The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Ed. 1 Friday, January 8, 1915 Page: 1 of 2
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THE SCHULENBURG STICKER. SCHULENBTTRG, TEXAS
HOW AVERAGE TEXAS
FAR1MRNISH LIVING
cast—Gen-
Due 2nd
the Cotton
A STUDY OF TEXAS FARMS BY
AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT
THROWS LIGHT ON SUBJECT.
o. 3—Due - for
in Northwest
will be general-
N, due the 22d,
edule.
C ^ 4 ? $jf.!
ferfer,
Jay, Jan. 17 to 20.
with Cool "Wave
loderately cold tem-
}LE and KASTBRN
{minima there rang-
degrees. It will be
ler in WESTERN
be generally cloudy
roujjhout the South
the week, bpt no
1 is expected.
Friday, Saturday, Jan. 21,
ill become 10 to 16 degrees
Bver the South in advance of
Ives J and N united. This
IBnt will spread over the
stern belt the 22d and the
inder of the South the 23d. It
lower temperatures to the freez-
potat except along the Coast,
re minima will range around 40
lay and Sunday, Jan. 23, 24—
be week will close cool and general-
unsettled and in the WESTERN
sit there will be rain, which will
read over MEDDLE and EASTERN
sit as the new week opens.
| Those who may wish the forecasts
iled to them direct may get them
a nominal consideration. Caro-
s Observatory, Houston, Texas.
MA ANTI-ALIEN
LAW UNCONSTITUTIONAL
Special Federal Judges Decide
nst Constitutionality of Meas-
ure In All Particulars.
Francisco, Cal.—The Arizona
alien employment act, adopted by
le of the state at the Novem-
as an initiative measure,
unconstitutional, null
Friday by a special court of
leral judges.
9 court held that the statute vio-
the guarantees of life, liberty
possession of property, made
alike, whether aliens or not, and
toenth amendment to the
^^gonstitution; that.if the
forbid any em-
more than 20 per cent
Pc could with equal justice
[in to hire 1 per cent or even
alien.
i struck at the vitals of the act,
ordered that any employer with
roll of five or more'names must
at least 80 per cent of -those
i were duly qualified electors,
law was intended," said the
"to be a police regulation, but
the guiae of police regulation
was in effect depriving the
it of his right to labor,
. him by the fourteenth
to the United States con-
iise of police regu-
can prohibit an em-
ploying x&ore than 20
fcbor, it can prohibit
more than 5 per
cent, aky at all.
court of the United
has held that the
a right of property.
}t be deprived of the
property under the constitu-
te United States." -
art made permanent a tem-
iijunction issued by District
gtelle, restraining the state
>m enforcing the &w.
in New York 8ubway. N
:.—The worst accident in
history of New York's
during the morning
ly, when 700 pas-
stalled trains were
panic in the darkened
smqke and acrid
ited cable,
struggle to escape,
persons were in-
woman—probably fatal-
Fere overcome and were
ious by policemen and
scores of others strug-
Bt
Crowned Anew.
La.—Ceremonial pa-
the return of Gen-
ikson and his troops
pld of Chalmette and
I Hickory" on the
Jackson was re-
ago, were the fea-
the last of the
ition of the 100th
battle of New Or-
tween Great Britain
Itates.
|an Warfs Indian.
-The Jiggest thing
Indian wedding ever
I Sioux Indians was
when James Gai-
iman, was married
' Richards, grand-
lite Red Cloud, big
ix tribes. The best
Eagle and the
igeline Kills Above.
also is a grand-
Loud.
L on Cattle.
Official decree,
cisco Villa, no
r be brought
e starvation
caused Villa
]ins.
Two Ways of Obtaining Necessities
of Life: Raising Them for Self, and
Raising Something to Sell for
Money to Buy Them With,
Washington, D. C.—A survey of 44
farms occupied by white families in
McLennan County, Texas, where corn,
oats and cotton are grown, has recent-
ly been completed by the U. S. de-
partment of agriculture, in order to
ascertain how much the average farm
contributed to the family's living in
the form of products grown ^and con-
sumed directly on the farm! There
are two ways of obtaining the neces-
sities of life—raising them one's self,
and raising something else to sell for
money to buy them with.
