Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 125, Ed. 1 Friday, March 27, 1891 Page: 4 of 8
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RETALIATION.
ASSIST THE UNFORTUNATE.
ALMOST INCREDIBLE.
tribune
WHO
OFFICIAL CITY NEWSPAPER
I '
FRIDAY EVENING. MARCH 27. 1891.
510 00
*
otherwise ill-treating him.
♦
him is urged by the
*
d
ter.
If you
r
Green & Co.’s. *
Entered at the Galveston postoffice as mail
matter of the second class.
15c
25c
50c
Three pound cans California Table
Fruit, 25 cents at C-----L
must
nature
kind
stop
■
. 8c
|5 00
. 8 00
50
50
MARINE NOTES.
The next steamer for New York will
be the Comal on Tuesday next.
The schooner Fred A. Small sailed for
Pensacola in ballast this morning.
The schooner Henry Waddington from
Philadelphia, with 650 tons of coal to or-
? .--s
*-5'X: <■£'Tj
•' ' V ?A \
of Evening Tribune not to make such a
mistake. But every newspaper so charged
could make the counter charge that the
real estate men, to a large extent, have
been drifting with the tide; they have
been depending entirely too much on
a blackboard and scrawling chalkmarks
to bring them business. The blackboard
plan of advertising is read only by a very
small percentage of those who pass along
the street; it brings no one to the city; it
tells no one of Galveston and her induce-
ments to investors. Tomorrow’s Even-
ing Tribune will be just what every live
real estate man will want. It will cover
the entire field, and this paper has a
right to expect that every real estate man
in Galveston will be in the lead of its
distributors, and have a word to say to
the thousands of strangers into whose
homes it will go.
At Chosen Friends’ Hail.
Tonight at 7.30 o’clock, at Chosen
Friends’ ball, W. R. 13. bascoyne, the
Imperial Organizer of the Order of the
Golden Grail, will explain the objects of
the Order to those who attend, and every-
body is invited. This Order pays its mem-
bers $100 in six months,$109 to $300 in two
years, and a death benefit. It is the most
successful order of the day,and is based on
sound business principles. Bring friends.
The address will be short and explicit.
Evening Tribune confidently expects
to announce the approval of the charter
amendments bill by Governor Hogg in a
few days.
The latest thing in the trust line is a
trust on wool hats, with a capital stock
of $1,500,000. The straw hat season hav-
ing arrived, the announcement will not
cause a flutter in Texas.
If the Texas constitution stands in the
way of all the most reasonable and well
approved methods of inducing immigra-
tion as is charged, then there should be
a united demand for a constitutional
convention. Such a constitution is de-
cidedly too small tor Texas.
The Boston Commercial Bulletin has
published statistical articles, based upon
the Agricultural Department reports, in
which it is shown that the total number
of sheep in the country today is 43,431,-
136, against 44,336,672 in 1890, and that
consexuently the wool clip will be 5,000,-
000 pounds less than last year, when it
was 276,000,000 pounds.
Kansas, Nebraska and a large portion
of the great northwest are covered with
snow. Railroads are blocked and tele-
graph lines down. In Galveston the sun
is shining brightly these beautiful, in-
vigorating spring days, and the ther-
mometer registers 65 above zero. Leave
those cold, inhospitable regions and
come to genial Galveston.
The refusal of the legislatures of a
number of the southern states to make
any appropriation for a display at the
World’s fair is provoking stinging criti-
cisms from the press. Referring to the
action of the Arkansas legislature in kill-
ing the World’s fair appropriation bill,
the San Antonio Express says that “the
Arkansas legislature and the Texas leg-
islature trot in exactly the same class.
That is to say, they both crawl.” Ten-
nessee took the crawl movement yester-
day, and still there are more to follow.
These august bodies may feel that they
are doing the proper thing, and perhaps
they are, but their constituents do not
think so.
The abandoned farms of Massachu-
setts, Maine, New Hampshire and Ver-
mont have at last attracted the notice of
the officials of those states. They are
situated so close to the Home Market
we have been hearing so much about
that it is difficult to see upon what
grounds their owners abandoned them.
But quite likely hundreds of them came
to texas and took possession of better
ands in a more genial climate. What-
ever the motives were, the owners have
left them, and 1,500 tenantless houses
and desolate, weed-grown farms are to
be found in those four states within
sight of the factories for which the agri-
culturists of this country have been
taxed millions of dollars to maintain.
