Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 67, Ed. 1 Monday, January 20, 1890 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Galveston County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rosenberg Library.
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IN
And Retail Dealers
BU8LDERS’
EQUIPMENTS.
Wholesale
IMPORTERS,
J. M. BROWN, President.
111
tfiOib
.3
'I
[ _
hw
Jill
raBtu.
V\>- SSffi • I
J. S. Brown, Vice-President.
.iirdwareCo
J
1
SADDLERY,
Saddlery Hardware.
fflM IMPLEMENTS,
Wagons,
Buggies and Carts,
BLACKSMITHS
AND
n heelwriglits’ Materials.
PARK & McRAE.
All
Kinds of HARD and SOFT COALS
Promptly Delivered.
Office--Corner 20th and STRAND.
B
Imported and Domestic Table and Pocket Cutlery
Carriages, Buggies, Oyster Roast an d Picnic Wagons
for Hire. Mules and Horses for Sale.
KEEP 1 FULL LiNE~OFPH®fOKShBUOGiES AKD CARRIAGES FOR SALE.
1
Ll\TERYr «Ss UNDERTAKING.
J. bevy & Bro
For Sale in Galveston by
H6NRY TOUJOUSE.
I
1
jxleu/ fipe of Raliap Statuary
By last Steamer. From $15 to $100 a pair.
Fancy China, Tea, Dinner, Fish, Salad
And Chamber Sets.
Toys. Velocipedes, Express Wagons Etc.,
BALDINGSR BROS.,
[Cor, 22d and Mechanic Streets.
rrnn»rnrTrmTnrrr~iiTiiii irrmiinni:ihjih. irn miiri ~Tn„ri.T i mm ~ m _.n j. i ~i . i i i h 11 , .1_____iuu. ■ji.l.ih mu in______ji-j iiiiiiiiii.iminii in im—i^ui m—'nini'.imwi—
Old Yannissee Rye.
NOTARY PUBLIC and CONVEYANCER.
Agent for the Mutual Reserve Fund Lffe Association.
^ag^The patronage of everybody respectfully solicited. ■'Sg®
OFFICE: TB EMONT STREET, TREMONT HOTEL BUILDING.
Abstracts of Title to Galveston City and County Real Estate correctly prepared.
Deeds, Releases, Mortgages, Powers of Attorney, etc., written up,
and all Notarial work promptly attended to.
P. S. WREJM,
o
ZETOZK
EVEBIO
ETTILDILTG-.
OFFIC1A L Publications.
Office Rooms over Mason’s
Book Store in
Apply at
No. 78 CENTER STREET.
Holiday Luxuries.
Wm. Buscher will march at the head
of the procession during the holidays.
Of course he will set out all the finest
holiday drinks, and his lunches will be
superb.
A well selected stock of grain, flour,
hay, etc,, at Hanna, Waters & Co.
Larabee’s fruit cakes at Sweeney’s
Restaurant. o
French asparagus in glass and cans at
Henry’s. o
Theo.Vinke’s Drug Store,
2111 and 2113 Market St.
Sour
Stomach
It did me an
It gave me an
DY AUTHORITY’OF THE CITY’COUNCIL OF
D the City of Galveston.
Dyspepsia
Makes the lives of many people miserable,
and often leads to self-destruction. Distress
after eating, sour stomach, sick headache,
heartburn, loss of appetite, a faint, “ all gone”
feeling, bad taste, coated tongue, and irregu-
Distress
After
Eating
distressed me, or did me
little good. In an hour
after eating I would expe-
rience a faintness, or tired, all-gone feeling,
as though I had not eaten anything. My trou-
ble, I think, was aggravated by my business,
which is that of a painter, and from being
more or less shut up in a
room with fresh paint. Last
spring I took Hood’s Sarsa-
rilla—took three bottles,
immense amount of good.
appetite, and my food relished and satisfied
the craving I had previously experienced.”
George A. Page, Watertown, Mass.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists, gl; six for £5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mate,
IOO Doses One Dollar
Have your prescriptions filled at
VINKE’S Drug Store. o
Notice for Twenty Days.
