The Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 230, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 9, 1902 Page: 3 of 4
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LOT OF THE TILLER OF THE
SOIL IS TO BE ENVIED.
re* In City Shops Know Moth-
of HI* Independence, nnd Al-
|M#n*U tl..- Work I* Hard and I»-
oesaant the Reward la tyre.
JM! some of the farmers who are dis-
couraged because they have not made
a fortune off their farms and who feel
inclined to envy their brother toilers in
the dty, imagining that life in the city
is more desirable than theirs, easier
and filled with plenty of leisure to en-
joy all the pleasures with which the
rustic Imagination gilds and glorifies
those distant scenes and activities,
they need only try to find out their
mistake. “Far fields are green” and
lose much of their attractiveness npon
a nearer view.
To the city man of ordinary means
and opportunities, who, like the ordi-
nary farmer, has no bank account to
tail back upon in case of emergency,
life is one “demnition grind” and with-
out the soothing influences of nature
that surround the farmer to quiet the
fever and unrest with which the strug-
gle, competition and turmoil around
him keep his nerves on the rack day
after day. As a rule, such men are not
-their own masters, but must order
their speech, demeanor and inclinations
to please the powers that have cohtrol
over their daily doings in order to keep
bread in the mouths and clothes on the
backs of both themselves and their
families.
The farmer, Jf he does not feel well,
can rise in the morning at whatever
hour it pleases him so to do, for an
hour or so or a day or two does not
make much difference In his affairs,
except at the most critical periods of
planting and harvesting. He can have
his own opinions, and voice them, too,
on politics and religion and all the
stirring questions of the day without
fear of antagonizing the powers that
be, who can “sack” him if his views
and opinions do not happen to coincide
with those of his masters or "over-
lord” (the boss).
That the farmer is a hard worker no-
body can deny. Tilling the soil Is not
easy work. Since God gave the com-
mand to man to “earn his bread by the
sweat of his fuce” the farmer’s life
has been a life of toil. It takes some
Strength and effort to dig a living out
of the ground. It is not easy to earn a
living, much less a fortune, without
effort, and the farmer is not the only
one who “sweats.” Brain workers
have no sinecure, although some per-
sons imagine that all they have to do
Is to sit at a desk and add up figures
or to twiddle a pen in their fingers. The
life of a salesman behind the counter,
is most wearisome and monotonous.
The beautiful days of spring go by,
the birds are singing as tbey build
their nests, the flowers are blooming in
the valleys and on the hillsides, and the
grass is growing greener and greener
,i In the meadows, yet never a glimpse
does he get of the beauty of the bright
world except when he can take a car
ride of an evening or on a Sunday or
holiday.
A grocer’s clerk works more hours
and harder than the average country
boy, who can go to the "corner” and
pitch quoits and gossip with his cronies
when the city young man Is Just get-
ting from work, and, as for the man
who delivers milk in the city; he has
| even harder work and longer hours.
At 4 in the morning and even earlier
Ibis wagon is beard on the streets and
hltoself racing from top to bottom or
[the high apartment buildings in the
cold and sleet of a midwinter’s morn*
flng or in the enervating heat of sum-
aer. At breakneck speed be goes, and
could almost imagine that bis life
idepended upon getting through his
■rounds in due season. Competition is
|so great that he must neglect nothing
nd always be pleasant and obliging
i the most unreasonable of customers
for fear of losing one. There are the
emen, carrying fifty pounds and often
ft pounds of ice tap four flights of
airs, wbi$b is no easy task, and as it
not skilled labor the pay is probably
it more than it should be, considering
e amount of strength expended,
the work is and moderate as
m no man can afford to lose
Jgugpe has to W VeitTcareful not
ihtagonize his employers,
he ujafj "who does business on a
icale and Is his own boh* prob-
fands it noeasler ip make allying,
LACEMAKING.
«•*<
—1
That Tell* of
All OM Le*«n
Origin of the Ar*. '|i
Lacemaking is by no means so old an
Industry as most persons suppose.
