Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 128, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 31, 1891 Page: 3 of 4
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2
*
•••
From 10 to 300 Candle Power.
Officci 2422 Market, Between 24th and- 25th Streets.
C. P. RUSSELL, Secretary.
CV3
C_5
I
w
THE MORAL IS:
Galveston, Texas.
Don’t Depend on Them io Discover Yon!
me
115
Day
i
kt
J.W. BYRNES
IMPORTER AND REFINER OF
ASPHALTUM
--AND--
CONTRACTOR FOR BORING
ARTESIAN WELLS
GO
GIRARDIN HOUSE
is proved by the fact that the dog and
the wolf will mate and produce offspring.
Nevertheless it is probable that the dog
is merely descended from the same orig-
inal stock with the wolf.
THE POPULAR PLEASURE RESORT
AND PICNIC GROUNDS.
Keep YOUR BUSINESS, and, Hitltatallu,
YOURSELF, More Ur FffliG.
‘ As wa journey through life,
Let us live by the way.”
Full Sets
$10.
EXTRACTING
5Oc.
All Work Done in my Shop
by Experienced Workmen un-
der my Personal Supervision
and Guaranteed iu Every Par-
ticular. PRICES THE VERY
LOWEST for First-Class Work
and Material Used.
Bargains
IN BOYS’ KNEE PANTS.
Finest WINES, LIQUORS and
CIGARS in the City.
Gold Fillings
$1 Up.
AND
GENTS’FURNISHING GOODS
KO
■you
Then Go Where You Can Get the Best Wines,
Liquors and Beer.
DO
YOU
SMOH1E ?
Then Go Where You Will Find the Best Im-
ported and Domestic Cigars.
DO
YOU
2E -A- T ?
Then Patronize the Nicest Merchants’ Lunch,
from 10 io 1, in the City. ■
AND REMEMBER THE PLACE IS
GAMBRINUS HALL,
THE OLD RELIABLE,
Billy Buscher, Prop.
Center bet. Market and Mechanic.
COHEN & MICHAEL,
TREMONT STREET.
LEON H. BLUM,
Importers and Wholesale Dealers in
STAPLE AND FANCY
DRY GOODS,
DRESS GOODS,
NOTIONS •
LEE IRON WORKS,
C. II. toHU <fc CO.,
PROPRIETORS.
MANUFACTURERS OF ALL
KINDS OF
MKHIHEUf, STEM ENGINES
AND
Brass and Iron Castings.
Repairing Done on Short Notice.
COIL 33d WINNIB STS.,
GALVESTON, TEX.
Brush Electric Light Company.
Arc Lights of Standard Candle Power.
itvcjvjvoesceint;
LIGHTS r
Beach Hotel.
OPEN AM. THE TEAK.
Rooms with or without board
T. B. GALE, Manager.
PA----
■BRICKS
|*BICJSS
I RICES
flHOICE MEATS always on hand,
L OUR SPECIALTY. —
Broadway and 11th
N. SALZMANN,
SWISS WATCHMAKER
And’ Manufacturing Jeweler.
Dealer iu DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY,
SILVERWARE, CLOCKS, Etc.
Repairing of all kinds skillfully done at mod-
erate rates.
Old Gold and Silver bought.
2217 POSTOFFICE STREET.
PAINLESS DENTISTRY.
E
E
Substance and Form in Literary .Judgment.
And is it not true that from the nature
of things the contemporary judgment
lays most stress on substance, and that
the “final" judgment is favorable to
form? Substantially speaking, how many
historic things of immense contemporary
vogue seem insipid to us, whereas scarce-
ly anything of very great formal merit
has been allowed to perish?
In other words, is there not an element
of universality about perfection of form
which significance of thought does not
possess? or, at any rate, is not perfection
more nearly attainable in form than it is
in substance? And nothing is so pre-
servative as perfection or any approach
to it.
