Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 63, Ed. 1 Friday, August 18, 1916 Page: 4 of 8
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ARLINGTON, TEXAS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1918.
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FORCE.
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"CUSTOM AND
CLOTHES”
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LU» t , tato •< tlw> Moraine New*, Waco, is
bato .4—rtteinw manaanr uf the JoW«-
r of the Jaws,
Ashiug Mae and
PARAGRAPHS HERE PRESENTED
\ NOTABLE JUDICIAL VICTORY.
COTTON WORTH 20 CENTS.
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Brownwood.
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come
the
■Sundby, September 3, 1916.
HAPPENINGS OF MAJOR AND MINOR
IMPORTANCE NOTED.
Confederate veteran* are expected.
At a special election in Pecos J. E.
8 tar ley was elected mayor without op-
position to succeed E. C. Cason, who
resigned, removing to Waco.
Mrs. nave Carter .<■ killed and he.
mast*x si Ennis, died al Oklahoma
Hurial was al Ennis.
SO YM«V
Aao
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an 1
date,
* Moreover, we don’t care a snap if
cottoi <*ces go to . tvunty-five cents
per iour.d. In fact, it will have tc
reach t.h»t altitude u* we pay for al'
I and
intend tq buy.—Denison
IONE STAR NEWS
IN EEW WORDS
sentence.
Houston Wagner, negro, who coo
fessed to the rmirdcr at Dallas of Mini
A Fort .1
eight chickens with
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men and women are as near the fculiT
dyle as they should be permitted to
<ro—until we are all more nearly re
ren era ted than now.
WM. A. POWCN Miter.
■atcred at the Arlington Poatoffiev aa Mall Matter of the-Second Class.
IVMOlFHOt RATES. PAYABI.K IX ADVAWCKi
One -Year •*
Six Months
We now pay more
print paper what we
ago i----- ----
operated for appendicitis and "justifies the Journal’s contention that
good rent houses are in demand in
Arlington.
^"7
The forty-first annual reunion ot
Ross,’ Ector’s and Granbury’s bri ’
gades, United Confederate Veterans,I
was held at Wills Point, with nearly
fifty in attendance. The veterans wer,
elegantly entertained. • Considerable
business sass* up al the meeting.
But. if you are old enough to look back
a raw .t_ t‘._Z
comparatively recently has the soda foun-
tain been el thar ao pop
and iiyglanic.
Ton may remember what
fountains looked like—what
they mi "
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The death of that truly great sur-
geon, Dr. John B. Murphy, of Chicago,
was a calamity. It was my good for-
tune to know him in the days when,
he first <.
evented the world-famous life-sav-
Mg "Murphy’s Button” for intestinal
operations. It enabled surgeons to
perform modern miracles. Dr. Mur-
phy is believed to have been a vic-
1
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*r« doing in-
tuAllHMiks used in the first four grades
of the Dallas public schools, costing
about *1,1110 and to lie furnished free
to the children of those grades has
been placed
Mrs Mabie J. Davis, who taught
school ^n Dallam and Hartley coun-
ties, dropped dead in the postoffice at
Goodwell, Okla. She bad gone to
that state to engage with a son in the
livestock business.
Mrs, W A. Callaway, twenty-five
years connected with the Dallas ..News
as a writer, and prominent as a .social
welfare worker and a club woman of
Dallas, died al that city after an
ness of several weeks.*'
J M (Matt) Brown, a freight con-
ductor on-lhe Texas and Pacific rail-
way, injured by a fall from his train
near Gordon, died at Weatherford [
He was a son c"
Brown of the latter place.
About 2H0 cars of peaches and 30C th***!*!* "fountain
of watermelons have been shipped so *-*— *
far this season from four Hopkin. ‘
county points. Peach shipments ar*1
about half of those of 1915, but thos«
of watermelons are greater.
