Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, October 30, 1914 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 14 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:
WWW
. y
/
i
A. & M. Farm Notes.
Valuable Facts
By JUDIC CHOLLET
;4-
Value of Heated Cotton Seed as Fertilizer
began to be so interested in see-
at
i
i
os, but I Induced the cotumnnder to
I
jr ■
i
1
ft.
I
A.'<
il-
gw
rr <$S
i
she had nothing to do at th •
TRIED RECEIPTS
►
Operation—Profitable
1 J
*.-i\
-----H
The farmers of
the
own cooperatively
or
Six*
ive- The trouble was there were
Ad<ir»»M*
*
I
at
I
»
4
c
'I
I
K ■
!S/5
No..
81m
Nam* ....
I
AMr«aa
for suitable
,7
n
■W-
—=‘;
rw *
♦
• i
THE ARLINGTON JOURNAL
i
I
i
day to yiir the animals, ke?p
proper i 1 ‘
decide whether or not a given
i anmftl is i
Foes When Lull FaHs
on Strife.
C
s
FASHION HINT
r d
i
I
y
a
l
J
<
1
i
ton seed meal. A case of
serves
ed.
By JUDIC CHOLLET
-x
< •» ■ ...
<*»
-
■■ ' ' ■ Mr
i't.
.M'v M ■
r.
I •>«««•••
. I*
COSTUMES DESIGNED BY
GIRLS.
4
die Of the street, and altbuuxh Uei
words were sometimes lost iu the noise
of exploding shells, she went right on.
“ ‘If the Germans get buek Into the
city thia time.' I asked are you going
to otayF
“ ‘I shall be all th« more needed if
they come tmek * Mme. Maclierea re'
Piled
“‘When* they came the Oral time
how did they behave?" ■ <■ . .....
•TRFET LN BK1<H<N TVU \ PILLJKD Uli
htonfm to gkiiman alaamk
Officials Gone, Woman Takes
Over Government of
French City.
! LITTLE STORIES OF HAPPtiJiiGS
J FIELD OF WIB III EUROPE
J —w.- —
hill after another was added, he ; ’ Humanity Makes Brothers of
began to be so interested in see- o ’ ~
ing the row grow longer that ha !1
, Minted Meat in Tom tn*
Selertt solid’. Tsrm? tomato’-;,
one for each nelson to to serv-
ed Cutoff the stem end. r rwv<’
the cores anrf seeds, jtband tto” -
in a baking- pan d'st with
and pepper; nirt a bit of btote'
the site of a oew <n each tmnste
and bake until thev are temfe-
r-y;r-r-~----, ■
7-4-g-' ~r •
.
•M..-U4-•/.■j.”
--------. j.- _...n "is
T . . I
$£j
.-■rllzv
**
per ton.
If the cotton seed has merely
heated and fermented so as to
render it unfit for the manufac-
ture of meal, it has lost very lit-
tle of its fertilizing value. It has
to rot in the ground before the
fertilizing constituents can be
taken up by the plant. If, on the
other hand, the cotton seed has
been left out of doors to be rain-
ed on and it has decomnosed so
that it has all run together, it
has undoubtedly lost a portion
- of its fertility, but it would be
impossible without a chemical
analysis to show what its value
would be. However, even when
’ thoroughly rotted. I should
judge, that it would be equal to I
stable manure value, which is'
worth about $3.50 per ton
okb pibcb ssnrr with you.
edge; therefore It can be used for bor-
dered material* and for floundnga »a
well aa for plain or atrlped gooda.
For a dancing gown a deep lace
Oounce over a skirt of cbarmeune
would be beautiful, or chartneuae eatia
would be pretty with a bnaque or gir-
dle of velvet and there are vartoua oth-
er auggeatlona that might be made.
For the medium alae the akirt wbl
require three ..nd one-half yarda of
material twenty-aeven inchee wide.
The width of the akirt at the lower
edge le one yard and thirty-one tnebea.
