Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, March 10, 1916 Page: 2 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
' wi
rec
»n’
By
The Pa
elared tht
powerful i
f zs£z
with Much
governmei
4 M prefere
3 hint! the ti
* duty.
, A comi
ease may
your cow
Um an
inject the
WiU usual
hours, afl
worked 01
I |
I I
I WHAT
I New\
| ed in ret
h£r U1® <
the dair;
I ~~ cream
L just hov
I used in
riculturt
•eMora
the f» ™
* were at
' 9flt,28l
[-'^average
separate
j the num
has Incr
1Q >«
value of
more th
amounts
ooo.ooa
say Just
due to
. separate:
cannot I
many ad
r' method.
arator wi
abllng h
the marl
with the
oda of se
I mi |^o ft
It* Another
I available
I and «wt(
I > animals
ough aei
IKw »•
I good am
Ls?- had.—^J.
I ‘ Board ol
Ip'"
I. A nun
I have cor
' .M
I treatment
trail to <
t ««"» ‘t
y While
I seldom i
heavy mi
M and well
the moat,
time the
* occurs oe
4, lowing th
The e,
1 Deee, the
to anothi
and loses
The next
becomes
I throws h
ifip-'" Before th
B'^pletely fc
i The tn
into the
blood pre
i there. Tii
lowed by
I ' One ponn
ftep . /. z::z.
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BARGAIN
PIANO FOR
1
VIA
&
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3
I
South African Pea Proving Greatest
Feed Crop and Soil Builder Known-
Texas Girl Starts This New Crop.
February Lend 8a tee end Leaeee.
The amount paid into the state treas-
ury of Texas during February from
land sales snd leases was 8187,024, of
which 0133,164 was credited to avail-
able fund and 053,560 to permanent
fund*
Railroad Butt.
State of Texas filed a suit against
the Galveston, Harrisburg and San
Antonio for statutory penalties, alleg-
ing noneompliance with a railroad
commission circular. The easeaffects
■ Seven Pariah In Fira.
By tne destruction of the M. Creed
farm bouse, near Taloga, Okla., Mr.
Creed, his wife and five children were
burned to death. The bodies were all
huddled together when found in the
embers. The father and mother were
each about thirty-five years old each
and the ages of the children* ranged
from six to twenty years. .
railroad commission over certain class-
es of cotton shipments.
J
>■ M
B.
M.
O.
- -ToU :
FORT WORTH
Gu Electric Motor Coro • •
< ►
Between ' ’
H
E.
•W
» *
II
A?’ : • ’
A .....
F. B..MCKAY.
0>00Ht0OMM»>®*
I
northwest of Oroesbenk.lt was brought1
in at 600 feet and has an estimated
daily flow of 10.000,000 cubic feet ol
gas - * -
Mrs Josie Browning, Miss Connie
Browning and Mrs'Carlotta Murray.
■
■ 3*
*
D81
SSSHSSStmrtMOMOOOM
LOW RATES
; ■
i ■. —
life'-tv ■ -
K®.’
K
Ww;g'
Bfcr ' - '
Hjb”-
few*-'
•fier several years of suffering. Somc-
i thing of his long and eventful career
will lie written later. Brother Turner
' was »4 years of ag* when death re-
lieved him of his suffering. He !s sur-
vived by his aged wife, Mrs. Mary
i Turner, who will continue to make her
h .rne with us. ...
Former Mayor May Dead.
Steohen John Hay, mayor ol Dalla’i
from 190" io 1911, president of the
Dallas Tf-ust and Savings bank and
thirty years a resident of that city,
died after a brief illness He was born
in Spaulding eounly. Ga., Oct 5.1864.
and one of the greatest workers for
Dallas that city ever had He leaves
a syidow. two daughtersand a son
SALE—RIG,
———
I have a pianat almost new—used
very little for sale. It cost 1300, an-
" ' I will sell for only 61t5. Ask me qulcx
Dickey, .’.This offer will not last long. J. S. Mo
'; 1 KINLEY, Arlington, Texas.
I •
i
a Confederate soldier participated id
several battles in Virginia during the“
civil war He wa* a member of the
guard detail that accompanied John
Brown from jail to the place of his ex-
ecution at Charleston. W Va . Dec
2. 1859
fc1
Owath Claims Captain Green.
