Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, April 5, 1912 Page: 5 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Arlington Journal and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Arlington Public Library.
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The Very Latest
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See Me Before
Buying
Mrs. Lucy R. McNatt
Burt
OVER LUTTRELL'S GROCERY
Mollle Elliott Tuesday.
At
(
Hayes
visited
in
Ladies, don’t buy
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Is Interurban
GaJnes,
S.
WHY?
Convenient Service Frequent Schedule
ft
Ba££a£c Called For and Delivered
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Cars Each Way Every Hour
6 A. M. to 11 P. M.
Styles and LOW-
EST PRICES.
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Mrs F. H. Jones visited in Fort
Worth Tuesday.
Mrs. M L Dickerson was in Fort
Worth Saturday
Miss Tommie
Dallas Monday.
Mrs. K. T. Hume left Sunday for
San Antonio to join her husband.
Mrs. P. C. Scott visited in Dallas
and Ennis last week.
Dr and Mrs R. E. L. Miller of Fort
Worth were guests of Dr. and Mrs.
W. H. Davis Sunday.
Mra. J. W. Good of Grand Prairie
visited her sister, Mrs. J. M. Moore,
last week enroute to Austin to vis-
it her son, Mr. G. C. Good and wife.
Miss' Mary Cantrell of Fort Worth
was the guest of Miss Grace Thorn-
ton from Friday till Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. R. Page of
Dallas visited Mr. and Mrs. D. B.
Baker Sunday.
mule much cheaper and
his life and period of usefulness, if then
at night, and at other times when[tlrely.
corn
corn
They will
while and
h
Mrs. A. C. Barnes spent Tuesday
In Fort Worth
Best
2 5c
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2.—12
10 lbs corn
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AN EASTER CHICKEN OR RABBIT
The Popular Route!
Between +
Houston and Galveston I
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A
pre-
White
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KNAPP & LEE
Cleaning, Pressing and Laundry
One door East of Postoffice / Phone 77
We can fit you up for Easter in a
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New Straw Sailor, New Tie, New Hose
IL LOCAL J
Mrs. W. C. Weeks visited in Dallas
Tuesday.
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Mrs. W. M. Dpgan spent Tuesday
In Dallas.
Mr. Hone Wallace visited his sis-
ter, Mrs. Will Christopher in Ter-
rell last week.
Mr. John Hahn of Fort Worth vis-
ited his son, Mr. Luther D. Hahn
this week.
Miss Bessie Nickens of Garland
was the guest of Mrs. Nannie Clark
Bunday.
color
> its poisonous
A small dish of this liquid
Miss Ethel Bone, who has been in [
St. Paul's Sanitarium in Dallas two
weeks, having undergone the mas-
told operation on her ear, is at home
and getting along nicely.
to one
Ten to one the
filling
just one acre of ground.
, returns were $98 and a
■J
Mr. John R.
ited Mr. W. A. Thornton Tuesday.
—4*—
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Harris spent !
Saturday afternon in Fort Worth.
)
Mrs Clyde Owens and little son
Clyde will leave Saturday for their
home in San Antonio after spending
several weeks with her parents, Mr
and Mrs. Albert Goodman.
--------4.--------i
TWO PAPERS FOR PIUCE OF ONE
will I»e sent one year together with
the Farmers’ Fireside and -Bulletin,
for the price of the Journal only. We
1 *ve • canvasser out on this propos-
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should be taken as in the handling
and use of other poisons.
--------4.-------
The correct treatment for cuts,
burns, scalds, wounds, sores, lumba-
go, rheumatism or neuralgia is
Ballard’s Hnow Liniment. It is
healing, penetrating and antiseptic,
which is everything that is needed
Price 25c,
Sold by
i,
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Children, come and bring your Mamas; we will serve Hot Biscuit and Coffee, cook-
We will have many new and useful things for
We want our farmer friends to
or nearly anything in the Gent's Furnishing line.
> Don't fail to see our line before you buy.
Demonstration of Our Cream Separator and Old Trusty Incubator
and enjoy a “social cup” and a Hot Biscuit. Don't forget the date.
I tw ■ ■*'
McKinley-Slaughter Hardware Co
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- SSjaaKSgs
1 Yonr Easter Apparel
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. Mrs McNatt offers you your best
opportualiy to gef real stylish
Millinery ax the lowest price. -Over
Luttrell's grocery.
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Have the druggist
pare a mixture as follows:
arsenic (poison) 1-2 gram cane, sug-
ar 20 grams, water 100 cc. This
will make about three ounces of
It is well to have the
Mechanical
’ va-
rious kinds of animals. John C.
I Burns, professor of animal husband-
I ... 1.--- ----------a --->__«__
Dr. and Mrs. Kidwell of Dallas
visited Mr. and Mrs. Meadows Sun
[day.
Mr. Walter Splawn of Belton vis-
ited his aunt, Mrs. T. G. Bailey, this .
week.
