Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 159, Ed. 2 Wednesday, November 14, 1894 Page: 4 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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Come and See Our New Store.
1918,1920,1922 & 1924 MARKET ST.
Furniture, Stoves, Matting, Rugs, Lamps.
LONG TIME. EASY PAYMENTS.
WAR
ON
PRICES.
Johnson’s
NEW FURNITURE STORE.
WAR WAR
ON ON
PRICES. PRICES
r
ID
[JI
pm
u
The Galveston Tribune.
WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOV. 14, 1894.
*
[iRMI
3:TOTZ
7.50 am
6.10 am
10.00 pm 10.30 am
5.30 pm ~
7.50 am
9.20 pm
■■
I
Louis Marx Sold the Second Capital
in Galveston.
Louis Marx is again in luck. Last
night he was notified by wire from
Kansas City by C.A. Gale & Co.'that he
had sold the second capital prize in
the Little Louisiana lottery of Kansas
City, in amount $4000, and numbered
65,993. Now, Louis don’t know who
bought the ticket, but he wants the
holder to show up and get the cash.
This is the second good sale that
Louis Marx has made within two
months, and he always pays the cash
over the counter when a ticket is
shoved at him. This is the reason why
he does a good business. Further, he
don’t represent a company who don’t
pay the prizes promptly; As the lucky
holders of tickets will talk, they prove,
next to The Tribune, the best adver-
tising medium in the city.
Leave Galveston ...
Arrive Houston
Arrive Palestine ...
Arrive Bongview...
' Arrive Memphis.. .
Arrive St. Louis ...
Arrive Velasco
Arrive Galveston...
Leave^Houston
Leave Palestine ....
Leave Longview....
Leave Memphis
Leave St Louis
(Leave Velasco
TRAINS ON THE
MISSOURI, KANSAS & TEXAS
. . RAILWAY . .
Now Run Solid
TO..a.
St. Louis
Chicago
KansasCity
Wagner Buffetsleeping Cars
.’.AND.’.
FREE CHAIR CARS.
Knows Nothing About It.
Aiderman ^pchmidt said to-day to a
Tribune reporter that he has no notifi-
cation of his appointment as chairman
of the committee to investigate the
alleged irregularities of the water-
works contractors as regards the em-
ployment of labor on the construction
work. Mr. Schmidt’s information, he
says, is merely that which he gleaned
through reading the morning paper,
and which he did not regard as formal
’ nor official.
Sold Another Prize.
7. 1
Iwl
Iwl I
Awarded
Highest Honors—World’s Fair.
DR-
iW£jr
F CREAM
MOST PERFECT MADE.
A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Free
frnrn Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant,
40 YEARS THE STANDARD.
gssisa®
fl The International
J ROUTE.
Shortest, Quickest and Best
V- ■ Route to the North and East.
j^“The Direct Route to Mex-
am
3,45 3.00
5.25 4.30 10.35 am
9.05 pm
10.45 pm
6 jOO am
9.05 am
7.25 am
8.55 am
I A 95
5.30 pm
9.55 pm 10.30 am
9.10 pm A —
6.20 am
1.25 pm
7.50 pm 12.25 pm
5.25 pm U.004am
.7.00 am
7.40 pm
9.20 pm
2.20 pm
The Short Line Between Galveston
and Houston—Time, 1 .Hour and
30 Minutes.
Train No. 6, leaving Galveston at 9.05 p m.
and Houston at 11 p. m., carries a Pullman
Buffet Sleeping Car through to St. Louis.
Only one change of cars to points North
and East.
For tickets or any further information ap-
ply -to JOE E. MORROW, Ticket Agent,
Galveston.
F. O. BECKER. General Agent, Galveston.
City Freight and Ticket Office, southwest
corner Tremont and Mechanic streets.
TAKE THE
ON ITS 0® BAILS
' RED EXPRESS
--TO--
FORT WORTH,
DALLAS or
ST. LOUIS.
