Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, April 25, 1913 Page: 1 of 8
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OUR WASHINGTON LETTER.
I
Th* Tariff Bill.
Stop!
and
. 5.
Ar-
Arlington, Texas
with
and
I
I
COUNTY
ANO
■; ?!
the
sheep
r
Value
A M. OOI
DAYS.
TRADES
AND
and
PANTEGO.
HOMES
CHIL-
As the gloriqus rain is falling, will
of
convenfently leave
•oheme
pass
ENU8-
Mrt.
Oonetl-
Last Tuesday Messrs. J. T. Field-
i
Miss
raffled
sub-bituminous. and
program committee.
It is obtainable in all
PRODUCTION IN INI
I
wasted or almost given away.
Some
Into Favor.
took
PRESBYTERIAN OHUROH.
The 220,
CHRISTIAN OHUROH.
♦
X*
I
t.
•I T5*/i
OFFICERS.
TH09. 9PRUANGE,. Pres?
W. G. WEEKS. Vice Pres.
wood.
“The country is to be cimgratulat-
TARRANT COUNTY 8HEEP
WOOL STATISTICS.
THOS. SPRUANCE,
W. M. DUGAN,
E. E. RANKIN, JR.,
DIRECTORS.
\V. C WEEKS,
JNO. M. ELLIOTT,
A.. W. GOLLINS,
that
tariff
He
21,718 SCHOOL CHILDREN IN TAR-
RANT COUNTY.
Handley . .
Keller ...
Mansfield .
of
the
7
14
Total
699
W. S. JOHNSTON,
T F. YATES,
JAS. D. COOPER
1258,4X8
452,697
808,721
952,261
will
aiding
roves
Col.
52
123
176
39
4
588
_511
150
a
that
White
647
I
master!
some I
only t
588
472
146
311
5,165
2,852
14
5
4
•38
* -
&
J ‘
were all astonished at the
printing plant they found here,
were interested insepctors of It.
W. M. DUGAN, Cashier.
C. B. BERRY, Asst. Cashier
H. T LOCKETT, Asst. Cashier
write to him. or to
Ribbon Orphanage,
Texas.
A PROMINENT PARTY OF
ITE8 VISIT ARLINQT
the high cost of living.
The New York Herald** Opinion.
The New York Herald, whose opin-
ion carries more,weight with the I Polytechnic
gm nt sense
! seems
dinner with 0. A. Moore.
Mr. Mat Hall and family visited
1
Journal
as in the pasL
r all such m<
. 167
272
. 163
.9,761
. 315
. 256
. 155
. 272-
The Citizens National Bank
174
286 I
163 '
12,613 1
329
261
159 1
310
for a
school in
Program will he given later.
Mrs. Boatright visited her cousin.
Mrs. Doyle Thursday last.
Miss Bertha Bufford visited
returning
Sunday morning at eleven o'clock,
“The Grace of God that Teaches.**
Sunday evening at eight o'clock,
“Building and Characteristic at First
Gospel Church of the World.**
Special music morning and evening
by Mrs. B. B. Spraance.
MBB
lation, April 24.—An en-
more than 300 students
d for the annual . short
for farmers, which will *
' the Georgetown circuit in 1876 when
1 was In my seo<*i>d year at the South
western university. He has lost
none of the Are and earnestness of
bls younger days.
' ARLINGTON
Washington, D. C., April 21, 1913
The Dew tariff bill. that has Just
been presented to congress by Hon.
Oscar Underwood, of Alabama, chair-
man of the Ways and Means commit-
tee, has been received throughout the
country with a most hearty approval.
The bill has been drawn with a great
deal of care and it * is quite certain
the
rails
list,
in
PORT WORTH DISTRICT CONFER-
ENCE HELD HERE.
but
.00
Preaching Sunday morning by the
pastor, but no services at night, on
account of revival at the First Bap-
tist church.
Sunday school at 9:4$ a. m.
Junior Endeavor at 3 p. m.
Senior Endeavor at 7 p. m.
A cordial invitation and a hearty
welcome to all.
W. T. THURMAN, Pastor
er, S. M. Braswell and J. T. Harris,
prominent business men of Venus,
and Rev. T. E. Bowman, pastor of
the Methodist church there, came
over in an automobile and made the
Journal*a pleasant visit. Mr. Field-
er came to see about his interests
here and visit old friends, and the
party returned in the afternoon. They
astonished at the large
and
Stop regretting that you haven’t a home of
your own—thait you haven’t that new suit—that
you can’t take that pleasure trip—that you can’t
send the boy to college—that you can’t own an
automobfile or buy Mary a piano.
