Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 32, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 18, 1950 Page: 5 of 6
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Tol * S-
■
• ■ -
V
Sr
V of honor at an Honor Awards
dinner flven by the State Fair in Dallas’ Baker Hotel wore
Tarleton freshmen Athleen Rodgers and her escort. Bill
Tayraare.
let on History
rrinted in Bryan
Tarleton’* history was recently
published in tho Bryan Eagle,
‘ Bryan newspaper, as a port of the
special edition commemorating tho
76th anniversary of the Taxes
A&M System.
The article, reproduced from the
Bryan paper, follows:
Tarleton 8tate College, although
it did' net become a member of
the A&M System until 1917,
celebrated He fiftieth anniversary
last year. The institution first
opened its doors as a private col-
lege in the fall of 1899 with four
faulty members and fewer than
IMF students varying in age from
10 to SO years.
Knowh as John Tarleton College,
it vma named for its founder, John
Tarleton, an eccentric old bachelor,
who made and lost several fortunes
in the mercantile and cnttle busi-
ness during the roaring seventies.
In his will he designated that the
school be endowed and maintained
for the children of small farmers
and ranchers. To carry out his
wishes, ths trustee# took over oH
Stephenville College run by the
Mcllhnneys.
When the doors Opened that first
year, there was only one building
in the midst of a grasaburr patch.
Dr. W. H. Bruce was president. la
the following years there were
eight other presidents: E. E. Bram-
lette, Frank M. Martin, J. D. Sand-
•fer, E. D. Jennings, Roswell W.
Rogers, Mr. Hewlett, G. J. Nunn,
and James F. Cox.
Originally endowed with only
$75,000, the school fell into finan-
cial straits. In 1917 the people of
Stephenville and Erath county
raised the money to buy a 40-acre
campus and a farm and offered the
school to the State af Texas. The
Legislature accepted the offer, and
the first state supported junior
college came into existence as John
Tarleton Agricultural College. It
was placed under the direction of
the A&M Board of Directors......
James F. Cox, who waa president
it the time, remained, .on as tho
dean of the school, as the head ad-
ministrator was then called. He
was followed in 1919 by the late
Dean J. Thomas Davis. A nation-
ally recognised educator, Da via re-
mained the administrator until
1945, when ho retired to emeritus
status. At that time E. J. Howell,
former registrar at A&M, became
dean.
When the A&M Bond of Di-
rectors changed the administration
to the chancelorship system, the
head of Tarleton again been me
known ns the president; snd
Howell now holds thnt position.
Last year also the Legislature
' passed a bill changing the school’s
mime to Tarleton State College.
Today the school has grown until
it has little resemblance to what
it was when the state took over in
' 1917. It has a $2,000,000 plant and
a $1,000,000 building program in
progress. The original 40-acre
grasaburr patch is dotted with
buildings and beautifully land-
scaped. An additional 64 acres
nearby are now being developed
into a new and modern athletic
plant. The original 600 acre farm
has grown to 092 acres, and in
addition tho aehooi now $a* a 16-
acre poultry farm and a 6-acre
horticulture farm. \
A co-educvtienal school, Tarleton
offers complete courses in home
economics. Because ai a provision
in the founder's will, it offers two
years of high sehooi worfcv the only
state supported school to do this.
From tho fmfc, agriculture has
been one of the moat popular suo-
jects in the curriculum. Last year
the school instituted a terminal
course in agriculture which is de-
signed to give students enough
"know-how” in two years to make
a farm or raoih pay off.
-
erently
United Putt Stag Corrsependent ,W)tor-, k«w: RumI* i,«. »m to *i.e
the ImortMiofi that It htt not Bent armn
Chongjon, North Korea, Oct. 18, j to North Karoo Sovlot occupation
KB—Don’t get me wrong. I love tho *"«*• *«*» »- -
EVBEHCE REFUTES RUSSIAN DENIAL
OF RECENT AID TO N0R1R KOREA
South Koreans
The South Korean is a good fight*
ing man.
But there are times ... writ, take
today for instance.
I saw ROK soldiers riding up a
highway In carts pulled by oxen
and riding bicycles and 1 saw seve-
ral of them industriously pumping
the handles of a railroad handcar
up a stretch of tracks alongside the
highway. That’s how we advance in
this war.
I saw another crew herding a
Red fire truck they had found
along the road. The truck stopped
about every 200 yards ahd out the
South Koreans would hop, cluster
hround the hood and look inside and
eventually get the darn thing run-
ning again.