11.00 p.m.
9.35 a.m
3.45 p.m.
9.30 p.m.
8.40 a m.
7.20 a.m
7.00 a m.
1.40 p.m.
7.30 p.m. |
8.00 p.m. .
.. .Kansas City Express...
Houston Express
Houston Express
Houston Express
.. Red Express
Arrive
From Galveston
Depart
TIME SCHEDULES.
r - ■ ■ • ■
Santa Fe
G., C.
and S. F.
R’y,
We
Overcoats!
Overcoats!
FOR MEN AND
BOYS.
We are determined to close them out.
have an elegant lot, and go they must.
$15 OO Overcoat, - $10 OO
12 50 Overcoat, - 8 OO
10 00 Overcoat, - 7 OO
7 50 Overcoat, - 5 OO
Boy’s Overcoat, from $1 50 up.
Star Clothing House.
For
s
COAL
[15
PHONE 20.
Strand,
Bet. 24th & 25th.
Hanna &
Leonard,
Strand,
Bet. 24th & 25th
Hanna &
Leonard.
Avenue A and
22d Street.
Telephone No. 21.
Prompt delivery
HAY
N
& j
%
Ling System
Massage Parlors
operated by
PROF. M. O. SPRING.
MASSAGE and Ladies and gentlemen
SWEDISH treated at their homes
MOVEMENTS. or at parlors.
For information adddress
M. O. SPRING, Masseur, 25th & Ave. I.
Will
COME! SEE! BE ASTONISHED!
BOILER MAKER
Repairing of Marine, Locomotive and
Stationary Boilers a Specialty.
With C. B. Lee & Co. Telephone 258.
....
J. W. HERTFORD,
ANYTHING, ask
for it in the want
columns of THE
TRIBUNE. 25c.
will pay for 3 in-
sertions of 3 lines
Now you try it.
DUCKS ARE COMING !
The shooting is fine, and, of course, we are fixed for anything the hunters want.
Guns we can’t be beaten. We also carry a full line of Freshly Loaded Shells.
FISHING IS GOOD SPORT. No one in the South carries a fuller line of fishermen
goods than we—everything you need.
WE ARE THE AGENCY for the Monarch Bicycle—G. and J. tire. Price, $100.
W. F. STEWART, Successor to Victor H. Cortines, Tremont St.
D. RAPHAEL
Fancy and Staple Groceries, Kerosene and
Eupion Oil. Coal by the sack. Fish and Oys-
ters. Chickens, dressed and undressed. White
Clover Butter; best in the market.
17th STREET AND AVENUE H.
Paul Sliean & Co.
PLUMBERS,
GAS AND STEAM FITTERS,
2123 Mecanic Street.
• - -
Chas. S. Ott,
MARBLE, GRANITE, TILE
and BUILDING STONE WORK,
Tremont St., cor. Ave. I.
Sargent TransfersStorage Co.
2203 Mechanic Street,
GALVESTON, TEX.
Safe and satisfactory hauls, or store all
kinds of merchandise. Safes, Heavy Ma-
chinery and Furniture a specialty.
Money Advanced on Goods Stored.
These prices tell the tale. Dark Mixed
Scotch Tweed Sack Suits, all wool, $7 50. Very
tine line Black Clay Worsted Suits, perfectly
made and finished, $12 to $25. Black Clay
Worsted Prince Albert Suits, $15: Mens’Over-
coats, gray, brown, blue and black, from $4
to $15; Boys’Suits. $1 to $5; Boys’ Overcoats,
$1.25 to $8. Working Pants from 50c up; Dress
Pants, all wool, nice styles, from $1.50 to $6.
1000 Knee Pants, all sizes, 15c to $1.25. Shoes
for Men and Boys, 75c to $3.50. Hats, Caps.
