Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, January 30, 1914 Page: 4 of 8
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 10. 1914
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ARUWQTOI, TEXAS, FHI PAT, JANUARY SS, 1*14.
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Beasley, F. M. /
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purpose
H.
FOR
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and
of
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By the Pastor.
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WORK
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Ruth
Ward.
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over
anc
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RATH A
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INDIA-
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(“Buster”)
an-
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were
Arllngto-v
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. .State II.
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------o------
KILGORR-YANTB.
community
f-.lt
Brother Harris—ead he's afloat on the
—-------------1 not only eeaa-
the
same
A SURPRISE BIRTH D AT CEI.EBRA-
TION.
.....
play
thia
gore,
judge
has I
agent
This
last
will
— and
either.
in .
up j
1 Hl
not
try ” v
must.
cause
By P <>. LAPP’.
. Deputy.
Meadamaa
Johnson,
a
and
lines
nmura
Mt
I nuratK'ct.1
MIUI. IIUl
M ■
came
turera say so.
tor says:
VSR OF
a,
’i ■
-
- bar
Nal
•str<
■K . ,.
Peach
to be-
long,
....»1.00
. JM
• era
aoc
rig
loa
’ Bai
OOfl
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the
pro
’•j car
c<*
wh
fl
ton
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cou
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net
pro
On
tab
ton
wh
pro
bar
fir.
oar
and
the
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K'.v
I
AGRICULTURAL
SANTA FE SYSTEM.
■ ■«'■' 1-o-----------
It is not the liixh cost of living that
is a burden to moat people, but the
fool cost of high living.
MRS. 1— W. OWEN—HER
ABIDES.
pass and chart, but without a Vessel
or evea a life preserver.
It is reported that the Texas base
ball mangament have presented Gov
O. B. Colquitt with a life pass to all
» games of base ball. During the last
campaign it was shown that Judge
"Ramsey, while a member of the Tex-
as Supreme Court, claimed the credit
that we could
Does
THE NORTHEAST TE1H PRESS
' ASSOCIATION.
as the
abou t
W
I >/»■’**' /.>■ M . a.
--—----
CHEAPER EXPRESS HATES—GREAT j Intelligent
REDUOTION AND CONVENIENCE.
COTTON FABRICS,
appointing a committee thereunder, T Statements made in these columns a
K' •
I
■
■
j useful
. ful young
nephew of
pleasant. He Is al
1 South—may their 1
—J'Tt «? i1
, _ . . .
You can fatten a hog on’ Golden
Rod one-third cheaper than on oom; zQ
try a saok and be oosvinced. For sale -
I Bros.
cgseor and our patrons a moat suc-
ceaaful year.
Yours truly?
D D. Park and Brother
We might dif
•t endorse the
and character
t flffllW of the glmblet-polnl ray of
| narrow and selfish and incompetent
—Farmers, you should Insist that
the work of that committee on the
“Greater Consumption of Cotton” be
again Inaugurated, and by the same
capable men who were meeting with
Facta will
Fpge f*«r
THOS. H.
7 v>
. -T.
haa alao eome Into greater fashion
Tha mills are no longer content with
turning <>ui plain ootton or enllco.
W'*'
SK?* V'.' M
■
---------- •—
I
h
Br-'
I
!
w
■stared »t the Arlington Poet Offlee as Mail Matter of the Second Claaa.
MMMOmPTION RATU. MYABLK IN AOVANOC:
One Year.....
> . Six Months.. ...................
All Ada,, where not contracted fur a definite number of limes, will be oonlin-
ued until ordered out and charge made for ineertiona run.
All Ads., discontinued before time contracted for will be charged difference
v' . between tranaient rate for times run ami contract price.
We diaoount from regular card rates will be allowed not named in contract
and duly signed by an authorised repreaentatlve of The JOURNAL.
All advertisement bills payable monthly unless contracted otherwise
■ I of "decreeing” that we
■' base ball on ' Munday."
entitle him to a life pass'*
JOURNAL** PURLICJTT » AM-
PAIGN REARING FH1 IT.
