Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 151, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 17, 1893 Page: 2 of 4
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Seine ©ergwgenljctt
HIS RECORD.
W
E. T. DODDS
as a candidate for Aldeiman-at-Large.
WEDNESDAY EVENING. MAY 17, 1893.
Election June 5,1893.
PURE FRUITS
REAL CREAM
PRESTON’S CELEBRATED
on June 5 for Aiderman at large.
J. E. MASON.
W. J. HOULAHAN
for Aiderman. Election June 5, lg93.
Aiderman
I EON & H. Bffl
— - ■.
DRESS GOODS
NOTIONS
^GENTS’ FURNISHINGS
Galveston, Texas.
DREDGING.
E?
I
as a candidate for Aiderman of the Third ward.
9
and
Only 456 hours more of Fulton and
Boddeker. _
It is a libel to talk of Chicago’s great
feet—ures.
If you want to know the result ask a
policeman.
The people are mighty, their wishes
shall ba obeyed.
Now the Washington hotel keepers
are thinking a great deal about public
office-seeking being a private hold-up.
The working people are getting their
work in this trip and they are not throw
ing any votes away on lame ducks.
The city hall will have its spring
cleaning this year. It may be a little late
for spring, but the cleaning will be
there just the same.
The cry is that we have all to win and
othing to lose by a change in the ad-
ministration—anything would be better
but nothing could be wrorse—unless it
would be more of what we have had.
And it came to pass that on the day
when the summer’s sun had for the
fifth time arisen, the people arose in
their might and slew them that had held
the people in bondage. Whereat there
was great rejoicing.
REGISTRATION
NOTICE
FRUIT
FRAPPEE
as a candidate for Alderman of the Fourth
ward.
Election June 5,1893.
Brush Electric Light and
Power Co.
IMPORTERS AND WHOLESALE
DEALERS IN
FRANK JONES
as a candidate for Aiderman from the Eighth
ward.
OLIVER LORENZO
as a candidate for Alderman from the Ninth
ward.
Election June 5,1893,
P. S. WREN,
Registrar of Voters.
THOS. W. JACKSON
as a candidate for Alderman of the Seventh
ward.
^E are authorized to announce
THOS. J. GALLAGHER
as a candidate for re-election to the office of
Aiderman from the Second ward.
Election June 5, 1893.
the request of my friends I
announce myself as a candidate for re-election
as Aiderman of the Ninth ward, and ask the
support ot my constituents.
LOUIS SCHMIDT.
^yE are authorized to announce
JAMES SPILLANE
as a candidate for Aiderman of the Nin h
ward.
Election June 5,1893.
^yE are authorized to announce
T. J. ROCK
af the Fifth ward as a candidate
at Large.
Election June 5, 1893.
^yE are authorized to announce
CORNELIUS J. WILLIAMS, JR.
as a candidate for Alderman from the Eighth
ward.
Election June 5,1893.
■yyE are aut orked to announce
CHAS. C. HAKENJOS
as a candidate for Aiderman of the Tenth
ward.
Election June 5,1893
yyE are authorized to announce
PAT WALSH
as a candidate for Aiderman of the Fifth
ward.
Election June 5,1893.
yyE are authorized to announce
PAUL GRUETZMACHER
of the Tenth ward, as a candidate for Aider-
man at Large. Your vote solicited.
Election June 5,1893.
yyE are authorized to announce
JOHN WEGNER
as a candidate for Aiderman of the Eleventh
ward.
Mr. Wegner has been endorsed by the Eleventh
ward club.
Election June 5, 1893.
yyE are authorized to announce
WM. REPPEN
as a candidate for Aiderman of the Third ward.
Election June 5,1893.
Official City Newspaper.
yy E are authorized to announce
HUNTER GRIFFIN
Bids will be received up to and including
May 30th, 1893, for dredging a channel across
the west side of Galveston bay from Texas City
to deep water and along the docks to be con-
structed at Texas City Amount of excavation
about one million yards. Work must begin
within thirty days after signing contract. A
bond of 10 per cent of the bid will be required
when the contract is signed. Contractors hav-
ing dredges suitable for this work can see speci-
fications at No. 524 Tremont street.