Captain C W Green, seventy eight
year* old. ana'iveof Virginia, died
at Waco H‘ was one of the oldest
traveling men in Texas A daughter
all of Ardmorp, Okla., pleaded guilty *** ftDOthe|, dlMH5t rebult(. w German
Ambassador Bernstorff for wjjat &•
regards as the improper publicity of
tbe ambassador
, He issued a formal statement that
reports of the contents of the German
FOR THE BIG H
■ ' I
FAT STOCK SHOW
Rare Exhibits of Fine ;!
Stock andlarge List of
Special Entertainment < >
Features.
In county dourtat Gkinesvllle to shop-
lifting and ware fined 6112.40. which
they paid - — * .■■—T.....■ - ■ T .A . - . -1
Naretsso Urrutia, member af a rich'
Cbihuanua faraiby was found dead at
his home tn Castle Heigbts.an El Paso ^^Tandum laid before ftim by Am
suburb, with his throat cut from eai bM,ador had not been made public
to ear and his head in a pool of blood. by bUu*e!f or his department and fur
Suicide was the verdict. I declared qp statements had been
Sam G Gary has been appointed bjrj made expressing his department's ex-
the Denton eitv commission to fill out. pressions regarding the memorandum
the three mouths’ -inspired term of • Snipe newspapers printed what pur
Mayor W. L Foreman, who'resigned ported to be a paraphrase of the mem
to become state agent of an eastern > orandum
fire insurance company. ;
Charles B Smith, tax assessor of
Daliam county, died in a Dalhart hos-
pital He wa« serving his first term
Mr. Smith U sorvM-ed - by his widow
and hi* parents, the matter residents ol
Niagara Falls N. Y
flrcisfht revenues <
operation in Texas increased 62,936.-• t|on were arrested at
Uruguay
■ML ■’
R. A. YOU
— “
Nellie Griffith of Wise County Proves Pioneer in Wonder-
ful Food, Feed and Forage Crop and Soil Builder-
Full Particulars Given of Seed and Cultivation.
Moalah Temple from Fort Worth
was represented by Nobles Jakv F.
Zurn, Past Potentate; William James,
Potentate; R A. Masary, Chief flab-
ban; C. B Brown. Assistant Rabban;
E A. Levy, High Priest and Prophet:
George Stapleton. Oriental Guide: W.
R Edrlngton, Treasurer: H. E. Crow- |
ley. Recorder: Jno. A Waldrop, First i
Ceremonial Master; R. C. Hearne, Sec-1
«<nd Ceremonial Master: Max K. Mayor,1
Captain of the Guard; J. H. P‘-*--~
Outer Guard: K E. Edwards, Marshal;
Amartoan Murdwrwd.
Grover C. Nara, an American, was
murdered at his home," twenty-five
miles north of Durango, Mexico, re-
ports to the state department say. It
is said Vi 11 Islas are responsible for
the crime
Mcffro ••grwg-atlon Wine,
By nearly 35,000 negro segregation
advocates won at St. Louis, One or-
dinance provides that a negro cannot
become a resident in a block occupied
by those of the opposite color. An-
other imposes the same restrictions
in blocks containing 74 per cent white
or the like percentage of negro resi-
deats. V. TyT/J
Collin County to Hove Fair.
Business Men’s association of Mo-
Kinney, Tex., decided to hold a county
fair at that city at a date not yet do-
■
? ■
gr- .t,).......
i-iV*- ■■ •'
♦♦oa»oooaa»a»8«G66»66»»»<i
THE BEST ROUTE
' iharged with gambling fined 610 oooh
sad a woman fined 66 for falling to
pay hack hire. Remainder were xtindr
Mexia, was thrown out when the team
ran away and so badly hurt death re-
sulted in a few hours. Mr. Pitts was
also thrown out and severely Injured
Tbe little girl eseaped unhurt.
At the. request of State Health Ofltaer
Collins rangers have been sent to La-
redo to assist Health Officer Hall at
YOU CAN’T AFFORD :
TO HISS IT# ji
See local agent for special <•
rates on certain days,train
service, etc., or write, !
A. D. Be II. Get. D Hunter, ]
Asst On. Fm Aft Om. fim. Aft. <
DALLAS
3
■W
■ WTGOUN ANDJORGAN FOUND.
