Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, October 30, 1914 Page: 4 of 8
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Friday October .30, i»14.
—
&&&
u
*
I Texsa.
WM. A. BOWIN Mltor.
I
Batered at the Arlington Post Office -as Mail Matter of the Second Class
at
L
)
Be discount from regular card rates will be allowed
Cream Baking Powder is a pi
is pure and healthful beyond
ail advertisement bills payable monthly unless contracted otherwise
will be charged for at'tlie rate of 5 cents per line
B
1
OV
■J
died leaving a fortune
in
f'otton Palace.
NO
1
of the lat-
Germany is complaining because.
Cot
I
We Will Buy Cotton
THE COUNTRY
7.
In 1KR1 a country boy’ began lif->
Wear more cotton nnd thus be p’i-
t
groat hustling city started In
1
j
■. .
I
its
0
\lso for obituaries exceeding
i
Hq r*
What Kind Do
You Use ?.
The Arlington journal
Piibliehsd Ivsry Friday toy
TNI ARLINGTON FNINTINO COMPANY
>1.00
.00
pa
an
ac
Pc
da
■f
G
G .
th
th
Hi
su
re
Ex
of
Ui
f*»
M
and
•Will
1
them refuse to, “go after,” and he get
it-...
advertise.
desk
’t
i If)
fea
5-
L
r
f
19
ca
««1
M
fit!
I
arc rushing in to sign
Dea re trestles.
I ’
ARLINGTON’. TEX AS. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 30. 1914
make It seem probabl«At ha t• th In meth-
od would prove both economical an.I
efficacious, when practiced., on a i
|
EVERYWHERE j
HHiS * * *..
— flft-r*- .—•» -
The cotton must be delivered to us ip Dallas. We do not huy cotton
at all for cash. \ ■ f
If you need Dry Goods, Clothm g, Shoes, Ready-to-Wear, Millinery,
etc., this is your opportunity to exchange cotton for them.
The Texes Dry Goods Go.
[A Saving Store]
1400-02 Elm Street Dallas. Texas
air and complete seclusion. He could
return to Washington In thia way or
by rail, as he might choose, but such
k- ■".....the jfftfrhirt«bF -rt
in all this section-^and no matter
how many hundreds of acres are put
Advantages In Bottling Pasteurized
Milk While Still Hot.
’ to organize and head
| brigade is now raging.
STATE ! of Doubt put the Colonel in doubt?
■- -y.-' -
upon
pa)e
asked
-— o .......
| KENTUCKIANS EATING “MULE
BEEF" AND DOG SFOR PIGS.
and
firms’
CROWDS going to the
FAIR.
this was the only means of his suc-
cess, except his honesty and his en
and intelligence.
He is dead
November.
SIGCK8T" A VISIT
HV SEA WITH REST.
With the .view to gtvln
rest.
■ A-.cwl • ■ -y-
The air cooling
I "Mars’ Henry’ Needed at Ho’»e—
Mules snd Dogu Sold for Meat.
L
—•?*-
Arlington will do
home” hereafter than
We’ve lenrjted our
ing out ol paper
except where we
own places.
■0-4-—.
Major J- W. Rigging of Waco, will
open the Cotton Palace Saturday
dressed in a cotton suit—pants, jhirt.
vast, shoes and socks. And it was
all grown and made in Texs*. looks
sniptious and coat only about 14.66.
K the presi-
dent a complete rest. of which he i
stands In great need. Mr Burgess biik-
geifted that he go by boat to Galveston
and thus secure the benefits of se i
This latter is the move th; ’ |
will permanently insure the profit - :
able raising of cotton in the South ' !
a,nd heln the entire Nation.
And pay you in merchandise for »
.mAj* — : -
j Sears’ methods, or his success, are
flinging bricks at advertising—for
Why not write something simple mJ '
2''.
Fan Four
flRBEBESES
-
I
Ki- ■
■ al
or 1
::i
|r
try—especially the latter.
ess grew in proportion to his use of
“printer’s ink.” He used more ami
more of it. In a few years I saw him
grow into a large busines over th?