Thia May Manton pa It era la cut la ataee
from M to tt Inches we tat meaeurw Scad
K» cents to this office, giving number. MM.
•nd ft will be promptly forwarded to you
by mall . If In haste aend an additional
two cant stamp for letter poets** When
ordering um coupon . v
w1’/
K*-2
Th*'
useless
idlemen is one or rne purpos- >
of this little vohrme. which;
erv Texas farmer should read. .
Farmers* Fireside Bulletin in- ‘
vites every
Sauce Sabayon.
Put a pint of milk in a doub'e
boiler. S^nerate.two eggs; add
to the yolks four tablesnoonfuls
of sugar: beat thoroughly and
add the hot milk when mixed,
return it to the double boiler,
and cook until, the custard sticks
to a knife blade. Take from the
fire ? add a tablespoonful of va-
^1
| furniture, mantel■ tiles, fireplace
I fronts and the various fabrics
l used in household decoration.
The woods, wall papers, draper-
ies, moulding, etc , are illustrat-
ed in color. The Manual Train-
ing Department will'also be rep-
resented by pieces in wood work-
ing, metal work and wood car*
ing and by house plans. The
■■ .* I .’|M
%
Pugu Two
fa.
GALVESTON — Declaring
th-ait the raising of more eatt’e
is the solution of the food prob-
lem, N. E. Hay- former Gov-
ernor of Washington, and who
was recently in this city, says
that Texas farmers should give
more time and thought to this
particular line of industry. Hr
also said that the farmers must
plant a greater acreage of for-1 train Mmr. Jconne Wntt«*nn Machcrn.
age crops, as the large grazing a heroine of the war. took charge of
the city, ran the boopltnla. auperin
tended na nl tat Ion. afreet Henning and
In fact, everything The civic author
j Itlea had left
“The Germane were making a de
terrolmd nttdek on the town da we '
-k. - *•••*«>." aaye a correapondent “I
few years than any dther crop timed thirtywtvea aheiia in #» min
1 ute Mme Machrre* atood tn the mid
exhibit will have a new location ; mestic science features of the
college will be shown by bread,
cake, cookies, otc„ made from
th-' various Hours- including cot-
*“ TWJ WI1U LRBA.tr until Vlltrv ttltr V^IRJT-
and piekfcswitlbe inctod- *«* "* ««»
* cooked m-'st sufficient to the
tomatoes, with gilt, pepper an-<
a little crushed celery see*fT nut
BIG TASK DONE IJTTLE AT in a sarce nan with a littlest^k
if water, andstjr until hob. Ta' e
I the tomatoes from the oven, fl*’
Z.Vwy. "X.rf
owl
Pu. a and potash at 6 cents
po- a ton of cotton seed
to the unfinished row and it will
leave only one hill of potatoes
before you to work on and it will
'not take you long to hoe that, <>
then go on to the next one an3 I!
from the position in wihich you , J
will stand you can see nothing <;
but ths finished work which will ' •
encourage you to go on.“ ! 1
The plan was tried, and as one ] |
'MT?
i. SSeagon fiK-'l-.
with a half-teaspoonful each o'
salt, black pepper, and Worces
erahire saucer mix the eggs anf
fish; turn 'rrto a fish or nud*
dirg mofu, and steam tfrr< e
quarters of an hour, or place H
a pan of water and mok in tH*’
oven. Serve hot with crenrr
on the- top of ertch and servo
MAke the tomato seance: bafhre
you heat the meat.
Costume design in color for ,
both millinery and dressmaking
in a feature of the College of
Industrial Arts exhibit at the
Dallas Fair. The whole college
win iiiivv a n^w iwawwii
thss year, Along the north side
- of the Coliseum. .
