Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 327, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 1, 1904 Page: 2 of 4
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letter
^..... VTES. pi
Three Months
one Month •
es on Application.
Office and Editorial Rooms,
Both Phone* No, 74.
$rp
Every Afternoon, Sundays
Excepted.
af-j
TO ADVERTI8ER3.
m
Insure insertion of display ads
the current issue of the Tribune,
copy must he handed In not later than
• a. m.
Reading notices and classified ad
copy must be in hand by 12 o’clock
noon If publication Is required for that
day.
j Important to Subscribers.
Tribune subscribers served by car-
rier will confer a great favor on the
publisher by promptly reporting by
phone any failure of a carrier to de-
liver the paper, giving the name of the
AMONG
.wear? •
The intelligent trucker will be the
one to succeed. The trusting to' luck
man will always be the one who
makes the failure.—Yoakum Herald.
"k,;
The proposed viaduct across Sabine
< lake from Port Arthur tb the Johnson
Bayou country in Louisiana is pre-
sumably for an avenue of escape from
the mosquitoes for the Port Arthur-
ites.—Lake Charles Press.
delinquent boy. This will enable us
to correct the annoyance, and take
measures to prevent a recurrence of it.
iSfe''
ORANGE, TEXAS, SEPT. 1, 1904.
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It
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Whene’er I take my walks abroad
How many dogs I see. ‘
But I don’t cafe a snap for that
If none of them bite me.
Whether out of respect for his
name or for lack of ^criminating evi-
dence, a man named Booze has been
acquitted of a murd*r charge by a
Lake Charles jury.
................. I. ■ i
Col. Tom Amderson, the nevqr-let-
up general passenger agent of the
Southern Pacific, is aftef the scalpers
like a ferret on the wake of a rabbit.
They may hunt their holds, but they
will have to puli the holm in after
them If they expect to get iway from
him. '
Congressman Cooper and Col. W.
8. Davidson of Beaumont wli meet in
Washington about the middle of this
month to bring their Influence to bear
oa corrallng the deep water appro-
priation for the purpose of putting It
to work at dredging the channel.
More power to their elbows.
Vast as is the quantity of sand and
other land debris brought into the
Gulf of Mexico by the Mississippi and
other rivers, says the Baltimore Sun,
ft is insignificant in comparison with
the amount of limestone which the
lower forms of life are creating
through absorption of calcium carbon-
ate from the waters of the Gulf.—
Tlmes-Democrat.
Is it possible that our ’fool methods
of marketing” are not entirely to
blame for the small consumption of
rice? When we are getting 5 cents
for head rice it is sold at retail in the
North for 12 cents and in Crowley
for 8. Now that we are getting 11-2
and 2 cents for the same grades it is
selling at retail in the North for 12
and in Crowley for 8. “Fool methods
of marketing,” to be sure; but pofesf-
bly we have been blaming the wrong
people.—Crowley Signal.
Is Texas to be infllctefl wib another
selge of Taborism? It looks very
much like it. No sooner does Tabor
discover a case of yellow fever in
Brownsville than the physicians who
have had the best opportunities for
studying the case declare it Is not
yellow fever. Tabor has the whip
hand, however, and if he says It Is
yellow fever it may as well be yellow
fever for all the good it will do any
one to declare otherwise.—Beaumont
Journal.
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JAPS
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_______^ _ __ _
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(Continued from Page I.)
HERE AND "THERE IN TEXAS.
Various Oddities and Happenings Told
Briefly and to the Point
The general passenger agents are
going to blow themselves next month,
beginning cm the 18th, at Old Point
Comfort, wherr the annual meet cf
thefir association occurs. The occa
sion will nt>t be one all of pleasure,
though. There will be much serious
business up for discussion, not only
affecting the association Itself, but
the affairs of the railroads Its mem
ber* represent. But the general pas-
senger agents will manage to cut out
a good time for themselves, and may
they have It.
J. H. Hoopes announces to the Hous-
ton Post correspondent that he does
Bat Intend to accept the republican
nomination as their candidate for the
legislature. He says It was sprung
upon him at a time when he was not
prepared to embark in an active polit-
ical campaign. With Mr. Hoopes' out
of the race, it is not regarded likely
that under the provisions of the Ter-
rell election law the republican^ can
or w4Jl put out another candidate in
opposition to the democratic nominee
A precedent for shutting out the re-
publicans on a post-convention nomi-
nation has Jurft been established in
Fayette county.
