Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 153, Ed. 1 Monday, April 17, 1916 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGE FOUR
TEMPLE DAILY TELEGRAM, TEMPLE, TEXAS, MONDAY MORNING, APRIL 17,1910. 4
TEMPLE DAILY TELEGRAM
MMitMf of the AMOC1ATBD PKEBS and of
Th« 4MEKICAN PRK83 ASSOCIATION.
DAILY TELKGRAH .BstablUhed 1»»7
DA 11.1 TRIBUNE BrtablUheS III*
(OonsoUdated January. 1110.)
YmkllakaA mttrr mernlnc by th» Telerram
Publlahlng Co. (Inc.) B. K. WllUama.
Bell tot And Uanacer.
FOREIGN RBPIIBSKNTAT1T*9.
CHICAGO—O. J. Anderaon Sptcla: Agency,
Maj-qualte Building.
MEW TORE—Ralpta R. Mulligan. It Park
Ottloa at Publication, 111 and til Woat
> tobuo A. Tempi*, Taxao.
■. K. WILLIAMS Managing Editor
A. U WILLIAMS News Ed tor
OH AS. W. INGHAM Aawiclat* Editor
■mi QOOCH Society Editor
ANDREW McBEATH K*ch.\ng« Editor
("The Tezag Preao")
ADA LASATER Reporter
REECUTITE STAFF.
a, K. WILLIAMS General Manager
ST P. BLACK Advertising Manager
WM. BTEPHEN8 Buelneaa Manager
TELEPHONES,
Old Phone .
Hew Phono
...Ho. IM
...No. Ill
■UB8CK1PTION PRICE.
Temple and Belton.
Delivered by Carriers, Inelde City Limits
Bally awl Sunday, per I
Bally And Sunday, per year S.OO
Baity and Sunday, by mall I.JO
Dally and Sunday, by mall. I months.. 1.00
Dally and Sunday, by mall, I months.. 1.71
ft/WWWWWWVWWWWSAAAAAA/
The Telegram la a
member of the
AUDIT
BUREAU OF
CIRCULATIONS
i: THE TEXAS PRESS i:|f BITS OF BYPLAY
Bj Andrew McBeath.
The United States has just started out on
Villa's trail twenty Apache Indian scouts.
With these scouta working In connection with
Colonel nodd's cavalry and General Persh-
Iiik with the remainder of his forces hold-
ing In order the "co-operating forces" of
the de facto Mexican government. If the
Washington government will refrain from
projecting red tape hindrances Into the
activities of the punitive expedition, there
exists a large probability that the objective
of the expedition will be accomplished, and
thus intervention be staved off for a time.
—Houston Post,
In the meantime William G. M«-
Adoo is in South America trying to
strengthen commercial relations with
all the American republics bo that
when the time comes for intervention,
if it comes, those people will have
some knowledge of our disposition
with reference to other republics.
This that those people may know
that we seek only justice, and not
territory.
The Pasteur Institute at Austin Is crowd-
ed with patients. Mad dogs have been un-
usually numerous and vicious lately.—
Yoakum Herald,
Early in the year, too. What do
you suppose Is the cause? Do you
suppose the dogs are really danger-
ous at all seasons of the year?
By Luke McLuke.
Sundays are the filling stations of
the soul.
These are the days when men go
down to the sea in ships.
FARMERS' FORUM
Note to Mexico: Give us Villa and
We will talk about getting out.
The republicans are still searching
for a Roosevelt with another name.
The city of Temple pays more for
fire protection than it pays for health
protection.
About three-fourths of the com-
mercial failures occurring during 1915
were due to faults of those failing.
Formerly the family problem con-
Misted in keeping up with Lizzie; now
M consists In keeping up with the tin
lizzie.
The section of the state that has
not received rain recently has been
discriminated against, as such rainfall
has been widely distributed.
The United States is willing to ne-
gotiate with Carranza on the point of
staying In or withdrawing from
Mexico.
