The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, March 15, 1935 Page: 2 of 10
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THE SCHULENBIJRG STICKER, SCHULENBURG, TEXAS
POWERFUL FEMININE BAND
The Delphian society is a national
women's educational organization. It
ha3 chapters in all of the states ex-
cept two, Vermont and Rhode Island.
It haa a membership of 250,000 and
its chapters number 3,o00. As many
as 30 chapters are banded together
In some cities for a city federation.
The purpose of this organization are
higher education, social progress and
pei'sonal improvement. Self-expres-
Sion is the keynote of the society.
Doctors Know!
• „. and they use
liquid laxatives
You'd use a liquid, too, if you knew
how much better it makes you feel.
A liquid laxative can always be
taken in the right amount. You can
gradually reduce the dose. Reduced
dosage is the secret of real and safe
relief from constipation.
Just ask your own doctor about
this. Ask your druggist how popular
liquid laxatives have become. The
rig tit liquid laxative gives the right
kmd of help—and the right amount
of help. When the dose is repeated,
instead of more each time, you take
lesn. Until the bowels are moving
regularly and thoroughly without aid.
People who have experienced this
©orafort, never return to any form of
help that can't be regulated I The
liquid laxative generally used is Dr.
Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It contains
senna and cascara, and these are
natural laxatives that form no habit.
It relieves a condition of biliousness
or sluggishness without upset.
To relieve your occasional upsets
safely and comfortably, try Syrup
Pepsin. The druggist has it.
SYRUP PEPSIN
Three Keys
The human mind has three keys
opening all locks. Knowledge, reflec-
tion, imagination—iiij these three
things everything is contained.—Vic-
tor Hugo.
W Youi own druggist is authorized to
cheerfully refund your money on the spot
If yo« are not relieved by Creomulsioo.
Nonchalant
Philosopher—I take things as they
come.
Shoplifter—And I take things as
I go.
Quick,.Safe Relief
| wun.r,^uie rv «: iei
.'<? For Eyes Irritated
BV Exposure
. 'To Sun, Wind
WmfMWm and Oust —
= 5
Old Established
•By In expanding business for spring
■ — oil sales representatives In sale of
—>f Coating. Men willing to
■— te 8100 weekly. No samples to
Just a clean cot proposition with no
attached. This Is one of few lines of
—is producing big results at this tlma.
Wit* /or particular*, (jiving detail*
JOE P. COMYNS, Box 4306, Ft Worth,Tex.
MISERABLE... WEAK?
Mrs. H. W. Curtner of
1117 Geyer St., Little
Rock, Ark., said: "I was
in a rundown condition and
had headaches. I had bare-
ly enough strength to do
my housework. Dr. Pierce's
Favoritfl Prescription helped
me wonderfully. I felt
stronger and better and
fas relieved of the headache."
New size, tablets 50 cts., liquid $1.00.
Write Dr. Pierce s Clinic, Buffalo, N. Y„
or free medical advice.
□ All C Instantly Eased
O WI !■ 31 Quickly Healed
CARBC'IL eases throbbing pain; allays
inflammation; reduces swelling; les-
sens tension; quickly heals. Easily
applied, Inexpensive. Results guaran-
teed. Ai so use for festers, risings, cuts,
burns, and bites. At your druggist, or
Spurlock-Neal Co., Nashville, Tena.
NO-VEX
*&• World's Best Ointment for Athlete's
r*ot, Rinirwttrm, Eczema, Itchlnfc Plies and
Dandruff. Stopa Itching Instantly. Heals
quickly. Absolutely pore, and will not Ir-
ritate the tenderest skin. Many leading phy-
sicians pri scribe and ose it. If your lo«al
druggist cannot supply yon, send o* 60c
» Ja» will he sent you by mail post-
FALLS CHEMICAL CO., Box W2,
fenn.—Adr.
paid. F
Memphis
BOB T NEGLECT
YOU 11 KIDNEYS!
r? your kidneys are not working
right and you suffer backache,
dizziness, burning, scanty or too
frequent urination, swolien feet and
ankles; Heel lame, stiff, "all tired
out" ... use Doan's Pills.
Thousands rely upon Doan's.
They are praised the country over.
Get Doan's Pills today. For sale by
all druggists. •> • -
DOAN'S PILLS
BRISBANE
THIS WEEK
Find Comfort in Greece
The British Wake Up
New Civilization?
