The Galveston Daily News. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 84, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 14, 1883 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Abilene Library Consortium.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
/
i
Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway.
UNBROKEN C0MMES1CATI0X
with all principal points
MTU, EAST m WEST.
THE
GREAT POPULAR ROUTE
or TEXAS.
I Only line that rung solid
trains through between Ual-
Veston and Fort Worth and
l^allas and Galveston and
I-ampas)is.
TIKE TABLE
BorKD Kokth,
i I tTTinnn^
midland
"J
It runs through the Garden
Regions of the State, re-
nowned for the beauty of its
landscape and wonderful
fertility of its soil.
IN EFFECT JUKE 10, 1883.
NO. 28.
6 00 p.m.
7.12 p.m.
8.00 p.m.
• Passe'ger Passe'ger! Through |
Daily. Daily, jEx.daily.
3.30 p.m. 8.40 a.m. 0.00 a.m.jLv.. ..Galveston....Ar
4.40 p.m. 9.50 a.m. 7.20 a.m. Ar Alvin Ar'
3.30 p.m. jlO. 40 a.m. Ar... Houston... .Lv.
*.55 a.m.iAr... Rosenberg... Ar. 3.30 p.m.
■10.20 a.m.!Ar Sealy.. .. Ar. 2.15 p.m.
11.44 a.m. Ar Brenham Ar. 12.50 p.m.
2.00 p.m. Ar Milano Ar. 10.15 a.m.
' 4.15 p.m. Ar... .Ten<ple Lv. .8.10 a.m.
Bound South.
Through JPasse'geriPasse'ger
Ex. daily, j Daily, j Daily.
6.45 p.m. 10.00 a.m.! 4.15 p.m,
5.27 p.m I S.oOa.m.j 3.07 p.m.
8.00a.m.! 2.15 p.m.
8.25a.in.j 4.25 p.m.,Lv Temple Ar.; 8.00am.| 4.15 p.m.
j 4-47 p.m. Ar Belton Ar. 7.37 a.m.
7.00 p.m. Ar... Lampasas... Lv : 5.3) a.m. |
C.00 a.m.
30.00 a.m.
9 a.ni.
12.05 p.m.
1.86 p.m.
1.37 p.m
5.45 p.m. Ar.... McGregor... Ar. 1 6.55 a.m.! 2.50 p.m.
7.8-^ p.m. Ar Morgan ...Ar. 4.58 a.m.!12.47 p.m.
8.57 p.m Ar....Cleburne Lv.j 3.37 a.m.ill.23 a.m.
i.oi p.m. 8.58 p.m. Lv Cleburne Ar.. 3 3'» a.m. 111.22 a.m
3.00 p.m. 10.13 p.m. Ar...Fort Worth...Lv.j 2.15 a.m.jlO.OO a.m
Ar Dallas Lr.,
CONNECTIONS.
AT GALVESTON with Malory Line Steamships " "** """* *~ **' ••• —
fer New York. Morgan Line for New. Orleans,
Indianola, Corpus Christi, Brownsville and Vera
Cruz.
At HOUSTON with Star and Crescent for New
Orleans and points East and North, G. H. and S.
A.. H. and T. C\, H. E. & W. T.. I. & G. N., and
other llnea diverging.
AT ABCOLA with I. and G. N. Railway.
AT ROSENBERG with G., H. and 8. A. Railway,
End N. Y.. T. and M. Railway.
Passe'grer
Daily.
8.30 p.m.
7.12 p.m.
6.30 p.m.
7.00 p.m.
3.00 p.m.
4T ?RFKFr7vh Railway.
S vrti!"?' H.and T- C. Railway.
AT TEMPLE w', £
ir MOPrEAfjPR 3?S T- ^ Stt Railway.
AT r^mn}X-Pth ?',an,lJ T- c Railway. 7
AT S \V-?»S-?2-th 1 'alias
aJri vI2W WORTH with M. P. RV T. P
AT I>ItW a"d Senver City Railway.
AI D ALLAS with T. P R"r H and T P
an<. Dallas Extension M. P. Railway.
R'y
Hy
»u j*. i.. l.aiiu rv«*nay. extension 31. P. Railwav
^rr,fllra.t.S,S.?^rf i?ht <Juoted' and throuSh bills of ladi*? issued to all points.
OSCAR G. MCERAV, Gen'l Pass. Ast. J. H. MiLLER, Ticket Asent
CALVESTOISr, TEXAS.
BANES AND BANKERS. _
traders n ation albank,
saw antonio, texas.
J. M, H HO WN SOX, President,
J. S. THORNTON, Cashier.
Transacts a General Banking Business.
LOTTERIES.
l.s.l.
!Tfcis lathe only lottery ever voted on and indorsed
by the people of any State.
Louisiana State Lottery Comp'y
Incorporated in 1866 for 25 years by the Legisla-
ture for Educational and Charitable purposes—with
a Capital of $1,000.000—to which a reserve fund of
t>\er $650,000 has since been added.
By an overwhelming popular vote its franchise
Vas made a part of the Present Stats Constitution
adopted December 2, A. D. 1879.
k SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO "WIN A FORTUNE.
It* Grand Single Number Drawings will take place
monthly. It never Scales or Postpone.-?, Look
»t the following distribution:
GRAND MONTHLY DRAWING
CLASS G, AX NEW ORLEANS,
TUESDAY, JTJ'JYS' ZO, 1333,
tJnder the supervision and management or
Den. G. T» BEAUREGARD, of Louisiana,
and Gen. JUBAL A. EARLY, of Virginia.
CAPITAL PRIZE. $75,000.
jlu0,iiCW Tickets at FIVE dollars Each; frac-
tions, is fifths, in Proportion.
list of prizes.
! CAPITAL PRIZE
1 do do
5
JO
i,0
100
300
500
1,000
1 do do
2 PRIZES OF
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
$6.000
2.000
1,000
500
200
100
50
2o.«.«...«
APPROXIMATION FRIZES.
9 Approximation Prizes of $750....
9 do do 5o0....
9 do do 250....
$75,000
25.000
10,000
12,000
10,000
10.000
10.000
20,000
30,000
25,000
25,000
6,750
4.500
2,250
1.907 Prizes, amonating to £205.500
CERTIFICATE.
We do hereby certify that we supervise the ar-
rangements for all the monthly and semi-annual
Drawings of the Louisiana State Lottery Com-
pany, and in person manage and control the Draw-
ings themselves, and that the same are conducted
ftvith honesty, fairness and in good faith toward all
parties. We authorize the company to use this
certificate, with fac similes of our signatures at-
tached, in its advertisements.
Application for rates to clubs should be made only
to the office of the Com pan v in New Orleans.
For further information, write clearly, giving full
address. Send orders by Express. Registered Let-
ter or Money Order, addressed only to
M. A. DAUPHIN', Kew Orleans. La.
Or, J. D. SAWYER., one door west of News Of-
fice. Galveston.
" 07X10X NAL
little havana
<Gould &. Oo-'s)
decided BY
Royal Havana Lottery
CLASS 1181. june 23, 1SS3
Number for number. Prize for* prize, with 230
Additional prizes. 28,000 BALLOTS—1204 PRIZES.
SCHSDULS:
1 Capital Prize $9,000
1 Capital Prize 2,500
1 Capital Prize 1,000
1 Capital Priae 500
2 Prizes of £250 each ...» 5d0
20 Prizes of SoO each 1.000
042 Prizes of $10 each 9,420
2 Approximations to 1st prize, $100 each 200
2 Approximations to 2d prize, £50 each 100
2 Approximations to 3d prize, §25 each 50
074 Prizes, as above, being the full number
in the Royal Havana, and
230 Additional Prizea of $5 each to the 230
tickets havintr as ending: numbers the
two terminal units of the number
drawing the Capital Prize o£ $9000 1,150
1,204 Prizes, amounting in U. S. gold to $25,420
Tickets, $2 Halves, $1.
ALL PRIZES PAID ON PRESENTATION.
Caution—See that trie name GOULD & CO. is on
your ticket; none other are original or reliable.
EKZPSEV COMPANY, Gen. Agts
&212 Broadway. or 68 East Randolph st„
NEW YORK CITY. CHICAGO.
For Information apply to W. W. WALLING,
Can Antonio, or J. D. SAWYER. Galveston.
,. (.Ws^nta
no vo.
jo
wl
jorM
ffor :P.
Had Scrslula for seventsgn Years
I have suffered from Scrofula for about seventeen
years. The disease being mostly confined to my legs
pud ankles my shin bones were covered with la rye
Ulcers and on* incite of rotten flesh, and the odor
'u I moat unbearable. .All remedies and treatments
V'hlch 1 tried failed to do tne any good. At last I
fcegan taking S. S. S., continuing for about four
gnonths. and I AM CERTAINLY vvELL. I took S.
B. S. under the supervision of a physician of twen-
ty-six years active practice, by your order. Pre-
vious to taking S. S. S. I at times could scarcely
Valk. Now, / con walk all day, and I have to
thank £>. £'. a\. and it only, for viy cure.
THOS. McFARLAND.
54 Foundry street, Atlanta, Ga.
ECZEMA.
I have taken with great benefit S. S. S, for a clear
ease of Eczema. The eruption has entirelv disap-
peared, and I am well. W. J. ROBINSON.
Member N. Ga. Conference, Atlanta, Ga.
If you doubt, com#* to see us, and we will CURE
^YOU, or charge nothiugi Write for the little book
free. Ask any druggist as to our standing.
ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS REWARD will be
paid to any Cnemist who will find on analysis of 100
fcottles S. S. S., one particle of Mercury, Iodide Po-
tassium, or other mineral substance.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Proprietors.
Atlanta, Georgia.
Price of Small Size, $1 00; Large Size, §1 75.
rr^SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. ^
i Cure without Medi-
cine Patented Oc-
tooer 10, 1870. Otie
t box No. 1 will cure
any case in four days or less. No. 2 will cure the
most obstinate case,' no matter of how long standing.
a positive
allan's
CVLUUIjU iULUHJillLU IJUUlIillU
No nauseous doses of cubebs, copaiba, or oil of san-
dal wood, that are certain to produce dyspepsia by
destroying the coatings of the stomach. Price, $1 50.
Sold by all druggists or mailed on receipt of price.
For further particulars send forcir- 0* 4 ,
cular. P. O. Box 1533.
J. C. ALLAN CO. 0
c3 John St., New York.
