Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 68, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 21, 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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Mules and Horses for Sale.
I
1
Carriages, Buggies, Oyster Roast and Picnic Wagons
for Hire. Mules and Horses for Sale.
KEEP A FULL L^E OF PHOTS, BUGGIES AND CARRIAGES FOR SALE.
Wholesale
And Retail Dealers
IN
IMPORTERS,
BUILDERS’
EQUIPMENTS.
SADDLERY,
1
Buggies and Carts,
BLACKSMITHS
AND
wheelwrights’ Materials.
Saddlery Hardware,
FARM IMPLEMENTS,
Wagons,
IB
PARK & McRAE.
All
Imported and Domestic Table and Pocket Cutlery
ft
If
Kinds of HARD and SOFT COALS
Promptly Delivered.
Office--Corner 20th and STRAND.
9
J. Levy &
1
For Sale in Galveston by
HGNRY TOUJOUSE
UNDERTAKING.
Agent for the Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association
UW'-The patronage of everybody respectfully solicited.““^1
OFFICE: TREMONT 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. WREH1
TORY reiLIO anf CONVEWER.
plem fipe of pix Ital-iaQ Statuary
By last Steamer. From $15 to $100 a pair.
fancy Chins, Tea, Dinner, Fish, Salad
And Chamber Sets.
Toys, Velocipedes, Express Wagons Etc.,
BRLDINGeR BROS.,
i Cor, 22d and Mechanic Streets.
Old Yannissee Rye
ACTION.
THE GRASS DANCE.
One of
OFFICIAL CITY JOURNAL.
TUESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 21, 1890.
It is not Galveston’s funeral.
o
lac
The
EVE|IW TOit
EWTTTDTJSTGK
OFFICIAL P LiBLiLAT1ONS.
great scheme in
Office Rooms over Mason’s
Book Store in
A moist, red nose ought to be a source
of comfort to victims of la grippe. It in-
dicates that the thing has let loose and
the patient is on the way to recovery.
But it is a time when precaution is neces-
sary, for a backset may be much worse
and probably mean death if it grows into
pne u m onia.
Apply at
No. 78 CENTER STREET.
A well selected stock of grain, flour,
hay, etc,, at Hanna, Waters & Co.
Theo. Vinke’s Drug Store,
2111 and 2113 Market St.
ENTERED AT THE GALVESTON FOSTOFFICE AS SEC-
OND CLASS MAIL MATTER.
Shiloh’s Vitalizei- 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
I. J. Schott. 7
Be Sure
rV-~'’=rr^ EgatiK'ElEEFSiS&'SIga
If you have made up your mind to buy
Hood’s Sarsaparilla do not be induced to take
any other. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a peculiar
. medicine, possessing, by virtue of its peculiar
combination, proportion, and preparation,
curative power superior to any other article.
A Boston lady who knew what she wanted,
and whose example is worthy imitation, tells
her experience below:
To Get
Dr. Talmage is to be welcomed home
on his arrival, about February 1, by a
great public meeting in the Brooklyn
Academy of Music, over which the may-
or will be asked to preside. Dr. Talmage
is excelled in advertising enterprise by
only one other American, and that is P.
T. Barnum.
DY AUTHORITY OE THE CITY’ COUNCIL OF
Dthe City of Galveston.
FOR USK-AWlY.
A Wise Young Man.
Wilbur Blair, a jroung man of Woodland,
was returning home from a hop the other
night, and as footpads were known to in-
fest the town, he took $20 which he pos-
sessed from his pocket and carried it in his
hand. He had not walked far when he was
astonished to see a menacing figure emerge
from the gloom and demand that he throw up
his hands. As the man had a pistol pointed
at bis breast, Blair elevated his hands without
parley. The footpad then searched his pock-
ets, but was unable to find anything, so he al-
lowed Blair to pass on.—San Francisco Argo-
naut.
Galveston must, sooner or later, have
a pavilion. Il’ it is decided to build it. at
once, the state convention will be ours by
common consent.
The democratic members of congress
are placing themselves on the light side
of the Silcott matter by opposing the
movement to make the government pay
the defalcation. There is no reason in
the world why the United States should
return money to the members of congress
stolen by Silcott.
“ In one store where I went to buy Hood’s
Sarsaparilla the clerk tried to induce me buy
their own instead of Hood’s; he told me their’s
would last longer; that I might take it on ten
days’ trial; that if I did not like it I need not
pay anything, etc. But lie could not prevail
on me to change. I told him I knew what
Hood’s Sarsaparilla was. I had taken it, was
satisfied with it, and did not want any other.
