Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, July 6, 1917 Page: 3 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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ARLINGTON JOURNAL
RAM THRU
Dallas Business Directory
—ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR—
PAINTING ---
8TEOPATHIC
PHYSICIAN---
--- AUTOMOBILE
RAOIATORI
Th* Optra House I* Next Door.
GEO, W. BROOKS
Osteopathic Physician
Specialties
Children’*
Office 315 Wilson Building
2308-10 Main 8tr**t
Dalia*
CEILING AND DESK FAN8.
Res. 4720 Gaston Avenue
Phone* 8w. Main 359.
•I
- a
Phones M
46H6 and H 3353
Auto Main 3664.
RADIATOR
REPAIRING—
---PHYSICIAN AND S’JRGEOI
FORD SERVICE---
X-RaY
DR. JNO. H. DEAN
DR. R. H. MILL WEE,
built.
GENITO-URINARY
♦j
WILLIAMS
! X - Ray Examinations
DISEASES.
AUTO TOP CO.
and Treatment.
528-30 Wilson Building.
DALLAS, TEXAS
427 Wilson Building
■
AUTOMOBILE
TOPS
3933.
IT WILL PAY YOU
111
Hour*: 11 to 1; 4 to 6.
RE-COVERING AUTO TOPS
SEAT COVERS
MADE YO ORDER.
2504 Main 8tr**t
Dallas, Taxa*.
y
H. G. Walcott
Tat* Miller
CHIROPRACTOR.
Drs. Walcott & Miller
Linz Building,
DALLAS, TEXAS
House )
— Dr. T. Raymond Be^s
AUTOMOBILE PARTS
Your Feet Treated Scientifically
MEDICINE AND SURGERY
Battle & Hubbard
LADY ATTENDANT
512-13 Southwestern
DR. LORR,
i 6 6 i ; \ 11 I
M
CHIROPODIST
Ibdl II
s I I?
ea
305 Andrews Building,
1 pm.
stir until
7
t
DR. C. X. McCAFFEY
Perhaps
DALAS, TEXAS
OPTICIANS
—EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT
GENITO-URINARY
Brou n & Montgomery,
i
and skin diseases
• 07 S
\\
I, if. Bmldiim
be mddr, if
READ ALL THE ADS
Phone Main 115.
J ■
or
HOW TO SAVE EGGS IN SUMMER
D. E. Compere, M. D.
511 Wilson Building
DALLAS, TEXAS
OBSTERIOS
AND
the hens.
Keep
DR. F. A. PIERCE
612 Wilson Building
BOTH PHONES MAIN 4309
DALLAS, TEXAS
Phone Lamar 3171.
/->
nesls
I
» ,
I
i
BQK
I
Life Building. I
Practice Limited Eye,
Ear, Nose and Throat
Diseases of Women, Ob- j
sterics, Surgery.
Drs. D. T. Atkinson
and R. H. Daniel
MAZDA LAMPS.
DALLAS, TEXAS.
Fowler “The
Radiator Man
Dr. W. C. Swain .
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Moved to basement of Ft. Worth Club Bldg.
6th and Main Streets.
EYE, EAR. NOSE
AND THROAT.
GYNECOLOGY,
SURGERY.
Practice Limited to
DISEASES OF THE STOMACH
AND INTESTINES.
c -rii
and
►
►
►
u-
•d
BIG TEN CENT ROLL TOILET
PAPER—8 FOR 25 CENTS
C.O.MANZY
— FORD SERVICE —
12.00
recov-
be lifted off with the fingers.
This drug freexone doesn’t eat out
the corns or callups but shrivels them
even irritating the surrounding
might to be caressed on the back of
the neck with a baiTel stave.—state
Press, in Galveston-Dallas News.
JOE D. JOHNSON,
Manager.
i!
IF
i>f
Suit* 512-513
8outhw**t*rn Life Building
DALLAS, TEXAS
'•iff
Hancock Electric Spe-
cialty Co.
Everything Electrical
except thunder
storms.
LIGHTING FIXTURES AND SUPPLIES.
iy
i>r
is
)0
Office Phones: H.-ll M
I X7H
DALLAS, TEXAS
h
.f
j
---------------I)--------------
CORN AND CHEESE: A SUBSTITUTE
FOR MACARONI AND CHEESE
WONDERFUL STUFF
LIFT OUT YOUR CORNS
EYE, EAR. NOSE
AND THROAT
i.
is
rn
:
if
le
in
its
n-
hy
s
rn
Il-
ey
re
.el
j
b
I-
ic
n
>
•d
Opticians.
Only house In Dallas where Glasses
fitted by an Oculist.
