Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 247, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 13, 1904 Page: 4 of 4
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Capital*
Surplus.
YOUR MO NE Y ww. u.
It will-lheo be safe from fire and rebbers
YOUR BUSINESS IS SOLICITED
TRAIN 8CHEDULE.
Southern Pacific. -•
Eaetound— Arrives.
No. 4 The "Oriole 3:15 pm.
No. 6. The "Badger" 8:65 a. m.
No. 8 10:60 p. m.
No. 10 .., 9:50 a. m.
Weetboand— Arrive .
No. 8, The "Oriole". 8:16 p. m.
No. 6.. .r. 6:42 p. m.
No. 7 6:36 a. m.
No. 9........ 8:46 p. m.
Orange A Northwestern.
No. 2, leaves Orange 6:30 a. m.. ar-
rives Buna 8:45 a. m.
No. 1, leaves Buna 1:30 p. m., ar-
rives Orange 3:45 p. m.
4* 4
•J. LOCAL AND PERSONAL. 4.
HE* 4*
UNNEEDEO «TRAIN ON HORSES.
If you have visitors, of if you know
any item which would be of Interest j
to a single reader of The Tribune, the
editor would appreciate a note or a
telephone message to that effect. Or,
If any occurrence of unusual interest
transpires, a reporter will be promptly
sent to the scene.. Do not forget the
number. Both phones 25.
Charlie Wlynn wpnt to Vinton today
on business.
C. H. Glflln' and H ~M. Anderson
went to Beaumont today on business.
Dixon Gray, former city marshal of
Beaumont. Is here today on business.
Why pAy bouse rent? By a lot in
Bruner addition, .own your own home.
O. H. GIFFIN J 4-31
Good Tea mater Can Do Much for An-
imals in His Charge.
The strength required of an aver-
age steed team of horses and- the
strain On the hortfes to draw a heavy
load over stones or out of a deep rut
hole, or over many other,-^avdidable
obstacles is often greater ttym to
draw the same load over a smooth
surface fifty yards. 1
It would be a small estimate to say
a careless driver strains his team
in that manner twenty times a day.
If a driver prevents straining bis
horses twenty time each day be will
save tbem 1,000 yards of unnecessary
pulling and in the 300 working days
of the year 300,000 yards, and in five
years 1,500,000 yards—nearly 4,000
miles. —-r
With proper judgment and careful-
ness the driver, at tlie 'end of the
five years, will have In place ot a
team of weak, over worked, bony
horses, a team of healths, and strong
ones.
From a business point of view will
It not pay any horse^oWner, driver, or
teamster to be careful' and consider-
ate and to avoid all unnecessary
strains on horses?—Our Dumb Ani-
mals.
which
ln-'il
in the
out on
P« tt
Outside of tU<
r the
third four-
The four
street in front
tog and it took
Captain Sholars
seargents to And
After this every
and the boys executed the doable
comnfanSs with promptness
marked precision.
The company made several more
turns on the street and returned to the
hall. They stood at attention while
Captain Sholars read tbe financial re-
port and talked to them about the
company's^future. The company was'
then dismissed to meet again Tuesday
night.
Those who are In arrears in pay-
ment of dues should cancel the de-
linquency at once by paying for four
months back, as agreed upon. Each
meníber should make It a point to at-
tend the drills regularly and talk to
others who do not come op at every
meeting and Induce them to attend.
All who have uniforms and guns out
are requested to bring them in.
There Is room in the company lor
several more young men of good
character and any wishing to become
a member of tbe Rifles may hand his
application to Captain Sholars or to
either Lieutenant T. C. Ford -or Louis
Sholars.
All members of the company are re-
quested to read closely the sections of
the general orders published in yes-
terday's Dally Tribune,
^IfJ A BLAZE OF GLORY.
Rising Young Politician Soars to s
Dizzy Height.
