The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 2, 1926 Page: 2 of 8
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NEW ULM ENTERPRISE, NEW ULM, TEXAS
OO^A>/<7/rr UTrHK
CHRISTMAS PRESENTS
one
ties
this
picture shows. In this fray
top-
was
PETROLEUM JELLY
PRETTY CHRISTMAS PRESENTS
They Gave Him a Beautiful Bone.
or
the
is Dare’s Mentha
HAARLEM
TWO DAYTIME COATS
25f
W. N. U., HOUSTON, NO. 49-1926.
Enjoy GOQD HEALTH
He
saw
by
top
as
was
tree
and
of
has
as
and
strong and vigor-
its work without
Before giving advice a wise nrf
prepares to dodge the consequences.
and
The Spirit
cf Happiness
To-night!
and end
As if
our
a tooth.
exclaimed Jean, dis-
our baby ain’t even tut
haarlem oil has been a world-
wide remedy for kidney, liver and
bladder disorders, rheumatism,
lumbago and uric acid conditions.
Poles Careful Christmas Eve
The Poles have many superstitions
in connection with Christmas. They
believe that what they do on Christ-
mas Eve they will do all the year
around, and therefore they conduct
themselves with that prospect in view.
Forgotten Polish Colony
A colony of Poles which had been
lost sight • of since 1873 was recently
found by a Polish naturalist in the
valley of the' Doce river in Brazil.
They had been completely isolated
and spoke only Polish.
relieved
la used
Adv.
STOPS ANY COLD
IN A FEW HOURS
Wanted Ice Cream Hash
At the last moment some of our
company could not come, so it was
found that later in the day we had a
small surplus of ice cream that even
the children could not get away with.
Our near neighbors were not at home,
either, so I said, “Well, there is not
much and we might as well throw it
out, as it won’t do any good to keep
Flush your kidneys by drinking a
quart of water each day, also tako
salts occasionally, says a noted au-
thority, who tells us that too much
rich food forms acids which almost
paralyze the kidneys in their efforts
to expel it from the blood. They be-
come sluggish and weaken; then you
may suffer with a dull misery in the
kidney region, sharp pains in the back
or sick headache, dizziness, your
stomach sours, tongue is coated, and
when the weather is-bad you have
rheumatic twinges. The urine gets
cloudy, full of sediment, the channels
often get sore and Irritated, obliging
you to seek relief two or three times
during the night
To help neutralize these irritating
acids, to help cleanse the kidneys
and flush off the body’s urinous waste,
get four ounces of Jad Salts from any
pharmacy here; take a tablespoonful
in a glass of water before breakfast
for a few days, and your kidneys may ./
then act fine. This famous salts is
made from the acid of grapes and
lemon Juice, combined with llthla, and
has been used for years to help flush
and stimulate sluggish kidneys; also
to neutralize the acids in the system
so they no longer irritate, thus often
relieving bladder weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot in-
jure and makes a delightful efferves-
cent lithia-water drink.
For a lovely skin and a sweet
breath.-avoid auto’-intoxication
A SAFE* DEPENDABLE LAWfl®
coats add bold plaidings, jacquard
..patternings and bayadere effects in
most vibrant colorings.
Perhaps the new slim, sleek suede
or broadcloth black coats, which have
so smartly and suddenly appeared
upon the style horizon, serve by way
<if contrast to make t|e color of col-
orful coats look more colorful. Be
that as it may, as fashion now is, the
colorful cloth coat is Intensely so, or
else it isn’t colorful at all but black
through and through even to the
fur which trims Lt and its silk lining.
The two coats in the picture are
typical of gay mode. Rivaling in point
of novelty the leopard-spotted fur
Read About This Generous Money Back
Guarantee
Get a 10-cent box now.
You men and women who can’t get
feeling right—who have headache,
' coated tongue, bad taste and foul
breath, dizziness, can’t sleep, are bil-
ious, nervous and upset, bothered with
a sick, gassy, disordered stomach, or
have a bad cold.
Are you keeping your bowels clean
with Cascarets, or merely forcing a
passageway every few days with salts,
cathartic pills or castor oil#
Cascarets work while you sleep;
cleanse the stomach, remove the sour,
undigested, fermenting food and foul
gases; take the excess bile from the
liver and carry out of the system all
the constipated waste matter and poi-
son in the bowels.
