The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 28, 1901 Page: 4 of 4
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ran mil—m.
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11 ed by ExpertGin ners If Its del-
icate fiber is to be presrvsd and the highest
market price raiized from its sale.
plant has recently been entirely renewed*
business will be given my personal super-
and the result obtained will cectalnly
satisfactory.
I also will continue to carry a complete fcne
of Lumbr and Builders' Material. J1
Your patronage is solicited.
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BUI
K. of P.
Meets every 1st and 3rd
in their
Senelemann's hall.
All visiting Knignts are
invited to attend
meetings ot
V, H. Boettcher, C. C.
Gus Ulrich, K. OCR. A 8.
-* '' hmi *"
O. U.
Meets regularly every 2d and 4th Wednesday.
Transient brethren are cordially to attend.
M. c. um. It. *.
Wm. k super, Jr. i Recorder.
Freiligrath Lodge, No. 14.
O. d. H. & , .
Donnerstag
pT
ident
man.
** •*
— ''—:
my stock.
L
ted
Joseph Berger, N. G.
to visit us.
mmm?
Secretary.
*WW
Meets on Friday on
or before the first full
brethren are
invited to at-
,:WJI
Ebelig,
p.,No. 120.
wfm■
fmm
Meets «very
wsd^jm
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh
that Contain Mercury
as mercury will surely destroy the
scence of smell and completely de-
range the whole syotem when en-
tering it through the muscous sur-
faces. S%ch articles should never
be used except on prescriptions
from reputable physicians, as the
damage they will do is ton-fold to
the good you can possibly derive
from them. Hall's O.tarrh Cure,
manufactured by b\ S. Cheney &
Co., Toledo, O y contains no mer-
cury and is taken internally, act-
i ng directly uuon the blood and
muscous surfaces of the system.
In b«ying Hail's Catarrah Cure he
sure you get the genuine. It is
taken internally, and made m To-
ledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co,
Testimonials free.
Sold by all Druggist?, price 75c.
per bottle.
Hall's Family Pills are-the besl.
The Oil King's Private Wire.
John D. Rockefeller occasionally
oses the long distance telephone
when away from his New York of-
fice, but not for important business.
For such purposes he never uses the
mails. There is a private wire from
the office to his mansion at Forest
Hill, 0., and the Standard Oil mil-
lionaire when at the latter point
transact business just as though he
wrre in New York. He never writes
mCeifcge, but talks to a trusted and
reliable operator:
Pretty Tough to Scratch.
For a living and relief also. Hunt's
Cure will cure you of Itch, Tetter,
Ringworm, Itchinsr Pile?, Eczema.
Guaranteed by all dealers.
Carmen Calve Here Again.
As to what she did while bo long
abroad, Madame Calve, who return-
ed to New York a few days ago.
said: "Last summer I sang at
Covent Garden, last winter I went
off for a rest, and had a most en-
joyable stay of four months in
Egypt. And now, after these ad-
ventures, if they might be colled
such, I am back here to sing, and.
glad to be here again." Mrae
Calve will be one of Mr. GrauV
chief dependencies on the long tour,
which begins October 7, in Albany,
extends to California and ends in
New YoTk just before Christmas,
when the Metropolitan opera housf
season begins. >v ;
i if
Dun't Become Discouraged,
But use Simmons' Liyer Purifier
(tin box.) Many imitations of the
original, so be careful and see
that it's "Purifier" and manufact-
ured by the A. C. SI MMONS J11.
M EDICl NK CO.
Mrs. How's Eads Memorial.
Mm Eliza A. How, widow of
James F. How, late president of the
Wabash Railroad company, has
given $100,000 to Washington uni-
versity, St. Louis, to be used for
the erection of a memorial to her
father, Captain James B. Eads, who
built the Eads bridge acfoss the Mis-
sissippi river at St. Louis, and the
jetties below New Orleans. The gift.
has been accepted by the board of
trustees of the university, who will
confer with Mrs. How as to the
character of memorial which shall
be constructed..