( tsmhtfimffl
All who from indlsorsMons, exctM** or other canneg ara
■weak asilTved, low apirilad, phywcally •ir*in»d, fcod unablo
ecrform life** 4ut!e» propc-rlv. can be ce*ain!y and t-frma-
Ii«ntlr «arad, without alouja :h modicia«s. Endorsed hydocton.
tnlnist^r* and Ibe pr»«t '' " ^
D9t>r« ana toe pr*H». i nr hcb'cui tuuuiu
r>i>n oftr«atin« Nfrvon* D^bllftv. I*hv«!« «I A,*
F3 w^llr .Vp«r«d.d by T1IE HAWsTC»N BOLIT ;^ Even
cttacit aatured •Toertaio re«toratiou to fe per*
„T,B Staple. tlftcUw, pl«M»a«. Sei-a
Cno.nlt.tmu wnb pby.ician trer.
VimOH KEMEOT CO.. 40 *■ "tl> St., Sew York.
i manhood
Sper-dilT revtored bv the u»e of Vitallt«f
ment, wh,ch effectually ourea Mervon« I>cl*l*T
- It/, IiiMt Virility, Pwmstnre and
I -« fill troubles arising from over-work aDd excesses.
H ~~ Kample ofVltxline mailed free, eealed.^ «d-
drtssiug. |>r. Wiilttler, 174 Cincinnati, O.
morgan slouisiana andtexasr r
dmp'y
uuj rasB-j_iii<
For Nev Orlaanp, Tia Morgan City. EVERY
TDESDAY, THURSDAY ami FRIDAY
at 12 m. sharp.
Tor Indianola, every TUESDAY and FRI-
DAY, at 4 p. m., connecting with G., W. T. & P.
Kmlway for \ ictoria and Cuero.
^°rpU3 Christi p.nd Kockport every
iHLRSDAY, at 2 p. m., connecting with Texas-
juexican Railway for Laredo.
For Brownsville, every TEN DAYS, or as
soon (hereafter as practicable.
NOTICE—N*o bills of lading signedafter depart
ure of steamer. Wharfage and insurance oh all
\ ictoria_shjpments assumed by this company
Ticket
aria shipments assumed bv this company
aXIASS. FOWL22, General Ag-ent.
"tc'.,'ce: _ _ Central Wharf.
galveston & new york
REGULAR WEEKLY
steamship line
Consisting of the following named
steamers: ^
MARCOS Captain I lines
ti,' t r K Captcin Nickerson
Captain Crowell
RIO GRANDE Captain Burrows
2'reight and Ir.scrance at Lowest ^a tes
One of the above-named steamships will leave
£ew \ ork every SaTLUDAY, and Galveston for
Isew ^ oik every WEDNESDAY, and on Saturday
when the trade requires.
Stearo«hip C03^0B.AI>05
CROWELL, Master.
Will sail for KEW YO!SlX,
Wednesday, June 20, 1883
J. K. SAWYSat, A feat,
54 Ssrand, Galveston.
C. H. MALLORY CO., Agents,
Pier 20. East River. New York.
CUNARB LINE OF ROYAL MAIL
Between
LIVERPOOL, 3SOSTOS7
and 2ISW TORS.
Rates of saioou passage $80 and S10U po:a ac-
cording' to accommodations. Steerage passage to
ftDd from Galveston by all rail or steamer to New
^ork. Liverpool, Queenstown, Belfast Verry Bris-
tol, Cardiff, and all other parts of Europe, at low
rates. r
J. N. BAWY2ia, A^ent, 51 Strand-
Messrs. VERNON H. BROWN & CO., Agents,
4 Rowling Green, New York.
I1! liilljjui imiiuiiiiui'
THIS LINK OF
TUGS AND BARGES
Will receive aud forward promptly
ALL FREIGHT FOR HOUSTON,
And all points on the
HOUSTON ANSTEZAS CSIJTSIAIj,
TEXAS AN© PiCIflC, and
TEXAS and K2W CHI.HANS
RAIL-watts.
AH claims for loss or damage promptly adjusted.
All goods insured bv this company wnile in transit
on their barges. After landing same the insurance
risk of this company ceases.
CHAS. FOWLER. Pres't.
J. J. ATKINSON, Sup't,
J. O. RISHPAUGH. Agent.
E ARE NOW PREPARED TO EUItNlSH IN
V V quantitifsof 20,000 feet per day. KiLN-DRIKD
DRESSED LUMBER, from our Excel-ior and Chi-
cago Dryer. For beauty of finish, this lumber has
no rival, neither will it, shrink, stain or mildew.
Parties requiring high grades of lumber, or odd
sizes, will fir.u it to their advantage to order from
us. as we will have bills sawed to order, and thor-
oughly kiln dried, on short notice.
Our process wili dry lumber as thoroughly in ten
days as the atmosphere will in twelve months. We
employ best skilled labor only, and guarantee our
workmaanhip equal to the best.
Long Si Co.*8 O. K. Shingles, kiln-dried or air-
dried; Plastering Lath, kiin-dried or green: best
Louisiana Cypress, by shipload or carload, direct
from the mills on the Teche. or by smaller quantity
from our mills. Long-Jear'Pine Timber or Lumber
in any quantity not less thau carload from here or
Lake Charles.
Orders from Dealers Solicited-
Beaumont Planing Mills Comp'y,
3EATJMOJTT, TEXAS,
D. Wkbkb.
Joshua Miller.
C. Jci jlek.
V\
li
C. B. LEE & CO.,
irofl k brass
AND
machinists
MASiiFACXURERS of
stem eeciles, SiV hills,
Boilers, Kill and Giu Geariugr, Shaft
ing, Falleys, Brass and Iroa
Pomps, Etc.
93?"Particular attention given to orders for Iron
Fronts and Castings for Buildings.
All kinds ol Job Work solicited. Satisfaction
guaranteed.
Corner Winnie and Tliirty-seeoad Ssts.,
(Near Railroad Depot, •
OA L VESTON, TEX A S.
the taylor
pueit, stub m3 ITQSiBL!]
s,
S2X-CVI.I17BEH
Cotton Conipres
MANUFACTURED ONLY BY
THE PH1SEY&JOKES COMPANY
Wilmiagtoa^ Delaware.
Having, after long and careful study and great
expense, succeeded m perfecting the above re-
ferred to machine, we offer it now to the public as
the most powerful, safe and expeditious compress
in use.
Wholly of metal, reducing its risk of destruction
much in case of lire, and working with scarcely any
friction, its? movements are smooth and noiseless;
and as tne whole power is directly applied to the
bale without intervention of levers, cog gearing or
other devices common to otb^r forms of com
presses, its work is performed at less cost of fuel
per bale than any press in use.
When used in combination with RiesePs Bale
Ejector, which discharges the pressed bale as soon
as the press opens, thereby relieving the men from
that labor. 100 '
and tied.
bales per hour can be compressed
The capacity of the pr«ss is 2000 tons, and this is
applied to each bale pressed
These presses are built in the very best manner,
and with all'the care that skiil and experience can
command, and are guaranteed in all their details.
For particulars address the undersigned or
CAPT. A- P. X-UF&X2>?,
Galveston, Texas.
THE PUSEY & JONES COMPANY,
Wilmington, Delaware.
COW
And full stock of
GRASS SEEDS.
A. fz.&x2 & co.
fi.
Southern Pacific r. r.
a.
Tlie Original " Sunset" and " and Orescent." Route.
the great east affd west ihme..
JHULUl UUil I liltl'XU IJIJLLl 111U-UJ1II OLlHIUli lil IllU
through palace sleeping caes from new orleans,
houston and san antonio
To San Francisco Without Change!
HTSlfflM in OUT Mil
railroad
This Lino is now opened for
Through Passenger Busi-
ness, and has advantages Far
Superior thaa any other
Line, It is thoroughly equip-
ped with all Modern Improve-
ments conducive to the pleasure
ot a, long journey. Solid and
Secure Roadbed.' Steel Rails.
Excellent Eating-Honses at con-
It is bound to be the Papular Route, »**a « !M only
benson, arizona;
tucson,
maricopa,
YUMA,
stocston, ..
SAJST
This is the direct route between \V est.
venient intervals. The Most
Pict uresquue Scenery im-
aginable. Polite and attentive
employes, etc., etc.
By taking this Route you can
have your Baggage Checked
Through, thus avoiding the
annoyance of rechecking at
Junction Point—advantage that
NO OTHER LINE possesses.
All the Tear Round " Route to
CAL.;
colton, cal.; tresno, cal;
los angeles, cal.; maoera,
suiixner, merced,
goshen lathrop,
sacreihento, san jose, cal.,
AND
FR^AJSTCISCO.
Southwest Texas and Mexico, and all points In the East, South-
east and North But" otie" Change qf Cars to St. Louis, Chicago, Louisville. Cincinnati, Baltimore or
Washington and but two changes to Philadelphia and New York. At Houston close connections are
made with all diverging lines for points in Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska. Wisconsin, Minnesota and the
East; and at Rosenberg Junction with all trains on the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway.
For information regarding Rates, Time, etc., call on or address the Agents of g., h. & S. a.
RAILWAV SYSTEM,
T. P. NZCHOLS. Ticket Agent, p. B. freer, Ticket Agent,
Houston, Menger Hotel, San Antonio, or
t. w. feirce. Jr. o. p. and t. a., Houston, tezas.
OLD KULIABLE.
g..h.&h.r.r.
TIME TABLE NO. 69.
IN EFFECT SUNDAY. JUNE 10, 1883.
Arrive at Houston.
Leavk Galveston.
daily' ... 6.56 a- *•
.... 7.05a.m.
Connections for^11 points on H. & T. C. R y.
Connects at Denison with Missouri-Pacific K y tor
St. Louis.
^ S Union Depot
4.50 A.M.... \ h. &T. C. Depot
DAILY.
_ ( Union Depot £.05 p-*-
3.00 P. "■ •••■) H. at T. C. Depot 5.15 p.m.
This train will carry Pullman Sleeping Car for St.
Also, Pullman Sleep-
ing Car Galveston to San Antonio, Laredo, Austin.
Dallas and intermediate points without change.
Connects with Texas and New Orleans R T for
New Orleans; G.. H. and S. A. K V for theAVest.
FAST EXPRESS DAILY.
r ftn p. k Union Depot 7.00 P. m-
Soliu train to St. Louis; arri-«> St Louis6:50 a. m..
second morning. Pullman Sleeping uai-
veston to St. Louis without change.
Leave Houston.
7.40 a.
Connects with H. & T.
Arrive at Galveston.
DAILY.
s.40 a. w.
_ _ C. and T. & N. O. R ys.
Sleeping Car from Laredo and Austin.