I guess I passed that fire engine
four times today and I would say
it didn’t get more than three miles
all day.
If the South Korean stops to look
at something, everyone around him
also stops and looks at the same
thing.
If 10 men are riding in a truck
and the engine quits, .all 10 jump
out and aH look under the hood.
They are the only people in the
world, I believe, who can load from
100 to 200 men into a two and a
half ton truck.
IMS. However. UP'. Retort Bonwxfcoff.
first American war rorrwapondent to
mm late North Kona, tURtt* that to
found evidence to tto contrary white ac-
eonpanylna the South Korean Srd di-
vision la IU dash up the east ooaet of
■ Korea.!
By ROBERT BENNTHOFF
UnM/Prtw Staff CtrrwptBtant
Tokyo, Oct. 18, Of!—-War booty
captured by United Nations forces
in Korea shows that Russia sent
arms manufactured as late as April
oat tills year to North Korea.
There also is ample evidence that
Soviet agents continued to play a
.major role in North Korea long
after Russian occupation troops
were withdrawn iff December, 1948.
Russia has sought to disassociate
itself from the Korean war by say-
ing that it has not given military
aid to North Korea since 1948.
But while advancing through
North Korea with the South Ko-
rean 3rd Division 1 saw stockpiles
of new Russian-made burp guns
still in * perservative grease and
bearing a manufacturer’s 1950
stamp.
I also saw Russian mine de-
factors with batteries bearing dates
as recent as Feb. 11, 1960, and
field pieces made in Russia in April
of this year.
Several Train Loads Nto
Allan
Governor Calls
Conference on
Traffic Safety
Austin, Oct. 1$ HP—Gov
Shivers called a traffic safety con-
ference today as a rising highway
death toll threatened to hit a new
aU-tisae high.
The governor, in an invitation to
public officials and civic leaders,
set the special session for Dec. 8.
In a stafaftielif released througli
his office, the governor said, "Un-
less every citisen begins to con-
centrate and work toward the re-
duction at traffic accidents, ap-
proximately 2,500 Texans will die
in motor vehicle accidents in 1950.
This will be aa all-time high, ex-
ceeding the 1949 record by some
560 deaths.”
The conference, the governor
said, will be an all-day meeting,
where officials "will learn the true
facts concerning this grave situa-
tion , . "
As truck or jeep drivers, the
South Koreans rate at least a hun-
dred notches below a Brooklyn car
driver. A ROK driver stops where
he happens to be, no matter what
part of the road he is on. He in-
variably pulls over to the side of
the road after you honk your, jeep
horn for 16 minutes, just enough so
you can pass, scraping hub caps.
Yet the same South Korean grins
as you pass, shduts "hello” or
"okay” as you squeeze by.
You get mad at them a dosen
times an hour, yet five minutes
later there’ll be something else to
give you a chuckle.
One Korean regiment decided to
practice the art of camouflage and
you never saw a greener forest
walking around. However, the idea
died quickly because American
fighter pilots usually tell North
Koreans from South Koreans be-
cause the Reds camouflage them-
selves and equipment and the ROK
soldiers do not. __
During these days of swift ad-
vances they have an interesting
way of finding mines planted in the
roads. They just put one af their
many ancient trucks at the head of
the column and strike out. As an
ROK officer told me today:
"We sehd men ui trucks down tli^'
road. When truck blow up we stop
and look for minefields.”
I saw enough such equipment
and weapons made in Russia since
1948 to fill several railroad trains.
Almost every village and town
in North Korea also shows signs of
The bust proof af all I aaw was in
Wonsan, Nerth Korea’s biggest
east coast city and. port.
The Wonsan railroad stations
bear two algae—one in Korean, and
the ether ia Russian. Most im-
portant buildings also are identi-
fied in both Korean and Russian.
The Wonaan refinery, once the
biggest in the Orient but blasted
into nibble by American air raids,
has a huge sign in Russian on the
fence outside the administration
building. Inside the plant were
more operating instructions and
building designations in Russian
than in Korean.
Wonsan airport might have been
lifted bodily from the Soviet Union.
Most of the signs on hangar doors,
on gasoline storage tanks and even
instructions inside the 17 fighter
planes I saw there were in Russian.
Inside a building, which resi-
dents said had served, as headquar-
ters for. a Russian advisory group,
I found a complete library in Rus-
sian.