Regrets will never get you anywhere. Begin
NOW to save up the money. Place it in our bank
where it is safe. Leave it alone until you accu-
mulate enough to buy what you long for. Will
you start 1 We will do our part by taking care
of it for you carefully.
. The quantity of briquetted fuel
manufactured in the United States
in 1912 showed a small gain over the
output for 18H, according to E. W
Parker, of the United States Geologi-
cal Survey, the briquet industry may
be considered as now paselng out of
the experimental stage and assuming
a more substantial and permanent
character. The quantity of briquet-
ted fuel made |n 1912, at 19 plants,
i was 220,064 short tons, vslued st
•952.281. ss compared with 218,448
tutlon.
A few days ago the state of Con- .
neoticut ratified the amendment to '
the constitution thereby making 36
states that have
which therefore renders it
amendment to the
announcement as well
setting forth of
have to offer. *
the same,
a legal
constitution, so
that in the future all United States
Sensors will be elected by the popu-
lar vote, same as the governors of
the states. Mr. Bryan and Mr. Wil-
son are delighted. Both of these
great Democrats have been heartily
in favor of this amendment, and Mr.
Bryan, especially, has championed it
for more than twenty years, and it Is
through his brilliant work In pointing
out to the country the sources of cor-
ruption that enamated from the elec-
tion of senators by legislatures Instead
of through the people themselves,
that aroused the country to action.
So thio amendment to ths consitutlon
is a great Bryan victory.
DEMOCRITUS
is antici,
t course for farmers, which- -will be
, conducted this summer at A. A M.
College, just previous to the Farm-
ers Congress. The short course
which heretofore has been conducted
during the Christmas holidays will
b.e held each year one week prior to
the Cohgress.
This change was made in order
that the instructors might devote all
2.— 2, tinstruction of
The proposed tariff schedule now
under consideration by congress, put-
termine the date of that
When the date is announced the I
opening of the short course will be |
determined.
Christmas more than 150 students'
The quantity of raw material avail-j P* *
able for the manufacture of briquets,' tilizer, etc
as stated by Mr. Parker, is ample and i While f ,
may be obtained at slight cost. JPhe United States is still in its infancy the
1907
1909
1911
1912
A copy of the report on briquett-
ing may be obtain^! free on applica-
tion to ths Director of the Geological
Survey, Washington, D. C
I excellent substitute
Enormous Supply of Briquet Material peat now produced
The quantity of raw material avail- j
r
a «
Year
„ , . , Heights ...
In -the meantime, our readers may I'flpcr in the United States, has the , Riverside ....
rest assured that whenever the I following to say about Oscar UnderJ ! Smithfield
ting wool on Hie free list, is of inter-
est to the sheep growers of Tarrant
i county. The present tariff oil wool
is, approximately, 11 cents per
pound. The quantity of wool clipped
in this county is not of record, but
per sheep per annum
amounts to about five pounds. '
There are 4.054 sheep and goats,
Beginning last Tuesday afternoon
the Fort Worth Districa Conference
was held in the Methodist church
here, ending yesterday afternoon. It
has been a splendid session, presid-
ed, over by both Rev. Jerome Dun-
can, .presiding elder, and Bishop
James Atkins, D. D., being the first
. time in Arlington’s history that a
. - Mishap held a district conference. And
the able sermon* and addresses, not
only of Bishop Atkins, but of the oth-
er visiting preachers, have been of
tee Ughesl order, and a great treat
to our intelligent people. In fact,
those who have missed these have
missed some of the very ablest ad-
dresses and discussions ever held in
all North Toxas.
Ths program, as published in the
J l nr Be I test wook, was carried out.
and proved all, and more, than it
promised * Space fofbids Reporting
in detail, but the routine questions
were asked and answered, and the
educational and mission work were
handled ably. Dr. H. A. Boas, pres-
ident of Polytechnic college, ad-
dressed the conference on education
Wednesday morning The opening
permon was preached by Rev. H. S.
P. McCullough, of Highland Park
Methodist church, Fort Worth, Tues-
day night. Bishop Atkins preached
Wednesday night, his subject being
“Justification by Faith,*' and it was
' ’ a masterful and helpful sermon, with
I
Clare Williams,
visited W.
