Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 267, Ed. 1 Friday, September 28, 1900 Page: 4 of 4
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THE GALVESTOH TRIBUNE:
ERIDAY,
4
1900.
WORK OF RED CROSS
A MATRIMONIAL MART.
FACES
THE WORLD SENT BIG CHECK
10c.
army
GAEVESTON TRIBUNE
19C0.
28,
SEPT.
HOME COMES FIRST.
I'
he
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
NOTICE.
If our hemes are
Model
AND
which to send the children.
We can safe-
0. K. Laundry
others
NO ADVANCE IN PRICES.
Galveston
young man, usually
Brewing
Company
STREET RAILWAY SERVICE-.
and each year we
flies struggling—they
We Can Fit Any Eye
by
7
Cupid.”
C. B. WARREN
’’
so
upon us
11
■4
has so affected
delicate
J
a
of
Hamburg.
K,
«:•.
and
MY
line
operated
to
gf
N
TORE DOWN THE FLAG.
L-'-T
Eujj;
Texas.
Galveston
a
ill
colors, a mob having torn down the stars
cour-
and stripes.
v;
How far is it to
I
Removal
Dentist.
The Up-to-Date Service of the
1.4 (1. I
LIME FOR SALE.
t
ft
7
a
la
SAFE
EXPERT.
Mills at Chihuahua
hoisted the United
were in salt water from six to eight hours
and this has so affected the
mechanism, that now the fields rheostats
says on Sept. 17 he
States and Mexican
It Will Undertake the Distribu-
tion of Relief.
Pl
The Paul Sheati Sani
tary Pturti bitig and
Maucfacturiiig Co.
and are prepared to make estimates
on contracts in this line at once, at
our old stand, No. 2114 Mechanic
street.
All work given immediate atten-
tion.
Will pay 2S cents for
each of their empty kegs
delivered at the Brewery
during the next 10 days.
that will respond
to light regardless
of complications.
WM. ABFLE, UNDERTAKRB.
. 2319-21 Wiiinie st. Phone 151^ -
Leave orders at Tribune business
office or Pacific Express Co. office.
REAL ESTATE
COMPANY.
The, Southwestern Telegraph and
Telephone Company will resume tele-
phone service to a limited extent in
the business district within the next
thirty days.
We are prepared to deliver to any
part of the city, WITH NO IN-
CREASE IN PRICES.
0. M, McKenzie,
ARCHITECT
21071-2 Postoffice Street,
GALVESTON _ - . TEXAS
I
C. B. LEE & CO., Proprietors,
Galveston, Texas.
THOS. H. OLSEN,
SAIL AND AWNING MAKER,
Tremont nnd Avenue A.
Tornado Insurance,
215 22D STREET,
DAN ROBINSON
Optician and Jeweler.
Public Stenography,
WEEKS, McCarthy Building,
22d and Mechanic streets.
Airs. F>. 7VI. Buckley
GALVESTON GAS FITTING
AND PLUMBING CO.
File Your Orders Early for Prompt Attention.
ROOFING
We are Agents for
JOHN’S ASBESTOS
■■I
I
Lumber.
“Tn Washington? Here, dear, at the seat
of goverfinMfrt, is the proper place for the
militafy’,m‘aii.1'■'As a,, matrimonial cobweb
the capital 'is' all right,
I : ‘ f> ’> ir.r » 'i> 1 ri 1'6' '
see the uniformed
D.M. WILSON & CO.
San Antonio, Tex., Sept. 28.—A private
lettter -to a federal official from Consul
r
tells a tragic story.
■schools, but they will serve little purpose
unless we have the horiies rebuilt from
re-
was
c try-
; fam-
LAWRENCE V. ELDER,
(SUCCESSOR TO J, W. BYRNES),
Manufacturer of Roofing and Paving Pitch,
Creosote, Asphalt Varnish, 2 and 3-Ply
Ready Roofing Feit, Aqua and Anhy-
drous Ammonia.
. Galveston, Texas.
LS.McKinney&Co.