■ ® v
THE ARLINGTON JOURNAL
one of the
only cotton
states
ll
On February 1. the new rates in ex-
press matter w Hl go Into effect. The re-
j ductions are great, and places the ex
press within reach of every one. as the
lates will rival—and In many cases
be Ipwer—the parcel post. And. a> is
well known. express packages go
more promptly than do postoffice par
cel packages and your receipt is an
insurance w ithout further oost. Bee Mr
Hargett, agent before shipping
Golden Hod will Increase your milk .
and butter; o.ne-third cheSper; try A
agrk arrd be'vbnvinced. For sale by
Luttrell Bros.
All cards of thanks, Church or Sunday school resolutions of respect, etn,
srtll be charged for at the rate of 5 cents per line Six words make a Udi,
aanh Initial or figure in dates, etc., counting as one word. Count your words,
divide by six, adding a line for any surplus words, and s;nd or bring **"
Money with speh notices. Also for obituarteA exoeeding 18 wordqpat
fates.
on «
’ at
Union fn Salina.
to ^explain Tb-rs+Hrgig
greatly <
!
The bntlre community regretted
that Mrs. 1^ AV. Owen fvlt called by
her large duties to other fields so soon.
She went to Abilene from here. Ni
•Be has ever visited Arlington who
gid so much real good for girls and '*nXt°n Mid
time as did Mrs. Owen. Her -textures Arlington Con
■nd her personal work with teachers,
boys and pArenta will abide. She Is |i
benediction wherever she works. May
•he live yet many years to do greater
end wider work, and enjoy the plaud-
its of those whom she has helped j
And. in the after-time, she will have j
her hands full of sheaves—for xhe has I
sown the spirit, and of the spirit she I
will reap everlasting life.
------0------
The Good Roads Convention at Fort
Worth this week was s great suc-
cesa. An impetus was 'given good
roads building that will be felt all
•ver Texas. Beside the ,apJ«sjdkl week of
President Warren, of tian Antonio.
Secretary Treasure Homer D. Wade,
‘■jvga aa usual, an inspiration to all.
and now President Woodrow Wilson
intimatefl the name thing, and bold.
—-----------
.....v
jMMtek.. ••» ■ 'afaS
I ■ . . ' I .
"< '*■■■' ' ■r'MJW, • "* --Jit'*-'ir*• ■’ .'ij
civilisation Few, lies,
so-much against them! chance.
The Journal is pbaaed that Its earn I
paign of publicity for the Great
llngton Country is already bearing
fruit And. in order for all to sec
just what is the special field of Ar
1 the Arlington Journal.
*e give an outline map of The Great
show, at a glance, that Arlington has
a magnificent field all of Ha own If It
be but cultivated and proper and
friendly relations established and kept
With those good people Inside this
j circle of The Great Arlington Country
Folk's. It Is squarely up to ua within
this circle. Let’s get busy and stay
everlastingly at it.
era In recognized
Southern Pacific
two year* a<o.
Yountf to fill
with that company.
The oroatlnR nT jiurh a position
in a tnovB,- tn the rttfht direction
and farmer* .and Iran wpor tat ien
line* should no operate and
Ip harmony.- Pari* News,
-j-----0--------
! to act with a like committee from
• the representative labor organisa-
tions for the purpoae of both great
organizations getting in elver touch
for mutual co operation where possK P»pulsrity
Ne. Thiu wise action shows progress.
------o—.......... *.
It is reported th>t Mrs. Finley
(formerly Helen Gotrttfh^XiJWonfli
thousand hungry rten on her f*' 1
wedding annlvernary. If she woulc
send fifty thousand of that kind to
locate on the Gould railroads in Texas,
to make farm homes, and raise food
stuffs, they would be Able to hasist
in feeding several thousand hungry
l»eople every day in the year.
---.—
The Supreme Court of a Wetrtern
State is recently reported to have
decided that' when a grocer buys
flour from a mill and agrees to sell
at a fixed price, and then sells at a
leas price, he is libel to damages.
If that is not favoring the principles
of a trust, we are badly mistaken.
-----o-----
The Chairman of the Inter-State
Commerce Commission has announc*
cd that the railroads of the country
----o
A LETTER TO THE JOURNAL FROM t »hen it Wiys:
The creating of such a position is
move in the right direction,
farmers and transportation
should co-operate and work in har-
mony.