Mr. and Mrs. Bishop Neely of Deb-
ton entertained five generations of the
Neely family. Guests were all females
and ranged in age from great-great
railroads at their monthly conference •
in Galveston decided to eliminate the
Down in Houston now they’re say
ing: “Write it, nay it, tell it—Buffa-
le River.” Only one familiar with the
Magnolia City can understand that
they mean the Buffalo Bayou. It’s a
sort of River of Doubt.—Denison Her-
ald.
, The only doubt is as to whether
the editor of the Herald ever saw a
river except the murky, roily Red riv
er. There is no doubt about his nevet
having been down the beautiful Buf
falo river—or bayou—for it is one of
the finest, prettiest rivers, broad anu
forest fringed, one ever rode on. And
even now 95 per cent of the tonnage
of the world could come to within
three miles.of Houston. It will, in a
few years, be one of the busiest piece,
of water on the Atlantic or Gulf
Coasts.
---a mooim Som FooarsM
was so evident in the fountain ttsda.
The earns principles of purity, goodness
and dellciounnoM made another aatouite-
Ing record of growth poaaiblo, Bottling
plants have been established al! over tba
country to take care of this braadh.
Just think of it—over >0,000.000 MaMOB
and bottles of Coca-Cola are drunk ovanr
month. Ho—just as much as is the oswa
fountain a national Institution SOM <■**•>
Cote the NaUonal Beverage.
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SWIMMING PARTY.
Last Thursday evening Messrs.
Mike Ditto and Robert Finch carried
an auto full of boys to the Arlington
Hole on Village Creek for an hour’s
swim. Those enjoying the occasion
were: Clayton, Howard, Chester and
Mike Ditto, Set!rick and Eugene Finch,
Prank Morrison, Wolcott Lay, Messrs.
Mike Ditto and Robert Finch.
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Now, Old State Press is in hot wat-
er—figuratively speaking, of course,
for Old State Press was modifying
the habit of getting into any water.
He has been assailed for condemning
the diaphanous and abbreviated bath-
ing suits worn by the dear things of
the gentler sex when in swimming
where the brute, Man, is swimming
also. State Press properly argues
against permitting Americans to cul-
tivate the customs and costumes of
tfw ZohM whom M* critiq say* are
among* fte*- most smt*!• ami virtuous
■ae c tteUaa not
would have us
permit the same costumes in bathin*
parties here as in • Zululand—where
both sexes bathe together costumei’
simply in a sheet of water, so to
speak. State Press says of bis critic’s
argument:
"Custom, he goes on to say, is the
great regulator of morals and n»ai-
ners. and when we get used to new
fashions we find them no more of a
menace than old fashions were. There
is, of course, some truth in that asser
tion. Nevertheless, to seriously argti '
for the Zuluixation of this country
would be enough to land the aro-uer in
jail. Eve® so powerful an arbiter as
custom must draw the line somewhere
Swimming is a sport, and is enioy-
able to girls as well as boys. Wbe *
the proprieties of the swimming poo’
are observed with the decorum that
prevails on the tenis court, there is no
rcasop why the two sexes should not
swim in the same tank, as well as play
ennis at th* same net. Otherwise
'therwise. Do you get ns?"
And we are heartily in agreement
vith Dear Old State Press, and think
present bathing costumes for both
While Mr. Candidate Hughes
criticising the Democratic administra-
tion for alleged violations <rf the civil
service rules, it would be embarrass-
ing to him if some one were to insist
vn him answering just how he ob
served this law morally and actually
—when he was governor of New
York. H« wm x*rtis*n Qf ^partisans
in his appointments. What a descent
from Supreme Cogit Justice of e
great nation to an insincere, hyper-
critical partisan stump speaker of the
reckless sort!
merchant; if they did, they
ie. Even the fellow who for
has been m the habit of pur-
loining a paper from the office with-
out paying for it, cannot see why the
publisher should be so allfired stingy
as to not let a fellow have a copy of
the old sheet. But the problem is not
the price; it is where the paper can
be secured.—Denison Herald.
than double for
paid six months
ago and it is hard to get at that. We
do not know what the end will be.