FIRE
AND
IS RESUMED.
Leave Galveston 1.50 P. M., arrive at
St. Louis Next Day.
Buffot Sleepers.
Office: 301 Tremont Street.
Fate of Unmarried Army and Naval Of-
ficers in San Francisco.
Washington Star.
“That settles it; he will be married be-
fore the year is out,” said the wife of a re-
tired army officer to a young Washington
bride, referring to the assignment of a
young and handsome lieutenant to- the
Presidio-.
The sun shines
every day in the year for him. The maid-
ens smile, the matrons glow, the papas are
content, the big brothers proud, the sisters
envious, and all others respectfully d'stant
and quiet.
35TH AND N,
Ready
for Business...
At the Old Stand,
2422 Markst Street.
High Praise for Those Who Have
Labored Here Uttered by Miss
Clara Barton.
Contractor for Shen and Gravel Roofing,
Sanitary Flooring, Asphalt Paving,
Artesian Wells and Waterworks Plants.
Office—212 Tremont Street,
Factory—Avenue A, bet. 18th and 19th Streets.
If your case is not
fully covered by our
free book, “Healthy
Mothers Make Hap-
py Homes,” write in
confldenca for free ad-,
vice to the
LADIES’ HEALTH CLtlij
care L. Gerstle £- Co., .
CHATTANOOGA, . TENN.’
Druggists <
SellG.F.P.!
A
SEPTEMBER 28,
ly hold the educational development of
our little ones in abeyance a few months,
but we can not safely adjourn the matter
of making homes for the homeless. Where
are the pupils now’? Some dead, some few
here, the others scattered throughout
Texas. Those who have found temporary
homes elsewhere can get schooling; those
who are here are in more need of homes
To The Tribune.
Headquarters Relief Committee, W. A.,
McVitie, Chairman, Galveston, Tex., Sept.
27.—Will you kindly advertise in youn
columns that the relief committee wish ta^
dispose of several cars of bulk lime in car®
on track here and oblige. Yours truly; t
W. A. M’VITIE, Chairman,
John A. Kirlicks Thinks the School Mat-
ter Can Be Held Up Temporarily.
John A. Kirlicks made a suggestion this
morning that impresssed every one who
heard it.. He said there was apparently
systematic and earnest work toward the
rehabilitation of the schools. This, in it-
self, was very well, he said, but he
thought a more urgent and more immedi-
ate necessity was the rehabilitation of the
homes that had been destroyed.
“We may restore our schools,” said he,
“but where are the pupils to come from
not restored? Every
scantlinc on the south side of the city
We may rebuild our
I I
H
“The girl who* hast two, or three Presidio
or Mare Island officers' at her function, is
happy. The girlrwhoiis attended by one is
delighted. The g?irl who is engaged is joy-
ous, while the girl Who is being married to
a uniform is delirious until the ceremony is
over, for then, ^ear, as you know, she be-
comes one of ‘us.’ The post is one of glo-
rious sunshine,. ea^e and social prestige.
Every few weeks a notice like this appears
in the local papers:
“ ‘Marriel, Ramona, the eldest daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Placer Mine, to Lieut.
Manly Sharpshooter, first lieutenant, 5th
Artillery.. U. S. A.’
“It’s quite wonderful, the. accuracy cf
the fire of these pretty Californians, when
they decide upon whom trey will bring
down. I have seen in a single season a
dozen or more brave fellows go down be-
fore it. The girls aie all rich, you know,
and an independent income ccntribures
much in army circles towards one’s com-
fort.
Ar®
can be cured by the use of
O F P aBR™S8«
« ■ .■ ■ P*“ AOE*
It has brought happiness to many
homes that had been desolate for years.
A BABY BOY.
My wife was suffer-
ing badly from leu- :
corrheea or whites,
and the doctor did ■
her no good, I began 1
giving her G. F. P. ’
and sue improved at ;
the start. Four bot-
tles cured her, and '
we now have one of '
the finest baby boys
an the country.
