Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 60, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 10, 1891 Page: 2 of 8
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FAMILY STOCKS IN AMERICA.
RICHES IN THE CONGO.
goenitifl tribune
SATURDAY EVENING. JANUARY 10, 1891.
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C. P. RUSSELL, Secretary.
- Hand 19th.
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MARK!
Co’s
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TRIBUNE.
EVENING
CTS
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■4
IthpS
on
your
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stall,
motto.
F(oad to Opulepee Ljes ^ee-Deep Jtyrou^
prior’s IqK-
F C
t LOBINSTEIN
SCO.
UCCt?3 CAN BE ACHIEVED
| In Ann Business by
T.TIjR *fc CO.,
ROPRIETORS.
MANUFACTURERS OF ALL
KINDS OF
MACHINERY STEAM fflfflES
AND
Brass and Iron Castings.
Repairing Done on Short Notice.
COR. 32d «fc AVUVINTJE STS.,
GALVESTON, TEX.
W Untiring Industry,
v f Careful Economy,
Arc Lights of Standard Candle Power.
IZMCJVTXIKESCIINT
LIGHTS
From 10 to 300 Candle Power.
Estimates for Wiring Public and Private Build-
ings Given on Application.
Office, 2422 Market, Between 24th and 25th Streets.
Read Evening Tribune, the best adver-
tising medium in the city and the best
local paper in the state.
THE BANK SALOON WOOLLAM’S LAKE,
S. W. CORNER PO^TOFFICE
AND CENTER STS.
Most Popular Resort in the City.
If you want to find your friend and his party
call upon CHARLIE and JOE at the above ad-
dress and you can find them.
A Fine Free Lunch from 10 a. m. Until
2 p. m.
Only the B'est of Imported and Domestic
Wines, Liquors and Cigars kept in stock.
CALL AND SAMPLE I HEM.
He Considered It a Compliment.
Pryor—Look here, Charlie, you must
JufliGious Advertising.
The world renowned Mathushek & Son
Pianos are to-day the finest and best in-
struments, and are only for sale by
C. Janke & Co.,
State Agents for Texas.
Visit the Galveston Dining Parlors.
Best place in the city to get a Regular
Dinner and Short Order Meals. Market,
just above Center.
Evening Tribune, 50 cents per month.
CUKES*—
CUT^l
X-'z 1
Mrs. Palmer, President.
In electing Mrs. Potter Palmer presi-
dent of the lady managers of the Chicago
World’s fair the right person was put in
the right place.
As is well known, Mrs. Palmer was a
Miss Honore, a member of a distin-
guished southern family and a sister of
the beautiful wife of Col. Fred Grant,
the eldest son of Gen. Grant, and our
present minister to Austria. Mrs. Palm-
er’s husband, who is a millionaire, built
the Palmer house, of Chicago. The
Palmers live in one of the north side
palaces of Chicago, facing the lake.
Their house is a' copy of an English
castle, and is considered one of the finest
residences in America. Mrs. Palmer
makes annual trips to Europe, and has
purchased some of the finest and rarest
tapestries, statuary and ’ bric-a-brac, to
say nothing of valuable paintings.
Mrs. Palmer is even more beautiful
than her sister, Mrs. Grant. She has
dark hair and eyes, is tall and slight,
with an air of elegance that is most at-
tractive. She talks with remarkable
grace and ease. She seems to under-
stand parliamentary rules thoroughly,
for she presides with great ability and
dignity.—Epoch.
As we journey through life.
Let us live by the way.”
• UHRIB’S CAVE, •
Corner Center & Market.
JAS. PRENDERGAST,
PROPRIETOR.
FINEST BEER IN TNE CITY.
Wines, Liquors and Cigars of the very
best quality.
THE PUBLIC CORDIALLY INVITED.
HOT LUNCH FROM 10 TO 1 P. N.
H.Maiwitz&Coi
G-JLIuVESTOTST.
Dealers and Im porters of Ship Chandlers’
Goods generally, Manilla, Sisal and Cot-
ton Rope. Contractors for Sails, Awn-
ings, Tents, Etc.
9 sofi
venile, but I’ll act a
ward you.
He—Mother's part!
mean—to ridicule me?
She—No; just what Isay i I’m engaged
to your father.—Kate Field’s Washing-
ton.
An Exhausting Place.
Mistress—I am at a loss to understand
your motive in leavin.
Bridget—The work is too harrud,
mum, and it’s worn out I be entirely.
