The Arlington Journal. (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 27, 1907 Page: 7 of 8
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Washington Day by
___________________________* - ♦
DORCHESTER PLUCKS PLUM
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DORCHESTER GETS BUSY.
HOfiSE FOR THE MUSEUM.
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PEOPLE ’LIVE
TALL
LONGEST.
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BOY HAS PI
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STORIES ABOUT SENATOR
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SPOONER ARE RECALLED
WIGS NOW MADE OF GLASS.
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allowed the grain to fall into t» London.—The
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SUMMER CAPITAL AGAIN
LOCATED AT OYSTER BAY
PRESIDENT SPENDS BUT
LITTLE IN TRAVELING
MISS ETHEL MAY SOON
ENTER CAPITAL SOCIETY
f
Reasons Are That ths Company Wants
to Bell Out the Business.
A small son of Walter Price, living
near Mangum, Ok., was thrown from
a disc harrow, while driving the team,
and received Injuries from which he
died Saturday.
H. C. Pride, a Confederate veteran,
aged eighty years, was placed on trial
for murder at Brownwood last weejc.
A passenger train oh the Baltimore
and Ohio Southwestern was cut in
two by a falling rock in a tunnel near
Mitchell, Ind., Thursday morning. Sev-
enteen people were injured, four of
them seriously.
Milwaukee Physician Quits Largs
Practice for S10 Job at Boa.
News Gathered Here and There
at the National Capital
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John H. Kirby Is planning an In-
dustrial village adjoining Houston, on
the style of Pullman, Ill. A big tract
of land has been purchased and a
piano factory, employing one hundred
and twenty-five men, will be the first
manufacturing enterprise of the new
town.
The Confederate reunion at West
August 12-16, bids fair to be one of the
largest over held In McLennan County.
present fiscal year will find him there.
It is found that when allowance Is
made to cover the expense of the sec-
ond trip which the president made to
the Jamestown exposition and of the
trip to Oyster Bay fully >17,000 wil’ be
turned back into the treasury as the
i :.
Cleveland' Health Officer Says Germs
Can’t Climb Up to Their Noses.
Corsicans Cotton Mills Enlarge.
Corsicana: Shwarts Brothers, own-
ers of the Corsicana Cotton Mills, for
the last two years, have completed ar-
rangements bv which they will build
and operate a second mill here. Re-
cently they purchased considerable
. property adjoining the present plant,
wljh the view of enlarging the mills.
They will, to accommodate the equip-
ment, build a new plant, the building
for which will bo . 76x200 feet* two
stories high.
Prominent Educator Drops Dead.
Texarkana, Ark.: A well dressed
stranger, a very fine looking man; aged
about 40, fell dead at .the Union Star
tlon while waiting for a train. He had
been walking on the platform for sev-
eral minutes when he suddenly sank to'
the floor. Papers on the deceased
and marks on his clothing showed him
to be W. J. 81ms, Superintendent of
Public Schools at Cameron, Texas. In
his pocket was also a through ticket
to Buffalo, N. Y.
IV ASHINGTON society is beginning
vv to speculate on the possibility of
Miss Ethel Roosevelt, now In her sev
enteenth year; being presented on
New Years next. Although she will
not have finished her school course
here in the National Cathedral School
for Girls the president and Mrs. Roose-
IV ASHINGTON.—The "summer cap
VV ttal" of the United States has
once more been transferred to Oyster
Bay, where the president has gone for
a long and much-needed rest. The
“summer capital” will be located as
usual on the second floor of Moore’s
provision store building, at the corner
of Main and South streets. Secretary
Loeb's home this year is the pretty
E. N. Townsend cottage, up the Cove
road, near Christ Episcopal church,
where the president and bis family at-
tend weekly worship.
The president's home. Sagamore
Hill, is some three miles and a half
from the village offices, and In order
to keep the executive in touch with
the work of his administration, as well
as to secure the very hecessary presi-
dential signature to commissions, or-
ders, and important letters, the secre-
tary makes dally trips to and from the
Roosevelt residence. Mr. Loeb makes
most of these journeys on horseback,
carrying the official documents and
correspondence In saddle bags slung
over Ephraim's back. "Eph” is the
western saddler that Secretary Loeb
got from Congressman Cocks about a
year ago, and he has proven a worthy
successor to Skoot. {he fine saddle
horse the secretary formerly rode, but
which unfortunately “went wild” one
day and came within an ace of ere- * bring forth.