It is thought that five million auto-
mobiles will be enough for the
American people to have in use at
rne time.
The members of the American
Women's League for Self-Defense
will wear trousers, believing that
presses are a curse and a burden.
Outdoor recreation develops boys
and girls and is recognized as a ne-
cessity in the life of every people.
We have been living too much in-
doors.
Many persons have had wrists
broken while cranking automobiles,
hut an Oklahoma man has gone one
better by having an eye destroyed.
Safety first.
Dairy farming Is one of the foun-
dations of a successful and perma-
nent agriculture. All who desire such
conditions should assist In building up
the Texas dairy Industry.
Forty-three states have centralized
direction of road improvement .Texas
Is one of the five states in which the
state government has no authority
over the expenditure of the vast sums
of money that are used in keeping up
public highways.
Governor Ferguson told his audi-
ence at Carrizo Springs that Texas
should give undivided support to
President Wilson in his policy of
handling the Mexican situation, as
his viewpoint is broader and more
nearly correct than the view some-
times held by the people along the
border.
The Texas Federation of Women's
Clubs has an ambitious program. The
■work of the clubs Is wide In Its scope,
Including educational, philanthropic,
borne economics, civics, library ex-
tension, public welfare, music and
other lines of endeavor. All such ef-
fort. should be encouraged by every-
one who favors advancement.
Temple won fourth place at the
Agricultural and Mechanical College
track meet, in competition with
schools from all sections of the state.
Temple was represented by one lone-
some boy who dropped in to see the
(shew and decided to get into the
game. Theron Brown of Temple is
regarded as one of the greatest high
school athletes that ever went to an
A. & M. track meet.
Give Hens Plenty of N^fcts.
A soiled or washed egg decays much
sooner than one which never has been
dirty and for that reason the chick
en houses and yards should be kept
in a clean and sanitary condition,
points out Ross M. Sherwood, of the
Kansas State Agricultural college.
"One nest should be provided for
every five or six hens," says Sher
wood. "This is important because
when only a few hens have to lay In
a nest there will be fewer dirty eggs
The location of the nests is important,
They should be where the hen* will
use them and in places where the eggs
may be gathered conveniently. When
the nests contain plenty of nesting
material there are fewer broken and
dirty eggs produced."
TELEGRAM
BOOMERANGS t
Live Papers In Dead Towns.
Andy McReath, he of the Temple
Telegram fly-swatting rep, says we
double-crossed ourself when we said
we had seen some very live papers
published in some very dead towns;
then admits (after swatting another
fly) that such is "an exception." Yes,
it's ail exception, we admit; but in
your admission, Andy, your are not
entitled to another double-cross.—
Cameron Herald.
No One Knows.
Jn our Civil War the Southern army
won every battle, in which it was not
outnumbered, for three years, says the
Temple Telegram, and finally lost the
war. It is not hard to guess that the
Telegram means that with all the bat-
tled Germany has won, she stands a
very good chance of losing out in the
end. Well, no one can foretell the
outcome, with possibly the exception
of a few dry goods box whittlers or
chronic know-it-alls.—J. S. Koeke-
feilovv, in Alexia Herald.
On Being Dropped.
The Herald, alone; with some other
"obscure" weeklies, seems to have
been dropped from the exchange list
of the Waco Morning News, since the
new management took charge. Of
course, we feel a deep interest in Waco
and always have felt it, and were it
not that we got the Times-Herald a
few hours after it leaves the press,
giving us the news concerning our
many friends in. that city, the action
of the News would "put us out" very
much. Of course, we know that the
News does not need the Herald, but
with the Times-Herald, Houston Post,
Dallas News, Beaumont Enterprise,
Temple Telegram, Fort Worth Rec
ord, Fort Worth Star-Telegram and
other splendid dailies of the state com-
ing to our table we guess we will man-
age to survive. However, we always
enjoyed the Morning News, and would
be glad to have it on our exchange
list.—Hamilton Herald.
OPENS CAMPAIGN SATURDAY.