HoocF s
■When I began taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla
I was feeling real miserable, suffering
a great deal with dyspepsia, and so weak
that at times I could hardly stand. I looked,
and had for some time, like a person in con-
sumption. Hood’s Sarsaparilla did me so
much good that I wonder at myself sometimes,
and my friends frequently speak of it.” Mrs.
Ella A. Goff, 61 Terraco Street, Boston.
SarsapariSh.
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass,
§0© Eposes On© DoHar
There will be life in the old gulf town
from this on. Confidence now abides
and there will no longer be any need of
waiting. The Galveston boom will make
all other Texas booms seem infinitesimal-
ly small.
A Living Cyclops.
An Oregon newspaper states that an Indian
child of the Nez F’erce tribewith but one eye,
situated in the center of its forehead, like
those of the fa tiled Gy clops, was lately seen
at Pendleton, in that state. The child was
able to see with ease, and ran about with as
much freedom as any of its two eyed com-
panions. When the child’s mother was asked
for an explanation of the mystery she replied
in chaste and elegant Nf,z Perce that she
could account for its strange peculiarity only
by the fact that she had looked at a one eyed
cayuse shortly before the infant’s birth.—
Frank Leslie’s Newspaper.
Already the John Sealy hospital is
full to overflowing. In this particular
line the facilities seem to create the de-
mand. Perhaps “vigorous management”
is necessary, after all.
Well, this is the calm before the
storm. Like all other cities, it requires
at least a month for Galveston to recover
from the indisposition that a glorious
holiday season superinduces. The storm?
Wait. The grand wdiirl will soon begin,
and it will not let up until 1890 glides in-
to the spectral past.
Galveston never before had a chief of
police who was more generous by im-
pulse than Jerry Lordan. When a suf-
fering mendicant finds his way to the
chief’s office and begins to pour forth
his or her lamentation it is not long be-
fore a responsive chord is touched upon.
Often the chief’s generosity suffers him
to be imposed upon. He has been fre-
quently seen to go down into his pockets
and draw forth a dollar, a dime or a
quarter, after he was convinced the appli-
cant was worthy, and give it with a
heartiness that showed it was a pleasure
for him to give. These things are trifles
comparatively, but they afford a splendid
insight into the noble character of the
man.
Little Irving's Funny Speech.
Little Irving is only 3 years Old, and he
wasn’t that within three months when he
made the funny speech about the Lima bean.
His mother had a pan full of them on her lap
and had begun to shell them when the small,
fair haired, blue eyed boy jumped from his
rocking horse and came to help. He took one
of the largest beans, of course, but although
he tried and tried he could not burst the pod.
It was too much for his tiny fingers, and at
■last, throwing it down in great vexation, he
said: “Oh, mamma, 1 can’t unbutton it.”—
Detroit Free Press.
Those people who imagine that an ex-
clusive social set can be of much interest
and value or excite the envy of those not
within the pale, but who know what ex-
clusive sets really mean, are very much
mistaken. If there is anything that is
stupid in society it is the exclusive clique;
it shows on the part of those comprising
it a lamentable amount of ignorance and
inexperience. Of course there is a differ-
ence of taste which leads to a choice of
society or companions or friends, but this
is different from the spirit of exclusiveness
on the part of those who imagine it
means social success and pre-eminence.
Only those who have never been any-
where and do not really know anything
can believe in such a theory. It is es-
sentially true that a brilliant society
must be cosmopolitan, kaledioscopic,
ever-changing and with constant addi-
tions of new thoughts alid new life. Ex-
clusiveness in anything is a very narrow
way of living and is decidedly provincial.
Keep your lamps trimmed and burn-
ing brightly, Mr. Stringfellow. The
whole world is looking this way and
West Galveston must not be lost sight
of. You are depended upon to keep your
. end of the house in a state of uproarious
confusion.
Ecrasito. the New Explosive.
The new explosive, ecrasite, is the invention
of two engineers named Siersch and Kubin.
its power is to dynamite as 100 to 70 and it
ran be carried from place to place with the
utmost safety. It is not smokeless, but emits
a thick, black smoke, and the detonating noise
is louder than that of gunpowder, but shorter,
sharper and clearer. It can be used for rifle-
cartridges or as priming for cannon, and a
bombshe 1 loaded .with it explodes with such
terrific results that experiments against pali-
sades representing 100, 250 and 500 men, at
ranges of 300, 750 and 1,200 meters, recorded
marks on every division of the palisade stand-
ing for a soldier. The secret of this invention
is being.closely kept by the Austro-Hungarian
' war office.—Now York Telegram.