Men’s and Boys’, 25c to $1.50. Underwear, all
colors, all sizes, all grades, per suit, 50c to $3
Suspenders, Handkerchiefs, Neckties, etc
Full line Gents’ Furnishing Goods
Edward Hirschfeld,
2015-2017 Mechanic St.
8
fa
The Old Reliable
Mexican Lottery
OF THE CITY OF MEXICO.
The ONLY Lottery Chartered and Protected by the Mexican National Government All
Genuine Tickets are signed"'!!. BASSETTI, Manager.
CAPTTA I'. PRIZE, ®6O,OOO
(IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY).
TICKETS: Wholes, $4; Halves, $2; Quarters, $1; Eighths, 50c; Sixteenths, 25c.
NEXT DRAWING NOV. 22, 1894.
For particulars apply to
B. W. LeCOMPTE, Sole Agent.
OFFICE: 315 TREMONT STREET.
CONRAD I
CONRAD I
CONRADI
In accepting the Presidency of the Honduras National Lottery Company
(Louisiana State Lottery Company) I shall not surrender the Presidency ©f
the Gulf Coast Ic® and Manufacturing- Company of Bay St. Louis. Miss.
Therefore, address all proposals for Supplies, Machinery, etc., as well a«
all business communications, to
PAUL CONRAD, Puerto Cortez, Honduras,
Care Central America Express,
PORT TAMPA CITY. FLORIDA. U. «. A-
PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL,
FOR WOMEN.
FOR MEN MUST WORK.
LOUIS MARX’S COLUMN
J. B. SARSON. President.
ip
-j?—
A
WIT AND WISDOM.
C. A. GALE & CO.’S TICKETS arc the
A SUMMER’S DAY INCIDENT.
The wind had taken it
first class cradle for the
Go to Buttelmann’s for Best Coffee.
Age
Purity
Quality
Strength
Chartered by an Act of Congress
and Confirmed by the Presi-
dent of the Republic. •
Hoppe’s Corner.
THE POPULAR RESORT
OF GALVESTON.
Dr. Perkins is making teeth for $6
a set.
SANTO DOMINGO
Lottery Co.
The Original
LOUISIANA
LOUIS MARX
SOLE AGENT,
GALVESTON.
only ones issued in the United States
on which payment of prizes is abso-
lutely and unreservedly guaranteed
by a Chartered Guarantee Company
of $250,000.00 Capital.
Stop and consider. A few dollars in-
vested in Alta Loma town lots at the
auction sale November 27 will more
than double in a year. Handsome
profits have been made in similar pur-
chases in Alvin and Arcadia, and Alta
Loma offers inducements far superior
to those places.
.$5 00
. 1 00
. 25c
CAPITAL PRIZE
$160,000
(United States Currency).
PUBLIC DRAWING, DECEMBER 4, 1894.
PRICE OF TICKETS:
WHOLES $10 00 HALVES ...
TWO-TENTHS.. 2 00 ONE-TENTH
TWENTIETH .. 50c FORTIETH ..
Be sure and see that your ticket is signed
November 27 is the date for the grand
auction sale of town lots at Alta Loma.
Special train, lunch, refreshments and
music. All free.
We guarantee Johnson’s Magnetic
Oil; it has no superior for all aches and
pains, internal or external, man or
beast. $1 size 50 cts.; 50 ct. size 25 cts.
J. J. Schott and J. T. McClanahan,
Galveston, Tex.
Highest Grade Wines, Liquors and Cigars,
Imported and Domestic.
FRESH AND COOL BEER.
Elegant Hot and Cold Lunch.
A. HOPPE, Proprietor.
No other company in the world distributes
so large a number of prizes or so high a per-
centage of its revenues, or gives the public
such strong financial guarantees for the
prompt payment of its prizes, neither is there
any other lottery giving so large a monthly
capital prize.
5692 Prizes, Amounting to
$574,880.00
Try This Menu.
.BREAKFAST.
Sliced Oranges and Bananas.