’ MEN WANTED AT DALLAS ARRESTED
IN MONTEVIDEO.
Clarence K McGoun and John Mor
gan wanted in Daila* in connection
of the rallw«y< 1hw^tb the cuty-tax department defalca
i m>u wnt ai vi wl Montevideo, in
They will be sen! back to
Dallas for trial. — ,
Bluecoated officials arrested the men
as they stepped from the gang plank
of a steamer.
Rank carelessness on the part of the
fugitives led to their apnrehension
Buying tickets from New York upon
tbe steamship Voltaire, they sailed on
Jan 22 . with tickets purchased to
Buenos Aires. Taking their stop-over
WaxafO privilege, they left the ship at Rio de
hachie on charge of failing to obey
quarantine regulations He had small j
pox and Is alleged to have failed to.
obevShe health eflleer’, instructions J roen The la’t‘*r ™nllnupd the'r iour-
i ney to Montevideo When the city
last named was reached officers were
waiting for them
am sending you a picture of my South
a most wonderful pea. Last year was I * cannot say just how many bushel-
our second year to grow them. In of pe“ ca“ bLga^erehd ,from 5“ ’T
1914 we only planted two ounces. we gathered what we though!
four rows across our garden, sixty *e w„ouJd 8 r “’.a *
vines to the row. This gave us green ,arned hog8 of them__they are the
peas all summer and fall. As the peas
would ripen we would gather them
from time to time. We saved 120 ■ to plant one acre, three by three feet, 1
pounds of shelled peas to plant.‘ My-j one pea In a hill and that is the wayj,1
two ounces cost me 61.10 or 68.80 to plant them.
per pound, and I sold over 6600.00 j Last year papa planted some of hi»
worth last spriQg besides we plantel corn in five foot rows with a row of
them all through our corn. That field peas in the^ middle of the corn rows
(G’S MEAT MARKET
TXLEPHOXB H.
M 6 6 6 6»»»f »6 ..... 6060
w. or 7 78 oer cent, during the six
months ending D< c 31, 1915, accord
ing to a compilation made by the Tex-
as railroad eommissioa
Texas' first goat ext»erimentai sta-
tion will tie located by Processors
Jones apd Youngblood of the agricul-
tural and mechanical college and J
E Boog-Scottof Coleman near Juno,
between Del Rio and Sonora
Albert Borders, a negro, Fas fined t
61G0 in Ellis county court at V. .
' Janeiro Feb. 8. There is no extradi-
tion treaty with Brazil and Dallas po
lice officers figured they had lost the
ibeySjje health rffleer’s instructions i roon
A meeting will toe held March 0 at
Sweet water to take steps toward se-
curing a branch of the agricultural
and mechanical college for west Tex-
as It is stated that every commer-
cial club west of the one hundredth
meridian is pledged to this end
H D. Hanks, a road contractor, on
road woit ouToYMcKinney,was6a?iy and a son survive, Captain Green As
injured by an unexpected heavy blast
He was blown several feet in the air
Henry Taylor was also hurt and Will
Burleson, a negro, was bruised and
may lose an eye
W N Moil seventy years old. a
federal soldlar during the civil war,
was induced by R H. Turner, a Con-
federate so dier. to connect himself
with a Dallas Baptist church Mr
Mott said he had given little thought
to religion until he met Mr Turner
Tbe annual convention of tlje Anti-
Saloon League of Texas will l>e held
at'Dallas March 13. B and 15. Hon
William Jennings Bryan arid former
Congressman R P Hobson are among
the speakers Plans for a statewide
prohibition campaign may come up
The trouble between Texarkana and
the Texarkana Water corporation and
three years existing has been settled
A substantial rate reduction has been
efleeted end 630,000 is to be expended
on main extensions and also other
ImproventFOte
M Banta, who died at Electra, in
Wiehita county. Isft 261 acres to that
eounty for a county orphanage. The
will provides that no negro, Mexican,
Russian or Italian children shall be
admitted, tbe Institution only~being
Intended for dependent orphans bora
Id Wichita eounty.
