Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 134, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 29, 1905 Page: 4 of 8
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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THE STARVATION TRUST IS
c
COURTESY,
HOT BLAST FROM A TEXAN.
FOR KENT.
when
THE
TREASURY DEFICIT GROWS.
modern
con-
AND REFUSING TO DO BUSINESS TILL THE TAX
NOTICE.
LOST.
LODGE NOTICES.
For quick results use Tribune C. C. Ads.
For quick results use Tribune C. C. Ads. H
Col. Gorgas, the chief sanitary officer
on the isthmus of Panama, reports that
Entered at the Postoffice at Galveston as
Second-Class Mall Matter.
the death rate was only 14 per 1000 among
the canal employes, which is low for any
climate. Give the Americans time and
they will teach the Panamans some of the
virtues of cleanliness.
A St. Louis man is asking a divorce be-
cause his wife refuses to speak to him.
Strange. Many men seek marital separa-
tion because their better halves talk too
much to them.
Now, Mr. Blystone, be a good fellow and
turn on a first-class brand of weather for
the baseball cranks tomorrow.
Chicago doesn’t mince matters in any-
thing, even riotous strikes.
They’re off today on South Texas league
baseball grounds.
nation’s
national
WE do all kinds of jewelry repairing,
clock and watch work; prices moderate
M. W. SHAW & SONS, Tremont and
Market streets.
TRIBUNE TELEPHONES j
Justness Office __
Editorial Rooms,
MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS
THE TRIBUNE receives the full day tele-
graph report of that great news organiza-
tion for exclusive afternoon publication in
Galveston.
all the higher officials, native and foreign, with their families,
-------- —— —------------ The chair bearers have
MISCELLANEOUS WANTS. -
WM. H. LEHMANN,' the old reliable cis-
tern builder, No. 2711 Mechanic st., will
raise cisterns with or without water.
TERMS OF SUBSCBIPT1ON:
Delivered by carrier or by mail, postage
prepaid.
.1?
.49
Eastef^ Office
JOHN P. SMART
Direct Representative—150 Nassau Street,
Room 628, New York City.
GALVESTON TRIBUNE
(Established 1830.)
WANTED—Second hand furniture and
stoves; highest cash price paid; furni-
ture neatly repaired' and finished. T. E.
NIGHTINGALE, 716 Tremont.
It is a little annoying and embarrassing
to our sense of superiority to find that
most of those South American revolu-
tions are really strikes, such as we have
every few days in New York and Chicago.
Any erroneous reflections upon the stand-
ing, character or reputation of any person,
firm or corporation which may appear in
the columns of The Tribune will be gladly
corrected upon its being-brought to the at-
tention of the management
FOR RENT—Two cottages, Broadway be-
tween 20th and 21st, four rooms and
attic; between 21st and 22d, five rooms;
modern convenience in bath; north side.
Apply Center and Broadway, upstairs.
, all in
tan any
If the strain of waiting for the long de-
layed naval battle in the far east isn’t
soon broken it will drive many telegraph
editors either to drink or the mad house.
THE HALL Committee of the I. O. O. F.
of Galveston is to give their first annual
Maifest at Woollam’s Lake Sunday, May
7. Music by the Young Harpers. M. N.
STORHANG, Secretary.
Published Every Week Day Afternoon at
The Tribune Building, 21st,and Mar-
ket. Streets, Galveston, Texas.
PRICES the most convincing argument.
The JANKE MUSIC CO., 415 Tremont
street, offers for this week second-hand
pianos, Mathushek among them,
good condition; prices lower thi._
other reliable firm can sell .them for
CASH OR CREDIT.
TWO furnished rooms;
veniences. 1625 Winnie.
“To catch occasion by the fore-top” la to
begin to advertise for a new tenant as
soon as you know that the old one is to
leave. The Tribune want ads bring qulcM
results.
ON1,Y % CENT A WORD.
THE entertainment and dance to have
been given at Cathedral hall Friday
April 28, by the Lady Maccabees of Gal-
veston, Hive No. 91, has been postponed
to Thursday, May 4. All tickets sold
good on that date.
