Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 50, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 22, 1907 Page: 4 of 8
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1907.
JANUARY 22,
4
Classified Advertisements
SITUATIONS WANT:
The French
FARMERS’ UNION
GOSSIP OF SPORT
SHOWS GROWTH
(ADS
BE
HELP WANTED.
2127
at
once;
con-
at
Apply
If they
LOST.
Gov. Hoch of Kansas speaks of the ju-
of
diciary as “the final citadel of our liber-
FOR rent;
ing with our judges.
Out west a fraternal insurance society,
known as the Knights of the Forest, has
gone under because the man who handled
NOTICE.
the funds has taken to the woods. Which
When the interstate commerce commis-
Ap-
usual charges.
FURNISHED ROOMS.
A statistician asserts that 1 per cent of
RUSSIA’S REVOLUTION
L-
Uncalled For Answers
whack up.
To Tribune Want Ads
WEATHER WISDOM
re-
guessing.
“The
L
as
MISCELLANEOUS WANTS.
more
so
I
certainly seem longer to some.
repaired.
Phone
stoves
is
itself
as
UNFURNISHED ROOMS.
WANTED TO BUY.
than make up for it.
as
The
*
adults;
rooms;
SANCTUM SIFTINGS
FOR SALE.
w
LIVERY AND TRANSFER.
as
In
the
are
v
WHY TROUSERS ARE WIDE.
• It
• L
1687.
PROFESSIONAL.
Brmy
2325 Strand.
IKON SAFES.
Jan. 22, 1907.
k -
pire.
Now
PERSONAL.
OCULISTS AND AURISTS.
LEGAL NOTICES.
CLOTHESPIN KING.
There
■y
CLAIRVOYANTS.
MESSENGER SERVICE
With Western Union Telegraph Cih
Secret
Rmm S10
2101 Strand
secret
Instead of
TRUNKS.
INSTRUCTION.
cart
UNCLE EPH for Diamond Bargains.
Entered at the Postofflce in Galveston as
Second-Class Mail Matter.
Published every Week Day Afternoon at
The Tribune Building, 22d and Post-
office Sts., Galveston, Texas.
.83
.49
Hereafter foreign diplomats and
sular officers are to be admitted to this
yet been two years in the first stage.
There are fruitful years of blood be-
fore it.
shows that there may be something in a
name after all.
sion gets through with the rebaters it
’would be well to begin protecting the fel-
lows who have always had to pay the
Harriman is quite blinding.”
doesn’t seem to be overlooking any bets.
Says the Cleveland Plain Dealer:
fierce white light that beats upon Mr.
Still, he
Dr. Ossler says people would live longer
if they stopped using tobacco. It would
Poor people seem to escape appendicitis,
but the stork calls often enough to more
colder
tricts.
Box 7990—1 reply.
Box 8327—1 reply.
Box 8230—3 replies.
Box 8455—1 reply.
Box 8407—1 reply.
Sufis
Gfir
W ANTED—First-class laundress,
ply 1815 Ave. H.
GIRL WANTED to help with housa work.
Apply 3828 Broadway.
WANTED—Housegirl
Church.
WANTED—Housegirl for family of three;
at once. Apply 2216 K.
Box 8348—1 reply.
Box 7873—1 reply.
Box 8374—1 reply.
guaran-
Phone
TRIBUNE TELEPHONES:
, Business Office _------------------
Editorial Rooms ..................
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Delivered by carrier or by mail, postage
prepaid:
One Million Tillers of Soil Repre-
sented at Great Raby in
Atlanta Today.
WANTED—A porter as a dish washer.
417 23d St.
WANTED—Mirrors to resilver;
teed to last; best references.
.2563.
BOY WANTED at J. V. LOVE’S Stencil
and Rubber Stamp factory, 2205 Mechanic
street.
stol
HE
FOR SALEM
by 120 feet
and 17th; $3
FOR * RENT—Houses,
stores, road saloon. 1
ALD, 409 24th street.
DR. FRANCES ROWLEY.