“ Orville Rice,
Garfield, Mo. ’
Seventh Ward ......FORSTER ROSE
33d and avenue O.
Eighth Ward ......MIKE O'KEEFE
Bath avenue and N 1-2.
Ninth Ward ...........R. H. READ
Ave. A bet. 22d and 23d streets.
Tenth Ward.........W. F. COAKLEYi
21st and N 1-2.
Eleventh Ward .......HERM FRCKE
Jesuit college, aye. I and 14th,
Twelfth Ward ........ED. HUSSION
12th street and ave. I.
BRAVE MEN FALL
Victims to stomach, liver and kidney
troubles as well as women, and all feel
the results in loss of appetite, poisons in
the blood, backache, nervousness, head-
ache and tired, listless, run-down feeling.
But there’s no need to feel like that. Listen
to J. W. Gardner, Idaville, Ind. He says:
“Electric Bitters are just the thing for a
man when he is all run down, and don’t
care whether he lives or dies. It did more
to give me new strength and good appe-
tite than anything I could take. I can
now eat anything and have a new lease on
life.” Only 50 cents at J. J. Schott’s drug,
store. Every bottle guaranteed.
--------------- >
TRIBUNE WANT ADS
DO THE BUSINESS
dressing F. A. Stuart Go., Marshall,
Mich., giving briefly the symptoms of the
various forms of stomach weaknesses,
causes and cure. ~
I ron I/V or les
Manufacturers of All Kinds of Machinery, Steam Engines and Brass and
Iron Castings. ——Mill Furnishings and Shafting a Specialty.
TURNLEY
W. F. TURNLEY, Notary Public.
207 22d Street, - Galveston, Texas.
Dr. Bock,
has removed his office to 2123 Market
street over R. I.,’Cohen’s new store.
If anyone knows the whereabouts
of Charles L. Olsen they will confer a
great favor by notifying his wife, at
2301 avenue A, who will pay a $25
reward if he is alive.
Will be glad to turn out
work at the Model Laun-
dry. O. K. Laundry is
temporarily closed. Can
turn out work in any
quantity.
I
I
I will guarantee
■that my Kidney Cure
I will cure 9O‘;per cent,
of.all forms of kidney
g| complaint and in
S many instances the
F most serious forms of
Bright’s disease. If
the disease is com-
plicated send a four-
ounce vial of urine,
a We- Will analyze it
a and advjse you free
‘ what to do.
1 MUNYON.
vial. Guide to Health
105 Arch st.'r-Phila.
and armatures burn out and nave to be
enf'r’ely restored.
Maj. Baer wishes it understood that the
.free list is suspended. He is doing every-
thing in his power to provide good service
for the public. He is operating as much
of the street railway system as is possible
and every day shows improvement. The
West Broadway line is
Fortieth street.
B. Roken Down:
Skeegum?
!’/,'S.yiTi. Hayseed: Bein’n as yer look
so weary,> I don’t reckon it's mor’n a
couple o’miles.
CUTS AND BRUISES QUICKLY
HEALED.
.Chamberlain’^. Pain Balm applied to a
cut', "bruise, burn, scald or like injury will
..instaptly,.AUay, the pain and will heal the
parts in less time than any other treat-
ments «rU-nles§rthe injury is very severe it
will not leave a scar. Pain Balm also
•cures .rheumatism, sprains, swellings and
lameness. For sale by all druggists.
fehoice "timothy hay, alfalfa, upland
prairie and coast country hay, all new
crop and choice.
PJione 703. HANNA & LEONARD.
TRIBUNE WANT ADS
KIWCURE
CURED
Obstinate deep-seated Eruptions, Blood
Poison, Cancers, Boils, Rheumatism, Eat-
ing Sores, Itching Skin and Blood Hu-
mors, cured by taking a few bottles of B.
B. B. (Botanic Blood Balin.) Makes the
Blood Pure and Rich and heals all sores,
ulcers, scrofula, and eczema. $1 at drug
stores. Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.)
thoroughly tested for 30 years-. Cures
when all else fails. Try it.