One thing is very certain—neglect of
form involves the sacrifice of an element
of positive attractiveness as well as of-
fending positively by perverseness and ec-
centricity. Whether rhyme and rhythm,
cadence, purity, flawlessness, melody
are essential or not to poetry, the aban-
donment of the artistic quality which
they imply is obviously a loss.—Scrib-
ner’s.
J. H. STONER.
Undertaker and Funeral Director,
Southwest Cor. Tremont and Church.
variety." That it is not a different species • telephones :
- ’ ' 455 | Night
A window, with wide panes embayed
And half moon seat of old gold cloth.
Looks forth to where the trees are swayed
By winds whose breath is chill and wroth.
And on the glass a filmy veil
Extends, as if to shield the bloom
That nods in greeting to the gale
From midst the warm and cheery room.
Roses and lilies, hothouse pinks
And pansies that no garden dew
E’er wet, and ferns whose fragile links
No woodland pool with shade did strew.
And showing multi-colored tints.
Full clusters of chrysanthemums
Flash back the roseate flame that glints
Where cosily the hearth log hums.
While near at hand sits one who reads
The pages of a book of art,
And naught outdoors or indoors heeds.
Lost in some spirit realm’s fair mart.
—William Struthers in Detroit Free Press.
Coal Tar Distiller.
The small bronze bells found in the
ancient palace of Nimrod contained
ninety parts of copper and but ten of
tin. In our day the proportions are,
say, eighty parts of copper to twenty of
tin.
T. L. CROSS & CO.,
Ship Chandlers, Manufacturers’ Agt.
— t—AND—t—
Commission. - Merchants.
Cor. Center Street and Strand.
Have in stock a full assortment of goods It
our line, including Beef and Pork, which we ar
offering low to the trade and to consumers.
See those we are offering for 50 cents
a pair. CONFIRMATION Suits in end-
less variety. We are showing some ele-
gant Youths’, Boys’ and Men’s All-
Wool Suits at $10.
The Old Favorite Resort is now under the man
agement of its new Proprietor, the Well
Known and Popular
NICK CREINER,
GIRARDIN HOUSE,
Cor. Market and. 34 Hi Sts
GEO. J. GART1IAR,
Carpenter & Builder.
STORES AND OFFICES FITTED UP.
Shop: Postoffice street, between 21st and22d
streets. Residence: Corner Winnie and 35th
streets, Galveston, Texatf.
All kinds of jobbing promptly attended to.
F. C. VOIGHT,
Watchmaker and Jeweler,
Also Dealer in
WATCHES, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY,
Repairing Neatly Done.
2C28 Market Street, between 20th and 21st Sts.,
Galveston, Texas.
Office and Headquarters for Chas. C. Voight’s
Military Band
%
Aii Indian Challenge.
Two tribes of Indians in the upper
part of California had as boundary be-
tween their districts a low ridge where
the streams headed. If yon should go to
where one of these streams, Potter river,
rises you would see still standing a tall
pile of stones beside a never failing
spring. On one side of this cairn was the
territory of the Porno Indians, and on the
other the land of the Chumaia. These
tribes were enemies, and were often at
war. When the Chumala wished to
challenge the others to battle they took
three little sticks, cut notches round
their ends and in the middle, tied them
at the ends into a faggot and laid it on
this cairn. If the Pornos accepted the
challenge they tied a string around the
middle of the three sticks and left them
in their place. Then agents of both
tribes met on neutral ground and ar-
ranged the time and place of battle,
which took place accordingly.—St. Nich-
olas.
ft®®®' ft/
UH RIG'S CAVE,
Corner Center and Market,
JAS. PRENDERGAST,
PROPRIETOR.
FINEST BEER IN THE CITY.
Wines, Liquors and Cigars of the Very
Best Quality.
THE PUBLIC CORDIALY INVITED.
HOT LUNCH FROM 10 TO 1 P. M.
Origin of an Old Saying.
In the Sixteenth century it was gener-
ally stated that “spiders be true signs of
great stores of gqld,” a saying which
arose thus: While a passage to Cathay
was being sought by the northwest a
mariner brought home a stone which
was announced to be gold, and caused
such a ferment that several vessels were
fitted out for the express purpose of col-
lecting the precious metal. Frobisher,
in 1577, found on one of the islands
where lie landed siniiliar stones and an
enormous number of spiders.—Cornhill
Magazine.
