Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 16, Ed. 1 Monday, September 12, 1904 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Lamar State College – Orange.
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, Three Months IIM
• S00 One Month M
tea on Application.
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Si
Office and Editorial Rooms,
Both Phones No. 74.
Every Afternoon,
Excepted.
Sundays
TO ADVERTISERS.
To insure Insertion of display ads
A the current issue of the Tribune,
copy must be 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 n&me of the
delinquent boy. This will enable us
to correct the annoyance, and take
measures to prevent a recurrence of it.
ORANGE, TEXAS, SEPT. 12, 1904.
Richard Croker has paid 129,200 for
a pair of horses in England. Croker?
Croker? Oh, yes! He's the man that
used to be In politics. The one whose
pockets came first all the time. Yes,
yes. Remember him now.
A Dee Moines, Iowa, woman com-
mitted suicide because her husband
insisted on going to a base ball match.
It is said that next day there were
more married men present at ball
games in that city than had been
known for years.
Now is the Juicy oyster again on
tap, and the oyster shucker gets busy
Nothing has a harder time than the
oyster. If he isn’t being roasted he is
In a stew. And everybody likes to
touch him on the raw. And how often
do you hear it said of him that he’s in
the soup?
We saw a big heading in a Houston
newspaper, "Yarn Spinners Meet,"
and sat down to read something good
about a gathering of war correspond-
ents. Our disappointment was great
when we found it was a conference
of hosiery and yarn manufacturers to
discuss prices.
4. AS OTHERS SEE US.
All of Which Shows Which Way 4*
the Wind Blows. *f*
Neame. La., Sept 9.
4. Dear Friend Dlckensheeta: +
4. Inclose rapney order for $1 for 4.
4. payment for the Tribune for Au- 4.
4. gust and September. Under your 4.
4. management the Tribune has got 4.
4. to be a “hummer” and quite a 4*
4. factor in the town and county’s 4.
4* affairs. Long life and success 4*
4. to the Tribune. Sincerely, 4.
4. ED E. HAYES. 4.
4* ' 4*
4. It Is of very frequent occur- 4.
4. repee nowadays for us to re- 4*
4. ceire letters similar to the 4*
4. above. We not only receive flat- 4*
4. terlng comments from our own 4*
4. home people, but from our out- •§>
4. side subscribers, who are scat- 4*
4. tered from Maine to California, 4*
4. as well. It would take much 4*
4. valuable space to print all these 4*
4* letters, but we reproduce this 4*
4. one because it comes from a 4*
4> man who has had experience in 4*
4* the newspaper lino, and Is there- 4*
4* fore in good position to Judge. 4*
4* It Is now generally conceded 4*
4* tliat the Tribune is Improving 4*
4* every day, and that it is the 4*
4* greatest factor in the commer- 4*
4* clal. Industrial and social life of 4*
4* Orange and Orange county. 4.
4* Many thanks to our friends for 4.
4* the encouragement they give us 4*
4» in our efforts to make the Trl- 4.
4* bune the best paper, for a town 4.
4- the size of Orange, in the State 4.
4* of Texas. 4.
4* 4*
4-H« W »H-M« •HHf*
5»5-w*iv,
„ % V > '
111
taining to irrigation that the execu-
tive committee has decided to system-
atize the work—-divide it into sections
‘save the forests,” “store the
floods,” “reclaim the deserts,” and
“homes on the land.” Each section
will be conducted by a chairman rec-
ognised as an eminent authority In
his line.
"Information will be dispensed re-
garding the Increasing of production
by Irrigation in the Atlantic States,
as well as in the Pacific sections; for;
estry problems In New England an<J
as along the Rocky mountains and Si-
as along the Ricky mountains and Si-
erras; engineering applied to protect
from devastation by floods, drainage,
climatology and rural settlement will
also be discussed.” '
General Passenger Agent T. J. An-
derson of the Southern Pacific has
announced that a special rate of one
fare for the round trip will be made
from all points on the line In Louisi-
ana and Texas.