Cracked Wheat and Cream.
Frizzled Beef.
Stewed Potatoes.
Popovers. Graham Bread.
Coffee.
LUNCH.
Scrambled Eggs on Toast.
Cream Toast. Stewed Fruit.
White Bread and Brown.
Tea and Cocoa.
• DINNER.
Tapioca Soup.
Scalloped Fish.
Brown Fricassee of Chicken.
Browned Sweet Potatoes. Potato Snow.
Lima Beans in Cream.
Salad, Lettuce, French Dressing.
Cream Cheese. Toasted Wafers.
Rasberry Water Ice. Plunketts.
Coffee.
Manufacturer
' of
All Kinds
| BUGGY HARNESS.
HORSE COLLARS
SADDLERY
For eight out of every 10 who ever
take a vacation, there remains ' behind
some hard working, uncomplaining
toiler who is only too happy if he can
provide a rest ,and a change .for those
dear to him. ♦
And it is lucky if in many cases this
self-denial does not get to be regarded
as a duty, and the thought of a rest for
one’s self a thing impossible.
The number of such overwrought
men, who simply toil right on without
so much as a two week’s respite a'year
is surprisingly large. TZST? i )
Grateful wives and children should
see then, that these cheerful and un-
selfish fathers and brothers do not
“work themselves to death. ” Signs of
failing strength and nervous weakness,
that none so quickly detect as they,
should be promptly and firmly combat-
ted. A thorough feeding of worn-out
nervous tissues by Paine’s celery com-
pound soon does away with every form
of nervous debility and exhaustion.
This great nerve and brain invigorator,
Paine’s celery compound, supplies rich
material for the repair of all the nerve
tissues. It makes the thin, used-up
blood again capable of feeding the sys-
tem, and purifies it of all humors that
work harm to the body.
There are countless men so absorbed
in business that they disregard the in-
dications of nervous weakness and
think that their neuralgia, headaches
and rheumatism are trilies. It is the
duty of those members of the house-
hold who see this gradual decline fPom
health to insist on a building up of the
“run-down” system and a strengthen-
ing of the nerves and brain by a vigor-
ous tonic like Paine’s celery compound.
In every city in this country there
are homes that have escaped sickness
and misfortune because some prudent
member has known the value of Paine’s
celery compound for strengthening
nerves and brain, purifying the blood
and building up the vigor of the tired
body. For overworked men, for nerv-
ous, “run-down” women, in a bloodless
condition, Paine’s celery compound is
the regular prescription of family prac-
titioners all over the country. It has
permanently freed thousands from neu-
ralgia, rheumatism, dyspepsia, kidney
troubles and blood diseases by invigor-
ating the body, purifying the blood
and feeding the nerves. Nothing gives
strength like Paine’s celery compound.
Drawings, Second Tuesdays of Each Month.
$15,000 for $1; $7500 for 50c; $3750 for 25c.
100,000 Tickets at $1 each; Halves, 50c; Quar-
ters, 25c; Tenths, 10c.
1 Ticket in Every 18 a Winner.
The Guarantee of Three National Banks
on Every Ticket.
For Over Fifty Years
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup has
been used for children teething. Tt soothes
the child, softens the gums, allays all pain,
cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for
diarrhoea. Twenty-five cents a bottle.
Are You Going Away?
Before you go examine our handsome
stock of Trunks and Traveling Bags at
prices from 50c to $50. Have also a good
assortment of Fancy Leather Goods,
Straps, etc., at R. H. John’s Trunk
Factory, opposite Opera-house.
Get your tickets for the grand auc-
tion sale of town lots at Alta Loma at
Alta Loma office, Tremont hotel.
Auction sale November 27.
The Young Man Forgot His Straw Hat
Had a String to It.