EMPLOYMENT
St. Phone 770.
wanted.
FOR RENT—The Burck residence, 2017
Ave. L; 10 rooms; nicely finished; all
modern conveniences. W. R WHITE.
CULMBACHER—What it is? A pleasant
beverage during the heated spell. Try
it. OPERA HOUSE BAR.
BUFFALO BAYOU SOIL.
BUFFALO BAYOU SOIL.
Ready to take orders for any quantities
of rich Buffalo Bayou Soil; also plenty
other filling, shells, and rotted manure.
Estimates cheerfully given. All work
promptly attended to.
F. FREUND,
211 Tremont Street.
Office phone 791. Residence phone 866.
WE BUY and sell new and second-hand
furniture, stoves, ice boxes, refrigera-
tors. SUTTON’S, 2423 Market St., for-
merly Sutton’s Racket Store.
FOR RENT—A 4-room house, avenue A,
between 14th and 15th streets. Apply
1412 Postoffice street.
WILLS, Deeds, Mortgages, Contracts and
all character of legal documents drawn
and authenticated. Bonds made for
administrators, guardians and all others
in National Surety Company of New
York; capital and surplus over $1,000,000.
Money at all times to loan1 on city real
estate or approved securities. THE
HEBERT AUSTIN COMPANY, Real Es-
tate, Loan and Investment Agents.
(Hebert Austin, Conveyancing Attorney);
Notary Public. 313 22d street. Phone 252.
LOST—Bay mare; bell brand on left hip.
Apply 4117 avenue F.
M. W. SHAW & SONS test your eyes free
of charge; all glasses guaranteed a per-
fect fit. M. W. SHAW & SONS, Opticians,
Tremont and Market.
RAISED COTTAGE, rear of premises 1102
Church street, for rent to responsible
tenant. Apply on premises.
ASK about free premiums On cash wood
orders at G. FRED EVANS’ woodyard
Phone 160.
FOR RENT—House for rent, corner Ave-
A and 17th St.; four rooms and attic.
PRIZES on display at B. GANTER’S,
2025 Market street, for Phoenix picnic,
Sunday, May 14, 1905.
WANTED—Good wagon horse or mule at
once. Apply PABST BROS.
The north, as well as the south, will
regret the passing of Fitzhugh Lee. He
served his country well.
EXCHANGE your old typewriter for a
new Underwood Visible; none equal to
It; monthly installments. Second hand
typewriters and safes, sale or rent.
FORDTRAN, Levy Bldg., Notary Public,
Surety Bonds, Loans.
By. Rev. Father THOMAS J. DUCEY of New York.
HE starvation or food trust in the United States may be
viewed as a huge octopus or devilfish spreading its tenta-
cles OVER EVERY STREAM OF TRADE to clutch
the necessary products that go to feed, nourish and com-
fort the children of God. It has not only throttled the
essential life of the people, but it has THREATENED the life of
the government of this great republic.
It says to the people of the country: “Pay what we demand, give
us our price, or otherwise you will have to go hungry. We control
the food supply just as others control the heat supply and the lighting.
We are your masters, AND WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO
DO ABOUT IT?”
FOR RENT—Three-room flat over 507
Center street; $7.50. Also office (15x25)
over 2107 Postoffice street; $8.
NO. 3471—The State of Texas to the Sher-
iff or any Constable of Galveston Coun-
ty, greeting: ^nnie Mensel and August
Mensel, administratrix and administrator
respectively, of the estate of August
Middlegge, deceased, having filed in our
County Court their final accounts of the
administrations of the estate of said de-
ceased, together with an application to be
discharged from said administrations, you
are hereby commanded, that, by publica-
tion of this writ for twenty days in a
newspaper regularly published in the
county of Galveston, you give notice to all
persons interested in the administration
of said estate to file their objections
thereto, if any they have, on or before the
next regular term of said County Court,
commencing and to be holden at the court
house of said county, in the city of Gal-
veston, on the third Monday in May, A.
