Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 163, Ed. 2 Monday, November 19, 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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
UPPLIES,
INo
IMPORTERS AND WHOLESALE DEALERS
ARDWARE AND RuiLDERS’
T. ♦
FOR WOMEN.
SCHOOL AND CHURCH.
GO TO THE
TO-MORROW.
Special Programme
BigCut inRates.
A Good Razor
BLACK CHEVIOT SUITS
To
i
...
46
THE
Office, 2422 Market St., bet. 24th& 25th.
THEY KNEW.
More, money for races than was
ever offered before in Texas.
ALL
DRUG
Hoppe’s Comer.
THE POPULAR RESORT
OF GALVESTON.
BrusliElectricLiglitanflPower
COMPANY.
Most Modern Methods
?! in the preservation of
(TEETH
ill
Tickets for excursion to Alta - Loma
and return on November 27th free at
Alta Loma office Tremont hotel.
Grand auction sale of town lots.
-; Exclusive
only Btitter House
In the City.
Headquarters for
----SWIFT’S BUTTERINE—.
Much better and a great deal cheaper than
ordinary butter.
Fine Coffees and Teas. All kinds Produce
and Poultry.
Fine Comb Honey, Just Received.
IsM City Prote Gornw,
612 Tremont Street,
Phone 215. Bet. Church and Winnie.
Free and punctual delivery.
Highest Grade Wines, Liquors and Cigars,
Imported and Domestic.
FRESH AMD COOL BEER. Lunch
Elegant Hot and Cold Lunch.
A. HOPPE, Proprietor.
Henry J. SclmeMur,
Prices Moderate.
Satisfaction
Guaranteed.
606 Tremont BRHILES"ETC.
Manufacturer
of
All Kinds
BUGGY HARNESS
HORSE COLLARS
SADDLERY
—Divide the number expressing the
year by four (4), taking no. notice of
the remainder. Next find the number
of days inclusive from the 1st of Janu-
ary to the date in hand, reckoning Feb-
ruary always as having only twenty-
eight days. Add together the sum, the
quotient and the first numbers and di-
vide this by seven (7). The figure ol
the remainder gives you the day of the
week, one (1) standing for Sunday, two
(2) for Monday, and so on.
—One catches the first far and fine
view up the Hudson at Eleventh avenue
and Sixty-first street .where the rail-
way tracks suddenly shoot westward
to take possession of the river bank.
In the foreground is the maze of tracks
with green weeds springing between.
A little further on is an old stone house
completely clad in ivy and doing duty
as an office for the railroad, and be-
yond is the splendid freshness of the
Palisades, green and purple, and the
broad tide-lined bosom of the river.—
N. Y. Sun.
, Equal Bargains
HOUSTON
. RACES
VIA THE
Sull ft Route
RATE
$1,75.
Includingtrans-
fer from Central
II
11
A *7/I
S a S A complete stock of Staple
Jar and Fancy Groceries to
select from. California
Fruits, Fish and Oysters. . . . . . • , .
CHARLES NEUWILLER
CABINET-MAKER.
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 20th Sts.,
GALVESTON, TEXAS.
RANSY PILLS!
Safeanq^ure^end4c?for^womanTsafe
GUARD. Wilcox Specific Co^PmiuuPA.
Special I. & G, N. Train
Leaves Gaiveston 11:50 a m
Special Santa Fe Train
Leaves Gaiveston 11:55 a m
Is hard to get, you say. Well,
yes,, so we have often heard.
Most people are too apt to se-
lect one anywhere they happen
to be, but to buy it right one
should go where a stock is.
Likewise the same on Scissors,
Shears, Pocket-knives, Table
Cutlery, Silver-plated Spoons,
Knives and Forks. Better come
to us and be suited with some-
thing good. Now is the time
you want to Spade and dig, Hoe
and Rake up things, Scoop in
Oysters and Broil them—open
up to suit to suit your taste. We
have all these things. Do you
ever make any mistake in buy-
ing? We do; and when we slip
up and get fooled—why, we just
make the best of a bad bargain
and give it to our customers.
Come right along, ladies, and
take in our bargains. We have
a few goods to sell, - There are
a few over 21,000 articles
S
Social train will
IsaiB Galieston
Hally from Nov.
120 to 30810
a. in.
Depot and ad- Returning after races,
mission to race course.
Look Well—Cook Well.
