Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, December 4, 1914 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Arlington Journal and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Arlington Public Library.
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I
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some
i
f
ARLINGTON, TEXAS, FKI BAY, DECEMBER 4, 1914.
CAN, son, that appeals to you.
or
i
see
THANKING
THE
[ sickness or death, we had to wait
O, when will
I
a
The
-o
a
in nine years.”—New York Journal
of
in contact.
after, but he lays much stress on the I
10 CENTS A POUND
I
FOR COTTON.
c.
-4r"
ar?"
gb.
■
r
<
•” •• ••• • xastiugvvAi \7wuull j| mill cMSzlU Uo
receipt therefor, and we wiM mail you receipt for Journal
a
"HlO'
S'
Ar’lngton’s poet laureate sends ur
i
"♦ v’
Hi
4
• ...
*1
*S*
In
______
THE JOURNAL, Drawer One, /
ARLINGTON, TEXAS.
day.” Red Cross seals
j and cost only
HI RST PRODI CE ASSOCIATION
GETTING READY.
and flowers for the living.
His name is Emil F. Schuessler and
But
the
In addition, (here will be
. —».™ j and com
The Journal does not hesitate
they ail
success,
abilities e
The Arlington Journal
Published Every Friday by
THE ARLINGTON PRINTING COMPANY
-----o--
Some wonderful revelations are tie
—« ***
aad
bin hl
s are
dren
rh-rl
and
are I
pils I
J
•Hr
rets I
♦he
wa -
H
an
live
from
Nori
Fl
1
*, *to.,
• Ito*.
'■“Wj
us ■
some j
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1914.
- — -■■■■............... '"■■aa
n Arlington.
THE SIHLEY GIN.
THE CRIBBS GIN.
THE FARMERS’ UNION GIN.
Or any gin in the Great Arlington Country, and*send
Of d
r
I
POEM TO THE MUD.
0, the mud, soft, slushy mud;
It brings us down with a splash and
strong body
Yes, Arlington ha« been a regular
the past week.
g
Kr' ’
L ■
NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE;
SHELVING. WRAPPING. ETC.
The Journal office
hns old newspapers for sale, don*
up in narkages of 55 in a bundle,
j olean and ready for use—only fivr»
cents per bundle
I
1
one els> with WhdNr^eWmie- ■*-'
He not only preaches the ,
T<- is just dawning upon many that
the golden band of wealth hidden
In these Lower Cross Timber soils
is where the Great Arlington Coun-
try will get its biggest prosperity.
------- o—---
The man who will not learn, and
falls hack upon general average;
and refuses to eveu.trp preven facts
is beyond hope. Work on hi* chil
They JSfit iguitoV^Rlte* it
i so If Pa’s and
‘ leas fasten in their
The man who reallv kniwa
more from all
continued to ncc«mmhdate me i
As hcon ns I owned these fee j
JOURNAL WILL PAY*
_____ _
- •■-V- • .-■•***»
-
Fag* Four
--o----
Smartalei'k—“Josh, I
all cats are
many.”
Josh—“Whut fer?”
Smartaleck—“To make lining for
war-coats; that's t ,
haw!”
. .. ...
'ffSSBKffilJlf’W.'**''
M
“HE WHO THINKS HE
CAN.-—Mrs. Chas. S- Taylor.
•
tn commend the moving picture the
n.ter of Arlington for being a whole
some place of amusement, with many
educational features.
.....—»--
WALTER BURTON VISITING
POULTRY SHOWS
Miss Geons Wilson is teaching
this session over at Rockwall. Re-
ports come that she is. making a
great faucces’s—and is making an
enviable reputation among teachers,
vupis and patrons.
And she loves her work,
say, which explains her
couple’d with her natural
and studious habits.
Look over our real estate offer-
ings by those having bargains, set
forth inr today’s Journal. Arlington
is attracting attention as never be-
fore. And acreage in thia-.goldpn
sandy loam soil will support a fam-
bnk ccwans) wgawffaa
i bank account.
Now is
home place.
—o-
Before Rountree
THE ARLINGTON JOURNAL
Uy and add 1
ily and add a
prices are going up.
time to buy a
ARLINGTON GIRL IS A
SUCCESSFUL TEACHER •
—ONE DOLLAR for every 30 pounds of seed cotton left
for us—middling.
