Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 9, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 20, 1888 Page: 2 of 4
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The Greatest fli< for Sammer!
Ewung Tribnm'
b<
At 58 and 60 Marker Street.
«{TUESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 20, 1888.
aELL?S?HXSeX,a0.83
I
2 Official Journal o/ the City of Galveston.
8 15
A
£2g“0rdcss by Telephone. _^8
I
City School Tax Assessment,
■
I GALVESTON. TEXAS.
TREMONESTREET I
*
’ f'ljhrn No
)
...
WARNING.
Meat by Telephone 388.
BE
Successor to Evening Record and Daily Print. En-
tered Galveston P.O. as Second Class Matter.
—Country Eggs, etc., at Hanna, Wat-
ers & Co. o
We have just received from California our
first consignment of PURE
Grain, Hay, Flour, etc., at Hanna,
Waters & Co. o
houses a.w solw.
Between P__l
Adjoining' Tremont Hotel.
attorneys at law
OFFICE: COTTON CO’S BUILDING.
Mechanic street, between 21st and 22d Streets
JSTOTIOZS
1----------
For the Scholastic Year Begining October 1,
1888, and Ending September 30, 1889.
GEO. P FINLAY. QUITMAN FINLAY
FINLAY FINLAY,
0B8
T
STRAWBERRY BRANDY,
Distilled from the Best Fruit.
Chip in to the deep water fund.
------- -e ---------
Highway robbers ply their trade in
Dallas.
--------» <a» ------
The iniquitous Sunday law should be
repealed.
Mrs. Jay Gould now lies at the point
of death.
C
©
J. H. SJTOISTESIEL,
UmlGrtaker and Funeral Director,
ZHZ-AJS ZR.ZBZMlOV'HLD TO
No. 217 Center Street, Next to Masonic Temple.
Also Office and Telephone, No. 115, at
I GREGORY & SON’S LIVERY STABLE,
Attorney-General Hogg is after the
men who made bets on the result of the
election. Hogg and Jordan should form
a mutual admiration society.
In the fulness of time perhaps the
constitution will be so amended as to
provide for the election of president
and senators by a direct vote of the peo-
ple.
The Church of Rome is sitting down
very hard on the Knights of Labor on
account of the socialistic doctrines which
are tolerated in some branches of the or-
der.
•‘FROM THE HOSPITAL.”
It is a Delicious, Wholesome, Refteshins Beveraee, anti also a Fine Tonic.
Give us a call and taste it,
Yk. «T. T?x”o.olia.i*cl sfc Co.,
North Side Strand, Between 22d and 23d Streets.
To the Musical Public :
We respectfully announce that we have
secured the services of Prof. H. A. Le-
berman, who will preside over our retail
sheet music department. He will play
new music for customers on a Weber
Concert Grand Piano provided especially
for this purpose.
Thos. Goggan & Bro,
auuarj, at id u wuua a. ru..
Address bids to J. Reymershoffer, Chairman of
Special Light Committee, at City Hall, Galveston,
Texas.
And so the new waterworks system is
to be ushered in without the usual cor-
ner-stone laying ceremonies. ’Tis well.
Such ceremonies cost more than they
come to.
It Is Sad. but True
That Henry has the only electric con-
nection with the opera-house. The gong
rings three minutes before the curtain
goes up between acts.
It is a Settled Fact
That Paul Harden sells groceries, feed,
potatoes, cabbage, etc. at the lowest pos-
sible price. Will be glad to take your
order for garden seed of every descrip-
tion. A fresh lot of planting potatoes
will arrive in a few days. Come and see
me corner Thirty-third and Winnie, or
ring up telephone No. 266. 0
Read Enening Tribune.
OFFICIAL
T)Y AUTHORITY OF THE CITY COUNCI
..Othe City of Galveston:
JSigareHS
ifeadlb? experience in the
preparation of more
than One Hundred
_
THE QUEST.
I mocked at Life—“Give me the gift you hold!”
Sighing, she offered me a crown of gold.
“Nay,” I besought, “The boon I crave is higher!”
Smiling, she handed me a brand of fire.
I spoke to Death—“Unfold your mystery!”
And held Life’s torch above my head to see;
When lo I there shone beyond Death’s prison
bars
The holy glitter of eternal stars,
—Margaret Lippincott in Traveler’s Record.
GALVESTON TRANSFER
O g Pl
+- 2 o
I £ g
—Twenty acre island farm for sale or
lease on easy terms. Geo. P. Finlay.
RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION:
copy one week
i copy one $
I copy six m nths “
1 ®opy one y ar • • •
All communications Intended for publication
must be accompanied by the writer’s name and
address—not necessarily for publication, but as
an evidence of good faith.
Address all letters and communications to
EVENING TRIBUNE, Galveston, Texas.
The city council of San Antonio has
appropriated $7000 for the entertainment
of the members of the National Editorial
association. It is money well invested.
The editors will return home and sing
the praises of the city to an audience of
sixty millions of people. It will be the
biggest advertisement San Antonio ever
had. By the way, the editors have been
invited to visit Galveston. The Island
City should not be behind San Antonio
in this matter.
ilttl
PiOi
&
stg
£ ?
iliiiL.
All orders.taken during the day at the
Model Market will be filled at stall No.
3, Central Market.
* A. S. Newson, Proprietor.
—Step out between the acts and see
Joe Cooley at the Bank Exchange. You
will be served promptly. *
Fresh and Pure.
Just received by Colosia & Bro. an in-
voice of imported cigars from the cele-
brated Corona factory in Cuba. *
All persons, partnerships and. corporations own-
ing or controlling any real or personal property, as
agent or otherwise, within, the corporate, limits of
the city of Galveston, on the FIRST DAY OF OC-
TOBER, 1888, liable to taxation, are hereby notified
to call at this office within two months from the
date of this publication, and render the same for as-
sessment.
J. S. VEDDER,
City Assess
No. 1195.
rpHE STATE OF TEXAS—To the Sheriff or any
I Constable of Galveston County—greeting:
James Carrol administrator de bonis non of the
estate of John Hanlan, deceased, having filed in
our county court his final account of the admin-
istration of the estate of said John Hanlan,
together with an application to be discharged
from said administration.
You are hereby commanded, that by pub-
lication of this writ for twenty days, in a
newspaper regularly published in the county
of Galveston you give due notice to
all persons interested in the administration
of said estate, to file their objections there-
to, if any they have', on or before the November
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 No-
vember, A. D. 1888, when said account and ap-
plication will be considered by said court
Witness: A. WAKELEE,
Clerk of the County Court of Galveston County.
Given under my hand and seal of said Court, at
[l. s.] my office, in the city of Galveston, this
29th day of October, A. D., 1888.
A. WAKELEE,
Clerk County Court, Galveston County.
By C. D. Strickland, Deputy Clerk.
A true copy I certify.
PATRICK TIERNAN,
Sheriff of Galveston County.
By H. V. Lang, Deputy Sheriff.
BIDS ARE lb. VITED TO LIGHT THE CITY OF
Galveston for a term of five years from May 3,
1889,
The bidders are to submit with their proposal a
plan of distribution and arrangement for the street
lighting, and to specify the kind, amount and
power of the lights they wish to furnish for streets,
and for indoor lighting of city buildings. Separate
bids are invited for the furnishing and installation of
an electric light plant, suitable to light the city and
city buildings, the bidders to furnish the complete
outfit, except the ground and necessary buildings
for the station, to guarantee their machinery, as
well as the cost of the yearly running expenses, of
so much per light per hour, for the term of five
years, and to receive payment for the said plant in
five yearly installments.
Efficiency, amount and good distribution of light-
ing compared to the total yearly cost (of which the
committee shall be the judge), shall be the mam
features for consideration, and the committee re-
serves the right to accept any one of the bids or to
reject all of them.
Bids to be received on or before the 5th day of
January, 1889, at 10 o’clock a. m.
Special Light Committee* at City Hall, Galveston,
J REYMERSHOFFER, Chairman,
E. H. FORDTRAN,
james McDonald.
WILLIAM SELKIRK,
Special Committee on Lighting City of Galveston.
Galveston, Texas, November 17, 1888.
W, E. GREGORY, Wm. W. GREGORY.
"WKF. C-regory
PROPRIETORS OF THE
GALVESTON CITYdTRANSF£R LINE,
The Newspapers of Japan.
It is only eighteen years since the first
newspaper was published in Japan. Still
61,000,000 copies of newspapers were sold
in 1884, and the increase of 1879 was
double that of 1876. At present Japan
has 575 daily and weekly newspapers, and
its dailies number 97. It publishes 35
law magazines and 111 scientific periodi-
cals. It has 35 medical journals and an
equal number of religious newspapers. Its
people read eight different story papers,
and 102 papers cater to the agricultural,
commercial and industrial classes. It has
its Punch or Puck, and this is filled with
cartoons and witticisms taking oft the
public men of the mikado’s empire just
as Puck and Judge do those of our repub-
lic. All of these papers are published in
Japanese. They are read by the natives
of the country, and the work upon them is
done entirely by native labor. They are
the outgrowth of the new civilization and
pie.—Frank" G- Carpenter in New York
World.