West Side. Soon his was the largest
house of the kind in the world.
This young fellow was Henry W.
hi j get our liea) words. A--
lipgton's schools are really doing pra< -
tical work. Colonel Taylor. Come over
and. visit them and see. land seasoning.
\ —----- - — ' ithe Cotton Oil Mill has put in
THE xwvNTRV BOY* WHO MADE , for makihg oil of the peanut and wul
GOOD—ALL RY ADVERTISING. ; take everv bushel of peanuts raise I
OkPrices
CREAM
Baking Powder
Made from Cream of Tartar No Alum
W-
you are doing a great work in this
line which this entire section should
appreciate.** The above was Mr, Ed-
ward’s kind remarks regarding the
work of this editor for farmers in
, T_„_. <
- I
~ /Th
X
$
A
■i
4
Cream of Tartar, the chief ingredient of Dr. Price*s
Cream Baking Powder is a product of ripe grapes. It
is pure and healthful beyond question.
Alum is the chief ingredient of many of the sub-
stitutes offered in place of Dr. Price’s Cream Baking
Powder. Alum is a mineral acid, declared by physi-
cians and chemists to have an injurious effect when
used in the preparation of fodd.
No baking powders containing alum are permitted
to be sold in England, France or Germany. To avoid
alum and be sure of wholesome, home-baked food,
read the label carefully and use only
•—r—
at thc r3te of 7 l-2cts the fround
a measure the present fi-
L.; •z
* • ' ' - ■ —*-■*-*• "
“HE WIKI THINKS HE
CAN.”-—Mrs. Chas. S- Taylor.
• 1
£
- 'A, '_______
• - . k
Labratory Tests That Indicate A Possibility of Uu^
This Method to Advantage, 1
to US
And Governor Colquitt has been Secretary Tumulty to abrang
for Praldent Wllupn that will brinif
him to Texas. If not during'the Hout- __wl.
yon jubilee, at least some time during ] a trip would enable him to visit Texas
T._V;...™, | an<t other Southwestern States that
have not had opportunity of entertain-
ing him. Secretary Tumulty took the
s u ggestion under consideration, and.
said the president hz«d not yet indu-
rated what he expected to do. after
congress adjourns.
We are making this offer to relieve in
nancial stringency of the cotton raisers.
All our goods are marked in plqin fighres, which assures you pay-
ing the same price for them as if you paid cash. This fact togeth-
er with the liberal price we allow yoti for your cotton should make
this an appealing offer to yo'i
BBBBCRIPT1ON RATC8, PAYABLE IN ADVANCE:
One Year Z
Six Months
All Ads , where not contracted for a definite number of times, will be oontin- }
tied until ordered out and charge made for inseel ions run
AU Ads, discontinued before time contracted for will be charged difference
between transient rate for times run and contract price.
_ __________ . „ ’ ’ ‘ ... - .. j not narnef] |n contract
"and duly signed by an authorised representative of The JOURNAL
In the meantime,
•very home where choice cuts
feasted upon lately,
are pale and got
when asked ‘Will you
handles the Coco-Cola and other
large advertising firms’ business,
i'very poor boy on the,' They were the first of such lines *o
join this move. A..2 t!._, “*2_
urging the substitution of cotton
Washington. 1> Oct 2!».---Iovch-
tlgator* In th* United States Depart
'n.-nt of Agriculture have found that
the proves of boltlhia pes’e'irlzed milk
while hot has several advantrigea wl“ct> (
a rczugh-rider
Did the rive-
For a long time men flocked to th.*
a'erage social event because the wo-
men who went there declared they
had nothing to wear. Now men stay
away because they don’t believe ,the-|
VISIT 'FVAS —.HOtSTOV
< i:i i nn gmi-.-ro-sF »
ClltMKl. OPFNING.
more 'living at
ever before,
lesson—to quit liv-
sacks and tin can.-,
fill them from our
W nahItiKton. II. C.---•’! uui torced tn
, aonfraa thnt Tyvna la one of the three
, Stiatea of the I oloo I hate never *l-«it«-al
nn,| If the nffnlra nt nay office will
permit It la my Intention to nrrrpi the I
Ina ttatlon.**
Thia was the answer of Secretary
the Navy Daniels to the request of the
newspapermen of Texas that he be
their guest of honor on November 16.
which has been designated as Premia
D- In the week’s celebration of the
completion of the Houston ship chan-
nel.