Propaganda Section
A building high on a hill over-
looking Wonsan had housed the
North Korean propaganda section.
It contained stacks of Russian
handbooks and other Red literature
and desks at which translators had
worked.
* A Wonsan resident pointed out
'buildings which he said were
Be Invalid
Austin, Oct. 18 Ml—Texas’ com-
mercial fishing licenses law, aimed
at protecting the state’s coastal
marine life from out-of-state in-
vasion, was ruled unconstitutional
today by the State Supreme Court.
The law, enacted by the 51st
Legislature in 1949, permitted the
Texas Game, Fish and Oyster Com-
mission to establish yearly quotas
oa the number of commercial fish-
ing licenses to be issued with a
priority for Texans.
However, the Supreme Court
ruled that the act was discrimina-
tory and that thp limitation placed
on the number of licenses bore only
a “remote connection” with con-
servation of marine life.
The eourt, in an opinion written
by Associate Justice W. St. John
Garwood, reversed a Travis county
district court ruling and dissolved
an injunction returned against the
fishermen.
90th Division to
Hold Reunion
In Fort Worth
<$ ; '■ ' '' **
Dallas, Oct. 18 «B—The 90th
Division Association will hold its
S2»id annual reunion in Fort Worth
Nov. 10-12, T. J. Ball, president,
has announced.
Dr. James G. Gee, president of
East Texas State College at Com-
merce, and Lt. Gen. James A. Van
Fleet, commanding general of Fort
Meade, Md., will be speakers at
the annual banquet on Nov. 11.
General Van Fleet commanded
the 90th Division during World
War If.
Dr. Gee, veteran of both world
wars, is a long-time friend of Gen.
Van Fleet and once succeeded the
general as football coach at the
University of Florida.
Stephmyblle. Djuu Empiri
Wednesday, Oct. 18, 1$50
Use Daily Empire Want AdsI !
EXPERT
WATCH & JEWEIJIY
REPAIR SERVICE
Diamonds -Watches
Jewelry
MAJESTIC
JEWELRY SHOP
Travis McMahan. Owner
“Russky places.” They included a
well-eqyipped modern hospital. In-
habitants said it was open only to
Russian personnel in Wonsan!
We found abandoned photo-
NEW ARRIVAL
Susan Jean Walker was horn
Oct. 12 to Mr. and Mrs. E. E.
Walker. She is the granddaughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Sam J. Ottinger
and Emmett Walker, all of Steph-
enville.
the recent presence of Russians, graphs in many buildings, some
with notations at the bottom with
a 1950 date. They showed Wonsan
eivic leaders posing with men
dressed in uniforms obviously Rus-
sian.
Townspeople showed us the
office of the prefectural governor
—and across the hall a more elab-
orate office which they said had
been headquarters of “No. 1
Russky.”
. ..... .......
Worried About
Unpaid Bills
You can stamp your bills paid in no
time at all with one of our rapidly
extended, easy to repay loans.
The Answer lo Your Loan Needs
Auto - Furniture - F.H.A. & Conventional Loans
ELLIS INSURANCE AGENCY
198 S. Belknap
Phone 379
TNORSDAY THROUGH MONDAY • OCTOBER 19-23 IHCl.
WHAT IS ITT On* of America's greae savings events, originated by Rexall Drug Stores in 1909
— to acquaint you with reliable Rexall Drug Products st "two for the price of one plus lc."
WHEN IS IT? NOW ,.. once in the Fall, once in the Spring - just twice a year.
WHERE IS IT? At our Rexall Drug Store. Shop from this Circular
met mve during the One, the Only, the Rexall Original One Cent Sale.
Right reserved to tonit quantities.
Cosmetics
_object to tat.
.....
VLn.'i
$
SUPER VALUES
Not It Sale M»-rchandis* Sup* r Val ues
during the 1c Sole W h i I e stocks last!
fi ini ii'.iumiui
As Advertised in . . .
LI FE • POST • look • lifllii't’S • I arm .Itsu rn«i I
and on the. REXALL RADIO SHOW
starring DICK POWELL as Richard Diamond, Private Detective”
WEDNESDAY EVENINGS* NBC
Uggetf* J-U-M-8-O Six*
MUK CHOCOLATE BARS
Plain or Almond. limit 2 lari
2h,37'
MINIMAL OIL
2f"O0e
, @9 MILK
.jKJUWNISIA
>*.4t|.Jfc PM a ta.
