Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 305, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 13, 1902 Page: 3 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 24 x 18 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE OLD RE LI ABLE
Often Disagree With Us
Dec. 11th
NEWSQFTHECOURTS
New Size
COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS.
I
MARINE.
THURSDAY EVENING, NOV. 13, 1902.
COTTON,
Receipts. Shipments. Stock.
1 ro oxi
Of
$33.45
THE WEATHER,
.QUEEN ALEXANDRA’S DAINTY FAD.'
R-HWW
Final
Through Sleepers and Chair Cars
FAVORABLE TOWARDS THE CANAL,
BANK WRECKER SENTENCED.
MONDAY, NOV. 16, 1902.
Personal Points.
F. H. Lawson of Houston is in the city.
and
the
p. m.
MOROCCAN SITUATION SERIOUS.
Tennessean
GALVESTON TRAINS.
COLUMNS OF STEAM OVER ETNA,
DAUGHTERS OF CONFEDERACY.
SLOO to Houston
Express,
MILLION DOLLAR FIRE.
con-
TRI-STATE DOCTORS.
!*»
i
On sale November 29, 29 and 30.
limit December 10.
easy.
Fully good middling.
Fully middling .......
Low middling .....;.
53,351
110,36?
19,935
63,966
247,714
Things Wo
Like Best
ONE LONG PURPLE LINE
Of ROYALTY'S COLOR
They Stranded on Galveston Beach
Last ,Night.
MILLIONS OF
MEN OF WAR
IT’S ALL IN '
KNOWING
HOW
Yester-
7.7S^79
7.84-86
7.87- 88
7.88- 90
7.91-92
7.94-96
7.96-98
7.62-65
7.75-76
S’les
10^000
2,098
5,200
500
400
804
3,800
717
6|B
'532
"46
memoirs of
'is the extra-
by Na-
CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT.
Henry Pa.tterson, burglary; on trial.
HOUSTON SCHEDULE
Lv. Galveston, 1.40 p.m. ,5.40 p.m., 6.30 p.m.
Ar. Galveston, 8.C0a.m, 9.55 a m„ 9.35p.m.
Yester-
day.
8.08-09
7.95-97
7.99-8c
8.01-03
8.04-05
8.07
8.07
7.93-95
8.02-04
8.08
IT’S THE, BEST
EVERYBODY SAYS SO.
Azalea ....... ,....
Balila ..............
Breckfleld ........
Breslau ............
El Paso ............
Fert ...............
Induna .............
Iran ............ ...
Malin Head
Pensacola .........
Port Deneson ....
Roland ..........
Sabine ...........
Sarma.tia ......-.
Sch Samuel T.
Thistleroy ......
Chicago
AND RETURN
Little
Beneficencia
Lottery
Of the City of Mexico.
'NEXT DRAWING
Capital Frize---------$5,000,00
Tickets, $2.00, $1.00, 50c and 25c.
The Katy
TENTH DISTRICT COURT.
City of Galveston vs. S. w. Jones, taxes;
under advisement.
CHANGE OF TIME
ON THE
Santa Fe
| fey MJrtaggSetej 1
aor sent in plain wrapper,
MSUS&?*
Uiroatas aeat ea
Yester-
day.
5%
6%
6%
7%
7 13-16
8 1-16
8 5-16
the
* *
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT.
- - -
- ' 641 ° U1C vxuiwug quuiauu
for cotton on the spot today at the leadi:
markets, together with the closing of mi
dung yesterday, with foday’p sales:
Mid
ysday
4.46
This day
Last year.
26,114
13,323
26,967
1,406
95,680
163,484
Louisville, Ky„ Nov. 13.—J. M. McKnight,
formerly president of the defunct German
national bank, was today sentenced to six
years in tihe penitentiary for embezzle-
ment of bank funds.
A. A. Alexander of Fort Worth is in the
city.
Col. L. J. Polk, vice president of
Santa Fe, is in New Orleans.
Ben Campbell and Judge E. P. Ham-
blen of Houston are in the city.
W. J. Poole and A. J. Harvey of Hemp-
Lowther of Dallas
Y'ester-
day.
4.12
4.24
4.36
4.45
4.01
4.88
SAILED.
Ss Manteo (Am.), Brownsville.
Ss El Dia (Am.), New York.
Ss Iris (Am.), Port Arthur.