There is no proof that it existed previ-
ous to the fifteenth century, and the
oldest known painting In which it ap-
pears is a portrait of a lady In the
academy at Venice painted by Cat*
paccio. who died about 1523. The leg
end concerning the origin of the art is
as follows:
A young fisherman of the Adriatic
was betrothed to a yoting and’beauti-
ful. girl of one of the isles of the la-
goon. Industrious as she was lieuntl
fill, the girl made a new net for her
lover, who took It with him on hoard
his boot The first time be cast it into
the sen he dragged therefrom an pxqui
site petrified wrack grass," which he
hastened to present to his fiancee. But,
war breaking out, the fisherman was
pressed into the service of the Venetian
uavy, Tlie poor girl wept at the depar
ture of her lover and contemplated his
last gift to her. But while absorbed ,o
following the intricate tracery of the
wrack grass she began to twist and
plait the threads weighted with small
beads which liuag around her net. Lit-
tle by little she wrought nn Imitation
of the petrification. and thus was cre-
ated the bobbin lace.
IS
i
We Owe the Hat to Asia.
We owe the hat to Asia, for It was In
that country that the art of felting
wool was first known, and from the
most remote periods the art was car-
ried on by the orientals. In India.
China, Burma and Siam hats are
made of straw, of rattan, of bamboo,
of pith, of the leaf of the Tallport
palm and of a large variety of grasses.
The Japanese made their hats of pa-
per. The modern hat can be traced
back to the petasurs woTn by the an-
cient.Romans when on a Journey, and
hats with brims were also used by the
earlier Greeks. * ■ '
It was not until after the Roman
conquest that the use of hats began In
England. A “hatte of blever,” about
the middle of the twelfth century, was
worn by one of the nobles of the land.
Fralssort describes hats and plumes
which were worn at Edward’s court
in 1340, when the Garter order was In
stituted. The merchant in Chaucer’s
“Canterbury Tales” had “on his head
a Flaunderlsh beaver bat,” and from
that period onward there Is frequent
mention of “felt hattes.”
Origin of “Hooiter.”
An Indiana man who was being
taunted about the name of his state,
“Hoosicr," gave this explanation of it:
"When the young men on the In-
diana side of the Ohio river went to
Louisville, the Kentucky men boasted
over them, calling them ‘new purchase
greenies.’ and claiming themselves to
be a superior race, half horse, half alli-
gator and tipped off with snapping
turtle. These taunts produced fights
in the market house and streets of
Louisville. On one occasion a stout
bully from Indiana was victor in a
fist fight, and, having heard Colonel
Lehmanowsky lecture on ‘The Wars of
Europe,’ who always gave martial
prowess to the German hussars in a
flight with the Russian Cossacks, pro-
nouncing hussars ‘hoosiers,’ the In-
dlanian, when the Kentuckian cried
‘Enough!’ Jumped np and said: “I am
a booster.’ And hence the Indlanians
were called by that name. This was
its true origin. I was in the state
when it occurred.”*-Chicago Chronicle.
TEMPTED, HE ATE.
A Story of Hdnrloh Heine ut
foothnoate frp*«
Returning from a Journey to the
south of France Heinrich Heine met A |
friend, a German violinist, in Lyons,
who gave hint a large sausage that had
been made in Lyons, witli the request
to deliver it to a mutual acquaintance,
a homeopathic physician, in Paris.
Heine promised to attend to the com-
mission and intrusted the delicacy to
the care of Ills wife, who was travel-
ing with him. But us the poet chaise
was very slow and he soon became
very hungry, on the advice.of his wife
both tasted of the sausage, which
dwindled with every mile.
Arriving.nt Paris. Heine did not dare
to send the remainder to the physician,
and yet he wished to keep his promise.
So he cut off the thinnest possible
slice with bis razor, wrapped it in a
sheet of vellum paper and Inclosed It
in nn envelope, with the following
note:
Dear Doctor—From your scientific In-
vestigations we learn that the millionth
part o£ a certain substance brings about
the greatest results. I beg. therefore,
your kind acceptance of the accompany-
ing millionth part of a Lyons sausage,
which our friend gave me to deliver to
you. It homeopathy is a truth, then this
little piece will have the same effect on
you as the whole sausage. Your
HEINRICH HEINE
—Ughettl’s “With Physicians and Cli-
ents,"
The Vulgar Voice.
What constitutes the vulgar voice?
