Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 125, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 26, 1887 Page: 2 of 4
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NATURAL FRUIT
/LAVQRa-
MOST PERFECT MADE
Prepared with strict regard to Purity, Strength, and
Healthfulness. JDr. 1 'rice's Baking Powder contains
no Ammonia,Lime, Alum or Phosphates. Dr.Price’a
Extracts, Yanil la. Lemon, etc., flavor deliciously.
%xxhmtt
Official Journal of the City of Galveston.
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All communications Intended for publication
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Address all letters and communications to
EVENING TRIBUNE, Galveston, Texas.
TT]7 F 1 0 EVENING TRIBUNE ’FONEXTA QQ
tLiliL/lJor call at 58-60 Market Street. IMU.O5)
WEDNESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 36, 1887.
Should the charter amendments become
a law there will be an amount of street-
paving done during the coming fiscal
year that will cause the mossbacks to
groan in agony of spirit.
The telegraph brings an account of the
fatal burning of four little children near
Oil City, Pa. As usual iu such cases the
mother had gone on an arrend leaving the
little ones to their own devices.
Grover Cleveland still retains an
eminently level head. He has determined
that the railway commission shall not be
filled with place hunters and broken
down political hacks, but by men who
possess a national reputation for wisdom
aDd integrity.
The movement on the part of the coun-
cil committee on police to provide for
city prisoners where they will be under
direct supervision of the city authorities,
is a move iu the right direction. While
it is true that Sheriff Tieruan does not
charge any more for feeding city prison-
ers than his predecessors have done it is
equally true that they can be fed for con-
siderably less than sixty cents per day
each. It is not necessary to feed the idle,
worthless vags, who constitute the bulk
of city offenders, on the fat of the land.
Besides this it is very necessary that they
should be where the city authorities can
exercise full supervision over them and
punish them when they refuse to work.
—Sargent has a cottage for rent.
— Remember the Bank Saloon when in
quest of refreshments. J;
—Get Sargents’ grey mules to move
your safes and machinery. *
—Between the acts to-night wander
down to Henry’s and tackle those excel-
lent lunches.
—First class Cabinet Photos can be had
only at Rose & Schmedling’s for $2.50
per dozen, UO Tremont Street. f
—Shiloh’s Catarrh Remedy—a positive
cure for catarrh, diptheria, and Canker
Mouth. Sold by T. W. Tarrant & Co. 2
-.........
—Sleepless nights made miserable^by
that terrible cough. Shiloh’s cure is the
remedy for you. Sold by T. W. Tarrant
& Co. 1
Why will you cough when Shiloh’s
Cure will give immediate relief? Price
10c, 50c, and $1. Sold, by T. W. Tarrant
& Co. 2
—The Rev. G. H. Thayer, of Bourbon,
Ind., says: “Both myself and wife owe
our lives to Shiloh’s Consumption
Cure.” Sold bv T. W. Tarrant & Co. 2
—Shiloh’s Yitalizer is what you need
for Constipation, Loss of Appetite, Diz-
ziness, and all symptoms of dyspepsia,
Price 50 and 75c per bottle. Sold b-
T. W. Tarrant & Co. 1
—A nasal injector free with each bot-
tle of Shiloh’s Catarrh Remedy. Price
50 cents. Sold by T. W. Tarrant & Co. 2
Their Business Booming1.
Probably no one thing has caused such
a general revival of trade at T. W. Tar-
rant & Co.’s drug store as their giving
away to their customers of so many free
trial bottles of Dr. King’s New Discovery
for Consumption. Their trade is simply
enormous m this very valuable article
from the fact that it always cures and
never disappoints. Coughs, Colds, Asth-
ma, Bronchitis, and all throat and lung
diseases quickly cured. You can test
before buying by getting a trial bottla
free, large size fl. Every bottle war-
ranted. 8
London Graveyards.
There are some queer phases of life in
London which are senreely credible to
us in this still new country. London is
a very old city. The v.-.ui have been for
many centuries buried in small city
graveyards. Little thought is given
them after the generation of the living
to which they belong has passed away.
The old graves have been forgotten in
digging the new. The bones are scat-
tered through the soil, and it would seem
that in some yards fragments of bones
are as plenty as stones in gravelly soil.
