The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, June 8, 1917 Page: 5 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 24 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
!
\
r
THE BASTROP ADVERTISER. BASTROP, TEXAS
SPORTING
ALL OUR HOUSES TODAY
ARE OF GLASS
SOME HURLERS NOT AS
DANGEROUS AS THEY SEEM
Plank, for Inttance, Says Cobb, Seems
to Have Eye Glued to Runner, But
Cannot Stop Thefts.
ii jilt< |i..r ii|t|•<-jti's to be
g nt first base all tin' tiin*1, you
not think ilmt tii> |s in position to
thnw .HIT there. Dililli' I'lank for
example. seems to have his eye glued
to tlir runner on tin- Initial station l.ut
In* cannot throw then* unites hi' Just
lobs ilii' hall an*l hi' Ik tin ri'fori1 an
easy man to get a lead on. Sonii' other
men who ilu nut Kt'i'in to In- paying
much attcnilon to the runner really
arc watching hi 111 out of tin- <-orn-'t' ol
their eyes. <'uld**oll, B'tidcr. I'oombs,
Walsh ami Shawkc.x arc examples of
right-hand pitchers who arc hard to
run bases against. Walter Johnson Is
II toilgll one, too, Im'i1'!'.l.--e lie gets till'
bull away so fast and throws with so
much speed thai (he catcher Is ready
to peg hi'fore you are anywhere near
hccoiiiI base, says Ty Cobb, In the
Auicrlcau Hoy.
Never slide headfirst. Ii Is i; .nger-
ous to you, heciiiise the man eoverlug
the hag Is likely to step on you or
J up for the hull ami conic il< vn on
your haml. Also, a I • •.•ullirst slider Is
C! y
11
By CHARLfcS G. SHAW, Professor of Philosophy of New York Oliverr-ity.
The umn in the glass lioiifco is not sup|Hiscil to throw stojies, If hi*
'rinks windows in other houses, what will happen to hi* fragile ilwcMu;
when (lie other man reiiliates? At the stiiny time, ' ntirisni is a in «« sin
part of human life, just as ucid is an element of food or the bitter ta-te
i an ingredient in the flavor of eolfee.
Hut the glass house is not only fragile hut traiispiirent. Y< u eriti-
/e your neighbor anil your neighbor liegins to look into ami through vour
lilice, Judge ami yoti will he judged. Your house of glass throw- your
liie open to the world. You see something awry when you jner into the
jia>s windows of il)<- other's house, but lie sees more that i- <|tios;mrabl"
hi you.
^ our glass house shields you from neither mis-ilcs n r critici-n.. To
live in a glass bouse must be uneoinforlablc, since glass i> not the proper
material to tise m constructing a comfortable dwelliti:.'. No one would
think of calling it a home. l.iglit cotncs through the roof and floor, wall
and wall. In the glass house you have no privacy. You mu in all
direction*, but you can be seen from all directions, too. If the glass ol
your house were adamant von would find your vitrified dwelling uii<oin-
I'ortablc, ll could be no place for the human soul. Xevcrtholcs . whole
•ities are now being built of glass houses. The house may loi a- though
it were made of brick or concrete, but in reality il is a dwelling of glass,
< here no private life is possible.
No man livcth to himself alone. Hut if it is bad to live in seclusion,
it is not much better to live in lack of seclusion.
The n< ,'d of contemporary life is to find some new form of seclusion.
We must live together and ea* together and travel together, but we may
le able to find some new way of nourishing the private inner life. This
i.i-w serin, inn volt must find, lest your life be all public and miscellaneous.
A man's house is his castle, a place of defense. In your glass castle you
must find the new seclusion. •
mid there Is no use wrangling ahoiit It. 1
Most kicks are made I up ll"-
■1 aer who has been called out an.*
v i Tile athlete tries to make the
sr. tiire the "goat" In order that the
!'i■!I iw who has failed to go through
wlih - ii a11cinpteil st nl ur some other
I,t:( n present an "alibi' tor fulling
lovvn.