Something must happen soon
AMNOUNCEMENT—CHANGE
JOURNAL STAFF.
The Journal announces to its friends
and patrons that Mr. Ben Harlan,
Tho an »wer lies in that delicious bevor-
as« Coca-Cola Boon after lie Introduc-
tion at the fountains people began to ask
mors and mors for this <Ustlnctlve drink.
Alons with its demand came the de-
of City Marshal John mand for more places that would serve it.
■ fountains spraac up everywhere,
ing 1* beauty, neatness and st-
e eervioe. It iea fact that the part
an its anted indue-
ay tn the economic
si
In the same way ban the call for bottled
beveragee grown. In 1«» Coca-Cola in
bottles was Bret put on the market and
the same quick recognition and anprecta-
tltm wan accorded to it in this form as
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■ «*n be increased largely, and less and
Iran our people will buy away from
| home. The Journal is strictly for thia
Worth negro who caugt»iMatter—but not being ia istCMi4'1
---— ----- baaiMaar we am only «ra* MMl aafat
to wav—it i* *» to the inw5*& to -
alww the paefito-tt is to their Iqtoreat
to trade at home, and to prove that '
the Journal is right in its rampaign
MR. W. V. TAYLOR MAKING GOOD W e
The Journal was pleased to receive A
a visit yesterday from Mr. W. V. Tay- •
lor, now of Weatherford, who is vis-
iting his mother on North Center ave-
nue. Mr. Taylor went to Weatherford
, a short time ago and started in on
,J "his own hook" in an advertising bus-
'l1 iness and 'han been placing big pla-
I’m poM* is to manufacture i crmelons shipped from tl at city
r- ■ ■ . -
A. Higgins, many years county pounds. We join Mr. Taylor’s
("kllwts* frion/lc, 1 » tfwwnd a«1 WB
for he is
ARLINGTON’S FIRST BALE.
The first bale of this season’s cot-
ton crop were brought to Arlington
Tuesday afternoon, about one week
later than the first bale last season.
They were brought in by D. B. Hick-
man, of one mile south of Handley
and F. W. Cross of Hurst. Both bales
were bought by the Rankin Hard-
ware Co., and brought 14.25 cents.
Hickman, reaching town about twen-
ty minutes ahead of Cross, waj
awarded the Merchants’ Firat Bale
Premium, making his bale of 570 lbs.
ogether with seed and premium net
him about 9135.
That Rsleta to Mettare of Rrasant
■nd Llkewlss ths Futuro R’eoad
In Typv and Emt>r«o^g Va<*ioua
Portions <>♦ tha CommonwMlth.
Tomatoes continue plentiful.
Cattle tick fighting is under way io
?ooke county.
Flour ha’ been advanced 50 cents *
barrel.by Dallas mills.
Myriads of butterflies
jury in Scurry county.
Contract for «<*wsgn disposal plant
at Corsicana has boon lek.
Dr. U. J* McLaurin, a prominent
Dallasphysinian, died from apoplexy
Will McCarty. «hot north of Tto
roll, died in a sanitarium at that ci^.
During the street-car strike at
Paso a car was wrecked
Capital-stock of Ffir*^fttatSOMI
Flaton has been Increa’sedftos&tlS
«ra of Beaumont is * new organ!***
Mon at that city.*
From ten >9 thirty earloada of water*
gielons are being shipped daily out ol
Sulphur Springs.
It la now believed 250 carload* ol
watanaalon* will be ahippod thia aaa-
.*on trona Weatherford. ’
v Tbn bigrest cotton er«>p 1* year* to _
-f pronrtaad la tha'Rraao* riwr boMntni ppcmln—t ip Washington society.
^IMteasMe ttopHeinityot Bryna. • - I *"' “
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CONDITIONS OF PRINT PAPER
MARKET.
Blank white newspaper is getting
to be extra scarce and the pnee has
snore than doubled during the past
four months. Yet. we have not raised
our subscription price. The paper us
costing us more money now than the
price each subscriber pays us, and
the end is not yet in sight. The real tim of fien<i who poisoned the
question is, how long can we get the
blank white paper at any cost’—Mc-
Kinney Courier-Gaxette.