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
Newspapers may cavil and politi-
cians may snap and snarl, but all the
same your Uncle James Stephen Hogg
Is the biggest man in Texas today.
There will have been a heap of fun in
Texas before James Stephen steps
down and out. Just wait until he gets
his cotton picked.
We rise to remark again, and our
language Is plain, that what the Orange
county farmer wants to do Is to get a
move on him and take up truck farm-
ing. He has the soil, markets are con-
venient. All he wants now( is to util-
ize the one and he will command the
other. Will he do it?
A' dispatch from Mukden says the
Russians explain the success of the
Japanese thereabout by saying that
the fields were thick with millefc,
which the Russians weren’t used to
getting around in. Just like the fiend-
ish Japs. Why didn't they have their
millet cut and mowed away before
the Russians got there? Tangling
their feet up In that way. The idea!
A new official guess at the losses
during the fighting at Liao Yang is
out. It is from Japan. Japanese loss
17,000, Russians 20,000. We may ex-
pect a Russian return now, by wntch
we shall 1 arn that the enemy’s loss
was 30,000 and their own 10,000.
"Figures wont He”—except in rail-
road reports and reports of the other
fellow's loss In battle.
Theodore Roosevelt's letter outiln
> lng his views on national issues, as af
footing his candidacy for the presi-
dency, is out. If length is an indica-
tion of soundness and strength, this
deliverano of the president’s must be
a regular Samson of republican doc-
trine. It makes eight good columns
of fine type in the Houston Post of to-
- Now- let Judge Parker sound his
horu, and the two champions
be in the lists. Hip, hip, hooray!
AND ALL FOR WHAT?
The estimates that are made of the
cost of the packers’ strike to date, if
correct, or even approximately so, tell
an awful wastage of comfort and cash,
life and living, peace and plenty. A
cash loss of $15,650,000 distributed
among packers, strikers, cattlemen
and railroads is an awful amount of
money to sink In a row that would
have been avoided by the exercise of
good common sense on the part of both
parties to the controversy. The whole
strike was caused by an insignificant
difference in wages for the common
laborers in the yards, and yet It has
been so pushed that, it bas involved
over 60,000 wormen In several cities,
dragged fifty unions into the fight, n-
terrupted business In a dozen of the
principal cities of the country, an-i
brought distress an<J loss nett only on
the strikers themselves, but on the
army of a quarter of a million depend-
ing on them for their daily bread and
comforts of life. In addition to this
the peace of great cities has been dis-
turbed, Innumerable riots caused, some
of these with bloodshed and death,
and hundreds injured in these riots
while six persons have been killed out-
right. A score have been so badly
hurt that they have had to be sent to
the hospitals for treatment, and all
for what? What has been gained in
any Quarter by it? Meat has bqen ren-
dered scarce and millions In no way
connected with the strike have felt
its disabling effects. Cattle raiders
thousands of miles from the scene
of disturbance have been put to great
loss and their whole business broken
into, while the carrying trade of the
railroads has suffered demoralization
in the matter of the carrying of
NEW DAINTIES TO EAT.
Some Marvelous World’s Fair Palate
Ticklera.
There is considerable comment
among visitors upon the novel varie-
ties of refreshments sold on the
World’s Fair grounds. From candy to
Philippine drinks, from Ice cream to
rice cakes, the variety of edibles of-
fered to the hungry and thirsty is al-
most startling.
The man who discovered that, by
pouring granulated sugar over a swift-
ly revolving cup run and heated by an
electric motor, a kind of aandy appear-
ing like plain cotton could be pipduced
has made a fortune. The expense of
preparing bushels of this delicious can-
dy cotton which melts in one's mouth
is trivial. Every youngster upon see-
inging a small armful of the attract-
ive article offered for a nickel im-
mediately purchases and, delighted
with the fact that a fistful can be eas-
ily taken at a time, purchases again a
little later.
Another novelty Is In the sale of
ices in the forms of icicles encased in
tin “cartridges.” These can be en-
joyed while seeing the exhibits, are
easily handled, and cheap and thirst-
quenching.
