The Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 5, 1899 Page: 4 of 4
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Pteli
mzmi
IT.
. Davidson, J. N.
Mond2y af-
and Sep-
: weeks. - - 3
in ml .as^e
Lyoi>s Lpd^e, No. 195..
AF&A M
Meets on Sat-
urday on or be-
fore the first full
moon in each
month. Trans-
ient brethren are
corially invited
to attend.
R. S. Tanner, w.-m.
Fred. Ebeling, Sec't.
.
:^;v"
. of H. Lodge,
No. 1501.
Meets on 1st and 3d Monday in
each month. Transient brethren
in the city respectfully invited.
E. L, McKinnon, Dictator.
Fred Ebeling, Secretary.
WESTERN STAR LODGE, NO. 174-
I. 0. 0 P.
.
7 -
Meets regularly each Tuesday
I Brethren are cor-
}d to visit. C . .
lourt on
Court
in each
t; |:- • ' :
. • :.r ;
C. Levey, N. G.
N. L. McKinnon, sec.
iNM
Ar J V w 'v ,•
\ V&A i W-
O. d.H-S.
Freiligrath Loge
NO. 14.
Regelmsesige Yer-
sammlung jeden
Donnerstag vor
Yollmond und 14
tage danach.
H. Beneker,
. Peter Sekretaer.
jetCanm No. 120.
mP1
V
- ■ *
ga@ m
Thurs-
th. Visiting breth-
"ly invited to meet
F. Young, C. C.
Jr. Clerk.
r*
Meets every 1st &
aod 3rd Wednesday
night in their castle
hall over Yovngs store
.11 visiting knights
are cordially invited
leetings
of the lodge.
tt. H. Upton, C. C.
jb K. of R.- & S.
a
jpfi
Bg !l^§lre
'■ ■:' T; ?
ford Co.
———
handled
pi?
^ipla
BliPfe '
MRWi
Selected
nng
bot-
pure
: room,
liskey which
by all
toas in this sec?
itry for the
not a com-
ever been heard.
So if you want something real
good and pure call for these
brands at all first-class saloons.
The above brands are sold by
Louisville, Ky.
©. Quir?,
A.-b"tox,XL©-y- - art;-3L,arw-
Weinoar, Texas.
Will practice in all courts of the
Her gtate. Office over Townsend Rock
Boildine
• "" . —•*• r- r*'
If you are fading under the weakening
influence of "female troubles," do not
longer experiment with useless or dan
gerotis drugs, but try
Bradfield's Female Regulator
It will regulate the menses perfectly, and
cure Falling of the Womb, Leucorrhcea,
Headache, Backache and Nervousness.
It is a harmless vegetable remedy, which
puts the menstrual organs in perfect
health, stops drains and pains and Over-
comes weakness.
Sol ! at ^rug stores for $1 a bottle.
THE BRADF1LLD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta 6*.
——
:si
Pleasures of Farm Life,
There is much truth and philos-
ophy in the following from the
Norfolk Pilot:
The person who does not love
life in the country has lost the best
part of his nature by being cast out
of the garden of Eden at an early
period of his life, to be artificially
reared on the streets, alleys and
sewers of some citv. He knows
nothing of real home life. Cities
have very little as a rule, only
number so and so, such a street.
He has very little sense of home
joys and affections, the pure air
and water of the country; its holy
quietudes; its gentle appeals to all
the senses; its solitudes, where
mobs and tumults never intrude;
its delightful wbods; its sports and
pleasures; its loves and friendships,
undefiled by the dust and grime of
crowded tenements and thronged
thoroughfares; its sacred privileges
and seclusions; its leisure, its free-
dom and independence from the
intrusions and demands of hurry-
ing urban life and its sacred ex-
emptions from the gross contacts
and associations of the bustling
and shouldering streets—all th^se
and more akin to them make tKe
rural existence a perpetual delight
undefiled by the conditions-that
constantly attend the constant
pressure of the mixed and crowded
population.
The farm is not a bonanza, but it
feeds the world. To one accus-
tomed, its labors are easy and
healthy; its incidents interesting;
its rests, changes and relaxations,
With exchanges of visits, al-
ways full of recreation; its crops
engage continual care and attention
with daily vicissitudes of weather
that never destroy hope, but even
cheer with promise of fruition and
at the last, witti* garnered crops, it
affords you plenty, with a roaring
fire under your own roof, happy
in being monarch of all you survey,
despite the struggles for bread in
the cities Jand never-ending exer-
tions and woes inseparable from
style and silly rivalry.
