The Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 40, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 19, 1907 Page: 3 of 4
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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— tv raquaai or me W, C. T. I'. tM»
o umn In i ■•erda;'* Tribun* will be do-
i0«4w (bat department and will tie edited
by the ladles.
Thin week we are being favored by
the help of our National Worker, Mrs.
Maud L. Green. Her gift with the
crayon Ib exceptional and never falls
to delight her audiences and her quiet
Humor, her keen hits aad perfect fa-
miliarity with her subject renders her
work most valuable to Unions.
Sfce chalks and speaks for children
or !;>r adults, or for mixed audiences.
She also holds Mother’* Meetings and
Worker’s Conferences, adapting the
Work so as to bring the best results
to the local unions.
She also conducts Mass meeting!!
and Gospel Tenijierance meetings,
thus rendering complete the help In
all lines of our beloved work, and she
Is meting that success which her ear-
nest. effective work demands. She will
bring to us new hope, new courage,
now skill uud powers.
Mrs. Green has personal indorse-
ments from F. B. Meyer, of England;
Lady Henry Sonunerset, Agnes E.
Stack and other noted persons across
the sea where she has spent a year
and a half in the interest of the W.
C. T. U.. and in Evangelistic services,
Mrs. Green also carries letters of en-
dorsement from the I. O. G. T. and
from the 8. A., bearing such names as
Commander Booth Tucker; Lieuten-
ant Colonel Evans, of England , also
from Anna Gordon, Mrs. L. M. N.
Stephens and other prominent W. C.
T. U.. workers of the lTnietd States.
Mrs. Green wil llecture or chalk talk
as follows, at the I^ake Avenue Bai>-
tist church this evening at 7;:J0.
At the Baptist Church in West Or-
range tomorrow, Wednesday evening
at 7:30.
At the Eighth street Baptist Church
Thursday evening at 7:30.
At the Episcopal Church Friday
evening at. 7:30.
On Friday afternoon Mrs. Green will
conduct a W. C. T. U., Institute at the
Christian church at 3:30.
We trust-fhat no one interested in
the W. C. T. U.. work will fail to be
present.
Mrs. Maud L. Green, the lady car-
toonist preacher has been in Orange
since last Sunday giving her delight-
ful and instructive chalk talks each
evening to crowded houses. She has
an inate sense of humor combined
with true devotion of principle and her
“talks” are as pointed as her crayons.
Under the non de plume of “Ivan Ink-
ling,” her name has won her a place
in the reaits of many readers. As a
national orga'nizer and lecturer for the
W. C T. U.. she has been iastrumeu-
tai In advancing the Interests of the
cause to which her life is devoted.
NOT POO*.
Few Sons Hava Had 8uch Advantage!
as Were His, 8aya Writar.
Verily we must abandon the belief
that Andrew Jackson belonged to the
class of American youths who rode to
fame and fortune by their own efforts,
unaided by the help of family friends,
says Watson’s Magazine.
Never did he taste the bitter cup of
physical want, of hunger and cold, of
helpless, spirit-breaking poverty. Never
was he without home and loyal friends
and a sufficiency of the comforts of
life. Never was it his lot to suffer the
humiliation, that mortification, that
inward bleeding wound which the
proud nature writhes under when
there is no money in the pocket, no
change of clothing for the body, as the
harassed day draws to its. end and the
wretched night comes on. ,
Poverty! Why, Andrew Jackson
never in his whole life had a genuine
taste of what the cruel word really
means.
Few men have been more greatly In-
debted to the intelligent affection of a
self-sacrificing mother. Few sons cf
poor parents have had such advan- j
tages as were his lot, and few lads <>f
poor parents did such a scanty amount
of manual labor. Compared to the
rugged, self- taught youth of Benjamin
Franklin, Roger Sherman, Abraham
Lincoln. Andrew Johnson. Sam Hous-
ton. and Nathaniel Greene, the boy-
hood of Andrew Jackson almost as-
sumes the appearance of having^ been
cast upon “flowery beds of ease.
grsat canal from ii« lacua. Tne ap-
plication of scientific agriculture to
the reclaimed land aad the construc-
tion of-a railway linking Karachi and
Bombay would complete the enter-
prise. .
