Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 215, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 5, 1903 Page: 3 of 14
fourteen pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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_ are very few people who can buy th£m became it requires cash down
B government keeps the bonds.
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Orange City Lots are Better
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down, the
becaute I will sell you choice residence lots with a small payment dowi
balance on easy monthly payments. This makes it possible for you to invest
- r money in something just as safe as government bonds and better, because
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 value
in the pawo years, and with present prospects will double again in the next two years.
1 It there any reason why you can't^ participate in the increase of values when you can buy
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property on the terms Í offer ? Come and see me and talk the matter over.
M. REIN!
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tfco attvaatofo oC * -
H Wor% OVM differ-
Mi alwmjr* twuMt t now
m H. M. «oclety are preparing FOREWARNED IE FOREARMED.
■pechil entertainment sad a
OR Dae. 22. Those who are
iroabled «9 the aoxkiu* qucmtion Evidence multiplies in all
"what to gire" for Ohrlstau , will «nd sections of the southwest, of
all naaaer of eaggeatlve things dla- which this city is the centre.
Purther noUlce a movement to raid thji^Veir"R«nr«^
the United St*^i on the Southern
played by the ladle*,
win he given later.
M* •
•tf. H.
L"f a fllUr frrrr required for mar
Ing the rtce crop. In IW2 It required
13.000. I am certain the figuren for
1903 will «how a tre/bendouis gain over
1 last year. If yon wtoh to know what
" 1 i riBMMHÉtÍMflMi m« —I
summer, and keep it agoing un-
til the order went forth to use
the patent disinfectant that the
grafters are preparing to spring-
on the state. Congres^^
«jKo <Iate method!V She: "Oh.
he give trading atampa"—Yonl
Statesman.
"legWBeía |«
aSíaSiTU!
r.
fisrsn
t Ml SiVWftl ft
S«SSJtoa
of the methods that
hare adopted Jo
way to Sortuae. their daUjr
how they bet. -f;;- .
Fhil" has stood the teat
of a plunger's career longer
any other nan who.haa wa«*red
of dollars on the/tnrf. FV>r
years he has striven to wrest
asesor from the bookmakers. Me to
ao*: Other
turf, paid *
rlslt, made brilliant coups. wOo
«Si
im
on the
briulaa
million dollars in a season only to
H the S«Ki sod to sink Into ob-
Xy. But "Phil." year In and year
ont, has bet thousands of dollars on e
and is today the only man who
In as aft|ac*r ow doosde
I still tn the ring, bettlag
on a race. He deHes all
tfcaia ws of chano* nnd, despite the
odds to the tooloMker's foror, wins
a million?
„ to not mors than SS years of
la his early maahood he whs a
la Pittsburg, tn those days
of betting on horse races
pools or Preach ton-
AHI the large bettors
ift«av |n ftueikHiff. Bftch
aWSF|Hwr|f«-'af« mipieewpsi^ ^
in a ra<-« f a ««id op-
auctloned off by pool
I|||||HH not lit-
but a ward bearing his
to tho highost
'If'.: -asfW
ltoacir
was not v.
Very often sner^NfjjcV, 1 |
Jack had as a net proftWhls, busl-
ncTK 0 void to his stomach and an
empty pocket with which to till -It.
A change for the bet ter came to lie-
gtnnls' fortunes two years ago. when
he became Senator Pat MoCarren's
betting agent. In a short apace of
Unw he had accumulated a tidy sum.
With money to his credit he had day
dreams. He would become a horse
owner.
the opportunity to become a turf-
man eamo rolling P««t McOinnls last
fall. He saw it and grasped It. At a
sale of horses In tralnlag—oaat-offs of
E. Banford k Son's thoroughbreds-
Tribes HUI, brown coll S years old. a
son of Clifford—Oaroga. was brought
Into the ring and offered for sale. All
the trainers and horsemen gathe^d
at the roped arena, laughed at TrttJs
Hill and leered him. AH iMkt Mo-
omnia. He saw what he thought to-
dlestetf Speed tln the brown legs of
Clifford's son, No one would havjLthe
"ping." "Why should mef'bfy s
home that always brought up the
rear of a race?" said the uainers. So
they smiled atfti wslted—even Mc-
Oinnls waited.
Auctioneer Haston pleaded to vain
for a bid He told th* men that
Tribes HM'e-etre was Clifford, a great
race horse to his day, and that Oaro-
ga was one of the most valuable mat
roas of the Sanford form, a place
noted as the home cf some of the best^
blue-blooded maros lb this country.
Finally the colt was passed out of the
ring without a hid.
Trlbss HUI, Cheap Nag.