D 1905, when said account and application
will be considered by said court.
Witness: GEO. F. BURGESS Clerk of
the County Court of Galveston County.
Given under my hand and seal of
[Seal] said Court, at my office in the
city of Galveston, this 30th day
of March, A. D. 1905.
GEO. F. BURGESS,
Clerk County Court, Galveston Co.
By H. CLEM KUHNEL, Deputy Clerk,
A true copy I certify.
HENRY THOMAS,
Sheriff Galveston County.
By IKE POSNER, Deputy Sheriff.
NO. 3222—The State of Texas to the Sher-
iff or any Constable of Galveston Coun-
ty, greeting: J. T. Huff master, adminis-
trator de bonis non of the estate of An-
nette Hapgood, deceased, having filed in
our County Court his final account of the
administration of the estate of said de-
ceased, together with an application to
be discharged from said administration,
you are hereby commanded, that, by pub-
lication of this writ for twenty days in a
newspaper regularly published in th®
County of Galveston, you give due notice
to all persons interested in the adminis-
tration of said estate to file tneir objec-
tions thereto, if any they have, on or be-
fore Monday, May 29th, 1905, at the next
regular term of said County Court, com-
mencing and to be holden at the court
house of said county, in the city of Gal-
veston, on the third Monday in May, A.
D. 1905, when said account and application
will be considered by said court.
Witness: GEO. F. BURGESS, Clerk of
the County Court of Galveston County.
Given under my hand and seal of
[Seal] said Court, at my office in the
City of Galveston, this 28th day of
April, A. D. 1905.
GEO. F. BURGESS,
Clerk County Court, Galveston County.
By H. CLEM KUHNEL, Deputy Clerk,
A true copy I certify.
HENRY THOMAS,
Sheriff Galveston County.
By C. J. ALLEN, Deputy Sheriff.
Milwaukee furnishes another illustra-
tion of the inadequacy of th^
laws for the supervision of
banks.
WANTED—A yard man to milk and take
care of horse. Apply FELIX, on the
beach.
Environment’s Effect
Upon Temperament
By Dr. ALBERT MOLL, Berlin (Germany) University
HE conduct and environments of the life, including one’s
fl food, can exert marked influences in altering temperament.
Temperament sometimes APPARENTLY undergoes
periodic changes. For weeks a choleric temperament will
be in the ascendant and then succeed to the bilious temperament. Or
again the native temperament may be temporarily overruled. A
woman whose feelings are easily disturbed at home sometimes knows
enough to preserve a calm exterior in society, while a man Mio vents
his spleen in his business hours may be the tamest of human beings
in the domestic circle.
It has often been inquired as to which temperament merits first
place. Since EVERY temperament has its advantages and disad-
vantages man finds the true art of living in such control of his emo-
tions that he belongs TO NO ONE TEMPERAMENT, but to an
intermingling of all. He should be sanguine in the little joys and
sorrows of his daily life, bilious in the serious hours of momentous
life experiences, choleric with the influences which grapple with his
leading interests, phlegmatic IN THE DEDUCTING OF HIS
FINAL CONCLUSIONS.
~ Per Copy „ $ .03
Per Week.„_____________________.10
Per Year 5.00
Sample Copy free on application.
It Probably Will be Thirty-five Millions
for Fiscal Year.
Washington, D. C., April 28.—Adminis-
tration officials do not hesitate to express
their concern at the growing treasury
deficit. The excess of expenditures over
receipts for the present fiscal year has
reached the sum of $30,118,434. At this time
last year there was an excess of receipts
over expenditures of $2,414,005.
There are only two months and one week
more of the fiscal year, and treasury of-
ficials now have no hope that this deficit
will grow less. To say that they are dis-
appointed and surprised at the situation
is expressing it mildly. The deficit for
the first three weeks of the month of
April was $5,640,295. It is not expected to
be so large as this in May and June, but
under present conditions it is thought that
the deficit for the year will reach at least
$35,000,000.