Pittsburg, pa—With the great
mass of official business off his-hands,
caused by the annual meeting of the
Museum Directors' association, in fhls
city recently, Dr. W. J. Holland now
Intends to devote himself to the
mounting of the many new finds made
within the last few months.
By far the most interesting ot
these, from a historical standpoint, la
the skeleton of Stonewall Jackson's
horse, which was secured by the di-
rector against much quiet but per
sistent competition. DT. Holland will
prepare this exhibit with, his own
hands, and it probably will be placed
|n the museum within a fortnight. The
skeleton is said to be practically per
feet
The skeleton of another famous war
horse of the rebellion, Winchester, the
charger of Gen. Phil Sheridan, In his
famous 20-mile ride, Is government
property, and Is kept in the museum
on Governor’s island, In New York velt, It la said, feel that she should
harbor. This museum for a long time
has been going to ruin through the
lack of an appropriation to keep It up^
and the hide of the old war horse is
rapidly falling away from dry rot *
It is possible that “Winchester” will
be added to the Carnegie collection or
that both Jackson's and Sheridan's
horses will ultimately stand side by
side In a national museum.
I Clarksville: Several farmers of the
Garvlnsvllle community, south of this
city, turned large flocks of geese
Into the cotton fields and report that
as far as young grass Is concerned no
better cotton choppers can be found.
One • citizen Who has twenty eight
geese on * field of thirty acres of cot
ton states that absolutely no grass
grows where the geese roam. The
present scarcity of labor has served
session when, upon the enforcement
of the anti-pass legislation, the rail-
roads were prohibited from continuing
the old practice of furnishing the pres-
ident a private car or a special trajn
when he desires to leave Washington.
It was roughly estimated that the
president could get along on >25,000 a
year as traveling expenses, and con-
gress appropriated that amount as an
experiment. The president recently
left Washington for his summer home
said. “We know that these germs are at Oyster Bay, and the close of the
taken Into the system through the
nose In breathing. They find a breed-
ing place in the dirt of the streets,
and as they are stirred up by the pars-
ing pedestrians, they are drawn Into
the nose.
"The germs never reach any great
altitude. Most of them are falling
toward the earth, and as the cfail |
dren's noses are closer to the ground
than those of adults, they are more
likely to Inhale the disease-makers.”
WZ? otber-oenaOvs Mr. Spooner has
• said that during his 16 years of
service in f the senate he had clade
only about >5.700 from his law prac-
tice. "I have been retained in cases,”
he said, “but I could not cojpe with the
delay of the courts. A case would be
set during vacation, but invariably a
lawyer on the other side would man-
j age to have It continued, to December
J
Oyster Bay this year. Visitor*
New York.—It was the fascination
of the Pacific, the undeniable attrac-
tion of endless blue skies and rolling
seas that caught Daniel Wylie, a Mil-
waukee physician, and caused him, as
•o many others have done, to secure
employment that would keep him In
the Sandwich Islands. Less than a
year ago Wylie, about 3> years old,
shipped out of this port for Honolulu
M "cabin boy” aboard the American
bark Nuuanu, Capt Joselyn. Now he
is purser of an Island steamer plying
between Honolulu, Maul, Hawaii and
other Islands.
The Nuuanu has come back. Capt
Josselyn, an elderly skipper, who
Uvea at Duxbury, Mass., told of his
physician cabin boy. He said: "He
made a good cabin boy; never saw a
better one to clean brasses than
Wylie. He was a good doctor, too, by
all accounts. A man about -years
old, I should imagine. He got >10 a
month as cabin boy and said he left
a practice of >10,000 a year to make
the sea trip. He was shattered In
health, you see; nerves gone; worked
too hard. Well, naturally, you can
see what it led to. His health gave
way and he was advised to go east
and take a long sea trip.
"Seems his wife was dead and he
had letf two children out west there.
Wylie stood the test well. When we
were, out a few days he was very bad
and could hardly get about. After
that he braced up, however, and stead-
ily recovered his health.”
see as much of White House events
and entertainments as possible, and
ahe will not leave school, but will ap-
pear more generally than heretofore.