TEXAS CITY IMPROVEMENT CO.
GALVESTON, TEXAS.
yyE are authorized to announce
yyE are authorized to announce
P. N. HARRIS
of the Seventh ward as a candidate for Alder-
man-at-large.
Election, June 5,1893.
CREAM DRINKS
Finest in the World.
Wholesale Grocers,
Cotton Factors
Commission
Merchants,
P. J. WILLIS & BM
(INCORPORATED.)
GALVESTON, TEXAS.
9 ™_J=
Evening Tribune would like to see
somebody that’s seen the books within
the past ten years.
Ths present administration can not
complain of the loyalty and activity of
the police in politics.
Is there anybody in the city who is
not in the employ of the city who favors
the election of Mr. Fulton?
yyE are authorized to announce
yyE are authorized to announce
WE are authorized to announce
yyE are authorized to announce
GEORGE PHENNIE MORGAN
of the Second ward as a candidate for Aider-
man at Large. Your vote solicited.
Election June 5,1893.
The bandits who blew open a car
door with dynamite the other day are
gentlemen robed in the sanctity of truth
and virtue as compared with the men
who, under the guise of bankers, are
trying to loot the treasury.
It is painful to have to tell the truth
about the sanitary condition of Galves-
ton because of the incapacity of the
governening municipal administration,
but it is best to admit our condition in
the hope of securing a remedy.
JN compliance with the wishes of friends I an-
nounce myself as a candidate for Aiderman of
the Third ward.
JOSEPH ENGELKE.
Election June 5,1893.
You are not entitled to sympathy if
you don’t try to help yourself. This ap-
plies to the coming election.
The thief on the cross was entitled to
wear diamonds where the Wall street
sharks couldn’t wear moss agates.
yjfE are authorized to announce
R. WEBBER
as a candidate for Aiderman of Fourth ward.
Your vote and influence respectfully solicited.
Election, June 5,1893.
POLITICAL ANNODNCKMBNT8.
yyE are authorized to announce
A. W. FLY
as a candidate for the office of Mayor of the
city of Galveston.
Election June 5, 1893.
^yE are authorized to announce
JOHN A. COTTER
of the First ward as a candidate for Aiderman
at Large.
Election June 6,1893.
^yE are authorized to announce
J. B. (Feese) BAUDENON
yyE are authorized to announce
WM. BROWN
'J’HE people of the Fourth ward want
^yE are authorized to announce
P. LEVINE
as a candidate for re-election to the office of
Aiderman of the Eighth ward.
Election June 5,1893.
as a candidate for Aiderman from the Fifth
ward.
Election, June 5,1893.
^yE are authorized to announce
Arc Lights of Standard Candle
Power. Incandescent Lights,
from 10 to 300-Candle Power.
Estimates for wiring public
and private buildings given on
application.
Office, 2422 Market St*
Bet. 34th and 3
In Mexico the police end of the govern-
ment is called the departments politico.
That’s more honest than the Galveston
term.
Don’t bold Boddeker responsible for
sickness if Fulton is re-elected. You
who vote to keep him there will be the
ones to blame.
A SPECIALTY
of Souveneir Photos, made in all sizes,
at $1.50 per dozen and upwards. Enam-
eled Photos a specialty, at Paul H.
Naschke’s Studio, 420 Twenty-second,
between Postoffice and Market streets.
The Provident Savings Life Assurance
Society of New York issues all ap-
proved forms of life insurance. For the
business man its Yearly Renewable is the
best.
Forty per cent cheaper than level rate
companies. Quitman Finlay,
General Agent, 22d and Mechanic.
The prince of Wales will not be at the
fair. Well, we may stop home, too.
The police are certainly doing their
duty—to the present administration.
How can you blame a man for taking
a hand in politics when his job’s in it?