Several of the real estate men of Gal-
veston have complained of the lack of
interest taken in the city by the newspa-
pers. If they included this paper in
their list they made no mention of the
fact, and it is fair to presume these real
estate men are sufficiently informed re-
garding the policy and every-day record ^der,* has* arrived*
The British bark Unicorn sailed for
Leith today with a cargo consisting of
7870 sacks of oil cake.
The steamship Queen shifted from
Kuhn’s wharf to the new wharf this
morning to load cotton.
The Hot Weather Is Coming, Sure.
Call and examine my line of Refriger-
ators, Ice Chests, Ice Cream Freezers
and Water Coolers, and be ready for it.
M. P. Hennessy.
Marsden’s Pectoral Balm
is indorsed by some of our most eminent
physicians. The late Dr. D. C. Holiday
of New Orleans recommended it highly
for coughs, colds and lung disorders.
CURRENT COMMENT.
Ran Antonio Express: Evening Trib-
une of Galveston thinks it “dishonora-
ble” in Bud Connor of Dallas to run
against the regular Democratic nominee
to the mayoralty. IR..
of Illinois and his former relation to
Republicanism ?
Palmer never bolted in his life; he
left the Republican party because he
could not endorse its principles, just as
thousands of men did last fall and are
doing today. There is no such word as
bolt, in its political significance, in
General Palmer’s dictionary.
Nashville Herald: Insane jealousy
earned George Harris of Caldwell, O.,
to cut his wife’s throat, killing her, and
then to mortally wound himself.
If these cutters would always begin on
themselves, the world would have de-
IVarehouse Bill Passed.
Special to Evening Tribune.
Austin, Texas, March 27-—The ware-
house bill, which is of great importance
to the city of Galveston, passed the sen-
ate today.
Indiana’s Direct Tax Refunded.
Indianapolis, Ind., March 27.—The
governor has received from the secretary
of the treasury a draft for $769,000, being
the amount of direct tax money returned
to the state under an act of the last con-
gress.
THE
How about Palmer
Eastern Office :
230, 231, 232, 283, 234 and 285 Temple Court,
New York City.
W. F. BRITTINGHAM, Manages.
All advertising originating outside of the state
ust be contracted tor through this office.
Dew Drop.
This brand of canned goods stands
, .among the best in the land.
Foou to tone up your stock. For sale by i want, something good, try them.
* Boyd & Waters. | Peter Gjjnglek.
A Rear End Collision—Jail Delivery
at Pine Bluff, Ark. — Blizzards In
the East, With Heavy Snow— Gen-
eral News.
Middlesborough, Ky., March 27.—
Another terrible tragedy took place at
Cumberland Gap, a few miles from here,
wherein J. H. Burke, a telegraph opera-
tor at that place, was shot and instantly
killed by Tom Hurley, a negro. Reports
are conflicting as to what caused Hurley
to commit the deed, but from what can
be learned from reliable sources it seems
that Burke and Hurley fell out over
some trifling matter in a saloon. While
Hurley was being conveyed to jail a par-
ty of sixty men took him and went into
the mountains with him, where he will
doubtless be lynched.
THE MURDERER TAKEN TO THE
MOUNTAINS AND LYNCHED.
SANGERFEST NOTES.
The executive comihittee will hold
their regular weekly meeting this even-
■
LORD HELPS' THOSE
HELP THEMSELVES.
But He Issues a Challenge to Any Eight-
weight in Texas.
Evening Tribune is in receipt of a
letter from Professor P, J. Pitzlin in
which he states that he has retired per-
manently from the ring. He says : “I
ask no one to fight me, for I have left the
ring. I can make more money by letting
it alone, hence my retirement. But I
hereby challenge any lightweight in
Texas to fight Professor Mike J. Mooney
of St. Louis, Monghan or Jack Burk pre-
ferred, for from $500 to $1000 a side.
There was a $100 forfeit up at the Hous-
ton Post, but no one would cover it. Now
I ask Mr. Monghan, who claims the
lightweight championship of the state, to
come to the front and uphold his title.
A man that cannot uphold his title
against all comers is not entitled to it. I
am ready to put up a forfeit with Even-
ing Tribune or with any other responsi-
ble party. My money is ready and is
now up in the hands of the Waco Day.
P. J. Pitzlin.
Evening Tribune is a lumber of the
following press associations, whose re-
ports it receives daily:
ASSOCIATED PRESS.
