The Paducah Daily Sun Newspaper, December 16, 1896, Page 4

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> swcinamaitr ; Holiday Goods, Our public appreciate the enter- prise which prompted all this holiday preparation and are proving their ap- probation by their patronage. Hun- dreds of helpful hints bere to make your gift-buying easy and our prices are the smallest. Dolls! Dolls! Dolls! | Don’t pay fancy prices for your Jolls. Don’: think of buying dolls till you} * we are show Don’t buy agly dolls! have seen the ‘*heauties ing at prices our neighbors are asking for common dolls: 10¢e. buys a nicely dressed, bisque | headed doll that will just delight the little ones for a 12 inch kid body, bisque head dolli—an extra value. 0c. large size, 18 inch kid bodied and handsomely dressed joint- ed dolls. Holiday Linens No more beantiful or sensible pres- ent can be given a hoasekeeper than 25e one of these table cloths with napkins Meti Mr. Fred Greif, The well known baker lately of H. Gockel’s, bas bought the stock and fixtures of JJ H Thompson, the bakery on SEVENTH AND WASHINGTON, and will Shencefomh bf krown a@ the j “Bon Ton Bakery.” share of your patronage. | LOCAL MENTION. Death at the “Home.” to match. 68-inch bleached table damask neat patterns, at p the yard 70 inch extra b y damask at 79 $1.00 the dozen | Sets of fringed table cloths, 2! yds long, in good quality damask with napkins to match, for $3.98 set. | Three yard Table Cloths with nap- kins to match for $4.19 the sét. SPECIAL VALUE FOR THIS SALE is our 72-iach extra quality heavy table damask at 98c¢ the yard, regular price, $1.19. Napkins to match for $3.98 the dozen, Initials Stamped Free. During the holiday sales all table linens, handkerchiefs and bought from us will be stamped with your initials free of charge. Special in Mackintoshes towels | jams, | five others at Oe aughter of Mrs ast evening at the The 2-year-old Bartholomew died Home of the Friendless city hospital The Rush Contipues At Noah's Ark, But wi of salesiadies, so that Oar stock is bei every day and our bar; lower than the lowest. Girl weet. A competent Awhjte hofigé girl wanted at onée~534 J, street. F ff 16d3 ee Sweet Odors. Violets of Sicify, Coronovia, Red Roses, Purple Agv'ea, Frangipani, Blue Qilies, May Bells, and twent chiaeger & Wal- ker’s, 5th and Broadw . At A Birth. Mr. and Mrs. L. Willis, Jackson street, are reje recent appearance of ® fiie baby boy of 1017 We are closing out a lot of Duck | Brand, best quality fancy colored | mackintoshes, regular price $5.00, in| this sale at $2.98—a real bargain. Holiday Rugs To combine use with ornament is wise economy. acceptable Christmas present. all several styles—all beauties. _ White and gray far rugs, extra size and quality, unlined for $1.89 feach. Handsome black ones for t $2.49. door mats for 38c. anese, jute and velvet rugs at al tractive prices. Remnants of tapes- i Extra size Jap- | try brussels, with fringes to match, weeks kinds and prices, and ‘this line is sim- for rugs and drugge's. SPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK— | 10 extra quality rugs, 26x36 for $1.75, worth $2.50. | Shoe Department, : fi In our shoe department you will) syrup is abeollgly pute. find us abreast of the times with the style, quality and price, no our pur- chase for fall we have tried to com-} bine, so far as practicavie, handsome goods with quality » prepared to show you stylish footwear | | ‘and quality combined i We Otter Child’s kid or grain, § to 8, 50c, Better one, same size, 69¢ i Wanted—A secon \ Child's kid S_L, tip, 8 to 11, 75c, | trombune, in good co! : or. Misses Same 11} to 2 $1.00, la KANGAROO CALF. a This is an elegant shoe for school | use, 8} to 11 at $100, and 11g to Pretty designs in Smyrna! where they wailtto all I will go straight) to Stutz’s yand are therefore get my candy ; 1 dag wantianything at their house, Has Scarlet Feve' Hon. Chas. K. Wheeler's little son has scarlet fever, bat is not very ill, fortunat nt On a Hunt, Dr. Jas, Lang and Capt. E. C. v 7 Carpenter, the latter of Cincinnati, A nice rug is 4 most’ went out into the county today on a Here! bird hunt. turn tonight. They will probably re- Hello, Central. Ring up all Paducal, for I want to ell them all plain fact¢about the place it the best can- Stutz makes s