Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
_—_ THE PADUCAH DAILY SUN, every afternoon, excep! Sunday, by THE SUN PUBLISHING COMPANY, ENCOMPORATED. Published ® M. Fasten Puesivert 2. 8, sare ViCk PRESIDENT J, J. dorian clos SRCRETARY Wit Paxzon ‘TREASURER SP. HOPG. . MANAGING EDITOR DIRECTORS U.M, Fisher, JR. Sinith, R.W. Williamson J.J. Dot THE DAILY SUN WU! give special attention to ALL. local, hap- penings of Interest in Padueah and vicinity, Bot neglecting general news, which will be given as fully as space will permit without re- Gard to expense. JHE WEEKLY SUN devoted to the interests of our country, pat ‘and Will at all times be neway and en. ining, While keeping its readers post 6n all political affairs and topics:while it will Ureless exponent of the doc: hings of the National Republi Clements, JH. CORRESPONDENCE. A special feature of the weekly edition of ‘THe -UN will be Its Correspondence Depart ment, in which it hopes ably to represest every locality within the limns of tts cirol lation * es ADVERTISING. Rates of advertising will be made known On appiteation CcOMee, Standard Block, 115 North Fourtlr street Subscription Rates. $ 4.50 2.25 40 10 cents Daily, per annum...... Six months ly, One month Daily, per week. Weekly, per annum in ad- VANCE ss ee ee ee Specimen copies free —_—_—_—_————— SATURDAY, JAN 1.00 Tur anarchistic governor of Illi- nois ia his parting thrust at the newspapers can do them no harm, and surely they will pardon a little venom in one who has come in for so many sound drubbings at their hands, especially seeing it will be the last gubernatorial message he will ever write, Mr. Bryan before the Jackson club at Chicago claims the silver Democrats as the true Jacksonians, while the sound money Democrats have no doubt they are in line with Old Hickory. It is doubtful if the stern old hero could be induced to sit down at either table, should he re- turn. Governor Brapier's determina- tion, of which we are assured in re- cent dispatches from Frankfort, to ask the legislature to provide for a state bank examiner is to be com- mended by every thinking business man, We doubt not the intention of the governor {s not to banks alone, but every species of fi- nancial institution receiving moneys The law should extend to building and loan associations and kindred institutio ns a8 well as banks The small expenses which these in-, stitutions will have to pay in the way of fees and traveling expenses to the State examiner. will be returned many times in the extra security de- positors and stock holde rs willreceive through such an office well adminis- tered. The Governor's head is level and he will have the support not only of outsiders, but of the officials con- mstitutions them- include in trust. nected with the selves, Ir is not matter of surprise that Gen. Gomez has ac last raised the | black flag and determined to make the hundreds of his followers who have | reprisals for countrymen and been brutally and mercilessly put to| death by Spain, after surrender in| battle. The surprise is that the Cu- ban generals up to this time, jon the severest pos- | sible, ned from | committing excesses, and have uni- formly treated their prisoners hu- | man: The imputation that men who could thus conduct themselves | have under provoc restr: themselves under such grave provocation are not capable of self government is with- out force. No one who has followed the history of this cruel war will for a} moment doubt that their capacity for| advanced and liberal self government is far above that of their cruel antag- onists and former masters. It is an insult to the intelligence of the Amer- | icin people for a Spaniard to make The cruel, heartless | such a charg old despotisin should be driven from | offered a free site of twenty acres if man Dake; t the Ish Ovx of the knottiest problems with which congress will wrestle at this session is the Pacific Railroads mat-| ter. by government aid and are indebted | to the government in the sum of| $113,000,000 ; in default, and the question is whether it would be These roads were built largely | are wiser to extend the second mortgages, | foreclose or take possession under the law. In either of the Jatter cases the first mortgage bonds agpre- gating $61,000,000 would have to be paid by the government. ‘The pro- priety of extending government aid to these roads by land grants and