The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, June 15, 1917 Page: 6 of 8
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THE SCHULENBURG STICKER. SCHULENBURG. 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.
USE PLAIN SHAPES
Paris Milliners Put Ban on Trim-
ming This Season.
Flower-Pot Models, With Narrow
Brims and Very High Crowns, are
Very Fashionable Just Now.
The qaint hat for a young girl, which
Is shown in the accompanying sketch,
was created by the famous Caroline
Reboux. It is exceedingly simple, but
at the same time amazingly chic,
■writes Idalia de Villiers, a Paris corre-
spondent. The hat itself is made of
lacquer-red Japanese straw, and the
broad ribbons are in a delicate shade
of silver gray.
These ribbons are tied in a full bow
light at the top of the high crown,
passed through the brim at either side
and then passed under the chin. In all
black, with a bright colored lining in
nmmm.
PPmm
mmMkm.
mm
mMM
mmi
Quaint Hat for Young Girl.
[ the narrow brim, this model would be
charming, or in dark blue straw with
japonica-pink ribbons and a lining of
cream glove kid.
( ' These flower-pot shapes are very
fashionable just now. They always
t 'have narrow brims, very high crowns
and hardly any trimming. Indeed, the
leading note of the 1917 millinery sea-
Lfon is simplicity.
Very beautiful and expensive straws
selected for the hat shapes, but
ings are lightly used.
jrgette is making a specialty of
y Scout hats for morning wear, in
le chip and also in Japanese straw,
igths of picot ribbon are twisted
ind the crowns of these wide-
ned hats, the ends hanging loose-
i over one shoulder.
;ets in new bloomers
at Designed to Be Worn With
rt Skirt of Khaki and the
Norfolk Jacket.
now possible to buy bloomers
have pockets. In this will be
the influence of the new sort of
aine garb which is being brought
rard in anticipation of woman's
Mice into industrial fields which
tofore have not been opened to
lie pocketed bloomer will be worn
the new short skirt of khaki,
□roper complement is the Nor-
Icket. Moreover, the summer
Fho at present does not feel the
Ity of identifying herself with
the national organizations to
War department will be glad
£1 herself of thfs convenient ac-
for camp wear or tor the hik-
j^e^Hilon in the country.
^Vnniers are to be had all
jy *h9fru "'those of white satin to
f mo 'fiYrtnble variety of cotton or
i.-4,Th«-'pverage woman will be at-
t&Vdrcl the models in dimity
inaook, dome of which are in
and which are designed to wear
the lingerie dress of matching
.engthen Days of Silk Stockings.
course you know that nothing,
jwever durable, will wear either well
long if not cared for properly. Silk
tockings are no exceptions to this
le. They demand proper care. First
and foremost, a thorough washing ev-
ery time the stocking is worn is almost
Imperative. Perspiration tends to rot
the fiber—consequently the little holes
tliat popped out so unexpectedly.
Make a lather from a mild, white soap,
"swish" the stockings about in it,
rfnse and iron when quite damp. If
the stocking is only mercerized and
pou desire the silky seen, then rinse
k water that is a bit soapy and press
And a word about mending:
cotton and cotton on silk is
jember and a deal more sat-
. long run.
TO WASH SUMMER FROCKS
Handful of Salt in Rinsing Water
Nearly Always Acts as Preserva-
tive for Any Color.
When washing colored summer
frocks at home, remember these hints:
A handful of salt in the rinsing wa-
ter nearly always acts as a preserva-
tive for any shade or color.
Brown Holland frocks always pre-
sent a better appearance If washed in
bran water, without any soap being
used. Boil a pound of bran in two
quarts of water, strain this into two
quarts of clean warm water, and wash
the dress In as many lots of water as
necessary.
Rinse through cold water and, when
half dry, iron on the wrong side with
a hot iron.
Silk summer blouses want washing
quickly and carefully, one at a time.
Do not wring the blouses, but squeeze
through two bowls of soapsuds, then
rinse through clean warm water. Pale
colored silks improve by being given a
second rinsing through blue water. Roll
in a towel and iron before quite dry
with a fairly hot iron, keeping a piece
of muslin between the silk and the iron
—a good tip this latter. So many home
laundresses ruin silk blouses, making
them yellow, by washing them in very
hot water.
SUPPER SET FOR LITTLE ONES
Same General Decorative Scheme Can
Be Carried Out in Tray Cloth,
Bib and Napkins.