Mias Grace Moore of Fort Worth
visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.
M. Moore this week.
jry, has prepared the following for
farm horses and mules doing from
'mediunr to hard work, each ration
being 'he amount of feed per 1,000
lbs live weight per day.
Ration No. 1.—15 lbs ear corn or
12 lbs corn (shelled or chojks),
lbs alfalfa hay^ 7 lbs prairie hay.
ear
or
or
Bermula or prairie hay.
Ration No. 7—71bs kaffir
(threshed), or 8 lbs kaffir
heads, 2 lbs cottonseed meal or cake,
18 lbs kaffir corn in bundles.
Ration No. 8.—12 1-2 lbs ear corn
or 10 lbs corn (shelled or chops), Ithe system with billions poison, that
3 lbs wheat bran, 7 lbs alfalfa hay. 1 Dr„ King's New Life Pills would ex-
[ pel. Try them. Let the joy of bet-
1 "the blues."
wheat ' fo^ stomach, liver and kidneys.
at all druggists.
Try them.
2 ter feelings end
.. I u
-------4.-------
Ragged wounds are painful and
cause much annoyance.
Dr. J. W. Matlock of Frost visit-
ed his sister, Mrs. A. C. Sublett last |
week.
__________________________________________________________________ -
...........‘
—4.—
Mr. and Mrs. Webb of Dallas vis-
ited Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Thompson
Friday afternoon.
Ration No. 2.—12 1-2 lbs
corn, or 10 lbs corn (shelled
chops), 2 lbs cottonseed meal
cake, 11 lbs prairie hay.
Ration No. 3—10 lbs kaffir corn
or milo maize, 2 lbs cottonseed meal,
14 lbs sorghum hay.
Ration No. 4.—8 lbs rice bran, 4
lbs blackstrap molasses, 2 lbs cot-
I tonseed meal, 14 lbs prairie hay.
Ration No. 5—7 1-2 lbs’ ear corn
or 6 lbs corn (shelled or chops), 4
jibs oats, 2 lbs wheat bran, 14 „ lbs 'covers the vine
burns it or else buries it with soil.
---+---
Puts End to Bad Habit.
Things never look bright
with "the blues."
trouble is a sluggish liver.
-------4.-------
GETTING RID OF ANTS.
From Farmers’ Fireside Bulletin:
The small ants which are a nul-
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Mesdames George and Askew of I
Fort Worth were guests of Mrs. J
Griffin of Itasca vis- T' ThomP‘’on Sunday.
—4*—
Mr. and Mrs. Mayfield have gone
to Fort Worth after visiting Mr. and
Mrs. J. T. Thompson.
Mr. Walter hornton of Oklahoma
Qity si>ent Saturday and
with his father, Mrs. W. A.
ton.
II
II
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Miss Jessie Christopher has gone
to Georgiana, Ala., to spend
[summer with her grandmother.
—4*—
Ladies of particular taste will
find it will pay them to see the styl-
ish millinery and low prices at Mrs.
McNatt's before they buy this spring.
Over Luttrell's grocery.
Sunday
Thorn- [ 7 lbs sorghum hay.
Ration No. 6.—9 lbs kafir corn,
lbs cotton seed meal, 2 lbs
bran, 14 lbs kaffir corn stover.
Ration No. 10.—12 lbs kaffir
corn or milo maize heads, 8 lbs al-
falfa hay, 6 lbs sorghum hay, prair-
j ie hay or kaffir corn stover.
’ I These rations are not absolute as sance in the house can be gotten
Ito the quantity an animal should re- rid of according to Wilmon Newell,
Icelve. They are Intended to meet [ State Entomologist at the & M.
’the average requirements of horses College of Texacs, by the following
J and mules doing medium to hard method:
[ work and fed entirely under dry lot
conditions.
The feeder, by studying the needs
of his animals and noting their con-
dition, can soon regulate the quan-j"ant poison.
The proportion of each feed, druggist add to it a little red con-
be approximately . fectloner’s sugar so that its
I will give warning to
THE ARLINGTON JOURNAL.
tloB bow and treat w|M»n Mr. Moore
calle you will give him your sub-
scription. The Journal will give th
lection news, together with facts
oncerning all candidates and meas-
ures this important election year;
an<l the Farmer,’ Firetide and Bul-
' let in will contain the most valuable
reading and facto of interest and
value to fanners of any paper In the
country. And^it is the official pa-
per of the Farmers Union, of Texas,
besides. BOTH PAPERS FOR THE
PRICE OF ONB. z
---+——
It Ixtoks Like a Grime.
to separate a boy from a box
Buck len s Arnica Balve. His pim-
ples, bolla, scratches, knocks, sprains
and bruises demand it, and it's quick
relief for burns, scalds, orc uts is his
right. Keep it handy for boys, also
girls. Heals every thing healable,
and does it quick. Unequaled for
piles. Only 25 cents at all druggists
-----4.—J--
FEED RATIONS FOR
FARM HORSES.
