Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 285, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 23, 1906 Page: 7 of 8
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GALVESTON TBIBUNE:
1996.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23,
7
4
a
a
D
11
I
LATEST MARKET QUOTATIONS
STORM VICTIM IN NEW STORK.
COTTON.
<
Wl
J
0
L
J
SMASHED
1,003
t
MARITIME MATTERS
l
firm and unchanged.
ft
C
41,165
'Common, ordinary salt.”
of
t
Total
Total
.54,147
In many
126,240
240,719
Total stock
322,861
t
/
exporters and speculators. Total imports,
I
GENERAL STRIKE AT WARSAW.
I
(
20
'James Fierce
J.
PERSONAL POINTS
*
M., K. & T OVERCHARGING.
steady.
- v
this
ar-
GOVERNOR OF GARRISON KILLED.
•c......
South
b
. \
TOO LUU TO CLASSIFY.
WINDOW
FRAMES
Bl
COULD NOT PREACH CONVICTIONS.
of
2000 to 5000 on Hand
delivery
tvt ’ a n a
DISCHARGED FROM BANKRUPTCY.
...The...
C. F. HILDERBRAND CO.
r - ' ~ ~ * n
ANOTHER RECORD
I
r
t
Call early to avoid the crush.
Phone 430.
Dismissed by plaintiff.
Foster vs. Isom Foster, divorce.
STRAY STORIES
OF THE STREETS
By G.. C. and S. F...
By I. and G. N.......
By G., H.-and S. A.
By G., H. and H....
By M., K. and T_____
By barge Reed.....,r
By barge Jones......
By barge McKinnon
Last year
45,633
21,861
39,505
7,480
,10.15
.10.77
.11,15
.11.49
.12.11
,12.65
Augusta
Memphis
St. Louis
Houston
WANTED—A cook and to assist in housa
work; good wages. Apply 1522 Ave. H.
2,601
2,500
39
9- 4
9-30
9-18
9- 27
10- 8
PETITIONS FOR FINAL DISCHARGE.
Charles Koehl and Andrew Foster, com-
posing the firm of Koehl & Foster of
Wharton, have filed petitions for final dis-
charge in bankruptcy. The hearing on the
petitions is set for Nov. 14.
How a Galvestonian Dairyman Lost
a Wager—Dog Killing Time.
Mexican Tour.
for delivery choice
D. M’ADAMS, 3912
TEETH
’without plates;
PROBATE COURT.
(Hon. Wm. B. Lockhart, Judge; George
F. Burgess, Clerk).
Estate of Jos. O. Dyer, non compos. Re-
port of sale of 100 shares International
Creosoting and Construction Co. stock at
$109 per share confirmed.
PROBATE FILINGS.
Estate of Catherine Teichmann, deceased,
application to probate will filed.
.72
.71%
.71%
• 71%
.76
.73%
.72%
NEW YORK FUTURES.
Closed steady.
Yester-
day.
10.99-11
11.07-09
11.15b
11.18-20
lx.22-24
11.23-25
11.30-32
10.93-95
10.93-95
10.91-92
, 8 3-18
. 9%
.10 5-18
,10 15-18
,11 5-18
.11 11-16
Today.
Ordinary ______ ...........,.,....5.47
Good ordinary .................5.71 .
Low middling ..................6.05
Middling .......................6.27
Good middling .................6.43
Middling fair ..................6.79
Sales, 7000 bales; yesterday, 6000.
LIVERPOOL FUTURES.
Closed quiet.
72%
72
72
72
75%
73%
72%
1,842
2,971
1,528
34,824
33,580
.32,074
8,473
57,85)
Yester-
day.
5.39
5.63
5.97
6.19
6.35
6.69
10 11-16
10 13-16
10%
January ........
February .......
March .........
April ......... ..
May ..... .
June ........ ....
July ..... .
October ........
November........
.December
12,000 bales; American. 11,700,
LIVERPOOL SPOTS.
Closed steady.
I
7
n
Yester-
day.
5.97
5.99%
6.01
6.03
6.04%
6.05
5.99%
5.94%
5.91%
5.91%
4
'V
t
!
t
I
Today.