Laugh and the World
Laughs with yod, have chills and
you chill alone. Cheatham's Lax-
ative Chill Tahlets cures, gives an
appetite and strength. Most con-
venieiat chill tonic on earth. * Can
carry in the vest pocket.
Was Fond of His Front Yard.
"The late President McKinlej
took great delight in Ids front yard
at Canton,'* said Representative
Robert W. Taylor, of Lisben, O.,
flie other day. "The postmastci
there, George Freese, was one of the
president's intimate . personal
friends, who used frequently tc
pass. the MeKinley household early
in the morning. Often he found
Mr. MeKinley out there. 'George/
he would say, 'don't you see .how
those elephant's cars are greying ?'
referring to a plant of that nam:
which flourishes in his yard. It
was not a magnificent yard, but
well kept, and entirely worthy ii
president's pride. I had bit finest
down in Canton and enjoyed twe
jr three pleasant chats with him
during the trip. He was not by
any means at- busy as here in Wash-
ington, and twice when I happened
there we sat on the porch and talk
ed for the best part of an hour.
He was well rested and I never saw
him in better cheer."
qpp
m
TO1
OS
*
Mt..Ve
For
Country
grandfather used
r PQre Ja
for
Cane Belt R'y. Company.
i added passenger
/ and Bay Cftjr.
Eagle I .a Ice at 9:23 <
■m
i Lake
tarn*
> connect with N. YT. * H. trains in both it-
-
EAT RICE
rice yon ought
t is an ideal food, easily <li-
,nutritious and cheap. Send
ten cents in stamps to S. F. B
Morse, Asst. Passenger Traffic
Manager, Southern Pacific. Son
set Route, Houston, Texas for
r of Southern Pacific Rice Cook
containing two hundred re-
for preparing rice.
Southern Pacific Rates.
National Live Stock association
Chicago. Round trip tickets one
tare pluss 12.00 on sale JNov. 30th
1st limit Dec. 10* h.
mie Grand Lodge meeting
ton. Tickets on sate Nov
24th and 25th Dec. 1st and 2nd
limit Dec. 18th. Convention Bas-
Leasne
agi
Round trip
'iti Saloon
_ ,..t, we
tickets one and one-third fare
dates ot sate Nov. 29th to Dec. 2nd
limit Dec. 8th-
Cbristian Lectureship
Tex. Rate one and one-
Nov. 24th and 25th
Tlie train due to lcare KaftU Lake at 12:U is
dne to arrive at Bay City at f :15 p. m.
ia dn« to
UMpm a«id to arrive at
Cbas. boaobkzn, CK P. A.
X&U. N. R R. EXCURSIONS.
Fort Worth, Texas, November
General Convention of
Texas.
Fort Worth, Texas, November
15—21 National Convention, W
C. T. U.
Marhn, Texas, All-year-round
excursion tickets, from I So G N
points, at rate of one and one-
third fires. World famous Hot
welt, natural Sanatanum, and
health resort.
Remember—That we now run
our own train into Bryan, Calvert,
Marlin Waco, and are rapidly-
pushing forward to Ft. Worth.
Low rates will be in effect for all
of the above occasions. Ask ticket
agents for particulars as to rates,
dates of sale, etc., or write to
D. J. Price,
Gen. Pass, and Ticket Agt.,
Palestine, Texas.
M. K. k T. Cheap Rates.
Free chair cars between Waco
and Memphis, via M. K, &T. and
C. O. & Cx. Railways.
This new through chair car ser-
vice enables passengers to leave
Waco on the "KATX" at 7:18 pm
and reach Memphis the next eye-
nine at 7:40 p. m. without change
of cars. In opnosite direction
passengers leave Memphis at 9;00
a. m, and arrive at Waco at 10:51
a. m. \
The seat m these chair cars are
easy and comfortable and absolu-
tely free. A jporter is in charge
of the chair car to look after th^
comfort of patrons.
