Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 291, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 8, 1891 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Galveston Tribune and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rosenberg Library.
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LOW
RICES
IjRTCKB
jTRICEg
■ KICKS
ihiiiia it Leonard
W^comjpsve'its teettmi
Kitheir Natural or Artificial, Are Essential
to Good Health.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED.
.AINLESS
IKEFECT
EBMAN1NT
ROMP®
jExaminatlons Free.
EXTRACTING
5©e.
Extracted.
Filled.
Crowned.
FuUSetsg
si©, r
Bridged.
Implanted.
ess»hb Blsached.
GOOD TEETH ARE PRICELESS
And Professional Attention is Necesrary to Re-
tain Them.
Geld Finings
SI Up.
N. E. C&r. Mar ket and 26th gta.
1 PAIIIlfSS DENTISTRY.
SOUTHERN SHOW CASE WORKS
Before you buy your Show Cases elsewhere.
W. CKANZ, Prop’r. Strand, bet 23d and 24th
PHILADELPHIA DENTAL PARLORSd
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it
It Will lave You Money to Ask for Prices
0gimaiMBMr
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' • ••. '
** M MISSIBI
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H
KAHN’S Confectionery,
Vienna Cate Safety & Ice CreamParhf
Open Every Day and at Might Sill 11 fPelsjs
ESTABLISHED IN 1886.
Victor H. Cortines,
G-UMKS,
Ammunition, Hunters’ Supplies, Fishing Tackle and Sporting Goods.
Base Ball Outfits. Sportsmen’s Headquarters for Texas.
VTPTHP IT nnPTTNKQ Sportsmen’s Outfitter and Furnisher, Tremont Street, Gal
V iv Lvll II. vVItllll L0 veston, Agent Herring’s safes and American Powder Com
pany. Powder, Dynamite and Blasting in Carloads or less.
Absolutely Pure and of Choice Stock.
For sale by all dealers.
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Admission: Adults, $1; Children under 9 years, 50 cents.
NO PASTE! MM OBNOXIOUS CHEMICALS!
La Belle Creole Cigarettes.
MANUFACTURED BY
S. HERNSHEIM BROS. & CO.,
New Orleans.
Try them, you will take no other.
I
BACHELORS, ATTEMTION!
| SEND YOUR LINEN TO
THE TROY STEAM LAUNDRY
Fine Work. Seasonable Prices. Heading Free.
T. G. JOTC3S, Propr. 019 Church St.
To Our Friends and Patrons.
Please can for the Anheuser-Busch and Original Budweiser Bot-
tle Beer. It can always be had at the most prominent wholesale
and retail groceries and saloons, and if they should not keep tt»
H call at our Galveston agency, 113 20th St., bet. avenues A and B.
Telephone 585. ANHEUSER-BUSCH BREWING ASS N.
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Colonel E. Daniel Boone, Miss Millie Carlotta, The Celebrated
Boar-Hound, Saxon, and with them
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A. ROLLFING,
House, Sign and Fresco Painting.
Opposite Evening Tribune Ofllce.
Southeni Pacific Co.
SUNSETROUTE.
Atlantic_System.
a JOAXLtY (37EtAJSri». a
a sarwKB® S,
IXOTiatoxu Orieana £j>
f 1X3 9AX ASraOWIiS. fflSEOA •
(Hose aad reltebto eennccttoBa wish n& as^
Dsew «t K»v Orleans
fOB ALL POUTS 50ETH AK» SAS?
«?rece ifcw few aS fa Hew
AxIskssi sad CsBfsrala. The BiBud«rd gEW.:
Short Una to &s <W ei
fMbassa F»la«« 8a#»4 Cteapwt es AB Treftw
QUICK TI3£B AMU MW RATES.
?®r further Informitton end al&apex roserva
•Ion apply to
T. F. MCCANDLESS, T. P. A., KowSon. Tex
MAX NAUMANN, Tkt. Aft Q.,0. &H. r. Rj
J. G. SCHRIEVER, Traffic Manager.
W. U. WATSON, Genl. Paea. end Ticket Agt
LEE IRON WORKS,
C, 18. HJEE & CO.,
PROPRIETORS.
