Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, August 1, 1913 Page: 3 of 8
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BUSINESS
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W
CAN YOU- NOT HELF SOME?
(By Alexander Roberta.)
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not
not be spoiled by attempts so
often
his
Burn
TO THE COW.
In the Kitchen.
;; A Few Reasons Why:;
li
be
their
no
do
A
Ask ua fur-
ABOUT
Or See
the
she
take
in
Stack O Wheat
Short Orders
Pure Foods
me
give
’ ?
4’i
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51
4*
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FERTILIZERS.
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ot< >|< •!
PBRMBHiniBT CAM S
U«VI» OB TAB!
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I Most reliable Old Dn* 't»ni panics. Af Citi**ns Nst’i Bank ;
»e *#♦*♦»»•< aeeeeeeeeeecceecce»»»»c»ce»»»»cccc»c»ce s'
and
and
the
you that you might share in this beau-
tiful work.
For a beautiful work it is i
some things about^ it that are
pleasant. /
During a dinner given
Chamber of Commerce of a
LT TOC
FORM
so can. ' we find
to plant other trees and in a
measure do our share towards
pairing an unnecessary lack.
Fw
beauties.
. for
delicious
onions, j
sterilize
then
a
movement,
air
“They stayed
hand
Com-
oro
FERTILIZER*.
Thia
the
Telephone end Find Out
What was the weathe*
report B ■
What to the market B| ■
4 price of cot ton Wr A
Was my team left town fl
la there any freight for
f . J
Do you want to buy
• any butter or eggs J
When to tbe meeting J
Who was elected f
Tbe telephone answers ff
these and many other I
questions for thou- I
sands of farmers W
every day. w
The coat of a telephone
oa your farm is small
The aavings great -
Our nearest manager will tell you
about it or write to
I > f
Sulkviitiri
THnrapb wd
w
HUM
FORT WORTH MONUMENTAL WORKS
107-111 E. Belknap Street
M DUGPiN '
-FOR— * ;
• Fire & Tcrnado Insurance :
table-
i ta-
mustard
unground
_
their presence will be an
pleasure, you had better not try it,
-------------- ' " ‘ if
be-
I
I< > >I< >1
Don't Build a N
ILd^s'hxou/l-
Booklet on Fl, • l*d
8CIIEE5B
Made to order
Write today
ASee ScrwrF Co.
Fort Worth. Trim
A T
< • Saves time for the cook. <
<> Gives a steady heat. ]
] J Is a much cleaner fuel, and J
<' the cost is very reasonable. <
THE FARMER ANO THE
MAR.
ducer.
him.
if he will only believe it himself
body else will think of disputing It.
—Home and Farm.
L. D. HAHN, Manager.
Texas Title Guaranty co.
809 W. Eighth St.. Fort Worth
T
Ta
fll
■" 3
- iw
-fl
I
I ■;
How-
I be
would
100
soda.
- Thia should be aplied about six Inches
from the plant on the surface of the
soil in the early spring.
For corn 1 would suggest that you
. grow cow peaa and turh them, under
or graze thein off; and as a*"fertll-
izer, a mixture of 100 pounds of
nold phosphate and cotton seed meal.
This shop Id be applied in af/rihg about
.tiwi® panting.
MORE ABOUT
Prompt Attention
'Open All Hours
Busy Bee Restaurant
expensive <
and, in ’
IGUST 1, 1918.
W"———
ISD TO WOMEN
1 IS YOURS A
Case of “Nerves F’
Hot flashes, dizziness, fainting spells, backache, headache,
baartag-dowu paina, norvonanessell are symptoms of irregularity
aad fssnals dtabubasses sod are not boyoad relief.
s Favorite Prescription
Mfl to that of a fsmeni phyeieiaa unusually exparioaaod
Mi la the treating of women’s peculiar sflmsata For
■ I forty yearn it tee been rosommeaded to Buffering
wemnakind. Tbooaanda of women eon bear witnoee 1
tettebenoAeisI qualitiea. Pmbay itaaid to all that J
RewtitbetirnTte'seb wrisTor’k V. Mere.'.*BuSSo. I
..... B AM NMW cmuo> . I
11
1
'W I
ment station at the'A. A M. College:.
Phosphoric acid is one of the most
Important ingredients of a commer-
cial fertilizer. It is contained in bone,
tankage, but chiefly in acid hosphate.
Acid phosphate is made from phoshate
rock j>y treatment with sulphuric acid
Therefore, the substance you need is
and are I
occasionally without washing
hands and be disrespectful. As for
tearing clothes, why, even girls
that.