The investigators found that in the
area studied in Texas the cost of
board and lodging on the farm for
each individual was $158 a year. This
sum included food, fuel, oil, house
rent, and house labor, the items be-
ing as follows:
Food $ 92.30
Fuel 6.91
Oil 1.43
House rent 16.00
House labor 41.00
$157.64
Compared with the figures obtained
by similar surveys made in the course
of the investigation of areas in New
York, Vermont, Ohio, Wisconsin, Kan-
sas, Iowa, North Carolina, Georgia and
Pennsylvania, this is somewhat low,
the general average for all the areas
studied being $176. In the Texas area
the value of the average farm house
was lower than in any of the other
areas except North Carolina. On the
other hand, more actual money was
spent in buying food than anywhere
else, although the individual did not
get the most to eat.
The ave.«;e family in the Texas
area consumSl annually $489.09 worth
of food, $213.47 of which was pur-
chased, and $275.62 furnished by the
farm. In other words, only 56.4 per
cent of the food supply was home-
grown, as compared with a general
average of 63 per cent for all the
areas studied, or 82.3 per cent for the
North Carolina area. In North Caro-
lina the average family spent only
$71.28 a year, and yet each individual
had within $3 as much to eat, the con-
sumption per person being $89.32 in
North Carolina, and $92.30 in Texas.
Had the Texas farms been as nearly
self-sustaining as in North Carolina,
each family could have saved $127.02
in cash outlay without diminishing the
food£u?j iy in the least. They would
aistThave had better food to eat.
The most striking difference is In
the matter of fruits and vegetables.
Taken together these, in point - of
money value, formed 24 per cent of
the North Carolina diet; 15.2 per cent
of the Texas diet. In North Carolina
they were practically all furnished by
the farm; in Texas, two-thirds of the
vegetables and all but a minute frac-
tion of the fruits were bought. Of the
articles classed as groceries, Texas
bought 98.7 per cent, North Carolina
76. Only 2.7 per cent of the animal
products used in North Carolina were
purchased; 14.2 of those in Texas. No
beef at all was raised in the Texas
area for home consumption, and the
average individual had only 11 gallons
of fresh milk a year, as compared with
33.4 gallons in North Carolina. A
smaller quantity of home-raised pork
was used than in any of the other
areas except Pennsylvania, New York
and'Vermont. A far greater percent-
age, 88.7, of the fuel was also bought
than in any other area.
In short, compared with a number
of other areas included in the investi-
gation, the Texas farms produced
money rather than comfort. This is
particularly noticeable if we consider
two items frequently forgotten in esti-
mating the farmer's income, because
they are taken for granted. These are
house rent and "house labor. In Texas
about 7 per cent of the labor was
hfted, the rest being performed by
members of the family. Had they
done this work for somebody else,
however, 'they would have been paid
for it, and if it had been performed
by somebody else they would have had
it to pay.
The charge for rent must be consid-
ered in much the same way. The
value of the farm house is usually in-
cluded in the value of the land, and
the whole regarded as the capital
which the farmer has invested in his
business. If this is done, however, it
is only fair to credit the farm with
having furnished its occupants with
shelter, which, as every city worker
knows, has a high 6ash value. In
Texas this value was lower than else-
where, except in North Carolina, be-
ing estimated at only $83 a year for
the average family.
From these and similar statistics
published in farmers' Bulletin 635 of
the United States department of agri-
culture, "What the Farm Contributes
Directly to the Farmer's Living," it
appears that the standard of living in
the Texas are^ is not as high, in com-
parison. with 'the other districts Mr~\
eluded in thi investigation, as the i
mount of m[ ney spent would imii- •
,e. More intention paid to the pro-
for home con sump-
raise the stai;d-
Every day brings to our door'some-
thing that is good and that will never
come our way to do again. If we are
blind and do not sq© it, and insist
that our days are featureless, whose
fault is that? Opportunity does its
part, and we must do purs.
TRY THESE.
When a change from an ordinary
omelet is desired a most appetizing
dish i3 prepared
by beating up
three or four eggs,
adding two taWe-
spoonfuls of cold
water, seasonings
of chopped pepper
or parsley, or any
oT the herbs or a
bit of garlic is an improvement. Give
the eggs six or seven whisks and pour
into a pint granite dish that has been
well buttered. Set this in the gas
oven and turn on both burners after
the dish has been put into the oven
As soon as the eggs have risen to the
top of the dish, turn off one burner
and then as soon as the eggs are set,
turn off the other, leaving the eggs a
few minutes longer. They must not
remain over twenty minutes, and
often fifteen minutes will be enough,
depending upon the gas pressure.
