Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 279, Ed. 1 Monday, October 16, 1905 Page: 5 of 8
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BENDER.
PIPE
4
Black, Gal vanizsd and
VITRIFIED
PIPE FITTINGS
2 and 3 Ply Tarred Roofing
r
AMERICANS RISK
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co
Not Safe.
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well
I
$11,000,000 POSTAL PROFIT.
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Trave'ed Through Wilds of Moroc-
Where Christians Were
Pathetic, Pungent, Pointed Philo-
sophical— People’s Peculiari-
ties Pleasantly Portrayed
BOLTON’S
New Handsome Rubber Carriages cost
no more than others. Biggage hauled
to any part of the city 25c.
BOLTON’S TRANSFER
Phor* 22 7.
SHORT STORIES
TERSELY TOLD
W. I. HEFFRON
111 21 st Street
MRS. WINSLOW’S
SOOTHING SYRUP:;
I has been used by Millions of Mothers for thefa? ’ >
J children while Teething for over Fifty Years. <.
1 It Boothes tho child, softens the gums, allays <
S all pain, cures wind colio, and Is the best (1
S remedy for diarrhoea. (*
< TWENTY-FIVE CENTS A BOTTLE. , •
f /
I 1
I t
I •’
I *
HAND
SAPOLIO
FOR TOILET AND BATH. \
Keeps the pores open and the skin in
perfect condition
All grocers and druggists.
MESSENGER SERVICE
WITH WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO
PHONE 310 2121 STRAND
Messengers for all kinds of errands. Ser-
vice prompt, reliable. Try us and be
convinced. Will call for classified Ads
for ran tribune Fbbb or Chargb
GUS. SCHULTZ, Manager.
Is®
THEIR OWN LIVES
Don’t wait until your
blood is impoverished
and you are sick and ail-
ing, but take Hollister’s
Rocky Mountain Tea. It
will positively drive out
all impurities. 35 cents,
Tea or Tablets.
J J. SCHOTT
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A GRAVE JUDICIAL JOKE.
Miss Mary Waite,, the only' daughter
of the late chief justice of the United
States, lives quietly in an. apartment in
■Washington since the death of her moth-
er. Although her hair is turning grvy,
she has youthful eyes and sprightly ways.
She is fond of relating a story which
now for the first time finds its way into
print.
“One day,” says Miss Waite, “I said to
Justice Harlan, ‘How is it that none of you
ever bow to me when I come to the su-
preme court room? Several ladies who
have gone there have said to me, “Justice
So and So bowed to me. f feel quite neg-
lected.’
“Some weeks after this conversation I
went to the court room r^ar the close of
the session, that my father and I might
go home together I slipped into a seat
and was quietly enjoying myself, when a
man leaned forward, laying a finger on
my shoulder. ‘Excuse me, miss,’ he said,
‘but perhaps you’d like me to tell you
who they all are. That’s Justice Brewer
over there, and Justice Field next to him,
and there’s Justice Waite in the middle.’
“ ‘Excuse me,’ I interrupted, ‘but per-
haps I know them quite as well as you.’
“At this moment I raised my eyes to the
judges’ bench and realized with a gasp
that every. gray head of them was mak-
ing inclination to me. The notoriety hunt-
er back of me gulped out, ‘Who are you,
Miss?’ Gathering my skirts about me, I
hurried from the court room, the man at
my heels. But he never caught me, for
I knew those halls, as I did the justices,
better than he did.”
woman,
world,
ticated; strangely naive.
“Hawaiian servants insist on callig you
by your first name. Ours were always
saying to my husband, ‘Yes, John, or ‘All
right, John,’ and to me ‘Very well, Ann,’
or ‘Ann, I am going out.’
“At last I got tired of this, and to John,
when we got a new cook, I said:
“ 'Don't ever call me by my first name
in this new cook’s presence. Then, per-
haps, not knowing my name, he’ll have to
say “Mrs.” to me.’
