The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 28, 1901 Page: 1 of 4
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■4A xtst a&r* &r~ a*.
VALLEY ■
Stock Farm,
DR. I. E. CLARK, Proprietor.
TEXAS
Standard and Tksrcigkkrti
HORSES
iTTLE,M4 3k
B, and
mura
to foal.
Corres-
of Fine
is respect-
Carries
selected line of
the most fashionable designs of
id has constantly
sty o||
in stock a
or * strong gaJe will
operate one of our
DANDY WINDMILLS.
MADE ON PURPOSE TO
BE THE BEST.
}■#$*
isii&s
e -■ -• ■
mm
v, 11 m*
MM
wmmBm
/ i ii
New Orleans Beer.
— :
There is nothing like it.
Always Fresh and Pure.
Refreshing and Invigorating.
WED BY
wing Association.
H. BENIKER, Agent.
R Delightful
of-Soba
Aibcr uaviu^ MACU m wy w V*M tvw «/Vf *%
slacks the thirst snd leaves you a most pleasing re-
membrance of your indulgence.
■fM*. '^0.%, t - '
Works Is
le essence
YW> >
- t " • ' ' '
ed by the Schnlenburg Bottling \
distilled water and represents the
ection.
J. R.LUECKE. PROP.
J. J. SCHWART
Bros
Liyery and Feed Stable#,
Men Meet all Trains.
Buy sell and Exchange Hordes.
siife imm
TMUM.
*F. C. WOLTERS,
Has an Elegant Line of
The Best Liquors, Vines,
CIGARS, ETC.,
And cordially Invites his friends and
patrons to inspect his stock.
REPORT OF «
COMMISSIONERS.
120.93
$14,855.83
STATE OF TEXAS, \
County of Fayette, j
We, the undersigned members of the Commissioners' Court of
Fayette county, in compliance with law, have examined the following
reports of R. T. Bradshaw, Treasurer of Fayette county, upon the
several county funds filed Nov. 12, 1901, for ex&minatisn and approv-
al:- v; '•
1st—Report of the treasurer upon the General
Fund of Fayette county, approved, show-
ing a balance on hand—. $5,337.95
2d—Report of treasurer upon the Road Fund
of Fayette county, approved, showing a
balance due treasurer.. $3,123.62
3d—Report bf treasurer upon the bridge fund
of Fayette county, showing a balance due
treasurer to amount of. L—
4th—Report of treasurer upon the Special
Court House fund of Fayette county,
showing a balance on hand
Total amount in treasury $20,193.78
That we proceeded to inspect and count the ca*h as reported on
hand belonging to the aforesaid several funds of Fayette county, and
at the First National Bank of LaG-range, Texas, the treasurer placed
before us the sum of $20,193.78 in cash, which the treasurer stated to
us was the money belonging to the County of Fayette and which we
then and there counted and found the amount correct.
JOSEPH EH LINGER, County Judge,
C. E. HACKEBEIL, Commissioner Precinct 1,
KOSSUTH ZAPP, Commissioner Precinct 2,
C. A. YOUNG,,Commissioner Precinct 3,
J. J. FIETSAM, Commissioner Precinct 4.
Sworn to and subscribed before me in open court by each of the
above named members of the Commissioners' Court this, the 15th
day of November, 1901. R. KLATT, Clerk
County Court, Fayette County, Texas.
seal }■ By PAUL KLATT, Deputy
Filed Nov. 15,1901. - R. KLATT, Clerk
County Court, Fayette County, Texas.
By PATjL KLATT,.Deputy.
THE STATE OF TEXAS,) ;
County of Fayette. )
I, R. Klatt, Clerk of the County Court and ex officio Clerk of the
Commisioners' Court in and for Fayette county, Texas, hereby certify
the above and foregoing to be a true and correct copy of the original
sworo report of the county judge and each of the county commission-
ers, showing the cash and assets belonging to said county, as shown
by the books and reports of the county treasurer on the 12th day of
vembeTf 1901, alid as appears of record in Volume 5, page 628, of
the minutes of said court.
In testimony whereof I hereunto sign my name and affix the seal
ii&aald court, this 18th day of November, 1901.
R. KLATT, Clerk
seal -> County Cou.it and ex officio Clerk Commissioners'
Court of Fayette County, Texas. '
By PAUL KLATT, Deputy.
. novi
it |
}
COMMISSIONERS' COURT*
It bavin# been brought to the
attention of the court that cer-
tain property owners in the oily
of L (Grange on block 23 are at-
tempting fo connect their own pri-
vate sewer with that owned by
the county, said action be unautho-
rised by the county it was ordered
Lbat suit be filed to prevent fur-
ther interference &c with said
sewer and that Robson & Duncan
be employed io prosecute said
suit.