.....5.91%
.....5.93%
.....5.96
.....5.98
.....6.00
.....6.01%
.....6.02%
.....5.99
.....5.92%
.....5.89
.....5.89
1
*
TO
NEW YORK
VIA
MALLORY LINE
Sailings Wednesdays and Satur-
days at Koon. Wednesday’s
Steamers Call at Key West
J. B. BENI6&N, Agent. 2322 Straml.
Galveston, Texas.
TICKETS TO AND FROM EUROPE
I
L
OLD BLOCK,
Setting for November Term of
Criminal District Court—3,
Capital Cases.
STEVENSON RELEASED.
Alexander Stevenson, who was arrested
on Oct. 9 and charged with complicity in
what was then supposed to be the mur-
der of Tommy Barry, was discharged
from custody yesterday afternoon follow-
ing a habeas corpus hearing before Judge
Lewis Fisher.' The evidence upon which
Stevenson was held was practically thie
same as that upon which Billy McCarthy
was restrained of his liberty, and this was
not considered sufficient upon hearing be-
fore Judge Fisher some days ago.
i Laborer From Key West, Florida, Landed
in Gotham.
By Associated Press.
New York, N. Y., Oct. 23.—The solitary
Galveston survivor of 33 men who went adrift on
th© barge boat Halfy from lower Mata-
combi key on the coast of Florida during
the terrific gale in October was brought
into, this port today by the steamer El
PASSED SAND KEY.
Sunday, Oct. 21, 8 p. m., A. Bull & Co.
steamer, bound west; 11 p. m., steamship
Monadnock (Br.), Letts, for Galveston;
Oct. 22, 1 a. m., Mallory steamer, bound
west; 2, p. m., steamship El Norte, New
York for Galveston.
QUALITY SERVICE
O. K. LAUNDRY
DYEING CLEANING PRESSING
11 1 r 1 ' — I "........ '—ww—WWW............. m---n—^-TTMniiiT-linnr-ifiiiiiiirj I/nwrriinmi-TMniiMW
GALVESTON STOCK.
This day.
87,724
26,686
33,283
8,184
# CONSOLIDATED STATE^F/4T.
Net receipts of cotton at all U. S. ports
thus far this week, 256,920; thus far last
week, 205,204; thus far this week last year,
149,560; thus far this season, 1,960,259; thus
far last season, 2,081,390; difference (de-
crease), 121.131.
SAILED.
Ss Goodwood (Br.), Aarhuus.
Ss Cuthbert (Br.), Liverpool.
Ss Ribston (Br.), Hamburg.
Ss El Sud (Am.), New York.
DAILY DOCKET
OF THE COURTo
On Shipboard
For Great Britain....
For France ..........
For other foreign....
For coastwise .
In compresses
depots _______ .
ARRIVED.
Ss El Sod (Am.), New York.
Ss St. Dunston (Br.), Montevideo.
- Ss Candidate (Br.), Shields.
Ss Martin Saenz (Span.), Havana.
Ss Indian (Br.), Liverpool.
January-February .
If’ebruary-March ...
March-April ........
April-May ..........
May-June ...........
June-July ..........
July-August .........
October ...... .....
October-November ..
N ovember-December
December-January
HAVRE MARKETS.
Havre, Oct. 23.—Spots were quiet but
Yester-
day.
84
80%
76
GALVESTON MARKET.
Galveston market for spot cotton closed
Yester-
day.
7%
7 15-16
9 3-16
10%
11
11%
H% "
LIVERPOOL MARKETS.
Liverpool, Oct. 23.—Spots opened with a
moderate business and closed steady and
8 points up. Total sales, 7000 bales, of
which 6300 were American, and 500 went to
NOPAIN—NO HIGH PRICES
ABSOLUTELY OHLY PAINLESS METHODS USED
OR NO CHARGE
January ......
February .....
March
April
May ......
Juno ......
July ......
October ...
November
December
and
..... 166,984 -
Mr. H. Jbl. Snyder of Philadelphia is
here.
Mr. H. N. Jones came over from Hous-
ton today.