Send 5 cents to pay postage on Free trial
Bettie. Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga.
__
of whom, being leaders of the different
wards, also have charge; of the.-gamgs of
men engaged in removing? the .millions of
feet. of splintered lumber,'.debris of all
sorts and remaining dead bodies, ..their
time feeing almost wholly, required in that
direction. The relief is thus? most com-
pletely organized and reduFdtlTo a .perfect
system. The skill with which .'it -was first
organized and has thus f-ar been-conducted
by Chairman McVitie and his' associates
is a marvel to us. The leading business
men of the city have labored day and
night upon the committees and have com-
pleted a thorough census of the present
city, as to names and present- abodes of
the sufferers, their pressing wants and
whether or not each person or any mem-
ber of a remaining family is able to do
day’s labor, of which there is ample, and
fair wages are being paid .therefor in the
removing the debris.
eV
executive committee, of
meets
great task of
The general
which Mayor Jones is chairman,
daily and considers in the most formal
and capable manner all subjects pertain-
ing to the work of relief. I have never
known a more representative or capable
business committee, and :the .time and en-
ergy devoted to the work by each mem-
ber fills me with admiration. The most
imperative subject now before the com-
mittee and the one greatest in importance
next to the sanitary reliefMii cleaning the
city, is that of providing" suitable homes
of a temporary nature for" IrfbYe’ than 8000
homeless persons. The.'cqmfnittbe is for-
mulating a comprehensive plan now for
the purpose of meeting With That great
necessity. Immense quaiTtftaeS’lJfTumber,
nails, roofing, carpenters’^oo’ls/ dtc., and
a large fund of money ^wiilibeinecessary
to suitably meet this end- ..In ever'y in-
stance where possible t?he sufferers will be
expected to furnish their own labor in the
reconstruction of their homes, thereby
keeping every one employed.
“tsovernor’s Island, New York, is not
considered especially desirable from
matrimonial standpoint. T'he-t officer, es-
pecially in the lower ranks, like so many
others, is-lost, swallowed up, in: that huge,
high-tensioned, pulsating whirlpool of hu-
manity which has the Harlem for its outer
eddies. The gilded youth of the town ask
when his ship got in, his next probable
station and what he thinks of Dewey. The
army man is asked his opinion on the rela-
tive superiority of the volunteer officer
over the regular—they think the volun-
teers whipped the Spanish—or some such
pleasantry, and then they invite him to
have more champagne,
champagne. Talk about the ‘admiral’ or
the ‘general,’ and the flash of gold lace
and epaulets, with glistening scabbard
and nodding h'OTse hair plumes or ostrich
tips awakens a Iffiedtfig of friendsly,
teous cordialityionlyo
“It's the samCivirii the girls. They are
a trifle more efftisivau The feminine eye is
undeniably at trad ted) and the heart moved
by the manly fbfim in blue and gold lace,
but their glancfes have their genesis and
revelation usually imadmiration. Officer’s
Mil®
—
111 M 1
Captl Shields was a
was at
served
war as
“No Need to Worry” wheti -you can- get
all these, good things at such., lowjn’ices.
Just Received via Mallory.-S’teimsmp:?'
Holmes' & Coutits’ Fa'ncy" Biscuits, Co-
edanut Taffy, Vanflla Creaip,-Btrarwberrry
Bar, Apricot Cream, Marshmallow. Wal-
nut, Orange Slices etc., per Ibi, 25c.* For a
quick desssert try. Schepp’s Creanr. Pud-
ding, unrivaled for .convenience*. quality
and taste,, chocolate, ros(i,-wanii4a,.M'emon
or orange flavor;-per pkg?, ■ 10c^ "?i Calif or nia
table fruit in sirup: PeaTsCfe,§'!gffg5, Apri-
cots, etc., 3-lb. cans, each.‘20qjj;3;^ns, 50c.
Ivanhoe glass.jams, ass’t-, 3-?gfasses 25c.
