Texans used corncobs as jug and bottle stopper, smoking pipes, tool handles, torches, fishing floats and various other purposes. Husks were used by Texans as writing paper, food wrap and also for mattress and pillow stuffing.
Explanation:
- Corn is something which has been cultivated in Texas from prehistoric time to present time. People of Texas ate corn in multiple forms like roasting ears, cornbread, popcorn, hoecake, pudding, porridge and in many other forms. Texans also feed their livestock with corn in different forms like grain or fodder.
- The corncobs served various other purpose for their daily needs. The most important use was for firewood and meat-smoking fuel.
- Husks, also known as shucks, served other purpose for them.
- Husks was used as a wrapper for wrapping food and fruits, as writing paper and also was used as filling for mattress and pillow.
- Every part of corn was used by Texans in one or the other form. They used even the stalks and leaves of corn.
- Stalks and leaves were used for roofing purpose, as scarecrows, for fencing and also as a material for the construction of shelter.
The Nazi state sought to establish control in many ways, such as when Adolf Hitler became Chancellor in 1933 and made the first Decree which was passed Feb. 28, 1933, the first Decree abolished all rights the people had in Germany such as freedom of speech, press, and assembly. The Decree also set up concentration camps and sent communists and jews there. On March 3rd, 1933 the Enabling Act was passed, the Act established Hitler's dictatorship in Germany, banning all other political parties. The Nazis took control of the military, media, and judiciary matters of the country. this Act also granted the Gestapo, the Secret Service, and the police large amounts of authority over society, this allowed the Gestapo detain people in their torture chambers, send them to concentration camps and deport them at will.
C. The Mycenaean civilization (c. 1700-1100 BCE) flourished in the Late Bronze Age, reaching its peak from the 15th to the 13th century BCE when it extended its influence not only throughout the Peloponnese in Greece but also across the Aegean, in particular, on Crete and the Cycladic islands
The nickname for U.S. soldiers in WW1 was known as "doughboys". There are many explanations for the nickname for the soldiers but the most common was that their uniforms would be coated with dust, so that they looked like they were made out of dough, or perhaps of adobe.