In an article tin the London Spectator
a writer concludes that this evidence of
vulgarity, “springs, like almost all vul-
garity, however displayed, chiefly from
two causes—an undue love of conspicu-
ousness and an undue fear of the
same.” The person whose chief aim
is to keep himself or herself in the eye
of the world rarely makes a Remark
without desiring that It shall reach the
ears of others besides the one directly
addressed, and here the peculiarly false
sound of the voice is attributed to the
absence of singleness of motive. On
the other hand, the wavering tone and
affected accent of the timid vulgar are
ascribed to another form of insincerity
—namely, the wish to imitate others
with whom one happens to be when
they are of a supposedly higher social
standing. The attempt is sure to fail
and the result Only In the suppression
of nil evidence of the speaker’s own
personality—in the voice as well ns in
the manner. Thus sincerity, paramount
in all art, is basic in breeding as welt
which is the art of life.
—--
to.'ijo the greater part of his
in t}ii case of ^‘baSl or
nprofi t$bIe «fea son -
as hi 8 hire:
i wages alleast.
sometimes mdl so
p % /'
That man who owns bis land and
as good health is a poor farmer who
aot make at least a living for hlm-
E and family. It may not be a sump-
nous living, but it may be a compare*
Ively comfortable one. This cannot
r said of ail sorts of occupations.
There is another hope ahead for the
armer. If he doesn’t have good luck
ills year, he may the next There Is
always a chance that there will be a
ter yield In crops and a better price
i the market The element of oncer-
,lnty adds xest to life which a settled
aount of wages from month to month
nd from year to year cannot give, and
is always sure of enough to eat on
i farm of some sort or another,
tie time Is coming and Is not far dis-
when the farmer's life will be
upon as the Ideal life by many
tiie world weary tollers of the
cities. Even now the one
; dream of many a drudger In the
and offices is of a happy time
ling when he will have a farm, a
le all his own In the country, where
a rest his tired brain and nerves
sits beneath his own vine and
• apple- tree. Whoever despises a
re Is a fool; it Is the most
l ll» OB «rtB.-Oooo«r
V.'
MSP
The Thermometer In Slcknea*.
Currie of Edinburgh employed a ther-
mometer in the treatment of typhoid
fever patients with the cold douche as
early as 1797. He was ridiculed by his
German contemporaries as an instance
of medical decay in English medicine.
The first clinical application of the
thermometer was made by Santorii’is of
Padua. He Invented a thermometer
open at the end. After being held by
the patient it was plunged into cold
water. Boerbave taught the impor-
tance of the thermometer. De Haen
(1704-1776) must be given the honor
of Introducing the thermometer into
current use at the bedside. It was
not until 1850 to 1870 that it came into
general use.
Hngro and HI* Critic.
Victor Hugo once made a queer mis-
take in “Travallleurs de la Mer” when
he mentioned the Firth of Forth as
the “Premier de Quatre." He had con-
fused the word “firth” with “first” The
English translator of the book was at
(he pains to point this out to the great
man in a letter, but Victor Hugo was
Indignant at tbe Impertinence and ab-
solutely declined to have the mistake
corrected.
Rain Hat* la Korea.
Korea is a country of strange head-
dresses, but perhaps the most curious
headgear of all is the immense rain hat
worn by the farmers’ wives while
working in the fields during the rainy
season. These extraordinary coverings
are often as much as seven feet long
and five feet broad and protect the
body as effectively as any umbrella
could do.
.. A* a Faro*.
A certain London restaurant has this
remarkable sentence displayed in vari-
ous parts of its dining room:
“Any incivility or inattention ou the
part of any of the employees of this es-
tablishment will be considered a favor
If reported promptly to the proprietor."
The Exception.
Attorney—Ignorance of the law ex-
cuses no one.
Client—Except of course a lawyer.—
Town and Country.
The easiest money to spend and the
hardest money to save Is that which
you Imven't earned.-^-Chicago News.
' ...........
' :':y"
Lead Pencil Experiment*.
An English statistician was asked
how many words could be written with
an English lend pencil, and, being de-
termined to answer it he bought a lead
pencil and Scott’s “Ivanhoe” and pro-
ceeded to copy the latter word by word.
