The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
eight 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:
KüwH
„ '
'
WM&
Shades
■ |P'ij
¿i-,
&¡É
■ ..'¿■■J';'!
Heaps and piles of new
goods are pouring in-
to our store daily.
Won't you investigate
our offerings
HODGES
Pi
LMOST every freight train to Orange brings to Hodges Store a shipment of newspring goods
for 1909. We received this week $1,500 worth of Men's Negligee, Pongee and Dress Shirts to
retail at 50c to $1.00; $1,900 worth of Embroidery to retail at
solid Case of Dress Linen; $1,600 worth of Valencienne and
a yard; two solid Cases of Dress Ginghams, Three cases of Dome
aa
c to $5.uu per
n Lace to retail at'
sheeting,
of Ladies' and Men's spring Oxfords—ail the 1909 styles and sha
Pique Suiting, India Linons, AUover Net, Persian Net, Band sets, Rouian
Ribbons and Waisting. Our store contains very little winter goods, but what
will be offered at a sweeping reduction. Our store is crowded and incom
bear with us we will show you the largest and best assorted stock of £
vou have ever seen displayed over an Orange counter at prices that have no
a mm wr
Something new to show
you every time you
come. Every express,
every freight brings us
new
HODGES
ORANGE,
one
i,
hand
• • -
i
to
back is
uainess
Ki
SHOW LAST NIGHT
Mf.
O. PATTON AND COMPANY
"THE BLOCKHEAD" WAS
THE OFFERING
IN
Don't drug the stomach, or stimu-
late the heart or kidneys. That is
wrong. It is the weak nerves that are
crying out for help; Vitalize these
weak Inside controlling nerves with
Dr. Shoop's Restorative, and see how
quickly good health will come to you
again! Test it and see! Sold by Gate
City Drug Store. .
Largest Audience That Has Recently
Been in Theater Building, Witness-
ed Production and Mr. Patton Seem-
ed to Please Them,'as Usual.
' Ai*'" '
Hi
' :
.—; •
One of the best attractions of the
season and incidentally the best au*
dience that has witnessed a high class
production • at the Orange theater in
several weeks was the offering last
<night, W. B. Patton in "The Block-
head."
Mr. Fatten this year has surround-
ed himself with a fairly capable com-
pany, whose interpretation of their
lines, Is good, thoügh the play Itself,
has not the force that "The Slow,
poke," "The Last Rose of Summer,"
"The Minister's Son," and other of the^
MacCauley-Patton production have.
Mr. Patton himself, was about the
same as usuál, and kept the audiencia
well pleafied throughout, with his pe-
culiar' comedy, and several curtalnis
wérjs givén the comedian.
, ' Miss Prince, who enacts the role of
Mrs. Barnes, "Ruth" has an affected
manner that almost spoils the force
Of the play. One can hear half she
/, says, which leaves t.He remainder to
be guessed at. If she would come
out of her manner of queer speech,
get down to real earnest every'
iy, ordinary speech,, with a little"
power equalized all the while, her
part would be much more acceptable
to the audience. The next offering
will be "Faust," January 19th.
■ |i fA i •
A Religious Author's Statement,
For several years I was afflicted
with kidney trouble and last, winter
I was suddenly stricken with a severe
páln in my_kidneys and was confined
to bed eight days unable to get up
without assistance. My urine contain-
ed a thick white sediment and Í pass
ed same frequently, day and night,
commenced taki
Remedy and
ed and finally
ame normal. I
I
Foley's Kidney
gradually abat-
and my urine
cheerfully recom-
medy. For
re. -
PLEASEg CRI
Rosabel Morrison's "Faust" Company
Is Making DecldsW Hit
Utilize Lime Refuse.
Spokane, Wash., Jan. 15.—Daniel C.
Corbin, millionaire president of the
Spokane International Railway com-
pany, has perfected a plan to utilize
lime refuse, used In curing beet sugar
In his plant at Waverly, Wash., as a
fertilizer in the Spokane valley, where
be owns several hundred acres of ap-
ple orchards. Expert orchardlstsin
this part of the country are interested
in the outcome .of the test.
In referring to Rosabel Morrison's.
production of "Faust," which will be
the offering at the Orange Theater
Tuesday night, January
Orleans
date says:
"Plays with the devil or his imper-
ii, the New
Times-Democrat of I recent
own Hereafter to appeaae'hls
soul-longing while on this:earth. But
the play "Faust" is too familiar to
need farther words.
"Miss Rosabel Morrison has sur-
rounded herself with a company of
«Moists, and the 'Faust* of today Is
even more pleasing and true to what
one Imagines Goethe would have
wished than the,'Faust* of yesterday.