From Farmers' Fireside Bulletin:
There are many inquiries made at
the Agricultural and
the I
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Burt of ,College of Texas for rations ^of
[Grand Prairie were guests of Mrs. “ ■ - - -
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If not kept
clean they fester and become run-
ning. . Ballard's Know IJuiment in
an antiseptic healing remedy for
such cases. Apply at night before
going to bed and cover with * cot-
ton cloth bandage. It heals in a few
days. Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 per
bottle. Sold by Corner Drug Store.
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j [ • Friday, April 5, 1812, , f.
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Spring Millinery
tlty.
howevek, should
as suggested.
The ration whl£h proves to be nature.
cheapest in any given locality should should be placed under tables, re-
be, the one to use. - J friierators, etc., where the ants are
It makes the keep of the horse or in a habit of traveling.
mule much cheaper and prolongs eat of it greedily for a
desert the neighborhood len-
The solution should be kept
not at work, he has access to pas- in a safe place, away from children
ture. With, good pasture, less and peXs and the usual precautions
to effect a complete cure
50c and $1.00 per bottle.
Corner Drug Store.
-------4.-------
Folk-Lore In Texas.
the recent annual meeting of
the Texas Folk-Lore Soclexy held in
does his Austin, a very distinctively western
topic was handled by Mr. R. M.
Anderson of Uvalde—a student of
the University—under the title of
Folk-Lore in Cattle Brands. The
brands, he stated were largely a
matter of the whim of the owner;
but these whims proved a sort of
monument to his character. The
man who marked his cattle with let-
ters from the Greek alphabet was
evidently no uneducated lout; the
man who stamped a whiskey jug on
his sober and unsuspicious .steer
was probably not a teetotaler; the
man who used a brand that seared
its way from the jaw to the hind
foot was clearly not especially hu-
mane
Then there was the brand especi-
ally designed to cover the brand of
the rightful owner; while the lover
of nature showed his true character
by selecting some such brand as the
"flying arrow.”
Mr. Anderson announced in clos-
ing his talk that he had grown en-
thusiastically interested in the study
of the Texas cattle brands and was
eager to make a complete study of
them. He will be glsui to get let-
ters from people who can tell him
of peculiar brands and the history
that lies back of them.
-On the program were other pa-
pers with an interest for th© Texan.
Among these were:
Some Local Legends of Texas—
Mrs. Lillie T. Shaver, San Marcos.
A Batch of Mexican Border Bal-
lads.—Mrs. S. N. Gaines, Fort
Worth.
■X , , •
No names registered after above date. We give the chickens'and rabbits away on the 6th beginning at
10 o’clock strictly. Children, come and bring your Ma
ed on a Detroit Jewel Gas Range' to all visitors that day.
your inspection on this occasion. Come one and all, you are welcome,
be on hafid at 3 o’clock to see the
Mr. Jess Spillipan of Scottsville,
Ky., visited his brother-in-law, Mr.
J. T. Lyon, from Saturday until
Wednesday.
roughage or hay than recommended
will be needed.
In using cottonseed meal, or cot-
tonseed cake, it will not be well <o
feed over 2 lbs per 1,000 lbs live
weight per day. Care should be
taken to get animals up to this
amount of cake or meal gradually.
BEST CANTALOUPE SEEDS.
E. J. Kyle, professor of Horticul-
ture of the A. & M. college of Tex-
as, who has been successful in grow-
ing cantaloupes, uses the rust re-
sistant stock seed, the very best they
put on the market, which cost $1.50
per pound. it takes about one
pound per acre. He gets them from
Rocky Ford, Colo. He
planting between the first and 15th
of May, depending a good deal on
the weather conditions. The can-
taloupes begin to ripen from the
20th of July to the first of August.
Last year on account of the wet
weather, he was only able to get in
The gross
few odd
cents. He keeps close watch on the
melons and as soon as he sees some
leaves curling on the vines, he
makes an examination and if he
(finds any plant lice he immediately
------- , with straw and
Dr. Brown and son, Bernice of
Gustine spent Friday with Mrs. Nan-
nie Clark.
'" " T
Get Ready For Easter
'\A7’E Arc Putt?n2 in the most complete Bargain Counter in rAr.li»Xto.n; especially designed ,
w<ut Rome to give r eacn coy or girl who fetjisters" at‘ 'our '‘sto’re
on or before April 5 ' - .
your spring
Millinery until you have seen the
stock and styles at Mrs. McNatt's,
over Luttrell's grocery.
Mrs. A. D. Hutcheson and Miss
Mae Collins spent Saturday in Fort
Worth.
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Bowen, William A. Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, April 5, 1912, newspaper, April 5, 1912; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1302787/m1/5/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Arlington Public Library.