The fresh air children have their
full share of mischief, and most of
them, Id addition, lack good home
training. Anyone who welcomes them
to their home on the supposition that I
they will prove stray cherubs is be. I
stined to disappointment. Of course,
they mean more work. Every extra
child in the home means extra work,
and such quests make more
than most others. I
Long
Distance. .
Telephone, :!
JOURNAL OFFICE HAS CONVENIENT PAY STATION ' “
Out friends, in city and country, who d» not want to ’;
go over and climb the two pairs of stairs, are welcome to < >
use our Pay Station booth, t is convenient Has slot for o
pay-as-you-call-and-talk.
CONNECTS EVERYWHERE. LOOK FOR THE
BLUE-BELL SIGN IN FRONT OF THE JOUR-
NAL OFFICE.
When you want a country or tong distance talk with < ►
t the Arlington Journal or the Farmers’ Fireside Bulletin, ‘I
f call for No. 8, Arlington. --—■ O ■'
I The management of the Southwestern Telegraph and ‘ ’
y Telephone Company installed this long distance booth with ;;
♦ the privilege of us permitting others t» use it Come in <
t and call up your friend, home or business.
F. R. WALLACE
i • Our Arlington Representative, <
' in Citizens National Bank *
' ’ . Building. ’
‘A?
for disappointment is sure. But
you think it is work that ays
cause it is work foc-Christ; if you
are ready to make a sacrifice in order
to give td some shadowed little lives
their first conception of the beauty of
God's outdoors and of the peace and
serenity of a Christian home, you
have no need to fear disappointment.
H,
You Need a Tonic
There are times in every woman’s life when she
needs a tonic to help her over the hard places.
When that time comes to you, you know what tonic
to take—Cardui, the woman’s tonic. Cardui is com-
posed of purely vegetable ingredients, which act
gently, yet surely, on the weakened womanly organs,
and helps build them back to strength and health.
t It has benefited thousands and thousands of weak,
ailing women in its past half century of wonderful
success, and it will do the same for you.
Youcant mate . m„Ul.e in Ukin«
The Woman’s Tonic -
Miss Amelia Wilson, R. F. D. No. 4, Alma, Arie,
says: *1 think Cardui is the greatest medicine on earth,
for women. Before 1 began to take Cardui, I was
so weak and nervous, and had such awful dizzy
spells and a poor appetite. Now I feel as well and
as strong as I ever did, and can eat most anything.”
Begin taking Cardui today. Sold by all dealers.
Has Helped Thousands.
-
Our advice may be a decided help to you in selecting
;! a monument to deceased loved ones. Visit our plant.
We will trade monflmental work for a good hone or
dr of horses.
H. H. WILKINSON, Proprietor
Fort Worth, Texas.
THE AR LINGTON JOURNAL
.......................... "~"T" .......................
CARE OF THE SHAM TREE.
i
j
i > Gas is no more
, , than coal or wood,
* * many cases, it is a far cheaper *
< > fuel than either.
< > ther about it
COUNTY GAS CO., Dallas,
or five
shreds.
Now take
(The following tribute to the cow is
from a toast written by the late H. C.
Adams for the Breeders' Gazette,
seventeen years ago. Mr. Adams was
then State Dairy Commissioner for
Wisconsin.)
The civilized world pays tribute to
the corw. She is the one thing that
man can always get something out of.
She is one of the few stock concerns
of the country that the bondholders
have little chance to milk.
She runs a business college
teaches men to keep accounts
figure profit and loss. She is
symbol of contentment, the one thing
needful In American life.
She Is life itself to countless chil.
dren stranded upog the barren bos-‘
oms and 'the hollow hearts of degen-
erate modem motherhood.
She comes In at evening, bringing
With her the sweet breath of
an (.meadows, whose velvet turf and crim-
fragrance
i you think it will not be,*ny work and *n form of^acid ^phosphate. There' u ;g keynote of memories of days
.> .. .. Btosrty work# of nights of rest, of
Probably there to not a reader ol
the visitor who does not know aome-
thing about the fresh-air charity
Some of ydu have seen trains pass
through your town with one or more
coaches filled with children from the
city slums. You have looked curi-
ously at the faces at the windows—
the small, eager, wondering faces—
and perhaps it has never occurred to
.hnnn I »» I 11 i a I1.16H
’ ' ■ . a,.''S' 'i**'1
■ - • -v.:
____X__
Thomas Jones, a Missouri farmer,
was Invited to address the St. Louis
Business Men’s League, and he said
things after this wise:
“Send your prize fighters an4, bar-
room bruisers out to the farms to
work off their surplus energy. That’s
what is the matter with the city-
wasted energy. More energy goes to
waste on theater stages any night tn
the week than it would take to raise
a bumper crop.
