The Arlington Weekly Journal. (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, February 20, 1903 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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weeks foliew-ing
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JWB HAT WO. 1.
Ito Dtfidixe Sttfdi Co,
OMAHA, NEB
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When a man runs short in hU ac-
counts ha is apt to run long in his
travels.
Ignorance sometimes, does what val-
•r would not dare to attempt
t.S
To keep their respect, whip a surly
dog but kick a flatterer.
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enfiwbuttpm
J
tj
World,
,. M"< <.
pAXUNE
’ TOIL ul
The mountaineer always takes a •
peak when he wants to obtain a good
view.
>y it, and thousands upon thousands
>f letters are pouring in from grateful
the worst forms of
ry»
1
___ : ■ ; -
—---... .. -r
An IM Womans NMllcIn.
is 1 ' JK
7?^:...
Mrs. Winslow’s Sootninr eynxte.'
Fc- rblldrea toaiaiag. Mftsa* tea cmao. i MMW kte
SamiBsuoa.Mlan sals -area wind volte. lx»>-Hi,
If a rooster were as big as his crow
a whole family could dine on one for
two weeks.
Rtopa tne Cough and *
Works Off the Cold
Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Fries25c.
■’
K man seldom has any trouble In
finding trouble.
r For nearly _
half a century
Ferry’s
Seeds
hsre tern growing fftmouB I n every
k»n< vf MM1,everywhere, bold by
k all tknlera. IVOS hscwl Annual
k postpaid Tree to all appUcanta. 4
k ». M. FERRY 4 CO. ,
bvtrwlt, MleK
flu or nervoaanew a flat
rat Nerve krotoror.
bottle and troailaa.
TO CUBE A COLD IN A FEW HOURM.
Take Britton’s Bad Cold Breakers. At all
Druggists or by mail. Price 25c. Bbitton’s
Dbug Compami, Dallas. «l
Defiance Starch Is put up 16 ounces
in a package. 10 cents. One third
more starch for same money.
Little Australian Butter in England.,
We are still increasing our pur-
MKWHSHMs —• ' * • -
iWS
JL
■ Lots of people In this world would
be miserable if they couldn't find
fault.
# •
w .
Some nden’s heads are so soft that
a Shadow from a brick wall produces
a serious impression.
FREE TO WOMEN I
To prove the healing and
cleansing power of Fa a tine
Toilet Antiaeptto we will
; mall B large trial' p^kAge
with book of inatrUetions
absolutely free. This la not
a tiny sample, but a large
package, enough to con-
vince anyone of its value.
I Women all over the country
I are praising Faxtine for what
Lit haw done in local treat-
*anent of female Illa, curing
all inflammation and discharges, wonderful ax a
cleansing vaginal douche, tor sore throat, nasal
catarrh, as a mouth wash and to remove tartar
and whiten the teeth. Send today; a postal card
will do.
Hold by druggists or sent postpaid by ns, BO
couta. large box. Batlafaetloa guaranteed.
THE M. PAXTON CO , Boston. Maas.
Bia CoIambus Ave.
AT ALL GROCER?
K PUNCPJOR10 CENTS
■^r
y. <
wheat.
Lot 2, 5.75 pounds of soaked wheat
Lot 3, 5.59 pohnds of ground wheat
Lot. 4, 5.86 pounds Of ground whea'
and corn, equal parts.
Lot 5, 6.21 pounds of ground wheat
and rye, equal parts.
Lot 6, 6.12 pounds of ground wheat
and 'shorts, equal parts.
Lot 7, 6.09 pounds of ground corn.
Lot 8, 6.24 pounds of ground rye.
At the time this experiment was
conducted, wheat and corn were each
worth 55 cents per bushel, rye 50, and
wheat shorts $18 per ton. The cost
of grinding the wheat and rye was
eight dents per hundred and the corn
six cents. At these prices the net
profits were greatest on soaked wheat,
amounting In this case to $1.30 per
pig, as compared with |1.07 on
ground wheat. In this experiment,
corn at 55 cents per bushel gave a net
profit of only 60 cents per pig. It
was therefore the most expensive
food used. The ground wheat pro-
duced 9 per cent larger gains than
the ground corn, pound for pound, and
the ground corn 2 per cent larger
gains than the ground rye.
Wheat kernels are so small and
hard that many passed through the
animals undigested, and unless first
ground or soaked this grain is unsatla
factory for feeding. Of the two meth
ods, soaking is more economical un-
less the grinding can be done for 2
cents per hundred.—E. A. Burnett.