2r*40‘
8^9 puretest
89 Alco-Rex
CBM MS31
OB ASPIRIN
RUBBING ALCOHOL
ANTISEPTIC
No faster-acting
EtofcX. asPffin made!
^2 tor 44e
The mouthwash
■mJ ol many uses.
’ Iwarl ^
ANTISIPTICua
BBS 69c
2hrSSe
Bj bSc
2fBr/Ve
Texas Weather
Affected by
Florida Storm
Mr UNITED PRESS
Florida’s hurricane blew cloud
formations across the deep South
into East Texas today.
Tho U. S. Weather Bureau at
Dallas said clouds extended as far
west as Minercl Wells at mid-
morning. On the eoast the layer
‘floated pest Galveston and Palacios
and there was some cloudiness at
Waco.
Shortly after daybreak light rain
foil at Tyler, Longview, Texarkana
and Beaumont.
Skies are expected to remain
cleat in West Texas today and fa-
morrow, with cloudiness continu-
ing in the eastern section another
36 hours. No important tempera-
ture cbangs* have boon forecast.
Tuesday’s highest temperature
waa 9l at A Bee, Victoria, Cetulla,
and Laredo, while Lubbock posted
a low maximum of 79 degrees. Last
night’s mitdniums ranged from 49
at Junction to 70 at Galveston.
Use Daily
Empire
'Wdte ■
want-ad#.
hr-
ilfc
The logical market place
for your
PROOUGE INI
DAIRY PRODUCTS
1
TRIANGLE CHEESE
^PRODUCE CO.
;
l -
Plastic Material
Now Being Used
For Many Items
By PAUL F. ELLIS
I’totw Promo ISwu Miter
New York, Oet. 18, W»—The
makers of plastic material are
finding more and more uses for :t.
Here are some of the new ap-
pliances that have come on the
market:
1. A new-type light filter made
of transparent vinylite plastic. It
blocks out the red and yellow light
from the rays of an incandescent
light bulb. It provides a white light
similar to daylight. The filter de-
vice also contains a magnifier that
nearly doubles the intensity of the
light. It is a handy device, either
for reading or sewing.
2. A combination postal scale-
ruler-letter opener, it 1* a 12-inch
nils, but also can be used to check
whether a sealed envelope requires
more than a three-cent stamp, anJ
also*as a letter opener.
8. A new-type table place mat,
requiring no laundering or ironing.
The plastic material resiats wrink-
ling and cracking, and is treated
to resist flame and boiling watt*-.
The mats will net slide or scratch
fable surface. They are easily
cleaned by merely rinsing under
the faucet or with a damp sponge.
4. New-type plastic food bajr*.
including a new closure steep that
fastens merely by slipping one
end through a slit in the onposite
end, completely sealing the bag
and its contents. The material is
tasteless, odorless and nen-toxt',
and yet rotainc moisture. The bags
are designed fa keep any type ef
food fruah.
6. A new, flexible, drip-proof
sink strainer. The device does net
chip despite faugh handling
against the side of a sink or gar-
bage can. The strainer aufamatic-
elly tilts so that no liquid runs out
of drain holes.
8. A new telescopic whfak broom.
The device ha* three different de-
grees of bristle—one, for “suede,”
with stiff bristles; two, for “up-
holstery”; and thitd, for “clothing.”
The bristles can be pushed bee*
into the handle, similar to the clos-
ing ef a telescope, when not being
used.
7. A bath tub lounge seat. The
article weighs slightly more than
one pound, and is aasily inflated dr
deflated. Before filling the tub r
With water, the inflated lounge
seet ia placed in a desired position.
Suction cups on the bottom keep
; Marino Brigadier General John
H. Ru*»eH w»# appointed * Wer-
TABLETS
For sweetening.