The young man with the pepper and
salt suit, the yellow shoes and the
straw hat bound about by a varicol ored
ribbon was walking just ahead. He
seemed to know that he was made up
for display, for he kept looking in at
the show windows and pulling down his
cuffs. At the corner one of those sud-
den gusts of wind which seem to come
from nowhere blew off his straw hat,
the one w'ith the varicolored ribbon.
He made a grab with both hands, but
it was too late. The wind had taken it
off his head.
He saw a hat rolling- down the street,
traveling on one edge. Of course he
was after it.
“Go it,” shouted a policeman.
“Hooray,” yelled the corner news-
boy.
The pedestrian found time to stop
and encourage him in his chase. But
the hat had a long start on him and
the wind was holding out. Once he
saw the hat topple ovei- and lie quietly
on the cobble stones for a moment.
Then a puff of wind raised it and sent
it wheeling along at an increased
speed.
He did not hear the jeering laughter
of the teamsters. With lips firmly set
and nostrils distended he ran, gaining
every moment. Once he was delayed.
The hat rolled under a coal wagon and
he had to go around. At last the hat
ran into the curbstone near a corner
street lamp, and with a pounce he was
upon it.
All flushed and breathless, he picked
it up, and then leaned up against the
lamp post to rest.
A man also flushed and breathless
came running- up and took the hat out
of his hands.
“I’m much obliged,” said he.
“For what?”
“This is my hat.”
“Where’s mine, then?”
“Hanging behind you at the end of
the string.”
Sure enough he had forgotten all
about his new hat string.—Chicago
Record.
J. Romanic Ricker, D.D.S., 2117 Mkt.
Specialist in Crown Work and Orthodontia.
Sweeney—
He keeps Fresh Oysters
And serves them
In All Styles. ;
That’s Sweeney’s Specialty
The Best Meal in Galveston
At Sweeney’s Restaurant,
On Market street,
Between 21st and 22d.
Newspaper Reporters Wanted.
We are informed that the Modern
Press Association wants one or two news-
paper correspondents in this county. The
work is livht and can be performed by either
lady or gentleman. Previous experience is
not necessary, and some of our young men
and women, and even old men, would do well
to secure such a position, as we understand it
takes only about one-fourth of your time.
For further particulars address
Modern Press Association,
Chicago, Ill.
Rev. O. S. Stringfield of Wakefield,
N. C., says: “Five boxes of Japanese
Pile Cure cured me after 12 years’ suf-
fering.” J. J. Schott and J. T. Mc-
Clanahan, Galveston, Texas.
It won’t cost you anything to attend
the grand auction sale of town lots at
Alta Loma on Tuesday, November 27.
Free train, lunch and music. Tickets
can be had at Alta Loma office, Tre-
mont hotel.
From Throat to Foot.
For The Tribune.
Bodices are now made so elaborate
that new and novel designs for collar
arrangements are highly prized. One
of the most useful of the many cur-
rently fashionable designs is a neck
fold of brilliant velvet, to fasten, as
most of them do, in the back. At each
side is attached a fall of lace, wide and
long enough to spread well over the
shoulders and out on to the big sleeves
that all dresses have. In front a
shorter fall of lace gives finish. Such
a collar may be whipped about the
neck in any emergency and will impart
a dressy and dainty effect to even the
dusty shopping gown or the too simple
house dress.
In the house dress sketched here-
with, however, the general scheme in-
cludes so much that is highly wrought
that the colar is left plain and the
dislike of
Addison.
—“Do you think Skinner can make a
living out there?” “Make a. living?
Why, he’d make a living on a rock in
the middle of the ocean—if there was
another man on the rock.”—Philadel-
phia Record.
—Pouting is unprofitable as soon as
it causes no misery or sorrow to oth-
ers. So long as it is an affliction to
others, it will live and thrive; it is so-
cial, requires society for its growth
and perfection.—Baptist Courier.
—Ah, well, let the summer girl laugh
and giggle and have a good time. In a
few years from now she will be mar-
ried and will wear her winter dress in
summer, putting on a white starched
tie to make it look cooler.—Atchison
Globe.
