The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, June 1, 1917 Page: 6 of 8
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THE «5CHTTtENBTTOf; STIfK^R SCHfTT ENRTTRG. TEXAS
E STICKER'S WOMAN'S DEPARTMENT
Fashions and Fancies of the present time as prepared for the Women
of Schulenburg, Texas, and Surrounding Territory.
OMEN TURN TO
ONE-PIECE GOWN
It Chiefly Because of Grow-
ing Aversion to Marked
Waistline.
IALLY ADOPT FRENCH IDEA
tricans, After Years of Opposition,
Decide That Feminine as Weil as
Masculine Shirtsleeves
Should Be Hidden.
New York.—There Is no doubt that
Increasing popularity of woolen
has solved several problems of
ince for many women. It has
difficult to find a suitable com-
between serge and muslin for
weather. When that weave
as jersey made Its appearance
sweaters, it was greeted with en-
iasm, for there were undoubted
vantages in the knitted garment
f hot days, and there has come about
a rooted aversion to the marked
e, or, rather, the admission of
by leaving It uncovered, that every
slim or stout, desires a sack
some kind to drop from shoulders
hips. In jersey one-piece frocks
find the right substitute for the
and separate blouse.
French have always been the
opponents of that keenly
division of the skirt from the
and even after they adopted
Anglo-Saxon coat and skirt made
E mannish suitings, severely built,
did not remove the jacket in the
those days we were in the habit
at them and showing at
B rather contemptuous atti-
toward their abuse, as we said.
■ i
i frock of gray jersey has organ-
at neck and wrists. Pockets
with gray silk. The but-
silver and the belt of blue
type of apparel we had made
When Americans in Paris
it on hot days without a
tag a dark skirt and white
Mouse, the little xnidlnettes
J noon hour were wont to turn
kugh in that provocative manner
the French women are adept.
^ thought they were Ignorant of
way to treat a coat suit. We
hear that laugh of derision
for "women who turned out
streets in their shirtsleeves,
| even the French workman did
as they put it, but we acted
contemptuous manner, and
le thought it had drawn blood,
"Americans turned into the tea
rhere there was dancing after
ck and found women dancing
jackets on, we wondered
stood the discomfort of it,
Immediately took off our coats
elaborately embroidered chif-
which we thought very
indeed. Evidently the Parisi-
not think so, from the uplift-
rs that greeted the costume,
lea is usually toplofty at first
itative in the end. The several
of amused derision on the
the French for the woman in
jves finally began to have Its
and sensitive souls began to
their coats in public places.
Bring the Shirt Sleeves,
the Americans went over
tedly to the French idea that
as well as a man, must hide
shirt sleeves. It was found-
see, on the right artistic idea
as on good taste. The control-
ling reason behind the French attitude
was the one that rules whatever the
French do in dress: which is to make
the best of the human figure and give
it as good an outline as art and nature
combined can produce.
Today it is exceedingly difficult to
make an American woman appear in
her shirt sleeves In public; in the pri-
vacy of her own home, yes; but even
there she finds a one-piece frock far
more artistic than a cloth skirt with
a separate white blouse. It is because
she has discovered, after many years,
that the figure looks infinitely better
and more graceful with a long line
reaching from neck to hips, that she
wears a sweater constantly in the
house. She has begun to feel that the
waistline should be obliterated at all
costs.
In this frame of mind she naturally
turns to the gown cut in one piece,
hanging in a long line. It allows her to
comfort herself with the thought that,
even if her waist is too thick in front
and her skirt rides, these deficiencies
are covered up by the frock or coat
that, charitably a trifle too high in the
waistband, passed them by without re-
vealing them to the onlooker.
Long Line Under the Arms.
So insistent have the women be-
come upon hiding the waist, except
by the merest fraction of a supple
curve, that the dressmakers are pleas-
ing them by introducing drapery un-
der the arms which hangs below the
knees. It is transparent, this drapery,
and floats about in the air as the wear-
er uses her arms, but it fulfills its mis-
sion of straightening out the figure in
an admirable manner. It cannot be em-
ployed on an informal frock, the kind
that one would wear between the hours
of eight in the morning and seven in
the evening, but on any type of eve-
ning frock, it is well placed.
