The Paducah Daily Sun Newspaper, January 21, 1897, Page 3

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® A aN - 5 ’ ‘The Great Through Line From / St, Louis TRY THE NEW FAST TRAIN KANSAS/AND NEBRASKA LIMITED. frok Mountain Route. The thost direct line via Memphis to Syl! points in ARKANSAS AND TEXAS, WEST AND SOUTHWEST. jairs on All Trains, To KANSAS OITY, ST. OMAHA, PUEBLO, DEN And SALT LAK Free Rechinin, “6 MEMPHIS TO Fort Worta, Turovan Coacy DALLAS AN) For maps, rates,(tree books on Texas, Ar kansas, and all We ays, and further information, call on your lo or write R. 1. G. MATTHEW LA TOWNSEND, RAILROAD TIME TABLES. Nashville; (Chattanooga & St. Louis Railroad PADUCAM AND MEMPHIS DIVISION Hy . m Ejunei. 108) 2 m0 ‘ ies ato sourn » Uy, Padueah, Memot A. Nash — ———————— ILLINOIS € ENTRAL RAILROAD MEMPHIS DIVISION No No fet dows NO aud New OF 1% Nader the Palmer “ | Iino Cental, ; suuati and Loutsvitie a Pullman Toufist Sleeping Car ry Wednesday and rung vy oF MEXICO cla New Orleat as Lou sb tte aa necting oe chine Co. and of all kinds. Papvean, ° Missouni Paciric away! = Agent Line Owned and Operated Tennessee aud Ohio Rive n Co ware Sts. JOE FOWLER and JOHN Leave Padtican at 9:30 ¢ Wert alyhys the fi FALL STYLES design and Worera) ready for Finest Picture Moul In the Cit Have you « Tn all Prices Reasona’ ) Bway Under Pat R AND 1R0 th Tl N rd St TIN, SLATE Ss Whey You Want Somet HALLS BLOOD HALL MEDICINE Pa A~S. DAB LW, Mo KALMR IN Staple an Cor, 7th av i AM kinds of imperfe CABLE COMPA B14 par 1208 Forth, B ‘wilt practice tn all the col collevulon of claims promply TEL. 1 aturday hb every Tues Evansville, Paducah and Cairo Packet POWLEI y're A YARD OF FACES. FOOD work L. P, BALTHASAR, DAVIS, Front / Rank CEWRHACES, aa Orleans & Cincinnati} ** acket Company, Memphis lock day and Sat r ‘Trans S. HOPKINS It Supt rst to show the lates in now dings eel se y{*you ought to have “Talking about having — yonr watches stolen from you,’’ remarked Actor John Griffith to several mem- bers of his troupe at the Union depot while waiting for the train yesterday, been with me down in Texas last season! We played a little town down there and nearly everything we had of any value was stolen from our dressing rooms during the performance. “The most amusing feature of the mity,”’ he continued with « grim je ‘was the way the police gut 1 with us, Our manager wouldn't let a single ‘cop’ in the show that night, and they were all pretty sore about it. It tickled them to death when they found out our watches RITTEN AT RANDOM. | DRIFTWOOD GATHERED ON THE LEVEE. again. He had left his coat and hat in the hall, and I guess he took them ARRIVALS. and went back to the coun‘ry.’’ Jobn Hopkins This was the unexpecte| termina-| Bostona . me tion of that story. . . Evansville + Cincinnati «Metropolis - Danville Geo. H. | Cowling Ashland City... DEPART! A youthful looking man boarded PS, a street car the other day and after! City of ( i paying bis tare, begat! to devote! bia Nad edebttts Deca tment attention to the ladies in the car. He] pick Fowler 1 Calle had a red head and every feature! John S. Hopkins *“Bvaneville bore the unmistakable imprint of | Geo, H Irish ancestry’ Whenever he saw a i lady rise to mng the bell, with com-| | mendable gallantry he pulled the} The Dick Fowler was away to cord for her. Sometimes he received | Cairo as usual this a, m. in return for his courtesy a grateful! The gauge showed 17.9 this morn- nod, and sometimes he didn’t. Butjing, a rise of 9 tenths last night. Cowling. +» Metropolis and money had been ‘nipped’ and when we kicked at headquarters the chief said he was sorry, if he had time would look into itter some time that week.’” o- Capt. Jimmie Owen has quite a remarkable cat. Some time since he decided to @ollect all the stray fe- lines he coul@ find and take them to his cave up the Cumberland river to feast on the mice and rats that infest There was one sad-eyed tabby went to work with a will and an empty stomach when he left it there, and its incessant practice in exter- minating the corpulent rodents wemed to stimulate in it a higher conquer, Nothing could be found except rabbits and the cat has caught scores of them e it