“Every time 1 visit a city I see a Iqt
of husky fellows sitting around wear-
ing their pants shiny when the yought
to be out by chains. I don’t know
what you ought to do with them.
“You city men who go to California
or Europe for your vacations—why
don’t you come up to Livingston 'boun-
ty, put on overalls, get out in
folds and help us do something?
K “The farmer neen’t take off
hat to any man He’s the real pro-
Other people all depend on
He’s as good as anybody, and
no-
Yours trulv,
MRS, L. F »»!Ll 1OD.
o o
Ohow Ohow.
One peck of green tomatoes, sliced
thin, one-half gaDon onions
halt rallon of
can be omitted
■ —
of the fertilizer is used in East and
Northeast rijNEM, very little being
used in the Southern portion of * the
State. The State Chemlat’a office Is
a clearing house for fertilizer Infor-
mation During the past year Dr.
Fraps has written more than 11,500
letters In answer to queries along this
line simply.
Bulletins lit and 149, dealing with
fertilisers have been in steady demand
and following an article published in
dally newsapers telling of the publica-
tions of these bulletins 700 inquiries
were received in four days and within
ten days more than 1,000 requests for
the bulletins had been received.
IKE ASHBURN,. Publicity Agt.
gg-......■■■ =
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7’ ■
“That was a disgusting tramp
helped this morning,* said old
Smythe, of Bugtown Corners,
gave him a pie and asked him to saw
•ome wood, and about tbn minutes
later he came in and asked me if lid
mind If he ate the wood and sawed
ths pie," —Baaaar.
»»Mr» Hwure. t ie 11. t to & •
Dr. A. A. Brower, Specialist
UN CHRONIC DISEASES OF MEN AND WOMEN
Blood and Skin D eetses, BLOOD POISON, SYPHIL-
I.IS, GHONORRHEA, ECZEMA, Piles, Nervous Debil-
* Ry. Structure and Urinary Diseases, Knotted Veins,
Kidney, Bladder, STOMACH AND LIVER DISEASES
•pedal Attention given to DISEASE* OF WOMEN.
ARE YOU Si OK >> If others have -filled to cure you,
come and see me and let me talk with you, which
will coat you nothing. ■
My Treatment Cures—NOT A DOLLAR NEED BE
PAID until convinced that my treatment cures.
Consultation and X-Ray examination FREE;. Office
oxer Texaa State Bank, corner 9th and Main ata.,
entrance 109 W. 9lh St.. Fort Worth, Texas.
have been worse.
real boys, full of life and fun,
thoughtless needing reminders ol
course. Those of you who have
brothers will acknowledge that even i
3
College Station, July 25.—There
has been an unprecedented demand for
fertilizers during the season of 1912-
1913, according to figures compiled by
Dr. O. S. Fraps, State Chemist to the
^Experiment Statiorrat the A. A M
College. During this year 75,000 tons
of fertilizers have been used In Texas
This is almost double the quantity
used in 1911-1912, the record for
that year being 44,766 tons. • This
amount, however, was eclipsed in
in 1910-1911, when 52,985 tons were
used. The cause of the low consump-
tion in 1*11-1912 was the wet sea.
son, the farmers being unable to put
the fertilizer in.
Acid phosphate Is the fovortte snd
best fertilizer, says Dr. Fraps Most
fc flU. 3 WAT urn
In this, the day of modern prog-
ress, where marks and illustrations of
man's ingenuity are at every hand;
where the skyscraper has taken the
plgce ■ of the former sedate office
building and large pretentious ho-
tels have succeeded the old hostel-
rls which catered to palate and ca-
price of former generations: where
cities have become crowded and old
houses and their grounds have had
to conform to tbe inexorable band of
what it has pleased us to call civiliza-
tion and stand aside for a more mod-
ern form of structure and arrange-
ment in this, tbe new day, we have
learned muchan d are continue* to
learned much and Are continuing to
behooves us to atop every now and
then to ask if, in passing, we are for-
getting anything of importance.
If, for instance, in learning
build larger and more modern cities
we are remembering to keep them aa
beautiful and as cheerful and *•
comfortable as ossible—all right and
good—but suppose we are hot?
