The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 5, 1950 Page: 7 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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practically all over the world.
In pernicious anemia, there is
lack or loss of an important ferment
in the stomach digestive juice, but
by digesting the protein part of liver
extract by use of ferment papain,
this lack is corrected.
In the recent examination of the
boys of a large reformatory school,
it was found that more than half of
them came from broken homes.
Chewing rough foods stimulates
the circulation in the gums and
helps prevent pyorrhea.
• • •
Your dentist can treat early cases
of pyorrhea, but in advanced cases,
he may want to send you to a pyor-
rhea specialist.
• • •
Adults should drink at least a half
pint of milk daily.
1993
Drs. L. R. Slattery. S. A Yannitel- ,_ke.??..in_*i.S®.*U.^a”Ce.'.
unsuccessful destinies.
All this comes to my mind be-
cause of the predicament of a
When did you ever do one
for me? What is itf ••
“Matt says this doesn't mean any-
thing, it’s just their way. But my
own home was different. We
weren't allowed, as kids, to keep
up this kind of silly, mean picking
and grumbling at each other. The
result is that we four brothers and
sisters love one another; we like
to be together, and our children, as
they grow out of babyhood, will
have happy times together as
cousins. My mother-in-law has two
sisters to whom she has not spok-
en for 15 years; Violet, the oldest
girl, has married a very nice man,
but they sneer at him."
COME YEARS AGO a cartoonist
O pictured two trees standing side
by side, on one of which the tree
surgeon had finished his operation
by application of cement. One tree
was saying to the other, "Did I tell
you about my operation?" The car-
toon appeared about the time that
operations for removal of the ap-
pendix were so common and the con-
versation at bridge, golf, or other
games naturally was about these
operations.
We do not hear or read so much
these days about operations; such
conversations today are usually
about blood pressure because heart
and brain attacks are in mist cases
caused by high blood pressure.
I have written before of what was
called the Philadelphia experiment
in which the physcians, and citi-
zens also, of that city determined
to establish a record in reducing
the deaths from appendicitis. The
efforts to reduce the death rate was
so successful that a world's record
was established. Three rules were
ester, easy to
apeelal
invid*
six years I knew them, under pro-
test, recrimination and dislike. It
was Dorothy’s turn, it was Ma-
bel’s turn to wash. As for the
brothers, those boys were so lazy
and so stuck on themselves and so
spoiled that, according to the girls, |
they were simply no good.
Not many families are quite as |
disagreeable as were the Optics.
But unkindness of this sort does
exist in too many homes, and it
destroys one of the most valuable
assets any child can have: a back-
ground of love and help and se- |
curity.
Cheap family quarrels destroy '
many a sensistive and hungry heart.
Goodness — just simple goodness —
and thoughtfulness, and a humble
desire to promote family harmony
completely make any life heaven.
Goodness isn’t easy to achieve. I
But there is a consideration that
to many women who are socially j
ambitious, who want everything :
about their houses and their chil- |
dren to be “nice," might make fine
manners and sweetness and tender-
ness worth their cultivating.
Such women—average wives and
mothers—avoid the word "com- :
mon."
——————————— Mlnaerl Are Common
yrrnikir uriiruv I They would far rather die than
ntALItli | have it applied to them. And bad
■ la a a It <1 It ft I I manners are “common.” Squab-
Appendicitis Death Rate Reduced
By Dr. Jamas W. Barton dic,te • background without cul-
ture or spiritual guidance; in oth-
followed: (1) no purgative, (2) no er words, "a common family.”
food. (3) early operation. These If I can sit through just one din-
suggestions are now being followed rer hour with any family of boys
practically all over the world. 8nd girls, I can tell you just where
In Archives of Surgery, Chicago, ‘he parents failed them or helned
Drs. L. R. Slattery, S. A Yannitel- ‘hern in wise guidance, and predict
li and J. W. Hinton, state that dur- closely their successful or
ing the past 10 years there has been ‘ ‘ *
a spectacular drop in the death rate
of acute appendicitis. There were____ _ ___ .__________
14,313 deaths due to appendicitis in young wife who writes me from
the United States in 1939, while in Wichita. *
1946 there were only 5,285. .. . , ...