Mistress—Why, I have done most of
it myself.
Bridget—Yes, but it’s worn out I be
hearing yez tell me of it.—Munsey s
Weekly.
THE MAIL EDITION.
Many readers of Evening Tribune are
under the impression that it is debarred
from the mails because it contains lot-
tery advertisements, and that, conse-
quently, its circulation is confined to the
"island. Such is not the fact, however.
After the supply for the city is worked
off, the press is stopped, the objection-
able advertisements taken from the forms
and replaced with an advertisement of
the city of Galveston. This “mail” edi-
tion can be mailed anywhere and any
quantity of them, open or nicely wrapped
for mailing, can be procured at Evening
Tribune’s counting room.
A Prize for a Model Husband’s Wife.
The $100 prize has been awarded to
Mrs. C. K. Hood, of Brooklyn.
The thousands of letters which were
received in the contest were carefully
read, and the judges, consisting of Mrs.
Roger A. Pryor, Mrs. Chauncey M. De-
pew and Mrs. William C. Whitney, after
careful examination, unanimously de-
cided in favor of the following:
“Free from all manly •(?) vices, per-
sonally clean and orderly, into our ut-
most privacy he brings the tender
courtesies of a gentleman. Our home
making is a delightful partnership, one
supplementing the other with every as-
sistance, he always considerate of the
woman’s responsibilities, but leaving at
his office the annoyances of a business
man. In sickness or health there is al-
ways the responsive throb of a single
interest. Perfect love casteth out fear,
and our freedom of speech and action
leaves no occasion for any petty tricks
of deception, alas! so common.
“Above this is his high ideal of woman
that helps me produce something better
than before recognized in myself. Re-
ceptive to my aspirations, no new
thought or culture is attempted but
meets his approval and encouragement,
while a noble spiritual atmosphere lifts
my daily life from a common routine
into a loving pleasure. Taking my face
in his hands he has lovingly said,
Would I had wealth that I could place
you a queen among women!’ With such
a king for a husband, am I not walking
in a queen’s garden?”
Neither of the judges knew the name
of the writer of either letter, and the
prize was awarded wholly upon merit.—
New York World.
Fires in New York.
That the- growth of the work which
New York firemen are called on to do
demands the best apparatus which can
be made, and that every valuable im-
provement must be adopted will be ap-
parent from even a casual inspection of
the statistics of fires and consequent
losses. In 1865, the year after the paid
department took the places of the volun-
teers, there were 796 fires in the city. In
1888 there were 3,217. In 1866 there was'
1 fire to every 80 buildings, and in 1888
1 to 35. In 1866 there were 1| fires to I
every man on the force, in 1888 3 1-7 fires
to each map. That the efficiency of the’’
force has more than kept pace with the
growth in fires, however, is plain from
the fact that the average loss per fire in
1866 was $8,075.38, and in 1888 but
$1,705.29.—John R. Spears in Scribner’s.
WM. BOTHMAN,
(Successor to C. Bothman.)
BOILER MAKER AND MACHINIST,
Every description of Steamboat work
promptly executed.
Boilers Repaired on the Shortest Notice.
Orders from the country solicited. Satis-
faction guaranteed.
Mechanic Street, between 25th and 26th Streets
GALVESTON, TEXAS.
stop smoking those villainous cigarettes.
They will soften your brain and---
' ’ Baw Jawve!
You are dooced
You Can Buy a Piano.
Twenty-five years’ experience^
tau^uu — -----
our climate. We are large buyers and
secure i
PHOICE MEATS always on hand, SAUSAGE
U OUR SPECIALTY. FREE DELIVERY.
WEI®
... K’ yJ 609 Tremont, bet.
v J- Church and
Winnie Sts.
How the Place of Residence Affects the
Dignity and Worth of the Name.
What then are the means of perpetu-
ating good family stocks in a democracy?
The first is country life. In this regard
democracies have much to learn from
the European aristocracies which have
proved to be durable. All the vigorous
aristocracies of past centuries lived in
the country a large part of the year.
The men were soldiers and sportsmen
for the most part, and lived on detached
estates sparsely peopled by an agricult-
ural and martial tenantry. They were
oftener in camp than in the town or city.
Their women lived in castles, halls or
chateaux in the open country almost the
whole year, and their children were born
and brought up there. The aristocratic
and noble families of modern Europe
still have their principal seats ii\. the
-country, and go to town only for a few
months of the year.