MANUFACTURERS OF ALL
KINDS OF
MW, STEAM ENGINES
AND
Brass and Iron Castings.
Repairing Done on Short Notice.
COia. 33d dt WTPnNTE sire.,
GALVESTON, TEX
N
Ix>;
Il
JAPANESE
PILE
CURE
A 6«arsnteed Cure for Piles of whatever kind
or degree—External, Internal, Blind or Bleeding,
Itching, Chronic, Recent or Hereditary. This
Remedy hsa positively never been known
to fafL fl a box, 6 boxes tor ?5, sent by mefl
prepaid on receipt of price. A written Gnaran
tee positively given to each purchaser of slat
boxes, when purchased at one time, to refwnd
the 55 paid u not cured. Guarantee issued bj
J. J. SCHOTT, Dr^lst, Sole Ansat, 2085 Madcet
etxeet, Qalvaston. Tax. Staapte Packages Fan
NEW MANAGEMENT.
BERRY & LEE, Proofs.
Tie Bank fctaje
Has an Entire New Stock of
everything kept by a First-class
Saloon. Our Motto is: FIRST-
CLASS GOODS AND POLITE
ATTENTION.
LEON (6 B. BU M,
Importers and Wholesale Dealers in
STAPLE AND FANOY
DBY GOODS,
DRESS GOODS,
NOTIONS
AND
GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS
Gaivesten. Texas.
4-PAW MENAGERIE More cages of beasts than^would fill two immense menageries. One
ADAM FOKEPAUGH, JR.’S SCHOOL OF TRAINED ANIMALS.
The Great Hanlon-Volters
Premier Acrobats of the world, seen now for the first time under canvas, salary $775 00 per week,
highest ever paid. Leap for Life. Double Somersaults 60 feet long. Flying
Meteors. ^Erial Kings. Greatest in the world,
O g8* O All a R ? The Original Cutter Battle, Hanging of a Horse Thief,
8 tC £ a* HH Emigrant Train Attack, &c., supplemented with Ghost
-w s s. » a «. w wi h a Dance, Death of Sitting Bull, Wounded Knee Sortie,
UA4 " I I kA# j. Etc., Numbers of Indians, Scouts, Trappers, and Actual
ww NlCl Ww GSfej Participants, and Captain A. H. Bogardus and his
A IT “jT? A TW Tlie Ancient Roman Corso revived. Roman Standing
.fiXVlls.zS.l” Races, Roman Chariot Races, Running Races, Hurdle
innmi.mk.-vm.tx Races, Man vs. Horse, Elephant vs. Camel, Monkey and
g g g ly| Pony, Wheelbarrow, Sack, Donkey and a score of other
Forest-Bred, Majestic IF Loose in a Steel
Tamed and Trained S3 Encircled Ring.
Triple Circus, Double Menagerie, Real Roman Hippo-
drome, Reinforced Wild West, World’s Menagerie and
a Host of Famous Foreign Features.
HOPPE’S CORNER
THE
POPULAR RESORT OF GALVESTON.
Highest Grade
WINKS, LIQUORS AND CIGARS,
Imported and Domestic.
FRESH ANU COOL BEER.
Pleasant Lunch Room.
ELEGANT HOT ANU COW LUNCH.
Everything First Glass.
A. HOPPE, PROPRIETOR.
Northeast Corner Pssstofflce and Center
T. L CROSS & CO.
Ship Chandlers,
MANDFAC1VK.KKS’ AGBNT8 and COM
MISSION MERCHANTS,
Corner Center Street and Strand,
Have in stock a full assortment of goods in thei
line, including Beef and Pork, which they av
•’■.fferiug low to the trade and jo consumers.
THE BANK SALOON
gharley and Joe are the boys you know—
||andsome Charley and little Joe;
^Iways right glad their friends to see,
Reaching to all a hand warm and free,
giving and letting live, as they journey away,
Entertaining the crowd by night and bv day—
yes, and never get cranky, so patrons all say.
?nd why not drop in where welcome awaits,
2^0 charge for smiles, all refreshments low rates
puly served up in style with usual rebates.
