Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 65, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 7, 1903 Page: 4 of 4
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JUE GALVESTON TRIBUNE SAT Ij RD AY, FEBRUARY 7, 1903.
4
zj- Per Cent Interest on Savings Deposits.
Begin the New Year by starting a Savings Account with us. A Deposit of $1.00 will do it and will
entitle you to one of our Small Savings Banks for your home.
BANK OF^N ON SATURDAYS FROM S TO Q F\ /VW
MATTER OF MORE
LIGHTS OFF HARBOR
Col. Hawley Brought It to Atten-
tion of Lighthouse Board.
PROMISE TO RECEIVE
IMMEDIATE ATTENTION
imasBBnBBsasKBBBnraK
SPECIAL
TrouserSale
| 100 Pair Trousers, well made
I and tailored, in Worsteds and
I Cashmeres, all sizes, $3.5o, $3.00
| and $2.50 values; to close out
the lot
We Have Cut Them to $1.85
Lot of Boys’ Caps, 25c values;
to get rid of them
| . We Have Cut Them to 15g.
: All Mackintoshes at less than I
cost. .
I Great Reductions in our Win-
ter Underwear; don’t miss these
opportunities.
EA6LE
Clothing Store
2421-2423 MARKET ST.
LET US DO
| YOUR
WASHING
We have the largest and most |
modern plant in the city and em-» 9
ploy none but skilled laundry
workers. We turn out linen so
nicely that it looks like it’s just
out of the store.
i No charge for repairing and sew-
ing on buttons. Every piece of |
work we turn out is a specimen
with ys. Try us and see what
first class laundry work looks like, g
MODEL LAUNDRY
TRIMBLE BROS., Props.
2-1 til and Postofflce. Plione TO.
Telephone
The best Substitute
obtainable for
BROOKSIDE.
WE HAVE IT,
VERY LITTLE SOOT OR SMOKE.
HOT FIRE!
JOCKUSCH
Worry and waste are avoided, and
it solves the servant girl problem.
For baking, broiling and boiling it
is perfection.
It cooks much quicker, and the
flavor is not lost; neither does the
meat shrink away so much.
All gas ranges sold at cost and con-
nected with service free.
GALVESTON GAS CO.
• In the lottery of life there’s just barely
chances enough to go round, but still a
i good many people fail to take theirs when
i it’s offered.
ST. LOUIS
TOMOHROW EVENING
LEAVING GALVESTON 1:30 P. M.
I. &~O. IN.
FAST MAIL.
£01 Tremont St. C. HIGHTOWER,
J BONE 181. F.4T.A.
ANOTHER GERM DESTROYER.
Ilerpicide Is Death to Dandruff Germs
The germ burrows into the scalp, throw-
ing up • the ’cuticle in thin scales, -called
dandruff, or scurf, and -digging at the root
of the hair where it saps the hair’s vital-
ity. First comes brittle hair, then luster-
less and dead-like hair, then falling hair,
and finally baldness. . Nine-tenths of the
hair troubles are caused by dandruff.
Without dandruff hair will grow luxur-
iantly,-as’ nature intended. “Herpicide”
kills, the dandruff germ, leaving the hair
to grow, unhampered, as it,,does with the
American red man.
Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c
In stamps to The Ilerpicide Co., De-
troit, Mich. J. J. SCHOTT, Special
Agent.
GALVESTON TRIBUNE
SATURDAY EVENING, Feb. 7, 1903.
HANDICAPPED
BY BAD WEATHER
Winds, Rain and High Tide Cause
•Temporary Halt on Sea
Wall Work.