Cholera has broken out again in
Hamburg. It may be in Galveston soon.
Roger I. Rex, will abdicate next
month after a continuous reign of twelve
years.
The duke of Veragua will forget he’s
living when the Infanta of Spain gets to
the fair.
The firemen are out of politics. The
firemen know what’s expected of a city
employe.
Chicago is all right. A man who would
eat the pie there ought to be made to
pay for it.
It is a misnomer to speak of a city
that hasn’t the enterprise of a box-car
way station.
There is only one police system in
the world. The Metropolitan.
There is only one kind of a police
force in the world. Non-political.
Predicting Earthquakes.
Professor Falb of Vienna has attained
some notoriety from the fact that he
predicted the coming of both series of
earthquake shocks from which the island
of Zante has recently suffered.
Earthquake prognosticationshave been
recorded as coming true in not a few in-
stances, but there is reason to believe
that the fulfillment of the prophecies was
purely accidental. Seismologists are not
likely to give Professor Falb much credit
for prescience. They will say he merely
happened to foretell what was coming.
We may, to be sure, predict earth-
quakes in some’ regions with a good deal
of confidence that the prognostication
will come true. If we predict, for in-
stance, that an earthquake or earth
tremors will be felt in Japan tomorrow,
the chances are that the prediction will
come true, for one or two earth move-
ments on an average are felt in that
country every day, but we cannot tell
exactly where they will occur or what
degree of violence they will exhibit.
The greatest boon which could be con-
ferred upon regions that are subject to
violent earthquake shocks would be the
discovery of some means of foretelling
the coming of these terrible calamities.
For years seismologists have given their
most earnest attention to this problem,
but it cannot be said that they have
made , much progress. Professor John
Milne says that he and his assistants
have spent years in observing the earth-
quake phenomena of Japan, but they
have never yet succeeded in foretelling
the coming of an earthquake.—New
York Sun.
of Christianity that drives a man i
from home, breaks up a family and leads
to shiftlessness is not the Christianity
expounded in the able epistles of St.
’ Paul.
Opposed to the turbulent experience of
Mr. and Mrs. Frank was the life of Mr.
and Mrs. Opp, who, after 57 years of
married life, died on the same day. This
is one of the pretty stories that sometimes
creep into print, illustrating a happy exit
that every young couple would pray for.
—New York World.
Even Machines Must Rest.
To the town council of Southport,
England, belongs the honor of having
reduced Sabbatarianism to an absurdity.
Not content with decreeing that all shop-
keepers shall rest from their labors on
Sunday, this delightful body has decided
that the same rule shall apply to auto-
matic machines. Six days these over-
worked automatons may labor, but on
the seventh day they must disregard the
pennies introduced into their interior on
pain of fin© or imprisonment.—Ex
change.
Rail Rates
Will be the same from all points in Tex-
as to deep water at Texas City that they
now are to Houston. Free docks will
will remove the differential and bring
return cargoes from New York for inte-
rior points. _
See here, do you want to die like sheep?
Get your city clean.
The administration is in the saddle—
mounted police and all.
The only way to run a city is to elect
capable and efficient officials.
If disease becomes epidemic in Gal-
veston who is to blame for it?
of the Tenth
JJY request of many citizens, I hereby an-
nounce myself as a candidate for re-election
Funcy ! DRY GOODS
2)er je^ige SBurgermeifter (EQapor)
oon ©aluefton fagt: fteUe mid)
tn bie £Retl)e ber ^anbibaten unb Ijoffe
roieber erroa^lt ju roerben burd) ben £ins
roeiS auf meine SBergangenfjeit im 3lm«
te." Seine SSergangenljeit im Slmte bes
roeifi fidj burd; eine Scaffe nid)t gelial?
tener 23erfpred)ungen unb gebrodjener
SBerpflidjtungen.