FAST EXPRESS DAILY.
9.00 a. m.......H <£ T.C. Depot 11.00 * »■
Express from St. Louis via St. L., I. M. & S„ Tex.-
pac. and I. & G. N. R ys.
DAILY.
5.kgp « Union Depot 7.50 p.m.
Through Sleeping Cars from St Louis via Denison
and H. &,T C. R y.
J S. MACNA31AHA. Ticket Agent. Union Depot.
callingeii & mott,
125 PoslotHe Street,
GALVESTCF. TEXAS.
aKTS oE the human body enlarged, devel-
oped and strengthened." etc.. is an interest
Pc
ine advertisement, long run in our paper
ply to inquiries v/e vriTl say that tin
dence of numbu* about this.
In re
that there is no evi-
On the contrary, the
advertr^ra*are highly indorsed. Interested persons
may get sealed circulars, giving all particular|. by
addressing Erie Med. Co., P. O. Box 513 Buffalo,
N. Y. iToledo Evening Eee.
COTTOK FACTORS.
' ' &alve3tow.
F. Lammers.
e. S. Flint, late of K. A.Brown & Co.
Lammers & Flint,
cotton factors
AND
coisigission merchants,
MALLORY BUILDING, STRAND. GALVESTON
R, A. Brown.
r.
Geo. Walshk.
Brown
COTTON
A.
A. H. PiHauso*.
rll}
FACTORS
8l co.
commission merchants
204 STJt^VB,
ii. seeligson & co.,
COTTON FACTORS
AND
c o mm 1 s si o n m e r cli an ts.
tto at-n nreDared for business for the coining sea
son.and cPan.Pwith confidence: refer to those tor
whom we have sold Cotton in the past.
spkotjle & nisbet,
GOITGN erokiers.
COTTON FUTURES: Galveston, New
York, New Orleans and Liverpool,
CTRAND OAT.VESTON TEXAS.
T. J. Gitocs.
L b JEMIS0N, QROCE & CO.,
COTTON FACTORS
C O.n.TtI SSI O.V .JIE It fHJ-VTS,
GAI.VKSTON, - - TEXAS.
Wo invite correspondence and solicit consign-
ments of Cottan, pol. Hides, etc.
Jso. D. Rogers.
J. A. Robe .--sos.
JN0. D. ROGERS & CO.,
COTTON FACTORS
Ann
OJBJniSSlOJV .VEKC1MJ\~TS,
GALVESTON.
McAlpine, Baldridge & Co.,
(Establish sij in 1807;
COTTON FACTORS
ano
co.esss.v ?'* nrH*aj\~TS+
MALLORY BUILDING. STRAND. GALVESTON,
TEXAS.
Liberal advances made on bill lading or cotton
in hand. '
Members
Ed. Dreieh.
Members*New York Cotton Exchange.
Galveston Cotton Exchange,
j'Xo. AYMES & vo.,
SPOT AND FUTURE BROKERS.
COTTON FUTURES: Galveston, New Orleans,
New YorkL!*eroool and Havre.
GRAIN ASl>PROVISION CONTRACTS: Chicago
and Sew York.
Galveston, Texas.
samuel p.
beall.
CO.,
W0LST0N. WELLS & VIDOR,
COTTON FACTORS.
Advances made on Cotton,
kinds of produce.
GALVESTON
N1W ORLEANS.
AT WOOD VIOLITT.
new york,
TEXAS & MEXICAN
RAILWAY.
NOW OPEN FROM ROSENBERG TO VIC-
TORIA.
Close Connections made] at ROSENBERG with
trains of the G., C. & S. F.. and G., H. & S. A.
RAILWAYS, FOR ALL POINTS NORTH AND
EAST.
The Only All-Hail Route to Wharton,
Victoria, Indianola and Cnero.
ON and AFTER TUESDAY, MAY. 15,1888.TRAINS
will run DAILY, as follows:
No. 1—Leave Rosenberg 9:30 a. m., (connecting
with morningr trains from Galveston, Hous-
ton and San Antonio.)
Arrive Victoria 4:5': p. in.
No. S—Leave Victoria f>:0 • a. m., (connecting with
trains from Cuero.)
Arrive Rosenberg 1:00 p. m., (connecting
with evening: trains to Galveston, Houston
and San Antonio.)
For rates or information applj to
C. K. V. ESTCOTT, A. G. M.
^ ictoria, Texas, May 14. 1888.
• Agent for J. If. PEET &
iJe-w Orleans.
('OTTOS FUTCKES: Galveston, New Orleans,
Nrw \ ork and Liverpool.
GRAIN AND PROVISION CONTRACTS: Chi-
cago. St. Louis and New York.
COFFEE CONTRACTS: New York.
G-AI^/SSTOSr, TEXAS-
Wooi, Hides and all
TEXAS
Texas ge-Operativs ^sssciatioa
P. cf H.
CHARTERED JULY 5, 1878.
Capital Stock, S100.000.
Orsranized for t3*e purpose of traniact-
ins a Oenera 1 Purchasing, Factors9
and CoaszsUaMoii CSnsiness.
Special attention griven to the filling of orders
anct 10 the sale of Cotton, Grain, Wool. Hides. Etc.
Correspondence, ordera audconsignment? solicited.
P. O. BOX41G. J.S. ROGERS,
Business Manager, cor. St ran a and Twentieth.
a.w.&d. t.smith,
General State Agents for
DANIEL PRATT'S
I2S.PStGVE2>
time card in effect sunday, june 10.
North Daily.
I
South Daily.
5.10 p. m.l 5.00 a, m. Leave Galveston
7.20 p. m. | 7.15 a. m..Leave Houston
1.40 a. m.' 3.00 p. m. Leave Palestine
| 1.30 a. m. Arrive Denison
8.55 a. m.l Leave Te-carkana
3.25 p. m.i I^eave Little Rock
7.00 a. m.J 6.20 a. m Arrive St. Louis
ill.00 p. m Arrive Kansas City
7.55 p. m.' 7.55 p. m. Arrive Chicago
10.15 p. m. 10.15 p. m. Arrive New York
.. Arrived
... Arrivel 5 .50 p. m.
.. .Arrive 10.20 a. m.
Leave 12.40 p. m.
... Leave i
.... Leave1
Leave 8.30 p. m.
Leave; 4.30 a. m.
I^eave; 8.45 a. m.
... .Leave! 7.55 a. m.
8.00 p. m. 11.00 a. m.
9.10 a. m.
2.50 a. m.
6.50 p. m.
1.15 p. ra.
8.50 p. m.
8 .45 a. m.
7 .55 a. m.
QUICK TX9IE—FI5ST-CLASS EQUIPMENT—SOLID TRAINS.
No Change of Cars of any description between Galveston and St. Louis.
Close Connection at LITTI.E ROCK for the Southeast, and in the Union Depot, ST. LOUIS, with
Express Trains in all directions.
EXCURSION TICKETS
TO ALL THE PRINCIPAL SUMMER RESORTS in the North, East and Southeast, food until October
3i for return, and now on sale at Low Rates.
Two Express Trains each way daily, offering passengers Choice of Routes *i» Texartan
and the Iron Mountain Railway, or via Mineola and the Missouri Pacific Railway.
Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars attached to all Through Trains.
For Tickets, Rates, Time Cards, or any information, apply to
J. S. MacNAMAKA. Ticket A cent, Galveston, Texas.
B. W. HIcCTTLLOUGH, H.P.HUGHES,
[ Ass't GenT Pass. Aeent, Marshall. Texas. ! Pass. Agent. Houston, Texas.
H. M. HOXIE, Third Vice-President, St. Lords, .Ho.
H. c.'townsenb,
Gen'l Pass. Agent, St. Louis.
houston & texas central railway.
2 EXPRESS TRAINS DAILY EACH WAY.
Fnllman Sleeping Cars between Galveston and Houston and Sedalia, and be
tween Galveston and Laredo, ria Houston and Anstin.
WITHOUT CHANGE.
Going North
7.10 A.M. 6.15 P.M.
8.30 P. M. 5.55 P. M.
8.25 A. M. 7.30 P M.
12.30 A.M. 1 11.45 A.M.
1 8.-30 A. M.
6.22 A. M. 1 5.58 P. M.
: Leave Houston Arrive
| 4 ... Austin " i
" Waco 4i
! Arrive Denison Leave
| " Kansas Citj
: " St. Louis "
Goiso South
7.15 A. M. : 5.30 P. M.
4.15 P. M. j 8.10 A. M.
6.00 A. M. 4.40 P. M.
2.00 P. M. ! 12.30 A. M.
5.:» P. M. I
8.52 A. M. I 8.32 P. M.
TEXAS AND EUROPE.
Outward and prepaid tickets between Texas and all parts of Europe, via prominent British, German,
Dutch Italian and French Steamship Lines, are on sale at all important agencies of the Houston and
TexasCentral Railway. For rates and general information as to above, apply to
J. WALDO, c- B- OEAT,
Vice-President and Traffic Manager. General Passenger and Ticket Acent.
HOUSTON - - - - TEXAS.
GROCESIES—LiaUOB,3.
J.F.MAGALE,
direct importer of
BHAHDIUS AND WINES,
And Wholesale Dealer in
i>
REVBLVtHS head cough gihs.
Feeders and Condensers,
SMITH'S
HiiLL s seed SfPlUTOi gixs.
SCEOFIES.D'S
COTTON PRESSKS A. SIEAM ENGINES
A FULL STOCK OX HAXD.
Send for circulars and prices.
STRAND, GALVI'STOJf, TEXAS
SUMMEE RES0B.TS
Hot and Warm Springs Hotel,
aiadison County, XT. C.
Largest and Most Delightful ltesort in
the South.
ELECTRIC BELLS IN EVERY ROOM.
Excursion Tickets on Sale at all
Principal Points.
For information address the Warm Springs Co.,
H. A. GUDGEK, Manager, Warm Springs )'. O., N. C.
Resident Physician—Dr. I. E. NAGLE, of New
Orleans.
Houston ADVERTISEMENT TS
C. S. LONG COPE. S. A. McASHAN.
LONtlCOFE & CO.,
COTTON FACTORS
commission"merchants
No. 8 Main Street,
HOUSTON, - - TEXAS.
Liberal Advances made on Cotton.
OF ALL GRADES,
Maeale's Building, (Band65Strand. Galveston. Ter.
All cash orders promptly tilled same as if parties
were here in person.
FOit SAl.KTO JOBBEKS.
20,000 barrels
XjOXJISI ANA
Sugars and Molasses,
on Consgnment from Plantations,
also
emm, hams, lard, flour, meal & grils,
For direct shipment from the West in car lots.
