The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, November 3, 1922 Page: 1 of 6
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Sfe-'^Bagpi
THS SCHULENBURG STICKER* 8CHHLENBDHG)
IIIIUilillllHIllHli.fSr'ili
Soil Conditions Influence
Night Air Temperatures
To Help Yon Win
Riches—power—happiness. The average
man places these as his goal. He dreams
about having them.
But Che average man is slow to take a prac-
tical'step towards that goal. He is content
to dream about it—ana never gets there.
The most practical start is
account Rockefeller
thousand dollars.
to start a savings
had to save his first
It earned the rest of his fortune.
Character Earns Credit
Saving men not only have capital for their efforts.
In saving, they establish a reputation which will make
it easy to secure additional capital when necessary.
A fanner has frequent need for capital if he is
striving continually to improve his property. How
important it is then that he build up his credit—
f^ahiinK }|j| char*
acter.
The eaalest and
quickest way la to
start a savings ac-
count
JfAVi
mQ
lb Save
Ifcut Honey
MiHalu
lOttfnOniy
DANK
WITH
Ig. R.ussek Sta.te B&nk
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
MRS. IG. RU8SEK, Pres. CHAS. SENGELMANN, 2 V-P.
ERNST RUSSEK, Active V-P. HENRY RUSSEK, Cashier
K. D. SENGELMANN, Assistant Cashier
HENRY GRAF, Bookkeeper
G. E. RUHMANN, CHAS. MATULA, FRED BITTNER
HENRY A. SENGELMANN
"DRIZONE"
AND SOUTHERN SELECT
The Ice Man Notary FHiblic
DODGE Automobiles
Phone 87 or G8
Baumga.rten-Ma.tula Co.
Lumber, Sash, Doors, brick, LJume,
Cement, Hardware, Paints, Oils,
FHirniture and Undertaking.
Schulenburg
Texas
Enterprise
Bottling
Works
is a modern, sanitary factory
in every sense of the word,
and soft drinks manufactured
and bottled here, are not only
in big demand here at home,
but in all the surrounding
towns and territory.
Whenever and wherever you see
our label on the bottle you see a
a bonafide guarantee of purity and
highest quality.
A relation has been shown to
exist between the temperature
of the soil and the ensuing
minimum temperature of the air
immediately above, sa.vs the
Weather Bureau of the United
States Department of Agricul-
ture.
Low night-air temperature in
garden and truck farms may
often be prevented by the selec-
tion of soil in which there is a
sandy component, as sand and
Products Of Prominent
Flour Manufacturer In-
creased In Popularity
Asked what single policy had
been most profitable in his busi-
ness, a manufacturer noted
throughout the world for his
•success, replied: "Restraint of
immediate profit's."
"That" said Mr. R. H. Wagen-
fuehrof the H. Dlttlinger Roller
Mills Company, New Braunfels,
Texas, "has always been our
policy in the sale of our various
brands of flour, especially so
sandy loams generally store up ; during the past year's business
more heat during the dcy than
do most other soils and give off
more in the nighttime by con-
duction of the air above, thus
diminishing the probability of
critical temperatures and the
formation of damaging frosts.
The land in use should be well
drained of surplus moisture, as
wet soils are invariably cold soils
and more susceDtible to frost
damage. Any soil whether it
be sand, loam, or clay, is warm-
er when it is clean and free from
weeds and unnecessary vegeta-
tion.
/
Frost may form on one side of
a street and not on the other, or
in one section of a level farm
and not in another, for one or
more of several reasons, such as
difference in soils, slight differ-
ence in elevation, in moisture, or
in kind and extent of surface
covering, or the amount of in-
solation received. Frost may
appear in sections which have
wet, cold soils -covered with
heavy vegetation or uncultivated,
while on the same night and
under the same meteorological
conditions it does not form on
other ground close by where
the soil is relatively dry, warm,
and clean.
Proposed Route Surveyed.
Flatonia, Tex.^ Oct. 30.—W. L.
Norris, government inspector
for rural routes, spent several
days with Post-master F. W.
Dusek and thoroughly went over
27 miles.on the La Grange-Flat-
onia road. The patrons along
the route petitioned the establish-
ment of the service.
depression. And it has paid
generously, as exemolified in
the present-day demand for our
products."
"But I am getting ahead of
ray story"continued Mr. Wagen-
fuehr. "Late in December of
1921, when most everyone was
retrenching, curtailing every
possible expense, calling in sales-
men, discontinuing advertising,
and saying. 'It can't be done',
we decided to pursue just the
opposite policy."
"You can wtell imagine it took
courage at that time to forego
"immediate profits" and instead
divert them to the financing of a
big persistent advertising and
sales campaign. But we knew
the future success and growth of
our business was the vital con-
sideration, and not the temporary
success involved in "immediate
profits." "We knew too, that
there were hundreds of dealer
and distributors whose loyalty to
us entitled them to genuine and
timely sales support. So
every campaign covering Comal
Lily, Snow Queen, White Daisy
and Sweet Roses Flour, not only
popularized these several brands
with the public but also tied up
specifically with the respective
dealers handling these brands".
