The Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, April 18, 1902 Page: 1 of 4
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THE CHAKLESTOH EXPOSITOS CAIDIDATBS FOR BLECTRDCOTIDH.
New York Delegation Will Leave That
Citx Monday.
f Ahbociawcl Press.
York April l8.- Details
tve been completed for the
in of the spee+ál- train which
íe merchants' association dele-
tion hafc arranged for the ya-
ms New York Committees
Siting: the Charleston exposi-
jn, for New York day. The
in will leave Jersey City at
14, o'clock a. da? on Monday
and arrive in Charleston at
a.m. Tuesday. It will
Charleston on the return
at 4 p. ra. on Thursday.
Thrfa Man Adjudged Guilty"of the
Murder of *n Unela.
p By Associated Press.
Hudson, N. Y., April 18,-The
jury in the ease of Burton, Willis
and Frederick Vjan Wórmer,
charged with the murder of their
uncle, Peter A. Hallenbeck,
.todav returned a verdict of guilty
of murder in the first degree
against all three.
Phone 19.vhave your wantB in the
drag Une delivered to your horn .
Gorce & Higman. tf
Dealers
Free delivery to
any piart of. the city.
opsone orders
promptly execute
Phone No. 188.
Staplq and
Fancy Groceries
Forward Reduction Co's Great
Plant at Orange.
■ H
$100,000, SOBTB OF lACHIIERf
Now on the Ground and Work Hard-
ly Begun. What la BalnfrDana
in South Orange.
<******< i
Delmonico Restaurant
RUSSELL 4 ELUDE, Props.
We are now serving regular meals at 35c
'•MMV MM| > «Mw «tar ' gyw a 1 'Slf «ay Mar WMT
Table board, |5.50 per week. A f6.00 commutation ticket for $5.00.i
Prompt and courteous attention. Elegant lanches for excursion
parties pot np on short notice. Short orders are our specialty.
£
M. V. ANDERSON. . J. H. BLAND. W. L. ANDERSON.
Orange Hardware and Implement Co.
Has something in stock that will interest you
Those. up-,to-date Buggies and Phaetons.
Those cheap Refrigerators. A splendid line
of Saddlery and Harness. Builders' Hard
ware and Carpenters' Tools of every descri
tion. The best line of Fishing Tackle in, i
Link Block, 5th Street Change, Tex.
jL
AMERICA AND THE COFFEE
QUESTION:-Americans are the great-
tit consumers of coffee itf the world, for
tea and other table beverages are only
of secondary Importance with this. It
:
■
therefore behooves every consch
grocer to look to his stock of coffe
are prepared to satisfy all tastes, and
have Mocha, Java and other, excellent
"blends," mixed iü excellent j>rog>rtlon.
xedi_
coffee of fine flavor I
iur Leader,
7
at from aoc to 96c per lb.
Complete Line Fruits,
Goods Delivered Free. Phone 79-2r.
James Bunn
Grocer and Báker
RANGE CAFE and RESTAURANT
A Place tor Ladies amd Gentlemen.
i ane jtvtv serving full 35c mtals 3 times * day
cial rates to families and regular boarders
Strictly first-class service; courteous and attentive
mm
V '• •
If there are any Doubting Thomases
in thiecprntnunity who are skeptical
as to the intention of the Forward fie-
duction compaBJ^ to carry out their
plapB as outlined for building one of
the greatest oil refinéries in the world
at Orange, a visit to the big niant
such as was made by a Tribune rep-
resentative yesterday Will forever
dispel that illusion and Will convince
the mosr~skepticfyl that this great
{plant, when completed, will far exoped
anything that has ever been thought
of in this connection. Upon his ar-.
rival at the refinery site, the reporter
was taken in hand by Mr.' JL M. David-
son, general superintendent- of the
Forward Reduction company, who has
full charge of the construction work,
and who-extended every , opportunity
for the visitor- tot thoroughly únder-
stand everything that hád been done
and the vast work of construction that
iii. contemplated and that will be begun
in a few dayK
A visit wis, first paid to the brick-
making plant, where the big machine
that turns out 50,000 bricks per dayi is
belted up and in first-class condition,'
waiting to begin making as fine briok
a can be made in any jpart^of the state,
aa soon as the big steam dry sheds are
fitted up, which work will be complet-
ed in a few days. The boilers in this
big brick plant are/fitted with oil burn-
ers, all of 'the kilns will be fired with,
oil and oil will we uBed as fuel under
all of the boilers with which the big
refinery will be supplied. Mr- David-
son has started a testing kiln, where
he will test the burning of brick in
ways, and «an© interesting re-
sult may be expected.
