Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, September 17, 1886 Page: 3 of 4
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IN VALUABLE FOli
BTJKN3, SUN3URNS, DIARRHOEA, CHAF-
INGS, STINGS OF INSECTS, PILES,
SORE EYES, SORE FEET,
THE WONDER OF HEALING!
For Piles, Blind, Bleedlns? op Itcli-
IlljST, it is tlie greatest known remedy.
For Burns, Scalds. Wounds, Rruiscs
anil Sprains, it is unequalled—stopping pain
and healing in a marvellous manner.
For Inflamed and Sore Eyes.—Its effect
upon these delicate organs is simply marvellous.
It is the Ladles’ Friend.—All female
complaints yield to its wondrous power.
For Ulcers, Old sores, or Open
Wounds, Toothache, Faceachc, Elites
of Insects, Sore Feet, its action upon these
is most remarkable.
RECOMMENDED IIY PHYSICIANS!
USED IN HOSPITALS!
Caution.—POND'S EXTRACT has been imi-
tated. The genuine has the words “POND'S
EXTRACT’ blown in the glass, o.nd our picture
trade-mark on surrounding buff wrapper. None
other is genuine. Alway > insist on having POND’S
EXTRACT. Take no other preparation.
It is never sold in bulk or by measure.
IT IS UNSAFE TO USE ANT PREPARATION
except the Genuine with our direc-
tions. Used Externally and Internally.
Prices, 50c., SI, SI.75. Sold everywhere.
■SirOuB New Pamphlet with History of our
Preparations Sent FERE on Application to
POND’S EXTRACT CO.,
76 Fifth. Avenue, New York
Evening
At 58 and 60 Market Street.
Successor to Evening Record and Daily Print. En-
tered Galveston P. O. as Second Class Matter.
—Shiloh’s Vitalizer is what you need
for Constipation, Loss of Appetite, Diz
ziness, and all symdtorns of dyspepsia,
Price 10 and 75c per bettle. Sold b-
J. J. Schott & Co.
Mr. J. M. Norris, an old resident of
Rome, Ga., says that he had been badly
troubled with Kidney Complaint for a
a great many years and with Eczema for
three years; at times could scarcely
walk, and had tried many remedies with-
out benefit, until he begau taking Elec-
tric Bitters and annointing his hands
and feet with Bucklen’s Arnica Salve.
This treatment afforded him great relief,
and he strongly recommends Electric
Bitters to all who suffer with Kidney
Complaints or need a Blood Purifier.
Sold by J. J. Schott & Co. .3
WOMAN AND HOME.
THk HflAL,TH-Dt:;rP.0 Yi NG SYSTEM
OF TEACHING IN OUR SCHOOLS.
FRIDAY EVENING. SEPTEMBER 17. 1886.
—Ger. F. Schneider Jr., successor to
A. Flake & Co., has on hand a
full stock of Landreth’s crop of 1887. As-
sorted turnips, cabbage, cauliflower and
celery seeds, etc. tf
—If you are going away store your fur
niture with us, or if you need storage
room for anything, call on us at 999
Strand. We have a large warehouse,
plenty of room, dry and clean—best
warehouse and cheapest rates ever offered
in the city. R. P. Sargent t%Co., 999
Strand. *
“Buchu-Paiba.”
Quick, complete cure, all kidney,blad-
der, and urinary diseases, scalding, irri-
tation, stone, gravel, catarrh of the blad-
der. $1. Druggists.
Farmers aud Mechanics.
Save money and doctor bills. Relieve
your mothers, wives aud sisters by a
timely purchase of Dr. Bnsanko’s Cough
► and Lung Syrup, best known remedy lor
Coughs, Colds, Croup and Bronchial
effections. Relieves chiMren. of croup
in one uight; may aye you hundreds of
dollars. Price 50 cents and $1. Sample
free. Sold by J. J. Schott & Co. b
Henry’s Carbolic Salve.
The best salve used in the world for
cuts, bruises, piles, sores, ulcers, salt
rheum, tetter, chapped bauds, chilblains,
corns, and all kiuds of skin eruptions,
freckles, aud pimples. The salve is
guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction in
every case. Be sure you get Henry's Car-
bolic Salve, as all others are but imita-
tions and counterfeits.
