The Arlington Journal. (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 18, 1907 Page: 2 of 7
seven pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 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:
'2
TtlE JOURNAL
Church Directory.
"a
*■
I
(tf.tymninQ tfarid
nt.
♦ 4
4
I
V.
u.
J
■rjo
i
ifl
i
Sign O1
HL' ■/
LOW RA
1
on south
DINE
Main St.
stop 12 at
140 cheap
lilts north of
>x
f
Sum
■A.
/
THE
d ZJpACIfMC
r
L
TEXASj
Bl
AN IDEAL CLIrtA
i
Selling
ortb mm
It !■ tb«
UMi
&
4
fcijyA ■/ i{< if’' ' *
?
• ■
53° to 64
i
CI
-I
I
MWMMWHMMMiWoilK i-TIB WWMi. -» »> I ?
'’WOP
Paetor, SuitiHr
r.t W. J. Pulley.
i»m;
!• Hu
' HMt
Rot
T»
r
W. M. Stankerry, Editor-
A^tvn StonBorry, Business Manager.
Arlington, Texas, July 18, l‘*07
will cure that thru
Ballard’s Snow Lin
ing free circulation,
Cures 5
B
El very
Is <
Yc
Sold ar
Foi
RMtWAY.
^S.4>
1
or
CHRISTIAN
Preaching first, third and fourth Sundays in
each month, morning and evening; prayrrmuet-
Ing each Wednesday night. Elder H. E. Luck.
Pastor. Sunday School meets at lu o'clock, a. ».
J. Moors. Superintendent. Junior C. E. S. meets
at 3J0 r. m.
Ballard
SOO
ST. LOUI
R
g;
r
O. J. PH
GEO. D.
CAFE P
Is given our pi
I'-
I
■k
S ■
; . ■
During a parade on the great
national holiday of France, in
the city of Paris, last Sunday, a
crank attempted to assaslnate
Pres. Fallieres who was riding
in a carriage in the procession.
Two shots were fired, both with*
out effect. The villain was cap*
tured and narrowly (and unfort-
unately) escaped lynching at the
hands of the infuriated people.
Even in the face of the noble
example recently set by this
county, Collin county last Satur*
day gave the anti-prohibitionists
another knock-out blow, very de*
cisive in its nature, carrying the
county by almost three to one.
Callahan , also voted dry last Sat-
urday by a small majority.
I & I
THI
t An noun
One-Haf
SSEZESSixi
your dealer does wH aunply ;
W« are tuedfiiertera
veteldea. If it’s a etaodai
FARLIN & ORENC
PRESBYTERIAN
Preaching each Sunday morning and evening.
Prayennuelta* every Wednesday night. Rev.
W. T. Thurman, Pastor. Sunday School 1c 10
o'clock a. M. John Watson. Superintendent.
Iunlor C. E. S. at 3:30 .* M
n
Judge Brooks reversed Hiatus
Pollard on the ten • day prohibi-
tion proposition. Pollard how-
ever, still sticks to it that accord-
ing to law all saloons would have
to close ten or twelve days be-
tween acts.
I
Cars leave each
to
• * Figure on this foi
A most att
c ing many
Scenic Gri
'.v*
FOR PARTICULARS JI.llMN.imiT
GUIDES-ADDRESS
*>£.>£ G/isson?*
OUMIRAI Mt Mtnote AOgNT
FORT _ WORTH, TEXAS.)
A saving husband said to his
wife: Susan, don’t spend a cent
of my money with a merchant that
dou’t advertise in the newspapers.”
The wife, who wasabusiness wom-
an, replied: “Old goose, I learned
better than, to go where I was not
invited long ago, you would be an
old bachelor now, if you had not
invited me to be your wife. Catch
me going to a store without an in-
vitation, I guess not —Ex.
iuse, lot
All that keeps Arlington from
being the biggest city in the
state or in fact in the whole
south is houses for the people to
live in, and people to live in
the houses, all of which we are
getting as fast as possible.
