Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, November 11, 1910 Page: 9 of 10
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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C. K. Cullom, Prop.
Just above Stop 14 on Interurban
Colonial]
Farm I
We wish to qnnpunce that we have
mated up several pens of our high-
grade, heavy-laying
barrei)nd Plymouth Rocks
And we are now prepared to furnish EGGS for Hatching at $1.50
per 15, from either variety. We invite your inspection of our stock.
Orders booked-for stock and babv chicks. Mail-orders tilled.
55
Our neighbor, Mr. Beard, sold a
load of potatoes in Fort Worth this
week.
Our community is furnishing Prof.
Tarpley with several students this
yeftr, Mr I^eeRawing. Miss Matlock
and others. ft Is said ‘Knowl-erLg©
is power and will assert itself;" and
much is being said today by the
school men about educatirg and edu-»
cation, and the fact is lamented tfiat
only about C>2 per cent of Texas
school children attend her public
schools. One reason is, we suppose,
about 90 per cent of Texas scholastics
outside the towns and cities are
renters' children. They are in the
cotton fields the first three or four
months of our public school term.
And do you say. "Why plant so
much cotton? Why not diversify—
raise feed. hogs, colts, calves?" ^sk
the average landlord. It's cotton,
cotton! More cotton! And if you
don't like the terms, you can move
nt. There are twenty men^waitlng
for your place. Nine-tenths of the
houses in which the renters live in
this country are not only unsanitary
and uncomfortable, but—shall I say
it? -disgraceful, humiliating to a
self-respecting white man who has a
family, and in some cases we pay
rent extra for the same house.
"Man’s inhumanity to man makes
countless thousands mourn/' so they
tell us. and 1 suupoee it will ever be
the same.
It is not so much the official deni-
agogue, the public grafter, that Is"
crushing the life out of the common
herd, as our local commercial specu-
lative extortioned Gur doctors are
in an agreement with the druggists
in the prescription business, and with
eachother jg ,
Wtr Xftocors are agreed oh^frfbes. and
so the drygoods nierehanta, -JgtjjrlG
perhaps W(*Tnd hotter quff^r this
time and come_ again, for all this
only leaves for the old fogies their
dried apples for breakfast, pease for
dinner and to swell for simper with
YOUR 1’XCLE PINK.
’----
NOT soilin' FOB BLl XDER.
"If my friends hadn't blundered
in thinking | Was a doomed victim of
Consumption, 1 niigktr not be alive
now," writes It. T. Sanders, of Har-
rodsburg. Ky., but for years they
sa^w every attempt to cure a lung-
racking cough fail. At last I tried
Or. King's New Discovery. The ef-
fect was wonderful. It soon stopped
the cough and I am now in better
health than 1 have had for years.
This wonderful life saver is as un-
iriValed remedy for coughs, colds,
lagrippe, asthma, croup, hemorrhages
whooping cough or weak lungs.- 50c
and 11.00. Trial bottle free. Guar-
anteed by all druggists:
---—.j,——... ..
A GOOD |*OSI*flON'. ‘
Can be had by ambitious young
men and ladjea,lM the field of "Wire-
less' or Railway telegraphy. 8|nc«
the 8-hour law became effective, and
since the Wireless companies are es-
tablishing stations throughout ithe
country there is a great shortage of
telegraphers. Positions pay begin-
ners from >70 to |90 per month, with
good chance of advancement. The
National .Telegraph Institute oper-
ates six official institutes in America,
under supervision of R R and Wire-
less Officials and places all graduates
Into positions. It will pay you to
write them for full details at Mem-
phis, Tenn., or Columbia, S. C. 34-lt
service.
W. C. FORBESS,
G. P. A., Fort Worth
for all points between
Fort Worth
and Dallas
TAKE THE
INTERURBAN
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Frequent and convenient ♦
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JOHNSON STATION.
Johnson Station, Nov. 9.—Your
"Uncle” was out with the boys last
week on a cotton-picking—hence no
report.
Grandpa Melear, father of Zack
and Louis Melear, was buried here
last Sunday evening, aged 87 years.
He was an ex-Confederate soldier.
The service at the grave was by R. P.
McElreath.
Our Col. Thos. Adkins has sold his
farm here to some Western man.