TEXASMFTERNOON PRESS.
SOUTHERN PRESS BUREAU.
are in
from the
but
people
San Antonio Express: Governor Hogg
has declared that the pistol-toter must
go. An examination, however, of any
issue of any morning paper published in
Texas will show that he has not gone.
But his gun continues to go—off. What
the state needs is some twenty or thirty
hanging juries sitting simultaneously.
Why not make a requisition on Gov-
ernor Nicholls for a detachment of the
Mafia exterminators? They are war-
ranted sure cure or no pay.
Nashville Herald : Senator C. B. Far-
well and Congressman Abner Taylor are
in Texas, preparing for the building of a
city at the mouth of the Brazos river,
where a deep water channel and harbor
are being constructed.
They are not devoting as much time to
constructing channels and harbors as to
the constructing of a “town site” and
fishing tackle for suckers.
— —
Brenham Banner : Young man, there
are unoccupied positions worth from
$5,000 to $50,000 in the future. Those
who qualify themselves to fill them will
get them. Remember that neither in-
herited wealth, social position nor
“blood” will afford the necessary qualifi-
cation. Education and character are the
prizewinners in the great conflicts of
life.
The $5,000 positions are always looking
for men to accept them, while the one
dollar a day places are continually full to
overflowing.
San Antonio Light: The murder trials,
and in fact all criminal trials in this
country, should be heard before a bench
of justices, and not before a jury. Then
there would be no miscarriage of justice
as in the case of the New Orleans trial;
and no necessity for a popular uprising.
The American people are not prepared
to throw the jury system overboard be-
cause a few mistakes are traceable to it.
The only reform needed is to change the
practice of the courts so that the densest
ignorance shall not be the only qualifi-
cation of a juror.
Birmingham News: In the April Fo-
rum Granny Hoar has a labored article
to show that the Republican party made
so great a mistake in not passing the
Force bill that it will now have to find
new issues and vigor to make its future
in any way worthy of its past.
All it need to do to be worthy of its
past is to wave the bloody shirt in the
same old fashion and preach the doctrine
of everlasting hatred for the south. This,
with plenty of pensions, is all the issues
it needs.
PITZLIN QUITS THE RING,
ing.
Messrs. Julius Runze and Louis
Schlesinger made another canvassing
tour among the citizens yesterday after-
noon and report a very gratifying suc-
cess.
By tomorrow evening it is expected
that Mr. O. Lippincott and his assistant,
Mr. Eichelberger, will be here. They
started from Chicago on Wednesday, as
previously announced.
The committee on transportation has
not as yet received definite information
as to • what the railroad companies will
do, but they have had the assurance
that very liberal rates will be given
from all sections of the state. The time
is drawing so near that but little time
can be lost in giving the new rates pub-
licity.
Miss E. Gareissen, the young and
charming daughter of Mrs. Oscar Gareis-
sen, is on a brief visit to her mother and
relatives in this city. Miss Gareissen
has been studying music in Europe for
two and a half years, most of which
time has been spent in Leipzic, Ger-
many, under the most prominent teach-
ers. She will make her debut before a
Galveston audience at the time of the
great Sangerfest, after which she will
return to Europe to finish her studies.
It will be a treat to hear this highly cul-
tured young lady in the city of her birth,
and few are they who will not improve
the opportunity to do so.
A Good Haul.
Butte, Mont., March 27.—Early Wed-
nesday morning the Ozark saloon was
raided by masked robbers, who forced the
bartender to open the safe and give them
$1100, which it contained. No clue.
NEW OFFICE BUILDING.
Major Casteel, of the wide awake real
estate firm of Casteel & Spears, who re-
cently sold the business property on the
corner of Tremont and Postoflice’ streets,
is of the opinion that Mr. Lazarus, the
purchaser, will erect a fine office build-
ing on that valuable corner.
Foreign Reciprocity.
All this talk about reciprocity with
foreign powers may be in order, but Gal-
veston people must remember that
Schneider Brothers carry the largest
stock and quote the lowest prices of gro-
ceries and provisions. Give them a trial
order.
Rear End Collision.
Charleston, W. Va., March 27.—The
local passenger train on the Chesapeake
and Ohio ran into the rear of a freight
train in the tunnel seventy-five miles
east of here yesterday, and both trains
were wrecked. Fire broke out and the
entire passenger train was consumed.
Several persons were injured.
Outraged His Grand Niece.