The.unfavorable weather conditions pre-
vailing yesterday .caused a temporary lull
in the sea, wall work on the beach. Rain
fell all during fhe morning and when it
was not raining, there was a mist which
was as bad as rain. In addition to this
there was quite a high tide which inter-
fered with operations. When a Tribune
reporter visited the work late yesterday
evening, just before nightfall, the gulf
wateite were lapping that portion of the
concrete foundation laid from 16th street
several hundred feet eastward, and ini
places the, waves were rolling over it. In
consequence of. the high tide there was
no concrete laid, as the excavations made
to receive the base were filled with gulf
water and sand, which rendered it useless
to proceed with that portion of the work
until there, is a change for the better in.
weather conditions. The pile drivers were
not working and the greater portion of
the line almost to 6th street was covered
with water, One of the drivers had been
shifted to 7th street, from where it will
work eastward to 6th street and thence
north along the street to the bay front.
In consequence of the conditions existing
as stated above there was no sheathing
placed in position yesterday. There is a
good supply of material on the ground
and there is a train of piling on the rail-
way tra,cks which has not yet been un-
loaded.
The large., concrete mixing machine
which will'be used in the construction of
the sea wall proper is being gotten ready
as fast as possible, and it is hoped to
have it at work some time next week.
The framing for the wall proper will be
constructed in 25-foot sections, and it is
proposed to -so regulate operations as to-
have each completed the day it is com-
menced, and it is thought three sections a
clay can be placed in position. The con-
tractors are nearly ready to begin the
placing of the rip rap on the gulf side of
the wall and it will be three feet high a,nd
extend -gulfward for a. distance of 27 feet.
It is the intention to place the rip rap in
position before the foundation is laid and
before the wall is erected. This part of
the work can be pushed forward rapidly
and it can be put down at the rate of 200
feet a day.
With an improvement in the weather,
although the prospect for a change of
Wind is not bright, work will be pushed
forward rapidly. Southeast and easterly
winds, such as have been prevailing re-
centely, ca,use high tides, and these neces-
sarily impede operations, as at the points
where, operations are now being con-
ducted the line of the wall runs into the
gulf at high water.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Helen C. Robinson et al. to Henry G.
Schutto, lot 11, block 607, and improve-
ments; $600.
Z. Winfrey, administrator of the estate
■of James and1 Clara Holland, deceased, to
R. J. F. S. Dreffus1, lot 5, southeast block
of outlet 21; $550.
County of Galveston to R. S. Allen, lot
1, block 3, of Galveston county farm; $73.
African Methodist Episcopal church to
Reedy chapel, African Methodist Episco-
pal church, lot 4, block 140; $10 and other
considerations.
TAKE A FRESH HOLD.
Good Food a Stepping Stone.
The route back to health is nine times
out of ten through the use of proper food.
The healthy enjoy life, it is the sickly and
weak who have lost Interest. Restoring
health (through scientific feeding) means
restoring happiness too.
You must take a fresh hold. Here Is a
sample case—a lady of Dallas, Texas, who
writes: “Two years ago I was sick all the
time. None of the food I was eating
agreed with me. It did not digest and I
suffered dreadfully.
“I went to Florida and stayed three
months, but got worse all the time. Came
back to Georgia and finally came west. At
this time I felt as if I were losing my
mind. My health was slipping away,
strength and energy were gone and I stood
in fear of the dreaded asylum. I would
not have given two cerits to see the great-
est city in the world, but continued to
travel, hoping it would help me.
“Finally I tried Grape-Nuts and I must
say words are Insufficient to express the
good the food did me. I have been using
it some time and my health is better, my
mind clearer and I weigh more than I
have in ten years. I eat anything I want
and nothing seems to disagree with me.
“I don’t take any medicine at all now
and I feel well all the time. I simply
would not be without Grape-Nuts.” Name
(Sivan by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
CORNER STONE
WILL BE LAID
County Commissioners Decide to
Put One in Sea Wall.
DURING VISIT OF BATTLESHIPS
Governor and Legislature Invited, to
Help Dedicate It—Other Matters
Before the Board.
The counts’- commissioners’, court had a
called meeting at 3 o’clock yesterday
'afternoon. There were present Judge
Fisher, Coms; Henderson and Menard and
Clerk Burgess. Absent, Coms, Dick and
Wolston.