For Bovs end G-irlo,
We shall give a way several thousand
dollars in present* nefore August 1st, in-
cluding solid gold watches, jewelry,
guns, revolvers, violins, banjos, guitars,
music boxes, rool chests, telescopes, aud
everything an intelligent boy or girl
could desire.
If you want the model magazine foi
the youth of the nineteenth century,
send 25 cents for three months trial sub-
scription and list of presents. A hand-
some pocket-knife or something of
greater value guaranteed to all senc.ng.
6end for your friends and receive the
presents. Address National Youth’s
Movrsnw. Buffalo. N. Y. f
An Oid Citzen Speaks,
--—■------
Another Life Saved.
J. C. Gray, of D.ideviile, Ala , writes
us: ‘‘I have been using your Dr. Win.
Hall’s Balsam for the Lungs, and I can
say, of a truth, it is far superior to any
other lung preparation in the woild. My
mother was confined to her bed four
weeks with a cough, and had every at-
tention by a good physician, but he failed
to effect a cure; aud when I got one
bottle of your Dr. Win. Hall’s Balsam for
the Lungs, she began to inend right
uway. I can say in truth that it was the
means of saving her life. I know of five
'«es that Dr. Win. Hall’s Balsam has
ared, and my mother is better than she
aas been for twenty years.”
Boaniing HoUser- for Working "Women.
Novel Employment—Wakoful Babies.
Old and Voung'-tlermun Girls—Amuse-
ments—Vagaries of Fashion.
An anxious mother writes to kno w what
course she shall pursue with her 9-year-old
daughter who will do nothing but read and
study, and whose health is suffering in conse-
I quence. The best thing is to send her off into
| the country, where she can get very little to
read. If she .studies too much, keep her out
of school for a year or two. The whole
system of teaching in our public schools is
health-destroying. Mind and body both
suffer. No girl should be graduated before
she is 20 at least, and during that time she
should not be allowed to enter society. As a
rule girls begin to go into society at 15 and 16,
anil if not married at 20 or 22 are looked upon
as old, and they are more or less satiated
with everything.
Girls should be kept in school much longer
than they usually are. Teachers, from well-
meant, perhaps, but none the less unwise
motives, endeavor to arouse ambition by
holding- constantly before scholars the dis-
grace of falling behind in their studies. Bet-
ter do that, and it is by no means disgrace-
ful, than to sacrifice health. People urge in
favor of the public schools, that they send
out boys and girls better prepared for col-
leges than any other schools. It may be
true, but those who wish to study will do so
with a little encouragement, anywhere. In
many ways the public school system is ad-
mirable, but in the matter of health it is
ruinous.
A well-known Cleveland physician said,
not long since, that public school education
had done more to cause disease of the brain,
spine and eyes than any other one thing, and
his opinion is but the opinion of many emi-
nent physicians and surgeons. We could not
do without our schools, but we could do with
less elaboration in the courses, and we should
insist on fewer studies and slower and more
thorough work. From what “Anxious
Mother” says, her daughter, loving books
naturally, has been made more ambitious by
the thoughtless words and taunts of her
teachers, than the young brain and delicate
body will stand, and the only remedy is com-
plete rest, which can be bad by taking the
child from school for several years, and by
change of scenery or by plentiful light and
pleasant entertainment, thereby causing
healthful reaction.—Cleveland Leader.
Boarding Houses for "Working Women.
The increasing number of women who live
by the higher employments in this city has led
to the establishment of several large boarding
houses on somewhat the same plan, though
a more -modest scale, than the luckless con-
cern of A. T. Stewart, which is now the Park
Avenue hotel. At these places you will find
teachers, telegraphic operators and type-
writers, artists with the brush and the
needle, literaiy women and others who de-
pend rather on their talents and accomplish-
ments than on mere manual labor for sup-
port, congregated in curious little communi-
ties, presided over by a boarding mistress
who has the air of a matron in a public insti-
tution rather than a private person. The
houses are governed by certain fixed rules,
none of which seem to be at all oppressive,
and have a very homelike and pleasant air.