Gro back to the country, young
man! Go home to the farm, seize
the plow and become an independ-
ent Jaod happy man, though you
may miss wealth, fashion and lux-
ury.
S. K. Patterson, Montague, Tex.
writes: For 20 years I .have used
Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicin
for cramps, colic and sick headache
In my opinion it is stronger and
acts more naturally than either
Black Craught or Zeilin's medicine-
To Core Meat.
The following receipt has been
recommended: To every hundred
pounds of pork, ham or shoulders,
take of the best coarse salt, eight
pounds; saltpeter, 2 ounces^ brown
sugar, 2 pounds; water, four gal.
Mix and bring to a boil. Test with
an egg or a potato, which should
be borne up by the brine. When
the brine is cold it should be turned
on the meat in the « barrel, which
should have been slightly salted
when packed and should remain
three days before the brine is put
in. After the meat has been in the
brine for six weeks it is ready to
hang. Hang for two or three days
before smoking. When smoked as
much as desired, wrap in heavy
paper, two to four thicknesses, and
sew in heavy muslin.
If gloomy and nervous, looking
op the dark side of things, take a
few doses Dr. M. A. Simmons Liv-
er Medicine and the gloom will
disappear.
Trying to quell a woman's wrath
is a good deal like sitting down on
a bunch of lighted fire-crackers to
prevent their going off.
A Frightful Blunder
Will often cause a horrible Burn,
! Scald, Cut or Bruise. Bucklen's
| Arnica Salve, the beat in the world,
| will kill the pain and promptly
heal it. Cures Old Sores, Fever
j Sores, Ulcer8, Boils, Felons, Corns,
idll Skin Eruptions. Best Pile
pure on earth. Only 25cts a box.
; Care guaranteed. Sold by all
; Druggist,
DR. MENDENHALL'S
IMPROVED
CHILL
AND
FEVER
CURE
Tasteless.
5© Cents.
Guaranteed.
For Sale by P. Breymann.
mms
TOBACCO SEED:
In reply to inquiry the Herald
is in receipt of the following letter
from the Texas Leaf Tobacco Co.
of Houston:
"If your farmers contemplate
planting tobacco they should order
their seed at once, as we order only
enough to supply the demand.
Would suggest that you plant
the Vuelta Abajo cigar tobacco seed
and some of the Sumatra cigar to-
bacco seed, experimenting in a
small way with red and white bur-
ley chewing tobacco.
The Vuelta Abajo and Sumatra
should be grown on sandy soils, in
fact all cigar varieties should be
grown on those kind of soils. From
the best information we have now
the burley or chewing tobacco will
do well upon most any kind of soil,
but would not advise you to plant
extensively of the burley tobacco,
as there is more profit in the cigar
varieties.
The cost of any of the above
mentioned seed is 50c an ounce,
which is a sufficient amount to
plant four acres; or $8 per pound,
which is a sufficient amount to
plant 64 acres.
We think if it is possible for you
to interest ten, twenty or more far-
mers in getting them to plant three
acres or more in tobaccos, that it
would be a good idea to secure the
services of some" experienced to-
bacco grower (we think that the
services of such a man can be se-
cured by us,) though many are
making a success in this state by
growing tobacco from the instruc-
tions as set-forth in the bulletins
which will be sent you."—Hal-
letsville Herald.
Brave Men Fall
Victims to stomach, liver and kidney
troubles as well as women, and all feel
the results in loss of appetite, poisons in
the blood, backache, nervousness and
tired, listless, run-down feeling. But
there's no need to feel like that. Listen
to J. W. Gardner, Idaville, lnd. He
says: "Electric Bitters are just the thing
for a man when he is all run down, and
don't care whether he lives or dies. It
did more to give me new strength and
good appetite than anything I could
take. I can now eat anything and have
a new lease on life." Only 50 cents, at
all druggists. Every bottle guaranteed.
Miss Golden's Suicide.
Hillsboro, Texas, Dec. 23.—The
shooting of Miss Anna Golden at
her father's home near Whitney
last evening was a sad affair. She
was just 16, high-minH^^nsitive
and of an unblemished^^^picter.
Ten days ago slander<flfi^tories
were started about her. Her father
and brothers engaged in a fruitless
endeavor to .run them down. Fi-
nally convinced and sure of her in-
nocence, her father determined on
a heroic measure to convince his
neighbors. He summoned physi-
cians. He talked to his daughter,
She replied: "I will submit to any-
thing, father, to prove my inno-
cence." She had been weeping
almost constantly for days. After
the physicians visited her she
seized her father's pistol and shot
herself. The physicians declared
her immaculate. She died last
night. Her father is almost crazed.