The enormous treasury deficit means
the beginning of a campaign in the late
summer and early fall on the part of Pres-
ident Roosevelt and administration offi-
cials in favor of legislation that will in-
crease the government revenues. In the
opinion of the treasury officials there can
be no hope of reducing expenditures in th®
near future. The only remedy in sight is
more revenue from a reducti&n of certain
tariff schedules for the purpose of increas-
ing importations.
The accounting now going on at the
treasury department to enable the secre-
tary to make some estimate of the re-
ceipts and expenditures for the next four
years and has already progressed far
enough to convince him that each year of
President Roosevelt’s administration will
show a considerable deficit unless some
provision for new revenue is made in the
immediate future
SEE desk telephone holders at Gengler’s,
E. S. Levy’s, Police Station, Brewery,
etc. I have them; $2.50 and $3.25. FORD-
TRAN, Levy Bldg. Typewriters.
FOR RENT—Three unfurnished soutn
rooms for rent. Apply 1114 22d St.
NEWLY furnished rooms for rent; rea-
sonable. 2219 Ave. H.
OFFICE—718 Tremont
Places waiting and
NICELY furnished south rooms; bath,
electrio light and phone. 2605 Church.
Trades Unionism In the Orient
fix j
By Professor JEREMIAH W. JENKS of Cornell t,
LtR workingmen might find something to imitate in the
J oriental, who is a firm believer in his trade union. The
American superintendent in charge of the building of the
American legation at Peking was careless enough to praise
the work of a group of workmen brought in from the outside, to whom
was being paid a somewhat higher wage on account of their greater
efficiency. The immediate result was A STRIKE OF ALL THE
OTHER GROUPS FOR EQUAL WAGES, saying they ought
not to render an equal service unless they had equal pay. In Peking
all the higher officials, native and foreign, with their families, pay
official and social calls in sedan chairs. The chair bearers have a
union which MONOPOLIZES the work, and no person outside of
the union is allowed to carry any chair for any man. Moreover, the
rates charged are four or five times those received by other workmen
engaged in work requiring the same degree of skill. The barbers’
union in Some places has taken the position that the art of shampooing
is beneath the dignity of the barber’s calling and that no member of
the barbers’ guild must give a shampoo. Moreover, for ten days
before the Chinese New Year, when every one must have his head
shaved and the barbers are extremely busy, they all are forbidden in
certain sections of the country to clean their customers’ ears, which
at other
WORK,
FOR RENT—A 4-room cottage in first-
class condition; city and cistern water.
46th and Ave. J.
General Denunciation of the Morals of
New Yorkers.
The New York Sun of recent date pub-
lished the following letter:
To the Editor of the Sun—Sir: In Dal-
las, Tex., the finest town in America, we
haven’t believed all that we heard about
New Yorkers being grafters and cheap
skates, but I reckon we’ll have to revise
our opinions after the exhibition your
people made of themselves Saturday.
When rain stopped the ball game Friday
afternoon Ban Johnson and Frank Far-
rell, because they had no rain creeks—
fine New York business management,
that!—announced that the 12,000 spectators
would be admitted free the next day.
Johnson and Farrell^said they put the
fans on their honor. Well, the result
shows what New York “honor” is, for
25,000 persons jammed into the grounds!
The 13,000 grafters who lied their way
into the grounds weren’t muckers, either.
Your baseball expert says: “There was
no rough or undesirable element.” The
crowd was made up of “solid and re-
spectable citizens”—the men who pay fees
to policemen for the privilege of breaking
your laws, the grocers who sand the
sugar, the druggists who substitute dirt
for drugs, the get-rich-quick operators—
all your “solid and respectable” trades
and professions were represented. It was
■a chance for graft, and, true to your in-
stincts, you were out to grab.
There isn’t another town in the country,
unless Chicago,' where such an exhibition
would have been made. There isn’t a
community in which the residents would-
n’t have been ashamed to graft like your
“solid and respectable” New Yorkers did
Saturday. You did it because with you
expediency takes the place of morals and
every kind of a game is allowed. The
only thing you object to is being caugh.t
You're a swell lot.