The rates of board are moderate, and the
character of the inmates lends their home an
air of great refinement and pleasant domes-
ticity.
The first of these places that I remember in
New York was in Mulberry or Mott street,
and is, I think, now known as the Big Flats.
It was intended as a hotel for working girls,
but the rules were so exacting and their ad-
ministration so rigid that even its economy
and comfort failed to render it popular, and
it was abandoned and the house handed over
for tenement uses. For women above the
condition of unskilled workers I do not be-
lieve any provision existed until the present
special boarding house system came into
being. They were commonly herded to-
gether in gangs in the cheaper boarding
houses, where they packed the rooms that
better-to-do boarders scorned, or forced to
live in lodgings and feed at restaurants,
always at a greater cost than should have
been necessary. A decent woman without
money to waste used to have a hard time of
it looking- for quarters in New York, and
with all the provisions, intelligent private en-
terprise and larger public philanthropy have
made for her she is still far worse off than
any man. One of the good works of the
Young Women’s Christian association has
been to encourage the creation of boarding
houses for single women, a register of which
is kept by the association for the direction of
applicants.—Alfred Trumble in New York
News. _
Novel Employment For Women.
Some Philadelphia women have hit upon
something novel in the way of occupation,
surely. They call themselves, or are called,
“lampers.” The care of a lamp is a good deal
like that of a steam engine or a baby—it is
not everybody that can attend to it properly
and with judgment. A new occupation is
open to women now that drawing rooms dis-
play as many as half a dozen lighted lamps
by night, with corresponding care of wicks,
chimneys, shades, filling, etc., by day, and
when a smoky lamp is not only a nuisance
but an inelegance. The “lamper” takes i his
care off of the mistress of the house, t lie
comes each morning, empties out the oil
when it is getting thick, refills, trims the wi ck
mathematically, without even touching steel
to it, nrhs the metal, polishes the shade and
leaves chimneys and all immaculate. - She
goes from house to house in a neighborhood,
and is fully worthy her weekly pay. In un-
skillful hands the new popular oil lamps are a
great trouble; sometimes filling them is put
off until after dark, when there is danger in
bringing the oil can anywhere near the gas-
lights. When neither mistress of the house
nor her servants are good at lamp care the
skill of the professional can now be had for a
very small sum for each visit.—Philadelphia
Ledger.__
The Old and the Young.
A man or woman of 50 who cannot make
himself or herself agreeable to a girl of IS is
wanting in good breeding; on the other hand
equally lacking is a boy of 20 who cannot
give pleasure to a man or woman of 60. But
this good breeding can only be acquired by
practice. Once acquired it communicates a
peculiarly social exhilarating social enjoy-
ment, as all will testify who have had the
good fortune to be flattered in their youth
by the kindness of older people and in later
years by the good will of younger people.
And few conversations are more charming
for the interlocutors themselves or for by-
standers than those in which the young girl
or young man just entering into life is led to
awaken, by the gay audacities of his igno-
rance, the deeper thoughts of the man or
woman just passing out of active life. The
flame-like fancies of youth kindles the glow-
ing imagination of experience, and in the in-
. terchange of ideas each for the moment seems
to gain all the advantages of the other.
Such conversations cannot be held at gei’-
all day, nor at receptions, formal or in* j
formal, from which the young lady of the
house is encouraged to exclude her fathor
and mother, and the fathers and mothers of
her friends. They only still linger around
the firesides of pleasant homes, where tha
habitues of the house, old and young alike,
are equally the friends of parents and chil-.
iren.—Exchange.
Why Men Don’t Marry.
I say it boldly and without fear of contra-
diction, there is not a man living who is at
all times proof against feminine fascinations,
who has not, at some period in his life’s
history, indulged in the hope of realizing his
dreams of domestic happiness, in which the
face of some real or ideal woman shone forth
as the guiding star to brighten his life. No
man ever indulges in dreams of domestic hap-
piness outside of his ideal home. The world
is Ids at all times, in which to roam at his
own sweet will. Ilis experience teaches him
that in all the world can offer there is noth-
ing so sweet as the love which lives in the
home, gives rest to the soul and that peace
of mind which :he world cannot give; his
innermost soul craves for it, so satisfying is
it in Us tenderness. True love is the very
mainstay of happiness, and no outward ruin
“can wreck the citadel whore the immortal
lives.” Is it the fear of the failure to realize
such happiness as this that keeps these dream-
ers from seeking it in marriage?