The following monthly reports
of Neal Robison, Tax Collector,
wore approved:
The report for August shows,
811.31 revenue, $11.62 school, and
$10.86 poll and penalties collcted
for *tate and $32;30 ad valorem,
$6.49 poll and penalties collected
for county on redemptions; and
$1959 collected for stat and $979.50
for county for occupation taxcsf|
The report for September sIkjhIs
$.39 revenue, $.43 school, $6 poll
and $.68 penalties collected for
state and $1.20 ad valorem, $1 poll
and $20 penalties, collected for
county on insolvent list; $13.8/
revenue, $14.26 school, $8.19 poll
and penalties collected for state
and $39.64 ad valorem, $7.28 poll
collected for county, on redcmp
tion; and $3331 collected for state
and $1665.50 for couuty for occu-
pation taxes.
The report tor October shows
$2128.97 revenue, $2299.39 school,
$1219.50 poll collected for state
and $6387 ad valorem, $203.25
poll, collected for county on reg-
ular tax rolls; $.31 revenue, $.34
school, $6 poll, $.76 ponalty col-
lected for state and $.95 ad valorem
$1 poll and $.21 penalty collected
for county on insolyent list; $9.79
revenue, $9.32 school,
and penalty collected
and $25.90 ad valorem,
and penalty collected for county
on redemption; and $50«5 collect-
ed for state and $2564.50 for
occupations taxes.
$8.03 poll
for state
$6.47 pot I
The following claims were al-
lowed:
W. D. Burns, digging grave,
$2.50.
H. C. Ledbetter et al, costs in
case, Johnson vs. Fayette- County,
$4.70.
Dr. R. A. Johnson, judgement
vs. County, $28.44.
Srah Brooks, appraised value of
one glandered mare, $12.50.
Flatonia Record, notice of road
tax election, $3.50,
Flatonia Argus, notice of road
tax election, $3.50.
LaGrange JS. L. W. & P. Co.,
fittings and repairs for court house
and jail, $13.55.
Tom Berry et al, services ap-
praising glandered horse, $6.00.
T. H. Breeden, services apprais-
ing glandered horse, $6 00.
, Dr. T. J. Pier, examination o!
body of man found dead, $10.
Chas. H. Schiege, one inquest,
$5.00
Emil Christen, value of one
glandered horse killed by sheiriff,
$17.50.
LaGrange, loe <fc C. 8. Co., 3
ice book, $6.75.
H. F. Lane Printing Co. station-
ery, $2.25.
M. Ferneu, one pauper coffin,
$5.
A. Loess in, ex-office services,
$219.50.
A. Loessin,killing and burning
glandered horse, $7.80.
The Kind He Wanted.
"Young man," said the fortune
teller, going into a trance; "I can
see you, in the near future, with an
airship—"
"Make it an heirship to a million,
can't you?" eagerly exclaimed Ar-
dup, slipping another half dollai
into her hand.
Her Family.
She—"She comes of a grand old
family, I believe."
He—"Yes, very! An ancestor
of hers was beheaded in the Towei
during the reign of the fourth Ed-
ward."
She—"How perfectly lovely!"
out ths follow
Milk (Ml
Food and Dairy
Norton of Iowa,
ing circular of
Th£ bearing of the
upon the subject of cream testing with
the Babcock tact, does not seem to be
fully understood by the "butter-makers
of the state. The law reads: ^Station
262t. Any person or cotforaftion;'or
the employe of such personor corpor-
ation, who operates a creamery or
cheese or condensed milk factory and
uses a chemical . w '
the quantity of better fat in milk pur-
chased, used or received, shall so use
only such testa as shall be clear oil,
free from any foreign substance and
produce correct measurements of but-
ter fat" Of course the word milk in-
cludes the word cream.
In testing milk, the ordinary 17.6
pipette will deliver the same weight
of milk, 18 grams, whatever Its test
may be. But the same is not true of
cream, which varies greatly in w;eight
with the Variations of Its quality;!
hence; whether the piquette be 17.fec
or line or 22cc, the results obtained
are all incorrect because the weight
of poor cream takes by any of tttes"
pipettes is greater than the weight ot
rich cream taken by the Haftig Tftpette*
The proper weight should be IS gram;
of cream or milk, and the most accur-
ate cream testtng can be done only
when the cream is weighed into th*
bottles. But this Is practicable onl>
in those creameries that.can afford u
have the proper balances for weighing
the cream In testing.
But the use of a 17.6 plp-tte and th-
taftles of corrections prepared at th
Iowa Experiment Elation, will glv
very accurate measurements of thr
butter fat In cream, and is the only
method of measuring'the cream for |h*
Babcock teat that Is held to be author-
ised by the. law.
