Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 109, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 9, 1885 Page: 3 of 4
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merits open from 12 m. till 1 p. m.
Soul—Hob' |honght Can Build New
Physical Structures—The Wise
Man of the Future.
ARRIVALS OF MAILS.
The Missouri-Pacific Railroad arrives at 8:25 a.
m., and brings mail from Houston, Anstin, Dallas.
Waco, San Antonio, Houston and Texas Central . , „
and branches. Northern and Western States, Ter- [Specia. Correspondence.]
ritories, Foreign Countries Boston, April 30.—Healthy body, healthy
The Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe—main line, ar- ’ , J J
rives at 11:43 a. m., daily, brings mail from main nund. Old adage, convertiole terms—
'ine and connections, Laredo, Corpus Christi, Vic- healthy mind, health}’ bcdv. More yet,
toria, Rosenberg, California and Mexico, New Or- , . . , , , , ,
.eans and Southern States. keep the mind young and fresh and you keep
Missouri-Pacilic arrives at 1 p. m., and brings j the body ditto. Worried minds, racked
ern railroad, Northern and Western Scutes and minds, fretted minds, sour, cross, ugly,
foreign countries, study, peevish, sad, melancholic minds wear
Missouri-Pacific arrives at 8 p. m., brings mail
Houston and Texas Central railroad south from
Corsicana.
COLLECTIONS.
I
Colleetionf from street letter boxes are made at
10 a. m., 1 p. m. and 8. p. m. This comprises the
justness portion of the city.
DEPARTURES.
5:00 a. m.—Daily mails close for main line, Gnlf,
Colorado and Santa Fe Railroad from Galveston to
Fort Worth. Texas Pacific from Fort Worth to
El Paso. Missouri Pacific from Temple to Deni-
son and branch of Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe
road from Tem, le to Lampasas. Galveston, Har-
risburg and San Antonio road from Houston to El
Paso. New York, Texas and Mexican from Rosen-
>erg to Vic ona; also California, Arizona, New
Mexico and Northern Mexico.
2:30 p. m.—Daily mails close for Texas and New
Orleans road, Houston, and all Southern States.
11:30 a. m.—1Thursdays and Sundays—Gabion,
Parrsville, Double Bayou, Smith Point
12 m.—Wednesday.- ana Saturdays for Shoal Pom
6:00 a. m.—Galveston Houston and'IIenderson
Railroad—Daily mails close for mail line Houston
and Texas Central road, Northwestern Branch of
H. & T. C, R’y from Hempstead to Austin. Hons
ton East and West Texas road, International ur.d
Great Northern road rom Palestine to Laredo,
Texas Pacific from Texarkana to Dallas; also tor
Columbia Tap, I. & G N. R’y leaves Houston on
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Aud for
Northern, Eastern ana Western States and Terri-
tories and for Foreign countries and Northern
Mexico.
3:20 p. m.—Daily mails close for Houston, Deni-
son, Sherman, Dallas, Coisie.ana; also I. &4H, N.
R’y from Houston to Texarkana, Palestine to La-
redo and points between Laredo and Corpus Christi;
also for Beaumont, Orange, Liberty and all points
between Beaumont aud Rockland; also mails
is for
all Southern Northern, Eastern and Western States
and Territories and Foreign countries.
6:35 p. m.—Daily mails close for all points on the
'TToustofl and Texas Central road and its branches
and connections; also all Northern, Western, East-
ern and Southern States, Territories and Foreign
countries; also the Texas aud New Orleans road
and International and Great Northern road from
Hearne to Laredo and all points between Laredo
and Corpus Christi.
W. H. GRIFFIN, Postmaster.
Btagamaus^aammaama!Mi0aBMraxmmr*m3scB2*im*£&exiiZszr-z3 i».»mc<vru,' »
i'viluvnc
At No. £>3 East Mechanic Street.
Successor to Evenin
tered Galveston ]
; Record and Daily Print. En-
. O. as Second Class Matter.
Saturday evening, may 9, isss.
WEATHER BULLETIN.
The following is the official statement
of the weather bulletin for the station of
Galveston, May 9, 1885: Height of
barometer, 30.03; change in last 8 hours,
.03 fall; thermometer — exposed, 01;
change last 24 hours, 16 fall; minimum,
60; maximum,-; wind—direction, north-
east; velocity, per hour, 18; rainfall
in the last 24 hours, .25 inch; state of
weather, light rain, cloudy.