When your particular little boy sings
fo£ his supper see that he is set down
to something ns attractive as this little
supper set, which will amuse him if he
eats alone or at least keep him quiet
if he shares his evening meal with the
family.
It consists of a traycloth of crash all
finished with fancy buttonholing in
black and embellished with a proces-
sion of animals from the cross-stitch
book. The bib, which Tommy Tucker
will put on to protect his clean suit
will follow the same genera! decora-
tive scheme. Then there are two little
napkins each with one of the cross-
no, cross-stitched-—iinimala in one cor-
ner. These are used to form an extra
protection under the little one's plate,
especially if the cloth is used to cover
his portion of a polished table. Surely
a kiddle would not grow obstinate at
a supper served under such attractive
conditions.
THE
KITCHEN
CABINET
The men who are not satisfied
Are they who set the pace—
The men who do not meet defeat
With calm, contented face.
The men who labor on and on
With minds and fingers skilled—
They are the gTeat unsatisfied
Who plan and fight and build.
adjust hair net lightly
It Should Not Be Pulled Tightly Over
Coiffure at the Beginning as
Might Be Supposed.
In adjusting a hair net It is not
pulled tightly over the hair, as one
might suppose. The best hairdressers
always throw it lightly over the hair.
While one end is held in one hand, the
other is pinned dowu at one side of
the front and a few invisible hairpins
thrust Into it without any attempt to
make it fit smoothly at first. Then the
other end is fastened to the other side
of the front. This leaves the hair net
standing outiironi the hair in placea
Then these little full places are
gradually taken up, always being care-
ful not to pull the coiffure down too
tightly. The little bunches of net are
pinned under the surface of the hair,
where they will not be noticeable.
A last touch is to take a hatpin and
pull the coiffure out into its original
form wherever it has become flattened.
As the hairdresser says, "Don't be
stingy with hairpins."
LET US RAISE OUR OWN VEGE-
TABLES.
Now is the time for the forehanded
woman to look to her gardening if she
hopes to have
vegetables for her
family this winter.
Our women can
show their patriot-
ism in no better or
more convincing
way than by con-
serving food, elim-
ination of waste
and producing her own vegetables on
every available foot of ground that
can be cultivated. Spinach, chard,
peas, beans, cauliflower, tomatoes and
corn may all be satisfactorily canned
at home, and, even counting the initial
cost of glass jars, putting up one's
own vegetables costs no more than
buying the cheapest grade of tin-
canned ones at the grocery, while the
expense after one has acquired the
i jars is very small. One may buy the
i standard makes for five and ten
| cents as needed, thus making it pos-
sible to lay in a good stock by de-
grees.
If there were no other advantage
in putting up one's own vegetables,
when they are in their prime and may
be canned a few at a time, it would
pay in the matter of convenience, as
one may can in pints, quarts or two-
quart sizes. In tomatoes, the average
grocer carries nothing smaller than
the quart can, which once opened
must be used at once. One's own
little pint jars hold Just enough for a
sauce for a soup for two or three
and its superior quality is beyond
question. x
Later in the season plans are being
made to hold canning clubs for all
who desire instruction in the art of
canning vegetables. In the meantime
prepare. It might be well to think
of the future. If war does become a
reality, we will need all the surplus
that can possibly be spared from
home to furnish the hospitals. If
each housewife in her canning season
sets apart a few cans of fruit, veget-
ables and glasses of jelly for her
country it will mean a splendid sup-
ply in time of need.
and alfalfa
SUIT WEIGHS TEN OUNCES
In summer, comfort's the thing. It
is not any too easy to obtain It either.
Many frocks have been designed to in-
sure comfort, but few have lived up
to their purpose. This oharming suit
of pussy-willow weighs only ten
ounces, and is made In navy blue with
white silk stitohlngs that are very at-
tractive. The suit Is adaptable for
sport wear and is very durable. The
hat Is of unusual shape with a very
broad brim.
THE VALUE OF SUCCULENT VEG-
ETABLES.
We underestimate the value of the
succulent green vegetable, usually
counting It as bulk with
little nourishment. Many
of our green vegetables
besides their acids and
mineral matters, contain
a most valuable, but as
yet little understood,
growth determinant. This
substance makes clover
so valuable as food for
I growing stock. We will soon be eat-
ing and appreciating alfalfa bread, as
it is being more used for human food.
Vegetables are appetizers, for ex-
ample, the onion, garlic, chives, pars-
ley and celery. The woody fiber being
indigestible, serves as a brush in the
alimentary canal to carry along all
waste and excite peristaltic action.