Dispatches from Oklahoma
state that Stump Ashby, ,once
a famous political and ecclestical
blatherskite in this state, is the
democratic nominee for the leg-
islature from his district in that
state. '
and enthusiastically indorse, and
that is to refuse to speak at
cheap chautauquas or anywhere
else where an admission is charg-
ed. He leaves that field open to
cheap jingoes like Dick Hobson
and Bob Taylor.
The new laws passed by the
last legislature and which have
just gone into effect, are costing
the Journal about five dollars per
month, and of course is a great
strain on our democracy to give
it an enthusiastic endorsement.
BAPTIST
. Preaching each Sabbath morning and evening.
Prayermeeting Wed need a >■ night. Rev. A. S.
Ball. Pssfor. Senior and Junior B. Y. P. U
meet* Sunday afternoon. Sunday School at >1
o'clock A. M. Walter Jackaon. Superintendent.
From fair Furl tvbri hto Dcwr.
A din: tig Cxr Cemplde,
A taxvelihtf pJue lefburaii.
With di wings guedto eat
4
■ ’ METHODIST
Preaching every Sunday morning and evening:
prayermeetlng every Hvdneaday night. Senior
and Junior Epworth Loalruoe meet each Sabbath
afternoon. Rev. Ed R.JVaUace. 1
School meeta at 10 o’etock A. M.
Superintendent. .
/ --
lw
Jesse Grant, son of Gen. U. S.
Grant, was in Fort Worth and
Dallas this week. He is a pros-
pective candidate for the demo-
cratic nomination for president
next year.
Federal Judge Bryant refuses
to turn the Waters-Pierce re-
ceivership business over to the
state authorities, and thus the
rights of the state go.
Over 400 applications for license
to sell intoxicating drinks were
registered in Houston when th a
new law went into effect.
that it would be a good place to
live, and vice versa.
Often a man wants to see wheth-
er his particular profession is rep-
resented or not, and on looking
' over the paper.if he sees no one
advertised in his line he naturally
concludes that there is an opening
for him. His conclusion is that
there is no one there m that line, or.
that if there is he don’t Amount to
much or he would advertise. So
when it is too late the man who
has stay.'d at home and neglected
to advertise finds himself confront-
ed with a competitor.
The point which we wish to em-
phasize is that all should advertise.
It is vastly better for 50 business
men to pay $500 a month and have
every enterprise represented, than
for 10 men to pay that amount to
have only a few enterprises repre-
sented.
As au example of what we con-
sider a model advertising patronage
for a local paper we mention the
Hereford Brand of last week. The
Braud carried 58 display ads, 20
names iu its piofessionai column
and reading notices accordingly.
These 58 ads represented 11 dry
goods store, 1 queeusware, 2 hard-
ware, 1 meat market, 3 banks, 4
drug stores, 8 real estate offices, 2
cattle, 4 lumber yards, 1 painter
and pap. r hanger, 1 restaurant, 5
groceries, 1 jeweler and optician, 1
cleaner and presser, 2 coal merch-
ants, 1 furniture dealer, 1 tailor,
1 hay and feed, i* concrete man, 2
nurseries, 1 laundry, 1 shoe dealer,
2 grain dealers, 1 implement man.
1 optician, 1 photograph gallery, 1
ice dealer, 1 livery stable, 1 bakery,
1 tinner, 1 saddle and harness man,
1 insurance,,and 1 stallion.
And all this mind you in a town
less in size than Arlington. Our
own paper of the same week carried
only 24 display ads, 10 names in
the professional column, and read-
ing notices to correspond. Such
parallels speak for themselves. We
have never complained. In fact,
we have always had a good busi-
ness here, have even been accused
of bragging, but we must say that
we would much prefer to have
more of the various enterprises of
the city represented in the columns
of the Journal.
It is to the interest of the whole
town as weli as to our interest to
have it so. No town ever gets
properly before the country with-
out it.
u
I
H
H
E
I
a
. 1
WHITE SWAN1
PINEAPPLES
w
“Pic DMfllWarBocnces-
Or.the l(?Jfda/crJdne,
Adouble daily service.
Effective; oppurl une.
From Nt-.v Or!or«? to Denver.
And Houston.too.well.
New Pullmwi feJ&xe Sleepers,
Luxurious and swell.
