The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 241, Ed. 1 Monday, April 11, 1927 Page: 2 of 24
twenty four pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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THE ORANGE LEADER
PROGRESS EDITION
Birds-eye view of the home of the famous "Black Beauty” Creosoted Poles
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m The -Firut, Atethodist
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FELIX WEIL
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SINCE
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1902
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FAME OF ORANGE IS SPREAD
untreated
IN
AS HOME OF CREOSOTE POLE
pe
ORANGE,
and is the first
l<» market
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TEXAS
ways glad to kive you tbe aetalla
placed the timhers.
that
dentined
fifty men and the persunnel is al-
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An Orange Industry
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Texas Creosoting
Company
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piece of timber is lena than one third
of that of a treated timber
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lumber, ties Me.
A The 4fe of a reosoted pole, pile
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4ple
“BLACK BEAUTY”
PRODUCTS
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"gnugaugpra«ge
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KNOWN AS “BLACK BEAUTIES”
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tie or timber ‘s forts to fifty year*
a Mar article bearing a trade mark
The treating eylinders ench eight
feet in dimaeter by one hundred and
twenty-five feet long are constantly
covers fifty aeres of sand filled dry- 'tn why and how or «reosoted polen
ing yard* empleys ohe hundred ant * —‘
The creosoting industry is youth-
ful and there is romance in its pos-
sibilities as well as the straight bus-
inetms of doilars and cents
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The Tex am (‘reomoing company
whereas the life ot
piles ties,
to ber onia
The Toxas Creoting company, a
memher of the Amerienn Wood pre
wervers arsoeiat Ion. draws its sup-
ply of raw materials from the un-
limited forests of east Texas and
louinjana and enjoys a market for
its produet in virtually every part of
America, nles are frequently made
..p , ’ T —......- "n the Atlanti. coast, Recentty a
"aek beauties. lorated on devp |nrm shipment wan ment •„ y.n.
wter the plant enjoys the advan- zuela. "" ” "ene
Thi plain mecurod ita charter on
Auzunt 1. IKI and to th. manu-
facturer of "ISlack Hteauty" pro-
d«d> Thia mean ihat it la meiling
a regintered trail, marked produet-
operation. iMo the- oylinder
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Thin company carries a stock of
approximately fifty thousand poles
on ita yard, daily teplacementskeep-
in* the stock at all times up to nor-
mal. Speclalizing in poles and eross-
arms for trannmission lines due to
the tremendous development over
Texas and adjoining states The
smaller vQwer companies are ron
emcentrating into greater units and
ditributing elertricity everywhere,
therefore a grent demand for poles
and arma, and ereosoted poles and
arms renisst weather and the ravages
of insects.
tage of ocean transportation service
and water rates, has its own pri-
vate wharf two hundred feet long,
at which nhips to and from world
ports load and unload All of the
ereonote ured comes from England
and Germany and is dimcharged di-
rert from steamer into the huge
l .
partments of the Sunday school and
haa folding doors to enable it to be
united or divided.
Sunday r;hgol begins at 9145 a.
m./ and services at 11 a. m. and
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ill
♦ At
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By BROCKMIAN HORXE.
Situated on th- northwest corner
of Sixth and Kim la th. First Nreth-
odlnt church. This buiine la con-
MrwtM of hollo* til. nna rrm.nl
Antshed with brick It or moa.
ern arehitecture, Iran I nr toward th.
tint hl. toil. Operations were be-
gun on this thuailding under the yas.
torship nf w. W Watts in the
ar of 1.1. and comptetea in
1223.at “ cost of »!>'••», of which
515.000 i. st in unpaid
.The bulldine in -qufppea win |a-
Olea parler. paster's stndy. fully
mqulpped kitchen and merving room
Th. hanemient which to .Ifarrtlv e
low the auditorium to wtca for r.
primary. boEinnera and junlor de.
1
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 241, Ed. 1 Monday, April 11, 1927, newspaper, April 11, 1927; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1443856/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.