Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, February 20, 1920 Page: 2 of 4
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E/JX;
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1920.
Wm. A Bowt*. WWf.
w
«■
-
ARLINGTON, TEXAS
T
4
NOTICE.
6th and Main Sts.
SERVICE
«
GO HOME!
1st
ARLINGTON LIGHT & POWER CO.
I
Washington, D. C., Feb. 14.-
Use Want Ads
X
About
GOVERNOR'S OFFICE
11
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isneral
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little
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sc •I-' I?
•»***■
Dye Old, Faded
Dress Material
VICTORY CAFE
OPEN FROM 6 A. M. TO 12 P. M.
yagaa^£a=-ssS^5£aas-.="aafe=:j-as-~a^
Worth Thursday.
When we connect our electric wires to
your house, we agree to furnish SERVICE
and that is what we endeavor to deliver.
get fair crop weather'except not
1
L. D. HAHN, Manager,
RESIDENCE ARLINQTON, TEXAS
PHONE *74
27; plains sections 17, 23, 28;
meridian 90, great lakes, middle
Gulf States and Ohio Tennessee
* alleys 18, 23, 29; eastern sections
19. 24, March 1, reaching vicinity
of Newfoundland about Feb. 20,
25, Mar. 2. Storm waves will fol-
low about one. day behind warm
waves and cool waves about one
Warm waves will reach Vancouv-
er about Feb. 15, 21, 26 and tem-
peratures will rise on all the Pa-
cific stop?; They will cross crest
Mrs. A. A. McCrary and daugh-
ter Miss Floyce, and Mrs. W. J.
White spent Thursday afternoon
shopping in Fort Worth.
Miss Lorena Wester of Ferris,
Texas, spent Sunday, .with Miss
Maeon Boyd.
Health
J
No i
than 2
A Llttl
Wl
I'
Maay thousands of
woaea suffering from
womanly trouble, have
been benefited by the on
TEXAS TITLE COMPANY
Basement of the Fort Worth Club Building
Fort Worth, Texas
Choice
heavy
mai
rival
Farm.
There
SI* Ins
FtNre©
< . •
’ Zlroo from the
CLA
*
FOB i
hound
Hire,
ft-? ; 1 •
SKIN DISEASE
a ® w ma ■ a ^raa |
—'-i.
iithlt* da!w |
renter Card.
to giv<
Mrs. D. G. Cox of Fort Worth
spent Thursday in Arlington with
friends.
K'
The death of Chandler Diehl,
only gon of Charles 8. Diehl, pub-
lisher of the San Antonio Light,
occurred a few days ago at his
home in that city. Mr. Diehl was
business manager qf the Light
and had many friends in newspa-
per circles.
Semi Hud
: Fattitan,
StreesMHH
Plew aad Fann Teeb
,v r-V”-
W sther.forthe
lyetemterui
end herrt^
Gob. Nothl
FOSTER’S WEEKLY
WEATHER BULLETIN
GOOD THINGS TO EAT
usual ups and downs #ill reach
the high point near 24 and then
start for lower degrees. These
conditions will drift acron con-
tinent with each distrubanee in
about 5 days.
One principal storm wave will
prevail during the week centering
on Feb. 24, drifting with the dis-
turbance dne on meridian 90 mar
Will
/ 'i*
aeylteh oM Now.$o W '*0*
Deal worry about parfret raaufta.
Um “Diamond Dyes,” gwrantMd to giro
a naw, rich, C
wWtbcr wool,
good*.-—drcwM, blougm
child™’. aoata, drap
•*» Ip 11 •VllOn IXKJg !■ »
Tit Mate* any mat
■haw yen “Diamond U
-----—.................. u..
~------ -•*•'**.
moisture, coming from southward, fe
can pass thru low places of the V
Rockies crest and meetjhe storms
cm States and parts of Alberta A
and Saskatchewan are unfortun- y|
ately located for weather of this Bk
month. The high ridges south of
the upper Missouri river, the |g
Bfack Hilln and other elevationa
south of those sections, cut off the
moisture that is trying to get to M
the storms coining from north- JI
westward. Rut this condition will BU
’•hyy ----------I
waraceive, similar to this
ooc from Mrs. Z.V. Spell.
ofHayM,N.C. “Icodd
mt stand m my lest, md
)»t saftand tsnfbty,"
aba says. "As ay al-
isriag wm so grosi, asd
bshsd triodo£sri<=
dtos. Dr. i-m-m bad as
i ' v ''' ■ J
WM' 'OU
■wo__________'________
When tired, gorlibifft& WTfPn you want con-
solation, go home. When you want fun, go
home. When you want to show others that
you have reformed, go home—and let your
family get acquainted with the fact. W'
you want to show yourself at your best, go
home and do the get there. When you feel
like being extra liberal, go home and practice
on your wife and children first.. When you
want to shine with more brilliancy than usual,
go home and light up the household.