Judge John D. Robinson o? Belton
candidate for congress from this dis-
trict will open his campaign for con-
gress at the court house in Hamilton
at 1:30 p. m. Saturday, April 22.
Judge Robinson is an orator of note
a man who has served the people with
honor and credit on the bench, and is
a gentleman who commands the high-
est respect wherever he is known.
The people of Hamilton county, ap-
preciating the compliment shown them
of having him open his campaign for
congress here, will givo him a most
cordial welcome and a fair and cour-
teous hearing.—Hamilton Herald.
(Copyright. 1916, by Cincinnati Enquirer.)
Oh, Joy!
A fortune would not make me glad;
For riches I'm not very keen.
But my, oh. me! I wish I had
A doieen barrels of gasoline! •>'
The Wise Fool.
"Time works wonders," observed
the Sage.
"So would you if you were on the
Job twenty-four hours a day," re-
sponded the- Fool.
"FLOWERS FOR THE
LIVING" CLUB
Progress.
"How are you getting along with
your new machine?" asked Plodder.
"Fine!" exclaimed Speeder, as he
tinkered with the spark plug. "Why,
I have got so I can almost tell what
is the matter with It when it won't
go."
Ooof!
She loves the postman, does sweet
Nett
To greet him she will never fail;
She never gets a letter, yet
She's on the lookout for her male.
Betchn!
Dear Luke: Can George Drybread
get a little butter if he Joins the
Club? He Is an auctioneer at Tuc-
cumarl, N. M.—H. K. Grubbs.
Snre He Can!
Dear Luke: We have a Notary
Public In Chicago, 111., who would
like to pick up a quarter every now
and then In the Club. His name is
Erna Schilling. Can he?—P. G. D.
A great deal of interest Is being
manifested in the Temple tree census.
It seems queer that the people of
Temple would have little idea of the
number of trees growing in the town,
When It Is noted that there were no
trees when the town was laid out.
Prizes will be given for the one guess-
ing nearest the correct number that
will be revealed by the census, guesses
ranging from ten to a hundred thou-
sand.
The Bell county Experimental
Farm Is soon to be Short a very fine
Instructor. A. K. Short has been
taken from the state service by a
private corporation which has the
knack of recognizing special ability
on the part of competent men. The
change brings loss to Bell county and
gain to a ruilroad company and the
farmers who live In the railroad ter-
ritory. For wherever A. K. Short goes
better agricultural methods win go.
SUNDAY SCHOOL
LESSON QUESTIONS
By Rev. T. 8. Llnscott.
Lesson For April 23, 1#I6.
Easter Lesson, "The Risen Christ."
1 Cor. 15:1-28.
Golden Text: Now hath Christ been
raised from the dead, the first-fruits
of them that are asleep. 1 Cor. 15:20.
1. Verses 1 and 2. |Iow many
ideas or facts are absolutely essential
to complete "the Gospel" of Christ?
2. How much Is essential for a
sinner to know, or believe, in order
to be saved by Jesus?
J. Verse 3. What Is your under-
standing of the phrase, "Christ died
for our sins?"
4. Verse 4. What Is the proof
that Christ was crucified and buried ?
In a Paris aerodynamic laboratory
for testing model aeroplanes wind
speeds up to seventy-one miles an
hour are produced by Ingenious ma-
ichlnery. , .
Our Joe Miller Con
Peter McCarthy came close to land-
ing the prize with this ancient Joke:
Two men who had not seen each
other for years happened to meet and
one was bragging that his son was
making a living by his pen. "That's
nothing," bragged the second man,
"my son Is making a living with his
pen, too." "Is he an author or an
artist?" asked the first man. "He is
neither," replied the second man.
"He is raising hogs."
Moro About Mitry.
Mary had a Corn Fed shape.
The kind that fat provides;
And when she strapped it in in front,
It bulged out at the sides.
—Luke McLuke.
"What makes her shape bulge over
so?"
The eager children cry.