Firmly Established.
"Of course you're going to Palm
Beach this winter?”
“No.”
“No? I thought your position in
society was such as to make it ab-
solutely necessary for you to go.’’
“Our position in society now Is
such that wa don’t*have to go any-
where.”
BRITiSf. MILITARY TRAINING.
If your eyes need attention, call on
Dr. H. Cavanaugh, Room 11*. Holland
Hotel, 2-1*-tt.
-o-r*-
If your eyes need attention, call on
Dr. H. Cavanaugh. Room 118 Hallond
Hotel. 2-19-tf.
For Sale.-A few thoroughbred
White Plymouth Rock Cockerels and
Hens and eggs for setting. Price, $1
per setting. Chas. L. Darla, Orange,
Texas. Phones, New 338, Old 204,
* 2-12-61.
PATRONS OF THE DAILY TRI-
BUNE ARE REQUESTED, WHEN
they Have an article of
NEWS THAT IS TO *BE PHONED
IN TO THE OFFICE, TO PCEASE
REMEMBER THAT THE EOITORI-
IAL PHONES ARE: NEW. 380; OLD,
74-2 RINGS. THE BUSINESS
PHONES ARE ON DIFFERENT
LINES AND WHEN AN ITEM OPi
IMPORTANT NEWS IS BENT IN
OVER THEM, IT DOES NOT REACH
----DESK OF THE CITY EDITOR,
CE SOMETIMES A MUCHLY-
IRED AND VALUARLE ITEM
LOST AND LOBES PUB-
v.
COOKED BUT NOT FROZEN.
Horrible Sight That Met the Woman
Who Loved Plante.
The young housekeeper had been
obliged to leave home over night and,
doing so in a hurry, had not time to
write down more than a dozen or so
instructions for her husband to follow
In the conduct of their household af-
fairs.
During the night it turned very
cold and the wi/e thought with many
misgivings of her ferns and palms and
other plants left out of doors. In the
morning she telephoned her husband
and asked him about 17 questions as
to what he had done in her absence
—if he had put the flannel cover on
the foot of the brass bed, if he had
folded up the pillow shams, if he had
found the supper she left for him, if
be had taken the cream off the dumb-
waiter and sent down the trash, if the
laundry had come home, and so on.
and if he had by any possibility
thought to take In the planto.
“Indeed, I did,” he replied proudly;
“they’re all right I brought them in
and took good care of them.”
Much relieved, she hung up the re-
ceiver. When, she reached home that
afternoon the steam heat was on at a
high pressure and a peculiar odor
struck her nostrils. Her plants had
been placed with infinite care on the
radiators.
Soldiers Play at War on a Vast Tract
of Land. /
England has reserved a tract of land
several hundred square miles In ex-
tent on which her soldiers play at
war, according to F. A. Talbot in the
Technical World Magazine. The Rus-
sian- Japanese war served to emphasize
the radical revolution which has taken
place In warfare due to the remarka-
ble Improvements which have been
wrought In the devising of long-range
and quick-firing weapons, combined
with improvements In explosives,
The result of this revolution In war-
fare is that a battle front may range
over as much as 60 or 70 miles. Con-
sequently a grave difficulty presents
Itself in the training of an army to
comply with and to understand these
new conditions, since it is essential
that an army In peace should be
brought to a high standard of effi-
ciency which will enable It to cope
with any peculiar difficulty that may
present itself In actual combat. Rut
to train an army upon this basis ne-
cessitates a vast tract of land having
a conformation of the most difficult
nature and far removed from the In-
fluences of human habitations, to en-
able the men to have the fullest scope
in which to practice the new condi-
tions of their science.
expectantly.
“My son. never get a reputation for
being funny. It Is the most mournful
thlngf on earth.”
pnriwrwmmwrmw
Organ to Save Weedplle.