Judge Fisher stated that the meeting
was called at the solicitation of the Busi-
nes sleague and others who want to ha,ve
some little certemony during the visit of
the battleships in the nature of laying a
cornerstone, or tablet, at the initial point
of beginning work on the sea wall. He
also stated he had written a letter to the
president of the Business league saying
that the court would co-operate with
them in the matter and that he had been
requested to write the governor on behalf
of the commissioners’ court inviting him
to be'present on that date to dedicate it
and- deliver an address.
On motion of Com. Henderson the action
of the county judge was ratified.
A bill for $50 for conveying luna,tics to
the asylum was approved and ordered,
paid.
Architect Roth submitted specifications
for repairs of the court house roof.
A local photographer was informed that
there would be no objection to his taking
pictures of the sea walk
The following letter was read and the
bills referred to therein were ordered
paid:
Galveston, Feb. 2.—To the Honorable
County 'Commissioners of Galveston
County, Galveston, Tex.—Gentlemen: En-
closed please find estimate, for month of
January, 1903, covering work done by J.
M. O’Rourke & Co., under contract dated
.Sept, 9, 1902, amounting to $28,001.48, less
20 per cent reserve per contract, $5600.29,
leavin gbalance due for month of January,
1903, of $22,401.19.
The work during the month of January
has progressed very satisfactorily, and
during the month of February I am in
hopes all of the work will be under way
to its fullest capacity, and by the end of
February we should have considerable of
the wall completed, with rip rap protec-
tion in front of same. Respectfully,
GEO. W. BOSCHKE.
A pay roll for $1452.85 was also presented
for parties employed by the county in the
construction of the sea wall annd ordered
paid.
MUCH DRIFT. b 1
Many Huge Logs Are Being Washed
Ashore on the Gulf Beach.
There was a considerable quantity of
drift coming ashore on the beach yester-
day afternoon, consisting of large tree
trunks, which have floated down the
rivers and thence into the gulf, to be cast
ashore by the action of the currents. One
big piece of timber about 50 feet in length
and 24 inches in diameter at the base, evi-
dently from the timber regions of east
Texas or western Louisiana, came ashore
near the fishing pier and was made fast
to the shore.
The water hyacinths with which the
beach has been strewn, and which prob-
ably came from the streams in eastern
'Texas, appear to have ceased coming
ashore, as yesterday evening there were
no evidences of any fresh deposits-. This
aquatic growth is so luxuriant in sime of
the rivers to tihe eastward of this place
as to be a serious impediment to naviga-
tion.
--------------------<— ......... - .. ,
EISENFELDER’S HOBBY.
It Is Not Baseball, But Cabbages and
Flowers.
Charley Eisenfeldar, the baseball crank,
is .spending his winter cultivating a hobby
a,nd flowers and vegetables at one and
the same time. He has a garden at his
home on 31st and P%, where he has been
growing for the past three months all
sorts of vegetables and the nicest of
flowers. Right now he is gathering violets
and sweet louisas by the iiundreds’and in
scent and size they equal similar flowers
to be grown anywhere. As to his vege-
tables, Mr. Eisenfelder says that his
family has been feasting on fresh vege-
tables ever since the baseball season
closed and he had time to get his garden
going.
RAPID TRANSIT IN LONDON.
Many Tube Scheme Bills Now Before
Parliament Will Be Delayed.
New York, N. Y., Feb. 7.—A royal com-
mission has been appointed, to consider
the question of rapid transit In London,
says the correspondent there of the Tri-
bune. As a consequence many tube
scheme bills which are now in parliament
will be delayed until 1904; Reference to
thie commission is very comprehensive
and the work of investigation wil prob-
ably last four or five months. The most
important point to be considered is the
question of establishing some aufihoritj'
or tribunal for consideration of all,rail-
way tramway schemes of - a local char-
acter.
FAILED TO AGREE ON DAMAGES.
