The Corrigan Press (Corrigan, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 13, 1936 Page: 6 of 8
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Tn o©mug an rams
|1 Mineral Oil
(Heavy)
Quart
69c
75c
Lf3terin«
59c
75c Bayer's
Aspirin, 100’s
59c
26c Listerine
Tooth Paste
15c
$1.30
Syrup Pepsin
80c
fiOe
Syrup Pepsin
40c
50e Irina
Tooth Paste
34.C
iriV
75s O. J.
Bounty Lotion ...
$1JW
Aprarol
$1.10
50c
Prophylactic
Toot* Brush
59c
$1.00
Wine of Cardnl
67c
60c
Mentholatum
44c
DRUG SPECIALS . . ,
for SATURDAY and MONDAY
AT THE BUSY
CASH DRUG STORE
FOUNDED ON TALUKS
PHCMVE 425 AND 439
B4»ki 'Em Twhy*—Tomorrow (TlL^ MPAMDBD ON TALUB1
PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED FOR LESS
LUFKIN, TEXAS
30c
Mantholatum
23c
3Sc Ever-reaAy
Blades
28c
25c Black-
Draught
15c
10« Cashmere Bouquet Soap 8e
It Castor 00, qL ..........TSc
$J, 1 quart Milk of
Magnesia ............ (Sr
ll.K. 1 phat Iron, Quinhta,
Stry rhfilne ............7Jc
50c Castor Oil, pint . SOe
Mr 1 pint Standard Maka
Miaernl tfil ('heavy) . 39.
#1.24 Lysol ............. 89c
52.00 SSfl ............. $1.59
*5e Jad Salta............. 59c
80c Syrup af Kies......... 44c
75c Vtck'a Salve.......... ,50c
$1 I-OJ. Quinine............ 89c
00c Vi-at. Quinine......... 59c
40c Vi-or. Quinine ........ S5c
25c Vi-oa. Quinina......... 20c
*1 Stella Vitna ........... 09e
a« *«...................i$c
** ......................
80c Lyaol .................qo«
50c Euraline ..............Ata
50c Ungaontine, tuba.......Me
$1-20 Scatt Emulsion.......0t«
Wc Scott Emulsion........ Me
35c Sloan'a Liniment...... I4c
75c Ayarol ........... 59c
75e Hooper ToMorem..... 59c
$1.50 Hooper TrHcrrm . $1.1$
!5c Palmolive Shampoa 20c
50c 100 Pure .tipirii
Tabletn ........„,,.. J5«
VOc 1 do/.Pare Anplria
Tablet/., 3 for........... 10c
75c KJetci/er Cantoria ..... 59c
3Sc ’DuckeT'a Worm Syrup 24e
35c Whdde Cream
Vermifuge ..............34a
$1.25
Argatnne
69c
50c Grore’i
Chill Tonic
2S« Flotcher Caatorta.......19.
28c Auto-Strop Marias .... 11/
50c Durham-Duplex Blades *y«
98c Gem Razor Blades..... H,
7tc Fosntaia Syringa.......PM
28c Kleenex ...............it,
•8c Btsodal .............. ip,
30c Snow Liniment.........19«
05c Hot Water Bottle.......SOe
7Se Raeme Bearsy.........59,
75c Hunt's Salre......... J9e
*1 Najol ..............ST<
25e Gillette Blade* ........22c
35e Under* Razor I Andes ... 22e
$1 Lucky Tiger............S7e
30c Bronte Seltzer........ 2Se
$1 Krank Lemon Cream.... 79e
75e Vaseline Hair Tank 59c
We Vaseline Hair Tanle 33e
Q n 50c PhilUpa Milk 91
JOC of Magnesia...............04C
Zi p OQ *L25 CaroidABiU Qf- 50c Hind's Honey o A onin^"*’ 21r
B,by Pere?...............Salt Tablets...............UOC and Almond CrLm........34c ?“““ ..................
15e Putnam
$1 08 . 34c 3Se Vick'. cs. DFW.fr.................25c
Ye Olde English Come From
Venetians, Scientists Discover
Trace Its Origin to Period
Hundreds of Years
Before Christ.
Ye OUIe Benulye Shoppe may
sound like Merrle England to the
customers, hut such spelling really
originated In Venice, where the citi-
zens rode around In ye olde gondolas
hundreds of years before Christ,
scientists of the Smithsonian Insti-
tute announce.
llecent discoveries of mysterious
Runic tables tn Venice, according to
Dr. J. P. Herrington, language ex-
pert of the Smithsonian, prove that
the Germanic languages of ancient
Britain had their beginnings In the
writings of the Venetians.
"These ancient Venetians were a
people without a history, who were
early swamped by the Roman em-
pire," Doctor Herrington said. “It Is
1 only through the recent discoveries
j of Runic Inscriptions that we can
i Imagine their Importance as the mid-
! dlemen between the Germanic races
and the Mediterranean."
Straight Lined Letters.
The letters In the language which
spread northward before the Ger-
mans and the English had learned
to write, consisted entirely of
straight lines, which were easy to
carve In wood and scratch In mctnl,
he said.
“When scholars began seeking the
origin of these strange letters they
found nothing like them In either
Latin or Greek,” Doctor nerrington
continued. “Recent discoveries traced
them to the Adriatic sea and have
revealed In surprising manner their
origin as coming from a people
scarcely known to history but who
gave their name to the modern city
of Venice.
“They were known as the Venetl,
while the swamp region where
Venice now stands was called Venetla.
The Inscriptions found on golden
rings used as necklaces and upon
ancient helmets show the language
of the Venetl to share peculiarities
with ancient German, a corruption
of which once was the language of
England, Scotland and Scandinavia.
out way of recording epitaphs and
for cutting Inscriptions on offerings
to the undent Germanic gods.
Date Back to 200 A. D.
'•[’he oldest such Inscriptions In
Scandinavia dale from 200 A. 1>,
which shows that it took the Vone
Haim three centuries or more to
travel up through Germany, to the
Ear North and to England.
“The ancient Scandinavians, Eng-
lish and Scotch were peculiarly ad-
dicted to Venetian Runic writing and
left more relics of It thun did tire
Dutch and Germans.
“It Is 11 source of great satisfac-
tion to unravel at last the secret of
the ltunes, and to prove definitely
that they brought from the ancients
of the Mediterranean a culture,
vestiges of which may still he seen
la the ‘ye olde’ signs on some shops
In modern American cities.”
Grow a garden of
GRADUATES
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breeding institute
For 80 years,
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organization,
through continu-
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Our foundation stock is de-
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Breeding Institute Stations at
Rochester, Mich., and Salinas, Cal.
This purebred stock is then used
for seed production on our own
farms, or under our direct super-
vision. The seed crops from this
stock are sold only after thorough
tests have shown that they are of
proper quality and germination.
That is why — North, South,
East, West—you can buy seeds
from the Ferry display in your
neighborhood store with the great-
est assurance that they will repro-
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Look for the Ferry display be-
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for free copy of our Home Garden
Catalog. Ferry-Morse Seed Co.,
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THE FERRY-MORSE SEED
BREEDING INSTITUTE
Dovoted to improving and maintaining the
quality of America’s garden seeds.
(ran
EMI
“I hivq woo ettf 300
awards lor baking and
have ased many brands el
[ baking powder. I now use
Clabber Girl, euloslrely."
Mrs. M. E. R» nation
Indiana Stale Fair Winner
*>***■■
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Gilbert, J. R. The Corrigan Press (Corrigan, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 13, 1936, newspaper, February 13, 1936; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth645740/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Livingston Municipal Library.