Ss Lincluden (Bn), Manchester.
VESSELS IN PORT.
.........................Pier 10
...... • .......Bolivar roads
......Pier 18
...... Pier 10
......Pier B
......Pier 31
......Pier 27
......Pier 15
......Pier B
......Pier 34
Pier 18
Pier 10
......Pier 25
...... Pier B
Beacham.............Pier 19
......... ..............Pier 35
For tickets, routes, etc., see
GALVESTON STOCK.
This day.
. 35,422
. .13,631
. 44,125
. 4,728
. 111,824
. 209,730
St. Louis Limited, via Houston
Leaves Galveston.......<5.<3o p. m.
Kansas City, Chicago, Colorado
•California Express
Leaves Galveston.......7.30 &. m.
Bellville Express
Leaves Galveston.......5.00
. 1,426
. 6,499
. 4,129
.14,584
.26,738
remains of Tanojl, ithe head of ths
gambling den. of Kongo and Asakysa, when
when the policemen of the Hongo station
stopped the procession, ps ths deceased
was a convict, whose term of punishment
was not yet expired. The accusiation was
true, and the bereaved family was there-
fore compelled to carry out the burial ser-
vice in a stealthy way.
AN INTERRUPTED FUNERAL.
Japan Times.
A splendid funeral procession was re-
cently proceeding from Hongo torbury th<,
A certain bank clerk relates that
from a slight liver trouble he had'"'~<
long- been subject to sick head-
aches, and has never found any
remedy that will stop the trouble
so quickly as a Ripans Tabule.
If he is careful to take one after
meals when the symptoms ap-
pear he avoids the headaches al-
together.
I \■ Use Bis® for unnatural
i'discharges,inflammati; ns,
irritations or ulcerations
of mucous membranes.
Painless, and not sstria*
S.B. NOBLE, City Passenger Agt,
307 TREAIH^T. PHONE 250.
“Tbs Right Way”
Trains leave Galveston 2:30
a. m., 9 a. m., 2 p. m. and
5:45 p. m. Ask for your
tickets via the G. H. & H.
London Telegraph.
In connection with the terrific cyclone
which passed over Sicily a few days ago
it is reported that throughout the day,
when the storm was at its worst, “Mount
Etna sent up a thick column of steam
from the vicinity of the scene of the erup-
tion of 1892.” This could hardly be due
to the torrential rains that fell, because
most likely the crater was above the
cloud level in such a storm. More prob-
ably the issue of steam and other gases
may be ascribed to the diminution of at-
mospheric. pressure. Ordinarily air pres,
sure is about 15 pounds per square inch,
with a barometer at 36 inches. A fall of
29.5 is, therefore, a drop of one-sixtieth,
or a reduction in the weight of the at-
mosphere of one pound for every four
square inches. On a single square mile
this would amount to over one thousand
million pounds, or rather less than 500,000
tons. There is good reason to believe that
the outrush of steam and gas from vol-
canoes depends, as in coal mines, to a
large extent on air pressure, and such a
fa,11 in the weight over every square mile
of surface might conceivably produce
large effects in the deep caverns of Etna.
E. R. FORBES,
Veterinary Surgeon. Graduate of Ontario
Veterinary College, Canada. Office over
SID Xremaat streak Phone 1188—4 rings-.
A vS*
4°
stead and Harry P.
are in the city.
S. J. Gaines of Rosebud, Tex., has re-
moved to Galveston and taken a residence
at 12th and Postoffice.
Mrs. S. C. Norwood and family of Wac&
have moved to Galveston and have taken
a residence on avenue O*, between 23d and
24th streets. Mrs. Norwood is the mother-
in-law of W. H. Gaines, secretary of th<
Galveston Maritime association.
Port
Liverpool...
Galveston..
Mobile.......
Savannah...
Norfolk .....
Baltimore...
New York...
goston ......
Philadelphia
Augusta.....
Memphis ....
St. Louis.....
Houston.....
B.W. LeCOMPTE, Sole Agent.
Office on Tremont, between Market and
Mechanic Streets.
ARRIVED.
Ss Balila (Ital.), New York.
Ss El Paso (Am), New York.
Ss. Malin Head (Br.), Swansea.
f
Augusta ..
Memphis ..
St. Louis .
Houston ..
Totals ...
