Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 17, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 13, 1904 Page: 2 of 4
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at Orange. Texas
Mail Matter
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to say
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SUBSCRIPTION RATHS.
>ar * M on Three Monti
Three Month*
One M<
't:-V ■
■tooths 3 00 One Month
AdvertUtne Kate* on Application.
ttS
I Office and EditorUI Rooms,
Both Phones No. 74.
Val Verde County Herald haa
pertinent and truthful things
on a vital subjert: When a
newspaper man meets you and asks
yon the question. “What do you
know?” it Is not a non-meaning
phrase. He Is Interested In what Is
going on in the world. HoweVer, nine
times out of ten you will answer,
“Nothing." The condition should be
Every Afternoon,
Excepted.
Sunday*
TO ADYERTISER8.
To insure Insertion of display ads
o the current issue of the Tribune,
copy must he handed in not later than
9 a. m.
Reading notices and classified ad
copy must be in hand by 12 o’clock
noon if publication is required for that
day.
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
delinquent boy. This will enable us
to correct the annoyance, and take
measure* to prevent a recurrence of it.
is vsv«»*aa£|> — ------ f
reversed, or if the party would think
for a moment he would doubtless be
able to scratch up an item that would
be of interest to hundreds of people,
and the newspaper man would be glad
to tell It It is often the case that the
reader wonders why the paper did not
notice an incident of which he or she
was cognizant, yet It Is quite proba-
ble that they had been approached
during the week and asked “What do
you know?” and a flippant reply been
given. A good local paper Is a bene-
fit to the community and no cltlsen
loses anything by giving the editor an
item and thus assist in making the
paper not only of Interest at home,
but bring the town into prominence
all over the country.
pralSsHi
*
ANNOUNCEMENTS,
AMONG OUR EXCHANGES. 4.
+ - 4*
•fr 4-HHH* 4**H* HhH* 4
was caused by a train going through a
trestle. The trestle Is purely an Amer-
ican Institution. They do this part of
railroad construction better In the old
country.—Houston Post.
ORANGE, TEXAS, SEPT. 13, 1904.
The round bale company is In tl
hands of a receiver. And yet they
have done business on the
claim to
square.
It is not often that the Kentucky
colonel is impolite enough to question
any statement that may be made to
him, but they are telling about one
who drew the line the other day. Some
scientific person, the subject being
toxicological, told him that soda was
just as good as whisky for snake bftes,
and the colonel begged his pardon and
wanted to know if he hadn’t meant $o
say that soda was just as effective as
whisky?
American railroad managers might
do well to investigate the methods of
operation upon the Mexican railway.
It is said that in more than forty years
of operation there has never been a
passenger killed upon it—Item.
A man was arrested in Shreveport
for having live boll weevils In his pos-
session. Texas farmers can have their
live boll weevils without the interfer-
ence of the law. It is not safe in some
parts of Texas to handle bug juice,
however.—Fort Worth Record.
Do You Believe
The man who has a hundred thou-
sand dollars in bank and yet signs and
swears to an assessment sheet which
makes no reference to It, not only
cheats the state out of the tax which
he owe*, but proves thst the peniten-
tiary is being cheated out of a oon-
vict.—Houston Chronicle.
..r
The man who makes two sweet po
tatoes grow where only one grew be-
fore might just as well have ndt done
it if he doesn’t take measures to find
more than a home market for them.
AT MANA8SAS.
Brief Review of the Late Mimic War-
fare on Historic Ground.
Skipping the rope Is said to be the
coming fad In society over the water,
ft seems to be the fad, also, with not
a few of the colored population of
Georgia, but they seldom succeed In
doing it.
Never in She history of political
campaigns In this country has there
been so slow, stupid and nerveless a
one as this one now on between Ted-
dy the Terror and Parker the Prim.
It seems as if cgie was afraid and the
other daresn’t.
Oklahoma has got hold of a breed of
hogs that have no split in their hoofs.
They are called the /nule-footed hogs.