Then there are the famous rice
cakes or waffles made by the Japan-
ese in "Fair Japan” on the Pike.
These are most enjoyable especially
with Japanese tea and appeal strongly
to all Fair visitors.
One of the latest innovations which
is extremely popular Is the idea of
selling ice cream encased in a funnel-
shaped waffle of delicious taste. The
novelty of the Idea, the delicacy of
the article, all add to the popularity
of this combination of ice cream and
cake.
The average World’s Fair visitor de-
lights in trying new eating fads and
there has been no disappointment or
regret among the purchasers of these
novelties.
dressed meats. Is this all that the- they are largely composed is a seere-
Ki
brains and business sense and labor
agitation of the age can show for it-
self? Is there no way of avoiding this
fight between those who employ labor
and those who labor? Must there be
an inevitable and irrespressibie an-
tagonism growing more bitter and un-
reasonable from year to year? If nrft,
then what has the future to hold out
that ts encouraging to labor or the em-
ployers of labor. The one Is as nec-
essary as the other. Labor needs cap-
ital as much as capital needs labor,
especially in the present arrangement
of the work of the world. Greed Is
the cause of it all. A fair arrangement
seems to be Impossible. Courts and
legislatures are powerless, for these
can not bind a laborer or a union to
his contract. Arbitration has been
tried and failed. Perhaps the immense
loss that follows strikes and the bitter
teachings of experience will instruct
In better things after awhile. In the
meantime the people are caught, like
the cloth between the two blades of
the shears, and have to suffer for it.
Ed'He Bird's Nests.
Coron, a little island of the Philip
pires. Is one of the chief sources from
w hich come edible birds' neBts. It has
sheer walls of rock fronting the sea,
n which are deep boles where a cer-
tain sea swallow builds its nest. The
wild aborigines. Tagbanounas, collect
the nests from the cliffs by means of
long vine ropes, selling them to Chi-
nese traders, who export them to their
own country, where they are consid-
ered a great delicacy. The nests aro
three inches long and bring $12 (Mexi-
can ) for bunches of ten or twelve, ac-
cording to size. The gum of which
lion from the
swallows.
salivary glands of the
in the way of causes for
t damages from railroads for
Juries received thereon
FVio county. One John
' county was a sufferer
One day he was
San Antonio and
at Kennedy,
him, and he
CALL FOR IRRIGATION CONGRESS.
Work of the Convention Divided Into
Sections for Facilitation.
The official call for the meeting of
the twelfth National Irrigation Con*
grees to be held at El Paso, Texan,
November 15 to 18, has been issed by
[ C. B. Boothe; chairman of the execu-
tive committee. Ah invitation to at-
the congress is extended to
are Interested to conserving
great natural resources of the
the habitable
of
I
a
Life Belt With a Mask.
A German inventor, working on the
theory that most, persons'who are I
drowned are really overcome by the
waves which cannot be kept from
dashing into the face of the victim,
has invented a mask to be worn in
connection with a life preserver, and
this, he thinks, will be the means of
saving many lives. It is provided with
valves, which will not permit of the
entrance of water, but which respond
easily to suction, so that the breath-
ing of the Wearer is not interfered
Ivlth, ■
Size of World’s Mail.
The International Postal Union,
formed by the Postal Congress, held
at Berne on Sept. 15, 1874, now ex
tends over forty million square ml lea
of territory, peopled by one billion one
hundred million persons. The number
of pieces of mail handled in 19o0
amounted to about eighty millions a
day (twenty-nine billions a year). The
chief terms were; Letters, 11,000,000,
000; post cards, 3,300,000,000; printed
matter and samples, 14,000,000,000.
The mail routes had an aggregate
length of 1,864,000,000 miles, about
twenty times the distance of the earth
from the sun.