Notice is hereby made in accordance with
Section 22- of the" City Charter, that rendered
roll A, for the scholastic year 1889-90, beginning
on October 1, 1889, the same having been com-
pleted and reported by me to the City Council,
and accepted by the City Council, and at the ex-
piration of twenty days from the date of this
notice I shall deliver the said roll to the collector
for collection aud inventory lists to the auditor.
JAMES D. SHERWOOD, City Assessor.
Galveston, January 7,1890.
For Rent.
The three story brick building on Mechanic,
between 20th and 21st streets, formerly used as
citv hall, to September 30, 1890. Apply to M.
Ullmann, chairman of committee.on public
property, or to J. W. Jockusch, purchasing
agent for city.
Is Consumption Curable.
Read the following: Mr. C. II. Norris,
Newark, Ark., says: “Was down 'with
abscess of I lie lungs, and friends and
physicians pronounced me an incurable
consumptive. Began takinc Dr. King’s
New 1 -iscovery lor Consumption; am now
on my third bottle, and able to oversee
the work on .my farm. It is the finest
medicine ever made.”
Jessie Middlewart, Decatur,Ohio,says:
“Had it not been for Dr. King’s New
Discovery for Consumption! would have
died of lung troubles. Was given up by
doctors. Am now in best of health.”
Try it. Sample bottle free at J. J.
Schott’s, wholesale druggist. 5
We Sell on Time,
And ask for neither notes nor interest,
Emerson Pianos,
Weber Pianos,
Mathushek Pianos,
Chickering Pianos,
Hale Pianos.
Goggan & Bro. organs, Mason & Hamlin
organs. We are not of mushroom growth,
having been here for twenty-four years,
and buying, as we do for cash, we can
give lower prices and easier terms than
those who sell only consignment goods.
Thos. Goggan & Bro.
larity of the bowels, are
some of the more common
symptoms. Dyspepsia does
not get well of itself. It
requires careful, persistent
attention, and a remedy like Hood’s Sarsa-
parilla, which acts gently, yet surely and
efficiently. It tones the stomach and other
organs, regulates the digestion, creates a
good appetite, and by thus Siok
overcoming the local symp-,
toms removes the sympa- HOadQCSlG
thetic effects of the disease, banishes the
headache, and refreshes the tired mind.
“ I have been troubled with dyspepsia. I
had but little appetite, and what I did eat
Heart -
bism
Shiloh’s Vitalizer is what you need for
consumption, loss of appetite, dizziness,
and all symptoms of dyspepsia. Price
10 and 15 cents per bottle. For sale by
J. J. Schott. 7
If you want a fresh imported cigar
from the La Sabrosa factory, Havana,
get it at L. Colosia, Market street. *
If your horse is out of condition and
needs toning up, use Raven’s food. For
sale by Hanna, Waters & Co. o
You may depend upon being served
with the finest goods when you call at
the Tremont bar. o
Fish chow’der every morning served
free at "Wm. Buscher’s. Make a note of
this. • o
The Tremont Hotel Bar.
Say, have you been there lately? If
not, go. It is the glorious place of the
city, and the management is superb.
No one can afford to neglect a cold;
catarrh, chronic bronchitis and consump-
tion are caused by neglecting common
colds. Take Chamberlain’s Cough Rem-
edy and cure it while you can. J. J.
Schott sells it. o
FIRST LOVE.
THE OLD MAN’S TALES.
—Owen Meredith.
BABIES.
BOTTLE FED
The red
According to statistics recently published
by M. Albert Soubies, the most popular
operas with the Parisians during the past fif-
teen years have been “Mignon” and “Car-
men. ” The former has been performed in
Paris 453 times since 1874, and “Carmen” 376
times.
H,? Liked the Indians Because They Kept
Their Promises—Living in a Cave—The
Adventure of Little Til Pruitt—A Woman
Deserted Her Indian Husband.
Whom first we love, you know, we seldom wed.
Time rules us all. And life, indeed, is not
The thing we planned it out ere hope was dead,
Aud then we women cannot choose our lot.
My little boy begins to babble now
Upon my knee his earliest infant prayer;
He has his father’s eager eyes, I know,
And they say, too, his mother’s sunny hair.