"And," said tbe rising young poli-
tician as he reached his eloquent pero
ration, "I predict that our Candidate
will, when the votes are counted, be
found to have ridden to success- upon
a tidal wave of glory that will have
H. A. Stone, of Beaumont, repre-
sentative of the Bonner Oil company,
is in Orange today.
W. A. Ward,a prominent Baumont
real estate man, was here yesterday
on business.
S. M. McNeeley chief of the tie de-
partment of the Klrby Lumber com-
pany. Is here today from Houston.
COLMEBNIEL EDITOR'S MISTAKE.
Gets Into Trouble With a Female
Through An Error.
(Colmesniel Cor. Beaumont Journal/)
Colmesniel, Tex.. Jan. 12.—A strange
character stopped ov«r in our town
between trains on Saturday last. An
old lady sharp of visage and sharper
of tongue. She made tbtngs lively
swept all before It like wild lira around the burK- and furnished W*
breaking In flying spray upon the tk* amusement to some and constCr-
strand 'Where the sun of victory shall nation to others. She visited .every
blaze forth its effulgent rays upon the business bouse In town, sticking her
close of one of the most noble, most "harp bill Into everybody's business.
memorable campaigns
been launched upon the
to gather strength and
fore It like the cyclone
ttot have ever
' wa polities
carry all be-
sweeplng
end came near causing a duel between
one of our prominent business men
and a Methodist preacher.
Some folks thinks she was not alto-
In terror."
covered with wool.
4.—Shearing of the sheep when trfe
weather begins to get .warm. Use of
wool. Warmth.
;.Baa, baa, black sheep
Have you you any.wool? etc-
5 —Birds, fowls, Snakes, etc
§P|itoltness or feathers., of
fowsl la summer; tn winter. Jtfattlng {£
«.—In general the wile provision 15
for the comforts of all animals.
Miss White. •- 'á
The first point 1 would bring out Is
source of tbe rain.
- Explain how the heat of the sua
causes the vapor . to rise and for
clouds which are driven by the wind
over the land ; and bow the mountains
¿sóndense the clouds into rain and
snow. f.
Now, what, becomes of the rain that
falls on the earth T Bring out three
different wags by which it is re-
moved from the surface
1. Some sinks Into the earth.
2. 'Some Is drawn op by the sun.
3. Some Is at once drained off by
Osteopathic cures are permanent
WRENS SING A REQUIEM.
How the Birds Mourn the Loss of a
Comrade.
"Did you know that wrens sing .a
raquieni—hold a funeral service—over
1 heir dead?" said a gardener. "1 my-
- Weff once saw a requiem in progress.
Julius O. Fry. fiel* manager of the ll wa" early morning In May, and
Forward Oil Producing company, of in ""usual 'wittering outside my win-
mont, is in Orange today on busl- low C8,,Be(1 to Ket up. 1 saw, un-
eaves. two curious festoons
J. 111llAflUvíUliber agent for the
Orange Lumber company, 1b «here to-
day from his headquarters at Rose
Pine.
,
Mrs. Dr. Dillard and little son Rob-
ert, after spending the week here with
Mrs Dillard's parents, Hon. and Mrs.
Jerome Swlnford, returned this morn-
ing to their home at Kerrvllle.
wrens— wrens to the number of 20 or
25, that clung to one another with
loot and wing. Thus they hung for
two or three minutes, and all the
while they twittered mournfully. Then
suddenly, they broke loose and flew
1 away. On going down 1 found a dead
wren lying Just under the window
„ , ... _ , ov*"" which the birds, in their strange
Orange today. He leaves for Beau-, cluster, had so sadly twittered. A
mont today and will conduct a number, naturalist to whom 1 described this
o€ Chicago capitalists to Nacog- episode said that what I had
Prof. L. H. Shelfer, former expert of
the United States department of Agrl-
across the broad prairies from which gether what she seemed. Some soy
even the orb of day has disappeared she was Carrie Nation, others that she
(was Hettle Oreen the railroad queen.