—Only at Johnson
Malt Extract.
& Gwin’s—Pure
—Finck & DeMeritt can’t be beat in
fine work and low prices. *
Roug-h. on Rats.
Clears out rats, mice, roaches flies,
ants, bed-bugs, skunks, chipmunks,
-—-^ggjph_rs,_15c. Druggists. r
“ Rough on Coughs.”
Ask for “Rough on Coughs,” for
Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Hoarseness.
Troches, 15c. Liquid, 25c. r
Buchu-Paiha.
Quick, complete cure, all Kidneys
Bladder and Urinary Diseases, Scaldings
Irritation, Stone, Gravel, Catarrh of the
bladder. $1. Druggists. r
Bueklen’s Arnica Salve.
The best salve in the world lor Cutt,
Bruises, Sores, Uleers, Salt Rheum, Le-
ver Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chil-
blains, Corns and all Skin Eruptions,
and positively cures Piles, or no pay re-
quired. It is guaranteed to give perfect
satisfaction, or money refunded. Price
25 cents per box. For sale by J. J.
Schott & Co. ly
-«.---
For Boys and Girls.
We shall give away several thousand
dollars in presents before August 1st, in-
cluding solid gold watches, jewelry,
guns, revolvers, violins, banjos, guitars,
music boxes, tool chests, telescopes, and
everything an intelligent boy or girl
could desire.
If you-want the model magazine for
the youth of the nineteenth century,
send 25 cents for three months trial sub-
scription and list of presents. A hand-
some pocket-knife or someth.ng of
greater value guaranteed to all sending.
Bend for your friends and receive the
presents. Address National Youth's
Monthly, Buffalo, N. Y. tf
A Great Discover.
jyjr. Wm. Thomas, of Newson, la.,
says: “My wife has been seriously affec-
ted with a cough for twenty-five years,
and this spring more severely than ever
before. Bhe had used many remedies
without relief, and being urged to try
Dr. King’s New Discovery, did so, with
most gratifying resnlts. The first bottle
relieved her very much, and the second
bottle has absolutely cured her. She has
not had so good health for thirty year.”
Trial bottles free at J. J. Schoot & Co.,
Drug Store large size $1.00. r
Young Men!—Read This.
The Voltaic Belt Co., of Marshall,
Mich., offer to send their celebrated
Electro-Voltaic Belt and other Elec-
tric Appliances on trial for thirty days,
to men (young or old) afflicted with
nervous debility, loss of vitality and
manhood, and all kindred troubles.
Also for rhumatism, neuralgia, paralysis,
and many ether diseases.
Arrivals and Departures of the Mails now TO KEEP YOUNG.
OFFICE HOURS. ---------
General delivery dahv, except Sundays, from HOW THE MIND CAN KEEP THE BODY
h.. tn. tUi o p. Tn,
Stamp, Registry and Monty Order Department. I FROM GROWING OLD.
daily, except Sunday, fro i. a. m. till 6 p. m j _
SUNDAY.
Stamp, General Delivery and Carrier Depart- T,le Rust 'I ha: Wears noth Hody and
a young body into an old one ten, twenty,
thirty years ere its time.
Two-thirds of our old age, so-called, comes
of rust, dead rust, treadmill lives, living in
ruts, learning nothing new, declaring we’re
too old to learn.
Young man marries at twenty-three.
Young woman ditto. “Settle down.” Give
up recreation, boats, bans, dancing, croquet,
etc. Turn five-sixths of then’ lives into busi-
ness and housekeeping.
Result at thirty-five: Young man’s rut is
worn tco deep for him to crawl out of.
Thinks he’s seen about all there is in life to
live for. Has settled down into eating, sleep-
ing and pottering from store to house and
house to store. Begins to “lay up” for old
Sees himself in thought an old man.
Result, ha does grow old, acts old, tliinks
id, not knowing that thoughts are live
things built out of highly rarefied mat-
ter, that mind is at workand in ex-
istence in every atom of our bodies, and
that the mind full of fresh, hopeful, hap-
py thought, and of plan, purpose and project,
makes and reops the freshest, strongest and
most vigorous body.
Ericsson as alive with work and invention
as ever at eighty-four; Gladstone in his sev
enties running England; De Lesseps canal-
ling and over seventy; Victor Hugo hale and
hearty at eighty or thereabouts; Peter Cooper
unflagging in mental vigor up to his last mo-
ment, when over ninety; Beecher more pow-
erful than ever and has long passed his three
score—do not these point to greater future
kno wledge on this subject.