Brother J .W. (“Buster") Biari
and Will P. Young are doing great
work for the upbuilding of farmers
in Texas,,—Farmer’s Fireside Bulletin
Conservative m«n of all callings
are favorably commenting upon the
resolution adopted by the Northeast
Texas District Farmers’ Union and
--- !--■■■* — —— ■ -I
The Arlington Journal
. Ptibllalted Kvary FrMay by
TH« ARLINGTON PRINTING OOMFANY
----------------------- ...--
c--—o----
The acquits) of Rev. J. Frank Norris ■■
waa juat what t.la many friends *x-,
I'veted—«n what we believed would I
result. And the rulings of Judge Jas I
■ .Swayne placed him higher ns a judu-' |
ii. the estimation of every unbiased. |
cltlxen. Judge. Swayne ;
showed that he was not afraid to do*
right. Some of theA(estlmony offered |
was shameless in its1 brazen affrontry
to intelligent honesty, and that such |
Incredibly rnanufnc.tilred stuff should'
he palmed off on the public shows
that we have not yet arrived at a high
plain of Christian Civilisation Few
men have had
because of their stand for what they
believed right, as has Bev. J. Frank
Norris—and this without any refer
costs of suit and for general relief
Herein Fall Not. Ini’ have you then
and there, on the 6th day qf April.
19’4. before said Court this writ,
with your return thereon, showing
how you have executed the same.
--------- " UUU4MA. JF., Clerk -•<-
--tea District CowrL. —wwr».-—«-»»»
. Given under my hand and seal of
said Court, in Fort Worth. Ihls tTth
—■ day of January, A. D. ISlfr ■ •
SJJ j K. J. BROCK, Jr..
W I Clerk district Court of Tarrant Conn*
----—O-----
O. that Michaelanxelo. Harris
but ywt on the triwod' Then three
big new,papers would not have com-
mitted such blunders without being
atralghtvwwd out as did the Fort
Worth Btar-Telegram w{ien it repeat-
' tn charge of the practical highway
department, wgs one of the beet things
tone.
■ Box 49 • , .■ -------.
j ■ .. ...
-------o-------
One of the flhlngs that makes cost
of fowls, bleats, etc., so high is the
enormous waste, especially* In fowls
-end eggs. In New YffTk alone, dur-
ing the holidays, more than 1100,000
worth of ^poultry was destroyed by
health inspectors of foods because it
was spoiled and unfit for human food;
and the eggs destroyed in like man-
ner were valued at about tit.000.
r.px-
Jonson
the authorship of Johnsons Dlctiqn
ary—a book oomplUd and printed more
'than one hundred years after "JJ
Rare Ben Jonson." the friend of
BWkkeepeare was deed; and of the Dal-
las News (and Old State Press Him-
self. at that) for crediting to tee
benevolent Mr. Boffin the poetical ten-
deney of the designing Mr. Silas WeKg,
Who was prone to "drop into poetry,”
as Charles Dickens himself insists in
"Our Mutual Friend." Had Michael
i angelo Harris been on the job oft
"keeping the literary record straight”
aa to Mr Geo'. Robinson, the Jeffer-
sonian. and Major Hugh Nugent Fitz-
gerald, the political records, those
brethren would be "hauled ove^ the
eoals" for those bad breaks. But,
alael The eliminating prohibitionists
houghi tha Wazux. News teem uedee are efrtitkd to htffhCT fretffht *•* * kad eemo lete greaiee use H
jburuallotlc sea. without
DO YOUR DUTY
Mark the Graves of Your Loved
Ones, See Us Before You Buy
Cemetery Monumental Works
Champion ;
Phone j] Arlington, Texas
Wh»re There's a
Farm There Should
Tlte progressive farm is
reuBds hhneeU with seetorn
•toantagqa.
He, lee, appreciates that oeea
MrGmwo gsleisters te health,
AaRpteesa, progrese aed wealth.
I' , What toee he del
' WWi ether eeighben he
■MtAi A Rural Tolepbewe Aaa.
I beupk said.