Some wives are so jealous they
won’t even allow their husbands to
hug a delusion.
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MMKMM <
aS’:, .
pjHKsmOhMfiWi
Lo*for th fiastf thirts
th mm TOWtt *
|xg.7s&g-jra^?A.|
Wheat vs. Other Grains for Fattening
Pigs.
* At the Nebraska Experimental Sta-
tion 48 pigs weighing about 110
pounds each were divided into eight
lots, six In a lot. After a prelimin-
ary feeding of nine days, they were
period of thirteen _
this date, the food consumed (n the
' production of one pound of gain, on
> ^e different rations was as follows
Lot pounds of w%?fre dry
CrbySn FeiWaft IbBsu IIU VW
R«»ul»r Cvloe BOB Sv ail u« four Pbou> uH Ms
Money order O«r work !• (U*r»nie«d- I»«U <H-
ie mtffh
as carpenters, but they are usually ex-
pert joiners.
■1 Ji UNION MADH
I » Mt A. Douv/aa asaftws amf ae/fo
sMm Hsaov'a ffaa<jraar IMaSf
•awiasf n aoaaaJ eAssa rAaw smutaSAer
asamffaa<vrar At rNa
$25,000 REWARD X" ''v
will be paid to aprona who VQ,
eon dlaprove tftla oiatamont. sjft
Because W. L. Douglas
\ . jathelargeHtmailufaclurer Uff Ws;
can boy cheaper and C-J fit
' produce his shoes at a KjMttvk - /y
: i lower cost thahother con- AjjBml
oerns, Which enable* him .A ’
to sell shoes for >3.50 and 1
>3.00 equal in every ’yk.
way to those sold else- .dR®<
where for 84 and >5.<*». flMBIlMKjy ot'iTW
W L. Douglas >3.50 L UML ■W/Jwrwl
and >3shoes are worn by tlHiusandaof men who
|_ _ _ « _ __a _ a da or * 1 st • .a
coaid get a firsts-lass shoe for >3:50
t— * a — kmk ** i A a 4. ■■ m a L- a a 1. a
and wear of hie >3.50 and >3.00 shoes' is just
aa.good. C’......*
NLlIra I a,
la Huali
’* ssnri
W. L. oouai
Worth S4MX>
D» tret I’nBorttt unit Air>»rlcun leathfn
Pattnt Calf. Cnamtl.JSo* Calf, Calf. Hid Klu. Lu.sn,
Colt, int national Kangaroo. Foot Color f goloto.
Piuflnn • Tbs ■•nulna bavs W. n DOUGLAS
wallllUII • name and price stamped on bottom.
have been i>aylngS4 ami >5.not trelieving they
'' ' * - * . “‘I or >3.oo.
lie has convinced them that the style, fit,
Give them a trial and save money,
aeveaae /IMS Haire: Halt,al
----ILA* S4X» GILT HOGH LINK,
I Compared with Other Makee.
.'rzltvr*. Hogl'o
, fnanul.ion Calf, Calf. Kid Kid. Corona
-tIonol Kangaroo. Foot Cd<
The senulne have W. '
...___ name and price f
Dropsyb
Removes all swelling Tn Stoss
days; effects a permanent cure
inyeto Bodays. Trial treatment
given free. No<hlne<-«n be fairer
Write Dr. H. H. Breen s -ons. i
Specialists. Box R. Atir . a. te
CAI ARY CIR a wkilm. am> lai-knmm
wALMIsI w’V tomen with rlgursell BOTFTiAN
FOVLTXT 00MPODMD PoeUivaly a valary.
EGYPTIAN CO.. l>ept. A, Faraona, Kan.
inDIIIIUI WHISKY <«•« arn<
w# I W IVfi bahlts cured We went the
Wurst cases. Rook and references FREE Dr.
B. M. WOOLLEY. Boa SI. Atlanta. <M.
w. N. u. Dallas — no. 8-1003
Pills are for the kidneys only and cure
the dangers of urinary and Madder
'disorders, from common.inflammation,
to Dropsy-, Diabetes. Bright’s dhease.
CU> No. A’-'fiAF-
mer, .well-known builder, residing at
125 N. Hinde street, Washington C. H„
Ohio, says: “I am glad to endorse a
remedy which possesses such inesti-
mable value as Doan's Kidney Pills.
They cured me of Inflammation of the
bladder which had caued me much an-
noyance and anxlsty because of the
frequency and severity of the attacks.
I have advised others to take Doan's
Kidney Pills and I know they will not
be disappointed In the results.”
