The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 13, 1910 Page: 7 of 8
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Tjhe Schutenburer Otfc/rcr
W. D. Keuper,
THREE BOYS BROWNED Butter Oil
_ j , || ... , . , . .. BOYS SKATING ON FARM NEAR
Cays he sells neither the highest nor the; ft. cobb, okla., meet
^ lowest but at good honest prices. He|
will treat you right so give him a call. I
DEATH.
Lyons Avenue
FALL THROUGH ICE ON POND
THE DE LAVAL
Improved
Yellow Rose Creamery,
Agents
Martin C. Abernathy.
Graham, Tex.: Martin C Aber-
nathy died here Saturday and was
buried at Finis. He was 88 years of
age. He was a Mexican War veter-
an, haying enlisted at Pulaski.
,Tenn. He was engaged in the bat-
tle of Yera Gruz and Cerro Gordo.
Fire Loss $115,000.
Richmond, Ya.: Fire Sunday de-
stroyed^ the Majestic Theater, the
postoffice and all but one of twenty-
six business houses in the little ham-
let of Alma, a few miles from Suf-
folk, Ya. The total loss is estimated
at $115,000.
Madriz Aids Red Cross,
Managua: President Madriz has
sent $20,000 in gold to aid the work,
of the Bed Cross among the prison-
ers of war at Bluefields.
Fatal Rooming-House Fire.
Buffalo, 1ST. Y.: Frank Leber, aged
twenty-eight, and Theresa Craig,
aged twenty-five, are dead, and Mrs.
Sarah Cole is probably fatally bTim-
ed, as a result of a fire in a rooming
house late Saturday night.
Wealth Goes to Canada.
Chicago: The hegira of 1909 from
the United States to Canada has
taken $100,000,000 of wealth across
the Dominion line, according to a
summary completed for the year.
/./•-r. r;.
tt Ji ri j?.tb uttti jLODtm .ro. m
K. OF P.
Meets every 1st and 3rd
Wednesday night in Their
Casjie Hall. All visiting
Knights cordially invited to
attend the meetings of the
lodge.
A. PENNINGTON, C. C.
h. VOGELSANG, KotR&S
Western Star Lodge
No. 174
I. O. O. F.
Meets regularly
each Tuesday night
Transient brethern
are cordially invit-
ed to visit us.
Gus Russek, N. G
N. L. McKinnon, Secretary.
HERMINE REBEKAH
LODGE NO. 9.
Regular meeting 2nd Thursday
at 8 o'clock and 4th Thursday
at 4 o'clock in the afternoon at Odd
Fellows' Hall, visiting Rebekahs are
cordially invited to meet withus.
Mrs. John P. Thomas, N. G,
Mrs. B. F. Johnson. Sec.
Lyons Lodge, No. 195
•#. V. «•#. \JfI. 1
Meets on Friday !
on or before j
each full moon in
the month. Tran -
sient bretheren are
cordially invited to
Dr R. O. Perkins, W. M.
Fred. Ebeling, Sec
Four Die in Fire.
Ycw York; Fbv?
and three persons
•hurts i".."
Joy:—
were lost
Turkish Cabinet Resigns.
| Constantinople: The whole Turk-
ish Cabinet resigned Tuesday, follow-
ing the resignation of Himi Pasha, the
S Grand Vizier, who withdrew from the
i ministry earlier in the day.
Long Ride For Five Cents.
t Chicago: thirty-fiv'e-mile ride for
jfive cents will be made possible by
; the $70,000,000 merger of all the sur-
face railway lines of the South Side.
Twenty-Eight Perish,
j Madrid: Dispatches received here
jsay that twenty-eight persons perished
I in a landslide caused by the floods in
a Tillage near Viana, Navarro.
Cold Weather Killing Quails.
. Jefferson City: State Game and
Fish Commisisoner Jesse A. Tolerton
has received information that quails in
jthe nerthern part of Missouri are dy-
ling in great numbers because of the
lice and snow.
Tim Sullivan Dies.
•• Ne,w York: Timothy P. Sullivan,
;the '"Little Tim" of the Bowery and
! power in metropolitan politics, died
jhere Wednesday. Death resulted from
! Slight's disease and inflammation of
the heart.
attend.
J f *~
Many Bills introduced.
Washington: As a promise of ac-
tivity in the interest of legislation,
Senators Friday introduced more than
350 bills and resolutions, covering a
variety of subjects.
A Younger Brother Ran for Help, But
Assistance Came Too
Late.
Fort Cobb, Okla., Jan.. 3.—While
skating on a pond on the W. J.
Clemmons farm, near Fort Cobb,
Sunday night, two of Mr. Clem-
mons' song, aged 11 and 13, and the
10-year-old son of J. C. Smith, a
neighbor, were drowned by the ice
ibreaking near the pond's center. A
younger Clemomns boy ran for help,
bjit it arrived too late.
