Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 163, Ed. 1 Monday, October 5, 1903 Page: 3 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
mmwmm
PW®Ív'
,«j
Mi
IGATá
-ATLAW.
■mm
is
t Water Heating
)'
e of tlitM n«-
rest of Ills life «t
• the malp
lite be has mined,
llngly go back to Orange
up and work for the reit
fe for Maud But as that
¡ble, I must do this.
I ask the people of Orange to
Upon Maud as pure and virtuous
day «he was born, and a better
doesn't life. I am now going to
God. end mar be hare merer
soul, and may my friends for-
me for this raab act are my last
Good-by to all. -~ÍNH
' ; JACK CNBILL.
The teat Letter
he flalshed some time FVlday
in his room, reads:
the Public: You will And one
tetliK already written at Lake Chartéa
In explanation of my tot. I fully In-
tended doing this there last night
Thinking of the disgrace to my dear
father and mother, I decided to try to
gat beck to New York State, and gire
"f up to the authorities of my own
as I thought It would be better
being brought back to Orange,
, but upon arriving here my money gate
out. •
I tried to pawn my gun, suitcase and
contents for enough to take me home,
but eould not do It. Realizing this
I thought the best thing to do would
be to end It all tonight, as I cannot
keep the people of Orange In Ignorance
of My crime forever. In explanation
of what I did. I want to say that it was
not my own fault. I came to Orsnge
with perfectly honorable intentions,
just three months ago today. I met
Maud after a few days there, and
loved her the minute I saw her. We
were naturally throfn Into each Oth
er*s company, and I, at the time, nefer
thinking I was doing wrong, kept going
to see her and learning to love bet
more every day. " J , |
As soon a t realised bow dear she
to me I began making arrange-
■. .
C>i''
mmm
mm
ICC CKEAM
Parlar
In the
•?
in
Kísii*
aaswfm?
giren. Job work
* • to. All work
M. ML _... ....... HUPPPVIPBP
meats for my former wife to set * di-
vorce from me. and In a tow mora day*
she undoubtedly would. A week ago
last Monday I called to take her to
nee n young lady friend of hers who
was sick. Her father, through some
wild idea he had, followed ns,
when we were within twenty-live feet
of this lady's home he attacked me
with • big knife. After a few minutes'
row with him. In which he succeeded
In knocking me dawn, be came to his
* and apologized for what
>, saying that be had ft>r-
thftt this young lady had moved
present home, and told me that
he did not object to my calling there-
after. as he considered me a perfect
ntleman.
Hand's mother being away visiting,
thus making her lonesome, I want out
see her. never staying
f;S0 and always sitting on
Never did r, either
or actloa, do anything In iftl
right until last
taking her home
from church, he stopped me at the
gftte and/at the point of a gun, told
me never to call again, at the same
me to understand that he
kill me on sigi^. i went up
town where i got two guns to protect
with, and started drinking,
never going to bed until 6 O'clock Mon-
day morning, and thon with my clothes
''v :\r 'i
R o'clock some of my frienda
room end told me her fath-
on the street on horseback
I looked out of
and could plainly see him,
atoly he wns toe far away
a shot at him. I wanted
and meet him
but my friends
Tom Browne, the Bagllah painter,
bo has achieved wide tame, al>
though still very young, was once an
orraad boy tor a Nottingham
Once when on a tour la Spain
unable to speak the language, he pic-
tured hie wants.
Patient Pol*.
The United States government ha
given Commander Robert Peary thr«e
years In which to discover the north
pole. It is some satisfaction to know
that If It isn't discovered
thftt time It will not wander away.
Shoe Exporte.
America is now exporting about 97,•
000,000 Worth of shoes a year, of
which Great Britain gets one-third;
Life of the Reiehstag.
The legislative period of ft German
five years in duration.
Forty Years a "Newsboy."
"Pete'' Miirphy, the pioneer news-
boy of Canada, who has sold papers
to Montreal tor forty years, has Just
celebrated hie forty-ninth birthday. Me
ts president of the Newehof ' Union.
!
later
ÍOO
ae'h« had gottan.
to marry her right away
away from her stepfather,
man gave me «38 and told
same thing, StlU
g. and
I the minister. to*
friends, came in
to marry h
1
" ' ' 1Í.T W'ij,,'" ' i : V- ; . ÍM¡. }
^ilpf H
Appendicitis
A London
mntoy iow
guaranteeing to holders all the me4i>
cal. lurftteal md nursing exM&ies,
to thñ amount tnaur#d. ioourrtd in
WW "WPRIfft''wlflWWWttT1'w' .1 i1 ^-TT ^ ii JJI—
attftck of this malftdy,|
■"J."■:,jsi11 ',i. v
rv¡ i•.