I’.fyjrr'U
Movement. ' *'
“The Southern Baptist Co
r, ”1
In Conference
Ha
110 t
Texa
Mr. and Mrs.W: A. Kerr and
family have moved from North
Mesquite street to their place at
Stop No. 14, and Mr. J. R. Caw-
thon who recently came to our
city is moving in the house vacat-
ed by Mr. and Mrs. Kerr.
It is not so much what you eat,
as it is the quality, the care used
Hl ... k--. - -|-f—n'W" i'J "frminii fi ■■■ni«enuii ~ i~ moiMii~ .i..~ . ra i nn r ~ rrai ~i - r . . ■»nl—i m MMyu ««
lence of its serving.
We have all these
woman and tn an economical
hygienic .advantft^
the Arlington journal
numbered 2 ahd 4 on Foster’s
Sectional Cropweather Map.
Of all the absurd, unthinkable
ideas brought out by official sei 1
ence that of communication with .
the people of Mars and Venus
caps the climax. By official sei- ■
ence I have reference to those sci-
entists in the employ of the gov-
ernment, the universities and the
inventors who work for corpora-
toy ’ cottop .
States for laat half of February j
will he in spots; ACCficult to dis- 1
laces too much, '
rdgj; <3enoHly
Do you want a wi?^ job of
Plumbing installed or sfew’erage
put in, or a yard closet anyv.-ay if
no more? If so. get busy now and
see Ed M. Forlines dr phone 294.
He can make you prices that are
O. K. Don’t wait as goods are
.scarce and hard to get. I have
been ordering ahead to meet the
demands and have- lot of yard
closets on hand now. So get
busy, and plaqp your order now.
ED M. FORLINES,
The Plumber.
Phone 294. Office 1st door
west of Elite 'Cafe.
—..... ' —
MDM.IMGCO mramv timbmv and pmmv «v
THE AM.IMT0N PUNTIN* DO.
------------ ;-------—-----
■tiered al the Arlington Postoffiee as Mail Mailer cT »
.... _ the Second Glass. <
E ARLINGTON JOURNAL
........... .........—---
: Influent*.epidemic and.continue to make our
town the abiding place of brotherly love?
What a glorious dwelling place Arlington
would be if we always felt toward each other,
and took the same interest in each other, as
we did during the dark days of the recent
epidemic.
. MAKING* HOMES GLOOMY.
3|F
sf • cents per line. Six words hwle a lme.^s«n
iUMal or figure In dates, etc., cduntnig as one word.
Count your words, divide by six, adding a Une for
MV surplus words. *nd send or bring the money with
Meh notices. Ateo for obltflarlec exceeding 78 words
^'at Mms satsa,' ...
am In splendid MaMh...
| caadomyworiu IHI
I UwaittoCMdni,tor!wM |
I In dreadta! conditioa ” 1
I My— are acre—a, nm-
I ‘ weak, or Mfler ■ I
Ml, every month, try
I Cardul. Thnmsniteot
I «OMa praise this medl-
I dM for me food R kN I
I duae Bma. aad maay J
I d*y^^laMi who have used *1
CmdaiatrtJ/ "j
I -***'• ■ '■ ’ '■ I
h||;Pnwito.
L L L-.' IL I
partnieiit 1 have this ~day issued —These vUKturbances will douuu-
ate the weather of North America
from near Feb. 15 to near March
1. Low temperatures moving
’Yr. and Mrs. Sandei* visited
their son, J. O. Sanders, in Fort
subscribed in the Baptist 75 Mil-
lion Campaign, reports Dr. Gron-
er, who was state director in the
campaign. Subscriptions are still
coming in and the amount will
probably reach $100,000,000: This
huge sum will be used in the dif-
ferent missionary, educational,
benevolent and evangelistic en-
terprises of the Baptists through- nf Rockies by close of Feb. 16, 22,
out the world.
