The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 19, 1920 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: New Ulm Enterprise and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Nesbitt Memorial Library.
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NEW ULM ENTERPRISE, NEW ULM, TEXAS
Doubles Its
SAILBOAT’S DREAM.
MOTHER!
Marked by Shells.
a
of
it
soreheart bolts to-
Sun.
of
o n
go-
INVENTIVE GENIUS
ROBS CALOMEL OF
NAUSEA AND DANGER
The Magic Distance.
Guest—You advertised a magnifi-
cent view.
Proprietor—Yes, you can see three
miles out at sea.
A few cents buys “Danderine.”
After an application of “Danderine”
you can not find a fallen hair or any
dandruff, besides every hair shows new
life, vigor, brightness, more color and
thickness.—Adv.
Accept “California” Syrup of Figs
only—look for the name California on
the package, then you are sure your
child is having the best and most harm-
less physic for the little stomach, liver
and bowels. Children love its fruity
taste. Full directions on each bottle.
You must say “California.”—Adv. .
Bolts.
Knlcker—The sorehead bolts.
Bocker—Anti the
■sether.—New York
w author.
What will human ingenuity do next?
Smokeless powder, wireless, telegraphy,
horseless carriages, colorless iodine, taste-
less quinine,—now comes nausealess, calo-
mel. The new improvement called “Calo-
tabs” is now on sale at. drugstores.
For biliousness, constipation and indi-
gestion the new calomel tablet, is a prac-
tically perfect remedy, as evidenced by
the fact that the manufacturers have au-
thorized all druggists to refund the price
if the customer is not “perfectly delighted”
with Calotabs. One tablet at bedtime with
a swallow of water—that’s all. No taste,
mo nausea, no griping, no salts. By morn-
ing your liver is thoroughly cleansed and
you are feeling fine, with a hearty appe-
tite. Eat what you please—no danger—go
about your business. %
Calotabs are not sold in bulk. Get an
original package, sealed. Price, thirty-
five cents.— (adv.)
Loss Almost Total.
First Professor—I lost half of
week’s wages yesterday. __
to—what did you do with the
^2?
Doctors’ Favorite Medicine Now
Purified and Refined from All
Objectionable Effects. “Calo-
tabs”—the New Name.
Neither Satisfactory.
Edwin—Which’ll we see? There’s
nn awfully funny Charley Chaplin at
the Bijou. You’ll split your sides.
Then there’s “Shrieking Souls” at the
Scarehead. It’ll make your hair stand
on end.
Angelina—Can’t you think of some-
thing else? I’m 'wearing my new
georgette waist and I’ve just had a
permanent wave.
Puts I Will In You
Easy to Get Strong
Everyone wants more pep and sure-
ty needs it this hot weather. Hot
weather takes away the appetite and
makes onp feel listless, lifeless, miser-
able, even when you have a strong
stomach, but for those who have weak
stomachs, it is really a dangerous,
trying time.
Be on the safe side this kind of
weather and help nature all you can, by
taking an eatonlc tablet about half
an hour before you eat and one or
two an hour after j*>u eat; it will be
of wonderful benefit. Eatonie sim-
ply takes up the excess acids, poisons
and gases, and carries them right out
of the body. With the cause of the
trouble removed, of course you will
feel fit and fine—full of pep all the
time. Eatonie will cool feverish mouth
and stomach and give you a good
•appetite, even in hot weather.
Get a big box at your druggist’s
for a trifling co'st and let eatonie
help you for a few days; then you
will’ never be without it. Adv.
’‘California Syrup of Figs”
Child’s Best Laxative
i Couldn’t Go Straight.
’Josephine—Now, you go straight
home.
Wess—I can’t. I live around the
corner.
“DANDERINE”
‘Would you like me to tell you of
the dream I had?” asked the sailboat
of old Mother
Ocean.
And old Moth-
er Ocean whis-
pered to the sail-
boat :
“Tell me your
dream, lovely
sailboat, for you
and I are friends.”
“I will tejl it to
you then,” , said
the sailboat. “Yes-
terday when al?
was so still, when
the water was so
warm and blue
looking, when
there was
slight haze
“1 Fell Asleep.” warmth over
and when the sky
was so clear and blue and when there
were no clouds in the sky I fell asleep
as I sailed along and I dreamed.
“Of course I didn’t fall sound,
sound asleep. My sails were still
standing straight on my masts. I still
went along the water standing very
straight and firm. No wind was blow-
ing so it was quite safe for me to
have a little day nap and should the
wind have started blowing I should
have ^elt it and awakened at once.
“For a sailboat never misses the
blowing of the wind.
“And as I sailed along through the
water with my tall masts looking up
at the cloudless sky I dreamed this
dream:
“All along the shore I saw children,
boys and girls, and I saw them in lit-
tle bathing suits. Some of them wore
suits of green and some of blue and
some of red and some of black and
some of orange.