Mr. W. M .Dugan has also sold his
fine farm here to a Fort Worth
party.
Randol Mill, Nov. 10.—Here comes
"Dolly Dimple” again, after several
weeks' absence.
Health Is real good in this com-
munity at this writing.
Rev. Mr. Scott of Smithfield filled
his regular appointment at the Meth-
odist Church Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Reno were the guests
of Mr Geo. Peters and family Sun-
day
Mr. and Mrs. Belma Jones visited
Mrs R. A. Randol Sunday.
Miss Grace Morror, who attends
the High School at Fort Worth, spent
Sunday with home folks.
Mr. and Mrs. Blessing of Roscoe
spent the latter part of last week
with W E. Whitworth.
Amelia Peters’and Minnie Whit-
worth spent Sunday afternoon >ith
Della and Callie Bracken.
Miss Annie Temple and aister, Mrs.
Shoffltt of Fort Worth spent Sun-
day with T. N. Temple and family
Misses Kate and Annie . Finegan
spent Sunday with friends in Hand-
lay.
Mr. and MrszF. L. Harvey of Arl-
ington were the guests of R. A Ran-
dol Sunday
Mr. Kellv Whitworth and Robert
Randol will leave Saturday for San
Anton+o, where they will attend the
fair
Rev D. C. Siblev will fill his regu-
lar appointment Sunday at Wheeler
€cho01 House.
Mr and Mrs. O. L. Sweet of Fort
Worth spent Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs. Clark.
A box supper will be given nt
Wheeler School House Saturday night
week (Nov. 19) for the benefit of
the school. Everybody is cordially
invited to come, and the editor has
a sneclal invitation. (The editor ex-
pects to attend, thank you.—Editor
Journal.)
News is scarce, so will cut this
short. DOLLY DIMPLE.
RANDOL MILL.
+•
day at West Fork and every member
o fthe church is requested to be
present without fail.
REPORTER.
rally
Is
of Temnle,
Miss
with
John
spent
with Sallle Lou Copeland
Mr. and Mrs. John Jordan and
children spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs Elder Bellamv.
Mr. Charlev Satrr
Okla., snent Wednesday with
Ella Cleveland.
Mr. Wrav has a niece visiting him
from Quanah.
Mfrs Kate Copeland Is visiting in
Fort W’orth.
Remember next Sunday
WATSON COMMUNITY.
Watson Community, Nov. 9.—Mrs.
little daughter,
night
Mrs.
Mr. Jujrt and wife spent all day
Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs A H.
Copeland
Mrs T. B. Copeland gave an old-
time quilting Friday.
Mr. Clonts bought a place south
^f Grand Prairie and is moving in
’his week.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Liibke were
visiting Sunday
Mr*. A. H. Coneland spent Thurs-
day afternoon with the writer.
Mr Ellis Patton and family of
Grand Prairie and Mr. Henry Wheel-
er and family of Arlington snent
Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs.
John Wheeler.
Mr. John Wheeler, our superin-
tendent, was sick Sunday, and was
therefore absent from Sundav school.
M»-n|e Graham spent Saturday
Bob Gardner and
Irene, spent Saturday
her parents, Mr. and
Thompson.
Miss Lassie Wheeler left Monday
morning for Jones County to apend
the winter with frlendg
Mr. and Mrs G. W. Hewitt of
Dallas spent Wedneslay and Thurs-
day with the latter’s mother, Mrs.
Rorex. * > •
Miss Alpha Copeland visited at
Grand Prairie Saturday and Sunday.
Miss Leila Bailey was a guest of
Miss Josie Graham Sunday.
Mr. D. Y. McKenney received a
message Sunday from Norman, Okla.,
saying his mother. Mrs. N. E. Mc-
Kenney, was dying Mr. McKenney
and wife left immediately for Nor-
man. •>
Miss Bessie Clonts is spending a
day or so with the 'writer * -
Ed Bailey, Leo Patterson, Leonard
Rorex and the writer attended serv-
ices Sunday at the Methodist church
in Arlington.
Mr and Mrs. S. D. Graham spent
Sunday forenoon with Mr. and Mrs.
John Thompson.
Walter Bailey, Gene Copeland, Jim
Gardner and Henry Bailey spent Sun-
day with the Rorex boys.