1 “Matt and I will have to live with
The greatest single factor in re- his folks for another year at least,”
ducing the death rate has been the says her tear-stained letter. "They
greater number of patients seen in don’t hate each other, I know they
the early stages of the disease, don’t. But if anyone stays long at
“Public Health education and in- the telephone, or is just a few min-
creased alertness of the medical utes late for a meal, or buys a hat,
profession are responsible for much the way they all scream at her, or
of this improvement." Added to this laugh at her clothes, or push their
is that peritonitis which causes so pudding away and say they never
many deaths, is now prevented by have liked it is simply terrible; if
the use of the sulfa drugs and peni- you say ’Will you do me a favor?’
cillin. These drugs kill harmful or- the usual thing is to say. T like
ganisms and prevent complications that!
which may follow operation.
Look Your Best
UERE IS A simple yet extreme-
*3 ly pretty frock for occasions
when you want to look your best.
Note the unusual neck treatment,
the gored skirt, choice of sleeves.
• • •
Pattern No. 1W3 U • aew-rlte perfo-
rated pattern for Bizet 12. 14. 16. 16. w:
40 and 42 Site 14. abort sleeve >S
yards of 30-Inch.
Don’t mitt the fall and winter STY-
LIST—46 pages of style. — * **
make for all the family;
tures; gift pattern printed
book. 25 cents.
fea-
the
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//MVAMAMMAAAVMMMAAAJi
"... ebnp family quarrell ...”
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MORE REAL
DYEING POWER
Pretty Frock Featured
By Unusual Treatment
The inside of an enameled pot
can be whitened by putting a half
cup of laundry bleach in it. filling
it the rest of the way with water
and letting it stand for twenty-four
hours.
Small holes in the bottom of an
aluminum pot can be mended at
home. Buy some small copper or
aluminum rivets, one-sixteenth of
an inch in diameter and one-eighth
of an inch long. Enlarge the bole
so you can force the rivet through
from the inside; then rest the head
of the rivet on some hard metal
surface and tap the other end with
a hammer until it flattens out and
tightens up in the hole.
Self - thickening gravy can be
made by using the water in which
rice has been cooked. A lot of food
value, cooked out of the rice, is in
the water, thus providing added
nourishment.
To add to the eye appeal of
gravy when it isn't brown enough,
add a little leftover coffee.
When you thicken
flour, you can avoid lu ,
mixing s little cornstarch
flour.
The name, “Journeyman Paint-
er" comes from the painters who,
at the time of the Renaissance,
journeyed from country to coun-
try with their brushes, palettes,
and secretly blended paints In
today’s parlance, a journeyman
painter is one who has had at
least three years’ experience and
schooling ss an apprentice.
Does what you imagine show
your true self?
CIMMIE SensK Drttet with sar
powder dye or tiol adliag st the Mae
price. Saad coo miss TORINO L, shea
FISTEI, IETTEI resalts—tree, eves,
Isstiss colors every Uwe wShowt
Whmt. mtimt Mmt. wathead foW
MAUITEEI to dye 10 fahrta (oopt
(Ism or metal)—dyes than the asms
color. Cleans u it dyes. Tn «ee
many ton me lees dye io yoer wasb-
in< machine. Bay at dealer’s, or write
Sorth antcoa Bye Cesw.aiiNSf.BT.
To clean the vertical tube tt a
percolator, run a pipe cleaner
through it. Or. fill the percolator
with water, add four tablespoon-
fuls of salt, put the tube in and Jet
it perk for ten of fifteen minutes.