WM. A. BOWEN Editor.
■Mered at the Arlington Post Office as Mall Matter of the Second Class
G. •’>- '■»-
Nqte the advertisements in The
Journal. * Merchants who advertise
are the merchants- who believe in
your intelligence and who really de-
serve your trade because they frank*
ly tell you what they have—and the
prices. Also, these are the men who
build up a country, and are the only
ones "who do not build up mail order
houses that take money away fr>ni
the home community. And The
Journal guarantees readers against
loss by misrepresentations by our
advertisers. We refuse “fake ads”
of all kinds. Better get in the habit
of patronising our advertisers, as
you are thus insured against regrets
and losses.
Mrs. Sidney Wilson has gone to
Burke, Tex , to spend the winter with
her son, Rev. J’. S. WHson, who is
pastor of the Methodist Church
there.
That is what D. Swift & Co., pat-
ent lawyers of Washington, D. C.,
call their new diary for 1915, with
its calendar for 1915 and 1916, crop
ulation of each state since 1890, also
ulation of each state since 2890, also
of largest cities; pieces on each date
for notes; synopsis of business, pat-
ent and other laws, etc. Anyone cau
get it by sending a two-cent stamp
to D. Swift & Co., patent lawyer.-.,
Washington, D. C.
-----o-----
After all,, winter has its comforts.
Soldiers in trenches now stand jn
ice instead of wallowing in water.
Unil
field
tion.I
ercisl
w*s I
- . >3e
tow I
* . -eot
:,i ■ ■
--
Dr. H. K. ('ans’.er of HillsbortA was
called to Arlington last week to see
th<- infant of his brother, Mr. Tom
Sansler of Arlington The baby has M
an attack of pneumonia. We are '*
glad to say from last reports the ?
little sufferer is improving.
their kindnesses toward him. Then. |
being a man who believes in flowers
for the living, he thanked the local
newspaper for its kindness in throw-
JMMORIFTION RATES, PAYABLE IN ADVANCE:
One Year -.fl.00
Six Months -00
Mil Ads., where not contracted for a definite number of limes, will be contin-
ued until ordered out and charge made for tosestions run.
CUI Ads., discontinued before time contracted fot will be charged difference
between transient rale for times run and contract price.
■b dBoonuat from regular card rates will be allowed not nemed in contract
end duly elgBOd by an authorised representative of The JOURNAL.
£■ advertisement bills payable monthly unless contracted otherwise.
•Mi cards of thanks, Church or Sunday school reeotutuioM of reopeot.
* ssttl bo charged for at the rate of 5 cents per line. Six words make a
•ash initial or figure In dates, etc., counting as one word.. Count your words,
Wvtda by six, adding a lino for any surplus words, and send or bring the
*saey with such notices. Also for obituaries exceeding 78 words at same
FARMERS AND THE SCHOOl
HOUSES OF TEXAS.
official 1
ing but eitheTTblockheads or
logs.
Dallas is Just now furnishing th*
State with an Illustration of whfi1
havoc may be wrought when irre-
sponsible or foolishly headstrong men
ore placed in official position whert
they are allowed too much discretior
along lines that may impair success,
of such an institution as our schools
The school board of Dallas, without
notice or consultation with any p»t
ions or texpayers, arbitrarily forbk
. the children of the public schools t<
solicit, or bring to the schools, do-
nations for the benefit of deserving
poor, and which has been the custom
under the United Charities Assoda
tion in Dallas for more than twent>
years. is
Very properly and justly the Dal-
las News opened its columns for a ;
protest—and the patrons and tax-
want to see this wonderful youn,;
The editor of
The Journal has induced him to agree
to give us a nigh< in Arlington soon.
In fhe meantime, let everyobdy hand
in at least a dollar for the Girls’
spring. The setback last spring only
stirred them up to greater efforts -
tetter than *n"*training ^or ***>• know *hat never ««»»
President U. S. Anderson and See
l retary Owen Finlan of «he Hurst
| Produce Association, were in to see
i The Journal this week, and outlned !
the splendid work that live associ- |
for j ipx Blade down at Austin in the suit
J qnrino- TKm b..________
set-=«y> by the Savior m Mat-
thew 25th. g.