Too much can not be said in favor of
the Ruby Cook Stove, which is sold un-
der a positive guarantee by Wisrodt
Bros., 2314 Market street. A large
number of these stoves have been sold
this season, and in every case they
have given entire satisfaction.
Newspaper Reporters Wanted.
We are informed that the Modern
Press Association wants one or two news-
paper correspondents in this county. The
work is light 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.
“Store Teeth” for $6 a set.
Dr. Perkins.
The latest ideas in Crown and Bridge
Work. Dr. Wilson, 26th and Market.
J. Romanic Ricker, D.D.S., 2117 Mar-
ket. Gold Filling, $1. Full Set Teeth, $5.
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.
Pure cow butter, the very best, 25c,
delivered free. J. R. Chebk. Phone 655
See the noted horses, horsemen,
jockeys and drivers of the Amer-
ican turf.
John Vindicated.
“Our John is the greatest fellow to
put off you ever saw.”
“He procrastinates, eh?
“Oh dear, no; I don’t think John
would do anything as bad as that. He
only puts everything off. That’s the
worst I ever heard anybody say about
him.”—Texas Siftings.
Not Very Graceful.
Little Ethel—At the circus I saw a
monkey riding a dog, but he didn’t sit
up like a man on a horse.
Mother—How did he ride?
Little Ethel—Oh, he screwed up his
legs, and stooped way over so his head
’most touched the dogs ears. He looked
’most as funny as a boy on a bicycle.—
Good News.
Get your tickets for the grand auc-
tion sale of town lots at Alta Loma
which occurs Tuesday, November 27th
at oAlta Loma office, free. Special
train, lunch, refreshments and music,
all free. _____
For Over Fifty Years
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup has
been used for children teething. It soothes
the child, softens the gums, allays all pain,
Cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for
diarrhoea. Twenty-five cents a bottle.
Finest creamery butter 25c per lb.
J R. Cheek, 18th and A. Phone 655.
. Dr. Perkins fills teeth with pure
gold for from $1 up.
W ' Order $13.25
Higher Grades
• ’ Equal Bargains
—Ten thousand mosquitoes dance up
and down in the sun, with the minutest
interval between them, yet no one
knocks another headlong on the grass
or breaks a leg or a wing, long and
delicate as they are. Suddenly a pe-
culiar, high-shouldered, vicious crea-
ture, with long and pendent nose,
darts out of the rising and falling
cloud, and settling on your cheek, in-
serts a poisonous sting. What pos-
sessed the little wretch to do this?
Did he smell your blodd while he was
dancing? No n-m
For fresh raisins, currents, citron,
plum pudding, etc., go to Schneider
Bros., grocers, Tremont Street.
The Fit. Wear and Style will
please you. Ever so much
nicer than ready made.
The depressed times has en-
abled us to secure cloths for
Overcoats, Suits and Pants,
that we offer at
Lower Prices
than ever before.
PSynButh
508 Tremont St., Galveston, Texas.
AT La/baclie’s.
—The town of Girard, Kas., has three
ladies on its board of education, and
one of them, Mrs. Alice Haldeman, is
president.
—At Suva, in the Fiji islands the
corner-stone of a Roman Catholic ca-
thedral has just been laid. It is to be
built of stone and dedicated to St. Paul.
—The educational course at St. John,
N. B., will include the following sub-
jects: Practical electricity, French,
singing, mechanical drawing and book-
keeping. There is also a Chautauqua
circle.
—Foreign commercial travelers in
Russia besides paying a tax, must
henceforth be provided with properly-
attested papers of identification; their
passports must state the limit of time
of their permission to travel in the em-
pire, and must distinctly tell the reli-
gious profession of the traveler.
—The students at Rutgers college
have agreed to co-operate with the
faculty in the scheme for self-govern-
ment proposed by President Scott. A
standing committee, composed of per-
sons chosen from the faculty and the
students, is to investigate all breaches
of discipline and recommend action
thereon to the faculty.
—The Baroness Langenau, of Vien-
na, has been much persecuted by cer-
tain Lutherans because she is a Meth-
odist. She recently spoke at a meeting
of the West London mission, which is
conducted by Methodists, and pre-
sented it with a necklace worth ten
thousand dollars, to be sold for the
benefit of the mission.
—The university of Chicago an-
nounces in its department of compara-
tive religion special opportunities for
those intending to be missionaries.