He wrote 95,008 words and then was
obliged to stop, for the pencil had be-
come so short that he could not use it.
A German statistician who heard of
this experiment was dissatisfied with
it because all the lead in the pencil was
not used on the work, and therefore he
bought a pencil and started to copy a
long German novel. When the pencil
was so short that he could not handle
it with his fingers, he attached a holder
to it, and it is said that he wrote with
this one pencil 400,000 words. Possi-
bly, however, his pencil was longer or
the lead in it was of a more durable
quality.
Disliked Efotlim.
“What’s the matter with you?’’ asked
his wife.
“I’m feeling lonely,” was the reply.
“Don’t you like this town?”
“I don’t like this earth.’’
“What’s the objection to it?”
“People are too egotistical. If there’s
anything I hate it's egotism. And when
I see kings going about confidently and
Aolng things wrong, and diplomats try-
ing all sorts of insincere tricks with
complete effrontery, and lawyers seek-
ing applause for arguing on the wrong
side of a ease, and everybody display-
ing utijer selfishness without a blush, I
am forced to the conviction that I am
the only consistently high toned and
moral gentleman on this globe. And it
makes me feel lonely.”
A Quaint Epitaph.
Here is an epitaph which may be
read in an English churchyard at-
tached to Leamington church:
“Here lies the body of Lady
O’Looney, great-niece of Burke, com-
monly called the sublime. She wo a
Bland, Passionate and Deeply Reli-
gious; also she painted in water colours
and sent several pictures to tbe exhibi-
tion. She was the intimate friend of
Lady Jones. And of such la tbe king-
dom of Heaven.”
He Knew.
A truthful man who has Just re-
turned from abroad says he overheard
the following dialogue between two
fellow pnssengers. Said one:
“I wonder-who that awfully homely
yromnn is?”
“Oh. that’s my wife.” replied the otb-
er. * ” * ’ *’ '1M
“How do you know? You’re not
looking at her?”
“I don't have to.”
Tea W«f» of Putting It.
Oculist (after examination of the eye)
—Yes. it Is. as I supposed, a case of
choroiditis exsudatlva, accompanied by
partial micropsia, metamorpbopisla and
chromatopsic scotomata of singularly
regular forms.
'Young Lady—There! And ma said
it was only a sty coming!
Sticky Hulr Oil.
Tommy (inquiringly) — Mamma, is
this hair oil in this bottle?
Mamma—Mercy, no! That’s liquid
glue. ‘
ON A CHRISTMAS FOOTING
we are ready for holiday buyers,
whether they are ready for us or not. '
There is a world of Joy in some as
a-' ii as much usefulness in all of these
things. There is something suitable
for every member of the famlly-*1-
gtft things that have strength as well
" ■ as beauty, and things whose sole duty
s to be serviceable. Under the gen-
eral name of
HARDWARE
we offer a variety of excellent goods.
SABl it SUPRSCO,
SS •
<<
- &
LOST HIS NERVE.
Why It Waa That Blur Fete Failed to
lilt the Sheriff.
There wore thirty men in the White
Wolf saloon when the sheriff of Silver
couuty sauntered in to arrest big Pete
Thompson for murder. Pete was play-
ing a hand In a game of poker, and
after nodding to him the sheriff snxid
up at the bar aud called for a drink.
His back was scarcely turned when
Pete laid down his cards, pulled his
gun and fired six shots as fast ns Ills
finger could pull the trigger. The sheriff •
never moved. When the smoke had
rolled out of the open door and we
could see, the sheriff stood In the same j
position ami wore the same smile. One ,
bullet had burned his cheek; a second
had grazed ids car; a third had cut j
through. his shirt collar under the left
ear. Big Pete was a dead shot, and
yet he had missed his man at fifteen !
feet. %
“Got through, Pete?” asked the sher- |
iff, breaking a silence that was posi-
tively painful.
“And you—you are not heeled!”
gasped Pete as his arm sunk slowly
down.
“No; come on.”
"You didn't bring your guns?”
“No; if you are through shooting,
we’ll go.” *
Pate laid his two guns down on the
table before him and walked to the
door and out into the street. His horse
was tied to a post a block away. He
reached the horse, mounted and then
headed down the long street after the
sheriff, who was giving him not the
slightest attention. In five minutes the
pair were out of sight.