“So John was very careful always to ad-
dress me as ‘Dearie,’ or ‘Sweetheart,’ but
li
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New York Office Will Net That This Year
for Uncle Sam.
New York, Oct. 16.—The quarterly re-
port of the New York postoffice shows:
$21,185,045 received from postmasters, an
Increase of $4,431,454; bills of exchange
amounted to $11,162,202, an increase of
$3,338,028; money orders certified to foreign’
countries, $12,373,187, an increase of $2,931,-
806. The total amount of .cash handled
Was $78,810,527, an increase of $16,343,123.
By estimate the New York office will
yield the government a profit for the
year, absolutely net, of something like
$11,161,108.
1
By Associated Press.
New York, Oct. 16.—In spite of formal
warnings by the American and Moorish
authorities, John Larkin, a New York
•lawyer, and his wife, resolved to face the
dangers of an overland trip from Tetuan
to Tangier through the Anghera moun-
tains, says a cable to the Herald from
Tangier.
After a troublesome journey the trav-
elers arrived here safely Saturday even-
ing, accompanied by the well known
Shereef Wazzan.
The party met bands of armed men who
offered no resistance to their advance
through the Anghera territory, the roads
ot' which were in the most deplorable con-
dition.
Mr. Larkin was disguised in Moorish
dress, while Mr. Larkin was taken for a
r.ative woman. This is the first time for-
eigners have undertaken a journey
through the Anghera region since the be-
ginning of the revolt last year.
TOLD IN EXPERIENCE MEETING.
At a prayer meeting in Maine a good
■old brother stood up and said he was
glad to give the following testimony, says
the Boston Herald.
“My wife and I,” he said, “started in
life with hardly a cent in the world.
We began at the lowest round of the
ladder, but the Lord has been good to
us and we have worked “up—we have
prospered. We bought a little farm and
raised good crops. We have a good home
and a nice family of children, and,” he
added with much emphasis, “I am the
head of that family.”
After he sat down his wife promptly
arose to corroborate all that he had said.
Sfee said that they had started in life
with hardly a cent, the Lord had been
good to them and they had prospered;
they did have a farm and good crops,
they did have a fine family of children and
husband was the head of the family, but,
she added with satisfaction, “I am the
neck thatemoves the head.”
I
HER FIRST NAME.
“Hawaiian servants,” said a brown
“are the best—the best in the
But they are strangely unsophis-
THE OTHER ONE.
A story is told of a police magistrate
in Cincinnati who, having an extraor-
dinary amount of business one morning,
was disposing of his cases at the rate of
some two or three a minute, with great I
exactness and dignity, ' bding, as is usual
in police courts, judge, jury and lawyer,
all in one, says Harper’s Weekly.
To one refractory witness his honor
said:
“I am to understand that you readily
recognize this handkerchief as the one
stolen from you?”
“Yes, your honor.”
“How do you know it is yours?” per-
emptorily demanded his honor.
“I recognized it at once because of its
peculiar design.”
“You must be aware, sir,” declared
the magistrate, oracularly, as he drew
a similar handkerchief from his own
pocket, “that there are others like it.”
“True enough,” was the unexpected re-
ply. “I had two stolen!”
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for a
as
for 1906 will be made up at the next meet-
ing of the Automobile Club of America.”
MATHEWSON.
TWO EX-COLLEGE MEN, HEKOES OF THE WORLD’S CHAMPIONSHIP BASEBALL SEBIES.
Christy Mathewson, the star twirler of the New York Giants, and Charley Bender, the premier slab artist of the
Philadelphia Athletics, are both ex-college men. Mathewson went Into professional baseball from Bushnell, and Ben-
der (who is a Chippewa Indian) started playing in the government school for Indians at Carlisle, Pa.
cles for culinary and other uses and*not
as beverages.