------o------
O, when will men 1 .. . . , ,— ----------- — —, --------- -------- „ ,
they only do for themselves, their | choir leader, organist, ushers, sexton, I were appreciated, and men of less
own f ‘ ‘ ‘ “* 4 j-*’ - -----
• nd likewise made the ui
And the women, when they would I
slip off the plank into the mud over |
exprea j cntTE FINE CRYSANTHEMUMS. ! fir"t y««r *'n’ " wet ««»<>« »nd 1
-- • 1 did not make enough to pay creditors.
The editor of The Journal—and j 1 went to each on date of promise
Church. When his work on earth is j them. 1
finishe*! and he joins the innumerable ; the usual reels—romance
caravan that motel, i
will be ready for him for that be gave I
a newspaper just erelit, and thereby I “
broke all former world records—Bren- *
ham Banner-Press.
----o----
THE LOSING SIDE OF
MAIL ORDER TRADING
j and unordained order of things, thai
• ono of the Banner-Press men in a
near-front seat had to paw the air
Gr ' for breath. It staggered him, for it
was the first time in over twent.”
i ,
where j “nd send it to
ordered killed in Ger- i Though we got bit every once in
Walter Burton 'eft Tuesday for <
Amarillo, where he juden the big
poultry show this week. Next week
he goes to both Sherman and Gaines-
ville, then ti Greenvile for the show
on the 16th and 17th Our Walter
Rurton has become somle judge of
fowls, and is in demand. And he
evidently samples the gastronomical
value of them also, judging by the
growth of his equinoxial line and the
spread of his abdominal rotundity,
—st-
_______________________________________________________________________________.
gatherings. And have
brary in every one
6 .— o--
THE GIRLS* TRAINING SCHOOL ,
OF TEXAS.
We believe cotton will sell at 10 cents a pound, middling
basin, by April next It should be taken by all business
on account or for supplies, at 10 cents a pound.
The Journal will accept 30 pounds seed cotton (middling)
for one dollar, to apply on subscription to the paper Thin
will apply to old subscribers paying up and for new ones
also, and U you desire to pay in advance a year or more,
we will agree to allow this. • .
For every dollar you owe The Journal on subscription, ,
take 30 pounds of seed cotton to your ginner, have him
weigh it and give you receipt therefor, bring or eend this
receipt to The Journal, and we will receipt yotr at th nite
of one dollar for every 30 ponnds of sa^d cotton (middling **
basis) you thus place to our account. All back sdbscrip-
jtions and new ones, and in advance not exceeding five
years ahead, will be accepted on thia plan
You may leave the cotton at either of the following gimi ’
Ail
J
payers are protesting in a way that Corley is in demand every- |'<Ue and “grow beautifully less and
should lead that board to at one* where for this lecture — and they small by degrees?” This is as sure
rescind its foolish action. And the
News editorially agrees with the citi- j mnn everywhere, too
zens in protesting against the actioi |
”cf the school board.
Now, Farmers’ Fireside Bulletin
■would urge faAners to look well to |
their f»chool* matter*. The publi< ' Training School of Texas,
schools are for the sole purpose of
making boys and girls into better cit
izens. This cannot be done simply by
technical text-1
I
•» a *--i u“-'~i'.‘
■ *..< *-------V- -■ *■**-“-. - u., .-.lit*
to » gospel of repentance and the here- |
“Hew to the line; let
the chips fall where they may.” I
acknowledge 1 am astonished at
revelations already—and the worst j
is yet *o come. Well, let it come, j
Anotherr Shakespeare wor<| fits; 1
“Let the galled jade wince; our with-
ers are unvrrung.”
-----o------
Don’t let the good work of street
and sidewalk improvements abate •<
single jot. Keep it up.