Patriotism in the Kitchen.
m. \
>na
urt ••
ell housewife
uniform, the
in with the
Ecidie Plank.
flOt feared b\ lln' Imsi .'|| ;111d they
may block you otT rather roughly if
they )iet a chance. KM Klherfeld. then
with New York, cui' d me of sliding
headfirst in nhout the lirst ^i.nic 1 ever
played against him. I went Into sec
ond on my stomach and lie raine down
on my head and sat there. It Jarred
me up so badly that I Immediately
made up my mind I would learn to
slide fee)first and 1 didn't rest until
I had acquired at lensi the rudiments
of the Hci'omHIshuicnt.
I.et the umpires alone win ii close de-
cisions afe called against you on the
liases It doesn't :<m you anything al-
ways to be kicking and if you persist.
It may cause the umpires to turn
against you and give you the worst of
if. Any umpire who Is at all co mpe-
tent calls plays the way he si-.-s them.
Tie may be wrong, but even if he Is,
the decision, once made, must stand
Mother's
5 Cook Book
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
• 1 > dons her im-
kitchen apron and
pi m :' i|i'termina-
tion to do her I it toward the great
> ..oil ciiM-. rvatlon i iuih '. 'i i - as much
i patriot as the man who runs a plow
or carries a gun, said Miss Hub I • • •!I
■ I' tli"' M sinirI ('ollcge of Agriculture
' •Celltly In lllsclisslnthe housekeep
• ■ r's part In the war.
"However, most housewives i ;*e be-
coming alarmed and confused at the
numerous warnings on all sides—
•eliminate waste,' 'substitute Inexpen-
sive foods for expensive ones,' 'use left
overs.' If the women representing the
.•iiinmi.ooo homes of this country are to
accomplish anything they must stop
; talking and begin work now In a sane
and systematic manner," said Miss
Hell.
"The llrst logical step for every
housewife Is to make a thorough study
■ >f food values. For the last 15 years
home economics specialists have been
preaching food values but very little
attention was given this subject until
recent years. Now when we stand face
, to face with the present great food
powder. Combine mixtures and drop
by spoonfuls Into hot buttered niudln
rings set in a buttered bnkli g pan.
Hake '.ilitll llrill. Nerve with roast beef.
Facts in Figures
Honolulu has 'J,."iOO registered
aiitoinohib s.
I.os Angeles has s.">7 Ileitis
trial concerns, employing -7..VI
persons.
San Francisco has !!i in
du-irinl plants, emph.ylti^ 17.-
• !"<! persons.
< nc county In 1 < 'ins*Ivanin
has l-.ono acres of undevclojicd
coal lands.
Hawaii con'.ain ■ 1 I oo • I 'm'eil
States siihliers and '.'.immi Na
t 'i tl • Juardsiuen.
I -i I • I '111«'i H t nninsloii -sit, . I'!' 11-
iidelplua, bought for S_,.*tOii.iMiii
in IPM!, -o|,: a few day s a .ii for
s| . ,1111 | k 111,
Simple Meals.
For an ordinary family dinner, the i
Be Htroni«:
It mnttcrn not how deep tniirticlio 1 I tie
wronK,
How liarrl tln< tiatlli' tfno*. tli" I"?, bow
long.
I"Blnt not, tlKltl on. Tomorrow ceine.i lb"
■on k '
Common But Nourishing Foods.
When one buys hamburger steak pre
pared at the market for the usual ens
tomer, made from all sorts of nits uf
meat and not alwajs the Mud one en-
joys eating. It seems a more economical
■way to use the tougher portions of
steaks for hamburger and do the grin I
lng and mixing at home. A small
tough end of sieak will with a bit of
suet or salt pork and a half cupful of
cooked oatmeal, well seasoned wlih a
dash of garlic, a pinch of cloves, n
grating of nutmeg and plcntj ot .ilt
and pepper to season, made into cat <
he a most satisfvlng and tie-ix bit el
meat, and one also has the sni t ion
of knowing how It Is prcpni' I : nd that
It has cost less than If bought In lb"
market.
Cornmeal Mufrh.
Take one cupful of cornmeal, four
fiipfuls of Hour, a ol s ilt
and cook In a double holler after bring-
ing to a brisk boll. Add the cornmeal
to the boiling water very slowly, then
place In the double boiler and cook
three hours Hour Into a bread pan
and let It stand to mold. <"ut In thin
slices . nd fry In a little hot fat. brown-
ing the mush oil both sides.
Corn Cakes.