Mr. Will A. Morriss of San Antonio ar-
rived in Galveston today.
Mr. J. S. Welch and wife of New York
are registered at the Tremont.
Dr. A.. W. Fly left last evening for Los
Angeles, Cal., on professional business.
Mr. R. H. McArthur of Louisville is
among the arrivals at the Tremont to-
a.r.
Mr. John DeVres of Winchester, Ind.,
is among the arrivels in the city
morning.
* “‘TTDii
ALL-STATE LEAGUE.
Yester-
day
11.03-04
11.08-10
11.23-24
11.28-30
11.37-38
11.42-43
JL1.47-48
11.04-05
" 10.92-91
10.94
.............15
m..........12
. .Quarantine
.avre................ 15
line), Liverpool.. 10
. 12
. 27
. 35
. 43
WILL FILED.
The will of Catherine Teichmann was
filed for probate this morning. It is dated
Oct. 8, 1883, and is witnessed by N. B.
Bendy and Hugo Brosig.
To Jacob Teichmann, husband of tes-
tator, is bequeathed all property of the
deceased and he is named as executor
without bond.
who did business as W. E. W’oodend &
Co., stock brokers, at 25 Broad street.
The Chicago creditors.' Jones & Co. and
Wheeler, Lieberman & Co., who had here-
tofore opposed the discharge, did not ap-
pear yesterday. . _ •.
Dr. Woodend’s failure in April, 1894, at-
tracted wide spread attention. He was
well-known at one time as a horse show
exhibitor.
Oklahoman Charges That Katy Wants to
Sell Coal.
By Associated Press.
Washington, D. C., Oct. 23.—The inter-
state commerce commission has received
a complaint from J. B. Harrell, Oklahoma
City, Okla., that the Missouri, Kansas and
Texas Railway company is making ex-
cessive overcharges on shipments of West
Virginia coal from St. Louis to Oklahoma
City. The rate charged is $4.50 a ton as
against $2 a ton on Oklahoma Territory
coal shipped from Oklahoma City to St.
Louis. Complainant expresses belief that
discrimination is due to the defenadant’a
interest.in the Oklahoma mines.
Woodend’s Petition Granted by United
States District Court.
By Associated Press.
New York, N. Y., Oct. 23.—Judge Hough
in the United States district court grant-
ed a motion yesterday for the discharge
from bankruptcy of Dr. W. E. Wobderld,
&
.........London via Coatzoacolcus 9-25
Cayo Soto....................at Havana 10- 3
Dania......
Diadem....
Basil......
Blue Cross..
Director......
Dora Ballea.
El Mar.......
El Norte ...
Today.
.......10.99-11
.....11.07-09
.......11.16-17
......11.18-20
.......11.22-24
....... 11.26-28
.......11.32-33
.......10.93-95
.......10.91-93
A......10.90-91
NEW YORK SPOTS.
Closed quiet and 10 points down.
Good ordinary ...........................
Low middling ............................
Middling ................................
Good middling ...........................
Middling fair ............................
Fair ......................................
There were no sales.
NEW ORLEANS FUTURES.
Closed, steady.
MARINE NOTES.
The Morgan line steamer El Valle
rived at New York from Galveston.
The steamer San Jacinto of the Mallory
line sailed from New York for Galveston.
The Italian steamer Mongibello, from
Galveston for Genoa, passed Gibraltar.
The British steamer Marie de Larrin-
&ga arrived at Manchester from Galves-
ton.
.....
......
•.......
........
. i. ■« gtw: ______
........?...T.^?P...54,147
FOR BENT—Two unfurnished rooms for
light housekeeping; also single rooms
for gentlemen only; in good location. Ap-
ply 3801 Ave. H.
Convicts in An Attempt to Escape Causa
Battle;
Irkutsk, Siberia, Oct. 23.—The attempt
o-f convicts here to breaking out of jail
* last night led to a serious fight, dueing
which nine convicts and the governor- of
the garrison were killed and several per-
sons wounded. Seventeen convicts suc-
ceeded in making their escape.