. Miss Ethel is budding into a very
handsome woman and has all ot the
frank charm of her sister, Mrs. Long-
worth, added to vivacity. She is a
devotee ot horseback riding and when
In the city she and her mother can of-
IIOW much do the president's travel- unused portion of the appropriation.
11 ing expenses am’ount to? This I
question interested the country last' to Indianapolis cost about >1,000 and
his other trips have brought the total
up so that his traveling expenses for . f
the present fiscal year will not exceed
>8,000.
There has been a material change j
In the style In which the president J
travels. When the railroads furnished
the transportation all arrangements I
were lavish In the extreme, the rall-'^J
roads vying with each other in the en-
tertalnment provided. Special trains
were not uncommon, and special
schedules were frequently prepared
forthe president. Now it is different.
The president, paying his own way,
travels quietly. His Pullman bills ar*
not large, his car Is hitched to regular
trains, the service Is simple, the meals 1
plain, and the president enjoys him* j
self just as much.
Toms Going Rapidly Forward. *
Jacksonville: Twenty-six cars of to-
matoes were loaded here Wednesday
and shipped out to Northern and East-
ern markets. Including the small
loading stations within a radius of
seven miles, there were more than fif-
ty cars loaded. Forty-one cars Is the
largest number of cars of tomatoes
loaded here in any single day this
season, during which day there were
126 cars loaded within the territory
adjacent to Jacksonville.
manger in front of the horse. A small
electric light Is attached to the upper
side of the clock box, which shows the
farmer where the box is without a
lantern, so that the possibility of set-
ting fire to the barn is averted. Each
day the box is filled with grain and
the lever adjusted.
The Receiver of Waters-Pierce Estab-
lishes Headquarters.
Sherman, Tex., June kl.—Chester B.
Dorchester, named as receiver of the
properties and business of the Waters-
Pierce Oil Company of Texas, re-
turned from a business trip to St.
Louis yesterday afternoon. His offi-
cial bond in the sum of >100,000 was
presented to Judge D. E. Bryant and
approved. i '
Receiver Dorchester has taken actu-
al charge of the duties ot the posi-
tion. All of the more than two hun-
dred agents of the company in Texas
have been fully apprised by wire ot
the appointment of the receiver, and
Instructed to make reports to him, and
it Is not apprehended there will be any
serious hitch in the transaction of the
business. The permanent headquar-
ters ,ot the receiver are to be In Sher-
man. All of the agents have been
called upon already for' a full and
complete Inventory of all the com-
pany property at their respective sta-
tions, and the reports on them are ex-
pected to be made as promptly as pos-
sible.
Ex-President Cleveland Convalescent
New York: Advices from Princeton,
N. J., announce -that ex President Gro-
ter Cleveland has passed the danger
point ot another serious attack of
sickness. He has been perilously ill
for some days .with internal trouble,
and several physictans have been in
constant attendance. The crisis has
now safely been passed, and Mr. Cleve-
land’s recovery is looked for. Mr.
Cleyeland was stricken just as he was
ready to start for bls summer home
In New Hampshire.
FORMER HOUSEKEEPER WEDB
WESTERN MILLIONAIRE.
Cleveland, O.—Health Officer Mar
tin Friedrich, of this city advances a
new germ theory that is certainly en
couraging to people who are tall.
"Blessed are the tall,” says Fried
rich, “for they shall live long. A six
footer,” he continued, “has more
chance to escape disease g^rms than
the little fellow.' Those built close to
the ground must be on the lookout."
Friedrich was perusing the physl
clans’ mortality reports, and noticed
a prevalence of children's diseases.
Out of 26 cases of cerebro-spinal men-
ingitis, or spotted fever, reported to
his department since January 1, all o(
the victims have been children.
“I believe that most of the disease
germs are close to the ground." he
ten be seen on the boulevards and.
parks around the city. Mrs. Roose- I
velt and Miss Ethel are among tho
best horsewomen in Washington and J
are quite as much at home on a good 1
horse as In a drawing room. ]
Mrs. Roosevelt wears ihe plainest ‘1
of black broadcloth habits, made with
a severely plain, tight-fitting jacket
and rather a short skirt. She usually
wears a sailor hat, although through
the winter she appeared with a derby. I
Over her hat and face ahe always 1
wears a thin black chiffon veil, which
is tied down closely over the hat andl |
about the neck. - -
Miss Ethel frequently wears a bl ack i
suit with white shirt waist with black1 I
and white sailor hat. '
II
Start a Great Engineering Feat
New York: With a small silver
trowel Maydr McClellan turned »aod
of earth among the hills two 'miles
back of Peekskill, on the Hudson Riv-
er, and by this act began the great
engineering undertaking which will
coat >162,000,000, and will eventually
furnish Greater New York with 800,-
000,000 gallons of water daily, from a
source 160 miles away, besides the
to make the geese even mor Tala-' amount available from the Croton and
other present sources ot supply.