Allan Cleveland of Baltimore went
. to Sherman to reopen the famous Tom
Bean ease He says he has tbe family
, record from the time Tom Bean was
two years old The estate ip worth eotton shippers and jurisdiction of ths
about 62,500.000 and the claimants re-
side at Baltimore, Washington and
' Philadelphia
,- At his home In Brownwood former
State Senator Arch Oripnso suddenly
expired He was forty-nine yean of
age snd leaves a widow, one child and
six sisters Mr Orinnan *as bora In
' Cnlpspper county, Va., March 6, 1868,
and his parents moved lo Texas the
next year. • He served four terms in
the senate
Wlltser Pitts, three years old, while
in a Wsgon with his father, Rufe
Pitts, and little sister on a road near \
II _
Telephont and Find Jin
What was tbs wrath* j
csport A
What Is ths market I
price of cotton 1
Has my team left town
Is there shy height for
me
Do you want to buy
•by butter or eggs
When is the meeting
Who was elected
The telephone answers
these and many other
questions for thou-
sands of far mere J
every cay.
The coat of a telephone
on your farm t* tmail
The savings great
Our nearest manager will tell you
about it or write to
’ I « I
Sodthwestira
Telegraph and
Telephone Co,
I ULLAS. - TEXAS
■asonm mow norm.
* ’ The Hirfue was signally honored the Work; A. I*. McCoy, Captain Ps-
•wlth the presence of llluairaie J. Put- trol; Morgax H. Jones, President Pa-
man Stevera, Imperial Potentate fur, trol: atui Nobles A. B. Case, M. S*n-
; • T tbe Auricnt Arabic DrtteF rtf the W»- J eon. St.. K. T.^yya. Whiter Acker, U
. .Mbs. ot the MysUo Shripe'for Nortii! P. • Hnbertsta. E. J. Hosey, Elnwr
Aniert.'H test Sunday, when he and hi* ,I .
purty-wre guests at ItmchetHt Among ncry and L. B, Comer.
the honor guests from Bella Temple*! t
Miss Allie Oswalt Is the latest ad-
i.itiun to Jhe family, arriving lajt week
from Belton, Teyas- • ~ .
Brother*J. 0. Turner passed to his
N JOURNAL, a.
Allison' Mayfield, chairman of ths Afiinr If ARE
railroad commission, has ask d to 11IVI F MllWf.
have bls name placed on the Demo VJJVL ITIVIIL
cratic official ballot for the primary OPDIII/PIl IV
I in July for'rcoomination IlLDUllLU lU
7 t. W CoUlnsof'Bbermsa owned a' ■ ---
««« »«««««
All the fest and logs were of ths same BY SECRETARY Of ST ATE ,..U* *
•las and all were used in walltint ;i. —-—-
IMPROPER PUBLICIW
Report* or th* Memorandum u*id ’
B*for* Him. St*tlng Hlm**l* or
Department Had imp*rt*d infor-
mation to No On*
Secretary of State Lan'ing admtnls-
-
kdilSn ft ’ >
«W i!P ,
' ' a
Paris -
Commerce
Greenville J
and Dallas H
No Cinder,
FAST TIME ;
Arrive Depart <
10:50 a. m .....t.6:80p. at- !
8:07 p. m. Greenville 8:10 a. m. J
8:87 p. ek.'Uommeros 7:40 a. m
10:00 p. m. Paris . .6:U a tn.
Standard Steam Trains and Mo- ■
tor Gars BetweM Paris end J
Ennla, .
.................. ' ■" J
MH for Tickets Via .
TKXA* fitt1*1*111**
' PARAGRAPHS THAI INTEREST.
Event* Thrt H*v* B*oom* tt**lltto*
Toto tn T/p* and Oth*r* Soon to
Com* to P«»* Will B* Found In •
C*mpr****d Form.
Many hogs will b* raised this year
. Peach trees are in bloom tc Long-
view section. —-y *• »■
Faulty plumbing is blamed for the
gas explosion at Mexia
All investigation is. being made of
the mineral resources 6' L’anoebunty
f A movement is on topi at. Paris to
grganiae a national guard company
Kansas City Life insurance company
paid into state treasury 611.000 occu-
pation tax. . • '
. Gin at Denton of Taylor, Bros wax
burned. Loss I* 67,000; 63.(X>> insur
gnee was carried
More garden -red is being «old at -
Eoongview than at any other period in
the city's history. ,
Rev. M. T. Andrews of Hill«t>oro
has declined a call to tbe First Bap-
tist church of Den on.