\hen
have
to succeed
, H The Jour-
ide for the beat interests of
the farmers and all other olti-
In the Great "Arlington Country,
. We believe that they are entitled to
r the same treatment at the hands of
k business men that modern, enterprls-
Llng business elsewhere gives the
^■citizens. And thia paper will always
wivocate and stand for busness men
k totting farmers, as well as others,
I know exactly what they have, and
I the prices and qualities of their
I goods. Otherwise, people with mon-
■ ey to spend will go where business
I men* fairly, frankly make known
I wftaffthe have, with the prices there-
| on, W'they do in the papers farmers
I read for this very purpose. The
I Journal has many thousands of
I readers in Arlington and the Great
I Arlington Country. The Joural has
to dealt fairly, truthfully with them a*.
■ all times; and they have a right to
I demand that If our business men
■ went their trade, and have anything
been
pass
which he aaM was for phioing home-
less children in Christian homes, a
work similar to that which has been
done, and ia being done, so long by
Rev. I. Z. T. Morris, of Fort Worth
Captain Lynn says there are more
homes wanting children than they can
find children for. That they have
now many open homes. Parties in-
terested in orphans are requested to
Mrs. Lynn, White
Box 345, Decatur,
; working people, but the present tar-
I
their names must be a part of the
as must the
what merchants
PROS- 1
FOR HOMELESS
DREN.
The scholastic population of Tar-
rant county is 21,719, according to a
report Just issued by the State De-
partment of- Education, and the to-
tal apportionment at 86.81 per cap-
ita 1s 8148,775.15 for the 1912-13
term. 18,391 of our school children
are whites, and 3,328 are negroes
The total number of school children
over seven and under seventeen
years of age in Texas is 1,017,133,
and 812,896 are white and 104,237
are colored. The males number 515,-
603/and the females 501,530. The
total apportionme its are 86,967,361
for the etate.
It is customary to multiply the
scholastic population by five in order
to ascertain the true population of
the ccqinty, and on this basis Tar-
rant county has a population of 108,-
595, an increase of 23 over the fed-
eral census of 1910.
The scholastic population of the
independent districts of Tarrant
county is shown in the following
table:
District
Arlington ....
Arlington
Heights ...
Diamond Hill
Everman ....
Ft. Worth . ..
followng figures show that the pro-
duction has nearly twice 'doubled
since 1907:
Production of Briquets in the United
State*, 1907-1812.
Short
tons
.... 66,524
.... 139.661
.. .'.218,443
... .220,064
iness men and citizens In showing a , pat ty deb at.
spirit of appreciation in building up
trade and business—and that in a
. liberal spirit, and not in a niggardly ‘
' ,“*.... We
have organized efforts, with respon- QueeHna ta a business question
sible men, men who have the con-1 ** ‘ “
fidence of the public, in charge. And i
i He has shown, his ability to steer
| clear of the rock. The conflrtenee
I Wnicii the country has in Mr.
J wood explains its refusal to r
much excited over ^the jspective
tariff changes. j
i “Mr. Underwood is, <nn of
1 He is certainly sane, -and he i
' safe.”
Income Taz.
I The Constitution having
• amended so that congress can
an income tax bill, that feature in the
present tariff will probably bring in
Of i state. The School of Mines of North
used anthracite j Dakota University has been making
some interesting and valuable exper-
iments in briquetting lignite, under
the direction of Prof E. J. Babcock,
"j obtained excellent
results
The large areas of peat beds In
the United States are also available
as a source of raw material. They
are generally remote from the coal
tons. | fields, and briquetted fuel from peat,
“ when properly prepared, makes an
for coal. The
in the United
States is used for stable litter, fer-
‘■‘l.ci, c»v. None is used for fuel.
While the briquet industry in the
Offer nrises for various farm ami
live stock products, such as we for
tnerly had here. This is a i, *
move, as the Journal ha,s repeatedly ; ground
said, if in the hands of -----
of the people and makes up for the
( loss in revenue by placing a substan-
. j what is tial though moderate tax on the large
called the "White-Ribbon Orphanage,*' incomes of the wealthy
Quick Action on the Tariff.
Next in importance to adjusting
the tariff schedule properly is /the
desire, of the country that the mat-
ter he' quickly disposed of so that
the business of the country can
quickly adjust itself to the new tariff
schedules.