A proposition has been recently under
discussion to transform many of these
old graveyards into quiet little parks,
preserving the monumental stones, but
making the yards garden-spots. This
has led to much public discussion. The
rector of Bethnal Green, Rev. Mr. Han-
sard, communicates to the London
“ Times ” some very curious facts with
reference to the soil of such cemeteries,
and the danger to public health arising
from its disturbance. But another dan-
ger which he points out is startling.
His rectory opens into an old graveyard.
There is no other access to it. He says
a spadeful of earth cannot be taken up
without turning up human bones. In
the part formerly devoted to the pauper
interment he has learned that the coffins
were formerly piled one on another in
great numbers. The result is that the
surface is treacherous to footsteps.
Decay has left vast cavities below. Mr.
Hansard says that he has himself fallen
eight times up to his waist in “these
ghastly holes,” once in passing along a
gravelled walk! His daughter has had
two such plunges. In a neighboring
graveyard he says a policeman fell in
the night into a grave hole which
yawned under his feet, and there re-
mained up to his neck until morning.
The horror of the night crazed him and
he died soon afterward. Numerous
other incidents are told where persons
suddenly disappear in the darkness.
Eat More Salt.
Dr. Burggraeve, a learned professor of
the University of Ghent, has just pub-
lished a remarkable work in which he
endeavors to prove that anybody who
will take the trouble to follow his in-
structions may become a centennarian.
His system is merely a system of reno-
vation, and is simplicity itself. The
great panacea for all ills which he pro-
fesses to have discovered is salt, the ra-
tional use of which, he says, is a sure
preserver of life. He affirms that good
health is not a matter of chance or con-
stitution; the laws which regulate
human life are calm and regular phe-
nomena, and all we have to do is to take
care that they shall develop themselves
without obstruction. According to his
theory, salt is the great regularizing
agent. If the blood is too rich, salt will
clarify it; if the blood be too poor, salt
will strengthen it and furnish it with
the necessary elements. Dr. Burggraeve
quotes several examples in support of
the sovereign virtue which he attributes
to salt. Formerly, in Holland, the great-
est punishment which existed for
offending soldiers was to give them un-
salted bread. After a few months of
this regime the culprits almost invari-
ably died. In Saxony, at the end of the
last century, a terrible epidemic reigned
solely through the want of salt. The
Dutch savant furthermore assures us
that salt is an infallible cure for con-
sumption and cholera. (The Russian
peasants once saved themselves from a
plague by putting salt in their milk.)
He estimates that the quantity of salt
which every adult in ordinary health
should consume daily is two-thirds of
an ounce. In conclusion, he asserts that
if the world would only take to salt,
centennarians would become almost as
common as new-born babes.
The Abstemious Arab.
How is it that Arabs contrive to
live in the waterless deserts of that
much-talked-of-region ? They are, to
begin with, abstemious in their habits,
and know every crevice and hollow in
the' hills where water will collect. They
regard this fluid more, perhaps, in the
light of a luxury than as a necessity,
and use it with wonderful economy.
They would never think of wasting it
on the exterior of their bodies, and con-
sider that once in forty-eight hours is
often enough to replenish the inner
man. General Colston tells us that
when Bedouins came to his camp water
would be offered them, but would often
be refused with the remark that the
visitor had drunk yesterday. By culti-
vating this habit of abstemiousness,
they are able to cover immense dis-
tances, which would be impossible for
a European, unless he were accompan-
ied by baggage animals.
........•*+ A-A-:*-3;
1 A Potato has been raised at Santa
Barbara, Cal., which measured twenty
nches in circumference one way and
twenty-seven the other. It weighed six
and a quarter pounds.
Work horses these hot days need
water as frequently as the men work-
ing them require it. In this respect
work horses are cruelly treated by their
owners. Turn over a new leaf and
begin these hot days to be merciful.
The Berkshire hog of to-day, says
Colman’s Rural, was built upon a hardy
and rugged constitution, one inured to
hardship; the hardship of having to
hunt its own food, and at times to have
to hunt far and long. This developed
bone and muscle gave it good lungs and
the best circulation of the vital fluid.
In these are embraced what we under-
stand by constitution.