"Why, Mary loves to eat, you know,"
The teacher did reply.
—Newark Advocate.
Notice!
Dr. Cheek, the Terre Haute (Ind.)
dentist, has been added to the Club's
staff of Molar Maulers.
Rat Will It?
Dear Luke: If you can't keep the
Chickens in the Club, why not hire
Willa Koop Holdem, of Seattle,
Wash. ?—Billy Bates.
ConstMatloa By-Laws.
If with pleasure you are viewing any work
a man la doing.
It you lUta him ar yoa love him. tall
him aow;
Don't withhold your approbation till the
parson makes sratlon
As he lies with ■no—y lilies o'er hta brow;
for, no matter bow you shoat It, ha won't
really care about it;
Ba won't know how aoaa? tear-dropa
you have shed;
If you think some pralsa is due him. Bow's
the tlma to slip It to him.
Tot he can not read his tombstone when
he's dead I
—Maaonlo Observer. Minneapolis^
Flower*.
Don't wait for another to bear the
burden
Of sorrow's irksome load;
Let your hand extend to a stricken
friend
As he totters adowii life's road.
And If you've anything good to say
of a man,v
Don't wait till he's laid to rest;
For the eulogy spoken when hearts
are broken.
Is an empty thing at best.
—Chicago Record-Hjerald.
Kwut.
Declaring that President Wilson's
re-election Is "Impossible," the New-
Yorker Herold voltmteers this expla-
nation: "No matter whether German-
Americans are Justified in their oppo-
sition to Wilson or not, the simple fact
is that the latter cannot obtain their
votes." Does it follow that Mr. Wil-
son will be defeated because the Ger-
man vote is against him? The Ameri-
can vote may have something to say
about the November election. We
are aware that the professional Ger-
mans in the United States will vote
the way Berlin wants them to vote,
but Berlin may not control a majority
of the electoral college. Before the
campaign is over, the contest Is likely
to reduce itself to one simple issue:
"Can the kaiser elect a president of
the United States?" The republican
leaders are trying to evade this issue,
but they must face it squarely before
election day.—New York World.
QUESTION BOX
By Charles W. Ingram.
FINDS TRAP GUN IN HOUSE.
Ed Page of Tuhna Owen Life to Break-
ing of Trigger String.
Tulsa, Okla., April 16.—Ed Page,
brother of Charles Page, millionaire
philanthropist of Sand Springs, prob-
ably owes his life to a broken string.
The string was attached to the trig-
ger of an army rifle and a chair at
the door of a farm tenant house. The
gun was arraigned *n suoh n manner
that it would be disciiargol by the
opening of the doj-.-.
Page went to the house to serve a
vacation notice on the tenant, when
he found the broken trap gun.
The tenant, E. L. Willis, was ar-
rested today on a charge of attempted
murder. He is in Jail in default of
11,000 bond.
An inventor has patented a guard to
be fastened to the back of a man's
head to enable him to shave his neck
accurately and safely.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦••••••♦♦••♦♦♦I
Q. Have we an official national anthem ?
—Worried.
A. There Is no official national aong.
Q. Is Carrie Jaeobs-Bond, the song writ-
er, a man or a woman?—Interested
A. A woman.
Q. What department of government does
the secret service belong to?—Detective.
A. It la a division of the treasury depart-
ment.
Q. Should a man take the lady's arm
when walking or the lady the man's?—
Ignorant.
A. The modern girl generally prefers to
hava both arms free to swing, but—espe-
cially if she Is engaged—she may take her
fiance's arm or he may take her"s In assist-
ing her.
Q. What Is Jute?—Saw It. ...
A. The glossy fiber of an East Indian
plant, uaed for the manufacture of lacking,
burlap, twine, and sometimes in wrapping
paper.
Q. How much money should a fellow
have before he gets married?—N. Love.
A. All he can manage to get kold of.
Mischief: Such pranks as yours are pretty
hard on a fellow, but If he is a good sport
ho won't grouch.