A number of years ago a village In
the eastern part of the town of Mlddle-
boro was very much wrought up over
the Introduction of a musical Instru-
ment In their church service. At the
Anal meeting when the matter was to
be settled excitement ran high.
One man whose reputation for hon-
est dealings was not always above sus-
picion made a fiery speech in opposi-
tion. A neighbor whose back yard
Joined the speaker’s could hardly wait
for the close of the remarks. Then
Jumping to his feet without waiting to
address the chairman, he said:
“Qosh, sir, if I had known the gen-
tleman was so afraid of an organ I
should have had one hung on my
woodpile years ago.”
: Via ¥n Mes! z Hack
GALL OP raONt
; mu Liier? nan
u n Mum"
▼He Media eoaue tern
•vary article ssai (rash as icuw
trots tbs
Paragon Laundry
TOONS - MB*
Wires Need a Rest.
“Messages.” said a telegraph op-
erator, “always slide over the wires
better on Monday than on any other
day. The wires, you see, have profited
by their Sunday rest.
“it Is a fact that Inanimate as well
as animate things get tired and need
a vacation occasionally. You know
how true this is of razors, of automo-
biles, of locomotives—and It la Just as
true of telegraph wires.
“A wire after Its Sunday rest gives
a quicker, a fuller and a more delicate
transmission. It is like a piano that
haa just been tuned."
P. B. Curry &
Fire, Marine, Life
AKO ACCIDENT
INS UR A N C
TRY
KEEN INTELLIGENCE WANTED.
Dog ae Newsboy's Assistant.
A small white dog who Bella papers
near the Park street entrance to the
subway will soon be eligible for mem-
bership to the newsboys’ union. If the
officers can get over the difficulty of
deciding whereon -to pin his badge,
says the Boston Herald.
He carries on either side, secured
by a strap around his body, a little
leather pouch about twice as large
as rhjt used by men for holding foun-
tain puna and peaaUa. The dog's mas-
ter sticks a paper Into one pouch and
places another between hla teeth. Tha
canine salesman does not hold his
wares long. He attracts buyers rap-
idly from all aides as the people come
and go from the subway, and hla
money bag is soon filled with pennies.
Hla master, who goes on crutches,
having lost one leg, keeps on regular-
ly furnishing the little chap with two
papers at a time as fast as he needs
them. The man aald that he has five
similarly gifted dogs in training for
the newsfwper business.
Knew the Signs. .
William Henry, Jr., aged seven, hss
an Inordinate appetite for buckwheat
cakes and maple syrup. At breakfast
the other day his grandfather watched
him with amazement, counting <J»
cakes as they disappeared.
“Junior." he asked, “have you ever
la all your life felt that you had all
the buckwheat cakes you could get
,W’YesWUJlr." replied Junior, “lots of
U^oiVi yw^w ills
' ^j,
A Story That Illustrates What Banks
Are Looking For.
Pierce Jay, the commissioner of
hanky of Massachusetts, at the Ameri-
can Bankers' association's convention
in 8t. Louis, advocated a better ac-
counting system.
“But above all,” said Mr. Jay. in a
discussion o/ his idea, "we want intel-
ligence, if embezzlement Is to be thor-
oughly put down. Systems are good,
but intelligence is better, and In cash-
iers and tellers and bookkeepers and
note clerks we want the same keen,
quick intelligence that characterized
old Capt. Hiram Cack of Gloucester.
“Cack lay very 111. One day he got
down-hearted, feeling that his case
was hopeless.
“ ’I fear, doctor,’ he said, ’there isn't
much hope for mb.’
” ‘Oh, yes, there Is,’ the doctor an-
swered. ’Three years ago I was in
your condition precisely, and look at
me now.’
“Cack, intelligent and alert, said
quickly:
‘“What doctor did you have?* ”
Sorrows of a Humorist.