The draft work Of the fine
arts dasaea will include potterv,
made from Denton clay in in-
ciaed and relief designs, samples
of cardboard construction, reg-.
ular bookbinding, tooled and
- carved leather. Designs made
by student* in the study of sti'l
life and plant forms have,been
applied to the various arts of the
^C*I——. T W*ta4i»ax|-T,l AW** Pp. I
apartment.—basketry,
■work- china pairtting and stenc-
iling. Clay and wax modeling
are illustrated in their use for
the developing of designs which
are finally used in metal and
wood
tin costume designing
students have designed
one said, she 3elt so loaded down i
with work she "did not know
where to begin “
In discussing this problem and
trying to devise ways and means
to accompliiih the work easily
and quicker the story was told by
the manager of a large concern
about the boy who became dis-
couraged over the prospect of
honing the whole field of pota-
toes, for it looked to him an al-
most endless job. Every row
seemed long as he looked the
i whole length of it, and the WOTk
did not progress very fast FL
, Hally his father went out to
J where the boy was
rUle' soon found what the diffi-
Iculty was, and said- Tty^son, — #—---
i j just turn round with your back grown today .
No development of the fkvortte
baaqu<- iden yet seen la prettier ttsa
thia one
It abowa the cbaractertaUc flalab •**
the akirt. yet it la abort enough to be
dreaay for dinner and evening wear,
and the half low chemisette with the *
high rolling collar not alone twratosb
h' --' t. » J
V^tKENCH oeweiwpera, saya a re
M cent dispatch from Europe, are
not averse to relating atoriea qf
German acts of klndneko to the
' euenilee of the kaiser Here Is one go
Ing the,rounds in France: A French re
aerrtat Warned Aubrey was wounded
by a shell near Nanteutl-le-Haudouin
_j was found the following morning
lying belli jess In s field by a German
patrol ■ -The Germans rushed upon him —
With fUed- bayonets, but Aubrey, fear ‘“They wanted an Indemnity from
lag that |Uj< last hour bad come, plead
ed with one gray tended German sol
dier nnrt tried to show him by panto
’mime that he had a wife and children
- "Txmi bksband and -father?" asked
tbeOarnnin In bad French.
"Yes.” wu.<l the reply
v "1 grandfather; have Ove sons In
annyv" said the German, w^o there
upoq carefully bandaged Hla French
eoturade'ir’wound Then the guns be
gan ttCthmider and the Geranms re
■ tired, leaving Aubrey to be found soon
afterwasd by a Frewh.-pntrol.
- Soldiers’ Marriages Encouraged.
Aroused l>y stejis taken by Germany
and Austria to protect themselves
against a falling birth rate and the
death rate Ihf-ldental to the war. Eng'
land continues to -.iwoiirngi* marriage
of recruits <- on t<*g<><*u foreign service
At Hit- suggestion ,»f th<- ari‘hbisho{>
I of Canteri-urv k- tins probably already
b<s-i> ku >n-> in \iin-ro"i tlio dloceann
w
Ifesr'*
■-
I
-
’ Friday, OctoMr 30, 1914
FASHION HINT
the
four
types «1 dress—morning house
< Presses, business uits- afternoon
• gowns and evening dresses. The
• designs have been worked up
into actual drew** and ’these
are also on exhibition- Other
xigggfc Emos the domestic arts de-
partment will indude dresses of
wool, crepe de chene, kwn, silk
i blouses, aprons and under muf-
fins. There will also be sets of
table linen and bed linen; hand
Ifoen, in towels, doilies, center-
. pieces, ribbon, flowers, tatting
and embroidering
Sfouse plans for the manual
traning department will be
^1w>wn ana in connection with
them drawings from the cJasms
■ Ta interior decoratJo"‘
flpititincr tn€ aiiicrenv
rooms of the house and show
original designs for suitable
1 No itkirt < uuhl lie eaaier to maka
{ fhau thin <><w un<l uouc prettier to
wear with one of the k>ug baaqoaa ar
one the dwp girdle* that make aueh
I featiireM of autumn and winter atyiea
The akirt H perfectly straight betow
th* vnke and gathered at the upper
A TIME
One of the greatest diifficul- them with this mixture, put a
KTS51SSSSV£g -
‘do through the day piled up in
a big heap on the desk when the
business woman goes into the of-
fice in the morning, when the
housekeeper start her days work
or whatever the labor is. If it
looms high before one, with all
the details attached, it is apt to
cloud the vigion, cause confusion „— --------
and prevent the best work. As J nilla, and put it aside to cool.—
>4jfcr aaaqira.