She certainly possessed many of the
I characteristics of both of these not- ¡
«bles—In being unquestionably able
to manage her own buslneas and her
decided manner of speech and for hurl*
ling epithets at any and all who in-,
icurred her displeasure. '
After "doing" the town she made up
) her mind to visit the office of the Ty-
ler County Times. This was the croara-
Ing event of her abort stay In tbe
city. She made her way to the above
mentioned place. Seeing no one
around the promisee she made herpres
ence known by thumping loudly cm
the floor with the point of her um-
brella The Times office is a two-
story building opening on the street,
the lower story being used principally
for the reception of the editor's
fHends, he being a very popular, gen-
ial man and polite in the extreme, es-
pecially to the fair sex. His door is
always open to£ls friends who are
many—even the Town cow visits him
when the weather Is rainy and cold
and she falls to find her own door
I tier the
hanging from the room. «The festoons
wfere two semi-circles imposed of
doches.
Holland Hotel Arrivala.
W A. Ward, Beaumont.
W, C. Tyrell, Beaumont.'
J. P. Landry, Beaumont.
S. E. Bell, Beaumont. ...J,
1. A. Paulhamus, Beaumont.
W. S. Richards, Lake Charles.
J. M. Thresher, Beaumont.
J. G. Fry, Beaumont
M- Demmey, New Orleans.
M. C. McCormick. Now Orleans
F. B. Markle, St. Louis. *
J. C. Estney, Lake Charles.
Sol. Bernstein. Louisvllíe.
Geo. W. Gaines. Philadelphia.
8. W. Berry, Brogkhaveti, Miss.
C. O. Grenlow,- Brookhavea, Mise.
E. B. Cohkling, Houston.
Geo. Dalsheimer St. Louis.
"Tk. W. Bering, Houston.
Mrs. E. Smith. Three Oaks, Miss.
Joe H. Taylor Dallas. .
M. Marks, San Antonio.
W. E. Bowler Houston.
J. H. Philan. Texas.
«. W. Turner, Welsh
tí. A. Stone, BSaAmont.
« Marks Dallas.
A. F. Rust, Kansas City.
B. Ellis, Chicago.
MM
Raoe War In Indiana.
tted Press. I
Ind., Jan. 13 —Great alarm
felt in Normal City today. The ne-
ta fear of a raoe war and
ammunition and the po-
the homes of many
'
nessed was called the 'wren's
qulem.' an established fact, though a
thing very rarely seen."—
i.edger.
opetj.
KOREAN WOMEN'S HARD WORK.
irmtfui
ingdom
Now, as tbe afternoon of our story
was-a wet one. and our wrothy editor
PhiMtMfeaJUy! upstairs at work, hearing the
ijld" nmplng on t,jB floor, concluded
that tbe cow had come in out pf tl#
rain. So be nhouted out In his deepbsss
voice, "John go down stairs and run
that old cow out." John went. We
will kindly draw the curtain on the
lsat act.
Our poor editor may recover,"WhSlo
it is needless to say that highly in-
sulted, Incensed female has shaken
the dust of Colmeunell from her feet
Unknown
In
No one
Labor-SavIng Machi
"Hermit Kingi
Am there are no labor-saving ma-
chines In Korea, wonAu s work is
.Jone by the crudest and hardest
methods possible, from hulling rice
with a heavy wood or stone pestle to'
wiashing clothes by beating them 4n
the streams and ironing them with OWfither she came
sticks. In order to iron the clothes
must always be ripped apart and
wrapped around a wooden roller while
damp; they are then beaten by either
one or two women. It-Is surprising ÜÓ
see the gloss on the white calico and
the sheen upon the linen produced by
this method of ironing; it surpasses
the dressing one Sees tn this country
on newly bought linen. Since tbe peo-
ple dress exclusively in white, the
woman's day—and often much of tbe
night, too—Is spent in washing, Iron-
ing and sewing.
Bones ef Kings.