Ask for Prices Before Buying Elsewhere
ayers & Cannon,
Commission Merchants Galveston.
" candy.
We have perfected arrange-
ments enabling- us to deliver
to the trade
STICK AND FANCY
CANDIES
that are guaranteed not to |
melt during the summer
season. We put up pure,
wholesome goods, and will
sell at figures to meet com-
petition! BUY CANDY that
bears the name of
t„ rattq co.,
Wholesale Grocers and Confectioners.
TljHtSiZ.
6fv«xli
: i ' . s-l:
. • - ;
AiW®jFS ft*
ai.sure hemtos
VZr*isr-^'' |p
If
CEimifH FAC-8IM1LS—Promln«ist Let-
ters, ALL white on a black ground.
Beware of dealer® who attempt to palm off
IMITATION, tsl'BSTlTUTIO.'V orWOHTH-
LESS poods which yield them a LARUEH
PROFIT. IV'oae are genuine without the
ZW S A F E . -^3
H. H. WARXER & CO., Rochester, Ji.Y.
Gulf, Colorado and
SA JSTTA. FE
RAILWAY COMPANY
•i«EL & 1!. F. WOLFE,
General State Agents for the Celebrated
CARVER GIN CO.'S
LIGST-DR-aFT COTTON GINS,
With Linter Attachment and Roll Compress Equal-
izer, FEEDERS and CONDENSERS.
THE ECXiIPS3 AND CHAMPION
liuller and Seed Separator Gias*
COTTON SEED LINTERS,
WITH FEEDERS AND CONDENSERS.
The New Improved Brown Cotton Gins
WITH FEEDERS AND CONDENSERS.
Straub's Wheat and Corn Mills.
Reynold's Improved Cotton Presses*
THE "COMPLETE COTTON CLEANER."
A full stock on hand. Send for circulars and prices.
165 Strands Galveston, Texas-
Established in 1S38.
t.w. house.
Cotton & Wool Factor
AND
gui! k Tim,
cotton brokers
196 gravier Street,
New Orleans-
Orders for Futures executwl in New Orleans, New
York and Liverpool.
Correspondents:
MESSRS. FFELDING & GWYNN. New York.
MESSRS. CUNNlNGUf >M & HINSHAW. Liveroool.
Commission Merchant
'Time is moner-'J *4Goods well bought are
sold." These axioms I can demonstrate; and
to cms end challenge a test of same by inviting in-
terior merchants, and the trade generally, to call
and examine my goods aud prices, to see'my facil-
ities of business" and to witness with what care and
dispatch I can forward their purchase.
Cotton will net more iu this than any market in
the State, aud ali I ask is a trial to convince . ou of
this tact.
LIBERAL CASH ADVANCES MADE ON ALI
CONSIGNMENTS. QUICK SALES AND
PROMPT RETURNS.
T. W. HOUSE.
KGUSTGR. TEXAS.
The j. m. OrunswiokSBalkeOo.,
SECRETARY'S OFFICE,
t
jlanufacturers of
BILLIARD & POOL TABLES
211 Market Street, St- Louis, l\1o.
BRANCH OFFICES IN TEXAS:
HOUSTON—No. 2771^ PRESTON STREET.
DALLAS—407 MAIN STREET.
2^~Send for illustrated Catalogues .and Price
Lists.
g. i Edwards,
725 Slain St.,
DALLAS, TEXAS,
i "Dealer in Chickering. Mathushek, and other flrst-
ela-s pianos, organs, organinas, music-boxes, &c.
Full stock of small instruments for wholesale trade.
Send tor catalogues before you buy.
EDUCATIONAL.
COMMERCIAL.
General Market Quiet—Bacon Lower
—Oats Firmer—Spot Cotton Dull-
Futures Higher at Liverpool—Amer-
ican Markets Dull.
Kicvs Officb June 13.—There is but little change
to note in eeneral business. All lines of trade are
Quiet, but with few changs to note In values. Ba-
con is atrain marked down whiltf lan! is
quoted firm at previous figures.^Hams ar® with-
out change. Corn is quiet, with but little doinsr.
Oats are firmer and prices from store are advanced
lc from store, while from track outside figure^
rule. Hay from track is advanced $1 per ton.
Eggs are dull and easy, but unchanged.
Poultry is almost nominal, with a moderate supply
and very little demand. Groceries and vegetables
are unchanged.
The following quotations from Kansas City were
bulletined at the Cotton Exchange to-day:
This Yester-
day.
99H
9T,
. ... 10-V
10»i
dav.
99U
93
1074
Wheat—No. 2
Wheat—No. 3
Bacon—Clear
Bacon—Rib and long
I Cotton on the spot ruled dull. Philadelphia re-
duced quotations and St. Louis closed %c
lower for middling. Quotations in other spot mar-
kets were unchanged. Futures at Liverpool opened
steady, with part of the months a point lower, but
advanced during the day, and closed firm and 2<&3
points higher. Futures at New York opened
steady and 1(3.4 points higher, ruled dull, and
closed dull and within a point of yesterday's figures.
Futures at New Orleans opened dull at an advance
of 1<&4 points, ruled dull, and closed quiet, with
June y points lower, July a ooim lower, August at
yesterday's figures, and the other months l(Tt2
points higher. Futures at Galveston opened dull
but steady, and 1(&4 points higher, were steady on
the second call, but dull the balance of the day,
closing with 3 points lower for July, while October
and December wero unchanged, and the other
months 1(^2 points h'gher than yesterday.
The following are the clositus quotations for cot-
ton on the spot to-day at the leading markets, to-
gether with closing of middling Wednesday and
sales to-day:
Galveston. Texas. May 14th. 1883. S
Notice is hereby given that the Board of Direc-
tors of said Railway Company have called a meet-
ing of all the Stockholders of said Company, to be
held at its office in this city on the 1st day of Au-
gust, 18S3, at tii9 hour of 12 in., for the purpose of
considering determining as to the necessity
for constructs, completing, improving aud op-
erating its Railway, by the issuance, sale and dis-
posal, by said Company, of Second Mortgage Bonds
of said Company, in sums t f one thousand dollars
each, to an amount not to exceed thirteen thousand
dollars per mile on the main track of said*Com-
pany's Railwaj , constructed, aud to be constructed
or acquired, and ail branch lines of soid Railway.
Said Bonds to run for forty years, from October
1st, 18S3. aud bear interest at the rate at' six per
cent, per annum, payable semi-annually, on the 1st
days of April and October in each year, at the city
of New York. The issuance of said Bonds by the
Company to be limited as follows: Not to exceed J
$2000 per mile on or before the 31st of December,
1383; and additional issues so that the aggregate of
all Second Mortgage Bonds shall not exceed
amounts per mile, and on or before the dates as
follows: December 31st, 1884, $3000: December j
31st, 1885, $4000; December 31st, 1886, $5000: Decern- j
ber 31st, 188T, $6000; December 31«t, 1888, $7000; i
December 31st, 1889. $8000; December 31st. 1899,
$9000; December 31st. 1891. $10,000; December 31st,
1892, $11,000; December 3ist. 1893. $1'J.000; and
December 31st, 16.'4. $13,000: the miles of comple-
ted railway to be ascertained by certificate of the
President and Chief Engineer of said Company,
and the payment of the said Bonds 10 be secured
bv a Second Trust Deed and Mortgage on all the
railway, franchises and property of said Company
as follows:
Any and all railways of said Railway Company, j
nr»w constructed, or hereafter to be constructed or <
authorized, wheresoever situated, including main
lines, branches, extensions and acquisitions, to-
gether with all the railways, wavs and rights of
wav, track, rails, bridges, viaducts, culverts, fences,
and structures of every kind, all depots, station Gladstone a* Oxford*
houses, eneine house*, car houses, wood houses, [Temple Bar.j
machine shop^ water tanks.and ail other buildings. He was one of the most hospitable men at
together vith the lots or parcels ot iana on which r*u.u . i • i .
e.icli and all are or may b*» erected, idi«i all loco- Christ chuich, \vhieh is savin# a good deal,
motives, tenders, passenger, baggage ir-iil. freight, uis father supplied him with a handsome
t and and other cars, and nil ether rolling stock allowance, he was enabled to give frequent
uid equipment, all machinery, tools, implements, breakfast parties and " wines;" but at
fuel and materials, ali furniture, i:.ups. of "wines" then, as now, very little wine was
account, vouchers, ^receipts, and assets ■>; :y drunk, and after his guests had dispersed Glad-
SttS'rei.tsrSRuei: ^mt^vL-relons a'ai r'-n..Ua.!: ! stone was always ready to apply himself to a
ers all whicn hereiu specified recit • i ; -r..:-; -- and hours of vigorous reading. One must
roperty. and all other real and personal property , use the word "'vigor" in this connection, be-
ow or at any time belonging or to belong to said j cause Gladstone never dawdled over his
Company with all appurtenances th-'-ret ■. together : books. He set himself a task and toiled until
For the Higher Education of Women,
Independence, Texas.
The 38th Annual Session will open September 1st
and continue forty weeks. For catalogue, address
J. H. LUTHER.
cb £<§>al bcsion Bcius.
with* all' the present and future franchises itni j
chartered rights, privileges and imr.;unities, which
now do or at any time ir.av belon • ,.p appertain
to said Company, including the franchise t.» b - a I
Corporation. But it is understood that the lands •
which may be acquired by said Company from the ;
.State of Texas, aud all other lands i> may acou : e i
by.donation or otherwise, except those acirdn d •'
for some of the purposes hereinbefore specified. 1
aud used in connection with said Railway or the
operation thereof, are not hereby conveyed nor in-
tended so to be.
F. 2?. K!2X*SLj^]S'-}S'5 Secretary-
1 >.T STOCK.:
iei.eeo lis. MIlfiLLi
3-4 Inch to 7 Inch Clrcuiufereace.
t-,
DR. JVI. PERL,
General Practitioner.
HOUSTON, TEXAS.
E. P. Turner,
jot d
60,000 LBS. VMl SOP
1-4 f ncli to 2 Incite* EJ>iimeter.
OS, 103 LIS. HEMP 60PE,
J■ Lj L SIZ£S«
il marwitz & co.
BROOKS'S"
Anti-Malarial Tonic
June 13.
This Dav.
G. O. I L. M.
♦Liverpool..; 5 3-16
Oalreston.. 1
N. Orleans, i Jvg 9^-s
Mid.
Mid
Yes
jSalej
to-
te r lav. day.