The men who lied themselves into the
ball park would pick pockets or blow safes
if they weren’t afraid of detection. Now,
I don’t wonder your police and other
city employees are rotten. They’re your
servants, and, “Like master, like man.”
ERVAY CORINTH.
New York, April 23.
The Russians are having ’their troubles
at home as well as abroad. Charley
Schwab has beaten all Muscovite compet-
itors for the job of reconstructing the
czar’s new navy.
H
The answer to their boasts was given when the supreme court
proclaimed them criminal conspirators. They ARE criminals before
high heaven’s tribunal, and the human decision of a supreme court
here on earth gives voice to the justice of heaven and cries aloud
for vengeance on ’those who have been defrauding the poor and the
laboring to hoard up the means of indulging their avarice, greed,
luxury and other deadly sins. THE HANDWRITING HAS AP-
PEARED on the wall and the doom of unjust and illegal monopolies
and trusts has been sounded.
I thank God that even at this late day men with clear visions are
showing their sympathy for the multitude in their wrongs and their
distresses and are sounding the warning to the lethargic and the un-
just to be roused from their slumber and blindness and see the truth
of God’s justice TO ALL THE PEOPLE.
We have become so accustomed to the oil barons and the coal
barons that we have lost sight of THIS GREATEST OF ALL
TRUSTS, the starvation trust, monopolizing the nourishing food of
the world. * ' 1
led I
IT8 INSATIABLE GREED FOR GOLD, MORE GOLD, CHILLED ALL
HUMAN SYMPATHY FOR THE RIGHTS AND THE WANTS OF OTH-
ERS. IT HAS SOUGHT TO MAKE THIS A LAND NOT OF THE
FREE AND THE HONEST RICH, BUT THE LAND°OF THE ROBBER
RICH AND THE HOME OF THE INDUSTRIAL SLAVES. s
t oh m r
___ ■— 1 ■ m-. v't !
SEE “Hickory Farm” in four acts, by
original cast, at postponed entertain-
ment given at Cathedral Hall by Galves-
ton Hive No. 41, Thursday, May 4, 8
o’clock sharp. Dance music by Young
Harpers.
. A visitor to one of our world’s fairs is
quoted as saying: “I seldom ride in a
car without seeing some evidences of
nineteenth century gallantry. While in
the city in which the great exposition
was being held I was told by a resident
of that city that no one had any time
for civilities, and that I would have no
need to make use of those two little gate-
openers to desired favors—‘if you please’
and ‘thank you’—and that, it was not ex-
pected. I found this a mistaken idea.
Sir Walter Raleigh himself could not
have been more thoroughly a gentleman
In courtesy and deferential politeness
than were the many people who were in
attendance at the great exposition. I
can not now recall a single act of dis-
courtesy at that time.”
It is indeed refreshing to learn that in
the rush and hurry of our robust Amer-
ican civilization we have earned this
kindly encomium from an appreciative
observer, especially at a time when peo-
ple are on pleasure bent, a time
activity is presumably laid aside in the
pursuit of enjoyment pure and simple.
Away back yonder an anonymous philos-
opher observed: “True courtesy is great-
ly to be desired; therefore, be courteous,”
and when one at such slight cost can
wear a mantle as Becoming as. that of
Raliegh it should be the exception where
incivility is found. Civility, according to
Lady Montagu, is the summon. bonum
of the person who is continually seeking
something for nothing. She says: “Civil-
ity costs nothing, but buys everything.”
Spencer says:
“Seldom yet did living creature see
That courtesies and manhood eevr
disagree.”
It should be the earnest purpose of the
younger generation of our southland to
perpetuate the traditions tha^ have lent
a sweet aroma to the manhood of the
south that by fate, robbed of wealth, po-
sition, prestige, the chivalry [hat had be-
come the nature of the man and taught
him to honor womankind and respect man
still lingered and gave him a distinction
that made his native place easy of identi-
fication.