26,587,335
WARNER’S SAFE CURE
Sold to December 27, 1886.
No Other Remedy in the "World Can
Produce Such a Record.
QUARTERLY DEBT STATEMENT
Of the City of Galveston, for the Quartor Ending November 30, 1886,
BONDED DEBT. Aate of
Interest
r ire department bonds............................................10 per cent $8,060 00
Fire Department bonds for the erection of engine houses..........10 per cent 4,200 00— $12 300 0C
Bonds to purchase block 321........................... 8 per cent 35 000 00
Thirty Year Limited Debt bonds.................................. 8 per cent 475,100 00—
Forty-year Limited Debt bonds...................................... 5 per cent 813,400 00—
Total bonded debt...............
Interest accrued and unpaid on same.
Warrants outstanding.......................
Bills payable, pay rolls and claims unpaid..
Interest, accrued and unpaid on same......
FLOATING DEBT.
$510,100 00
813,400 00
$1,335,700 00
45,392 24
1,942 83
124,OSS 93
452 33
Total floating debt.
Total debt, gross................................ .............
Less cash in hands of city treasurer......................................... 31 514 68
Less bonds in sinking funds.............................................. 203 300 00
Less cash in hands of the American Loan and Trust Company, New York..28,429 53
Total debt, net............................................................
Total debt net, August 31, 1886...........................................$1,276,878 45
Decrease.
Respectfully submitted,
126,454 0#
$1,507,546 34
263,244 21
$1,244,302 12
$32,576 3e
BBSIiiSS DIRECTOR!.
CHEAP COLUMN.
This wonderful success of “ Warner’s Safe Cure ” is due wholly to the real merit of the
Remedy, For a long time it has been REGARDED RT THE HIGHEST MEDICAL
AUTHORITIES As THE ONLY SPECLFIO FOR KIDNEY, LIVER AND URINARY
DISEASES AND FE HALE COMPLAINTS.
pZSSTmm * "Waraer’5 Saf1! Cure-”and we oan Ad.m»eBI^^
Advertisers should remember that letters di-
rected to initals only are not delivered through
the postoffice. If initials are used they should be
directed to the care of some person, firm or post-
office box or may be left at The Tribune office
until called for.
Read the following and note the large number of bottles di stributed.
these figures to be correct, as our sales-book will prove.
We guarante. 0^e
t ■ until i
Boston,
1,149,122
CAPT. W. D. ROBINSON (U. S. Marine
Insp., Buffalo, N. Y.), in 1885 was suffer-
ing with a skin humor like leprosy. Could
not sleep; was in great agony. For two
years tried everything without benefit.
W as pronounced incurable. “Twenty bot-
tles of W arner’s Safe Cure completely cured
me, and to-day I am strong and well.”
(Feb. 5, 1885.)
Pennsylvania, - 1.821,218.
F. MAYER (1020 N. 12th St., St. Louis, Mo.)
afflicted with tired feelings dizziness and
pain across the back, and lost appetite.
Was sallow and care worn all the time.
1 he doctor’s failing he began the use of
Warner’s Safe Cure, and reports, “J feel
like a fighting cock."
Chicago,
2,808,693
Providence,
EX-GOV. T. G. ALVORD (Syracuse, N.
Y.) in 1884 began running down with Gen-
eral Debility, accompanied with a sense of
weight in the lower part of the body, with
a feverish sensation and a general giving
out of the whole organism. v\ as in serious
condition, confined to his bed much of the
time. After a thorough treatment with
Warner’s Safe Cure he says: “1 am com-
pletely restored to health by its means.”
I 7 I .929 M£* K BROWN (2221 Woodward Ave.,
> Detroit, Mich.) injured his back from a
jail. Was confined to his bed six weeks
The fall injured his kidneys, producing in-
tense suffering. Warner’s Safe Cure
restored his kidneys to their natural condi-
tion, and he writes, “I am now eighty
years of age, smart and active.'"
Space | l time [ 1 week j 2 weeks ] 4 weeks | 3 moe
3 lines | 25 cts I $ 1.00 | $ 1.95 J_ $ 3.85 | $11.85
±
For Sale.
rTLEAN AND SUITABLE FOR WRAPPING
KJpapers—old newspapers at Evening Tribune
office. 25 cents per 100 or $1 for 500,
Miscellaneous.