The beautifully bound and intauise
Iv human doa'iiment which the No-Tsu-
Oh press day committee sent to Wash.
- ■ y - 2112 r Dan.
.... Xhe„,
•tsite. war and navy building In a
of the
u d nn matter how nearly per.
fl ' I the r«p may be.
I-aboratory experiments conducted
the investigators Indicate that
t may be pasteurized, bottled hot,
? ru
caps.
a trip
build up a mail order business, jl?
had proven out the vahie of advertis- '
ing, and saw how another young fel-
low bad growr! rich by this method--,
Montgomery Ward, 1
house on a small scale. He used the
All cards f>t thanks, Church or Sunday school resolutuiona of respect, etc .
~ ’ ----’* 7— ’*“1. Six words make a line,
•ach Initial or figure in dates, etc., counting as one word Count your words. |
tivlde by slx/adding a ime for any surplus words, and send or bring the .
Boney with such notices Uso for obituaries exceeding “ft words at same j «U,,K P>KS-
Htea
FEED CHEAP.
5000 pounds of hog an^i chicken
feed cheap. J. T. Morrow, Phone 72.
I'V I
milk
dljrzpn naslKbnSetutfJrfoa cmfwyp
..i... | capped with ordinary cardboard
coni:.! ihd xjnol.xl by a blast of cold air ecO-
------------ ------- -v^ikYmctorJ
bacterial reductions
proevsN requires a somewhat longer
time than by cooling water, but in
fhr -laboratory It was found that thot ■
(Highly pasteurized milk, bottled im-
mediately .could be cooled slowly with-
out increasing the bacterial content.
Whether or not the experience of the
laboratory will be found true In com-
mercial practice, remains to be a4en.
The Department of Agriculture. It Is
announced, will conduct experiments
with a view to determining thia Im-
portant point. ,
I Before the milk is poured into them,
the bottles should be steamed for two
minutes, the authors are careful to
point out. This removes al! danger
of Infecting the milk from the bottles,
and Is another advantage that this
new method poeeessea.
■Bu; 1.
K-
ip?. .,
k. i-f-A......—
------
easy to spell and pronounce, like Step I
iJJvely. or I-ok Out for the Cars, or ' ergy
Ignorance Is Bliss, or Better Babies. ’
or Beware of Pickpockets—why not.
write some sign that will put the
school children rn rapport with the
real conditions of life? We hear an I
r.-ad much about practical education
We are told constantly that the child
should j>.- trained to live in the ei<-
world rather than ih a world
I rightly (suggests that the South will
never profit in farming until her
farmers break away from the onti-
crop (cotton) idea *n<i diversify and
raise more livestock with feedstuff
raised to feed them on. And Presi-
dent Ames is eminently correct in
this—which this crisis is proving to
all intelligent people. Visit the Stats
Fair and see these.
-----
MAKING COOKING AND PRE-
SERVING OILS OF PEANUTS.
—-----o-----
Frost is predicted fot; next week.
And, by the way, our St*te election
will come then too. and bring a frost
to many candidates.
-----o---
Cats and individuals frequently
“come bsck.” But it was left to lit-
tle Belgium to be the the first Nation
to make the return trip.
------o-------
“Turkey-in-Europe” has kept- bis.
neck, so far. in this war. But, alas!
In just>about three weeks, the turkey
irt the' United State* .will get his ii
the neck.”
