Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 163, Ed. 1 Monday, October 5, 1903 Page: 2 of 4
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ORANGE, TEXAS, OCT. 8, 1903.
assss
The question of the boar: "R TJ.Oll
wwir- fi
Subscribe lor the Tribune and keep
posted. I-' ;;'í//
AdvertlBers in the Tribune continue
to reap the golden hardest. The bus-
iness which passes their neighbors by
does hot fall to stop at their doors.
,
■ ■
Some of the most priceless philos-
ophy Is ottered by fools: It 1b one of
the clearest evidences of the exist*
) euce of an eternal soul.
■Mí
ü
ftfc ■
When we reflect upon the dead and
gone how many little thingB, as well
as great, recur to ub that we might
have done, if we had only thought!
¡S95
i ®i
The time to buy Orange lots 1b NOW.
Without any thought of sacrilege we
can assert that It Is like salvation la
that respect The proper time 1b al-
ways NOW, but every moment of the
future holds elements of risk and loss
and danger.
.
Let us not for a moment forget that,
oil or no oil, we have the beBt and
most promising little oity right
here on the banks of the Sabine, and
that our future prosperity depends
largely on our own efforts, and the
degree of energetic working harmony
which we Bhow. If we see a man or
woman trying to do anything for the
good of the community let us ask our-
selves If we cannot help—and Do It
Now. '
f* 111 n n i nun ■H'j'
,v.,> 4*
EDITORIAL CLEARING HOUSE 4*
Ü
m'
■H'-llM 11 11 1 1 1"1 1 I'M-
Since cigarettes seem lees provoking
tTnto the ones who do the smoking,#
O, won't some power please compel
'em
To smell themselves as others smell
'em?
^ —Exchange.
Bat. even this Is better far
Than he who smokes a rank cigar,
Tls then you wish—and mighty
quick—
That it would make him, aB you, sick.
—San Antonio light.
Worse than the smell of bugs and
roaches,
But we fly to NacogdaoheB:
More fragrant than Havana filler
The Texas weed's no zephyr killer.
After reading this dainty
thine Journalism, of course we
immediately overwhelmed with mi
ty, we plead guilty to having made one ,
or two Attempts at expressing our
sontlments in verse, but had no idea
any one would take It for poetry, (for,
we tailed to write under It this I poet-
ry.) If though we have Written any
tblng that pleases the "Girls of
Rayne" Its compensation enough to
know It, even without a good square
meal of "angel cake." May the Rayne
girls live long and be happy.—¿Rayne
CLa.) Tribune.
Our readers will agree with us that
this is a clear case of justifiable In-
sanity. It gives us a wild desire to
turn violent handsprings when we
think of what would happen in this of-
fice If the angels brought us a cake, or
old clothes, or anything, wltb two
beautiful Orange girls nestling in the
center. O, Lordy! O Lordy!! 0,
Lordy!!!
SANCTUM LININGS.
4*
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4
4-
4*
•I"!"!"!"!"!"!"!"!"!1 ■M,,M"M"M
Logansport, so to speak, is "between
the devil and the deep blue sea"—un-
paid malicious lying hirelings on the
west and the glnnera* combine oh
the east. Even wltfc these drawbacks
business Is booming, cotton is boom-
ing. and we are all as happy as clams
at high tide. Bully for Logansport!—
Logansport Journal.
•••••
The question of the hour: "What is
the state of the woodpile?"—Orange
Tribune.
That question 1b for morning hour*.
The question for after dinner Is:
"Where's that palm leaf fan?"—Na-
cogdoches Sentinel.
We are wondering what choked off
the sweet Orange Tribune's lusty
crow over the oil discovery at that
place so suddenly. It isn't possible
that the crow was a little premature,
is It?—Port Arthur Herald.
Gee! our throat ain't made of sole
leather! The rooster that crows day
and night quickly becomes a nuisance,
.anyhow.
% It would be a difficult task to dis-
charge a shot gun down Main street
afternoon and not hit, \ Cal*
politician.—Jennings Times.
During the remainder of the day dis-
charging shot guns down the street
may be done with Impunity.—Orange
Tribune/ . :
At last! at last! we've .been annex-
ed to Texas.—Lake Charles Presa.
And we thought it was only red
r' ™
Four hundred soldiers at Fort Bam
' Houston, San Antonio, weat ait A
strike a feir days ago on account of
poorly cooked gruli. Their strike prov-
■ ed a «access, for the matter wan In-
vestigated and there was an Immedi-
ate Improvement in the cooking. There
lota of folks throughout the world
op a strike for
but feel that it
elmar Mercury.
,te talk
some who
to tell
THE WEATHER AT ST. LOUIS.
Time Your Trip So As to Strike Wea-
ther to Suit You.
The weather tfhich visitors to the
Louisiana Purchase Exposition may ex-
pect to be Bhown by the "normals" at
St. Louis, taken from the records of
the United States Weather Bureau.
These "normals" are the averages
of the temperatures at St. Louis dur-
ing the 33 years that the Weather Bu-
reau has bad a station in St. Loals.
The "normals" are as follows:
May ...66,1 Sept 70 2
June 75.4 October 58.7
July 77.6 November ...44*8
August -77.6
How closely the temperature for any
one year follows the normal is shown
by the mean temperature for each
month token by the Weather Bureau
at St. Louis during the past year.
These temperatures are:
May 71.8 September ..88.4
June .74.2 October .....66.2
July... 80.3 November . ..53.3
August 76.4
The Louisiana Purchase Exposition
is to last seven mopths Instead of six
monthB aB did the Columbian and Par-
is Expositions. Opening April 30, the
Louisiana Purchase Exposition will
not close until Dec. 1, 1904. The rea-
son for this is that as a rule the weath-
er at St. Louis during October and
November is peculiarly pleasant. It la
the "Indian Summer" of the Middle
States. Wealthy persons with sum-
mer homes in the North and winter
homes in the South spond these
months in the vicinity of St. Louis.