Next, a permanent family should have
a permanent dwelling place, domicile,
or home town. In older societies this
has always been the case. Indeed, a
place often lent its name to a family. In !
American cities and large towns there
are as yet no such things as permanent
family houses. Even in the oldest cjties
of the east hardly any family lives in a •
single house through the whole of one
generation, and it is very rare that two
successive generations are born in the
same house.
Rapid changes of residence are the
rule for almost everybody, so that a city
directory which is more than one year
old is untrustworthy for home addresses.
It is almost impossible for the human
mind to attribute dignity and social con-
sideration to a family which lives in a
hotel or which moves into a new flat
every 1st of May. In the country,
however, things are much better. In
the older states there are plenty of fami-
lies which have inhabited the same town
for several generations; there are a few
families which have inhabited the same
house for three generations.
The next means of promoting family
permanence is the transmission of a fam-
ily business or occupation from father to
sons. In all old countries this inherit-
ance of a trade, shop or profession is a
matter of course. Under right condi-
tions, a transmitted business tends to
make a sound family more secure and
permanent, and a permanent family
tends to hold and perfect a valuable
business. This principle, which is se-
curely founded on biological law, ap-
plies best in the trades and professions,
in ordinary commerce, and in the in-
dustries which do not require immense
capital; but in Europe many vast indus-
tries and many great financial and mer-
cantile concerns are family properties,
and there is in our own country already
a distinct tendency to this family man-
agement of large businesses as being
more economical and vigilant than cor-
porate management, and more discern-
ing and prompter in picking out and ad-
vancing capable men of all grades.—
President C. W. Elliot in Forum.
of Beittg Old Before Seventy.
Some old persons are apparently as
capable as ever, but this is only in cer-
tain hues where they have the advantage
of earlier habits and all previous accumu-
lations. Their versatility, their power
to turn effectively in other directions, to
train themselves to new intellectual
habits, is far from what it once was.
It is often the case, and sometimes it
is a source of trouble, that an old man
does not perceive his intellectual shrink-
age as clearly as others see it. But there
is no dead line at fifty, even for the
minister. No man who takes care of
himself begins to be old before he is
seventy.—Youth’s Companion.
Real Lightning for the Stage.
Fred V. L. Smith is the inventor of a
peculiar electrical apparatus for the pur-
pose of producing flash lights to imitate
lightning on the stage. Flash lights are
located among th© flies, and are operated
from a small resistance block not more
than six inches square.— Pittsburg Dis-
patch. .....
—
25 ChX
Twenty-five years’ experience has
taught us what Pianos are suitable for
secure from the manufacturers not only
lowest prices, but necessary changes in
construction of instruments. Our easy
payment system enables families with
limited means to buy a good Piano.
Thos. Goggan & Bro.
School Pads.
We are closing out our entire large
stock of Pencils and Inks, Writing Tablets,
Composition Books, Note Books, Memo-
randuin Pads, etc., at cost. Now is the
time for the children to refurnish their
School Outfits. C. W. Preston & Co.,
Market and Twenty-Second.
You will save from 25 cents to 50 cents
on every dollar in buying your violins,
guitars, Lanjos, zithers, flutes, accor-
dions. and all kind of musical instru-
ments from C. Janke & Co.,^
Tremont st., bet. Market and Mechanic.
When you go to Central Market call
Colonel J. H. Wendl before placing
order or making purchases, as
but first-class meats are kept at his
Free and prompt delivery is his
Great Faith.
A melancholy case was brought to
light over in Brooklyn the other day
when a man was taken to court on the
charge of neglecting to provide for his
family. He solemnly asseverated that
he carried home all the money he earned.
Being further questioned, he admitted
that his sole means of livelihood was
serving as a juror, and that he only got
a chance to prosecute his vocation about
once a year. This is sometimes scoffed
at as the age of the decadence of faith.
But think of the faith which this poor
man has exercised day after day and
year after year! Is it any wonder if he
has sometimes doubted whether, after
all, trial by jury is the palladium of our
liberties?
Certainly he were to be pardoned if
questionings and suspicions sometimes
arose in his mind. Still the calm wings
of his faith soared above such petty
things, and he faced the future with con-
fidence. As a family provider, though, it
is plain that such a person has serious
drawbacks. But there’s no denying his
faith. It might not be able to remove
mountains, but it would not hesitate at
a fair sized hill.—New York Tribune.
For Sale by J. J* SHOTT.