They came from somewhere in In-
diana. Besides this talent as to hoof,
these hogs are immune against the
cholera. Queer things come out of
Indiana. They’ll be giving a democrat-
is majority, those hoosiers, the next
thing <te know.
While the cartoonists exaggerate
the prominence of President Roose-
velt’s teeth, Ms dental outfit is by no
means a modest one; and when he is
moved to emphatic speech by being
ruffled over something, and it does
not take much’ to ruffle him, the dis-
play he makes of that outfit almost
makes one forgive the cartoonist’s
treatment of it. And the verbal ac-
companiments of the display -would
have to be carefully revised and re-
arranged before they could be adopted
by a Sunday school conference as the
sense of the meeting.
We want to be a lawyer, and with
the lawyers stand, big brains beneath
our forehead, big fees within our
hand. Which the same we are led to
ejaculate after reading that the firm
of Denman, Franklin & McGown.
knights of the green bag who lurk at
San Ahtonlo and prowl here and there
•sd>out the state, have just been told
,’by the court, sftting at Houston, that
the receiver for the Kirby Lumber
•“company and the Houston Oil company
may pay them 3600 a mouth for his
having xheir ear In the affairs of the
latter company, the same—the money,
not the ear—to be dated back to Feb-
ruary 1, 1904, although the receiver
-wasn't a receiver until April 30. Just
“what Denman, Franklin & McGown
will be adjudged fit to receive from
Kirby Paper company we don’t
But we want to be a lawyer,
Just the same, and with the lawyers
Mr
The expense incurred ip carrying
out the program of the maneuvers at
Manassas has, It is said, been under-
estimated, as new and untried under-
takings of this character generally
prove to be, so that it Is very probable
provision for the excess expenditure
will have to be made in the next gen-
eral deficiency bill. Some say that the
mock war will cost the government
|500,000 more than its originators esti-
mated, thereby bringing it np to the
dizzy heights of a round million.
While considerable damage was done
to the property and crops of farmers
ocupying the 65,000 acres of land over
which the sham battles were fougbt,
it was not greater than would obvi-
ously be expedted under the circum-
stances.
The military event has proven a
windfall to the residents and farmers
for miles beyond the scene of actual
hostilities, and they have richly profit-
ed from the temporary viisit of the
provisional army. Every hotel, board-
ing house and private home, from
Thoroughfare to Manassas, has been
crowded to the doors sin*e the Incep-
tion of the exercises, while the coun-
try around has been stripped of evot y-
thing edible.
Every horse and beast of burden
that could he had for love or money
for miles around was drafted Into ser-
vice long before the maneuvers were
well under way, and $15 a day for an
old plug .that could have been pur-
chased outright before the exenis'-s
began was freely offered, with no
takers. It wap simnly because the
hoTpes could not be had, however
tempting the offer.
This mimic warfare, intended to
reproduce, in a crude way, the first
and second battles of Bull Run. in the
civil war. was the most Inter'-ring se-
ries of military maneuver* ever under-
taken. on an elaborate scale, In this
country. The 30.000 or more troope
of the regular and militia organiza-
tions that took part In these exer-
cises were given an objertt lesson of
what war actually means. In a fashion
as realistic as was possible to make It.
as the men diacoceml not many hours
after reaching there; but they will re-
turn to tholif respective stations or
homes richer In
Ah a general thing, the English
tongue is more correctly used in the
South than in any other part of the
country, for the reason that there Is a
predominance of English fftock In the
South, and not the admixtqre of con-
tinental blood such as corrupts the lan-
guage of the Inhabitants of the East
ern. Middle and Western States. Even
that for -which we are most reviled Is
English—the soft, almost Inaudible r
final The Southerner says "Sir” as
if it were written S’r, and that is the
English way. The Yankee sayR
“Slrnr r,” with a bold twist of the
final r. unlike the pronunciation of
English by the cultured In any part of
the world.—Mobile Register.
HERE AND THERE IN TEXA8.