But when he sleeps and smiles upon my knee,
And I can feel his light breath come and go,
I think of one—Heaven help and pity me—
Who loved me, and whom I loved long ago.
But blame us women not if some appear
Too cold at times and some too gay and light.
Some griefs gnaw de.ep; some woes are hard to
bear.
Who knows the past? and who can judge us
right?
“This land was a paradise,” says a gentle,
kindly old man of 83, known in this region
as Uncle Rowel Honeycutt, “when I could
stand on the bluff and look down in the river
bottom and count fifty deer in sight. White
men hadn’t spoiled the country and turned
everything to dollars. Neighbors thought
of what they could do for one another, not
of how they might take advantage. And the
Indians were always honest.”
Among eastern nations the best pastime
was listening to the tales of old men. Their
experience is a kind of wealth which time
has not yet given us, and when ours comes it
will bear a different date and be a different
kind of experience.
Here is an old man -who may pass out of
sight any day. But while he fests we may
look through him, as through a field glass, at
the early life of this country.
He has thin ham, faded blue eyes, and a
few teeth, hard as nuts, and impresses sensi-
tive beholders as an aged boy, grieved by
civilization and always homesick for his first
playmates, the Indians. He is not in har-
mony with Anglo-Saxon ways,
tribes always treated him well.
AWAY BACK IN 1820.
“I lived with the Sauks and Foxes three
months,” says this old man; “I went with
them when they left this country and went to
their reservation in Iowa. And I would like
to go to Oregon now—as far west as I could
reach—and spend my last days in sight of the
tribes left there.
“An Indian you could trust. He keeps his
word. Once I met an Indian out here on the
bluff and he borrowed ten bullets of me. You
couldn’t get lead for making bullets short of
Alton then. They were rather precious. This
young Indian said lie would return the bullets
in a certain number of days when the sun was
so high—he lifted his hand to show about the
middle of the forenoon—and meet me where
we then stood. That day, within an hour of
the time, that Indian was there with the bul-
lets, and he had walked fifty miles to keep
his word. Honestest folks I ever. saw.
“Yes, I am a wild man myself yet. I wish
I could go to such another country as this
was in ’20. We came in 1817. My father
moved his family first into a cave in the bluff,
near a spring. The time of the year was May.
It was pretty living. YVe built our fire against
the back of the cave, and the smoke oozed
along the roof and went out at the cave door
without doing any damage. The mark of the
smoke’s on that cave roof yet. The country
was full of game. Only six white men were
here then.
“Once they had a mill raising up the river.
The mill’s standing yet. It ought to stand.
It was built of timbers fifteen inches square.
A rope broke at the raising, and one of' the
timber *fell and killed nearly all the men in
one county! Six men. That’s about all there
were in that county.
“But Seeley’s mill over here; it was the
place where everybody used to grind. Folks
brought their grists from Jacksonville and
Springfield. Jacksonville and Springfield
haven’t been where they are very long,
though. I went over their sites in 1821, and
there wasn’t a house.
“Some fine men came out of this region
around here. There was Maj. Ringgold that
died in the Mexican war; he used to be part
owner of Seeley’s mill. But some folks here
in ’23 didn’t enjoy this country. A man’s
wife got sick and wanted a pound of tea, and
he walked clear to St. Louis to get it for her.
He moved back east. He said it was too hard
for him here.
“The women did have scares. This was
when the British gave a bounty on scalps.
Some Indians went down Wood river and
killed six children and a woman and brought
away their scalps—the quirl of the head, you
know, where the hair, grows around. Maj.
Pruitt and some more whites got on horses
and chased them down. They killed an In-
dian, and the rest ran for twenty-four hours
and bled to death at the nose they got so ex-
hausted. Shabbona told me about their
bleeding to death. He was the only one that
got away. Maj. Pruitt took back the wom-
an’s scalp to her husband.
“It was little Til Pruitt, my wife’s sister,
that got lost, and had all the men betwixt
here and Alton turn out to hunt her.
