The Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 20, 1905 Page: 3 of 4
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,
Everything You Want: Many Things You N
SOME THINGS YOU MUST HAVE
fveryont With Aty Frile
We Have Jut Received
Wishes to be eon»i<l*mi in »ome
degree refined. There i* nothing
to indicative of true refinement than
■oine *how of esthetic* in the home.
Nice suit* of furniture in the bed
room, pretty pattern* of nmtling*
on the floor, attractive ball rack
neat centre table, delicate «hade
of window *ha<ie*. neat window
curtain*.'and a neat, dean bonne
conduct to good feeling and a pro-
per atmosphere for the growing
children.
A car of Bedroom Suita that art
all that could be daairedi&U £W-
era, Side Board* and (hiffoniem,
Matting* in the mod approved pat-
tem*. Chair*, Table*, Hall Rack*.
Bric-a-Brac, Book Garni, ale, etc.
We were enabled to make a tpe-
cial deal for cadi in them good* and
we propoee to give our customer*
the benefit of oar greet erring. Oar
good* are the beet and the price will
be a pleasure to you. The Furni-
ture Market ha* aa upward toedeat-
cy aad if you need anything ia tbit
IS NOW OPEN FOR
BUSINESS AND
SOLICITS THE RE-
TAIL LUMBER
TRADE OF ORANGE
AND VICINITY V
line NOW i* your safe time to buy.
THE CHEERFUL MAN
All Door* Fir 0*»a WM* «• lilrt
» >••> It.dial*. laaiklaa.
“Fate Itaelf ha* to concede a great
many thing* to tlie cheerful man.”
The man who persistently face* (he
tun ho that all ahadowa fall U-hlnd
him, the inau who keep* hi* mnchlnery
well lubricated with love and good
cheer, can withstand the hard jolts
and disappointments of life luflnltely
better than the man who always look*
at the dark wide. The uinn who lore*
shadow, who dwells forever In the
gloom—a pessimistic man- has very Up
tie power In the world a» compared
with n bright, sunny *ouL
The world make* way for the cheer-
ful man; all door* fly opeu to him who
He doe* not need
/3 COMPARISONS ARC TO OUM —
iLeADVANTAOP* ’
j&flKflk*' WE CAN AFFOftO TO
Courteous and satisfactory treatment to all
Phone Orders promptly attended to.
I]' Thhouoh thc
f TEXAS
PANHANDLE.
radiates eunahlne.
an introduction; like the sunlight, tu>
la Welcome everywhere.
A cheerful disposition I* not only a
power -it I* alio n great health tonic.
A depressed mind make* the system
more susceptible to dlaen *e;,ei>«-oursges
!t* development baemuae It kills Hut
power of resistance A cheerful so«l
can resist dispose, snd It Is well known
among physicians that there is n great-
er chance of recovery from exhaustive
disease* of a bright, sunny soul than
of n gloomy, despondent oue. "Cheer-
fulness la health; melancholy, disease."
Gloom and depression feed disease and
hasten Its development, -ttuceesa.
SAViS FATHOMS 300AMISM VfSTTtm
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK,
Oft OALtrOHMA POINT*,ANO
If5 SERVICE SPEAKS FOR ITSELF.
SERPENT EATING SNAKE,
THE TOMBSTONE CENSOR.
BATHING IN THE SEA
A Venomous Reptile That Will At-
tack Man or Beast.
The serpent eating snake, or king of
ferpenta {Ophlophagu* cl a ps) found In
Burma, ia among the most Interesting
Of our venomous snakes and the only
really aggressive member of the ophid-
ians, readily attacking any man or
animal that happens Its way. The
female Js especially Irritable during
Os Sees That So I tisccmly In scrip,
tion Mnrs the Cemetrrr.
A tombstone censor Is employed by
most large cemeteries. It Is the duty
of tills man to see that nothing unseem-
ly la the way of a tombstone Is put up,
A young engineer in a Norristown
mill was killed by the explosion of a
boiler, ami the family of this young
man. twllevlng that the mill owners
bad known all along that the boiler
was defective, actually had carved of
the tombstone the sentence, "Murdered
by his masters.” The tomtotone cen-
sor, of course, refused to sanction Sud-
an epitaph.
On the death of a certain noted prlae
fighter the surviving brother of tbs
man wanted to put In a glass case be-
side the grave a championship belt
four medals, a pair of gloves and othei
trophies of tlie ring. But the censor's
negative was firm.
A widow who believed that tho phy-
sician wm responsible for her bus
band's death wished to put on til*
tomb.