No. 1865
rpHE STATE OF TEXAS—TO THE SHERIFF 1
L or any Constable of Galveston County—Greet-
ing:
R. C. Gardner, administrator of the estate of Chas
L Black, deceased, having filed in our County
Court his final account of the administration of
the estate of said deceased, together with an ap-
plicalion to be discharged from said administra-
tion.
You are hereby commanded, that by publication j
of this writ for atdeast twenty days in a newspaper
regularly published in the county of Galveston,
you give due notice to all persons interested in the
administration of said estate, to file their objections -
thereto, if any they have, on or before the expiration
of twenty days from date hereof, at the November
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
November, A. D., 1888, when said account and
application will be considered by said court.
Witness: A. WAKELEE, ,
Clerk County Court, Galveston County.
Given under my hand and seal of said court,
at my office, in the City of Galveston, this,
[l.s.] 16th day of November. A. D., 1888.
Attest: A. WAKELEE,
Clerk Countv Court, Galveston County.
By C, D. Strickland, Deputy Clerk.
A. true copy I certify,
PATRICK TIERNAN.
Sheriff of Galveston County.
By H. V. Lang, Deputy Sheriff.
Trustee’s Sale,
Whereas, Francis W. McCurdy executed his five
promissory notes, each for the sum of 8133.33)4,
payable to his own order, and to secure the
prompt payment of said notes, conveyed to J N.
Sawyer, in trust, lot 14, in southwest corner of
southwest quarter of outlot 14, said lot fronting
forty-three (43) feet on avenue M by one hundred
and twenty (120) feet on 1 hirty-first street, which
deed of trust is recorded in the records of Galves-
ton county, in Book 24, pages 281 to 283; the said
Francis W. McCurdy having made default in he
payment of said notes. Now, therefore, I, J. N.
Sawyer, trustee named in said deed of trust, at
the request of the holder of said notes, will sell
said premises aforesaid at public outcry, to the
highest bidder for cash, at the west court-house
door of Galveston county,
CN THE 23d DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1888,
between the hours of 10 o’clock a.m. and 12 o’clock
m. and will make such deed to the purchaser as
I am authorized to do so by virtue of said deed of
trust. J- N. SAWYER.
Galveston, Tex., November 3, 1888. [
J. BIAGINI,
BIG OYSTER AND FISH DEPOT,
--DEALER” IN--
OYSTERS, FISH s VEGETABLES
CORNER BROADWAY AND CENTER STREETS, GALVESTON,
Pompano, Spanisli Mackerel, Snapper and ^oft-Slhell Crab
Always on hand at Lowest Market Rates.
Hotels and Families Supplied, Orders from the Country Packed and Shipped Free of
Charge ?. O. Box, No. 157.
f^”Free and Prompt Delivery.
i 2? s ” I- 2,
0D f
|g.o
g 0Q - PJ
Hi
CD
gD -
c+-
II §
cl gq r
Having purchased of the American
Well Works and M. E. Chapman their
Tools and Patent Rights for sinking Ar-
tesian Wells on this island, we hereby
notify all who contemplate using said
patents or Tools on this island that we
will defend our rights to the full extent
of the law. J. W. BYRNES & Co.
TO YOUNG. MEN WANTING POSITIONS,
Conyington’s Business College.
Offers You the Education you Need for Business Life
You can not obtain a situation if you are not prepared to fill it.
Take a course in
Bookkeeoirw, Penmanshio, Short-hand or Tvoe-writmq
Students may begin at any time. Regular Fall session begins September..
Allhinds of Stenographic, Bookkeeping, Type-writing and Pen-work done at the College.
Call or addre p
ontheast Corner Potsoffi^ Tro.mon'
“Yes,” said the Rev. Mr. Dibble, “I j
knew I could depend upon the hospitality ,
of my flock to entertain this excellent <
young divine, seeing that my own house-
hold is in so disorganized a condition, ow-
ing to the exigencies of cleaning house.
It will be only for a night or two, and we '
all know what is promised to those who
receive the angel unawares. ” .
And Mr. Dibble rubbed his hands and
looked, smilingly around upon the mem-
bers of the Young Ladies’ Aid association,
while a very perceptible murmur of assent
rose up from the aggregate collection of
curls, bangs, frizzed hair and crimped
laces.