Miss Ruth Copeland visited Miss
JSessie Clonts Sunday.
A
Free To All
SicK People
Sample of Wonderful New Medical Discovery Sent Free to
All Sick or Af Hie ted People
*’I will mail, free of charge, a complete home treatment of my
Wmderful new discovery to all sufferers who fill out the coupon
below and send it to me today. I want to send you this free proof
treatment to show you the wonderful curative powers it has. Do
Dot send money—not one cent do I ask fof this wonderful new
^peatment. Just write me for ft> using the coupon below, and I will
3end you at once the free treatment that has cured others that suf-
fered as you now suffer. I will also send free my book, ‘How to
Get Well,*’ for your guidance. If you have any of these troubles,
ftll out the coupon below and send today. Db. D. J. Walsh.
►
Address
Age How bung afflicted?
t
Coupon for Free Treatment
And Free Book
. Dizziness
. Kidney Trouble
Bladder Trouble
Heart Disease
|.. 1 mpure Blood
... Female Trouble
. Torpid Liver
1 Partial paralysis
.. Nervousness
Malaria
DR. D. J. WAIAH
Send me at once all chargea paid, your’trce
treatment for my caae and your book---all
entirely free to me.
Name .......................
If youf disease Is not on the list < rp< »sile
---thejume heic.
Box 2004 BOSTON. MASK.
My Principal Trouble Has Been
Make a cross X In front of your trouble. Two
crosses XX in front of the one from whleh you
suffer most.
. Rheumatism
| ... Lumbago
[ ... Diabetes
... Dropsy
j ... Neuralgia
. Diarrhoea
. Constipation
1 ndigestion .
^..Jleadaehg |- Bright's disease
I
W. M. DUGAN
—FOR— ;
i Fire & Tornado Insurance ;
> Most reliable Old Line Companies. At Citizens Nst’l Bank. ]
► <
; POPULAR POLISHING PARLOR :
I The Acord Brothers have arranged especially for ladies to J
I have their shoes polished at their Polishing Parlor, and J
; Arlington ladies are invited to visit it. Walter, an artist <
; in his line, will give them the politest attention.
<
<
A Clear Cut Argument
: furnished men who desire to look their best—and feel the I
; part. We guarantee our razors, shears and all tools to be ‘
; sterilized and antiseptic. The latest styles in hair-cutting. <
Try an artesian bath in our sanitary porcelain bath tubs. I
: POST OFFICE BARBER SHOP :
>•••••••••••••••••••••••••
• W. S. CASTLE •
4 CEMENT - WALKS •
J Curb Concrete Construction >
• CEMENT WORK A SPECIALTY •
••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.....$7.00
f 3 75
Both papers one year............ .
During our “BARGAIN DAYS,” Dec. 1-15—
BOTH PAPERS by mail ONET YEAR, our price..
SEE US AT ONCE.
regular griea 80 oanta par manti
AGKNTS WmUmI KVBMYWHKRK
$1.00
M
S!
Id
Star-Telegram
and gat thia big madam Daily and Sunday nawapapar, using
ASSOCIATED PRESS. TEXAd NEWS SERVICE, NATIONAL
NEWS ASSOCIATION, giving oom pl sts Markets with ALL the
news EVERY DAY from EVERYWHERE—over our own
‘leased wire"—12 to 24 hours ahead of any other newspaper.
NEXT YEAR—“You must know,”
The Southwest will grow and prosper as never before—
New railroads, new factories, thousands of new industries—
Farm products will sell at highest prices. Then—
A new Legislature with new laws and—
New Governor for Texas—“YOU MUST KNOW
Big legislative doings. Great prohibition campaign.
YOUR OWN HOME NEWSPAPER—
THE ARLINGTON JOURNAL, one year...
And NEWS OF THE WORLD every day in
FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM, one year, by mail.'... .$6.00
$3.23
A Year—DAILY and SUNDAY—By Mail '
(No part year.) .(Only.)
Send in your subscription before DEC. IS. After this date the
regular price 80 cents per month—vrill strictly prevail. *
FORT WORTH
AGKNTS Wsased KVERYWHBAK
1-15
(No part year.)