Nose and Throat. T‘‘
Eastern Office;
JOHN P. SMART,
Direct Representative, 150 Nassau Street,
Room 628, New York City.
Any erroneous reflections upon the stand-
ing, character or reputation of any person,
firm or corporation, which may appear in
the columns of The Tribune, will be gladly
corrected upon its being brought to the
attention of the management.
I
J
MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS.
THE TRIBUNE receives the full day tele-
graph report of that great news organiza-
tion for exclusive afternoofa publication in
Galveston.
GASOLINE
2563.
Per Week........................■,......10
Per Year.—t..................... $5.oo
Sample Copy free on application.
GALVESTON TRIBUNE
(Established 1880.)
i
“THIS IS MY 64TH BIRTHDAY.”
Francis L. Patton.
'■
I
■
FOR SALE—
and lot on wWB
bargain at S1S00.
FOR SALE—City IB
rice and fruit lanS
DONALD, 409 24th St.1
GALVESTON TRIBUNE: TUESDAY,
WANTED—A white delivery boy. AI>-
ply ENTERPRISE TEA AND COF-
FEE STORE, 21xx Postoffice St.
If the people are going to insist on pure
food, the packers have determined that
of their income shall be pure profit.
country without being compelled to an-
swer “embarrassing questions.”
will refrain from asking us embarrassing
questions, the arrangement ought to be
satisfactory.
Mr. Tillman and Mr. Foraker have con-
vinced the president that they are not
guilty of any “conspiracy of silence.”
HOT CHOCOLATE.
MOCK TURTLE.
BEEF AND CELERY BOUILLON,
WE NEVER CLOSE.
SCHOTT’S HOT. DRINKS.
ASPAROX.
VIGORAL.
ETC.
ROSE bushes and umbrella china trees,
choice stock; delivered to any part of
the city by ED PERTHUIS, 210 Tremont
or phone 2102 for prices.
YOUNG man wanted to make himself
useful working in store and not afraid
to work. 511 Center street.
DR. HALLEY has moved his office to
3d floor Trust building, cor. Postofflce
and Tremont streets.
I
WANTED—To rent, furnished house or
flat, at once. Address Box 8327,
Tribune.
same shock.
the shock by the power of military or-
ganization and command of modern de-
structive weapons. As long as it can do
this it will have the powerful support of
A
ONE or two furnished or unfurnished
rooms for light housekeeping; rooms
in building down town would be con-
sidered; for counle and two children.
Box 8374, Tribune.
ties” and “the urn containing the holy of
holies of government.” A few more out-
breaks like that and there will be no liv-
CHEAP if taken at once—refrigerator,
stoVes, safe, chairs, tables, chickens,
etc. 3307 Ave. M.
FURNITURE of finely furnished cot-
tage for sale; cottage to rent. Apply
1524 Ave. N.
FOR SALE—Slightly used runabout and
harness, cheap. 1718 M1^.
REWARD for return of horse and buggy
stolen or strayed from front of Dr.
W. R. Mercer’s residence. 1815 Church
street, Sunday evening, 6.30 o’clock.
may not even take longer.
revolution was five years in. the stage
of anarchy, 10 years reaching settled
government and 15 years in restoring the
strong government of a personal despo-
tism. The Russian revolution has not
WANTED—Good solicitors, lady or gen-
tlemen, good paying proposition. Ap-
ply HAWLEY ART STUDIO, n. W. cor.
22d and Market street.
Special to The Tribune.
Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 21—One million pro-
gressive farmers throughout the south and
west are represented at a grand rally be-
gun in Atlanta today by the national di-
rectors, organizers, state presidents and
other leaders of the Farmers’ Educational
and Co-Operative union. President C. S.
Barrett called the gathering to order this
morning in the assembly chamber of the
state capital. The general purpose of
the meeting, as set forth in the official
call, is to discuss matters affecting the
welfare of the organization and to outline
in a general way the plan of action for the
coming year.
The reports of the several officers show
that the past year was the most success-
ful in the history of the organization. The
figures obtained in these reports show that
the growth of the Farmers’ union in mem-
bership and influence has been nothing
less than marvelous.