“What ailed Pete?” was asked of
the barkeeper, who had come to the
door of the saloon. \
“Lost his nerve,” he brusquely re-
plied.
“How do you mean ?”
“Why, the sheriff coming without a
gun and standing there to be shot at
took all his sand a\vay and made a wo-
man of him.” "*
“Suppose the sheriff had had a gun?”
The man Jerked his head toward the
field wherein fifteen or twenty victims
had been buried and said:
“He’d ’a’ bln over thar.”
“And will big Pete get clear?”
"Likely; but lie’ll have to leave here.
The boys have already put him down
as N. _
WAVES OF WATER.
The Nile is the only river In the
world that flows for 1,500 miles without
a tributary.
Off the Cape of Good Hope waves
thirty-eight feet high from trough to
crest have been noted.
Prismatic lake, In the Yellowstone
Natioual park, is the largest body of
hot water In the world.
Three rivers afi big as the Rhine
would JUBt equal in volume the Gan-
ges, three Unngoses the Mississippi
and two Mississippi the Amazon.
The St. Lawrence river is frozen four
months of the year, aud its navigation
is so difficult that an average of one
steamer a month is wrecked in its wa-
ters.
Askel Chiu, in Tibet, is the luke
which lies at a greater height than any
other in the world. Its level is 16,600
feet. The lowest Is the Dead sea, 1,200
feet below the sea level.
Mralqht
as
l hi Crow
files.”
K. C. S. A
Kansas
City
South'll
BETWEEN =
Kansas City
AND THE GULF
Double daily train service.
Shortest line and quickest
time to Fort Smith, Ark.,
Joplin, Mo., Pitteburg, Kas.
....................................and =*========
KANSAS CITY
Direct connections* for
through business between
Texas and Louisiana points
and Omaha, Minneapolis,
St. Paul and CHICAGO
Visit the famous Arkansas
Health Resorts, Si loam
Springs and Sulphur Springs
uneap rates to above re-
sorts all the year. For fur-
ther information apply to
L H. MORRIS S. G. WARNER
Tmv. Pass. Agent G. P. At T. A.
Kansu City, Mo. Kansu City, Mo.
■~TrJtENTIVE~ TO EFFORT.
’ ..............J.. * :
The Leaaaa Lincoln’* Lite Tenches to
the Idle Born,
It Is human nature to take It easy
when we can, and with most people a
big bank account will paralyze effort
and destroy ambition. Who can tell
what would have been the effect on
our national history had Abraham Lin-
coln been horn in luxury, surrounded
with great libraries, free to the multi-
form advantages of schools, colleges
and universities, the manifold oppor-
tunities for culture that wealth be-
stows? Who shall say whether the ab-
sence of all Incentive to effort might
not have smothered such a genius?
What wealthy, city bred youth of to-
day, glutted with opportunities for ac-
quiring knowledge, can feel that hun-
ger for tKioks, that thirst for knowledge
that spurred Lincoln to scour the wil-
derness for many miles to borrow the
coveted "Life of Washington” wbteh
be had heard that some one in the
neighborhood owned?
What young lawyer of our day goes
to a law school or library with such u
keen appetite, with such a yearning for
legal knowledge, ns this youth Und
when he actually walked forty-four
miles to borrow Blackstone's "Commen-
taries?”
Where is tbfe student In college or
university today who experiences that
satisfaction, that sense of conquest,
which thrilled Lincoln while lying on
the floor of his log cabin working out
arithmetical problems on a wooden
Mot All Heformed. above) by the light of a wood fife or
At a dinner given by it philanthropist enthusiastically devouring the cootenta
to the Society of Reformed Criminals a of a borrowed book; as if hts eyes
gentleman complained to his host mid- would never rest on its pages again?
way through the festivities that he had On rending Lincoln’s Gettysburg
lost his watch. The host was a man of i speech and his second inaugural ad-
great inggnuity. He caused all the dress foreign readers exclaimed,
lights to be turned out Then ho ob- “Whence got this man bis style, seeing
served: “Some one here has a watch be knows nothing of literature?” Well
that doea not belong to him. If by the j might they exclaim, but their aston-
tlrae I have counted a hundred it is not j fahment would have been still greater
placed on the floor in the middle of the bad they known that those eloquent
room, the police will be sent for.” He . utterances that thrilled the nation’s
counted a hundred, and the lights were heart had fallen from the lips of one
turned on again. Thirty-three hand- : who In his youth had access to but
some watches lay in the middle of the four books—the Bible, "Pilgrim’s Prog-
ress,” Weems’ “Life of Washington”
and Bums’ poems.—Success. '
room.