Glasses Fitted—Lenses Ground
Our Prices Ar* Right.
1210 Main Street, Dallas.
I b > give
Northern
of coarse
• n
- - - •
J
We buv
serntde and
parts, «.
c.ir- al
The Standard for service; made In
sizes to meet every requlremenL
a cool room or
are Hold, In the
is sometimes de-
Radiators repaired and re-
All work guaranteed
Machinists and Automobile Part*.
Axles Made for All Cars.
We try to call as many as possible ,
of our people to get news, local and
i are
— - appreciate the
: robtg.jOhnson,
President.
1 hrG66V6WpPGe»66S9Ssse ieeeseeeeesseGBBGGBBsefMSBBM
„ ... I ■
skin
Just think 1 No pain at all'; no sore-
; It or
Jewelers and Opticians
THOUSANDS
OF DALLAS
people
WHI Testify to Our Superior Optical
Service.
A thorough and scientific examination
assures you satisfaction and safety. |
W. C. HILBURN & Co.
THE MONEY BACK GUARANTEE.
Jewelers and Opticians
1106 MAIN STREET
J. M. TURNER, Optometrist.
_
are
TEXAS TITLE COMPANY
Abstracts.
Training School, as director.”
--------K)---------
THE MI88E8 ROMANOFF.
—AUTO
slow I
muck.!
II l-s
E"
Hr.
BL
Ba
a
ac-1
LARGEST STOCK IN TEXAS
LIBERAL PAYMENT TERMS
II
|l
■MMMBBl Successor to
jJHHMK* FRANK NEVEU
2665-57 Main Street.
Bell Main 1400, Aut. Main 1411.
DR. Wm. E. HOWARD,
. ."1
J
o os Holl M 7 I30 till
2214-16 Main Street
The Department of Labor-author-I
izes the following statement: |
“The city boy is making good on the |
farm This was the report today from'
various parts of the country to the I
States Boys’ Working Re-j
Reports received during the,
■'i 'fl
-*>7 J|
THE NATION WINS.
henry Watefsoii in Courier-Journal.
On fame’s eternal camping ground,
Their silent tents are spread—r
And Glory guards with solemn round
The bivouac of the dead. ,
Most of the men who boast that
they give their wives every cent of
their salaries omit mention/if the fact
that they borrow about two-thirds of
it back.—Macon Telegraph.
That, we bubiip^
But even Aiod-
I
M 4356
Dallas
I
l
SI
OFFICE
Bell M 933; Auto. M
RESIDENCE
Both phones M 1731
Automobile Painting — Automobile
Spring and Wheel Work.
I
Both Phone* Main 2452.
1'1
.1
• tffl
1
There is Always a Way!
t ■ do .civ thru.'. if we can only find it. j
We believe you can find in Chiropractic
id|iistni' iits a way to perfect health. I
Let me demostrale what Chiropractic !
will do fop you.
T. H. HUGHES, D. C.
CHIROPRACTOR
South Ervay and Gano greet*
Phone M 4H2H Sw
LADY ATTENDANT.
Women and
Disease*.
words by
M. Kinley,
was flashed from
an-wer came as
mill as from Hie
heroic sacrifice as
chance would have It. a North Carolina
lad of Rebel parentage
It is well l
at a time like
member these things
centuated by the
mark the day In the nation's capita).
for the whole country'
this to recall and re- I
scenes which will 328-319 Wilson Rldo.
Not one <if t he veteran Confederates I
arrayed there but would willingly give
his life to win the battle for world |
freedom which is upon us; most of
them would gladly go to the -front
If they could; whilst some of them
have the fancy that the “Rebel yell,”
If their old throats could deliver It
loud enough, would make the Hohen-
zotlern scamper and sound in the ears
of the Hapsburg as if it had said, “rats,
to your holes I"
Nowhere in the land do the pulse
beats of the people respond more
promptly and firmly to the drum beats
of the nation, than In the South, for
which these gray-clad gray heads and
gray beards fought four long, heart-
breaking years, and he must be a poor
American who does not warm to them
—even as McCollum Moore, touched
by the appeal of Jeanie Dean’s warmed
to the tartan—seeing them march,
not as phantoms out of the battle
smoke of the Confederacy, hut soldiers
—men every Inch of them-—singing the
Star Spangled Banner and exclaiming
in holy wrath, “To Hell with the
^^Hohenxollerns and the Hapsburjs'"
as well as the samll ones, at Lome.
Market the eggs at least twice a
week Eggs evaporate rapidly in hot
weather, and this makes them appear
stale.
Do
nests
. - •
If’-
I
. dis- I
• hew
Apply a Few Drops Then Lift Corn* or
Calluses Off With Fingers—
No Pain.