“Her mother was sink abed when it hap-
pened and afterward died of the scare. Til
.slipped out after her cousins when they went
into the woods hunt greens. Her mother
thought she was with her father at his chop-
ping. She was barefooted and bareheaded
and had on nothing but a cotton slip. It was
the 9th day of April, 1820. She was gone
two nights and two days. One night she
slept in the bed of a dry run where leaves
had drifted thick. She followed the course
of a stream, and that’s how she got lost. It
made a crook and turned her. She waded
across. The folks out hunting found her lit-
tle footprints, and a bear’s tracks close by.
Til was about 4 years old. The men hunted
down the bear and killed him, and cut him
open, but he hadn’t got hold of the child.
When they found her she was asleep. They
wouldn’t have found her easy if she’d been
awake. She’d got pretty wild. She says
when she saw anybody or heard the shouting
she’d hide. She was afraid of men that were
not her dad. Her feet were all cut and
bloody and her slip was in tatters. Every
man had carried a hunk of bread and meat
in his pocket to feed her with when they
found her, and she was nigh starved, and
weak, and they carried her to her father.
More than a hundred men took dinner at
Pruitt’s the day Til was found. There was
frost both nights that she was out. The
woods were full of bears and wildcats and
painters and Indians.
“Yes, I did know a couple of children that
were carried off and brought up among the
Indians; two girls, one not 4 years old.
Taken prisoners, and the oldest one never
got back, but the youngest one—I found her
out here at the point of the bluff. She was
with the tribe. I knew her, though she was
a woman of 30 then and had an Indian hus-
band and two half breed children—boy and
girl. The boy was named Baptiste and the
girl was named Kloteed. Kloteed is an In-
dian name.
“As soon as that woman satisfied herself
she wasn’t an Indian but was white, she took
her children and left her husband. She went
to live with her white uncle’s family—uncle
that lived not far from here.
“Her husband would come and stand by
the window and cry two or three days at a
time, but she wouldn’t go back. He begged
her to go, but she wouldn’t do it. The chil-
dren both got sick and died. They couldn’t
stand life in a House. They were made to be
free Indians and not -live shut indoors. But
she never went back to the tribe any more.”
—Mary H. Catherwood in Chicago Tribune.
A Few Practical Hints for the Welfare of
the Future Rulers of Our Nation.
People pity the baby that is deprived of his
natural food, but seldom extend that pity to
the mother of the baby. No matter how ex-
perienced she may be in caring for children,
a mother feels very helpless with her first
bottle baby. Unless a nu Using baby is really
ill the mother does not fret about its health.
He has his natural nourishment; of course he
is doing well.
How different it is with a baby brought up
by hand, as they say. How few mothers
have patience and perseverance enough to
stick to one kind of food and give it a fair
trial. If baby does not grow faster really
than he should, his food is changed and
changed until the poor little stomach gives
out entirely.
There are so many simple remedies to cor-
rect acidity of the stomach and regulate the
bowels that any change in the food should be
the last thing resorted to. If a baby must be
fed, the most natural substitute for mother’s
milk is cow’s milk. Those who live outside of
cities are the most fortunate, for they can get
good milk. A baby should at first have the
food weak, Women like to measure things by
spoonfuls, although men hate to hear them
talk about spoonfuls of milk.
As this is essentially advice for women 1 will
say, give a new born baby ten spoonfuls of
water to five of milk, add a little pinch of
salt, a little sugar, say an even teaspoonful,
and make it blood warm. Use warm water
in mixing, or heat cold water on an alcohol
lamp. Do not make it hot; it only needs the
chill taken off. Some people think a hot bot-
tle is as much comfort to a baby as a hot cup
of tea is to older people. Food too hot or too
cold is particularly hurtful to the digestive
organs of a baby. It is better to have the
food a little cool than too hot, and yet some
mothers heat it so much that you cannot hold
your hand on the bottle.
Give the above proportion for two months,
then add another spoonful of milk or take off
one of water, as you please. The proportion
ten to five will just make a quarter of a pint,
and will be enough for one feeding if the
baby is fed every hour and a half if awake.
A pint of milk will be enough for the day
and night.
When good cow’s milk is not obtainable
condensed milk should be used. There are
many highly recommended prepared foods
for infants, but cow’s milk or condensed milk
should have a fair trial for at least three
months before resorting to anything else.