No need of a man or woman giving up and
settling into old age and old ways and be-
coming “old folks” if the wear and tear of
life has carved a few lines on their faces or
whitened a few hairs. It’s the giving up
business that starts them on the down grade
fast, stoops the shoulders, weakens the knees
and ages the face. What a man or woman
think of themselves inside that they soon be-
come and show outside.
Some day not far hence a reputed very
wise man will come to the front and show to
the world what some already know, to wit:
That thought is a substance, with possibilities
concerning not mere longevity, but the full
retention, if not increase of snap, vigor,
vitality in brain and body up to date.
Is everything learned about everything
yet? If one-fourth the attention was paid to
the study of making stronger bodies and
clearer brains that is now given to making
money, wouldn’t new truths and “big points”
soon crop out somewhere? Is the human
race at the end of its tether in the getting of
knowledge?
Make up your mind to keep fresh. To
“make up” your mind will from time to time,
and ail the time, keep bringing you neve ways
anl means for keeping fresh. Don’t live
over much in recollection of old times, old
associations. That’s living in your back
brain. That’s looking back all the time. Bad
practice. Mrs. Lot looked back. Salt. Keep
fresh. Look forward. Just as good times li-
the future as in the past. Better. Sun’s a >
bright to-day as forty years ago. Read Paid,
“Forget- the things that are behind, and press
forward to those that are before.” Looking
always back is old thought. O. T. makes
you old.
Eat live, fresh food. Fresh eggs, fresh
vegetables, fresh fruit. Get life in it. Trans-
fers such life to you. No economy in your
provision because its cheap. Puts lead in
you instead of life. Poisons your blood in-
stead of enriching it. Makes your brain dull.
Injures your purse. Bounce salted foods.
Can’t cheat your stomach that way. Pi Is
up. Mainly with dyspepsia or some form
of scurvy.
Live in the present and in all that's going
on that you can take in, and also enough in
the future to see what’s coming. Don’t cu;
off your lives with young people. Don’t
think you must keep the company of old
putterers (who have stopped growing and
are dead but- cicD’t know it) just because
they were born the same year with you.
What’s experience and wisdom good for if
out of it you can’t make yourself good com-
pany for a man or woman half or even one-
third your age?
Wrash off your dead side.often. Dead skin
is part of your own corpse clinging to you.
Body’s done its part in throwing off dead
matter through the pores. Calls on you tc
do the rest. Wash it off. Clogged pores,
no draft for life’s furnace. Liio s fire there
smoulders. HeDce you feel dull, sluggish,
old. Skin breathes as well as lungs—or
would if it could. One half the world’s skins
but half work. Result, loss of snap.
Don’t keep old things around. Live in the
new as much as you can. New- houses, new
clot hes and among the kind of people that are
newer every time you see them. Don’t keep
old clothes after you’ve worn all the life out
of them. They’re ful 1 of your old emanations.
Full, in fact, of your deadness. Fact for
future philosopher to build brilliant reputa-
tion on. Fact to-day, nevertheless. New
clothes bring their own new' life.
Can’t afford ’em? Makes no difference as
to result if you can’t. Even snakes have
more sense than to craw-1 back into their old
dead skins. But serpents are w-is ’, if they
can’t wear high-heeled shoes. No snake will
wear his coat over a year. Some men wear
theirs a dozen—for economy’s sake.
Don’t hurry about anything. Haste makes
more waste of life’s force than most of us
dream of. Half our brain-softening, paraly-
sis, general debility comes of trying to do
from one to four things at once. Trying tc
make the body- do one thing while half oi
more of the mind is on another. Mind
many ether diseases. Complete
restoration to health, vigor and man-
hood guaranteed. No risk is incurred j means force. Mind, thought and strength
as thirty days trial is allowed. Write means the same thing. If a poet cuts down
them at once for illustrated pamphlet J a tree the strength he puts in the ax might
jan9-ly ' have written a poem. But he can’t write the
free.
j pcem an <u<- The tree uowu togetuer. One
j thing at a time. Don’t burry for anything
j or anybody. Let the boat go to thunder, the
world to smash and the cars to the—-off fcb»
track before you ran for any of ’em. Bette *
i be left a dozen times than train yourself to
! be always in a hurry. Ona-third, at
least, of our grown-up children are trained
| to the habit of hurry. Hopeless cases. Can't
I get out of it. Too late. Thinking of what’s
| uext to be done while trying to do w-hat
I should now be done from morning till night.
| Pulling on pantaloons and thinking business,
j eating breakfast and thinking business,
i walking and hurrying to business. Awful
j waste of force there ate for, slept for
and paid for. Think an orator could make a
speech and turn a grindstone at the same
time? Steam turned on two machines when
j there’s hardly enough power for one. Re-
sult: poor speech, poorly turned grindstone,
debilitated orator and old age at fifty.