“Only a limited number of the
Woodward Vaginal Powder .
Syringes at Coulter A Sona. Bet-
enic measure for your food health,
ter flhone or call now if you get
yours? > (Atfv.V
niTlWBlt“ collide rat ion.
officially declined to take part in
the Interchurch World Movement,
as .d><i the Baptist General Con-
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1920.
--------------—-------——-——————
. **Arlington is the most beauti- s.
ful and ideal home city in the
world.99—Rev. J. Frank Norris,
pastor of the First Baptist
Church, Fort Worth,
gw* .
■few*
*
■ 1
/uvx iuriui VI }’lvgr*IUB. n,uuu a lll.V nur Ur.vi/IK?, >n .u. uuc vu mvi >u.«u av iicna
U ■ W* have nq connection whatever fredornixed here.aa ‘elsewhere as th$t Mate and* fri—tjpreeipitation
L.. grams.’’ • |listed personnel, the United States
recreation, i
.eting travel,
FRESli
T. L. 1
!x’ wluT
typewi
fifty d
pose p
1. Gho
11 FOB =
N£
MMtfM |
•t—8, Wooley Voung,
It provides a . training T
young man will >find Pf marked
value throughout his lifetime. A
I, therefore, respectfully ask
that the people of the State, of
Texas cooperate
in securing ito enlisted quota and temperatures and a shortage qf
that the young men of our State rain and snow, except where the
givevto the Navy their serious
consideration.
\ In Witness Whereof, I have Rockies crest and meetJh
votes, and the action of hereuRlSiaCiWSSy*^
the seal of the State of Texas to| Some <>f the middle no
be affixed. . -\
Done at the Ci|y of Auafin, the
Capital, this 6th day of February,
HOBBY, .
By the Governor 7 " ;
C. D. MIMS, /./. A'Mw-vd
Acting Seerelai-y of State.
7 <
- ,J - 1
Austin, Texas
February 6, 1920.
A Proclamation by the Governor
of the State of Texas.
the raqsmaG .at jhiifedrifewii,
the following proclamation call-
ing for five hundred recruits to
fill vacancies on board "Uncle
A few days after Christmas we had occa-
oii^T eve^Vurn?
Noise of any sort waa forbidden.
Little Jim had a new game, a present from
old Saint Nick, and th© playing of which nec-
essitated quite a bit of noise, in order to get
the full benefit. -
: But it was, "Jim, please be*quiet; Daddy is'
taking a nap," and “Dorothy, walk With less
noise. /Don’t you know you are in the house?"
And eVeTy time pne of the children made a
slip, they turned scared faces^Jo the stern
mother.
And later, when we passed another home wv
“ —heard the kiddies’ voices, full of laughter and
through the Window WF could see the mother
attempting to read, while Dad was down on the
floor with a pop gun shooting down the brave"
cardboard soldiers. What a contrast it Wa^!
Out over the hill in the city of grassy
mounds, it'is silent.' And as we walk through .
the avenues our voices are hushed as though
we fear to awaken those who pleep.
But why make a tomb of the lyjme? Soon
enough the little ones and we, too, will be
wrapped in the silence neVer-ending.
So, while we may, let’s make the home an
atractive place for them. Then they will want
to spend1 their ‘Play-time there. But if forced
to speak in whispers and walk tip-toe, they
are going to long for more freedom. That isn’t
all. They will get more freedom. And you’ll
wonder, and worry, and scold.
We will let them play and yell, and when
the noise threatens to raise the roof, we will
not yell at them. If we must yell, we’ll yell
with them.
*—■" And smile!
. .
fc ■’ I
1
as UKl the Baptist Weneral < on-
B;’ . vention hi its ireCW sesaion in
Houston. The actiou of the South
ern Baptist ’Convention which
was math- up of over 4200 ines
| aengers representing a eonstitu-
' \ ency of more than 3.000.000 white
B-- Baptists, was praetisally unani-
P mous, there being only two dis-
Baptist General, Convention of
:m, representing a constitu-
r of 350,000 white Baptists
1 absolutely unanimous aud
dnsive. It was felt that to
id any confpsidn this state-
d OUtfht to be given to the pnb-
D Me end that the attitude of
Jfeptfaa toward the move-"
d Should not be mtonnder-
W0ULD BE SOME TOWN.