The night weather throughout the
season during which the Exposition
will be open Is extremely pleasant
The summer gardens which have oper-
ated for years on the outskirts of the,
city have enjoyed a large patronage
and demonstrated this amply.
throughout
fur some time
with trap-lanterns for the
tton of Insects. It has
however, that the useful
harmful Insects are lured
The noxious species, such as th
curculo, bee moth, chinch bag
buffalo tree hopper, are
in the traps. /V l'";
Philadelphia Makes Up.
Even Mexico must thrust its Jibe
at us. The Mexican Herald declarea:
"It was, perhaps, quite natural that
Mr. Schwab should take his rest cure
In Philadelphia." This leads us to
irrelevantly observe that if Mexico
would give greater attention to sup-
pressing Its yellow fever and Its mw
qui toes we should be very much
obliged.—Philadelphia Record.
Industrial 8chool for Negroes.
The Rev. H. W. Jameqon, pastor of
the colored Baptist church at Madi-
son, Wis,, Is starting an Industrial
school for children of bis race. The
hoys will be taught carpentry and the
rudiments of ¿othe^-trades, and the
girls will ieani cooking, housekeeping
and sewing. Twenty pupils already
have been enrolled.
A Peat of Endurance.
At St. Mary's church, GrnndMt
burg, Eng.. on a recent Suaday, eight
members of the Norwich Diocesan An-
notation rang upon the bells of the
church a true and complato peal of
Bob Major. When it is considered
that this consisto of 6,040 distinct
changes and occupied the performers
two hours and fifty-three minuten, it
must be regarded as a teat of
Biderable endurance.
Soy's Touching Gratitud*.
As a tribute of gratitude for having
restored him to health, Walter Carr
Byrd. seven years old, recently donat-
ed the munificent sum of 52 cents to
Jefferson hospital in Philadelphia. It
was the first public contribution avar
received by the institution, and Aetr
log Superintendent Oregg was as
much pleased as tboogh soma maltV
mllllonaire had bestowed a prlnoely
benefaction.
Turf ter Fuel.
An English-Irish syndicate hae bean
formed for the purpose of removing
one of the worst evils with which Irish
industrial development was afflicted,
vis., dear coal. The industrial diffi-
culties doe to the absence of ooal in
Ireland are to be removed by the one
of turf, in which the island abounds.
This is to be out dried and
iato bricks.
Cremation Figuras.
According to statistics published la
Paris, 29,470 dead bodies were cremat-
ed last year in France. The United
States comes next in the list with
16.986. Italy, with only 4,393 bodies,
cremated during the year, has twenty-
eight crematories, the United States
twenty-six and England only nina.
Canoer and
Some one has discovered that
increase in mortality ¡from
bears a direct relation to the to-
creased consumption of beer. Thsre
are persons whose sole object In life
seems to be to de«|troy all the peace
of mind of their fellows.—Buffalo
■i n' V, - -
& m <Mls Natural
fcM r* of x 1 hea ven h f"
Hen Pekt, the Assyria
the tower of Babel, startled out at
did my
Oil Supply Diminishes.
For two yean the oil
of the world has exceeded the produc-
tion. The stock of erode Pennsyl-
vania petroleum above granad in
December, 1900, was 11,174,717 bar-
rels, while in December. 1903, the
amount thus stored was only 6,699,-
12v barrels. Pennsylvania
greatest American oil Said.
A very line specimen of lepldoden-
Anon has been unearthed at a quarry
worked by Mr. Jones, near Goto
Lwynau, Gelllgaer, Wales. The lepl-
dodendron Is a fossil plant found
largely In the carboniferous coal meas-
ures, and was a kind of tree Cato of
gigantic proportions. The portion ex-
poned is about fifteen feet long and
nearly a yard wide, and the roots' are
also distinctly visible.
Islands of Tunta.
Some Sixty-four miles off the coast
of Tunis a cluáter of little island has
been discovered. One was found to
bo inhabited by a former French ser-
geant, Clement, who had disappeared
some fourteen years ago, and a small
number of natives, «he Islands have
been annexed by France, and Clem-
ant appointed resident teapector of
fishing ant of the harbor, registrar
ssss
'Wá
What Is It?
that makes people always re
turn to my store for a second
purchase ? It's the
Excellence ol
Groceries
and the cleanliness of my st
Once a customer, a
customer, when yon bi
groceries from
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greatest boohs la
their most folusilnotifi
volumes; the •'Pei-wen-yin-fu,'
Mee dictionary of over 190
aod the "Ta Tatag Hul tien
S history Of tv
oS the Chinese i
B. C. and coming down to 1944.
history is la utoi 910 volumes.
11 .«a I I. IN.. I III I j
:
The scientific ■ n«lr r tin
ptng of corn
riBL
Htarch graIns,
|n the grain.
of orator and air
He Ran Ne ftlok.
Be had risked hla Ufe to
fair maid from a watery grave,
of course, her father waa duly i
fvL "Young man," he said, "I
To John Singer
a
•nrmplslnei while
tti
my maid applies to
morning fulfil -may
It niay be
9HI
children iHMW
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They seed that
jecreatlon; '|The
tog not lees than
can ha
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■'dr .> . *f.V¡ . ■>?' * 1 ''■■'■ " Si'*
pbytticul one.—Lo
ftrldoe# In
the
w'
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heroic, aot
émm
my
the
married."—Chicaao
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Rein, Charles M. Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 163, Ed. 1 Monday, October 5, 1903, newspaper, October 5, 1903; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth182937/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.