Don’t knuckle to the Oid Fogy, male or
female, who tells you that because things
have been so and so in the past, so must they
ever be just so in all future. Nonsense. Same
sort said a ne thing to Columbus, to Fulton,
to Morse,'to everybody who had a new idea.
Bounce anybody who says “it can’t be.” Im-
possibility of to-day turns out possibility of
to-morrow-. People to-day average longer
lives and fresher lives at sixty than they did
forty years ago. Cause, more sense. Better
care of bodies. Hundred years hence, if not
sooner, some will be in their prime at eighty.
Nothing wonderful. Just lies in knowing
how to make new bone, new flesh, new nerve
and new mind.
Get up and keep up as many new interests
as you can. Learn to do new things with
your hands as well as your head. Every
new interest is a new grip on life. New- oc-
cupations bring new thought. New- thought
is new life. “News” keeps half the people
now from stagnating. Commence a new
trade, a new art, a new study at fifty or
sixty. Yes, if you have time and taste for
it. It’s a tonic. Many a rich invalid would
get w-ell if he’d apprentice himself tp a black-
smith or a carpenter for two hours a day.
Half the old boys and girls are ashamed to
begin learning anything new-; ashamed tc
show awkw-ardness of beginner to younger
people; want to keep up bogus dignity. Hum-
bug. All outside; nothing but pretentious
know-next-to-nothings.
Say you: “But I’m too hard pressed to
make a living for self and family to com-
mence any new ways at my time of life.”
Sorry for you. Result the same. Nature
says, “Go this way.” Nature says, “Go
that.” Nature says, “Rest and recuperate.”
Business, necessity, circumstance say, “Work
and grow w-eaker. ” Well ?
Prentice Mulford.
CHURCH CHIMES.
Holy Trinity Church—Holy commu-
nion at 7 a. m. Morning prayer and
sermon at 11 a. m. Evening service at
7:45 p. m.
St. Mary’s Cathedral—First mass at
6:30 a. m.; second mass, 8 a. m.; high
mass and sermon, 10 a. m.; Sunday-
chool, 3 :30 p. m.; vespers, 4:30 p. m.
Broadway Bethel, corner 22d and
Broadway—Regular services at 11 a. m.,
3 p. m. and 7:30 at night. Prayer meet-
ing Thuasday night at 7:30. All are in-
vited. Seats free. Rev. O. E. Mclntire
pastor.
—First Baptist Church, Corner Avenue
I and Twenty-second streets, A. T.
Spalding pastor. Services at 11 a. m. and
8:00 p. in. Seats free. Sunday-school at
9:30 a. m.; C. A. Taylor, superinten-
dent. Visitors and strangers welcomed
Evangelical Association of North
America Church—Corner Avenue H and
Nineteenth street (German), Rev. J. M.
Gomer, pastor. Services at 10:45 a. m.
and 7:30 p. m. Sunday-school at 9:15
a. m. Prayer-meeting ©n Thursday even-
ing at 7:30 o’clock.
— Broadway Methodist Episcopal
church, corner Broadway and Twenty-
second streets. Rev. E. O. Mclntire,
pastor. Public worship and services at
II a. m. Sunday-school at 10 a. tn., Mr.
E. T. Brewster, superintendent. Prayer
meeting Tuesday night at 8 o’clock. All
invited Seats free.
Services at the First Missionary Baptist
Church, on avenue L, between Twenty-
sixth and Twenty-seventh streets. Sab
bath-school at 9 a. m.: J. H. Washing
ton superintendent. Preaching at 3 and
7:30 p, m. by the parlor, Rev. I. S.
Campbell.
-St. John M. E. Church South—Corner
Broadway and Bath Avenue, Rev. E. S.