The lower part of the dish will be
tender and flaky, and the center
creamy, neither like scrambled egg nor
like omelet.
Use potato or turnip cups for a
change instead of timbale molds or
patty shells. Peel good sized pota-
toes or small turnips cut in halves
and a slice off each end so they will
stand well, hollow out the centers
and cook the shells in boiling salted
water. Use these for any creamed
vegetable, fish or chicken, having all
hot and covering them with a rich
white sauce. A little filling goes fur-
ther served this way and looks very
attractive. Garnish with parsley or
chopped chervil, or water cress.
Chop Suey With Fish.—Put a table-
spoonful of butter in a deep frying
pan and fry in it a pound of fresh
pork and a cupful of diced celery and
chopped onions. Cut the pork into
bitB, cover with a cupful of water and
a can of mushrooms with the liquor
from them. Cook slowly for an hour,
then add a cupful of finely chopped
peanuts and - cupful of flaked tuna,
season highly and simmer for another
half hour. This is such an unusual
combination that it will be enjoyed
by those who are looking for a new
gastronomic sensation.
, IT 510
STOP USING SAU1T
Don't Lose a Day's Work! if Your Liver Is Sluggish or Bowels
Constipated Take "Dodson's Liver Tone."—It's Fine!
Any kind of training is far more ef-
fective and leaves more permanent im-
press when exerted on the growing or-
ganism than when brought to bear on
the adult.—William James.
SOME GOOD EATING.
It is not so important that there
should be a large variety upon our
tables, but that our food
should be well cooked
and daintily served.
Almond Pudding.—
Beat separately the
yolks of two and whites
of three eggs, mix to a
cream with four table-
spoonfuls each of sugar
and butter. Add, after the mixture is
well blended, the grated rind of an or-
ange and a quarter of a cupful of
Juice. Pour into a well-buttered bak-
ing dish, ornament with whole nuts
and bake until firm. Serve hot with
hard sauce and whipped cream.
A hard sauce may be made by
creaming two tablespoonfuls of but-
ter, add a cupful of powdered sugar,
a teispoonful of vanilla, and when
well mixed fold in a half cupful of
whipped cream.
Veal and Ham Pie.—Trim the ve.il
and ham into small pieces and season
with pepper and salt to taste. Chop
finely a half cupful of mushrooms and
some parsley, put them into a stew
pan with one small onion chopped and
a tablespoonful of butter. Fry light-
ly, then add a pint of stock and sim-
mer five minutes. Put all together
into a baking dish and cover with a
crust. Bake and serve hot or cold
Bran Gems.—Take two cupfuls of
bran, two cupfuls of graham flour
Bifted, one-half cupful of sugar, a tea-
spoonful of salt, one teaspoonfui of
Boda and two cupfuls of sour milk.
Bake in gem pans. ;
Graham Bread.—Take two cupfuls
each of graham and white flour, sift
the latter with one teaspoonfui each
of salt and soda. Add a cupfv'I of
molasses and enough sweet milk to
make a batter, about a pint. Add one
cupful of raisins and chopped ' wal-
nuts, well floured. Bake in a slow
oven.
To make ripe olives even more tasty
and palatable, soak them over night
in olive oil to which a small p.iece of
clove or garlic has been added.
One Who Can Appreciate.
"Why do you feed tramps who come
along? They never do any work for
you." }
"Nc," said the wife, "but it is quite
a satisfaction to see a man eat a
meal without finding fault with the
cooking."
You're bilious! Your liver is slug-
gish! You feel lazy, dizzy and all
knocked out. Your head is dull, your
tongue is coated; breath bad; stomach
sour and bowels constipated. But don't
take salivating calomel. It makes you
sick, you may lose a day's work.
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel crashes into sour bile like
dynamite, breaking it up. That's when
you feel that awful nausea and cramp-
ing.
If you want to enjoy the nicest, gen-
tlest liver and bowel cleansing you
ever experienced just take a spoonful
of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone. Your
druggist or dealer sells you a 50-cent
bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone under
my personal money-back guarantee
that each spoonful will clean your
sluggish liver better than a dose of
nasty calomel and that it won't make
you sick.
Dodson's Liver Tone is real liver
medicine. You'll know it next morn-
ing because you will wake up feeling
fine, your liver will be working, your
headache and dizziness gone, your
stomach will be sweet and your bowels
regular. You will feel like working;
you'll be cheerful; full of vigor and
ambition.