During the recent epidemic of the Spanish
Influenza, which spread all over the world and
left its trail of death and sickness across Amer-.
ica, there was scarcely a community in all the
r land that escaped. In many towns the situa-
y, ’ tion was desperate for days and then the real
ST’ human kindness of. the average neighbor was
R ‘ discovered. .■
Here in Arlington many volunteer nurses,
both men and women, went into the homes of
the afflicted 'and rendered the most menial
services without thought of reward. The war
had awakened many of our better and finer
aenaibiliitcs; we had already learned to serve
and to deny and to give.'l But it was the In-
flucnsa epidemic that laid ’the cap sheaf on our
appreciation of the Golden Rule.
Before it is too late and before the pedp.*1
of Arlington fall back into their old-time
routine of apathy and indifference to others
we want’ to say that the volunteer labor ren-
. dared by some of our people in that time of
trouble was one of the finest examples of
Christian service we have ever seen tn this
community. But why is it we must be rudely
jarred by affliction before we realize the beau-
ty of service, the reward of kindness, the in-
finite joy of doing unto others as we would
that others should do unto us?
Can we not her© in Arlington hold fast to
® the lessons we learned during the war and the
-..........a—
Baptists Not
A -
j__<
Following the announcement
that the Interchurch World Move-
ment will hold a conference in
Dallas February 12, 18 and 19,
W and that the pastors and repre-
sentatives of all denominations
-- would be at the conference, Dr.
F. S. Groner, secretary of the
Baptist General Convention and
general seerctart' of the Baptist
Executive Board, has announced
” that the Baptist denomination
p. will not be represented at the
f conference.
' “My attention' has been called
"1 jterchurch World Movement head-
H quarters for Texas has been es-
tablished in Dallas and that they
dUS- to Jtpld a conference here on —r---, t-, -
the date mentToneHT^ ’aild Dr. Sam’s’’ fighting ships; the United eastward near Feb. 15, with about
Groner. "In order that tlft gen- “-------‘ K-~ — •• ------» -»—-- -*-«---«-
oral public, as welPas tire Bap-
tists, will not be confined by the
announcement that all the de-
nominations will be represented,
.it was thought best to announce
that the Baptist denomination
. would not be officially represent-
ed* nor will it participate in the
■jnovemertt’s plans or programs.
culed. the idea that the planets
have any important effect on our
weather—knowing that govern-
ment scientists base -their fore-
casts of the tide, for use qf our
navy and for all ocean shipping
i -7-on the relative positions of Sun,
Moon and the plqnet Venus, very
much as I base my weather fore-
casts on the relative positions of
Sun^ Moon and all the major plan-
ets. All these official scientists
admit that these heavenly bodies
are great magnets, hillions of;
times mpre powerful than any '
electromagnetic machine that
man can ever hope to make.
Strange that it does not occur to
those scientists that the disturb-
ances they •hear on 4h<»,’wireless
comes from the Moon and planets
as they eross their critical mag-
netic points.
1 improviag, sad It cured
I are. ’I tore, aad my
1 dtocGsrkaows,wfrstCar-
I dal dM Ise are, isray
I Mrvas aad ImeMi ware
1 feMtgMa.”
-
MiditawMeskta d
wEshsochaMi
ieip«d her, so we
— jga
rtwr twi
aw*.
States Government has asked the
State of Texas for five hundred
good clean young men for the
months of February and March
to help fill the vacancies in the
Navy caused by the granting of
discharges to men who enlisted
only for. the duration of the wa^.
Our KaV$, oivett termed the 1
Nation's first line qf defense, is
with the Interchurch World’‘of the utmost importance, and it of the three weeks, Feb. 10 to 30,
re J must k, kaMjt» fnHaGfndJw that Week.
JTolttew* t-Mfcipitatiofi
and
ebSter than-
'Mr/
prortrtresof
much precipitation in the valleys
of rivers that run eastward. About
normal temperature* s
Pacific slope, will get normal
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Bowen, William A. Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, February 20, 1920, newspaper, February 20, 1920; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1305064/m1/2/: accessed May 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Arlington Public Library.