Take a cupful of canm d corn, t ilf
tea poouful of salt on- cupful of
flour, three-fourthi of a cupful of «n Ik,
, lf a tablcspoonfnl ot uigi r, one
nhlespoonful ot baking powder and
two well beaten egg To the corn add
the milk sugar and eggs well beaten
Mix and lit -"It, Hour at I baking
nutritious part of the meal Is composed
of a meat or a substitute, a starchy
vegetable and a green one. «Mir house-
wives all over the land are warned of
the shortage of food and those who
have the Interests of the many at
heart are willing to live simply, cutting
down the main menl of the day to
three courses and having them of good
wholesome nutritions food. No small
-'imp of vonien can accomplish much,
but when all are willing the results
cannot be measured.
Another Hamburg Steak.
Take niie poum' of I one cupful j
of bread crumb one fourth of an
union, chopped Hue, one half of ;i tea-
spoonful of sab and pepper to taste,
ff the crumbs are verv dry add a lit-
tle sweet milk, tnt ke Into hulls and
oimk In a well buttered, hot frying pan.
} UxCc-t J / U^ vrtJ&L
A Rumor Cure.
A rumor cure has been found by an
i.Jlicial ill that part of Kent which is
1 m mi 11; i ;-| > liable to (German activities.!
People 11ax e brought to tills olliclal
jail sorts oi stories and conjectures of'
u,■i sii i ions lights and acts of espion-
age by perfect I.v Innocent people, and
a great deal of time was wasted In
>nvcstlgai ng them. Finally the man
hit on a cure. Kvcry person who
' ii in - io him with any story was given
per and pencil and requested io
"put It In writing, If you please, and
i ; It" In !!iosi cases the Imparter
■ net information would balk at
thi' and so none hut stmles with
sum truth were brought to the o(||-
clnl. This custom "caught on" In the
town, and now wherever anyone tells
i partlcuh ly tall story, he or she Is
inlet I v handed a pi paper and
| pencil.
After si'Vc
v ears
shortage every woman sees the abso-
lute necessity Of having this knowl-
edge. She sees that without It she is
helpless to make the proper selections
and the proper substitutions."
Things That Are New.
Fsln;: a gasoline engine for power, a
machine has been Invented by a New
Jersey teacher that digs up gardens or
small farms, manual labor being ri>-
rpilrcd only to guide It.
A recently patented tent Is suspend-
ed from a tripod and extended by a
hammock that It contains, while a
piece of canvas can be fastened under
It to completely inclose its occupants,
A Chicago Inventor's haml signal
light for automobllists Is so arranged
that when mounted on a man's linger
the extending of his hand to warn fol-
lowing vehicles automatically switches
on the current.
The net weight of the content* of a
container Is given automatically by the
rid ol a new scale attachuii nl that
balances an empty container again t
the inn In use and causes the weight
of the latter to be omitted from the
scale reading.
To maintain even temperature in
rooms a Tennessenn has invented a
cover for steam or hot water radiators
that Is equipped with uutouuitl'.'ull,.
opened and closed shutters.
An Hnglish inventor Is experiment-
ing with corrugated hulls for seagoing
vessels, contending they at conomlcal
for fuel, have more cargo space and
aie stronger and less sensitive io wave
motion than smooth hulled craft.
)f experiments
an Austrian scientist claims to have
found a perfect substitute for coiton
In the fiber of the siinclng nettle,
which he says can Me grown in -ailli
eient quantity to supply the need of
(iennanj and Austria.
To remind business men of engage
incuts a cabinet has been invented
Willi a pigeon hole for everv lo min-
utes. a memorandum placed in a hole
completing an electric circuit that
rings a bell and Hashes a light when
the time for that hole arrives.
Uses Auto in Evangelism.
A Faiillc coast evangelist - touring
the cetuitry with his family in a two
and one-half-ton motor truck, which !c
has lifted up as his home. The vehicle
11! I'lli'ts'llltlch lit 11 •! 11 nil because ,i|| is
light-colored bodv are painted mi> ■ t-
oiis quotations from the s piin.s
sa.vs ilie Milvvaukee Journal.
At the rear of the car Is an observa-
tion platform, from which step* lead
down to the 4Miind. It can b uti <r- I
as au outdoor pulpit. A door | nl
from tie platform Into a room having
window seals on either side, which
serves as a living room. Tie- remain-
ing space is occupied by disappearing
beds, a sn all kitchen, and a cupboard
that serves as a pantry.