Aeeb seeor aewmCMaaao^a let he
, ' dermaRee e» wake to —**—*c-n
-f-----.1
ED ON A LI. THIS SECTION.
note from Mrs J. C. Denny, at
Sawyerville, Ala. in renewing her
subscription to the Journal. saysf
"Mr. Bowen—kindly s<w that my pa-
per (the Journal )ls mailed to me
regularly, as 1 miss It so much if
_ It fails to come. I certainly enjoy
fsrmers voted to kill It, keeping up with my Arlington friends
- and the Journal la so full of home-
news from that ettv nr»d section gen-
erally Cordially yonre. with regards
to all my good friends
> Too late for thia issue, we got a
letter of gr««at internet from far-off
■ East India for publication^in the Jour-
nal which will appear next week. Tha
Journal is read even tn the land of
the Brahmins. And. yet by the way. to-
night or tomorrow night, there will
be one of the Yogis of India at the
Talace Theater here, who will have
some interesting Qiingx to say and
show us. Mpnager Winter will
nounce by dodger juat when he will
come—but it will be interesting and
instructive and amusing.
The Journal congratulates and con
with good brother R. K Yantis,
and proprietor of the Athens
ly says that the prosperity of the T^ep
c< " , . *. 1
prosperity of the railroads. Now,
where is the demagogue who will cry
out that the abhve two officials AN
controlled by th* interests?
K — ■” ■ o" /
The Texas Good Roads Conven-
tion is in session at Fort Worth as
we go to press, and th* editor of
Farmers* Fireside Bulletin is a del-
egate. We trust many farmers Will
lie present, and that good roads will
become even more5 common than
ever in Texas. They are needed to
assure farmers success.
-----0---*■ i?* > "
I-et the boys have their own ♦log;,
Texas are as well known tn farmer*
all over the State as is Brother Biard;i such great success before.
Bulletin b* •fi'ren from time to time to back
» n- »h UP ■" °f thia matter. And woe be
*" j to thoxe who oppose aueh work by
and of and for farmers because It
runs counter to their personal
schemes and small local or Individual
plans. ' v
Read the following from the Chris-
tian Science Monitor, one of the great-
est and cleanest dally papers in the
United States (published at Baston),
and you will get some pointers. And
It Is no* giving facti to its more
than 2S0.OOO subscrlberetbat our read-
ers know Farmin’ Fireside Bulletin
gave to its readers many. many
month, ago. Aim, It shows just what
Fanners’ Fireside Bulletin contended
for. that cotton la getting niore valu-
able all the time. Cotton manufac-
Read what the Mohi-
ARL1NGTON MAN RKCRIVIN'
OGNITION.
I*rof. J. O. I^awrence Is" receiving
many calls for an evening* with his
great collection of Civil War photo-'
graphs. Rev, J. Frank Norris urges
him to give* an evening at the First
Baptist Church In Fort Worth. Since
the world beifan it has always been
true that the work and achievements
of mill have been better known
abroad than In their own home Hence,
the old proverb: "A prophet is not
without honor except in his own coun-
Tbia is true-r-not because it
or even Ought to be; but be-
ef the narrowness, ignorance
and perversity of fplks—and there is
always a great deal of human na-
ture tn folks Frequently the only re-
buffs a ntnn gets, who is doing a
world-wide and world-needed work. Io
in the small, narrow, confined lo-
cality where he Ilves.
1 attended the session of the North-
east Texas l*ress Association at M<
Kinley last week, and- never was an
sutsenibly of new.-paper men more roy
elly .treated than we were in Me Kin- '
■«•>■ Senator Tom Perkins, of the
Courier-Gazette an d the Messrs
Thumpsons. of the Examiner-Inquirer,
were backed up as’hosts by the Com-|
■erclal Club, the cljy officials and
all the citizens, including the women
•f the Federated Clubs. And Jhe ban-
quet to the men at the splendid cafe
• u a most enjoyable one. aa It was
a superbly arranged and successfully
•arrled out affair. 1 also^ spent a
aiost pleasant evening as guest of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brown In their
most beautiful and perfectly arrang-
ed and appointed home—and every
detail, both of architecture and Inside
finishing and furnishing. was their
own work, plans and ideas. They have
•ueceeded in making a model h<ini<*.
To me the occasion was especially de-
lightful because I have known Mrs.
