Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 182, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 15, 1892 Page: 4 of 4
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Office, cor. 22d snd Strang
Phone 445. P. O. Box 113.
J. S, BROWN, Vice-President
J. M. BROWN, President.
LADIES’ DINING PARLOR,
J. S. Brown Hardware Company,
DiRKS & VIDOVICH,
Importers and Wholesale Dealers in
HARDWARE, BUILDERS’ EQUIPMENTS,
r. L. CROSS & co
BKVSEL
Me Light and Fw Company
Saddlery, Saddlery Hardware,
Are Lights of Standard Candle Power.
INCANDESCENT LIGHTS
STsosa IQ to 800 Candle Power,
STRENGTH . .
North Bids Market, Between
83d and 33d.
When the Breeze Dies Out
Take to the Oars!
N. J. Claytow,
P. 8. Rabitt,
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
Commutation Books, $6 for S5.
MENUTES BROTHERS,
DEALERS IN
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC FRUITS
ALWAYS FRESH.
Fine Homemade Candies.
Center, bet. Postoffice and Market.
Cotton Exchange Bar.
THE MERCHANTS’ RESORT.
Lunch at AH Hours.
ROBT. SHOOK, Propr.
t
tUxnates for Wiring Public and Private Build-
ings Given on Application.
11$ Market. St.( Bstseea 24th 25th Strcetx,
JOHN S. EWALT, See*! and Treasurer
HENRY KAISER
HAS REMOVED HIS SHOE SHOP
TO
Corner Center and Mechanic Sts.,
Where he will be pleased to see all his
old customers and many new ones.
New work made to order.
Repairing neatly and carefully done.
SHIP CHANDLERS,
%«nufaetaK8irs* Hgenta and Cota.*
mission m«i«sb®nts.
Have in stock a full assortment of goods in their
line, including Beef and Pork, which they are
.fferlng low to the trade and >o consumers.
Corner Center Street snd Strand.
Driven and Bored Wells Put
Down.
All kinds Pomps and Pipe on hand.
Agents Baker Manutacturing Company’s
“Monitor ’ Wood and Steel Wind Mills.
T. J. MACE, 2219 Postoffice St., Galveston.
ELEGANT and new.
THE - BOW - TORI
A first-class Restaurant conduct- d
in a manner which is causing it to
grow in popular favor daily. Its
service is unsurpassed.
L. COURS, - - - Proprietor.
33C8 Market Street.
Mwrmms
dies. Galveston Cement Pipe Works, bet
38th and 29 th, UTarket St.
GA LV H7 3TON.
8
For a Summer Clearing sale at
LABADIE’S
We offer a very large and varied
assortment of Crockery Plates,
25 per doz.; Hotel Bakers, 50c
doz.; Hotel Cups and Saucers, 25c
per set. All kinds of decorated
odds in China Vases. Wedding
Presents—this class of goods is
quite low in comparison to other
stores. Fine stock Tinware—large
Milk Pan for 10c worth 20c. In
Enameled Ware we are decidedly
very cheap. Hardware in detail.
Toys, Fancy Goods, Cutlery, etc.
I
J
PABST BREWING COMPANY,
Formerly Philip Beat Brewing Co.,
QUALITY ... Cool Keg and Unexcelled Bottled Beer
Telephone Wagon on Hand Day and Night. | H aaAn» ..
Telephone No. 256. Private Faxasliee Supplied. I ffi. uliUUft, KTgf.
FARM IMPLEMENTS, WAGONS, BUGGIES AND CARTST/
BLACKSMITHS’ AND WHEELWRIGHTS’ MATERIALS. 4
When Business Lan-
guishes, push it.
The best advertising
does not consist of wind
alone. It hc.s Strength
and Power. It will pro- (||
pel your craft into the
harbor of prosperity,
against adverse tides and
over dangerous shoals.
n7T claytonT^o”
ARCHITECTS.
Jones’ Wood Yard.
WATKIN JONES Prop.
I will take pleasure in supplying the citi-
zens of Galveston at all seasons of the year with
Cord Wood or Sawed and Split Wood
at reasonable prices.
MARKET ST., bet. 30th and 81st.,
Galveston, Texas.
E"?.bo“£. {CASINOS
Oo You Want Water? ^m^orte<^an^ ^°mes^c and pocket cutlery.