Much of the landscapes, of course,
must go In the construction of a big
city, but some of Its features may be
preserved with a proper ehre and ap-
preciation oLtheir beauties. There
are many instances , for example,
wherein a tree may be perserved that
otherwise, between the • whim of a
property owner and the supposed
needs of the municipality would be
sacrificed without. consideration and
when a tree is saved it should be saved
despite jn its entirety of beauty and should
—----r,- ----- J uot not be spoiled by attempts so often
. A girl summed this up not | Meen j0 conVert it into a utilitarian ob-
long ago in a way which seemed to ject, making it grotesque and impairing
* * -i rendering it grotesque and impairing
it as a thing of beauty by fastening
to it brackets carrying telephone and
electric lighting wires and cables.
As there are trees in every oity that
may be saved from destruction, so al-
opportunities
few
-re*
To this
end the selection of a certain kind of
tree will certainly be wise, for it may
not be expedient to plant one kind
of a tree in the same place a tree of
different variety would be planted.
The price of our present civiliza*-
tion has been greater than we com-
monly suppose. This becomes in a
.. . . ( ug w,)en we
stop and consider the beauties of na-
ture we have sacrificed to attain it.
But in some instances we are paying
more than we need pay and we can
cut the price down by giving a iitt.e
thought and the proper attention I
the matter of trees—Christian Selene <
Monitor. - . ..
• “And do you have to be called
the morning’?’ Asked the lady who
was about to engage a new girl. “1
don't has to he mum." replied the ap.
plicant, “unless you happens to need
me.”
a few minutes later; then
fruit Jar caps and rubbers,
seal up chow- chow while real hot.
More sugar and vinegar can
added to suit the taste while cook-
ing if desired. Be sure to fill jars to
brim with Juice,to keep chow chow
bright color. And when you eat it
this winter with baked beans or
fresh pork (it is also quite a delicacy
with meat and sandwiches) yon .will
say it is “the beat ever." *.
O O
Six-year-old Dick was preparing,
much against his own sweet will, to go
calling with his mother It was the
first time Dick had been allowed to get
ihmself ready alone, and together with
boyish disgust at being obliged to go
visiting, he felt the importance of the
situation.
After having put on his hat and
coat he suddenly renjrmtier#.! some-
thing and called downstairs: "Mother,
shall I wash my hands or wear
gloves?"—Harper's Magazine
WE HAKE ABSTRACTS
and GUARAN TEE TITLES
Meet me a . morning aboui ‘7:45 al the Interurban sta-
li< n, or phone 236.
The following is in answer to
inquiry concerning the nature and use
_ j work "f n*’*1 phosphate made by Dr. C. S.
Some of them use I *?rap8, chemint to the Texas Experi-
bad language almost innocently. They |
have heard it all their livea, till its
use has become second nature. And
other children to their credit be it
said, growing up in the slufs have
I manners which would not mortify the
- most careful mothers.
i If you girls are willing ‘to take >uereiore, me sunsiance you neeu is
i city children into your homes because; Phosphoric acid. Your purchase that I
______ la ___:»i i_____________j in flin fnrni n/tiri r\h/icnhnln Thorn I
TWO GOOD RECIPES.
Garland, Texas, July J9. 1913.—
Mr. Will A. Holfdrd, Editor Garland
News, Garland, Texas: t
Dear Sir: You may be somewhat
surprised at me using valuable space
in your paper. Just for "some good
old recipes," nevertheless I can asr
sure you, if you will let ynut letter
half up evena small amount of edi-
bles from the following recipes, you
will never regret giving it space in
of youi
thihly
sliced, halt rallon of tfltra
(or okra can be omitted If not
preferred, and tender, green beans -ad-
ded instead). All these vegetables
should be thoroughly washed in warm
water before slicing. Now, take a
nice, clean flour sack, put in a layer
of sliced ingredients, then sprinkle all
over with a liberal handful of salt;
continue in thia manner, a layer of
sliced mixture and a handful of salt
until all is in the sack. Tie sack
and shake well, then hang in a shady
place to drain over night
Next morning pour contents of
sack Into clean granite or porcelain
lined dishpan: take an empty baking
powder can, and biscuit cutting fash-
ion. chop your mixture fine as desir-
ed. but don't grind It In food chop-
per, as that lessens that agreeable
flavor). Then slice four
pounds of cabbage In long
then chop fine with can.
an old pair of scissors and snip in
small bits six pods of red sweet pep-
pers, 12 ar 15 hot red and green !