------o------
If Arlington’s property holders
were compelled to render equal as-
sessments on all property, there
Would be no shortness of funds for
all purpose* But to permit one
man to render a fair valuuation and
another on the same block and of
equal value to render at severs!
times below wha’ he would sell st -
and could get—is not only a man;
fp£t Jnjustice. .bet keeps, this city
J
: One of the Brenham pastors, or. i and send away for it, which wasn’t
— winding up his fins' sermon of the I so pleasant. One by one our mer-
learn that i* j conference year, thanked the choir, | chmts moved to places where they
< j v I ... . j en_
families and homes and com- stewards, congregation and others fo( | ergy moved in. Gradually our town
munities they must shrivel and dwir-
Xttenton, Members of Farmers’
Union: Before you make a move be
sure and see L. M- Boatwright abouf
yorr stuff.
NO ALUM m
BAKING POWDER
u
Nc
pils
rowni
At
Mei
entai
wool
on M
n>uT
that
t to p;
lowir
•mil
ises
ation
maki
studi
So
scho<
the <
even
. tl»«
HiglB
abouH
Higlfl
form®
Thursday morning was this mud- th* fa^nv—were p'aced under p'e^s- * and explained conditions, paying as
we. I obligations t»s< Monday by lit- j • u~h as possible, and they all car-
Miss Rosa Le* Jones, daughter ’ r’cd the balance over another year,
c* Br and Mrs. E. H. Jones, for a
—bM1tf|f1t| bouquet of ervsan- until I was able to buy a forty-acre
♦hewuims. both cream and dark red 1 place of my own.
We have an excellent communi-
cation from a good German-Ameri-
can protesting against opposition to
the W'ar-lx>rds of “Mein Faderland,”
but it is too long for these columns.
When briefed, it will appear, cheer,
fu'ly.^
aSK'?*1 -**-rr—w
Hans Garbus, a German farmer of
Iowa, has discovered that the benefits
which appear on the surface as at-
taching to the mail order plan some-
times spells disaster and has written
a very interesting story on his views •
in a certain farm paper. Here is a 1
part of his story:
. *-'.x . . . ' * “W* farmers need awekening to
(as it does others) down tn the list. the fact that we have unmirtakably
reached the period where we must
think and plan. I am one of tte‘«’ow
German farmers that had to be
shown, and 1 a tn now giving my ex-
• erience that others may profit, for
knowledge is more expensive now*
than ten years aKO. , i
“Twenty-nine years ago I began
my farm career. M had an old team
and >50. Our furniture was mostly
home-made — chairs, cupboard and
lounge made from dry goods texes,
neatly coteped with ten»eent cretonne
by my girl wife. We rented eighty
acres. Being a boy of good habits,
I rot a'l needed machinery and gro-
ceries of our home merchants on
-redit, until fall crops were sold. The
■ another season be experienced. They
have a new and better contract for
their cantaloupes and melons the
I coming season, and will soon buy
the seed, and will be enabled to get
crates, baskets and boxes on better
terms and prices, also. Next Sat-
| urday week, Dec. 12, Messrs. An-
derson and Finlan, and Vice Presi-
dent J. M. Suder, accompanied by
Mr. Wm. A. Bowen and Zack Slaugh-
ter, will visit Bedford and present
’he matter to the farmers over ther*
and enlist them in the Hurst Asso-
ciaion. The trip will be made in an
purposes and even for lotei theaters ‘ avtomobllH returning to Arlington
playa, debates, moving pictures, etc . «»ne night. They designed go-
Ttese be exactly what school house* 'he r“n P°Bt.-.
are for—bringing the people togethei
in alt moves that i—---------
better citizens old and young—for th<
old no less than the young, should
be yearning for education. And ttes* I
of "us who rightly appreciate what
education is, do thus yearn. “ i - « > ■
Compel al! school houses to be ope* MUD, THE SLUSHY MUD!
fer social center purpo-es and for al! —
• religious, social, intellectual, moral
elean amusement entertainments anr | “stick-in-the-mud”
a public li f And to make it the more emphatic.
.-v... uuv .re ..jr. ...uv.. vn inc . Manager Richardson of the Pala'-e I
doctrine pf credit where credit is due ; Theater ba« contracted for the great t
■ standard moving pictures
j European war,
what fur—haw, I their stocks of goods—for lack of
I patronage. Finally we began to re-
----- I alixe that when we needed a bolt
NEWSPAPER, quickly for machinery or clothing for
had gone down, our business houses
are “tacky” in appearance, a number
are empty, our schools, churches and
walks are going down, we have no
ing open its columns to the churches. ! band, no library nor ball team. These
The deed was so rare in human his- ! is no business done in the town, and
, no taxes to-keep things
up. lotel is closed for lack of trave'
Go <!ov n to the depot when the train
pulls in and you will" see the sequel
in mat! order packages.