“Some were swimming, some were
building castles in the sand, some
were paddling in the water, some were
picking up shells.
“Others were building one of the
biggest sand castles I’ve ever seen—
as it was so big that it could be seen
easily from out in the water. It was
standing high on the shore and its
big entrance was marked by shells;
shells made a great gateway and en-
tranceway. And the children had used
the soft sand over which the waves
had gone to makefile castle stand firm
all about.
“They had not gathered it when it
was under the water and when you
were roaring wildly and telling the
sand fairies some of your exciting
stories, Mother Ocean, but they had
taken the sand when it was still damp,
yet when it was not under the water.
“Yes, these were the things I saw
in my dream, just as I see these things
when I am not dreaming. I sailed
along and along and suddenly I heard
the voices of the children coming
close to me and bending over'my 'sails
and jumping on to the parts which
were in your dear blue lap, Mother
Ocean.
“And they all said to me:
“ ‘Dear Sailboat, you look so lovely,
so peaceful and so quiet and so happy
and so contented as you sail so slow-
ly along over dear old Mother Ocean.
Your sails are so white and you look
so straight and true and the sky above
seems to be just like you too, true and
clear. Yes, the sky is true blue!’
“And they laughed, Mother Ocean;
they laughed such gay and happy
■laughs.
“And then they said:
“ ‘Dear Sailboat, you look so lovely
that we want to make you look even
happier, so we’ve come to tell you
something.
“ ‘We’re not going to be perfect, no,
'we could never be that, and no one
would really like
us if we were
perfect. We’d
really be too good
if we were per-
fect.
“ ‘But we’re gb-
i n g to promise
you something,
something to
make you smile
h a p pi 1 y, dear
Sailboat. All
u s children
this beach ijre
i n g to promise
you something.
“ ‘You’re just
so lovely that we
have to tell you
our promise which
we’ve made to
each other, for you’re so beautiful we
know you like thoughts and wishes
and promises which are nice too.
“ ‘We’re never going to say mean
things about each other, we’re never
going to gossip and repeat unkind
stories, for they don’t do anyone a
scrap of good. They make enemies in-
stead of friends, they make unhappi-
ness instead of happiness and usually
gossip and stories about people aren’t
really true.’
“And I smiled, Mother Ocean. I
smiled with joy in my sleep. But
somehow I feel that it is a dream
which will come true!”
Stops Hair Coming Out
Beauty
my
Second Dit-
other
BW EVENING
fairytale
Practical and Good Looking
WHEN a dress is called-“practi-
cal” we are apt to feel that it
has been condemned with cold praise
and “practical” offered as its ex-
cuse for not being pretty. House
frocks for the average woman
must be practical and their manu-
facturers have undertaken to make
them at least good looking. They
have succeeded so well that there are
many models that are both practical
and pretty. The simpler designs are
planned to launder easily; usually cut
with kimono body and sleeves, made
in one piece, and with a loose adjust-
ment about’the waistline, where a belt
of the material slips through straps
of it, to give the waistline the required
definition.
Houses dresses for everyday, ordi-
nary wear are shown in a variety of
designs that are really attractive.
After experimenting with other good
fabrics, and successfully, designers re-
turn to gingham with unshaken confi-
dence. In plaids and checks it has
been a great favorite this season with-
out laying any claim to novelty. But
JUDGING by such blouses as have
lately arrived from the hands of
those who create them, we have not
seen the last of the bright-hued em-
broideries on dark-colored georgette.
Nor the last of blouses made of vivid
colors in georgette, with silk or bead
embroidery, in contrasting colors, as
an embellishment. But we are see-
ing the first of long sleeves, and they
are causing much surmise as to the
fate of sleeves for the coming fall sea-
son.
Some very handsome blouses, as
well as gowns, for fall, feature rather
delicate embroidery jn all-over pat-
terns on georgette, crepe de chine,
marquisette and chiffon. The early
styles make cheerful promise of allur-
ing color in new blouses for dressy
wear at least.
A fore-runner of the fall mode is^
shown here. Whdever is fond of em-
broidery will be arrested by this model,
since it goes to great lengths in
its decoration. To make it one has
to select a
designers have managed it cleverly as
one of many good models will prove.
This is shown in the picture. It is
noticeable that the skirt and tunic are
cut on the straight of the goods and
the tunic left open at the front. It
is. bordered with a bias band of the
goods. The waist is plain, with three-
quarter length sleeves, and has an or-
gandie vestee and rolled collar, picot<
edged, with four flat pearl buttons
making a neat finish at each side of it.
The vestee has two picot-edged
flounces set on a plain foundation and
there1 are rather large patch pockets
capped with organdie.