During
BARGAIN DAYS
By Mall Only
1 Year
You can subocribo, renow or ex-
tend your subscription to
December
(Thb reriod Only)
During Our “Bargain Days,’’Dec. 1-15
Both Papers From Us (DO H S
One year, by Mail, O • f
'125
K t 1
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[Facts
It will pay you to do this.
It has paid thousands of other
successful farmers and stock and
poultry raisers.
This famous remedy is not a
food, but a genuine, scientific med-
icine prepared from medicinal herbs
and roots, acting on the liver, kid-
neys, bowels and digestive organs.
Sold by all druggists, price 25
cents, 50 cents and $1. per can.
rT0U
LOSE
MONEY
when you allow any of your
r stock or poultry to remain sick
a day.
They give you less results in beef,
pork, work, or eggs, when (hey are
not in perfect health. Take a little
interest in your own pocket book
and doctor them up with
Black-Draught
.Stock and Poultiy
jWs Nature £
• The ■ucccks < f Dr. Pierce** Cvolden Medical Din- ttN
e covery in curing wi stomach*, wasted bodies, weak
lusllJs, and obstinate ><u 1 lingering coughs, is based on
t’ie recogninon of the fundamental truth that "Golden
Medical Discoven ’’ •upplic. Nature with body-build-
lag, tissue-repairing, mu»clc-u.„i.. >■' materials, <n con- ■
densed and concentrated form. ■ • I Nature
supplies the necessary strength to tiio sioinacb to digest
food, build up the body end therebv throw off lingering
obstinate coughs. The "Discovery" re-establishes the
digestive and nutritive organs in sound health, purifies 7
and enriches the blood, and nourishes the nerves—in
•hort establishes sound vigorous health.
/f four draler offer* aomethlnG " l»*t a* food,”
It la probably better FOR HIM ■■It pay* better.
But you pre thlnklnH of the cure not the profit, ••
there’a aothlnH “luat aa hood” for you. Bay ao.
’ Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, In Plain English; or, Mod-
* Mas Simplified, 1008 pages, over 700 illustrations, newly revised up-to-date
Edition, paper-bound, sent for 21 one-cent stamps, to cover coat of mailing
M^. Cloth-bound, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R. V. Pieroe, Buffalo, N. Y.
V
♦
Tho
Dover
C. T. BROWER & CO.
THE FITTERS.
TXIEOR AND MEN’S OUTFITTERS
Necessities
of life are going
higher in price
every day, but' J
we are selling
The Florsheim Shoe at $5.00 and
$6.00 per pair, and you never have
had or will get more for your money
j
A complete
thou)mg at $5
Some few
efylee $6
==?
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; NOVEMBER 11, 1910.
3
THE ARLINGTON JOURNAL.
v* LI** .' *» JI*'k’* *'•(*!. a. »’ * ? •• • 4
1
♦ ■ i ’ T> ms
Pare 7.
cases, where other medicines had been
■i
Have You Tried It?,
There is a bottle of Cardui waiting for you at the
drug store. Have you tried it?
If not, we urge you to do so, before your troubles
have obtained such a hold on you, that nothing will drive
them out
Even now, it may be nearly too late. But try it any-
how. If anything can help you, Cardui will. It has helped
t In thousands of cases, where other medicines had been
tried in vain. Why should it not do fte same for you? .
Iake CARDUI
The Woman’s Tonic
L "My daughter, Octava. would have been in her grave j
kiotUx. h*d if not -been for. that fine medicine, Cardui,” j
‘'-WNRl '•tJMi^wife^’'^'’:wenrioif StftWrKy?'----
k-—■ “Nothing I tried helped my daughter, until she had
taken Cardui. I had sent for the doctor, when I thought
of your medicine and got a $1 bottler When she had
taken four doses she became all right I often recommend
Cardui to my friends.” .....
Your druggist sells Cardui with full instructions for use
on the bottle.
Write to> Ladies’ Advisory Dopt. Chafiaaoofa Msdieine Co., Chattanooga. Ten*.. •
lor Special Inttructtcni, and M-page book. "Home Teoatment for Women, ” sent fro*.
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Bowen, William A. Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, November 11, 1910, newspaper, November 11, 1910; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1308473/m1/9/?q=waco+tornado: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Arlington Public Library.