Hamburg via West Indies
_____Cardiff via St. Vincent
........Para
Montevideo
Liverpool via Barbadoes
..........passed Gibraltar 10-10
..................New York 10-19
.................New York 10-18
DESTINED FOR GALVESTON.
'Amdale ........................at Barry 9-10
'Ascuncion de Larrinaga .BuencsAyres 9-31
Bardsey........Barry via Las Palmas 9-19
JBarnby ..........'................at Barry 9-i0
Cayo Domingo............................
GALVESTON GRAIN RECEIPTS,
By G., C. and S. F.. 36 cars wheat; by
G., H. and S. A., 6 cars wheat. Total, 4J
cars wheat.
Today.
.........11.02-03
.........11.08-10
.........11.22-23
.........11.27-29
.........11.36-37
.........11.41-43
.........11.50-51
.........11.03-04
........10.91-92 .
........10.93-94
FOR SALE—A sfood Jersey cow; will soon
be fresh;. $40.00., Can be seen at 3619 K.
WANTED—A deliy'erv bov about 16 yedrt
Old. Apply TREMONT MExiT MAR-
KET, 612 Tremont St,
Mr. George Lewis, 24 years of age, and
employed at the Southern. Paoific
vzharves, suffered an accident. yesterday
evening about 7.30 o’clock while attempt-
ing to cross th© railroad tracks in the
vicinity of 25th street. He was at tlie
time attempting to, cross the tracks be-
tween the cars when a switch engine un-
expectedly bumped the cars and the vic-
time suffered a compound fracture of the
left leg. He was immediately conveyed to
the Sealy hospital, where he is reported
on the mend.
ft
LOGGER SAILS TODAY.
The motor boat Logger of the Brazos
Freight and Transportation company will
sail for points up the Brazos river as far
as Richmond this afternoon about 4
o’clock. The vessel will carry a fair-
size cargo of freight and merchandise,
among which might be mentioned a larga
quantity of cement, hardware, groceries,
etc. The Logger will be gone more than
a week before getting back to this port.
It is said that a large cargo of cotton
and produce is awaiting the arrival of
the vessel up the river and when she re-
turns here next week Capt. Montanden
expects the boat to be loaded to its
capacity.
Paso. John Russell of ■Salem, Tyre
county, Florida, declared hd-saw eight of
thirty-two others drowned, and believes
all of them went down when the barge
foundered.
a b&i I
Pavement Paragraphs
Baseball Magnates of North a^id
Texas Hold Conference.
Fort Worth, Tex., Oct. 23,—President W.
H. Ward of the Fort Wofth baseball cluo.
President Morris Block of the'Ban An-
tonio team and Dr. Roby, president of the
South Texa® league, held <&.. .conference
yesterday with reference - to anj all-state
league, and after the deliberations It wag
given out that the prospects for such a
league next season are Vjery bright.
In speaking of the matter -last night
President Ward, owner of the local fran-
chise. said that should an all-state league
be formed it is very probable that Dr.
Roby will be elected as its prSsicfent. Mr.
Ward is favorably Impressed with the
manner in which Dr. Roby handled the
situation In south Texas last season.
“You may say that the fans mav look
for an all-Texas league,” said Mr, Ward.
' The teams in the league, if formed, will
be San Antonio, Galveston, Houston, Aus-
tin, Waco, Dallas, Fort Worth and either
Cleburne, Corsicana or Sherman.
Liverpool spots opened with a moderate
business and closed steady, 8 points up.
Total sales, 7000 bales, of which 6300 were
American. Futures opened steady, 2 to
2% points down, and closed quiet, 2 to 3%
points below yesterday.
New York spots closed quiet, 10 points
down. Sales, none. Futures opened
steady, unchanged to 2 points down, and
closed steady, unchanged to 2 points below
yesterday.
New Orleans spots olose«| easy, l-16c
down. Sales, 6300 bales. Futures opened-
steady, 4 to 6 points up, and closed steady,
unchanged to 1 $olnt below yesterday.
Galveston spots closed firm and un-
changed. Sales, 3009 bales.
FOREIGN EXPORTS.