With Head to the North.
The supersti tious belief that human beings
should sleep with their heads toward the
north is now believed to be based upon a
scientific principle. The French Academy of
Sciences has made experiments upon the
body of a guillotined man, which go toprove
that each human body is in itself an electric
battery, one electrode being represented by
the bead and the other by the feet. The body
of the subject upon which experiments were
made was taken immediately after death,
and placed upon a pivot free to move in any
direction. After some vacillation the head
portion turned towards the north, the pivot
board then remaining stationary. One of the
professors turned it half way around, but it
soon regained a position with the headpiece,
to the north, and the same- results were re-
peatedly obtained until organic movement
ceased.—St. Louis Republic.
The Way to Sharpen a Pencil.
“It really makes me tired to see the average
man sharpen a pencil,” said an old newspaper
man in a stationary store yesterday. “He
will cut his fingers, cover them with dirt and
blacken them with lead dust and still will not
sharpen the pencil.
“There is but one way to sharpen a lead
pencil, and that is to grasp it firmly with the
point from you and not toward you. Take
your knife in the other hand and . whittle
away as though you had lots of pencils to
waste. By following these directions and
turning the pencil over you will soon have
it neatly and regularly sharpened, and your
A Great Scheme.
Young Poet—1 have a
mind.
Friend—What is it?
Poet—I am going to write a spring poem
in the autumn. Tennyson has just done it,
and it was successful. Great scheme, isn’t
it?— Yankee Blade.
Have your prescriptions filled at
VINKE’S Drug Store. o
Meteoric Iron.
A fine specimen of meteoric iron has jusl
been received at the North Carolina State
museum. Its greatest length is 12 inches,
with an average breadth of 8 inches, and it is
about 2 inches thick. “It’s general shape it
flat, though it is somewhat concave on one
side and convex on the other, as if broken off
from the outer surface of a rounded and
larger mass. The specimen is coated with a
thick crust of dark brown rust and weight
twenty-five and three-quarter pounds. It is
from the same neighborhood (Rockingham
county, N, C.) as the specimen obtained in
1866, and the composition and general ap-
pearance seem to be identical.- An analysis
of the first specimen received gave: Iron,
ninety parts; nickel, eight parts, with traces
of cobalt, copper and phosphorus. They have
also in the museum a meteorite from Nash
county, which is totally different in appear-
ance and composition, being gray in color
and of a stony character. The specimen
from Nash was seen to fall in a field in the
daytime, and was immediately dug out, when
it was found to be very hot.”—Philadelphia
Ledger.
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 dai s from the date of this
notice I shall deliver the. said roll to the collector
for collection and 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
city hall, to September 30, 1890. Apply to M.
Ullmann, chairman of committee on public
property, or to J. W. Jockusch, purchasing
agent for city.
Deluded age, which thinks cr seems to think
That naught is action save what can be seen,
And sets a brand upon the brow serene
Of those who from the gaze of crowds would
shrink;
And they who rush not boldest to the brink
Of novelties seem coward souls and mean;
And they who pause and meditate between
Their deeds at wisdom's well ne'er learned to
drink.
Action.is prayer upon the sick man's bed;
Action is silence where a word might wound;
Action is bold rebuke where crowds are led
To assault the wails which gird old truth around.
Action seeks shelter when the wind’s ahead.
While those who dare the stormy waves are
drowned
—Theodore D. Woolsey in Independent.
The First Step.
Perhaps you are run down, can’t eat,
can’t sleep, can’t think, can’t do any-
thing to your satisfaction, and you won-
der what ails you. You should heed the
warning, you are taking the first step
into nervous prostration. You need a
nerve tonic and in Electric Bitters you
will find the exact remedy for restoring
your nervous system to its normal,
healthy condition. Surprising results
follow the use of this great nerve tonic
and alterative. Your appetite returns,
good digestion is restored, and the liver
and kidneys resume healthy action. Try
a bottle. Price 50c. at J. J. Schott’s
drug store. 6
An eye for an eye and a tooth '"for a
tooth, is certainly a Fort Bend county
idea. The killing of Kyle Terry this
morning opened the ball in dead earnest.
From now on the pistol and the under-
taker will be kept busily engaged until
both parties are shot dead and buried
deep.
Site Cost Her Weight in Gold.
