these attractive molded
aa the prise to be won in
for cleaning the plate of the
course!
In the Reducing Diet
Both men aad women whe KM
counting their eateries, in aa at£
fort to avoid overweight, ar ta>
reduce, ean proflt by tahtag (•la-
tin salads and deaaerta, which sal
isfy hunger without provldlag ah
wanted fuel value.
In cases of dlgeative
anee, gelatin la frequently
mended becauae of Ha binad tuts,
and beeauae It leaves ao rsstdaa
in the lower intestinal tract.
This same apleadid food la
advised by doctors when a
protein diet la desired ta
growth, or daring convalessaaaa
from an illness. Gelatin may feai
added to broths, milk, fratt aaA;
vegetables, and these, la tata,'
may be incorporated la setfdMsi
gelatin. ¡
Indeed, this many-aided food !
stuff has come to play suoti a'
wide and varied role in nutritions'
not only by itself but by enhaaa>
ing the value of other foods, tlMV
it must be numbered among *fKa<
products that help to increaae
tional health and vigor.
Questions Answered
I
Mrs. S. B. L.—Even in the aa
called goiter belt, simple gaits*
may usually be prevented by tha
administration of small amounts
of iodine to every young girt, be-
fore and during adolescence, and
also to expectant and nuraing
mothers. The amount required as
quite small and may be given bp
a physician" in' the form of la 1
dized salt. - ♦
Misa A. M. G.-Bran is consid-
ered an excellent, ^ource of both
iron and phosphorus. "' :
©-WMU-C. Houston ^ouiUqh-liae-NL?
nouns
That Everyone Who Takes
Aspirin Should Staéj
Drop o tayor labial In water—it Mar*
to disintegrate In 2 locondt—homo Is
ready to "go to work" rapidly
This Quick Dissolving Property
of Genuine Bayer Aspirin
Explains Fast Relief
If you suffer with headaches or tha
pains of rheumatism or neurit!*,
keep the above picture about gen-
uine Bayer Aspirin in your mind.
Especially if quick relief is what
you want.
For the way a Bayer Tablet works
in the glass is the way it works when
you take it. It starts to dissolve ai
most at once — hcncc is ready te
"take hold" of the rheumatic pais
or headache with astonishing speed
Relief often comes in a few minute*
Always ask for
"BAYER Aspirin"
—never usk for
"aspirin" alone.
15!
Iron 12 TABLETS
S FULL DOZEN 2So
A Sure Index of Vols
... is knowledge of a
manuiacturer'snameaad
what it stands for. It la
tha most certain method,
except that oí actual
use, for judging tha
value of any manufao
turad goods. Hexe Istias
only guarantee sasfel
_ oarelssB workmen ship a*
Buy use of shoddy attfcaeW*.
ADVERTIS® GOODS
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Smith, G. A. The Caldwell News and The Burleson County Ledger (Caldwell, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 3, 1938, newspaper, November 3, 1938; Caldwell, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth175330/m1/3/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Harrie P. Woodson Memorial Library.