There is a distinction between the true
and the false in this attribute or quality
that even the untutored child can dis-
cern. Courtesy is inbred, civility the ve-
neering: “O, dissembling courtesy! how
fine this tyrant can., tickle where she
wounds!” says the Avon poet; yet this is
the wrong conception, even the immortal
barfl to the contrary notwithstanding.
Cteurtesy is as much an element of char-
acter as is integrity. Dr. Samuel John-
son offers this conception: “A man has
Sio more right to say an uncivil thing
than to act one; no more right to say
a rude thing to another than to knock
him down,” but true courtesy asks not
the right or wrong, but, like charity,
vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up, doth
not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not
her own, is not easily provoked, thinketh
no evil..
FURI^____
TWO south rooms furnished for light
housekeeping, with private family; no
children; references exchanged. 2602
Ave. K.
times forms a part of the regular work. LIMITING
we see, was practiced in China long before it was here.
UH*
UNIONS ARE IN POLITICS TOO. The barbers were
formerly not admitted to the state examinations which give them
a chance at official life. They were considered too low in the social
scale. The muon FORCED the government to open to them the
examination halls. Moreover, all classes of occupation Jiave their
unions, and business life is dominated by them probably more than
is the case with us, while the results are partly evil and partly good,
as with us. They could teach our unions many tricks, as they could
our political reformers.
LATELY THE MERCHANTS IN ONE LOCALITY SECURED THE
REPEAL OF AN UNPOPULAR TAX BY ALL CLOSING THEIR SHOPS
WAS REPEALED.
FOR SALE.
and
with bath,
cottage,
21st
$300
SALESMEN WANTED.
HELP WANTED.
DR. A. SUNDT,
[Ads. rec’d late may be found on page 7.]
FINANCIAL.
OFFICE BOY wanted.
2111 Market St.
WANTED—A white woman to cook and
do housework. Apply 1517 Ave. H.
SALESMEN wanted on commission or
salary if they have established trade;
must have good references. UNITED
STATES WHIP CO., Westfield, Mass.
SITUATIONS WANTED.
SITUATION WANTED—Fine young
colored man to travel as valet or witn
drummer; best recommendations. 718 Tre-
mont street. EMPLOYMENT OFFICE.
WANTED—Energetic man to establish
business for manufacturer; sell retail
trade; salary $20, paid weekly; expenses
advanced; good route; hustle more de-
sired than experience. G. L. SEXTON,
Star Bldg., Chicago.
WANTED—A house girl; white preferred.
Apply University Hall.
WANTED—A competent cook. Apply 1804
Ave. H.
FOR SALE—Rubber-tired phaeton in good
condition. Apply at 1113 16th street.
$950.00—One and one-half lots, just filled,
on south side of M between 14th and
15th streets. Apply STAR RICE MILLS.
LADY assistant for branch office; estab-
lished business; $18, paid weekly; no in-
vestment required; position permanent;
previous experience not essential. Ad-
dress AMERICAN UNION, Como Block,
Chicago.
CHEAP fish boxes, ice boxes, refrigera-
tors, furniture, gasoline stoves; new or
second hand. SUTTON'S, 2423 Market St.,
formerly Sutton’s Racket Store.
FOR SALE—Edison phonograph; com-
plete and in good condition; forty-five
records. Apply GEO. LEINBACH, Pabst
& Bros.
story and lot, 42x107 feet,
street between and P.
WANTED—Two good painters; general
hands. 1102 Ave. A.
WANTED—A reliable woman to cook and
do general housework. MRS. R. S.
ROWLAND, 1818 Tremont St.
TRAVELING salesman wanted to sell
grocers; permanent position; state pres-
ent occupation and salary expected. LOS
ANGELES CIDER CO., St. Louis, Mo.
LADIES—Earn $20 per hundred writing
shprt letters; enclose stamped envelope.
AMERICAN BELT WORKS, Batavia, Ill.
WANTED—A house maid. Apply to MRS.
GEORGE SEELIGSON, 1220 Ave. H.
RELIABLE white cook wanted for a
family of three. Apply 1824 Winnie.