$ier eine baxron:
,,2Benn bie SBiirger uon ©aluefton,
beren SRadjfidjt id) fd)on aujjergerobl)nlid)
in 3lnfprud) genommen Ijabe, mid) roieber
ber @^re be§ 2Imte§ al§ SBiirgermeifter
roertl) fatten fiir bie nad)ften jroei $aljre,
fa nerfpred)e id) bie ^flidjten meine§
2Imte§ getreulid) ju erfiiHen, fo gut idj
fie oerftelje. Slud) roerbe ic§, nad) SSer?
lauf biefe§ £erminu§ auf feinen gall al§
^anbibat fiir SBieberroaljl auftreten, nod)
mir IjerauS neljmen einen !iRad)folger
norjufdjlagen. $d) fage biefe§ au§
Sldjtung fiir eine grojje $afyl unferer 23ur?
ger unb glaube bag brei auf einanber fol;
genbe ^ermine fiir eine ^erfon unb fiir
ein Slmt, ooHtommen geniigenb fein foils
ten."—9L £. gallon in ©ironing £ri?
bune, ben 8ten SJiarj, 1887.
Entered at the Galveston Postoffice as mail
matter of the second class.
Evening Tbibune receives daily the reports of
the Associated Press, the Texas Afternoon
Press and the Southern Press Bureau, being
a member of all these news associations.
KEEP OUT THE DEATH ANGEL.
In another column of thia paper you
will find an interview with one of the
foremost physicians in the city. In that
interview he says:
“When I tell you that Galveston is
gradually but surely retrograding in the
matter of her salubriety and that typhoid
and other intestinal diseases, heretofore
unknown, are becoming annually more
and more frequent, and that such in-
crease in this respect is clearly due to
defective sanitation, and that at the pres-
ent ratio of progress in this direction it
will only he a few years before Galves-
ton will become the sickliest, instead of
the healthiest city in the south, you will
readily appreciate the importance of
electing a mayor competent to deal with
this sanitary problem, and one, too, who
has the firmness to maintain-his opinions
u.ion this important subject.”
Now there is the matter in a nutshell.
What are you going to do about it?
Cholera is again rampant in Europe.
Disease is spreading thick and last on
the North American continent, and do
you think that Galveston is going to
escape if you do not get up and do
something pretty soon?
Have you got a single idea that disease
will pass thia city by, unless you take
some effective means to keep it out?
What becomes of your indifference when
the angel of death makes your city his
abiding place and your friends are carried
off by the score? What then becomes
of your lack of interest in the city’s
condition ?
Galveston has long enjoyed immunity
from disease. Why? Have you done
anything toward it? No! Has the pres-
ent city administration labored to keep
it free from pestilence? No! Has the
health inspector seen to it that there was
nothing here by which disease could
gain a foothold? No! No!! No!!!
Nature herself has been our health
officer. The sandy soil, the salt
water, the fresh air, all have tended to
keep the city free from disease and have
combined to form a natural sewerage.
But Nature is an exacting mistreis
She will do just so much. She will
bear her burden without complaint, but
you must do your share. You must not
expert tob much of her. She performed
the work of draining your city until you
asked too much of her. With the growth
of population there is always an accumu
lation of filth. Nature did her share
nobly, but you have made her task
greater than she can bear, and she re-
fuses to protect you longer.
Read that extract from the interview
over again. Read it two or three times.
Get it imprinted on your brain. Take it
to your hearts. Talk it over with your
wife. Look at your little ones. Walk
through your house. Look at it all.
Suppose disease and death should strike
you down among the first? Suppose it
carries off your loved ones? Suppose
you have to take your wife and babies,
close your business and flee the city ?
We do not want to be considered
alarmists. There is nothing sensational
in this. Nothing but cold, hard, in-
controvertible facts. We want you to
know that disease is coming. While
we hops we may escape it, yet it does
no good to eimply hope so and sit down
idly until an epidemic has fastened its
destructive talons at our throat and the
time has gone by for us to shake it off".
You have a duty to perform. Doit!
This matter rises above politics. It is a
question of life and death. It is a matter
of self preservation. It is a duty you
owe yourself, your wife, your babies,
your friends, your city, your state and
your country.