There Is but one survivor of the
war of 1812 on the government pen-
sion rolls, but there is another sur-
vivor of that war who fought with the
British. He Is Matriarch Fish, a
Seminole Indian, now living in Okla-
homa, at the age of 119 years. He is a
pensioner on the federal pension rolls,
having served as a member of the In
dian home guards in that service dur-
ing the civil war. Fish is deaf, and
almost blind, but he is very agile,
and rides his mount as well as a man
half his age. He fought under Pack-
eoham at the battle of New Orleans.
He was afterward under General Jack-
son in the wars that followed. He
HMe horseback to Prague the other
day to participate In a soldier’s re-
zion. He nfever learned to speak
ieoguage, and his gronddaught*
him always as interpreter.
—...... •
«1 Texan named Wllijam
a resident of Greer coun-
surviving Confederate
103 years old. He
regiment through
went over
Batson. A. M. Tylor, Pearl Breed-
ing. Social game of draw. Misun-
derstanding. Three of Breeding’s bul-
lets In Tyler. Another one In Bob
Campbell, spectator. Tyler and
Campbell’s folks will have under-
taker’s bills. The jail for Breeding.
Cotton futures worried W. S. Stuck-
ert of Rusk more than his own future
did. Shot hitaself.
Texas republicans and Texas pops
talk about fusing.
Bonham has an idea it would be a
good thing to resume flatboat navi-
gation on Red river. Recalls the days
of Noah and the ark.
Htev. J. B. Buchanan, pioneer minis-
ter of Sherman, died while eating
breakfast.
Stalk of cotton nine feet high at
Dallas. Tried to grow out of reach
of the weevil. Failed.
Cowboys from Silver City, N. M..
came to R1 Paso to have a good time.
Succeeded. City Marshal Lilburn dy-
ing. Constable Rodriguez dead. Dep-
uty Sheriff Collier badly used by a
^ulle<t. Cowboy Chcnoweth In jail
with bullets enough in him to war-
rant the coroner figuring oh him for
an ultimate fee.
Rice fanners near Hou^t^jn talk
about giving it up and going to El
Paso to raise fruit. Too bad.
Just discovered that the State Agri
cultural and Mechanical oolloge at
College Station has been carrying a
little overdraft of $40,000 for years,
and using state appropriation to pay
on ft. Quite a smell over it.
See that Palestine has either got
too few school houses for its schol-
ar*, or too many scholars for it* school
house*, don’t know which. Serious
matter either way.
O. W. Malusby of Chicago has a no-
tion to coionize plantations at El
Paso, grow bananas, ship ’em to mar
kdt in new line of steamers, and skin
the fruit trust. Great scheme, but
lots at folks slip up on banana skins.
Hear that fish are so thick in the
Sabine that they are choking naviga-
tion in the Pass. Got to have deep
water or less fish.
Mm. Jennie Ratcliff, Waco, 35, good
looking. Arrested. Member gang of
train robbers. Husband railroad cleric.
Mere man. -
suspense is intense over the final i.-
sue of the Titanic struggle. In vle.v
of the number of men and guns en-
E,ag d the carnage will doubtless he
great on both sides. The best fig-
ures now are that half a million mtu,
with about liOO guns, are fighting for
the mastery. The crisis is expected
today.
The public Is so hungry for news
from official sources that failure to
give out advices last night is inter-
preted ominously in many quarters,
but te explained by7 the theory that
General Kuropatkln Is too busy In the
midst of the gigantic battle to pre-
pare reports for publication.
No Reports of Casualties.
By Associated Press.
Tokio, Sept. 1.—Reports received
here from the Liao Yang battle do not
mention the casualties, which, it la
presumed, are very heavy on account
of the heavy firers engaged and the
nature of the attack the Japanese are
making against the strongly defend-
ed Russian positions. The second
Russian line Is povlng stronger than
that v at Anshan Shan, which they
abandoned. It is estimated that Gen-
eral Kuropatkln has 150,000 fighting
men in the field, and it is Impossible
to forecast the duration of the battle
now going on. ft may possibly be
prolonged several days.
Frightened to Death by An Automo-
bile.
By Associated Press.