Less than five years ago the association
was organized in Texas. It had but a
handful of members in the beginning. To-
day it has a membership in the neighbor-
hood of 1,000,000, covering every southern
state and spreading into Iowa, Kansas,
Nebraska, Oregon, California, Illinois and
other states of the north and west.
Its members declare that it has alreay
accomplished what no other organization
has ever been able to do—that is, it has
the cotton situation of the United States
well in hand and under the most thorough
control. It is generally conceded that to
the assaciation’s stand for 11-cent cotton
is due more than anything else the fact
that up to this time the average selling
price of cotton has been far in excess of
10 cents. The efforts to control the cotton
crop formed but a beginning of the great
campaign contemplated by the Farmers’
union. It is believed that with in brief
period it will be able to as thoroughly con-
trol the marketing of all agricultural pro-
ducts and largely eliminate the middleman
from the situation, enabling the farmer in-
stead of the speculator to step in and con-
trol the markets.
Some women look upon a husband as a
money-earning convenience rather than
as a domestic necessity.
, rooms, offices,
RONALD M’DON-
HIGHEST cash prices paid for old feath-
ers of all kinds. Send postal GOOD-
MAN, 2706 Postofflce street; will tall.
R. H. KUHN.
Manufacturing Jeweler.
Trust Building. Room 510?
A. MARTINI, southwest corner 21st and
I. Headquarters for staple groceries,
cigars and wines, liquors and Galveoton
beer. Specialties in our restaurant de-
partment: Delicious chili con carne,
fried fish, fish chow'der, famous bayou
oysters served any style, oyster loaves,
macaroni ana spaghetti, Italian style;
pure milk and well made coffee. Don t
forget the place—
Southwest Cor. 21st St. and Ave. I.
Phone 1687.
A GREAT deodorizer and disinfectant
is Microbine-Bactericide; price 25c
and 50c per bottle. For sale by all
druggists. Microbine purifies the air,
kills all disease germS^and flies, mos-
quitoes, bedbugs and all other insects.
Messengers for all kinds of errands.
Service prompt, reliable. Try ua and
be convinced.
WILL CALL FOR TRIBUNE WAJJT-.
ADS free of char«; but cash for cd
must accompany copy.
GUS. SCHULTZ, Manager. jl
MRS. ROBINSON gives dancing lessons
at her residence, 1821 Postoffice street;
phone No. 2503.
hensive readings $1.
this talented lady.
8 p. m. daily. Phc.
WANTED'—A. girl to take egre of baby"
Call Tuesday at 1718 Winnie street.
M. F. Mott. W. T. Armstrong.
MOTT & ARMSTRONG.
Attorneys-at-Law.
309 Tremont St., Galveston.
WANTED—Three furnished rooms for
housekeeping; couple with two chil-
dren; within short walking distance of
25th and Mechanic. Box 8428, Tribune.
FOR RENT—One south front room and
kitchen, completely furnished for light
housekeeping. 2308 Avenue H.
WANTED—Small cistern in good condi-
tion, cheap for cash. 2125 Ave. I.
LAW AND ABSTRACT OFFICES
of
MACO & MINOR STEWART.
Security Building. Galveston, Tex.
MARSENE JOHNSON,
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR.
Phone 780. 20th and Market Sts.
(Successor to Johnson & Johnson.)
DR. D. DANIELS, Dentist, has removed
to rooms 209 and 210, Trust Bldg.,
second floor.
ROOMS AND BOARD.
ROOMS AND BOARD—Good table board,
$3.50 per week. Rooms and board, $5:00
per week. Park Hotel, 2016 Winnie.
Phone 1990.
th^estate^of James A? Hayes; deceased,
are 1* „
the same.
NEATLY furnished rooms. 1821 Postofflce
•street. Phone 2503.