Jury in Perrin Case Differed Between
$75,000 and $25,000.
White Plains, N. Y., Feb. 7.—The jury
in the action for $250,000 brought against
the New York Central railroad by the
four daughters of Alfred M. Perrin, who
was killed in the Park avenue tunnel dis-
aster, failed to agree after 27 hours of de-
liberation and! was discharged. Eleven of
the jurors favored a verdict for $75,000,
but the other juror stood out. for one of
only $25,000.
It Is Hoped Good Results Will Be
Promptly Forthcoming to the
Relief of Mariners.
The clear, convincing statement made
by C-apt. Sam Risk in a recent interview
in The Tribune as to Galveston’s- lack of
necessary aids to navigation was trans-
mitted to the lighthouse board by Mr. J.
H. Hawley, with the following letter:
Galveston, Tex., Jan. 30, 1903-Capt. W.
Maynard, .Secretary Lighthouse Board,
Washington, D. C.—Sir: I take pleasure
in sending you, this majl, under separate
cover, copy of The Evening Tribune- of
this city, containing particles on “Aids to
Navigation,” which I believe will Interest
you and the board.
Galveston is a growing port. Her ship-
ping interests are the largest part of her
commercial life and it is extremely im-
portant that she occupy, in all respects,
that position which her geographical lo-
cality affords. To the proper assumption
of her true position the lighthouse- estab-
lishment must necessarily contribute, and
I believe that upon this matter being
brought directly to your notice the result
as desired will be promptly forthcoming.
Yours truly, J. H. HAWLEY.
Here is the departinsnt’e reply, which
indicates the matter will receive atten-
tion:
Treasury Department, Office of Light-
house Board, Washington, Feb. 3, 1903.—
Mr. J. H. Hawley, International and
Great Northern Railway Company, Gal-
veston, Tex.—Dear Sir: Your communi-
cation of Jan. SO, 1903, in reference to aids
to navigation, Galveiston ba,y, Texas, is
acknowledged. It will receive immediate
attention and a full fepiy will be sent you
at the earliest possible moment. Re-
spectfully, B. JOHNSON,
Chief Clerk Lighthouse Board.
Amusements.
JOHNNY THOMPSON.
Of an old-time star who hasn’t been in
Galveston for manyeyeai’s; but who plays
here Sunday matinee and night, the Tren-
ton, N. J., Gazette says:
"The usual -crowded: house greeted John
Thompson at the opera house last night.
To a person wlio has never been to New
York city, 'Around the World in 80 Min-
utes’ is instructiveias well as amusing. It
gives you a goodi liisiglit to some of the
local characters with which that city
abounds. John Thompson goes to the op-
era house with oner-object in view, and
that is to amuse people, in which he suc-
ceeds beyond a doubt. ‘Around the World
in 80 Minutes’ is not a play—dt. is an en-
tertainment, and a good one. There is no
other entertainment like it. Most plays
remind a person of their troubles, this per-
formances makes you forget them. There
is not a serious hair in John Thompson’s
head; he is funny right through. His rep-
ertoire of songs, a'bout sixteen in all, are
all comic, and all good. His solos on th©
violin, piano, banjo,, clarionet, Chinese fid-
dle and cow’s horn are most artistically
performed. His dancing would make many
minstrel men hide their heads.”
ADVOCATES METRIC SYSTEM.
Chamber of Commerce Favors Bill on.
Weights and Measures Now Be-
fore Congress.
Secretary Johnston of the Chamber of
Commerce said this morning that the
chamber would request the senators and
representatives from Texas to support the
bill now before congress adopting the
metric system of weights and measures
as the standard one of this country. As
is well known, the metric system is the
decimal one, corresponding to the mone-
tary system of this country. While its
use would unquestionably, after a while,
prove expeditious, it would likely be a
difficult matter for the people of the
United States to acquaint themselves
with the new order of things. Commer-
cial bodies all over the country are in-
dorsing the measure.