A Brazilian parrot once succeeded in
making a railway party believe that they
had run over a child. Sudden cries, fol-
lowed by a low moaning, rang out from
beneath the wheels. The train was
stopped, and the employes nervously
searched the track, but no child was to
be seen. No clew to the situation could
be found until a large green parrot,
•winging in his cage, uttered a mocking
laugh.
There has been some dispute as to the
descent of the dog—whether it is an im-
proved progeny of the wolf or a distinct
J
THE BANK SALOON
S. W. CORNER POSTOFFICE
ANO 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 Fiue Free Lunch from 10 a. m. Until
5 p. m.
Only the Best of Imported and Domestic
Wines, Liquors and Cigars kept in stock.
CALL AND SAMPLE THEM.
Make You-* Wife Happy.
Buy her a “Monarch” Gasoline Cook-
ing Stove of M. P. Hennessy, and the
happiness of your home will be complete.
Car Oats and Corn Chops, Best and
Cheapest Feed for horses at
* Boyd & Waters.
It was not until about fifty years ago
that cut ice became a commodity ad-
mitting of purchase by persons of mod-
erate means. In New York city alone,
at the present day, the yearly consump-
tion of ice amounts to about 1,000,000
tons.
Estimates for Wiring Public and Private Build-
ings Given on Application.
s ou Laud, SAUSAGE
FREE DELIVERY.
~ - K and 19th.
- A
HOPPE’S CORNER.
THE
POPULAR RESORT OF GALVESTON.
Highest Grade
WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS,
Imported and Domestic.
FRESH ANB COOL BEER.
Pleasant Lunch Room.
ELEGANT HOT ANB COLB LUNCH.
Everything First Class.
A. HOPPE, PROPRIETOR.
Northeast Corner Postoffice and Center.
P.T.WIW
HAS SPENT IS HIGH AS
HO,ODD AYEAU
IN AlWtRTOlN&:
TODAY
ITTME55B/EN FIGURES
TO TELL MIS FORTUNE.
2» DU, Od KIllOUGH,
Thoroughly Equipped Beutal Parlors,
Where Efficient Professional Work is
Done at REASONABLE CHARGES.
. Over Preston s Drug Store, 22a anti Market S<».
Plain Living.
To the ordinary homekeeping youth
plain living is usually the every day
diet to which he has always been accus-
tomed, with little regard to its fitness or
wholesomeness. With a royal contempt
for divergent tastes, he is apt to give a
domestic version of the old saying, “Or-
thodoxy is my doxy, so heterodoxy must
be yours.” What suits him should suit
every one. The same spirit animated
Dr. Johnson when he gave his famous
definition of “oats” as “in England, food
for horses, in Scotland for men.” But
the whirligig of time has so twisted af-
fairs around that the food at which the
great lexicographer sneered-little more
than a hundred years ago is now an ar-
ticle of daily diet in thousands of En-
glish homes. The plainest of plain liv-
ing it is to us nowadays, but the high
thinking of the Seventeenth and Eigh-
teenth centuries was cultivated on a very
different aliment. Yet who is prepared
to say that greater intellects have ever
been known in the English nation than
were produced in the days of roistering,
wine bibbing and high living, when
such minds were developed as those of
Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, Dryden, Addi-
son, Swift, Pope and countless others
whom time fails even to mention?—
□Christine Terhune Herrick.
Professor Boyesen, the Norwegian
novelist and teacher, is a short, thick
set man, with brown beard and curly
hair. .He is about 40 years old and
looks more like a man of business than
a college professor.
Piano Tuning and Repairing.
No house in the South has facilities
equal to ours for Repairing Pianos, Or-
gans, Violins, Guitars, etc. Our work-
shop is complete in every detail, and we
einploy only competent tuners and re-
pairers. Thos. Goggan & Bro.,
Cor. Market and 22d streets,
Galveston.