Smith, pastor. Sunday-school at 9
a. m.; G. E. Clothier, superintendent.
Regular services by the pastor at 11 a.
m. and 7:30 p. m. All are invited.
Ushers at the door will show you a seat.
West Point Free Mission Baptist
Church—Cor. Avenue R and Twenty-
ninth street; Rev. G. R. Cushenberry
pastor in charge. Services at 3 and 8 p.
m. Sunday-school at 9 a. m. General
servicts Wednesday night at 8 o’clock,
conducted by the pastor. Invitation ex-
tended to all.
Grace Church—Thirty-sixth and Ave-
nue L, Rev. Chas. M Parkman, rector.
Sunday—holy communication, 7 a. m.;
morning service 11 a. ra.; evening prayer
6 p. m For colored people 8 p. m.;
Wednesday and Friday, 9 am. and 5 p.
m. Thursday, holy communion, 11
a. m.
St. James Methodist Church—Corner
Postoffice and Fourteenth streets, Rev.
II. M. Sears, pastor. Sabbath school at
9:30 a. m. ; S. H. Chiles, superintendent.
Services at 11a. m. and 8 p. m., Seats
Iree. All persons invited to attend.
Young men’s prayer-meeting Tuesday
evening. Public prayer service every
Thursday exening at 8 o’clock.
Christian Church, Ave. K., bet. 10th
and 11th.—Rev. U. F. Mortimer will
preach at 11 a. m. aud 7:30 p. m. Sub-
ject for the morning will be “ Self Con-
secration.” Evening, “ Man.” Sunday
school at 9:30 a. m. A special invita-
tion is extended to all who have at any
time been associated with the Christian
or Disciple church. Everybody made
welcome.
—St. Paul’s M. E. Church, May 10th,
corner of 8th and Avenue II.—Sunday
School 9:30 a. m., J. H Jones Supt.
’ preaching 3 p. m. by Rev. I. S. Camp-
bell, a sermon to the Rosetta Temple No.
1. 8 p. in., preaching by Rev. II. W.
Wilson—subject, the Biood of Christ.
Mr. Wil^bn is stationed in Huntsvill this
year; he is assisting in our revival. All
are invited to attend - a nice church and
good seats. Robert E. Roberts, Pastor.
—The orders for crayon portraits are
iu big demand at the Galveston Art Gal-
lery. *
Propper Treatment for Coughs.
Tnat the reader may fully undertsand
what constitutes a good Cough and
Lung Syrup, we will say that Tar and
Wild Cherry is the basis of the best
remedies yet discovered. These ingre-
dients with several other equally as effi-
cacious, cuter largely into Dr. Bosanko's
Cough and Lung Syrup, thus making it
one of the most reliable now on the mar-
ket. Price 50 cents and $1. Samples
free. Sold by J. J. Schott & Co. r
Pictures of Yourself.
To introduce our handsome new style
pictures throughout the U. S. at once,
we will send four dozen finely fiuisbed
photographs of yourself, postpaid, upon
receipt of $1 and. sample photograph to
copy from, (cabinet size preferred), pro-
vided you will promise in your letter to
show pictures and act as agent in case
they are satisfactory. Are sure to please
everyone. Refer to postmaster, Am.
Express Agent, or Nunda Bank. Remit
by postal note or registered letter (no
stamps taken), and mention paper. Ad-
dress, Nunda Publishing Co., Nunda,
N. Y. apr23 4m
—Call at Johnson & Gwin’s for pure
Malt Extract, and while there you will
doubtless see a thousand things you
need. *
An Eeterorisinv Reliable House.
J. J. Schott & Co., can always be re-
lied upon, not only to carry in stock the
best of everything, but to secure the
Agency for such articles as have well-
known merit, and are popular with the
people, thereby sustaining the reputation
of being always enterprising, and ever
reliable. Having secured the Agency
for Dr. King’s New Discovery for con-
sumption, will sell it on a positive guar-
antee. It will surely cure any and every
affection of Throat, Lungs, and Chest,
and to show our confidence, we invite
you to call and get a Trial Bottle
Free. r
—Children’s hose oc., 10c., 15c. and
20c. a pair, worth double the money.