1,1 1 ’ 1 1 ! n 1 ?,,r » '
Th« Japanese Girl. :;,0;
The life of a Japanese girl, to spite
of the self-subordination that is de-
manded of her, is fqll of delicate Inter-
est. It is true, she does not get any
of the uproarious fun that the English
young ladies delight in. It to very
doubtful whether she would enjoy
!$i'"
it But shi
Wm
Has the Weevil Got There, Too?
By Associated Press.
Atlanta, Ga.. Sept. 18.—An insect
resembling the Mexican boll weevil
hkR appeared in the cotton fields of
Georgia and South Carolina. The only
difference between this new pest and
the weevil is that the former seems to
sting the cotton boll, instilling Into It
a certain poison that first dries up the
boll, which then begins to rot, and at
last crumbles to pieces.
For District Judge.
We are authorized to announce the
candidacy of HON. W. B. POWELL of
Jasper as a candidate for the office of
District Judge at the forthcoming No-
vember election.
New Fast Trains to 8L Louis via Mo-
bile and Ohio Railroad.
Mobile and Ohio Limited leaves New
Orleans at 7:30 p. m., arriving to St.
Louie *:44 next afternoon. 8t. Louis
Express leaves New- Orleans 9:10 a.
m., arriving 9t. Louis next morning at
7:52. Both are solid, wide vestlbuled
trains of the very latest pattern, car-
rying the finest Pullman sleepers, par-
lor and library observation cars, New
Orleans to St. Louts, without change.
Dining cars with large electric fans,
serving all meals a la carte. Patrons
pay only for what they order, and get
the very best that the markets afford.
World’s Fair literature, maps and
time cards, cheerfully mailed on ap-
plication. F. E. Guedry, D. P. A.,
229 St. Charles St., New Orleans, La.
Phone Main 3639-L.
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 oost
yon but a few cents and your wants
will be supplied.
Advertisements under im«nead.!Sc perttoe
FOR RENT—Furnished south front
room, with bath. 1110 Green avenue.
13
MULES FOR SALE—One carload good
Texas mules, cheap; all broken. At
old stables. Main and Fourth streets.
A. C. DEVER. 9-16
WANTED—A married man with no
children for a partner on fine truck
farm; must bring good references and
thoroughly understand trucking. AM
dress Truck Farmer, care Tribune,
Bargains in household furniture,
matting, etc., if sold at once. Call on
W. F. Van Arsdel, corner Main and j
Se venth streets. 3-tf
FOUND
A combination Shop
Sheet Metal Work and Sanitary
Plumbing. New stock, new
men, new ideas—mechanical and
sanitary work. Work guaranteed.
Your patronage solicited.
Wright Son.
New Phone 480, Division St.
Opposite Holland Hotel,
CONTRACTORS AND SUPPLIES
FOUND
A place where gasoline stoves, cook
stoves and pumps can be repaired
Work guaranteed.
Wright & Son
Phone 480.
C. LEWIJ WILSON,
ARCHITECT A
and E N O IN E E, It
Office Room 24, Rein Bldg, Orange
356 Pine St., Beaumont, Texas.
Contractor
Building, House Moving a specie lit
also repairing o( all kind*.
S. M. DEPWE.
Out of town till September 20. Ad-
dress commounlcatlons to
residence.
Old Phone 174; New 100
Orange, Texas.
DENTISTS.
WANTED—Long or short leaf pine
lands. Address Timber Lands, care
the Tribune. 27tf
FOR SALE—Full breed bull terrier,
champion fighter of the state, an Ideal
yard dog, an excellent companion; $66
cash, or will trade for horse, saddle
and bridle. Prof. Alfred Collins,
“Riverside,” * 2-tf
WANTED TO BUY—Fifty or more
worn out gasoline stoves. If you have
thrown away your gasoline stove tele-
phone us and we will come and buy It.
WRIGHT * SON,
480 New Pbone.
Saits made
by me are
■■PH All Wool-
wm „ s,r,ish “d
I keep them
TNeSnJW pressed free
B O K N E .
WS»M THl8t*8 ALWAYS S0MET|ilM OMM
Dr.R. P. O’Brien
DENTIST.