New York, March 27.—Arthur Ofield,
60 years old and married, was arrested
last night for outraging his nine-year-old
grand niece, Stella Harris. He took the
child out for a walk yesterday and
got her into his apartments and then
assaulted her. She was badly injured.
It was with great difficulty Stella’s
father was prevented from taking the
law in his own hands. In court to-day
Ofield was held without bail for exami-
nation.
One of Bill Nye’s Jokes.
Fort Worth Mail: In an interview with
a Times reporter Bill Nye remarked that
San Antonio was a city of which its resi-
dents might well feel proud. In order to
discover whether Bill perpetrated one of
his jokes on that reporter it is necessary
to know whether or not the interview
took place in the Con Carhe district.
A well selected and complete stock of
Grain, Hay, Butter, Cheese and Potatoes
at Hanna & Leonard’s. *
Butter, Cheese and Lard on hand and
constantly arriving at
* Boyd & Waters.
Make your wants known through the
columns of Evening Tribune Every
body takes it. Evervbodv reads it.
A PLEASANT PARTY.
The Children’s Purim party given at
Harmony hall on Thursday evening was
a treat for the little ones. Scores of
bright-eyed and happy-faced children
gathered on'the stage and joined in the
grand chorus—America. Piano solos
were rendered by Melia Kaufman, Lena
Lord, Elka Freeman, Cora Levy, Hattie
and Bella Sonenthiel played a duet. All
of the young misses acquitted themselves
in a most creditable manner. Albert
Lacker’s recitation. “Guilty or Not
Guilty,” delighted the audience, and
Bennie Scbeani’s violin solo was enthu-
siastically encored. An elegant supper
was served and dancing and other games
were indulged in until a late hour.
Important Notice to Parents.
The undersigned will open a new Vio-
lin Class for beginners, in which the new
method of Professor Singer, of the Royal
Conservatory, in Stuttgart, Germany,
Will be taught. Elementarv class tuition
$2 per month. Parents and pupils are
requested to call at once at
Galveston High School of Music.
Arrived and for sale
at Two Brothers,
1200 Gross of Cherries
in Maraschino,
Dandicolle & Gaudin
Brands.
They are delicious.
All who takes cherries
in theirs
will be accommodated.
They are luscious.
The Question Answered.
One often hears the question asked:
Where can I get real good Butter? Why,
at Peter Gengler’s where you can always
get the finest fresh-made Creamery But-
Peter Gengler,
2005 and 2007 Market street.
Live Long and Be Happy,
but beware of a bad cold, which, if neg-
lected, soon develops into consumption.
Marsden’s Pectoral Balm is the best
remedy for coughs, colds and all lung
troubles. d
Jail Delivery.
Pine Bluff, Ark., March 27.—About
2 o’clock this morning six persons con-
fined in jail here sawed off the bars from
a cell in the main corridor and breaking
lock on the outside door of the jail suc-
ceeded in gaining liberty. None have
been recaptured.
An Eastern Blizzard.
Washington, March 27. — Snow is
falling this morning from northern Vir-
ginia to Pennsylvania and will probably
continue quite heavy or turn to rain by
tonight. Snow is indicated for eastern
New York and southern New England
this afternoon and snow tonight or to-
morrow morning in northern New’
England.
New Road to Denison.
St. Lours, Mo., March 27.—A dispatch
from Muskogee, I. T., says: Surveyors
are at work ten miles east of here locat-
ing the Gould road from Fort Gibson to
Denison, Tex. The road will not ap-
proach the Missouri, Kansas and Texas
nearer than ten miles at any point.
An Inhuman Monster.
Colorado Springs, Col., March 27.—
One of the most atrocious cases of inhu-
man cruelty came to light by the issuance
of a warrant for the arrest of a woman
living several miles east of this city. The
woman is charged with cruel treatment
to a step son. The cause, as alleged, is
jealousy of the son for fear he would
receive more of his father’s attentions
than herself. The complaint sworn to is
as followrs:
“Thatshe attempted to kill the boy
several times, the first being in Novem-
ber, 1890, when she threw’ the boy in a
well and tried by means of a long pole to
hold him under wrater; that after his re-
covery she compelled him to take hot
baths and then, immediately after, put
him in ice-cold water; that she has fed
him lye, which, it is expected, will result
in death ; that she applied external lini-
ments internally; that at one time she
poured crude creosote in his ear, ,which
destroyed the mechanism of the organ ;
that she heaped continual abuse and tor-
• ture on the boy by kicking, beating and
nthprwisp ill-t.rpn.tin& him if
PURELY PERSONAL.