. ' <r Herb Palin.
I
A
I '
3
a "Katerml at the Arlington. Texaa, poitoffice
am eecond-daat mail matter
BUB8CR1PTION.
> OaaYaar.............................1100
Moathe............ .50
▲dvertteiug Ratea Reaaonable.
—. imTl ifr*
A sore thi
dangerous
biftyou doi
tie a sock
your reck
BALL/
SN
LINIIV
Complete informatii
inquiry to any Cotte
information and a f
! v R. C. FYFS
I Awl. Gen. Frt. A Pa
I Trier, Tct»'
! GtfS HOOVER.
Traveling Paaeertiirr
1. ,I_
THE YEAR OF JUBILEE.
The Fort Worth Telegram is
still talking up the Diamond
Jubilee Exposition for Arlington.
Last Monday’s Telegram said:
“Regardless of the fact that
El Paso is out with' the proposi-
ion to donate one million dollars
to the proposed Diamond Jubilee,
it remains very apparent that
Fort Worth and Dallas will secure
the coveted plum and that a con-
certed effort toward this determi-
nation will soon be begun. News-
papers thruout the state have
taken up tne discussion and with
the exception of the El Paso and
a few neighboring papers, the
consensus of opinion here is that
Arlington is the logical point.
Interviews appearing in The
Telegram from representative
Texans from the north, south,
east and west are, in substance,
the same—they all believe in the
idea. In the meantime Arling-
ton citizens are busily discupsijpg
the affair and anxiously awaiting
the first move on the part of the
Dallas and Fort Worth citizens
at which time they propose to
come forward with a proposition
that cannot afford to be over-
looked . ”
Yonng man, that beautiful girl
whom yon worship as a pillar of
unadulterated sweetness doesen’t
contain even three ounces of sugar.
It has been shown by analysis that
a person weighing 154 pounds is
composed of 96 pounds ot water, 3
pounds of the white of eggs, less
than 1 pound of glue, 34 L-2 pounds
of fat, 8 1-4 pounds of phosphate
of lime, 3 ounces of sugar and
starch, 7 ounces o' chloride of cal-
cium, 6 ounces ot phosphate of
magnesia and a little ordinary table
salt.—Exchange.
That is a shocking declaration.
In fact, it is positively irrevernt
GAVI
Henry Stone, Pro
Snow Liniment for
which upon applies
mend it an being th
paiu caukod from N
PR
all®
JI FEW HINTS ON ADVERTISING
Hardly a werft passes but some
r «Mre writes for a “sample copy of
• the Journal," sometimes for one
/ jMtrpose and sometimes for another.
Sometimes it is for th^ purpose
«»f looking over the paper with a
- wtew to locating here. In such
mease it is well to have every en*
Aeeprise of the city represented in
kRhe oolumns of the paper, at least
4lkose of which the city is not
mahamed— and Arlington has none
which we are ashamed. If he
jsms all the modern utilities and
a«md veuiencies advertised he argues
RtLPFVL •
READING «
THE FARMraS*
DEPARTMENT
5 ‘Set.
lurn«a ever tM soli-
SPECIAL UJa.
OFFER
t»rMtk of your tows 1
gT» In caah In advanea
-
E11
r i *
th
K
I
Ri-
ft •
III
111
■ I
Ic
I <
II
Homeseekers’ Tickets
ON SALE DAILY^t
<E. P. TURNER,
General Passenger Agent,
DALLAS.
Are all selected from
Bahama flock, the finest
Pine Apples grown. Are
packed immediately upon
cutting, prepared by a new
process that retains all of
that luscious freshness, so
loved by people who have
eaten Pine Apples in the
Tropics.
Everything good in cans
packed under the White
Swan Brand, if your grocer
does not keep them, send
us his name.
THE
WAPLES-PLATTER
GROCER CO.
DniMm Ft. Wortji Dalas
Connections are Certain
4t
Fort Worth and
Dallas ’ .
if you travel via the IN-
<. TERURBAN
Cars always arrive and depart on
schedule time. C'“ Z-.
city every hour from 6 a. tn.