—“Well, Edith, how do you like go-
ing to school? Is your -teacher nice?”
“No. I don’t like her one bit! She put
me in a chair, and told me to sit there
for the present; and I sat, and sat, and
sat, and she never gave me a present.”
■—Evangelist.
—‘ ‘I think my boy is going to be a
great mathematician,” said Lemonby.
“He’s wonderful at it. He can multi-
ply five by three and make twenty out
of it every time. I don’t see how he
does it, but it seems as simple as can be
to him.”—Harper’s Bazar.
—“Hullo, Timmins!” said a friend,
‘Have you done anything with your
flying machine yet?” “Yes.” “Any-
thing practical?” “Oh, yes; eminently
so! Part of it I used for kindling; and,
by putting rockers on the rest, I made
it into a first class cradle for the
twins.”
■—There is no slight danger from gen
eral ignorance; and the only choice
which Providence has graciously left to
a vicious government is either to fall by
the people, if they are suffered to be-
come enlightened, or with them, if
they are kept enslaved and ignorant.—
Coleridge.
“Store Teeth” for $6 a set.
Dr. Perkins.
The following indorsement appears on each
and every ticket:
I, Antonio Mora, President of the Santo
Domingo Guaranty Company of the City of
Santo Domingo, capital $2,000,000. hereby cer-
tify to a special deposit of $600,000 gold coin
to cover all prizes in this drawing, and will
pay at counter on presentation such prize as
may be drawn by this ticket, or forward
draft on any of the following depositories in
the United States:
American National Bank, Denver, Colo.
Metropolitan Nat. Bank, Kansas City, Mo.
National Bank of Commerce, Omaha, Neb
Franklin National Bank, New York city.
Second National Bank, Jersey City, N. J.
Mechanics’ National Bank, Boston, Mass.
Chemical National Bank, St. Louis, Mo.
Equitable National Bank, Cincinnati, O.
Bank of Commerce, Chicago, Ill.
First National Bank, San Francisco, Gala.
First National Bank, San Antonio, Tex.
For Tickets apply to our authorized agent,
LOUIS MARX,
GALVESTON.
Our Official Drawings are published in.the
San Antonio Daily Express, also in the Hous-
ton Post.
A IS THE NUMBER of PAUL
7 /S HARDEN’S TELEPHONE,
w » Jj A complete stock of Staple
-A Hi and Fancy Groceries to
. select from. California
Fruits, Fish and Oysters ■ , .
The Many Uncomplaining But
Weary Toilers.
They Go Without Rest to Make Sure of
Happiness for Others.
The latest ideas in Crown and Bridge
Work. Dr. Wilson, 26th and Market.
—The deepest wounds are those in-
flicted by a friend.—Ram’s Horn.
•—It is fit for a man to know his own
abilities and weaknesses, and not
think himself obliged to imitate all
that he think fit to praise.—Boyle.
■—My errors, I hope, are only those
of charity to mankind; and such as my
own charity has caused me to commit,
that of others may more easily ex-
cuse. —Dryden. •
—A Pleasant Prospect.—Young So-
licitor—Make yourself easy, my dear
sir; the successful management of your
case shall be the task-of my life.—
Fliegende Blatter.
—A little girl’s father had a round
bald spot. Kissing him at bed time
not long ago, she said: “Stoop down,
popsy; I want to kiss the place where
the linjng shows.”—Tit Bits.
In Training.—“Your husband is a
prize fighter, I believe?” “He is.” “Is
he in training just now?” “Yes. He
is up stairs studying ‘The Complete
Letter Writer.”—N. Y. Press.
—The jealous man is not ang’ry-if
you dislike another, but if you find
those faults which are in his own
character, you discover not only your
another, but of himself.—
—Thomas E. Breckinridge,who crossed
the plains with Fremont’s expedition
in 1845, is living at Telluride, Col., in
destitute circumstances. Petitions
praying the federal government to
grant him a pension are circulating in
Colorado and California.