Next month you will be in the midst
of summer, then look for disease. You
have very little time in which to act.
ELct a mayor who can grapple with the
question; elect a mayor who under-
stands the matter of sanitation; elect
a mayor who knows what disease is;
elect a mayor who has all his life been
fighting disease; elect a mayor who does
not have to depend solely on a subordi-
nate’s word for his information concern-
ing the city’s condition; elect a mayor who
is capable, honest, fearless and who has
the interest of his people at heart.
When on June 5, you deposit your
ballot, vote to save your city; vote to
keep out disease; vote to keep down the
mortality; vote for cleanliness and
health.
Vote to keep out the angel of death!
A Photographic Fad.
Those little souvenir pictures have be-
come quite a fad of late, and so great is
the demand for them that Mr. Justus
Zahn, the popular photographer on Tre-
mont street, has decided to make them
in different styles at prices ranging rom
$1.50 and upwards per dozen.
Fine Quarters For Christian Young Men.
La Salle clubhouse walls, burdened
with the tales of gay life, will soon echo
gospel hymns and exhortations. The
money for its purchase by the Young
Men’s Christian association has all been
subscribed save $4,000 and the time of
opening extended until the new occu-
pants can raise the remainder. The
transfer will be made in a few days.
The house, which contains 28 rooms, is
one of the finest on the West Side. It is
of white marble, with a large addition,
which will be made into a gymnasium,
audience hall and bowling alleys. The
association will buy the club furniture,
it being included, in the $50,000 necessary
to secure the ownership of the place.
There are at present 600 members in the
West Side division of the association,
but with the new headquarters an effort
will be made to increase the roll to 1,500.
—Chicago Herald.
New Sieamthip Lines
Wifi run between Boston, New York,
Baltimore, Philadelphia and Texas City,
when twenty feet of water is on the bar.
Pictures of the whalebacks can be seen
at No. 524 Tremont street, Galveston,
Texas.
Mark Twain in his “Gilded Age,”
speaking of the dullest town in Tennes-
see, tells of the intense excitement
caused in that bustling metropolis by a
dog fight. A like excitement occurred
on Market street. A cur dug which had
been decorated by attaching a tin can to
his caudal appendaffe, ran like a streak
of greased lightning past the well-known
and strictly first class hardware store of
Horsley & Burck, where only first-class
Not Up In American Geography.
The congenital inability of the British
mind to master the trivial details of
American geography was never mora
strikingly illustrated than in the London
Lancet’s recent report upon the Chicago
water supply. This was a long and very
carefully prepared paper, whose main
conclusions are doubtless as accurate as
human skill can make them, yet in the
opening paragraph we are gravely in-
formed. that a portion of the sewage “is
pumped over a lock into a canal, which
carries it far south into the Missouri and
eventually into the Mississippi river.”
Evidently The Lancet man is blissfully
ignorant of the fact that the Missouri, a
river larger than a hundred of the
Thames, and draining a region upon
which all Britain would be but a patch,
comes from the other side of the Missis-
sippi.—New York Recorder.
George M. Pullman will entertain
King Humbert if Italy’s ruler should
visit Chicago, and thus do something to
requite Humbert for his patent of nobil-
ity by which the title of marquis was
conferred upon Mr. Pullman.
A New Line Added.
Mr. Justus Zahn, the Tremont street
photographer, has added to his regular
line of first-class photographic work
souvenir pictures in various lines at $1.50
and upwards per dozen. This is done to
meet the demands of many customers,
both old and new.
A Year Old Egg.
The old belief that an egg laid on
Good Friday or Easter Sunday will not
spoil—simply dry up—has been seeming-
ly proved in a single instance at New-
bern, N. C., where Moses Roberts made
a test by keeping an egg laid on Easter
day of last year to the present. On break-
ing the egg open a few days ago it is
claimed to have retained every indica-
tion of a fresh laid egg.—Philadelphia
Ledger.