FOR SALE—One ladies’ bicycle, almost
new. 907 27th.
FOR SALE—Fine, thrifty Califdbnla
violet plants; reasonable price per hun-
dred. Address Box 1327, Tribune.
FOR SALE—The Burck residence, 2017
Ave. L. This is a magnificent home,
consisting of iy2 lots and 10 rooms, hand-
somely finished throughout,' with all
modern improvements. A bargain if taken
at once. W. R. WHITE, Agent, care
Southern Coffee Co.
SPLENDID piece of railroad property or
factory site; seven lots; north side Ave.
A, between 15th and 16th streets. Address
STAR RICE MILLS, Galveston.
CIRCUMSTANCES compel MRS. TA-
NELLA to leave next week for Europe.
Her entire stock of fine clothing of every
description must be sold by next Wednes-
day at your own price. 3814 Ave. K.
FOR SALE—Seven small mules for sale;
cheap; one pair gentle broke. Apply
37th and Ry2. W. B. HIPP.
reliable woman as
Postoffice. MRS.
$2750 will take a neat five-room cottage
and lot, 78x107 feet, on southwest cor-
ner 33d and MV2. Terms.
$1500 will buy a good five-room two-story
and full lot next to corner 9th and
H; $200 cash and balance $15 monthly
payments. '
for a high filled half lot on Nyz be-
tween 16th and 17th streets—$300; $100
cash and balance $10 per month.
FOR RENT.
Cottage, 3 rooms, 15th and 16th, N; $10.
Cottage, 5 rooms, 22d and O; $17.
Cottage, 6 rooms, 13th and K; $14.
Cottage, 6 rooms, 25th and 26th, P; $15.
Cottage, 8 rooms, modern conveniences,
H between 27th and 28th streets; $35.
Cottage. 6 rooms and bath 1917 My2; ?20.
Cottage, 5 rooms, 22d and Ny>; $15.
Gottage, 4 rooms, 14th between K and L;
Two-story, 2720 Church; $30.
Two-story, 33d and 34th, K, 7 rooms; $25.
Two-story, 5 rooms and bath, 1417 I; $30.
Two-story, 8 rooms, bath and toilet, 12th
and 13th, I; $30.
„ , A. J. HENCK,
Real Estate, Rental and Loan Agent,
Phone No. 253.
THE ROSENBERG BANK
Has Safe Deposit Boxes for rent.
Sells exchange upon all principal points
of the world.
Furnishes Travelers with Travelers’
Checks in book form for use in all coun-
tries.
Draws on Mexico, payable In Mexican
dollars, at very low value-.
Receives deposits against Certificates or
on open account.
Discounts good paper at reasonable
rates.
Buys and sells investment bonds.
y, in good
Winnie be-
Small
balance easy
WANTED—At once
Cook. Apply 1818
EICHENBERG.
A. J. HENCK’S NEW BARGAINS IN
REAL ESTATE.
$1700 Full south front lot and two cottages
bringing in a rental of $17 per month.
This property is located on K between
14th and 15th streets.
$2500 Nice six-room two-story,
repair and full lot, on V —
tween 14th and 15th streets,
cash payment
terms.
$3000 Fine six-room tunagc, ---—
toilet and electric light; also full lot;
at 1808 M.
$2500 will purchase a good eight-room,
two-story and three-room cottage,
with full lot of ground, No. 3614 ave-
nue I; $300 cash and balance in easy
monthly payments.
$3000 will buy a good twelve-room, two-
story and lot, 42x107 feet, on 21st
TEN girls wanted for light work, x.pplv
*°day at the TEXAS CHEMICAL
WORKS, 19th and Mechanic.
WANTED—A woman to cook, wash and
iron; two meals a day. Apply MRS. J.
J. NORTON, 8815 Ave. P.
1
T
T
*
LEGAL NOTICES.