Rev, A. F Cunningham of Temple
has accepted a call to the First Pres
byterian church of San Angelo.
Somerville the past throe years has
had a ye. fecu fire record, not a dol-
lar’s loss having been sustained
Hii), Coynty'Good Roads associa-
tion wt.s organized at Hillsboro lt*ts
a unit of the National Good Roads
association
John W Robbins of Travis county,
former state treasurer, is a candidate
for railroad commissioner cgalnst Al-
lison Mayfield
Bob Matthews, a witness before the
Denton eounty grand jury, refused to
ansaer questions. Ordered to jail he
changed his mind. ,
Wind demolished Sam P Loving’s
barn at Mount Vernon and blew down
several small dwellings. Doc Sowel’s
residence was unroofed.
Taxpayers rtf Denton have petitioned
the eity fathers to pave .North Elm
and West* Hickory streets, ^property
• owners to pay two-thirds
The Carolina house, erected slxty-
' twrt years ago and tbe oldest house In
Tyler, is being torn down to give way
to a modern brick garage.
H. J. Chamberlain, who donated a
considerable amount to Baptist church
snd educational work, died at San
Angelo, aged eighty-one years
Mayor Lindsley has designated as
a rose-planting day, for Dallas March
fl, School childreh are expected to do
the major portion of the work
Tbe Producers Oil company’s well
at Palestine has attracted several rep-
resentatives of large companies to tbe
city. Some leases have been made
Dabney White of Tyler has issued
a call for the Texas ginners to meet at
Dallas April 20 It is said effort will be
made to repeal the permanent ware-
hour law.
The transport Kilpatrick sailed for
Panama from Galveston with tbe first
squadron of the Twelfth cavalry, re-
j rently ordered to the canal zone from
I the border.
Frame bam at Plano of George W.
> Bowman burned, together with 500
bushels of com and other feedstaffs,
’ a calf and some hogs. Loss is 81,500;
I no insurance
I The Chalmers Motor Sales company
1 of Wilmington, Del., capita) Stock
J 1100,000 and Texas headquarters Dal-
, las, has been granted a permit to do
, business in the state.
1 Roland M. Simmons of Dallas, long
' assistant state manager for a life ta-
1 surance eomoany, then a newspaper
J man and finally a traveling salesman,
died suddenly at El Paso.
I Three young Mexicans attempted to
' lasso a young lady schoolteacher In
1 Hidalgo rounty. On* was arrested
. and barely •tacaped lynching, .
Former State Comptroller J. W
■ Stephens, who nearly two mouths ago
* was stricken with paralysis while at
> bls desk In "the comptroller’s offloe,has
> recovered and resumed bis duties.
Tbs annual report of tbe Houston
Electric company shows tf shrinkage
In gross earnings of 8386,192 and 646,-
600 In net earning*. A statement al-
lached attributes this decrease to jit-
|eyA
Alter six trials Mrs. Agnes Omer
eas refused by the court of criminal
appeals a new trial. She was eon-
vieted at El Paso for poisoning, it
is alleged, Lillis, her daughter, and
given life sentence.
Police Judge Murphy of Dallas tried
| Dan E Lydick, Assistant Conductor of TEXAS NEWS
■■■■I pRIEEEY NOTED
MATTERS THAT CERTAIN TO THE LONE
STAR STATE NARRATED
R. A.Young’s Market
(Formerly owned by Wilkerson & Martin)
WIU be gUd to serve all old and new customers. We
wfll havw only the BMT OF PUSH MKAT8, BW
■AOK, CBHJ, Btc. Before MDinff your cattle of all
Mfidbflfit OOMKAMDSBEtm.