The most inveterate club man, the bitterest
scoffer of “love in a cottage,” are those men
who failed, either from lack of confidence in
their own power of persuasion or want of
means hi their youth, to win the one particu-
lar woman they worshiped as their ideal.
Disappointment in love is one of the main
causes of there being so- many bachelors in
the world.—New Orleans States.
Babies "VVlio Are Wakeful.
A philanthropic physician has published a
little pamphlet with timely, suggestions con-
cerning babies. Among other things he
writes: “Asleep baby becomes tired of lying
in one position and wants to be turned upon
his side or stomach, or wants the warm pillow
turned, or the creases taken out of his
blanket, or one of his garments loosened, or
his eyes turned from the light, or a noisy fly
disposed of, or a mother’s lullaby sung again,
or to be left alone; but no! he has made him-
self heard and something must be done. Up
he comes, to nurse most likely; or, with too
much covering over him before, all is taken
off but his garments, and he is rushed about
the room, bounced up and down before an
open window, or half uncovered for three to
five minutes to be changed. How can the
little one do else than take cold?” This pic-
ture is not overdrawn. Do we not all know
babies who are wakeful at night, and be-
cause they cry are nursed or fed with catnip
tea or sugar and water jin til their poor little
stomachs ache from the distension by un-
necessary liquids? These same babies only
need a change of position, and when this is
given them they drop asleep peacefully.—
New York Commercial Advertiser.
Amusements for the Young.
There is not a country village in the land
where the young people cannot have rational
amusements if they will. A dramatic club
will furnish infinite amusement' for a whole
winter; a singing school is still possible in
country places, though a conservatory of
music may be unattainable; a whist club will
flourish anywhere, and there are few places
where dancing may not be had at slight ex-
pense. Reading circles cost nothing, and may
be started by any half dozen young people
anywhere, and be profitable as well as pleas-
ant. Schoolboys should have a debating so-
ciety, no matter on how small a scale, and
old-fashioned spelling schools are by no mean3
to be despised in many places where there is a
dearth of amusements for the young. Some
excuse for congregating together is the main
thing; the young people can be trusted to
enjoy themselves if only this opportunity is
offered. Simple and costless pleasures, these
are the desirable thing, and they can be com-
passed by all if there is the right disposition
in regard to the matter.—Hattie Tyng Gris-
wold.
German Girls as Wives.
There is less difficulty in German girls of
the middle class finding suitable partners for
life than is the case in the same class in Eng-
land. German girls, as a matter of course,
take their share in household work; this does
not prevent their being frequently very ac-
complished, often excellent musicians, but it
does prevent a great deal of restlessness and
vague discontent. A young man who mar-
ries in that class knows that he may reason-
ably expect his bride to be a good housewife.
If he is in the upper middle class, for instance
a shopkeeper, his wife often keeps the ac-
counts of the shop. I have wondered at the
close attention to business details shown by
women who might have expected, to be spared
such exertions; but I was assured they pre-
ferred to be thus occupied, partly in order to
save for their children. It seemed to me that
the master and mistress in most shops were
on friendly terms with their assistants, who
were permitted to rest at intervals during the
day in a room behind the shop.—National
Review.
Beautiful Souls.
Beauty attracts the eye at first; but after
you come to know people very intimately
you do not know whether they are pretty or
not. Their ways make an impression on
you, but not their noses and ears, their eyes
and mouths. In time the sonl expresses it-
self to you, and it is that which you see. A
man who has been married twenty years
hardly knows what his wife looks like. He
may think he does, and tell you she is a be-
witching little brunette long after she has
reached middle life, because the image of his
early love is in his heart, and he doesn’t see
her as she is to-day. Or, being an indifferent
husband, he may not know she is the fine
woman that other people think her. You
have known men who have married the
plainest women, and think them beauties;
and you know beauties who are quite thrown
away on men who value a wife for her suc-
cess as a cook.—Philadelphia Call.