A FREB TRIAL of this great kidney
medicine which cured Mr. Hammer
will be mailed on application to any
part of the United States. Address
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For
sale by all druggists. Price 50 cents
per box.
WESTERN CANADA
Is AttraeUas more AUaaUoa lhaa ur Mtaor dlklrUI
la Us word.
T1l.* •* Ww!4•" “ Tbo »f •«
Ibiaa.'* th* Hataral IvoGag Qrouda too Stock.
•«*» »«• • • • 1 SS7.SJS rerre.
YtoM MM . / . . . 117,S8S,TM bubals.
Abandanca or Water; Fuel
Flanlllulj Building Malarial
ChOM, Good Oraaa for patlure
red hay; a far Illa toll; a turn
slant rainfall and aaUmate(Ivins
an aaa u rad and adaquaia
season of growib.
NOMKITEAB LANDS OF ISO ACRES FREE,
(Boo* SO cVunehu, Sebuola* ale** KsUwayf^ap' all
■MStod dlawloia. Saad for Allas and other literature
10 Smortaundent of JmmlsraUoe. Ottawa, Canada,
ar to J. S. Crawford, an Wafaut Si .Kanaaa City, Mo.,
tee author tied Canadian Government Areal, who
wm supply you wlte coruscate (tvlag you reduced
I PAT SPOT I teH FOB
lwn “"‘ToFntt land warrants
’trill Ittued tn aoldtore nt any war Alee Boidlora* ABtU-
vvrtto Cloeal Hometteod It'xteta. Write me al anon
, gBANK H. BKGlQt, P.O. Bax Ud. Denver,'OaX
If you don’t get the biggest end best
it's your own fault. Defiance Starch
is for sale everywhere and there is
positively nothing to equal It in qual-
ity or quantity.
Even a warm church can’t compete
with a cold barroom.
1/14 B /l CAYSULM and CARAT*
1/1 A 1/1 for Uterine troubles Vlnvl
W I 11 1/ I Liquid and Cerate for Ca-
V | fl > | tarrh. Vlavi, a simple veg-
etable compound. Lltera-
ure tree. Representatives wonted In every
town In Texas. Oflloes, rooms 18 to 22 Uastou
Building, DaUas, Texas.
■UglMtoF- .
-' ■V *~
lletf Jtates has 2o,000 miles
of railways, upon which there are 5U
employes for each 10U miles. The cost
of operating these roads with steam
power Is >502,660,000 a year; but to
carry on the same amount of work
with men and horses would cost ti e
country 311,908,500,000.—Exchange.
DBVIANUE STARCK
nhsuld ba In avarv household, none so
good, bssldok 4 os. more for 10 cents than
any ether brand of cold water starch.
f>'.-ws-»re»SA'
Present Play by Oscar Wilde.
“Salome,” by the late Oscar Wilde,
was given in Berlin the other after-
noon at a matinee before an Invited f
audience, a public representation hiv-
ing been forbidden by the polidb.
was a tremendous success.
Subsidies of Various Powera
France gives the largest subsidy to
shipping of any power. The total
amount, including postal subsidies, in
>8.500,000 a year. Japan comae next
with about >3.000,000 and thaa Gar
‘ many and Russia. x .
I Hs fotf jH goes a’goffin]
■ h ths giddiest al goum.
^-JW- The sun sWnts sufay oalUL
jfcy >7*B> f;i
O’er the green sft« chases jfiytjf
In a fierce perspiring march.
But her clothes don't show a wrinkle
'Cause she used Defiance Starch,
'V —
-.r^l
P ' ’ *1
FITS P«rman*Qtly CvM.
f!r*t day'* uro of Dr. Kiln*** Or»t
lend for FREE NS.OO triad L
DB. H H. Ki ma, Ud..t31 Arch BL
So says Mrs. Josie Irwin, of
325 So. College St., Nashville,
Tenn., of Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound.
Never ih the Jiistory of medicine has
the demand for one particular remedy
for female diseases equalled that at-
tained by Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, and never
during the lifetime of this wonderful
medicine has the demand for it l>een
so great as it is to-day.
From the Atlantic to the Pacific,
and throughout the length and breadth-
of thia great continent come the glad
tidings of woman’s sufferings relieved,
by it, and thousands upon thousands
of letters are pouring in from grateful
women saying that it will and posi-
tively does cure the worst forms of
female coinplainta.
a Mrs. Pinkham invites all wo-
men who are puzsled ul»out
their health to write her at Lyn a.
Mass., for advice. ’Such corre-
spondence is seen by women only,
and no charge is made.
BAD BACK*.