The Horrors In Its Train.
Spelling contests are fashionable again
in Michigan. They seem to have come
in along with crinoline.
The roller skating craze has broken
out again among the western Massachu-
setts girls. Hoopskirts give the fair
skaters plenty of leeway for striking
boldly out.—Boston Globe.
Defining a Kleptomaniac.
Teacher—What is a kleptomaniac?
Pupil—One who steals things for which
he has no use.
Teacher—Very good. Can you give
me an illustration?
Pupil—Charley Jones says my sister
has stolen his heart, and Lil says she has
no use for it.—Boston Transcript.
The Decay of Winter Sports In Canada.
The average inhabitant of the “States”
in going to Canada in the winter time
expects, I have no doubt, to see the
streets and hillsides covered with snow-
shoes and toboggans. He may be sur-
prised to learn that there is but one
really good toboggan slide in Canada,
and that is at Montreal, while snow-
shoers are numbered now by tens where
formerly they were counted by hun-
dreds. It is simple enough to under-
stand what has brought about this
change in what is usually accepted as
the typical Canadian winter sport.
A few years ago, when tobogganing
and snow shoeingflourished purely for the
great sport furnished, the professional
impresario, aided by the hotel proprietor,
conceived the idea of booming Montreal
and incidentally enriching themselves
by holding winter carnivals, the main
expenses of which were borne by Mon-
treal merchants. For a time they drew
largely, and Canada was literally alive
with snowshoes and toboggans, but anon
they palled, and the last much advertised
“carnival” was highly uninteresting from
a spectator’s point of view.—Harper’s
Weekly.
Beware of “Cheap” Canned Stuff.
There is one great danger connected
with preserved goods, and that is that
the insane mania for cheapness at all
risks which some women have has in-
duced dishonest people to put inferior
goods upon the market, but if a house-
keeper is careful to buy none but the
best and sees that they are propeily pre-
pared by her cook she need have no fear
but that her tinned vegetables are as
harmless as the same substances in their
raw and natural state, and she will have
the advantage of procuring an infinite
variety for her table at a very small out-
lay both of time and money.—New York
Tribune.
THE WORKINGMEN’S CANDI-
DATE.
A conference of the membership of
the different labor organizations was
held last evening in the Knights of
Labor hall to discuss the issues of the
coming municipal campaign. After
a two-hours’ session, during which
time the merits of the different candi-
dates for mayor were discussed, a
motion was made that Dr. A. W. Fly
be indorsed as the choice of the meet-
ing, which was carried.
GEO. E. ROBINSON,
Chairman.
geo. McCracken,
Secretary.
Galveston, May 9,1893.
Has Boddeker seen the streets lately?
All flavors. Made directly from the
fruit. Unequaled anywhere.
E are authorized to announce
GEO. J. GARTHAR
as a candidate for Aiderman from the Seventh
ward.
Election June 5,1893.
o’clock p. m. each day, at my
office, No. 510 Tremont street.
■
Citizens of foreign birth will
kindly have their papers with
them.
The present mayor of Galves-
ton says he is making the race
for re-election on his record.
It is a record of unfulfilled
promises and broken.pledges to
the people of Galveston. Here
is one of them--
‘‘If the people of Galveston
--whose indulgent favor I have
already invoked beyond reason-
able expectation--will honor me
with the office of mayor for
the next two years I promise
them to be faithful in the dis-
charge of the duties of the of-
fice, as I understand them, and
under no combination of circum-
stances to accept a candidacy
for re-election at the expira-
tion of said term of office, or
undertake to name my successor.
I say this o-ut of respect to a
large number of our citizens
who believe that three consecu-
tive terms are quite enough for
any person to aspire to for one
offi.ee. ’ ’--R. L. Fulton in Even-
ing Tribune, March 8, 1887.
PETER SCHRIEBER
as a candidate for Aiderman from the Twelfth
ward.
Election, June 5,1893.
■^yE are authorized to announce
STEVE H. SMITH
(Known as “Windy Smith”)
as a candidate for Aiderman from the Tenth
ward.