AGE . . .
PURITY . .
2214 & 2210
Avenue SL
For the money BIG- 4 leads them all.
GOOD GOODS! CORRECT WEIGHT! HONEST COUNT!
ANYTHING Y^U AVA.INT IN CMROCOESllIES#
J. P. BOONE
FOR HOT T OR COLD T TRY
CONRAD!
CONRAD!
Lock Box 1358.
s - H
Drink Tea?
DO YOU
If so, you want one that is sim-
ple, economical, perfect and abso-
lutely safe. Get the
Do you intend getting
a Gasoline Stove ?
J. P. LALOR,
Market St., bet. 24th & 25th.
K
CGNMD!
facturing Company,
etc., as well as ;
addressed to me
It has been tested for ten years
and is far ahead of all new-fangled
stoves. It has asbestos-lined oven
and is a perfect baker.
CONRAD,
New Orleans, La.
■S
IBS
liSfeS
PI
fits
BWffig
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“MONARCH”
A CARD TO THE PUBLIC.
While it is true I have been chosen president of the Louisi-
ana State Lottery Company, vice M. A. DAUPHIN, deceased,
I still retain the presidency of the Gulf Coast Ice and Manu-
--so all proposals for supplies, machinery,
all other business communications, should be
: as heretofore.
PAUI/
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Constructors of Large and Small Buildings.
<■53-JT
Darlington-Miller
LUMBER COMPANY
Rough and Dressed
Fine and Cypress Lumbr.
ASFHA LT REFINHRS
30th and Mechanic Streets,
A»L>
MAMliFACTURWBi* Ok
TELEPHONE SST.
gABOUNffi
c
ROOF ANu -PAVING PITCH.
Bensoie, Creosote or Dead Oil. ItoMJnf
uitci Building Fen, Kie.
JOS. LABADIE, President. JOS. H. STAHL, General Manager.
THE STAHL ffllLBK HOMflNf
Wiw
Shell and Gravel Roofing.
S A N STAR Y FL O O R s N G
AND
Wood and Asphalt Paving fo?
Streets and Sidewalks,
The Little Oelmonico Restaurant,
J. T. LANAHAN, Proprietor.
Open Day and Night.
Sets the Best Meal
in the City for . . . 23 LOTUS
No. 3014 MARKET ST.,
ween 20th and 21st, Galveston, Texas.
Office, 2220 Postoffice St.( Galveston, Tex.
Telephone 583.
j-p^wwwjy
Bvy
XX-*-
Old Buildings Remodeled, General Carpenter Work done in a satisfactory
manner. All woik guaranteed. Plans and Specifications furnished. Estimates
Oil all kinds of work. QUEEN ANNE COTTAGES A SPECIALTY.
Telephone 579.
peekXbooTsktscrapS ’
HORSE-SHOE BONNETS
In stock and made to order in all colors. All
kinds of Ready-made Dresses, Wrappers, Mother
Hubbards, Aprons and Ladies’ and Children’s
Underclothing.
Goods made to order on short notice. Call and
get my prices. MZEYZEEl,
2720 Market Street.
Bound for PRESTON’S,of course,
because there we can find the new-
est and coldest “thirst-quenchers.”
Have you tried the latest? It is
called “Creme Frappee,” and all
the ladies are wild over it.
Market and 22d.
Mg5
<rni^
A .
O
A Granulated Smoking Tobacco.
Made from OLD LEAR Thoroughly Matured, Free from Stems*
A 2=OZ. BAG FOR 5 CENTS.
FOR PIPE AND CIGARETTE.
1 Tar Distillers
FUNERAL NOTICE.
The officers and members of br-nch.es Nos.
196, 522 and 531, C K. of A . are hereby notified
to meet st Cathedral hall, on Church and 21st
streets, Rt9c’clo:k a. m. Thursday, 16th inss.,
to attend the funeral of our deceased brother,
Captain F. O’C. Maclnerney. A full and prompt
attendance is earnestly requested.
J. A. McCormick, President No. 166; AV. D.
Ray, Vice-President No. 222; B. Ganter. Presi-
dent No. 531.
I Morning t
! Noon |
I Night!
Good all the time. It removes
the languor of morning, sus- <?