For the winter quarter of the present
. year it offers a three months’ course
in Hindi under the direction of Rev.
Fulton J. Coffin, who was engaged in
practical mission work among the peo-
ple of India for several years. This
course is an addition to those on the
religions of non-Christian peoples.
—At Athens the Greek government
has recently declared the whole region
lying between the Theseiou and the
monument of Lysicrates archaeological
ground, thereby compelling the pro-
prietors to sell at prices to be fixed by
a commission of sworn experts. It is
believed that the American and Ger-
man schools and the Archaeological so-
ciety of Athens can easily raise the
funds needed to buy it up. The latter
society, in its excavations at Epidau-
ros, has brought to light the stadium,
which is apparently intact. On sink-
ing trenches across the area to a depth
of five yards or more, the rows of mar-
ble chairs, each with its inscription,
which ran completely around the stadi-
um, were found in their proper places.
It will be the first Greek stadium yet
known in its original state.
—An appeal for help has recently
been made by the Bodleian library at
Oxford, which is the largest university
library in the world, and is surpassed
by only five national libraries, the
Bibliotheque Nationale at Paris, the
British museum, the Imperial library
at St, Petersburg, and the royal
libraries at Munich and Berlin. It re-
ceives for all purposes $45,000 a year,
and needs monsy to support its staff;
to prepare its catalogue, which is now
years behind the times; to heat the
portrait gallery; to repair the build-
ing, the finest public edifice of the time
of James I., and to provide shelves for
books in the Ashmolean museum,
which has just been put at its disposal.
The Bodleian containing over 500,000
volumes, the separate titles in the
catalogue amounting to 1,500,000; the
new accessions of books and pamphlets
are nearly 60.000 a year; it has the sec-
ond largest numismatic collection in
the British empire. Books and coins
are declared by the librarian to be in a
state of chaos owing to the lack of
funds; the library needs at least $75,000
to be kept efficient, and he calls on the
public for assistance, as Oxford, owing
to the agricultural depression, is too
poor to support its own library.
bbss Cornmeal, Bran, Corn,
r“ I™ r“ 9 1 Oats. Cotton-seed Meal,
B fesn L™ wheat for Chickens, Hay,
and everything in the Feed line, at “down
stairs” prices.
For fair treatment1 send your orders to the
Old Reliable
Paul Harden,
Free Delivery. 33d and WINNIE.
THOSE 1-2 WOOL
Boys’ Kw Pants, 25c a nair.
Have vou seen any or those celebrated
MRS. JANE HOPKINS BOYS’ KNEE
PANTS?
nnE|5PoiDlsofPerttn:
i if! DOUBLE SEATS
K | B DOUBLE KNEES
I I a RIVETED BUTTONS
UUU ELASTIC WAISTBANDS
I WARRANTED NOT TO
A PAIR.| RIP.
Star Clothing House.
And What Was the Use ol Any Formali-
ties?
As a rule women have no use for par-
liamentary law, and very few ideas of
organization. Thts was humorously
illustrated the other day, when half a
dozen ladies met to organize a church
charitable society. After they had
sat looking at each other a trifle
nervously for awhile, one of them said:
“It seems we are here. Now, what
are we going to do?”
“Oh, <Jpar,” said another, “I don’t
know, but do let us do something.”
What they did was to fall to talking
voluminously upon the work they ex-
pected’ to accomplish and the poor
folks they knew in the congregation.
They spent two hours or more at this,
and discussed a good many plans. As
they were adjourning one of them said:
“Oh, I suppose we ought to have a
president.”
“Why, of course we ought,” the rest
assented, o
“I don’t suppose anybody will object
to Mrs. Smith? Let’s have her.”
“All right, let’s,” chirruped the rest.
And nobody objected to names pro-
posed for secretary and treasurer.
The secretary a few days afterward
consulted her husband as to how she
should write up the minutes.
“You should begin,” said the man,
“by saying who was chairman of the
meeting.”
“Why, we didn’t have any chairman,”
broke in his wife.
“Who, then, put the motions before
the meeting?”
“Oh, we didn’t have any motions,”
said the lady, laughing. “Somebody
would say she thought such a thing
would be nice, and the rest would say
they thought so, too. That was all. ”
“In that case,” said the man, some-
what perplexed, “yon will have to set
l,t down in the minutes that such meas-
ures were informally approved. But
you must state clearly the name of the
club, the constitution and by-laws you
adopted and—”
“But,” interrupted the lady, “we
haven’t got any name, and we didn’t
adopt any constitution and by-laws.