took up its quarters in Owen's celebrated cave. It never eats them, but always takes them to the cave keeper for such disposal as the latter deems expe- dient. Truly, Capt. Owens has a wonderful cat, and there is probably not another like it in the state. “1 was traveling in Arkansas with a show related Artist Ellis Bour to a erowd at Fourth and Broadway yesterday, ‘‘and after giv- « performance in one of the small ns, we boarded a train on one of those tin-horn, narrow-guage rail- roads to go to our next stand, The railr company on that oceasion trying to reduce time on its system and some crack-brained man had reported to the gen- ger that he had an invention by means of which two trains could pass each other on the same track going in opposite direc ys without touching each other. Those Arkan- as railroad men decided to try and see if the thing would work, and they were to try it that day with our train, of course we aidn't know it. I you've ever been in a train on casion like that you probably oticed that something happened when the trains passed, I was lean- my seat in the rear end of one ing ing back in the train, watching the other passen- gers. ‘There was a bald-hgaded man trying to read @ newspaper, two drummers with ther feet and their sample cases in the seat in front of them, talking politics, —free-silver was unknown then—a country girl, probably going to visit a relative down the road, and ® fat woman with four small children, The children were crying and talking, and dir above. 4 q Yo JRL PURIFY YOUR BLOOD, VER REGYLAT YOUR LI\ AND ER nae ALL POISON M JHE SYSTEM REMEDY, Oy NEY, # “DENTIST. 406 BROADWAY\, ore, Groceries, Canned Goods - Kinds, Free delivery to all parts Xt ity rse Shoeing a Specialty. ection tn travel corrected Postal Telegrapl NY, ROADWAY. ed to carey els to any she began opened a large basket and to distribute cakes and ap- ples to quiet them, I thought of the the time when and how Lused to like apples and home-made cakes and such things, when she took out a big pumpkin pie ani held it up so they could see it Maybe my mouth didn’t water! 1 guess the trains must have passed each other on the same track about that time. The last thing I remem- bered was seeing the fat woman holding up the pie. When I came to there were doctors all around lots of kindling wood camp fires and exeite- ment and plenty of broken hones. I never did see the pie any more, but when L woke up they were combing it out of my hair, and they told me that when they found me J was wear- ing the crust for a collar.”’ “That swift telegraph operator you wrote about the other day,’’ be- van Col. W. Fred Long as he stuck a Courier-Journal in his pocket yes- ay aud stepped out of a Broad- store, ‘was pretty good, I s, but Lean discount that story sane. Col. Long is sn old and the train dispatcher himself, to hear the writer of course stopped story. “One low walked into a tel day a country looking fel- raph office in Louisville and — asked for a job,’ continued the speaker ‘His apparent — yerdancy caused @ smile to go around the office as the operators stopped jong enc ugh to Jook up at bins. He was so persistent, however, that the manager toll bim he would give him «trial, Ho left bis coat and hat in the ball and was shown. an instrament and given In- structions, ‘he manager put bin on to the swiftest operator on the line to have some fun out of him, ‘Vine wag a lip young fellow in Cin- cinnati. Direcily call came, and the greenhorn promptly ticked off the “I, 1,’ and then began to light his pipe. ‘The words came piling in, and by the time his ‘Jong green’ got to smoking good he was thirty words bind, When he asked where the water the other operators ne hock boys to nudge each other and giggle. They told him be could get a drink fn the hall, and be walked out, with about sixty words of the message already sent and not a single ope of them written down,/? Here Col. Long paused, and glanced at several bystandeys who had stopped to hear the story, “You surely don’t mean to say that the felow went back and took down all ckat message, do you?" ventured gome one. “No, [don’t megu jg say any such a thing,” was the reply of the was kept to grin, aud the narrator. Ihe