"This thing of being a humorist la
about the saddest thing 1 know,”
sighed Simeon Ford. “An ordinary
person can hava hla moods and hu-
mors as he pleases, but I must always
be on the job. I am constantly being
invited out, not because I'm liked for
myself alone nr because of my manly
beauty, but because T am expected to
entertain the assemblage. The rest
of the company may be as dull as
dishwater, but if 1 do tiot shake tip the
gathering with a few jokes the hostess
glares at me and really feels resentful.
I may be sunk In the slough of
destKiad, but just as soon as I take
mv seat afl lean forward and eye
Let your wants be known In The
Tribune.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
W. J. Wingate, County Judge.
C. L. Goodman, District and Coun-
tl Clerk.
R. M. Johnson. Sheriff and Tax
Collector.
H. H. Russell, County Treasure,*.
George A. Foreman, Jr., County
Tax Collector.
8. W Sholars, County A to • • .*
Jack Noguess, County 8n • or.
County Commissioners.
Martin Buhnh, Precinct No. I,
J. B. Childress, Precinct No. 2.
; Peter McDonald. Precinct No.
D. D. Derrough, Precinct No *.
Justice of the Pe?cc.
J. B. Btslnnd, Precinct So. !.
J, T. House, Precinct No. 2,
U. C.Gravett, Precinct No, 3.
J. D. Derrough, Precinct No. 4.
O. W. Burton. Jr.. 1 rerun: t No. 5.
Sam Combs, Constable Precinct No.
tine.
Time Table T. & N. O., Railroad.
East Bound.
No. 6 leaves.......... 6:15 a m.
No. 10 leaves.. . • 10:-0 a m
n6. 4 leaves.. .. . ., .. 1:13 p m.
No. 8 leaves.........11:38 p m.
West Bound.
No. 7 leaves..... .. 6:38 a in.
No. 3 leaves.........11:56 a m
No. 5 leaves.. .. .. .. 6:28 p m.
No. 9 leaves..*........ 8:37 pm.
Orange A Northwestern.
Leaves Newton........7:45 a m.
Arrives Orange........11:00 a. m.
Leaves Orange.......3:00 p m.
Arrives Newton .. ,. .... iil6 p m.
Post office Schedule.
All outgoing mails close thirty min-
utes prior to train and boat schedule.
All outgoing malls close at 7 p. m.
Poetoffic* open tor general business,
at 7:10 a m. Registry and money or-
der window close at 6 p. m. General
delivery Window and sale of stamps
close at 6:10 p. m.
10CAI AND I0NG DISTANCE
Service the last Tatis
IlMRIt
|
Thk Cklkbrated
FOOS GASOLINE ENGINES
Are fsr Sale By
II 0WARD SMITH Cs.
Write for price.
geo. McDonald,
4ECHITECT AND SUPERINTENDENT
Old Phono 320
New Phone
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H*e ma If you want to tray vr nail pt *
party— If ytm bavan't lima to call a •
ufflew It t« easy to write ma utrmi *
wtter will h ave prompt *it«ntton
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PORT WOOD:
A a Me LEAP*
MAL HU Ml HMIlWni
make a apacUMy of traylag
Ins or MdksnatDC ettypti
Olloa ph» ta vi Hm pt><>
VI/
\ w. B. S1MM0N5 «
S Dentist
once opal sire, SaMsa Hide
Naw pbcma OSca ITS; rae m
Last m Attxkiukcs
J. S. Price, M. 0. P. W. Beckman, M. O
R. 8. Sullivan, M. D.
•A-Af * maw ■■
Beaumont Sanitarium
A private hospital for medical god
surgical cases. Your family physician
may attend you. Rates reasonable
Mica Pauline Noble, 8upt, Beaumont.
ijfi ■ VI.-->
Winter Service
-between *
leans and San franclsco
day
To the People of
Orange:
! want to attract your attention
to our
HESairTWI KFAITMENT
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Ford, Arthur L. The Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 40, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 19, 1907, newspaper, February 19, 1907; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth658881/m1/3/?q=technical+manual: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.