A Cascaret tonight will straighten
you out by morning—a 10-cent box
from any drug store will keep your
stomach sweet; liver and bowels regu-
lar, and head clear for months. Don’t
forget the childfen. They love Cas-
carets because they taste good—never
gripe or sicken.
Relief comes in-
stantly.
A dose taken
every two hours un-
til three doses are
taken will end
grippe misery and
break up a severe
ctild either ■'■fh ■ fh&'
head, chest, body or
limbs.
It promptly opens
clogged-up nostrils
and air passages in the head, stops
nasty discharge or nose running, re-
lieves sick headache, dullness, fever-
ishness, sore throat, sneezing, sore-
ness and stiffness.
Don’t stay stuffed-up 1 Quit blowing
and snuffling! Ease your throbbing
head! Nothing else in the world gives
such prompt relief as “Pape’s Cold
Compound,’’ which costs only thirty-
five cents at any drug store. It acts
without assistance, tastes nice, causes
no inconvenience. Be sure you get
the genuine.
•7^,CHRIS.TMAS
“ "PRAYi
repe paper, rive mue star .
then pasted,, as you see Ln / 193g, Western Newspaper UnipjL)
Accuracy in Gunnery
By means of a vacuum tube and a
high-speed camera the United States
bureau of standards experts are as-
certaining the vibrations of guns un-
der various conditions. The experi-
ments, it is thought, will make gun-
nery more accurate.
Smarting, sfcalding, sticky eyes,
by morning if -Roman Eye Balsam
when retiring. 372 Pearl St., N. Y.
Not Even a Hair Cut
Jean’s new brother is a bald-headed
baby and Jean watches him daily for
signs of a growth of hair. Yesterday
her Chum Billy announced his baby
sister had cut
“Doodness,”
gustedly, “an’
his hair yet!"
When you have any trouble with
your stomach such as gas, heaviness
and distention, why fool with things
which at best can only give relief.
Why not get a medicine that will
'build up your upset, disordered stom-
ach and make it so
ous that it will do
any help.
Such a medicine ..
Pepsin, a delightful 'elixir that is sold
by your local dealer and druggists
everywhere with the distinct under-
standing that if it doesn’t greatly help
you your money will be gladly returned.
It has helped thousands—it will no
doubt help you.
Take Salts to Wash Kidneys if
• Back Pains You or Bladder
Bothers
the tiger striped coat is spotted calf-
skin. Its advent into style circles is
nothing short of a sensation. The re-
markable thing about calfskin is how
fascinatingly it works up into not
only coats, but hats, hand bags, belts
and various accessories. It is an open
question as to which is most effective,
the black and white* or the beige and
white spotted calfskin.
Brown sheared lamb is another
youthful locking fur which is popular
for “flapper’’ coats. For trimming the
newest pelt is badger, .which is em-
ployed most lavishly.
JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
the presents
branches.
family opened
Then each had a
Slipped Quietly Into a Seat of the
Large Church.
and there were little presents left on
the tree for their friends.
But an uninvited guest came to the
party. The uninvited guest was a dog,
and he was standing outside the door,
looking very cold.
It was a freezing cold day out, and
the temperature was going steadily
down.
The dog had stopped, seeing that a
well-lighted house and a cheerful-
looking house had every look
though it might give him warmth
welcome for a while.
The dog’s home was far out in
country and the dog had been tor a
long run through the snow.
They let him come in and he got so
beautifully warm and they gave him
good things to eat, and then be-
fore he went home they gave him a
beautiful bone and tied a red ribbon
to his collar.
So that he, too, had a Christmas
party and a Christmas present.
It was so nice to receive a cordial
welcome when you weren’t even in-
vited.
So that every one that day in that
house was very, very happy, even the
cold, wandering dog, the uninvited
guest.
striped and in fantastic
combination are our fur
to compete in furnishing
cloth and knitted
In the Right Place
Little Girl (in furniture store)—
May I see a time-table, please?
Clerk—Are you sure you’re In the
right place? This is a furniture store.'
Girl—Yes. You see I’ve saved up to
buy my mamma a clock, and I want
one to put it on.
‘Pape’s Cold Compound
opens clogged nose and
head — ends grippe
Subtraction
Teacher—Take four out of five and
what do you have, Tommy?
Tommy—Pyorrhea, ma’am.
Today’s Big Offer to All
Who Have Stomach
Agony
Besides, she thought, she really ought
to.go in and say a little prayer for
her mother.