"The wisdom of our policy of
safeguarding the future rather
than contenting ourselves with
"immediate profits'* has been
vindicated in the sales results of
today. There are decidedly
more users of our brands of
flour today than ever before, as
indicated in the far greater
volume of business done with
our old established dealers, to
say nothing of the additional
business coming tons now from
a host of new dealers. "Today
our business is good!"
'Our Mill, situated on the
Comal River, New Braunfels,
Texas is not only one of the old-
est in the South but also is the
most modern and cleanest in the
south today. Its products are
recognized by every housewife
as the most wholesome, nutriti-
ous and uniformly fine in exis-
tence. We are giving the cus-
tomer better Flour Quality than
ever before and can truthfully
say that our flour, also feedstuffs
and meal are making friends for
us everywhere. Our btrvice
also cannot be improved."
Cuero Defeats Hallettsville
Cuero, Texas* Oct. 23.—The
Cuero High School football team
was too heavy an aggregation
for the ambitious visitors from
Hallettsville in Friday after-
noon's game here, and while the
visitors put up a game struggle
and were fairly successful with
aerial attacks, they had to be
content with the short end of a
32 to 7 score.
YOURS FOR SERVICE •
CLEANING, PRESSING, TAILORING, DYEING,
LAUNDRY AGENCY, HATS RE-BLOCKBD.
H. F\ MEYER, Prop.
Phone 171 for Quick Services.
Cros*~Rib Tread Card
A Real Cord Tire for Small
Cars at a Popular Price
The new Goodyear Cross-Rib Tread Cord in die 30 x 3#
Inch clincher type is a tire that the small car owner will
warmly welcome.
It gives him, at a price lower than the net price he is asked
to pay for many "long discount" tires, every advantage of
quality cord tire performance, for it is a quality tire through
and through.
It is made of high-grade long-staple cotton; it embodies the
reliable Goodyear quality of materials; its clean-cut tread
engages the road like a cogwheel*
The scientific distribution of rubber in this tread—the wide
center rib and the semi-flat contour—gives a thick, broad
surface that is exceedingly slow to wear.
The tough tread stock in this tire is carried down the side*
walls clear to the bead, making it rut-proof to an extraor-
dinary degree.
In every particular it is a representative Goodyear product,
built to safeguard the world-wide Goodyear reputation. -
Despite its high quality, and the expertness of its construc-
tion, it sells at a price as low or lower than that of tires
which lack its important features.
The 30x3% inch Cross-Rib
Cord clincher
$13.50
This price includes manufacturer's excise tost
Geodyeor CrtmJbb Tread Cord Tires are also made in 6, 7 tmd $ imk $ipw firfomA
FOR SALE BY
- «
Wm. Baumgarten
Monroe, Banket
And Diplomat
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The First National Bank
Jf, tifet iters
{President
OFFICERS
(?. S3. Jtess/et
Viee-ZPresident
S, Mustek
Caskier
Your - Business - Solicited.
You Have heard
iluch about Cuero
Turkeys and The
Cuero
Turkey Trot
Why not see it this year?
Bigger and better than ever
I
But the Turkeys will Parade only
on Armistice Day
Schulenburg People
Cordially Invited.
TAX PAYERS' NOTICE!
Weather and roads permitting, I will be at
the following places, to collect taxes, on days
and dates as specified below:
THIRD WEEK
PRIMM, Monday, Nov. 13. 10 A. M. to 12 M.
WEST POINT, Monday Nov. 13. 2 P. M. to 4 P. M.
MULDOON, Tueaday, Nov. 14.10 A. M. to 3 P. M.
CISTERN, Wednesday, Nov. 15.10 A. M. to 3 P. M.
PRAHA, Thursday, Nov. 16 9 A. M. to 4 P. M.
FLATONIA, Friday, Nov. 17. 9 A. M. to 5 P. M.
FLATONIA, Saturday, Nov. 18. 9. A. M. to 3 P. M.
FOURTH WEEK
PLUM, Monday, Nov. 20. 9 A. M. to 12 M.
SWISS ALP, Monday, Nov. 20. 2 P. M. to 4 P. M.
HIGH HILL, Tuesday, Nov. 21. 9 A. M. to 12 M.
FREYBURG, Tuesday, Nov. 21. 2 P. M. to 4 P. M.
ENGLE, Wednesday, Nov. 22. 10 A. M. to 3 P. M.
SCHULENBURG, Thursday, Nov. 23. 9 A. M. to 4 P. M.
SCHULENBURG, Friday, Nov. 24. 9 A. M. to 4 P. M.
SCHULENBURG, Saturday, Nov. 25. 9 A. M. to 3 P. M.
FIFTH WEEK
HOLMAN, Monday, Nov. 27. 11 A. M. to 8 P. M.
DUBINA, Tuesday, Nov. 28. 10 A. M. to 3 P. M.
AMMANNSVILLE, Wednesday, Nov. 29.10 A. M. toSPJM.
LaGrange from December 1st 1922 to January 31st, 1
State Rate 75c County Rate 55c Highway No. 1
Highway No. 2 40c Highway No. 8 50c Highway N|
Highway No. 5 40c.
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Edwin G. ScHeel, Tax
Fayette County, r
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The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, November 3, 1922, newspaper, November 3, 1922; Schulenburg, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth189780/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Schulenburg Public Library.