Ladies’ Balbrigan hose, 20c., at Price
Cross’. -
—The Galveston Art Gallery is pre-
pared now to make life-size crayon por-
traits, free of charge, to anybody that
will furnish a photograph. Satisfaction
guranteed. *
CITATION-12,513.
rTMIE STATE OF TEXAS—TO THE SHERIFF
1 or any constable of Galveston County—greet-
ing:
Oath therefor having been made as required by
law, you are hereby commanded that, by making
publication of th s citation in some newspaper
published in said coum y once a week for four
consecutive weeks previous to the return day
hereof you summon W. J Me Anally, defendant
to be ana appear before the District rourt, to be
holden in and for the aforesaid county of Galves-
ton. at tbe court house thereof, in the city of
Galveston on the
FIRST MONDAY IN JUNE, 1885,
then and there to answer the petition of George
Seeligson, Liberty S McKinney and Max Maas,
partners, compote g the firm of G. Seeligsou &
Co., plaintiffs, tiled in said court on the 8tuday of
April, 18 5, and numbered on the docket of said
court 12,513. agaiust the said W. J. McAnaby and
Charles A Perry, composing the firm of McAnal-
ly & Terry, and alleging in -ubteunee as follows:
That the full ( hrisiian name and residence of
W. J. Me \nally is unknown; that prior to the 15th
day of September, 1883, plaintiffs, at request of
defendants, sold and delivered to them a large
amount of goods and merchandise, and on said
day an account was rendered, aud it was agreed
upon and determined by the parties that thore
was then due plaintiffs by defendants for same a
balance of One Thousand Seven Hundred and
two dollars and Thirty tive cents, and on the
22d day of Septemb >r, Is83, defendants acknowl-
edged in writing sud .-um to be due plaintiffs,
and promised in writing to pay the same in Gal-
veston county, Texas, to plaintiffs; that the debt
and interest to March x5, 1885, amounts to
§196'.64, and there has been paid by J. B. Moore,
assignee, several payments, amounting with in-
terest, to $472.14, leaving a balance due plaintiffs
otsumof $. 192 50 with interest from March 25.
1885, as appears from a schedule attached to
petition. Plaintiffs pray 1or citations, aud for
judgment fo: their debt, Interest and costs.
Herein lail not, but have you then and there,
before said court, this writ, with your return
thereon, showing how you have executed the
same.
Issued this, the 8th day of April, A. D., 1885.
Witness: ALEX. EAS PON,
Clerk, of District Court, Galveston County.
Given under my hand and the seal of said court,
[n. s.] at office, this, the 8th day ot April, A. Da
1885.
Attest: ALEX. EASTON,
Clerk, District Court, Galveston, County.
By Edwin Br ce, Deputy Clerk.
A true copy I certify.
WM. P. OWENS,
Sheriff, Galveston County.
By Ed, Giebel, deputy. apl-13
B. BLUM & CO.,
DEALERS IN
General Heavy Hardware,
Space | 1 time | 1 week | 2 weeks j 4 weeks | 3 mos
3 lines] 25cts^~$TdO~r$T95~T$3F5~T$11-85
6 lines | 50 cts | 1.90 | 2.80 | 4.50
\/TRS. O. GAREISSEN, BESIDES GIVING
LY_Lpiano lessons desires to form a class in salfeye,
or singing at sight. Terms $3. mar!2-tf
Wanted Help—Female.
1ESPECTABL .i WOMAN TO DO COOK-
--- big and housework for a small family. Fair
wages and steady employment to a competent per-
son. Address “ W., ” this office. my5tf
Wanted Help-.Male.
TAT"ANTED.—TWO YOUNG MEN TO WORK
V V at brick yard. Apply between 8 and 9 this
evening at Debner & Olson’s store, corner of 26 and
Market. m2-6t
TXTANTED—A COLORED MAN TO ATTEND
V V to horse and garden. Apply at 9 Market St.,
between 24th and 23th. m4-lw
A POSITION WANTED IN A STORE OR
xYoflice by a young lady. .......
j—j_oiuce uy a
Tribune office.
Address M, L. T.,
may6-6t
QITUATION WANTED AS SEAMSTRESS IN
k- residence or store. South side Ninth and L.
May 9-6t.
Wanted—Situations—VjLa les.
A YOUNG MAN SPEAKING ENGLISH, GER-
XA. man and French wishes a situation in some
business house, either as book keeper, clerk, sales-
man or drummer, Best city references. Address
M.,Care of Roemer & i renchard, 9 an-ill, Market
Street, Galveston.