♦
the newest faabion; It atoo la *ragy
generally becoming, the collar making
j a moat effective frame for the face.
The sleeves are plain, but may be
t cut to any preferred length. Suck a
; basque would be ciiamiing.made of oao
1 of the fashionable soft satins.
F'or the medium size tbe basque will
require three yards of material twenty-
seven Inches wide, with <>ne-f<»urth
yard thirty-sis inches wide for the
chemisette trod one and one-half yards
of lace "it in- tu-s wide for the sleeve
I frills
| Tlita May Manton p.i-tern *x cut tn st«e»
, i from It to-C inches bust measure Send
,i 10 cents to ttjs otjice giving number M08,
•*"’ U p'rompily forwarded to you
- by mall If in haste send nn additional
I two cent stamp for letter postase When
I orderinr use vofipon
No
Nant4»
l-tiuto ny Auirio.ii t reaa AaeoelaXlon i
raaacH orri kh uu> zmuavoh oh •*•<■ *
acwui|M«uy me about the city to prove
to him that he w:t< nsklng too touch
1 convinced him that could give me
more tlnni we hut 1
'Thl« uas Mine M.ivtieres s tusaltsw j
way of potiliu: u t>«,4 I hod Ivurmsi i
how. Iu in! 'ii c t-'*1 «he h -d resK' -,ll
the <h in I’.-* I -y- -I t1... d-t' r to
bllis-o noil ureal <pmwtnl,-s of wines
ami liu.-flli hod secure I l-etter terms '
Germany Loses Chief Bandmaster,
The l.iindoti I'lihatlrle's <v«rres|ion<J
eld nt ’ nt;.i - ivs one of the most cu
rlotis the war was made
In the io-l"hl,<>rt>H.<| of Ypces ahi’ll the
btindin i-ti-i u» hU'f of the German
army « i- i -ken \ g-»»l ileu) of doubt
nt tirsi -nt i *>4iii-lr»i tlie Identity of the
mus h de> orat. il umIIvMiihI in hla got
ceviiM nniforui
He I'tinlids u«rHi loouiiieti i-ulon. and
his store of mush' also fe'i hito the
hands i-r hia enptors ,
It was on the outskirts ql Yprea that
a numbev of soldiers came upon this
bnpimlng functionary aented. dlocon
aolatcly nnd deserted, on n tree stump
by tbe wayside endeavoring to tie up
with bin handkerchief f slight wound
hr his right band Be was surrounded
end Informed that be wag a prisoner.
This Increased hla dejection, and he
said Chat he had lost hla band
The bandmaster In chief was march
«d off. but before night fell be made
in effort to eecnpe. Though be may
toow n greet deal about mnaic, be
proved n child In the matter of en
deavorlng to elude bls captors, so the
bandmaster In chief of tile German
army remains n gloomy prisoner.
Prayed For His Dead Leader.
“There is one picture 1 will never for-
•tt.” anya a German lieutenant's letter
to the Cologne Gaactte “We shot
down s patrol of ebnsseura Two men
. '*4, Z ■ •' --
_
value of ish’t it?— this thing of having
fresh meat on the farm through-
. out the long hot summer at ac-
■ trial ciMtt—no rska uff. no nrof-
it, no middle-man, no dis-
content, no grumbling—just
fresh meat at any time in any
quantity at cost.
This, as well as many other
of adventures in co-operation by
Texas farmers, is chronicled in
i detail, by Professors Austip
and Wehrwein . in their 100-
page bulletin. No. 366, distrib-
uted by the University of Texas.