Various Oddities and Happening* Told
Briefly and to the Point.
IN MAGNETIC HEALING? That Is a
question that is frequently asked and
discussed. The question should be:
Do you believe in drugs? Do you be-
lieve that man was put on earth to be
made an animated test-tube of—to
hold and test all of the fifty-six com-
mon deadly mixtures that are poured
into him? Doe* it sound reasonable
that you are going to cure a chronic
disease by- pouring poison into your
stomach—helping one organ at the ex-
pense of another?
You've heard the expression, “Try
it on the dog.” There are thousands
of doctors who will agree that the sci-
ence of medicine was founded on that
principle. > ,
WHAT IS HEALTH? Isn’t It the
perfect circulation of the blood?
Every organ was made to perform Its
function properly. The blood was
made to keep these organs In healthy
condition. If they are not, it 4s be-
cause of improper circulation.
We all know that “Electricity Is
life,” that it helps the circulation of
the blood. We know that scientific
massage builds up the shrunken parts
and puts new life into the tissues.
Every one concedes that. Now what Is
MAGNETIC HEALING hut a combina-
tion of the two? Some people think
Magnetic. Healing is mysterious; there
is no mystery about It.
Big Sandy. Talk opening bank. Big
inudy bank, lnaybe.
El Paso. Washout on all lines. Pol-
iticians’ dirty linen, maybe.
Dallas. Consumption of water been
cut down 800,000 gallons a day. Aw-
ful. Where's Cyclone Davis?
Coleman. Dry. Started Club. Name
Stag. See way members come out,
thing named wrong. Ought be Jag.
Mineral Wells. Stranger In town.
Arrested stealing watch. Wouldn’t
give name. Put it down Procrasti-
nation. Thief of time.
Beaumont. Base ball nine say Dal-
las doctored water. Got sick. Could
not play ball. Fudge. Water not doc-
tored. Beaumont nine not used to It.
That’s all.
HERE ARE LIVING TESTIMONIALS.
Estella Bush. 724 Henderson strert;
cured of rheumatism and dropsy after
having it for seven years. Also deaf-
ness In one ear.
Mrs. Kate Henry. 462 Burton street;
had cancer of head for two years;
cured in one month.
Mrs. Anderson, Burton street; con-
sumption for three years; has gained
six pounds in two weeks under Dr.
Collins.
Mrs. Mordeat. Orange: had neural-
gia and paralysis; la now almost en
tirely cured.
Prof. Alfred Collins,
RIVERSIDE HOUSE.
Office Hour*, 10 a. m. to 8 p. m.
Two unique and historic snuff boxes,
one of which was once the personal
property of Marie Antoinette, are ex-
hibited In the Denmark section of the
World’s Fair. The other, which Is
more elaborate, formerly belonged to
King Frederick VII of Denmark.
A' large collection of bows and ar-
rows of Chinese manufacture are In
the Chinese section of the World’s
Fair.
Louisiana Day at the Fair, Sept. 14.
On Tuesday, September 13, the Mo-
bile and Ohio railroad will run a spe-
cial coach excursion to St. Louis;
rate $15 for the round trip; limit ten
days. We will also sell the following
tickets which will be honored in sleep-
ers by paying berth rate, every day,
including September, good for fifteen
when they started out for the his-
toric Shenandoah valley, while none
of them will be the worse for hi* ex-
perfenee, -It Is true the disagreeable
task* incidental to the maneuvers, ex-
Ending over the rough country be-
tween Manassas and Thoroughfare
days at the fair, |20; sixty days, $24;
military lore than good until October 31, $26; good until
and. big’ brains beneath our fore j l3aJ>. was no novelty to many of the |
big fees within our hand. {regulars, and to not a few of the
December 15, $28.80. Coach excur-
sions every Tuesday, $15, limit ten
days.
For rates, time cards, sleeping car
reservations, etc., write F. E. Gmvirjr,
D. P. A., 229 SL Charles street, Now
Orleans, La. Phone Main 3639 L.