Mrs. Jesus Castro, an aged Mexican lady
who recently died at American Flag, in the
Santa Catalina mountains, Arizona, was,
perhaps, the only woman in the world who
ever cost her husband her weight in gold. In
the early gold digging days of California she
was a resident of Sonora, Mexico, in which
state she was born and grew to womanhood.
When about 17 years of age a paternal uncle,
but a few years her senior, returned gold-
laden from the newly discovered mines and
soon fell desperately in love with his niece.
He sought her hand in marriage and was
accepted, but the church refused, on account
of the near relationship of the pair, to
solemnize the marriage. Persuasion being
in vain he tried the power of gold to win the
church his way, and succeeded only by pay-
ment of her weight in gold. She at that time
weighed 117 pounds, and against her in the
scales the glittering dust was shoveled. The
husband still. had sufficient of this world’s
goods to provide a good home.—St. Louis
Republic.
Larabee’s fruit cakes at Sweeney’s
Restaurant. o
French asparagus in glass and cans at
Henry’s. o
any court plaster to put on the wounds, be-
cause you cannot cut your fingers when whit-
tling from them.
“This method is the best, whether the knife
is dull or sharp. If the pencil is a soft one,
there is no sense in sharpening the lead.
Simply cut away the wood, and in writing
turn the pencil over, thus writing with the
sides of the lead.
“Another disgusting and senseless habit is
in placing the pencil in the mouth when writ-
ing. This is a relic of the days when pencils
were all as hard as flint and before the manu-
facturers were able to produce the smooth,
soft pencils that are used today. This con-
tinual dampening of the lead will harden
even a good graphite pencil and make it hard
and gritty. It is simply a habit anyway,
and most-habits are bad ones.”—Philadelphia
Times.
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.
Tnos. Goggan & Bro.
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.
Girdling didn’t Kill It.
About two years ago a severe frost burst
the bark of an orange tree at Auburn, Cal.,
all around near the ground, and it subse-
quently fell off, leaving a space of from
eight to twelve inches on the tree without
any bark. Still the upper part of the tree
lived, and is alive and thrifty today, bearing
fruit. The fact of a tree living after being
completely girdled is probably unprecedent-
ed-—Exchange.
Evening
The pistol is quicker, if not mightier,
than the courts. It did some quick and
terrible work this morning before the
courts were ready for business.
the Few Surviving Dances of the
North American Indian.
Every race, civilized and savage, must have
its play. When David danced before the ark
it was in the performance of a religious rather
than a social ceremony, and this is true of
many of the dances of the ancient races, and
essentially true in the main of the dancing of
Indian tribes. Many of these dances partak-
ing of the nature of the savage race were
barbarous and cruel. Many innocent dances,
however, are still enjoyed. The majority of
these are plainly religious ceremonies, and
with a race so filled with mysticism and rever-
ence for the supernatural as the Indians to
mere pastimes, even fetichism bears a rela-
tion.
Today your correspondent witnessed at
the Crow agency a hop or grass dance, the
most picturesque and wildest scene that could
be painted or imagined. The savage finds
nothing useful or cesthetic in the habiliments
of civilization, and even blankets and leggins
more to his fancy are discarded in the two
most important occupations of life—war and
dance. The only garment his sense of mod-
esty or comfort requires is the clout, yet it
must be said his aesthetic sense is instinctive-
ly higher or more cultivated than that of his
white brother. The painted and beaded and
feathered savage is a far more picturesque
and pleasing sight than the dude and his
adornments, and his adornment is less incon-
gruous to the artistic eye than the civilized
gentleman’s-evening dress, and, I might add,
not much more without the bounds of modest
delicacywthan the evening dress of the civil
ized lady.
As among all ancient nations, the sexes min
gle in very few of the dances. There are squaw
dances and buck dances, but promiscuous
dancing seems undiscovered or under the ban.
The grass dance is a buck dance; the squaws
arrange the arena and contribute the grace
and inspiration of their presence, but bear no
part in the dance.
The costume of the dance is striking. A
crest of gaudy colored bristles surmounts his
own roached and braided long jet black hair.
At his waist is bound a feathered garment,
which covers half the back and trails on the
ground. As he dances, arms and legs are en
circled by girdles of shining metal or rich
hued furs, and horns and rosettes of many
varieties of ornaments are disposed about hit
body, but the most important part of his
makeup is the ornamentation applied direct-
ly to the skin. Tllis is painted from face to
feet in most fanciful and grotesque variety:
one-half the face will be red or black, the
other white, or perhaps on a solid ground
will be imposed figures of white, or green, oi
blue. The body may'be painted white, or
red, or green, or may combine all the color?
the fancy suggests.