Very few ever ask themselves where
the humble but useful clothespin comes
from. Few ever heard of. Bryant’s
Point, Me., and yet a man the^e has
been quietly turning trees into clothes-
pins for years and supplying the world
with them, amassing in the process as
comfortable a fortune as many a man
makes in a more pretentious business
in some money centers. His name is
Lewis Mann and he began with a capi-
tal of $400, with which he purchased
an old, disused mill and began the
manufacture of clothespins. Today he
is the largest individual maker of this
very necessary article in the world.
THE ROSENBERG BANK.
(Unincorporated.)
Has Safe Deposit Boxes for rent.
Sells exchange upon all principal
points of the world.
Furnishes Travelers writh Travelers’
Checks in book form for use in all
countries.
Draws on Mexico, payable in Mexi-
can dollars, at very low value.
Receives deposits against Certificates
or on open account.
Discounts good paper at reasonable
rates.
Buys and sells investment bonds.
DESIRABLE suite of rooms, well fur-
nished. with modern conveniences; priv-
ate family; references exchanged; no
children. Box 8456, Tribune.
A navy man has been explaining to
a landsman that baggy ones are the
only possible trousers for a man-o-
war’s man. “They are baggy at the
bottoms,” he said, “so that they will
roll up above the knee conveniently
and easily. Sailors are great deck-
washers, and in deck washing it is
necessary to have the legs bare to the
knees. Trousers of ordinary cut rolled
above he knees would cramp the flesh
of the upper legs and hinder the cir-
culation, but sailors’ trousers may be
taken by their wide bottoms and
pulled in a ’’iffy up to the hip.”
1'OR ‘W
room?|
service.
Ni/2. A.
RECEIVED LATE MAY
FOUND ON PAGE 7.)
FINANCIAL.
WANTED—A man that thoroughly un-
derstands the care of horses and can
drive. MRS. J. M. BROWN, 24th and
Bi oadway.
WANTED—Good white girl fqor gen-
eral house work. Mrs. B. F. WIL-
IJS, 1202 Postoffice St.
NICE front room, with' board, suitable
for gentleman and wife or two younjs;
men; also srood table board by day dr
week. 2023 K.
TRUNKS—The largest and finest as-
sortment of Trunks and Leather
Goods in the state. Fine goods a
specialty. Repairing a pleasure. Phone
291-3, at R. H. JOHN'S Trunk Factory,
2218-2220 Market St.
?
■3
STRAYED OR STOLEN—Liver colored
spaniel puppy, 3 months old; only
small white soot on breast. Return co
2216 K or phone 2130 and get reward.
LET US take your vehicle and
board your horse. We’ll take the
best of care of both and will cost
you less than you can bother with
it at home. Let us supply your
next carriage or rig.
PHIPP’S LIVERY STABLE.
2314 Postoffice St. Phone 346.
BOYS’ and girls’ band-orchestra. I teach
20 girls from 8 to 12 years; they get 5
lessons a week and have to pay $4.00
monthly. Apply 906 38th street.
MADAM LA BELL, the world’s greatest
clairvoyant, 2320 Winnie. As a test
in reading she will tell you your name.
Settles all questions where doubt
lingers. Advice given on all affairs of
love or business. Unites the separated.
Removes all obstacles. Full compre-
i-----«i. Don’t fail to •isit
Hours, 9 a. m. till
Phone 1479.
SEVERAL very desirable spaces fSJ
fruit, confectionery or cigar stands.
Also place for penny arcade in the new
Amusement Parlors about to be opened
at 411-413 23d street. Apply at once.
G. K. JORGENSEN.
DO YOU intend raising your hous'e or
building a new one! Creosofied posts
make the best supports. We will cut
them anv length for you. Creosoted
sills, gutter boards and curbing will
save you money in the end. Call up
GALVESTON CREOSOTING CO. Phone
No. 2003. 34th St. and Ave. A.
A newspaper writer says that women
were always good guessers. Likewise,
they are good at keeping the opposite sex
YOUNG AND OLD MARRIED MEN.
Celina Record.