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
The best salve in the world for Cuts,
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fe-
yer Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chill-
blains, Corns and all Skin Eruptions,
and positively cures Piles, or no pay re-
quired. It is guaranted to give perfect
satisfaction, or money refunded. Price
25 cents per box. For sale by J. J.
Schott. ___
The Galveston High School of Music
elves instructions either private or in
classes on piano, organ, violin, cornet,
zither, banjo, guitar or any other
intrument at lowest prices and by only
the very best teachers. Give us a trial
and you will be convinced. Pupils can
begin any time during the month at the
Galveston High School of Music,
Over C. Janke’s & Go’s Music Store.
Fresh, imported cigars from the famous
La Sabrosa factory, in Havana, at L.
Colosia. *
Cholly—Thawnks!
thousand thawnks!
kind, Pwyor.
Pryor (as Cholly moves
there’s gratitude for you,
\,t
off)—Well,
Hawk. I
actually" believe the fellow’s going to
swear off.
Hawk—No, that wasn’t it. You see,
the poor chap has been told so often
that he has no brain that he feels highly
flattered by your concern.—Spirit.
ADVANTAGES OF THE FREE STATE
AND ITS RESOURCES.
Broadway and 11th ■
fMFUIERMANN RADEKER,
Wholesale &Retail Dealerin
UL Butter, Eggs,
MILK AND GAME.
Prompt, Delivery Throughout the City POST-
OFFICE bet. 20th and 2 i st, attha OLD ICE HOUSE
GALVESTON" BARREL FACTORY.
WM. BU HAN, Proprietor,
Office and Factory, 19th
St. and Ave. A.
MOLASSES, OIL,
VINEGAR, CIDER
LIQUOR, FLOUR and
PRODUCE BARRELS,
, HALF-BARRELS
and KEGS.
Stanley’s Views on the Proposed Emigra-
tion of American Negroes—The Country
Offers Many Opportunities for Amass-
ing Wealth—Idlers Would Suffer.
Henry M. Stanley expressed his views
to me on the emigration of the Ameri-
can negro to the Congo Free State, the
opportunities that are there for him, and
the development of that country.
“I am familiar,” he said, “ with the
fact that Senator Butler, of South Caro-
lina, made a proposition to the United
States government that the American
negroes be deported to the Congo Free
’ State, but that is a matter that must be
taken care of by the negroes themselves.”
“ W hat advantages would accrue to
the negroes if they should emigrate to
that country in large numbers?”
“The. advantages would be many.
There is any amount of land to be had
for the asking; the laws are favorable
and calculated to promote happiness and
content; the climate for the negroes is
comparatively healthy; the soil is fertile
and the country new, so that the slight-
est cultivation cannot fail to be followed
by the most gratifying results. In these
facts lie the advantages that would fol-
low for the emigrating negroes. Value
at the same time must be given to the
fact that they would become residents
of their native land. Whites—that is,
the Caucasian race—cannot colonize the
Congo Free State.
“A white man while living in the
Congo valley three years would expend
ten years of vitality and the white wom-
an could not retain health. The result
of this would be children of puny frames
and inferior intelligence. It would have
the effect of forever keeping the Congo
Free State in a condition of inconse-
quence among the nations of the world.
With negroes forming the majority of
its citizenship it would, with proper en-
couragement, make remarkable develop-
ment and in time become a great nation.
forward or backward.
“Is there any possibility, if the Ameri-
can negro should go to Africa, that he
! would, because of contact with the sav-
ages, retrograde from a condition of
> civilization; or, on the contrary, would
3 his presence there have a beneficial in-
fluence upon the growth of civilization
among the natives?”
“That is very difficult to answer. The
She—Ho, I can’t marry you, Mr. Ju- iaWS of the Congo Free State have been
mother’s part to- made with the thought of having a civil-
izing effect upon the savages. If the
civilized blacks going into that country
were developed morally, it is safe to say
that their ‘contact with the savages’
would be happy. If, on the contrary,
they were of degraded character, it
would follow that they would deterior-
ate, practice polygamy, etc.”
“What obstacles would they have to
overcome before they would became
thriving colonists?”
“No very great obstacles would pre-
sent themselves. Sheep, goats and cattle
are of prolific growth, and the rivers
teem with fish, and to be successful it
would only need that the colonists should
show that kind of expression of industry
that deserves^ success. Th© emigrant
should remember, though, that he is
going to a land where desirable results
are to be secured only after toil, and
that, while nature is lavish in her gifts,,
yet bread would have to be earned liter-
ally with the sweat of the brow.”