Fremont Older
Americans, with comparatively small
troubles, may find comfort in reading
about Greece,
where government
airplanes are bomb-
ing government bat-
tleships, seized by
rebels. From the
Averoff, pride of the
Greek navy, "flames
rose high" when a
250-p ound baby
bomb struck her
deck. What would
happen if a 5,000-
pound bomb struck
such a ship?
Arthur Brisbane
Ancient names
taking you back to
school days are scattered through
Greek civil war reports. Venizelos,
a true Greek patriot, supporting {lie
revolution, dwells on the little island
of Crete, where the Minotaur, half hu-
man, half bull, used to live and de-
vour youths and maidens from Athens.
In this world of trouble, something
must explode somewhere.
Ramsay MacDonald tells the com-
mons that Germany's military activity
compels Britain to extend her boun-
daries of "imperial air protection" to
the banks of the Rhine. Armies of
men mean nothing. Floating ships
mean little. A while ago Lord Rotlier-
mere, warning his country usefully, as
his brother, Lord Northcliffe, did in
the big war, was telling the British
that they must have at least 5,000
fighting planes. His advice, at first
ridiculed, is now taken seriously and
Britain will have the planes.
Old American methods that have
built up this country, such as it Is, are
called out of date by leading minds in
Washington.
Mr. Richberg, supposed to be closest
to the President in thought, tells a
Miami audience "the World war
marked the passing of a civilization.
What kind of civilization will take its
place?
With all possible respect for pro-
fessors and reformers, you wonder
if they can, offhand, manufacture a
better one.
The death at seventy-eight of Fre-
mont Older, for more than fifty years a
courageous, fighting newspaper man in
California, recalls Victor Hugo's words:
"The death of the just man is like the
end of a beautiful day."
Fremont Older's life, character and
work were worthy of his impressive
stature and benign expression. It may
be said of him, as was said of Glad-
stone, that "his heart was ever with
the weak and miserable poor." Every
good cause found a defender in him;
the most miserable convict, released
from prison, might find a friend in him.
There is a heaven, of course, and Fre-
mont Older is there. If there were
no heaven, his character and merit
would "make it necessary to invent
one."
Alabama voted dry, stands with Kan-
sas, one of the two dry states of the
Union. Northern racketeers and boot-
leggers must not hastily conclude that
Alabama offers a paradise of profit.
First, Alabama knows how to make
corn whisky at a price per gallon that
would discourage any bootlegger; sec-
ond, the men of Alabama are not as
long suffering as men of New York.
Racketeers would find Alabama is bad
climate for their health.
Paris and American dressmakers tell
woman that she must now dress in a
fashion "revealing the outlines and
curves of the human form." To know
exactly what the outlines of the human
form are, take a walk through the
streets of Miami near public or private
bathing beaches. Yon will see stroll-
ing to their homes, as free from care
or self-consciousness as little birds,
hundreds of ladles, some tall and thin,
a majority short and fat, with literally
nothing on from the waist up that
could not be replaced by two half coco
nut shells fastened to the chest with
a string around the back of the neck,
and below the waist a wisp of material
that would make Eve's skirt of leaves
look like a ball dress.
Such costumes are unwise "sales-
manship." The old-fashioned muslin
dress down to the ankle, up to the
neck, aroused romantic interest and
uncertainty. The two half coconut
shell costumes cause the eligible young
man to say, "If that is all there is to
It, I shall postpone matrimony."
On an Island In the Pearl river, In-
habitants of a Chinese fishing village-
dreaded and disliked a small settle-
ment where 24 lepers lived nearby. A
dispatch from Hongkong says the vil-
lagers have solved their problem by a
massacre of the 24 lepers, followed by
the destruction and burning of their
settlement.
That shocks us tiow, but such bar-
barity was once the rule. The old were
killed and sometimes eaten In primi-
tive days.
British medical men declare positive-
ly that "drinking mills within two hours
after eating meat is highly detrimental
to the digestive system," Moses could
have told them that long ago.
O. Kins Features Syndicate, Inc.
WMU service.
OUR COMIC SECTION
Events in the Lives of Little Men
vzzMfl I SHALL C0N5ULT ATTORNEY
WWITTEMORE ABOUT THIS
FXPIAIH THIS,
youkc MAN ->
j
1)
on LY
THROWING
at charlie"
HAYHH'J CAT
hon£5t
q ASTOPAHP
« ' 'HELP U$
CELtBRAJi
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I
THE ALIBI
(Copyrishr
THE FEATHERHEADS
By Oiborne
<P> Western Newspaper Union
Reminder
po<s6onej there
WAS SOMETHIMG-
l wamted to "do
and i ftorsot what
it
did ^oli
mail that
letter i
D/\T IM
© Western Newspaper Union
\ put a
LETTER IM
LETTeR^ FOCKB7Z
VJHAT LOCKET?