What was the use? We all knew what
we were there for. Besides^ we didn’t
think of it.”—N. Y. Herald.
TRAINING HINDOO GIRLS.
Beginning; at Seven, She’s an Accomplished
Housewife at Fifteen.
The greatest care and anxiety of the
Hindoo mother is to bring up her
daughter to home life and to make her
a good housewife.
When a girl is seven years of age the
mother teaches her to cook and to wash
the pots. Hindoos have two kinds of
washing. One is the daily washing of
everyday apparel, for the clothes
are changed every morning after bath-
ing. Every Hindoo must bathe before
he takes his meals. Religion requires
that no food be cooked before the per-
son who cooks it has bathed. Hence
every woman must bathe before she
cooks. A woman first gives a bath to
her children, then she takes a bath
herself and thereafter goes to cook.
The clothes are changed and washed
every day. i
The little girl washes the smaller
clothes on a stone and hangs them for
drying. She assists her mother fh many
small things; she sweeps the kitchen,
she fetches the utensils, she cuts and
slices vegetables, she pounds and grinds
the spices, she takes out the small peb-
bles from the rice and cleans it in
water, and, in short, she does all the
petty work, assisting her mother. If
she has an infant sister or brother she
feeds it and lulls it to sleep in the cra-
dle. She gathers flowers and weaves
them into wreaths with which the Hin-
doo women adorn their hair.
The mother teaches her to sew and
to embroider and to make her toilet,
which is simple. She has no paint for
her cheeks and no hooks and thorns in
her hair. She adorns her hair with or-
namental flowers made of gold. These
are fixed on the knot of hair. A small
round mark of red paint is made on her
forehead. The absence of this mark
from the forehead of a woman indicates
that she is a widow, for widows have
not the privilege of wearing it. By the
time she is fifteen she learns all things
pertaining to general housekeeping
and cookery.—Chicago News.
.. Hub’s Special Hat.
A few days since a woman entered a
certain hat store. She had in tow a
boy of about ten years of age—that is,
his body was ten years old, but his
face looked like a man of thirty.
“I want a cheap hat for this boy. I
don’t care what it is so long as it is
cheap.”
The hatter pulled over his stock and
finally presented to the woman a hat
worth about fifty cents.
“I guess this will satisfy you,” he
said. “It is fifty cents.”
“All riyht; 1’11 take it. I wanted
something cheap for the boy to have
fits in,” and then she went out.—Syra-
cuse Post.
A Shrewd Match-Breaker.
Pater—No, sir; I can not allow you
to marry my daughter.
Suitor—But I love her!
Pater—There’s a family secret I must
tell you.
Suitor—Speak, speak!
Pater—There’s insanity in the fami-
ly. She is deranged.
Suitor—What is her mania, then?
Pater—Her desire to marry you.—
Puck.
.............IJUHIIIIIIIHIIII......................................................
Arc Lights of Standard Candle Power.
Incandescent Lights, from 10 to 300-Candle
Power.
Estimates for Wiring
Public and Private
Buildings
Given on Application.
Drs. Tarvin & Bell,
2031 MARKET STREET, ffiSg»Saar
We are the only dentists in the city who
extract teeth positively without pain, this
method being exclusively our own.
Fillings, 50c up.
Bridge and Crown work or teeth without
plates. Fine gold fillings. All other kinds of
dentistry. Extraction, 25c.
All work guaranteed.
Foiv. .
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.
GALVESTOH PUBLISHING CO.,
Tribune Building.
Pickwick Restaurant
Serves the BEST MEAL IN THE „„
CITY for 2o cents
Also serves the . „ . . „
BEST LUNCHES for . 10 and 15 CtS
Commutation Tickets can be bought $6 for $5,
also $3 for $2.50.
SCAPERLENDA & VIDOVICH,
2214 Market, North Side, bet 22d and 23d Sts
R. P. SARGENT & CO.,
2201 Mechanic Street,
GALVESTON, TEX.,
R1IY AND ^Fl I New and Second-hand House
DU I KiW OLLL Furnishing Goods, Furni-
ture, Office Railing, Desks, Safes, Scales, Long
Tables. A GENERAL SECOND-HAND STORE
WJiat’e Rlfjlit In Bonnots,
For The Tribune.