She opened the huge door of the
cathedral, slipped quietly into a seat
of the large church and prayed fer-
vently for her mother and little sis-
ters ; prayed, too, that she might,
somehow, be able to buy them a cake
for Christmas!
The heat of the church after the in-
tense cold outside made her drowsy.
She went fast to sleep and her head
of a
HEADACHE, COLDS,
COSTIVE BOWELS,
TAKE “CASCARETS”
3T WAS cold along the Seine that
Christmas Eve. There was a thin
rain, half snow, and a nasty,
penetrating wind coming up from the
river that sent chills trembling down
one’s back.
Little Juliette Caret blew her breath
against her hands to warm them and
pulled her ragged little coat more
tightly about her. She was the sole
support of a family of four—this lit-
tle, shivering tot, who stood always
before the door of Notre Dame sell-
ing holy _cards and medals to people
as they passed in or out of the church.
Her mother was very ill and the
three other children of the family—
youngm? than Juliette—were too lit-
tle to do any kind of work. How she
would have loved to bring home some-
thing very special for them this
Christmas!
On her way to the church this eve-'
ning she had stopped to look in at
the window of a patisserie shop and
her heart was taken with a great cake
in the center—all white with dots of
large red cherries around the sides.
The price was ten francs. She took
out her little worn purse and counted
—two francs, five sous. Slowly she
closed the purse and put it back in
her pocket. The cake was out of the
question. It would have to be a loaf
of bread only.
All evening she had stood in front
of the church, but had made almost
nothing. Great numbers of people
were coming to the midnight mass,
but 'they all passed by little Juliette
with only an annoyed “Non, non,
non!” A little later there was almost
nobody coming. She could hear the
organ playing. Mass had begun.
She would have hurried home but
her feet were numb with the cold.
FOR OVER
200 YEARS
EASES SORE
THROAT
Take a little ‘'Vaseline”
Jelly several times a day
ana at bedtime. Taste-
less and odorless.
Soothes and heals. Will
not upset you.
CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO.
(Consolidated)
State Street New York
She went fast to sleep and her
fell heavily against tlie shoulder
man sitting next to her.
The man was an American,
was at first annoyed when he
the little towseled head with its dirty
cap against his coat-sleeve, but on
second glance at the pathetic little
figure he was overcome with genuine
emotion. “Poor little devil,’’ he
thought, “wonder what’s been your
short history and what will it be in
the future.” He saw in her dirty lit-
tle hands the strings of medals and
the box of holy cards she had been
trying to sell. He reached into his
pocket, pulled out two crisp 1,000-
franc notes, folded them carefully
and placed them on top of the cards.
Almost everyone had left the church
when Juliette wakened. Mass was
over; all the candles on the altar had
been extinguished, the lights of thei
church were being put out. Juliette
rubbed her eyes drowsily and with a
start counted her medals to see that
no one had taken any while she slept.
They Were all quite safe. She next
turned to her box of cards and her
eyes became two large moons. “Two
thousand francs, two thousand
francs!” She couldn’t believe it. It
was a miracle! Hadn’t she prayed for
money to buy her people a Christmas
gift? She knelt down again, said a
fervent prayer in thanksgiving; then
gathered all her things together and
ran quickly from the church—past
the confisserie shop. It was closed,
of course, but the white cake was
still in the window. Tomorrow morn-
ing she would go there early and buy
It—buy every good thing in .the shop.
And still there would be enough left
to buy them all clothes in the after-
Christmas sales. She leaped joyous-
ly in the, air. She did not feel the
cold now.
“Merry Christmas,” she called to an
old lady who passed her. “Merry
Christmas to the whole world!”
(©. 1926, Western Newspaper Union.)
A CHRISTMAS present, be It ever
so humble, carries with it the
thrill of a resplendent gift, if it ar-
rives in gay wrappings all lavishly be-
ribboned, belabeled and betinseled.
Then, too, what a personal message of
friendship and love is expressed in the
wrapping of a gift!
This picture suggests several new
and novel ways of boxing and tying
up gifts. The newest Idea is the “pack-
age tree” intended for the Christmas
table centerpiece. It consists of boxes
in various sizes, each with a gift or
more inside stacked up in a pyramid
as
Have Kidneys
Examined By
Your Doctor
y /
There in the center of the room
stood the tree. What a handsome tree
it was. And there were the presents
all around it and hanging from the
branches.
Every member of the family re-
ceived presents and there were blocks
and trains and toys and dolls and
animals made, of cloth and animals
made of candy.