, Brown and Black,
In one of tbe middle cities of the
United States there lived a local wit
and his favorite butt. Both were prom-
inent clubmen and enlivened the same
social set One was named Black and
the other Brown. Black was immacu
late in
LAY UP YOUR TREASURES.
Mo Man Mi on Id Spend (he Whole of
HI* Income.
Is any one too poor to save? is an im-
____bis'dress, “while Brown was which the readers of
careless, often wearing hi* finger nails * London dally are at present attempt-
in mourning and an ecrute collar with to fwlvi'- TUe question is not by
a full dress suit. But family connec- one' !t >" on« w‘hl(?h
tious excused bis shortcomings. One 1ms troubletl past generations. Just as,
evening the pair arrived at a reception ,n “J1 probability, it will affect the gen-
and met the hostess simultaneously. yfet,to. c'(‘nK‘- We c”"r‘ot “f/
The two names mentioned together *hflt latest discussion of the sub-
suggested a bonmot to Brown, but the |tfCt e throwing much, if any, fresh
mod,.«
rrri,DS a* T
To which their hostess rootled “Yes °ne nmn’ wl,° deme*‘ an ln«w“e of
i iTJTrrXfi Js j1-350 a *ear froui prrrty*
■d. Ly ire fast colors." uuto the cat»*ory’
limit in a matter like this. Very much
depends upon the locality and the con-
ditions and surroundings of the indi-
vidual. An income that would be
amply sufficient to insure a family a
comfortable home, excellent social ad-
vantages and a good living In a coun-
try village woult) mean many priva-
tions and sore discomforts In any large
city.
On the whole, however, we are in-
clined to believe that Max O’Rell's
views on tjie i»oint under discussion
come nearer the( safe aud common
sense rule than anything we have seen.
“I do not care,” be says, “how small
the income of a man Is, he should never
spend the whole of It, especially if he
has a wife and children. He should
at least save enough to pay every year
the premium on a good life policy. No
man is worthy of tb« name who does
not do this, at least, at the price of
whatever privations he has to submit
to. Ponje pleasure may be derived
from high living, but certainly no hap-
plnesa.” _
Whyt
One of tbe wonderful things Is that
a woman of fair Intelligence will paint
her cheeks like a clown’s and appear
on the streets. Why does she do it?
Does she imagine that people think the
pqjnt Is bloom of youth? Does she not
know that people laugh at her? There
are two things that people are quick
to uotfee— when a man wears a wig
and, when a woman paints her cheek A
—Atchison Globe.
■ : ■ .......- ------ /
.fht Oculist.
patient— V can’t see that there’s a
thing wrong with my eyesight.
Oculist JonnJwyse -- The most posi-
tive proof that you need glasses, my
dear sir, when you are unable to see
anything so plain ns that!—Los Angeles
Herald ■. f nif
Accomplished.
Mrs. Gimp—Is Miss Stitcher much of
a dressmaker?
Miss Piping—Splendid. She never
has to make a drew* over more than
tw6 or three tlmes.-Boston Transcript
Fruit?.
, “She’s evidently the apple qf his
eye.’’
“lie told me she was a peach.”
“So? Wei!, at any rate, they are a
fine looking pair.’’—Indianapolis News,
The Meed of Modish dodo Mist.
Under ordinary social and gastronc
ic conditions there Is probably a
deal more heartburn than heartbi:
!ngs.—Indianapolis News. !
m
7'j
; I
:;v/;
Advise an old man to marry i
young enough to be his dan
he may ask if you take him for i
but he will not be oil
Globe.
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The Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 230, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 9, 1902, newspaper, December 9, 1902; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth647511/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.