Brown sinceTjer'ba&yliood. and knew
her mother in, her girlhood — Mrs. Rob-
ert S. Hyer. wife of the distinguished
■resident of the Southern Methodist t
University, of Dallas. McKinney may
command me in ail things hereafter.
And I must add that my Association
with my good frjeAd. Hqn. E. W. Kirk
Patrick, w-as most pleasant. He Is a^
gentleman of the Oli South—mav their!
tribe never grow le
few months ago. says tlie-''Christian
Science Monitor, to the effect that ar-
tistic treatment of cotton in the weav-
ing of fatirles w*as bridging the. latter
into fashionable recognition and wide
are auw eonflrmod fully -
■in several quarters, jn none more em-
phatically and satlafaCterlly than on
the shelveji and counter*, of the great
retail <fry . goods houses and In the
‘costumes turned out hy the modistes.
, A dream ef tt»< Southern section* of
first the United States is thusx being real-
roaljTse* but in a mosFW«YHcYrrfiuU»ner. ’
In the days of chedp cotton and con-
sequent dull times In that section, the
.hope wee thst cotton might some-
how or other be brought Into more
general use st home and abroad. The
outlook seemed unsatisfactory at
home, because the United States wom-
en aa a rule were wearing goods
made of every other fiber than the
great staple of thrflr owa oountFy.* and
It appeared that with them cotton i
would always bo "common.*** Ratter '
things were expected from the Orlrfht. i
however. If China. • for Instance, <
could only be opened to American *
trade, cotton would go up, perhaps (
7 ysnts, or it might even jump to 10 <
cents a pound.
"It is unnecessary to talk of cotton <
prices in this t>1aCe, What happened 1
with relation to cotton consumption
was not even to be Imagined In ths <
early '90s. Suffice that yt has been 1
put te scores of new uses, Moreover, J
j -
Quite a crowd of neighbor* and
friends gathered at the home Of Mr.1
and Mrs. D. H. Huff, out on inter-
urban near Elliott stop, to celebrate
ths birtbtoy anniversary of Mrs.
Huff.
Many of those attending took with
them some delicacy, more or less sub-
stantial article of food In order that
they might have a part in providing
the dinner. All this was a surprise to
Mrs. Huff, and wks a groat day f<ir
all present.
Those present Welle: Mesdamaa
Chas Rogers, J, T. Johnson. Kllia
’Wade, Geo. Fitzhugh, Henry Wilder
Oliver Heltt, G. B.
White, G. T. Burton. J. H. Spradlin, ■
Oscar Pogue, Walter Burton; Misses
Lura Fitzhugh end Nellie Potts.
thousand* of farmers over Texa.-».
and tow whom Brother Biard is . well j wvts.
and favorably known.
As the News says, few men in;
A GOOD FREEZE.
■Ince writing the weather notice,
•IsejYhere. * good freeze came Thurs-
day night which will be of Antold'
value to the entire country. Earljr
» F-Hey (this) morning, test •
Journal goes toprssa tbejun
m*M And It Is clear and eold.
-
S , CARD OF THANKS.
D. D. Park end blether, having sold
their business to Mr. Will Fletcher,
hereby return grateful thanks to |1te
people of Arlln^n nnd this eeuntry
for their liberal patronage during "the
J. W. (Buster) Rlard has been
appointed agricultural agent of
the Snnta Fe Railroad This is
an office just created by the San-
ta Fe in order to co-operate
more closely with the farmers tn
Texas. Mr. Biard's duties will be
to - visit, farmer* at their homes
and meetings, and discuss soils
and fertilizers, and how former*
van raise more r>n less space.