If this dulls the luster of the perco-
lator. restore it by boiling vinegar
in it, or water with piece* of raw
lemon.
r
Too Muqb Unkindness
Their dinner-table talk was quiet
sneers, criticisms and complaints.
If one of the daughters, rather shy
and not too pretty, observed that
a young man had walked home with
her, or sent her candy, all the oth-
ers metaphorically tore the young
man from limb to limb. Only a
bold girl would go on into courtship
after that, and, as a matter of fact,
none of the girls married.
If the flushed, tired, overworked
mother observed that her mother or
her sister was coming in for an
overnight stay, there were groans.
Dishwashing was done, for all the
When such foods as cereals and
rice stick to the inside of the top
part of a double boiler, turn the pot
upside down in piping hot dish-
water for a few minutes so that
the steam can loosen the stuff in-
side.
> Ik “ uiu
Can you be “too tired to
think"?
Answer: Not really. You may un-
consciously resent so intensely be-
ing forced to concentrate on busi-
ness problems and ignore your
private interests that you can’t
make yourself go on any, longer.
But as Dr. Mortimer Ostow tells
us in the Journal of Nervous and
Mental Diseases, thinking in itself
Answer: Yes. You can learn rela-
tively little about anyone by ask-
ing him direct questions, since all
that the answers will reveal will
be his conscious feelings, which
may be the opposite of his real ones.
But by using what is known as the
"projective technique” — asking
someone what he “sees” in a series
of ink-blots or having him tell the
story that a picture makes him
think of—you can get him to show
more about himself than he knows,
let alone realize he is revealing.
But interpreting his answers takes
a skilled technician.
Answer: No. In its extreme form,
it is more likely to mean the exact
opposite. If for no good reason you
live in continual dread that “some-
thing terrible will happen” to a per-
son whom you believe you love,
what you may well really be afraid
of is that your unconscious wish to
hurt him or get him out of the way
may come true. The mother who
“cannot let a child out of her sight,"
for instance, frequently is one who
did not want to be bom and feels
that caring for him is a crushing
burden. Real love “casteth out
fear.”
NATURALLY, we can all make
life miserable for each other.
The power to be cruel is as close as
the power to be kind, and some-
times much easier to use. Any
woman is free to say slighting or
cutting things to her husband. Any
man may neglect the mother who
loves him and break her heart. Any
parents may make life hell for their
children; short of actual violence no
one will stop them. Some homes
are full of small instances of mean-
ness and coldness, little daily hu-
miliations and hurts.
It is actually frightening to think
how easily we may all fail each
» other in this way, and how far-
reaching the results of this only
half-intended rudeness and thought-
lessness can be. The members of
„ ■■ ,----„ — - ... . ... one family of brothers and sisters.
Doe. worrying over” someone mean you love him. neighbor, of our. many year, ago,
requires almost no measurable never said a kind word to each
amount of energy and so is not other,
hampered, even by complete physi-
cal exhaustion. If your thinking
leads to the solution of some prob-
lem about which you have been con-
fused and anxious, it may actually
rest you.
fen
Throat .ih
For fine soothing comfort, rub
Vicks VapoRub a M/Mf s»
on your throat >> IVnw
andchest.Tryltl w VapoRub
KATHLEEN NORRIS
Bad Manners
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FA1
NO COOKING
NEEDED
/III Fabric
SUNSET
DYT/NT
CLEANS AS. IT DYES • »0
LdJU tlMSLAUS JULui-U ■ ■ lAuJr J
St.Joseph aspirin
WORLDS LABGEST SELLER AT
A
• J
Worry Doesn't
Connote Love
By Lowrance Gould
MIRROR
Of Your
MIND
1
I
THE NEW ULM ENTERPRISE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, IBM
HEALTH NOTES
¥
LOOKING AT RELIGION
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77ME WORD ORIGINALLY MEANT
SIMPLY A TENT, BUT RECEIVED LATER ITS
SPECIFIC MEANING AS THE NAME OF THAT TENT
WHICH MOSES CONSTRUCTED UNDER DIVINE DIRECTION
AS A PLACE FOR WORSHIP 8Y THE JEWS.