fellow never did come back and we never saw biw . ambition, and the animal began to] ends.’’ look about for something larger to]the motorman, and he tle village. here. that price. this place about 85 years; he has done great work as a physici has spent much of his t ed by his acquaintance greatly missed by all who knew him. Six Weddings Among Kinfolks at took place, on which & correspondet soliloquizes as follows : T was @ boy, |to “Uncle Bob”’ the six couples, before the wedding, he had a daughter and a son, grand-daughters, an aunt, four nieces and two nephews | Meets any one related to this did not seem to worry him any.| ‘The City of Paducah passed out He seemed to take a keen delight in] of the Teansssie river for St. Louis hearing the bell clang, and he pulled | yesterday afternoon. the rope almost hard enough to jerk} ‘The Bostona from Cincinnati it in two. is ip - | passed em) When he reached up to pull tie|Iorning, |" MemPbis. early thus cord for the last lady in the car, he} aye: ‘ accidentally grabbed rwo ropes, and Tota tae belts a pulled them both as violently as his |e. prvi ent, ad? strength would permit, 8 f The Clyde is due out of the Ten- ‘‘Look here, young feller,”’ yelled "1 Shorty Tolbert, the motorman, as he] 2essee river tonight or early tomor- shoved back the door and protruded j7°W morning. his head, ‘You are too fresh? The] The Ashland City will arrive from last time you acted so gay you rang} Danville this evening and receive the bell at both ends of the car. freight for tomorrow's departure. “Thot’s all right, me frind,’’ re-] The John S. Hopkins was away to torted the fresh young man, ‘‘Oi} Evansville this morning at 10 o’clock wanted dhe car to sthop at both] carrying a fine load of freight. This argument overpowered] ‘The City of Clarksville departed no more: tfor Elizabethtown today at noon with KY. an excellent trip of both freight and passengers. : Capt. Alex Montgomery, owner of After our long silence we will the Henry DeBus” Al Martin and write the news in and around this lit-| several other steamers arrived in the city yesterday afternoon from Cin- We have been having some cold|cinnati in interest of his boats. weather for the past thirty-six hours. The harbor towboat men say that Business is looking up somewhat | the harbor prices for towing here are not at a figure calculated to make a The tabacco buyers are out looking | fortune for a tug in a single season, at the tobacco in this vieini They OF, in fact, a lifetime. There are BRENSBURG, are paying revsonably good prices for]00W several jobs around this port good tobacco. Some have sold for] Waiting to be done, but the harbor six and two and others for less than | boats will not do the work on account is to be paid for it. COLORED DEPARTMENT. CHURCHES. of the price that Dr. Joseph M. Mooney, of thi place, died at his home the 17th inet, Dr. Mooney bad been a resident of Clan ; com- fort the poor ;his friends are number- and will be 2 leaves Husband Street Church (Methodist)—Sua He leaves to mourn his loss a wife| q/iusband Sireet Chara, (Methadte and five children, three of whom are|m. Rev C. M. Palmer, pastor. residents of Paducah. Berks Chapel. rch & Calo, (Mstbodions.) Syn, La grippe and pneumonia bad a]™) Rev iS Burks pastot a —sund ‘ ‘ ington Street Charch.—Sunday trong hold on several Of OUT} schooi®am. Preaching 8 pm. Rev { s, but no one dangerous at this] W. Dupee, pastor writing. Seventh street Baptist Church.—Sunday oe’ m. Preaching, llamand? p m. On the 20th Mr. Andrew Gossett | Rev W.§. Baker, pasto and wife, of Mississippi, will arrive St. Paul A. M. F m., preaceing li a, here to spend a few days with their | Stanford, pastor. baother, b. 3y cube St. James A. M. E. church, 10th and Trimble »rother, L. J, Gosset. streets, nay School 2p. m., preaching 3p. The Misses Pace, of Hardin, visit- " ed relatives here last week m. Ret. G. J. Stanford, pastor, Trimble feet Christian chureh—Sunday school, 9:30 aching, Miss Mattie Joe Brian, of Kobe, is visiting here this week. Jouty, ing, ila, mand 7:30 p. tn. ‘ednend MUCH MARRYING, anday school 9 + ‘and 7:30 p. m., Rev. J. G. nesiay even- ings, 7:90: Sunday school ‘teachers’ meeting, ‘Thutsday