Join with the throng at the table, take beer,
Qr order the best—the best is kept here—
£nough for an army, and all is good cheer.
Remember there is but one “Bank Saloon,”
and that is Charley Scheele’s, southwest corner
Center and Postoffice streets. Spacious, pleas-
ant, and everything first-class. Beer, Liquors
and Cigars the very best.
Amount of Sleep Required.
Sleep is the principal agent in body re-
cuperation. The amount needed is dif-
ferent for different persons. For the or-
dinary worker from six to eight hours is
necessary; yet how often, in the battle
for existence, is the desire for sleep forci-
bly suppressed and the night’s rest fool-
ishly shortened. Sooner or later insom-
nia wreaks its vengeance on the phy-
siological sinner. Many a person who
once robbed himself of the necessary
amount of sleep would now gladly sleep,
but cannot.
Many nerve troubles first develop into
disease when joined with sleeplessness.
It appears as a symptom of a long stand-
ing nervous disturbance, but to many it
appears as the first signs of disorders,
when it is only a result of causes in oper-
ation long before.—Herald of Health.
Storks’ Nests.
Sparrows and wrens not unfrequently
build in the stork’s huge pile of sticks, a
nest within a nest, which we rarely see
in England. In Holland and Denmark a
common mode of inducing storks to take
up their abode is to fasten a cart wheel
on the top of a tall pole erected in some
field. At the village of Luitsedam, near
the Hague, there is one of these, which
is regularly tenanted.
Closer to the town, in the plantations
around the house of one of the gentry,
there is an enormous nest. It is placed
at the top of a large silver fir, the lead-
ing shoot of which has been broken by
the wind. At Wassenaar, a village some
miles off, where immense quantities of
bulbs are grown, a pair yearly rear their
young ones on the church tower.—Cham-
bers’ Journal.
Here Is a Method Which Is Said to Be
Infallible for Securing Sleep.
The good old cure for sleeplessness
holds good through all changes, an easy
conscience and a healthy body. A due
portion of fatigue and quiet surround-
ings may be added as also necessary to
induce refreshing sleep, and sleep which
is not refreshing is about as unsatisfac-
tory as wakefulness. Nevertheless, to
people of a nervous temperament some
strictly material rules for courting the
balmy god with success are not to be
despised. Many little things conduce to
sleeplessness, the avoidance of which
will remove that trouble.
Indigestion, cold feet, overfatigue, tea
and coffee taken in excess, excitement
generally, all tend to a restlessness of
the brain, which prevents calm sleep.
Many devices are resorted to to expel
such nervousness. The old suggestion,
made in ridicule originally, to read some
very dry book or to have some one talk
you to sleep is really excellent in prac-
tice. The dull monotony of a prosy book,
and even more the dull monotone of a
prosy talker, usually produces just the
dull impressions on the brain which are
required to induce sleep. A monotonous
train of thought often serves.
An eminent student of brain disorders
prescribed the constant dripping of water
on a metal pan. The regular ticking of
a clock frequently sends sleepless per-
sons into the desired state of brain inac-
tion, though in fact all these processes
may serve to drive a very nervous per-
son into a wild hysteria of wakefulness.
But an old and most curiously recom-
mended physical process comes to us in
old books.
It was announced many years ago as a
great discovery in England by a Mr.
Gardner, and most commendatory testi-
monials as to its effectiveness were given
by the late Prince Albert, Sir Fowell
Buxton, Sheridan Knowles and other
eminent persons. It was considered so
valuable that a large sum had to be paid
for it for publication by Air. Binns in
his quaint book, now almost unknown,
entitled “The Anatomy of Sleep.”
The prescription as therein printed is
as follows: The person who after going
to bed finds himself sleepless is to lie on
his right side, with his head comfortably
placed on the pillow, having his neck
straight so that respiration may be un-
impeded. Let him then close his lips
slightly and take a rather full inspira-
tion, breathing through the nostrils un-
less breathing through the mouth is
b abitual. Having taken the full inspira-
tion, the lungs are to be left to their
own action; that is, expiration is not to
be interfered with. Attention must now
be fixed upon the respiration.