J tains the energies of noon, lulls S
$ the weariness of night.
i H S c? Root j |
|1 IirCS Beer I
delicious, sparkling, appetizing. (
A Don’t be deceived if a dealer, for the sake A
K of larger profit, tells you some other kind V
® is “justas good”—’tis false. No imitation *
A is as good as the genuine Hires’. A
IWRNESJGO
"few
® r A
Ci
HOW SHE EARNED HER CAR FARE.
WEDNESDAY EVENING, JUNE ?5, 1892.
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
LOUIS MARX
Pears
J
Soap
as a candidate for County Clerk of Galveston
county.
Election next November.
Pianos of all. kinds tuned and satis-
faction guaranteed by 0. Janke & Co.,
307 and 309 Tremont street.
Instantaneous photography has shown
the former method of representing light-
ning as a fiery zigzag to be quite as false
as were the old pictures of racing horses.
The total money of the world in gold
and silver coin is given at $7,862,072,000.
tai average of $5.31 for each individual.
PERSONAL.
Mies Eloise Noble left yesterday to
Retarns Came in Early.
Husband—Er—my dear, there is going
to be a very important—er—election at
my club tonight, and I may---
Wife—Very well. 1’11 wait up to hear
the returns.
‘•Um—er—are you interested in the
returns?”
•'•Yes—your
Weekly.
are auth°rizeii t° announce
$7,500 FOR 50 CENTS.
One-half of ticket 56,666, which won
the FIRST CAPITAL PRIZE of $15,000
in the ORIGINAL LITTLE LOUISI-
ANA LOTTERY of San Francisco, Cali-
Good the Earthworm Does.
“The earthworm performs a very im-
portant part in the economy of nature,”
said Professor Ernest Parker, of Nash-
ville. “The little creature is ths worst
despised of all animal life, but from dis-
coveries of my own, after long and pa-
tient investigation, he has gained my
respect, and I want to extend to him
assurances of my most distinguished
consideration. I have found out that
but for the earthworm’s indefatigable
toil very little of vegetation would grow
except by irrigation. He is the greatest
producer of moisture and heat in the
world.
“He does more than the plowshare to
disturb the latent heat and moisture of
the earth and bring them to the top soil
to vitalize and invigorate the struggling
roots of the grasses, grains alnd other
forms of vegetation. But for him great
.stretches of the western agricultural
lands would become vast deserts. There-
fore, all hail to the earthworm and bad
luck to the man who thinks he is fit only
for fish bait!”—St. Louis Globe-Demo-
crat.
Few accidents approached in horror tc
that at the Victoria hall, at Sunderland,
in 1883, when 182 children were crushed
to death. That disaster was all due to a
block on the staircase.
without reasoning on cause and effect,
sees bright white leaves and imitates
them,—Cor. Forest and Stream.
A Conduit Electric Railway.
A conduit railway system has been de-
vised in which the current is transmit-
ted to the car by induction. It requires no
overhead wires, storage batteries or sur-
face or underground conduits, the ar-
rangement of the transformers being such
that the primary circuit is underneath
the roadbed, while the secondary is car-
ried on the car, so that there is no metal-
lic connection between the car and the
main circuit from which the current is
derived.—New York World.
Breaking Up a Witness.
In no way can barristers better display
their acuteness than by seeing at a glance
the character of the witnesses they are
about to examine and by treating them
accordingly. Erskine was famous at
this. In a case in -which he was en-
gaged a commercial traveler came into
the witness box dressed in the height of
fashion and wearing a starched white
necktie folded in the Brummel fold. In
an instant Erskine knew his man, though
he had never seen him before, and said
to him, with an air of careless amuse-
ment, “You were born and bred in Man-
chester, 1 perceive.” Greatly aston-
ished at this opening remark, the man
admitted that he was. “Exactly,” ob-
served the great cross examiner, in a
conversational tone; “I knew it from
the absurd tie of your neckcloth.”
The roars of laughter—coming from
every person in the court, with the sin-
gle exception of the unfortunate witness
—which followed this rejoinder com-
pletely effected Erskine’s purpose, which
was to put the witness in a state of agi-
tation and confusion before touching on
the facts concerning which he had come
to give evidence.—London Illustrated
News.
Pianos of all kinds tuned and satis-
faction guaranteed, by C. Janke & Co.,
307 and 309 Tremont street.