Luke McLuke Says
There are «,985 varieties of the
plain or garden variety of Idiot. And
the man who trios to argue with
his wife Is the Champeen of the
flock.
Have you ever noticed that all of
the Lucky men you know are fellows
who work hard and mind their own
business?
Many a rich man who turns up
his nose at Lobster and Terrapin oft-
en finds his teeth watering when he
thinks of how good a slice of bread
and molasses used to taste when he
was a kid.
It is a mighty dumb seventeen-
year-old Princess who doesn't believe
that she is qualified to write a bock
on What a Young Girl Ought To
Know.
Another lad who Is going to be
terribly disappointed is the fellow
who thinks he is going to get Into
Heaven because he gives one per
cent of his stealings to the Church.
Love may be a disease, but the
patient begins to get Qpnvalescent as
soon as the Honeymoon ends.
Some men get Experience cheaper
than others. But a woman always
has to pay a terrible price for it.
We all like to bluff. But there are
lots of perfectly respectable families
who never see a napkin on the
tabic unless they have Company.
No, Gladys. A young man does not
always mean business when he is
wearing a business suit.
A man can forget his troubles and
his enemies and his loves and his
triumphs and his failures. But he
never forgets that dollar he lent you
that you forgot to pay back.
Things To Worry About.
Gelatine is now made from sea-
weed.
Names Is Names.
Miss Fountain B. Lowe lives at
Sugar Loaf, Ky.
Onr Dally Spcdal.
Alcohol Won't Preserve A
Roll.
Bank
<1
fm\
mtis.
The Great American Smoke—"Bull" Durham
Fall in line with hundreds of thousands of red-blooded
smokers of the good old U. S. A. Smoke the cigarette tobacco
that's been an American institution for three generations—"Bull"
Durham. The rich, relishy, star-spangled taste of "Bull" puts the
national spirit of get-up-and-hustle into your hand-rolled cigarette.
"Bull" is the freshest, snappiest, liveliest of smokes.
genuine;
B u ll Durham
SMOKING TOBACCO
"Roll your own" with "Bull" Durham and you'll find far
^ greater satisfaction in your cigarette than
( you ever did before. Made or the richest,
mildest leaf grown. "Bull" has a delightful
mellow - sweet flavor found in no other
tobacco.* And its aromatic fragrance is
supremely unique. Men who never smoked
cigarettes before are now "rolling their own"
with "Bull" Durham.
I »l>rr An Illustrated
P RKr. Booklet, ahow-
* * ina correct way
to "Roll Your Own Ggarettes,
•nd a package of cigarette paper*.
will both be mailed, fit*, to an*
addreaa in U. S. on requeat. Ad-
dress "Bull" Durham, Durham.
N.C
Ash for FREE
package of "paper*"
with each Be each.
in UUUCSM TOBACCO CO.
How It Happened
C
J By Andrew McBeath [
J
In the society column Sunday there
was a report of the recent session of
the "Domestic Science Club" In which
appeared the following statement:
"This club indulges In the practical to
the last word and so It was In order
that members should Interest them-
selves in the fly campaign and give
their names as participants In the cru-
sade against this summer nuisance."
A domestic science club will not tol-
erate the fly. All kinds of domestic
interests are opposed to the fly and
all kinds of science is opposed to the
little hairy varmlt. When domestic
science 1s promoted through the
medium of a club there indeed is a
AMERICAN RimiRNS AND TELLS
AUDIENCE OF STIRRING
EVENTS IN TURKEY.
KANSAS CIT y. Mo., April 1«.—'The
story of the defense of the city of
Van, Turkey, against the Turks by
Armenians, prevloiu and subsequent
atrocities, Russian relief and then
more atrocities by the Cossacks
against Turkish women, were Incidents
discussed by the Rev. Clarence D.
Ussher, a missionary, at the Prospect
Avenue Congregational church here.