Dodson's Liver Tone is entirely
vegetable, therefore harmless and can-
not salivate. Give it to your children!
Millions of people are using Dodson's
Liver Tone instead of dangerous cal
omel now. Your druggist will tell you
that the sale of calomel is almost
stopped entirely here.
A Buliseye.
E. Berry Wall said at a dinner in
New York:
"Woman's dress nowadays is beau-
tiful—beautiful but shocking. The
slashed skirt, to be sure, has disap-
peared—but it has only disappeared
to make room for the lace panel.
"A stupid greenhorn of a butler
scored a bull's eye unconsciously the
other day.
" 'Is Mrs. Blanc in?' a late caller
asked him.
'"Yes, sir; she's in,' said the butler,
'but she ain't at home, sir. She's up-
stairs undressin' for a dinner dance.'"
—Washington Star.
OUCH! PI, Pi,
Rub
pain away with a small
trial bottle of old
"St Jacobs Oil"
Rheumatism is "pain only." Not
one case in fifty requires internal
treatment Stop drugging! Rub sooth-
ing, penetrating "St. Jacobs Oil" di-
rectly upon the "tender spot," and re-
lief comes instantly. "St. Jacobs Oil"
is a harmless rheumatism cure which
never disappoints and can not burn
the skin.
Limber up! Quit complaining! Get
a small trial bottle of "St. Jacobs Oil"
at the store and in just a moment
you'll be free from rheumatic pain,
soreness, stiffness and swelling. Don't
suffer! "St. Jacobs Oil" has cured mil-
lions of rheumatism sufferers in the
last half century, and is just as good
for sciatica, neuralgia, lumbago, back-
ache and sprains. Adv.
The Third Generation. '
John Barrymore tells this story
about his little nephew, Sammy Colt,
the son of his famous sister, Ethel.
This story illustrates how the desire
of the theatrical artist for ^exclusive
business" is probably transmitted from
one generation to another.
"f Was present one night last week
when my sister was putting her young-
sters to bed," says Uncle John. "She
has reared them like old-fashioned
children, and taught them to say their
prayers at night. This night Sammy
hesitated, and there was a worried
look on his face. He had got no
further than 'Now I 1^- me,' when he
stopped.
" 'Say, muvver,' he complained, 'I
don't fink I'll say that prayer. I heard
another fellow say it today, and if we
aren't careful it will get all over
town the first thing we know.'"
His Choice.
The inan of great financial promi-
nence had met with an accideht.
"We'll have to probe," said the doc-
tor.
Just at that moment the man recov-
ered consciousness and exclaimed:
"If it's a surgical operation go
ahead, but if it's another investiga-
tion, give me an anesthetic."
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
i ——————— ————
Suspicious.
"How about this fare?" demanded
the stranger in New York.
"Fare's quite correct, sir," replied
the taxi chauffeur. "I haven't over-
charged you."
"I know you haven't, and why
haven't you? What sort of a game
are you up to now?"
Hicks' CAPUDINE
CURES HEADACHES AND COLDS
-Easy To Take—Quick Relief.—Adv.
It's Off.
"How about you and that telephone
girl?"
"She has sent me back my solitaire."
"Ring off, eh?"
fciconomical, Indeed. v
"Is your wi;e so very economical,
then?" "Oh, yes, very. Why, my. wife
aan take an |old worn-out $10. ha
spend $15 on'it and make it look a
most an good'as new."—Puck.
If Yours is
/
LITTLE PARABLE OF LIFE
Aptly Compared to Journey Through
Comfortable Psosage Leading to
One Small Room.
I will tell you a little parable. Each
life is like a wonderful castle, with
hundreds of mysterious rooms.
Through the whole expanse of that
castle runs a broad, comfortable pas-
sage—ultimately leading to the small
room that contains an honored and
.peaceful deathbed.
If you would be safe, you must stay
in this passage. You . ust pass by
without opening them the hundreds of
afiuring doors. You must pass with-
out following them the secret wind-
ing stairs leading up or down to un-
known places—
You will never know all you really
own. You will never see the festive
hall with its brilliant revels, nor the
taper-lit chapel with its mystic ecsta-
sies—you will never find the hidden
chamber with its lotus joys, nor the
romantic balcony with its bizarre as-
semblage—you will never reach the
tiny tower room with its view across
land and sea and up into the skies.
. . . And you will never see the
dark cells where weird things are
kept—nor the ghastly dungeon deep
down below the ground, where one
lies sobbing and bleeding and broken,
and whence there is no returning.