DANGEROUS CALOMEL
IS SELDOM SOLD NOW
Calomel Salivates! It Makes You Sick and You Lose a Day's Work—Dodson's
Liver Tone Acts Better Than Calomel and Is Harmless for
Men, Women, Children—Read Guarantee!
E^rv fintpgist here, yes! your druggist and
everybody's ciruogist has noticed a great falling-
off in the sale of calomel. 1'hey all give the
same reason. Dodson's Liver Tone is taking its
place.
"Calomel is dangerous and people know it while
Dodson's Liver Tone is safe ami gives better re-
sults," said a prominent local druggist. Dodson's
Liver Tone is personally guaranteed by every
druggist. A large family-sized bottle costs only 50
cents and if you find it doesn't take the place of
dangerous, salivating calomel you have only to ask
for your money back.
Dodson's Liver Tone is a pleasant-tasting, pure-
ly vegetable remedy, harmless to both children
ami adults. Take a spoonful at night and wake up
feeling tine, no sick headache, biliousness, ague,
Answered.
"I'll, what is a fund of Informa-
tion?" asked the kid who could ask a
thousand dollars' worth of questions
per dscal month.
"Oh, It's merely a little collection
tnkrn up occasionally to provide the
benighted heathen with school books
anil other superfluous paraphernalia,"
responded pa.
Hardened Veterans.
Another thing Will widowers go to
war, or will It be considered that
they have served their term?—Pallas
Ncvvh.
Spartan Woman Suffered Untold Torture*
but who wants to be a Spartan? Take
"Femenlnn" for all female disorders.
I'rlec title and $1.00.—Adv.
Diplomatic.
lilundcr—I say, who Is that fat,
homely, coarse-featured woman sitting
over there?
Daggett—That, sir, Is my wife!
' Blunder—So It Is; so It Is. Stupid
of me. Thought for a moment It was
mine.
FROM KC/.KM \ AMI IttNRWORM
You can obtain Instant, relief by us-
tn« Tetirriii<\ also the best remedy
known for Chafes. Bites of Tnwerts,
Tetter. Itching Piles, liurtis, Chilblains,
old ItchlnK Sores, etc. Because > .m
have spent hundreds of dollaru and ex-
perlenced no rell f for your ttchlmr
sliln troubles, besides devoting a great
deal of energy soratchtng and pnw'ng
at the plague sprtt until the blood Is-
sued forth, don't despair. Nature wisely
provides a rennjdy for every ill that
flesh Is heir to. Tederlue will cure you
permanently, positively and completely,
nothing else will.
Sold by drugglHts or sent by mall for 60<\
by J. T. Shuptrlne. Savannah, Oa.. Adv.
New Language in Making.
A new language Is in the making in
France, where the French and English
troops have developed a peculiar 'lan-
guage, known only to themselves,
which answers all their common needs.
The words nonplus the olliclal Intur
prefers, but un Hnglish soldier with
no French at all can ask a French sol-
dier with no Hnglish at all for vlr
tuall.v anything lie wants and gets It
HEAL ITCHING SKINS
sour stomach or clogged bnwek Dodson's Liver
Tone doesn't grijx- or cause inconvenience all next
day like calomel.
1 ake a dose of calomel tonight and tomorrow
you will feel sick, weak and nauseated. Don't lose
a day's work!
Dodson's Liver Tone is real liver medicine.
You'll know it next morning because you wdl
wake up with your head clear, your liver active,
bowels clean, breath sweet and stomach regulated.
You will feel cheerful and full of vigor and ready
for a hard day's work.
You can eat anything afterwards without risk
of salivating yourself or your children.
(iet a -bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone and try il
on my guarantee. You'll never again put a dose
ot nasty, dangerous calomel into your stomach. Adv.
GREEN MOUNTAIN
ASTHMA
TREATMENT
ht.UMlitril l-ein-'dy for ntXf
yearn ami result of ninny yeara
experience In treatment of
tli rout and lung Ulbvaocu by
Ur. J. II Otilld.
f ree Sample snil Praetti'iU
Treatise en Asthma, It* ratine,
treatment, en ., unit upon ra-
mi • t .'.v. >k ft "i at driiKi.:tata.