5 11-16 D ll-16i10.00'}
Mobile.
Savannah .;
Charleston.
Wilmington
Norfolk
Baltimore..
New York..
Boston
Philadelp'La
Augusta ..
Memphis...
St. Louis...
rJ\l \
8% 9^
a 15-16 9^4
8 15-16. !>U
i
S. lt>
8 15-16 101*
V-i 1C"4
o>4 iou
8H ; ov|
9 :
io ho
I) lie I
3 13-16; 9 15-10
i
'10
110
10.%
I m
u
! 9>«
■.St
i to
i \ou
!10U
li«*4
'It
i 9H
:io
iio
106
2250
200
15-1
20
"i95
"233
205
50
♦Lverpool in pence; other markets in cents.
Markets Closed—Liverpool, moderate inqui .
freely supplied: Galveston, steady; New Orleans,
easy; Mobile, dull and easy; Savannah, steady
Charleston, quiet: Wilmington, dull and lower to
sell; Norfolk, steady; Baltimore, very dull; New
York, quiet; Boston, steady: Philadelphia, dull
Augusta, quiet; Memphis, dull; St. Louts, easy.
Cotton.
GALVESTON SPOT MARKET.
The Exchange repeated yesterday's quotations,
and bulletined the market as ciosing steady. Sales.
100 bales
OFFICIAL quotations for spot.
This
Yester-
Last
Last
day.
day
Friuay
year.
Low Ordinary..
9
Ordinary
TTs
V-i
10
Good Ordinary.
b'Z
11
Low Middling...
9*
*>u
*>M»
1156
Middling
10
10 ~
10
11 -'■*
Good Middling...
iraf
103*
lotjj
Middling Fair...
lovjj
1056
1-9*
Stained, off: sandy cotton, ^4(&le. lower.
GALVESTON FUTURE MARKET.
Futures opened dull but steady and 1&4 points
higher, were steady on the second call, dull on
the third call, and closed dull, with 3 points lower
•bid for July; October and December at yesterday's
figures, and the other months 1&2 points higher.
quotatioxs for future delivery.
The inside figures of the following quotations
are bidding rates, and the outside figures the ask-
ing prices: •
lie had titiished it—though one of his tules
was never to infringe oil the seven hours
i which he allotted for sleep. The men who
wrack their healths by hard reading are those
who sit up half through the night with pots of
i strong tea at their elbows, and wet towels
' round their heads. Gladstone worked regitlar-
i lv, and never had to put himself on the oeger
' list or to lie late abed iu the morning, snatch-
! ing fitful eyefuls of sleep. Ho was a pretty
; regular attendant at morning chapel in the
I cathedral, but 'the practice as to chapel-going
I was looser in those times than it became after-
j ward, and once it did happen that having
i somehow missed several chapels in succes-
Q »1 OC ' -'ion. Gladstone was ordered by the censor
{IU! £- i to write out a hundted lines. Now the censor
5 j would probably not have inflicted this punish-
ment task if he had thought that Gladstone
would write the lines himself. It was a toler-
ated custom that lines should be bought- of the
scouts at the rate of half a crown per hun-
dred, so that the punishment was another way
of lining a man two-and-;«ixpence. The actual
writers of the lines were generally servitors,
who did them—one is almost ashamed to say—
for a shilling the hundred, thus leaving* the
scout, or middle-man, a profit of^loG per cent,
on the transaction. Gladstone's scout, hear-
ing of his little trouble, brought him a p;ena,
as a matter ol course, and was much
surprised when the student answered: "It
will do me no harm to write the hundred
lines." Having said which, he wrote them,
and in his best hand, too. The incident de-
serves to bo mentioned, because it provoked
some discussion at the house. The implication
that it was dishonest to buy a paena instead of
writing it was scouted by young gentlemen
who were freer with their half-crowns than
with their penmanship, and it seems that the
morality which prevailed in this.i^spect half a
century ago is that which still subsists in these
our times.
I
No. 62 main Street, Houston, Texas.
Practices in State Courts at Houston, Supreme,
Appellate and Listrict Court* at biaiveston.
Manufacturer and Wholesale Dealer in
LONG and ,SHORT LEAF PINE,
WHITE OAK LUMBER.
Sills cut to or.iftr*
Office: Sterne Buildinsr* Hoi«*tot», r«*
CHI LL AND FEVEIt CUKE
Vegetable Preparation. 'Jcing entirely free
from any mineral ingredient whatever.
Warranted to Cure or price refunded. •
For sale by Druggists.
a- K. FINLAY fit CO.,
rew Orleans,
Picnic for Children-
! Parents can now rest easy, as Dr. Worthing*
! ton s famous Cholera and Diarrhoea Medicine
j is a specific for summer complaints and stom-
! ach diseases of children.
A young lady in one of war i-nsv »iii tracts
was escorted home from an evettpc . ^ _ upt
long since by a young man —— mt*s
no' particularly partial. O. .'^s%re
be remarked: 4'I guess I'll and set you
iiext Sunday night." .Veil. J|m,' rtpliea
tho iady, "yon can come as a friend, b o no
as a feller *
Catarrh of the Pladdctr-
Stintrfwr « .• - — *
Jan.
Feb.
Mar
Apr.
Mav
.T'ne
July
Aug:
First
Call.
Second
Call.
Third
Call.
Closing
10-1*6-17 10.06-15 10.0G 12 10.06-12
Yester-
day.
S'les
10.09-11
10.24-26 10.21-26 10 21-25 10.21-2". 10.20-23
Sept 9.94-9G 9.93-95 9.93-94 9.93 94
Oct. | 9.75-79' 9.73-76 9.73 74 9.73-74
9.91-94
9 73-77'
Nov) 9.64-66' 9.64-65 9.02-65 , 9 62-65j 9*61-6!i|'
Dec. j 9.04-60; 9.03-06' 9.61-65; 9.01-65 9.61-65
To'1.1"
100
100
100
coo
300
♦Asked. tBid.
SALES.
August—100 bales at 10.25. September—100 bales
at 9.95. November—100 bales at 9.64.
GALVESTON DAILY STATEMENT.
This
This
This
Last
Receipts—
dav.
week.
season.
season.
Net
fi: 8
2,344
81 a,388
425,177
From other ports
18
18
15.814
10.705
Gross
G96
2,302
835,202
441,942
Exports—
To Liverpool....
306.0f4
157,425
To France
39.328
15,145
To Continent...
....
1,475
100.593
»;.j.4-2i
Channel ports...
0.081
22.057
Total foreign
2*475
512,005
258,04*
To New York....
.%63i
3.081
189,245
124.375
To Morgan City..
112
09,053
35,953
Other dom. ports.
51,988
2i,932
North by rail
50
14,800
Total coastwise....
3.m
3*793
310.335
199,190
Total expoit
3,081
5,203
822.401
437,108
day. last year.
2,546 72f
1,37;
GALVESTON STOCK STATEMENT.
This ^ This day
On shipboard;
For Great Britain
For France
For other foreign ports
For coastwise ports
In compresses
Total Galveston stock
AT ALL UNITED STATES PORTS
This This Thus far Last
day. week, this season, season
1.037
17,491
21,074
7.299
9.402
RECEIPTS
Ports.
Galveston
New Orleans
Mobile
Savannah
Charleston
Wilmington
Norfolk
Baltimore
New York
Boston
Philadelphia
Other ports
Total
Last year
Difference..
678
1,032
43
330
300
*102
337
81
2.908
1,880
2,344
932
1,679
771
15
1.649
1,961
40
1,610
770
16,147
9,050
819.333
1,041.237
309,998
800.0*5
565.906
128,492
790.109
52,519
150.834
380.254
92,983
280,588
5.854,513
4.555,147
425.1
1.104.335
260,044
718.146
490.289
132.921
59*\G!4
38.008
167,849
226.057
77.068
256,039
4,555,147
1,208 7,097 1.299,306
exports and stocks.
Exports from all United States ports thus far
this week: To Great Britain. 21.999 bales; to France,
bales: to the continent, 4629 bales; to chan-
nel ports bales.
Consolidate'! stock at all United States ports:
This dav, 449,273 bales; yesterday. 453,750 Dales;
this day last year, 407,301 bales.
DAILY MOVEMENT AT INTERIOR TOWNS.
Receipts. Shipm'ts. Stock.
Augusta 37 • ...
Memohis.... 160 345 23,954
Cincinnati 88 310 2,131
St. Louis 67 128 20,005
in large and small lots, for common to choice,
good Goshen. 80<&35c; Western, nominal: Texas,
qooed at 15<2>30<* for fair to choice: oleo-
margarine and Dntterine. 18&2i)c for cood to
choi'e.
CAJ*DLES—Quoted a* follows: 16-ounce weight
fro® first hands, in carload lota, 15c; from whole-
sale sroeers. 15^6&l6a.
CANNED GOODS—Two pound standard gxxvts,
per dozen: Strawberries, $1 3r>£frl 45; pineapples,
standard, $1 85; seconds, $1 45^1 50; j»ears,
$1 25: peaches. standard. 2-tt>, SI 75^! *0;
seconds, 2 E>, Si 55^1 60; 3-lb, standard. $2*45
30; 3-!t>, seconds, $1 75«,l 85: blackberries,
$1 l.r>ki4 25; red cherries. Si 75; srooseberries, ^i 15
(&l 25; peas, marrowfat, $1 25^1 35; Lima beans.
$1 50; string beans, $1 25; corn ranges from $1 15
(^11.0; tomatoes, 2 lb, $1 »>5^1 15: do. 3 !b. 40(^
1 55; oysters, 1-18, 1. w„ 60<&65c dozen: 2-Ib. I. w.,
lOfiil 15 ^ dozen; l-t>. f. w.. Si ldfftl 2»*: 2-lb, f.
w., $2 00^L210: saimon. f 1 65<ai 75: apples. 3-ft can.
Si 50<2,1 55 %< dozen.
CALIFORNIA CANNED lK>ODS—Wholesale
grocers.fill orders at tne following quotations per
dozen for 2^ lb cans: Peaches. SS 00(^3 15; pearls,
$.3 10^3 15; anricots $3 00Q& 10; curraute. $2 10
^2 15; plums, j: 75; black cherries. $3 i5f^3 30;
white cherries. $3 30: nectarines. $3 25; strawber-
ries, $3 55; quinces. $2 75; grapes, $2 75; black-
berries. S2 95
COFFEE—Wholesale grocers' Quotations: Ordi-
nary. 9c: fair. 10<^10^c; nrime. lK&lll^c;
choice, 12©12^c; pea-oerry, 14<&,14V£c: Cordova,
12(^.12t4c; old government Java, 22&2uc. acconling
to grade. Importers of Rio coffee fill orders for
round lots, of not less than 250 sacks, at the follow-
ing prices: Fair, 9i*^9->*c; eood, 10<^10J<|c:
prime. 10«*^10>£c: choice. llHQllt^c
cHEESfi—Quotations aie as ioIIows" Western,
l2H(V^14c: cream, 103^-^1 «>^c: Swiss. 25^20c; Lim-
bursrer. 15@16c
COTTON SEED—Quoted at $11 00 per ton on
wharf.