After two years in the Courts
our contention is sustained.
The Court of Appeals decision re-
moves nuisance (the Subway
Construction plant)
from our front.
Tide Line Looked Like a Grand
Garden of Morning Glories
In Full Bloom.
Today.
.....8.05
......7.92-94
.....7.96-97
.....7.97-98
.....7.99-8c
.....8.01-02
.....8.01-02
.....7.89-90
.....8.02-03
.....8.06-07
GALVESTON GRAIN RECEIPTS.
By G., C. and S. F., 9 cars wheat.
Steady......7%
Steady......7&
Today.
......7.78-79
....7.82-84
......7.86-87
......7.87-89
......7.90-91
......7.92-94
.....7.95-96
.....7.68b
December ....... 7.74-75
NEW YORK FUTURES.
Opened easy, ruled steady and closed
steady.
MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP
has been used lor over 50 years by millions
of mothers for their children while teeth-
ing. wish perfect success. It soothes the
child, softens the gums, allays all pain-
.cures wind colic, and is the best remedy
for diarrhoea. Sold bv druggists in every
part of the world. Be sure and ask for
"Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,” and
take no other kind. 25c a bottle.
Ten Blocks of Oliphant, Pa., Are Wiped
Out.
Scranton, Pa., Nov. 13.—A disastrous fire
broke out in the general store of Atherton
& Co. at Oliphant shortly before noon to-
day and swept along the north side of
Lacka,wanna, destroying ten business
blocks. The fire department of this city
sent several companies to assist in check-
ing the flames. The estimated loss thus
far is $1,060,000.
NEGRO MURDERER LYNCHED.
Murdered and Mutilated a
and Paid the Penalty.
Lewisburg, Tenn., Nov. 13.—The horribly
mutilated body of Robert Adair was
found in a. field near his home at an early
hour this morning. Adair heard some one
'With a wagon who had been stealing corn
and started in pursuit with a small rifle,
the stock and barrel of which were found
near his dead body. A knife covered with
blood was also found and identified as the
property of John Da,vis, colored. The
sheriff organized a posse and went to the
house of Davis, where the bloody clothes
he wore were located, but the murderer
had fled. The search ■was unrelenting and
the negro was caught half a mile from
town, but not until he had been twice
wounded. He was brought back and the
sheriff and Rev. John Roya.l Harris made
an appeal to the people to a]Jow the law
to take its course, but the mob was .deaf
to all entreaties and hung the negro in
the court yard. There were about 500 un-
masked men in the crowd. -
Mexican Lottery
Beueficencia Publlca of t’.ie City of Mexico
CAPITAL PRIZE, $60,000.00
(UNITED STATES CURRENCY)
IIKETS-Wtow, $4; Halm. $2; Qnartefs, $1; Eighths, 50c. Sixteeirtfts, 25c.
NEXT DRAINING
NOV. 27, 1902.
For circular and particulars apply to
B. W. LECOMPTE, SOLE AGENT,
Office oh TREMONT, BETWEEN MECHANIC AND MARKET STREETS
Returning, trains leave Hous-
ton Grand Central Depot 4.45
p. m. and 9 p. m., I. & G. N.,
Congress Street, 10 minutes
later.
LIVERPOOL FUTURES
quiet, and closed quiet.
Today.
January-February ......4.28-29
February-March ........4.28-29
March-April............4,29 ,
April-May ...............4.29
May-June ..............4.29
June-July................4.29
July-August............4.29
October-November .....4.35
November-December ...4.31
December-January .....4.29-30'
Colombian Minister of War Wants the
United States to Dig It.
New York, N. Y., Nov. 13.—Gen. Fer-
nandez, minister of war, who has re-
sumed his duties after a period of illness,
says he is favorably disposed toward en-
tering into a canal treaty with the United
States, cables the Bogota, Colombia, cor-
respondent of the Herald.
If necessary, he added, congress will be
convoked for that .purpose as soon as cir-
cumstances permit.
Dr. Carlos Martinez-Silva, formerly Co-
lombian minister to the United States, and
other influential men are still in prison.
There have been no changes in the Colom-
bian ministry and there will probably be
none soon.
Her
Europe
com-
main, to her
Rebel Tribesmen Drive Troops Sent From
Tetuan and Threaten the Town.