’TIHE MUTUAL RESERVE FUND LIFe'aS-
JL sociation of New York. Life insurance at less
than half the cost in old line insurance companies.
For particulars call on the agent,
R. T BYRNE, Notary Public,
Corner of Tremont and Strand Streets.
OFFICIAL PUSa.lCA'TlOJMS.
DAN’L. J. BUCKLEY, City Clerk
MISSOURI PACIFIC,
RAILWAYSY STEM
l. & Gt. Northern R. R. Division
CALVESTOfg,
Houston and Henderson Railroad
Sohedule in Effect Sunday, Nov. 15,1885.
NORTH DAILY.
TOY AUTHORITY OF THE CITY COUNCIL
ID of the City of Ga’
Galveston:
Detroit,
A N ORDINANCE—Entitled an Ordinance to
XA-levy taxes for the municipal year beginmng
March 1, 1887:
Be it ordained by the city council of the city of
o/n n/n Galveston.
o4b U4b ®ect’on * That there is hereby levied for general
Portland, Me.,
MAJOR 8. B. ABBOTT (S; ringfield, Mo.),
in 1871 was afflicted witn lame back, Rheum-
atism and Kidney trouble. Consulted the
very best physicians in San Francisco, and
visited all the mineral springs there. Took
a health trip to the New England States,
but for seven years suffered constantly from
his malady, which had resulted in might's
disease. After using a couple dozen bottles
of Warner’s Safe Cure and two of Safe
Pills, he wrote: “My hack and Kidneys
are without pain, and, thank God, 1 owe it
all to Warner’s Safe Remedies ”
Bal. of New Eng., - 441,753
MRS. J. T. RITCHEY (562 4th Ave., Louis
vide, Ky.), was a confirmed invalid for
eleven years, just living, and hourly expect-
ing death. Was confined to bed ten months
each year. Was attended by the best phy-
sicians. Her left side was paralyzed. Could
neither eat, sleep, nor enjoy life. The doc-
tors said she was troubled with/ema(e com
plaints-, but she was satisfied her kidneys
were affected. Under the operation of
Warner’s Safe Cure she passed a large
stone or calculus, and in Nov., 1885, re-
ported, “Am to-day as well as when a girl."
MRS. THOS. SCHMIDT (wife of the Vice-
Consul of Denmark, 69 Wall St.,New York)
/ / j I nr reported that her little son, after an attac c
T*t i y I Uui °f Diphtheritic Sore Throat eight years ago,
was afflicted with Bright’s Disease in an
advanced form; by the advice of General
Christiansen, of Drexel. Morgan & Co.,
Bankers, New Yor,;, she prescribed War-
ner’s Safe Cure, with the consent of the
physicians, and reports, “the physicians
say that he will be perfectly well."
Milfantee,
458,891.
MISS Z. L. BOARDMAN (Quechee, Vt),
In May, 1882, began to bloat, thence came
stomach trouble, terrible headaches and fin-
ally the doctor’s opinion that it was
Bright's Disease, and incurable. Eventually
she became nearly blind, pronounced by
the doctors to be the last stage of Bright’s
disease. After having been under treat-
ment by Warner’s Safe Cure for one year,
she reported, “Iam as well as anyo-ie."
linnesote, - - 648,OR
HON. N. A. PLYMPTON' (Worcester,
Mass.) in May, 1880, was prostrated by
Gravel Under the operation of Warner’s
Safe Cure alone he pass d a large stone, and
subsequently wrote, “I have had no re-
currence of my trouble since Warner’s Safe
Cure cured me."
New York State, - 3,870,773 Bal. I. f, States,
1 767,149.
ASK YOUR FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS ABOUT
WARNER’S SAFE CURE.
The Most Popular Remedy Ever Discovered.
iroperty w’ttun the city of
exempt from taxation by the constitution and laws
of the State of Texas, of and at. the rate of ninety-
two (92) cents on the one hundred dollars valuation
nf Hnifi Tvrnnprty. The meaning of
” as used in this ordii
the same as conveyed
Title five. Article six, Section eighty four of the
City Charter, and the meaning of the term “real
property,” as used in this ordinance, is, and is in-
tended to he, the same as conveyed and defined in
Title five, Article five, Section eighty-three, of said
Charter.