CORN—Quoted at 6-3£&67VaC from track for
mixed in carload lots; mixed, from store, 68<&69c;
white. 0 i&71e
CORNMEAL—Quoted at f3 70 per barrel Tor
Western kiln-dried. Pearl meal. fA 75 per barrel.
Grits, $4 75 per barrel. Cracted corn, $1 per 100
pounds in 50-sack lots. Oatmeal. $8 00^8 50 per
barrel; $4 00(^4 25 per half barrel. City corn-
meal, kiln-dried, from mills, in sacits. per barrel,
$3U0; in barrels, $3 20; from wholesale grocers,
$3 3i> in sacks and $3 20 in barrels. Ciijf pearl
meal, crits and hominy. S4 30
t>RIED FRUITS—L»riea peaciies nominally SGL
S^c per pound. Prunes, Dried currants,
7Ji@79ic. Dried ajiples—9@9^c for quarters, 10
©lOMc for slice<l. l(.V^<2il7c fur'evaporated
DRY SALT MKATS—Market bare of shoulders
and sides, and prices are nominal;bellies offering at
ll-' 4^l2C
EGGSy-QuoreJ af 12^I3c ner dozen for patent
cases from near railroad points; island, S5&35c;
bay, 13(2H"e.
FLOUR—Quotations for round lots from mills,
in sacks, per barrel: XXX, 3"' 8) choice family,
$0 55; fancy, $0 80; patent. $8 (X). In barrels 30c
extra is charged. Special fi^ut^s giren for
large lots. Wholesale grocers quote Western flour
as follows: Patent. $7 *5(^8 25: fancy. $7 25^7 75;
choice, $6 75<&7 00; treble extra, ^0 25^6 50; in
sacks. 25c per bbl lesa.
FEED MEAL—Offered at $1 45 p>er 100 pounds.
HAMS—Western su^ar-cured. canvas* d. from
tra«.*k. in larsje lots, at 13t^®l3-'^c; from whoiesal^
grocers. 133c|<&i4c; sugar-cured canvased shoul-
ders. 1014c: New York ham8.15H;<3&159<ic; shoulders.
12€412tic.
HARDWARE -Firm. Nails $3 75 per keg. bas:^
lCd. Axes per dozen ?9 00<^12 00. Castings per
potmd. 4t^c. Bar iron 3t^^4c per ponnd. Sal
iron, 4t£e. Barbed wire 9@,~10c per pound. Anvil*,
per pound, 15o. Vises, per pound. 20c. Horse-
shoes. 0c per pound
HAY—Western timothy Quoted at 520£>2I from
track, and $21 00<^22 i» from store in lar^e lots;
Western Texas mesauite t:niss nommajt; srairie
hav Ss 50 ftoM track.
— .11* quoted as ioflows: Dry flint,
thev run. 11^ 2,13^0: dry salted. HH^12c; wet
salted, 7^S^c. Selected dry flint wilt brins 14c.
Butchers ijreen. "
LARD—wuoted at JlV40^llt^c for refined.tierces;
cans, iu cases, 1H4CH-''-4,c. urocers fill oraers as
{ S4C a«lvanc«
Li. vlONS -In fair supply at f t 00(^4 75 per box
for Palermo: Messina quoted at S4 25<^4
Mv-JIjASSES—Quoted from first hftnds a< follows;
lA>uisiana centrifugal. 3l>®.4t»c; open kertle, 35 Jt
45c: Texas. 33<&45c. Quoted by wholesale grocers
at 40^»42c tor ordinary; fair to good, 44£&4oc;
prime to choice. 48(^52c.
OATS—Ouotea rrom store at 62c for gor.-d
mixed Western, and at 00c for fair to good
in carload lots from tract-
OILS— Linsee I. raw. boiled. 05c: castor,
5". 35, West Virginia lubricating, 25c |>er gallon:
in barrels. 20c: golden machinery, 3";^40c; lard
oil. winter strained 95c; extra No.I 1. 85c;
No. 1 50c; neats foot. 85c: train oil 0Oe.
ONIONS—New quoted at $1 25&1 50 per bushel
in sacks; $3 ."0(5,3 75 per carrel in barrels; Ber-
muda. 82 75 per bushel in orates.
ORANGES—Messina, in boxes, 54 25214 50; Va-
lencia. 50&8 Oo
PECANS-Quoted at 5«iGo for medium to larse.
PICKI^ES-Barrels, 5o: half-barrels, £5 75
ten-gallon ke^s. S54 25; five-gallon kegs. $2 50.&
Quoted at 54 0031 20 t>er
Total to-day 352 783 46.089
OTHER COTTON MARKETS.
[Compiled from Telegrams to Cotton Exchange.!
Liverpool, June 13.— Cotton on the spot opened
with a moderate inquiry, freely supplied, and
closed unchanged. Ordinary, 4 11-lGd; good ordi-
nary, 5 3-10d: low middling, 5V£d; middling up-
lands. 5 ll-16d; middling Orleans. 5 13-ltkl. Sales.
10.000 bales, of which 8400 were American, and
l'XX> for export and speculation. Imports,
8850 bales, of which, 8000 were American. Fu-
tures opened steady but partly 1 point lower, but
advanced and closed firm and 2®3 points higher
than yesterday. Deliveries quoted as follows:
June-July, 5.46d: July-August. 5.50d: August Sep-
tember, 5.54d; September-October, 5.51d; Octo-
ber-November, 5.45d; November-December. 5.424.
Havre. June 13.—Cotton on the soot quiet and
easy. Futures quiet. Tres ordinaire, 69f: low mid-
dling, afloat, 69f: low middling, loading. 69f;
June, 66^; July, 67f: August-September, 68?; Oc-
tober-November, 68^ f.
New York, June 13.—Cotton on the spot opened
quiet but firm, ruled dull and closed quiet and un-
changed. Texas quoted as follows: Orainarv.715-10c;
good ordinary, 9 3-10c; low middling, iO^e; mid-
dling, lOvkc; good middling, ll'-^c. Sales, 293bales—
all to spin ners. Futures opened steady and 1 <2.4
points higher, ruled dull and closed dull, with June
a point lower. July, September and January a
point higher, and the other months ar yesterday's
figures. Saies, 46,0,.K) bales: delivered 011 contract,
500 bales. June 14).6oc: July, lu.sue: August, 10.04c;
September, lo.jdc; October. 10.05c: November,9.h.'.c;
December, 9.90c: January, 10.05c; February, 10.15c.
Nkw Orleans. June 13.—Cotton on the spot
opened dull and closed easy but unchanged.
Saies. 2250 bales. Low ordinary, Tv^c; ordinary,
8c: good ordinary. R"^c; low middling, 9-«c; mid-
dling. 10c; good middling, 10 5-16c: middling fair,
10 9-10c; fair, 11-&C. ■ Futures opened dull but
1C&4 points higher thau lust evening, ruled dull,
and closed auiet. with June 9 points lower. July 1
point lower; August unchanged, and the o'.'.er
months 1<&2 points higher than yesterday.
Sales. 26,700 bales. June, 9.97 c; July,
10.13c; August, 10.25c; September. 9.94c; Octo-
ber. 9.74c: November, 9.64c; December, 9.C5c;
January, 9.76c; February. 9 o7c.
Freights.
Steam—Cotton to Liverpool direct, 13-32d; via
New York, 25 04d; to Bremen, noue; to Havre,none;
to New York 45c par 10<> pounds.
Sailt—Liverpool, none; Havre, rtSd*: Bremen,
13-32d; New York, Boston, Pro valence, va!; Rive*
and Philadelphia, >^c.
Financial.
EXCHANGE AND SILVER.
Official quotations of the Cotton Exchange:
Commercial. Bank.
Sterling, sixty days 4.SO 4.85
New York sight par 14 prexn
New Orleans sight ,. par 3-4 prern
Silver, American dis par
Sdver, Mexican 80 nominal
Galveston tiive Stock Jrlarket.
Reported for The New* by Borden & Borden, lave
Stock Commission Merchants.
Beeves Yearlings
Receipts.
and
and
Cows.
Calves.
Sheep.
Hogs.
This dav
This week
*29
* 41
"166
43
This season
. 7899
4Do7
8128
2028
Stock in pens..
35
22
Quotations—Grass-fed cau'e. ^ choice, gross
4©4Vic; grass-fed cattle, fi lb. common, gross.
3©3V»c; two-year old, per head, $16 0"J@.zQ 00;
yearlmcs, per head, >12 00^16 00; calves, per
head. $0 00^10 tX). Mutton, choice, & 2>. gross,3Ur^
4c: mutton, common per head. SI ttJ&i *5u.
Remarks—Market well supplied.
The General IVIarlt^t.
£gy—Quotations represent wholesale priccs. In
making up small orders higher prices have to be
charged.
AMMUNITION—Powder, per keg, SO 50. Blast-
ing powder, $2 90 per keg, agents' price; jobbers
charge $3 25. Shot, drop, per sack, $2 00: buck,
$2 25.
BACON—Selling round lots at following figures:
Shoulders, 9«4^9^c; long clear llj$<&n*tfc: short
clear. ll%<£Ml-?4; breakfast bacon, frum store.
16<g;t5^c. Jobbers fill oraers at advance.
BAGGING AND TIES—Quiet. Standard, 25-4?p.
12^$c; 2D), llj-fcc: 1^3), 10>^c; iron ties,$l 40^.1 50
•er bundle. Baling twine, 10® 13c ^
SONES AND HORNS—Bones, clean and dry. $15
I ton delivered on track. Horns, fresh and clean,
each: steers. 3<&4c; cows. lOllUc each.
SB.AN— 'Juoted f t *1 v .
POULTRY—Chickens _ _
dozen, for full grown; spring chickens. $2 50^2
per dozen. Turkeys, full grown gobblers. $15 00
18 00 per dozen; best mixed coops, $22 00S&14 tX)
per dozen; hens and i»artly grown, $9 00(&1100
per dozen. Geese and ducks nominal.