Excitement ran high last night.
Armed men went about and there
was talk of mob vengeance if the
author of the stories could be lo-
cated. There is much excitement
and if the guilt should be fixed up-
on any on there will probably be a
terrible retribution visited upon
him.
That Throbbing Headache
Would quickly leave you, if yon
used Dr. King^s New Life Pills.
Thousands of sufferers have proved
their matchless merit for Sick and
Nervous Headaches. They make
pure blood and strong nerves and
build up your health. Easy to
take. Try them. Only 25 cents.
Money back if not cured. Sold by
all Druggists.
A man will destroy his own life
by holding his breath, but he may
prolong the lives of others.
How to Prevent Pneumonia.
You are perhaps aware that
pneumonia always results from a
cold or from an attack of la grippe.
During the epidemic of la grippe a
few years ago when so many cases
A NEW fRIUMPH.
The Dreaded Consumption Can be Cured.
t. a. slocum, the great chemist and scien-
tist, will send to sufferers, three free
bottles of his newly discovered rem-
edies to cure consumption and all
lung troubles.
Nothing could be fairer, more philanthropic or
carry more joy to the afflicted, than the gener-
ous offer of the honored and distinguished chem-
ist, T. A. Slocum, M. C., of New York City.
He has discovered a reliable and absolute cure
for consumption, and all bronchial, throat and
chest diseases, catarrhal affections, general de-
cline and weakness, loss of flesh and all con-
ditions of wasting away; and to make its great
merits known, wiU send three free bottles of his
newly discovered remedies to any afflicted read-
er of the Schulenburg Sticker.
Already his "new scientific system of medi-
cine" has permanently cured thousands of ap-
parently hopeless cases.
The Doctor considers it not only his profes-
sional, but his religious duty—a duty which he
owes to suffering humanity—to donate his in-
fallibly cure.
He has proved the "dreaded consumption" to
be a curable disease beyond a doubt, in any cli-
mate, and has on ftle in his American and Euro-
pean laboratories thousands of "heartfelt testi-
monials of gratitude" from those benefitted
and cured in aU parts of the world.
Catarrhal and pulmonary troubles lead to con-
sumption, and consumption, uninterrupted,
means speedy and certain death. Don't delay
until it is too late. Simply write T. A. Slocum,
M. C., 98 Pine street, New York, giving ex-
press and postofflee address, and-the free med
lcine wiU be promi
Doctor you saw
Sticker..
sent. Please tell the
s offer in the Schulenburg
Fire at Weimar.
Last Friday morning about 10
o'clock the fire bell sounded a true
alarm. Sifert's gin was on fire in
the lint room, and flames aud
smoke were plainly visible. The
fire department followed by a big
crowd, flew to the place of the fire.
The tire was extinguished with re-
markable quickness and before any
serious damage was done. It is
supposed that the fire started from
a match or a nail in the cotton that
was being ginned. That gin took
fire once before this season—only
a few weeks ago—and has caught
fire at almost every ginning season
for several years past,
Weimar has such fine fire fight-
ing facilities and so efficient a fire
department that fire stands a poor
show to do much damage here.
The chief of the fire department,
Mr. A. F. Rose, is the right man
in the right place, aud his noble
firemen are just as galaut as he is.
Tho standpipe is a great thing to
have. Had it not been for the fire
department and their facilities Sif-
ert's gin would have been destroy-
ed last Friday.—Weimar Cor. Col-
orado Citizen.
Millions Given Away.
It is certainly gratifying to the public
to know of one concern in the land who
are not afraid to be generous to the
needy and suffering. The proprietors of
Dr. King's New Discovery for Consump-
tion, Coughs and Colds, have given away
over ten million trial bottles of this great
medicine, and have the satisfaction of
knowing it has actually cured thousands
ofhopeless cases. Asthma, Bronchitis,
Hoarseness and all diseases of the throat,
chest and lungs are surely cured by it.
Call on any druggist and get a free trial
bottle. Regular size, 50c and-$ 1. Every
bottle guaranteed, or price refunded.
J. M. Little was upfromSbimek
Wednesday morning. He informs
us that his cane crop from three
acres amounted to 600 gallons of
syrup this season, which he dis-
posed of easily at fair prices, and
could have soid several hundred
more gallons if he had had it to
spare. He says he is disgusted
with cotton at present prices, and
will increase his acreage of cane,
potatoes, beans, etc. Without hia
success in cane this season, Mr,
Little says 4-cent cotton would
have left him in the hole,—Wei-
mar Mercury.