A number of large storage tihks have
already been pnfc.np. for the storage of
oil that will be used under the boilers,
and the pipe line has been completed
from these tanks to the wharf on the
bayou, where the barges will land to
discharge their cargoes of oil into these
tanks. The company noW owns a tug
and severa} oil bargee which will be
used for transporting the oil until the
pipe line to the oilfield is completed.
A few hundred yards away from the
brick plant is the site of the refinery.
T&is site^haá been staked off: and laid
out and as one looks from one side
to the, other it is hard for the imagina-
tion even to conceive what á mammoth
structure thiB will be when completed.
Some idea "may be. gained of its im-
mensity, however," when one remem-
bers that the specifications contem-
plate the use of thre& million brick
in the construction, of the refinery
building. Work on the refinery proper
will begin just, as soon as enough brick
have been made to give the masons
plenty of material with which to
work. The big boiler shops are. now
well under way And occupy a building
75 x 186 feet An enormous eleibtrical
traveling - crane is being placed i;
n the Terms of the British
Peace Proposals.
WEYLER
I1TIAT1VE AMD REFERENDUM TAKEN
In the Mean Tlm¿ No Armlatiee Has
Been Arranged, and the War
1 Goea On.
Bfr Associated press.
London, April 18.—The Gov-
ernment leader, A. J. Balfour,
in the House of Commons today
be-
imüém
——
de the following important
statement:
'After two conferences
een.the British High Commis-
sioner of South Africa General
MÍlner and General Lord Kitcb-
ner with Boer delegates at Pre
toria, Kitchener, while refusing
to grant an armistice on military
grounds, has agreed to give facil-
ities for „an election. „and meet-
ing of representatives of various
Boer commands to consider the
position 6i Boer leaders. They
have therefore left Pretoria to
carry out this plan."
Mr. Balfour added that it was
not expected 'that communica-
tion between the British authori-
ties and the Boer leaders could
be resumed within less than
three weeks time.
In His ReconcentradoMethods,
Say the Federal Lawyers;.
■ .. -1.7 "V.■> -■ 'I ,** -tMK-i i:
' ' '
CUIUS IcillST THE COVBRIIEIIT
Growing Out of the War With 8paln
tn«l the Cubán Inaurrectlon
. x> Prior to It.
iiSfW*
Press.
New YorkrAprillS.—Lawyers
of this city who are pushing
rious Claims against the govern
ment, growing out of tfie wur
with Spain and the Cuban insur-
rection preceding it, have re
^ived a brief of demurrer to
their petitions in whi<ph the
Federals lawyers assent that
General 15(eyler's recon c e n-
trado order was justifiable under
the rulés of civilised warfare:
The plaintiffs in the case
claim that while they were citi-
zens of the United v States
their silgar plantations twe
destroyed by the Cuban insuK
gehts. The United States
government is looked to
for ^ reimbursements because of
the agreement with Spain as to
the mutual relinquishment of
claims on behalf-of her citijyyys
HEAVY OVERSUBSCRIPTIONS.
The
British
■ V-
position here, which will lif|; the mi
ponderoua^naohinery or material from
the cars on the track at one end of
the shop and carry it with ease to any
portion of the building desired. This
boiler shop will soon present a scene
of clamor and activity when the work
of construction getr-well under way,
0 The big direct acting electric light
énginé has arrived and will furnish the
Continued on pa«e 2.
,
The Fancy Grocers
ü
8FJ
"liM S «P-
M* A ,
■, ' 'i.Vj. ■
■M
SsEwi '
rfíVV.A. ' ' II, "• J
Loan. 1a Vary Promptly
Seourad.
By Associated Press.
London, April 18.—The list of
applications for portions of the
new loan of sixteen million
pounds offered «to the public
closed this morning, owing to
heavy oversubscriptions and in
convenience to the market
arising frem locking up Sucha
large amount of money.
QUKM1ILBELIIUI ;J
Haa Typhoid Fayor>«Hár Condition la
Conaldarad Alarming.
By Associated Press.
The Hague, April 18.—A.n
official bulletin was issued this
morning from Cattle Loo stating
that Queen Wilhelmina passed a
fairly quiet night, but her fever
continúes alarming.
