The Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 91, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 11, 1903 Page: 4 of 8
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at Orange, Texas,
CI* Mail Mutter. "
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v Three Months
is . .... 3 00 One Month ...
Advertising Rates on Application
BaassE^sasafc .1 ^TJirgasfcg;
.$6 00
. 3 00
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... $1 B0
.... 80
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Afternoon at 4:30 O'clock. Sundays Excepted.
ORANGE, TEXAS. TUL Y n. 1903.
' — —
HURT IN A BARGAIN RUSH.
_
mm Williamsport (Pa.) Sun. a reputable newspaper
* ' publishes only facts and does not "fake" news
tones for advertising purposes, recently contained
following in its local columns:
' "The fire sale at Loder's store, in Market square,
today and was a veritable bargain rush. Two
before the sale there was a large crowd in front
the store, covering the sidewalk and" part of the
As usual there was a certain amount of push-
■ and jostling, and one young lady was jammed up
the window so tight that she fainted. Sh^ was
1 into a private room at 12 Market spuare and soon
recovered."
m The current issue of the "Ad-Writer," the widely
rculated and well known advertising journal of St.
contains the following pertinent comment on
the above. Further remarks from the Tribune are iin-
*
vet there are plenty of people in the business
no will tell you that advertising doesn't pay.
ly it is the merchant who has not made the
or does not concentrate his advertising efforts in
direction. Good goods well advertised will
readily and give more satisfaction than inferior
There are unlimited advantages in ad-
if merchants will only put their ideas to prac-
tise and keep at it until the right chord is struck
is to attune their business to proper conditions
the best results."
vorld w.
IS THE COTTON BELT COMINGf
notice of a special meeting of stockholders of the
. Louis Southwestern Railway of Texas has been run-
in the Orange Weekly Leader, as well as other
papers, which may have a greater significance
many suppose.
meeting is called at Tyler on the 27th instant,
I is for the primary purpose of authorizing said com-
any to borrow $25,000 per mile upon a branch line to
¿.«instructed, and which is technically described as
rs:
Beginning at the terminus of the branch line of
said railroad heretofore known as the Lufkin
< branch, at or near Lufkin, in Angelina county,
Texas, where the same connects with what is
as, and was formerly the Texas & Ixm-
railroad ; thence extending: in an easterly di-
for a distance, of about twenty (20) miles
> the present eastern terminus of the constructed
on what was known as, and was formerly the
& Louisiana railroad at a point in Angelina
Texas; thence extending and to extend
gprom its said present eastern terminus of said con-
^atrocted line through the counties of Angelina,
ijf San Augustine, Sabine, Jasper and Newton, to a
near the town of Newton. Newton county,
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win
are
1 to be done.
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'
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The Beaumont Labor News comes out in red, white
and blue in celebration. Things are coming the News'
way just now. ■ ■ •„ ' I f|
i'iJí í" ' ft ' >' ' • '''isVvV, * * ' í * ■ { - y ' 1 x v . ->
We've been up against it this week. It is awfully
discouraging trying to run an exchange column with-
out the Port Arthur, Daily News. Haven't seen a copy
this moon.
' f «*• ♦ <4 /■ y
"Howdy, Taft!"
'"Howdy, Teddy!"—Houston Post.
Shake!—Nacogdoches Sentinel.
Gimme a chaw er terhacker!
— ' ,r't ,
Gen. Miles needn't worry. He is slated' to lose his
job next month, but he has bought an acre of Jennings
gusher ground.—Lake Charles American. , .
And he has gone the whole Hogg in Texas.
'• . ' .•••• ' 7? '
' _ ♦ ♦ 4
Commenting on an item in the Tribune in reference
to developing oil lands, the Texas Fruit and Truck
Journal says some people are so* darn selfish that they
would prefer the oil to remain under the dirt rather
than have some one else enjoy any of the proceeds.
w,
cKinley's process of benevolent
insurgents ?—Grapeland
is the Texas & Louisiana extension of the Cot-
Belt road, and this is the first move of a great sys-
toward putting their trains into Orange. To do
it will simply have to connect with the Orange and
railway at Buna.
on the extension is already under -way, has
the Angelina and is well into Nacogdoches
Cotton Belt is coming to Orange.