Cardinal Ferrari, who attended the
German Catholic Congress, took back
with him to Milan as a present the
bones ot tee three kings, Melchlor,
Gaspar and Baltfaosar, which were the
famous relids In the Cologne
legend is that the
were taken away from a Milan
by Frederick Barbarossa's
tbe gift Is intended as a
forever. Like the wind that listenth: "Sí*5
and where she
Conosrt Tickets.
Tickets for the Ladles' Civic Club
concert, to be held Thursday night at
the Rein building, can be found on
sale at Qoree's drug store and at Hlg-
man's drug store.
WM
- Orange Rifles Notice
Each member of the Orange Rifles week of March,
Is requested to pay his does for tee
months of September. October, No-
vember and December to either C. «.
TOWNSBND. or B. B. HAYES. 18 4t
Jkv./. 'I % Useful Gifts.
Some eminently practical
mmMtmm
brating the
Mrs, John
Useful
What becomes of the water that
sink# into the ground? It
springs.
The water flowing contlnouSly out
of tbe ground forms what? Brooks
and creeks.
' When sswend brooks ifr creeks Sow
together Into one
call, it a river.
Then I would trace IK course of a
river, tt beginning as a mountain
torrent dashing rapidly down the
steep slopes and sometimes leaping
from rook to rock making waterfalls;
then follow Its course across the
platean till |t finally reaches the
coastal plain," where It'flows alowly
aad becomes very deep.
In this wey you can alao bring ha
the subject of erosion', by teaching
thst the rocks and mud washed away
from the hills are deooslted elsewhere
In this tracing of tbe river's course
you can teach the conditions deter-
Inlng tbe flow of the'waters from
Hp land and a'so the condlticms de-
termining tbe rtvefe velocity.
In taking up the drainage of any
particular country—North America
for Instance—the relief map is a mont
valuable aid!
• The school yard on a rslny day
war. also used as an Illustration,
WrRen language; "The Story of
the River."
The "Lesson on Plants" by
Ford and "The Expression," by Miss
Bard well, have been published.
t
Colored
Whole nuaefber registered, tM.
. Montb's'enrollment. 1M. '
Average attendance 182.
Cases of «ardlnen, 8.
• Per cent of atteadanoe, 8S.S.
Cases of Corporal punishment
The total enrollment in white
colored schools In 874. .
Respectfully submitted.
8. B
, "*
RABBI GREENBURO'8 LETTER.
^ I * - ■ ■■.r'v
Cannot Come to Orange Until Second
Week In March.
Dallas, Tex., Jan. ll, 1804.
Harry Crager Esq.,
Orange, Texas
Dear Mr. Crager:—
to actteow4edge the receipt of
invitation to lecture at
on the 20th instant and would have
replied before, but wanted to give
assure you that it wouli
qualified pleasure to be In
once more, tor $
oriee of Beaumont
the many charming
1tt: lip IBM
which Ues nearer
at present pressing
I must, though very
cllne your kind
ever I can In any
service to
Maw T<MÉ> ,
he at vour
hjujilt
wM
The man who makes wljeat
year ^84,000 advertising ill 800 newt-
papers and 30 magazines, and this "jr"
is spending a million dollars.
The siiltff
Wheat
Another paid $5,000 for the privilege of
painting the name of his product on a bi
chimney in lower New York that can be
seen from all the North riyer -ferryboats.
He has for months kept before
eye a comic
rhymes and has made
land laugh. But
mblu
manufacturer h
lars.
i
Ig.
laugh has cost
■ ' ■
Frank Fayant
mwm
s-:-' '•
The Afternoon Tribune
mimmiiiiim
LIK E THE SUN—NONE
=r
BEAUTIFUL
'NISI
ON ACCOUNT OF ITS AGE
11 1 ■
m
ñ
I
mm
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Rein, Charles M. Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 247, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 13, 1904, newspaper, January 13, 1904; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth183017/m1/4/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.