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RONALD COLMAN
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World of
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immediately became popular; in
fact, so many people wanted a re-
cording of the song that a record
has been made by the group that
sings it on the NBC Wednesday
night broadcasts. College presi-
dents and faculty members have
praised the series; students lament
the impossibility of finding a college
president like Colman.
Lowell Thomas recently celebrat-
ed his arrival on the air 20 years
ago, when a friend tricked him into
making a 15-minute, unprepared
speech on any subject he liked. Only
after the speech was finished did
Thomas learn that he had been au-
ditioning for a news program that
was to be sponsored by the Literary
Digest, and had been chosen the
winner.
John Agar, William Campbell and
Danny Arnold have established
bachelor headquarters in a rented
house at Eherman Oaks, near the
film capitol. They met while ap-
pearing in Warner Bros.’ “Break-
through," in which Agar starred.
Jeff Chandler will soon be doing
enough travelling to last him the
rest of his life. During shooting of
20th Century-Fox's "The Bird of
Paradise” in Honolulu, he will com-
mute by plane to Hollywood for the
“Our Miss Brooks” series.
ODDS AND ENDS ... An old day*
time serial favorite, “Myrt and
Marge,” may return to the air with
Edith Fellows as the star . . . "The
Railroad Hour” has returned to its
winter format, with Gordon McCrae
as the male singing star . . . That
Paramount Western co-starring
Bing Crosby and Bill (“Hopalnng
Cassidy”) Boyd, will be called
"Thataway" . . . Gordon McLen-
don, gridiron specialist for the Lib-
erty network, says a true football
fan is one who knows the nationelity
of every All-American.
By INEZ GERHARD
JJONALD and Benita Colman had
** no idea, when they embarked on
“The Halls of Ivy" series last Janu-
ary, that they were launching a
show that would become so popular
so soon. "Really adult entertain-
ment” is the description given by
its many devoted listeners. Not
only the show, but its theme song,
James Robertson Justice, who
plays the part of "Quist.” in Warn-
ers’ Technicolor adventure drama,
"Captain Horatio Hornblowor," is
a member of Britain's Parliament,
representing the North Angus and
Mearns constituency.
Jane Wyman believes in realism.
To play the deaf mute in “Johnny
Belinda” she stuffed her ears with
cotton, went through the film hear-
ing nothing. To play the crippled
daughter in "The Glass Menagerie"
she wore a special shoe which turned
her foot inward and made her limp;
she said nothing about the way it
cut into her ankle till the director
discovered it. He said she must
either wear rubber padding, which
would make her ankle look thick, or
discard the shoe. She wore the pad-
ding.
If an atomic bomb exploded,
how would you react? The cor-
rect answer, showing the pre-
ventive measures to take before
and after an explosion. Is given
in “You Can Beat the A-Bomb”,
the two-reel film made in col-
laboration with the Council on
Atomic Implications, and re-
leased by RKO. The picture ex-
plains the three primary effects
of A-Bomb detonation.
Berry Kroeger, known to “Young
Dr. Malone" fans as "Sam Wil-
liams," left for Hollywood to be-
gin work in a new film. Barry
Thomson who took his place now
plays a nice guy on "Malone" and
a heavy on “Road of Life."
U-I's Universal City covered a
total of 256 acres before the recent
purchase of a 140-acre tract adjoin-
ing the studio in the San Fernando
Valley; makes it the largest self-
contained film plant in the world.
Joe Wilman, whose records in
American Bowling Congress compe-
tition stamp him as one of the
greatest bowlers of the decade, has
signed to star in “King of the Ten-
pins”, of Columbia's
short subjects series.
»
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 5, 1950, newspaper, October 5, 1950; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1216335/m1/7/?rotate=0: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.