French Pudding
Flake sufficient cold hope '
fish to make one cunful. Beat a"
egg. without senaratiner. until
7— S^h'hrneeSn,A.f
used more moat than he furnish- j they know along the above hn<-
ftd to the club, he pa vs ten cents | This is exaftb ^Hat te™
1-er pound for the excess. Simple. need practical co-operahon
he Jorgot all about those that
were to be done and the work
was completed long before he
had thought it possibly could be.
This same idea was expressed
by a young woman in chi’ge o
of the filing department of >
large business establishment ;
She said when she saw so man-
letters in front of her in
morning It looked as if she He
could not possibly get through
the day but when she remefflber-
ed that there was only the on'
on the too o-f the pile that was fr
be attended to, she found tha’
her work was much more sMt •«
isfactory to herself. One of th-
girls in her department went te
her one day and in a tone nf dis-'
cobragement asked: “Ar*-all or
these lef+ers to be filed th:s ar
temoon?4' “All ynu hsve to do,‘
was the reply, “is to file tbe on«
on the top.“
The girl grasned the thought
and in less than two hours wh?
told her they were all done- The
work had been done » quickly
thoroughly and without conf”-
sion, for the next work at h°n
had not been hard to accmnnii’’
and she had not borrowed tro’ b
le over the prospect of what w«
further ahead and with ”’hi>
Sardine Bills in CtLCumhors
Remove th? skins and tai’-
i — -- —. I from one box of sirdine-: r >'
----- I sands of transactions, nay, mil- \Vorcei;ter<;hirp snnep- a ’-«h <•
I*-armor* Fol] of* Practical Co- lions mndc in Toxhs every dnvt j t^H^sco ind fo**"
a • w-x e • . tt — /^.ll • * I' k* rn .. mm wa an^vzara« s FAid ,
the n*ste into ball? ♦” a |
j ■ jiikiiah ... V. P-'el 1 ro - ’
[sized cuc”mbcr end c”'t p ’n‘
...---------------- . t ... -_o_ ! half inch slices, remove the
neighlxirhcod in Coryell county mission man $.85; the express | ciicnrnber in ro’d w”t< »'
.vly a slaughter company $1.00; retailer wjthoi*f salt fo»-on*1 or t”
house paying a butcher $3.00 p*-r $2-30. (If the_retailer fed, he re hours At serving time nut a <u»r.
... IT? C.v k^:p ceived $2.30 minus cost of feed.) dine ball on each slice .and plae«-
record? of the efub and ln no c*®® was the profit excess- slices in a nest of lettuce
. I . . >1 ----- ----
.. in fit condition for the four parties standing betwen the
table. The principle record kept farmer and the consumer. Fne
consists of a large sheet posted elimination of certain useless
in the slaughter house showing! middlemen is one qfthe PnrP^
the names of the members, the 1 es <
amount of meat taken by each I every
„ ,'V ,,, , >< », r<Mll
t>l«ho|i* «4 the tlmr- h ->r Eii^I.iikI have
(mill,- iiM»i-kr.i ih til,,'
«'li.iriit«»ll for -nm i init,- th piih.
miuI - liwnrvnren thn>iml«>iH tin- ihI.-iih!
• ri- ibvlr |w.rM,»»>>l
III CiwTiiifBI '•••’I lixtrl.i fill
tnnrrhriex-, were wnivwl entirely, mid Hi
tiiHni flrr-i iiu-ii innrrt.s) th-
tv i IT 'in* ma*» lheir b> Iiu ki
rOl|l|lH|MMH
Gotali vw*vt»»r ring* were Own,* «w*y
wlti>. iwwl »rr»n rtnz* euliHtltutixl foi
the ' i-remetay Then the married worn
rti wine -dr.THlv h-id Kokl wedding ring»
offered* rli»-m rw .-<»itrUinro>iin to the I
war filed iuh> replaced tlieoi with rtnga.