No one In Texas Is better qual-
ified. to fill this position thsn
Mr Biard. who was born and
raised in Lamar county,-where hl*
parents were plonenr settlers, and
there are but few men in 'Texas
who.enjof a larger acquaintance
among farmers than does Mr
Biard
His appointment Is a compli-
ment to Larner bounty, and shows I
that the Intelltyrr nee of our far m-
abroad,
Railroad
selected W P
a similar position
It
mnst important for. i
growing, but for all the
And this Is exactly the fact,
too. l( was smallness, jealousy. In-
competence and ignorance that kill-
ed that work. Farmers’ Fireside Bul-
letin has no hesitancy In raying this
Many good I
because they were misled by men in
whom they had confidence. Some of
these latter had special and personal
reasons foj killing that--or any other
action which brought out in strong
i light the successful work of crumble
THE JOURNAL KEEPS THEM POST-
ON ALL THIS
from Mrs J
Ala. in
to the
_ , J are producing ‘ soma eotteu
■ountry ia largely dependent on the that place the fabric on a level
with those composed of much cost* -s - —- •
%yer fibers. Optton goods and cloth* by Luttrell
Ing made from cotton goods ere no
longer sesentlally common. Tbe-work
-and art than *ntar lnly manufac-
ture of cotton goods are now apprais-
ed. find with the result that people
'are already beard to wonder how it
ever happened that cotton wea> was
donee
editor
Review on the loss of hia oldest daugh
ter and chief helper But this loss I*
in the naturfe of great gain—for Miss
Hallie Yantis and Mr. Homer N Kil-
gore. of Manton. were married at
Jacksonville on the 11th Inst Thus
Brother Yantis loses a most dutiful,
talented and devoted and most ad
niirable daughter only to gain a .iplen
I did son-in-law. thus having two chll-
• dren in the place of one And all the
editors of Texas wilt Join in best
wishes for this most deserving young
couple to have a success&ei. happy and ;
life. Mr. Kilgore iM’a success I
business man and I* a|
the late Judge B. C. Kil j
congressman and United States I
GFEI't’ •* «»»IEN—AND
THE HOME
The Arlington Journal will, until
March 1st. mall, absolutely free r.f
charge, one o( the A>ry best cook-
book* ever printed (containing 1(1 of
the best known recefnes. many of
them of the moat noted chefs and cooks
6f (he wbrld) tb any woman or girt
’.Y^ho will send In (or get her husband,
brother it other member of the fami-
ly! to do so) a subscription to The Ar-
' ’ll rig ton Journal—either renewal >r
'new. This eook book Is tried and
E ‘proven; more than a million of therrt '
'^avr been Sold''(nt6 the best homse.
i'at from 11.00 " up to 11.(9 ^ esch
Now. th!* offer la extraordinary, and
you‘will have to set quickly. To nave
t .tithe and Mtpense and trouble, on this
, .offer you Wfgy remit to tu in stamps- -
4 -—two-ceht stamps Just place fifty
, IjMrit stomps In kn envelope, fill out
th* following coupon, clip it out of
The Arlington Journal nnd send it
tn: ’• ' k ..
‘ Women’s Department The
JontnaU • ’ ■ ! ■
Flease send ate eibaelutely free, post
. paid,** copy of the Woman's Exchange
Cook Book*' wlHTMX woflf-famous re-
"cipeA* I IncYeto fifty l-cent stamp* to
SrsSSSSa**
word* "hot needed.)
Naihe A..
I A’>S
■nd the Farmers' Fireside
predicts every success
Biard, in his new duties.
The Paris News states a fact
| „ ° i
Hvery parent interested in the suc-
cass and welfare of the farm-boys and '
girls in this section should'!.see that ,
the boys and girls attend the meeting
ef the Cora. Hog and Baby Reef Clubs
at the City Hall here dext Saturday-
tomorrow. This Is a great move, and
while other sections of Tarrant county
are represented, and the boys earned—
and took a trip to Washington, the '
Great Arlington Country should be j
leading in such matters. |t all de-
pends upon the parents first, for the
Loys and girls delight In really dc-
Irg things worth while. Encourage
them. Come and bring them out Bat- calves and corn and feed-stuff lands.
Vitor. And give them some time of their
own for working and attending to
’ these. They will not only profit in
money, but in acquiring practical
knowledge that will build up farm-
life and keep them on the- farms.
--o..... '.....' -
Get books for the farm-home. Not
only agricultural books, but good
literature. Teach the boys %nd girls
the reading habit.
----------0----------!.