To the Public.
We are authorized to guarantee
every bottle of Chamberlain's Cou-
gh Remedy and if not satisfactory
to refund the money to the purch-
aser. There is no better medicine
for la grippe colds and whoop-
ing cough. Price, 25 and 50c per bot-
tle. Tiy it. For sale by Paul Brey.
mann.
A free country is one in which
every man has a right to look for
his own job.
If irritable, out of sorts, depressd
in spirits, have a dull headachy
take a few doses Dr. M. A. Sim-
mons Liver Medicin for quik relief.
Friends are those people who act
surprised when we tell them how
old we are.
A few doses of Dr. M. A. Sim-
mons Liver Medicine will do more
for a weak stomach than a pro-
longed course of any other medicin.
There is no fool like an old fool
who tries to act like a young fool.
.. _ To subdue nervous irritability,
resulted in pnemoma, it was observ- \ neuralgia, hysteria, St. Vitus dance
use Simmons Squaw Vine Wine or
tablets.
Some girls who profess to be
highly educated have merely been
immersed in a weak solution of ac-
ed that the attack was never folu\v-
ed by that disease when Chamber-
lain's Cough Remedy was used.
It counteracts any tendency of
la grippe to result in that danger-
ous disease. It is the best remedy
in the world for bad colds and la j complishments.
grippe. Every bottle warranted.'
For sale try Paul Breymann. j *0 relieve mental worry
:—1 : despondency and give refreshing
When a man sings his own praise sleep, use Simmons Squaw Vine
he invariably gets the tune too
high.
cure
Women's Complexions depend
for beauty upon digestion. Dr. M.
A. Simmons Liver medicine regu-
lates the stomach, liver and kid-
neys and secures the blessings of
good digestion.
Wine or tablets.
Lots of men fall oyer themselves
in striving to get ahead of others.
About the only time some women
refuse to talk back is when they ac-
cept some man's seat in a crowded
street car,
>
m.z&±
Wm. FRITSCHE,
THE FLATONIA
Any style shoe, in toe or otherwise, for men, or ladies
made on short notice. Nothing but the best material used.
Repair work of Every Description
Neatly and Promptly done.
Satisfaction ^Guaranteed. JfC south of st!i°n*kvi
SUNSET
ROUTE
Southern Pacific
New Orleans and Galveston
Sunset Route-
Deyble Dotily
TRAiN SERViCE 8an
...with Buffet Sleepers
Only Standard Gauge Line Running Through
Sleepers to City of Mexico.
Night and Morning Connections at
New Orleans with lines to
• 5V:;- m
New York, Philadelphia, Washington, Atlan-
ta, Cincinnati, St Louis* Memphis,
Ebeling & Son, | Dixie ^ *
standardK(
SCHULENBURG, - TEX. I Artesia
Bpi
The Best P
To buy goods is at a store Wi
honest dealing, where the stock is 1
lates&andjjest on the market, and where
low as the merchant can do business on.
Bring Me Your Produce.
I pay the highest prices paid on the mark<
butter, eggs, fowls, vegetables, and every
by the farmer and am prepared to gua
in any kind of goods desired.
R. A. WOLTI
— ■
Hay Presses,
'sjHW PU!M
Pumping Jacks,
Well Drilling Machii
ALAMO IRON W
[ y. • ' ^ T
Sam A -n -boxLio Texas.
: Sm
RUNNY SOUTH SALOON.
' AUG. ELLINGHAUSEN, Proprietor.
-«$pine Win®?? Cigarrp and
Fresh Beer always on tap. Pool Table in connection. First-Class Restaurant.
SCHULENBURG. - - - TEXAS.
A. K. HAWKES, G. M. JOHNSON
The Famous Atlanta Optician
A. K. HAWKS5
RECEIVED
GOLD MEDAL
l igtiat Award Diploic of
For Superior Lens Grinding and Excel-1
lency in the manufacture of Spectacles
and Eye Glasses. Sold in over 8000
cities and towns in the United States.
Established 18'/ 0* j
CAUTION These famous glasses
Vl are peddled.
PauJ prpynaann has exclusive sale of f~T"lT TTp
these famous glasses in Schulenburg. X
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The Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 5, 1899, newspaper, January 5, 1899; Schulenburg, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth190003/m1/4/: accessed April 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Schulenburg Public Library.