SOUTH EAST. MISSOURI, AR-
KANSAS and KANSAS.
Tickets on sale December 21,
22 and 23, at low rates, with thir-
ty days limit returning.
It yoa want to trayel in up-to-
date style, and want to reach your
destination in the quickest possi-
ble'tinie, lie sure and see that your
tickets read via the '*Katy Route".
For further information see
*'KATY" Agents, or write
W. G. Crush, Dallas Texas.
m
th Century Church fair
"^ex. Rate one and one
27tb, 28th and 29th
Expert Accounting*
The. only college in the Southern
States having a separate and dis-
tinct Expert Accountiag course.
Young meu and women educated
to fill the most exacting positions.
Send for Catalogue. Address C.
H. Clark, President, Alamo City
Business College, San Antonio,
Texas.
Want the'Cfuefs Resignation,
Rev. Dr. Walter Ford, who was
sleeted ehief of police of Smyrna,
Del., last March, has been requested
by the city council to hand in his
resignation to the council, as it is
thought he does not use the force and
other means in his power of sup-
pressing disorder.
Th® Alamo City Business College
The great actual Business Train-
ing University of the Southern
States.
Elegant Catalogue Free. Write
for it. Address C. H, Clark, Pres-
ident, Alamo Insurance Building,
8an Antonio, Texas.
In Memory of a Hero. •
A memorial portrait of Captain
Austin R. Davis, who was killed in
the attack on Tien Tsin, is to be
placed in the Carniegie library, in
Atlanta. The library building oc-
cupies the site of the house in which
Captain Davis was born.
Everything Comes
To those that wait, even now and
then aches and pains, Rheumatism
Catarrh, Neuralgia, and every-
thing that hurts. Hunt's Light-
ning Oil keeps off everything ex-
cept old age and death. Try it 25
and 50 cts. Satisfaction or money
efunded.
What's the Trouble
With yonr back, old man? Rheu
matisnii? Too bad, too bad. I ad-
vise you to try Hunt's? Lightning
Oil. It is said to be a wonderful
remedy.
Vienna's Appetite for Horse. Meat
Consul General Hurst, at Vicuna,
sends to the American department
of state an account of the horse meat
industry of the Austrian capital,
which now calls for the slaughter of
some 25,000 horses and half a hun-
dred donkevs annually—horse meat
being sold under close public regul a-
tion, and as such and not something
else, and finding a market among
the poor on account of its per cent
lower price as compared with ordin-
ary meat.
♦ ♦ —
They Came Too Late.
Among the late president's pa-
pers now in the hands of Secretary
Cortelyou are 5,000 requests fox
Mr. McKinley's autograph. It
had been his custom to devote spare
moments to the gratification of these
demands insofar as he could, but
during a few month's absence or
through a period when the presi-
dent would be busily occupied with
affairs of state these letters asking
for autographs would pile up. The
5,000 referred to accumulated dur-
ing the summer vacation, season.
Hope and Wisdom
Both are contained in Cheatham's
Laxative Chill Tablets.. Try them
25 cts. No cure-no pay.
Letters From Hades.
Five Philadelphia saloonkeepers
have .been startled recently through
the receipt of letters from Hades.
The signature to eacli letter is the
same; it is that of a young man who
died, some few months ago, of al-
coholism. The handwriting is also
the same, a hand slanting to the left,
and consideraly disguised, * though
the saloonkeepers think they recog-
nize it as the handwriting of a cer-
tain church deacon. Here is a sain-*
pie which the Record ogives of the
silly letters that have worried not
a little the five saloonkeepers:
"Ilell, Oct. 1, 1901.
"Dear Henry:—-It is hot down
here, and I have not yet got accus-
tomed to the heat. This is asbestos
paper I am writing on, Henry, I
am waiting patiently for you to join
me. You will, some day, there is
no fear of that. The boss, Mr. Beel-
zebub, says so. Mr. Beelzebub is
very fond of you.- He tells me you
and the other men in your business
send him more people than any other
men in the world. I know you sent
me here. Henry."
