The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, January 12, 1906 Page: 3 of 8
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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dividend
jSam
, •• . .
-
I Don’t try cheap cough mcdi-
| clues. Get the best, Ayer’s
Cherry Pectoral, whs* a
record It has, sixty years of
Cherry
Pectoral
I cures! Ask your doctor if
r he doesn't use it for coughs,
| colds, bronchitis, and all
throat and lung troubles.
t Afr't ChtrCf
i lc»pnMerlMI
for ».n.u
(•OKI. ’
SKSttglEEfe*
j. c. iris co..
Lowell. Mas»,
Bronchitis
■
ii V ■■ ‘
aaKSBs.
tjr an two Japan#** atwtonto, M. Mi
Rad U. Wtou*l (proaouaewt wWdky).
Tbelr names are aide by aid* on the
mtSMCR list X. Hnater Mportt that
be was ooce asked to fill a vacant vil-
lage pulpit. The regular prearfrer beta
tbe natite of Fox. In I*eda Mto* Orange
married a Mr. reel. Thera is bear that
aa offspring of this haprf union will
hyphenate the two aurnr.Biee. Another
matrimonial case la quoted by a corre-
apondent from the published •‘Diary of;
John Bppa. M. I)." On page 606 the
doctor notea: "Feb. IT. Thin morning
a patient consulted me named Ann
Devil. Finding she was a single wom-
an. I suggested that some day nbe
might Wcome Ann Angttl. which made
her smile, though she wan In great
pain." A note made later atates. “Tho
curious thing ia that she did many a
Mr. Angel."
mmmm
LliMMmMm
Black Hand
HHNMHMPI
mm®
to OMWdaai hi (ha Uip
lairiai
ta la*
tlaii M»iak—* at tha Saatoty
titotoj n> See* Otor farta
fe'** •
Demoralisation lu the Army.
Details of dolus* lu nrmy society
•not tit to print,” as one prominent
Journal stated it during the Taggart di
vorce proceeding*, raise the miestlon
Whether our army Is becoming,demor-
alized. There have always been exi-cp-
ttons to the generally high reputation
for sobriety and gentlemanly conduct
among the officers of the regular es-
tablishment, but the guild has been
competent to purge its circle of the
* jmworthy. The Boston Transcript iu-
alsta that the army Is still able to main
\ tain its traditional morale, saying:
The best way to secure reform in thi
* . army wilt be to leave It to Itself. If s
";k*et of reformers succeed In getting con-
greu *o Interfere In Us alfmlrs it wlil
Ohly make worse a state of affairs due to
v previous Interference. Civilian lnterfer-
wence lias been the cause of the chief and
l preventable 1)1. The army Itaelf will carry
on a far more effeotlve and rsdkml purg-
ing and regeneration than any civilian
commission ever would. With all his
faults, the army man j§ -prouder of hie
uniform than any of .the rest of us ore,
and this good men In the army do not
Wish tt> see that uniform disgraced by.
men unworthy to wear It.
More specific to the plea of General
} Kelson A'. Miles, whose long and varied
sendee^ qualifies him to speak of the
Is cultivated by army offl-
t the genera):
The armF lias been called a place of
eternal adieus It is one of the hardship*
of the service that officers must hold
' themselves In readiness to move from
post to post aa the service may demand.
This transitory state of living compels an
! ■ army officer to rely for aoclal comfort
very largely upon his own family, and
therefpre the domestic ties of an army
officer are almost Invariably much more
firmly knit than those of a civilian. An
/officer is expected to lead the life of a
gentleman; he Is restrained by army reg-
ulations. and unless be Is willing to
' wreck 1.1s entire oareer he will be govern-
ed by the Ideals which obtain among his
' fellow officers.
