Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 239, Ed. 1 Monday, January 4, 1904 Page: 3 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I I
,>">£ír:V¿
i
& .
:fe:..
¡if
!' !
PKr' 1
.
,JH|
r-iii# ■ ■ • i'®
i i 11
Ifji ' ''J '• ', i'
11 $lgf * ?*y fl™
-
i — ■
1
ML• ¿f? v . • ¡ggHMs
i§$
ill'
7
wII&Immmín
••■;i g&
.
HsiliMW
nfipi psüw "i
Éí'5®
■'■'■' 'h . 1<X
Sip
f'SPiVwBB
V. : V,'' '• ■'■"■
I
I
I
ra
1®? ■
Btíí
,r r
jfM
1 B
1^1
■
1 V'
■
■
M
ff
H
I
\
1.
% X' A'*
w
P
íi^i#
: M
9H9
'.líStPi.'ui.vr'ÁV. ;>|-1 i'.'.'
I V V*V:
.. ■'. - r
IIBHiRí,;3íí«
¡WfSBSBS
'
j - ' ',- .
L .
1
Li
Umim
Do It Now
am
S#f3 m
XÍn--:y r.®
HBi: " raBH
m Í-'V-'Í
Jpfeí/ •
#•'!'
Do It Now
p< p
iüI
fp
■ T
¡z
3B
overnment Bonds
Te a Good Investment
' gan
UT there are very few people who can buy them_be£ítuse it requires cash down
or the government keeps the bonds.
Orange City Lots are Better
because I will sell you choice residence lots with a small payment down, the
balance on easy monthly payments. This makes it possible for you to invest
your money in something just as safe as government bonds and better, because
you will get the benefit of increase in values. Government bonds have only
varied a few cents on the dollar in ten years. City lots have doubled in valué
in fhe past two years, and with present prospects will dopble again in the next two years.
Is tfyere any reason why you can't participate in the increase of values when you can buy
property on the terms Í off<?r,? Come and see me and talk the matter over.
CHAS. M. REIN.
#*«*$
■y
Do It Now
I
i M
EATING
cm always be had at tbt
OATC «TV CAPE
I tm W* Mfb
k *-n~ 142. . *. t MMS, rnp
■+••+1
r B. P. Curry & Son 5
fir., Martmi. UU amé 5
— - 5
mm Ct «*«. 5
WM&g
'
ftsiM . * ¿
#/
mm
WHY YOUR C0FFEB It BAD.
ftrhap* H to tpolltd by Adding th«
"Othar Quarter."
Bridget Jp «o excellent cook, but like
Boat woman of bar profeaalon aba la
>plnlonmt«dn«iá Inalsta upon making
Ul bar dtabaa atrletly according to ber
wn reclpaa. Her mlatraaa give her
tyil awing, not only aa to oooklng, but
*a to the purcbaae of auppllea. Tba
tbar day bar mlatraaa aald to bar:
"Bridgat, tba coffee yon ara giving
ii to vary good. What bind la ItT"
"It la no kind at alt. mum." aald
Bridget. "It'a a mixer." -
"How do yon mix fit"
"I shake It'one-quarter Mocha and
we-qnarter Jara and oae-quarter Rio."
"Bnt that'a only thrao^aartera.
What do you pot In for the other quar-
*tV Ii: ■, '■■■■;;,
"I put In no other quarter at all,
That'a where ao muy «poll
!he «toffee, mum—by puttln* In another
loarter."-—New York Praia.
mm
mmm
UNLUCKY rUM'MARINO ANIMAL*
Their Katermlnatlan Certain aa Re
ewlt ef Hunter* Qread.
The for bearing anímala ar% more
peralately hunted tbnn any other,
alnce many people depend for « living
on t^elr capture. When It to ahown
that In one year there are brought to
the market the fur of mo.ooo pine
marten , 400,000 aton*martena, «00,-
000 polo cata, 400,000 ermlnea, 110,000
minx, 68,000 ottera, end from America
alone ISO,000 bearer and 100,000
chinchilla , It wlJl be aeen that their
extermination la a quertton of a short
time. The sea-otter to now to be
found only In the Northern Paeitio, on
the northern coaat of California, and
thence along the cOat of America and
of Asia. To-day fewer than 8,000 aea
otter fura are aent to the market an-
nually. fe&i't :•
11 1 e
Hill* Alwaye Freah.
An Invention wblob to dest rlhed aa
•bout to revolutionise the milk trade
to being worked In France. The milk
to not "condensed" in the ordinary
., but the water a extracted from
dar
dimple Teat for Milk.
Milk varies in viscosity with oom-
poalUop and temperature, and a new
apparatus called the "lacto-viscomet-
er" I regarded by French physicist
aa solving the problem of a simple
teat for milk. It consista of a tinned
copped reservoir, mounted on a tripod,
with a fine glass tube aa outlet When
the reaervolr is filled with a sample
of the milk, the stopcock to opened
and .the time required for the escape
of the liquid to noted in aeconds, with
the temperature, and reference to a
table febowa the exact character of
milk corresponding to these data.