WM. BOTHMAN,
(Successor to C. Bothman.)
BOILER MAKER ANO 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 Street.
GALVESTON, TEXAS
It Cost Only Fifty Cents, but It Was
Worth Twenty Thousand Dollars.
His necktie was worth $20,000. A
plain, black, ordinary looking, every
day four in-hand, but worth $20,000.
He was a traveler who ha.d just come
in on tlTe Santa Fe route direct from
Arizona, and he removed his coat and
vest preparatory to cleaning his cinder
speckled face in the lavatory of a prom-
inent Michigan avenue hotel. With
the carelessness of a western man he
flung his coat and vest on a contiguous
chair, but his necktie, his four-in hand,
he carefully rolled up in a small com-
pass and thrust deep into his trousers
pocket.
This unusual exhibition of caution
excited the curiosity of a friend, and
the natural query, “Wherefore?” devel-
oped a most ingenious device.
“That necktie is worth just $20,000
plus the cost price of the article itself.
Sabe ?” w
The smile of incredulity brought the
valuable piece of black silk to view
again. With his penknife the traveler
opened the seam, and, while, unfolding
the ripped portions, dazzled the eyes of
the skeptic with ten crisp, clean $1,000
bills. “Ten thousand dollars on this
end and the same ante on the other.
Beats a money belt all hollow.
“I was held up by the James and
Younger boys in Blue Clay Cut one
time, and Jim Younger ran his hand
over my body and felt the money belt,
and I handed over just $1,200. But
what thief would ever look twice at a
fifty cent necktie? They might corral
it if was red or yellow, or even sky
blue, but plain black is too unobtru-
sive, for those chaps run to high color.
This plan is better than the porous
plaster scheme too. Never heard of it!
“Well, next time you travel with
more ready cash than you care to have
obtainable, step into a drug store and
buy two porous plasters. Fold your
wad neatly and flat, wrap around it a
piece of oiled silk and stick a plaster
over it and on to the outside of the
other plaster. Then slap this double
deck plaster on your chest and no one’s
the wiser. But the four-in-hand rack
et’s the best,” and the man with the
$20,000 necktie gave it a. final twist as
he tied it around his collar, slipped on
his vest and coat and walked out.
serene and secure with twenty $1,000
bills snugly hid away in his queei
safety deposit vault.—Chicago News.
F C
__ LOBENSTEIN
■ -u Winui j bts.
Office—161 Avenue H. P. O. Box 403. Factor
Ave. A, bet. 18th and 19th Sts.
HALVES TON. • • • TKXr
| MANITOU
I Ginger Chimpagne I
Refreshihg and Healthy.
I It is cheap. You can drink
i it. You will never be with-
1 out it after a trial. Tele-
g phone
GEO. SCHNEIDER £ CO.
PROTECT YOUR GRAPES
WITH THE OHIO GRAPE PROTECTORS.
Thoroughly protect
the grapes while
maturing and rl-
pening. Prevent
!’& blight and mildew.
H Grapes thus cou-
4 ered ripen to per-
V fection.
Made of specially
^prepared water-
^^&>\proof paper.
fejlnstantaneous
Attachment.
hundred
bunches can be covered in a few minutes.
Somerset, Ky., Sept. 20, 1890.
They worked to my entire satisfaction.
Easily put on, and prevented mildew. I
will want more next year.
J. M. Richardson.
Ottumwa, Ia., Oct. 22, 1890.
The Protector I regard as very valuable.
The grapes I covered arc now in perfect
condition. Those not covered are all gone.
I shall want more next year.
J. T. Hackworth.
PRICES: 500, $1.50; 1OOO,$2.5O
Special Discount for larger quantities.
-Sample 100 sent on receipt of Fifty Cents.
OHIO GRAPE PROTECTOR CO.. Ironton,©
1
GOOD TEETH ARE PRICELESS
And Professional Attention is Necessary to Re-
New York’s Literary and Artistic Clubs.