Newspaper publishers are getting
by far the worst of increased price*
of all commodities. While the cost 01
paper, as the Courier-Caxette says,
h** practically doubled and other ex-
penses incident to publication has
likewise increased, the papers are still
celling their product at the former
price. They cannot raise the price as
does 1
would
years
__ OT JOUMUm
Archl* Rssss. aistesn year* d *g«k (
w*» drowned in the Sabine river bear
Longview while swimming. He was a
iso of Dave Reese, a Harrison county
farmer.
Over 500 persons, 98 per cent actus
farmers, attended the short course of
the agricultural and mechanical col*
lejfe at Blbckjack, Smith county, seven
miles from Troup.
Dr. M D Porter, head of depart
sient of mathematics of University of
Texas, and Mrs. Leila Tyler Binkley, j
a teacher in the institution, were mar-1
•tod Monday st Gainesville.
East Texas Odd Fellows' associa-
tion, with many delegates present,held
an interesting two-day session at Ty-
ler. Grand Master Johnson ol Cor-
sicana and other officials attended.
co»*T
____I toA
Country above *11
f.time to time run special town -buildin j
| matter, from the best advertising ex-
perts, and it cost a pretty good stun to
. get this matter. It is squarely up to
the citixens and business men to make
The State Association of Constables, these series of articles of value. Just
winch held its 191ft session at Fort d°wn a!’d 1 r. --— *
, 1 n<H mend matters. Arlington
Worth, meets there also next year
Hev. J W Haggard has resigned fjto from these—because by
after,nine years’ service the pastoral* ' " -----
? of the Ontral Presbyterian church «. l.r^.
Mexia
“HK WHO TK1SKS UK CAW, CAW.*
a New York tobacco firm, wasconnect-
ed with a Waco dry goods, establish-
ment about eight years ago
Former Senator J W Bailey and
Attxirney George II . Culp of Gaines-
ville will defend gratis Ray Harris,1
charged at Fort Worth w
Audrey Rowland. Both men areclose
friends of Rev A. .J
of defendant Latter charged victim
with alienating his wife’s affections. I
Since the fate of the negro slayer of
Sheriff Will Ellis of Baylor county,
shot to death by a posse and his body '
burned, the rest of the race have left
Seymour owing to threats,
years ago no negroes were allowed to
w *
setup at the banquet to the Archbishop
of Chicago last spring. Better an ar-
my of such cooks perish than orx?
such man as Dr Murphy.
UH Ada. where not contracted for a definite number ot times, will be contin
wed until ordered out and charge mads for '""J/”?.-rKed dlRerene
from Xul" card r.le. will be altewnd not
and duly signed oy an authorised representative of Jhe JONURA1.
All edvertlaement bilia payable monthly unless contracted otberw
AU card. Vt thank.. Church or flund^
ba charged for at the rate of k <?*ta ’^^JlTword Cmint your word., divide
•'S^;\"ltoe‘,"r X- u:Voro,nea:-*°r-endCT‘ 'bHng^he ’ mon..
'MXrW. exceeding 71 words at same ratea
same.
The first step toward decisive action
to-put Austin on the new P—'
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th* automobile* Already ■ *old
*: thooe we i
Bl ■- . < Herald.
Twitinjr cotton manufacturer!
K?. raid for yean that cotton ia easily
■K-*— worth 20 cent*. The only resson ft
jjffi*-: brings Isss, they say, ia because farm-
*4H refuse to organize and stick to-
* Bother hi auakstfag cotton, Just us
I Ilium I tolh lor ih^assM other huM*<
I • • aw does its yrodneto—and sell hi
E; ■ thrift atoi MfMS'to-fterurit ^osstotort
I t* ■M^iihti esttoto Jtodjhe spin- gof eomn^nfty h^pmings, etc-
Pw-1 < '
WftSSto?X”'WM;
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Our dear eH Mtosrasd OMR Ptoss,
of the GatoMton-Dnllaa New*, who
saaay* to teach *e all on everything^-
and occassionaily, of couree, "slips a
cog” was “pff his base" recently re-
garding the material of which mush
-------- is made. He said the high price of
wheat would “account for the higher
cost of mush.” Shades of Old Brother
Corn Taeeel! Mush is made of corn-
meal. and the price of wheat hasn’t
anything to do with it. State Press will
next to telling us Gombo File is made
of hash and oak leaves.