Mrs. Charles II. Dorsey has gone on a
visit to Danville, Va.
Mrs. J. S. Kennedy of Cleveland, O ,
arrived in Galveston to-day.
Mrs. George Ree'd arrived from Gua-
temala, Central America, to-day.
The two sons of Mr. Alexander Nede-
mann started for Sewanee, Tenn., last
evening to attend school.
Mr. H. Greenw’all of the Tremont
opera house is expected to arrive from
New Orleans this evening.
Charles Kleinecke, who has been mak-
ing a tour of the state in the interest of
C. Janke & Co.’s music emporium, has
returned to Galveston.
B. T. Whipple, a well-known banker
of Kansas City, Mo., who is largely in-
terested in Galveston property, is again
in this city and looking over the field.
Mr. J. T. McNeil of Philadelphia, who
has held considerable island property
here, effected some important sales re-
cently and started for his home last
evening.
Mrs. Hiram A. Johnson, who is on a
visit to relatives in Groveton, Texas, has
been quite sick for some time and will
have to return to Galveston to obtain
better medical attendance.
Frank B. Roe, inventor of the Roe
Street Car Electric system, is in the city.
He is looking over the plant recently put
in by the city railway company. Colonel
Sinclair has charge of the distinguished
gentleman and will show him the sights
of Galveston.
Captain CilvinR. Megee of the schoon-
er Henry Waddington arrived in port
Wednesday evening last, after a thirty-
five days’ passage from Philadelphia.
The captain was accompanied by his
wife, nee Pascoe, who for several weeks
will sojourn with her parents, corner of
Strand and Eleventh street.
W. R. D. Gascoyne of Richmond, Va.,
accompanied by W. M. Bamberg of
Houston called on Evening Tribune
today. Mr. Gascoyne is organizing a
new order, the Golden Grail, which is
an endowment order on the plan of the
tontine system of insurance. At the
expiration of certaio periods, members
receive paid-up policies. A lodge of the
Golden Grail will be organized here.
Your Dentist Has Moved.
To the thousands of people who have
patronized me during the past three
years, and to all who may in future fa-
vor me with a call, I would state that on
and after the first of February I will oc-
cupy pleasant corner rooms over ^?res-
ton’s drug store, corner Twenty-second
and Market streets (entrance on Tw enty-
second street), and I would be glad to
meet all my old and as many new pa-
tients as chose to favor me with a trial.
* M. O. Perkins.
A Beau of I 829.
When grandpa went a-wooing,
He wore a satin vest,
A trail of running roses
Embroidered on the breast.
The pattern of his trousers,
His linen, white and fine,
Were all the latest fashion
In eighteen twenty-nine.
Grandpa was a fine looking young fel-
low then, so the old ladies say, and he is
a fine looking old gentleman now. For
the past score of years he has been a firm
beleiver in the merits of Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery. “It renewed
my youth*” he frequently says: It is
the only blood purifier and liver ivigora-
tor guaranteed’to benefit or cure, or
money promptly refunded. It cures liver
disease, dyspepsia, scrofulous sores, skin
eruptions, and all diseases of the blood.
For lingering coughs and consumption
(which is lung scrofula in its early
stages) it is an unparalleled remedy.
Here we are with Refrigerator Meat,
Pork Sausage, Weinerwurst, Liverwurst,
Head Cheese, Bologna, and everything
kept in a First-Class Market. Orders ,
for Meat left with us in the evening will
be delivered before breakfast.
* Green & Co.
Thera is Money in It.
Everybody who can should go in to
Ramie growing. The best Ramie Seed '
can be had of Schneider Bros., Grocery,
Market between 23d and 24th streets.
Instruction for cultivating this crop
furnished free with seed.
Groceries. Grain and Feed
Can be had of A. Kleinecke, 20th between
Mechanic and Market streets, at prices
that will give competition a stand-off.
Furnished Rooms
For Rent—Nicely furnished rooms, cen-
trally located and well ventilated. Prices
low. For further information apply at
Union Beer Hall, No. 66 Market street.
Try Green & Co.’s Pork Sausage;
they say it’s immense. *
G. C. C. Co.
Removed to Nos. 518 and 520 Tremcnt
street, east side, upstairs, opposite Tie-
mont hotel.