The fever which complicates
the' queen's condition is now
officially admitted to be typhoid.
, ABOUT THE PEACE PROPOSALS.,1
Haa No
Miaa Sibyl Clifton Inharita a Wf
at Beaumont.
By Associated press. T
—1~ . Chican April 18.—Migs
or subjects growing out of the one ihe. five
Dalagata Saya Ho
Information.
By Associated Prcx*
The Hague, Apfll 18.—A. D.
Wolmarans, Boot delegate, said
today that he had no knowledge
whatever of any particulars re-
garding the South African peace
negotiations, norof a report
published iii* Amsterdam to the
effect that negotiatio s had been
broken off.
— ■■ , ~*>r ,
BORAX AS MEAT PRESERVATIVE.
By Associated Press.
St. Paul, Minn., April 18.—
The wholesale dealers, arrested
at the instigation of the retail
dealers, have been arraigned on
a charge of using ¿orax as a
meat preseuiativé. * They de-
murred to tne1 ch'argé aftcl their
ca^es were continued until April
29, A casé similar to Óiése is
now pending in t;he supreme
court and It is expected that a
decision will be had before the
war and insurrection and theán
nouncement that the United
States would settle the claim of
its Citizens against Spain so re-
linquished as set forth in the
peace treaty.
The government's máia con-
tention is, that a state of actual
warfare obtained in Cuba at the
time of thei alleged losses, and
that ' therefore under the pro-
vision of the treaty it is not
liable.
STRICKEN AT THE 'ALTAR. ;
By Associated Press. ,, '
New York, April 18.—Charles
Pinck and Mary Mclntyie were
about to be married in the
Sacred Heart; church, says a
World% dispatch from Trenton,
N. J., whén both bridegroom and
the. best man were taken sud-
denly ill with appendicitis. The
priest was at the altar and the
bride and bridegroom were ad-
vancing toward him when the
voting man was stricken. As
he fell his best man also.was
stricken.
ENGLISH WAR TAX «1 BREAD.
An Effort to Make a Damon
Againat It. v.
By Associated Press. " ,
New, York, April 18.-
Michael Hicks-Beach is quoted
as having Said that the duty of
thre'e pence a' hundredweight
on grain and live pence on flour
will amount , to án insignificáiÉ*
fraction on a quartern loaf,
a Tribune dispatch from Lone
The bakers, however, fright
ed by the rise in the price of
flour, have in" some case put an
extra p'enny on the loal. The
Cobden club is tryihgto arrange
a demonstration in Free Trades
hall, against the tax. Miacing
Lane dealers claim that the im-
port will ; produce £5,000,000^
4*8,000,000 more than the cháa-,
Vellor of the exchequer estim-
EGEKCY IN HOLLAND
la Suggested on Account of
lllneaa of tha Quoon.
By Associated Press
t Berlin^April 18.-^TheCologBi ;.
Gazette today réyivea the re-
port of a probable convocation
of the Dutch States General in
order to establish a regency in
Holland on account of
Wilhelmina's illness.
RICH ID OIL LAUDS.
>■ ,
girls in J,The 'Chas
heiress to á fortune oí
in oil lands le£k by
Huntington Hale, w
Beaumont, Texas, two
and willed his estate to his
Miss Clifton has received a
gram notifying her of her
fortune. Her uncle went
Texas twenty years ago ■
bought )[and which of late
tlimed out to be rich in oil. Miss
Clifton has ambitions for. a,
musical training which her
parents were too poor to give
her. 1 She says she will first pro-
vide for her parents and will
next year go to Europe to study
music. . •. fills
A DOUBLE* HANGING.
By Associated. Press.
DOnaldsonviUe. La,, Apeií J
- -Ellis Washington and:
Wallace were hung here
for the murder of Lee Gig
Washington was cheerful,
Wallace was on the verge of
lapse when he ascended
platform. ;
*
|Jtz & Donn
Children's
G. W.Lewis
Shoes
Ladies'
Griffon
Waists
Men's
Gossett
Shoes
rr1
' .
111 j ,A
Woife Bros-
• Shoes
..111 / ' M-Ji
Men's
Eagle
, wc never lag. üach season we
^ ' fy.,, . | <V 1 'Jí 'I I ^T'l'
to improve our previous efforts!
mm
factorilv
now that we
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Rein, Charles M. The Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, April 18, 1902, newspaper, April 18, 1902; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth183025/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.