, Mméé
•S .¿, ,
fe'iiSINI -H
,|¡ i'
■'' ",j.: ■■ '*?■' .• i'VV ■ ■■ :
i ''i'..!,.,'V. . ^ ' ■ .4SB jU '.'i
. JUm MÍnÉ M v
1 and ask
k'mHHI
and to do all la
Maud's future aá
( <
power to make
as possible.
for If a girl lived who deserved bappt
ness It is Maud. 1 say good-by to you
ftll JACK STEWART O'NEILL/
P. a—My last thoughts a oí my
dear mother and of my darling Maud.
God knowp how I would Uke a word
of forglvenness from them both to take
to my grave with me. JACK.
He also made this request:
To the Newspapers:
Being ft newspaper man myself, t
will expect the same courtesies dead
ai I would alive. Grant It to me; my
folks will be the «offerers if you
don't
H* addressed leitcrt to Miss Renfro,
his mother and father and several oth-
er'persons.
The body, ftfter Coroner Richard
viewed tbe remains, was sent to the
undertaking establishment of Johnson
A Sons, on Julia and Magaslne streets,
for communication had been establish-
ed with the family of the dead man at
Schenectady, and they wired an order
Instructing that tbe remains be prop-
perly cared for.
Coroner Richards will forward let-
ters which the dead man wrote to his
parents and Miss Renfro—letters «rhlch
will only Interest the people to whom
they are addressed. Last night the
body was shipped to Schenectady.
The New Orleans Dally States of
Sunday morning has this:
It has been a long time since New
Orleans was treated to a story as In-
teresting aS wae the story of Jack
O'Neill's suldde IgUhe St. Charles rfo-
tcl yesterday. An<Wt has been many
day since the newspaper reporters
of New Orleans were so generously
treated by a victim of the snlcldal
mania. O'Neill's suicide read like a
romance. Everything connected with j
It smacked of tbe romantic. O'Neill
himself made It so. Using his literary
training to good advantage he filled
In the defects of the story so nicely
that the whole Mended with ft perfec-
tion that would do credit to a man
higher up In the world of romance.
O'Neill, according to tbe estimates
of those who saw him before be went
to his room Friday night, was a ro-
mantic looking fellow, tell, handsome,
well formed and nicely groomed, the
type of man thftt one would most read-
ily look,to for chivalrous deeds. But
he was apparently the opposite of
what he appeared to be. He was, ac-
cording to dispatches from other cit-
ies. anything bnt a lofty fellow, and
sentiment, which had favored him ear-
lier In the day, quickly changed
against him when the story of his
reckktas career waa slowly unfurled
the telegraphic advices thftt came
response to the report of his sui-
cide sent out from New Orleans. To-
day, bm his remains lie In a casket
at Johnson's undertaking establish-
ment. wftltlng ft clftlmant, there .are
few that know the story of his Ill-
spent life that still bear him the sym-
pathy thftt ft first reading of Ms ante-
mortem statements Housed.
The dispatches show thftt the Or-
Texas. Incident, wherein a young
lady of respectability became his trust-
ing victm, contained a number of In-
vented detections, so cunningly placed
as to relieve blm of the barden of the
great wrong, and again In falling to
tell $f his recklessly spent life* at
Schenectady and Ms desertion of a
young wife and Intent child. His fail-
use to tell of the bad as welt as tbe
sympathetic side of his misfortunes,
has robbed the story of Ms self-de-
struction of much of the roatftnee with
which he so liberally clothed it.
mmsmam—
Isny Wheels.
■* tbe Atchison clock
led a clock one day,
Globe, and when he weilt to
his pay the woman noticed
that he bad left one wheel out. "How
Is this, Mr. Curtis?" said the woman,
"yon have left a wheel out of the
works." Curtis #as anxious to get his
money, "Oh, that's all right," hs
said, "that was what was tbe matter
with it."—Kansas City Journal.
The Young Man's Chsnce.
The young man is in demand. If be
tails to avftll himself of some kind
of nn opportunity It Is usually Us
own teult. The elder Vanderbllt onee
said that you could take a young man
and stick him down anywhere and if
he had the right kind of stuff In him
he would get on and saye a little
money. This may be a strong state-
ment, but there Is a good deal of
truth in It.
Amerlea Rules Germany.
A German economist, Prof. Jastrow,
has written an essay In which he dep-
reeates the existing feeling of fear
and of dependency on the American
banking and Industrial market by the
Investing, commercial and manufac-
turing circles of Germany, which, says
tbe professor, gives Germany the ap-
pearance of being a dependency of the
United Statfes.
Natural Supposition.