POTATOES—No old »n marketoble condition of-
fering. New selling at 75^90c per bushel, accord-
ing to Quantitv and quality
PETROLEUM—in steaa v supply at 13c per gal-
lon in barrels: 10c incases foro-gallcn cans, and
20c in cases for i-gallon cans; 150 test, 26c in cases
and 23c in barrels. These are jobbers' prices
small advance from wholesalers is charged.
RAISINS—Layer, 40<&u 50 per box: London
layers. 75(g,2 85 per box
RICE—Wholesale grocers quote: Louisiana ordi-
nary. 5V£<&5$ic; fair to prime, 6(^6jjic; choice.
084(217 Vic.
SAL.T—Liverpool coarse quoted at $1 00 per sack
in carload lots: in lots of 500 sacks and upward,
97H»c: Liverpool fine. §1 35 for carload lets; §1 40
for small lota: Louisiana coarse. 95c; Louisiana
fine. SI 25
SARDINES—Imported, quarter-boxes, S14 25<7&
14 75 per case; American, uuarter-boxes, SS 00^
8 25
SCRAP IRON—Wrought scrap, fl4 00^15 00 r>er
ton: heavy castings, $14 00 per ton; stove Dlate
$9 0i> i>er ton
SUGAA—Selling from first hands as follows
Louisiana pure white. 8^c; choice white. 8$%
off whites. 8^<?fc8V£c; yellow clarified. $V63&84f*c
seconds. 6^©7^c: open kettle entirely nominal
grocers fiil oraers at H^.^c advance. Northern
refined firm: wholesale grocers quote as follows:
Cut-loaf, 10^@10&£c; crushea ana powdered. I0t£
<&lO$£c; granulated, 9^((&10c; standard A, 9}-£4&
9^ic.
VEGETABLES—Cabbages, $3 00&5 00 oer crate,
for common to choice. Green peas, 3"^&4c per
B>. White beans, 5>^^55^c per lb. Black-eyed peas,
lady peas. 7c; whippoorwUl peas. 4c; clay-
bank peas, 7c per Tfc>. Carrots, S3 50. Beets, $4 00
per bar ml
WOOL.—The following covers the extreme range
of views as to valuta: Fine to medium, free of
burs, 20;&24c; coarse, free of burs. 16®19c; burry
aud dirty, 5-&i0c lower.
Markets by Telegraph.
New York, June 13.—Denver and Rio Grande,473£
Houston and Texas Central, 71; Kansas and
Texas, 31^: Missouri-Pacific, 105^; Texas and
Pacific, 39; Southern Pacific, none.
New York, June l3.-Money, 2&2*4; closed offered
at 3; prime mercantile paper. Sterling ex
change. B. B.. steady at 4.S5t^; sight, 4,59; 3 per
cents. 103J^; extended 5s. 103^; 4>is, coupons,
!12£fc; 4s. coupons, 119%.
New Orleans, June 13.—Sight exchange on New
York, $1 50 per S1000 premium. Sterling exchange.
B. B., 4.86(&4.80V$.
New York, June 13.—Flour dull. Wheat inac-
tlvft; steamer No. 3, red. Si 03; No. 3 red. $1 17<&
1 17>4; steamer No. 2, red, $1 17^©1'19; No. 2. red,
Si 2234(31 2ftyC, elevator; $1 2C&1 23 afloat. Sugar
dull: standard A. 8^<^8 7-16c; cut loaf and crush-
ed. 9V£c: granulated, 8 13-16<Qi8%e: cubes, 9c; pow
dered. O^g^y^gc; refined white extra C, <Tac; off
A Sfs®8>ic; mould A, 8^gc: confectioners' A
8 9-10(^?y^c. Rice steady, with a good demand
domestic, 5(£7?>4e. Rosin stronger at ^$1 02^(3^
1 67^. Turpentine quiet and unchanged. Wool
dnll and unchanged, Pork dull and nominal. Lard
stronger at 11.35c.
New Orleans, June 13.—Flour auiet but firm
high grades. $5 25(^6 00. Corn—demand fair and
prices higher; mixed and white, 62c. Oats quiet
and weak at 51 ©52c. Cornmeal q net at $2 05<&
2 70. Hav dull; prime, $14u04&l6 00; choice, ^17 00
28 00; Pork in fair demand, but at lower rates,
$19 50. Lard lower: tierce, il?-*c; keg, ll->»c. Buik
meats in fair demand but at lower rates: shoul
ders. 8>4C. Eacon dull and lower; shoulders,
tc: long clear, 11 25c; clear rib. 11c. Hams—sugar-
cured. steady and unchanged; choice canvased.
12^l34ic. Whisky firm and unchanged; Western
rectified. Si 95^1 20. Coffee—strong; Rio car
goes, common to prime, 7(&103^c. Sugar dull and
unchanged ; common to good common, tJ^^OvUc
fair to fully fair. 67t,<&7c: prime to choice, 7v^(;5
7}i*c; yellow clarified. Si^S^c; choice white
clarified, 8-%-c. Molasses nominally unchanged
Rice steady with fair demand at 5®6?£c. Bran
uuiet steady at 80c. Cotton seed oil duii and un-
changed; crude. 36^j^40c; summer yellow,
fined. 45C^40^c-
St. Lotjis, June 13.- Flour unchanged. Wheat
lower aud slow; No. 2 reu, £1 lcj^fc^I lS^4 casL
Si 1W.&1 Its#. July; ?1 1^<J61 17^, August
Si 17^ntl 17 for the year. Corn dull and lower
51 (&50/4C cash; 52Vi^5l3r^c, June; 5;i>^@53c July
46}'4©45^c for the year. Oats lower; 39£ac
cash; 39^(&393^c June. Whisky steady at $1 14.
Cornmeal steady at 50.*.Pork duli at §18 70 Bulk
meats dull and lower; long clear, 9.40c; short rib,
9.50c: short clear. 9.75c. Bacon duli; long clear.
lO.Or'^lO.lOe; short, rio, l0.2o(^10.30c; short clear
IO.5O1& 10.60c. Lard nominal.
Chicago, June 13.—Flour dull and unchanged,
Wheat duli, weak and lower but n guiar; Si 10-.
June; Si ll?£(i&l 11 July; Si 13^^ 1 13 4 Ail
gusr: No. 2 re-J winter, $1 12^. Corn active but
lower; 5534 casn or June: jbirji^SO^^c July; 563^©
50^yc August. Poi'K easier and in good demand
818 20®.J8 1S^; cash or June; $18 275^^18 30 July
l^ard in good vieiuanu and irregular; 11.42;^{^11.45c
cash or June: 11.47>4vt& July. Bulk meats in fair
demand; short rib, ity*.c; short clear, 9.90c.
Kansas C ity, June 13.—Wheat steady: Sfo. 2 red,
901.4c bid ca.-h ami July; bid August. Corn
firmer at 42«^^43i^c cash: 44c bid July.
St. Louis. June 13—Cattle—receipts, 2S30: more
doing, but market feeling weak: heavy shipping
steers, 0 , 0 on; light do., §5 C0^£5 50; butcaers
st- 'T<, $4 T0<ui5 5*.': good cows and neifers, f4 25(2^
4 7" : common, $3 'AHA4 00; grass Texans, $3 75<^
4 Co. Hogs—receipts, 6000; market active and
slower; light shipping, $6 35(&6 5(»: rough to good
packing, Ot ^6 65; butchers' to extra, $6 WQ
ti 75. Sheep—receipts. 1300; market dull; medium
to choice. S~ «5-:. 4 25: Texans, $2 25(&4 25.
Chicago, June 23.—Hogs—receipts.^4.000; market
act. ve an-J fam; muted, S3 30^6 70; heavy. $0 65
Z%7 00; light, ?6 25-^6 ~S. Cattle—receipts, 41450:
xaarket more active aud firmer; exports. §5 9
o 15; good to choice shijiping, $5 W&o 80; com-
mon to medium, 5 00&5 OO; oows and mixed slow
but sf-ady, l2 50Q>; 00; stocke'rs and feeders.
S3 (-0^4 90. Sheep—receipts, SOO; market bri>
and strong: common to good, $.2 75^$4 25; choice
to extra, $4 50C&5 00.
Kansas City, June 13.—Cattle — receipts, 1100
market firm and higher; shipping steers, §5 12)^(2^
6 50; cows. S3 504 50. Hogs—receipts, 5500; mar-
ket lower: ranging $0^0 -A/; bait sales as SS 25^
c 40. Sneep—receipts, 2CU; market quiet; 93-pound
averages sold at $3.
PORT OF GALVSSTON.
Widnksday, June 13, !SS3.
ARRIVED.
Steamship St. Mary, Theissen, Morgan City.
$hip Julius. Metntzen, Liverpool.
Schooner Washington, J •''dan. New York.
Schooner J. F. Collins, Theissing, Philadelphia.
ENTERED.
Bark Hooding, Pearson, St. Thomas.
SAILED.
steamship St. Mary, Thiessen, Clinton.
IM PO RTS -CO AST WIS E.
Philadelphia—Per schooner F. J. Collins—550
tons iron pipe, 92 carboys and 7 bbls.
Morgan City—Per steamship St. Mary—1 case
cigars, 198 pkgs tobacco, i34 pkg> liquors, > pkgs
furniture, 14 boxes meats. 1*0 coxes crackers. 7G
pkgs groceries. 59 pkgs general merefhan Use.
RECEIPTS FROM THE INTERIOR.
Houston Direct Navigation Company — Per
barge Diana—34 bales cottou, flat. 21 sacks wool.
Gulf. Colorado and Santa Fa Railroad—June
13—~3 bales cotton. Jcars lumber, 3 cars rock, 1
car bones. 1 guide wheel. 4 sacks wool, 1 bale
hides, 1 sack cabbages. 6 sacks potatoes, 15 pigs, 1
case merchandise, 1 horse. 1 draj*. 1 set harness, 15
kegs powder, 15 boxes glassware, 4 empty hhds.
Xjive Stock.
Toy Greer Times: Last week B. M. Collyns
le-se hi that body of land situated ou the
*>foraJkt«JO^cno and Grape creek, known as the
PI A.aaley and Gardner ranches, comprising
t out £S,<XXJ acres of fine grazing land, to the
jtp. an4 Texas Cattle company and Chicago
«od Live Stock company, for a perirsd
of fire rears, at an annual rent of $GS2G yc.
They alio ^old to the same companies the en-
*Jr« flhti 6m r stock of cattle ana horses fpr the
sunt of fSf,000. These cattle will be sold at
ranch deanery.