A few creameries have been using s
22 pipette in cream testing, and have
called the reading ot the fat column
butter lnste- i of butter fat There are
three reasons, why this system should
not be used. First, It Is Incorrect, be-
cause no pipette will measure out the
same weight of creams of different
degrees of richness. Second, the bab-
cock teat la a teat for butter fat and
not for butter, and the teatahowa but-
ter fat In the bottle whatever the
amount of milk or cream used, and not
butter. Third, It Is not authorized by
the law. The attorney general says on
this point, and referring to
previously quoted:
creameries, cheese or
factories, whenever a
Ity of milk or
quired to use
as shall produce Statist m
of 'butter fat'" Note the
The law makes no provision la re-
gard to the manner of payment for
the milk or cream furnished. The
creamery may pay fer it by the hun-
dred pounds or by the gallon, or for
the butter it will make, or the butter
fat It contains, but the law is very
elear that If the creamery uses a
chemical milk test It must use such
a teat as shall produce correct meas-
urements of butter tat There la noth-
ing In the Jaw that will prevent a
creamery from paying its patrons for
a 26 per cent or a 60 per cent overrun,
if the creamery desires to do so; the
provision Is that the milk or cream
must be correctly tested for butter fat
Points TV*
Edward K. Slater, writing la a local
Minnesota paper aays:
The "book farmer" to the man who
can make dairying pay where
would faiL . . . Remember
clean milk will keep longer than milk
containing 111th. . . , Not move than
one-ha|f of the cana tha t eeme to the
creameries are property eared for. . .
There are T6S creameries In the atate
and a good prospect of increasing the
number to 900 this aeaaon. . .A,
creamery should never be built where
there lan't a good prospeet of securing
the milk from at least 600 cows. .
. . It Isn't always the cow which
gives the most milk that makes you
the moat money, If you are Belling
butter fat . . . Mow Is the time to
give that creamery a booat . . .
Something to the matter when a
creamery company can't keep any hnt-
termaker they may hire. The boys
are not all incompetent ... Wind
doesn't make a good piece ot machin-
ery; If yon contemplate buying a sep-
arator, satisfy yourself that It to what
It to represented before you Invest .
. . Dont neglect to atraln your milk
before taking to the creamery, juat be-
cause your neighbor does. Perhaps he
to doing so for same reason. .
. . Don't keep a $16 dairy cow; sell
her for beef and take what yen lost
last year by keeping her, and add to
the selling price and this amount will
buy you a cow that will make you
money.
The advaatagea of winter dairying
are numeroua. If the cow drops her
calf In the fall or early winter, she
will giro good Sow of milk through-
out most of the winter season on very
little more feed than Is necessary to
winter a dry cow. In the spring, When
the milk flow has begun to decrease,
the cow seems to take a new start when
put on grass, thus gtv<ng practically
two freshening* In the year. By this
method of dairying, the greatest milk
yield occurs during the seaaon of high-
est prlcea.
Germany imports every year about
140,000 dosens of hog livers for the
preparations of liver sausages.
Quadrenia! Stations.
There is a possibility that tht
Virginia constitutional convention
will provide for sessions of the
legislature cnce in four years, in-
stead of once inr two years, at
hitherto.
1
* <=$■
iMi
*
m
goods are
the best
first of the fall
h(*re! ¥hey represent
achievetnwts of „ the manufacturers,
and were selected- expressly for our
customers. They are ready for you,
-now, and we urge you to come early
and get choice ^ n?
; v •c!
I
' ' f%'\ % ■ '■■■ .
iSf
^%J!
| many people have th<
that a cough didn't amount to mi
excellent people whose friends
[ to tose them. Don't M&ke
A cough is the first step
serious and often fatal sickness.
right here.
Our Compound Syr\ip
J Pine with Tar in and ^o cent
\ has proven a marverlous cough stop
^you've just begun to cough, the 25c
I :will fix you; if it's an old cough, try a
, bottle. It always relieves and ti
N desperate cases it always cures.
an
Everything a well
ought to have, we have.
* -
jfPl
«tan Jtrttonio Screwing.
Sold 150,000 Kegs
Brewery in 1897,
A. SCHUMANN, Agent Sch
IBS
W£;
Nm
m
••
WHEN FRIEND
CD II
rKU
There's nothing to
' friend and the frie. .
link of
I WIip^fldF^
;v- we carry are the b
friend can have.
I once and they wi
other friend.
F«ESH NEWORLEAKS BEER ALWAYS Off
^^OLTMAMWS &
HPMfMi
wsimm
MS
B-swjsjiMtaneanu! shushwqi
wwm
MiMM
The H&ppiness of
Yo\ir Life.......
m
Depends V
Comfort of
m
' -pg. ' -^1
n the
IS IT RROTEOTBO BY IN SUN AN OK ?
IF fire we.'e to destroy it tonight would you be left desolate
and destitute, or could you present a policy issued by a
reputable Company and be reimbursed for your loss? A
small annual premium will afford you ample
I HAYE THE EXCLUSIVE A6EXCY FOR SEVERAL OLD
i
W. R. KING, Schulenburg,
o^l^SmSSr^SSSSSSSSSo ^2
• '
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Read ^ The
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King, W. R. The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 28, 1901, newspaper, November 28, 1901; Schulenburg, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth188997/m1/1/: accessed April 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Schulenburg Public Library.