evenings, 7:90. All are cordially in: vited, 8. R. Cotter, pastor. COLORED LODG MASONIC. Masonic Hall 4 Broadway, third floor. Mt MeGregor Lodge No 29 —Meets every first Thu y evening ineach month Mt Zion todge No 6—Meets every first Wednesday evening in each month Court No 2, Ladies—Mi -y couple is now closely related | routs Monday in'each noma ne ve? Tucker, one of the} =tone Square Lodge No 5—-Meete every se- Out. of [on Monday in each month DENT ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS, Udd Fellows’ Hal), se cor 7th and Adams. Household of Ruth, No 48—Meets first and w niece and = | third Friday evening in each month at Colored Odd Fellows Hall There were in the group 8) paguoat Lodge No I6b—Moots overy frat two } ana third Monday in each mouth at Colored Oud Fellows’ Hall, b Patriarchs No 79, G U0 0 Fo Z,second Friday evening in each month at Colored Odd Fellows’ Halll Past Grand Master's Council No 7—Meets every fourth Friday evening in each month at Colored Odd Fellows’ Hall, Western Kentucky Lodge No 2ti—Meets every second and fourth Tuesday evening in each month at Colored Odd Fellows’ Hall Danyille, and the Results. At Danville recently six weddings E leading men of his county. thee nephew brother and sister, two sisters, brothers, three cousins, two uncles, | "p44, and yet no one of the twelve married him or herself. Another singular feature is that out of the twelve individuals before the weddings there were two by the name Young Men's Pride Lodge 0 I7R8—Seets of Hopkins, two Dunbars, two every second and fourth Wednesday evening Chelfs, two Tuckers, two McWhor.|'? och month st ball over No Rrosdway UNITED BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP. St Paul Lodge No 6}—Meets every secand and fourth Monday evening {n each mouth at 131 Baoadway, Sisters of the Myster! t—Meeis the fret Tue 131 Broadway Golden Rule Temple~Meets gecond Thurs day tn each month at 131 Broadway 333 vu. K. 1. 777. Ceremonial Temple, No. 1. meets first au d third Tuesday might in each month, tors, one Pendleton and one Hood. After the ceremonies had been pror nounced the result was that the Dun- bars and Hopkinses had each increase ed two, the Penletons, Chelfs and MeWhortors could nowhere be found, the Hoods had gained one and the ‘Tuckers had been fortunate enough to hold their ground. Since the day of the great matrimonial sweepstakes ee eee, Fa Sei the town loungers have been wearing | “Queen Sarat Tabernacle No. %, meets sec: out their witsand their pencils in] on@ and fourth monday nights iu each mouth. their endeavors to discover just what] ,Mdaline Zapermacle, No. & meets frst and relation the seyeral brides and grooms} Lily of the West Tatergacie, So. 05, meets bear to their mutual kinsinan, Uncle) seco! abd fours Thurwday highis th exch Rob" Tucker, } anit eiloraeen eee taal meet first Bay Dissolution Notice. a) p me in egce mathe cenen Sater The firm of Dreyty$s & Weil has] , ‘lly ofthe Weet Tent meets third Savurday, been dissolved by ye death of Mr.) vith Tuesday nights in each ‘moat tt Herman LAWeilf Sol Dreyfuss will] 0! K:'1 bail over Martin s barber shop. pay all debts\dy@ by said concern, bi Se Foy wif bet INYMbe fatare. alone re:|,TB®, sotertaluimeat to take place sponsible for iis against the firm ponte of ar 2 yt hi aegis nil of Dreyfuss &/ Wil. ‘Fhe busiaess| * tas cater ys : A gna will be contigue® hy Sol Dreyfuss | ee ena yo ee easing per. alone, doing b "ah under the firm | eth the little pick Panis. nM name and stylaot Dreytuss & Weil, | Bier by ¢ little pickaninnigs. The > We 4 cake walk js open to all who wish to ‘i I jaducah, Ky in. 1, 1897. enter by making application to Minor 138-10, Bradshaw, 41 dackson street. (n order that the judges may be select- ed and announced, the management would request all who will contest to send in their names at once. Philosophy of History. us Ton, St No in each month at Important Notte All persohs knowigig themselves in- debted to thelrms of Rogers & King andJobn Rogers &\Son are hereby settle the same at warned to call al once yt my ed Oe South (Continued from Yesterday.) Fonrth Natreet, and thefeky save to] In America we must feel that we themselvedaosta, #3 | wi!) Se forced/owe our libesty, qur qchevpments, same, | our happiness, or advancement, our ly. present conditions, to the millions of I. Poryrat, pioneers, heroes and martyrs who, in }ogers/# King and Jobn)all countries and in all ages, have to proceed unless oth Keceiver of Rogers & Son, auld given thee lipos to the pause of eres humanity. History js a boundless Hickory Stoyé Wood, Held, There is no class of literature For nico stove wood-tetéphone 29.