J. K.GI II.D CO., llU| rt, Vi.
I lllIDFn of all klnilN l> HKlit null * U1 If
I 11 Rfl £4 X tt V ll ll ll V I) ill.) In ill or Mil io
FRECKLES
Now la tli• Tim* to < rt Hid of Ttimo
I Kir Mpolt.
Thcrc'f no longer th« aUght* t nrt d of i
filing athoined of your fr# ckl« . us tho
pr« rlptlnn othln* — double strength — l« |
i;tiarnnt#f(l to removo thai* hotnHy spot*
h lmply nn ounce of othlne—ilouMts :
DtrertKth from your HiuKK'vt. and apply u
lit t! 4* of U night and morning and you
should soon sri that even llm w, nt fr. « Ul< m
have 'i;iin to disappear, while the lighter
on N h«ve vnnlshid entirely It In seldom 1
that more thiiti one ounce In nr«'«lf(i to com-
pletely ch-nr the skin and gulti a beautiful
clear complexion
He sure to ask for tho double strength
othlne, tis this In sold urder guarantee of
money back If It falls to remove freckles.—
Adv •
AStMMA tmilHUl
Ucuukra O. Kiiua &
purchano any wrlU'. giving
& Itru., JoU IX'pL, liuJTiUo, N.
r-
W. N. U., HOUSTON, NO. 23--1917.
Another Rehash.
first (iiirtU'iier- -'nitons doln' nny
Kin nl yt't?
Soi.'oihI Ditto—Yi'p; comln' strong
now.
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove's
The Old Standard Grove'i Tasteless
chill Toaic is equally valuable as a Gen- [
era! Tonic because it contains ?h<s well
known tonic properties of QUININE anil
IKON. It acts on tho I.iver, Drives out
Malum, Enriches the Blood and Builds
up the Whole ,iJ> stem 50 cents.
A Whit* U Boat.
Kiting is keeping right tip with Ilia
news.
I wuu In one of those iiriii rhnlr
liiiH'luHunts svht'ti ii tiH's>riiger buy hur-
rleil In.
"(Minnie n white U-bout, <iulck," ho
(leinundeil.
Wiilumt hi'sltntlon the clerk pushed
:t vnnllln eelalr neross the countt r.
The U-bout \v:is "sunk" In tlire«
quick munches.- Rostou l'oat.
She Annexed Them.
"Wliiit possessed Kdlth to inurry
that old codger?"
"Ills possessions."
❖ <• ♦ <4* +❖ ❖ ♦ •> ♦ •> ❖ ❖ ❖
GIRLS! MAKE A
BEAUTY LOTION
WITH LEMONS
V
*
♦
❖
<•
❖
♦
•••
LIFT YOUR CORNS
OFF WITH FINGERS
How to loosen a tender corn
or callus t>o It lifts out
without pain.
With Cuticura Soap and Ointment—
They Heal When Others Fail.
Nothing better, quicker, Pilfer, sweet-
er for skin troubles of young antl old
that itch, burn, crust, scale, torture
or disfigure. Once used always used
because these super-creamy emollients
tend to prevent little skin troubles be-
coming serious, if used dally.
Free sample each by mall with Book.
Address postcard, Cutlcum, Dept. L,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
Fearful Prospcct,
"I prophesj that everything you
plant ibis year Is going to come up."
"Don't say that. I might have to
bury my mother-in-law,"
DON'T GAMDLE
that your heart's all right. Make
sure. Take "lteuovlne"—a heart and
nerve tonic. I'rice 50c and $I.(tO,—Adv.
Pleasant.
Quicker—Thin fellow's Job is a per-
fect *tiit p.
Sniiek—Impossible!
Snicker—Not at all; lie's a pho-
tographer.
LET US PROVE
The superiority of Bond'' I.iver Pills.
It you suffer from 1 lent Inches, Bilious-
ness, Dizziness, Constipation, Coated
tongue or other Malarial tmubl -t, s. ad
to us for a free sample of Bond's I'ilK
the Ideal Liver Stimulant that really
acts on the liver. One small pill Is the
ii se, you wa!:e up bright and refresh-
ed. -5c at nil Druggists. Bond's Phar-
macy Co., Little Ut k, Ark. Adv.