"riihlnm'' in Batter.
The New Zealand Dairyman reports
that at a lecture delivered on the 15th
of May at the eighth annual conference
of the Australian Butter and Cheese
Factory Managers' Association, held
at Melbourne, Mr. Thomas Cherry,
M. D., M. S., lecturer in bacteriology,
Melbourne University, said: "I may
say a word or two about one special
defect in butter which has attracted
a great deal of attention during the
past two or three years, namely, "fish1-
iness" This peculiar fiavor is due to
a chemical substance called "trimeth-
ylamine," which was first isolated
from herring brine, and which gives
the brine its peculiar flavor. During
the last ten. or twelve years tri-
methylamine has been extracted in
small quantities from many kinds of
putrifying substances, and it is now.
known to be a product of the growth
of at least a score of different micro-
organisms. It can be produced by
sowing a pure culture of these, just in
the same way as a pure culture of, the
lactic acid bacteria produces the
agreeable aroma of good butter. The
primary cause of flshiness is therefore
the accidental invasion of the butter
by an organism capable of setting up
this change. Among such organisms
there are several bacteria which are
found in dirty water, and others
whose natural home seems to be sea
water. But these bacteria are not
able to manufacture trimethylamine
from pure butter-fat and milk sugar.
The material from which they pro-
duce it Is the butter-milk or curd,; that
is to say, it is a product Of the putre-
faction of proteid substances. Further,
some of these organisms grow very
slowly, and at comparatively low tem-
peratures; and finally, the addition of
an extra amount of salt seems to fa-
vor their development.
The experiments which are being
conducted at the University Labora-
tory are not yet complete enough for
a full report to be given, but I think
sufficient information has been ob-
tained to justify the above conclu-
sions. If so, it is evident that flsh-
iness is not a simple matter to be
curad by any single remedy. On the
contrary, it may originate at any
stage in the process of manufacture.
The organism may find its way into
the milk on the farm and be carried
over into the cream, and thence to
the butter, or it may come from the
water used to wash the butter, or even
possibly from the salt.
American Batter and Cheese Abroad.
A. R. Eastman of Waterville, New
York, says that his experience with
dairy products in England shows that
very little American butter is to be
found there. The amount of Amer-
ican cheese there is also small. He
stated at a meeting in New York that
he had inquired the reason for this
and had been told that the dealers
had not sufficient confidence In Amer-
ican goods. This is due to the Vast
amount of fraud that has been prac-
ticed, and contrasts strongly with the
methods followed by the Canadians,
who make goods that will stand the
lest. He charges that the Americans
work for the greatest possible immed-
iate profit That his charges are part-
ly true we must admit, but there is a
point that modifies the situation con-
siderably. He says that he finds lit-
tle butter or cheese on the English
market This is partly explained by
the fact that dealers in all kinds of
goods resort to the trick of false
branding. Though the sale In Eng-
land of American cheese has fallen off
iionsiderably from what it was a few
years ago, we still sell a good deal
of that product to the English peo-
ple. If it does not appear as Amer-
ican cheese on the English markets
it does appear under some other
brand. Just now the Canadians have
quite a reputation for their cheese
and a good deal of the. best qualty of
American cheese Is. ^doubtless sold as
Canadian; while the poorest Canadian
cheese is branded American. We
know the trick is worked with Amer-
ican meats and see no reason why -it
should not ba used in the sale of dairy
products. Americans should work for
a better reputation abroad, and that
reputation can be gained only by
sending £o foreign countries goods
fully up to the requirements.
The D'rt in the Can.