A CLEvOfflfflOH
WITH COHCLUSiVE PROOF.
There is an old formula in philosophy
which says that no two things can oc-
cupy the same place at the same time.
As a simple illustration, drive a nail into
a board and you,will find with every
stroke of the hammer the nail will force
aside the particles of wood into which it
is being driven, finally making a place for
itself, and proving that the nail and the
wood do hot occupy the same place at
the same time.
DISEASES OF THE KIDNEYS AND
BLADDER and Dr. David Kennedy’s
Favorite Remedy can not occupy the
same place at the same time. If you are
troubled with frequent pains in the back;
if your urine stains linen; if you are
forced to urinate frequently during the
night, and a burning pain accompanies its
passage, your kidneys and bladder are in
bad shape and should be treated at once.
With every bottle of DR. DAVID KEN-
NEDY’S FAVORITE REMEDY, taken
according to directions, some of the par-.
tides of the dread diseases of the kidneys
and bladder, liver, blood, rheumatism,
dyspepsia and constipation of the bowels,
are slowly, but durely, pushed aside until
they completely; disappear. Do -not lose
faith or find fault if you are not entirely
cured by one bottle, because if these dis-
eases have fa&tened. their grip on you the
longer and harder it is to drive them
away.
Sample bottle—enough for trial, free by
mail. DR. DAVfD KENNEDY CORPORA-
TION, RONDOUT, N. Y.
Druggists sell it in New 50 Cent Size
and the regular $1.00 siz» bottles.
Dr. David Kennedy’s Magic Eye Salve for
all diseases or inflammations of the Eye. 25c
GUESTS AT EMBASSY IN RUSSIA.
New York, N. Y., Feb. 7.—Miss Elnora
Patterson of Chicago, daughter of Mr. R.
W. Patterson- of the Chicago Tribune,
and wife and daughter of Ambassador
McCormack, have arrived here and will
remain for some weeks as guests a,t the
embassy, says the Herald’s St. Peters-
burg correspondent.
Pure fresh Drugs and Sundries always
on hand at your disposal at CHARLES
B. WITHERSPOON’S Drug Store. 21st
and Market.
o loonjoy
i.al'Bf.Est?
DYSPEPSIA CURE
BRUSH DIKE WORK
Bay Will Permit!
Trobe’s Studio
LOUBET AT 'WORLD’S FAIR.
FISHERMEN RETURNING.
WE ARE THE PEOPLE
JEFFERSON DEMOCRATS.
NATE SALSBURY’S WILL.
Hatck, Millis&Co.
214 and 216 Tremont St,
with
A MOTHER’S RECOMMENDATION.
I have used Chamberlain’s Cough Rem-
edy for a number of years and have no
hesitancy in saying that it Is the best rem-
edy for coughs, colds and croup I have
ever used in my family. I have not words
to express my confidence In this remedy.—
Mrs. J. A. Moore, North Star, Mich. For
sale by all druggists.
OUR
PRICES
on OATS, BRAN, HAY and MILL
STUFFS are the LOWEST and the
feed we sell the best.
Phone us your orders.
Those Driven From Saginaw Bay by
Storms Are Back in Their Shacks.
Chicago, Ill., Feb. 7.—Two nights of cold
weather has put the ice on Saginaw bay
in good condition and many of the shanty
fishermen who were driven in all direc-
tions over the- bay during the recent ter-
rible storm are returning to their shacks,
says a dispatch to, the Record-Herald
from Bay City, Mich. The leader of a
searching party says that if any of the
men died in the storm, the fact will not be
known until the.ice goes out.
TRIBUNE WANT ADS.
BEST FOR LEAST MONST.