GUS C. OPPERMANN vs. unknown heirs
of Diedrich Schaeper, deceased, No. 25,107
in the District Court of Galveston County,
Texas. The State of Texas to the sheriff
or any constable of Galveston County,
greeting^: Affidavit having been duly
made in the above numbered and entitled
cause, you are hereby commanded that,
by publication of this notice in some
newspaper published in the county of
Galveston, state of Texas, for thirty (30)
days, yoy notify all persons interested
that Gus C. Oppermann, plaintiff in cause
No. 25,107, against unknown heirs of Died-
rich Schaeper, deceased, now pending in
said court, has filed in said court inter-
rogatories propounded to the following
named witnesses, to-wit: C. A. Kauff-
man, Mrs. Mary Cortes, Wm. Vowinckle,
Mrs. Wm. Vowinckle, Jushua Miller, E.
Fries, H. M. Trueheart and Thos. A. Ed-
gar, and Mrs. Henrietta A. Burck, all of
said county of Galveston, except the said
Mrs. Henrietta A. Burck, who resides in
the city of Los Angeles,.. state of Cali-
fornia; and that you furtner notify all
persons interested that a commission will
issue on or after thirty (30) days after the
publication of this notice to take the
depositions of said witnesses.
Herein fail not, but have this writ be-
fore said court, with your return thereon,
showing how you have executed the same
. Witness my official signature and the
[Seal] seal of said court on this 20th day
of April, A. D. 1905.
J J. F. SIMONS,
Clerk District Court, Galveston County.
_A true copy I certify.
HENRY THOMAS,
Sheriff Galveston County.
By C. J. ALLEN, Deputy Sheriff.
OCULIST AND AURIST.
DR. BALDINGER, Eye, Ear, Nose and
Throat Diseases. Trust Building. Phone®
—Residence, 423; office, 857.
DENTIST—Best work for least money—
Dr. Daniels, 2127 xVfarket street, over
Lelnbach’s drug store. Night bell.
DR. FRANCES ROWLEY, Eye, Ear,
Nose and Throat. 4U3 Levy Building.
■
4
THE GALVESTON TRIBUNE:
SATURDAY,
APRIL 29,
1905.
»
commis-
.F
TRUNKS.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY.
PERSONAL.
“IF YOU heed money and 3 per cent on
your personal note would interest you
address RUST & CO., Cedar Rapids, la.”
TRUNKS—The largest and finest assort-
ment of Trunks and Leather Goods 'in
the state. Fine goods a specialty. Re-
pairing a pleasure. Phone 291-3, at R.
H. JOHN’S Trunk Factory, 2218-2220 Mar-
ket street.
GUD MARNIN’, Mrs. Killey. Oi hev a
pain in me boick from slapemg on that
ould mattress. I’ll hev a new wan made
by R. IVEY, the Upholsterer. Factory,
Center and M. Phone 714.
THESE SHOULD SELL.
Go look at them.
The north 68 feet of lot 7, at the south-
west corner of 14th and Winnie, with
large cottage. House could not be U&ilt
for price of whole property.
Nice little house on 41st between N and
for $475.00. It’s a bargain.
We sell property strictly on
sion.
FOR RENT—Four raised cottages on
17th between L and M; $14.
$25.00 to $40,000.00 to loan at current rates.
THE HEBERT AUSTIN COMPANY,
Real Estate, 313 22d street. Tel. 252. “The
Yellow Sign.”
REAL ESTATE. ,
$o000 TAKES that fine two-story resi-
?? 8 rooms, bath, etc., all modern,
electric light, etc.; place cost over $4200,
1I0Yt to° larS« for the family; see it
In 3219 Ave- P) house open; terms
j g bargain. See that fine resi-
Dn^COT^ ,two lots> southeast corner MY2
bl,g bargain; must be sold at
bison’ AwoJots on the sea wall at only
Flne 5-room, hall, raised, slate roof
cottage and lot; house cost $1500 to build;
place can be had for $1200 if taken at
•?P£?G™Sry -Vms- see REAL ESTATE
HERVEY, 504 Tremont, when you want
to sell or buy.
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 134, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 29, 1905, newspaper, April 29, 1905; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1320547/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.