The really right thing in bonnets be-
sides women’s heads in the little Dutch
shape. This is worn a finger’s length
back from the forehead, the hair being
parted to the crown of the head. It is
perfectly flat on the head, and extends
the head’s horizontal another two
inches. The back of the bonnet turns
sharply down, meeting and. shaping to
the top of the coil of hair. The sides
of the bonnet are straight, and a little
longer than the back, making the
whole thing oddly wedge-shaped.
Rows of velvet are set with a single
loop, flat against the side and rising a
little above the level of the top.
These are exactly the width of the
bonnet’s side. At the very edge of the
top two tiny butterfly bows of ribbon
are set, and a little roll of velvet lies
under the edge to lift it the least bit
from the head. There is no more trim-
I
* ®
s f 'Njr a
ming, unless the single narrow string
of velvet that is attached to the left
side of the bonnet, and is passed under
the chin and pinned to the opposite
side with a jewel, is counted as trim-
ming. Explicit details are given for
this bonnet because it is entirely new
and will not be seen except on an occa-
sional woman who is away up in the
fashions.
An equally new design of toque is
that the artist presents herewith. Its
material is black felt and is crown
draped with green glace velvet embroi-
dered with large jet nailheads. The
brim is encircled by a ruchingof black
velvet edged with jet, and the same
ribbon forms those upright loops on the
left side. Imported models of wee af-
fairs, called theater, bonnets, show a
tendency to place the trimming pend-
ant from a coronet. This gives an
Egyptian effect that is a little too pic-
turesque to attempt while the rest of
the world is wearing trimming stand-
ing up straight, or at most, lying down.
However, the suggestion in the new
models is significant. Dalphine.
Meals for To-Morrow.
BREAKFAST.
Cracked Wheat, Milk.
.. Tenderloin Steak, Butter Sauce.
French Fried Potatoes.
Waffles, Coffee;
• Fruit.
. LUNCH.
Thin Slices of Veal.
Bread and Butter.
Baked Pears, Cookies
Tea.
DINNER.
Crab Gumbo.
Tenderloin Trout, Tartar Sauce.
Creamed Potatoes.
Baked Pumpkin, Turnips.
Celery Salad.
Batter Pudding, Sugar and Butter Sauce.
■
Age
Purity
Quality
Strength
PABST BBING GO.
Cool Keg and Unexcelled
Bottled Beer.
Telephone Wagon on hand
day and night.
TELEPHONE No. 256.
Private Families Supplied.
M. Brock, Mailer.
The Tribune’s want column is the cheapest
and best advertising medium. Three lines
three times for 25 cents.
gtegSil
7
KO
?!
-I
3
a
Chas. S. Ott,
MARBLE, GRANITE, TILE
and BUILDING STONE WORK,
Tremoitt St., cor. Ave. I.
,, ... _ w
lery.
Saddlery, Saddlery Hardware, Farm Implements,
Wagons, Buggies and Carts,
Blacksmiths’ and Wheelwrights’ Materials,
Imported and Domestic Table and Pocket
J. J.
BOILER MAKER
Repairing of Marine, Locomotive and
Stationary Boilers a Specialty.
With C. B. Lee & Co. Telephone 258.
Sargent TransferBStorage Go.
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.
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,
F’au.l Shean & Co.
PLUMBERS,
pgoNEjio. GAS AND STEAM FITTERS,
it
2123 Mecanic Street.
COME! SEE! BE ASTONISHED!
Strand,
Bet. 24th & 25th.
Hanna &
Leonard,
Strand,
Bet. 24th & 25th
Hanna &
Leonard.
HAY
N
These prices tell the tale. Dark Mixed
Scotch Tweed Sack Suits, all wool, $7 50. Very
fine 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 j$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
Eduard Hirschfeld,
2015-2017 Mechanic St
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.
lljHIIlsis
The Largest Brewery and Ice Plant In Texas.
©
o
BE
I
J
Galveston,
TEXAS.
H.'f.TJKft-ErVQ’CQ-CM.'CftlC
Erl
And beg to call attention to our “DIXIE PALE” Bottle Beer.
For. quotations apply to
Anheuser-Busch Agency,
WE SOLICIT CARLOAD AND EXPRESS
SHIPMENTS OF
AND ICE
J. M. BRQWN,
J. S. BROWN,
Vice-Pres.