The proportion for condensed milk is one tea-
spoonful of milk to one cup and a half of
water, or perhaps even two cups or a pint of
water, although that would be quite weak.
The quantity of milk should be increased
slowly as long as the child digests it.
Babies should be fed every two hours until
5 or 6 months old, then every three hours, as
they take. more food at a time, and they
should be weaned from the bottle at 9 or 10
months, just the same as a nursing baby.
A word or two about cleaning bottles may
not be amiss here.
I have never used a tube bottle, preferring
the plain bottle and Nack rubber nipple.
Have two or three nipples in use and keep
them in a cup of cold water when not in use.
Change the water two or three times a day,
for it gets offensive, even with a little soda
in it. Every morning turn the nipples inside
out, a«hard thing to do, aud scrub them well
with a tooth brush, soap and water. Nothing
will clean the bottles better than warm water
and a few drops of household ammonia. Put
a cork in the bottle, give a good shaking and
the bottle will be as clean and bright as pos-
sible; Be sure to wash it out thoroughly with
clean water. No matter how sour and dirty
the bottle may be, a few minutes’ work will
make it clean again. Keep three bottles on
hand, and when not m use keep them filled
with cold water. Have a little five cent tin
funnel to pour the milk from the cup to the
bottle, and it will save labor and carpets
wonderfully. Keeping water in the bottles
is much more convenient than having then;
lying in a basin of water, as some do. May
these few hints help some anxious mother and
make some little one more comfortable, and 1
will be well repaid for my work.—A Mother
in New York Sun.
How to Treat Burns.
One who was severely burned all over the
body while engaged at a fire gives the fol
lowing particulars of the treatment of his
burns, and the suggestions he offers may be
useful. He says: 1 will not attempt to picture
the-suffering I endured, as any work on sur-
gery gives a good description of the symp
toms. 1 will simply allude to the treatment,
which I found very defective. Carron oil,
as an external application, failed to give me
any relief.
After suffering twenty-four hours an old
lady advised me to use fresh slaked lime.
This suggested an idea, which we acted upon
at once, Lime and distilled water were
mixed together to the consistency of thick
cream, then equal parts of linseed oil were
added; this mixture relieved the pain. This
dressing was continued until suppuration set
in. We then used an ointment composed of
acid carbolic, one dram; vaseline, six ounces.
Mix. This was continued as long as any
dressing was required.
The following facts I learned from my
painful experience: First—When called to
treat a severe burn, give morphia subcutane-
ously to relieve pain, and whisky internally
to guard against the cold stage, which will
set in about an hour after the injury. Sec-
ond—Officinal aqua calcis does not contain
enough lime to make the first dressing for a
burn. Third—Do not puncture blisters, or
remove the burned and detachedskin. Fourth
—During suppuration keeps parts clean
and change dressing often; never use liquids;
a soft piece of old linen, pressed gently
upon the parts, will remove the matter,
avoid rubbing, as it will not only cause pain
but damage granulation. Fifth—Watch the
granulations carefully. Should they raise up
above the surface, touch them with nitrate
of silver. Sixth—As soon as soreness will ad-
mit use splints and bandages to avoid the
contraction cicatrization is liable to produce.
—Exchange.
A GREEN COUNTY, ILLS., FARMER
TALKS ABOUT OLD TIMES.
Lady—Have you any book containing “No-
thing but Leaves?”
Bookseller—Yes’m. The best thing we
have in that line is a blank book.—Boston
1 Herald.
OFFICIAL CITY JOURNAL.
MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY 20, 1390.
<■
Congressman Mills is expected to
print a reply to Secretary Blaine’s tariff
article from the standpoint of American
experience. It will be read with interest.
ENTERED AT THE GALVESTON 1'OSTOI FICE AS SEC-
OND CLASS MAIL MATTER.
Two of the wealthiest men in the west
are said to have been messenger boys. It
pays to go slow, after all.