“Would they have any share in the
conduct of government, the making and
the executing of laws, etc., or would the
whites attempt to dominate them?”
“At present the Congo Free State’s
government is entirely in the hands of
the whites, but in my opinion, I think if
any black man proved his capacity he
would receive all that any could expect.
Governor Janson had a Lagos negro as
his secretary and ho was an i----------
He enjoyed much power in tha colony.
No, it would only he a question of the
best material.”
OPPORTUNITIES.
“Would you advise the American ne-
groes to go to the Congo Free State? In
fact would you advise them to emigrate
to any part of .Africa?”
“This is a most delicate matter. I
cannot advise the American negroes to
goto the Congo Free State; it is a case
where every individual must decide for
himself. They should, however, not
jump into something about which they
have not been thoroughly advised. They
should not forget that as colonists in the
new country of Congo land they would
not be settling down to repose in a bed
of roses.” •
“Do you think that a commercial cor-
respondence between this country and
the Congo is a possibility?”
“Yes; the lethargy of American mer-
chants in this connection is not only re-
markable, but it is also deplorable. The
Congo Valley offers every encourage-
ment to commercial exploit. It is im-
possible to estimate the value of its
products. For instance,, rattan cane,
which is growing scarce in the market,
in Africa grows in unlimited quantities.
Of course there have been many obsta-
cles to prevent the development of the
Congo Valley trade, the most important
of which has been the cost of portage to
place of shipment.
“A railway is now in course of con-
struction, which, when completed, will
remedy this evil, and those merchants
who are now handicapped by the ex-
pense of transportation will reap the
benefits that must come as the sequence
of their being on the ground. Ameri-
cans seem to be dead to these oppoitu-
. nities. They ought to be there now and
cultivating trade, so that when the rail-
road is in operation to bring the interior
nearer the coast they will be in a situa-
tion to reap a fair share of the profits
that must follow. The American mer-
chants, though, will probably hold back
until too late, and not enter into com-
mercial work in this’direction until the
cream of the trade has been gathered by
other nations.”—New York Telegram.
LEON H. BUI LEE IM WORKS
Importers and Wholesale Dealers in
STAPLE AND FANCY
DRY GOODS,
DRESS GOODS,
NOTIONS
AND
GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS
Galveston, Texas.
Furnished Rooms .
For Bent—Nicely furnished rooms, cen-
trally located and well ventilated. Prices
low. For further information apply at
Union Beer Hall, No. 66 Market street.
. Piano Scarfs and Stools.
We purchased over 1500 Piano Scarfs
and Stools before the passag^bf the tariff
bill. These we are offering at old prices.
Thos. Goggan & Bro.
Regular and Short'Order Meals. Pri-
vate Banquets. Evervthing First Class
at the Galveston Dining Parlors, Mar-
ket, just above Center street.
The latest and most popular music
rceeievd daily, music books, and sheet
music for all instruments, at
C. Janke & Go’s Music Store,
Tremont st. het. Market and Mechanic.
Groceries, Grain and Feed
Can be had of A. Kleinecke, 20th between
Mechanic and Market streets, at prices
that will give competition a stand-off.
One hundred beautiful Piano Scarfs
and Covers, in all designs and colors,
from $2.50 to $5 at C. Janke & Cc’c
Music Store, on Tremont street.
Don’t Die in the House.
“Bough on Bats.” Clears out rats
mice, roaches. Bough on Worms. Safe,
sure cure. 25c. ___ 3
Wisconsin Cheese, Kansas and West-
ern Dairy and Creamery Butter, Choice
Potatoes at Hanna & Leonard’s.
At Justus Zahn,
Successor to Rose & Zahn, the best
cabinet photos are still made.
Pinney & Johnson’s Gilt Edge Cream-
ery at Hanna & Leonard’s.
A Most Remarkable Woman. . , ,1
One of the most remarkable women
that America has produced was the late
Miss Emma Willard. For many years
at the head of the Willard Female semi-
nary in Troy, N. Y., she was a noted ;
writer, the author of several popular his-
tories, and enjoyed the warm friendship
of a number of eminent men and wo-
men, including several presidents, from
the time of Monroe up to the beginning
of the War of the Rebellion. She died
in 1870, and a number of her formei;
pupils and friends have set about the
work of collecting $15,000 for the pur-
pose of erecting a monument to her
memory. It will be the first public
statue erected in America for the honor
of woman’s work in the elevation of her
sex. The president of the association
having the matter in charge is Mrs. C.