by! guaranteeing their bonds has always been matter of dispute. But one, thing is certain: But for these roads, and they could never have Jpeen otherwise built, a country which | now constitutes a large number of States, teeming with an industrious population, and representing thou- | sands of millions of wealth, would yet be practically unknown and un- = | ling of the road's repatr wo ‘The advantages are mutual, railroads are not in the habit of) 1,44; abandoning a city of so much im developed, If the government were portauee. Qn the contrary they go| asrrived.’” ~ MORAGLES IN SA able No | » Ivis dimicult, ¢lmost impossible, to overestimate the importance of re- cent advances in medicine and jsur- wery. | In surgery there is he spplication of the X-ray in determiving eompli- cated fractures, | la medicine. theréis the seram treatment for germ “Wigeases, snd | more important still, the ded use or Paine’s celery comp n the treatment of the nervous system suffering and earier deaths than all others, and that is why so much pub. li¢ promisence was at once given ‘to discovery. vas first announced by Prof, Phelps of Dartmouth college The rapid and sure way that Paine’s cel@ry ‘compound cures neuralgia, rheumatism and nervoug debiliy is wonder. working quarter of\a cegtuty, Ancient miracles were contrayf to natoral laws, whereas the reaiarkable power of Paine’s celeryscompound to make people well, comes from a bet. ter understanding of the natural causes of disease, That wonderful set of nerves known as the *‘sympathetic nervous syatem’? that knits every part of the bodK10 gether and barmonizes aij, is unde} stood today as never before Mav he Wonderfu) Progress Made Within the Past Few Yers, Diseases That loup’ Mothers Thought/ incur \Otred by Paine’s Celery |_a Ccmpound. many diseases eral health, that arise from a faulty or impaired People who thik to get rid of these | call on the mother country to treat ‘troubles by some medicine that dis This class of silments causes more jtegards the general health of the bods marvelous even in the eyes of /this| humors that ara barsting throu zh the] the ne otiations progress, Mr, Lai MEDICINES, | St¥4OWN REcoRocrr: e : The Canadian Govermmedt Bent On Gaining Some Ad- vantages. Ready to Extend Fayors to Our Manufacturers at the Expense of England. ashington special to the | Slobe-Den perat Says : ada pro- poses that it sha] be through no fault hone | of her own if she does not get on the ‘ground flor of the reciprocity move- persons are not aware that any such ment. Information bas come through nerves cxist. They do not know that private channels that within a week nothing goes on in any part of the Canada will have representatives here body that every other part does not to e known to Republican lead- instantly “know of, The closeness ers the desire of that country to be of sympath familiarly illas- | counted in when the making of reci- trated\ by headaches, indigestion | procity treaties begins. Because of rheumatigm, neuralgia, ete Abou |her colonial relationship to Great | every cashof sleeplessness, neryous| Britain, Canada can not act directly. ness and dyepep: a “sy mypatbei| Her agents must negotiate unofticial- Birike” by brain, derves or stomach, |ly with Chairman Dingley and the induced by thelowering of the gen | Ways and Means Committee, ascer- ie tain what terms can be made and then through the British Embassador. Probably the chief representative | ave on the wrong track, In getting} of Canada in the negotiations will be such} diseases a neuralgia and rbeu-}a leading member of the Liberal par- matism out of the system Paine’s|/ty, Mr. Charleton, M. P., who is an Paine’s ¢elery compound when its joelery compound proceed’ ag once to] American by birth, but went to Can- restore a notml appetite \and regu-|ada with his parents. He isalumber- jute the nerves, as the foundation for] man, with large interests on both sides uilding upth@ health and ¥igor. of the line, and has for years been \ It regafates thé bowels without de-| promoting closer relations between lay, and sees ¢d it) that the poigonous| Canada and the United States. As skin, in what are, for purposes of|rier, the Prime Minister, and Sir classifying, called ‘skia-diseuseg, are} Richard Cartwright are expected given a ready outlet. On this of | here. purified bigod and regulated fierves| As learned from Canadian sources, {ile