Another method that the dressmak-
ers have of catering to the concealment
of the waistline is the use of the elab-
orate cape of tulle or lace that goes
over the shoulders and extends to the
tips of, the fingors. The fashion for
lace of any kind gives one a variety of
methods of draping the body line in a
lissome manner. In daytime frocks
the long line is given by the use of
braid, of ribbon, of plaiting and em-
broidery. There are also glorified feus-
penders of ornamentation that are at-
tached to skirts with chiffon blouses
that give the correct and desired sil-
houette. They do not extend over the
front and back of the frock, but pass
over the shoulders, reach to the hips,
widening as they go under the arms,
and are often loosely belted in at the
waist by one or more of the draped
girdles that attach themselves to every
kind of gown this season.
These suspenders, by the way, should
prove an inspiration to the woman
who wants to bring the gowns she
possesses into the present picture. If
she has a dark silk or cloth skirt, for
example, with a thin blouse to match
in color, she can easily bring the two
into a composite whole by the addition
of this skeletonized jacket of em-
broidery, or soutaching on net
Lace Is Rioting Over Clothes.
The experts prophesied a revival
of lace in the immediate future and
the knowledge they possessed, proved
exact. Lace positively riots over the
new clothes. It is used for entire
frocks, for long wraps, for parasols,
negligees, petticoats, coats and eve-
ning frock drapery.
There is surely some economical rea-
son behind this furore for a valuable
and not easily procured article of
dress. It is quite evident that the
French wish to make lace the high
fashion In order to give employment
to the thousands of needleworkers of
its own country and those who have
come from Belgium and who have to
be supported by the French govern-
ment. This strain of caring for the
homeless of the neighboring country is
telling on France, for, In addition to
the prisoners she has taken, the num-
ber of alien mouths In which she has
to put food, constitute a small nation.
Therefore; to give the Belgians and the
French widows work, all sorts of in-
dustries have been revived and encour-
aged, especially those that will have a
good chance of bringing in American
dollars converted into francs. In Amer-
ica, we are minus needleworkers of
Importance, so the major portion of
what we must use, comes from the
Jacemaking centers of Europe. The
fashion for it may lead to a foolish and
inartistic application of cheap and taw-
dry laces to frocks, and a mass of it
where it should be avoided, but, so far,
there is no diminution of the fashion
which ci me into Its first bloom as the
spring openings were held.
(Copyright. 1917, by the McClure Newspa-
per Syndicate.)
Net and Silk Nightgowns.
Nightgowns of white net over pink
crepe slips have yokes trimmed with
filet or val lace and ribbons.
The KITCHEN
(mm
When you get into a tight place and
everything goes against you, until It
seems you cannot hold on a minute
longer, never give up then, for that is
just the place and time when the tide
will turn.—Harriet Beecher Stowe.
SEASONABLE DISHES.
This dish may be served hot with
tomato sauce or cold, thinly sliced.
Veal Omelet. — Put
three cupfuls of cold
cooked veal through the
food chopper, with one
slice of salt pork, artd
three crackers rolled
fine, one beaten egg, two
tablespoonfuls of butter,
a teaspoonful of salt tftid
a little pepper and mit-
meg. Mold in an oblong
loaf, put in a pan \rith
a little cold water, rub over the foaf
with softened butter and sprinkle with
crumbs. Baste while roasting *nd
serve when the crumbs are brown*
Planked White Fish.—Clean and
split a white fish and put it skin side
down on a well buttered plank one
anil a half inches thick. Sprinkle with
salt and paprika, lemon juice and
melted butter. Cook the fish in a hot
oven until tender. Garnish with hot
mashed potato forced through a pastry
bag. Brown the potatoes slightly be-
fore serving.
Caper Stuffing for Fish.—Take three
slices of bread and a slice of salt pork
finely chopped. Add a tablespoonfui
of butter, one teaspoonful of capers,
one-half teaspoonful of sweet mar-
joram and stuff the fish.
Cucumber Cream Sauce for Fish.—
Whip one cupful of cream until' stiff,
add a tablespoonfui of vinegar, salt
and paprika to taste and continue beat-
ing. When stiff enough to hold its
shape fold in one pafed and chopped
cucumber.
Hollandaise Sauce for Fish.—Wash
a half cupful of butter in cold water,
using a wooden spoon to press out the
water. Put one-third of the butter in
a double broiler with the yolks of two
eggs and a tablespoonfui of lemon
juice. Place the saucepan over hot
water and beat constantly until the
butter is melted; then another third
of the butter, beating as before; as It
thickens add the last third with the
salt and seasonings needed.