Madrid, Nov. 13.—A dispatch from Te-
tuan, Morocco, where the Kabyle tribes-
men have rebelled, shows the situation
has grown more serious. A body of armed
Tetuanites has been defeated in a fight
with the rebels and compelled to retreat
to town. The rebels enca.mped some half
hour’s distance from Tetuan, where all
business is suspended. In Madrid the
position of the Europeans in Tetuan is
considered to be most grave. The news-
papers comment on Spain’s continued ill-
fortune as again evidenced by the fact
that the country is without a cabinet at
the time of such an important crisis.
When your linen isn’t just right
it is noticeable. There’s something
lacking that can’t be made up by
the finest outer garments. Send us
your laundry this week and we will
sho,w you the difference between
correct “Model” domestic finish and
the imitator’® finish. We have made
Laundrying a study and equipped
our plant to produce the best re-
sults. Don’t post you any more for
first class work, and if you don't
agree with us that our finish is su-
perior to any ip this city we do not
ask your patronage.
Sozodont
Tooth Wash f
Strictly Pure ?
No Acid ... J
Standard for 52 Years %
@
J Hall & RuCKiiL, New York «
TRIMBLE BROS., Props.
34th and Postoffice. Phone 79.
Fully good middling........56
Fully middling ...............54%
Low middling .............53,K,
Futures closed sellers at quotations.
T Today.
February ..................’.'.'50%
March ............ 50%
April ..........................50%
May ...........................50%
November ....................51%
December ..................."51%
^MARKETS.
_ _ _ nut w ciQ nA JLtVi-L Vic:-*
mand for spots; prices steady. Sales 10,060
rm 6?’ which 9300 were American and
500 to exporters and speculators.
LIVERPOOL SPOTS.
Today.
.....4.14
.....4.26
.....4.38 .
....4.48
....4.56
....4.90
Memphis, Tenn., Nov. 13.—The Tri-State
Medical association will conclude its ses-
sions today. Officers will be elected this
afternoon.
Because we ovejeat of them. Indi-
gestion follows. Bjjit there’s a way to
escape such consequences. A dose of a
good, digestant like Kodol will relive you
at once. Your stomach is simply‘too
weak to digest what you eat. That’s all
indigestion is. Kodql digests the food
without the stomach’s aid. Thus the
stomach rests while the body is strength-
ened by wholesome food. Dieting is un-
necessary. Kodol digests any kind of
good food. Strengthens and invigorates.
Koslo! Shakes
Prepared only by E. C. DeWitt & Go., Chicago.
The SI bottle con.t;pns2% times th© SOc. size.
BeW!TT’SWttweiS^l¥f
A certain cure fqf piles and skin diseases-
and Return every Sunday for
Morning and Noon Trains.
MARKETS
GALVESTON to NEW TORN
Wednesday Steamers Call at Key West,
fs. Sabine, via Brunswick, (no pas-
sengers)............................Nov. 13.
Ss. Concho......Wednesday, Nov. 19, noon
5s. San Marcos....Saturday, Nov. 22, noon
Ss. Lampasas ..Wednesday, Nov. 20, noon
Freight Received Dally. Insurance Effect-
ed at Lowest Rates.
PASSENGER ACCOMMODATIONS
llnsurpasaed. Tickets issued, all elaues,
to and from Europe at lowest rates. Cor-
respondence solicited.
J. B. DENISON. Agent. 2333 Strand.
A million men-o’-war stranded on Gal-
veston beach last night. Some people say
there were even mofe than that, and old
, salts who have been bfeach combers around
here for something more than ten decades
declare that in all their experience they
never saw the like before or since.
This is no pipe dream nor Prince of
Inca tale, either. If you have any doubts
of “it, why you just go out to the beach
some time this afternoon before the even-
ing tide comes in and you can see ’em
yourself. Of course you know there are
men-o'-war and men-o’-war. Those re-
ferred to are the Portuguese variety and
do business on their own hook without giv--
ing any allegiance to King Carlos or car-
ing three straws how the goose hangs at
Lisbon.
The high tide line this morning was one
grand purple all along the beach. One lit-
tle 'tot who never saw a Portuguese man-
o’-war before, when she spied them this
morning called to her mother: “O mama,
see those lovely morning glories!” That
is just what they looked like from a dis-
tance. Their color is the richest of purple,
and in the morning sun the stranded mil-
lions of men-o’-war presented a magnifi-
cent spectacle, much more magnificent and
alluring than they would present to a
party of bathers with their sails set. for
the bathing ground, for if there is a pesky
pest in the gulf for the? sole purpose
making life miserable to- bathers, it is
these same Portuguese men-o’-war.