candies, and has beeu work- ing likea beaver fdr the past two making Xmas candies of all lies, fruits and cakes, nly the best and freshest in the city Ed Jones Is fs Place. For all kinds of fngredients for ruit cake. For fing apples and uddings and Manse maple oranges and for plum! ruit cakes. ‘Our Old Ep Joges, Second street. Ata, Pve Wor and bis chocolates and Re- put the best and are simply elegant. | member the place, Statz, 417 Broad- way, Tel. 293 slide Apply t the Sun building, 3@ Phe Old Country Bridge and Cart. A very unique pigee of workmar 4 ship; shoeld be to be appr 2 at $1.25. ated. It will be gin as a prize to LITTLE GENTS’ LACE, the one guessing neg§est its weight Years, and as evidence from service | given in the past are good wearers, | Bp to 11, $1: 11 to 2, $1.25 BOYS! BOYS! We are showing a line specially made for boys. H i y and servic e- | J at . Our general line is full of value, | beverag but mention as special bargains until closed— $1.00 buys Ladies’ Dongola Con- ; former price, $2 75 to $4, 00 buys Man's calf welt, lace Cheap at $2.75, 50 buys Man’s extra heavy sole nm, Cheap at $2. in mind our shoe repair shop. | © an artist on this work, deliver to any address in iv rdrop us postal and we | H a worth will be entitled to see it, | £ We have sold this shoe for ten d 163 his friends call, for the ext much a ec . Come We show an extra good shoe, size 94 Every purchaser of te 1349, at $1 25. UNKER HILL SCHOOL SHOE. Prories’ Kanvy Krrenen, 409 South Third St, Young Man. | her is now with John ill be pleased to have dlowl Mr. Will M . Bleich, and here | anil | y The girl's the yard; *§ napkins to match, at fa:her died a few weeks ago at the ng over the * ‘B.Third Street, Telephone No. Pittsburgh and McHenry Coal, / The Best on the Market. polis Clippings for Kindling, PERSONALS. W. L. Beck, of Woodville,is in the | city | Mr. D. 1. Lewis went down to} | Mayfield. J. T. Robinson, of Mound City, |is in the city | | J. W Gasho and wife went to Cairo this atternoon. Dr. Ed Gilsoa is out cent illness. after his re- Tom Leovard returned from Ed- dyville this | J. EB. Long | Birmingham rhoon and E. Butler, of ¢ in the city Mr. Greif is well known J. M. and J. B. Howard, of Cal- with many riends, and will no] vert City, are in the city, doubt prove successful .1n his dee T Delay, of Bastien, By new undertaking. Give him a . , » Ky., is in the city on business. Mr. Chas. Pell is out again after ent attack of paralysis. Father Jausen went down to ld this afternoon, Baggage Master Will Flowers is contined to his bed from illness. »| Mrs. Q. Q. Quigley has returned from a sojoarn at Dawson. Marshal Chas. McNutt, of May- field, returned home this morning. Mr. A. N. Clark, of Dun‘s Agency, went down to Fulton this afternoon. D. B. Ferguson and little son, of Benton, Ky., are at the St. Nicholas today. J Batler and W. D. Chalman, of Fredonia, are in the city on busi- ness. Dr. J. W. Jordon and son, Frank, of Marion, Ky., are registered at the St. Nicholas. Dr. Curd, i through today, Fulton, Misses Minerva Cooley and Will Grider, of Mayfield, were in the city yesterday. Night Clerk Will Bradley is on the sick list and was last night unable to attend to his duties. Miss Margery Gerard, who has been visiting in the city, returned to her home in Chicago today Mr. H. M. Jones, Ky., passed through the city enroute home from St. Louis. Kev. Warner Moore, Jr., passed through the city today enroute from Benton to Newbern, Tenn. J. M. Davis, a prominent candi- date for county judge of Livingston county, was in the city yesterday. D. H. Dixon, a prominent young man of Pinckneyville, is spending a few days in the city ow business, of Calloway county, enroute to | | Get the best. St/ Bernard Coal, St. Bernard Silvgr Coke, Pit burgh Coal andAnthracite Coal | from the St. Bérnard Coal Co.,| incorporated, ‘423 Broadway. Telephone No. 8 Oct. 21 COLUMBIAN CLUB. | Meeting of Unusual Interest Last Night, | The Columbian Club met in reguiar | session at Cecilian Hall last night The following iuteresiing program wa i and enjoyed by detel a: Gifted by nature to a remarkable |, » with every evidence of | to hear her is a treat long |} In elocutio ast evening, | ¢ de riisti training, to be remembered, powers as demonstrated she seemed ble ¢ of Princeton, | today | all present pronounced the | every Campbell-Mulvi ili Coal Co. Pittsburgh Coke, RAILROAD RUMBLINGS, Items of Interest Relative to the Railroads and Railroad People. §., ©. AND ST, 1. MILEAGE. Trainmaster Joe Rork left on train 104 this a, m. ing, Dec. 8, 1896 section of Nashville first the Engine 80 left as 104 tais a, m. for shops. Engineer Gus Gideon lays off this trip, his little girl Laelia being quite sick Sam Lowe doubles 312 this p. m., around for back on the | Lexington. A third brakeman was added to the loc. freights this morning. Heavy tobacco shipments necessitat.