Not a damsel in the number but would
gladly have extended her gracious hospi-
tality to the Rev. Felix Amory, who was
to preach a sermon in aid of ‘ ‘Home Helps
and Missions” at the village church upon
the coming Sunday evening.
“I’m sure,” said Miss Lida Larkspur,
promptly anticipating the crisis, “papa
would be most happy to receive the gen-
tleman!”
While the other ladies looked indig-
nantly first at Miss Lida, then at each
other, and whispered, “Bold thing!”
“Most kind of you to promise it, I’m
sure,” said Mr. Dibble, and so the matter
was settled, not at all to the general satis-
faction.
And Lida Larkspur went home and is-
sued orders that the parlor curtains
should be washed and ironed and a pound
cake of the richest nature concocted.
While Kate Duer, the doctor’s sister,
who was as fond of young clergymen as
Lida herself, and would in no wise have
objected to varying the monotony of her
home life with a spice of ecclesiastical
novelty, returned to her crochet work
with a yawn and a general impression
that life was a bore.
“We are to have a young lecturer from
the city in the church on Sunday even-
ing,” she said to her brother when he
bustled in to dinner.
“Eh?” said Dr. Duer, swallowing his
scalding soup; “are we? By the way,
Kate, there’s a new case of smallpox on
the railway embankment.”
“Dear* me,” said Kate, who was com-
pounding a refreshing salad in a carved
wooden bowl; “I hope you will keep well
vaccinated, Hugh.”
“Oh, there’s no trouble about that!”
said the Doctor, “only the other patients
in the hospital object to such a case.”
“I should think it very likely,” said
Kate with a little moue.
“I must try to isolate him somewhere,”
said Dr. Duer thoughtfully. “In one of
those stone houses by the river perhaps.
Old Mrs. Viggers has had the disease, I
know.”
Then Dr. Duer tasted the salad and
pronounced it first rate.
Pitcherville was all on the qui vive
that day when the double shotted piece
of tidings flew on the tongue of popular
rumor through the town. “An actual
smallpox case in their midst and a young
minister coming all the way from New
York to appeal to their sympathies on
behalf of home missions.”
“I wonder if it is contagious?” said old
Mrs. McAdams, looking very round eyed
through her spectacles.
“Contagious!” said Mrs. Emmons, “it
ought to find its way into every house in
our village.”
“What!” cried Mrs. McAdams, “the
smallpox?” «
“No, certainly not,” said Mrs. Emmons;
“the sympathetic movement in favor of
home missions.”
Then every one laughed. Mrs. Mc-
Adams looked puzzled, and Mrs. Emmons
drew herself up and remarked that “it
was very irreverent to laugh at sacred
things. ”
But Miss Lida Larkspur, whose father
did not believe in vaccination and who
had a mortal horror of the disease against
which the famous Jenner waged so suc-
cessful a warfare, was much troubled in
her mind.
“I’ve always had a sort of premonition
that I should fall a victim to the small-
pox,” sighed she; “I only wish pa would
let me be vaccinated!”
It was on a sultry August evening, the
sky full of lurid clouds, the air charged
with glittering arrows of electricity and
the big drops beginning to fall, when
there came a knock at Miss Lida’s door—
a most mysterious tap as she afterward
declared.
“W’ho’s there?” said Lida, opening it
sufficiently to obtain a glimpse of a tall,
pale man with a pocket handkerchief
folded turbanwise around his head.
“Excuse me,’’said this apparition, “but
I think I have lost my way. Might I ask
shelter from the shower? I am the young
man from the hospital. ”
“Certainly not,” said Miss Lida, closing
the door abruptly in his face. “Good
gracious! have I stood face to face with
the smallpox case?” and then she ran for
the servant and the camphor bottle and
went into hysterics.
Mrs. Printemps lived in the next house
—a picturesque cottage overhung with
Virginia creepers, with a plaster cast of
Cupid in the garden and a great many
bluebells and carnations—a young widow
who read all the newest boolcs and some
times wrote gushing poems for the sec-
ond rate monthlies.
Mrs. Printemps imagined herself like
the gifted and unfortunate Mary, Queen
of Scots, and dressed up to the part as
far as Nineteenth century prejudices
would allow her, and she was seated by
"the casement trying to find a rhyme to
suit a most unaccommodating line of
poetry, when the tall, pale stranger ap-
peared under her window, “for all the
world like a troubadour or David Rizzio
himself,”as Mrs. Printemps subsequently
expressed it.