Isn’t it a little funny to see a great
nation making such an ado about the ill-
ness of a three-year-old baby as is the
case in Spain? The infant is only old
enough to care for toys and sugar-plums,
yet it is the king of Spain, and when it
has the colic the whole country must
take soothing syrup. We don’t wish the
youngster any harm, but to us plain
Americans the spectacle is a trifle ridicu-
lous. ____________
The suggestion that the New Yorkers
turn the Grant monument over to the en-
terprising Georgians, is not without
merit. Those people have done more for
Grady in two weeks than Gotham has
done for Grant since the great general’s
death.
Housewives, who have occasion to
study economy—and there are millions
of them—will find the first of “Three
Chapters on Household Economy,” in
the January 18th number of Good House-
keeping, treating of “Ecomical Purchas-
ing,” the two succeeding papers of the
series to consider the equally important
points of “Family Sewing” and “Family
, Mending.” This will be an excellent
series of papers for economically inclined
housewives to read, and those who are
not so inclined might possibly find profit,
if not pleasure, in their perusal. Address
the publishers, Clark W. Bryan & Co.,
Springfield, Mass.
It is said to be seldom that a blind
man smokes. Soldiers and sailors ac-
customed to smoking, and wTho have lost
their sight in action, continue to smoke
for a short while, but soon give up the
habit. They say that it gives them no
pleasure when they can not see the smoke.
Chief Justice Fuller appeared on the
supreme bench the other day with a
handkerchief as big as a napkin, which
he waved all day in the face of the as-
sembled bar. There wras no hiding it—
the greatest judicious power on earth had
the influenza. During the entire session
he sat with a brief in one hand while he
held this white cloth up to his nose to
petition a truce with the grip.
One of the gems of Governor Hill’s
message is this: “It should be further
provided that each elector should remain
in the booth at least one minute and not
over five minutes, and that upon depart-
ing from the private compartment- lie
shall leave therein all the ballots except
those he proposes to vote, and his inten-
tional failure so to do should be declared
a misdemeanor.” As a great constitu-
tional lawyer Governor Hill ought to
state how he proposes to enforce this
regulation. Would he have every voter
thoroughly searched before leaving the
polling place? And if a search discloses
ballots somewhere on his person, how
does the governor propose to prove that
the carrying them away was “inten-
tional.”
Good reports come from West Galves-
ton. In theatrical parlance, West Gal-
veston may be accepted as a hit. There
is no danger of the Cook, now engaged,
spoiling the broth.
Thomas A. Edison, the inventor, was
the founder of the first journal ever pub-
lished on a railroad train. He was a
train boy, 12 years old, on the Canada
and Central Michigan, when he carried
out the unique idea of printing in the
■ baggage car a little paper of reference re
garding hotels, carriage accommodations
at depots, etc., together with news caught
on the. fly. This paper he would then
sell to the passengers.
The recent pitched battle between
white and colored children in one of the
public schools of Alton, HL, takes the
edge from a major portion of the criticism
that is passed on the south in republican
journals. Illinois is a radical state, and
Alton is usually dominated by the party
which professes love at election times for
the “man and brother.”
There is, it is usually held, more
pleasure in anticipation than in realiza-
tion, and that is why poor people really
enjoy themselves more than the rich do.
The grip is now on the wane. The
influenza may therefore be said to rhyme
with candenza.
There is a tendency in business mat-
ters to work in grooves or circles. It
will be noted that certain men take hold
of enterprises of a certain character,
while others continue their operations
within certain other classes. Thus it
goes, and this is a natural result of men
becoming experts in ceriain lines of busi-
ness which they develop. When they are
ambitious enough to branch out into lines
about which they know very little they
do not always make a success of it.
Livery. Feed and Sale
03
Keep constantly on hand and for sale a fine as-
sortment of METALIC CASES, BURIAL
ROBES & CASKETS. WHITE HEARSE
for Children & fine HEARSES foi- Adults.
Phil J. Mitchel, graduate in EMBALM-
ING, in charge.
Church St. Between 22nd and Tremont Streets.
ilf
fit
1
Sixty-six Years in Popular Use
throughoutthe United States.
Ask Your Dealer for It.
Awarded United States Ma-
rine Hospital Contract after
Chemical Analysis in 1884.
TOW
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Burson, J. W. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 67, Ed. 1 Monday, January 20, 1890, newspaper, January 20, 1890; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1232339/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.