As the Transcript very properly re-
gal marks, the bp^sh-American war very
nearly destroyed the old army. After
tho war the army was trebled In site,
old officers dropped oat, and new ones
did not follow the old traditions. So-
ciety should net harshly judge the tend
•notes of the mass of officers by tbe
habits of the few, especially since so-
ciety’s own paragons are not them-
selves exemplary exponents of tbs aim-
life. ,It would be strange If tbe
wave of luxury and Indulgence
has swept the country of late
bad not Invaded the lnner^clrcles of
garrison and camp. Soldier)# are but
mortal, yet tbe history of our army
proves that the weak among them are
_■■ *
There to some reason In paying a sal-
ary- of $100,000 to the president of a
railroad sgstem under develop
but the ease is different In the
Aainaurano* pas-
tes a force of clerks
i out for safe lnvi
m MPa oof .....
belong to the policy
-1---4—
and todies In t/mdaw
a spasm of sentiment
poor. The fact about
' the
mm
of the cook
bv
An Raamplr at Darla*.
* During the hottest fighting In the
Khipkii pass the leading battalion of
the Itusslan General DragomlrufTs di-
vision recoiled liefon* a hailstorm of
Turkish bullets. The general was a
very stout person and had the ap-
pearance of a peaceful German pro-
fessor. But when he saw hl» men re-
coil he dismounted nnd walked slow-
ly to and fro along a rhtge swept by
the enemy's bullets. He was a hun-
dred yards In advance of the men, oc-
cupying the position they had abandon-
ed. After staying there for awhile
without being touched he shouted bock
to the battalion; "What are you doing,
you geese? Did you think there was
danger here? 1 don’t find any!” The
men responded with a roar of cheers,
doubled up to him and charged so
fiercely that the Turka were forced to
retreat.
Whr Bands llr!|> March I g*.
All men who have any appreciation
of music feel prompted to step in time
to a march tune, and music on the
march therefore substitutes a new nnd
pleasnuter stimulus to exertipn for tbe
monotonous and somewhat dreary one
of keeping place in the ranks. It is
well known that weariness is, as a rule,
more a matter of mind than of body
and that the muscles of the body do
not tire half so soon as tbe nerve cen-
ters which move them. Music, by
bringing a fresh nerve center Into play,
will often banish all sense of weariness
and will even sometimes afford rest to
tbe usnnl nerve center, so that when
tbe music censes the soldier feels fresh
er than before It began. .
Start*** Tl**t levewa.
To start a tight screw press tbs
screwdriver firmly to place with
hand, but do not tarn It. Then take
bold of it sideways with flat jawed
pilar* aa does to the bead of tbe screw
as possible sad tarn it with them. A
band vise to better than pliers. Leave,
Just enough of tb# tip of tbe screw
driver outside the vise to fill tbe slot of
tbe screw, but no mare. This reduces
tbe danger of breaking er bending a
badly tempered screwdriver to a mini
mum.—Scientific
"What to tbe matter, darling?" asked
ffie concerned mother when her small
son came to her In tears.
"Wall, you sit. mummy, daddy was
banging a picture, and ha dropped It,
and it fall on hls toe.”
“But that to nothing to cfy about”
cried the mother cheerily. "Ton should
have laughed at that, sonny."
"I did, mommy,” responded her
small son regretfully.—London Globe.
Symbols of Trad*,
In Scotland it was for a long time
ostial to place on a man's tombstone
tbe symbols of his trade. Especially
was this tbe case at Dunblane, where,
in the burial ground of the abfey, it
has been found that of those tomb-
stones which are from 100 to 800 years
old about one-fourth are thus marked,
the symbols being in low relief. *
HB operations, of tbe Black
Hand society and other law-
leas associations of Italians
and* diet liana have suggested
an Inquiry by immlgrattoa officials
with a i>k>w to stricter methods In
keeping out of the United States per
sons suspected of affiliation with such
organisations. New York city, Jersey
CHy, Paterson, N. J., and other places
In tho vicinity of New York have been
tbe scene of many outrages in the past
few months which have been attribut-
ed to tbe pernicious activity of mem*
hers of these criminal societies. The
police departments of cities where sncli
crimes are committed have great diffi-
culty In tracing tbe author, owing to
the methods employed by the mem-
ber* of the hands to escape detection,
Broughton Brandenburg, a magazine
writer who has given especial study to-
Immigration problems, has made the
suggestion that tbe criminal authori-
ties would be aided In their work were
the United States Immigration bureau
to make n canvass of tbe entire terri-
tory east of Chicago with tbe view of
deporting nil suspects of the Black
Hand stripe who arc found to have
criminal antecedents. Were such s
task to t>e undertaken It would comq
under the Immediate direction of the
United States commissioner of Immi-
gration, Frank P. Sargent, who haa
already done much to make It more
difficult for lawless characters to get
Into our ports.