*an.
presented with a like suit by Maye
Riggins and he will appear in it on
' opening the Cotton Palace. Verily,
And they also are I this ’’ preserving the harmonies:
' Cotton State, Cotton clothes, cott<. 1
place cf jute for bags, sacks. Jwino. | 'K™'1.) interior cotton en’e ■
rope. etc. This latter is the move th: ’ i
------o------
jsfcCKFTVRV OF NAVY EXPECTS To
VISIT 1ET AS — -HOFSTON TO
Arlington has already sent larqe
crowds td the State Fair in Dalia*.
And the remainder of this week larg-
er crowds will attend. Today and to-
morrow and Sunday—the last day
Arlington will furnish large contin-
gents of both citizens of this city and
Ifc ■—! CWT'*,1 ' . -
In the meantime, don’t forget that
every attraction over there is wor'- h
I seeing. The county exhibits are above
the average even for Texas. Farmers
« ““T' / V. ? i should get an object lesion that will
’ anxmu.lv inquiring to them the folly of one-crop
As to the signs you suggest foH * dependence for a living. i have
a letter from President Ames, of the
' ~ , who
lives in Wisconsin and he writes sym-
pathetically of the South’s crisis, and
endorses the action of the Farmers'
National Congnes in declaring the
cotton question is a national one. and
offering all possible help. Mr. Ames
Th* first w»c in rnanv years in
(.f'thi’s same 14’al ’ failure ’-/which the Co'onel has not ru?hed ou’’
,■ 7-i- * N
/•> • ■ ■
T official complications prevent. Whet’i
j the secretary will xend a torpedo bout
I flotilla to Houston will not be decid’d
„ J until later
much mofe cotton than heretofore ns | invitation nisrt.SYF.n
I AT THE PRESS Cl.t’R-
I Just before the conference ended. (
Secretary Daniels seated hlmslf at hi- |
with the Houston Invitation onen
before him and was photographed with
the Texas congressmen grouped back
of his chair. He then directed that the
Invitation be displayed at the National
Press Club for-a few days In ord-r
that pie Washington newmaper men
might ft- 7*"
When Representative Burgess left
the secretary-s office, hs went di recti v
to the White House where he urged
permission of the Secretary of Ar
| rlcultlir^ In the Journal of Infections
Diseases, the authors declare that this
method results In bacterial reductions
i m» great as, or even greater than, by
■ pasteurization In botles.
The principle adVAhtagi
! ter method for the ordinary systems In
I commercial use Is the impossibility of
■, »Me milk becoming contaminated agifln
| while being bottled There Is also
some saving of milk, because there ia
, : no loss from evaporation. On the other
: hand, when milk la pasteurised In bot-
tles, It is customary to cool the bot-
tles by placing them In cold w»tr.
This necessitates the use of abso-
lutely water-tight caps, otherwise some
of the cold water is likely to find Its
way Into the milk bottles, and even a
very slight leak may result In con-
tamination. Waterproof caps are not
only expensive, but care Is essential
to see that they actually are water-
proof (and morover. bottles with chip,
ped and otherwise damaged tops cann«t
It may be truly written over the por-
tals ot ou:-I uV'C Scot bls' this year
"•Resurgam.” And this growing spirit
is due to what we might call the
• renalssnnwe " tn A llngton -»f the edu-
cational move. Ai.d this awakening
was brought about by all of those
who felt keenly the need ol nropres.t,
( specially by the Civic I.-- tcu-g jhe
Fhakespea s < lub, the School !to.(i I.
our efflci o • j-« rintend, n. K-xiho i
parents and school authorities to
bring about better conditions. Arling-
ton will be visited shortly by school
people of other communities getting
“pointers" This is as It should be - ~
arlingten .’. j.->aL Sears, Roebuck & Co. ,
Now Colonel, why should a hard
word like ■•Resurgam" be written over
the school house door at Arlington?
Ing address,
’(rcMcnted the uniqii*
hound volume of Individual letters of
the Tijias newspapermen.
'fi Eagle spoke of the jubilee and
’»»• 'ilavfline for the people pf the Rtat?.