For District Judge.
We are authorized to announce the
candidacy of HON. W. B. POWELL of
The wreck on the Seaboard Air Line Jasper as a candidate for the office of
District Judge at the forthcoming No-
vember election.
A section of the first marine cable
ever made and which it Is-claimed fur-
nished the suggestion whjch was after-
wards worked out by Cyrus W. Field
in the laying of the Atlantic cable, is
on exhibition in the Kentucky building
at the World’s Fair. The first marine
cable was used in a line running from
Nashville. Tenn.. to Paducah, Ky.
FOUND
A combination Shop
Sheet Metal Work and Sanitary
Plumbing. Nesf stock, new
men, new ideas—mechanical and
sanitary work. Work guaranteed.
jlicited.
Yoor patronage soli
Wright 4 Son.
New Phone 480, Division St,
Opposite Holland Hotel,
TONSORIAL PARLOF
■■■■■■I ' m
m
OP +
l|> ijwjl
4» THE HOLLAND BARB
4* Is the Finest and Most Popular 4*
4* in the city. Only First-class •{*
workmen employed. Excellent 4»
4* bath rooms is connection; hot 4*
4* and cold tub and shower baths. 4*
4* >n Holland Hotel. 4*
4. FRANK WEBER, Proprietor. 4*
■M~|. 4~M* 4-1*4’ 4-H* 4-H* *M-h
TELEPHONE.
CONTRACTORS AND SUPPLIES
FOUND
A place where gasoline stovsa, cook
stoves and pumps can be repaired.
TRY
THE
I LOCAL Amu Lome
DISTANCE
NEW
RHONE.
Services the Beet. Telit the Cheepeet
Work guaranteed.
Wright & Son
Phone 480.
C. LEWII WILJON,
ARCHITECT
and ENGINEER
Eastin £ Starks,
LIVE BY AND
TRANSFER BARN
Office Ro^m 24, Rein Bldg, Orange
356 Pins St, Beaumont Texas.
Contractor
Building, House Moving a ipecialit
also repairing of sit kind*.
S. M. DEPWE.
Out of town till September 20. Ad-
dress commounlcstions to
residence.
Old Phone 174; New 100
Orange, Texas.
J. H. BLAND,
Livery, Feed and Transfer.
Baggage solicited on train. Black-
smithing and repair work. Horse-
shoeing a Specialty. Phone 13ft
LEADING PHYSICIANS.
£TBoobifbXbirtnr<rtnnnnmr
l DR. F. W. LAWSON
Office, tioree's Drug Store.
PHONES, OFFICE IS; RES. 4H.
s
orrice Houna{ J v® »’»•**■
toll a.
DENTI8T8.
Q ft Q 0 0 0 -
Dr.R.P. O’Brien
DENTIST.
Suite 62-63 Unk Building.
new phone no,
A. G. PEARCE, M. D.
OFFICE.
Hswson’s Drag Stan
■ns?:: "H '■*■,H
OBie* If)
DR. T. F. COYLE,
OFFICE
OVER R. B. GOREE’S
DRUGSTORE.
J. D. BUTLER, M. D.
W. B. SIMMONS,
DENTIST.
Office upstairs in Sabine Building,
corner Front and Fifth Sts., Orange,
Texas. New Phone: Office. 174;tes-
idencc, 173. Lady always in attendance
OFFICE!
Hewton’s Drug Store.
Hours:
I to 5 p. m Office phone No. 105
8 to 10 a. m. Rea. phone No. 9.
LEADING LAWYERS.
ADAMS & HUGGINS,
Attorneys At Law,
Liak Building, Orange, Tax.
WINES AND LIQUORS.
A, MONCLA,
rout I ON AND DOMESTIC
Winesf Liquors and Cigars.
Telephone orders solicited. Proanpt
Delivery. Front .Street, opposite
Depot. New Phone 441.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Office at court
Robertson & Bruce,
attorneys
MACK’S SALOON,
Under New Management.
Choicest Wises and Liqsors.