“Excuse me, madam,” he began, “but
I am just from the hospital, and”----
“My goodness me!” cried Mrs. Prin-
temps, and jumped to her feet; “how
dare you come here and tell me that to
my face? Why don’t they isolate you?”
“Madam!” said the stranger, in sur-
prise.
“Go away!” said the lady, banging
down her window and bolting it. Then,
to her maid, “Betsy, run across the
meadow to Mrs. Underlay’s and tell her
the smallpox case is rampaging all over
, the country trying to get people to let
him in, and she isn’t to open the door on rue owtn 0I lIie uew _
■ any account. And stop at Dr. Duers and &educators of the peo-
ask him what kind of sanitary regulation . J . A3 kt— -v—
he calls this.”
“I’m afraid I’ll meet him, mem!” said I
| Winnie Street, ©
jBetween 20th and 21st.
©
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©
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©
©
V- ©
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_ ___ ®
J@Q@©@©@©@©QQi©©@© ' ’ ©©©@@©@@@@©@@©Q(pi©
’Carriages. Buggies i |WE KEEP ON HANDf
© -and- © | A full line of ©
Imules i horses! gDlIllul E u,|
® FOR SALE. © | Al! Stv]e^ g
—Will give you something good; come
and examine our meat—everything fresh
and first class. All pork sausage a spe-
cialty. A. S. Newson,
* Stall No. 3, Central Market.
Beauty and the Climate,
The Boston woman, considered as a type,
affords a most entertaining study to the
observer who is disposed to view things
from a humorous standpoint. She is in-
teresting because so different from the
female of our species elsewhere. Unques-
tionably, she is not beautiful. You may
promenade Washington and Tremont
streets for half a day, and never see one
really pretty girl. Venture into the shops
and you will find not a few, behind the
counters. But they are not of the in-
digenous breed. They come, almost with-
out exception, from “down in Maine,” or
from Irish-American parentage—a cross
nearly always productive of pretty faces
and good figures. In society, which is a
sort of caste by itself, there are some hand-
some women, but not very many. In the
population at large beauty in petticoats is
singularly lacking.
Doubtless, the climate has much to do
with it. Here it is winter eight months
in the year. There is no vegetation until
the 1st of June, to speak of, and it is
mostly gone by the beginning of October.
The sun is not generous with the rays it
sheds upon the cold soil of Massachu-
setts. Such conditions are not favorable
to the cultivation of loveliness. In the
warm parts of the earth things bloom
spontaneously; girls are more apt than not
to gi'ow up pretty, their complexions are
clear and good—at at any rate in youth—
n,nd their’figures are rounded with the
lines of grace. It ought to be as natural
for a woman to blossom into beauty, even
if she fades afterward, as for a flower.
And under favorable circumstauces it is
so. In this region, however, even the
young girls, at that age when they should
be loveliest, are plain and angular.—Rene
Bache in New Orleans Picayune.
—Lunch between the acts at Henrys’
to-night. °
—The old and popular “ State of
Texas,” manufactured by Colosia Bro.,
holds its own as the best cigar for the
money in the market. *
The great dailies are wasting a great
deal of ink speculating as to what
Cleveland will do when his term of office
expires. The general conclusion appears
to be that he will go fishing. This is in-
deed important.
---
Mrs. Parsons, relict of the late unla-
mented Texas anarchist, is in London,
advocating the use of bombs. If the
police of the English metropolis will
turn the hose on '.he impetuous Lucy
Uncle Sam will make no fuss about it.
Chief Jordan says that the enforce-
ment of the Sunday law will lead to its
repeal. gDoes he not know that other
cities in the state, jealous of Galveston’s
commercial supremacy, will oppose the
repeal of a law that injures Galveston
alone? It is a dead letter in Houston,
Fort Worth, San Antonio and Dallas.
Those cities would like no better sport
than to see Galeeston raw hided with it by
her chief of police.
Tom Reed, a congressman from “way
daown east,” is frantically kicking about
being harrassed by reporters seeking in-
terviews. The reporters have praised
Tom too much. Their flatteries have
caused his head to swell. The creature
has become greater than the creator.
They should now tell the truth about
him for awhile. It may take some of
.the egotism out of him.
----
Let us take comfort from history. In
1868 Grant, republican, carried 26 states,
Seymour, democrat, 8—4 not voting.
Four years later Grant carried 31 states,
Greeley, mixture, only 6 states. Two
weeks ago the republicans carried 21
states and the democrats 17. Take life
easy, go to work, be happy, and wait for
1892. It is only four years away, and it
has been a hundred times as long since
Columbus discovered America.—Houston
Post.