He told of the progress Of Texa^ and
l-vi-lt upon the Importance and slgnlft-
•>■* of the ship channel.
In closing he told of the deslr* -«f
the Texes editors to show' their estt-
mnte of a member of their craft who
had been honored with a place in raps-
tdept Wilson’s‘cabinet and by the cor-
diality of the greeting they would ex-
tend to him at Houston and added.
'•These personal letters« will touch
your heart 1 know, and let me say here
for all of Texas — not alone the news-
paper men---that we want you with
us."
Accompanying yr Eeagle were the
Texas representatives from the South-
ern part of the State whose districts
are interested In deep water Improve-
ments. CongTssmnn JRurgess of the
rtvera and harbors committee Con-
gressman Dies, Congressman Slayden.
Congressman Garner and Congressman
Young.
Walter S. Gard, staff correspondent
of The Houston Post represented the
Texas newspapermen.
WANTS PRESIDENT
TO COME TO TEXAS.
Following the presentation
j .. ..-
with his callers fir a few minutes. He J
had just returned from -a week’fM’tour.
making campaign speeches and he will
be out on the stump until the election.
, After that h® will come to Washington •
o — | to clear away Accumulated work and
What with his grape’juice diplonv t then, ’if it be possible, wtlt leave hem.
ary and the present war, the n»tionfl the night of Saturday. November 7.
. -(— up Mr. Brvan’i for Houston.
J He did not try to conceal liD desire ■
to visit Texas, repeatedly declaring his j
« disappointment over the fact that he l
■I has never becn-wlthln her boundaries it |
Then order all ifoods that .lacMtaln he will come linleo unfojsc* >
Germany is compWninff because. |
she says, the Allies use dumdum bul- I
lets, and that these are barbarous ,
Well, the Allies also claim that the
monster 16 1-2 inch seige guns ot
Germany are barbarous. And, inci-
dentally, I will inform both sides th«‘
war itself i« barbarous—snd the side
that makes it the worse will quicker
bring it all to an end. So there jp-i
<re.
Right here in the Great Arlington
Country we have a factory that i*
making the finest cooking oil known
—peanut oils. Also, this oil is re-
placing, even in Italy and Spain, the
time-honored olive oil for preserving
Over at Mansfiel't
a plant'
•day world rather thati its a world i.(
romance and make bellev. If that 1.
true, why not start by printing sign*
over the «chon) door* that really merci
som< thing' Of couro; Rr«::rg»in i
fine, orotund. rhythmic ’ word '
sounds Important, and Is r-Jolent . f
■th* classics. It harks ba< k t ■ th* turn -
nous old Latin days and has somethin,;
in it. oi . to :t tJ.at implies dignity and
aloofness Rut do w. w i-h to tea. ii
the children dignity -and aloofness.'
Can they make livings out of aloofness
and dignrtv ■ if our memory errs not
and our recollection is reliable. Re-
■ urgam means "I shall rise again. '-
That is all right. It was fine In Roman
times But why not modernize it'
Why not writ* on th* lintel of you;
academy this fin* kindred sentiment:
Hiistl* l’p” — Col Joe J Taylor in 5t:e ■
Press. Galveston - DaMns News.