The dictionary name of the Portuguese
man-o’-war is physalia. It is the typical
genus of physaliidae. These oceanic hy-
drozoans, known as Portuguese men-of-
war, are remarkable for their size, bril-
liancy and power of urdjeating. There is
a long, oblong crested float which buoys
the animal up, from which hang many
processes, some of which attain a len.th of
12 feet or more in individuals whose float
is only a few inches long.
So much for the dictionary part of it.
But any bather who has met one of these
birds in the water will tell you that if
the neither regions are warmer than the
sting of a “Portugee” then they will re-
form and be good till the trumpet toots.
Incidentally no one who has ever been
stung by one of them will regret the
stranding of the millions of'"'them by last
night’s tide.
XMUAVtP.......C.OI
Steady
GALVESTON MARKET.
Galveston market for spot cotton closed
-Today.
..7 13-16
...8 1-16
..% 5-16
Cooler weather is due tonight. It will
rain at the same time. Variable winds
will blow. The probabilities are the
winds will first blow from the northwest
and then from the northeast. Until they
shift to the northwest they will probably
blow from the southeasit. Col. Bowie
stakes his reputation as a weather prophet
on rain falling tonight. The cause of the
precipitation will be the cooler air from
the north swooiping down oh the moisture,
laden gulf air. causing the aforesaid mois,
ture to condense—then comes the down-
pour,
The temperature will probably drop to
about 60 or 65 degrees. The minimum tem-
perature yesterday was 74 degrees. A drop
of 10 or 14 degrees is something to be reck-
oned with. Fall clothing will not be so
terribly uncomfortable.
Cold weather prevails in the far north-
west and temperatures of 20 degrees and
below are quite common. The cold wave
influenced the weather at Amarillo last
night, with the result the thermometer at
that place fell to 38 degrees. Were it not
for the promised rain the cooler weather
would be welcomed with open arms. Gal-
veston does not require any rain right
now. But what care the powers that be
in the weather-making department of the
needs of this city in a rainy way?
ADOUE & LOBIT
BANKERS
AND
Commission Merchant®.
S »CLrIT.TPRAFTS ON LONDON. PARI8,
^OCKHOLM, BREMEN. HAMBURG,
FRANKFORT and BERLIN.
7.00am
8.25pm
The above trains all arrive at and de-
part from the Union Depot, corner Twen-
ty-52111 and Strand.
No Matter Where
Xom Are Going
THE PROPER WAY IS VIA
SOUTHERN PACIFIC
(SUNSET ROUTE)
OIL BURNING LOCOMOTIVES. NO SMOKE!
NO CINDERS! PERFECT TRACK ANO TRAIN EQUIPMENT '
TOLLMAN STANDARD SLEEPERS AND FREE CHAIR CARS on AU Trains.
S’FpBT^RHouSton Tex M’e 'p m T. J. ANDERSON,
1 r wir T P-1- T 1 p- & 11 A" Houston. Tex. A. G. P. & T. A., Houston, Tex.
J.H. MILLER, Division Passenger Agent, C. H. COMPTON, C P and T A
403 Iremont Street, Galveston, Texas. Phone 87. • n T. A.
Tone
Quiet.......
XT —----- Firm, lt.of’g
New Orleans Steady, rev.
Quiet.......
Steady......
Quiet .......
Firm........
Steady...,,.
Nominal....
Quiet.......
Quiet
Quiet-.......
Quici., stuy., , v®
Steady......7 9-16 7%
, FINANCIAL.
>alXest2n:. Sterling exchange, commer-
cial 60s, buying $4.81%, selling $4.82%; New
York sight buying % discount, selling %
premium; New Orleans sight, buying %
discount, selling % premium.
London: Bank rate, 4 per cent; street
rate, 3 7-16 per cent; rate of silver, 22 15-16;
consols tor money, 93 5-16; consols for ac-
count, 93 7-16.