I have opened many a door in my
castle—said Christine—and I fear I
shall never find my way back to the
broad, comfortable passage.—Smart
Set.
Serum Cure for Tetanus.
Doctor Doyen, the famous French
surgeon, announces the discovery of
a serum that will cure tetanus or
lockjaw. The inventor is a physician
in the Ardennes, and the secret of his
success lies in keeping the patient
with head downward at an angle of 45
degrees after injecting the serum into
his loins. Doyen says he cures 80
per cent of his cases.
SAGE TEA DARKENS GRAY
HAIR TO ANY SHADE. TRY IT!
(
Keep Your Locks Youthful, Dark,
Glossy and Thick 'With Garden
Sage and Sulphur.
When you darken your hair with
Sage Tea and Sulphur, no one can
tell, because it's done so naturally, so
evenly. Preparing this mixture,
though, at home is mussy and trouble-
some. For 50 cents you can buy at
any drug store the ready-to-use tonio
called "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur
Hair Remedy." You just dampen a
sponge or soft" brush with it and
draw this through your hair, taking
one small strand at a time. By morn-
ing all gray hair disappears, and, after
another application or two, your hair
becomes beautifully darkened, glossy
and luxuriant. You will also dis-
cover dandruff is gone and hair has
stopped falling.
Gray, faded hair, though no dis-
grace, is a sign of old age, and as we
all desire a youthful and attractive ap-
pearance, get busy at once with Wy-
eth's Sage and Sulphur and look years
younger. Adv. *
Came Natural.
Bacon—They say that president of
the bank who got away with a lot of
the money began his career as jani-
tor of the institution. ,
Egbert—Never forgot his eariy
training to clean out the bank, evi-
dently.
COLDS & LaGRIPPE
5 or 6 doses 666 will break any case
of Chilis & Fever, Colds & LaGrippe;
it acts on the liver better than Calo-
mel and does not gripe or sicken.
Price 25c—Adv.
Why Men Swear.
Georgia Wood Pangborn, writing a
story in the Woman's Home Compan-
ion, says of one of her characters:
"He's a man, and can't cry, so he
has to say damn."
Bacteria in Coal.
Mr. C. Potter has recently shown
before the Royal society in London
that in certain conditions of exposure
to the air charcoal, coal, peat and oth-
er amorphous forms of carbon under-
go a slow process of oxidation pro-
duced by bacteria. It is suggested that
this fact may account for the deteri-
oration of stored coal, its gradual loss
of weight, and its occasional sponta-
neous heating in ships' bunkers. If the
bacteria are not the sole cause of these
things they may induce them, chemical
oxidation accompanying and continu-
ing that begun by the organic agents.
The carbonization of vegetable coals,
says a French writer, is due to the in-
tervention of microbes at the begin-
ning of their fossilization. When the
coal reaches the air again, other bac-
teria take up the work of fermentation
that was interrupted millions of years
ago.—Youth's Companion.
Very Likely.
"I wonder why it is that the man
who marries in haste is usually sup-
posed to repent at leisure?"
"Because that kind of man wouldn't
have brains enough to do it all at once,
of course."
Good Cause for Alarm
Deaths from kidney diseases have in-
creased 72% in twenty years. People
overdo nowadays in so many ways that
the constant filtering of poisoned blood
weakens the kidneys.
Beware of fatal Bright's disease. When
baekache or urinary ills sug^e%b weak kid-
neys, use a tested kidney medicine.
Doan's Kidney Pills command confi-
dence, for no other remedy is so widely
used or so generally successful.
A Texas Case
E. D. Wert, Port
Aransas, Tex., says:
"My back ached all the
time and I could hardly
straighten after stoop-
ing-. In bed, I couldn't
turn over on my side. I
felt awful dizzy and
nervous and was con-
fined to bed for months.
One doctor said I had
but a aliort time to live.
Reading about Doan's
Kidney Pills, I used
some and from the first
I felt better. I was
soon able to go back to
work, in the best of
health. I have had no
sign of kidney trouble
since."
SartBS'
Get Doan's at Aky Store. 50e ■ Box
DOAN'S V?A\T
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
■ pm
Jif
c#p
jfi
m
'ill
" *£
- ■
Praise Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
, ^ ■ s •
Women from the Atlantic to the Pacific, from all sections
of this great country; no city so large, no village so small
but that some woman has written words of thanks for
health restored by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound. No woman who is suffering from the ills peculiar
to her sex should rest Until she has given this famous remedy
a trial. Is it not reasonable to believe that what it did for
these women it will do for any sick woman ?