BUILDING IN ROSE ADDITION.
-About two months ago Will Rose
purchased ten lots, including the old
homestead site of the Dr. G. N. Hut-
cheson estate on South Center street.
Tlte addition has been terraced and all
' cement walks laid. He has completed
and now occupies a five room cottage
modern in every respect, erected on
the northwest corner lot of this addi-
tion. Of the nine other lots, Mr. Rose
has sold all but two. Two houses are.
now under construction and contract
let for a third and al! three houses
are rented when complete, all of which
thal Relation. *
^?*5Tbm Slaughtered Red Frank Kel-
|ey, ifM>*>teM*el'* the Dallas county
'• |»»rhad*a figfit Slaughter was badly '
. Lftrt* ..One back wound was fourteen
lo 925,000. i \ Itefc- Eighty-two stitches were hcld atTerrell od.5 and ft. Many
The Central Jx>g Rolling totofeltXloA 'reiuired to sew up the wounds, done
of Woodmen held a two-day •ei»tot»4l with a small razor Kelley is under,
Brownwood. ~ ninety-year sentence on highway rob-'
Independent Lone Star Dock Work*. conviction and awaiting outcome
. — . . _t_ ___,4_. of appeal for new trial.
' Following an Illness of long dura-
tion, Mrs. T. J. Walker died al her
6WVM Ihn '(UuKhtor ot OeorJo^W thrown fpom lh*’r **V*ro 8uod», ln;a laroe crowd of dtlrono of th. Groot '
ln-m,W-H rommuol.ro, Oro,uro ro. rod—.
•tor from Iowa and secretary of war ••’"W*, t
In lb* H»yra cabinet. Her body was I Co®« J<*»*on, solicitor of the stat*
got to Bt. Louis and eramated. In her d«P*rtmtot, has anMhnW hi* Intato*
young lady days Mr*. Walker waa UoB ***ign WoN the end of It*
* y**r, return to Tyito and toeua* th
prawtlo* ot law. ^a*v raulwl to Flait W*
REUNION AT BEDFORD.
The regular annual reunion of old
^ic’hai't^with
lay in September. A huge tabernacle
bar recently been erected for that
■urpoae on the old church grounds.
Fbere will be a sermon at 11 o’clock
by Rev. M. H. Moore, a product ot
Bedford. In the afternoon there will
be short talks, music and readings
Everybody is invited to
>ri.'g dinner. Remember
TREATS OFFICE
Mrs. A. M. Coble sent'the Journal
office force a basket of very fine El-
berta peaches, which she grew in her
Wk yard. They were greatly enjoyed
and the force unanimously votes
thanks to Mrs. Coble for same.
O The Arlington Journal
Kvary Frto*y r
THR MNwNMiTOM PRHTTHM OO99PARY
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fixmfain •
’ AiAnmni/nslWion^
DM you ovot stop to realise that toe soda
, touMala is as much aa American Tnstitu-
. France and the Plum piKMIng an Mnallnh ^tnL-^riB;-K '
liiHtltutlon? And the funny part of ft all >
ia that though one neldotn seca a eodu
fountain in Eurotw (and then only for the J
auke of attractlnM American tourfet trade) [t -
Just aa soou aa a foreigner gets to thia (g J
country he Joo seems to learn to Jove the.
But. if you are old enough to look back!
a few years you will remember that onlyl
comparatively recently has the soda foen-l
-I;.— no popular oy so b.-ji<itiru!l
t;7 i these eM nodal
foeataine looked like—what poor provision
inado to supply even their scanty
!