SterHng exchange, bank-
ers 60s, $4.83%@4.84; commercial, $4.83%;
reichmarkp, commercial 60s, 94%@94 11-16;
mSl b6.wrS’ 6°S’ 5-1S% leSS 1-16: COm'
New Orleans: Sterling exchange, com-
rtMrcS $4.83; francs, commercial 60s,
6.20; New York sight, banker’s, par; com-
mercial, $1.25 discount.
WALLIS, LANDES 8 CO.
COTTON FACTORS
2409 and 2411 Strand, Galveston, Tex.
Liberal cash advances made on cotton
shipments, either for sale on arrival or
to be held. Minimum charges and faith-
ful services guaranteed.
Shipping blanks, stencils and daily Mar-
Ket quotations furnished on application.
Correspondence solicited.
Ships Chandler,
MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS
and Commission Merchants.
T. L. CROSS CO.
have In stock a full assortment of goods
In. their line, including BEEF and PORK
which they ar® offering low to the trade
and to consumers.
_____and 2016 STRAND.
KEMA>0W0ME».
gf tsBdayg. 1
I not to etricture. _ , ,
• Prevents Contegieu, Painless, and not £
ITHEEvaHSOhemiqalCo. gent or poisonous.
Ml
Meetings of National Body May Be Bien-
nial Instead of Annual Hereafter.
New Orleans, La., Nov. 18.—Confederate
Daughters in annual reunion and conven-
tion at Washington Artillery hall settled
down to work in ea.rnest shortly after 10
o’clock. Before that hour there had been
a brief meeting of jthe directors of the
Jeffersqfi Monument association.
Among the matters of importance that
will come up during the three days’ ses-
sion is the amendment proposed at
Charleston to make the convention meet-
ings biennial instead of annual.
Reports from various divisions were re-
ceived at the opening today and
sumed much of the forenoon.
The full -voting strength of the conven-
tion is not yet known because the creden-
tials committee has been unable to com-
plete its report.
CENSOR EDITS SHAKESPEARE.
Liverpool Post.
A masterpiece of censorship was once
performed by the Turkish censor, Nischan
Effendi, on the occasion of the production
of Sha.kespeare’s “Othello” at Conctanti-
nople. He “corrected” the drama so
thoroughly as to leave hardly a trace of
the original. Among other words, he ex-
punged “Cyprus,” giving ingenious rea-
sons for this correction. “Cyprus,” he
said, “is a Turkish- island; it would be
politically unwise to send Othello to
Cyprus, because the territorial integrity
of Turkey is guaranteed by treaties. Why
not put, instea.d of Cyprus.- some Greek
island, such as Corfu?” An<f thus it came
to pass that, from respect to the treaty of
Paris, Othello had to go Corfu.
NAPOLEON’S FaJscINATION.
Westminster Observer.U 1 f
The publications of further
St. Helena brings before
■ordinary fascination .exercised
poleon over four generations of states-
men, generals and biographers. The
records now being publiished by the Daily
Mail have the meritsflpf originality and
impartiality; but, like all contemporary
records, they suffer from the fact that no
one at tihe time was able to appreciate the
greatness of Napoleon. The man who
lives in the history of the world long after
his contemporaries have been forgotten,
and whose statecraft and warcraft are in-
voked persistently by politicians and
soldiers, is Napoleon.
Thoroughly equipped and in complete order;
location most central and convenient,
Europeau Platt—Popular Prices
Your patronage is solicited
B. L. M. BATES. Proprietor
MODEL LAUNDRY
6ulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Ry.
Arrive—
No. 1 So. Pac., H. & T. C............ 8 50am
No. 17 Galveston-St. Louis Limited l Z
No 3 Ha& T^C ' S a A a?d.ExPress. 9.15pm
bio. 3 H. & 1. L., b. A. & A. P......9.25nm
Depart—
No. 2 Houston Express......1 jAn_
No. 6 Main Line, Mail and Express* 7 20am
No. 18 Galveston-St. Louis Limited 7 30nS
No. 4 Houston and New Orleans Ex- P
Press ..........• ................ 5.50pm
Galveston, Houston and Henderson
Railway.
Arrive—
No. 5 I. and G. N. Fast Mail.......
No. 45 M.. K. and T. Flyer, daily io to
NDepart-H' & H' Passenger> da^- &30pS
No. 10 G., H. and H. News Special 2toa™
No. 8 Galveston-Houston Express,' JOara
Noa6yi. ■&’G"K"Fast"Maii.'.':.'.';:;: f'oOnS
No. 46 M.. K and T Flyer dailly..