Work on the brush dike on the north
■side of the* channel is progressing a,s well
as the unsettled condition of the weather
will permit. The dike will be a little over
four miles-long, or 22,560 feet. It will
start at the eastern end of the Southern
Pacific railway •Company’s bulkhead and
wil loverlap and! connect with said bulk-
head, and extend in an easterly direction
about 13,000 feet, parallel to and about 1400
feet from the face of the Galveston har-
bor lines, to a point on Hitchcock’s reef,
at or near the United States red beacon;
thence in a northerly direction for about
9150 feet to a ridge on Pelican island.
Two lines of piling are being driven. In
each line the piles will be diven vertically
and will not be more than four feet apart,
center to center. The piles in one line will
be placed opposite the centers of the
spaces in -the other line. The two lines
will be parallel and not less than two
feet apart, center to center. The space
between the two- lines will be thoroughly
filled with brush so as- to make the dike
impervious to dredged material.
The dike is being constructed for the
purpose of holding the dredged material
taken from the channel under the con-
tract to deepen and widen the inner har-
bor channel. The dredges will dump their
materia Iback of the dike and the deposit
will harden and serve as a, protection for
the channel. It is contemplated that the
dike, by confining the currents, will se-
cure a scour of the channel by the waters
of the West bay passing through the-
channel an dout through the jetties. It is
believed by the government engineers
that the dike will serve to a more or less
extent in reducing the amount of dredging
necessary to secure 30 feet of wa,ter; that
is, that the channel will considerably re-
duce the amount of material to be dredged
before the actual wo-rk of deepening th,e
channel is commenced.
While constructed as a temporary affair,
some of these brush dikes have proven
not only very effective, but if well pre-
served will last for years. If enough ma-
terial is dredged to cover up the piling so
the teredos can not get at them the piling
will last for many years. The 11-mile
brush dike constructed in the upper bay
paralleling the Buffalo bayou' ship chan-
nel weathered the storm of September,
1900, and is well preserved. The clay has
hardened to sufficient extent to maintain
the embankment and preserves the chan-
nel, and it is designed that the Galveston
channel dike will serve a good purpose.
About 200,000 linear feet of piling and
1200 cords of brush will be required to
build the dike.
The Southern Pacific protection to the
channel in front of its docks is a perma-
nent breakwater, built of creosoted sheet
piling and constructed to withstand the
wear of many years. It has proven a very
effective agency in protecting the channel
and preserving the depth of water there-
in.
KODOL
Digests what you eat
Makes
The Stomach Sweet.
President of France Expects to Attend
St. Louis Exposition in 1904.
Chicago, Ill., Feb. 7.—According to the
Chronicle’s New Orleans correspondent,
the French colony there has received
word that President Loubet of France
will come to that city about June 15, 1904,
on board a French man-of-war en route
to the St. Louis fair. The idea is to re-
trace the steps of historic French dis-
coverers and to ascend the Mississippi
•river as they did in years gone by. It is
planned that after visiting the world’s
fair M. Loubet wil cross the continent on
a specia,! train, where he will be received
at Ntew York. There he will board a
United States cruiser and be taken back
to France.
FOR UP-TO-DATE PRINTING.
Nest, Prompt and at Lowest Prices,
Estimates Cheerfully Given.
“Viewed externally,” said Dr. Dick, “it’s
Bottles oaly.—Regular Size, $1.09, holding 214 times as much as the trial size which sells for 5S cents,
Prepared only t>y E. C. DcWITT & CO., Chicago, V. S. A.
If you don’t your food does not do you much
good. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is the remedy that
every one should take when there is any thing
wrong with the stomach. There is. no way to
maintain the health and strength of mind and
body except by nourishment. There is no way
to nourish except through the stomach. The
stomach must be kept healthy, pure and sweet
or the strength will let down and disease will
set up.
No appetite, loss of strength, nervousness, head-
ache, constipation, bad breath, sour risings, indi-
gestion, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles are
quickly cured by the use of Kodol. Kodol repre-
sents the natural juices of digestion combined
with the greatest known tonic and reconstructive
properties. It cleanses, purifies and sweetens the
stomach. When you take Kodol everything you
eat tastes good, and every bit of the nutriment
that it contains is assimilated and appropriated
by the blood and tissues. Kodol gives health to
the sick and strength to the weak.