In carrying on Such an investigation
Mr. Sargent would rely greatly upon
the work of Detective Sergeant Joseph
Petroaino of New York, who is reputed
to know the members of these bands
by sight and to have a close acquaint-
ance with the criminal records of many
who belong to the orders suspected of
encouraging criAte. It to said that
there are at least 6,000 members Of
the Black Hand In tbe United States
It to a sort of Sicilian offshoot of the
Mafia, and, though Its operations are
usually confined to persons living In
the Italian quarters of the large Amer-
Begiflflittf of New
Coflegt Best is
4«n> Kttkit.
•T suppose you're going to Dr. Ma-
son's funeral, grandpa V
“OhA snarled the Infirm old man,
‘‘don’tTalk to ms about other people's
funerals. IPs as much as t shall be
able to do target to my own."-Bx-
ehann
A C1«nm rathe*.
She—You most ask father for Ids
consent He-He won’t give it to me.
She—Why not?
h,»uf*- ___
nuxx V. sABGmrr.
lean dittos, an extension of its depreda-
tions to said to be Imminent A kindred
band Is that of the Camorrs, which
also has a large membership In this
country. A ahott time age a Sicilian
family named Glroavalva, living In the
Italian quarter of New York, received
a letter demanding $1,000 for the Cs-
morra. The family kept a small but
prosperous grocery store: They paid
no attention to the first totter, but os
receiving a second reported the matte*
to the police. Their store was for somt
time guarded by officers In plain
clothes, hut In consequence of the d*
inand fOJ* the services of Italian detec-
tives, owing to frequency off
Hand crimes, the guard ‘ *
rarily. removed, Shortly i
there was sit
which the
tlally
were hurt.
Jersey
PHENOMENAL SUCCESS
The Tyler Commercial College
begins the flew Year under, ar
cumstaoces which permtt the
anticipation of even the great
eat year which wilt have beer
recorded in Its history at the
expiration ot 1906. The phenom-
enal extent of success to be at
tained needs not to be referred
to in comparison w th past years
before the Tyler reading public.
Suffice it will be to relate a
feurparticulars incident upon
tbe opening of this year at this
institution. During the past
three days—the first ot the New
Year—tbe Tyler College ba*
enrolled students from nio*
different States, and Prof. H. E
Byrne, president of tbe rapidly
becoming noted Byrne System
Colleges, and personally mana
ger of tbe Tvler branch, states
that it is tbe best opening that
has eveT crowned tbeir efforts
to bring the up to date systems
to the front.
Tbe rate of enrollment for
tbe first few days therefore
fustifies the belief that tbe at
tendance tor 1&0 at tbe Tyler
College will exceed that of any
former year by sufficient odds
toevidencetbe good,substantial
growth which this institution la
experiencing.
Tyler people are proud of thia
institution, and justly so. It is
one of tbe biggest things
Tyler and advertises this ofty
over many States. Tbe great
benefit derived from tbe
ence of several bund red students
in this city—an average ot near-
ly 1000 tor a year—is unquestion-
ed.