permghent cure lef every farm of | the idea of these liberal leaders is not b!ood digeases, such\as eczema, salt} to carry reciprocity to the extent of |rheum Abad complexton, is tow as |free trade between the countries. sured by this reaily wanderfubremedy | Canada has been building up manu- | |_ Ifthe reader of thie is per-| facturing industries by a protective fect bealth let hun simfplyfry a first /taiff since 1879, while Great Britain tle of Paive'’s celery” compound | las been proclaiming free trade, and does not propose to remove that tariff entirely. The plan on the part to lose every eent of its claim the country has profited a hundred fold by the investment. Etsewnere we publish an outline of proposed reciprocity arrangements between this country and Canada, There is no country with which more advantuges can be secured by reci- procity, perhaps, than Canada, But Canada is not in shape to entcr inte the agreement without the consent of the northern country; in fact the treaty must be rirectly negotiated with England, have arrived at an understanding of just what she wants. The mother country must necessarialy suffer seri- ously in her trade with Canada by apy arrangement from which this | coumiry can profit. It therefore be- hooves our statesmen to watch very carefully any propositions that may be made. Wily John (Bull will be of his own interests. It is within th matter may be the means of alienat- and developing the incipient desire for independence or annexation to the United States. Canada will un- doubtedly wish to negotiate for many advantages which, from selfish mo- tives, will be denied her by the mother country and the colony will awake to the fact that it is not her own interests, but those of England that willin all cases be first sidered. ——$—————— THESE kK? ROAD SCARES. It would be ludicrous if it were leading to texious not capable of consequences to note how determined some people are to believe the Illi- nois Centrat road is about to do some mischief to Paducah, Notwithstand- connected with the ing every officia road and the shops has repeatedly assured us there is no desire or dis- position on the part of the road to do anything that will result in injury to Paducah and that it is the unwav- ering intention of the management to maintain the shops here; that they are necessary to the economic hand- we are constantly called to combat| some new bughear, some new chim- era, conjured up by the fertile imag- ination of somebody. One of the latest is that Fulton bas to that city line the shops moved Another is that a new j built which will shorten the distance | from Louisville to Memphis and New Orleans, etc., ete. In his recent letter to the Sex| Major Harahan asked the people of | Paducah to a reasonable| confidence in the officials of the I. C. are isto be exercise railroad, and assured them they} would receive fajiy treatment and| would not suffer disappointment. Itis sad if the alleged new “cut | off” shall be built, Padycah will lose practically all the benefit’ she now derives from the road ana will simply | by @ ‘dinkey” road! be connected and train, The unreasonableness of this po- sition abould be apparent to any thoughtful person. Itis not to be supposed that Paducah, with a popur lation of 25,000 people, by far the} best business town in Western Ken- tucky,is going to be given the go by. | The after Canada shall} range of possibility that this very| ing many of her Canadian subjects | con-| ete. drink. ; Otto Adolph Walder. cription on the card when Mr, Evers of the Canadians isto make up a limited list of natural products and manufactured goods, and have trade in these free between the two coun- out of their way to reach them. Shculd the I. C. railroad see that by building the proposed ‘cut off’? she will be able to save|tries. This can be done,it is claimed, sufficient on her through traf-|in such a way that Canada and the fic to pay for the construction, United Siates may enjoy a joint market, without any interference from British manufacturers. ‘The list on which it is proposed to make trade free between the two countries includes implements,sewing machines, fire arms,pig and bar iron, axles and springs, locomotive and stationary engines, paper, printing machines and presses, gray cotton and cotton jeans, clocks and watches brass guods, carriages and sleighs, maintenance and interest on the