THK ACCOMFANVIMQ PICTURE WAS TAKEN THE LAST OF AUOU8T 1916
of corn and peas was the most won- The peas did better in this than the>
derful sight I ever saw growing. Af- did in corn three and a half feet row*
ler the corn was gathered they put a You can tell Just about what an acre
drove of hogs in the field. They sure i wil! make .Two ounces planted four
did get fat. The hogs will eat leaves,1 rows three by three feet, one pea <n
peas, hulls and all. These peas are , a hill, sixty hills to the row. From
good for all kinds of stock. We will, ihoe four rows I saved one hundred
plant lota of them again this year. We and twenty pounds of dried and shell-
banned lota of them green for winter' ed peas besides what we used green,
aiee. They are good cooked when dry j but **y just count the dried and shell-
like other dry peas or beans, only bet- ed peas and that will give you some
•er. . **::______“ '
We also took some of the green] I have six bushels
vines and peas to our Coupty Fair and
they took first prize.
This pea is a produet of South Af-
rica. They make a wonderful vine and
bear from top to bottom. The pods are
from 27 to 48 inches in length and
grow In clusters, combining the qual-
ities of the forage plant aa well as be-
ing a delicious table food. As a gar-
den vegetable ths South Africa pea is
unsurpassed, it will afford the family
not only peas bat a dish of the finest
snap beans, better than any snap
beans you ever tasted. The tender,
brittle pods are stringiess and not
.j woody or pithy one bit. They may ns
broken up and cooked as snap beans.
They are worked and planted- like
other peas bat mature much earlier
" irii11ii ittriiiii11tin trr
jtmii a* eve me tegettMigi g
lb
Kfe'-
B ■
gftO f t-
■
■.
“W
■
eighteen e*aee in ton minutes. Two P°ia* ^0P >O*^
J “o Jrt?£rl!ri!Lut first writa^otog
inspection, it le said. Many enoee of
typhus fever have been brought across
the border by the MexleMS. termined upon.
■ 1 ■ j !1,1 ■ - *
did get fat. The hogs will eat leaves, rows three by three feet, one pea <n
peas, hulls and all. These peas are , a hill, sixty hills to the row. ~
good for all kinds of stock. We v
plant lota of them again this year. We ' and twenty pounds of dried and shell-
ert* ivs* ups nmavaaa •awes nve wauwt , o-ww w«*.x*w ****** ww ••wal,
--They are good cooked when dry , but say Just count the dried and shell-
WIU B1VC JVi____
idea what one acre will make.
I have six bushels of peas to sell
at 55 cents per ounce, one-half pound
82.00, one pound 83.00. I wiU not sell
them any cheaper by the bushel than
63.00 per pound. My peas are all nice
•nd clean and free from weevils. We
picked ripe peas ninety days from time
of planting. I will send you a sample
of those peas. Plant in April and May
three by three feet, one In a hill and
the ones we planted in April and May
did the best. They will make alright
planted later, though.
I am not sending you this for yon
to print it ail, but if you ran get any
information out of It all right. 1 wifi
be fourteen years old in August.
Yomts sincere^- — ■
NELLIE RUTH OEIFFITH.
Route 6, BOX 53
Decatur, Texas, Feb'. 20, 1916. and continue to make and bear until
Mr. Wm. A. Bowen, Editor Farmers’ frost. The dry weather in Texas does
Fireside Bulletin. Arlington, Texa< *>ot st°P them from growing or bear-
Dear Sir and Brother: 1 am a little ‘ “W-
girl thirteen years old. Sister and 11 Last year I gave papa all of my
are going to school now. We Belong Peas 1 did not sell as he raises lota o:
to the Wise County Canning Club. I ,,o8s. He planted the peas for all pas-
;;ur) ; ~ ", lure. He gave me all I gathered. I
African peas. They have proven to ba Picked between six and seven bushel-
I of peas can be gathered from an acre
p J u ’ : we would sell and use. Then
: turned hogs of them they ar*
greatest hog fatt*n*r you ***r sai
Papa says it will not take 2 pound-
tRpnfr ■, Frfink IL Sparrow. C. W. Cea-.
Bella Ternpfe*j
from Dallas were Noble Sam T. Coch- >
van. Past Potentate; Noble
Robertson, Potentate; Nolde
Reardon. Treasurer. Noble Sam
Hanlev. Recorder; Noble W R Ellis, CrPWard hn»t Thursday evening at 4:80.
Captain Patrol; Noble H. M. Hughes,
High Priest.
_... ____
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Bowen, William A. Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, March 10, 1916, newspaper, March 10, 1916; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1302991/m1/2/?q=green+energy: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Arlington Public Library.