Galveston Co-operative Clothing Co.,
James A. Lyons, Manager.
Mob violence may rule, but low prices
still prevail at Schneider Bros. Gio-
cery. *
THE NEW LAWS.
If there is anything in a determined
sentiment the advocates of a return to
the system of electing aidermen by
wards have not won a profitable victory
at Austin. Fully three-fourths of the
taxable values of Galveston protested
against the adoption of this amendment.
The gentlemen who represent this
county at Austin paid no attention to
the protest. With this feeling arrayed
against it what sort of support can the
new charter expect to receive ? When
the time comes for placing the bonds is
it not reasonable to suppose they will be
in slow demand? With this and the
hostility of the Taxpayers Protective and
Aid association the new bonds are prom-
ised a lively time.
Dr. Perkins, Dentist, has removed his
office to the rooms over Breston’s Drug
Store, where he will pursue his practice
at his usual popular prices. *
See the line of Easter Neckwear at J.
V. Fitzgerald’s New Men’s Furnishing
Store, 2212 Market street. *
The World’s Fair Buildings.
Chicago, March 27.—It is probable
that one large building for the accom-
modation of special state exhibits will
be erected in Jackson park instead of
two score of similar exhibits being made
in separate state buildings. Heretofore
the general plan of the majority of states
seems to have been for each to con-
struct a special building. Such a
plan, if carried out, will make a series of
forty or more buildings and, owing to
small appropriations made by some of the
states, it was feared buildings could not
be made sufficiently attractive to
be in harmony with the general
erandeur of the main structures. This
plan does not contemplate the exclusion
of state buildings altogether, as some
which have made large appropriations
will be able, and may prefer, to make
separate exhibits.
Don’t Want Keciprocity.
Ottawa, Ont., March 27.—A promi-
nent member of the cabinet said, yester-
day, he had little faith in anything
being accomplished in the direction of
reciprocity with the United States and
believed Canada could pull through and
be better in the end w’ithout the pro-
posed commercial alliance.
Important Notice to Parents.
The undersigned will open a new Vio-
lin Class for beginners, in which the new
method of Professor Singer of the Royal
Conservatory, Stuttgart, Germany, will
be taught. Elementary class tuition $2
per month. Parents and pupils are re-
quested to call at once at
Galveston High School of Music. •
The Best I Ever Used.
So says Dr. S. S. Herrick, former sec-
retary ' of the Louisiana State Board of
Health, speaking of Marsden’s Pectoral
Balm, which he recommends as the best
remedy for coughs, croup, colds, bron-
chitis and sore throat. d
The Galveston Towel Supply Company
would like to keep you supplied with
clean towels. Address 3423 Eleventh
Avenue (K). Terms reasonable. •
You can’t realize what Cornfed Meat
and Pure Pork Sau=age is unless you
have been to the Refrigerator Market of
* Green & Co.
ner pail brigade that Galveston has been
soliciting, have lost their little all, and
while the loss may be small compara-
tively it is large to the individual losers.
A small fund, the accumulation of pub-
lic contributions would, if properly dis-
tributed and without unseeming de-
lay, help them. The people of Galveston
not only! know that it is proper in in-
stances of this kind, but they know how
to respond. To this end Evening Tri-
bune will start a popular subscription
for the benefit and relief of these dis-
tressed people with $10.
All who feel like sending in their sub-
scriptions can do so and proper credit
will be given. The purpose is to have
the subscriptions completed within five
days and the funds shall be distributed
under the supervision of a committee of
five to be named by the management of
the cotton mills. Let the subscriptions
come in promptly.
Evening Tbibune
■■■■Ml
7.' 7
Important Notlcoto Parents.
The undersigned will open a new Vio-
lin Class for beginners, in which the new
method of Professor Singer of the Royal
Conservatory, Stuttgart, Germany, will
be taught. Elementary class tuition $2
per month. Parents and pupils are re-
quested to call at once at
Galveston High School of Music.
He Will Help Those Who Help ®aon
Other—The Unfortunates In the Fire
at the Cotton Mill Village Need Help,
and the Good People Will Respond.
The people of Galveston can hardly
appreciate the loss sustained by the oper-
atives of the cotton mill by the fire of
Thursday morning. That these people
distress must be
very nature of
the
not
Big Strike on If. T., V. and G. Kailvray.