•> <■ <• > •{• •;* <« •;« ^ ■>
At tin; cost of a small Jnr of ordinary
cold cream one can prepare a full quar-
ter pint of the most wonderful lemon
skin softener and complexion beautlller,
I by squeezing the Juice of two fresh
lotions into a bottle containing three
ounces of orchard white. Care should
he taken tb strain the Juice through a
fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in,
then this lotion will keep fresh for
months. Every woman knows that lem-
on Juice Is used to bleach and remove
such blemishes as freckles, sallowness
and tan and Is the Idea! skin softener,
smoothener and beautlller.
Just try It! (let three ounces of
orchard while at any pharmacy and
two lemons from the grocer and make
up a quarter jiltif of tills sweetly frag-
rant ei hiii lotl'iu and massage It dally
Into the face, neck, arms and hands. It
should naturally help to whiten,, soften,
fit -bi n and bring out the roses and
beauty of any skin. It Is truly marvel-
ous fi smoothed rough, red hands. Adv.
Home From the Lake.
81 tide—See that chalk on uiy shoul-
der'/
Koouimate Yeh,
Stude- Well, that ain't chalk.
Let folks step on your feet herenfteri
wear shoes a size smaller If you like^
for corns will never again send electric
sparks of pain through you, according
to this Cincinnati authority.
He says that a few drops of a drug
called freezone, applied directly upon
a tender, aching corn, Instantly re-
lieves soreness, and soon the en'.lrs
corn, root and all, lifts right out.
This drug dries at once and simply
shrivels up the corn or callus without
even Irritating the surrounding skin
A small bottle of freezone obtained
nt any drug store will cost very little
but will positively remove every hard
or soft corn or callus from one's feet
If your druggist hasn't stocked this
new drug yet, tell h!in to get a small
bottle of freezone for you from his
wholesale drug house.—adv.
CAPL'DINE
—For Headaches-
Try it and lie convinced. Good for
aches In back and limbs also—Assists
Natun to get tight and stay so. It's
Liquid—easy to take.—Adv.
I'l'tibnblx 1,1 utile! genius I M-r
stirr |1 up sn much 'ruti le for m n-
l;l.id in Lreiieral ; s the one wI i Invent-
A Puzzle.
■ •-1IT. c'
'll Duli't tell 111 *
Let
P.iradoxlcal Treatment.
" I'lial I- a rni'i <■ ok \• hi Iiiivi "
os. . he . run but e\er\ hit
cooks 1m well done,"
i* tlon pr* n mflv Indi ^t -
«' i i' I 11 v< r i nd 1 • i- 'A '
V • y InM' I'll * rt* t * rwfu t
«rl|iltiK utv.
I 11. ll Mint
<tl inV
n « r.:
> Ml.li
Took and Gave Father's Advice.
Father—Tommy, go out to the barn
aiid hitch the horse to the old sleigh.
Son— Why not to the new sleigh, fa-
ther?
Father—Wear out the old first, is my
motto, son.
Son—Well, then, father, you go out
and hitch up the horse.— Everybody's.
SAVE A DOCTOR'S BILL
by keeping Mississippi Diarrhea Cor-
dial handy for all stomach couip'aluta,
Price 2fic and («0c.—Adv.
Knowledge of Trees.
Children cannot learn all the trees
i'.t once, but if en each walk they can
get acquainted with one antl have their
eyes opened to tho thousand wonders
along the coiintr.vslile, gradually they
will accumulate a st. delightful
knowledge and ln-pi 1 « interest.
Tie Te I" HO betler tune 111:111 llo\i to
begin one's stlld* "I tl' i's K\i hllUgr
A Forlorn Hope.
"\Vli;it did . hi do when \«hi found
our llllsban I s . ".e w :I - hiipi'less?"
"We sent (it off for file doctor."
' if money by
p.- ii ii/i I estate dealer.
I I'm' ii,i: utile' ha* lng
gQre Evelids,
l *e i an.r I by espo-
r t . iu.1. Oust and Hind
uickK rviirvedhy Marine
f eRi mrd). NoSmariing,
jiut I vc Ci'infort At
Drii,;. 'iinrli' itt.iil fOc per K<>t11c. Murine
LyeSdlvei rnl>c«25c. I : M<iwK of the I >«
Eyes £
./
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Cain, Thomas S. The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, June 8, 1917, newspaper, June 8, 1917; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth206208/m1/5/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bastrop Public Library.