Where, however, alcoholic compounds
called “essences of lemon, vanilla, cinna-
rnan,” etc., or so called tinctures or es-
sence of ginger, contain as you state, “a
mere trifle of medicament, the main con-
stituent being alcohol,” and these prepa-
rations which you further say are usually
sold by county merchants, especially in
prohibition districts, are found by the
local internal revenue officers or agents
to be generally sold or used as beverages,
every merchant thus selling them without
holding the requisite special tax stamp
as a liquor dealer under the internal rev-
enue laws will be liable to criminal prose-
cution in addition to the assessment
against him of special tax penalty, and
the manufacturers of these so-called es-
sences and extracts, who are shown by
the facts elicited to have made these alco-
holic compounds for sale in prohibtion
districts will be held liable to special tax
and penalty as rectifiers of liquors.
The commissioner has also held that
where malt extracts composed largely of
fermated liquor are labeled and sold
medicines it is for the manufacturers to
show that these extracts are so combined
with drugs as to be genuine medicines,
not coming within the recent ruling of his
office.
BODDEKERS 13, LEINB^ShS 10.
It was “getaway day’S in baseball at the
Jesuits’ college yesterday afternoon—in
other words the last gamd of the season.
The Eoddeker Sluggers for the ’steenth
time butted up against the Leinbach-Mc-
Donald Sluggers and won by the score of
13 to 10. It was a fierce game, with errors
galore—so fierce that Manager James An-
tonio Boddeker, though an easy winner,
resolved to dissolve his band of cham-
pions for the season. He didn’t want to
extend the season any further than the
REILLY’S LATEST WONDER.
Says the Houston Post of yesterday:
“The Houston club' has signed a wonder-
ful third baseman for next season if the
published accounts of his great work with
the bludgeon are correct. The gent’s
name is Mr. Hunt and he hails from St.
Louis. Mr. Hunt went to the bat 103 times
and swatted the pellet for 56 juicy.bingles
—a batting average of 543. If this bloated
perecentage is correct—and. a St. Louis
paper says that it is—fie haW §ot Hunter,
Edmondson and Gardner beat to a frazzle
and Las Wagner, Si Seymour and Mike
Donlin backed down into the booby class.
If Mr. Hunt lives up tq reputatuon he will
be a valuable man. In-the fielding end of
the game Hunt is rig^ht there with the
goods in large bundles? his Jfelfeentage at
st i ,J
the third station is 973,1 which as about 100
points better than the' average third-sack-
er aspires to. Manager Reilly has an ad-
vertisement in the Spotting News
player-manager for nex£
NEW CURE FOR CANCER.
All surface cancers are now known to
be curable, by Bucklen’s Arnica Salve.
Jas. Walters, of Duffield, Va„ writes: “I
had a cancer on my lip for years, that
seemed incurable, till Bucklen’s Arnica
Salve healed it, and now it is perfectly
well.” Guaranteed cure for cuts and
burns. 25c at J. J. Schott’s drug store.
tance of the Venezuela coast.
Togo’s worship in Ise temple creates a
profound impression in Japan.
British troops are having severe fight-
ing in East Africa with natives.
Urged in London that Sir Henry Irving
be buried in Westminster Abbey.
Baron Hayashi declares that Korea is
practically a dependency of Japan.
New York Nationals won the fifth game,
securing the world's championship.
Pottery antedating Aztecs and Toltecs
found at base of Topocatepetl volcano.
Pensacola, Fla., reports fifteen new
cases of yellow fever and two deaths.
Italy is using its influence to effect good
relations between Germany and France.
Southern Pacific guarantees to build
line from Guaymos to Guadalajara, Mex.
Natchez, Miss., reports seven new cases
of yellow fever, one death and three new
foci.
New Orleans reports nine new yellow
fever cases, three deaths and two new
foci.
William Ivens, Republican candidate for
mayor in New York, outlines his policy if
elected.
Depositors made a run on the Germania
savings bank, New Orleans, which was
met promptly.
La Prensa, Buenos Ayres, comments on
Secretary Shaw’s speech to American
Bankers’ association.