Just as Tribes Hill wss about to be
Ms bo* stall a maa walked
San ford, one of the owners
t. and said: "I'll give you
HUI " Banford looked
««rebasar for a
and then blurted out,
' " disgrace
m* i ..« ,84aA®8 joi u
L « . aaBJ0 °> JOV l*
f 81 UoiBaAI 0 jo MeiJt
Elephant's Wsen Sanaa of Smell.
A wild elephant has a keen sense of
smell. At a distance of 1,000 yards It
can scent an enemy.
Beaton Lights,
there *are one
Associated
jad the don't
rj Liu lis in csrtlng Into a sort of
ctprocity tangle. That la. the beat
getting Into the worry and the
Into the don'ts.
to "place" them to
have a chance. He '
Tip" O'Noll. the Western JockeyrJBP*
brought him Bast this year. He was
also the ffrst men to give Jockey Hlg
gins a mount to the East this year.
None of the Bastera txX>kmaker*
knew about the ablltty of (he latter,
and he put him up on his horse Km
bartassment at Sheepshead Ray. On
account of the hoy he «ot 5 to t
when the best price should have he«*n
1 to 10. Bennington bet $7,000 on the
race and won $14.000. This was his
biggest winning bet of the year.
Buying a Wife.
At an auction at Orkelijunga. tn
Sweden." iuat held, tho auctioneer put
a sum"
I stage of
' HIS re-
l,! If you
glye you
Mm
I, ^
Ha Laarna, but Too tats.
A young men begins to amount to
■omethJyp*'-49^te£ he learns that
and sasn*'* f •' M. Portwood
_ to. E
motion.. He ,n th.e
•'nations of a bout 2« cl
*RE T^E miy.
That iff V|P*^ you'll accept that
I love you. I've «aid
up as 1
to the
to mifl
young lady who was
knocked down"
of ñfty. The
couple have bean
wedding. It Is aa-
ly take place.
Request. , Mmm
In e<f If Jig Krttoll reauestrr a
fonder Wí^íS^. of Mrs.
Mary Ann Jefferles. wljio
wyn at the age of M tfnty«sfr«a,
was buried wlwMK 1 The tender
made out of a cart wheel
years ago ran over and kll j
a hoy of sit.
m .*«Ms<
publi
nounced.
was
>leh forty
her son.
Sweets for Orange S^sts.
Dont let it slip your mind tha,t we
have the.most complete Man of fancy
boxed chocolates in the ctty. Ounth
ers's are the best. Nothing is more
suitable for a Christmas present. See
onr display. The <*em ronfect«onery.
. '•■ * —
A Christmas present of $S0 to gold
given away by W. P. MeParland, the
laweior. 1 «• | m
h. Miller, president of the Orange
4 Northwestern Railway company,
left last night for New Orleans on a
business visit
Mi-
as proof tha
all 1 can to no avail."
EMnor did not reply nor look up;
she was tracing her name in the sand
—thinking. She had tried to believe
Jack, but, somehow, at times, bhe
doubted that he really meant all lie
said.
"He was such a serious sort of a
follow, aad she—O. she was frlvolouc
and scatter-brained, according to her
own estimate of herself. -Why should
he love her? And yet, why should he
say so If he did not?
At last she covered the sand letters
over aad looked up. "Jack." she
said, "would you really do anything
for me? Bven if it was silly and—
and awfully dangerous—Just to prove
to me that you like m<*?"
"Not to prove that I like you. but
Boaomont, where he is*
tv.entleih-—
«""dar
>£¡W O
+
DeRlddfp's New Power
The DeKldder lee. Light
has ■
Wf'i
000,
Sha Let the Baft Bsnd Trickle Slowly
Through Her Sunburned Fingers,
that I love you—ysa." He laughed a
aterí «rl0 ««• < &
a* Den
i
t"
in the edge
do."
% C,
The searcEligh
was thrown on
llKht she could w""'"
and smash about tLp,JÍ
Running close to
she looked up and
one of the old flat
Jack so often fished to.
far up on the shore,
down to the water
Stroke by stroke she
toward the big rock, but
strong and the boat heavy,
hours before she came
It.
"Jack, Jack!"
It's such hard pu|!
"!nor," -«-aa all
took bold ot the
and hers with
was not near! .
looked !r / y. *'
"JumSnfr ¿
But the i"
he replied, atlj
"What," she
thought It m
and that it
light"
"It's only 11-
100 years ago."
"Ont to, Jack,"
tiently. She
the shore to
"I would, if I
meaningly.
"Then km
• As Jaflk
tie cottage
years was
Imaginable.
whistle: "If
knew!"~
Olobe.
Bveryt
days-men, ,
Prlceji ran
thou||&(li
Jeweled "
Mi I
,t, hip W*
tide
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Rein, Charles M. Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 215, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 5, 1903, newspaper, December 5, 1903; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth182985/m1/3/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.