in- vestment, which is extremely doubt- ful, she will no doubt build it. Le would be the part of good sense and Paducah would have no right to com- plain. But we need have no fear the road would thereafter leave Paducah out in the cola. They want our bus- iness, and they will stay with us for it. Likewise if some other town should want the shops bad enough to furn- ish site, build the shops and pay the costo! removal, and ifthe advan- |tages possessed in other directions | were equal to those of Paducah, it is possible the shops would be removed, It might be the part of business | | and shoes, harness and saddieryware, refined petroleum and other oils, paints, rubber goods, furniture, elec. trical apparatus, ete. The Canadian duties on manufactures ayefitye 30 per cent. Canada sells all sorts of natural products to the United States, and the United States sends a con- siderable supply to Canada, such as livestock, wheat ($2,400,000 worth found pretty well able to take care! sense to remove them in such case, }it 1895), bran and mill feed, oats, $ corn meal, corn ($1,500,000), flour But what good under heaven can] (25,3 uy, a ah. ane ie j come of this constant agitation about $1,780,000), vegetables and so on jmetters that areas distant as the|If coal were made free the removal polar seas, and which the officials with | of the Canadian duty of 60c per ton one accord denounce as utterly with- bent its keira Buber enable Serr qi Ty + 3, | S¥!Vanla avd 10 to Increase eur out foundation. The I. C road is be Hi in the province of Quebec, now here to stay, The shops are here to}jargely supplied from Nova Scotia, stay. Let us enjoy them and not] while Nova Scotia would have a be make ouzselves miserable by constant | ter chance than now in New England fear and trembling, and thus pos Canada does not tax anthracite; basghap Aiaaea there is none worth speaking of in \ i bly aid in bringing about the very}inat country. All that is used there | thing we fear, ; (1,400,000 tons in 1895) comes, of SUPPOSED MURDERER, |¢0urse, from this country. a : With free iron ore and pig iron, The Brooklyn Suspect Says He is! Nova Svotia ore would he ee to a Free Silver Man, New England, and Ontario ore to The Metropolis “Democrat” thus|New York rnd Pennsylvania, but | gives further particulars of the arrest f the mia supposed to be wanted at Peoria, Ill., for murder. | ‘A man filling the description of | Max Frey, alias Max Miller, wanted | at Peoria,Ill. for the murder of Frank Boyle about December 5th last, was arrested at Brooklynn yesterday morning by Deputy Sheriff Evers and Marshal Grimes of Brouklyn and brought to this efty. | | ! in Canada would be manufactured in the United States. There are only six furnaces in Canada, and produc- tion, being on a small scale, comes high, To make first-class iron the three furnaces in Nova Scotia have to import ore from Newfoundland for blending, and the one in Ontario has | to import a supply from the United States; the other two furnaces, which | The description given on the card |are in Quebec, make charcoal iron. | sent out,and also in the Governor’s|'The Canadian duty on pig iron is proclamation offering $700 reward, }$4.48 per long ton; on bar $10 per | is that of a German between 28 and | short ton. 30 yerrs of age, 5 feet 3 inches tall] Canadian lumber is largely import- | and weighing 150 pounds, Alsofed into this country, nearly § that he had dark hair and beard, dark | 500,000 worth being taken in 1895, jcomplexion, and was addicted tofand only $9,075,000 by England. The latter country takes piue deals | This description the man under|and spruce, and square timber; the! arrest fills almost perfectly, the only | United States, sawn Jumberand logs, variation being in the weight and|the logs being towed across the height, He said that his name was}boundary and sawn in American and that his] mills, Cavada taxes corn 7!sc per randfather was a Ger-| bushel, corn meal 40c, flour 75¢ per at he was a carpenter|barrel. If these duties were removed imillwright, aud was last employed at|/there would be a rapid increase erre Haute, Ind., last September. | ju the exports from the United States, He also said that he made Bryan] New Kngiand would practically have speeches during the campaign in{a monopoly in supplying the sea- Louisville, Cincinnati and other {board provinces with those commodi- places and was known as the