Onion Cream Sauce for Meat.—Make
a rich white sauce and add a cupful
of boiled onions chopped fine, season
well with salt and pepper and serve
with veal, mutton or poultry.
• Pressed Veal—Cook together three
pounds of veal, one onion sliced, two
stalks of diced celery, one tablespoon-
fui of sugar, one and a half tablespoon-
fuls of Worcestershire sauce, two
tablespoonfuls of tomato catchup, two
teaspoonfuls of salt. Half a cupful of
minced mushrooms are added to the
meat after it is cooked and chopped.
Moisten with enough of the meat stock
to mold, then pack into a bowl and
cover with a plate.
A DAY WITH THE OMELET.
We have begun to take courage
again at the price of eggs and to see
times when a n
omelet will not
cause ruin, to the
family finances.*
A small omelet
is easier to prepare
and altogether
more satisfactory
than one made
with eight to *en
eggs unless they are cooked as small
omelets, for too large a one is ant to
be tough and either under ur over-
done. Four eggs makes a goaVsized
omelet to be successful.
Italian Cheese Omelet.—Separate
whites and yolks of three eggs, add
three tablespoonfuls of water, a pinch
of salt and a dash of pepper to the
yolks, beating well. Whip the whites
until light and stiff but not dry, stir
in the yolks lightly and put into a
hot buttered omelet pan. When ready
to fold sprinkle thickly with a well
flavored cheese, fold in half and place
in a hot oven after sprinkling with
cheese. Remove when the cheese is
melted and sprinkle with finely m'T'^d
parsley.
Celery Omelet.—Beat the volks o.
two eggs, add two tablespoonfuls of
cream, two of chapped celery arid sum.
and pepper to season. Fold in ttii;
well beaten whites of the eggs, cook
in a hot buttered pan until lightly
browned underneath, then place In the
oven to finish on top. Fold and turn
out on a hot platter. A rich white
sauce may be ser1"'.' with this, makifi,.
a most satisfactory luncheon dish.
Bread Omelet.—To a cupful of bread
crumbs add one cupful of cream or
rich milk, one tablespoonfui of butter
a little nutmeg and salt and pepper
to taste. When the crumbs have ab-
sorbed the cream add three well beat-
en eggs and fry in a well buttered pan.
Jelly Omelet.—Beat the yolks of
three eggs, add a fourth of a capful of
sugar, two tablespoonfuls of milk, one-
fourth of a teaspoonful of baking pow-
der mixed with one-half tablespoonfui
of flour, a little salt and a fourth of a
teaspoonful of vanilla, and the whites
of the eggs beaten stiff. Cook as any
omelet, cover with jelly and sprinkle
with powdered sugar before folding.
MORE GOOD THINGS FOR THE
TABLE.
Some of these dishes may find favor,
adding variety to the diet and furnish-
ing new combina-
tions.
Chili Stew.—Cut
in small pieces, or
grind, one and a
half pounds o f
round steak. Add
to it one anr! o half
tablespoonfuls each
of olive oil and
butter, add six tablespoonfuls of
chopped onion and one clove of garlic,
fry until a light brown color. Add
one and a half tablespoonfuls of Wor-
cestershire sauce, and three tablespoon-
fuls of chili powder, stirring well. Pour
in enough hot water to cover the bottom
of the frying pan and cook with the
meat 15 minutes, then add three cup-
fuls of tomato. Blend one and a half
tablespoonfuls of flour with some oi
the tomato juice, add to the stew and
place in a casserole to cook well cov-
ered for an hour. Serve with rice ot
noodles.
Spring Salad.—Mix together three
cupfuls of finely shredded cabbage
half a cupful of diced apple, one-
fourth of a cupful of diced celery, one
cupful of grated pineapple, all mois-
tened with boiled dressing and served
on lettuce.
Fish Souffle.—Make a white sauce
of two tablespoonfuls each of buttei
and flour; when well blended add a cup-
ful and a half of milk, cook until
smooth and add to this a teaspoon-
ful of grated onion, a tablespoonfui
of minced parsley, and a large can ol
fish flakes which should be picked
apart with a fork. Beat three egg
yolks until light, add to this mixture
and then fold in the stiffly beaten
whites. Bake in a buttered dish until
firm In the center, then serve at once
with tomato sauce.