The bill will probably pass the
house of representatives by May 1st,
and It is believed that the senate will
pass it likewise in about 60 days, so
that the country will not have a
long tariff agitation as has been the
case at all previous reyjakins.
Another Amendment to the
essary to successful leadership.
The Democratic party, too, is to be
The fate of that party
... ‘ The
I people all know of it if Arlington 1 last Deinocratiic tariff act was made!
|i» ever.to amount to snvthing more , by a theorist, a college professor of]
than today it must be -through the. *!he lofty ideals—and in its wake,
J._. . . ._. . an)1 ,
same I
.— number of these animals on
the farms and ranges of tHb entire
state is 1.808,709. which have a
value of 86,301,364. The produc-
tion 6f sheep and goats is 591,976
annually, valued at 81,361,544 and
• the state’s yearly wool production is
| valued at 82,267,308.
LEGE SUMMER( ’’ARM
COURSE. |
to promote the prosperity of
country. For instance, steel
have been placed on the free
Our steel rails have been sold
London for 824.00 per ton, and yet
they sell those same steel rails to
the American public at 828.00 a ton.
If the steel trust can do business
in Europe without the aid of a pro-
tective tariff they certainly can do
buainesa at home likewise without a
! protective tariff by lessening the
cost of steel rails a great many-more
miles of electric roads and steam rail
roads will be built every year.
The bill also places wire fencing
and nearly all kinds of farming ma-
chinery on the free list, thereby con-
ferring as much benefit on the farm-
ers as possibe. On the other hand the
tariff is greatly reduced on nearly
every article that goes into the mar-
ket basket, so that this bill will have
the effect of substantially reducing Grapevine
' t hi Anal Ha'inu* ___* i
College
one hundred and fifty million dollars rollment
in revenue. per year to the govern-
ment.
The Aldrich tariff bill placed ex-,
r duties on w/jblen
BRIQUET
New Style of Fuef Gradually Doming west, where at” miny places It is now! urday night
>-•- • — wasted er elir.ee! given eway. Some M Turner has moved into
slack piles have been burned to pre- t handoome new cottage,
vent’ their! cumbering the ground,— Wr. and Mrs. S. F. Webb
others have ignited spontaneously i Sunday dinner with yours truly,
and devoured themselves. The 220,-, SUSANNE.
084 tone of briquets made in 1912 ’
represent but a drop taken from the I
bucket of available material.
The vast and almost untouched
areas of lignite in North Dakota and
Texas still contain enormous sup-
plies of fuel that European exper-
ience hee taught Is well adapted to
briquetting and that Is much more
usable in that form than in the raw
7 /___________ ; ———
. .....
tons valued at 8808,721 in 1911.
these plants seven
culm, nine used bituminous or semi |
bituminous slack, one used residue
from gas manufactured from oil, one i
used mixed anthracite culm and bi- ! and has already
luminous slack, and one used peat
The largest producer of briquets in
the United States in 1912 was the
Berwind Fuel Company, of Superior.
Wis , the output of which was a lib-
tie in excess of 50,000 short *t-'—
The plant has a capacity ef bmween
35 and 40 tons of briquets an hour
backed up by the solid sentiment or
•the leading citizens. But, if it has
even the smack of a “private oick -
up," or merely a side issue, and
lacks the enthusiastic and hearty' The Journal had a visit from Capt. |
support of the business men, as a J. F. Lynn, of Decatur, Monday, who
whole, It were better no sort of move J is, with his wife, conducting '
be -made to have a Trades Day at -------- -----— • * -
all. The truth is, whenever such
moves are made so as to bear the
appearance of being a sort of
“cktch-penny" scheme to boost
some one's, financial shortage, or if
a pretention is made to do a thing
WBlfh x Only half done, then there
will uitue a lack of confidence on
the part of the publio.
Merchants who have merchandise
which thw either fear to advertise
before th<| world In their home pa-
per, or prefer to hlnt at so as to
catch buyers and ,get them Inside
their store, trusting to yien sell
them whatever they may have on
fftand. need not expect
YvltlJintelligent farmers.