Fatal Kick of a Mule.
Bonham: At Ivanhoe, ten miles
north of Bonham, Lewis Pierce, a
young man 19 years of age, was
kicked over the heart by a mule and
almost instantly killed. The young
man was traveling with several par-
ties and they had stopped at Ivanhoe
for dinner. He formerly lived at Jeth-
ro, Ark., and had a brother and sister
living there, but all efforts to com-
municate with his relatives were fu-
tile.
TO FEED HORSE8.
Automatic Laltor-Savlng Device Is the
Work of Fourtesn-Yesr-Old.
Skeleton of Stonewall Jackson’s
Charger Is Secured. ;
Cemmleeloner Neill Gets In • Good
Piece of Work.
Now York, June 21.—Complete vic-
tory was won yesterday by the Com-
when Robert O. Clowry, president of
the Westerr Union Telegraph Com1
paay, sent Charles P. Neill, United
States Commissioner of Labor, a let-
merclal Telegraphers Union in their
contest with the Western Union and
the Postal Telegraph Companies,
ter In which he granted all ot the de-
mands made by the Union, except the
supplying of ths typewriters and the
eight-hour day these latter being
quickly waived by the Union.
Following Mr. dowry’s letter, an of-
ficial statement was Issued by Edward
X Nally, vice president of the Postal
Telegraph Company, denying that his
company had been directly Involved
In the recent controversy, and giving
assurance that Its employes would be
treated with every consideration.
y> Officials of the Union were enthus-
iastic in their praise of the work done
by Commissioner Neill, who was act-
ing under the direction of President
Roosevelt.
They say that he handled the situ-
ation with great tact, and that his
skillful work averted a strike that
would have been In full swing within
a few hours.
WATERS-PIERCE OIL COMPANY
HAS NEW RECEIVER.
Mlddleboro, Mass.—One of the most
unique displays In the home work de-
partment at the recent exhibition giv-
en by the pupils of the public schools
was the automatic horse feeder made
by Arthur Ripley, a 14-year-old high
sifiool student. Visiting teachers and
superintendents were much interest-
ed tn this labor-saving device, and the
young electrician was kept busy dur-
ing the exhibition explaining his feed-
er and demonstrating its usefulness.
It consisted of a large box with two
partitions for the different kinds of
grain, the bottom of which was hung
on hinges. A lever which held the
bottom in position was connected with
the alarm gear of a common alarm
clock, which was put In a small box
on the side of the grain receptacle.
The time of the clock in front corre-
sponded with the time on the clock in-
side the box.
The alarm Is set at the time the
horses are to be fed, and the farmer
could then go about his other work,
and at the proper time the alarm
would go off, releasing the lever and
droppl^<Q!S<'tr1*»ai‘<rf too*, which
to buy it The supply in consequence
is running short, and the prices of
real hair are trebling. ________
,“^M/“1.“P^rt“ent? I be«n forced practically to give up the
_____ my profession."
Apropos of Mr. Spooner’s change of
*-----1 on the Philippines, Senator
Carmack, who is rather.given to the
practice of telling characterizations of
his colleagues, said that the senator
from Wisconsin “had endured the an-
nexation of Hawaii, pitied the taking
over of the Philippines, and embraced
the seizure of Panama.”