Fried Chicken de Luxe.—Sift a
fourth of a teaspoonful of baking pow-
der into the flour in which the chick-
en is rolled before frying. Beat one
egg, add crumbs and baking powder,
beating well; then dip veal or any
meat to be breaded in this mixture
frying as usual. This method gives
a richer crumbing than simply egg
with crumbs.
The man who is really accomplishing
something does not have time to stand
around telling about it.
GOOD THINGS WORTH TRYING.
There is so little variety used in the
preparation of tongue, that this recipe
may appeal to the one
who is fond of change.
Tongue With Blackber-
ry Jelly.—Cook a fresh
tongue until very tendei
in water containing a
teaspoonful of mixed
pickle-spice, one or twe
bay leaves in addition tc
those in the package, and
a few dry celery tips.
When very tender, re-
move the skin, trim off the root end
and stick the meat with a few cloves
Place in a buttered baking dish, dust
with salt and pour over a glass ot
blackberry jelly or jam, a cupful oi
raisins that have been softened Ir
the juice of a lemon and cooked un-
til tender in a cupful of water. Baste
often and bake 20 minutes. Serve hot
or cold.
Kidney Beans With Oxtails.—Soak
two and half cupfuls of kidney beans
overnight. In the morning rinse
thoroughly and put Into a large kettle
or saucepan with two tablespoonfuls
of sugar, a tablespoonfui of salt, a
fourth of a teaspoonful of soda, two
large onions chopped, a third of a
teaspoonful of pepper, and a quart can
of tomatoes. Boil 30 minutes and
then add two oxtails well cleaned and
cut up. Simmer for four hours. This
dish will serve a large family.
A half cupful of chopped, freshly
roasted peanuts added to creamed po-
tatoes, as they are ready to serve,
makes a new dish of creamed pota-
toes. A few peanuts added to a pota-
to salad improves that also.
THE GOVERNOR SIGNS MANY
APPROPRIATION MEASURES
All Items for Eleemosynary InstitU'
tions Approved—Signature Put
to Many Others.
Austin, Tex.—Governor Ferguson
broke the record when he approved
this week the bill carrying appropria-
tions for the eleemosynary institutions
for the ensuing two fiscal years with-
out vetoing a single ftem. This bill
not only provides for maintenance, but
for new buildings and improvements.
Its total is $4,659,396, divided between
the two years as follows: First year,
$2,657,151; second year, $2,002,245.
It is probable that the State Tuber-
culosis Sanitarium at Carlsbad re-
ceived more money for new buildings
than any other state institutions,
though the Orhans' Home was well
treated, as was the Southwestern In-
sane Asylum at San Antonio and the
new feeble minded colony at Austin,
which is to be opened late this year.
A resume of the appropriations al-
lowed each year for the respective in-
stitutions is as follows:
First Second
year. year.
Orphans* Home $226,435 $84,330
Confederate Woman's
Home 36,570 30,930
Confederate Home 143,970 101,170
Negro School for Deaf
and Dumb 93,320 43,930
Girls' Training School. 80,810 40,350
Tuberculosis Sanita-
rium 319,020 266,$40
Austin Insane Asylum. 358,530 344,830
San Antonio Insane
Asylum 560,840 362,390
Terrell Insane Asylum 357,880 354,880
State Pasteur Institute 5,150 5,000
State Hospital for Crip-
led Children at Gal-
veston 7,740 7,740
Teeble-Minded Colony. 132,556 55,240
Epileptic Colony 129,900 121,780
The Juvenile Training
School 204,430 182,930
The San Antonio Insane Asylum was
the only hospital for the insane to re-
ceive appropriations of any conse-
quence for enlargement. .
Extra appropriations were made for
other state institutions as follows:
Orphans' Home — Standpipe and
water system, $15,000; four new em-
ployes' cottages, $4,800; deep artesian
well, etc., $25,000, and administration
building and equipment, $100,000.
Confederate Home—Heating plant,
$25,000, and repairs, $11,100.
Epileptic Colony—Sewage disposal
plant, $4,000.
Negro Deaf and Dumb Institute—
Dormitory for boys, with chapel and
recreation and class rooms, $40,000.
Juvenile Training School—Addition-
al land, $50,000; central school build-
ing, 537,500; remodeling and fireproof -
ing administration building, $5,000.