Let boys and girls have some land
of their own and encouraged to
' raise the largest crops with greatest
profits. It is in profits that success
Give the boys and girls a
— ■ 1
has Rev. j. Frank I Girls,, join the Canning and To-1
without any refer | mato clubs. There is not only splen
enc® to methods or manner <>f dealing! rii«l social occasions and benefits, but
with public question*. We might dif a!so much profit in the work, and it
fer with these and
man and his
And we do.
Some members of the Farmers
Union in other than cotton states,
I w ho acted upon prejudice and caused
I the abrogation of the work
"* .."Greater Consumption of Cotton"
the last National Union in “ '
o.i mat cotcun wear w»» [Ur innr uurio psui'MM* uuopi vne
thought below the notice of the rich: more than three. ySara. we have bpenO^
and the faehionable. Jinlbuain®aa here. Wishing osr sac-
Cetten le not. nor oan It ever be,
linen, wool, silk, eattn or velvet. It
'must remain cotton. But aa ootton.
and standing upon its own merits, it
now ranks, in Its place, with the beat.
It ia not "cheap" tn the offensive
■epee; it is not “cotnmon;" It is not
"low." It can be treated ao aa to
present a very dignified appearance;
It can be made up ao aa to carry an
air of gentility. It ia worn today
openly by the proudest, aa it ia worn
comfortably by the humblest. The
great American * tuple has come Into
Its own.—Farmers' Firealde Bulletin.
CITATION BY PUBLICATION.
THE STATE OF TEXAS; i
In the District Court of Tarrant
County. Texas. April, A. D. 1#14, term:
To the Hheriff or any Constable of
Tarrant County. Greeting: . .
You are hereby commanded, that by
making Publication of thia Citation in
eome newspaper pnblished In the
County of Tarrant, four week’s pre-
vious to the return day hereof, you'
summon Raleigh Martin, whose resi-
dence is unknown, to be and appear
before the District Court of Tarrant
County, to be holden in and for the
County of Tarrant, at the Court Hou»'»
thereof, in the City of Fort Worth, on
the first Monday In April, A. D., 1014;
the same being the (th day "of April. A.
D, 1914. file number being ((>?(,
then and there to answer the peti-.
tion of Mary Martin fil<-d in sold
Court on the 1<th dn-y of January.
A. D.. 1914. against the xnid Raleigh
Martin and alleging in substance as
follows, to wit;
Plaintiff sues for dlvorcp alleging
that she and defendant were married
October 16th. 1911. That defendant
on November 14th, 1911. burned the.
home of the mother of plaintiff, andU
thereby tried to k>)l plaintiff and her
mother; that such conduct on th«»
part of defendant. »a aforesaid, ren-
dera the further living together of
plaintiff and defendant as husband and
wife, .insupportable. Plaint rft ' prays
that citation Issue to defendant, that
plaintiff have judgment for d I yorce,
------0------
Farmers, prune tho.«e fruit Irrifn,
especially the peach trees,
tree# must hot be permitted
come top heavy. Nor ’must
scraggy limbs grow downward or out-
ward. Sunlight and air must sweep
through peach trees. Don’t be afraid
of pruning them too much, as
| ----------o--
GREATER CONSUMPTION OF
COTTON — MANUFACTURERS
SAY MOST IMPORTANT WORK,
P. U. PROGRAM OF THE C*>N-
TRAL BAPTIST CHURCH FEB-
RUARY A
Subject—Being
God.
I .vader
Hong
Prayer
Scripture Quotations—John 4:14;
Paa. 147:6; Psa. 83:1S; Heb 3:4; Rom.
l:?0; Jer. 10:10; memorized and re-
cited by five members.
The Arguments for God’s Existence.
Mia* Frances McKinley.
Duett r . . "He Knows It AU”
Misses Hadie Bom , and Jewel Waller
God Existed Before the World Waa
Made . . Bro. Boone
There ia But On- God.. ...Bro. Waller
Hong . . .,.
What Kind of Being Is God? *
Mi.*a Merle Brytner
I the last National
, Kan., will yet have .. ,
| aetion—and at no greatly distant I Closing Prayer
' day, either. ^}b,' deadintr ' papers
| the United Stall’s are now’ to kin*
| this question and showing that
(---- ---- -------... .
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Bowen, William A. Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, January 30, 1914, newspaper, January 30, 1914; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1302882/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Arlington Public Library.