The Largest stock of
Bar* Band and Sheet Iron,
NAILS) BOLTS,‘NUTS, WASHERS,
Wlieelright Material, Horse Shoes, Etc.
IN TEXAS.
Apd Cheaper than anywhere in Texas. Address
Nos. 5 and 8 Strand,
East of Santa Fe Office, GALVESTON, TEXAS.
Have a large quantity of Spades and Pickaxes
for sale cheap, ausr29-I5
Seamen's INIigliit School.
OEAMEN can find a good night school for.
O Arithmetic and navigation at the Seamen’s
Bethel, Broadway and Twenty-second street.
Stoves and. Hardware.
rpHE CELEBRATED ACORN STOVE now the
JL best in the market, for sale low by HO b’FMAN
BROS., Tin, Sheet Iron and Copper workers,
Postoffice street, bet. Tremont and 24th-
sep5-ly
- -rir-iinnirn-r'mrtr-T--rmTifnrrrmiihrFay'irrii' ifTirwininii ■mi—t—
Sewing- machines and Pianos.
TV/T ATHUSHEK PIANO, DOMESTIC AND
-LVJLNew Home Sewing Machines. Fullsize sheet
music 10 cents a copy. Send for catalogues.
E. Dbi^fZ,
156 Postoffice street, near 22d Street.
A NEATLY FURNISAED ROOM ON AVE-
Y-Lnue H. between 23d and 24th streets, No. 62,
Mrs. N. Duble, mar9-tf
Miscellaneous Wants.
GALVESTON, - TEXAS.
S. E. MciLHENNY. Manager,
A winter resort for Northern people. A summer resort for Southern people. Hot
and cold, salt and fresh-water baths on every floor, ,-urf bathing cool breezes. Unob-
structed ocean view. Perfect location Good drainage. Building secure against fire.
Most comfortable bedding. America plau. A table of superior excellence. Prompt
attentive service. Electric lights and bells. Elevate-, etc. etc. Streetcars to and from
all parts of the city every five minutes. Cars to and from the hotel run all night. Special
rates by the wee i or month
USE EUPION OIE.
OILS AND LAMPS OF ALL KINDS.
The Finest and Cheapest Line of Hanging and Stand Lamps in the City.
OIL STOVES BOTH HEATING AND COOKING
--Of All Styles.--
BIG BARGAINS IN GASOLINE STOVES.
We are Cleaning Out Our Stock of
o Below
---Call and Examine---
GLASS, TIN, WOOD AND WILLOW-WARE CUTLERY AND NOTIONS
A Large Assortment of Toys Very Cheap.
T- IF5. Sz CO.
Nos. 19, 21 & 23 Market St., Between 24th & 25th Streets.
CHENEY BROTHERS.
f-SiMy Manufacturers
HARTFORD AND SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN,
*
SALESROOMS, WHOLESALE ONLY:
477, 479 & 471 BROOME STREET, NEW YORK.
: DRESS SILKS, Black and Colored.
: GROSS-GRAINS, BROCADES
: SATINS,
: PARASOL SILKS,
; MILLINERY SILKS,
FINE PATENT SPUN SILK for Manufacturers.
TDOR SALE CHEAP.—TWO LOTS AND y OF
X1 ground, witu two houses and other improve-
ment.-, soutb-west cor. 37 and Avenue I. Apply to
Airs. Geo. Clough, Harrisburg, Texas. m2-lw
Miscellaneons.
TT1RED. A. SMITH,
r STENCILS, NOTARY SEALS,
Cotton Brands, Rubber Stamps, Etc,
No. 114 Tremont street. Galveston.
LEON & H. BLUM,
Importers and Wholesale Dealers in
Staple and
DRY GOODS,
Rats, Boots and Shoes,
XOTIOXS, ETC.,
Cor. Mechanic anil 24th Sts.
ISI | Mmore money than anything else by taking an
Tf 111 agency for the best selling book out. Begin-
ners succeed grandly. None fail. Terms free. Hal-
lett Book Co., Portland, Maine. jan 1-r 6 m-g!2m
PRINTED HANDKERCHIEFS,
PRINTED DRESS GOODS,
PRINTED FOULARDS AND SATINS,
RIB AO NS, SASHES,
TRAMS, ORGANZUNES.
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Burson, J. W. & Brown, L. R. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 109, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 9, 1885, newspaper, May 9, 1885; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1132316/m1/3/: accessed June 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.