11 p. tn. inclusive.
f Dust
No ' Smoke
(Cinders
For particulars write
W. C. FORBESS,
G. P. & T. A., Fort Worth,
NOOSE FOR JINGOES.
Hon. O. W. Gillespie, our dis-
' languished congressman from this
-district, spoke to a large gather-
ing of the Fanners Union at
dComanche last Wednesday night.
* Of course he made a good speech
.and we indorse every word of it.
'The truth of it is that we could
oome very nearly indorsing any
speech that Gillespie might make
without seeing it, and not feel
much afraid of getting into the
wrong box. But we do want to
.amplify on one of his proposi-
,tions. that of hanging fhF
“jingoes." To get the proposi-
tion properly before our readers
we quote from the Record’s re-
port of the speech the following:
“Here he discussed the talk of
war with Japan saving there is
soothing in the San Francisco
matter to cause war; that if war
between the United States and
Japan comes the cause will lie in
j»ir blustering naval policy and
-our aggressive attitude through
the Philippines toward the com-
■ anerce of Japan; that a jingo press
caused the war with Spain and
----that if we have war over the
present matter with Japan the
jingo press will cause it also.
Here’ Mr. Gillespie said that when
trouble between nations arjses
the hanging of a dozen jingo
■newspaper editors would prevent
r r-
* W2LT.
And the amplification we wish
” 4o offer is that it would generally
ibe a good idea to hang a few
1 gingo congressmen along with
\±he jingo newspaper men. - Most
«of us remember how certain
members of congress urged the
Spanish War on the country ahd
have since deplored its results,
. and cursed the republican party
'Ifor the same. Though our own
southern representatives were as
much in favor of the war as any
Ante.
Roger Q. Mills x>f this state
-»as one of the strongest advo-
snaies of the proposed war; Mor-
gan of Alabama, Joe Wheeler,
Hobson and other southerners
were crazy for a fight. President
McKinley was a good man and
.-tried to avert the war, but noth-
-iug would do the people but a
■fight. So we had the fight all
jight, spent nearly a billion dol-
lars; have Cuba, Porto Rica, andj
the Philippines and an army of
pensioners and republican office
holders on hand to support and
■care for. Besides this we are
mixed up with Japan in a way
<fxat is anything but desirable.
And while we agree with our
x-Mteemed representative- that
jingo editors were largely re-
sponsible for this fov’:sh and
,2ruel war, find that some of them
ought to have been hung, we in-
sist that congressmen bear their
cast portion of the odium.
In saying this we do not
mean that we want our own
^representative hung any more
than he means that he wants us
hung when he talks of hanging
jingo editors, and those who re-
member how the Journal has al-
x ways supported Gillespie would
•» wot think for a minute that he
, wanted us suspended between the
flaeavens and the earth.
WHITEMSi
5WANKgji
PETIT A AO
pois
LUNCH^^M
These arc the smallest
of young sweet peas.
The danticst and most
delicious .grown.
Packed just as soon as they are
pulled from the vine, so that
I they retain all their fresh, crisp
and dainty flavor. No coloring
I nor foreign adulterations uae<
| this is why the White Swan
I Petit Pois are far superior to the
I French Canned article. Every
I thing good in cans pecked under
I the White Swan Brand, if your
I grocer does not keep them, send
I us his name.
I THF-
WAPLES-PLATTER
GROCER CO.
| Denisou, Fort Worth, Dallas
A Few Bargains in Real Estate
/a nice hoitse of 8 rooms, hall
< and bath. Cistern and city water,
$200 storm house, all fine im-
provements, close in, lot 150x115,
one-fourth cash, balance oasy.
This is a snap for $3500.
200 acres fine black land, 3
miles east of .Arlington, in one-
fourth mile of Interurban, only
$65 per acre.
New 4-rooin house, north side,
on lot 100xl*j7, assume $5u0 pay-
able $8.18 a month, balance cash.
3 acres in Cooper addition at
$350 per acre.
2 nice east front loti.
side at $550.
,Z*2 good lots on wes
at $600.