The person must imagine that he sees
the breath passing from his nostrils in a
continuous stream, and at the instant
' that he brings his mind to conceive this,
apart from all other ideas, consciousness
leaves him and he falls asleep. Some-
times it happens that the method does
not at once succeed. It should then be
persevered in. Let the person take
thirty or forty full inspirations and pro-
ceed as before; but he must by no means
attempt to. count the respirations, for if
he does the mere counting will keep him
from sleep.
It is certainly to be said of this plan
that it is safe and can easily be tested.
The other prescriptions, such as a good
conscience and a well earned fatigue,
need not be set aside on account of it.
—New York Tribune.
Utilizing a Scanty Wardrobe.
The widow of Booth, Sr., gave Edwin
her husband's wardrobe after a time,
and with occasional twisting we made
that serve for everything. We used, to
sew the ermine cap of Richard onto
Richelieu’s robe, and then rip it off again
when the crook back monarch had to
have it. In Memphis we met Ada Men-
ken, who conceived a violent attachment
for Ted, but he did not reciprocate. The
women were always going wild over
him, yet he shunned female society.—
Interview in New York Epoch.
The Two Meridians.
The Geographical congress held in
Switzerland recommended the universal
adoption of the metric system and also
the Greenwich meridian for the reckon-
ing of longitude and time. It is doubt-
ful if this will be done, however, by all
nations, for, although a standard in
both cases would be beneficial to the
world at large, France naturally desires
Paris time, and England would never
surrender her prime meridian and adopt
a revolution in her system of measure-
ments unless the new measure was ex-
amined and based upon intrinsic merit.
—New York Times.
Throat Distemper in Pigeons.
In The Journal of Laryngology and
Rhinology Dr. George Turner states
that a pigeon that had died of the
throat distemper was brought to him for
dissection, and he found a pseudo mem-
brane covering the whole windpipe.
With this he inoculated other pigeons,
and produced in them a similar disease,
which extended up the nostils to their
eyes.
TO HEAD OFF WAKEFULNESS.
10,000 Se»»t6,
One Ticket Ad-
mits to all
Departments.
Special Low Excursion Rates on all Lines of Travel.
_______________Polite Ushers. Performances commence at usual hours.
For the benefit of visitors who would avoid the crowd on the grounds, reserved numbered seats
(at regular price) and admission tickets, at slight advance, can be secured at SCHOOLFIELD &
MCCLANAHAN’S DRUG STORE, cor Tremont and Market, on day of Exhibition. _______
s
Grand Free Forepaugh Street Parade.
At 10 o’clock in the morning on the day of exhibition, and if the shows exhibit more than one
__________________day, at 10 o’clock on the morning of the first exhibition day.
'T’rilril F’ 200 performers. World’s best riders, tumbling gymnasts, athletes,
I nlPhr1 nlillri aerialists, clowns, fun-makers, foreign artists end novel features,
x lyii 111. viiy v w w More aud better CIBC g than any shoWs on earth.
All the Famous Forepaugh Home and Foteign Features.
i
EVENING TRIBUNE'S
0! IMffll
IS EQUIPPED WITH
WORKMEN
from a Visiting Card to a
W. BURSON-COMPANY,
TRIBUNE BUILDING, 1
CHLVEST0N. TEXAS.
Special Attention
GIVEN TO
Book; U/or^=——=
Three-Sheet Poster .
Adam
$3,000,000
INVESTED
$5,500.00
DAILY EXPENSES.
Shows.
1864 1891
38th YEAR
JAS. E. COOPER,
Sole Proprietor.
Call on us for Prices and Samples.
Estimates Cheerfully Given.
pamplpl^ts
—Briefs, Ete.
VI
. We Print Everything
OLDEST, LARGEST, RICHEST
Exhibition in the World.
POSITIVELY THE ONLY BIG SHOWS
____________COMING HERE THIS YEAR.____________
WITT. EXHIBIT AT
Galveston, Thursday, Oct. 22.
NEW TYPE
NEW PRESSES
^FIRST-CLASS
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Kahn’s Cakes
Kahn’s Candies
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Burson, J. W. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 291, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 8, 1891, newspaper, October 8, 1891; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1260663/m1/3/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.