Students waved red flags and chanted
revolutionary songs in St. Petersburg.
National hymn was hissed.
Gloucester, Mass., interests send depu-
tation to see Root about restrictions of
American fishing at Newfoundland.
Grand preparations being made in City
of Mexico for the entertainment of the
General Passenger Agents’ Association of
America.
USES OF SHARK’S SKIN.
THE NEWS BRIEFED.
PLACES TAX ON EXTRACTS.
Kingston,
room.
said:
“ ‘Sweetheart, dinner is served.’
“ ‘What?’ I stammered,
“ ‘Dinner is served, dearie,’ answered the
new cook.”
WILL BRING BACK
VANDERBILT CUP
woods. The fins are made into a glue that
is used largely by silk manufacturers.
New York National leaguers, who finished
Saturday as world’s champions.
American Automobile Enthusiasts
used by cabinet-makers for polishing fine
After Trophy That French
Champion Won.
Dried shark’s skin is as hard and smooth
as mother of pearl. The material is known
as shagreen, and is used in covering whip
handles and instrument cases. It is also
By Associated Press.
New York, Oct. 16.—American automo-
bile enthusiasts are already looking for-
ward to bringing back the Vanderbilt cup,
which was won on Saturday by Hemery
of France. In a conference yesterday
with several automobile manufacturers as
well as a number of enthusiasts, E. R.
Thomas of Buffalo decided-to give a cup to
the winner of the 1906 American race
which will be held in this country next
year to pick a team to go to France. The
manufacturers promised Mr. Thomas to
start early to build cars that will bring
the cup back to the United States.
“The reason this cup is put up,” said
Mr. Thomas, “is to get a large number of
automobilists interested and get them to-
gether long before the date of preliminary
triMs.”
The schedule of the elimination trials |
the new cook, a watchful chap, gave me
no title at all.
“One day we had some company, some
English officers. I told them how I had
overcome, in my new cook’s case, the na-
tive servants'' horrid abuse of their em-
players’ Christian name, and I said, ‘By
this servant, at least, you won’t hear me
called Ann.’
“Just then the new cook entered the'
He bowed to me respectfully and
W. J. Bryan reaches Yokohama.
Earthquake in Calabria causes a panic.
Spanish farm laborers caused a panic
in Ecija. e
Police raided every gambling house in
Augusta, Ga.
City of Mexico planning for -extension
sewerage works.
G. C. Metz killed in dynamite explosion
near Guanaju^q,.
Fire in Chicago destroyed property
valued at $130,000.
Colombia’s fiscal agent advises that he
can borrow $5,000,000.
Vicksburg reports six new cases of yel-
low fever and two deaths.
Earthquake shocks felt at
Jamaica, and Santiago, Cuba.
A French.warship is within striking dis-
Innocent-Appearing Liquids Often Alco-
holic, Yerkes Declares.
Washington, D. C., Oct. 16.—Replying to
an inquiry regarding the construction to
be placed on a recent ruling of his office
on alcoholic compounds labeled and sold
as medicines, Commissioner Yerkes of the
internal revenue bureau holds as follows:
The ruling does not apply to toilet arti-
cles, whatever the quantity of alcohol con-
tained therein may be; nor does it apply
to the various essences or extracts to
which you refer (viz, of lemon, vanilla,
cinnamon, etc.), if these preparations are
such as are known to the legitimate
grocery or drug trade as household arti-
MONDAY, OCTOBER 16,
GALVESTON
TRIBUNE:
1905.
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NEW YORK BOARD
MEN ARE HUFFY
VALUABLE EPIDERMIS.
TEXAS NEWS NOTES.
What a BtessiogJ
J. J. SCHOTT
DRUGGIST
2015-2017 Market St., Galveston. Texas
By Associated Press.