—Thomas B. Reed is noted for his
fearlessness in debate and parliamen-
tary fencing. There is only one thing
that will unnerve him and make him
an abject coward, and that is the pres-
ence of his wife and daughter, or either
of them, in the congressional gallery
while he has the floor for a speech.
—Nicolas de Savin, a Frenchman, is
living at Saratof, in g-ood health. Ac-
cording to a Russian Journal he was
born at Paris in 1768, witnessed with
his own eyes the horrors of the revolu-
tion, took part in the Egyptian expedi-
tion, fought at Austerlitz and Jena, and
received the. cross of the Legion of
Honor for a wound incurred at Sara-
gossa.
—Miss Geraldine Morgan, of New
York, is now the owner of a Stradiva-
rius violin, which Dr. Joachim has
loaned her for the past eight years. It
was purchased recently by Mr. George
Greer and Miss Greer, and presented by
them to Miss Morgan. Joachim’s letter
has just been received, acknowledging
receipt of draft. The instrument is
valued at $5,000.
—It is the opinion of Prof. James
Taft Hatfield that that region of Mas-
sachusetts in which Northampton is
situated has contributed to this country
a larger share of intellectual ability
than any other of its size. He regards
Dr. William D. Whitney, the Sanscrit
scholar, as the most distinguished na-
tive of that region who has recently
joined the army of the dead.
—The present executioner in Ger-
many is a g-entleinan called Herr Rein-
del, and, as in the case of a favorite
actor, as he performed recently his one
hundredth execution, numerous tele-
grams of congratulations were sent to
himrfrom various parts of the kingdom
to Gleinitz, where the interesting- so-
lemnity was to take place. An hour
before the execution he received as a
token of felicitation and good wishes a
superb basket of Marechai Niel roses.
—The minister of a certain Highland
parish arrived at the church one stormy
Sabbath to find that only one worshiper
had braved the elements. Anxious to
propitiate him, the minister asked:
“Shall I go on with the sermon, John?”
John (gruffly)—“Of coorse.” The min-
ister got up into the pulpit, and, lean-
ing over the book-board, inquired of
John: “Shall I give you the Gaelic ser-
mon or the English one?” John (more
gruffly)—“Gie’s baith; ye’re weel paid
for’t.”
—A woman who has gone abroad for
the summer has left her carriage and
pair at the service of some hospital
nurses in an institution with which she
is connected. At the hours when they
are off duty, in turn the carriage takes
them by twos for a long drive, and
how much this will mean to these
workers shut away for the most of the
time from any change of air and scene
can hardly be estimated. If there were
more such breaks in the lives of these
women pursuing a hard calling, the
startling average of life which, accord-
ing to Prof. Tyndall, is theirs, might
be raised. He stated not long before
his death that hospital nurses only at-
tain, on an averag-e, the age of twenty-
five years, while non-nursing women
reach the comparatively mature poiul
of fifty-eight years.
aX 1
\
sleeves are alike it in that respect,
nut brown cloth is the color of the
dress- and it is tastefully trimmed with
jet and cord embroidery. Golden
brown silk lines the gored skirt, whose
front and sides are richly embroidered
with jet and black silk braid in pat-
terns that reach half way up the side
seam. The bodice crosses over in
front, has no seams in the back and is
finished with a pointed yoke, also
braided, and wide brown velvet severe
edged with biased folds of the cloth.
The short basque is embroidered in the
corners and is faced with white satin.
Slippers are shown with a little
open-work strap, that when adjusted
looks like the old-fashioned crossing of
elastic over the instep. The effect is as
becoming to the foot as the old trick
was, and as the rest of the slipper is
made on modern lines, the whole is
vastly more becoming. To / those ac-
customed to luxurious comfort in cold
weather bedroom slippers are offered
of wadded silk lined with fur. They
are lovely to look at and pretty to
wear, though likely to make the
wearer take cold When she puts on her
street shoes. “Sleighing shoes” are
made very large and are meant to be
worn over regular street shoes, in
sleigh or carriage, during severe
weather. Dalphine.