Sec. 2. That there is hereby levied for said munici-
pal year a poll tax of one dollar on each and every
male person between the ages of twenty-one(21)years
and sixty (60) years, who has resided in the city of
Galveston six months prior to the first day of March,
1887,
Sec. 3. That to provide for the interest and sink-
ing funds upon outstanding bonds of the city of
Galveston, there is hereby levied for said municipal
year, upon all the property described in the first sec-
tion hereof, the general ad valorem taxes, and for ac-
count of the several bonds hereinafter specified to-
wit: Thirty year limited debt bonds—ordinance ap-
proved September 19, 1876—a tax of and at the rate
of twelve and one-half (12)4) cents on the one hun-
dred dollars valuation of said property. Forty
years limited debt bonds—ordinance approved June
23, 1881—a tax of and at the rate of thirty-three (33)
cents on the one hundred dollars valuation of said
property. Bonds to purchase block 321—ordinance
approved February 3, 1873—a tax of and at the rate
of two and one-half (2)4) cents on the one hundred
dollars valuation of said property. Fire depart-
ment bonds—ordinances approved October 8, 1872,
and January 19, 1675—a tax of and at the rate of
one (1) cent on the one hundred dollars valuation of
said property.
Sec. 4. That to provide a special reserve fund, as
required by Section twenty-nine, clause second, of
the City Charter, there is hereby levied for said
municipal year, on all property described by the
first section of this ordinance, a tax of and at the
rate of nine (9) cents on the one hundred dollars
valuation of said property.
Sec. 5. That the taxes herein and hereby levied
shall become due and payable on the first day of
September, A. D., 1887. and shall bear interest at
the rate of eight (8) per cent, per annum, from the
first day of October, A. D.. 1887, until paid.
Sec. 6. That the taxes levied by this ordinance
are hereby made payable in the currency or coin of
the United States.
Read first time at regular meeting held Janu-
ary 3, 1887.
Read second time and passed at regular meet-
ing held January 17, 1887.
Approved January 18,1887.
R. L. FULTON, Mayor.
Attest: Dan’l J. Buckley, City Clerk.
Cleveland,
682,632.
EX-GOV. K. T. JACOB (Westport, Ky.)
was protrated with severe Kidney trouble
and lost 60 pounds of flesh. After a
thorough treatment with Warner’s Safe
Cur6 he reports, “I have never enjoyed
better health.''
Cincinnati,
873,667.
GEN. H. D. WELLEN (144 Madison Ave.,
New York), scarcely able to walk two blocks
without exhaustion, and having lost flesh
heavily, began the use of Warner’s Safe
Cure and says: “I was much benefited bv
it.”
Bal. Ohio, State, - 633,158.
COL. JOSEPH H. THORTON (Concinnati,
O.) in 1885 reported that his daughter was
very much protrated; hadpalpitatiou of the
heart, intense pain in the head, nervous dis-
order and catarrh of the bladder. She lost
fifty-five pounds. Other remedies failing,
they began the use of Warner’s Safe Cure,
Safe Bills and Safe Nervine, and within
three months she had gained fifty pounds in
weight and was restored to good health.
That was three years ago, and she is still
in as good health as ever in her life. Col.
Thornton, himself, was cured of Chronic
Diarrhoea of eighteen years standing, in
1881, by Warner’s Safe Cure.
Southern States, • 3,534,017'
C. H. ALLEN (Leavenworth, Kan.(, son
Edwin, two years of age, afflicted with
extreme case of Bright's disease, and the doc -
tors gave him up. By the advice of the
doctor’s wife, began the use of Warner’s
Safe Cure, and after taking seven bottles
he is perfectly well and has had no relapse.
Canada,
1,467,824.
St. Louis,
1,530,537
CAPT. GEO. B. WILTBANK, (919 Spruce
St., Phil., Pa.), prostrated in Central
America, with Malarial Fever, caused by
congestion of the Kidneys and Liver, De-
lirious part of the time. Liver enlarged
one-third. Stomach badly affected. Could
h“ld no food; even water was ejected.