Mrs. Kate Chase’s Children.
“Do you intend to reside permanently in
France?” Mrs. Kate Chase was asked by a
correspondent. “Oh, dear, no,” she replied.
“I love my country, its people and institu-
tions. I do not live in Paris. I wish to be
retired and secluded. In that world of Paris-
ian life I take no interest. Gayety in fashion-
able life I do not enjoy. I have my children
to care for and enjoy. My wish is to bring
them up to be accomplished, educated, and
good women, an honor to themselves and to
American womanhood. That is a woman’s
sphere in life. I have much happiness there
with iny children, but I shall return to my
native Jand before very long. I feel an exile
in France.”—Philadelphia Times.
Twining; Her Tresses.
Never before since nature went unadorned
has it been possible for a woman to so com-
pletely suit her own tastes in the shape of her
head and the style of her face. Every pos-
sible way that soft and pretty hair can be
twisted it is twisted. And some of the ways
are pretty as need to be.
Once in a while there is a girl. who can
vrear-ho hair r.nv way sbr^pler.sop. but a
girl bad bettor make a good man/ otpert-
inents and mvestimations before sho makes up
her mind that she is one of the up jointed. If
her glass and her own eyes and tha reflection
from other eyes as critical tell her that she
may safely do what she pleases, then the
various authorities give many recipes, as you
might say, in which she may “twine her
luxurious tressefi.-’’—New York Graphic.
Pen Picture of Jeauy June.
A few days ago I accidentally mat Mrs.
Croly (Jenuy June), and was very much sur-
prised at the mistaken idea I had had of her.
She is a little, dove-faced, meek, unobtrasivo
person, with a costume widely at variance
with the canons of fashion she so aptly
chronicles from time to time. Her voice is
soft and sweet to listen to, and her manner
indicates that she has long since become re-
signed under difficulties. In fact, I under-
stand that she has experienced a great deal of
personal sorrow and severe financial re-
verses. For a quarter of a century she has
kept her place in the ephemeral literature of
the daily press as firmly as she has in the
hearts of her wide circle of friends.—Cor.
Chicago News.
Tlie Vagaries of Fashion.
A Vienna correspondent states that the pas-
sementerie trade of that city has, through
Count Hans Wilczek, sent a petition to the
crown princess, which represents that, owing
to the present English fashions, the demand
for woollen and silk braid and trimmings for
ladies’ dresses has almost entirely ceased, and
that hundreds of persons have thereby been
thrown out of work. Her imperial highness
answered that she would give orders to her
dressmakers that all her dresses should, until
further notice, be adorned with passementerie,
and that she hoped her example would be
followed by the ladies of the aristocracy. As
a result of this, the plain dresses and jackets
now worn will probably be out of fashion
next winter.—London Globe.
The Children’s Associates.
Every mother should invite her children’s
associates to her house, if it is in ever so un-
pretentions a manner, that she may know for
herself what sort of associates they are, and
that she may perhaps help them improve
their maimers or their minds. Don’t be
afraid of the trouble. Oh busy mothers,
of the noise, the tumult, the excite-
ment, the slight expense. Some gayety and
excitement the children must have; how
much better to have it under your own eye
than in questionable places.—Hattie Tyng
Griswold.
Queen Victoria’s Pure Life.
Gen. Adam Badeau, whose acquaintance
with English society is as close as that of any
American, writes of Queen Victoria, who, he
thinks, has lived a sad life: “The queen of
England exhibits in her exalted sphere virtues
which the humblest man or woman in her
realm might imitate, virtues which endear her
personally to her subjects, and certainly make
them unwilling, in her time, to disturb her
throne. Purity, honor, truth, religion,
fidelity in all the family relations, constancy
to friends, sympathy with all forms of hu-
man suffering in whatever class—these are
traits on account of which the English people
of to-day are content to have a queen.”—Ex-
change.
Christine Nilsson’s Mansion.