Newport, R. I., Sept. 1.—A rapidly
moving automobile today caused the
death here by fright of Mrs. Green of
Paterson, N. J. As the woman
stepped from the sidewalk to board
a street car a large automobile went
past with a great roar. She screamed
with fright and fell, dying almost im-
mediately. Heart disease, superin-
duced by the shock, was found to have
been the cause of death. The motor-
ists escaped.
A Russian Retreat.
By Associated Press.
Tokio, Sept. 1.—The Russian right
and center, which have been defend-
ing Liao Yang on the southward, are
retreating this (Thursday) afternoon,
■"lie Japanese are pursuing the Rus-
sians.
Japs Crossing Taitse River.
By Associated Press.
St. Petersburg, Sept 1.—General
Kuroki’s force is crossing the Taitse
river on pontoons. One division is al-
ready across and others are follow-
ing.
Groat Force, of Russians.
By Associated Press.
Tokio, Sept. 1.—A telegram from
the Japanese headquarters in the
field says that the Russians at Liao
Yang number twelve or thirteen di-
visions.
Louisiana Day at the Fair, Sept 14.
On Tuesday, September 13, the Mo-
bile and )hio railroad will run a spe-
cial coacl excursion to 9t, Louis;
rate $i5 or the round trip; limit ten
days. W i will also sell the following
tickets which wjll be honored in sleep-
ers by paying b fth rate, every day,
including September, good for fifteen
days at the fair, $20; sixty days. $4;
good until October 31, $26; good until
December J5, $28.80. Coach excur-
sions every Tuesday, $15, limit ten
days.
For rates, time cards, sleeping car
rcservations,«etc., write F. E. Guedry,
D. P. A., 229 St. Charles street, New
Orleans, La. Phone Main $639 L. -
IMPROVED SERVICE TO %
NORTH TEXAS
THE
Now Operates a Through
Pullman Sleeper
Between
Beaumont and Dallas
Train leaves Beaumont Daily at S
p. m., arriving in Dal las 8:40 a. m.
ibis train is equipped with new
Coaches throughout, and as it makes
direct connections with fast trains
for Chicago, Kansas City and St.
Louis, it will prove very attractive
to the people of East Texas. Reser-
vations may be made in advance by
addressing
I. B. MUXEN, Cj^P. A.,
BEAUMONT, TEXAS,
F O U M D
A combination Shop
Sheet Maal Work and Sanitary
Plumbing. New stock, new
men, new ideas—mechanical and
sanitary work. Work guaranteed.
Your patronage solicited. 3
Wright 4 Son.
New Phone 480, Division .St.
Opposite Holland Hotel,
CONTRACTORS AND SUPPLIES
-.—■—|-----—
FOUND
A place where gasoline stoves, cook
stoves and pumps can ba repaired
Work guaranteed.
Wright & Son
Phone 480.
TELEPHONE.
TRY
THE
\LOCAL AND U
MSfitl
NCH
Services the li
TbUm the 1
LIVERY
Eastin £ Stai
LIVERY AN
TRANSFER BARI
■yrrimrririnnrrr^
'o «
l VISIT THE COOL J
> G
j Southern Railway!
> e
| 8UMMER RESORTS.
; “The Land of the 8ky."
> "The Toxaway Country.”
I Low Summer Tourist Rates to
J Tennessee. North and South e I
; Carolina and Virginia.
Through Vestlbuled Trains.
Dining Cars Serve All Meals. °<
For particultrs apply to
HOLMES SMITH,
Trav. Pass. Agent, _
Houston, Texas.
gAaflpaBoaflBtQeflaoatooooo"
C. LEWIS WILvSON,
ARCHITECT
aua ENGINEER
Office Roam 24, Rein Bldg, Orange
356 Pine 8L, Beaumont, Texas.
J. H. BLAND.
Livery, Feed
mm
and Transfer.\
Baggage solicited on train. Black-
smithing and repair work. Horse-
shoeing a Specialty. Phone 130.
LEADING PHYSICIANS.
Contractor
Building, House Moving a apccialit
also repairing of all kinds.
S. M. DEPWE.
Out of town tin September $0. Ad-
dress commounlcatlons to
residence.
Old Phone 174; New 100
Orange, Texan.
OENTI8TS.
Dr.R.P. O’Brien
DENTIST.
Suite 62-63 Unk Building.
NEW PHONE 170.
ommrrinnnnrtTt a 5 tTrrnrrnnrdSI
DR. F. W. LAWSON
Office, Goree’s Drug Store.