We wonder how many of our readers
have noticed the difference -between the
man who has been married but a short
time and one who has 'been married sev-
eral years'. You can tell a young hus-
band from an old one. When a man has
been married a few months, you will gen-
erally see him working in the garden or
fixing up about the house, and while
he works he whistles, or sings, up toward
the window to see if anyone is watching
him. A year later he is still working in
the garden, but the smile hks been ex-
changed for a frown and he occasionally
looks up toward the house wondering why
in thunder breakfast is not ready. Another
year rolls by and his looks would sour
milk, but he is still at work, stopping
occasionally to kick the dog or throw a
brick at the cat. Tlie next year we find
him sitting on the front porch, smoking
a pipe, while his wife does the digging in
the garden. Now just watch our young
men as one by one they are caught in
Cupid’s net and see if this rule does not
work out the problem correctly.
FOR SALE—Cheap, four large glass
show windows. Apply BUSINESS
OFFICE, Galveston Tribune.
THREE unfurnished
references. 2221 I.
our population owns 99 per cent of our
wealth. And 99 per cent of our population
keeps busy trying to get the 1 per cent to
ROBERT BROWN does moving and
packing carefully and at reasonaWlo
prices. Phone orders will have prompt
attention. Phone 2120.
FOR RENT—To a gentleman, a nicely
furnished room in private family; terms
reasonable. 1505 Postoffice St.
LOST—One white goat; end of horns
tipped. If found return to 3720 Ave.
O and receive reward.
LOST—Small silver watch, between 18th
and 22d streets, Broadway and H. Re-
ward for return to 1810 I.
Nothing but pure water and best
soap used by the O. K. Laundry. Phone
65.
WANTED—Broken and damaged talking
machines. Will buy or repair them.
GRANT, 2120 Market.
’LEY. Eye, Ear,
403 Levy Bldg. ■
WANTED—-A nouse girl,
once. 1720 Postoffice St.
• The Russian autocracy
feeble as that of the Buorbons was. The
Russian nobility is as corrupt as that
t>f old France and not so brave.
Russian nation is hovering on the edge
Of bankruptcy, like that of Louis XVI.
It would fall into as complete political,
financial and social collapse under the
Yet it seems able to avert
conspiracy and
Instead of an open revo-
we have
The following replies remain unclaimed, and the holder of box
ticket will please call and get same.
WANTED—Second-hand cistern; must
be In good condition an<T reasonable.
Box 8449, Tribune.
---------?---------------------
WANTED—To buy, second-hand shoes,
hats and clothes. S. LEITNER, 271/
Market. Telephone 2587.
UMBRELLA CHINA TREES—Plant
trees now to bud out early. See me
at E. T. Horn’s Furniture Store, 320
Tremont St. THOS. HORN.
WANTED—A position as cook by 1
ored man. Address, Box 8455, Tril
i' As the Russian revolution progresses
!we do not hear so much of the likeness
Ibetween it and the French revolution at
the end of the eighteenth century, says
the Minneapolis Tribune. People begin
to understand that history does not
Political situations
peat itself exactly,
recur, but under changed conditions-.
I The political situation in Russia now
4s singularly like that in France then;
"but conditions have changed with pro-
gress of industrial civilization. The ad-
vance of science and invention has vastly
strengthened the governments of all
countries against the people!. If the lat-
m.uch political
“Man Is judged by his works and wom-
an by her ability to work him.” R.
IVEY works at the Upholstery and Mat-
tress business, factory, Center and M.
Phone 714.
MANY ERRING HUSBANDS.
San Angelo News.
The News received a visit from just an
even half dozen ladies yesterday. These
ladies didn’t come to pass compliments
on the News editor or to do anything like
that. 'The majority of them had blood in
both eyes, and had it not been for consid-
erable tact the editor might have been
sleeping the eternal sleep by this time.
A little item in the Sunday issue stated
that a certain woman was out looking for
her husband and that several saloons were
visited and hubby searched for high and
low. From the number of ladies who
called it is only just to presume that more
than one erring hubby was away from
home Saturday night, and that more than
one wifey was out in search of hubby.
The only thing that saved our scalp was
forgetting to mention the name of the
party we meant. It was indeed a lucky
oversight for us.