WHAT PST-reR *z .
J Sour, left
HANP OUTSIPE
COAT VOCKET—
DID Ttod MAIL
\T ?
i kview there was
something- i should
attend To
what?
?OCKET UMlMCr
ALL WORN
THROUGH?
^QU
FINNEY OF THE FORCE
of course, officer people. will
have seen voli here: — b/jt pon'f
Tell anyone why until, this
SCARE: IS OVER IF YOiJ'RT-
queshowbp tell them auyt'-u^ct /
ELSE —THAT I'M SUSpECTET? cp r7
^ ARSSKl—AKMTHINC? jr
By Ted O'Loughlin
© By Western Newspaper UnivB
ho.ther^ fimneY-
wat upl — i seetl
ya <5ro into
warbul'S HOUSE-
what'S tip?
was there-
IN SLI NAP I Kj' WRONiGr?
Slippery
OI'LL TELL ^EZ—
wal-er-now-
wal— 0\
had To go
there
h
THINKS 1944 HENS
WILL BE IMPROVED
Expert Predicts Bigger and
Better Birds.
OH, COME OFF
NOW— I
wal-er-he-
NEEDED Some
ccal-see - so
he would have
r-er-ashes To
Put on his ict
VSJALK- SEE-
&UT RAVMIMBER-
'TiS A SECRUT//
VIE WUZ SHTEALlM
COAL flJ
SERUE^E IT.
THEY USF
LIQUID FUEL
Yes ? why-
did he vo
SliMPIN'Z
By Prof. W. C. Sanctuary, Poultry Dept.,
Massachusetts State College.
WNU Service.
The average hen will live longer in
1944 than the hen of today, and she
will probably lay more eggs and be
better looking. Progress which has
been made in the past ten years war-
rants predicting still more improve-
ment during the coming decade. Since
1924, the average egg production has
been increased, egg size has been im-
proved and general appearance of the
birds has been improved, as a result of
careful breeding methods. But while
these progressive steps have been
made, the death rate of laying birds
has increased, until that is the princi-
pal problem facing the poultryman to-
day.
In order to develop birds which will
"wear" longer, and stand the strain of
heavy egg production, a program of
breeding for longevity is being offered
to Massachusetts poultrymen. This is
the third in a series of poultry man-
agement projects presented to poultry-
men by the state college poultry de-
partment. The first of these was cen-
tered around producing healthy pul-
lets; the second was designed to keep
the pullets healthy in the laying
house. And now the third campaign is
being launched, to focus the attention
of poultry breeders on the importance
of selecting birds for their vigor, stam-
ina, and longevity.
Like the other two, this project is
co-operative in nature, with the col-
lege offering all the available up-to-
date information on the subject, with
the poultrymen keeping certain records
which will provide valuable data for
further study of the problem.
Scalding Is Replaced by
Wax in Poultry Dressing
How that attractive appearance is
given roasters by the modern poultry
dressing establishment is explained by
Prof. E. L. Dakan, chairman of the
poultry department of Ohio State
university.
Recently, he explains, a new system
has be6n installed by many of the mod-
ern plants. The chickens are no long-
er scalded to loosen their feathers.
They are dipped in a specially pre-
pared wax.
The chickens are suspended on a
carrier and bled. The carrier dips
them into warm water to loosen their
feathers without injuring the flesh.
Leaving the water bath, the wing, tail
and other larger feathers, are pulled
as the birds are drawn along. They
pass on through a drying tunnel into
the wax hath, leaving that to pass
through cool air to speed hardening
of the wax. Girls standing by the car-
rier strip wax, feathers and all, as
the chickens pass before them.
The Rooster Problem
Midwinter is a good time to consider
the rooster problem, says an authority
!n the Rural New-Yorker. Too often
the practice has been to keep the farm
poultry in just one big flock, pullets,
old hens and roosters all running to-
gether. All eggs were gathered togeth-
er, and some were pullet eggs, some
were hens' eggs, and all were more or
less fertile, since all the flock had been
running together and male birds were
with all the layers. Such practice is no
longer excusable -on the farm where
a serious effort is being made to im-
prove the quantity and quality of egg
production, and make better profits
from the poultry side of the farm.