... ' ►
I is my specialty.
2712 MAIN STREET
i
412-14 Wilson Building
i
< , ' tides ...
- ,.....I,, ,,1 mat erials whieli have strong odors and
. which will sometimes flavor the eggs.
PATRONIZE OUR MANY ADVERTISERS' “""
1
.tisr ,1-ii
FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1B17.
If you want your Ford
fixed and fixed right,
bring it to a Ford man,
formrly with Ford Mo-
2410 main street, Dallas, tor Co. For your trouble
Phon* S. W. Main 2758.
Phone 8 W Main 4136
lb 'bh tlt *‘ Pli<«nt‘
the reserve a boy must be over 16 and
prtjve hlmsdf physically fit.
“From New York City alone, accord-
ing to word from Arthur F Payn«,
acting State director of the Boys' He-
serve, nearly 2,000 boys have been
sent out. 'without a single gomplalnt
from the farmers in regard to these
I boys '
Hard to Supply Demand.
“ ‘Our great difficulty,' say# Mr.
I Payne, 'Is in supplying the farmers
with the number of buys they need.’
Similar report^ have been received
from Pennsylvania, ConneeUeut, New
Jersey, and other states
"F. W. Holden, of Baltimore, who
has been appointed State director for
Maryland, started his work today. He
stated that already a number of in-
quiries have been made by farmer#
as to how many boy# they can se-
cure.
Virginia Boy# Organized.
“Between 600 and 600 boys from all
sections of Virginia have been organ-
ized to go to the eastern shore to
help harvest the potato crops Is the
encouraging report from Charles L.
Weaver, Virginia State director of the
- Boys’ Reserve.
“The District of Columbia ha# Just
been organized for the Boys’ Reserve
work by the selection of Prof C. Dan-
iel, principal of the McKinley Manual
Aspermont Star: Looking for a wife,
young man? The former Czar has
three charming daughters who are
“quite available," with no takers.
How do you know the Misses Ro-
manoff are “quite available, with no
taker* ?” Why assume that these
young ladles are anxious to marryT
Undoubtedly, they have seen enough of
wedded misery, in the court set at
Petrograd, and in their own family to
make them dubius of the advantages
of matrimony But no one need doubt
that if the ex-Czar's daughters do
marry they will become good wive#.
They, like most other royal PrinoeSse#,
know how to cook and keep house,
dust furniture, darn hose and “make a
home.'' Royal Princesses as u rule,
have better domestic training than falls
to the lot of rich girls without title#.
Many plain millionaires make fools of
Umtr daughters, but the royal fami-
'les of Europe Lave a consistent repu-
tation for giving their girl children
sensible educations, including the arts
of housewifery It is assumed by the
parental authority, in the case of a
Princess, that she will grow up and
marry a Prince, that she will make her
home in a large and costly house, that
she will be called upon to supervise the
management of the home, and' that
therefore she needs training in home
management in order to measure up to
her responsibilities,
is eminently sensible.
erately well-to-do Americans as a gen-
eral thing, allow or discourage their
daughters to grow up without a smat-
tering of housewifely knowledge.
Americans seem to raise Uieir feminine
young ones as if the latter would live"
their kves out in fairy palaces and
j subsist upon ice cream sodas fetched
' on silver platters. Any married wo-
. man who is the ostensible head of
what ought to be a happy home, and
who admits that she doesn't know a
blessed thing about her own kitchen,
Drain and combine with :
Eggs, like most other farm produce,
j will spoil very quickly in hot weather
1 unless they are properly produced and
cared for
The Infertile egg Is the only depend-
able egg In summer. Blood rings or
blood spots cannot develop.in infertile
eggs.
Infertile eggs are those produced by
hens having no male bird with them.
| The male bird has no influence on
the numtier of eggs laid by the hens.
The male bird serves absolutely no
useful purpose except during the
breeding season. Kill, sell or confine
all males as soon as the hatching is
completed.
Provide a liberal number of nests for
There should be at least
one nest for every four hens,
them clean
Aafher the eirgs twice daily during
the hot weather. Eggs remaining In
the nest deteriorate rapidly from the
heat of the sun or from the heat of
'other hens occupying the nest.