Numsen’s Cream corn.. 2-lb. ’cans, *3 'Jfor
25c. Numsen’s tomatoes, ^tbC Jor
25c; per doz, 70c.' Nums&nJS 'Baked'Beans,
3-lb. cans, 3 cans for 25c.. Numsen’s 'String
Beans, 2-lb. cans, 3 for 2§c*;' per"'doz, 90c.
Numsen’s Kidney 'Beans;T-lbCdans, 3 for
25c; m.er doz, 90c. Curtice^gros.’ ?Albion
brand Marrowfat Peas, S-lbr- caiwj -each
ln - H. MO&LE'&'CO..
at the present moment than of tuition.
“This was essentially a city of homes.
The greatest force of this disaster fell
upon the homes of the modest workers or
the fairly well-to-do. The home is -the
heart, the soul and the body of every
community.. Let us be content to waiyc
■ the subject of- the rehabilitation of. the
schools until we have solved, and well
solved, the question of the rehabilitation
Of the home.”
Removed to 4!6Trmi Street.
(Marx Bros. Old Stand.)
and still more
-
or an exchange,
caught my husband at the Presidio;
says I captivated him; same thing.”
“You interest me.” ,
“His own remark when he first saw me.
In California it is the quarry that stalks
the hunter. In the city on the seven hills
on the shore of the Golden Gate an ensign
or a lieutenant is as big as a commodore
or a colonel in Washington, and the scale
ascends. The military man iis the social
lion. When he shakes his mane and growls
the people are timid and aiwe-stricken.
When he roars- they flee. His name ap-
pears constantly in the social columns of
the local preis.s. He is invited everywhere.
Those superior beings, the native sons of
the golden west, meaning the young men
born in the state, deferentially stand aside
as his spurs jingle and his scabbard
clanks on the polished, tesselated floors of
the palaces on Iff'ob Hill.
WAnted-At Once
2000 Laborers^ wages $2.00 per day.
260 Men with Drays or Carts, at $3.00 par day.
2B>0. Men with Wagons and Teams, at $3.50 day.
_ The above force is to be used in clearing the streets and gulf front of the deb-
ris from the late storm. All laborers and men with teams desiring employment
m the city of Galveston are requested to report to the following ward bosses:
NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF WARD BOSSES.
First Ward...........THOS. DOYLE
W. side loth bet. Mkt. and P. O.
Second Ward . .. .CHAS. SUDERMAN
14th and Postoffice.
Third Ward..........MIKE KEENAN
Found at Waterwarks.
Fourth Ward.............A. E BUSH
N. W. cor. remont and Church.
Fifth Ward. .... JERRY KENNEDY
512 Twenty-eighth street.
Sixth Ward................P. ROACH
44th and avenue H.
All laborers will be paid cash on surrender of their time checks every Sun-
day from 9 to 12 o’clock at the offices of Messrs. - Adoue & . Lobit and Sealy
Hutchings & Co.
For further information apply to JENS MOLLER,
Chairman of Committee oif" Public Labor.
P- S- The ward bosses are requested to meet at Mr. Moller’s office every
afternoon at 6 o’clock.
.....
on both of these routes. The electric cars
only pretend to. struggle, of course—in the
silken! meshes so skillfully woven
The following telegram was received by
Miss Barton from the New York World:
New York, 3.30p. m., Sept. 27.—Miss Clara
Barton, Red Cross Society, Galveston,
Texas: Mr. Adamson, returning Joday,
makes extremely gratifying, report on dis-
tribution of World’s relief supplies under
1.1k* <54 l-t'J Hi
your direction. Gov. Sayers telegraphs us
today that too much praise cannot be ac-
corded to you and those associated with
you. It gives us pleasure' to ' place one
thousand dollars cash at your command
on account Galveston relief. Please draw
for that amount. > ' .
J. ANGUS SHAW? Cashier.
Electric Cars Nov; Being Run on the West
Broadway Line.