New York, Oct. 16.—Frank S. Gardner,
secretary of the New York Board of Trade
and Transportation, says the Journal of
commerce, when asked if the board would
send delegates' to the interstate commerce
law convention at Chicago on Oct. 26, said
he had had some correspondence on the
subject with E. P. Bacon, chairman of the
legislative committee of the convention,:
and the understanding is that Mr. Bacon
does not regard the board as eligib’e
to presentation under the call.
“The call quotes the president’s recom-
mendation in favor of conferring the rate-
making power upon the interstate com-
merce commission,” said Mr. Gardner,
“and invites only such organizations as
are favorable to impressing upon congress
the demand for legislation along that line.
“A proposition to- substitute any other
legislation would not be in order. As the
Board of Trade and Transportation is op-
posed to legislation conferring the rate-
making power on the commission, it clear-
ly cannot claim admission to the conven-
tion and will not do so. It is intended by
Mr. Bacon to correct the difficulties he has
met as a grain merchant in Milwaukee.
It may meet the situation in Milwaukee,
but it carries wi.h it, if enacted, the most
dangerous menace to the commerce of
New Yark that has yet confronted us.
“Under the Esch-Townsend bill and sim-
ilar bills the interstate commerce commis-
sion could arbitrarily apportion the trade
of the country between such cities as it
deemed to be most in need of it. By fixing
the so-called just relation of rates to and
from common points, the commission could
transfer such portion as it chose of our
own jobbing trade to Chicago and Cincin-
nati jobbers. It could send our grain .trade
to Baltimore or to New Orleans, or it
could transfer the trade of those cities to
New York. In the power to prescribe just
relation of rates, or to prescribe rates in
substitution for any rate the committee
deems unreasonable, there is an overshad-
owing menace to the commerce of New
York.”
Many People in Galveston Are
Learning to Appreciate.
What a blessing it is.
Sought after by thousands.
Galveston is finding it out.
Many a miserable man is happy now.
Nights of unrest, days of trouble.
Any Itching skin disease means this.
Itching Pile mean it.
Eczema just as bad and just as hard to
cure.
But Doan’s Ointment relieves at once and
cures all itchiness of the skin.
A blessing to a suffering public.
Here’s Galveston proof to back our
statement: ♦
F. A. Sandbury, now retired, residing at
2705 Posstoffice street, says: “I was
troubled for two or three years with itch-
ing hemorrhoids. I used remedy after rem-
edy, and even went to a physician, who
gave me a salve, but nothing more than
temporarily relieved me. Doan's Ointment
was recommended to me by a friend, but
I hesitated in trying it until one day I was
in J. J. Schott’i drug store and made in-
quiries concerning it. Mr. Schott told me
that it had a good sale and that it was
spoken of very highly by different people
who had used it. so I got a box. I am glad
I did so. for its use entirely cured me of
the trouble.” '
For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents.
Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y.. sole
agents for the United States.
Remember the 'ha.ne—Do.m’s—and
no other.
They Will Not Send Delegates
to Interstate Commerce Law
Convention in Chicago.
Elk Sues Doctor for Taking Too Much
of His Skin.
By Associated Press.
Spokane, Wash., Oct. 16.—George A.
Lovejpy, the Elk who was selected to fur-
nish cuticle to save a fellow Elk’s wife
suffering from severe burns, has brought
suit against C. P. Thomas for $10,000 as
the value of 50 inches of skin, which he
says the doctor peeled off his legs while
under chloroform.
Mr. Lovejoy says it was represented to
him that the surgeon would take from his
thighs only two or three strips of cuticle
three or four inches long and three-tourths
of an inch wide. After the operation he
found that the front of his leg between
knee and hip was stripped and it was ten
days before he was able to leave the hos-
pital.
Mrs. Frederick Searles was burned with
a lamp at Lewiston, Idaho} nad was
brought here to St. Luke’s hospital for
treatment. A number of Elks volunteered
to furnish cuticle to cover the burned
places, but Lovejoy proved such a promis-
ing subject that while under chloroform
all the skin necessary except some sup-
plied by Mrs. Searles’ husband and broth-
er was peeled off his legs. The grafting
operation was successful, but the woman
was so weakned from the long illness that
she died.
in Galveston and will
daily.