“Oh, aren’t those pretty silk tights?” was
the comment of a tenderfoot when she saw
' the first full dress dance. A neighbor sug-
gested that they were not silk tights, but
only buck skin, a “mot” I think worth pre-
serving.
The instrument which furnishes music for
the dance is a huge drum, made usually by
stretching a skin over a section of the hollow
bowl pf a cottonwood tree. Around this are
seated ten or a dozen drummers, each pro-
vided with one stick, with which he pounds
vigorously and in excellent time. The arena
is a circle of smooth grass 100 feet wide, sur
rounded by an awning for the protection
from the sun of the dancers and spectators.
It is a spectacle more savely grand and
strikingly picturesque and stirring than can
be found elsewhere to see 100 painted and
feathered savages at the sound of the “tom-
tom” spring from their seats, each chanting
a weird song in a minor key and a step pecu-
liar and inimitable, in absolutely perfect ac-
cord with the music, enact the various figures
of the dance, the sham battle, the stealthy
advance, the fierce charge, the killing, the
scalping, the retreat, the figures and music
growing more wild and grotesque as the
dance progresses.—Helena (Mont.) Cor. San
Francisco Chronicle.
It never rains but it pours. This lias
been the busiest day of the season with
Galveston reporters. Murders, wrecks,
fires, deaths, and .other irregularities
promised to-night.
The San Antonio Express says: “The
re-election of Mr. AValter Gresham as
president of the Galveston Progressive
association proves that the Island City is
not yet ready to give up the fight. ■ Mr.
Gresham is one of the ablest, brightest,
cleanest and most influential boomers in
Texas.”
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 chowder every morning served
free at Wm. Buscher’s. Make a note of
this. o
The Tremont Hc-tel Bar,
Say, have you been there lately ? If
not, go. It is the glorious place of the
city, and the management is superb.
If your stock is out of condition ; if you
wish to increase the quantity and quality
of milk in your cows; if you would have
your hens lay all the year around use
Raven’s Food. For sale by Hanna,
Waters & Co. o
He Didn’t Notice.
When a witness, whether in court or else-
where, is fairly “cornered,” he is likely tc
dash wildly into impossible statements. A
story related by the author of “Behind the
Bungalow” brings into relief this weakness
of human nature. A gqntleman, living in
India, suspected that his milk was watered,
although his faithful native servant protest-
ed that this could not be, as the milking was
begun and finished in his presence.
The master provided himself with a
tometer, and the suspicion became certainty.
Summoning the servant, he told him that the
little instrument floating in the milk could
neither lie nor be deceived.
“It declares,” he added, sternly, “tha;
there is 25 per cent, of water in this milk.”
“Your lordship speaks the truth,” answer
ed the man, “but how could I tell a lie?
milk was drawn in my presence.”
“Doyon mean to say you were there ali
the time the animal was being milked?”
“The whole time, your lordship. Would 1
give those wretches a chance of watering the
sahib’s milk?”
“Are you sure there was no water in the
pail before the milking began?”
“Your lordship, I made the man turn tin
pail upside down and shake it.”
As the gentleman turned the matter ovei
in his mind, it occurred to him that the lac
tometer, being of English manufacture,
might not work properly in buffalo’s milk.
“Is this cow’s milk or buffalo’s?” he asked.
The servant was beginning to feel uncom
fortable, and caught at this chance of escape.
“’Ab, that I cannot tell,” he answered; “ii
may be buffalo’s milk or it may be cow’s.’ I
do not know!”—Youth’s Companion.
S££U
3^3
7)^
JR.
Church St. Between 22nd and Tremont Streets.
9
Lively, Feed and Sale
UNOERTAKERS,
Winnie St. Bet. 20th and 21st Sts.
Keep constantly on hand and for sale a fine as-
sortment of METALIC CASES, BUKIAL
KOBES & CASKETS. WHITE HEARSE
for Children & fine HEARSES for Adults.
05^ Phil J. Mitchel, graduate in EMBALM-
ING, in charge.
J3'
Sixty-six Years in Popular Use
throughout the United States.
Ask Your Dealer for It.
Awarded United States Ma-
rine Hospital Contract after
Chemical Analysis in 1884.
«©•
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Burson, J. W. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 68, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 21, 1890, newspaper, January 21, 1890; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1232438/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.