silver] ties, while Quebec, Ontario, Mani- miner from Montana, Then he}toba and British Columbia would buy warmed up and said he wanted the} from the Western States. There is hewspapers to say there was a young] a tax of about 1QQ per cent on coal «inn in town who wanted to get] oil, for the benefit of a few wells and married ; suid be didu’t care if the} pefineries in Qntario; nevertheless, woman was toothless, but she must] one-third of the total consumption is uave at least $4,000,000. After-| supplied by this country. wards he said that he left Louisville on the 28th of November, going to] exported to the United States, vir- Vincennes sud thenee striking south, | tually all the fresh mackerel, great-great state before this time this winter, he] and answered */No"’ very promptly. canned Walder or Frey, whichewar may fish salted herring, lobsters, fresh oil, ete, Our couple of officers, who concluded] taking canned salmon from British that he filled the description on the|Columbi vard, but feared they would make a] Nova Scotia, mistake jn ar to the officers here. = Jn hoon he inquired the way and walked | amountjng 0 Brooklyn, where he night, Ontario and Quebec, @ to $320,000. || which is admitted into Canade |i e officers at Hrooklyn already | free, barrels themseles, % practically ali the pig iron consumed | supply would come from this country, principally from Michigan, A good deal of Canadian fish are | the C: t cod, | ositions which will be presented is a When asked if he bad been in this halihut nd herring, besides smoked | joint scheme for deepenin, fresh qnd| Lawrence route from Duluth and salmon, | Chicago to tide water, and for make im-|ing the lake traMe free to American j be his name, came here early Tues-| ports of such sypplies in 1896 wero|sod Canadian vossols alike, offering day morning on the railroad, and} $3,025,000 while Canada sent to|in return to give the United States was followed from Simpson by a| England over $4,000,000, England | joint control over the canals, and canned lobsters from tration, Mr. Laurier, is represented they as ready to do anything he can do esting him, so reported|on the otber hand, purchased fish in| with dignity and withoyt 4 the afcer-| this country, fia Dasaiiiy in 1895 | to Great Kiltain, to improve the re. v all round, 10 stayed all) Sal., other than salt for the fishvries, | Sir Richard Cartwright visited Wash- 5 ts taxed five wents pew 190 [ail these subjects with Mr. Blaine, he man stopped from the de- pounds in bulk, and 74¥e per 100 in| who, had the Liberals been in office bags or barrels, plus the duty on the |then, would probably have reached | first class work sad promp' There are galt! an agreement, ioe We hope not. throughout the coming year, Bu and if you do get sick, eome to have everything you want. A stock daily and are your nearest Drug Store, Cor. 71h and Jackson Sts. Are You Furthermore we wish you heal PHARMACISTS a Se Sick? it, if you are si us for drugs. We re adding to our and best Family qe “De” BACON & CO,, ———_-— Holiday Groceries, Fruit Cake Ma Telepnone 119, AT LOW PRICES, 112 8. Third Street. We can offer ‘you siime for less them at home, \We alsv-have BREAD AND CAI drugs and chemicals, glass, boots! 118 SOUTH SECOND SYREET. We will make a | BIG-REQUCTION | IN Ae aN AND DYEING | cleanedaunl pressed for $2. eaned, \dyed and pressed | | All work guarantee! to Ye first-class an: to our well known standard, =I Paducah Steam Dye Works, | | 329 8, Third Street. | K. C, Kose & Sow, | Proprietors. cee J, §. GANSTER, SOLICITOR OF ‘United States Pension Claims, © Prompt and thdgongh attention giv- en to all cases, = S\N Vouchers for quartérly\payment of Pensions carefully attend® to. 714 8. Third ————___ When You Want Something Yo | PURIFY. YOUR BLOOD, REGULAT& YOUR LIVER | AND ERADICATE ALL | POISON FROMTHE SYSTEM 8 ST HALLS BLOOD. REMEDY, | } | | | | | | | | Stylish Hair Cut —a0 70 - JAS, BAYAN'S. BARBER SHOP 405 BROADWAY: Brinton B. Davis, ARQHITECT, Ottie Am,-Ger, Nat. Bak Bldg —_—_..... wells in Western Qntario, byt if salt were put on the free fist the main ‘These facts show the field in which dians hope to negotiate a y treaty. One of the prop- recipro the St. ‘The head of the Canadian adminis. disioyaity ations of the two countries ington some years ago, and diseussed ~P.F.LALLY —-IS HEADQUARTERS FOR—— Apples.and Oranges, Fresh Canned Goods) &c. HOME-MADE LARD