The Sunday law should be allowed to
rest quietly on the shelf.
Colonel Geo. P. Finlay, ye prohibi-
tion orator of ye silver tongue, is now
special collector of liquor taxes.
-----
Give the school children a chance and
they will speedily raise the money for
the Rosenberg memorial window.
Betsy; “and I ain’t been vaccinated these
seven years or more. ” 1
“Nonsense!” said Mrs. Printemps. “If
rou go across the pasture you’ll get there
>efore he does. Hurry, now.” ]
Kate Duer was standing in her door-
way watching the storm roll grandly over
the mountain tops, when the weary and (
bewildered traveler opened the gate and
came hesitatingly in.
“I beg your pardon,” said he, meekly,
“but 1 think there must be something .
singular in my appearance. People seem
to shut their doors against me, and shun
me as if I had the pestilence. And I can-
not find the residence of Mr. Dibble, the
clergyman. Would it be asking too much
if I were to request permission to rest in
your porch until the storm is over? I
came from the hospital, and”---
“Oh, I understand,” said Kate, quietly.
“You are the smallpox patient. But I
have been vaccinated and am not afraid
of the disease. There is a very comfort-
able chamber in the second story of the
barn, and you shall be carefully nursed
and taken care of there, and”----
“But you are mistaken,” cried the
young man. “I am not”---
“Hush!” cried Kate, gently. “Do not
be afraid to confide in me. I am Dr.
Duer’s sister, and I know the whole story.
Sit here and rest a little, and I will bring
you some bread and milk until my brother
comes.”
“I am a thousand times obliged to you,”
said the stranger, “and the bread and
milk will taste delicious after my long
walk. But I do not know what leads you
to think that I am a victim to the vario-
loid. I have lost my hat in the wind, to
be sure, and am compelled to wear this
Syrian looking drapery on my head, but I
never had smallpox, and hope never to
encounter its horrors.”
Kate Duer turned first red, then pale.
“Then,” said she, “if you are not the
smallpox case, who are you!”
“I am Felix Amory,” said the young
stranger, “the chaplain of St. Lucetta’s
hospital in New York. I am to preach in
aid of the home mission on Sunday next ”
Kate Duer burst out laughing.
“Ami every one has been mistaking
you for the smallpox case! Oh, Mr.
Amory, do come in. How could we all
have been so stupid? But you see the
minute that you began to speak of the
hospital”----
“I dare say it was very awkward of
me,” said Mr. Amory. “But it’s the way
I have always mentioned myself to
strangers. St. Lucetta’s, you know.”
“Yes, I know,” said Kate. “But to the
good folks here, there is only one hospital
in the world, and that is the Pitcherville
institute. ”
Mr. Amory enjoyed his tea, sliced
peaches and delicate “angel cake” very
much, as he sat conversing with Kate
Duer by the soft light of the shaded
lamp, while the rain pattered without.
And when the doctor came it was cozier
yet.
“The smallpox case?” said he. “Oh,
that is safely isolated at Hope’s Quarry
since this morning. And doing very well,
too, I am happy to say. Upon my word,
Mr. Amory, I am sorry that you have had
such a disastrous experience.”
“ ‘All’s well that ends well,’ ” said the
young clergyman, leaning back in his
snug corner with an expression of ineffa-
ble content on his face.
Miss Lida Larkspur was quite indignant
when she heard that Mr. Amory was stay-
ing at Dr. Duer’s residence.
i “Just like Kate Duer,” said she. “To
i maneuver to get that poor young man
into her hands, after all. But if a man
rushes around the country, telling every-
body that he comes from a hospital, what
can he expect?”
“The most awkward thing I ever heard
in my life!” said Mrs. Printemps, vindic-
tively.
But this was not Mr. Felix Amory’s last
visit to Pitcherville. He came in autumn,
when the leaves were red and then in the
frozen beauty of winter. And the last
time he asked Kate Duer ‘ ‘if she was will-
ing to encounter the trials of a minister’s
wife?” And Kate, after a little hesitation,
said that she was willing to try.
And Miss Lida Larkspur declared that
“any one could get married if they were
as bold about it as Kate Duer.”—Waver-
ley Magazine.
i J. LEVY & RBO., e i J. LEVY & BRO.,
ILIW, SALEl
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Burson, J. W. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 9, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 20, 1888, newspaper, November 20, 1888; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1225691/m1/2/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.