Theories and Children.
The very children of today are afflicted
with theories. “Flurry, mamma,” said
a seven-year-old youngster passing an
alley whence issued a bad smell, “we’ll
get a disease.” If the little folks have
taken to a knowledge cf and dread of
microbes and bacteria life must be a
burden to them. It takes all the adult
philosophy one has to bear up against
the horrors which, according to this and
that authority, are ever lying in wait
for us. It is a pity that the children
should walk under the same shadow.—
Her Point of View in New York Times.
The Color of Chameleons.
As chameleons become tame they
change color less rapidly, showing the
habit is protective and to render itself
less conspicuous. Indeed the power of
assuming the color of its surroundings
is the only protection these helpless
creatures possess. Mr. S. D. Bairstow
informs me that he was watching a cha-
meleon on a shrub when a wild bee or
two came out of a nest close by, and im-
mediately the chameleon doffed its
bright green dress and became nearly
black, and therefore inconspicuous.
Their turning white at night may find
reason in the predominance of shining
foliage in the South African trees. The
leaves of most trees and shrubs glisten
under the bright stars and the moon-
light and so appear white. A chameleon,
Her One Wish.
Most people who go to Europe have
their minds set upon at least one place
or thing which they are particularly
anxious to see. This was the case with
a philanthropic spinster who had lived in
Boston for nearly sixty years. She was
to make her first trip abroad with her
brother’s family.
Hei* sister-in-law and her nieces were
mapping out the route for the six
months’ trav el and presently one of them
said to her:
“Now you must tell where you want
to go, Aunt Martha; we’re all choosing
our favorite place, you see.”
“I’ve heard you all agree on Italy,”
replied Aunt Martha, “and that’s the
only country I have any special desire
to visit.”
“Why, how nice!” said the niece, in a
tone of pleased surprise. “We were
talking it over the other day, and mam-
ma said she was afraid you wouldn’t care
to go to Italy. You’re so fastidious; and
though Italy is lovely of course there
are drawbacks, you know.”
“I presume there are drawbacks,” said
Miss Martha, shivering a little. “I’ve
heard of them. But you mustn’t think
I want to be sitting about on cathedral
steps or damp walls, my dear. All I
wish is to see some organ grinders in
their native land. That has been my de-
sire for a good many years. The men
we see here look so poor and ill fed!
“I thought perhaps,” added Miss Mar-
tha, “if I could learn enough Italian to
make myself understood by those men
it would be a good thing for me to ad-
vise them not to come to America.”
“I think it would!” said her listeners
in chorus, but Miss Martha never under-
stood why they laughed.—Youth’s Com-
panion.
Through the whole range of human,
plant, goat’s hair and sheep’s wool, how-
ever, nature shows such close gradations
that it would be difficult to draw an ex-
act line or to distinguish beyond a ques-
tion of doubt between wool and hair.
Why is Pears’ Soap—the
best in the world, the soap
with no free alkali in it—
sold for 15 cents a cake ?
It was made for a hospital
soap in the first place, made
by request; the doctors
wanted a soap that would
wash as sharp as any and
do no harm to the skin.
That means a soap all
soap, with no free alkali in
it, nothing but soap; there
is nothing mysterious in it.
Cost depends on quantity;
quantity comes of quality.
All sorts of stores sell
it, especially druggists; all
sorts of people use it, espe-
cially those that know what’s
what.
His Famous Cook.
Last week two men each looking for a
cook met on Woodward avenue and had
a talk on hired help. This week they
met again.
“Did you find a cook?” asked the first.
“No. Did you?”
“Yes, I’ve got one.”
“Any good?”
“Best I ever had in the house.”
“No! Where did you find her?”
“Down in Ohio.”
“Have to go after her yourself?”
“Yes.”
“How did you happen to hear of her?”
“A friend of mine told me about her
first, and I wrote to her on a venture.”
“How did you ever persuade hex- to
come so far from home?”
“Blessed if I know, but she seems per-
fectly well satisfied now.”
“Do you think I could get a mate to
her at the same place?”
“Well, no, I think not.”
“Why?”
“There isn’t another like her, I should
say.”
“Who is she?”
“My wife.”
“Oh,” said the other man, and when
he came home he went right out into
his kitchen and kissed the cook four
times, and his wife really seemed to
think he was doing the proper thing.—
Detroit Free Press.