The Century is assisted by othei
clubs in looking after the literary and
artistic needs of Now York. Among
these may be mentioned the Lotus, th<
Players’, the Fellowcraft, the Authors'
and the Aldine. The Lotus has long
been familiar to the public, and a great
deal has been said of the brilliant gift
which Mr. Booth has made to Nev
York in the handsome house of the
Players’ in Gramercy park. The com
plaint is indeed made that in these two
clubs the non-professional element
tends to strengthen itself at the ex
pense of the professional.
The complaint is not an unusual one;
it has been made with regard to the
Garrick in London. The Fellowcraft
is composed of writers and artists con
neeted with the press. ‘ The Authors’
club is, as its name indicates, made up
of men who have written books. 11
has rooms, but no club house. The
Aldine, founded by publishers and art-
ists, has within two years taken posses-
sion of a house in Lafayette place.—E.
S. Nadal in Scribner’s.
tr X —«
- co m
a, m ’
The Spider as a Remedy.
It is not surprising that so uncanny
looking a creature as the spider should
have various attributes of a more or
loss surprising nature awarded to it. In
rural districts it is no very uncommon
occurrence to find that there is a firm
belief in the curative powers of spiders
in cases of ague. Eleazar Albin says
that he has been instrumental in cur-
ing several children of this complaint
“by hanging a large spider, confined in
a box, about their necks, reaching to
the pit of the stomach, without giving
any internal remedies.” — Cornhill
Magazine.
The Mexican boy has plentj of play,
though he cares little for hoops or balls,
tops, kites or marbles. Unless he is
unusually poor he has a horse and sad-
dle of his own, especially if he lives in
the country; and no matter how poor
he may be, he has a donkey, or can
borrow one in five minutes.
HiMaiwItz&Co.
Q-JLJLiVEISTOJSr.
Dealers and Importers of Ship Chandlers’
Goods generally, Manilla, Sisal and Cot-
ton Rope. Contractors for Sails, Awn-
ings, Tents, Etc.
Bolton’s Barter Stop.
NEXT TO TWO BROTHERS,
On Market Street.
FIRST-CLASS BARBERS-TRY gm
FIRST-CLASS SHOP— TRY ||V
FIRST-CLASS SERVICE—TRY UU
J. 9 SO|I
Buteliers •
Important Notlco to Parents.
The undersigned will open a new Vio-
lin Class for beginners, in which the new
method of Professor Singer of the Royal
Conservatory, Stuttgart, Germany, will
be taught. Elementary class tuition $2
per month. Parents and pupils are re-
quested to call at once at
Galveston High School of Music.
Hava You Tried
any of the Dew Drop Asparagus, Peas,
Corn, Stringless Beans, etc.? They are
some of the best goods packed. To be
had only at Peter Gengler’s.
Tt’s the fashion now to drop in at
Saxe’s for aglassof his Celebrated Soda.*
La Grippe Again.
During the epidemic of La Grippe last
season Dr. King’s New Discovery for
Consumption, Coughs and Colds, proved
to be the best remedy. Reports from the
many who used it confirm this state-
ment. They were not only quickly re-
lieved, but the disease left no bad after
results. We ask you to give thisremedy
a trial and we guarantee that you w ill
be satisfied with iexults, or the purchase
price will be refunded. It has no equal
in La Grippe, or any Throat, Che.-t or
Lung Trouble. Trial bottle free at J. J.
Schott’s Drug Store. Large bottles 50
cents and $1. 2
Arrived and for sale
at Two Brothers,.
1200 Gross of Cherries
in Maraschino,
Dandicolle & Gaudin
Brands.
They are delicious.
All who takes cherries
in theirs
will be accommodated.
They are luscious.
Spring Is Here I
And with it comes the desire for thirst-
quenchers. We have the best. The best
drink last year, this year, every year, is
Preston’s Raspberry Phosphate. Found
only at C. W. Preston & Co.’s drug
store. Come and see our new fountain;
it’s a beauty. And don’t forget that we
are the pioneers in Hoda Water Novel-
ties. 2525 and 2527 Market street.