Well, Golonel Taylor, we did l»et-1
t.r th.,, writ, it-we HUSTLED
published the new State Emergency j
Tar*house Law (Official) in full,
which the News, more than two weeks
afterward*, asserted it could not give
its msnv ‘
ers.y
cur school houses, they would not be
appropriate in/j’ington because we, M1)Onal Congress,
■re progrOsed beyond their imine-1- — . « -—:»
diste need fy-ou suggest Step Lively]
—and we do. as the abo'e “scoop"
on the esteemed Nsws proves—and
Ixvok Out for the Oars—which we
have had so long we don’t need warn
ine is the DalUsites, and Ignor-
■nce is Bliss—which o«r schools an 1
reading of the Journal have made
obsolete here, and Better Babies—
which the records of big places filled
by now grown-ups who were babies
here show we are raising, and Beware
of Pickpocket"—which we do not care
to copv from Dallas where the pick-
pocket" flock because our vigilant of-
ficers hustle them back to Dallas
when they come over, and our school
pupils all know enough Isatin to make
such simple words as Resurgam ev-
Cry-day talk to them—since it is
in the back of every dictionary in the
schools and homes. just where you
in iwl H cuwnvry wy i»gyx«>'* »«• now ninny iiuimifo
in a small topm in the Northwest. He , jn. thev will pay top nrices for the
went into a small jewelry business—, peanuts. And the farmers will still
and he’let the folks know through hi-»; have the vines a* hay worth ahou.’ j 4^4^^
home paper that he was there and] the same as alfalfa, which will 1’n'-’|<-an be packed in sacks put in cotton
“had the good"” His competitors for seed,cultivation, etc., practically rnnd tied with cotton twine. This wil>
who had keen there so long "everv- leving the peanuts as clear prof’t. rrB1<r the United States consume a*
body knew them.” made scornful re- { Manager Joe Edwards was oyer yes-!
marks about thi" upstart youngster, (
etc.—Just as small-bore business men i
always do when a man starts in to !
treat customers like he thought they
had sense enough to know what they
wanted when they found it—and who
told them what he had and where
they could find it, and at what pries.
A While I was In Chicago, in the latter
The dispatches tell of Kentuckians
trying to make French practices in
meat eating. They evidently took ad-
vantage of the absence of good old
“Mars’ " Henry Watterson who was
— .' making friends with President Wil-
! son. and the butchers of Louisville
•old mule-meat for beef and dog*
(skewered up to resemble pigs) for
. There was a fine row
when the cultured epicures of th it j
French named city found it out. \ ■
number of butchers have been ar-
rested and the grand jury is inve'ti-r
gating more. In the meantime, in
were !
folks [
si 'k |
have
He started his j piece of this tenderloin steak,”
e. He used the ’’Have a slice of roast beef?” It
papers, in both the cities apd coun- i "aid half the population has been act- |
Hi" bus* ing like they were seasick for the past i
week. Even I.ouisvillians refuse To j
lower the cost of living by changing ]
meat-animals. The charge against
the butchers m selling misbranded
foodstuff^—because they failed to 1
label their meat “Mule-meat," or1
“Raw’dog” a la the Agarrotes at the
Sear$, founder of the great house of ■ St. Ixwis World's Fair.
‘____ ___L 11.'. * -----o 1 •-
The newspapers who fling bricks at BUSINESS MEN 1
HELPING GREATER USE OF
COTTON.
Not the law of gravitation, but the
law of aggravation accompanies the
high cost of living.
stfnjet.-' yxy1;.
very brief but very forceful and strlH. i
Representative Engle I
Invitation. a ,
Among those joining the “Buy-a-
: Rale" movement is the D’Arcy Ad-
I vertising Agency of St. Louis.’that
of more than $20,000,000—and every !
dollar of it made in about 30 year..,
beginning as a r . r
farm.
Merchants who refused to advc
tisv made Sear’s fiytune, because i.
was through their failure that he saw
his chance to get the trade their
short-sightedness (for thut is what
—kepi them' from advertising) made!
' - .....;___“J *•* ~ t '
-and his firm is still getting it be I
long “everv- |eving the peanuts
r^<IAAHr<in vam” 1 mUCn WOrP roiinn vnan iivi < .»
terday and had quite a talk with me«!i j (X*e'hpve lost in European trade. Then
♦his subject, berusr I was the prime. iD(lee(| wni ceme prosperity to mf
eamse, he says, in starting the farm . |anj
era into the peanut raising on a l»rg
er scale in this section. “And farm
era have not yet done what they
should became It i« »o hard to con-
vince them of the splendid profits in
. thi" business gven when they see how
this young fellow e»me to that wcr crops turn out for our neigh-
' r ■* •• bora. But they "re learnlng-«n 1 < rotten manufacture, making up and
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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/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Arlington Public Library.