Election, June 5,1893.
E are authoiized to announce
HARRY K. JAQUES
as a candidate for re-election as Aiderman of the
Sixth ward.
Election June 5,1893.
Ijy® are authorized to announce
J. H. BOLTON
as a candidate for re-election as Aiderman of the
Fourth ward.
Election June 5, 1893.
y^E are authorized to announce
BEN LEVY
As a candidate for Alderman
ward.
Election June 5, 1893.
Books for the registration
of voters for the municipal
election to be held on the first
Monday in June, 1893, will be IN compliance to
opened on Tuesday, May 2,
1893, at 8 o’clock a. m, and
will be open each day there-
after for twenty (20) consecu-
tive days, excluding Sunday,
from 8 o’clock a. m. till 8
C. W. PRESTON & CO.,
Druggists, Ma-ket St.
Singing Songs In the Oil Well.
A well known member of the Petro-
leum Exchange is wondering why coal
oil and religion do not mix well. He is
the superintendent of an up town Sun-
day school, which fact is known to his
brother bulls and bears. When he ven-
tures to do business and make a good
trade or sale, his associates form a line,
block hisway and sing in chorus, “Teach-
er, teacher, how I love my Sunday
school.” This, he says, he finds has a
depressing effect on business.—Philadel-
phia Press.
Fasting Versus Antifat.
Miss Mollie Nealson set out to fast 31
days. She had more pluck than strength,
but she managed to complete the task.
The only interesting thing in connection
with the feat is the fact that her weight
fell from 202 to 164 pounds, a loss of
pounds a day. This would indicate that
ordinary fasting, as it is called, would
not be a very efficient antifat remedy.
If Miss Nealson wishes to continue her
explorations in this line of science, she
may yet become a public benefactor.
Certainly a young woman who weighs
200 pounds has a strong personal in-
centive.—New York World.
J, W. BURSON-CO., PUBLISHERS,
Tribune Building, S. W. Cor. 21st and Market.
■The habitual care of the hair should
include a thorough brushing as well as
combing. Much soap and. water are not goods are sold and every body is treated
needed. Combs which have teeth with ----——*•— _i__
sharp or split edges should be avoided, i
;u NIO la beC
JiW.Byrnes&Co.
ASPHALT REFINERS
AND
Coal Tar Jistillers
MANUFACTURERS of
ROOFING AND PAVING PITCH,
Bensole, Creosote or Dead Oil, Hoofing
and Building Felt, Etc.
Shell and Gravel Roofing,
SANITARY FLOORING,
Wood and Asphalt Paving for Streets
and Sidewalks.
TWO AND THREE PLY
STRINGED CARBONIZED FELT
Quality FOR READY ROOFING
At Lowest Market Prices.
OFFICE, 317 TWENTY-SECOND ST.
(Alvey Building.)
FACTORY, AY. A, BET. 18th & 19th
Galveston, Tex.
KEEP COOL
inside, outside, and all the way through,
by drinking —.
HIRES’
This great Temperance drink; w* A
is as healthful, as it la pleasant Try it
Billy Buscher’s Rhymes.
No. 1012.
The summer sun is growing warm,
But for the hear, we’ve got a charm:
’Tis ice-cold beer at BUSCHER’ h BAR—
’Tis known by all, both near and far.
Just walk right in and take a seat;
With jolly good fellows you are sure to meet,
And boon companions you will greet
At BUSCHER’S FAMOUS PLACE.
And you won’t find it very far
To “unload the schooner at the bar,”
With LUNCH that’s always upto par,
At BUSCHER’S FAMOUS PLACE.
And other drinks—all of the best—
In fact, they’re better than all the rest—
You’ll relish all with greatest zest
At BUSCHER’S FAMOUS PLACE.
ForBiLLY’S PLACE is newly drest;
Come in and we will tell you the rest;
New paint, new colors attract the eye—
And be sure to sample our Old Rye.