A SPECIALTY. ARTISTIC PHOTOGRAPHY BRUCE'S STUDIO. '$ Mirbasicaees 5 oy want, THE CITY BAKERY Having baked a large lot of very tine FRUIT GAKES, a fine F. KIRCHHOFF. FOR THIRTY DAYS our January ;Cloak Sale Handkerch Ladies) | Mackintoshes, intosh} for Bhis is the time fot the sit year ee ae it Nice Bath Rooms in Connection, excellbnt qumbers at $3 We babe two bO aud $499. Wa also have a fey odds and ebds of numbers that hi « stopped buy hoe. We offer them a 490, worth $2.50, LW, YOUNG & SON, \ \ Give us your 'aundry if yo Ivery, . terials, » Cor. 9th and Trimble Sts, We Make a Specialty of High Grade . \ Work, get first-c ke ITO- money than you C¥M take line of all kinds. of DIEHL date. jcalt, Trilby toe, only Men’s, Ladies’ and Children’ Men's Shoes, $2 to-#5. Trilby, Orient. and Razor Toes. THE CELEBRAT mestic pipes in the City W. A. KOLLEY, ——————— 310 BROzDWAY. New Fall Styles, up to- Bee our new French B3.50 All Sizes, All Widths from C to Shoes Exclusively, STYLES, POPULAR PRIC ALL NEW GOODS. W. A. KOLLEY., . FACTURER OFr— ED— Fumar, Turn-Verein, ‘Co, Q,” Jap and Midget Havana * CIGARS ® \\ Strictly Havana filler, oe MADE. \ 1 am carrying the largest apd most select stock of Imported and* Do GOLD-BUG and 16 TO 1 Silver Mounted Pipes are Beauties, Have also an immense lot of Chewing and The latter are Novelties. Smoking Tobaccos, It will pay you to call and examinoyny entire stock, Corner Second and Broadway, VWVVSD VVUVVNA Las anything in the Grocery KAMLEITER and Provision Line that you Ea 4 hilton 70 o< | UP-TQ-DATE GROCER, | > ALL KINDS O¢ FRKSH MEATS AND OYSTERS AL- WATS ON HAND. Telephone 124, 437-441 S, Third St. YoY SY Ye oe 4 nee oo ° Is in full swing. There are hacd | some Jacke in our Cloak Room as when the Beason began, Many Of the finest btyles are here yet, as UNTIL THE NEW YEAR A SPECIAL BARGAIN SALE FOR MEN BE CONDUCTED AT WOMEN AND CHILDREN WILL DORIAN’S. Where you can Gnd many useful aud appropriate HODL- IDAY GIFTS. this is your chance ta save 25 per cent, on every pair of Ladies’, Men's and Childten's Shoes, We have the is often the cbse the best is lett be-| Winest Cheap Shoes and cauee of ceo pneiveness, We upset the pried and cut all of them in half, Theylare just as stylish, just as good, ut they are not so costly, Re nr | just one-half the \ t the prices arc iginal prices fd. ee for Yourself What values\ we are\ offering in Ladies’ Handkerghiefs) During the rush before\ @hristr dozen handkerchiefs and soiled We affer the entire |b whe ach nae de te So" 41 Bibles, Prayer Books ‘and | Devotional Articles. WHEN YOU DRINK They ar our 25d. quality, are sco} loped edge andj erpbroidefed, and most of them are eB Jinen) Also 20 dozens of Jajliest oli liden and embroidered Yandkerchiegs that were 35e. now/go af 25 cissors | i ] HALL MEDICINE 00., We have) About |f0 dozgr seis Papucan, Ky| 80rs, big aud little, that we have been s iling at We frani to} = close out ifs entire ot, ong offer |For An Easy Shave Hhem Mt 1B, per pa | } | | | | Thisis the time td buy al Mack each. \ Many of the Are a i u Laundry, Proptietors, \ BROADWAY. TELEPHONE 200,) de. | We have them—Heavy,\Fine and All Wool, Also cheay grades ‘ue | Holiday Books, | PADUCAH CYCLE WORKS. . Agent for Odell ‘Typewriter, Price $40.00, ) December 1 is the BENT SEASON for RIDING, call and see OUR WHE! Now Ready. up in ours hot trading with us, ask Ondof our customers about our want | OUF Way of treating our cliente—wnd their feet, The Cheapest Fine Shoes IN THE CITY. BLANKETS. 4 Twenty. tive per cent off on every pair, i: Laoies' ano Men's FURNISHING GOODS. Best Quanity \xp Lowest Prices, John J. Dorian, 205 Broadway. DRINK THE BEST ———You can find it at DETZEL'S. ——Where we keep the finest of — Whiskies, Wines, Beer, Cigars, etc RESTAURANT OPEN AT ALL HOURS, eee, and 126 128 North Fifth Street, Nar Parmer Uotse, DEALERS, High Grade Bicycles and Bicycle Sundries In— t Suitable for Miuisters, Doce tors, Lawyers, Teachers, and im reach of all, The Only Exclusive 1 From September 1 WE invite you to yele House in the City. ELS and get Bottom Prices on saniee~ J, R. PURYEAR, Manager. SCHOOL SHOES st Sorts---SMALLEST Prices. ing.to gell our Children’s Shoes at the VERY SMALLEST PROFIT). We want lo draw your children’s trade; we spiel children to grow ves, Gen Yreywill trade with ua all their livés, If you are hoes, \and about George Berithard. Bs boy PS Po > cy