President.
■
3
T
I
CO/ I.
Avenue A and
22d Street.
Telephone No. 21.
Prompt delivery
J. W. HERTFORD,
But it will complete your set of “SIGHTS AND
SCENES of the WORLD,” which Evening Tri-
bune left unfinished on your hands. The Galves-
ton Tribune has procured a supply of Parts 20 and
21, the numbers you failed to get, and you can get
them by calling at the office, or they will be mailed
to you”
d
BN ITS OWN RAILS
il
'The G-aeveston Tbibijke.
MONDAY EVENING. NOV. 19. 1894.
Bros.,
^--51
9.05 pm
x 6.00 am
9.55 pm 10.30 am
9.05 am
7.25 am
7.50-am
6.10 am
10.00 pm 10.30 am
5.30 pm
7.50 am
9.20 pm
i
TRAINS ON THE
MISSOURI, KANSAS & TEXAS
. . RAILWAY . .
Now Run Solid
O • • • •
St- Louis
Chicago
KansasCity
Wagner Buffetsleeping Cars
.•.AND.".
FREE CHAIR CARS.
Ths International
ROUTE.
Shortest, Quickest and Best
Route to the North and East.
2<®“The Direct Route to Mex-
ico via Laredo.
amlpml
3.45 3.00
5.25
West Indies Trade.
The steamship Gyller, with a cargo
of fruit, will arrive from Ponce the lat-
ter part of this month. A cablegram
has been received from Santiago de
Cuba, ordering 3000 bags of flour for
the December trip of the Gyller.
Mr. Gus Reymershoffer said to a Tri-
bune man to-day that trade with the
West Indies was picking upy'and he
felt greatly encouraged over the pros-
pect of increased commercial relations
between this port and West Indies
points. ______
4.30 10.35 am 16.45 pm
5.30 pm " —
9.10pm
6.20 am
1.25 pm
7.50 pm 12.25 pm
5.25 pm ll.00.am
7.00 am
7.40 pm
9.20 pm
2.20 pm
Awarded
Highest Honors—World’s Fair.
•DR.
CREAM
BAKING
RBHHB
MOST PERFECT MADE.
A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Free
Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant.
40 YEARS THE STANDARD.
Just Received
A full line of Curtis Bros.’ canned
vegetables, fruits and preserves at
Schneider Bros., grocers. Tremont
street.
All kinds of sewing machines at rea-
sonable prices; 25 second-hand ma-
chines from $5 to $25 at E. Dulitz’s,
Twenty-first and Postoffice. Telephone
No. 73. _______
Detectives Needed Here.
Superintendent Chas. Ainge of the
National Detective Bureau, Indianapolis,Ind.,
announces that two or three capable and
trustworthy men are needed in this county
to act as private detectives under his instruc-
tions. Experience in the work is not neces-
sary to success. He edits a large criminal pa-
per and will send it with full particulars,
which will explain how you may enter the
profession, by addressing him at Indianapo
Teeth extracted for 25c and 50c.
___Perkins.
Go to Buttelmanh’s for Best Coffee.
Leave Galveston ....
Arrive Houston
Arrive Palestine ....
Arrive Longview....
Arrive Memphis.. ..
Arrive St. Louis ....
Arrive Velasco
Arrive Galveston...
Leave Houston
Leave Palestine ....
Leave Longview....
Leave Memphis.....
Leave St Louis.....
Leave Velasco
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.
GALVESTON, TEXAS
Asphalt Refiner and Coal Tar Distiller.
Wood and Asphalt Paving
and Sanitary Flooring. FOR STREETS AND SIDEWALKS
TWO AND THREE-PLY FELT FOR READY ROOFING
Of Best Quality and at Lowest Market Prices,
OFFICE—317 Twenty-second street, Alvey Building,
FACTORY—Avenue A, between 18th and 19th.
J. W. BYRNES,
Call for
“Budweiser”
The BEST bottled beer.
kwVWnWKSLMEwl
I
^5
• V
'...................................; .....................................................................................................;.........s..........................’'.......“■.........................".........“.....1 ' .......................'..........." ' .............................‘...................... ' .......!:'.........................■........ ..
t.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View one place within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 163, Ed. 2 Monday, November 19, 1894, newspaper, November 19, 1894; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1260848/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.