----- has wrought this great change—
what baa made the soda fountain a na-
An initial order for JO.KM) copies of Inetltution-a comfort and necessity
1 in the dally Ilves of men and women—not
" — ' •- * ’■* ’? “-_*■» only during the hot summer time but the
whole year 'round.
ith killing capital stock !C0,0()(), has been granted
a charter.
Harris, father machinery
1’
clerk of Ector county and renominat-
ed in the reis-nt Democratic primaries,
died at Odessa I .
The Tom Green county poor farmt P^dor
has been sold to Mrs. Nellie H. Jones*
Up to two for 85,*1)00, the highest bidder
" ’ ■ > bids were made.
reside in that city, but the past sever-1 Mistaking a bichloride of mercury
a) months a score of families located tablet for asperin, Mrs. R. F, Fieke of ■ ^jon,**Both "exn^ct to be *in'their pul--
there. Corpus Christi swallowed it. ‘r” ” '
General passenger agents of Texas gered five days.
Ed Fair of Marlin, of Ashing party,
fell into the Brazos river at mouth ot Rev. P. H. Wilkerson delivered a
expense Of keeping agents in the field Deer creek and drowned in water that/D“«t interesting and instructive ad-
along the border soliciting business of was twelve feet deep. ‘d™" at ,^e Taberr.acle last Sunday
discharged militiamen and soldiers of, DurinK ft p|ay |n a Dallas theater a I oiSaniztog’sunday " and”?old-
the regular army, results not being wad in a pistol fired by the heroine hit jng revivals in rural districts before
Sufficiently justifiable to continue the the hb»o and lodged under the skin, a destitute of these uplifting advan-
bad wound resulting.
Dr. C. W. Bowman, r
the new Southern old, a resident of Caddo Mills many
National highway was taken by the years, is dead. He retired from prao I
business council of the chamber of tice about fifteen years ago.
commerce. Addresses were made by The Concho-Colorado Baptist en-
D. E Colp of San Antonio, secretary campment at Christoval, Tom Green
of the Texas State Highway league, 1 county, comme.nqcd Sunday. Over a
And T. J. Her^n of Washington,rep- hundred tents are stretched. *
Minting Che National Highway >*Sb- J. N(ne wereJeriously hurt in
a wreck at El Paso Sunday when a
Texas and Pacific railway passenger
train hit a switch engine.
The state Confederate reunion of
Texas, consisting of four brigades, is
Soda fc_.
improving
tractive
tries have come to
life of the .nation tc
the etimulua given „
In the same way haa
beveragee grown. In
bottleo waa *ret putjo
tkn’wM accorded to I
Ki
■^^^•**"**1_____
pert, capable adv^tMiw writer, and
kb *ervices are at the disposal of our
yitior- lie can materially assist in
getting up “ad copy” that pulls.
And Miss Mattie Lyon, for so long
wnnected with the Journal, has been
made chief of the mailing and sub
aeription department and also society
■nd local reporter. Miss Lyon need*
bo Introduction to the Journal Folks.
One of the most worthy, amiable, in-
telligent young women of this Great
Arlington Country, her sterling char-
acter and ability always commend her
to all. She will appreciate any items
•f news or personals, and we assure
«!1 these will receive attention.
BUFFALO BAYOU—OR RIVER—
IS A GREAT WATERWAX
’man, was found dead in the city jail
at Waco Coroner’s verdict was tha J
self-administered poison caused hi’
death Stanton, who was representing Zaola Cramer, was given the penally
of death
Pure Food Commissioner Hoffmar
orders'll a BAnhatn dan y closed,due to
typhoid fever case in the family ot liie
dairyman
Howard Smith company of Houston, I
I ranis on the 800 cars of tnonster wat-
Lthe east—melons - weighing from 65
F on xi/_ i_rt_ m___i__
other friends in congratulating him,
1 for he is a most worthy young man.