I
MRS- A. PETROPOL buys and sells
ladies’ children’s and gent’s left off
clothing. Phone 2558. 41st and Broad-
way.
REFINED young lady would "
tion as office clerk or a:
quick at figures and writes
hand. Box 8464, Tribune.
FOR SALE—Choice acreage at Dickin-
son, Laporte, in section 1, beach, city,
suburban lots. RONALD M’DONALD,
409 24th street.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
persons holding claims against
‘ . Jeceased,
notified and requested to present
D. ROSSI,
Administrator of Said Estate.
Address: 2025 Strand, Galveston, Tex.
5an. 22 In fifstory.
1561—Lord Chancellor Fran-
cis Bacon bom at St.
Albans; died 1626.
1588—John Winthrop, colo-
nial governor of Massa-
chusetts, born in Suf-
folk, England; died in
Boston 1649. John Win-1
throp was born to
wealth and influence In
England. He was ac-
tive in public life and Parepa Rosa.
In a position to encour-
age the Puritan settlement in Amer-
ica. When the Massachusetts com-
pany resolved to transfer to America
the whole government of its coloniza-
tion enterprises Winthrop was ap-
pointed leader and governor.
1788 — George Gordon Noel Byron (Lord
Byron) born; died 1824.-
71870—George D. Prentice, famous wit and
for 40 years editor of the Louisville
Journal, died in Louisville; born in
Preston, Conn., 1802.
1874 —Parepa Rosa, noted opera singer,
very popular in America, died in Lon-
don.
1883—Paul Gustave Dore, the prolific and
prominent French painter, died in
Paris; born 1833.
1901—Queen Victoria, crowned 1838, died at
Osborne palace; born 1813.
1906—George Jacob Holyoake, British au-
thor and lecturer, died at Brighton,
England; born 1817. The Brazilian
warship Aquldaban destroyed near
Rio de Janiero by the explosion of her
magazines; 212 officers and sailors
killed- •/
FOR SALE'—One- quarter of a lot in
Cahill’s cemetery, cheap. 2211 Church.
WANTED—Estimates on house raising
and repairing. Apply 2408 G.
IF YOU WANT your watch, clock or
jewelry repaired by a good workn’an
at moderate prices bring them to T, H.
BROWN, opposite Tremont Hotel.
WE TEACH mirror silvering by mail
successfully; only business not over-
worked; particulars for stamp. Address'.
MINTER & FEILD. Expert Mirror Mak-
ers. Little Rock, Ark.__________________
OSIRIS. Clairvoyant, Medium, Palmist,
1908 Church street. Readings 50 cents.
Hours: 10 to 10.____________
WILL sell at bargain—Secondhand Victor
phonograph and records; 1 large, 1 small
safe; letter press; nearly new Visible
typewriter. FORDTRAN. Levy Bldg.
Surety and court bonds, notary public;
tyepwriters for rent.______________
FINEST RUBBER TIRE CARRIAGES
in the citv. Ride in them. They look
swell and ride easy and are the same
price as the other kind.
GREGORY TRANSFER COMPANY.
519 23d St. Phone 115.
TREES! TREES!—Good sized cotton-
wood and catalpa, 25c each. JOS.
COLLONGE, Dickinson.
R. H. KUHN,
Manufacturing Jeweler. Diamond Setting
a Specialty. Room 510, Trust Blag.
FOR RENT—Two neatly furnished
rooms suitable for light housekeep-
ing. Convenient to cars. Apply any
time after 12 o’clock at 3314 Ave. II.
WANTED—A Galveston county couple
to be married on the elephant at the
Carnival Wednesday night, Jan. 23. For
particulars call on or address C. H.
ADAMS, Secretary, Carnival Grounds,
25 th and O.
NEW spring samples now in.
made to measure, §12.50 and up.
$18 special well worth $25. First-class
fit guaranteed. EDWARD TROSTMAN,
Artistic Tailor, 412 Center St.
WANTED—Young man to drive milK
wagon; must be well acquainted In
city. Apply 4106 P%.