| ing more force. | After this trip engine 68 will take anch and the place of No. 1 on the t | Gardner Sheppard will tax her speed on that tow path Supt. Hills goes out on spe morrow on regular monthly tion ngine 12 with Harry T) berg on deck pulls his car. Hollow Rock Junction until 12, mid- night, awaiting a special train of Florida oranges bound for Memphis. Rabe Greenwald, the brakeman who has not lost a trip for go out. on the pike will hold down the rear end of 108 today. place. Local got away m., Bob Darden in the lo Whippoorwill Frank and Hood doing the ‘swing act’ and Conductor Ben Englert captain. Engine 308, fresh from the shops at Nashville, goes from Hollow Rock | junction to Jackson today, aud will |haul special beck to the junction the Lewis Morrison Faust Co. ard, which opens in Nashville tomorrow. Mildred, the two and a old daughter of Sam Low y on the dot this a. | kout, half year lives next dvor toa house that recently | plaste nd took great delight in looking at the men mix up the mor- tar. The other morning when she the snow all over the lith and arose and saw yard, she called her sister wanted to know what they plastered the grass for. Conductor Charlie Scott's tafn picked up at the , auction twelve cars of oenabergs from Georgia and Car- olina mills destived for China, on yesterday. They were heavily loaded and added to the balance of the train made a hard pall over the hills, Rube Greenwald, the colored brake man, remarked that the ‘pig. tails’? ust all be naked over there, judg- ing from the great number of car loads of cotton cloth going there Supt. W. J by your reporter Hills was interviewed this morning rela- | live to the article in this morning's “Register,”’ and he most empiatic- ally pronounces that portion relating tothe N. C. and St. L, road as groundless and without foundation in le piece of act, purely a » unrea oa@ |imagivation on the part of its re- porter. N. C. & St. L. Co Mohan + and Isabel / have no idea of occupying the nver Recita Mr. Cai aey front beyoud what it now owns and Vooal solo with viclln and plano arcompant-|oceupies. ‘There has been no re-| meut—Misses Maud ' fusal on the part of the I. C. Co. to| ede ee ee ceetackveen, ‘eu seernas (ee a Ae Ow ME Sennciine~ ties Grane incline should that company so de-| vatlon—Miss Maud Brent. |sire, and the present tra: sferring ar-| very number was cleverly ren-/raugement is most sutisfactory in ariicular. meeting one of the most successful of] Yesterday quite a racy and lengthy the winter series, Miss Brent's mag-| discussion was carried on by the j midiceut sin; materially to | four young benedicts who have with- the pleasure eve Her |in the last few months became voice is wonderfully sweet, clear and|+ papas’ for the first time. As powerful, Jusual, each thought that his was the only cherub ever boro that was per- fect in all the requisices pertaining to| jy. abyhood, and a.ga 1 that his par-| ther three. dim Ealey claimed that almost excell- | his surpassed the othors in size and | OUtward advan as Se ing even her own inimitable rendition | weight, Will Lewis contended that| While down town stop in Stutz’s of vocal harmonies, The club hopes |his was by far tue prettiest and nd get one of bis dplicious hot to have the pleasure of hearing ber | sweetest, ‘Frank Dunkon maintained | 8. 6t. [again before her departure for ber] that his was the fairest and best, and . + home in the capital of the Buckeye | Ed, Colton said that while his would Estate Transfer, state. jee e 0! 