'10 atw^s 1-4 mile of
$125 per abre. I,
3 lots southNdde, 15p
at $750. \
100 acres 1 1-2 r
town, 50 per acre.
2 lots, 2 room
100x140 close in $95fc. • ,
One^cre well improved, north
side, well finished/4-room house,
good barn and chicken houses,
cheap at $2000.
12 lots north side near new
school building, small cash pay- I
ment, balance easy, only $1200. 1
4 room house and 3 lot*
150 feet square on corner fronting
Carlisle School, $2000, $1500 cash |
balance easy.
4 room house, 3 lots fronting
College St., close in, good im-
provements, city water, this is
a snap at $1-400.
2 houses and 5 lots in Toliver
addition well and city water, barn
and buggy shed $3,000.
Lot* of other good property
cheap. Don't sleep on your right*
List your property with me. I
will advertise it and sell it. I
would rather wear out my shoe
soles turning up something than
to wear out my pants waiting for
something to turn up.
Your* for business,
s W. G. Kniffin
WEST
TEXAS
Is fast becoming the fruit. I
vegetable, grain and cotton I
country of the Southwest. |
It will pay you to investi- j
gate right now. |
>
and we don’t believe a word of it. Bailey has done one thing that
Water, glue, starch, fat, etc,. In- the Journal can conscientiously
deed! And only three ounces of
sugar, Bah! That is not the kind
of sweethearts we always had. Il
that was all there is to a young
lady, a fellow could get him a tub
of water, and buy the few ingredi-
ents nam.*d at a drug store or cor-
ner groceJy, amj. pour them into
the water, stir it up and make him
a girl of his own. No siree, we
take no stock in any such rot,
science though it may be. Scient-
ists may know a lot of things, but
they don’t know what girls are
made of by a long shot—especially
Arlington girls.
The secretary of the Commer-
cial club has this week received
a proposition from the Glad Hand
Publishing Co., at San Antonio,
offering to sell the Commercial
club space in the Glad Hand to
the amoun.t of $600—six months
contract, two pages per month.
Inasmuch as the Commercial club
lies sleeping, if some will be kind
enough to hand us a ’ check for
$6Q(» we will forward same to the
Glad Hand together with adver-
tising copy exploiting Cariolton’s
advantages over other towns.
We’ve got ’em.—C a r r o 1 t o’n
Chronicle.
It seems that Carrolton has
troubles of her own with her
commercial club. "We all have
them. Even the irrepressible
Capt. Paddock of Fort Worth
writes us that it is a hard matter
to get a quorum of the Ft Worth
Board of Trade together “these
hot days.’’ ■ ■
We notice that our old friend
D. W. Hawkins and J. A. Elliott
have bought the Hcrefoid Brand
and assumed charge of the same.
Mr. Hawkins is a brother -of Mrs.
J. H. Stanberry of the Mansfield
Sun, was raised at Midlothian and
was for several years superintend-
ent of the public school at that
place. Later he was superintend-
ent of. the public school of1 Here-
ford. He is both scholarly and
gentlemanly and we are sure he
will make the Brand a still greater
papeY than it has ever been—and
it has always been a good pap^r.
A town is to be congratulated
when it gets such a man as Web
Hawkins hold of . the local paper, j
Will Conner has broken the re-
cord in the alfalfa hay line. He
has one three and a half acre
patch from which he cut the 3rd
of June one ton per acre, and on
the 25th of June he cut the same
amount again from the same
patch. The first cutting was
damaged by rain and he sold it
for $8 per ton, and the second
cutting brought $12, loose. An
income of $20.00 per acre in three
weeks makes a cotton crop look
mighty cheap. With proper sea-
sons he will get five cuttings this
year. Will has his entire farm
in alfalfa and makes good money
from the crop every year.—Gar-
land News.
We move that “First Premium’’
be granted to Brother Holford of
the News. We shall make no
attempt at all to tell abiggerone
than this.
Hl
<
i I I
■ fl
K 11
I p
II
if
i
h 1
H
Hi
fr?
I I
B
R
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.
Stanberry, William M. The Arlington Journal. (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 18, 1907, newspaper, July 18, 1907; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1313688/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Arlington Public Library.