PHONES, OFFIOE IS; RES. *a#o
orr.ee Houna{
iClLSUUULiUAfl a B g B.B_3 <v viu.tiuod
A. GJPEARCE, M. O.
V orncE.
lewsea's Drag Store
lea - IDS
one* 1SS
mm
DR. J. C. JEAJTRUNK. i
BcsidRncr Cor. Green Are. and iota St.
:«over Drug Store.
Phorld Residence 46; Office 62.
The band concerts each Thursday
night at the Link lots on Green ave-
nue by the Odd Fellows' band should
be well attended and the refreshment
tables liberally patronized. The band
boys need new instruments and ought
to have them. 312t
Classified Advertisements
If you want a cook, housemaid,
clerk, bookkeeper, stenographer or an
office boy, put a want ad. In the Tri-
bune Classified Column. It will cost
you but a few eehta and your wants
will be supplied.
Advertisements under tftisnesd.Sc per line
•fr'H"! 1 I 1 llf-M’******
SPLINTS.
++++++*+***
Nick of time—a
Notorious
? sf itkfli
'11
WANTED—Long or short leaf pine
lands. Address Umber Lands, oare
the Tribune. 27tf
FOR RENT—Three comfortable cot-
tages on Seoond street near towa;|§|
per month. Apply to W. O. Huggins
7-27At
HORSE AND BUGGY FOR SALE-
Horse 161-2 hands high, sound in wind
and limb; buggy is full leather top,
piano box, with good set single har-
ness. Price $125. Apply to L. K.
WEAVER, at ship yard. A26-83
|ron
Mountain
Route
SHORTEST and
QUICKEST LINE
World’s Fair,
ST. LOUIS.
C—DAILY—
o TRAINS
... FROM .. .
TEXAS.
Tbissfl Trim Sfccptof Cars.
Reclining Chair Cars (Seals FRED.
Ditto* Csrs (Meals a to Carle).
Al fkoidbtomo ISoAtTdKloit aiwt Aooctrtrttoo
Fatr Pdtdcr, contnMnq AFj.jp of St. Louts and com*
4. C. LEWIE,
/wwAy Pasaenfm Aftnt,
AUSTIN, TEX.
H.C. TOWNSEND,
DR. T. F. COVLE,
OFFICE
OVER R. B. GOREE’S
DRUGSTORE.
J. if SUTLER, M. D.
OFFICE:
ri.wson’s Drug Stars.
Hofri:
i to 5 p. m Office phone No. Si
A to 10 a. m. Res. phone No. ».
V -
I j leading lawyers.
W. B. SIMMONS,
DENTIST.
Office upstair* in Sabine Baitdii
corner Front and Fifth Sts., Ora
Texas. New Phone: Office, 174;
idencc, 172. Lady always ia
WINES AND LIQUORS.
srr
Less Than One Fare Rate
TO SAN FRANCISCO, CAL., ANO RETURN
■ 4$,
■ m 1 - y> aw ■sMtorfSKwh’
I he affective
';
A. MON CL A,
rORElSN ANO DOmeSTlt
Wines, Liquors mad Cgars.
Telephone order* solicited From,
Delivery. Front Street, opposi
Depot. New None
MACK*S SALOO
Under New Manxement.
Choicest Wtmeo
J. W. NEVMA*. Sole
Telephone 241. family Ti
Given Special attention.
Orange
misceliAneous.
REPAIRING, KJILDIN
GENERAL I0AT Wj
WM. Snoai, Pro,
X
pAMS& HUGGINS,
f Attorneys At Law,
BniMing, Orange, T«.
W. J. WINGATE*
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
ONIe* at Court House
Robertson & Bruce*
attorneys
Rooms 2<Lar'l 21, Rein Buildii
New Phene No.
NOE, .
ONANQl
TEXAS
Holland <&Hollani
ATTORN ETi
OtANOE. TEAAS.
REAL ESTATE SROKERS.
We Invite Our Fi
We B
Smoot! Fox
. «SSA /» W Men h,
THE SiBINE
Mew Phoa/400. F. J.
to Call.
A.M. H. STARK,
County Surveyor
and Rental Agent
ffke at Cart Mease.
Park Gray
LAW D
ACEWT
B. BITTIS,
»W
M1
. ‘i 1
■ * ■
Chas. M.
'fim
Bill
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Dickensheets, Charles D. Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 327, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 1, 1904, newspaper, September 1, 1904; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth643499/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.