New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1919 Page: 2 of 8
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AS
V UNDER THE X
MAGNIFYING GLASS
' 85% Z
To Stock Raiser.
12.96%
. Expenses
\ liter. FMfht /
A “Close-Up”
Swift & Company’s Profit of 2.04
cents on each dollar of sales
12.96 %
k&pe&s&s
£si>ai\ l&esght
Etc. 2%
NEW ULM ENTERPRISE. NEW ULM, TEXAS
RANKS WITH WORLD’S GREAT
GIRLS! BEAUTIFY YOUR
SAVING THE ELM.
W. N. U., HOUSTON, NO. 15-1919.
the
con-
Starving in the
Midstof Plenty
it your
Swift & Company, U. S. A
was all
was so
don’t
else
tree.
Life
elm
near
are
the
I had all
with me.
It isn’t what a man doesn’t know
that worries him, but what he knows
others know he doesn’t know.
A rose by any other name would be
Just as expensive in midwinter.
The small . boy occasionally
sumes time by eating dates.
Young men, what are you
do in the great future?—K.
nell.
WOMAN WORKS
15 HOURS A HAY
going to
A. Bur-
1919 Year Book of interesting and
instructive facts sent on request.
Address Swift & Company-
Union Stock Yards, Chicago, Illinois
thing I
Achievements of Sir Isaac Newton
Give Him an Assured Place
Among Immortals.
in the
"DANDERINE”
GROWS HAIR
Besides doubling the
beauty of your hair
at once, you will
shortly find new hair,
fine and downy at
first, but really new
hair growing all over
the scalp.. Costs little.
DADDYb EVENING
sarwiALE®
4?MAKY 6&U1AM BONNER
* X N ©/> Z4e AUTHOR X
acid-stomach is the real cause of the
trouble.
Naturally, the sensible thing to do
is to strike right at the very cause Qf
this trouble and clean the excess acid
out of the stomach. There is a quick,
easy way to do this. A wonderful new
remedy quickly removes the excess
acid without the slightest discomfort.
It is EATONIC. Made in the form
of tablets—they are good to eat—just
like a bit of candy. They literally
absorb the injurious excess acid and
carry it away through the intestines.
They also drive the bloat out of the
body—in fact you can fairly feel it
work. Make a test of EATONIC in
your own case today. Get a big box
of EATONIC from your druggist. See
for yourself how surely it brings quick
relief in those painful attacks of in-
digestion, bitter heartburn, belching,
disgusting food repeating, that awful
bloated, lumpy feeling after eating and
other stomach miseries. Banish all
your stomach troubles so completely
that you forget you have a stomach.
Then you can eat wbnt you like and
digest your food in comfort without
fear of distressing after effects.
If EATONIC does not relieve you,
it will not cost you one penny. You
can return it to your druggist and get
your money back. So if you have the
slightest question about your health
—if you feel you are not getting all
the strength out of your food—if you
are not feeling tip-top, ready for your
work, full of vim and vigor—do give
EATONIC a fair trial this very day
and see how much better you will feel.
this
must recruit is my health.’
Marvelous Story of Wcman’ff
Change from Weakness
to Strength by Taking
Druggist9» Advice.
One of the worbt features of acid-
stomach is that very often it literally
starves its victims in the midSt of
plenty. And the strange thing about
it is that the people with acid-stomachs
seldom know what their trouble
really is.
No matter how good or wholesome
the food may be, or how much they
eat, they do not gain in strength.
This is clearly explained by the fact
that an acid-stomach cannot properly
' digest food. Instead of healthy, nor-
mal digestion, the excess acid causes
the food to sour and ferment. Then
when this mass of sour, fermented
food, charged with excess acid, passes
into the intestines, it becomes the
breeding place for all kinds of germs
and toxic poisons, which in turn are
absorbed into the blood and in this
way distributed throughout the entire
body. And that is exactly why it is
that so many thousands of people eat
and eat and keep on eating and yet
are literally starving in the midst of
plenty. Their a ci g-stomachs make it
absolutely impossible for them to get
the full measure of nourishment out
of their food. And it doesn’t take
long for this poor nourishment to show
its ill effects in a weakened, emaci-
ated body.
You may say: “My stomach doesn’t
hurt me.” That may be true because
many victims of acid-stomach do not
actually suffer stomach pains. Then
again, there are millions who do suffer
all kinds of aches and pains—head-
aches, rheumatic twinges, gout, lum-
bago, pains around the heart and in
the chest—who never dream that an
Peru, Ind.—“ I suffered from a dis-
placement with backache and dragging-
down pains so
badly that at times
could not be on
f my feet and it did
• not seem as though
could stand it. I
tried different
medicines without
any benefit and.
several doctors
told me nothing
but an operation
would do me any
good. My drug-
gist told me of
HAIR WITH “DANDERINE”
Preliminaries.
want to enlist your interest in
enterprise.” “The first
According to a legend, which, how-
ever, is seriously considered by certain
authorities, in the year 16G5 the fall
of an apple as Newton sat in his
garden, suggested the most magnificent
of his subsequent discoveries—the law
of universal gravitation. On his first at-
tempt to explain the lunar and planet-
ary motions he employed an estimate
then in use of the radius of the earth
which, based on the value of a degree
of latitude then prevalent, was so er-
roneous as to produce a discrepancy
between the real force of gravity and
that require by theory to explain the
motions and indicated only an approxi-
mate verification of his theory. Ac-
cordingly, he abandoned for a number
of years the hypothesis that a homo-
geneous attracting sphere behaved .as
if all matter was concentrated at its
center, and took up other studies, con-
sisting chiefly of investigations of the
nature of light and the construction of
telescopes. He also propounded new
theories on light and color. Newton
died March 20, 1727 (old style), and
his remains were interred in West-
minster abbey.