Tryjnfl to Aeoount For (L
It to stated that there are more
aulcidea Monday than any other day,
but no attempt is made to give a rea-
son for this fact. Somebody points
out that Monday Is usually wash day,
and It should be added that a boiled
dinner «anally goes with It. The
clothes line may, perhapa, suggest the
fatal rope, and the clothes pin nasal
asphyxiation. There are blue Mon-
days, too, and it may be poasible that
the auteides have their own peculiar
ideas about starting the week right.—
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The Planet Venus.
The conditions of the planet Venus
are mo t like those on the earth, but
there to a strong suspicion t,hat Venus
has no n|ght or day, but always keeps
the aame aide toward the aun. If this
la really the case, then the sunny side
must be always burning hot and quite
Cry, whlleAfce opposite side must be
always ln<fled In lee—nay, more, in a
mixture dr ice and aolldlfled atmos-
pheric gasea. The Ufe of such a
world must be very different from
*ny that wa know.
■■■" 11
Unique Wadding Party.
A abort time ago a wedding- took
plaoe at St. Luke' church, Reddall
Hill, Cradley Heath. Stogland. at which
a man named John Hill was married
to a young woman whose name was
also Hill. The fathans of the bride
and bridegroom were eách named John
Hill, the wltnesaes wiry, all named
Hill, and both the Mldfegroom and
bttde resided at Old Hfill.
BIB®
-MrÉmmM
bayonet
111
net.
iown that the
English In-
France. It
ous Instances
mother of In-?
Frenoh wara
out of amrau-
at band, so
e their long
They did so,
le was sue-
li '
The World Is Too Much WUh Us.
The world la too much with us; lata and
soon.
Getting and spending, we lay waste our
powers;
Little we see In Nature that la ours;
We bave given our hearts away, a sor-
did boon!
ThU 8ea that bares her bosom to the
moon;
The winds that will be howling at all
hours.
And are up-gathered uow like sleeping
(lowers;
For this, for everything, we are out of
tune;
It moves us not-Great God! I'd rather
be
A pagan suckled In a creed outworn:
Bo might I, standing on this pleasant lea,
Have glimpses thai would make me leas
forlorn;
Have sight of Proteus rising fj-om the
Or hear old Triton blow his wreathed
horn. A —Wordsworth.
New Ship-Warning System.
In the ahlp-warnlng system of Mr.
C. E. Kelway. signals By Hertzian
waves are sent out from the light-
houses at regular #tervals at the
same times as tbe sound warnings. A
veaael in range having a recei
notes the time' that passes between
receiving the wireless signal and the
sound warning and is thus enabled to
calculate ita distance from the light-
house, and, on repeating the observa-
tion, after continuing a few utiles,
data is obtained for ascertaining the
exact location of the lighthouse ■ by
trigonometry. A stopwatch reading
directly in distances and a special' po-
sition finder have been devised for
ase with the system.
Checks for Large Amounts.
One of the largest checks ever
drawn was used In completing a deal
in Kim' erley mines. It was drawn
up by the De Beers for the round sum
of £5,000,000 («25.000,000). At tbe
time it was supposed to be the largest
check sver drawn, representing more
wealth than any other object In tbe
world. Since the drawing of the De
Beers check, however, several new
records have btien made, including a
check tor £ 10.000,000 (160,000,000),
drawn uron the Bauk of England by
the Chines* government In settlement
ol the Chinese-Japanese war indent
nlty.
. ^ ;
Remains ef Oxford's Founder.
A peculiar incident was the recent
discovery at Queen's College, Oxford,
of a leaden casket in tbe crypt bear-
ing the words "Reliquae Fundm
the remains of the fminder, Rol
Bulesfleld,- chapUÉn aocr confessor
phllippa, Queen Edward III.
lestiold died In U49, am
live centuries have
ffreater
GO DOWN TO
The Orange Hardware
and Implement Co.
and let them sell you a Heater.
If you don't want-va beater, buy a Garland
Cooking Stove.
If you will do tbe proper thing you will buy
a Garland Range—The World's Best.
Go and see their line of Buggies and Harness.
They handle the best.
ffl
1 m
y
i
! I 'ii®
1
DON'T FORGET THE PLACE
e Orange Hardware
and Implement Co.
FIFTH STREET.
¡Í
1
A BLAS
of low prices has exploded
the idea that hardware
charges are always high—
in our store anyway, how-
ever it may be with others.
We have a very large stock:
which we would like to ex-
change for cash in a hurry.
The Only Way
we know bow to do this
_—— i—. ■ honestly is to cut chunks
off tbe prices of uur goods and your good trading '
will do the rest. Everything in the store has been
iiM
been!
Tinware. Tools. Stoves
=3=
i ¿I#!
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View one place within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Rein, Charles M. Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 239, Ed. 1 Monday, January 4, 1904, newspaper, January 4, 1904; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth183009/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.