Everybody at Madrid is talking about the
mansion of the newly-married Comtesse de
Miranda, whom the public knows by the
name of Cln-istine Nilsson. The rooms are
decorated in the most extraordinary and ec-
centric fashion. Thus the dining room is
papered with all her old hotel bills, while the
walls of her boudoir are covered with the
music and librettos of all the operas in which
she has ever taken part.—Chicago Herald.
The Chief Fault.
The greatest fault of modern dressing is the
running on one style for all fabrics, for all
purposes and for all sorts and conditions of
people. It is the fault abroad as -well as at
home; for Paris has greatly degenerated in
this respect, and while maintaining a certain
supremacy in the design and technique of
dress, can no longer be trusted to classify,
discriminate and adapt styles to materials
and persons.—Jenny June.
Nutmegs Poisonous.
The common nutmegs are poisonous in
large doses. In a case which came under
medical treatment, a lady had eaten a whole
nutmeg and, a half, which caused extreme
drowsiness, then great nervous excitement,
followed by subsequent depression and pain
in the region of the heart. This case points
to the presence of an active principle which
should be investigated.—Philadelphia Gall.
Deserve Honorable Mention.
The Misses Shannon, of West Newton,
Mass., deserve honorable mention in these
days of selfish exclusiveness. The two ladies
own a splendid residence at Bar Harbor, and
have roofed in a spring on their grounds,
from which a boy serves glasses of the pure
aud delightful water to every one that passes.
—Chicago Herald.
An Indispensable Branch.
Etiquette, which included conversation,
making and serving tea, and posing, is an
indispensable branch of female education in
Japan. The youngest children are taught it
in all the public schools.—New York Graphic.
Tupper’s Wise Remark.
Tupper said one thing that was perhaps
worth remembering in his advice to a young
fellow to pray for the welfare of the unknown
girl who might some time become his wife.—
Springfield Union.
Out of fifty-seven well-known New York
lawyers interviewed by The Jurist, fifty-two
held that the coru^Hwtion of New York does
not prohibit women from voting.
When you hear a man sneer about “the
virtue of woman” you may be sure he has
nothing in that line to boast of himself.—Jud
Lafagan.
Girls never marry a marry a man who loves
to spend a holiday looking at other fellows
doing something.—New York Journal.
Clean straw matting with a cloth and salt
water. Wipe dry. This keeps it from turn-
ing yellow. _
Drinking Hot Water in Summer.
An eminent physician says if persons would
drink hot water instead of cold water in sum-
mer, they would suffer less from thirst and
from stomach disorders. In his practice he
always orders hot water to be given to babies
who are suffering from teething and the many
attendant ills. It is really surprising to note
how gladly the little sufferers will drink very
hot water, and how great relief they seem to
feel from its use. An ill child of eight months,
with no appetite, was given as much hot water
as it would drink. The little creature would
drink the water with avidity and become
quiet after the draught.—New York Com-
mercial Advertiser.
An audacious physician of the Quaker city
impudently asserts that much of the so-called
malaria is pure laziness.
M Set Iren.
U CRAMER, TIN AND SHEET-IRON WORK-
ij. nun Job work a ; e .ia.iy. Scad your or-
iie s to s. s. Market .-t, bet 25th and rtth, next
to cor. 26ih.
Mry Goods »nd Norton*,
TT C. RNUST, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, BOOTS,
fi i Shoes and Gen’s Furnishing Goods—s. s.
Market, bet. 26th and 27th sis.
f'HSEp
Umegt'
Fancy Painting;.
A.
ROLLFING. SIGN AND FRFS ’OE PAINT-
lug. _ .
very cheat est rates.—s. s. Maiket et., het. 28th
iDg. All work promptly attended to at the
and29ih sts.
Groceries,
H. SMITH. GROCEIDES, NO. 20 MARKET
.st. be . 25th and 6th, n. s.
RELIABLE
AND
STANDARD
CIGARETTES
AND
Tobacco,
Manufactured by
W. S. Kimball
& CO-,
The Connoseienrs and
Pioneers of America
iu Fine Goods.
Fragrant Vanity.