BaM1 berks rfre
H found in «Terjr
9m household.
A bad back is
A a back that's lame,
m weak or aching,
ja Most backache
Hk pains * come from
jV?, kidney derange-
I ments and should
| u be propiptly iXtcnd-
I ft etl to.
Reach the cause
raw of backache by re-
lieving the kidneys
d and curing their ills.
} v >-?' * ’■ ■
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NWMMMAMMMMWMMWWWMWWMi I
POTATOES
Th7t,Earal H.w Y.rti.r" al.reSal..,-. Far- .
Lr Wtoaaa-hi a ytolS of t«Vba. a. Frlvre
4jre.lb.-A. Ma-ua-lte.evk ire-li — II*-f1
Taa«*ato.CF**>toSirearaal Wkrel.*Sfcu. ,.r I
O., Maa* Cla.ar, atekipre rewinl or 10. p.,t,p. <
je*N A. BALSEBilEBee. La Creaaa. W I., ,
A 50 Cent Hat
f by maie
n>l< hat <n either
ttM'te** on rrt ei|v« of 90
cent* In cash, protal ordet or
stamps Money, bark It •©•
• taater™.ti> Colon, J**!' •’J}"
”•« r* Wtr* -
1-M-o-te finite. Coloni fte <re4r. Men', -ad
Stock. Bre-a ■■‘i Steel- B-,¥ kaa.
MIDDLETOWN HAT CO., ■
01 Mui sv.. KieoLSvowH. a. •
LAnu
^cts GcKtly:
pieatsarxllyt
^cts Ber\e-ficiadlyi
$cfs truly as a Laxative-.
Syrup of Figs appeals to the cultured and the
well-informed and to the healthy, because Its com-
ponent parts are simple and wholesome and be-
cause it acts without disturbing the natural func-
tions, as it is ’wholly free from every objectionable
quality or substance. In the pi ess of
manufacturing figs are used, as they are
pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal
virtues of Syrup of Figs ar* obtained
from an excellent combination of plants
known to be medicinally laxative and to
r act most b^nt-'fcially.
To R^t its beneficial effects—buy the
8?nu*ne—manufactured by the
(MH)!^IA[^YRIIP(?
, • --H* w -3«xr\ Frekrsciwco, Cal.
LomisviIIb, Ky. new York,N.Y.
fur •%!*- by gII Price- fifty cents per bottle*
celved during the five weeks ended
August 30 was 453,788 cwts., being
an increase of 74.570 cwts. over the
corresponding period of last year. Of
this quantity 393,632 cwts. came from
foreign .countries and 60,156 cwts
from Canada. . Denmark, as usual,
was the chief supplier with 171,676
cwts., Russia coming next with 86,-
819 cwts. During the same period
464,743 cwts. ot cheese were import- '
ed, being an increase ot 116,031
cwts. over last year’s figures. Of this
quantity Canada supplied 401,795
cwts., and foreign' countries 62,948.
Of the latter the chief suppliers are
'Holland, 28,338 cwts., and tha United
States, 25,395 cwts.
Messrs. Weddel and* Co. tn thalr
latest market report say: The de- .
maud for Canadian butter la some-
what checked by the lower prices at
which inferior butters are offered,
and which, retailing at a shilling a
pound, bring the retailers a greater
profit than Canadian. It is true the
consumer gets an Inferior butter, but
that is his fault, for not being willing
to pay more than a shilling. In Can-
ada prices are advancing, and the
lowest quotations have been left be-
hind. “Choicest” Canadian on the
spot makes 96s. to 98s. per cwt. for
salt, with 2s. to 3s. more tor saltless.
in reply to a cable askin*g what
were the prospected Australian sup-
pliea of butter tor the coming season,
we have received the following re-
ply: "Butter—there.fs every pros-
pect of exports being much less than
last year,” This information agrees
with the views of all who are in In-
timate touch with Australia. When it
is remembered that last year the Im-
porta from Australia were only 7,449
tons, against 15,556 tons for the pre-
vious year, the seriousness of the
above cable becomes apparent to ev-
ery buyer of Australian butter- to?
the coming ^season.—Dairy
Loudop,
TheT?
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WOBt,
gen-
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una,
n# a
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i nno
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iBry.
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PISO S CURl for
b.
CONSUMPT IUN
is *6*0. Sold by flrslite.
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Stanberry, William M. The Arlington Weekly Journal. (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, February 20, 1903, newspaper, February 20, 1903; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1313516/m1/3/?q=%22Places+-+United+States+-+Texas+-+Tarrant+County%22: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Arlington Public Library.