Important Notice to Parents.
The undersigned will open a new Vio-
lin Class for beginners, in whi<‘h the new
method of Professor Singer, of the Royal
Conservatory, in Stuttgart, Germany,
will be taught. Elementary class tuition
$2 per month. Parents and pupils are
requested to call ar once at
Galveston High School of Music.
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.
tain Them.
SP-COMPIiKTE TIIETII'W
Either Natural or Artificial, Are Essential
to Good Health.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED.
brainless prices a
IJerfbct [Brices | |i|Sj
PERMANENT f KlCES I I B BW
I ROJIFT I RICES
Examinations TTrce.
DANCING PAVILION AND MUSIC.
The Famous Place for
Oyster Roeusts
Refreshments of All Kinds on the
Grounds.
OPEN DAILY AND ON SUNDAY.
Take Denver Re-3urvey Electric Cars.
BIG MONEY TN A NECKTIE.
VICTOR H. CORTINES
Importer and Dealer in
Fire Arms, Ammunition, Fishing
TACKLE, AND BASE BALL GOODS.
Tremont bet. Strand and Mechanic Streets.
GALVESTON, - - - TEXAS.
Ag’t American Powder Mills and Herring
ifl^lSS^RADEKER,
H H jgi fe Wholesale & Retail Dealer in
IUL Butter, Eggs,
MILK AND GAME.
Prompt Delivery Throughout the City. POST-
OFFICE bet. 20th and 2 I st, at the OLD ICE HOUSE
Music I Musicl Music I
Comparatively speaking, only a very
few know that we carry the largest stock
of Sheet Music in the south. This em-
braces all the Standard, Operatic, Popu-
lar and New Music published in the Unit-
ed States. Tnos. Goggan & Bro,
Cor. Market and 22d sts., Galveston.
Here we are with Refrigerator Meat,
Pork Sausage, Weinerwurst, Liverwurst,
Head Cheese, Bologna, and everything
kept in a First-Class Market. Orders
for Meat left with us in the evening will
be delivered before breakfast.
* Green & Co.
G. C. C. Co.
Removed to Nos. 518 and 520 Tremont
street, east side, upstairs, opposite Tre-
mont hotel.
Galveston Co-operative Clothing Co.,
James A. Lyons, Manager.
Dew Drop.
This brand of canned goods stands
among the best in the land. If you
want something good, try them.
Peter Gengler.
Furnished Rooms
For Rent—Nicely furnished rooms, cen-
trally located and well ventilated. Prices
low. For further information apply at
Union Beer Hall, No. 66 Market street.
Rough on Coughs.
For Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Sore
Throat, 25c. Rough on Toottache. In-
stant relief, 15. 2
The Galveston Towel Supply Company
would like to keep you supplied with
clean towels. Address 3423 Eleventh
Avenue (K). Terms reasonable. •
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.
A well selected and complete stock of
Grain, Hay, Butter, Cheese and Potatoes
at Hanna & Leonard’s. *
Try Green & Co.’s Pork Sausage;
they say it’s immense. *
J. PETERSON, PRACTICAL TAILOR,
Center, bet. Market and Mechanic.
DR. WILSON, Proprietor
PHIUBfHIlOffll PffllOK.
N. E. Cor. Market and 26th Sts.
1
Extracted.
Filled.
Crowned.
T | Bridged.
Implanted.
Bleached.
tali
When Rome Fell.
A certain librarian declares that one
day a visitor pointed to a bust which
adorns the reading room of the estab
lishment with which ho is connected
and asked, “Is that anybody about
here?”
The librarian, supposing that the
questioner was simply attempting to
guy him, answered:
“He has been dead too long for
to presume to say where he is.-’
“I mean was he a man who lived
here,” corrected the stranger; and then
without waiting for a reply he added,
“What was his name?”
“Nero,” the librarian answered.
“Nero?” the other repeated thought-
fully; “that don’t seem just like an
American name. What was his busi-
ness'?”