%gr. HOTS-teg. *1.83
2 tor
Mescal's Almond
HAND LOTION
Reg. Me Put m mm
2 tor 60c
@9 QUIK-I
Plain or mere, treated \
Pkg of 36, Reg 29c i
Imit 1 |Og i
Urn* Talk
Assorted CN0C0LATIS
Milk or dark choc, coated c
Unit 1 In
2 LIS.
CHBICTMAf CAMS
Medford
total 21 diflorent and
IcstoMcartt. KG. Me
2 hr 60’
•asolllcards,Raf.tl, 2 for 1.01
BATH POWDER
I oaacts. KG. 11 M
2*V'
LAVEMOCR COLOGNE
4 ounces. Rag. $100, 2 for 1.01
Lanriaas right cream..,
Helen Cornell
Hormone CREAM
lhat iar. KG UN
2*1"
Cascade Elite Lima
POURS PAPES
50 white single Sat sheets
KG He
2 tor 66c
M MATCHING ENVELOPES, Rag. 65c 2 far He
Rax-Me Id
HOUSEHOLD
GLOVES ,
latex rubber; sues 7-9. Atj
SEC 7Sc fair
r,
Katpsate Faldad
FLORAL HOTES
Desk secretary with 40
notes md 40 envelopes
KG Me
2 tor51c
Wonderful
ADRIENNE
Beauty Aids
Any 2 identical items
regularly 75c each. .
2 tor 26c
Cokf Crt*n . . 3 ozs • Skin Lotion. . 4 ozs.
Astringent 4 on • Lipstick . . 4 stales
Liquid Brilliantme..........2 ounces
Cleansing Cream...........3 ounces
Finishing Cream..........3H ounces
Foundation Cream..........4 ounces
Skm Softening Cream......3*4 ounces
Skm Freshener............4 ounces
Face Powder............5 shades
(Henridge Unit
WRITING PAPER
24 bordered large flat sheets, 24 envdofat
Choice ot colors. ^
Unit 1 Bel. EACH
Ammoniated
TOOTH PASTE
No unpleasant after taste! Limit Three
3K ounce Tubes
3*79'
‘‘8440” Oatmeal
Complexion SOAR
Box of six 3 Vi-ounce cakes G&
Limit 1 Bax
faMlUi RexUlonq
COUGN
SYRUP
2 r,r60c
COLD CREAM
14k. to. teg- 81J8
. 2t~P'
!-«. HUH SIR
^20.3^
floral
Sheets
WRITING
PAPEE
14 tat ihrntx. 14 amaloem
-oaBo wrapped
. KG. Ha
2 ter
Helen Cornell
BUBBLE BATH
2B paakats. Rag $1.M
2*rW
Sltque
CREAM SHAMPOO
4ax take cr to. KG He
2 far 96'
• a Victoria 2-ft.
' WATER
SRTTLE
Store this buy with a tnend
and aach have one am price I
KG. *2.15
2 hr
ttombto tot** C*mbh0th*
2 Bottles ILAS01 HAND LOTION plas
1 Bex 300 KLENZO FACIAL TISSUES
Limit 1 Combination
*173 Value NTH FIR
TOU CAN DEPFND ON ANY DRUG PRODUCT
THAT BEARS THE NAME
MRJ Of MMNfSM Rexall Pureterf.....Reg 50c Pt 2 Iff 51c
CREAM RexaN.... lVi ounces, Ref. 50c 2«DrS1e
ENTCLOPES W4 $«e.............tt*. Reg. 10c 2Mile
____ Rexall Aspirex.......Reg 10c Pkg. 2 *nr 11«
ONE LACES27* assorted................Reg. 5c 2falc
Card ef 30, Rig 10c 2 ter 11c |
I—urn PEARLS 17“ strand..........Reg 49c 2*er58c
roan urn two blades.............Reg. 50e 2Mr51e
m mm Ptntic. ctwlci * colon.....,R*g- 3fc 2 Mr 40c
THOM INKS assorted colors......KTs, Reg. Ifc 2M11c
m coma knit .................fieg lOe Ztarllc
FMCT10II TAPE fa"x 10’ roll...........Reg 15c 2&rMc
arm PM steel or gilt Brass......2ffs, Reg We llif Ik
TOOTH BRUSH Klewo, medium size......Reg 15c llelk
COMM STROP Cherry Bark......8 otmees, Reg 79c 2 Mr Ik |
ATHUTFS LMMENT Rex-Rub.....6 ounces. Reg 89c 2 tor Ifc
MNR BLARES Stag..PEg. to 5, Reg 25c 2 to21c
EYE LOTION Rexall Eytlo......8 ounces. Reg 59c Zfalfc |
PTES genuine imported briv.........Rag *1.00 2Dlf 1J1
Cfcf TABLETS Rexall.........Tin *1 30. Rag. 39c Ifcrdfc
8LYCERM SWPOSITMHES.........17s, Reg 3fc Jfsrffc
REX-SALVME for burns .IVFoune* tube, Reg 53c 2 to 54c
H9RSEMU HOWRAHT Wickjtyle . .♦ *.. Rtf. 59c 2tolfc
POWER Rexafl.......6 ounces. Reg. 6k 2 to lie
____5 ounces, Reg 49e ItoSfc
puretest. 295. M Bonce, Reg. 25c 2to2fc
tfctow 2-quKl. ....Reg $2 50 2to2.SI
PRO-CAP
ADHESIVE TAPE
Less irritating! Stick* better-
stays put-may be left on body
longer. 1 in. a 5 yd. spool
2 hr 36'
euw-swAss
Sterile, eenoe-tipped
appllcaters. Pkg of 100
RIB. 27e ^ ^
2 f»r 22‘
fflU
y
HTSItHIC P9WCR
CRUM MR TOW
NtUCUROCMtOMI
Balmont
FOUNTAIN DEN
Gold-colored cap with dip-.