Cheeked ginghams in the daintier
colors with white are particularly
pretty made up with organdie, but
they are out of the class of practical
house frocks. Plain chambray with
organdie' and these checked ginghams
have made some of the prettiest sum-
mer dresses. Usually they have or-
gandie collars, cuffs, vest^es t and
sashes and occasionally organdie veils
the entire waist.
satin in a lighter, contrasting color fo;
bindings. And it employs narrow
picot-edged ribbon, declaring itself ai
opposed to simple things, with bind
ings and ribbons and embroidery al!
amplifying its story.. The ribboi
heads the deep flaring cuffs with s
band terminating in a bow and ends.
But we cannot give undivided atten-
tion to this pretty finish while bind-
ings of satin insist on the fact that
sleeves are long and cuffs are full,
'falling over the hands. The neck Is
round, with bound edge and the. large
embroidered motif at the front is in
several rich colors. But in the blouse
Itself it is not as conspicuous as in -the
photograph.
1® KTTCHM
CABWBO
9
The mountain of success Is steep and
rough,
Who gains the summit climbs a
wedry way;
And, though brave feet grow stronger
with rebuff,
The rocky path- a coward’s steps
may stay.
A HOT WEATHER LUNCHEON.
Even in warm weather a hot soup is
enjoyed, especially those made of fresh
green vegetables, such
as peas, spinach, vegeta-
ble oysters or celery. Cu-
cumber soup may not be
so well known but It Is a
most appetizing one.
Cream of Cucufnber
Soup.—Have ready one
cupful of stewed cucum-
ber, rubbed through a
sieve. Take the liquor In which the
cu-cumber was cooked, reduce it to half
a cupful by boiling, and set aside. Put
into a saucepan one tablespoonful of
butter, season with salt, pepper and,
when the butter is hissing hot, stir into
it two tablespoonfuls of flour. Stir
until the mixture leaves the sides of the
pan. Add three cupfuls of cold milk
and stir constantly until It boils.
When the mixture is as thick an a
thin cream sauce add the cucumber
and the half-cupful of liquor. Mix
thoroughly, boil up once and serve.
Eggs a la Bourgeoise.—Cut slices of
bread half an Inch thick and trim off
the crust; lay on a buttered platter
and sprinkle generously with grated
cheese. Beat eggs enough to cover the
bread; season with salt and pepper
and grated nutmeg; pour over the
bread and bake in a moderate oven un-
til the eggs are set.
Creamed Fish With Potato.—Pre-
pare creamed salmon as usual and put
a layer of the fish in a baking dish,
cover with a layer of cold? mashed
potato, then add another layer of fish
until the dish is full and the potato
on top. Dot with bits of butter,
sprinkle with buttered crumbs and
bake brown in a hot ovep.
Macaroni With Codfish.—Take one
cupful of cold-boiled macaroni, add
one cupful of cold-boiled codfish
flaked fine. Put into a buttered bak-
ing dish, sprinkle with salt, pepper,
grated cheese and sufficient milk to
moisten. Bake until brown. ’
Potato Border.—Make a rim of
mashed ,seasoned potato around a
well-buttered platter. Fill the center
with creamed fish, cover with buttered
crumbs and bake in a hot oven until
the crumbs are brown.
Cheerfulness and content are great
beautifiers, and are famous preservers
of good looks!—"Barnaby Budge.”
WHAT TO HAVE FOR LUNCHEON.
For a warm weather luncheon, and
this means one easy to digest and
not too heavy,
try a fish dish
for the main
course, a salad
and a light des-
sert with an iced
or a hot drink as
one prefers.
Curried Salmon.
—Chop a small onion very fine and fry
brown in one tablespoonful of butter.
Mix one teaspoonful of curry powder
with one tablespoonful of flour, and a
pinch of salt. Stir into the. butter.
Add slowly one cupful of hot water,
stirring briskly. When the sauce is
thiq£ add one cupful of flaked salmon
and cook until well heated.
Currant Pie.—Bake a pastry shell
and fill with the following: Mash one
cupful of currants with one cupful of
sugar, or use the same quantity of
fresh currant jam, prepared by using
crushed currants and sugar in equal
measures, or slightly less sugar. Add
two beaten egg yolks, two tablespoon-
fuls of flour, a quarter of a' cupful of
water; mix well and cook until
smooth and thick. Cool, fill the shell
and cover with a meringue made from
the beaten whites with two table-
spoonfuls of sugar. Brown in the
oven and serve at once.
Peas and Carrots.—Clean and dice
enough carrots to make two and one-
half cupfuls. Steam until tender; put
through a sieve; add butter and flour,
one tablespoonful each; one beatten
egg, one-half teasponful of salt and a
few dashes of pepper and a grating of
nutmeg. Press into a ring mold,
cover with greased paper and steam
twenty minutes. Fill the center with
cooked seasoned peas and garnish with
parsley.