Keep the eggs in a cool room
cellar until they are sold. In
I hot lest w eather i I
affable to lay a wel burlap or blanket
I oxer Hie <’gg case, but. If this is done,
I tie sure there is a good circulation of
■ air around Hie eggs
I Keep lhe i>ggs away from such ar-
ils kerosene, onions, or other
- The Journal ha* a case of strong,
- flna, tissue toilet paper—the Big 10
cent roll*.. Can sell this 3-for-25-
cents. Bost you ever bought—Come
while It last*.
de.-p.-r
>I aiin'
were wholly partisan ami |
Yet even liny e-.ubl m.l drive
the heart of the Southern
latent Xmerieaiiism that
to spring into life ami
Ioiiehed frum with nl. so
bv many kindly
and
Washington, July 25.—Corn may be
used with cheese in place of macaroni,
specialists in the United States De-;
partment of Agriculture point out, for
the preparation of a delicious and nu-
tritive combination dish The fol-
lowing recipe has been worked out by
the Departhient specialists
One cup of samp (coursely ground
or cracked corn.)
One quart of water.
One and 1-4 teaspoons salt.
Boil the samp in the salted wat«r
until tender. 1
I he following sauce
One cup skim milk.
<Uie cup finely cut cheese.
Two tablehpooiis flour
on® teaspoon salt, f-4 teaspoon
mustard, paprika, or other seasoning.
Mix the seasonings with the dry
flour Add enough milk to form in-
to a sm- oth paste. Add the remain-
m r of the milk and he.il m a
stirring emi-danlly until
Hie cheese and
I ■ mgb I v melt-.;
"at a l;yer of Ahi; Jjoiled samp in
a biking di-li or rass.-rble. ..... „
I > . r of sauce amt so on alternately
in'll the material is all used ,
br* ail crmnlis over Hie lop lay
- «mm and c
• In every national cemetery these
lines, written by a Confederate soldier,
appear either above the gateway, or
npon the oefitrsl monum#Rl.'~ It might
' be said in explanation of a certain
anomaly, rather seeming than real,
that they were written long before
the war of sections to commemorate ' t
lhe Kentucky soldiers fallen in the
Mexican war- whose remains were
brought home a year or two later for
reinterment in the Stale cemetery
at Frankfort But the circumstance .
that Theodore O’Hara, their author,
served the Confederacy as he had
served the Union, points a moral and
adorns a tale of patriotic valor out
lasting political passion and surmount-
ing lines of battle.
The final chapter of the glorious I
history begun at Lexington, Bunker |
Hill and Yorktown, continued across i
the Plains of Chalmette to Palo Alto, |
Buena Vista and Cerro Gordo, and
thence on to Shiloh, Gettysburg and -1
Appomatox, is written today by a thin,
gray line of Johhny Rebs carrying be-
neath the Stars aad Stripe# the tat-
tered banner# of the Confederacy—
symbols both and alike of national
umlty and American manhood—Invited
ther* by the brave soldier# of the
Grand Army of the Republic to be
welcomed and cheered a# they totter
along the great avenue by every Amer-
ican who love# hi# country and has a
heart in hi# bosom ■ •
it 1# fitting that at this moment
#uoh a reminder should be passed
among ourselves and that #uch an I
exhibit be given to the world ■
It took three foreign wars and one
war of sections—miscalled civil war—j
to make for us a nation and to weld i
our divided states into a Federal unit.
Yet a more homeogeiieou# people oc-
cupying such an extent of territory
never subssisted anywhere on earth
Puritan Massachusetts and Cavalier
Virginia—rather loosely named—came
from England. But they did not bring
their English quarrels with them The
terms “Puritan" and "Cavalier ' were
afterthoughte, one might even say af-
fectations, of our war of sections. |
That fine bellweather of secession, [
James Henry Hammond, of South I
Carolina, was sprung directly from the I
Puritans of New England while ttiat
first of Confederate soldiers. Albert j
Sidney Johnston—a Cavalier if ever
there was a Cavalier—had not a drop
of Southern blood in his veins, born In
Kentucky soon after his fattier and
mother arrived there from Connecti-
cut. What a rare old Puritan John
Slidell, tile Louisiana leader, was—
born and reared in NewYork—and who
shall say that Kearny l uster and Mc-
Pherson were not Cavaliers?
DODSON MOTOR
TRUCK COMPANY
600 Elm Street,
One block north of' Court
not sell eggs found in stolen
That practice will hurt the sale
of your good eggs, as such egg# are
usually very inferior.**
Don't forget ttiat in order to secure
the best prices the eggs must also be
of large size and uniform color. That
means—keep one pure-bred variety,
and feed them properly.—A F. Rolf,
Live Stock Extension Division, Louis-
iana Stale University.—L. S. U. Press
Bulletin
wr<’i'ked and us<'<! cars,
II the [Mils—Make
■II used parts for nll'makes of
«r.-.i 11 v rod lu-.-d [.riciM—We
.1’1 funiMi you any put for anv car
-'-A.Vi
;ri
, ,
..............Ua-.....