WANTe/d—White gi”l to assitiin gen-
eral house work. Apply 4106'
WANTED—Colored boy to drive de-
livery wagon. Apply at TED CUR-
LIER’S Racket Store, 2105 Market St.
Vidual daring,
lutionary government
tribunals of assassination,
aristocrats sent to the guillotine by the
load We have princes, ministers,
governors and police prefects shot or
blown up singly.
k The result may. be the same, and it
/LAUNDRESS wants washing to take
home. Good work. Box 8424, Tribune.
LARGE assortment of masquerade
suits for hire at 2705 Broadway.
_________J STORAGE! STORAGE!
For household goods or merchandise at
Very low rates. Letter presses, office
desks, steel garbage cans. 2325 Strand.
NOTICE—Carpets can.be cleaned of all
dust and grease without removing
from floor. Phone me and I will show
you. Phone 2563. )
BOYS' brass band and orchestra, aged U
up. Violin lessons after the school.
KUBELIKS, Semitone system. Box 8H9,
Tribune.
After his ordination TWO beautiful goldfish and fish globe
only 50c. For sale at the CENTRAL
DRUG STORE, 21st and Ave. M.
LOCAL RECORD
Temperature and precipitation record
at Galveston for 24 hours ending at T
a. m. this date:
Maximum temperature, 57 degrees;
minimum temperature, 49 degrees;
mean temperature, 53 degrees, which
is the normal; accumulated excess of
temperature since first of month, 273
degrees; accumulated excess of tem-
perature since Jan. 1, 273 degrees.
Total precipitation .00 inch, which is .12
inch below the normal. Accumulated de-
ficiency of precipitation since first of
month, 1.93 inches; accumulated de-
ficiency of precipitation since Jan. 1,
1.93 inches.
yl*;' \
_ STORAGfi!
The Rev. Francis L. Patton, D. D.,
D., president of Princeton Theological
seminary, was born in Bermuda, Jan. 22,
1843. He was educated first at Warwick
academy, Bermuda, and then at Univer-
sity college, Toronto. He studied theology
at Knox college, Toronto, and then at
Princeton, and was graduated from Prince-
ton seminary in 1865.
in the same year he was pastor of several
churches in New York and Brooklyn until
1872, when he became a professor in the
Theological Seminary of the Northwest, in
Chicago. From 1873 to 1876 Dr. Patton
edited The Interior, the Presbyterian
denominational paper in Chicago. Out of
this relation grew the famous “Swing
case,” the controversy between Dr. Patton
and Prof. David Swing, resulting in
Prof. Swing’s trial for heresy, and, after
active prosecution by Dr. Patton, his leav-
ing the church. In 1881 Dr. Patton took a
chair at Princeton Theological seminary.
In 1888 he became president of Princeton
university, which position he relinquished
in 1902 to become president of the Prince-
ton Theological seminary. Dr. Patton was
the representative from America to the
Pan-Presbyterian council at Edinburgh in
1878, and in the same year he was mod-
erator of the Presbyterian general assem-
bly.
i -——--
DR. BALDINGER, Trust Bldg. Eye,
Ear, Nose and Throat Diseases, and
fitting glasses to correct errors of
vision.
MASQUERADE COSTUMES of all
,, kinds' and fine waists of all nations
for rent or made to order. Apply 2328
d Winnie St.
TWO nice rooms for rent, furnished or
unfurnished; bath and phone. 903 27th
street, cor. I.
THREE exceptionally large unfurnished
rooms; all modern conveniences. Ad-
dress, Box 8230, Tribune.
LOCAL FORECAST.
Forecast for Galveston and vicinity:
Tonight and Wednesday, fair; slightly
warmer tonight; light to fresh easterly
winds.
FOR RENT—A five-room
tween 36th and 37th, E. AWH
FOR RENT—A five-room coU^B
south and east front rooms, 2d
stories of Trueheart building, nor^
corner 20th and Strand, for rent J
Apply JOHN ADRIANCE & SONS."
McGraw says this is the day of the pitch-
er. With the Los Angeles training Math-
ewson will be back again and the Giants
will be in the running. Even Victor Wil-
lis will not be able to hold them.