Hlnillue t», th»we worn hy tin- war
hridtiw
n»«- :ri'tabh<hw,> of I \iutertiury Ih «r I
<lrni.<clnc to have tile government
a-nnn- tie- 'lamp f,*- -if F2.5O which Wi j
linnwH..' <-u each ninrrtage ■ ertitiento |
H.inl diiw+HtiM l>txha>|w have reduci-d the )
iiiiicrinttv IkTH* f<-«- to $2.50 in tihe
< ;uo HMtfftere and -uillors of limtaed '
laomiH
Fornwdy it ,-.*t $!•’ to procure a
(aiirrbure Urenae properly Hta<n|H-d by
•he government. The < ost Ih now $5
and tbe nrehb'Hhop of t'nuterl-nry hofiea
•o bore it lowered to $2. Ml
Nearly half n million recruits are
quartered In ciinvpH acattered through
•ut England Tbta new army of Kltch
eurr’a probably will not lie rent to the
tnWliH-nl for M Ic.wt hIx montha
Many wedding* lire occurring dally
at the varlooH ccmpa. and new re
-tniita and their sweet heart* are often
much dlMtrawu-d to And that under the
EngllRh law one /if the pnrtlca to a
marriage must have rewldrd In the par
bdi In which they are married for at
IwiHt fifteen dnyn The archbtahop of
Canterbory has Kuggewted that thia wh
Stacie lie removed hy Htntnte
Woman Rtus French City.
In Holaaonn. while shells from oppoa
A>g French sod German hatterlea crlsa
iiuj-h! over tbe rooftojia. whlatllnc 1
j singularly like the sir brakes of a '
age crops, as the large grazing
lands are rapidly diminishing,!
being cut up into small farms.1
Sudan grass according to his i
theory will do more to revolution (
ize the cattle feeding problem
in this country during the next
Please tell me the
heated cotton seed as a fertiliz-
er. I want to know what a man
can afford to pay for them per tool coot—no raka yff. no prof-
ton.—T. F. P-, Kerens, Texas, ~‘J:“
Answer by G. S. Fraps, State
'Chemist and Chemist to the
Texas Experiment Station
the A. and M- College. ’
The average composition
cotton seed is as follows:
Nitrogen 3 13 per cent
Phosphoric acid 127 per cent.
Potash 1.17 per cent
Nitrogen at 20 cents a pound,
ph - »horic acid at 6 cents per ’n the hope of encouraging the
■ * a I co-operative movement amon*;
| the.farmers.
wo d have a valuation of $14.96 <5ne man tells how he made
t $3 or $4 net profit per bale of
cotton by marketing in a cer-
tain manner; another how e out-
witted the middleman in the
matter or marketing the yield
from 4 acres of tomatoes; and
still anoter relates how a
truck gardener -beat his neigh-
bors ja cent .or tw oa pound on
cabbage by using a very simp'e
device; and so on. Here’s one
striking statement from a Quan-
ah farmer:
“Our organization owns and
controls nine Farmers Union
warehouses to store and finance
our cotton and cotton seed, and
one ofjhe largest oil mills in the
State to grind ad protect our
cotton seed." • time.
Methods of co-operative sales
through breeding associations
_ i is also explained.
GO-OPERATION AND FRESH 1 pJt^n“action oTseifing 2 dOT-
MEAT- I en chickens—similar to ^b°u- , UII1 UIIW IR,A
I sands of transactions, nay, mil* tyoreestershirp snuce- a
i as follows: The farmer recrived • • •
Topsy The shipper RO* $ 65 ; the roTn'! half in<’h slices, remove the
<i slaujfhtcr company $1.00z thp retailor
ceived $2.30 minus cost of feed.) ^jne ^al] on each slice .and place
Da vex. Serve with French dress-
ing.
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.
Bowen, William A. Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, October 30, 1914, newspaper, October 30, 1914; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1302921/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Arlington Public Library.