The regular meeting of the Jefferson
Democratic association of Galveston
county will be held next Monday evening
a,t Clayton hall and all member's have
been urged to be present at the meeting.
It is said that officers will be elected and
indorsements for the appointive members
of the city commission will be made,
though this could not be verified.
a Red Raven. Taken internally it’s a bird
of paradise”
“Why don’t you take
Kodoi ? I was troubled with*
dyspepsia for 18 or 20
years and had gotten so
bad that I had to be very
careful what I ate. I had
pains at night so that I
could not sleep, and pains
in the stomach before and
after eating. My druggist
asked me to try Kodol,
which I did. I used some
3 or 4 bottles. It has now
been two years since I used
Kodol and I have had no
stomach trouble since. By
all means you should get a
bottle at once.”
E, D. Smith, Murray, Neb. '
As Good Progress Being Made on
It as Weather Conditions in
“When you take Kodol
everything you eat tastes
good,”
Veteran Actor and Showman Left $210,000
in Personal Property to Wife.
New York, N. Y., Feb. 7.—Nate Sals-
bury, who died at Long Branch on Dec.
24 last, by his will left $210,000 in personal
property and no real estate. His widow,
Rachel Salsbury, is made sole legatee,
“knowing that she will devote the Income
of my estate to the care and education of
our children,” as the will reads. The will
was written by Mr. Salsbury on Oct. 29,
1890. It names Milton E. Milnor of Fort
Benton, Mont., as exiecutor, but it is un-
derstood that he has renounced In favor
of the widow.
Seaboard Rice /Billing Company
41ST AND WINNIE, Galvestott, Texas. ’Phone 932.
Yhla signature Is on every box of tfee genuins
Laxative Bromo=Quinine Tablets
the remedy that cures a cold la one duty.
BETTER THAN GOLD.
“I was troubled for several years ______
chronic indigestion and nervous debility,”
writes F. J. Green of Lancaster, N. H.
“No remedy helped me until I began using
Electric Bitters, which did me more good
than aU the medicines I ever used. They
have also kept my wife in excellent health
for years. She says Electric Bitters are
just splendid for female troubles; that they
are a grand tonic and invigorator for
weak, run down women. No other medi-
cine can take its place in our family.” Try
them. Only 50c. Satisfaction guaranteed
by J. J. Schott.__
Fresh Game, Fish, Oysters, Vegetables
and Fruit. Country orders solicited. G. B.
MARS AN & CO., 1917 Market. Phone 109.
UNCLE EPH for Diamond Bargains.
The Proof Sns
eating.’*
Let us do your washing for a week
and if you are not convinced that
it is cleaner and finer work than
you have ever had done in this
city, we don’t want you to pay us
a cent for it. Fair enough, isn’t
it? Now just let us have an oppor-
tunity to prove our assertions.
3”"" With every dozen Cabi-
s net Photos, a Beautiful
S i % 1™ IL™ FRAME at
TWO CARS PURE RICE BRAN
Alt pe>r Ton F'. O. £3. mill.
“ONE YEAR BORROWS ANOTHER YEAR*3 FOOL.”
IF YOU DIDN’T USE
SAPOLIO
LAgT Y&AR, PERHAPS YOU WILL NQT
WOOLLAM’S LAKE
THE POPULAR OYSTER RESORT.
We are ready at all times to serve th‘«
public with Oysters in any quantity and
all styles. Bar and other privileges will
be leased for public or private entertain*
ments.
For terms,, etc., apply
1 I
F.D. <DV7Vl/V\ING9,
PHONE 717. WOOLLAM’S LAKI
K. LAUNDRY
20th St., P. O. and Market. Phone 05
Stolz & Koehler
23d and A. Phone 964.
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 65, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 7, 1903, newspaper, February 7, 1903; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1213260/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.