Feather Pulling
Feather-pulling pullets should be
separated from the rest of the flock
for a few days until they forget the
habits Keep the pullers in separate
pens and- feed them meat scrap to the
extent of 10 per cent of their feed for
a week, then reduce to 5 per cent. See
that the meat scrap is absolutely free
of taint of any kind. The habit is
common where birds are housed too
closely and have insufficient exercise
to keep them busy. This is a vice be-
longing to idle birds.
Poultry Notes
During wet weather, hens should be
kept In the laying house until the aft-
ernoon, as most eggs are laid by noon
or shortly thereafter. Poultry netting
should be put under the roost poles
to prevent the hens from coming in
contact with the droppings.
* * »
Sunshine is as necessary for laying
hens as It Is for growing chicks be-
cause they use a large amount of vita-
min D through weeks of intensive lay-
ing. r
* * m
Quality eggs mean clean eggs, and
to this end keep plenty of clean straw
litter on the floor of the poultry house
every day In the year, and likewise
keep the nests clean.
• * •
When England recently boasted that
its people ate an average of 152 eggs
a year it was brought out that Cana-
dians consumed Just twice as many.
• • •
At least eight feet of space at the
feeder should be provided for every
100 chic*"' ,
V/ISE PAGAN PHILOSOPHY 1
Let not sleep fall upon thy eyes till
thou hast thrice reviewed the trans-
actions of the past day. Where have
I turned aside from rectitude? What
have I been doing? What have I left
undone which I ought to have done?
Begin thus from the first act, and
proceed; and, in conclusion, at the ill
which thou hast done, be troubled,
and rejoice for the good.—Pytha-
goras.
WHAT TO DO
ABOUT
"Acid Indigestion'
A WAY THAT RELIEVES THE
CAUSE IN A FEW MINUTES
Many people who think they have
"weak stomachs" or "indigestion,**
doctors say, suffer in reality from
nothing more serious than acid stom-
ach. And this common ailment can
usually be relieved now, in minutes.
All you do is take familiar Phillips'
Milk of Magnesia after meals. This
acts to almost immediately neutralize
the stomach acidity that brings on
your trouble. You feel like a new
person I
Try this just once. Take either the
familiar liquid "PHILLIPS' ", or the
new Phillips' Milk of Magnesia
Tablets. But watch out that you get
the Genuine PHILLIPS' Milk of
Magnesia.
ALSO IN TABLET FORM t
Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tab-
lets are now on sale at a!! drug
stores everywhere. Each tiny
tablet is the
equivalent of
a teaspoonful
of Genuine
Phillips' Miik
of Magnesia.
Phillips
%/MM. of Aia/jneiicl.
Rifts in the Lute
Don't forget that there are some-
times yawns in love affairs.
SRVES MORE TIME
and WORK
than a *10022
WASHING
MACHINE
Coleman
SElf
Ht,\T l%G
Iron
II II———M——
No Heating with Matches or Torch ...No
Waiting...Lights Instantly, Like Gas
"D EDUCE your ironing time one-third
... your labor one-half! The Cole-
man Self-Heating Iron will save you
more time and work than a $100 wash-
ing machine! Iron any place where you
can be comfortable. No endlese trips carrying
Iron from Move to board. Operating coat only
Vit an hour. Helps you do better ironing,
easier, quicker.
See your hardware or housefarnishing dealer.
If local d< :aler doesn't handle, write us.
THE COLEMAN LAMP A STOVE COMPANY
Dept.wu306. Wichita, Kans.; Chicago, 111.; La*
Angeles, Calif.; Philadelphia, Pa.; or Toronto^
Ontario, Canada. [4306]
jS0&G§
efflSJSK»"
Start the day feeling
FITand ACTIVE!
Dw't lei a sluggish omcromM
sritem hoM you bask. CLEANSE
IITERMUY WIT* 6ARF1EL0
TEA.6at rid of th* wastes thai/
einrysiiiiBastfkeepifoaiMt- ('
hf run down a«d Inactive.
Usually warka wflhla 8 to
fOhrs. MUD but promptl
At drag ttorti 15c & 10c«
GARFIELD TEA
ii.nL ljj ^
be our oil and grease agent
Tteur locality. Half million dollar lndepen-
drnt oolummy fifteen years old needs good
man quirk. To man with car willing to work
tlx foil days, earnings unlimited, welnert j
at Rochester. Texaa made 6200,00 last j
wwk. Age limit forty. Mtut have use of
good light ear. Write immediately giving
fuii details. A,M.P*t*.Vie*-Pa-eeMe*tl Sale* i
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The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, March 15, 1935, newspaper, March 15, 1935; Schulenburg, Tex.. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth437512/m1/2/: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Schulenburg Public Library.