TEXAS NEWS IT21HS.
CAMERON.
Brownsville Cosmopolitan: Rev. Mr. F»lum,
the Jewish rabbi of Galveston, is on a vi«t to
this section The levee built along the mar-
gin of the river to protect the town from its
waters .luring a rise is 7343 feet long.
FANNIN.
Bonham News: Last Saturday evening dur-
ng the thunder storm lightning struck a tree
^n W. D. Oliphint's yard, and uurmsr the saxna
storm a colored boy, the son of Abe Persoos.
was driving a team about three miles south-
west of towu, when a tiash of lightning killed
him and both of his horses. Just previous to
this the wagon was filled with colored people,
who had got out.
. GOLIAD. r
The Summer Normal school will be opened
in Goliad on the 2d day of July Farmers
are encouraged a little by the ram this week,
but more by the hope of more.
HUNT.
Greenville is having an improvement booni
■just now. A large number of residences and
business houses are being erected, and capital*
ists are working for tne construction of a
street railroad, waterworks and a narrow*
gauge railroad.
KAUFMAN.
Terrell Times; The splendid prospect for
corn ha* caused a rapid decline in that article
of consumption during the week.
LAMAR.
Paris Nortli Texan: Mr. T. P. Jones sa-3
his crop is just good enough all round This
section is about cleaned or cattle, and bay era
will have to find new fields....Captain A. W.
Womack, of Gibson, reports too much rain.
Wheat is being cut and the crop is fine. Oatd
are very fine and no signs of rust.
MITCHELL.
Colorado Clipper: The price of business lots
on Second street, from Oak street to the Lone .
"Wolf bridge, range from $1000 to $5000...►
The receipts at this station on the railroad for.
tickets and freights has increased to $*i0U0 per
day as an average Several rattlesnakes
have recently been killed in the city. A couple
of ladies killed one in their diningroom a few
days ago....The street railway company have
the grade work nearly complete and will com-
mence track laying next week The surveys
by the Waterworks company for water mains
have l»eeu completed and work wili commence
at an early day.
NACOGDOCHES.
News: Mr. Tobe Young killed a black bear a
few days since in his neighborhood, «n the An-
gelina river, weighing about 200 pounds..
PARKER.
Weatherford Sun: Weatherford continues
her series of new buildings. On every con*
ceivable crook and corner can be seen the ar*
tistic work of th® carpenter going on.
RED RIVEK.
Clarksville Times: George Ellis, commonly
known as Black George, and Mac Linsay, botU
colored, were having a boxing match on Jim
Hopkins's place last Sunday morning.{Mac wai
a little too much for George, who exhibited
some temper when Mac turned away and quit.
As he started off, George says, " run or FlI
shoot you." Mac, thinking him in fun, ran off
a little, when George fired, the bullet striking
Mac just under the right shoulder blade, ana
passing through the right lung, lodging some-
where m the breast. The wounded mau was
taken to his cabin and Dr. B. A. Dinwiddle
summoned. He pronounced the wound danger*
ous but not necessarily fatal. George was ar*
rested aud lodged in jail.
SAX AUGUSTINE.
Herald: The late rain showers havo visited
us very opportunely for the prosj>erity of tho
crop# although they would not have "suffered
for a few days, yet there is no doubt out whas
the showers have been of ^n immense benefits
just at this time. Reports from all quarters
are cheering.
TAYLOR.
Abilene Reporter: About twenty buildings
are now in course of construction There
was a severe wind and hailstorm on Monday,
in the vicinity of Lytle Gap. Hail fell to the
depth of several inches, and where there w*as &
drift, it was not melted away up to Wednes-
day evening. Sheep suffered some loss, and
the crops that lie in the track of the storm—
about a mile wide—were completely destroyed.
Fortunately, the track of the cyclone was so
narrow that but few dwellings were injured.
This is the same storm which destroyed Mr.
Hoover "s house, at Meakel.
WOOD.
Quitman News! James Smith was tried last
•week for killing a negro in this county iu 1873.
Captain W. M. Giles represented the State and
Angle & Hart the defendant. The jury gave
the prisoner his lifetime in the penitentiary.
in the case of Charles Darnell, for the
murder of Mr. William Gilbreath, the jury re-
turned a verdict of guilty of murder in the
first degree, with the death penalty.
YOUNG.
Graham Leader: New wheat will be ground
at the Graham mills this week... .Harvesting
is now the main hold upon farmers, aud wear**
glad to know that the wheat aud oat crops are
turning out very satisfactorily The finest
rain of the season fell Thursday morning. The
corn crop is now secure from drouth, while
cotton, millet, late oats and vegetables are
elected by a large majority.
Mexican Items.
From the Cosmopolitan: __ The outrageotu
press law >vent into effect on May 20.
It is said that Sir Arcadio Zuniga y Tejeda.
the fearless editor of Juan Panadero, of
Guadalajara, has been obliged to emigrate ta
the State of Colima.
Srs. Sierna and Gonzales, editors of the
Sword of Damocles, an opposition paper of
Mazatlan. were recently peremptorily seized
and cast into prison.
During the year ending June 30, 1882, $25,■»
610,822.85 in gold, silver, copper and nickel
were coined in the various mints of th© repub-
lic.
Of the money coined in the republic by
the mints during the last fiscal year $4.52,590
was gold, $23,146,230 was silver and $11,972 cop-
per coin.
Nicolas Paez, a famous bandit anl escaped
convict from the Beleu prison, was recently
captured by Capt Pedro Ocampo and a squad
of the rural guards, in Moreles, on the 11thult.
Recently in Santa Clara, Nueva LeoH, live
girls, daughters of Sr. Nicolas Lahada, per-
ished in a fire.
The American company who received a char-
ter to drain the valley of Mexico have had it*
declared void on account of a non-fulfillment
of contract.
At Zangolica, Orizaba, a terrible hail-storm
recently fell, doing great damage to trees and
vegetation.
Two well-armed men, who spoke English,
one night recently, seized the night watchmaa
at the Santa Gertrudes mine, near Pachuca,
mutfled up his head, and kept him two hours
while they stole considerable silver.
Advices from the Lower California gold
fields say men and animals are dying for the
want of water. The mines are unworkable
until the rainy season.
Sheep and Wool-
Colorado (Mitchell county) Clipper of Satur-
day; The receipts of wool during the past week
show a falling off of 66,630 pounds, which may
be accounted for from the fact that growers
are holding their wool on the ranches waiting
for a change in the market, aud it is thought
by the warehousemen and others that very lit-
tle will be offered for sale until July or Au-
gust. Receipts for the week ending June 3:
J. T. Davis & Co., 150,000 pounds; received at
the depot, 41,000; other merchants, 70,000.
Total, 261,730 pounds.
Few things in the progress cf the civilized
werld are more astonishing than the increased
consumption of wool. This is best shown in
the statistical account of the production,
which, iu the year 1830, was about 320,000^000
pounds weight, and in the year 1S71 had raised
to ^026.750,000 pounds. In this extraordinary
aggregate, Europe produced 85S.750.000 pounds ;
South America and Mexico, 174,000,000; United
States, 185,000,000; Australia, 255,000,000;
Africa, 96,000,000; balance, scattering.
A Vermont sheep-raiser claims the foot-rot
can be entirely eradicated from a flock of sheep
by dipping the feet of every member of the
flock, whether lamb or not, into kerosene oil,
and then putting a pinch of sulphur between
the hoofs. Oue repetition of the treatment at
the end two weeks, he claims, will be sufficient.
They should be kept in a dry place for a few
hours after each application of the kerosene.
A Texas paper says that two Rambouillet
bucks, recently purchased by'Cojonel Zander*
son, in a fight with cayotes. killed two of the
beasts.
What the Coming Man will be Z«ike«
[London Spectator.]
There is little use in dreaming about the
man of the future, for, for anything we know
or can help, some horrid little teredo or other
evil-minded insect may learn how to eat the
silica-covered grasses, produce a corn disensa
aud alter all human destinies; but granting
that present conditions continue for 100®
years,'three changes in man are at least with-
in the range of possibility. The peoples
brought close by electric railways, steamers
and education will, in all human possibility,
give up the prejudice of race and largely-
cross their blood. Past evidence shows that
when that occurs, as it did once in India, the
dark races give the white races their tinge but
take their outline of form; and the usual man.
would be a well-formed human belng>
slighter and rounder than the present
European, and with skin of very light brown,
dark eyes and hair uniformly black. Then the
human race will be crowded, and being
crowded, will have a fierce struggle for means,
and in that struggle will develop the endurini
power of the Chinaman, the best industrial of
the world, who will work sixteen hours a day
and put will into his labor all the while. The
silent, browu man will, therefore, be very
strong and industrious. And, finally, he will
have had a thousand years of brain toil, will
have begun to reject such toil in self-defense,
and will tend to intellectual quiesence. In.
short, he is much more likely to resemble a
slightly handsomer and browner Chinese t.b»n
either the European of ;to-day or Mr. Kay
Robinson's hairless, toothless, club-toed, timid
and nondocomotive monstrosity.
jBl Pair Complexion-
A lady who has a beautiful complexion, free
from pimples and blotches, regular and clear
teeth, and an amiable disposition, whatever
the features, can scarcely fail to l>e regarded
as good looking, if not beautiful. Some use
catmeal iu washing the face, as a means of
improving the skin; but it would be far more
sensible and physiological to take it internally
as food. The use of flesh, in the extreme, cer-
tainly tends to impair the complexion. ' The
use of pork and fats in general produces a,
coarse skin—pimply, shining, rough—with a
greasy look. They deepen the color, and when
a liver difficulty is added, the skin has a dingy,
dark look, resembling that of the mulatto.
To be as fair as a Jewess is to live like one,
eating no pork, no pastry made with lard.,
nothing to disfigure the countenance, to say"
nothing of her improved health, as the Jews
are seldom, if ever, the victims of pulmonary-
consumption, scrofula, blotches or humors,
while they are free from most of the diseases
with which we are scourged. Most of the na-
tives of Scotland, Ireland, Germany. Russia,
Sweden, Norway, of the peasantry, living
very simply at home, mostly on grains, have
good h-*a]:l>, sound teeth and fair complexions
* of th« ir 0\»otl habits*
m
I.
1
■
- ■... i .
Uixzm -Ji . — -It- I nil irrtiMlrri- Mhliitrtf TiMtm-iifi r - '
Bskm la&ykM
...
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Galveston Daily News. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 84, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 14, 1883, newspaper, June 14, 1883; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth461452/m1/3/: accessed April 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.