Vegetables, because of their bulk, sat-
isfy hunger without over-feeding. In
their service as a broom to the body,
they keep the system cleansed, beau-
tifying the complexion and removing
all waste that clogs the skin and pro-
duces sallow, muddy complexions.
The proper cooking of vegetables is
another important thing to bear in
mind. All vegetables when cooked
should be put on to cook in boiling
water. Salt may be added to those
vegetables that are not toughened by
its use, for -example, potatoes and oth-
er fibrous root vegetables. Too long
cooking, especially of such delicately
flavored vegetables as asparagus will
dissolve the flavor and send it out with
steam, so both nourishment and flavor
will be lost. Left-over green vegeta-
bles, or in fact any kind of vegetable,
makes a good cream soup. Asparagus,
string beans, tomatoes in any form,
and celery with onion all make most
delicious salads.
A garden containing all the crisp
vegetables used for salads and as
many others as the space allows will
be a constant source of delight all the
summer and fall. Pumpkins and
squashes, as well as cucumbers and
melons will all climb on the back yard
fence and take up little room on ihe
around. Planting beans with corn
saves space and gives the beans some-
thing to climb upon.
Tender young carrots cooked in as
little water as possible so that every
bit of the mineral matter is saved and
then served with butter, salt and a
grating of nutmeg with a dash of
lemon juice is a most delicious vege-
table for which to cultivate an appe-
tite.
Tomatoes peeled and sliced down
nearly to the stem end, making petals
like a flower, then fill the center with
chopped pepper and onion and place a
spoonful of mayonnaise on top, is a
most dainty spring salad.
There is a road to yesterday—
A wondrous thoroughfare.
Where wanton breezes idly play
And blossoms scent the air.
It stretches long and far and straight;
It wanders up and down!
It passes many an open gate
And many a little town.
GOOD THINGS WORTH TRYING.
For rhe lovers of ripe olives the fol-
lowing will be enjoyed: Soak them
for an hour or two in
olive oil to which a clove
of garlic has been added.
Place the olives while
soaking in the ice chest
and serve them without
wiping off the oil. Do
not place them in ice as
it tends to make them
watery. The oil and garlic may be
saved for salad or for more olives.
Carrot Salad.—Place a spoonful of
mayonnaise in a small head of lettuce
and in the mayonnaise mix grated
raw carrots until the dressing is pink
as shrimp. The carrots should be
grated very fine.
Tomatoes Stuffed With Ripe Olives.
—Scoop out the pulp from the toma-
toes. Fry a small onion chopped fine
in butter, add the pulp that has come
out of the tomatoes and a cupful of
ripe olives from which the seeds have
been removed, two tablespoonfuls of
breadcrumbs, salt and pepper. Fill the
tomatoes and bake.
Sponge Cake.—Take four eggs, one
cupful of sugar and one cupful of
flour. Beat the whites of the eggs
very stiff, then fold in the sugar a
quarter of a cupful at a time, add the
yolks one at a time, cutting each In
half and stir them in so lightly that
the mixture is streaked with yellow.
Cut the flour into the egg in the same
way, put into a buttered pan and bake
forty-five minutes.
Small green onions sliced thin and
sprinkled over lettuce with a handful
of fresh peanuts and French dressing
make a most delicious salad.
The difference between pride and
vanity depends upon whether we have
it or it is possessed by someone else.
WHfcT TO EA^.
The following is a homely dish well
liked by most people:
Pot Roast—The
secret of well fla-
vored, tender meat
is usually in the
cooking. A pot
roast should cook
at a low tempera-
t u r e. Slice two
onions very thin,
cook until yellow
in two tablespoonfuls of sweet drip-
pings then add the meat, four pounds
of the round makes a most delicious
roast, and let it steam in just enough
water to keep from scorching. Cook
at least two or three hours, when a
fine gravy will be formed and the onion
will all have disappeared. A can of to-
matoes with two chopped boiled car-
rots will be an addition to the gravy, or
if one likes a sour gravy a tablespoon-
ful of vinegar added gives zest to the
dish.
Beef Tongue With Raisins.—So far
raisins are one of the good things that
haven't jumped Into the high prices,
though any day they may be beyond
reach. Wash a fresh beef tongue and
place In a kettle with a teaspoonful
of salt and boiling water to cover. Sim-
mer very gently one hour. Remove
and take off the skin, trimming the
roots carefully. Place in a casserole
with a teaspoonful of butter and two
cupfuls of water with three tablespoon-
fuls of lemon juice and any flavoring
herbs. Cover and cook four hours
slowly. An hour before serving add a
cupful of seeded raisins, one-half a
tumbler of currant jelly and more wa-
ter if needed. Just before serving,
thicken the sauce witl} two tablespoon-
fuls of flour, wet to a paste with water.