“Nine years ago my farm
. worth $195 an acre; today I’d have
r p.tter to sell it at $167
arre. It is ‘too far from a
town — so every farmer has said
that wants to buy. He -wants a pla<«
near schoo's and churches, where his
children Can have advantages. I have
my home town where 1 had gotten
my accommodation when I needed it.
“We then had one of the thriftiest
little villages In the state—good line
of business in ^11 the branches, mer-
chants who were billing to help an
honest fellow over a bad year, sjid a
Itown full of people who came twice
a week to trade and visit. lur littl-
country town supported a library,
high school, band, ball team, and we
had big celebrations every year.
“A farm near a live town soon
[ doubles in value. - I sold my forty
| acres at a big- advance and bought
I an eighty, gradually adding to It until
I had 200 acres of the best land*In
Iowa. I then felt no need of asking
favors and found it easy to patronize
the mail order agents that came al-
most weekly to our door. 1 regret
to Cay that 1 was the first in the
j county to make up a neighborhool bill
> a mail order house.
a
while we got in the habit of sending
away for stuff.
"Gradually our merchants lessened
to be the result of. selfishness and
greed a.*, “that night fol'ows the
are small-- . . --------- — , . -----
cent each, yet this ! tory, so fraught with- the unforeseen I therefore,
j is the only way to insure for Texas i
I sanitariums for fighting that great-
[ es’ of all modern plagues, tubercu- j
losis, for those unable to
care
| And every person stricken is
are to e' ery other one.
----1---o---------
Some men imagine the are good I P°^rb ted and unclothed, and they
timber, when they are noth- i
j. — gum
Several
of our good women are taking an ac-
tive interest and subscriptions may
. be handed to them: Mrs. J. A.Koken,
Mr*. M. Wade, Mrs. B. A. Bowers,
Mrs. Wm. A. Bowen, Mrs. M. H.
Cravens.
The Journal has a letter from
Judge Corley saying he will come to
Arlington soon and deliver his fam
ous lecture. “Overoaming Difficul-
ties”—and no man in the United
States has overcome so many and
reached the Very top as has Judge
Corley. Without hands, he has iiCS
vented little contrivances that enable
him to do many things men with two
good hands have not done. He can
do practically everything ariy man
does with ’wo hands—all because 1„
determined not to be helpless sim-
ply because he had both hands off.
His success is wonderful His lec-
one of the most inspiring,
helpful, especially to boys, as well
ns eloquent and amusing, even. He
will deliver it in Arlington soon. I
thud;
It musses our clothes and daubs up
our hair;
Anjl makes even deacons, and
elders, swear.
------o-----b
"GOLD MINE OF INFORMATION”
pile shoveled off. But by then
Fad all had our say—likewise our
slips and boggin’^downs. Those
who lived where good sidewalks pre-
vailed held th"’r heads high. aS if
r were ’“ade nf better tuff than The” were snl*nd’d specimens of this “
. Hke th* rr*t of us. Sidewalks make -i sutumn flower, and had ’he lhe, mail order house* lievsn
or dislike of the person soliciting in - : Ng differen e. . ( ^'irbnnk swee’ness in them Ar- | «'rding me catalogues, nnd grnd'ial'y
i ennlrtlv becoming n->te<I for I began sending my loose change t«>
•fs fine flowers * • I them, letting my, accounts stand •
------o--
Kaqsa.s is taking the lead of all
states in Christmas spjrit She will
give 100,000 barrels of -flour to the
stricken Belgians. And according to
the “promises of God,” Kansas, like
the name of good old Aloulen Ad-
hem, “will lead al' the rest,” judged
*n( by the criterion of the Judgment
Day set”<I)[> by the Savior m Mat-
' doubles
Mak-bawth !
beats me to it, I desire to call at-
tention to the fact that a terrible
catadasm has just occurred in Ger
man homeiK The Kaiser ordered all
cats ki'led to make lining for sol-
deirs’ coats.