The Austrian steamer Lucia cleared to-
day with the following exports:
Trieste—zOO bales cotton, $116,600.'-
Venice—3800 bales cotton, $221,540.
Genoa, by steamship Azalea—8500 bales
cotton, 4,590,000 pounds, $504,900 ; 3800 round
bales cotton, 9x2.000 pounds, $100,320 ; 5000
staves, $500. Total value of cargo, $605,-
720.
Aarhuus, by steamship Goodwood—43,200
eocks cotton seed cake, 10,752,000 pounds,
$161,280.
Liverpool, by steamship Cuthbert—11,200
bales cotton, 5,936,000 pounds, $652,960.
Havre, by steamship Monomoy—12,200
bales cotton, 6.466.000 pounds, $704,660.
Newcastle, by steamship Monomoy—81,-
600 bushels wheat, $63,648.
NEW ORi EANS SPOTS.
Closed easy and 1-16 down.
Ordinary .............................
Good ordinary .......................
Low middling ........................
Middling .............................
Good middling .......................
Middling fair .........................
Sales, 6300 bales.
COMPARATIVE SPOT MARKET.
The following are closing quotations
for cotton on the spot today at the lead-
ing markets, together with the closing o£
middling yesterday, with sales today:
Middling Middling'
today. yest’d’y.Sales.
300
4,308
ZOO
CLEARED.
Ss El Sud (Am.), New Yorke
Ss Cuthbert (Br.), Liverpool.
Ss Irishman (Br.), Liverpool,
Ss Lucia (Aus.), Trieste.
G.,- H. & H......
M._ K. & T.......
Barge Read ..
Barge Jone • ••■
Barge McKinoon ...
11%
11%
11.00
11.50
11%
11%
11%
DAILY INTERIOR MOVEMENT.
Receipts. Shipments
.. 3,992
.. 4,803
.. 1,150
-.39,555
C103B.
Fully good "middling........84%
Fully middling ..............81
Low middling ....4.,.^.......76%
Future# closed steady.
January ,.
February
MArch ....
April .....
October ..
November
December
TEETH O
■Will be a feature of our business fo- the
rextl5days Ordinary dentists charge
$8 and $10 for teeth that are positively
no bei ter. We guaran t. e a perfect fit or
no pay-.
A TOUR OF MEXICO.
Messrs. R. Hartman and Frederick Hu-
ber have returned from a delightful tour
of Mexico and points in. west Texas. Speak-
ing of the tour, Mr. Hartmann said that
Mexico is far aheaxl of ' this country in
police discipline, especially in the cities,
and while the officers there are all pow-
erful, they are consistent in enforcing the
laws and order. As to the reported revo-
lution, Mr. Hartmann said he saw noth-
ing of any disturbance brewing in Mexico,
and from what he did see and learn he is
inclined to believe that some irresjjpnible
Americans are trying to stir up trouble
on the border. Mr. Hartmann said to go
to Mexico witliout--.witnessing a bull fight
is like going to a cafe and drinking ice
cream soda; so he went to a bull fight or
two and liis vivjd description of the affairs
is worth the vihile hearing. In describing
one of these blood curdling affairs Mr.
Hartmann is a wonder and an artist. Mex-
ico has a pure food law and everything
one gets to eat or drink is labeled and
must be the ptire goods.
DOG KILLING TIME.
Within' the past two days Officers G.
W. Schmidt and J. C. Byrd have been
dog hunting and killing and have to their
credit no less than 16 dogs which they
made bite the dust, or strictly speaking,
dusty sand. Such a wholesale slaughter-
ing of canines, has never before graced
the record of the police blotter at the
police station, but the officers did noth-
ing but their plain duty in a plain way
and the question is who pays for the
cartridges? Accord’ng to report it ap-
pears that Sunday night while meander-
ing, strolling and perambulating m and
about and along the banks of the grade
raising canal a young man—perhaps a
scribe canal inspector—cams in contact
with a dog a^nd the aforesaid dog bit ths
man. The victim reported the affair to
the police and furnished a description of
the brutish assailant. Police Officers
Schmidt and Byrd, who are dead shots,
were detailed on the case and finding the
dog, inquired the name of his master,
which was furnished. The master con-
sented to having th© dog dispatched, as
well as the dog’s family of four pups.