New Vanity hair,
THREE KINGS
The Finest
Cloth of Goio
Straight r*n.
DRIER 7 ALS.
Sold in all pail;* o: the
wor'.'i.
Thirteen FIRST PRIZE MEDAL
Island City Savings Bank
Does a general Banking and Savings Bank Business
EXCHANGE!
Sold at Lowest Rates on all Domestic Commercia
Centres as also on all of the Principal cities o
Euso p> e.
MISSOURI PACIFIC,
RAILWAY SYSTEM?
1, <£ Gt, Northern | R, Division
GALVESTON,
Houston and Henderson Railroad
Schedule in Effect Sunday, Nov. 15, 1835
NORTH DAILY.
lalveston
Houston..
Palestine.
Texark na
Little R’ck
St. Louis,.
Kan City
Chicago...
Sew York
Lv.2:50 p.m
Ar.4:45 p.m
A.ll:35 p.m
Ar.l :55 a.m
Ar.-3:40 p.m
Ar.7:00 a.m
Ar.8:l‘J a.m
Ar.7:55 p.m
Ar.7:00 p.m
Lv. 7:25 a.m
Ar. 9:25 a.m
Lv. 6:40 p.m
Ar. 8:40 p.m
SOUTH DAILY.
Galveston
Houston.
Palestine..
Texark’na
Little R’ck
St. Louis..
Kan City
Chicago. .
New York
Ar.7:40 p.m
Lv.5:20 p.m
Ar 12:15 p.m
Lv 10:15 a.m
Lv. 3:05 a.m
Lv. 6:30 p.m
Lv 12:15 p.m
Lv. 8:30 p.m
Lv. 5:55 p.m
Lv. 8:45 a.m
Lv. 8:«f a.in
Ar. 5:55 a. a
Lv. 6:35 a.rr
FAST TIME,
FIBS? ■ CLiSB EpIPIEF!
SOLID TRAINS,
with all modern improvements.
NO CHANGE OF CARS
OF ANY DESCRIPTION BETW EN
GalmtOB and fi Louis
AND ONLY ONE CHANGE TO
Chicago,
4 .on Seville, IBaltimore,
WiAnlilnsfarsoiiii, ’Hof Work,
Philadelphia, fEostom,
AND OTHER PRINCIPAL CITIES IN THII
NORTH AND E^ST
Train leaving Galveston at 2:50 p. m. has
PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CAP
THROUGH TO ST. LOUIS.
Close eonneciions in Houston with trains of H
and T. C., and G., H. and S.A. R’y system.
iJlose connection at LITTLE ROCK for th:
SOTJTHEAST, and In the Union Depot, 8t. Louis,
with Express Trains in all directions.
Passengers booked to and from all points in
Europe via the Red Star Steamship Line between
New York, Philadelphia, and Antwerp, Belgium,
and via the American Steamship Line between
Philadelphia and Liverpool, England.
For tickets, rates, time cards or other Infor
mation, apply to
H. C. ARCHER,
Ticket Agent, Galveston, Tex.
H. P. HUGHES,
Passenger Agent, Houton, Tex.
b. w. McCullough,
Gen’l Pass and Ticket Agent, Dallas. Texas.
GRANT’S BON BON
YEAST POWDER.
WE HAVE BEEN APPOINTED SOLE AGENTS
for the sale of the above celebrat d Yeast Pow-
ders, bring the best powder for the moDey ever
offered in Texas. They can be sold as follows:
A fom ounce can for Five Cents.
An eight ounce can tor Ten t ents.
A slxieen ounce can for Twenty Cents.
Leaving the retailer a much larger profit (even at
so low a price) than he has ever made on goods
of this character.
Send for sample order- We will guarantee
their sale and satisfaction to the consumer.
G. SEELIGSON & CO.
SOLE AGENTS,
CHEAP COLUMN.
A D'/KRTISEMENTS CLASSIFIED
this head will be inserted as follows:
UNDER
Advertisers should remember that letter-- di-
vet eri to initalr only {frtnot. delivered through
the i ostoffiee. If Initials are used they should be
directed to —---*
office b x fi--...-,
uafcfi-ealled for.