The city railroad is now operating both
the Market street and the West Broadway
lines with electricity supplied by the
Brush people. It isn't altogether electri-
cal. power. Mule cars are-also in service
System is gradually being brought out
of chaos in the matter of distributing re-
lief. At a meeting held yesterday after-
noon this general work was merged under
the direction of the Red Cross society. A
Galveston auxiliary was organized, and
acting upon the insistence of Mr. Barton,
representing Miss Clara Barton, Mr. Mc-
Vitie was prevailed upon to continue as
chairman. The various ward chairmen of
the relief committees were continued un-
der the new order of things, but the idea
is to concentrate relief and put its distri-
bution in charge of various women chair-
men who will be definitely appointed at a
meeting to be held at 4 o'clock this after-
noon.
The following telegram was sent today
by Miss Clara Barton:
Galveston Relief, Sept. 28, ISCO.-Mr. Will-
iam Howard, 156 Fifth avenue, New York
City: Upon repeated solicitations of local
authorities, the- Galveston local relief
committee,'composed entirely of men, and
the local Red Cross emergency committee,
composed, entirely of Galveston ladies,
were merged into one committee yester-
day and immediately organized into the
Galveston auxiliary of the American Na-
tional Red' CFos§, the entire work of dis-
tributing ratidns, clothing and other re-
lief supplies being transferred to the nevz
organization and all such work to be im-
mediately and henceforth conducted un-
der the auspices and by direction of the
American National Red Cross. Not the
slightest interruption of the work will
take place, the ten ward distributing sta-
tions established and being used by Chair-
man MgVitie’s committee will be contin-
ued as found necessary, with the acces-
sion of ihe Red Cross ladies, one of whom
has been appointed as vice chairman of
each ward, with three or more assistants
to aid in the assorting and delivery cf
goods at the relief stations, with addition-
al accessions of ladies for each ward sta-
tion to any number that may be found
necessary, who'shall make systematic in-
vestigation in certain streets assigned to
them of the worthiness of all applicants
for relief. The work being thus systema-
tized can be most thoroughly conducted
indefinitely, and the relief in this pains-
taking and systematic method will have
to be continued many months.
The great central warehouse established
by Mr. McVitie’s committee and the Red
Cross will be used in conjunction with each
other as heretofore for the purpose of re-
ceiving from railroad, express and steam-
ship companies all provisions upon arrival
here," assorting and classifying the same
and furnishing the ward distributing sta-
tions upon requisition.As fast as practica-
ble, certain ward distributing stations will
be discontinued- (uid consolidated with
others, thus reducing the number and ex-
pense. The accession of the Red Cross la-
dies5 to the distributing committees is
hailed with .great satisfaction by the
chairmen of those committees, nearly all
■\ _______________ ■______________c
INTERESTING, IF TRUE.
You Can Try It for Yourself
Prove It.
One grain of the active principle in
Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets will digest
3000 grains.of meat, eggs or other whole-
some food, and this claim has been prov-
en by actual experiment which anyone
can perform for. Jijmself in the follow-
ing maimer; Cut hard boiled egg into
small pieces, as it would be if masti-
cated, place the’ egg and two or three
of the tablets in a bottle or jar contain-
ing warm water heated to 98 degrees
(the temperature of the body) and keep
it at this temperature for three and one-
half hours, at the end of which time
the egg will be-, as .completely digested-
as it would have been, in the healthy
stomach of a hungry boy.
The point of this experiment is that
v;hat Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets will do
to the egg in the bottle it will do to the
egg or meat m. the ktomach and nothing
else will rest, and invigorate the stomach
so'safely and effectually. Even a little'
child can take Stuart’s Tablets wi’th
safety and benefit if its digestion is weak
and the thousands of cures accomplished
by their regular daily use are easily ex-
plained when it is understood that they
are/ composed p.f vegetable essences,
aseptic pepsin; diastase and Golden Seal,
which mingles with the food and digest
it thoroughly, giving '.he overworked
stomach a chance to. tecuperate.
Dieting itevpr Jires dyspepsia, neither
do pills and ■cathartic medicines, which
simply irritate and Inflame the intestines.