Xt Ostwtnnfc.l In Kn«l.n4 la the
Klahtventb Century,
Sen Im thing had It* origin in England
before 1750, when Dr. Itlcbard Bussell
published Ills treatise on the virtue*
of sea water. The healing virtue* of
the sea bath were not understood, imr
wan the practice of sea bathing gen-
erally resorted to. There seems to
bave^exlated a horror of the sea; In-
deed, in mediaeval time* a compulsory
dip In It* water* wa* a sentence often
passed on the public offender. In the
earlier decades of the eighteenth ceu-
tuar western Europe suffered heavily
Under "king’s evil," the popular name
for that tuberculous affection which
Scourged all classes from pe«t to penn-
ant.
-Dr. Russell, a Sussex practitioner,
had observed that dweller* on tho
coast used to drink of the sea water,
bathe in It. even wash thslr sore* in
It and bind them tip with sea weed.
Having satisfied himself as to the
efficacy or the practice he began to
prescribe for his patient* with most
oatifaetory result*. His treatlM rs-
a»lt*4 to OK coast* becoming large
JOHN PAUL JONES
A British Vlrw of the Hero of Ihe
Bonlimnmf Rlrha.4.
John Paul, the Kirkcudbright market
gardener’s son, who elected to he fa-
mous aa Paul Jones, has long coated to
be the interesting personage he wa* In
the eyes of the ns vat authorities of till*
country when. In command of a rotten
ex-East Indlsman known at the Due
de Hurts and rechristened the Bon
homme Richard, he was s holy terror In
«d with a very powerful venom. It
< will be admitted that Ophlophagu*
elapa, Nadn bungarus or serpentivore,
' as it is also called, is a foe that had
t better be avoided.
|| While being neither an arboreal nor
|: A water, snake, the Ophlopbagus clap*
Climbs trees with facility and takes to
Motor readily, swimming with great
| «h and skill. Its poison is as deadly
In its effect as that of the lesser hooded
snake (the Ophlophagu* slap* also car-
ries a hood), the cobra, but if is believ-
ed that the action of the venom is not
-gaits so rapid.
The shortest period within which It
proved fatal to a fowl waa fourteen
ttfantoa, while a dog expired to two
v Boors end eighteen minutes. Nichol-
son relates an account of an elephant
which succumbed to a bite to tore#
hours-Am rlta Basar Patrika.
the firth of Forth and wtiefl be bad
engaged and captured a British frigate
to British waters after oas of the most
singular sea combats oa record.
The some time "blackbirder'* and
smuggler whom the Russian Catherine
decorated and advanced somewhat per
salttmi to the grads ef admiral was a
traitor, ef course, In the view of the
British government, but none the leas
a thorough seaman of quite unueusl
talent and originality, with « bulldog
courage snd taucltf to match. The
He employed a cheep doctor.”
but the tombstone censor showed her
that such an inneriptton vronld lay be»
open to heavy damages for libel.
Atheists sometimes direct to tbelr
wills that shocking blasphemies be
carved on thetr monuments. The cen-
•or.Tmwevcr. sees to |t that ifepe blas-
Captaltt Jones, toe.’ Who sent Lad* 1st-
klrk back l*r piste with his eotnpll-
menta. had tha’IasMnets of a gentle-
man. i/! -iffA Af»j| f% -n
Mare than the ether countries he
•erred. America haa recognised hi*
■tarttai fan Man Baaotta. - - ~
phemiee do not disfigure the cemetery
—Pbliadoipbia Bulletin. -
UNCANNY eves. ;;
> ef the' AeAer Thfojrs Bee
Is Deep Sea So**4l*sr*.
Via* OevereA HIMlacs.
s BOOM say, ninety-nine out of a
|« American building* are eom-
*ce or ugly, It 1* a good thing to
the walls compl*tely, but whan
SOUTHERN PACIFIC
OLD, JEWISH TSAOrriON
AT
IS NOW OPEN
-«i m i
” « • *
•,i,
>1 Mil.
gZdl
nrg
i
|l|
in
mSm
ACt
M Sumner 1
15 A PERFECT EXPERIENCE
Hikeml your Vacation in the Mountain*.
Breathe the Crap, Pure, Plney Air.
Gather 8tren/tli ami Health from the
Great Out-of-Doors, and coine home
. happy. From June 1st to Hejpt. JOtli the
Santa Fe will sell you round trip tickets
at very low rates.
MQ&0 Saita fe Agent for Particulars.
Ml
w.*s**wae.*v ' 1
hi) *0 ,w «tili -*v*t*M tiii iSiaiif^fMaa^*!M
gU.Jv* - ■ 1 .or ■ •-'/ * , - I
-eaeFvehte
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Ford, Arthur L. The Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 20, 1905, newspaper, July 20, 1905; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth660797/m1/3/?q=central+place+railroads: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.