V"-~ 1-"1
Sffl.de:l:Ti rau i vcejft \ 3 mos
"06 >8-1.95 j { '
* cob [J 5.85 j $11.85
I &50'! 13,00
QTORE FOR RENT IN FIRST CLASS POSI-
Otion for retail liquor trade. Address Saloon, 510
t st:t’et*t.; also good.two Kfory,housn.
east Church et}
TYLEAN AND SUITABLE FOR WRAPPING
V/papers—old newspapers at Evening Tribune
office. 25 cents per 100 or $1 for 500*'
dewing Mn - hincs anil Pianos]
rpHE CELEBRATED “MATHUSBEKPIANOS ”
i. -Domestic,” “'ew Home.” and “Improved
White” Sewing Machines, sold on installments,
“Domestic Patterns” new every month.
Music E DITLITZ,
sept23-tf 156 Postoffice street, near 22d street.
Mates. Slates. Slates,
In Stock and tO-nrrivA ‘ ■
1500 Squares No l Pensylvama blue Slates.
500 • • ■ • Sea Green
_ "• •• Unfading Green
From $6.25 per square upward.
i HAS. ENGELKE & CO.
Miscellaneous.
rPIIE MUTUAL RESERVE FUND LIFE AS-
I eociaf ion of New York. Life insurance a, less
than half the costm old line insurance companies.
For particulars Cali on the agent,
R. T BYRNE, Notary Public,
_____Corner of Tremont and Strand St) ets.
ANTED TO EXCHANGE 125 ACRES'OP
V V Jand. perfect title, for horse and buggy Ad-
dress Postofflc.e Box 124. Gal eston.
E exas Umbrella Kepain r.
Rim- bFEMAN, Texas Umbrcilla Repairrt'and
VV dealer in new Fans. Umbrellas aud Par ols
recovered and repaired.F. rules toregnes 2!5Ce i r
FREH^TQ ALL.
12el|» Wanted,
YTTANTED-A GOOD SERVANT GIRL,
VV white, for general house-work in a i ja’
family. Apply to Mrs. A. Roemor, avenue K, bet.
14th and 15th Sts.
Edwin Alden £ tiro.
For cost of advertising in any paper or
list of papers published in the United
States or Canada, send to the Advertis-
ing Agency of edwin alden & pro.,
»^E?|6i/NMewYork.
*** Our “Newspaper Combinations,” a book ol
r24 pages, containing prices of advertising, full
instructions, etc., shut on receipt of ioc. Our “Am.
Newspaper Catalogue,” containing names oi
every newspaper published in the U. S. and Can«
ada, sent on receipt of price, $1.50. Estimates free.
Advertising Agents.
LEE IRON WORKS
C. B. LEE & Co., Proprietors,
Manufacturers of all kinds of
BRASS & IRON CASTINGS
And makers and repairers of
32d and Winuie Sts.. Galveston. Tex.
LEON & H. BLUtf,
Importers and Wholesale Dealers In
Staple and Fancy
DRY GOODS,
Hats, Boots and Shoes,
NOTIONS, ETC.,
Cor. Mechenic and 24th Sts.
Hitchcock’s
Steam Laundry!
Po. & 26th Sts.
Telephone No. 325
Cleanliness,
Accuracy,
Despatch.
JOSEPH H. WILSON,
Attorney -at-Law,
AND
OFFICE:
Goggan Building, Corner 22d and Market Street
GALVESTON, TEXAS.
y31-tf
BEAUTIFUL PORTRAITS
Of any size made from any kind of small
Pictures. Agents wanted in every part
of the world, to whom the highest com-
-missions will be allowed.-
HE AUBURN COPYING COMPANY
85 7A- 8 OeneRce St.. Auburn. N. Y. 1-2 -6m
11 kill J. the way of making more money at
once, than anything else in America. Both se> es of
all ages can live at home and work in spare time or
all the time Capital not required. We will start
you. Immense pay snrefor those 1
tinson & Co., Portland, Maine.
see whostart at once-
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Burson, J. W. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, September 17, 1886, newspaper, September 17, 1886; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1136196/m1/3/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.