Sumerville line of the Santa Fe to be
put in first-class shape. New roundhouse
and gas plant for Silsbee.
Railroads are delivering cotton seed
cake and meal to the shipside without
charging shipper wharfage.
E. M. Bennett, aged 81, fell from a sec-
ond story gallery and received injuries
from which he died at Victoria.
Daniel Davis was fatally injured by be-
ing shot by his wife at Brownsville, who
says that he threatened her life.
Judge Stedman, in his argument on the
tax case at Austin, took a shot at the last
legislature, saying it was tax mad.
Jan Tked1?k, a Bohemian, disputed
Guaydosch^s privilege of beating his wife
and was thereupon killed 12 miles from
Floresville.
All the troops have been called from
Edna and the situation is in the hands of
the Rangers. The negro, Powell, is still
held in jail.
Insurance Commissioner Clay reports to
the governor on his investigations while
in New York of the life insurance com-
panies, and says the management has
been shameless, reckless and with regard
largely to the personal gain of those in
charge. The companies are solvent, how-»
ever, and will not be forced from Texas.
1 ■ IILD ANIMALS AND MEN in a savage
state, such as the native North
American Indian or the South Sea
Islanders, are never troubled with consti-
pation! Why? Because they live a natural
life such as nature intended.
Butput a man into a starched shirt and let
him w rk in an office, or factory, or shop,
; or store all day for years together, and he >
develops that artificial condition of the
Stomach and bowels which clogs and pois-
ons the whole system.. Put a wild animal
In a cage, or breed it for generations as a
house pet, and it develops the same bane'ul
symptoms.
This simply shows that the constipation
and biliousness, with the whole train of
evils that follow, res It from artificial diet
and artificial condition of living.
CALIFORNIA PRUNE WAFERS if taken
as directed, will, positively cure the most
obstinate cases of Constipation, Bi ious-
ness, Torpid Liver, Indigestion, etc., so as
io stay cured. 100 Wafers, 25 Cents.
Silsbee Masons are to erect a hall.
All quiet at Edna. A convict escapes.
Soldiers and police at Brownsville cross.
The Paris planing mill was destroyed by
fire.
Col. B. F. Yoakum expected at Houston
today.
Letting of contracts on the Texas Star
routes. —
El Paso is figuring on an annual inter-
national fair.
Beaumont has a prospect of getting a
glass factory.
The Corpus Christi country is being ex-
plored for oil.
The local option election in Polk shows
a close contest.
'Objects and workings of the juvenile
court set forth.
Vinrenz Marek kills his own brother in
Gonzales county.
McLennan county grand jury renders
its report to Judge Scott.
A. and M. college took the game from
Texas Christian university.
Returns from Polk county election in-
dicate that antis have won.
A scientific association has been organ-
ized at the A. and M. college.
Fire destroyed the greater portion of
the business section of Little Elm.
Mitchell Risse was twice wounded at
Houston. Ed Benson was arrested.
A Piedras Pintas well got loose yester-
day and spouted in regulation style.
Becento Fernandez, convicted of wife
murder at Uvalde, was given 40 years.
Officers of the Good Roads association
pleased with the meeting at San Marcos.
Officers and delegates were elected at
yesterday’s session of the state W. C.
T. U.
The jury returned a verdict of not
guilty in the John Henry case at Hunts-
ville. -
Carney Marsii lost an arm by the acci-
dental discharge of a shotgun at Living-
ston.
Ex-Gov. Hogg is in Fort Worth suffer-
ing from dropsy. Goes to Mineral Wells
today.
German cruiser Bremen at the wharf
receive visitors
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 279, Ed. 1 Monday, October 16, 1905, newspaper, October 16, 1905; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335011/m1/5/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.