PASTORS HELPING IN REVIVALS
‘ of the
Methodist church here, has been over
at Irving the past ten days assisting
Scaled in a revival meeting. And Res. S. M.
| Bennett, pastor of the Presbyterian
r church, lias been the past week as-
‘ sisting in a meeting at Johnson Sta-
Sholin 'pits next Sunday.
! TOLD OF HIS GREAT RUtlJ^.
WORK. t?
Rev. P. H. Wilkerson delivered a
A M Mprrison, twelve years post- THE JOURNAL AND THE GREAT- !
___.■ L'__AIH IlirTniu nnvtvvnv Ul >
grandmother of eighty-two down tc city,
her great-great-granddaughter qf ter
months
A three-day short course will be giv
en by the extension department of the
agriculture* and mechanical college ol
Texas f01 ibe » * ’’“
farmers ai - rarland Aug. 23, 24 and'
25. Sessions arc to be beld for both
men and women.
ARLINGTON COUNTRY.
As heretofore, the Journal will <
. , „ J tinue to stand for Arlington and
Standard Dry Goods company ot Great Arlinjrton c
Deport. I^tmar county, capitalized al else. At a large cost we have from
810.000, has iwen issued a charter f-
i Rev W W. Stogner of Dallas be '
><>nefit of Dallas count)' pastor of the First Baptist
_i---> 23, 24 ano' church of Elk City. Okla., Sept. I. |
sitting down and getting grouchy will
■ not mend matters. Arlington should
| he more and more getting large bene-
' *-------j proper
efforts on the part of the business
.(tages. His storv was pathetic and held
' the audience for over half an hour,
seventy years jg dojng a WOnderful work.
I DIED AT HOME OF SON. ‘
Mrs. Sarah Stealey, age 73 years,
died at the home of her son, Walter
Stealey, four miles south of Arling-
ton, Wednesday, the 9th, after an ill-
ness of two months. ( .y 7
Mrs. Stealey was a memlM of
Woods Chapel Baptist chureh.'Hhe i*
survived by two sons, Walter, of Ar*
lington, and George, of West, Texas.
Funeral services was held Thurs-
day evening at 3 o’clock at Johnaon
Station. Funeral was at the gravw,
Rev. Moore officiating, under the di-
rections of Hugh M. Moore.
SPOKE FOR CULBBR8ON.
L*st SatuMav Hon. O. W. Gillespie
came out and delivered an address In
urn wave 1 arier was suiea ano nar of Senator Culberson for r*-
huxbatid aeriouflily Injured by beingjJSaln^STSSSl *S
Arlington Counfrv lead the addrsaa
and sprinkled with applauaa.
— --------——
ARUMOmwiANR ATTEWn
RAMSET MKKITNG9
Arlington has had larr* nX
----a*—_ aV— kJ.
Not since Coco-Cola gained such a
•weeping victory over its business
competitors has such a judicial ban
been pronounced upon a trust that
would crush competitors as that ren-
'ered in the United States Court re-
ently in favor of Z. C. Patten, Jr.,
'gainst the American Medical Jour
>al for asserting editorially, that
Wine of Cardui was "a nostrum with
'ut merit.** As the Cardui people easi-
y showed that, as a prescription, tnra
nedicine was more uniformly effica-
•ious than were the prescriptions of
h« “regular" doctors, in whose be-
half the Medical Journal is published
-for it is the organ of the American
Medical Society, the jury took the
view—and the Judge agreed with them
-that the editorial was in the nature
if trying to crush a competitor to the
doctors. Patten wen his suit for dam-
iges in a verdict in his favor.
The Journal again requests all the
Journal FWk* to ba rare ami send in
*11 item* of new*—personals, social,
church apur*, ravel happening*, school
STtenMEJ* * * “ Oer pheaa to Ma. T. We
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Bowen, William A. Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 63, Ed. 1 Friday, August 18, 1916, newspaper, August 18, 1916; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1303014/m1/4/?q=corinth: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Arlington Public Library.