Suite 62-63 Link Building.
NEW PHONE 170.
DR. T. F. C0VLE,
OFFICE
OVER R. B. GOREE’S
DRUGSTORE.
Nt\k
mom.
Servicea fit Beet. Telle the Cheapest
LIVERY AND TRAN8FER.
Eastin £ Starks,
LIVERY AND
TRANSFER BARN
J. H. BLAND,
Livery, Feed and Transfer.
Baggage solicited on train. Black-
smithing and repair work. Hone-
shoeing a Specialty. Phone 130.
LEADING PHYSICIANS.
oryimmmrYinrTi^^
\ DR. F. W. LAWSON •
® Office, Goree’s Drug Store. •
l PHONES, OFFIOK 10| RES. 400. °
H ornce Houna^;™1;? !:
JUAJUUUUUJULIU^^
A. G. PEARCE, M. D.
OFFICE.
Hewioa's Drag Store
8 to 19 a.
2 to 4 p. m.
Roe. • US
Office IIS
J. D. BUTLER, m. D.
OFFICE:
Heweon’o Drug 8 to re.
Hours:
3 to 5 p, m Office phono No. 105
8 to 10 a. m. Res. phone No. 9.
TONSORIAL PARLORS.
Holland Hotel Barber Shop
HAIR CUTTING, SHAVING, SHAM-
POOING, ETC.
Hot and Cold Tub and Showor Baths
FRANK WEBER, Prop.
LEADING LAWYERS.
W. B. SIMMONS,
DENTIST.
Office upstairs in Sabine Building,
corner Front and Fifth Sts., Orange,
Texas. New Phone: Office, 174;rea-
idence, 172. Lady always in attendance
WINES AND LIQUORS.
A. MONCLA,
rOKBIBN AND DOMC3TIO
Wines, Uqnors and Cigars.
Telephone orders solicited. Prompt
Delivery. Front Street, opposite
Depot. New Pbone 461.
MACK'S SALOON,
Under New Management.
Choicest Wises mad Uqaor*.
J. W. NEWMAN, Sole Prop'r
Telephone 241. Family Trade
Given Special Attention.
Orange Ship Yard
ADAMS & HUGGINS, j
Attorneys At Law,
♦ Link Building, Orange, Tex.
. —1 ■ 1 "a
W. J. WING Am
ATTORN EVA TLA W.
Office at Court Houoa
Robertson & Bruce,
• attorneys
Rooms 26 and 2/, Rein Building
New Phene No. M
ORANGE, - TEXAS
Holland {^Holland*
attorneys
Oranoe, TeJxaa.
REAL ESTATE BROKERS.
A.M. H. STARK, C.E.
County Surveyor
and Rental Agent
ffke it Court Hoa&e. few Phone J89
m
REPAIRING, BUILDING AND
GENERAL BOAT WORK.
WM. Snoad, Proprietor.
lAINT
THAT
CARRIAGE!
What is more pleasing
than a nicely painted car-
riage? Ahd what in worse
for the carriage than to ndt
paint it?
The ORDINARY WAY la
.cheap materials,cheap work-
manship, cheap in price.
The EXTRAORDINARY
WAY Is b>4 .trade materials
and at as Rw a
: consistent
#8 V
We Invite Our Friend* to Call.
Wc Breed
Smooth Fox Terriers
T# sttL Cm k* mm by tswiatmen!
THE SABINE KENNELS.
F J~ ” Mr-
-------------
ft mm
• />
r B-
—.......
Park Gray
I LAND
ACENT
Off kt la HsMsaO Rslef.
Pine and Hard-
wood Timber
Lands and deotze-
ahie Farms.
Prices and Terms
Attractive
/
Chas. M. Rein
City Lots and Acreage
Prnnerfv
Property
RitaBMd. Orange. T<
mm
Kami
J
I ‘
.
■■
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Dickensheets, Charles D. Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 16, Ed. 1 Monday, September 12, 1904, newspaper, September 12, 1904; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth644762/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.