Girls' Training School—Enlarging
two dormitories, $17,000; plumbing,
heating and lighting two dormitories,
$13,500; additional fire protection,
$3,000. In this institution eleven offi-
cers are provided for to safeguard the
inmates.
Tubercular Sanitarium — Dormitory
with equipment, $70,000; new puntping
station, $10,000 ; X-ray equipment, $4,-
000; nurses' building,-$20,000; laundry
building and equipment with dormi-
tory above, $25,000; additional to
storeroom and employes' dormitory,
$10,000; steam and sewerage changes,
$5,000; Auilding for superintendent,
$10,000; sewerage plant, $15,000; wood-
en bungalows, $5,000; several outbuild-
ings and improvements, $13,000 for
both years.
Feeble-minded Colony — Dormitory
and equipment, $26,000; central kitch
en, dining room and refrigerating
plant, $50,000; barn, sheds, dairy and
farm stock, $6,000; completing store-
room and quarters now in construc-
tion, $6,886.
The bill permitting absentee voting
in primary elections, also the bill ap-
propriating $1,500 to cover expenses
and printing of the constitutional
amendment to be -voted on, likewise
the bill appropriating $250,000 for the
organization of the home guard ranger
force not to exceed 1,000 men were
also approved. The governor signed
the Morris plan loan bank bill, pro-
viding banks for poor people who can
not furnish security. He also ap-
proved the bill giving to the State Uni
versity control of the buildings and
property of the present blind institute
upon the completion of the new insti-
ution north of Austin, which may be
next fall; the bill amending the ware-
house law and which- is a ninety-day
measure, becoming effective August
15.% It makes the following changes in
the present law: Reduce the number
of managers from two to one; reduce
the ginner's bonds to not less than
$250 nor more than $1,000; provides
for one sample unless owner requests
that it be not taken, and a second sam
pie for the ginner is made optional;
changing the method of wrapping so
as to have complete wrapping after
compressing; all rules and regulations
of the warehouse commissioner gov-
erning ginning are subject to review
by the board.
Kansas Wheat Crop Is Short.
Topeka, Kan.—A prospective yield
Af 40,000,000 bushels of winter wheat
in Kansas this year, the lowest yield
in twenty years, despite the fact that
reports indicate the acreage is larger
than any ever devoted to a single crop
in the state, is far from optimistic
news contained in the state's crop sit-
uation as found May 19, issued this
week by J. C. Mohler, secretary of the
Kansas state board or agriculture.
GLEAN LIVER AND
YOU SICK!
BOILS I WAY
/ust Once! Try "Dodson's Liver Tone" When Bilious, Consti-
pated, Headachy—Don't Lose a Day's Work.
Liven up your sluggish liver! Feel
flne and cheerful; make your work a
pleasure; be vigorous and full of am-
bition. But take no nasty, danger-
ous calomel, because it makes you
sick and 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
cramping.
Listen to me! If you want to enjoy
the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel
cleansing you ever experienced just
take a spoonful of harmless Dodson's
Liver Tone. Tour 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. Tou'll know it next morn*
ing, because you will wake up feel-
ing fine, your liver will be working*,
your headache and dizziness gone,
your stomach will be sweet and yonr
bowels regular.
Dodson's Liver Tone is entirely-
vegetable, therefore harmless and:
cannot salivate. Give it to your chil-
dren. Millions of people are using:
Dodson's Liver Tone instead of dan-
gerous calomel now. Tour druggist
will tell you that the sale of calomel
is almost stopped entirely here.—Adv..
W. L. DOUGLAS
"THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE"
$3 $3.50 $4 $4.50 $5 $6 $7 & $8
Save Money by Wearing W. L Douglas
shoes. For sale by over9000shoe dealers.
The Best Known Shoes in the World.
YY7- L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the bot-
" torn of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and
the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes. The
retail prices ate the same everywhere. They cost no more in San
Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the
price paid for them.
' I 'he quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more
than 40 years experience in making fine shoes. The smart
styles are the leaders in the Fashion Centres of America.
They are made in a well-equipped factory at Brockton, Mass.,
by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction and
supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest
determination to make the best shoes for the price that money
can buy.
Ask your shoe dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes. If he can-
not supply you with the hind you want, take no other
make. Write for interesting booklet explaining how to
ret shoes of the highest standard of quality for the price,
by return mail, postage free.
LOOK FOR W. L. Douglas
name and the retail price
stamped on the bottom.