The mock combats between. Mr. Till-
man and Mr. Spooner have long been
one of the set farces of the senate. ,
I The trip which the president made ’
I fr* Trtrlim nannlla nhniit <1 AAA a»»A 1
(9
sting a vacancy in the secretarial
According to Secretary Loeb
president will spend a very quiet I
mer at C ~
at Sagamore Hill will be few and far
between, and unless they are does*
friends of the family they will be re*' 1
quired to give a pretty good reason fort
their coming If they are allowed to in-
trude upon the president’s vacation^
rest .. 'i
The only out-of-town engagement! J
the president has made thus far fort •
the entire summer is that of Aug. 20^ ■
when he vfill speak at Provineetoi
Mass, on the occasion of the Pilgi
Fathers* celebration. The preside
will make the journey by boat 1
Mayflower will probably be seleel
for this voyage. The rest of the sv
mer will be devoted to recreation, r
and work with pen and brain. That 1
president and Mrs. Roosevelt and ji
their children will take long horeoi I
back rides and will make many eicvK -j.
Hons bn foot and by rowboat wlthin> I
a radius of 20 miles of Sagamore Hill.
By Sept. 29, when he plans to end* J
his vacation and proceed to Canton,
O.. to help dedicate the McKinley Ma-
morlal monument, the chief Magistral*- - -J
expects to be in splendid physical con- J
dltlon and ready to plunge Into any’ . 1
legislative tussles the winter may
- —S—IQ
Spooner Is about the only man in the I
senate for whose good opinion Tillman
seems to care. The rude South Car-
olinian has been made to feel th* 1
waspish sting of the Wisconsin man's /
tongue so many times that be baa
come to have a respect, not unmlxed
with terror, for his opponent During
the Brownsville debate Mr. Spooner - J
and Mr. Tillman exchanged heated
personalities. The senate wont into J
secret session on that occasion to ad-
minister a sharp rebuke to Tillman.
A day or two later Mr. Spooner and
'jMr. Tillman were parading around th* ■ 1
chamber together, arm In arm. laugh- i
ing and chatting as though nothin* . J
unpleasant had ever happened. On. 1
one occasion last winter Mr. Tillman . j
peremptorily ordered Mr. Spooner tu j
' sit down." Mr. Spooner retorted that |
Mr. Tillman was a “rude man." Mr. ■< ]
Spoouer used to get a sort of “gallerjr! * !
fame” from these encounters with Mr. ** ]
Tillman which he very much resented. ; d
The South Carolinian had a habit of | f
interrupting Mr. Spooner’s speeches to j j
ask questions, which caused the latter
the most keen and obvious annoyaaMb J
Wae Once Companion ef Hie First
Wife—Successfully Invests Sav-
ings, Then Educates Her-
self and Travels.
Spokane, Wash.—Anna Larsen-Pe-
terson, born of humble parents in
Sweden, has become the wife of D. C.
Corbin, millionaire railroad builder
and sugar manufacturer, president of
the Spokane International Railway
company, whose line he built after
selling the Spokane Falls A Northern
railway to the Great Northern Rail-
road company. The wedding took
place at ML Vernon, N. Y., May 22,
and was not made public until the
couple arrived In Spokane a tew days
ago. Mrs. Corbin is 35 years of age.
while her husband Is 70. Close friends
say It was a love match.
Mrs. Corbin’s romance reads more
like one of Hans Christian Anderson’s
fairy tales than a story ot modern life
in the active and virile northwest.
The daughter of a small farmer In
rural Sweden, as a little girl she
dreamed of the future, and before she
attained her majority she came to
America, like many of her country-
men and women, to Improve her star
tlon In life.
After working in various house-
holds tn New England and the middle
western states, she came to Spokane
12 years ago and entered the home of
1). C. Corbin as a housekeeper and
companion to Mrs. Corbin. She gained
the friendship of Mrs. Corbin, who
assisted the girl with her education.
(Shortly before Mrs. Corbin died, six
years ago, Anna married Antone Pe-
terson, at that time Identified with a
local hardware firm, but they lived to-
gether only a few weeks, hnd two
years afterward the young woman ob-
tained a divorce at Tacoma.
Before her marriage she Invested
her savings in realty, which she sold
profitably, and with the proceeds went
to Chicago and placed herself under
Instructors, afterward going to Bou-
lton and New York, whence she went
abroad ’with a teacher and three other
pupils on an educational tour.
She traveled extensively a year,
and In the meantime entered Into cor-
respondence with her former, employ-
er, who asked her hand in marriage
three years ago. She gave her con-
sent several weeks ago, when Mr.
Corbin started eastward on a business
trip, and they were married at the
home of a friend, the bride being giv-
en away by her brother, Hjalmer Lar-
son, who Is chief draftsman for the
Spokane international system.