peppers, put in one tablespoonful of ;
unground black pepper, one I
spoonful unground allspice, two
blespoons unground white
seeds, one table apdbn
cloves, four large sticks of cinnamon ] [
bark broken fine, one heaping table,
spoonful of unground mace (if pre-
ferred spices can all be tied up iri a
rag, one quart Hienz's apple vinegar, < •
two and a half quarts of water, one J ’
and a half quarts of sugar. Place < >
dishpan of entire mixture on stove, let ' [
come to boiling point, stirring occa- * •
sionally so vinegar and sugar will be ,
thoroughly mixed through it, then <
draw to back of stove and let simmer i' J
by the
Western
town « business man yvho is a little
near-sighted, had as his left
comanion a gentleman who Is
pletely bald. At desert the man with
- the bare thatch "dropped his napkin
I sloope to pick it up. At that precise
M moment the near sighted man whq
..j was talking to his right hand neigh-
--lw bor> f®11 M touch on his left arm.
He turned and beholding the bare-
pate on a level with his elbow, said,
“ThanR you; no melon. 1 will take
offee."—Harper’s Magazine.
w'W
r I
’I
that your novel gueats will be such I are three grades of acid phosphate | c- ___v.“
I humble little models of gratitude that on ,be market, one containing 18 per, piP(jSUreg that had no sting, of a world
their presence will be an unalloyed ' cent of phosphoric acid, one 14 per j srnall but clean, wilh the light c‘
cent and the other 16 per cent. 1 ad- | heaven upon ft. It was a
vise you to purchase the acid of 16 I wholesome kind of a life, and in the
per cent, at you will get the phos- | picture the cow "the mother of men, ’
phoric sold cheaper in that | wag a central figure, and always.
Your mixture of 1 OO jiounds of j>ot-1 whether dainty Jersey or lordly
shorthorn, she brings back the golden
phoric acid will be a mixture of pot- ,tays of hoyhood a«d girlhood.
your paper: and ao many
friends will be benefited, too.
The season is now gradually ap-
proaching for such dishes, and so
many of my friends In and around
Garland have asked me for my way
of preparing that delicious chow
chow and pickled onions. A.I it
would be quite a task to give each
one a written recipe, I though* I
would let the Garland News ' p ss i'
on."
son clover mingles their
during tire summer days.
You lean over the fence as
comes Into the yard and stands quietly
chewing her cud in the after glow of
the sunset which touches lightly the
hills, and suddenly drop out of your-
self, yopr pains, your disappointments,
your hopes your pride and become a
boy again, barefooted, with chores
to do. You hear the faint tinkle of
I the, cow bell upon a neighbor's farm.
three grades of acid phosphate
imply that she' was ready to put
quietus on the whole
"Why, my aunt had two fresh
boys,” -she exclaimed. *'“
two weeks and it was lots of work.
Often they came in to the dinner dirty
and disrespectful; and they wrestled
op the lawn and they tore their
clothes and auntie had to mend them,
for they hadn’t any others. No, in-
deed! No fresh air at our house!"
If you study all the accusitions
brought against these boys you will
have to admit, after ail, that it might
These boys were
’ life and
reminders
Those of you
nice boys will wrestle on the lawn, | ^2
likely to come to the table : “
of
simple,
________ upon ft.
V-» U'urp. IUIV akUIM Ul *» me, nuu 111 HIT-
Phos- I picture the cow "the mother of men, ’
■ | was a central figure, and
i or
ash and 900 pounds 30 percent phos-
phorie. arid will hp a mintnrn nf not- '
ash salts wilh raw phosphorate rock.
Phosphoric acid and phosphorate rock
acts very slowly. It is of course
much cheaper in this form than in the
for mof acid phosphate. If you are
willing to wait several years for re-
sults and if you use the rock in con-
nection with a liberal supply of ma-
nure or with green crops plowed un-
der, it might be advisable for you to
use the ground rock. The acid phos-
phate, however, will certainly
immediate returns.
In order to produce rapid growth of
orange and fig trees in a nursery 1
would suggest a mixture of 250
pounds acid phosphate, 16 per cent,
250 pounda cotton seed meal and 25
pounds of sulphate of potash,
mixture should be applied 1n
spring, and you may, if you desire to
do so, apply two or three times the
quantity mentioned above,
ever, the above quantity will
a good amount to start on. I ’
also suggest an application of
pounds per acre of nitrate of
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Bowen, William A. Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, August 1, 1913, newspaper, August 1, 1913; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1302856/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Arlington Public Library.