LOTTERYCo.
Of Kansas City.
. JV. Gale & Co.
(Operated under Special License.)
R. P. SARGENT & CO.,
2201 Mechanic Street,
GALVESTON, TEX.,
RIIY ANR QFI I New and Second-hand House
OU I AHU OLuL Furnishing Goods, Furni-
ture, Office Railing, Desks, Safes, Scales, Long
Tables. A GENERAL SECOND-HAND STORE
PfflTWfllS
Cool Keg and Unexcelled
Bottled Beer.
Telephone Wagon on hand
day and night.
TELEPHONE NO. 256.
Private Families Supplied.
M. Brock, Manager.
The Tribune’s want column is the cheapest
and best advertising medium. Three lines
three times for 25 cents.
g— Cornmeal, Bran, Corn,
t®" 1“ I 5 Oats. Cotton-seed Meal,
S fcssi fcras Wheat for Chickens, Hay,
and everything in the Feed line, at “down
stairs” prices.
For fair treatment send your orders to the
Old Reliable
Paul Harden,
Free Delivery. 33d aitd WINNIE.
Por^
Rent
One Fine, Light Room,
well ventilated on Second Floor; has an
eastern exposure; power if desired,
One Large Hall
on Third Floor, having northern and
eastern exposure; suitable for a lodge-
room or an armory.
GALVESTON PUBLISHING CO.,
Tribune Building.
Pickwick Restaurant
Serves the BEST MEAL IN THE
CITY for 25 cents
Also serves the .
BEST LUNCHES for . lOattdlSctS
Commutation Tickets can be bought $6 for $5,
also ^3 for $2.50.
SCAPERLENDA & VIDOVICH,
2214 Market, North Side, bet. 22d and 23d Sts
Overwrought Nerves Work Half
Fed and Cry Out With Pain.
Henry J. ScMtor,
Prices Moderate.
Satisfaction
Guaranteed.
606 Tremont BRrDLES!' ETC.
CHARLES NEUWILLER
CABINET-MAKEK-
Manufacturer of Bank, Office, Store and
Bar Fixtures, any style. Interior Woodwork
of all descriptions a specialty.
WALL AND PICTURE MOULDINGS.
PICTURE FRAMES TO ORDER.
Factory, Mechanic and 2Oth Sts.,
GALVESTON, TEXAS.
LEMP’S "
gSlKcS1 Celebrated BEER
at Charlie Scheele’s Saloon,
2024 P. O., Next New Opera-House
XSRx JAPANESE-
OfcS 13 I LIS'
CURE
A New and Oom&iete Treatment, consisting of
SUPPOSITORIES, Capsules of Ointment and two
Boxes of Ointment. A never-failing Cure for Piles of
■:very nature and degree. It makes an operation with
Lhe knife or injections of carbolic acid, which are
oainful and seldom a permanent cure, and often re-
sulting in death, unnecessary. Why endure this
terrible disease? We guarantee 6 boxes
to cure any case. You only pay for benefits
deceived. $1 a box, 6 for $5. Sent by mail.
JAPANESE PILE OINTMENT 50c. a Box.
For sale by J. J. Schott and J. T. McClana-
han, Galveston, Texas.
I Cures promptly, without, addition-'
al treatment, all recent or chronic ?
discharges o£ the urinary organs, j
J. Ferre, (successor to Brou),
Pharmacien, Paris. Sold by drug-1
gists throughout the United States. |
TBM—-H I iTimrmwiMUJMB t n im—iiira
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 159, Ed. 2 Wednesday, November 14, 1894, newspaper, November 14, 1894; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1260847/m1/4/?q=%221964~%22: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.