Dirty methods in the dairy cannot
be hidden. The cloudy milk in the
bottom of the can tells the story. It
is a sufficient clew to the habits of the
dairyman on whose farm it was pro-
luced. Such an advertisement does
not increase the revenue of any milk
producer. He may escape punishment
f he is fortunate enough to sell hiB
milk to a cheese fac^ry or to a
reamery, where the Anager is weak
a resolution. If his trade is with
private families he will be constantly
.osing custom without fully compre-
hending the cause. Dirt in the can is
almost a perennial charge against
.iome milk producers. An Investiga-
tion of their premises will sometimes
chow that they are as clean as most
stables. Then whence comes the dirt?
In a good many instances It comes
from the dust on the udderB of the
cows, on the clothes of-the milker
and even from his unwashed hands,
if the milker will wash his hands, the
udder of the cow and the flanks of
the eow and wear clean clothes when
he milks, the dirt in the can will
largely disappear.
7/s9 7jh«r
SUMSEX
ROUTE
NO MATTER WHERE
YOU WISH TO GO.
fSEE CHAIR CABS. SPLENDID
—
_*\\
The
Sou
est,
St.
Send 10 cents in stamps for a coj
mo*
of the Sout
if* iiyo'B . 'j^iiffiiTPf'i'CTSinr
F. B. MORSE
A. P. T. M.
Houston, Tex.
WSm
L. J. PARKS*
G. P. drT A
Houston, Tex.
1
Dixie Pale and Budweiser Bottle Beer.
I - Keg Beer and -
#L3
EBEL1WG & SOW, Agents.
RAILROADS .
Tbis has been demonstrated by the marl
; -i in conditions
THE
<6
THE TE
Whither olher roi
results of the
PROSPERITY
THE CHICAGO, ROCK I SLA
Already crossing the ' 'DI
THE CHOCTAW, OKLAHl
Soon to Join the "DEIf
THEBLACKWEUL, EA'/i
Now building to the
THE KANSAS CSTY,
Expected to join
THE^FRISCO SYS
THE ARKANSAS & CHOCTAW
agij^v Hi' gj||M|
All tlfl8,
numbers bu
cajes that 'J.
W, F. S TERLEY,
•.#. «.
*smm
ROAD'' at Acme.
mmmm
ed for the "D
ai 30 Da
Home
Is. _B..—Ityoa want to get
member this : "OrtlyOne
k -j—fc
BETWEEN
SOUTH TEXAS
AND
EAST TEXAS.
-
ALL-YEAR SPECWtBeit
Through Cars
Daily Fast Tr
Modern Equip
is
- Passenger - Service!
If You Are
Askl. & G. N.
For Particulars.
bmp-ween "
SOUTH TEXAS
and
ST. LOUIS
-VIA
San Antonio or Houston.
L. TRICE,
Y. P. & iieacL Bu|iL,
PALESTINE.
1 ?■■* " 1
=5=
Th? double or triple skirt looks de-
crde^V' 'rrnnrt d's-ht figures.
Fred Skiff's New Job.
Fred J. Y. Skiff, director-in-chief
cf the Field Columbian museum in
Chicago, has been appointed direc-
tor of exhibits for the St. Louis ex-
position. Mr. Skiff, who in his
early days was a Lawrence, Kas.,
newspaper man, was afterward as-
sociated with Eugene Field on the
Denver Tribune, was deputy direc-
tor general of the Columbian exposi-
tion, and was director-in-chief of
the United States commission to the
Paris exposition. In recognition
of his merit in exposition work he
received the cross of the Legion of
Honor, a bronze, medal from
France and a gold medal from Ger-
many.
ro ST. LOUIS. CHICAGO.
KANSAS CITY.
GALVESTON. AUSTIN,
SAN ANTONIO.
DALLAS an*
PATRONIZE
HOME INDUSTRIES!
Highest market price
paid for cotton seed
delivered at oil mill.
WiU'pay the cash for
same or take it in ex-
change for hulls and
cake meal, as desired.
CHR.
->, . v -
.
f '
- -H
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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/m1/4/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Schulenburg Public Library.