Z'lir.i buu vycic li’jL cavniiris.
The list might lie extended indefi-
nitely. Indeed-the one typical Puritan
soldier of the war of sections served
not the Union but the Confederacy—j
Stonewall Jackson It was truly a
war of sections—-the North against the (
n South and vice versa—except for the'
removal of Abraham Lincoln from the ■
scene the popular coming together
when it was ended had been speedier,
for the men on both sides had actually
fought its battles arid were ready at
once to fraternize. They-may the Cour-
ier J iirnal pot say we—-had quite
enough of it The generous treatiiwnt
of l.ee by Grant set the pace
ample. All of us wanted to wipe off
Hie slate and in good faith to accept
the invitation of the” martyred Presi-
dent t<> ''come back home and behave
yourselv es. ’’
Tlie period and pr.eess of re-
construction prove.! more disastrous to
the Soufti and sowed dee[e-r differ-
ences lli.ui Hie c-jifiict ol -ii ms riuev
wholly partisan and p-ditieal
III of
people a
was bound
action when
t II It ,['l reeded
many kindiv lets and
MeKilllev , and men . like
when Hie signal was flash
Havana harbor, the
promptly from the
North, the first
If tlie Lord will especally bless
Mnerica, He will put into tlie hearts of
rich and near-rich—and even the poor
! need it, strange as it may seem—to
| rear their daughters in such'a way that
they will be fitted, as God intended, for
making happy, peaceful, law-abiding,
uid Christian homes; ttiat they may
• women of character, purity, cour-
age, strength We wish every parent
I m the land would read ttie above adl-
•'•jtorial and let it “soak in." “ '
' ' ,a|V 'ii’d better read it twice.
Sprinkle |
ov er the top layer of |
k in a medium oven mi- |
til lhe crumbs Itovvii
i.)e tn Hill II V fl III led
it both its Southern
name' may tic used in [dace
cracked corn in the preparation of
tins dish If tliis product is used,
if is unnecessary to Ipat it until it
is placed in the oven.
\ richer saner may
desired, as follows:
Two teaspoons butter
Two tablespoons flour
One cup milk.
Gue cup flnely'cut cheese.
One teaspoon salt
1-4 teaspoon mustard, pepper,
paprika.
Melt the butter In a sauerpan. Mix
Into it. the flour and seasonings Add . . . ,
the milk and heat, stirring constantly the corn or callus will loosen and can
untW- the sauce becomes thick and { 110 ,'r,pd «afh tn„
smooth Add the cheese and stir until i
if Is melted I vvm
--o ' without
CITY BOY IS MAKING GOOD ON THE 8kl?
FARM. | nes8 or smarting when applying
------- afterwards if yoqr druggist don?l have
The Department of Labfir . author- I hive him order it for you. (*)
--------o--------
TELL US THE NEWS
United
serve. ... „
week from a large number of States, I Per**ot>al Often we call when you
while not complete, show that more not in and we will appreciate
than 20,000 boys already have gone | favor If vou call no 7 when vou have
Into the country to serve their coun- i . ,
try by helping on the farm#. To Join 1 news’ on <'r Wednesday.
Nn timiibu- ' \ny c-.rn, whether hard,
soft or between the toes, will loosen
riald yj> and lift out, without a particle
of pain or soreness.
This drug is called freezone and fa
a comp oind -or ether discovered by a
Cincinnati man.
Ask at any drug store for a small
bottle of freezone, which will cost but
a trifle, but Is sufficient to rid one’s
feet of every corn or callus.
Put a few drops directly upon any
lender, aching corn or callus. Instantly
the soreness disappears and shortly
„.». "'EX™
regardless of condition. Radiators
manufactured by us are. guaranteed not
( to freeze or heat See us before buy-
ing your new radiator.
Burton Wheel and
A.&K.AUTO TOP CO.
Body Work#.
2101-3 North Akard
I Tai.—Bell 2424 M.; Auto. 2462 M.
SltOO For# Top« recover*# ta 1 #ay #12,00
12.00 For#* Palate# 1 1-2 #ay» 12,00
12.e* For# Set rovers put on in 2
hours .
We paint any make car and
er any top We build any style com-
- mercial body We build any style
w heel.
I ■■.. - _____________________________
Republic Motor Trucks
TROY 2 AND 4 WHEEL
TRAILERS
corn
dish
unnecessary
Do i “
Produce clean ones by keeping clean
Then use slightly dirly egg#,
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Bowen, William A. Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, July 6, 1917, newspaper, July 6, 1917; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1303060/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Arlington Public Library.