Washington
Heights .... 188
Balance of Co. 4,989
Last Tuesday night and Wednes-
day morning a great rain fell in this
section. Wednesday morning there
was a down-pour of not less khan
' one and a half inches, and it did un-
Clrculars are being scattered over, told good
and also will make a big corn crop'
— —__— __
’ ’ the! iiv „iuiwii
Everythng Is growing and J ceedingiy heavy
is well as everybody else ^00<|9i gloves, and hosiery and other
| articles that were consumed by the
them
conference.
j and small way, either
Lr ; 2-------- -----
sible men
i articles that were consumed by the
; working people, but the present tar-
j iff bill makes a heavy reduction in the
tariff on these articles, thereby con-
j ferrmg a great benefit on the masses
of their time to the
the farmers, not being burdened with
their regular class work. There will
be more room for the visitors-in the
dormitories; weather conditions will
be much better, and the farmers can
more convenfently leave home at
that season than during the holidays, i
The date of the» short course will |
be determined this week. Friday the |
executive committee of the Farmers’.
nwpfin/ i if properly made tttey are complete-
housekeeqer, Fuller’s family Sunday and Monday,
One objection raised to the use of
Circulars are being scattered over told good In fact, it practically in-
the city and country purporting Io sured a large crop of small grain.
Cotton likewise will receive a g^e*!
good impetus from the condition of L._
1 flrr«/St«vaz| pvawvlhniv la APto/teavlwir
_ , energetic.! farmers as i
representative business men, and if wear smiling faces.
Miss Bema
produce I North Fort Wbrth,
pltppopr Fuller’* famllv ^iin
Of
J.
I • MOWS V immhi; wseseasN WWW ivavilUffl/,
returning home Tuesday morning.
v..... .... Pt*0*- Hhodes spent a few hours
were 'enrolled in the short courses, i briquets is that they will compete W,*J1 writer Friday evening,
and E J. Kyle, dean of the School of with the prepared sixes of anthra-' Grandma Streighton visited
Agriculture at’ A. A M., thinks that, etc. From the viewpoint of the con- 1* B. Swaokhemmen Sunday.
| more than twice that number will at- i Sumer the objection lacks logic, and Prof. Rhodes is preparing f
' tend this Summer. this seems more evident when the j concert at the close of scho<
Mr. Kyle and Bonny Youngblood, apparent profit obtainable dn the Program will he given I
director of State Experiment Stations, i briquetted product !s considered,
will attend the San Antonio meeting ! Much Raw Material Now Wasted.
Mr Youngblood is a member of the . Slack from noncnklng bituminous,,,,
sub-bituminous, and semi-anthracite i ' era Boatright Saturday,
coals is another cheap and abundant ■ home Monday,
raw material. It is obtainable in all I Several of our young people play-
the coal mining regions of the middle forty-two at Mr. Caldwell’s Sat-
* dress Thursday morning on the Sun-
day school work was a powerful, .
‘>r4|l discourse.. As I stiall make’
Mi notes of this later, 1 —
say that Sunday school workers
[ to take advantage .. —
L world’s greatest Sunday school men's
r ? experience and able counsel and heq>-
| 7. fu'sesa.
h *• *S'e ®ermo11 Thursday, by Dr. Cul-
h'K ver? of Polytechnic church, on, ... 7 — , ,
K t “Power,” was also a masterpiece. It * ?’el* but sincere!} hopes
was a truly great sermon. Few
preachers have the force and power
in discourse aa has Dr. Culver.
In the forenoon Thursday several
young niftn were recommended for 1
admission to the annual conference
We could not get these before going I
to press—but will give them next
WH. It was a great
and Brother Coihe is proud of the
manner in which \rlington entertained
the conference. I miial metion that
the sermon of Rev. Horace Bishop,
presiding elder of the Hillsboro dis-
trict, preached Tuesday night, and it
wa jton eloquent, logical sermon—es-1
pec Wly enjoyable to this editor, be-1
cause Dr. Bishop was my pastor on J
THE RAIN AND THE DROP
PE0T8.
worth offering, they shall make it
known in an intelligent manner,
through the columns of the paper
those people take in order to got
facts about trade as well as news.
The fanners in the Great Arlington
Country are Intelligent citisens, and
can read, and do read, and will pay
attention to ail advertisements set-
ting forth intelligently goods and
wares and prices so they may know
what io offered. And they have a
right to demand this treatment be-
cause business everywhere else do
this very thing. And whenever Ar-
lington merchants have complained of
people in this section going elsewhere
for goods, ft has been because the
Arlington merchants have either not
presented their goods except in the
old, up-the-creek manner, when peo-
ple either could not read . or had no
papers—the “dodgers," which are
being outlawed in all intelligent com-
munities, or did not advertise at all,
depending upon the reputation tha*
"pa" gave the business by "knowing
everybody and everybody knowing
him and what he had to sell.** Fail-
ure will result to any business man
or community that follows these
methods in this day and time.