3 ose perfec- Mr. W. F. Bradshaw and wite xveisiicinaiieaiiaie rreoigedicodye pacts ft sive nda Alexander Kirklond today! MARRIED AT MAYFIELD. |that it could. yell” sori usion of Jefferson street, Turned Up All Right A farmer from Fancy Farm came to the city yesterday and this morn- | Miss Annie Lammers, , Rudy Central. nois Central. nge, in the passenger ti for and return all repair & Phillips, NEW TIME CARD, p. ede ¥ SR in Sunday on the Ilinvis A new time card goes into effect Bunday over this division of the Illi- So far as can now be ped, there will be little, if any Couldn’t Find the Pin, : ‘This morning a small girl, whose! y name could not be recalled by our] saformant, was brought to the city'y throat by local doctors, She kickea and squirmed so, however, that the pin coulda’! be found and she was takea back home, J Goto G, Wi. Roberison a For the best and in the city, try bi Best gem coffee, il be convinced. ve pounds for e. ‘freight trains, however, will be night by County Judge Lee, to have a pin removed from her Kellar, Metropolis pheapest groceries | this city, ful effort to sell the craft, at supper | terday, at the State Hotel, went Cousins From Migsouri Can't Get | thre A License Here, Mr. C.J. Witte aged 26 ed 20, who ley were married at 9 o'clock last | 2% hey returned to St. Louis, fie Mr. Witte and bride were today he guests of Lockup Keeper Harry Stole a Skif, Earl Furguson, of Paducah, and ‘ohn Butler, of Kelsey, Ky., says the ‘Journal,’ siole a skiff | K t Paducah yesterday and came to| th They made an unsuccess- | M to church one dollar, last night and left town on a freight}aad Mars Best granulated ‘Qygar twenty/car for St. Louis, Sey- | pounds for one dollar, recovered the skiff, but did not|un Flour from $3.75 to 65.25 perjlearn of the theft in time to get bbl. 6t ! them, Ww of the others combined ‘Try the old reliable St. Bernard and | Coal and get the best, if you want | ihe the most burn for the money, St. | slid whole towing the turn} | more than a year was compelled to stop off today, being too unwell to Frank Hogwood, the funniest man | He says a ‘fresh fish’’ will chew cinder this trip in his inhaling smoke |) Endorsed by Great Artists Open Evenings unt Christmas W. W. KIMBALL CO. Wabash Ave., near Jackson St. | Train 108 was-held last night at colored |¢ == eS eeeeee oe R. M. SUTHERLIN, SELF-DEVELOPMENT. tects the © . | Its tie mistsstae of yonry peoyte | POMfumes before they vecome fully exjzaged in bala ae _ i Wee rie rps to Paducah is now for encouragement, and make the wa: thy amusement w ) their associates ture ish too indispensable. The tende 4 mind ef youth in eivctautsor eoaoig M@ISON Soule’s Drug Store, }to staudt alone; it needs to be ove of ja class. Hence the hours that onght; You are cordially invited in. to t in the wcquisition of that | 7 General knowledge which is 80 useful | es in life, and which can be acquired | J ouly in youth, are thrown away in the | timized by it recently. 1 Most inglorious pursuits, for acquaint. | up to the clab the other day ax ances are seltom the companions of | two or three of the younger men gtudy or th Haries of ness attempting a new feat and he wateh Eniotions that aré not followed np | them with interest. One of t by their eppropriate action have a teud- | @ funnel in th of his trouser ency to decrease and perish. Thus «oft- | bis head back las . leney and ready sympathy, | forehead and tried to dr the fun if allowed to expend themselves with- | Bel by slowly raising his bead out producing any practical effort to re- all had failed Jerry insisted on lieve suffering or to give happiness, ig It, though all tried to persuad grow feebler and feebler until they de- | him from attempting a feat too dificult generate into @ puerile self-pity which | for them. The funnel was Vin th make even cruelty and injustice poasi- | Waistband of his trousers and be threw ble. Manners have ‘cynically de- | back his head to receive the coin on his fine sa thing by which wise me keep fools at a distance. Fasbion 4 rhrewd to detect those who do not be g to her train er attentions. Sc in Mts instinets, and seldom waste ciety is very swif nd if you do not be and sneers at you or quietly drops you. Accordingly, th ronditions and surroundings of lif largely what we m@ke them g to it, resists the case, first of all, through our direct | head back, «0, and—wow influence, We are ralsed or lowered by Again Jerry was forced to change bh our associations, Men are generally | Fiment, amd he iv not showing pee