Later in the day when a tall per-
son came into the room they had to
take long strides to walk over the toys
so as not to step on anything, and the
children had to call out warnings to
them to look and see that far below
them the floor was covered with
Christmas presents.
But the best of all was when they
were taking the presents from the tree
in the first place.
The children went to Christmas-tree
parties and it was nice to see what
was in any package they might re-
ceive off the tree, one never knew
what one was going to get and it
a nice, hopeful, expectant time.
But the home Christmas tree
the best of all, for that was the
which Santa had thought about
looked after for thfem.
Their daddy lifted
down from the topmost
Each member of the
a present in turn.
chance to see what the other got, but
sometimes things got so exciting that
they opened several at a time, and
everyone was looking at their own.
Of course, after it was all over,
after all the presents had been
brought down from the tree, they all
looked over the presents each other
had got and later in the day they saw
the presents more thoroughly.
Well, that afternoon they had a tea
party and had some of their friends,
the picture, so as to radiate from
big star, by means of tinsel cord.
A plain box. may be beautified
pasting a strip of crepe border on
bearing a Christmas tree design
here illustrated; Gold star seals paste
down each edge. The gilt ribbon
under the crepe panel.
We are living in an era
spectacular cloaking. Never such
this age and generation witnessed
as it is seeing now—and wearing.
Spotted and
and startling
coats.
.thrills.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Removes Dandruff-Stops Hair Falling
Restores Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair
60c and $1.00 at Druggists.
Hiscox Chem. Wks .Patchogue,N.Y.
gummed star seal or rather two stars
back to back so that the f$ln is inside
with only Its point extending. Stick
a star-pin into the top- of each candle.
It will look almost as pretty as if the
candles were lighted.
Black leatherette, new in the way of
fancy paper and obtainable where tis-
sue and crepe papers are sold, serves
handsomely as a background for gild-
ed holly tied on the box as shown in
the upper left comer of this group.
One can decorate a box attractively
and inexpensively by covering it witq
bluebird crepe paper. Five little star
seals are
Clean your bowels .
Headaches, Colds,
Sour Stomach
1
HINDERCORNS Removes Corns. Cal-
louses, etc., stops all pain, ensures comfort to the
feet, makes walking easy. 15c by mall or at Drug-
gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. Y.
Robert seemed to think it was a
terrible thing to waste Ice cream for
he said solicitously, “Oh, mother,
couldn’t we save it to make ice cream
hash out of it?’
Smart women often succeed in mak-
ing very stupid men think themselves I
wonderful.
EYES HU
Don't ignore t he-danger sig
of aching eyes, red lids, bli
shot eyeballs. Mitchell
Eye Salve removes irrita-
tion, reduces inflammation,
Boothes pain.
HAIL * BUCKET.
147 W averly PI., He w York
Whooping
Cough BeHaed
This dread cough is one of the
most dangerous of children’s
diseases. There is no cure for
whoopingcough. Itusualiyruns
its course, but af ew drops of this
well known physician’s pre-
scription will relieve the violent
coughing paroxymns, and avoid
vomiting. No dangerous “dos-
ing”—nothing to upset little stomachs. Glessco
DR,DRAKES quick relief
ULESSCO
CROUP REMEDY
DaddysEvening
JairyTal
the family gifts can be arranged col-
lectively. Cover each box with £lfirk-
grGen paper.' Baste garlands of bright
gummed seals on each. All sorts of
tag-toys are suspended from the boxes.
Streamers of tinsel are dropped down
from the top. A big star cut-out sur-
mounts the very pinnacle. Tiny can-
dles in little holders are placed at the
four corners of each box. If you are
averse to using lighted candles from
the standpoint of safety, and if tiny
electric bulbs are not available, a
very pretty effect can be secured by
using star-mounted candles. To pre-
pare these take ordinary pins or
frooden tooth picks. On each paste a
☆ /MARION
REAGAN
correct internal troubles, stimulate vital
organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist
on the original genuine Gold Medal
Opportunity—Study Law at Home during
spare time at small costs. Be somebody. Law
’ means success in business or practice. Big
money, influence, ease for men and women.
William Raley, Box 581, Nashville, Tenn.
UNDERGROUND TREASURES. How and
where to And them. Write for this free
secret today; it may mean your fortune.
MODEL CO., 332 Como Bldg., Chicago.
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 2, 1926, newspaper, December 2, 1926; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1200508/m1/2/?q=wichita+falls: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.