J. W, NEWMAN. Sole Prop r
Telephone 341. Family Trade
Gives Special Attention.
Rooms 26 aH 2/, Rein Building
Now Phans No. SS
ORANGE. - TEXAS
Holland Holland*
MISCELLANEOUS.
ATTORNEYS
Soils made
by me are
All Wool-f
Stylish and
I keep them
The announcement of the death of
Sara Stevens, the actress, and
of John C. Hern an, the old-
pugilist, as reported by a dis-
patch from St. Paul, Minn., contains
----- misstatements that should be
id keep the record straight,
•first erroneous assertion in the
is that. Mrs. Stevens was a
| Laura
Keene’s company.
"Our American
was shot, and
of Fort',
She
militiamen, who had seen service in
Cuba and the Philippines, but to a tna-
norffy of the "soldier hoys.” many of
them unaccustomed to hard work; the
experience gained sorely tried $helr
mettle, and the free outing furnished
was not un mixed with regrets.
1 ' *4
New Fast Trains to St Louis via Mo-
DH# and Ohio Railroad.
Mobile and Ohio Limited leaves New
Orleans at 7:30 p. m„ arriving In SL
Ixrals 5:44 next afternoon, at
Express leave* New Orleans 9:
m., arriving St Louis next me
7:52. Both are sdHd, wide v<
trains of
the
Sr.rfjP .
I with
mamn
w ifak Jr
LOW EXCURSION RATES.
For the following occasions round
trip rate of one and one-third fare Is
authorized, certificate plan:
■Encampment grand lodge of the I.
O. O. F., Corsicana, Texas, October
10 to 11; convention excursion rate*
on sale October 9 and 10, limit Octo-
ber 12. * Jk
Annual convention National Car*
riage Dealers’ Protective association,
at New York City. October 10 to IS;
one and one-third fare, certificate
plan. A:: '
*lhe &u>rts*.- P"«M«tee
oOUNE,
-Mtir TBME-S »l.m MMTitW BOlii.
•j* gj»
4* I REPAIR 4.
4. Boots, Shoos, Trunks, Valises, 4.
4* maks Buggy Cushions, and Ro- 4.
4* pair Buggy Top*. Work Guaran- 4.
4* feed Patronage solllcited. 4*
4> N .0. REYNOLDS, 4.
4* Cornsr Fourth and Main Streets. 4.
W-M-M-’M -I II 11 M-H-t
Oranoc. Tea A3.
JlEAL ESTATE BROKERS.
Orange Ship Yard
Texte National Irrigation
at El Paso, Texas, November
IS to I
fare round trip; on sale No-1
from date of
aded thirty days
T
REPAIRING, BUILDING AND
GENERAL BOAT WORK.
WM, Snoad, Proprietor.
A.M.H. STARK, C.E.
County Surveyor
and Rental Agent
Office at Court House. New Phone 18U
T)Aint
Mthat
m CARRIAGE!
What Is more pleasing
than a nicely painted car-
riage? Ahd what is worse
for the carriage than to not
paint it? '■ ■
The ORDINARY WAY Is
cheap materials, cheap work-
manship. cheap la price.
The EXTRAORDINARY
WAY Is high grade materials
—first (
and at ak low a price as Is
conubtoniwith that class of
worit. .....
eat, perhaps,but the
pensive. Th|t la the way
We Invite Our Friend* to Call.
Wc Breed
Smooth Fox Terriers
1*ee». CM has
THE 8AB
New Phone 400-
tELS.
Park Gray
land
agent
•ffksla Salas* B«i
K»e and Hard
wood Timber
Laadsanddssira-
ablc Farms.
Prices sod Terms
Attract! vs
*
j
w. J. WINGATB,
iiiifii
Chas. M. Rein
City Lots tnd Acreage
Property
lUmBldg. ovente. T.m
I I
?1®
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Dickensheets, Charles D. Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 17, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 13, 1904, newspaper, September 13, 1904; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth644385/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.