The occasion was the forty-fifth an-
nual meeting of the Missouri branch
of the women's board of interior mis-
sions. Mr. Ussher is a Kansas Cltyan
and left here in 1898 to become a mis-
sionary in Van, Turkey. His wife died
there a few montha ago of typhus
fever.
In telling the harrowing tale of mas-
sacre and treachery, the missionary
did not appet.r greatly prejudiced
against the Turkish people, despite
his own experiences.
Turk Lenders Degenerates.
"Do not think they are to blame," he
said. "The Turkish people are led by
a gang of 'rough-necks' who drive
them into these outrages. In hun-
dreds, and perhaps thousands, of in-
stances Moslems have sheltered Chris-
tians, even though an order from Con-
stantinople said the penalty was death
for all concerned should such treason
be discovered. I personally know of a
case where a Turk concealed an Ar-
menian man dressed as a woman, in
his harem for weeks. Because he was
allowed to mingle freely with the Tur-
kish women in that-sccluded sanctuary
the presence of the Armenian never
became known to the authorities.
Dr. Ussher was in charge of the mis-
place where a fly will not find safe
conduct or be able to secure passports.'
For the Invader will be clubbed both
actually and theoretically. The in-.
vader*wlll be ostracised, outlawed, ex-
iled, murdered, assassinated, slaigti*
tered and other wise disposed of in
a scientific way. The assistance of the
Domestic Science club will be of great
importance in this campaign beer, use
of the technical knowledge the mem-
bers have and the responsibility they
feel In a matter so vitally afi ictins the
health of the community.
Every organized body should Join
in the movement until it will be im-
possible for a fly to find a place to
stay all nignt In Temple.
slon at Van wten it was beleagured by
a Turkish army. Once during the
siege, he sarid, a bullet grazed his nose,
Have no Pair of America.
"I protested to the governor general
that the mission was a consulate and
the territory of a neutral nation, and
he sneered at me," Dr. Ussher de-'
clared. "He said the United States had
no army and hence did ftot count. The ,
Turks fired many shefls Into the mi*-!
slon later, Just before they withdrew
and the Russians entered.
"Whilst most of the consuls In Tur-
key are political appointees and worso '
than useless. Ambassador Morgenthau
was a great man—the best we ever;
had at Constantinople, God bless him,'*,
the missionary said. "He did much'
more than we had a right to expect
from anyone in those times of peril.
"But the consuls, even before the
war, were not treated with respect,
and Americans In trouble Invariably
sought out the British consuls because
they knew the American government
would not back up its representative^
abroad.
"The true story of the Kurd out-
rages never has been told. I have seen
troopers who were crack shots shoet
away the breasts of mothers nursing
their babies to prove to their com-1
rades that they could do this without i
killing either the mother or the child, i
I have Keen Kurds dismount and with'1
their wicked looking knives make up- ,
ward plunges, disemboweling »young
girte in the presence of their parents. <
"That the Armenians are a brave
people anrl at times can fight well, I
know. 1 have seen a handful of them ;
hold an army in check. In Van the
women watched for the arrival of i
mortar bombs and then threw them- j
selves on them, tearing out the fuses !
so their husbands could use the ex-
plosive for ammunition.
Ku6Kh>n Soidicra Sympathetic. j
"On the other hand when the Itus*
sians arrived, I had to take my re-
volver and rush to the assistance of
Turkish women who were being, out-
raged by Cossacks. The Cossack, by
the way, is not a Russia i. The lat-
ter soldiers are kindly and sympa-'
thetic."
Health is Wealth
byJohrv B. H\iber. D.
7/ it is well with your stomach, your lungs and your feet, royal wealth can
add nothing more.—Horace. » j < ■ / j ^ ,
m
malaria
Clean Up And Keep Clean.
Kt
|T is a very frequent experience that when a community Is bent on
a thorough civic cleaning, a single perverse, wrong-headed citizen
seems to be as much bent on keeping his whole neighborhood pes-
tilent. He will not remove his fly-breeding dung heap, or hia
malaria breeding pool, and the like.