- Question of the hour
truck farm?"
"Have you seen Max Mil-
victims of the kerosene can continue multiply-
That is one bad habit at least that the law can
t* «aid that the success of the corn crop is pow
am! prospects for rice were never better. We
in it. ... - K{ <( ^
*
bump 00 the prairie does not signify strug-
, but they are bumps we should like to investí
! they were on our property in this particular por-
: *he moral vineyard.
! people of Houston, led by the newspaper , have
vigorous steps to fix the responsibility for
stories. It is a wotlc in which all
lis ooocerned with Houston. , I
• continues to grow rapidly and substantially,
are building nice homes, and the charac-
houses. grounds, etc., gives an idea of per-
has a beneficial influence on the entire
Strawboard towns do not inspire o>nfi-
of the most important prop-
of Orange. Eyeiy day
one
Why not try
emulation on the
Messenger.
The Messenger wanted to say "assimilation," but it
does not matter. We wish neither to emulate or assimi-
late cut-thro4tt and assassins.
* • '
We heard a tomato grower remark yesterday that he
cannott afford to gather any more at present prices.
We think he is mistaken in this. If his tomatoes only
net him 12% cents per crate it is better to ship than to
let them rot in the fields.—Texas fruit and Truck Jour-
nal.
Thought the Jacksonville price was twenty-five cents
apiece. Just think of tomatoes at 12% cents per crate.
Whew!
The Orange Tribune has found an old Texas alma-
nac, dated 1867, and gives some interesting facts from
it, among others a list of papers published at that time
in Texas. The News-Boy was omitted from the Trib-
une's list, though our paper was established in 1865,
and we have cn«ie«¡ now that were printed in that latter
year.—Jasper News-Boy.
The Tribune's historical article was necessarily
brief and Was far from complete.
In discussing those eligible for the papacy a little
fact seems to have been overlooked, observes the Gal-
veston Tribune. Any male person who has received-
the sacrament of baptism in the Roman Catholic church
may be elected. But the right is about as valuable an
asset as the eligibility of every nude American citizen to
be elected president. Only politicians reach the presi-
dency and only cardinals become popes. \
Congressman Cooper deserves all the crediKfbr secur-
ing that life-spring building at Sabine Pass. He stays
right with all his work for the people until it is a fin-
ished success.—Orange Tribune.
This is the sort of commendation, remarks the Gal-
veston News, which faithful representatives like. It is
to the credit of Texas congressmen that they generally
left no stone unturned in their efforts to get good things
for their districts and few the State.
to a friend
BEAUMONT.
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A fellow by the name of JcAin Sims went to Rock-
port for a vacation and tells his troubles to the Hous-
ton Post, He wanted a drink on Sunday and couldn't
get it. Said he had six or seven dollars he wanted to
blow in "just to help the town." Whereupon Joe Boeh-
mer soliloquizes in the Floresville Chronicle: "Just
my hick 1 Had I been there the gentleman would not only
have befen accommodated, but wouild have been trying
to borrow nix or seven dollars to get «ut of town on by
the time I got through with him. The Rockport editor
is evidently neglecting his duty. Here was a man who
came all the way from a prohibition town to help Rock-
port and incidentally to take a drink, Mid he could not
be accommodated! Where were the steerers for the om
Pelican dub ? That genteel organization could
lieved him of his surplus cash.
Hamilton? If the man really had
Fayette could have chased up the
farn-ya-wefl. Fayette can find boose (i
cash) when no
lock'him up in a
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Rein, Charles M. The Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 91, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 11, 1903, newspaper, July 11, 1903; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth183104/m1/4/: accessed May 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.