goWfleM medium point
Choice of 3 cetos.
Ki
Mb
-tot
ce ot i cows.
2 (hr St*
AfTEMMVE LOTWH lavender
Reg. 63c. Pt 1 to I4»
4 ounce, Reg 75c ttoWe
SBIKKeARSIR Omturex 5tunces.1eg. 5fc
HTMMHEH PUMHI 3% medicinal Reg 45c Pt.
AMMtotd
KSfU
2to1
ItoSlc
Reg 4k PL 2to 4fc
.3 ounce tin, Reg. Ifc 2to4fc
1 eunce, Reg 291 2toA
' lffttSf!
tint Tor ••
CANDY POPE
Cluster of 10 ktofitus Mg
Pfa*'
a*,//'
a-r.!isas.s
ISttTSwLwa «FC MW, .»',«« 2IW*
MkTB rat tw,........run fwx w a. JVW
SS.l8fiSr'.-.'^i-2a:&2ISS
w*"*
MONEY SAVERS
Llbbey Huntsman 11 -ox.
GLASS TUMBLERS
Chip proo* edjn
2 tor 16e
Elegant
FACIAL TISSUES
Pkg. at 300
2 hr 33C
“Big Volvo”
ENVELOPES
854 siie- jjto'gto
Package of 100 _^P SK to
Limit t Pack
NOT It SAlf MIRCHANOISF BUT
IXCFPTIONAl VAIUF5 TOO GOOD TO MIJS
Klwnxo
■AIR BRNSR
CunkiMffM
1 2 styles, nylon
hr,tiled Value 98c a*
BOTH
FOR
"$50,000”
CHOCOLATE SYRUP
Household tin
2 hr 23*
MINERAL Dll
nm
2r»S
Odorless, colorless. taeMaea.
MX-MLTZn
Mtoliemg auiciac tablets
a-, 2 r*53‘
2*.t*>
j purctcsl VITAMINS
S NAVI NO CREAM
Chaica ol brwWass 3H ss.
or tether 3V6 av
REA. Ifc Tate gm**
2(*rS0c
REXALL SHAVE CREAM brushless or lather. 2 far 36c
LANOLIN SOAP Bo> three 4 V, or cakes 2 to Nc
TOOTH PASTE M.lk of Magnesia 3fa « 2 to 51*
DISINFECTANT No. 6 Pine Oil........Pint 2 to 96c
DISH TOWEL Cannon. 15.2* in........ 2ter3k
HOCK TOWEL Cannon, 14 a 70 in........ 2f*r3k
WASHCLOTH Cannon. 11 x 11 in........2f*r17e
MNP CREAM Mascal t Wi ounca ,ar 2 far 51c
OLIVE OIL Monreale mrported.....17 ounce 2 to 1J6
BAHT OH. Tiny Tot. Antnophc .... S ounce 2to5Bc
TOOTH PASTE RaxaB......Uk ounce tube 2 far 20c
CASCARA COMP, laxatto tabs. Hinkles. 100's 2 to 48*
Nigh Petaucy
COD LIVER Ml
nm
2 Art*1
Source of ettaniiu A M
2*3”
MfWtR'f YMSY TA
TRACT AND MON TAMMS.
BIT A-CAM Vitaato • aomplaa. .
art i fm 1.01
ttrs Star 74*
MTs filterXII
AIM CAPSULES
4 essential vitamma
k la 1 ensatea NTs
2*rf**
2*2"
I
1
OARCY S j^staU DRUGS
Prescription! Phoer 49-llt
SERVICE DRUG
Cosnetirs •Ttkmttos
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Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 32, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 18, 1950, newspaper, October 18, 1950; Stephenville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1133413/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Dublin Public Library.