The dispatching was accomplished with-
out undue ceremony. Other dogs were
found in the neighborhood that looked
suspicious1—sort of hungry and not par-
ticular about the food offered, yet fond
of babies, .jgheir. owners were likewise
consulted and likewise consented to the
execution of their . dogs. The officers
charged, the yelping brute® and soon had
them where they, would never more bark
at the moon. From the western portion
of the city, 36tji street and Avenue O%,
came a report of vicious dogs, yelping
dogs and other worthless curs and the
officers hied themselves hence. They
were introduced to a quartet of disturbing
canines and quickly they were doomed to
end their earthly career by the bullet
route. Tirus 16* dog's Were put to sleep
because they knew not how to be orderly.
VESSELS IN PORT.
Azalea (Sage), Genoa....................i. 35
Bechnana (Elder-Dempster), Hamburg. 32
.Candidate (Parr), Liverpool......18
Chancellor (Parr), Liverpool.. .Quarantine
Concho (Mallory), New York............ 24
.Creswell (F. & MeV.), Antwerp.........3S
Cuthbert (Ripley, Liverpool.............. 15
Dochra (Langbehn), Liverpool...........13
Elvaston (F. & MeV.), Hamburg.........36
Hannover (Holt), Bremen................®
Heronspool (Langbehn), Hamburg......12
Inchmarlo (Elder-Dempster), Rotter-
dam ............................. 38
Indian (Leyland Line), Liverpool... .Roads
Inkula (Leyland line), Liverpool........ 41
Irishman (Leyland Line), Liverpool.. 10
'Jessie Burns (Langbehn), Antwerp..... 14
Lassell (Master), New Orleans...........20
Lord Ormonde (F. & MeV.), Rotterdam 35
Lucy (Ripley), Trieste.................
Lugano (Langbehn), Liverpool.......
Martin Saenz (Ripley) ......
Monomoy (Ripley), Havre............
Nicaraguan (Leyland E-R,__
Otoyo (Langbehn), Hamburg.........
Pelham (Langbehn). Hamburg......
Planet Mars, (F. & MeV.), Antwerp.
Plympton (Sage.), Copenhagen.......
Sangara (Edler-Dempster), Hamburg.. 32
St. Dunstan (F. & MeV.), Antwerp.....35
Torr Head (Merrow), Belfast............13
tWest Point (Sage). Liverpool.............36
Schooners.
Minister; Quit Preaching Because
Mockery Therein.
By Associated Press.
St. Louis, Mo.. Oct. ■ 23.—Rev. Wfiiard
Boyd, who resigned: from the pastorate of
the Second Baptist church in December
1904, and soon aifter went abroad, recently
returned and last night gave out his
reason for having quit’the ministry. “It
is Impossible for a preacher to preach his
convictions,” said-he. “The tendency of
the modern fashionable- church is Wholly
to observe the interests of the rich. That
, is why I quit the.ministry,”
YOUNG ladv clerk. UNIQUE TALKING
MACHINE CO. 518 Tremont.
NOTICE—Ready
chrysanthemums.
Ave. K.
131,937
NET RECEIPTS OF U. S. PORT-&
Galveston, 54,147; New Orleans, 19,752>
Mobile, 936; Savannah, 17,837; Charleston,
1774; Wilmington, 3861; Norfolk, 6835;
other ports, 6420; total, 111,712. Same day
last week, 87,366; same day last year, 62,-
845.
GRAIN.
Chicago, Ill., Oct. 23—December Wheat.
-Opening, 72%@72%c; hi«h, 73%c; low,
72%c; close, 73%@73%c bid; yesterday, 72%
@72%c asked.
December Corn—Opening, 42%c; high,
42%c; low, 42%c; close, 42%c bid; yester-
day, 41%@42c bid.
St. Louis, Mo., Oct. 23.—December
wheat, 71%@71%c; yesterday, 71%c.
December corn, 40%c asked; yesterday,
39%c bid.