When the * business men of
lington will get together, raise re-
spectable prizes for real product?
and service, let it be known through
channels the people road and make
it a feature, then Arlington will get
the trade of the prosperous farrtfers
in this rich section—and never until
And the Journal will be
t business world than an>‘ other news-
I
assured that whenever the I fo,u>wing to say about Oscar Under- ' Smithfield .
Journal learns that any responsible j
i’"“7.’. parses and representative organiza-: ----- - - —=------- ,
nr”,,."1 lion of business men offer, in good ed uI'"n Mr 1 nderwood’s restoration;
—,h'n miaanri in,* faith, prizes fur farm products. Jive' to health He is once more in the.
2 ML-,: z .»e ». .x*?,
j to Inquire into' all nf these things so as head of the committee on
a& to know exactly the facts and who I Ways and Means, but because in him
i and what and how. The Journal | a»*« combined all those qualities nec-
i knows nothing about such a move I f ~
uu* Biucrrc.j ii’iprS that Ar- •—
I lington will awake and stand behind ; conKra*'dated,
something of the kind—and let our. *s bound up in this tariff bill,
people A>l *♦ < ..I..* 1 Inst DoinnorAtiiA I hi* iff Art wah
i is evei
1 co-operation of all its legitimate bus- j came deslructiori of
unquestionably flow from
brand of tariff tinkering.
Mr. Underwood understands
must ' Mr. Wilson did not—that the
I has undertaken tariff revision in Uv' I
' businesslike way to Subject demands.
I He has shown, his
clear of the rock
which the country has in Mr. Under-
■ » very
f industry en,‘ ; **R el'P
Similar results would ;
1 valued at *15,617 by the federal cen-
sus department, on the farms and
rances of Tarrapt county. The an-
nual wool and mohair production is
valued at «2,697, and 2,518 sheep
and goats are sold atnd slaughtered
each year, and their total value is
89,694.
The
most desirable material for produc-
ing a> smokeless product is anthra-
cite culm, a plentiful supply of which
still remains in the anthracite re-
gion of Pennsylvania and more is pro-
duced daily in the mining operation*.
! It is not too much to .believe or to
' hope that in the near future the
small sizes of anthracite, t»uoh“ as
! buckwheat and smaller, that are now
sold for. making steam, in' competi-
• tion with bituminious coal and at
, prices below the actual cost of pro- I
duction, will become more valuable
1 as raw material for the briquet man - .
ufaoturer. The output of these small
sizes, produced by breaking up large
coal to obtain the domestic grades—
( egg, stove, ami nut—exceeds 20.-
: 000.000 long tons annually, exclu-1 ,
J sive of 3,000,000 to 4,000,000 tons give the Journal readers unimportant,
annually recovered from the,* cu'rn as well as the important happening*
I banks by wastries. The jscesenFf of this burg,
! revenue from .this product will not; Rev. Barrett, of Seminary, HUI,
| exceed 830,000.000 . AVashery and | preached at the chapel Sunday at It
: small size coalr |<" worth from 50: o’clock and 7:30, as Brother Harl-
cents to 8t.50 a ton, the price de-1 buth, the pastor, was attending a
pending on the <qze As briquetted special meeting ht Sadler, Denton
fuel it should be worth as much as' county ' - V Jii;
stove or egg coal, or 83 to 84 per I Messrs W.‘ H. Moore, Walter
’ton The cost of briquetting Ht»l* Moore ami their families took Sunday
to 81.25 per ton. The uniform size
cicuuuve vuuiiuitwu ui me rarmers , 2^ G*e briquets makes them highly . __ ■. —- —•
Congress meets In San Antonio to de- ! desirable as a domestic fuel; besides relatives at Handley Sunday
ly consumed and do not
that bugbear to the
clinkers.
ipot
♦
ARLINGTON, TEXA8, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1803.
OLD
RIE8—VOL. XXXVI, No. 7
NEW 8ERIE8—VOL. XII, NO. 8< '
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Bowen, William A. Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, April 25, 1913, newspaper, April 25, 1913; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1302842/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed May 31, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Arlington Public Library.