Tbe college is in most capable
bands, and tbe n^anagement, at
the beginning of this year, de
serve to be crowned with honors
for tbe phenomenal success at-
tained since tbe establishment
of tbe coflege here some seven
years ago. In behalf of our cit-
ixensbip as a whole, we salute
the Tyler Commercial College,
and express the hope that future
successes will dwarf those of
the past.—Democrat- Reporter,
January 4tb.
MEETING OF THE PASTORS
—ii—
■ . *—
Allocution Holds Interesting aid fro-
11 - £: , fit*We Sessiofl A
The Pastors
in regular i
of the Hoitanc
morning at |9:i
with prayer
Whirter of the <
There -ere ,
K)
lillfSSnS
Soiig, by congregations.
I Reading scriptuwfifw ^
Prayer.
Solo, Mr. Lattir g.
Talk by Rev. J. H. McWblrter,
Prayer.
Hymn bv congregation, "Bleat
be tbe Tie that Binds."
Benediction.
Bach pastor upbn call ma
eport ot the week for the
week hi the church served
• i.m.
At tbe Christian church the
congregations ^morning and
evening were 'unnsuallv good,
the evening congregation being
the largest to greet tbe pastor
unce be began his work. The
text lor the mornirfg service
was Isaiah 28-40, thence, "The
Foundation ot tbe Church.”
Evening: text Bpb. 4: 1-0 "The
One Body.”
At tbe Methodist church the
pastor reported find congrega-
tions both morning and evening
ne^preacbmg in tbe morning
from Rom. 1:14 declaring and
empbasising "Obr i s t i a ol t y’s
Debt to tbe Unchristian World,”
and In the evening beginning a
aeries of sermoos on the life of
Christ, using at this time' Luke
2d.
Mr. Amerson reported very
fine congregations’ at tbe Qreen
Avenue Baptist church, the beat
at tbe evening service that haa
gathered in quite a while. Hit
theme for tbe 11 o'clock service
was "Christ Establishing His
Kingdonl’’ using Matt. 17di for
his text. At night be spoke of
the "Priceless Value of Oppor-
tunities,” basing ms lesson on
Acts 20: He was rejoiced at the
aCeawton of two members.
ThdJPastorof the West Or-
ange ikptiat cburch had the
good fortune to listen while
Rev. I. H. Jefferies preached to
tbe people of bis charge, tbe
service rendered being most ac-
ceptable and instructive. He
used Song of Solomon 2:15 as a
text in tbe morning and Rom. 2:
22-28 at tbe evening service.
At tbe Presbyterian church
though not as large as it should
have been tbe congregation at
tbe 11 o'clock worship was of
tbe kind that helps a minister,
maaifestiAg throughout tbe ser-
vice a narked Interest and iriv*
ing clone attention tothsthlogs
spoken. Tie pastor used Amos.
4:12 last clause, presenting from
the text "The Greatest Concern
of a Human Soul.” At the even-
ing service Acts 10:88 was
imdirecting to "A
Hearing of God’s Word."I
evening congregation
have equaled that ot tbe
ing bad tbe avowed
otthe church attended
vice.
Tbe Sabbath schools
churches have
Year,
1..........
‘■Imm \ pl. e
'M4» a4 “
«Ai
&££
»oto Owv a
*>» «AL* BY a r.
for omission of such a
wonli be gilt edge fo
be beard ultimately
bigbeot tribunal.
-
1
Opportunity
While talbfaf H
well known Teams
man, through
second time, the
sentative asked him
impressed by tbe
reply was that he
Orange a city of uni
sibilitfes, for the .
pecially a good town. «
L-“ in the city but i
e cjty
time”, continued this
‘out frofi looking
1 believe that say
who is mdus
here, and by this I
that not only can
good living, bat he
money to go in
for himself.”
met
irlor
The Agricult
The * __
lion free.
liuiojiry. tnn
ti?"
■ .
•; i| Jfe ’*>
.... .Wto
ggpli
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, January 12, 1906, newspaper, January 12, 1906; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth644286/m1/3/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.