A friend of Edward MacDowell at-
tended a recital given by a mediocre
teacher's pupils and when he met the
American composer he remarked: "I
heard one of the pupils, a little girl
of 8, play your 'To a Wild Rose.' " The
composer sighed dejectedly. "I sup-
pose," MacDowell remarked, "that she
pulled It up by the roots."
&
Tlie
Te
in
grades will |
about the 0th
the old books wil
Call at store for infomatic
part payment of new ones.
exchanging of old books.
All School Books Strictly CASH. This
Don't forget we have a big stock of
TABLETS, LUNCH BASKETS, BOOK
SACHEL8, PENCIL BOXES, BOOK-
STRAPS, and everything in SCHOOL
SUPPLIES. THE BEST POR YOUR
MONEY.
cv.cvr
D. C. FOREMAN,
MEAT MARKET
Our Meats are sweet, Juicy and
Tender: We make a specialty
of choice cuts of steak. ) ) )
) 9 Our refrigerator constantly
keeps all meats at an even tem• I
perature, thus preserving their j
good qualities. I I I I
Telephone Tour Orders—Beth Phones 44.
Market: Polk St. below Presbyterian Church. Free delivery to all parts of city!
Death of British Centenarian,
¿n authentic centenarian, Vis-
countess Glentworth, died recently In
England, age one hundred yearn and
thre« months. She was married
seventy-seven years ago to the grand-
son of the Earl of Limerick and cele-
brated her golden wedding with her
second husband in 1807.
Farming in Aiaaica.
Large sections of Alaska are suited
for farming and gardening. Such
crops as oats, wheat, rye, barley and
flax have been raised and vegetables
—potatoes, turnips, beets, peas, cel-
ery, ctc., grow In abundance.
Buys American Wheat.
Australia, as a result of last year's
drought, bought since January 7,000,-
000 bushels of wheat or Its equiva-
lent in flour from the Pacific coast,
and 1,000.000 bushels from New York.
For Hand - Made
BRICKS
WRITE THE
W
J R. LAND BRICK CO
p. o. Box 300 Beaumont, Texas.
'"■V
| For a Business or Pleasure Trip, The
Knight of the North Pols.
Peary Is certainly entitled to be
called the Sir Thomas Llpton of the
North Pole. He and Llpton have
equal pluck, equal enthusiasm, and,
unfortunately, equal success.
Bser Drinking In Germany.
The yearly consumption of
averages fifty-seven gallons a
throughout the German empire,
Increase of nearly SO per cent since
mi
an
of Professors.
Comparison of the ages of 1,500
university professors In Germany.
Austria and Switzerland shows the
average to be fifty-three years.
STANDS UNEXCELLED.
Tbe only line with through service to Kmsms City, Si.
Louis, Chicago and Denver, and all tbe principa sum
merresorts of the North. The Santa Fe dining station*
are the finest in the world. .
Elegant Furnishings. Best Obtainable Service.
For further information, call on local agent, or addreaa
J. R. DILLON, G. P. A.,
Phone, 791. Beaumont, Texas «
*.M1 ■!<'M"M' I l-H-I'
Net the Same.
The lady who plays bridge whist
cannot be expected to countenance
the man who plays poker. That's dlf-
ferent—Duluth News.
•efe re-Dinner
In Japan what are c*lled
dinner speeohee" ftre made before
ner, thus Insuring brevity, and at the
same time furnishing topics tor 00
versfttlon during the meal itself.
Mleafonarlaa. '■
i'"- ' "flu * ' ''
It to ««id thát there are from eighty
to a hundred millions of people In
the region ot the AngloGerman mis-
ins in the Soudau and only ten mi*
alonarles.
■ j'-' ' 'i
ot Contagion.
uostion the state-
taken to the
inn increase the sua.
( *-« • . T1, "T'?,"' —7—■■
to infection*
H. & T. C. R. R.
COLONISTS* BATES TO
CALIFORNIA
ONE WAY
On Sale Dally Sept. 15 to Nov« 80 1903.
THROUGH * SLEEPER between Houston, Chicago,
Kansas City and St. Louis, between Dallas and
St. Louis, and between Houston, Dallas, t!
Fort Worth, Waco and Austin.
Four
Trains Each Way
"THE BEST WAY"
Quick Time. Á
TO POINTS EAST,
AND NORTHWEST.
Excellent Service.
M. L.
ROl
Ueu,
at.
HOUSTON, TEXAS.
WM.
DOS
Act'g A.
V
mm*
of the YEAR.
DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE
New Orleans to Pacific Coast via
SUNSET ROUTE.
mm
BtgOAJW?
"I1 '«'"Oil ,PU["<
SUNSET LIMIT1
/• «
J.saa*
mKi
"
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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/m1/3/?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.