“I am so happy,” said the elm
“Oh, I am so happy and so glad,
is very beautiful, very indeed.”
“What mak6s you so happy,
tree?” asked the young elm tree
by. It was always known as the young
elm tree for the first elm tree was old-
er, much older and was called THE
elm tree,, or Grandfather Elm.
“Please tell me if it is your bithday,
Grandfather Elm? I know you are old
and I think you should have a birth-
day party. If you did, I am sure the
wind, and the trees opposite, would
wish you all sorts of happiness, a
long life, and we would sing you a
birthday poem, though we couldn’t
very well give you presents.
“Trees can’t give presents very
well.”
“It’s not exactly my birthday,” said
Grandfather Elm, “but in a way it’s
like a birthday celebration, for now
I can look forward to lots and lots
of birthdays and other days and weeks
and months and years.
“I am going to live a long while. I
am so happy about it, for I love life.
I love to look down at the people and
I love to keep them cool under my
shade when the weather becomes hot.
“Of course now I am just ready
for the summer. I am trying to look
my best and my brightest as all
trees are at this time of the year.”
“It is fine to hear you say you
going to live a long time,” said
young elm tree.
“It makes me very happy, too,” said
Grandfather Elm. “You see I was quite
ill and now I am -well.”
“Were you ill, Grandfather?” asked
the young elm. “I am so sorry to hear
it. I thought you were having a good
deal of care and attention when I saw
all the work which you were having
done for you.
“But I didn’t think that was because
you were ill but because you were be-
ing all dressed up and all fussed up
for the spring and summer. Tell me
about it without trembling with nerv-
ousness.”
“Yes, I was very, very ill,” said the
elm tree. “I didn’t know whether I
Get a Small Bottle! Freshen Your Scalp! Stop
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of Wavy, Glossy, Beautiful Hair—You Can!
If you don’t like your job,
worry. It will suit somebody
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i ham’8 Vegetables
l /wlW Compound. I took
V /\ with the result
\ that I am now well
Y '\ \ “"'I and strong. I get
up in the morning at four o’clock, do my
housework, then go to a factory and work
all day, come home and get supper and
feel good. I don’t know how many of
my friends I have told what Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has;
done for me. ”—Mrs. Anna Meteriano,
36 West 10th St., Peru, Ind.
Women Who suffer from any such ail-
ments should not fail to try this famous
root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound.
•FATONICs
E ■WMK FOR YOUR ACID-STOMACH
The diagram at the top. shows the distribution
of the average Swift dollar received from sales
of beef, pork and mutton, and their by-products,
during 1918. The magnifying glass brings
out the distribution of the 2.04 cents profit
per dollar of sales:
.94 of one per cent goes to pay interest
on borrowed money, taxes, etc.
.50 of one per cent goes to pay divi-
dends to shareholders.
.60 of one per cent remains in the
business to help in improving and
____financing the business.
Total 2.04 percent
Acid-Stomach Steals Strength and
Good Feelings From Millions
Grandfather Elm Swayed
Breeze.
would ever get well or not.
sorts of things the matter
“They talked about me, people did,
and they said if would be a great pity
to cut me down. They said I gave
shade in the hot summer, they said I
was very beautiful and they said I
should be saved if possible.”
“That was fine,” said the young elm
tree”.
“It certainly made me happy,” said
Grandfather Elm.
“Tell me some more,” said the young
elm tree.
“A lot of very clever tree doctors
were sent for and they said that I
could be saved. Oh, how happy that
made me I” 1
“All the bad wood which had start-
ed in to hurt me was taken away.
Then they fixed up the places where
the old wood had been so it would keep
in good condition in the future.
“I had steel straps put upon me in
certain places to keep me from blow-
ing over and fixed in such a way so I
could sway and laugh and blow nat-
urally with the. rest of you.
“My, but when they said I
right, how I did rejoice I I
happy, so happy.”
“We must certainly call
birthday,” said the young elm tree.
“Yes,” said the other near-by trees
which had heard Grandfather Elm'
Tree’s story, “it is the best time to
talk of your birthday. For you’re a
fine old tree and you will not live
many, many years, and when we wish
you many happy returns, we will know
that our wishes will come true.”
And the wind blew and whistled thia
tune which the trees all joined in:
Many happy returns of the day,
We feel so happy and gay,
For we love you, our fine old tree.
And always will. you. see.
And Grandfather Elm smiled and
swayed as he said his “thank you’sl”
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New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1919, newspaper, April 10, 1919; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1193575/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.