Here’s what an Australian paper says
about the fighting ability of “Bill’ Squires,
who is tipped to meet Jeffries. “From a
spectacular standpoint the fight between
Squires and Kling was a wretched one.
Not only was there little or no science dis-
played by either man, but there was little
hitting by either man,”
President O’Brien of the American asso-
ciation says he has ten umpires from
whom to select his staff for 1907,
There are 260 ball clubs in the ..ational
Association of Professional Baseball
Leagues.
Jim Hall, the Australian boxer, now in
this country, claims to have cured himself
of consumption by eating onions. We all
know there is “strength” in onions, all
right.
Driving of automobiles is 'becoming so
simplified that the period of the automo-
bile thief seems near at hand.
Fred Teral, the American, was the lead-
ing jockey of Austria-Hungary, with 83
winners out of 317 mounts.
Vincent Stevenson, Pennsylvania’s for-
mer brilliant quarterback, may be crippled
for life as a result of his professional
football experience with the Massillon,
O., eleven. His kneecap is the size of a
waterbucket, and he cannot walk.
Jack (Twin) Sullivan, who is still at Los
Angeles, wants to wipe out the defeat
Jim Flynn gave him before he leaves for
home, and he will be given that chance
on Feb. 22, when he will again clash with
Flynn at Los Angeles.
Abstein, who has signed with the Pitts-
burg ball club, and who did the heaviest
hitting in the Southern league last season,
is one of the leading soccer players of St.
Louis.
Jnodern finance.
J Military dicipline and deadly machine
guns are as potent against the armed
hordes of revolution as they are against
hordes of brave savages with inferior
weapons. As long as the army remains
loyal the autocracy can* defy the whole
nation in insurrection. A part of the
French nation was able to’ over throw the
monarchy, defended only by the personal
troops of the king.
was able to1 corrupt the national
and overthrow successive constitu-
tional governments less and less mod-
erate, till the excesses of the Terror
brought the natural reaction of the em-
But these mobs were nearly as
3vell armed and disciplined as the troops
that opposed them. Now a legiment
with machine guns can scatter the whole
jpopulation of a city in insurrection.
The nation as a body can not attack
the government as a body with any hope
of success. The only hope is to attack
St in detail, to pick off the leaders as
Eharpshooters did, when the battles were
more compactly fought, until discipline
is dissolved in terror and the whole
military machine falls in ruins.
was wholesale revolution in France, in
Russia we have retail revolutioif.
The people can command the destruc-
tive forces of modern science only in
desperate indl-
Vv ANTED—One unfurnished south
room, at once, two or three olocas'
east of Tremont near Market St. Ad-
dress 2216 Postoffice St.
WEATHER NOTES.
The barometric pressure has fallen
over southern districts, though it has
remained above the normal. The dis-
turbance that was central yesterday
over the Dakotas has moved rapidly
eastward to the eastern lake region
and has been attended by snow in the
upper Mississippi valley and lake re-
gion. Elsewhere it has been generally
fair. An area of high pressure, which
is now central over the Red river val-
ley of the north, has developed in rear
of this disturbance and caused much
weather in northwestern dis-
It is coldest in the Dakotas and
Minnesota, with temperatures from 10
degrees to 20 degrees below zero.
Texas the temperature ranges from 34
degrees at Amarillo and El Paso to
slightly over ■''50 de.grees along
coast. The general conditions
favorable to continued fair weather in
this vicinity tonight and Wednesday,
with light to fresh easterly winds. It
will be slightly warmer tonight,
though no decided change in tempera-
ture is anticipated.
B. BUNNEMEYER,
Section DirectbY.
iter had not gained
power in more favorable circumstances,
E0 as to be a large part of the govern-
ment in many countries, the outlook for
liberty would be depressing. Despotism,
armed with modern scientific weapons
and supported by modern finance, might
be as impregnable and as enduring as
Ithat of Rome.
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 50, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 22, 1907, newspaper, January 22, 1907; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335093/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.