Using less than a dozen bottles of War- veston, on Monday,
ner’s Safe Cure he writes: “I was com- 10SW in''vwt .
pletely cured."
No. 8374.
rnHE STATE OF TEXAS, COUNTY OF GAL-
_L veston—Justice’s Court, Precinct No. 2. The
State of Texas—to the sheriff or any constable o,
Galveston County—Greeting:
Whereas, oath has been made before me that the
residence of defendant, E. O’Rourke, is unknown
to affiants, you are therefore hereby commanded
to summon said E. O’Rourke, by making
publication of this writ in some news-
paper published in the county of Galveston,
once In each week for four consecutive weeks pre-
vious to the return day hereof, to be and appear be-
fore me, J. D. Braman, a justice of the peace in
for Galveston county, at my office, in the city of
veston, on Monday, the 7th day of February, J
Kansas City-
717,860.
MRS. (PROP.) E. J. WOLF, (Gettvsburg,
Pa., wife of the Ed. of the Lutheran
Quarterly), began to decline with Pulmo-
nary Consumption. (Over 50 per cent,
of all cases of Consumption are caused by
diseased kidneys.) Despaired of living.
After a thorough course of treatment with
Warner’s Safe Cure, she writes: “J am
perfectly well."
Bal, S W, States
746,789.
EX-SENATOR B. K. BRUCE (South Caro-
lina), after doctoring for years for what
he supposed was Malaria, discovered he
was afflicted with Sugar Diabetes, and hav-
ing obtained no relief whatever from his
physicians, he began the use of Warner’s
Safe Diabetes Cure, and he says: “My
friends are astonished at my improve-
ment.”
San Francisca,
1,242,946.
J. Q. ELKINS, (Elkinsville, N. C.), suf-
fered ten years from Gravel, which at-
tacked him every six motiths. He lost 45
pounds in three months, and his strength
was nearly gone. After a thorough use of
Warner’s Safe Diabetes Cure he reports,
l%Iam as well as I ever was, after using four-
teen bottles.”
Bal, Pacific Coast,
732,316.
^gT’Eyery Testimonial we publish is genuine. Write to tlie
testators enclosing; stamp for reply, and learn for yourselves.
for the Bnm of one hundred and twenty-two 98-100
dollars, balance due, and iuterest unpaid on open
account for lumber sold and delivered by plaintiffs
to defendant at his special instance and request be-
tween the 22d March and 17th April, 1884, inclusive,
the'same being payable within twelve months after
last named date. Said account is due and payable to
plaintiffs in Galveston county, Texas, and is on file
in this office.
Herein fail not, and due return make hereof, as
the law directs.
Given under my hand, this 3d day of January, A.
D., 1887.
J. D. BRAMAN,
Justice of the Peace, Galveston County, Texas.
A true copy I certify.
P. SHEAN,
Constable. Galveston County, Texas.
Galveston
Houston..
Palestine.
Texark na
LittleR’ck
St. Louis,.
Kan City
Chicago...
New York
Lv.2:30 p.m
Ar.4:30 p.m
A.ll:35 p.m
Ar.7:55 a.m
Alt3:40 p.m
Ar.7:00 a.m
Ar.8:19 a.m
Ar.7:55 p.m
Ar.7:0C p.m
Lv. 7:25 a.i
Ar. 9:25 a.i
n Lv. 5 25 p.m
n Ar. 7:25 p.m
SOUTH DAILY.
Galveston
Houston..
Palestine..
Texark’na
LittleR’ck
St. Louis..
Kan. City
Chicago...
rk
Ar.7:40 p.m
Lv.5:20 p.m
Ar 12:15 p.r
Lv 10:15 a.r
Lv. 3:05 a.r
Lv. 6:30 p.n
Lv 12:15 p.n
Lv. 8:30 p.n
Lv. 5:55 p.n
Lv. 8:45 a.n
Lv. 8:60 a.n
n Ar. 8:55 a.m
n Lv. 6:35 a.nt
l
3
1
'
FAST TIME,
FIRST - CLASS EQUIPMENT
SOLID TRAINS,
with all modern Improvements.