Cook long enough to cook the starch.
"HULO-c
Texas ranks second in number of
farm loan associations.
Many homeseekers are at present
visiting inviting sections of the State.
The Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe ap-
propriated $274,344.72 for road better-
ment.
The total amount of petroleum prod-
ucts shipped by water out of Port Ar-
thur in the month of May aggregated
2,604,428 barrels.
There has to date been over fifty
cars of Irish potatoes shipped from
Eagle Lake, and digging continues
The prices received being about $2.90
per bushel.
Two big grass-fed Texas steers,
grazed near Pearsall, brought $167 and
$185 respectively on the Fort Worth
market last week. This is 12^ cents
per pound.
—«—
The land values of Jackson county
have been lowered 10 per cent, and
the value on cattle was raised $5 pei
head by the commissioners court at a
recent meeting.
The governor has appointed Joel R.
Bond of Terrell to be Judge of the new
Eighty-sixth judicial district court,
composed of Kaufman, Van Zandt and
Rockwall counties.
The Central Texas baseball league
has disbanded. ¥he league started as
a four-club affair on May 21 with the
following towns represented: Temple-
Corsicana, Ennis, Mexia and Marlin.
The attorney general's department
approved the following bond issues:
Sanger independent school district,
$12,500; Quanah indpendent school dis-
trict refunding, $15,000; Quanah inde-
pendent school district, $40,000; Du-
rango independent school district,
$4,000.
—f—
Potato digging is about completed
in Calhoun county. All growers are
finding it quite profitable to scrape the
culls from the fields. Average yield
to the acre is seventy-five bushels.
Three hundred and seventy-five cars
of potatoes were shipped from Calhoun
alone.
—f—
The twenty-eighth annual session of
Daniel Baker College at Brownwood
closed on June 6 with the conferring
of the degree of bachelor of arts upon
ten graduates and the honorary de-
gree of doctor of philosophy upon
three ministers of the state. It Is sig-
nificant that exactly one-half of the
senior class are at the officers' train-
ing camp at Leon Springs.
Business handled through the cus
torn house at Port Arthur in May
amounted to over five million dollars,
according to information made public
by Collector Robert E. Latimer this
week. Of this business, $4,781,596 is
credited to exports and $221,726 is
credited to imports, the latter repre-
senting mainly crude oil from Mexico.
Seventeen countries took shipments
from this district in May, England
leading with goods valued at $1,387,-
876.
Plana are rapidly being perfected
for the mobilization and distribution
of farm labor in Texas to offset, as
far as possible, the shortage of farm
labor caused by a wholesale exodus
of labor to the North and East where
more attractive wages are offered
than is being paid on the farms of
Texas. According to a statement from
the state department of labor this
week, the greatest difficulty encoun-
tered in the work Is the small wages
offered by the average farmer for
labor of this kind, which, it is said,
has forced many thousands of laborers
to enter other employment.
Efforts are being made by Pure
Food Commissioner R. H. Hoffman,
Jr., to trace the origin of a quantity
of sulphur found in a drug store at
Livingston, Polk county, which, upon
an analytical examination by the state
pure food and drug department, show-
ed it was adulterated with arsenic to
and beyond the danger point. Com-
missioner Hoffman said that as ar-
senic is more expensive than sulphur
there would be no sense in making
such an adulteration to cheapen the
sulphur.
In area, Matagorda is one of the
large counties of the Texas coast coun-
try. It has some soils as rich as the
proverbial "crow ever flew over,"
Practically, the county is traversed by
the Colorado river from north to south,
with the valley of the rich and re-
nowned Caney Creek lying in its east-
ern portion. In antebellum days some
of the finest plantations of Texas were
located in this valley. This was in
the days of slavery, and on these plan-
tations were grown and harvested im-
mense crops of corn, cotton and sugar
cane.
War Measures This Week.
Washington.—Resigned to another
Aot weather session, congress this
week will dispose finally of important
war measures long pending and begin
consideration of new legislation, prom-
ising at least a month or six weeks
more of work.
Italians Take a Grecian Town.
London.—The occupation by Italian
troops of t,^. . of Janiua in North-
irted.