4%00
BEWARE
Boys' Shoes
Best In the World
aJf/i M Best In the World
W&lbrvCftla* $3.00 $2.50 & $2.00
President « W. L. Douglas Shoe Co.,
. Douglas I
1S5 Spark St., Brockton, Mass.
How He Won Them.
"So your boy's going in for war?"
"Yes, he is."
"What branch of the army is he in?"
"Cavalry."
"And has he won his spurs?"
"He has that. He went downtown
and got a pair and had 'em charged to
me."—Yonkers Statesman.
a
I BEGAN TO
TAKE CARDUI
And Soon Saw That It Benefited
Me," Writes This Kentucky
Lady. Read Her State-
ment.
Clifton Mills, Ky.—Mrs. a W.
Woods, of this place, writes: "About 5
years ago I got in very bad health. I
got thin, weighed only 91 lbs., and I
am tall, too. I had dreadful pains in
my left and right sides. ... I then
had in attendance Dr. , who gave
medicine for about a year, which did
me no good. He then told me to take
Cardui. He said he thought It would
benefit me more than anything I could
take.
"I would get so bad off I couldn't do
my work at all, and I was confined to
my bed part of the time, and suffered
most of the time; sometimes awful
... I then began to take Cardui
and I soon began to see that it bene-
fited me. It eased my pains and the
enlargement went out of my . . .
and I have been steadily getting better
ever since.
"I am now in better health than I
have been since I first took sick, am
stout and can work all day long. . . .
I certainly am getting my former
health back and I have a good color
and feel better than since I got sick.
I now weigh 113% lbs."
If you suffer from any of the ail-
ments so common to women, try
Cardui, the woman's tonic.—Adv.
A Libel on the Sex.
"Pa, who Invented leap year?"
"Some woman, son, who was
ting tired of annual birthdays."
get-
Bermuda last year exported 13,288
crates of celery.
Her Garden.
"I'm going to have a garden, John."1
"Oh, yes, of course."
"And I'm going to raise macaronis
and spaghetti and noodles for soup."
"That'll be nice."
"And strawberries; I must raise-
some strawberries."
"But they'll require sugar, yott)
know."
"Of course. I've got a place in the
garden to raise sugar. I think Til raise*
powdered sugar; I guess it's easier to*
raise than lump sugar."
The occasional use of Roman Bye Balsam*
at night upon retiring will prevent and re-
lieve tired eyes, watery eyes, and eye strata.
Adv.
Both Were Immune.
Suitor—I have no bad habits. I"
don't smoke or drink.
Father—Neither has my daughter*.
She doesn't play or sing.
A Long Reach.
"I thought I put that vase out of
baby's reach."
. "Well, he yelled for It," explained?
dad. "What his arms won't reach hbr
lungs will."
CAPUDINE
—For Headaches—
Try it and be convinced. Good tar
aches in back and limbs also—Assist*.
Nature to get right and stay so. If*
Liquid—easy to take.—Adv.
False Pretense.
"Bill says he would like to enlist*,
but he would be rejected on account'
of his teeth."
"Merely an excuse. He hasn't gofv
any."
One Exception.
"My principle is to let every detail
of one's life be open to all."
"Well, wouldn't you make an excep-
tion in favor of mosquito window-
screens?"
A FRIEND IN NEED.
For instant relief and speedy cure*
use "Mississippi" Diarrhea Cordial*
Price 60c and 25c.—Adv.
Australia Has Most Sheep.
Australia, It Is estimated, contains-
two-elevenths of the world's total of
sheep.
Every cheerful thought points the
way to another.
Hankow, China, has 68 registered
automobiles.
CARTER*
ITTLE
PILLS.
Yonr liver Is the Best
Beauty Doctor
A dull, yellow, lifeless skin, or pimples and
eruptions, are twin brothers to constipation.
Bile, nature's own laxative- is getting into your
blood instead of passing out of your system
as it should. This is the treatment, in suc-
cessful use for 50 years — one pill daily
Small Pill-Small Dose—Small Price (more only when necessary).
Carter's Little Liver
For Constipation
Genuine
bears
signature
Puts You
Right
Over Night
Pallid, Pale, Putty-Faced People Need Garter's Iron Pills
M
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The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, June 1, 1917, newspaper, June 1, 1917; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth189660/m1/6/: accessed May 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Schulenburg Public Library.