“He was at the head of the fire de-
partment,” the librarian replied un-
bl ushingly.—Boston Courier.
A PICTURE IN FROST TIME.,
CT. LF1. ZEdOLL,
Tin Roofing, Guttering
AND
GALVANIZED IRON WORK A SPECIALTY.
Dealer in
Stoves, Tinware and House
ITarnisliinu Gtoods.
Repairing promptly attended to.-5B®
(Baliinqor Building), 2207 Postoffice Street,
Between 22d and 23d Sts.
•*’ aO’l' 6 A
.co*0
e
-
CET THE BEST.
THE IDEAL WASHSTAND
and SYPHO CLOSET.
T I PLUMBER, GAS. STEAM and
I. J. mftUL, HOT WATER FITTER.
2219 POSTOFFICE ST.
J. PETERSON,
1
fiUKO € ATT Office ad Works,
blind, v, U I I , 21 st & Mehanlc
I
♦
*
TO 79 YEARS OLD.
raj4ous^
r
Agent for Irondequoit Wine Co.
B. Skeskind, Bns. Mau. | H. Grkenwall, son & Bro., Lessees. | Geo H. Walker, Treasure:
• SUNSET ROUTE.
MISS KATIE PUTNAM AND COMPANY
xixr
ft ft
THE FOLLOWING IS THE CAST:
GAY HOWARD
FUEh GRS
CHEAP IN APPLICATION,
8ETM ACTS
GALVESTON GAS CO.
KATIE PUTNAM
.. Edwin Gardner
. Charles Mortimer
Harry Colton
..John W. Burton
. . . .Thos-. Findlay
L. M. Edgar
..Thomas Grimes
J. C. Crowell
Cora Redfield
.May Fox
Wtern Pacifc Go.
Economical, Convenient and Cleanly in its
Operation. Our line of Heating and Cooking
Stoves most complete in its assortment. Gas
China Kilns, Instantaneous Water Heaters,
and all Fuel Gas ppliances.
GOMPliIMEJiTARY BENEFIT
TEDJUERED
Mr. George H. Walker
Tuesday Evg., March 31st,
□3Y
Frank Clifton
Ralph Whitmore .
Dan Bradley
Bill Williams
Jake Thomas
Hank Monk
Dave Stubbs
Jane Bradley
Mrs. Samantha Watkins
AtlanticJSystem.
« DAIRY TRAINS. fl
fl F.KTW8BN /I
Houston, New Orleans u,
AND SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS. I
riose and reliable connections with rail and
steamer lines at New Orleans
FOR ALL POINTS NORTH AND EAST
The direct line for all points in New Mexico,
Arizona and California. The standard gauge
Short Line to the City of Mexico.
Pullman Palaeo Buffet Sleeper* on All Train*.
QUICK TIME AND LOW RATES.
For further information and sleeper reserva-
ion apply to
T. F. McCANDLESS, T. P. A., Houston, Tex.
MAX NAUMANN, Tkt. Agt. G.,G &S. F. Ry
J. G. SCHRIEVER, Traffic Manager.
W. C. WATSON, Genl. Pass, and Ticket Agt.
LOVE FINDS A WAY.”
SHERRY. Guaranteed by
PORT. T T Sohoft
CA.TA.’WUA.. tf. Ot/AAWV,
CLARET. Druggist.
OUR KATIE IN BANJO SOLOS AND SONOS.
SPECIAL SCENIC EFFECTS.
Call ou JOE COOLEY at the FYCHANfiF
FINEST SALOON IN THE SOUTH, UHIl I\ LAullnnULl
But keeps the best goods.
SYNOPSIS.
Act I—“A Plain Understanding.”
Act II—“For Maryas Sake. Saved! Saved! ”
Act III—“Mrs. Watkins’ Nephew, Tommy.” (No wait.)
Act IV—“All for Love, and Love Finds a Way.”
Marble, Granite and Tile
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Burson, J. W. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 128, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 31, 1891, newspaper, March 31, 1891; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1247135/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.