Totals ........49 '«0
Today.
Low ordinary .......... 7%
Ordinary ............... 7 15-16
Good ordinary ......... 9 3-16
Low middling ..........10%
Middling ................11
Good middling .........,11%
Middling fair ...........11%
Sales today, 3009 bales; yesterday, 2399.
GALVESTON COTTON RECEIPTS.
Bale*.
.12,350
.11,747
.15,604
. 946
.11,145
. 842
. 700
. 813
In compliance with the instructions of
Judge J. K. P. Gillaspie of th© criminal
district court, who was 'in C ’ 1
Saturday, Clerk Bruce yesterday after-
noon prepared a list of the settings of
the criminal district court, which con-
venes Monday, Nov. 5. This list Clerk
Bruce gave out for publication yester-
day afternoon.
The settings comprise nearly all the
cases on the docket except capital cases
and those in which arrests have not been
made. All the cases set are for the first
week of the term and among them are
60 appealed cases, which are set for the
first day.
The capital cases on the docket will be
set on the first day of the term. Special
venires will be ordered for each. There
are three of these, as follows:
S. Turner Gregg, charged >with the
murder of Harry Collins.
John Fay. charged with ths murder of
Melinda Lewis, colored.
Al Bowen, rape.
In all of these cases there have hereto-
fore been mistrials.
Of course, the grist of the sessions of
the grand jury, which will be impaneled
the day court convenes, will be added to
the business of the court already on
hand.
In addition to the appealed cases above
referred to there are 53 cases which have
been set. In many instances quite a
number of these are against the same in-
dividual and a great number of them are
misdemeanor cases.
According to Clerk Bruce the business
of the criminal court is falling off. This
he considers a tribute to the morals of
the county. :
There is, it is understood, quite a bunch
of business to go before the grand jury,
it having been four months since the last
grand jury adjourned.
TENTH DISTRICT COURT.
(Hon. Lewis Fisher, Judge; J. C. Gengler,
Clerk.)
Ex parte Augusta M. Conklin, removal
of disabilities of minority. Disabilities re-
moved. . t ; ■.
The State of Texas ex rel A Stevenson
vs. Henry Thomas, sheriff, habeas corpus.
Defendant is discharged.
State of Texas vs. Ida Jacobs et alt,
taxes.
Lucy
Dismissed for want of prosecution.
A well known dairyman who prides him-
self on having a pure milk certificate and
handling nothing but pure milk, pure
cream and pure butter, became involved
in an arguiment yesterday in which he
was challenged with using chloride of
sodium in his butter. He declared by all
that is milk that some dairies might use
this preservative, but that not an ounce
of this or any other preservative, colorine,
freezine, benzine or other preparation is
used or ever was used at his dairy. He
was willing to wager money on it and
stood ready to prove to the world that
regardless of what other dairies and but-
ter factories do or did or might do, his
butter was the pure and unadulterated
stuff, without any chloride of sodium or
any other mixture. One of his auditors
said that he had been reliably informed
that he did use chloride of sodium and he
was willing to bet a fiver. The dairyman
accepted the bet, stakeholder was select-
ed, and then with chest expanded the
dairyman demanded to know what this
chloride of sodium is and to prove that
he used it. The two men put up the fivers
and asked the stakeholder what it was,
and the stakeholder threw a fit and re-
plied; “Common, ordinary salt.” Slow
bells.
iwwmwill ■I MIHI n II——B,
£5 Hips* CUiandlor
Manufacturing Agents and Commis-
sion Merchants.