Southern Pacific (Sunset Route).
Arrive—
No. 3 Houston & New Orleans Ex-
press H E. &W. T. connections..12.05pro
N«. 5 Houston Express.............. 3.50pm
No. z H. & T. C.. S. A. & A. P. and
So. Pac. (W. B.) connections......
No. 4 H. & T. C. and So. Pac. (W
B.) connections ................
Affirmed: South Texas national bank
vs. Texas and Louisiana, Lumber com-
pany et al., from Harris; A. Gilmer vs.
Orange Lumber company, from Orange;
Galveston, Houston and San Antonio rail-
way company vs. H. W. Caruthers, from
Colorado.
Reversed and rendered: J. R. Irion vs.
Eskrigge a,nd McLeod, from Rusk; Texas
and New Orleans railroad company vs.
Mary Ann Stewart, from Harris.
Reversed and rendered, Chief Justice
Garrett dissenting: Home Mutual Insur-
ance company va Tomkies & Co., from
Harris. ,
Motion to strike out transcript refused:
A. Gilmer vs. Orange Lumber company,
from Orange.
Motion for issuance of mandate refused:
Mary N. Mathis et al. vs. Carrie Hoopes,
from Aransas.
Motions for rehearing refused: Houston
and Texas Central railroad company vs.
J. W. Harris, from Grimes; C. J. Wright
vs. Annie Ross, from Harris; Frank
Mason vs. Bi. Adoue, from Galveston.
Cases submitted: J. T. Mason vs. E. L.
Fox, from Harris; Aetna Life Insurance
company vs. J. B. Parker & Co., from
Smith; Aetna Life Insurance company vs.
J. B. Parker & Co. et al., from Smith;
Jacob Hornberger vs. D. C. Giddings et
al., from Harris; Hipp & Key vs. the city
of Houston, from Harris; G. A. & G. D.
Johnson vs. D. D. Cooley, from Harris;
Houston, East and West Texas railway
company vs. Mary Charwane, from
Harris; American Copying company vs.
Crager Bros., from Orange; W. W. Crook
et al. vs. J. C. Lipscomb et al., from Waj-
lei, International and Great Northern
railroad company vs. James and Amanda
Peavy, from Rusk.
> DESTINED FOR GALVESTON.
Steamships.
Algiers .......................New York 11- 6
Anstice .......................New York 11- 6
Bray Head.................Port Talbot II- 1
Concho .......................New York 11- 8
. E1 Alba................yNew York 11- 8
EI SiSto......................'..New York 11-11
1 Hornby Castle ................Antwerp 10-27
Inventor ............-j-..'ABa,rbadoes 10-27
Irada ................... Li verpool 10-29
Lebaun .......... .New York 11- 8
Milwaukee ............'L.......Shields 11- 6
Red Hill ..........i.......Antofagasta.....
Telesfora............x. Manchester 10-28
ENGLAND’S SEA POWER.
' 7 ' ■ ■ ■ to
Chautauquan Magazine,.
.In 1858 Elizabeth, the las^ of the Tudors,
ascended the English throne. Her long
reign of 45 years was characterized by a
great growth of national spirit, culmi-
nating at length in the complete estab-
lishment of England’s maritime suprem-
acy. There is no disguising the fact that
this supremacy had its beginning in what
was little better than pira,cy.
The mariners of Elizabeth’s time were
a hardy, venturesome and not particular-
ly conscientious class of men, whose
primary interest was to fill their purses,
and who cared as little as they knew
about the theological controversies of the
day. If their operations in the channel
were directed chiefly against the
Spaniards, it was not so much because
the Spaniard was a Catholic as because
he more frequently than any one else was
to be found upon the waters with a richly
laden vessel. Spain at the opening of
Elizabeth’s reign was undeniably the lead-
ing maritime power of the world,
trade with the coast countries of
was considerable, but she owed her
mercial position, in
American empire. *
The Spaniard might have outwitted the
Englishman in acquiring the first right to
the wealth producing parts of the new
world, but if the Englishman could meet
the Spaniard as he bore away his booty
and compel him to stand and deliver, it
would not be quite so certain that the
Spaniard had the better part of the bar-
gain after all.
January' ......
February ....