When enough food is eaten and
promptly digested there will be no con-
stipation, nor in fact will there be dis-
ease of any kind, because good digestion
means good health in every organ.
The merit and Success of Stuart’s Dys-
pepsia Tablets are world wide and they
are sold at, the moderate price of 50 cents
for full sized packages at every drug
store in the United States and Canada;
as well as in Europe. ’
For the information of those interest-
Pekin, Sent. 28.—The MancJiu "'fe^assin
.of Baron Von Ketteler fia'sffie^rt-Trieif“by’
court-martial. No new eVidfih'ce. 'wab'pre;
sented and the'court decided itowotild 'be
ed a little book wiil be mailed (roe by iS
’ ’ — • - - - - -J the iM’isoner, who, howev^^i^^e?;!)^
In the hope of further information 'to be
I.Obtained, .......
H I’
At all drugglgtB, 25c. a v
rnpdic|il
Save your house from further damage
by using waterproof tarpaulins. We
have a large stock. Come quick.
Roup Cure, Germazone, condition pow-
ders, lice' .exterm’nators (powders and
.fluid), spray pumps, hay ties, etc. Send us
, yftur orders, HAJSIJIA & LEONARD,
pay.;can’t,^provide town houses, country
seats and.;broughams, and their social po-
sittoutbeing assured, they do not have to
marry, except for love, and they engage
themselves to the
slightly bald, sometimes with eyeglasses,
who goes down town every day in a busi-
ness suit, and scoops in or Joses a few
thousand bones, as my husband says, be-
fore luncheon..;-■
“Of course, dear, since your husband has
never been stationed at the Presidio, the
military post in San Francisco, you can
not be expected to know the remarkable
affinity that delightful place has for mat-
rimony among the bachelors of the
who may be stationed there. They really
are not safe. If I were a bachelor and dis-
inclined to matrimony I would use my
strongest influence if I were ordered there
to secure a transfer
w
• . . . A V ...
WILL REMAIN AT LARGE.
“Jones has gone clean daffy. I wonder
they don’t put him in an asylum.”
“His property is so heavily mortgaged
that none of his relatives want it”
,-t? ■'
THE NEWS BRIEFED.
A great fire is..burning in'the .port
Hamburg. ' ?*
Wolf Bros?' bKnk at Ccnireville, Mich.,
waS’ robbed last night of $io.uoo.
No late news from the'anlhrafite coal
strike encouraged the ideaj'hzt -it--is any
nearer a settlement.
"■ •■". ?■ -5 Q 7A.'?.“?■>,,■?.■ z"
Charles A. Collier, a former Mayor of
Atlanta, was killed there? while searching
his house for burglars.., ,.
A wreck of a Sonthcnn - Pacific train
in Utah killed Mrs. Carter .Af.s.Tpenton,
Mo., and' wounded 15 othersi
Boers attacked a portion of Paget's
force at,Pienaars river and^l^j^eaten
off after a three-hour battle.®
At" Manass?'s, Va.',''the pffilKipal: o'
normal .school, has been jailed* for com-
mitting an assault, on a pujSiE.;
A'n old man nanied-TIiram George
ports at Tuston, Artz.; that1, he
robbed ‘oft $10,000' in' Mexi.coi^'whih
ing to reach Galveston ..where' Ills
ily was lost. He says Mexican authori-
ties shot the man who robbed him.
Capt. Devereaux Shields, Twenty-
ninth Infantry, with 51 men. of ..Company
C, has probably been captur e J tot killed
by the Filipinos. (
Mississippian and his home
Natchez, in that State. He
through the Spanish-Apierican
lieutenant-colonel of the Second Missis-
sippi Regiment. Troops , have been sent
to effect the rescue of fli^’lndn '-under,
Shields who may remain alive®
VON KETTELER’S ASSASSIN.
■ O.x 8T _» o
FRIDAY EVENING,
WlMOLESS #
OWES
7
I
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 267, Ed. 1 Friday, September 28, 1900, newspaper, September 28, 1900; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1220629/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.