T. L CFtOSS <Sfc CO.
Have In stock a full assortment of
good* in their line, including BEEF
and PORK, which they are offering
low to the trad® and to consumers,
2014-2016 Strand,
Elton ...Sunderland via Buenos Ayres 8-17
Grantley Hall............at Vera Cruz 10-18
Hannover ....... -.........Bremen 8-25
Hutton ............1..........Baltimore 10-19
Inkum ............................ Barry 10-15
Irada........................... Liverpool 10-11
Jura ...........................New York 10-20
Karea .........................New York 10-12
Logician....Liverpool via Barbadoes 10-11
Lugano ...........Vigo via Cienfuogos 9- 1
Lynfield ............. Santos 10-13
Marte .....................at Montevideo 9- i
Manadnock ........................ Leith 10-3
Matteawan .................. Newcastle 10-6
Mechanician.................. Liverpool 10-18
Mexican .......................New York 10-21
Missouri ....................at Baltimore 9-23
Musician......Liverpool via Barbadoes 9-16
Nordhavet. .Baltimore via Vera Cruz 10-2
Penrith Castle ...................Barry 10-19
Roma .....................at Charleston 10-8
St. Fllians..............,........St. Lucia 10-16
Sah Jacinto..................New York 10-2]
San Marcos..................New York 10-17
Sicania ...............passed Gibraltar 10-17
Telesfora ...........passed Gibraltar 9-23
Teodora de Larrinaga. .at Manchester 9-26
Texan .........Liverpool via Barbados 10-1
Vitalia..................at New Orleans 10-22
.........London via Coatzacoalcos 9-25
Schoouer*.
Frank T Stinson........at New York 9-23
James B. Drake..........Philadelphia 10-9
WULJUM®
New method of treat ing sensitive te^th, so
that co s nsation can be felt in operating'on
them. Nervous peo le and those afflicted
with hea t weakness can now hav ■ their
teeth crowned filled or extracted with abso-
lute safety and without the least semblance
of pain or discomfort._______________
BEST TEETH ..............$7.00
22k GOLD CROWNS ...... 3.00
BRIDGE WORK (per tooth) .3.00
ENAMEL CROWNS ...... 3.00 /
GOLD FILLINGS .......... 1.00 R/
SILVER FILLINGS ..........5Oc V
~ TEETH WITHOUT PLATE 0
(Bridge W. r«.) N
Spaces wh.re irom one to twelve '
teeth have been lost, we repla e with
bridge work. Cannot be detected and
will last a life time.
Painless Extracting FREE—Written Guar ntee for 10 Years with All Work.
We will tell you exactly what your work will cost by a Free Examination.
Hours; 8 a, m. to 6 p, m. Sundays, 9 a. m. to 1 p. m.
UNIOH DENIAL PARLORS
CHIPS Of THE
1 . l -voft £
1 To get some idea qf £1^© tremen-
1 dous amount of cottoiy andE’the-value
' hid away' in this recoh'd receipts for
1 a single day, it ret^ii#e¥ cars
> made up for 27 trains to handle the
1 shipment and the toiaL.jral^e esti-
’ mated at 10 cents a ;-jio,uxid is
» $2,707,350.
Tone.
Mobile quiet .....,.10 13-16
Savanah steady ...10 13-16
Charleston firm ....10%
Wilmington firm.., .10 13-16
Norfolk steady .....11%
Baltimore nominal..11%
Boston quiet ........11.25
Philadelphia" quiet..11.40
Augusta easy .......11 ..
Memphis steady ....11%
St. Louis steady_____11%
Action of Court Martial Likely to Devel-
ops It Tomorrow.
By Associated Press.
Warsaw, Russia, Oct. 23. — Fourteen
members of the Socialist’s fighting organi-
zation, who were arrested on Oct. 20,
have been condemned by drum-head
court martial and it is expected that the
court will result in a general strike to-
morrow. Military authorities continue
their dominicary visits in the residential
district. They recently searched the
house of Count Krasinski, one of the mosi
prominent Polish Nationalists.
Today’s receipts of cotton at the
port of Galveston, as reported by
the Cotton Exchange, breaks the rec-
ord and surpasses by 1844 bales the
remarkable record which was estab-
lished on Nov. 7, 1903, ;when 52,302
bales were received. The' total num-
ber of bales received today were 54,147
and are divided up among the various
rdads as follows:
G. C. & S. F.............^^..12,350
I. & G. N................^+.,>..11,747
G., H. & S. A.............15,604
G- H. & H...........946
- .11,145
842
700
813
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 285, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 23, 1906, newspaper, October 23, 1906; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1329817/m1/7/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.