DIED.
KOESTER—June 15'h, at 3 o’cloik a. m.
Henrietta C., wife of C. W. Koester, in her
lifiieth year.
Funeral takes place tomorrow, June 15th, at
3 30 p m., from her late residence corner
Fifteenth and Postoffice streets. Friends and
acquaintances are respectfully invited to at-
tend.
“When I came here five years ago I
had just twenty-five dollars in my pock-
et. I got a room—or rather a cubby
hole next to ths roof—in a boarding
house on Fourth avenue. It was three
weeks before I got anything to do. Then
a place was offered to me as a primary ■
teacher in a private school. The salary i
when you got it was fair enough in I . , - - — --------
amount. But unfortunately you didn’t N,?eces for ^ew ork today to be absent
get it until the end of the month. ° °
“By this time there was such a tre-
mendous hole in my twenty-five dollars
that I couldn’t afford to move up town.
The expressage alone would have made
a bankrupt of me, for I had absolutely
come to such a pass that I hadn’t enough
money to pay my car fare to the school
and back. I explained the situation to
the landlady. She rually was a dear old
thing. She told me I wasn’t to worry
about my board bill. She was perfectly
willing to wait for her money until the
end of the month.
“That was one weight off my mind
of course, but I had still to grapple with
the car fare problem. I was in a dread-
ful pickle really. For four days 1
walked every inch of the way—4X miles
each journey. I used to leave the house
at 7 in the morning so as to reach the
school promptly at 9.
“Then I found that my French heels
were beginning to give out, so I saw
that my efforts to save money by pedes-
trianisin would only get me into deeper
water. Suddenly I had an inspiration.
“There were three old maiden sisters
who occupied the double bedded room
on the second floor. They were with-
out exception the fattest women I ever
saw. The most etherial of the three
weighed 300 if she weighed a pound.
They were all saleswomen in one of the
big Sixth avenue stores. They used to
scramble down to breakfast in the morn-
ing in a fluster at the last moment.
“One of them confided to me that it
was their shoes which always delayed
them. They almost expired every morn-
ing in their attempts to button them.
She told me in a tone of the utmost
resignation that eventually she expected,
their shoes would be the death of all
three of thexn. Well, what do you sup-
pose 1 did? I took that woman aside
and I said to her: ‘Now look here, I’ll
make a bargain with you. I want to
xnake a little extra money just now, for
I am dreadfully hard up. If you and
your two sisters will each pay me
twenty cents a week I’ll come and but-
ton your shoes fox- you every morning.’
“The poor old things fairly jumped at
the offer. They insisted on paying my
first week’s salary—sixty cents—in ad-
vance. It left me ten cents to the good
you see, because on Saturday there was
no school. Aftex* the first week they in-
sisted oxx raising my salary to aix even
quarter from each. Well, I buttoned
their shoes regularly for two months.
Then I had to resign my position, as I
was moving to a boarding house up
town.
“When I hade them gooclby the p®or
old things actually cried over me, and
presented xne with the loveliest little
silver buttonhook you evex- saw. I sent
them tickets for the private view the
other night. They all came, fatter than
ever, and went into ecstacies over my
pictures. The eldest one told me with
tears in her eyes that ever since I left
them they had beexx obliged to abandon
button shoes. ‘Now, my dear,’ she said
with a huge sigh of regret, ‘we caxx wear
nothing but elastic sides.’ ”—New York
Evening Sun.
Waiters on Horseback.
• In great French houses dinner was
announced by the blowing of hunting
horns, and it is on record that at certain
gala feasts the dishes were brought in
by servants iix full armor, mounted upon
caparisoned horses, a practice we could
only look fox- during the reign of chiv-
alry. Of the at ten dents at dinner the
carvei- and server took precedence ovex-
all the others; they stood probably on
each side of their lord. The server, it
may be mentioned, was the oflicex- who
placed the dishes on the table.—London
Cor. Chicago Herald.
A Woman’s Ingenious Device for Making
Money When She Was Hard Up.
A woman who is now one of the most
promising artists in this city, and was
lucky enough to get two of hei* pictures
accepted by the Academy, told this story Gornia, in drawing of June 14th, 1S92,
of how she earned her first few pennies ' sold in Galveston. Holder, come and
in this big town: j get youl. monev>
B. W. LE COMPTE, Hole Agent.
Office 24th and Market sts., Galveston,
Texas.