Mrs. Corbin is of the Swedish type
of beauty and has light hair and blue
eyes. She is a brilliant conversation-
alist and speaks English with scarce-
ly a trace of accent. She is also con-
versant with the French and German
languages. She is a member of the
Swedish Lutheran church, and it Is
said by intimate friends that she will
use considerable of the fortune placed
at her disposal by her husband in as-
sisting her countrywomen and in
works of charity.
Through her fnarriage she becomes
the mother-in-law of the earl of Ox-
ford, whose wife is Mr. Corbin s
daughter.
' J
Sherman, Tex., Jbns 20.—A bill of
complaint against the Watera-Plerce
OU Company was filed In the United
States District Court yesterday by 8.
B. Cantoy, an attorney of Fort Worth,
repreeenUng Bradley W. Palmer ot
Massachusetts, who prays tor the ap-
pointment of a receiver for the com-
pany.
It is claimed by the applicant that
the judgment rendered by the District
Court ot Travis County has been su-
perseded by a sufficient appeal bond,
which was signed as security by the
American Security Company and John
H. Kirby, and that In addition as fur
ther evidence of their solvency the
Watera-Plerce Oil Company had de-
posited >2,000,000, with the security
company for its protection.
'. That the company had also filed
... « supersedeas appeal bond supersed-
ing the order appointing a receiver
and that Judge Brooks of Travis Coun-
ty had suspended all receivership pro-
ceedings after the bond had been filed
pending the appeal In the State
Court
That the oil company has a small
•mount of tangible property In Texas
compared to the real and commercial
value of its business In the State and
has contracts to supply thousands of
persons and corporations in Texas
whose business would be disturbed
and impaired If Interfered with, en-
tailing Innumerable suits and claims
tor valid damages.
1 That the company is willing to sell
out and has an offer of over >2,000,000
and can sell within reasonable value
If a safe title can be made.
It la represented that drastic and
penal statutes enacted by the Thirti-
eth Legislature regarding employes of
any company conducting business'In
violation of the anti-trust laws will
make all employes sever their connec-
tion before July 11 and render it im-
posslble to get others.
That the company Is ready to aban-
don Texas and stop business, but can
eot sell Its property for anything like
Its value because of the Hen &xed
I That the company is threatened
additional suits for penalties under
the said anti-trust laws.
The Watera-Plerce Oil Company vol-
untarily appeared to this bill of com-
plaint, waiving service of notice and
admitting the truth of the allegations
and prayed for the same relief asked
by the stockholders.
Chester B. Dorchester of Sherman
was appointed receiver for all
property of the Waters-Pierce Oil
Company In Texas. Judge Bryant no-
tified the attorneys that he did not
Intend the receivership to last for a
long time.’ >
“Specs" Needed by 100,000.
New York.—The board of education
has voted to ask the health depart-
ment to make ah expert examination
of the eyes of all the children in the
public schools to find out exactly how
many would need glasses. Commis-
sioner Stern said he estimated at
least 100,000 children would require
spectacles. He declared that "all at-
tempts to educate these half-blind
children under present conditions
means so much sheer waste of money
to New York.” He said the "city must
provide glasses for the afflicted pupils
at once or else regret its refusal
throughout the generation.
Lack ef the Genuine Article Forcee
Uee of Novel Subetitute.
enormous feminine
demand for artificial coils and tou-
pees is leading to a famine In human
hair; Formerly Swiss, German and
Hungarian girls supplied the world
of fashionable women with luxuriant
tresses of all tints. ’
But the governments of many coun-
tries are now making It Illegal for a
glrl^to h*,r,?r1for &ny *g®nt or thereabouts. By tha^ time I would
...... «. ...... ■. busy In the senate, and would be
unable to appear in court. This pro-
cess has been worked so that I have
point to spun glass as the moat ef- practice of
fective substitute for human hair. Apropos
Wigs made from spun glass are won- course
derfully light and fine and the tex-1 —
ture soft and beautiful.
It is easy to produce any shade de-
sired, while curls and waves can be
manufactured at will to suit ths fash-
ion of the momenL The imitation is
so realistic and true. to. life that .lt Is
impossible to detect the difference
between It and real hair grown on tho
head.
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Stanberry, William M. The Arlington Journal. (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 27, 1907, newspaper, June 27, 1907; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1313685/m1/7/?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.