alike in their lower natures; it is in | ¥4t ; pout the funnel t the higher character thet they differ, | ~1ondon Telegraph, Manners, temper, inte are all directly influen roundings, and those themselves frieuds whether of als or of con’ their choice. our sur fox hoose ad or manners, of mor As @ general thing we reap that which we have sown. But |that they form a circle. ‘Tt where it is not so, where ci tances | may be worked in white with H over which we have no control come in, |pale green, in pale pink and whit the form of trials or joys, even these | may be of white shading in are greatly modified by which they are received Feen poverty or bereavemént borne no roieally and cheerfully that the af flicted one seemed rather an object of the spirit in Who has not Y |tcular progeny excelled those of the| envy than of compassion? On the other hand, who has not seeu one with every ¢ that earth hae to rendering himself and others miserablo by fretful complaints of troubles too petty to deserve a moment's notice? There are millions of human beings who, but for suffering, would never have developed an atom of affee- tion, There are 8 to be borne, creations to be p ted, through the stow pow its | Winistry of pain, which could be borne | and perfected in no other way Our sorrows, which appear to us noth |ing but # yawning chasm or hideous precipice, may turn out to be but the pnt which binds together of our existence into a The dark and crooked Jolning or ¢ fragmenta Opposite Palmer House. / Borrow and the Ministry of Pain Oftes This ix | Put the funnel in, a i morals of an inferior caste t—fall to the level of Today | Bois & Co's and all —— ae The Injunction Suit of J. K, Greer Marshal Crouch | testified, aud the case was left open Marshal could not be found by his friends, | are cousins, arrived yesterday after. | are cousins, id yesterc | Ba a 7 sorporated | Patt, in which we have to grope our e was known to have a large |noon from St, Louis and wevt to the| Bernard Coal Co. incorporated, | ys. aoubt and fewr mas fet 24 <n 7 y lear, may be but the amount of money on bis person and/county court house, The young |423 Broadway. Telephone No.8, | curve which, iu full daylight of a bright it was feared that he had fallen into ladygwas not of age,however,!and had| °°! a | er world, will appear to be the necessary hunds, About noon he was found! no written consent of pirents o1| The Last Week finish of some cholce ornaments, the at one of the hotels, however, where | guardian. They left without a li-| For Rondo Thpic. that wonderful | /1¢v'table span to some bright project he had slept all day. conse 2 ak ts oe on fe ~~ m > £0 alee he finer the nature the more flaws ept all ense and went to Mayfield, where |remedy, ‘This~Teck the 81 size for] wi11 it show through the clecnnees ott r bottle at Du- mg stores, Of- 110 South Third street. PARTIALLY HEARD, de; next week § ‘The best things the most seldom seen in their best form; same as a tender- hearted and compassionate disposition whieh inclines men to pity and feel the misfortanes of others, and which |{s even for its own sake incapableat inclosing any man in misery, is of all tempers of ngind the most azniable one, and though it never receives much ‘The injunction suit of Detective J, | honor, i# worthy of the highest. One reer, at Smithland, to prevent| ting we should always remember, that ¢ collection of $200 reward in the| P™ areatest glory is uot In never fall- DANGEROUS FUNNEL TRICK. Veteran Club Man Tried It Twiee Before Geotets Enough. The funnel trick is an ingenious prac- tical joke recently introduced in the Lett Open, Marshal Richardson, of Bardwell, MeNutt, of Maylield, til Saturda , whe Judge Sanders, Free for All Concert One week, beginning Tuesday even- ; at 6:30 o'clock, at KIMBALL HALL, NO, 430 BROADWAY This will be THE EVENT OF THE HOLIDAYS Every night FREE that enjoy a high class‘ TO ALL Musi- eale."’ Hobson's full orchestra and KIMBALL PIANOS. Severa! prominent local pian- ist will assist in the programme from time to time. Also a quar- og tette and mandolin club, All Come Out. Manager Holiday Sale. W.W. KIMBALL CO. CHICAGO. ‘The Finest Line of expansive brow. At that juncture a Jug of water wan emptied into the fun nel, and by t Ume Jerry had finished 5; dancing the rs had van , | Jerry's temper improved with dry r xt night at the club bh ow a couple of friends j me nd the started in to « the funnel trick “It's this way,” he ‘The Clover Leaf Design. | Clover blossoms and the fashion, bs h in art needlework painted on When used in needle work they are laid on th they are to be embrotdered, w ¢ | long stems overlapping each; Charming an th centerpieces, tea-clothy and 8, decorated with elo blossome leaves, have a trefoil edge GEBHAR FOTOGRAFS 405') Broadway. The Finest and Cheapest Line OF — CARVING KNIVES, POCKET KNIVES, TABLE KNIVES, BUTCHER KNIVES, (INCORPORATED ) | 318-824 BROADWAY - . . (Sion or BIG Kanes Phone 53, HATCHE And all other kinds of KNIVES at COTT HARDWARE 00., - PADUCAH, nh Gro, Leannarn. sades & Lehnhard, Kentuc'yand Anthracite Coal, LUMP - : - BGG: « - : NUT - - Old “Lee” Anthracite, $8.25 Ton. We Will Appreciate a Share lof : 10c - 9c 9c Your Patronage, Office Cor, Ninth and \ Harrison. LEADING 5c. CIGARS. RUS @ Ask For Them, NOTICE. From 1 the first of January holiday run on my Cabinet Fotografs at price of $2.00 per The best ‘fe the money in the 1897, AT YOUR OWN PRICE, I will make a the rock bottom ever offered for C. P. McCLEAN. Was the remark of “Dusty Rh square meal, they are of a different cha terial obtainable Ing of a repeat of threo » pst conventionalized elover leaves.—N, ¥ Popt, A LITTLE NONSENSE, —When a New Hampshire man wante |t© get @ wood-pile moved, he tells the boys that a rabbit bas run under it, If we had to wait until » woman lifted her veil in order to kiss her, we would lose all appetite, and wouldn't kiss her at all.—Atchison Globe. Playwright—"What do you think of my new tragedy?” Critic—“I think It would be better if you condensed the five acts into offe and then took the point of it and¥printed it as 4 joke in a comle paper."SFliegende Blatter. | | “De youfhink,” said the y | man who hi @ man in | Indifferen: knov | tully come? aD Bove into polities, “that position can afford to be fo public opinion?” “Idon't sald Senator Sorghum, thought ‘how much is your private in- —Washington Star. Coroner—"Is this man whom you found dead on the railroad track total stranger?” Witness (w been told by the company to be in his statements)—"No, sor, Ys leg was gone extoirely. He was a partial stranger xas Biftings, you know, went met his death,” But his body was brought home and given @ decent burial, wasn't it?” “Well, they hanged the cannibal, and then brought home his body and buried {t."Philadelphia North American, ~“L intend to preach a sermon upon football next Sabbath,” said the tall caller in the white choker; “and I shall useript, if you wish to use it, I know ® number of your readers would be lad to seé it in print.” “All right, eaid the busy editor; “you will have to | Collins and Mr, W. A. Lanitibs teil aoe ned tasilty, London clubs, An old gentleman,whom we wil) call Jeremiah Brown, was vic- get It here early, though. Qur sport- |g, pegs is the Bret to close."\ Saad s wee Pee Watch cleaned and new main ‘ We want to draw your children’s trade; be pleased to furnish you with the man- | up in our Shoes, then they will trade wi Estastisuep 1865 WILLIAM NAGBL. THE LEADING JEWELER. ‘Diamonds, Watches, Glocks/ FINE JEWELRY AND SPECTACLES, FINE WATCH REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. Cor. Broadway and ‘Third Streets, A Good Filling = een We use ‘acter, our work JOUN J prettiest sisting of everybody call replaced at $1.00 each for limited time. od fillings’ in all our work, EVERYBODY + SAYS BLEICH PADUCAH, KY ,'" as he arose from his monthly Although Our fillings are of the best ma- and are put in with the greatest care and skill. Give us a trial and we are satistied that you will be pleased with DR. C. E. WHITESIDES. as the larg- and best selected stock of HOLIDAY GOODS con- Clocks, Silverware, Bronzes, Noveliies, &o” in the city, and lis prices please (l see for yourself JNO. J. BLEICH, 223 BROADWAY, SCHOOL SHOES Now Ready. Best Sorts---SMALLEST Price) We are going to sell our Children’s She SMALLE at the VERY PROFIT, we want your children to grow th us ell their lives not trading with us, ask one of our customers abou 5 t our way of treating’ our cliente—and their fect, | Mt Shoes, and about George Bernhard, If you are

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