Progressive Piano Dealers.
Many piano and organ dealers and
agents say we are ag^essive in our
style of advertising our Dusiness. The
cause for this is we ajfe agents for the
very best, the most popular and best
medium priced instruments made, we
give superior value for the money and
we do not take notes on installment
sales. We are progressive.
Thomas Goggan & Bro., Galveston.
The Summer School for fancy needle-
work and German will commence on
June 1st. Lessons daily at $1 00 per
month. All material on hand, at the
returns.” — New York Decorative; Art Store. Mrs. H. Meyer &
Mrs. M. Buechner, 2115 Market street.
I visit friends in the interior.
Mr. F. H. Sage, left on the steamer
a few months.
Mrs. J. D Skinner and Mrs. C. R.
Girardeau leave tonight via the Santa
Fe route for Allegheny Springs.
Cndet Cooper of the Salvation army
has gone to Austin on account of illness,
and Cadet McKrell has taken her place.
Mrs. J. Sidney Skinner and Miss
Bacon will be passengers on the 7.10
Santa Fe train tonight for Washington
city.
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Bowen left yester-
day for Austin. Mrs. Bowen will visit
friends in Williamson county before re-
turning.
Mrs. Chas. A. Holt and children and
Mrs. John Wells and children will leave
for Virginia this evening to spend the
summer.
Miss Cora Gregory departed ou the
early train yesterday morning for Chi-
cago. She will spend the summer north
and east.
Mrs. J. S. Evans, accompanied by her
charming daughter. Miss Eulah, left
yesterday for a month’s visit to friends
at Cuero.
Miss Ruth Bower daughter of Col. E.
G. Bower, of Dallas is in Galveston pay-
ing a visit to her comin Miss Clara May
Shannon.
Miss Talbot haves this evening for
Danville, Va., and Miss Claudine Camp-
bell goes to Bedford, Va., both on the
Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe evening
train.
Mr. W. Kiersted, a hydraulic engi-
neer of Kansas City and member of the
American society of civil engineers is in
the city on business connected with his
profession.
Mr. C. D. Mackey, who has been in
this city for several days as the repre-
sentative of D. Appleton & Co. of New
Yoik, will leave this evening on bis way
north. Mr. Mackey made numerous
friends while beie, all of whom will be
pleased to see his smiling countenance
again.
At the Tremont: W. H. Tillson,
Houston; H. Pickett, Wacs; J. A.
Warner, International and Great North-
ern railroad; T. Cronin, Palestine; T.
R. Harris, St. Louis; O. W. Dennis and
family, city; Sam II, Dixon and family,
Dallas; Wm. Kloecker, Kansas City;
L. W. C. Baker, W. G. Baker, Aug. S.
Merle, New York; C. B. French, Kan-
sas City; J. W. Haveland^Philadelphia;
II. L. Stocker, Calvert; Mrs. J. J. Phil-
bratb, Key West.
Beach hotel: Walter H. Baldwin,
Baltimore; R. J. Jackson, Mis. M. E.
Hopkinsand daughter, Mexico; N.H.
Lassiter, Ft Worth; O. Haeiem, New-
York; Si Packard, Houston; H. B.
Deas, Chicago; D. D. Babbit, Clinton,
Iowa; C. Summer Shreve, New York;
S. S. Jones, New Orleans; H. E. Cobb,
Chicago; Chas. P. Morse, Houston; M.
C. Moleswortb and family, Mrs. S. K.
French, San Antonio; W. H. Graham,
Cuero, Tex.; J. A. Solomen, Waco, Tex.,
J. D. Quinn, F. T. Omaley, Miss Phil
Eagon, Miss Alice Omaley, Miss Laddie
Letcher, Denison ; W. L Douglas, Beau-
mont; J. H. Smith, Austin ; Si Perkins,
Houston; H. E Stein, A. J. McMullen,
Ft. Worth.
I
TH® FRESHEST
VEGETABLES
CHOICE FRUITS.
Foreign a«d Domestic Cheese.
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Burson, J. W. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 182, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 15, 1892, newspaper, June 15, 1892; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1263165/m1/4/: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.