Atlanta, Ga., March 27.—A big strike
is imminent cn the East Tennessee, Vir-
ginia and Georgia railway. Brakemen
and firemen, who think they have been
unjustly discriminated against in the
matter of wages, say the standard of
wages throughout the country is two-
thirds the rate paid engineers and con-
ductors and that is what they ask for.
A Safe Investment
Is one which is. guaranteed to bring
you satisfactory results, or in case of
failure a return of purchase price. On
this safe plan you can buy from our ad-
vertised druggists a bottle of Dr. King’s
New Discovery for Consumption. It is
guaranteed to bring relief in every case,
when used for any affection of the throat,
lungs or chest, such as Consumption, In-
flammation of the Lungs, Bronchitic’
Asthma, Whooping Cough, Croup, etc.
It is pleasant and agreeable to taste, per-
fectly safe, and can always be depended
upon. Trial bottle free at J. J. Schott’s
drug store. 1
A Fifty Tear Old Outraged in Kansas
City.
■ Kansas City, March 27.—An almost
incredible case of outrage and robbery
was told the police this evening at the
Union dept by a woman more than 50
years of age, whose home is in Litchfield,
Ill. According to the woman’s story she
had been approached in the ladies’ wait-
ing room at the depot bv a middle-aged
man dressed in a dark suit of clothes and
wearing a Derby hat. The stranger ask-
ed what train sbe wanted to take her and
she replied the Missouri Pacific for St.
Louis. He said that he was a passenger
director and would put her on the right
train. From the depot the woman says
he led her to the west end of the plat-
form, near some wholesale implement
houses, and there assaulted her in the
most brutal manner. She says he told
her that a woman had been recently
murdered for screaming, and that she
would fare the same if she made any re-
sistance or made any noise. After he
had assaulted her the woman says he
took her pocket book containing $25 and
left.
J. W. BUR8ON-CO., Publishers.
Tebms of Subscription.
Single copy
One year bv mail
Six months by mail
One month by mail • -
City subscribers by carrier, per month
Advertising Rates.
Display, per line
Special rates on contract
Local notices, per line
Special position, per line
Telephones.
Business Office 88
Editorial Rooms “Tribune”
Tribune Building:
Southeast corner 21st and Market streets.
Asking for Vincent’s Pardon.
Birmingham, Ala., March 27.—Nearly
every citizen of Chambers county, where
defaulting State Treasurer Vincent lived,
have signed a petition asking the gover-
nor to pardon him. Similar peti-
tions are beirg circulated in every
county in Alabama, Vincent is in the
penitentiary for fifteen years, four of
which he has served in the Pratt coal
mines. That confinement is slowly but
surely telling on him is urged by the
petitioners.
Teas to Drink.
Our Teas are all fresh and of the finest
quality. We sell no stale or shoddy
goods. The lowest priced Teas we have
are fresh and of good quality.
Peter Gengler.
Fresh, imported cigars from the famous
La Sabrosa factory, in Havana, at L.
Oolosia. _ *
Spring is here, the time to uae Raven’s
plain
things
if the kind hearted
. do not stop to think
themselves, the world would have de- of this distress. How can it be alevi-
cidedly more appreciation for their work, ated? These working people, the din-
I OPERATOR MURDERED.
Senator Paddock Denies that Harrison
Has Moved on Germany.
Washington, March 27.—Senator Pad-
dock, who has been spending several
days in New York, arrived here last
evening. In response to an inquiry re-
garding the report that the government
was contemplating retaliation upon Ger-
many as a result of the refusal of the
German Empire to remove the prohibi-
tion on American meat products, the
Senator said:
“The report that President Harrison
has stated to me the intention of the ad-
ministration to retaliate upon Germany
for the cause named is not true. How-
ever, I have reason to believe that if the
senseless and unjust discrimination
against American pork and other meat
products is not at once removed, our gov-
ernment will take prompt measures, un-
der the act of August 30, 1890, to retali-
ate by excluding certain German im-
ports from this country,
‘ ‘The cabled interview with Secretary of
State YonBoettler, in which he states
that Germany would not remove the
prohibition aaginst American pork on
account of the insufficiency of the in-
spection laws of the United States,
makes it plainly apparent that German
la w is maliciously unjust and passed not
’o protect the health of German subjects,
but absolutely to prevent competition
< n the part of the American corn-fed
hog with the razor-back swine of the
German empire.”
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Burson, J. W. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 125, Ed. 1 Friday, March 27, 1891, newspaper, March 27, 1891; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1247017/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.