The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, July 10, 1903 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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ggiiygll
r
m
Ib'i?; ®
States,
«rift be
this
velt sends hia
MlBi
the control and
Orange $ ead er
«voto nf entire
e paper and help-
gs. Kwllí/bemy
[Uftdar a general
f>evoting particular
Fber and other In-
)range and of
Ins * merit
and encourage
and industrial
dato City'of
V; the earnest sup-'
every \|MH|MÉ
\> this section,
le
JSLj
A. L. FORD.
i
«aK V not metropOl
¡thing there la A
way employees.
W
Vorld are now cen-
Vatican at Eome,
i battling valiantly
n> for hie life. A3
t years of age, the
% remarkable ener-
may live for
I'neue men and cltl
|y ha to what
. for Orange right
doubt, develop the
opera house."
:and m f
; if We are going
1 house, "DO N IT
U are that the rice
' the greatest ever
f.Hfcounty. The sea-
propitious and
lor calamity
ig the harvest-
will reap
grain. Bv
top prices for
" to, tlíé short
the market
Ife:
the history of
universal
a protest,
and
5the an
of Col;
Br traffic
cific rail-
of fa^t
Tdone more
ME
SB*#'
h, i yesir-
,io the
lions of
While
the
Francisco
Ibe opened in the Pacific.
will not be the first tototraphh
monieatlon which has crossed
great Western ocean. England"
ed her great «able between the
em border of Canada and «he ei
boundary of Asia last year, and
sageé have been going along pretty
constantly ever aluce; Bat tito ~
mercial cable, which 1a to toe
today,- la a strictly American enter-
pries.
■When Queen Victoria and
Buchanan exchanged their greeting*
long ago over Cyrus W. Field's fin*
Atlantic cable, the promise of close
connection between the new gnd
•was soon rendered futile, for
cable broke down before It ooulfl be
put into prKCtlcal use, and was not re-
stored permanently uutl a year after
the Civil war closed. No mUhap of
this nature need be looked for in the
case of America's Pacific telegraph.
The science of ocean cable construction
has been developed vastly in the last
forty or fifty years. Many telegraphs
have been strung serosa the Atlantic
since 1866, when the earliest of them
went into practical operation.
connect points more or Ian remote In
■Pacific but the Commercial cable
hi: the first United States line to cron
the'
The compilation of Che present cable,
will have aoclaN^ welt as. commercial
consequences. forHt^wIll strengthen
the ties between the United States and
Its outlying torrHory, and also aid in
extending American influence
for this cable will have co
with the mainland ait that continent.
As a business enterprise It will be a
big advaqaage to the country. It will
Increase the value of property In Gu-
am, the Philippines, and ti
the territory, all American.
touches. All. the more Inn;
American possessions in the Pacific,
exclusive of Samoa* aire cot
the Commercial cable, and-.
tory will sOon be brought
munication with the teat
foots in the big ocean
was {£' great date-mark 4n the trans-
formation of the Pacific into a United
States lake.—St. Louis Globe-Demo-
crat.
—1 m i IS i \ilmi
j a.1' .tó'f kit j •'¿lk. ... -.■'>
•' ' , 11 I.PH
Ths Nsgro to
m our
When Grlacom* Laughad.
A man with a wooden leg succeeded
In inveigling a quarter out of Clement
A Grlaoom, bead of the shipping
trust. Mr. Grlscom was generous, bot
not careless, in giving aim*. He told
the cripple pot, to croas his path
again unless the could prove satisfac-
torily tint he was worth more than *
quarter. ".V . H
In the course of a few daysTOe man
with the wooden leg again faced Mr.
Grlsoorm. A bed and a me® Were the
cripple's -requirements this time, as
he stated in h'lu appeal;
"Can you show that you are worth
more than you were two days ago?"
asked Mr. Griaccsn. sternly. :
"Tm, air," Bald the man, úiíheirttet-
Inglyi as he shoved forward hi« wood-
en appendage'. "Look* at that leg "
"la not that the,same leg you had on
thepther day?' questioned the ntog"
«jalifa,).) cripple,'a#
pulled Ca newspaper out of his
¿eket "but by this paper yotfib#ee
how the price of lumber has gone
•tip and made my-leg more vgftusble
jMr, gyiaoom has adopted a new
tór determining the Increaaad
Post.
Lto R. Kipl>
V There
never tires
once made toRui
Thla bookseller,
and Mr. KlpllagTduring
in Vermont, visited htt Jthop
HaJs. a thteT*barp man, and the
taking aj/lntereat
him
■9
elktr who"
retort he
-Vi, : ;i-,M > ;VK*
I
: ;.. v: m
i ' ■ CT -••• .
ern states Is no Justification iike
acta at home." it notoe that HUtta-
tkm la the sinoersat nattery, but says
osr dsaire to
so fardas to
Worth Indulge in that
The saraastn I* not undeserved, and
the serious reflection while the
Worth loves the.
ipipBjP JBBpBt,"iüüi;
ntiofti -41
raetlxfl
his
♦ «asafc ,"j - hytl..,. ■ ' /i*
itiiiq, rivw 1'^tr 1 nuuDC.
i," celebrated in
tar mors than
have -
it is not aurprialig to
"■■i''"' ''' "llhat^tljp
sixpence and desired bina to foring one:
to «he car, adding: -"And for the other
th reepanoe jgou may boy one ler your-
^m e "ÉBi - ■■—m
iirnmmKM mM _
to the Bishop, said: "There was only
one left guv'nor."
Gmfter—"This business Is
worked. I'm going to get at something
else." Steersr—^Wot! It will nsver be
overworkai. why, there Is a sucker
born ©very minute." Grafter—"That*,
all true enough, but to ttisse
1 {here's a grafter bora every
too."-—Baltimore American.
"I suppose you believe,
plain clttesn, "thai «verV/man ha« a
price." "Huh," snorted^ lobbyist.
•1 frequently find m«r who have
sort of prloes."—Mflladelphia Presa.
— - mi ill ^0' f/l' '
"To tell you, t) é truch—f' "Sheh-ehl
DonH trj* H.eM man. George Wash-
Ingtoa did ttist once, and took at him
now—he'^/dead! "—Baltimore Ameri-
can.
8|o(|te^ou come out with your
nit?" 'Twon 1ft;" "Get damages?"
re. I got almost, enough, to pay
my Jawyer."—cWeland Plain Dealer.
i've been' out pressing wild
era." -"Pre s any?" "No, but I
the girl jKho^sraa with me.'
■Free PrsM^Sffcr ¿it:
ChÉi|Ís>l(itoi •
"What is "ths profit Of "
Idn Sftoatpeller?"
A "Do they read me
EFiese and f.ther questions Mr.
ty* jig asked. Finally he took «p J
ates," a work of George Moors
-¡ ."Is this goiKir ^s aaked.
"I don't' know, sir.'
"You don't knar. Why,
a read it?" . ■W'jS'ítití
Air
■ ia no vpelcome word—but when
yvu «lijak b«w liable you are not '
purchase ^he only remedy unlvc
a
largest sals of : any:
oe 1868, ■
.
[Amy trou^ilai l
*n
mm
is «I
in all the
ale the
thAt word
mm
or «to nssrt la
la «he
■H
Customer—"I wonder It
hi flUa
n v, ■.' ■: : jr
,. . .
■ ■■
:'?íf ■■
■M
5&-; «i-'i't
-t
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raf*
mWhiW-*
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Ford, A. L. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, July 10, 1903, newspaper, July 10, 1903; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth183114/m1/4/?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.