Reason with such a one in a brotherly spirit; and if he won't get you
make him feel that he Is unpopular, be disagreeable to him In every way,
you can think of, let everybody give him the silence until he sees the light'
and acts accordingly. Perhaps he may have to be reported to the authori-
ties. (Maintaining a nuisance, by the way, is In most places a misde-
meanor punishable by law).
And they do say that there are some places where the authorities ought
to be Jacked up. Well, if they won't enforce the law, if they won't attend
to so vital a matter as the public health, if by reason of their negligenca
tender little children must, all unnecessarily, die, then pound them until
they do their duty; or get rid of them and put in their places men of heart
and of understanding of the communal Interest, ready to prodtote th*
communal welfare.
Work up the psychology of advertising as applied to elvle cleanliness'
Get the women's clubs interested; then you'll see the dirt flyl Get boards
of trade, farmer's leagues, teachers' Institutes busy. Engage lecturers tot
show their hair-raising lantern slides. Get the clergy to preach sermons!
on the cleanliness that Is so akin to Godliness. Get placards in store win-
dows, and posters on fences.
Above all, corral the local editor, or as many as there are of him.
The average citizen gets all kinds of circulars In his mall—asking him to
▼ote for Jones; to try Brown's tooth powder; to help support a home for
cats, so that wicked small boys shall not hurt their-felines, nor cruel doe-
tors vivisect such pets under the base pretense of benefitting mankind. Air
such circular literature, no matter how deserving of consideration, tha
citizen is likely to discard unread and unappreciated. But should he com*
upon the same in the column* of his morning newspaper he will take It in
with due interest and respect. So get the editor to print all the publl«
health stuff he will stand for.
THE BRUSH AND THE COMB.
O. J. E. writes! Does brushing and
combing the hair cause it to fall out?
Answer: No; on the contrary, by
these means the growth of the hair Is
stimulated, tho circulation of blood in
the scalp Is Improved, and the dand-
ruff is gotten rid of. Brushing re-
moves many loose hairs such as are
bound to fall out anyway; but the
place of those hairs is taken by new
and more vigorous ones. The only
way to keep a horse's coat thick and
glossy and healthy 1s by constant use
of the currycomb and the brush.
BREAD FOR DIABETICS.
O. H. P. writes: Could you tell me
how (1) almond bread Is made; (I)
Gluten bread? (t) Are these breads
good for diabetics?
Answer i 2, Beat 1-4 pound of
blanched sweet almonds tn a stone
mortals put in a linen bat. tteep IS
minutes In boiling water containing
>d mix into this pasta three
utter and two eggs. Add a
and the yolks of three eggs,
stirring well all the time. Whip up
the whites of three eggs and stir in.
Place the resulting dough In greased
molds and dry over a slow Are. a.
Gluten bread is made from unbolted
wheat flour; It contains more gluten,
diastase and mineral phosphates than
white bread. ». Ye?.
ADENOIDS.
S. J. wrltest My child is a mouth
breather, has a hacking cough and a
muffled voice, his hearing does not
seem to be as good as it should bet
People say hQ has a vacant expression,
and tho teacher says he is dull.
Answeri The trouble is probably
adenoids, growths at the hack of the
nose an& throat. Have them removed
and you will hardly know your own
boy, he will be s$ Improved In health.
In hearing and In general intelligence.
Any doctor can perform this near-
miracle. vj
This column is devoted to diteate prevention; to physical and mental
hygiene; to domestic, industrial and pub lie tdnitation; to the promotion of
tyajih effciehey and ttnff W/«. The latest developments tn medical science
pill be presenied. Question of generjiiJnjefist toiU be pnstpered here, space
permUtinff^-otkqre by mail i/ tf4+pef n(*rn envelope it enclosed. , -
tor personal diagnosis or treatment cannot, however( considered In j
» .;;
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Williams, E. K. Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 153, Ed. 1 Monday, April 17, 1916, newspaper, April 17, 1916; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth473895/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.