APPROPRIATIONS FOR THE
UNIVERSITY NOT VETOED
In An Opinion Attorney General Rule?
Only Itemizations Are Torched
by Governer's Penoll.
western Gri
Austin, Tex. — Attorney General
Leoney, In an opinion addressed to Dr.
Vinson Saturday, holds ttiat Governor
Ferguson failed to veto the university
appropriations, that he merely struck
out the itemization of the total appro-
priation, but permitted the grand total
to remain. His ruling also says It will
be lawful for the regents to use the
entire available funds and donations,
bequests, etc., for the support of the
university. Thus, in the event of. liti-
gation challenging the correctness of
Saturday's opbiion, the regents may
keep the university open by using the
available funds and any subscriptions
tendered for that purpose. The avail-
able fund aggregates $850,000 annual-
ly, which would give the regents $500,-
009 to pledge for maintenance during
the litigation.
Under the opinion, which is address-
ed to Dr. R. E. Vinson, president of
the university, the following totals
were not vetoed and will become avail-
able September 1, next, for the ensu-
ing two years.
Main University, Austin—First year,
$719,698.50; second year, $710,198.50.
Medical College, Galveston—First
year,, $98,715; second year, $98,755.
School of Mines, El Paso—First
year, $26,510; second year, $27,477.
Grand total first year $845,963.50,
second year $836,430.50.
The governor's veto stated that he
vetoed everything from pages 1 to 24,
inclusive, of the bill, aad marked those
pages "Vetoed," using a blue pencil.
The foregoing totals are found on page
17, which is not touched by the blue
pencil nor mentioned in the veto proc-
lamation. In his opinion the attorney
general puts the bills together, omit-
ting the vetoed parts, and shows that
it is a complete intelligible appropria-
tion bill.
If anyone is disposed to test the cor-
rectness of the attorney general's rul-
ing it can not be done until after Sep-
tember 1, the date the appropriations
become available. Two methods are
possible. One would be to enjoin the
controller from issuing warrants
against the bulk appropriations after
apportionments are made by the re-
gents for salaries and expenses. The
other, in the event the controller de-
clined to follow his legal adviser, the
attorney general, in Saturday's ruling,
would be to mandamus the controller
to compel him to issue such warrants.
Inasmuch as the mandamus would
have have to be brought in the su-
preme court, the matter could not be
decided until next fall, as the court
adjourns this month, not to convene
until the first Monday of October.
In answer to the charged contained
in Governor Ferguson's proclamation
vetoing the appropriations for the Tex-
as University, Dr. B. Y. Benedict, dean
of the College of Arts and professor of
mathematics, and the other four deans
who prepared and signed the state-
ment with him, have this to say:
"As we understand it, Governor Fer-
guson holds that if a sectarian preach-
er should be elected to the presidency
of a state institution he should not
continue to preach. No preacher
would accept any office at the price
of ceasing to proclaim the gospel.
"His excellency, the governor, claims
that articles 2645, quoted above, makes
it illegal that a preacher should be
elected to the presidency of our State
University, presumably basing his con-
tention on the second clause of article
2645, which clause reads: 'Nor shall
any course of a sectarian character be
taught therein;' utterly ignoring the
first clause thereof, which runs: 'No
religious qualification shall be re-
quired for admission to any office or
privilege of the university,' which
clause, it seems to us, givete to a min-
ister of any denomination as much
right to aspire to the presidency as to
one who is not a minister. Moreover,
it should be borne in mind that a pres-
ident is /not a teacher, but an execu-
tive. But we do not believe that a
minister who continues to preach
should be debarred from the teacher-
ships in the State University, provided
that in other respects he has the prop-
er equipment for the subject to be
taught. Nor do we believe that any
of the statutes quoted by the governor
were designed to preclude the election
af a preacher to either the presidency
or to a professorship in our state edu-
cational institutions, provided he is
otherwise qualified. As to the facts
involved, Dr. Vinson informs us that
since his election as president he hn«
preached only five times.'
Peace Delegation Arrested.
London.—Two Austrian generals,
fen officers, ten privates, escorted by
eighteen Russian soldiers, appeared in
Kishinev, Russia, Saturday, declaring
that they were peace delegates and de-
manding a conference with workmen's
and soldiers' committee. The govern-
ment at Petrograd ordered their ap
rest.
Veterans Unveil Memorial.