March ........
April .........
May ...........
June ..........
July ...........
August _____...
November ....
December ....
At Druggists.
The Flve-cent package is enough for an
ordinary occasion. The family bottle,
60 cents, contains a supply for a year.
Philadelphia Telegraph.
Queen Alexandra’s especial fad has a
daintiness well in keeping with her per-
sonality. It is that of having her pocket
money made perfectly clean and bright
before she fingers it. Whenever a check
is turned into hard cash for her use the
coins are scrubbed in a lather of spirits
of wine, water and soap before being
placed in her purse, and any change that
may be tendered her when making pur-
chases is taken charge of by the lady-in-
waiting until it has been subjected to a
like process of purification:.
A woman always agrees with a man
when he lets her have her own way.
Ordinary ......... ...
Good ordinary .......
Low middling ........
Middling ............
Good middling- ......
Middling fair ....................
Sales, 10,000 bales; yesterday, 10,000.
LIVERPOOL FUTURES
Opened flrm, ruled quiet but steady, then
“niPT nnrl nlnanH nin'ot Yest©r-
day.
4.25-26
4.25-26
4.25- 26
4.26
4.26
4.26
4.26
4.30-33
4.28
4.26- 27
NEW ORLEANS FUTURES.
Opened steady, ruled steady and closed
steady.
January ......
February ......
March ..........
April............
May ............
June ............
July............
■ November .....
firm and little offering.
Low ordinary
Ordinary ......
Good ordinary
Low middling .
Middling ......
Good middling
Middling fair . ............s t>-m
Sales, 1708 bales; yesterday, 2098.
GALVESTON COTTON RECEIPTS.
By G., C. and S. F.....................^al195
By L and G. N.........................3,503
By G., H. and H..................... 1.22c
By M., K. and T............. 2,234
By G.. H. and N........................2.403
By barge Hercules ............. 5g4
By barge Willie .............. 1,225
By barge Jefferson .................... 1,400
Total ........................................
The following are the closing quotations
IP OA r r A to A C L - A. L ~ 1 . > ■» « |
iid-
“(ar^eta- together with the cf-’ ‘ '
-.~a today’s
Mid.
today
4.48
7 13-16 7 13-16
7 11-16 7 11-16
7 9-16 7 9-16
7 9-16 7 9-16
7 9-16 7 9 -16
7X
8.35
8.30
8.60
On shipboard—
For Great Britain...
For France ..........
For other foreign....
For coastwise ........
In compress and de-
pots ..................
Total stock ..........
THE HAVRE MARKET.
"o?^Vre’ ^0V- 13.—Spots closed quiet and
Yester-
day.
55ya
54%
53
L1S.
Yester-
day.
50%
50%
60V2
50%
50%
51%
51%
_ Liverpool, Nov. 13.—There was a fair de-
4.W1 ^PULO, PHU'
bales, of which 9300
7»4
7 13-16
8
8.30
8.30
8.55
7%
7^ __
DAILY INTERIOR MOVEMENT.
655
5,246
3,079
15,365
24,345
’ GRAIN MARKETS.
(Reported by Wells & Porch.)
Chica.go, Ill., Nov. 13.—December Wheat
--Opening, 71%c; high, 71%c; low, 71%c;
carT’ 72^c; yesterday. 72%c. Receipts, 102
v,,-EuCe^?er . Corn—Opening, 51%@51%c;
low, 51%c; close, 52%c; yester-
day , 51c bud. Receipts, 134 cars. '
^,L®cemberioats—Opened, 29y2c; close, 29%
@29%c- yesterday, 29%@29%c.
cev ’ ,U^?- ^1°-' N°v. 13.—Cash wheat,
68%'c asked; yesterday, 68%c asked. De-
1 w?ea7;’ ®8%c liid; yesterday, 68%@
Cash corn, 45c bid; yesterday,
s.b-«fen,soorn' yest“-
1
T
I
i
I
w
MANHOOD RESTORED “supssehe”
hood, Insomnia, Pain. In the Beck, Serairfll Bml.Rlm.? as3b<.’^
FOB SALE BY J, J. SCHOTT,
I
THE GALVESTON TRIBUNE.
3
h SUNSET IO!
ROUTE ZE
_
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.
Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 305, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 13, 1902, newspaper, November 13, 1902; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1217409/m1/3/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.