L. MacArthur, wife of the well known
editor of The Troy Northern Budget,
and the corresponding secretary is Mrs.
William S. Kennedy. These, as well as
the treasurer, Mr. Francis M. Mann, Jr.,
reside in Troy.—Frank Leslie’s News-
Ibffiman: PaPer' ------------------
The Gas Company Pays Damages.
In the case of Gertrude M. McNeal
against the Boston Gas Light company,
which has been on trial in the second
session of the superior court, and in
which the plaintiff claimed $30,000 for
personal injuries, a jury awarded her
damages in the sum of $9,000. Miss Mc-
Neal was employed in a store, and an em-
ploye of the company, in testing a me-
ter, left a trap door open, through which
Miss McNeal fell. Her injuries are of a
permanent nature, as testified to by sev-
eral well known physicians, and the
defense, while not attempting to contra-
dict that evidence, claimed that the sur-
roundings of the plaintiff were not of
that quiet nature which a person in her
condition ought to have. Before the
trial began an offer jf $7,000 was made
by the defendant in settlement.—Boston
Journal.
Equal to the Occasion.
A woman who was passing up Gratiot
avenue the other day lost a fur collar off
her neck without seeming to notice the
fact, and a boy ran after her and
shouted:
“Hey, lady, you have dropped your
muskrat collar!”
He held it out to her, and three or
four pedestrians came to a halt. She
was equal to the occasion. Drawing
herself up, and assuming all the dignity
of a queen, she waved the boy aside and
“Thank you, little boy, but some poor
woman probably dropped it. My seal-
skin collar is safe at home!”—Detroit
Free Press. _
Women Take Up Timber Claims.
No less than 150 young women, it is
said, have taken up timber claims in
western Washington during the past six
months, and in eastern Washington
probably 100 others have located lands.
The lands that can now be had are main-
ly in outlying sections somewhat remote
from railways, and can be reached only
with some difficulty. As new wagon
roads and railroads are being pushed all
the time, however, the opportunities are
still good.—Philadelphia Ledger.
THE POPULAR PLEASURE RESORT
AND PICNIC GROUNDS.
DANCING PAVILION AND MUSIC.
The Famous Place for
Refreshments of All Kinds on the
Grounds.
OPEN DAILY AND ON SUNDAY.
Take Woollam’s Lake Street Cars.
Bolton’s Barber Shop. Brush Electric Light Company.
NEXT TO TWO BROTHERS, Ar°Llshte °f"" °“d‘e
On Market Street.
FIRST-CLASS BARBERS—TRY Em
F1RNT-CLASS SHOP— TRY g|V
FIRST - CLASS SERVICE-TRY UU
HOPPE’S CORNER.
THE
POPULAR RESORT OF GALVESTON^
Highest Grade
WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS,
Imported and Domestic.
FRESH AND COOL BEER.
Pleasant Lunch Room.
ELEGANT HOT AND COLD LUNCH.
Everything First,Class.
A. HOPPE, PROPRIETOR.
Northeast Corner Postoffice and Center.
| y Dentist. f V
Thoroughly Equipped Dental Parlors,
Where Efficient Professional Work is
Done at REASONABLE CHARGES.
Over Preston’s Drug Store, 22<5 and Market Sts.
T. L. CROSS & CO.,
Ship Chandlers, Manufacturers’ Agt.
—t—AND—t—
Commission - Merchants,
Cor. Center Street and Strand.
Have in stock a f ull assortment of goods in
our line, including Beef and Pork, which we
offering low to the trade andto consumers.
~"T?ROF. E. H. KRIJGER,
Organist and Teacher of Music
U (PIANO, ORGAN AND SINGING).
Organist Birst Baptist Church and
, Synagogue.
PUPILS RECEIVED ANY TIME.
Address: S. W. Cor. Postoffice & 18th.
I CURE FITS!
When I say cure I do not mean merely to stop them
for a time and then have them return again, I mean a
radical cure. I have made the disease of FITS, EPI-
LEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a life-long study. I
warrant my remedy to cure the worst cases. Because
others have failed is no reason for not now receiving a
cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle of
my infallible remedy. Give Express and Post
EL, G. ROOT. M. C., 183 Pearl St., N. Y.
mfr
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Burson, J. W. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 60, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 10, 1891, newspaper, January 10, 1891; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1246995/m1/2/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.