Miss Morrispn, of course, is Marguer-
ite, and it seems she is made fór the
part and the part ia made for her. Her
by the rolo
calling, 'Marguer
t part of )
by the late I
of its old flavor
ward N. Hoyt. He
i® * 4
■NHBWMi amfamasmm m mm mm
gusti'ng Mephlsto,
Don't Get a Divorce. . ^
A Western judge granted a divorce
on account of Ill-temper and bad
breath. Dr. King's New Life Pills
would have prevented It. / They cure
Constipation, Causing bad breatt and
liver trouble the ill-temper, dispel
colds, banish headaches, conquer
chills. 25c at B. F. Hewson's.
Breaking the News.
At a dinner or "The Fossils," given
(recerftly at the Republican Club,
James M. Beck was one of the speak-
ers. "The Fossils" is an organization
composed of former amateur Journal-
ists, and Mr. Beck, as one of the or-
ganizers of the National Amateur
Press Association In Philadelphia In
1876, has never lest hid interest in
this most admirable training school
for young writers.
"in looking back upon those day*
when the publishing of amateur pa-
pers seemed the most fascinating
thing in the world," said Mr. Beck, in
the course of his address, "I feel, In-
deed, that I am quite in the fossil
class.: The organization of the Nation-
al Amateur Press Association seems
almost prehistoric. In looking back
through the years it Is almost as mis-
ty as f^e stone age. I was a very
small boy when I took part tn those
weighty celebrations. I feel* like the
youngster who said to fit* father:
'"Father, was writing done on tab-
lets of stone In the old days?' -
" 'Yes, my son,' replied the dutiful
parent.. > ' v -i> ■■ "
■Gee!' mused the boy. Then It
must have taken a crowbar to break
the news."'r-New York Times.
IP®
Mmm-
¥
the result aimed at.
word-painting to tiMjt
'*> beauties of the
[alls of his hut.
en youthful
the trustful H
give her mother a
all thése are the work o
"The title role Is Wi
Carlisle Shelley. Of a
ure, and with a rich, deep
naturally adapted to the .
"Othér parts are minor in*
|mce, but Nick Snárk makes
Valentine stand out.
" 'Faust' can not be dismissed '
out a word of praise for the stage
ting:* Marguerite's cottage and
:fte Nuremberg prison and the apotheo-
sis are marvels of the stage manager's
árt, but nothing surpasses in Weird
. the setting for the revel* of the
demons on the summit of the ,Brock-
A'. .11 v < ' HÍÜWF'""
Cured of Severe Attack of Bronohitls
of sev
by fh
sonatOr as the central character are
now flooding the country, but none
furpaases In Interest the old reliable
Mephlsto of "Faust," which Is at the
CresCent this week. Goethe's "Faust,"
when well staged, Is Interesting, but
done the less a^e-lnsplring recital of
the lengths to which , a man will go In
search of happiness and the fair one
conjured up by his dreams. It Is a
recital of the unwitting misery om
brinks on
w
transition from the, aimple, trusting
peasant girl, whose virginity and good'
nets Is a model for all hér simple folk,
to the leve-lnsplred maldén who dares
anything for her sweetheart, is a won*
derful piéce of acting, If acting It can
be calléd. One forgets it is acting, it
is all so real and deeply Impressed on
the . mind; Miss Morrison Is at
beat In the prison. scene, where, awaii
for the mi
hamberlain's Cough
Remedy. \ ■'
"On October 18,th, last, my little
thfee year old daughter Contracted a
severe cold which resulted in a bad
case of bronohitls," says Mrs. W. G.
Gibson, Lexington, Ky. "She loet the
power of speech completely and was
a very sick child. Fortunately we
had a bottle of. Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy in the house and gave it to
her according to the printed direc-
tions. On the second day shfc was á
great. ceal better, and On the fifth
day, October 23rd, she was entirely
well of her cold and bronchitis, which
I attribute to this splendid medicine..
I recommend Chamberlain's -Ck^qgh
Remedy unreservedly as I have found
it the surest, safest and quiekelt cure
for colds, both for «hlldren arid
adults, of ;«jy I have ever used. For
sale by g. F. flewaon. .,
Pardon Murderers.
Jefferson City, Mo., Jan. 15.—C!
and Vester Collins, of
ty, servin
1905, fór murder
were released fi
'«Mr"'*
d Dr.
Discovery and was wl
six bottles. He Is a we
It's quick to relieve as
cure for weak or sore
rhages, coughs and colds, l
la grippe, asthma and all.,
affections. 50c and 11.00.
tie free. Guaranteed by ]
«"v ■ y
m.
Technical Society Me
San Francisco, Jan. 15.-
and mechanical experts
western Btates are participating!
session opened today by the Tecli
Society of the Pacific Coast.
If you will take Foley's Ori
" >nta tiie.boi '
will not *
constantly, aa Foley's Orino
positively cures chronic ü
and shigglah - liver.
tiVe
Store.
mmm
Reduoe Pullman Rates. !
Angeles,
action
15.—A
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 four places 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.
Ford, A. L. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1909, newspaper, January 15, 1909; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth183148/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.