Wonderful Case of Mrs. Crusen,
of Bushnell, 111. !
Bttshotxl, Iia.—"I think all the trouble I have had since my
marriage was caused by exposure when a young girL Mv work has
been housework of all Kinds, and I have done milking in the cold and
snow when I was too young to realize that it would hurt me. I have
suffered very much with bearing down pains in my back and such
miserable pains across me, and was very nervous and generally run
down in health, but since I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound my back never hurts me, my nerves are stronger, and I
am gaining in health every day. I thank you ,for the great help I
have received from your medicine, and if my letter will benefit suf-
fering women I will be glad for you to print itF—Mrs. Jambs Cruseh,
Bushnell, Illinois. >
A Grateful Atlantic Coast Woman.
Hodgdon, Me.—" I feel it a duty I owe to all suffering women to
tell what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did for me. One
year ago I round myself a terrible sufferer. I had pains in both sides
and such a soreness I could scarcely straighten up at times. My
back ached, I had no appetite and was so nervous I could not sleep,
then I would be so tired mornings that I could scarcely get around.
It seemed almost impossible to move or do a bit of work and I
thought I never would be any better until I submitted to an opera-
i; pH
jWm
ily of four. I shall always feel that I owe myj
medicine."—Mrs. Haywabd Sowers, Hodgdon,
For 80 years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound has been the standard remedy for fe-
male ills. No one sick with woman's ailments
does justice to herself if she does not try this fa-
mous medicine made from roots and herbs, it
has restored somany suffering women to health.
'Write to LYDIA E.PINKHAX MEDICUTE CO.
(CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice,
onr letter will be opened, read and answered
by a woman and held in strict confidence.
m
Gossip generally means taking two
and two and making three.
PINK EYE
DISTEMPER
CATXR8HXL FEVER
AND ALL NOSE
XND THROAT DISEASES
Cur*, the liok and acta a* a preventive for other*. Liquid ctven on th«
tongue. Safe for brood mare* and mil other*. Beat kidney remedy; Site and
•1 a bottle; $5 and 910 a dozen. Sold by all drug'gift, aad bora* t
houaea, or aent, express paid, by the manufacturer*.
SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists. GOSHEN*
Next Gentleman, Please!
Said He—Mrs. Tbreetimes is a
widow, is she not?
Said She—Yes, temporarily.
The Wretchedness
of Constipation
Can quickly be overcome by
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS.
Purely vegetable
—act surely and
gently on tl
liver. Cure
Biliousness,
Head-
ache,
Dizzi-
ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK.
Genuine must bear Signature
Carters
ITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
PARKI
HAIR B
A toilet preparation of
Helps to eradicate danc
For Restoring Color
Beauty to Gray or Fade
80a. andtLfliat Droggtsf.
Build Up With
Sf.b'2 Wintersmith's
remedy for malaria, chills and Tahia
fever, colds and grip. SOc. ■ w,,,w
Texas Directory
GENERAL HARDWARE
AND SUPPLIES
Contractors'SuppIies,Builde
Hardware, Etc. Prices and I
formation furnished on requ
PEDEN IRON & STEEL
HOUSTON SAN ANTONIO
DROPSY TREATED, usually gives quick
j relief, soon removes swelling
I and short breath, often eires entire relief in
P13 to 25 days. Trial treatment sent FREB.
bDR. THOMAS E. GREEN, Successor to Dr.
rH. H. Green's Sons. Box A. Chaiswortb, Gt.
WANTFH hoarlTom owner of rood farm
" 1 EAJ for sale. Send description and
price. 5.rtkwe*t«ra lulmt Af*ej,D — ■— - —
W. N. U , HOUSTON, NO. 3-1915.
VZleaned for 10c a pair
Add 2 centa fof return pottage. —'
We are oxpeHonood
. ops, dyers and pi
Wepay return charge.on order* of t
■ IE PANTITORUM COMPANY, Ibc„
MckfJtNE'S DETECTIVE
operate, th. 1
famiit uiiifliiii is
parieoea. No chart*
I off letter*. Rates i
Gloves
Heai
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D. O. Bell & Son. The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Ed. 1 Friday, January 8, 1915, newspaper, January 8, 1915; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth189566/m1/1/: accessed May 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Schulenburg Public Library.