OLD AND CHARMING TRADITION.

One of the oldest and prettiest traditions in the world is that which tells of a submerged city somewhere on the Scandinavian coast, the minarets and towers of which poets can see reflected in the waters at sunset, and the bells of which musicians, with ears divinely attuned to concordant sounds, can hear at vespers. Without either the poet’s eye or the musician’s ear it is still possible to conclude that traditions which have survived so many centuries, and which contradict nothing of the exact truth of science as to original causes, may be as well trusted as science when it begins to speculate, which is all it does when it seeks to prove that the Scandinavian fiords were in the country before the Scandinavian himself.

HON. JOSEPH D. SAYERS
GOVERNOR OF TEXAS

SHOWING TERRIBLE DEVASTATION ON AVENUE 1. BETWEEN TWELFTH AND THIRTEENTH STREETS

THE JOHN SEALY HOSPITAL, GALVESTON

A RESIDENCE CARRIED FROM ITS FOUNDATION BY THE RUSH OF WATERS

REMOVING DEAD BODIES TO THE BARGES FOR BURIAL AT SEA

GENERAL VIEW ALONG THE GALVESTON BEACH AFTER THE FLOOD

CREMATING BODIES EXCAVATED FROM THE RUINS

MEDICAL DEPARTMENT UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS, GALVESTON, DAMAGED BY THE FLOOD