NO CHANGE OF GARS
OF ANY DESCRIPTION BETW EN
GalYestOB and St Louis
AND ONLY ONE CHANGE TO
Chicago, Cincinuatl,
lLoiiisville, Baltimore,
Washington, Wew York,
tPlallatleipSiLJa., SSosfoaa,
AND OTHER PRINCIPAL CITIES IN THE
NORTHAND EAST
Train leaving Galveston at 2:50 p. m. has
PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CAR
THROUGH TO ST. LOUIS.
Close connections in Houston with trains of H.
and T. C., and G., H. and S. A. R’y system.
Close connection at LITTLE ROCK for the
SOUTHEAST, and in the Union Depot, St. Louis,
with Express Trains in all directions.
Passengers booked to and from all points ■
Europe via the Red Star Steamship Line between
New York, Philadelphia, and Antwerp, Belgium,
and via the American Steamship Line between
Philadelphia and Liverpool, England.
For tickets, rates, time cards or other infor-
mation, apply to
H. O. ARCHER,
Ticket Agent, Galveston, Tex.
H. P. HUGHES,
Passenger Agent, Honton, Tex.
B. W. MoOULEOUGH,
Gen’l Pass and Ticket Agent, Dallas. Texas.
rpHE
.L or
Citation—No. 1738.
STATE OF TEXAS—TO THE SHERIFF
or any Constable of Galveston County—Greet-
ing:
Dennis Hallicy, administrator of the estate of
John Monahan, deceased, having filed in our county
court his account for final settlement of the estate of
said John Monahan, deceased.
You are hereby commanded, that by publication
of this writ for twenty days in a newspaper regula-ly
published in the county of Galveston, you give due
notice to all persons interested in the administration
of said estate, to file their objection thereto, if any
they have, on or before the March term of said
county court, commencing and to be holden at the
courthouse of said county, in the city of Galveston,
on the third Monday in March, A. D , 1887, when
said account will be considered by said court.
Witness: A. WAKELEE,
Clerk County Court, Galveston County.
Given under my hand and the seal of said court,
at my office, in the City of Galveston, this,
l.s.] the 8th day of January, A. D., 1887.
Attest: A. WAKELEE,
Clerk County Court, Galveston County.
By J. W- Kelly, Deputy Clerk.
A true copy I certify.
PATRICK TIERNAN,
Sheriff of Galveston County.
By Thos. D. Gilbert, deputy sheriff.
Electric lights.
This company is prepared to supply Electric
Arc and Incandescent Lights for stores, hotels, sa-
loons, offices, depots, wharves and railroad yards.
W. S. HIPP, Superintendent,
BrushElectric Light and Power Company
Send 10 cents postage, and we wii
mail you free a royal, valuable, sam-
ple box of goods that will put you in
the way of making more money at
once, than anything; else in America. Both sexes of
all ages can live at home and work in spare time or
all the time. Capital not required. We will start
you. Immense pay sure for those who tart at onco-
Tonson a Co., Portland, Maine.
Potash Victim.
Cured by S. S. S.
CAUTION.
Consumers should not confuse our Specific
with the numerous imitations, substitutes,
potash and mercury mixtures which are got-
ten up to sell, not on their own merit, but on
the merit of our remedy. An imitation is
always a fraud and a cheat, and they thrive
only as they can stealfrom the article imitated.
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
frte. For sale by all druggists.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.,
Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.
S. S. S. vs. POTASH.
I have had blood poison for ten years. I know I have taken one hnndred bottles of
iodide of potash in that time, but it did me no good. Last summer my face, neck, body
and limbs were covered with sores, and I could scarcely use my arms on account of rheu-
matism in my shoulders. I took S. S. S., and it has done me more good than all other medi-
cines I have taken. My face, body and neck are perfectly clear and clean, and my rheu-
matism iB entirely gone. I weighed 116 pounds when I began the medicine, and I now weigh
152 pounds. My first bottle helped me greatly, and gave me an appetite like a strong man.
I would not be without S, S. S. for several times its weight in gold.
C. E. MITCHELL, W. 23d St. Ferry, New York.
I
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Burson, J. W. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 125, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 26, 1887, newspaper, January 26, 1887; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1136325/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.