With cards, and balls, and cues, and dice—
Just drop right in and we’ll treat you nice,
If you have only “just the price.”
At BUSCHER’S FAMOUS PLACE,
GAMBRINUS HALL,
Center St, bet. Mechanic and Market.
If your plumbing is out of order,
your gas will not burn, or you can’t
keep warm, ring Telephone No. SO, or
call on Paul Shean & Co , S1S3 Me-
chanic street, and report your troubles,
and you will be furnished with a
remedy.
^yE are authorized to announce
D. G. KELLY
as a candidate for Aiderman of the Tenth
ward.
Election June 5, 1893.
Established 1865.
Chas. Dalian,
Direct Importer and Wholesale
Dealer in
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
WINES AND LIQUORS
Louis Roederer, Mumm’s and
Due de Montebello
CHAMPAGNE.
JUST RECEIVED—A shipment of BELL-
THAL MINERAL WATKR from Germany,
the very finest table mineral water extant.
Ale and Porter Lemp’s St. Louis Keg and
Bottled Beer.
2406 and 2408 Market st., GaLVESTON, TEX,
& GIRARDIN
RESTAURANT.
THE BEST COOKING AND BEST SERVICE
IN THE SOUTH.
Market Street, Corner 24th.
with the eame courtesy. That’s why
they have succeeded bo well.
only to
her present fix, or, in other words, “this ”2^ remedy to make
Mrs. Frank’s Mistake.
As Mrs. Frank, surrounded by her ’
household goods, sat on the sidewalk in
front of the house from which she had
been evicted for nonpayment of rent,
she remarked plaintively that had she
“preached less and attended to house-
hold duties more” she would not be in turn to the~ —
her present fix, or, in other words, “this right remedy to make
b ft . Z?nrself secure from disease. Dr.
She should have said passive and false ’ as well as cures. Take it, as yuu ougnr,
Christianity, for it has passed into a ; when you feel the first symptoms (languor’
- - - - - ... Joss of
you’ll save yourself from something serious.
saw her mistake a little too late, though convalescence from pneumonia, fevers, or
IlULUlIlg VcLU '
to build up needed flesh and strength.
of time; for a quarter of a century the “ Dis-
P.fYVP.W ” hue I?"57
away i sands. The manufacturers prove their faith
i__1 ill it PTIflTflntppincr it frrr nil rlicrvrrlaY’Q nric.
ing from bad blood; in Scrofula, Eczema,
can-1 xicuiii, Jurysipeius, di
buncles, and every kindred ailment.
r* . ■ \___“i
money back. What offer could be fairer V
A LONG STRING
of diseases follows a “ run-down”
system when the liver is inactive
and the blood in disorder.
Look out for “breakers .
ahead ’ ’ by putting the liv er J
and blood in a healthy I
condition. You’ve i
yourself secure from disease. Dr.
18 the result of too much Christianity. | pjerce’s Golden Medical Discovery prevents
She should have said passive and false ’ as well as cures. Take it, as you ought,
Christianity, for it has passed into a ; when you feel the first symptoms (languor’
proverb that “God helps those who help !°ss,11of aPPetite> dullness, depression) and
f, . „ Trrn xv ; you’ll save yourself from something serious,
themselves. Mrs. Weller, the elder, | jn recovering from “La Grippe,” or in
saw her mistake a little too late, though convalescence from pneumonia, fevers, or
she was brave enough to confess to the other wasting diseases, nothing can equal it
redoubtable Tony that running after the .to build up needed flesh and strength.
red nosed Preacher Stiggms was * neg-1
lect of the marriage contract. The sort covery” has numbered its cures by the thou-
in it by guaranteeing it for all disorders aris-
T^ter, Salt-rheum, Erysipelas, Boils, Car-
If you receive no benefit you’ll get your
I II C-* n 4“ z-vflPz-fM t-i 1 V-x z-v O
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Burson, J. W. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 151, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 17, 1893, newspaper, May 17, 1893; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1267983/m1/2/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.