Gettysburg, Pa.—A memorial sur-
mounted by a statue of General Lee
was unveiled on Gettysburg battlefield
Friday in the presence of many Con-
federate veterans, who had come from
their annual reunion at Washington,
and also many Grsnd Army veterans.
Famous French Philosopher Dead.
Paris.—Prof. Felix le Dantec, biolo-
gist and philo? ^her, is dead. Prof.
Le Dantec occtilled the chair of tropi-
cal pathology in the University of
I Bordoa""*. __
SICK WOMAN HAD
CRYING SPELLS
Restored to Health by Lydia
EL Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound.
Enhaut, Pa. — "I was all run down and
Weak inwardly. I had female troubles
and nervous feelings
and my head both*
ered me. I would
often have crying'
spells and feel as if
I was not safe. If
I heard anyone com-
ing I would run and
lock the door so they
would not see me.
I tried several doc-
tors and they did not
help me so I said to
~tiy mother 1 guess
there is no help for
I will have to die as
She got me one of
" and sa "
opped
medicine and took Lydia E. Pinkham's
y<
books and my husband said I should
little
d try
the doctor's
one bottle. I stor
Ljc
Vegetable Compound. It soon made &
change in me and now I am strong and
do all my work."—Mrs. Augustus
Baughman, Box 86, Enhaut, Pa.
Why will women continue to suffer
day in and day out and drag out a sickly,
half-hearted existence, missing three-
fourths of the joy of living, when they
can find health in Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound?
If you would like free confidential ad-
vice address Lydia E. Pinkham Medians
Co., Lynn, Mass.
We Still Have One, Though.
Well, the slogan has changed. It
used to be, "Buy a Bale," and now it
is "Buy a Bond." So get busy.
Felt That Way.
"Do you shave up or down?"
"Down."
"It feels like down."
ON FIRST SYMPTOMS
Use "Renovine" and be cured. Do not
wait until the heart organ Is beyond
repair. "Renovine" is the heart and
nerve tonic. Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
High school graduates who attempt
to set the world on fire soon discover
that there are a lot of fire engines or
duty.
Better Way of Putting It.
"I raise pigs for my living."
"Don't be so crude. Say you earn
your living by your pen."
Nerves All On Edge?
Just as nerve wear is a case of kidney
weakness, so is kidney trouble a cause
of nervousness. Anyone who has back-
ache, nervousness, "blues," headaehes,
dizzy spells, urinary ills and a tired,
worn feeling, would do well to try
Doan's Kidney Pills. This safe, relia-
ble remedy is recommended by thou-
sands who have had relief from just
such troubles.
A Texas Case
Mrs. S. McAfee,
605 N. Cleveland
St., Sherman, Tex.,
says: "I suffered
from severe pains
through the small
of my back. These
spells came on sud-
denly and I had to
sit down until the
attack passed off.
Finally, I used
Doan's K i d n ey
Pills and after fin-
ishing two boxes, I
had no further
trouble. I am glad to say that the
cure has been permanent."
Gat Doan's at Any Store, 50c a Box
DOAN'S XS*
FOSTER-M1LBURN CO* BUFFALO. N.Y.
Ratsand Mice Carry Disease
KILL THEM by uaing
Steams' Electric Paste
Pull directions in 15 languages
Sold everywhere—25c and $1.00
U. $. BOVEfMMEXT BUYS IT
DAISY FLY KILLER
ail flies. Hnt,oiMa.
ornamental, oonvenieat,
cheap. Lasts all mml
Hade of metal, can'tip 111
or tip oTer; will not «oU
or injure anything. (h«f
an teed effective. Sold by
dealer*, or 6 eent bjr «**
prul prepaid for $L0&
SOMtRS, ISO DC KALB AVE., KOOIUMUk
Don't sit down and think about what
you would do if you could live your
life over. Get busy and improve what
Is left of it.
If there is such a thing as a wise
married man he is one who poses as
the boss of his own house only when
he is away from home.
A HINT TO WISE WOMEN.
Don't suffer torture when all female
troubles will vanish in thin air after using
"Femenina." Price 50c and ft.oo—Adv.
A girl's features may be stamped
on a young man's heart, but It Is her
drug store complexion that looms up
on his coat lapel.
Paris tea rooms now substitute
coffee.
Wf* a Your Eyes Need Cart
y Murine Eye Remedy
aT
■arting — Jnat Hyo Comfort, f
lata or nalL Write for Free
onnn -
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The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, June 15, 1917, newspaper, June 15, 1917; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth189662/m1/6/: accessed May 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Schulenburg Public Library.