Tomato Hors d’Oeuvres—Arrange
slices of tomato cut one-half Inch
thick on thin rounds of browned corn-
meal mush. Cover the tomato with a
paste made of cottage cheese mixed
with a few chopped nut meats and
add a seasoning of chopped chives and
radishes. Garnish with radish roses
or with olives. Serve at dinner.
Worth Cultivating.
Is it not a thing divine to have a
smile which, none know how, has the
power to lighten the weight of that
enormous chain which all the liv ing In
common drag behind them?—Victor
Hugo.
Washington’s Peculiar Hobby.
George Washington’s principal di-
version was training baby foxes. He
was fond of fox hunting. He took the
animals home, and trained them In all
kinds of tricks, which he often exhib-
ited to friends.
Blouses Invite Embroideries
DEPENDED UPON
IT 20 YEARS
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound Has Been
This Woman’s Safeguard
All That Time.
5
OXIDINE
| STOPS MALARIA |
That No-Account Feeling
Means that you have malarial
germs in your blood. Millions
of them destroying the Ted cor-
puscles, and filling your blood
with poisons that cause chills
and fever, general run-down
condition and complications with
Dysentery, Bronchitis and Pneu-
monia.
Avoid the dread effects of this
disease by taking Oxidine, a
preparation that kills the germs
of malaria, and tones up the
system in a natural way.
Don’t wait until Malaria gets
you into its clutches. Get a
bottle of Oxidine today. 60c.
at your drug store.
The Behrens Drag Co.
Waco, Texas.
Tan-No-More
Sffie Skin tBeaiztifier?
40c, 60c and $1.00 Jars
- always-
between you
and -the Sun.
Is a sure protection
against the beam-
ing sun or blister-
ing wind. It brings
to the skin the vel-
vety softness of youth.
Used before going out
in the evening, It assures
a faultless complexion.
Guarantee: Your druggist is authorized to re-
• fund your money If Tan-Ko-Jilore falls to please yon.
Baker Laboratories, Memphis.'I&nn
Omaha. Neb.—“I have used'Lydia E.
Pinkham’s VegetableCompound torover
twenty years for fe-
male troubles and it
has helped me very
much. I have also
used Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Sanative
Wash with good re-
sults. I always have
a bottle of Vegetable
Cpmpound i n t h e
house as it is a good
remedy in time of
need. You can
publish my testi-
monial as every statement I have
made is perfectly true.”—Mrs. J. O.
Elmquist, 2424 S. 20th Street, Omaha,
Nebraska.
Women who suffer from those dis-
tressing ills peculiar to their sex should
be convinced by the many genuine and
truthful testimonials we are constantly
publishing in the newspapers of the
ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound to restore their health.
To know whether LydiaE. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound will help you, try
it! For advice write to Lydia E. Pink-
ham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn,
Mass. Your letter will be opened, read
and answered by a woman, and held in
strict confidence.
ThirtyRunningSores
Remember, I stand back of every box.
Every druggist guarantees to refund the
purchase price (60 cents) if Peterson’s
Ointment doesn’t do ail I claim.
I guarantee it for eczema, old sores,
running sores, salt rheum, ulcers, sore
nipples, broken breasts, itching skin, skin
diseases, blind, bleeding and itching piles
as well as for chafing, burns, scalds, cuts,
bruises and sunburn,
“I had 30 running sores on my leg for
11 years, was in three different hospitals.
Amputation was advised. Skin grafting
was tried. I was cured by using Peter-
son’s Ointment.”—Mrs. F. E. Root, 287
Michigan street, Buffalo, N. Y. Mail or-
ders filled by Peterson Ointment Co., Buf-
falo, N. Y.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
RetnovesDandrua-StopsHairFafiinE
Restores Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair
50c. and $1.00 at druggists.
Hiscox Cbem. Wks, Patchogue, N.Y.
KING PIN
CHEWING TOBACCO
Has that good s
licorice taste
yoiivebeen
looking fbi
HBNDERCORNS Removes Corns, Cal-l(
louses, etc., stops all pain, ensures comfort to the L
feet, makes walking easy. 15c. by mail or at Drug-®
gists, iliscos Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. Y. W
Cuticura Talcum
is Fragrant and 1
Very Healthful
Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c.
GENERAL HARDWARE
AND SUPPLIES
Contractors’ Supplies, Builders'
Hardware, Etc. Prices and In-
formation furnished on request
PEDEN IRON & STEEL CO.
HOUSTON
SAN ANTONIO
FRECKLES
POSITIVELY REMOVED by Dr. Perry'o
Frockla Ointment—Your drugrtrht or'by
mail, 05c. Freo book. Or, C. M. 3arry
Co. 2975 Michigan Avenue. Chicago.
W. N. U., HOUSTON, NO. 34-1920.
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 19, 1920, newspaper, August 19, 1920; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1194523/m1/2/?q=waco+tornado: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.