I
1 Nothing makes better kind'ing
I I than old newspapers. And nothing
J-adU prove ao- neat, clean, sanitary,
nfv' hundw wtmmmiiil for shftvrs
I in the kitchen, pantry or cloaeta, as
Picture# of European War. i o’d newspapers. For putting under
Manager Richardson of the Pala e I mrpets and nigs they are the beat
i of all thngs for keeping dust ’from
of the ; rrinding into the floors and for keep-
,-----r-— —They expect to give ; ing out the co’d.
he is pastor of the German Methodist I these tonight—Friday.- Be sure and
— J i see them.
a golden erewn I ejy
teaching them the
books, nor by the broadest mental and
physical training. The greatest and4
truest education is, first the heart
then the head, then the body, the
latter simply to insure a healthy an
‘ r so as to gite the min)!
sari .heart - 4 maml. ar. Jbeoeypkftt j^be,
ing the best assurance of usef
•and service to others. And no one
thing ia of more value in making met
and women 1-------- ------
them from childhood to a car*
for others Just sut'h practiol les
none as the teaching of pupils <n
schools to share with those less for
tunate the necessities, and even th<
good things of life Now, me have
known borne rural school trustees •
who shut the school houses up from
aociala, lectures, entertainments, etc.
Texas needs to pass a strict Jaw com-
pelling all school houses to be opened
freely to all lectures, rntertainmenti
of a clean and wholesome character
to social occasions for the benefit ot
the community, for all social centei
purposes and even for local theaters
playa, debates, moving pictures, etc same night. They designed
’ * _ _ I IMAP fknvMAaww _
P°ned The Hurst Association will
will educate into ^-op^cate wth the Arlngton Produce
J possible aid the coming season. This
is the right spirit.
dertaken ’han that of establiahing P>oua and circumspect in walk .treri.
in thia state a Girls’ Training School and model in conversation, to "cut nil.** But they’ll think
not "had a square deal” in life. The
legislature at its last regular ses-
sion appropriated >25,000 for ‘hk
purpose, to be used only when the
citizens of the state had raised a
like sum. Thia is being raised in
| ono-doliar subscription* from every-
one—that is. from one dollar up.
Judge Corley of Dallas county has
taken ’he lead in the matter by ap-
pointment of the state authorities
Now, The Journal urges that Ar-
lington people make immediate and
literal donations to this worthy ’^sy
eaaaa. Don’t let your opinion or I—.
nuance you against this; remember
that it to the,cause, and not ’he per- ’his one:
» *
J the city allowed ’he street repairing
gang to dump a huge pile of clay
across the sidewalk between the T,
4 P. station and the business eenter,
which stayed there during all ’he
wet spell. It caused several good
No greater work has ever been un citizens who had been supposed to
dertaken ’ban that of establishing pious and circumspect in walk
f— . zu-t.* nr—g-v__i anA m-^.l t_ —_».
for derelict girls, and those who hare up such fantastic tricks before hieh i rrsnrins’s id<
heaven as make the angels weep”—• rrinda. ’**•--
nV—-----a- -ngodly Jaugh. | 5s alwaya leanring
i they would sources.
’heir shoe*, would thank the <
sive men who had "jus’ said some- |
thing” about that *’ mud. Not until
cure
for themselves when stricken, j
■ • • • men- years that he had heard a pastor or won
other public man, rise in public and ’•t
I tender thanks to the newspaper.
' HA/.plv r . I ■ < r. I, ...I .1
Far too ntany regard the newspaper
ns a public servant to be ridden,
j poorly fed and unclothed, and they
, look upon it as a personal affrsnt j awakened to the fact that in helping ■
i if the newspaper wants fair credit for the town dewn. it has cost me >5,600
its work. This Brenham man is be- i.. V V V«4 I >.
JOnKrWtion and of Commerce^
the Texas Business Men’s Associa- 1 y «tery
tion. All good, honest citizens j
should desire al! of the truth
be known.
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Bowen, William A. Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, December 4, 1914, newspaper, December 4, 1914; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1302926/m1/4/?q=%22Business%2C+Economics+and+Finance+-+Journalism%22: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Arlington Public Library.