• A Record-Breaking Sale.
Aransas Pass, Tex.: What is said
to be the largest town-site sale ever
held in this country has just occurred j
here. This is the town near which j
the government is spending millions j
building jetties so as to make the ]
finest deep-water harbor on the Gulf j
of Mexico, to be used as a harbor j
of refuge for our war vessels that;
will be needed for use in the neigh- j
borhood of Panama. The sale oc- j
c-upied ten days and 6,000 lots and >
1,000 tracts of truck land were sold I
for $800,000. The demand for the
porperty was "phenomenal and justi-
fied as the town is bound to be a
second Seattle.
| For cooking purposes can not be
| excelled. It will cure that chronic
j indigestion of yours. Call and get
! a sample.
(The
Schulenburg
Oil Mill
F. A.Bezecny,
The Saddler
Repair Work A Specialty
Gus Russek,
General Insurance
: ' ' i " ■ ■■ ? ' vV " :V '. • ••
Representing the Lead-
ing Companies
DEAFNESS
' :• . . ■ ■ - . <r V'
i i x
Successfully Treated
By the Simplest Methods yet
Discovered
.rccrived serious.
Temple andi Denton Get Stations.
! Austin: After being in session
practically all day, the experiment^
station locating board composed oi
;Lieutenant Governor Davidson, Dr.
Harkon, director of experiment sta-
tions, and Commisisoner of Agricul-
ture Kone, Saturday decided to lo-
cate two stations in'the black land
belt, one at Temple and the other
at Denton. .
Alaska's Mineral Output.
Washington: The value of the
mineral output of Alaska for the
year 1909 was $2,200,000, practically
the same as that of last year, ac-
cording to the geological survey.
Nearly all of it was gold. # The pro-
duction of copper was $520,000, a
loss of about $100,000 from 1908.
Morse Leaves For Prison.
Hew York: With a supreme ef-
fort to be cheerful, but with emotion
occasionally getting the best of him;
Charles W. Morse left New York
Sunday to begin serving a fifteen-
year sentence in the Federal prison
at Atlanta, Ga,, imposed upon him
for violation of the National bank-
ing laws.
Brakeman Meets Death.
Gordon: E. K. Brown, a Texas
and Pacific brakeman, aged twenty-
seven, was killed here Saturday while
riding on . the engine cab. He was
leaning out on the gang plank when
the locomotive reached a bridge and
Brown's head struck a beam. Death
was instantaneous.
No Liquor In Tennessee.
Memphis, Tenn.: The new law
against the manufacture of intoxi-
cants became effective Saturday, and
for the first time in the history of
Tennessee, it is against the law to
manufacture lienors in the state.
Ninety-five per cent of the cases of
deafness brought to our attention are
the result of chronic catarrh of the
throat and middle ear. The air pas-
sages become clogged by catarrhal
deposits, stopping the action of the
vibratory bones. Until these deposits
are remov-
ed relief is
impossible.
The inner
ear cannot
be reached
o by pr©bing
- or sprying
hence t h •
^inability of
specialists
to always ef
feet a cure*
nether can
E D. The Drum; H, Hammer; ear drums
A. Anvil; S. Stirrup; S. C. cure deaf-
Semi-circular Canal; C. ness. But
Chochiea. there is a
scientific treatment for deafness and
catarrh which is demonstrated every
day by the use of Actina. The vapor
genertaed in the- Aetina passes
through the Eustachian tubes into the
middle ear, removing the catarral ob-
structions and and loosens up the
bones (hammer, anvils and stirrup;
in the inner ear, making them respond
to the vibration of sound. Actina is
also very successful in relieving ring-
ing noises in the head. We have
known people afflicted with this dis-
tressing trouble for years to be en-
tirely relieved by a few weeks' use.
Actina has also been very successful
in the treatment of hay fever, asthama
bronchitis sore throat, weak lungs,
colds headache and other troubles
that are directly or indirectly due to
catarrh. Actina will be £ent on trial,
postpaid. Write us about your case.
Our advice will be free as well as a
valuable book-Prof. Wilson's Treaties
on disease. Address Actina Applaince
Co., Dept. Z 220D 811 Walnut St.,
Kansas City, Mo.
SUNSET CAMP 120,W.O.W.
Meets every 1st and 3rd Fri-
day in the month at Turner Hall.
Visiting Sovereigns welcome,
John P. Thomas, C. C.
A. Pennington, Clerk.
R. A. Wolters, Banker.
, I
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Winfree, Raymond. The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 13, 1910, newspaper, January 13, 1910; Schulenburg, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth189369/m1/7/: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Schulenburg Public Library.