} more calculated to inspire and en- $1 per load. 4 ff |oourage the young. $b yp full of Outo Rrver Seoxe axp Rit Co.Jexamples of high” intellectual and moral worth attained under circum- poten, stances the most untavorahle and As a settlement of the estate of B.Jtrying. A careful study of its pages Weille, (deceased), must be] reveals the fact that the majority of made by February }, 1897, all par-| the world’s great mev and wowen-— ties knowing thoweetV@s Indebted to] those who bave been moulders of the firm of 8: Weille & Son will call] character and shapersot the destinios I" once gadapttle. Respectfully, of nationshayp leay of bumble Jburd B, Weittw & bux Vorigin, who worked their way up step llinais ST.- LOUIS - No clinkers, no We only charge get their load o their thousands 5. O. Barrie WARRIS-& CRICE, Attorneys at -\Law, 125 8S. Fourth—Upstairs Stenographer in OMce. by step. Most of them struggled with poverty and labored with the sons of toil; many of them educated themselves by thelr own efforts. “The heights of great men reached and kep: Were not attajned by sudden fight But they, while their companions slept, Were tolling upward in the night,” In teaching history it is best to keep these five indispensables before the mind’s eye: (1) Event, (2) place, (3) time,(4) cause, (5) result. These are inseparable. They blend and reinforce each other. Charts, maps, books and blackboards are helps; but the ever wakeful, quick, discerning eye of the teacher, who feels he is training souls for noble lives and endless existence, is indis- pensable. The imagination and the memory are the faculties of the mind most prominently brought into play, but the understanding, the judgment, must not be neglected. The child must be made to see with the mind’s eye, the events as they occur. He must be present at the founding of Jamestown and Plymouth Rock set- tlements and see the difference in the circumstances of each, what impelled each to seek homes in America, and he must trace these causes to their effects, as seen in the subsequent his- tory of these colomes. He must trace the torch of liberty through their [struggles with adversity and wars, down tothe adoption of the constitution. He must see and un- derstand the revolution and fight over again its battles, that he may thoroughly enter into the spirit of those stirring times, and beable to appreciate his present privileges— must see how mistakes are made,how corrected ; how slavery grew and how it perished. These things and more he must do that he may imitate the good, avoid the bad and learn lessons from all. The language of the text book must be comprehended by pupils. They must be able tograsp thought. The mistake of supposing If you want the best cral in the city you can get it of Illinois Coal Company, who handles the celebrated Coal far excels all other coal for grates or stoves. Washed Pea Coal beats the world for fu use no other. Lump, 10c.; Egg, 9c.; Washed Pea, 6c. L. L. Crice Washed Coal AND - BIG - MUDDY - COAL. dirt; but pure, clean coal. Our Egg Our ace or cooking. one price the-year uround. The poor f coal as cheap per bushel asthe rich of bushels. Try our ¢oal and you will BARNES & ELLIOTT, Proprietors Illinois Coal Company, Paper and Window Shade > LATEST PATTERNS. ATTENTION GIVE ‘0 ALL ORDERS—— W. S. GREIF, © No 371 re No. 132 8. Third Street, Telephone Jas.A.Glauber’s bivery, Feed and Boarding Stables, \ ELEGANT CARRIAGES, FIRST-CLASS DRIVERS, \\ } BEST\ATTENTION TO BOARDERS Stable---Corner Third and Washington Streets” aducah Electric Co. INCORPORATED. M. Brooms Pres} R. Rowtanp, Treasy” | F. M. Fisuzr, See, STATION 217 N. SECOND sit j pupils understand a paragraph be- cause they recite it verbatim, must be guarded against. This must not be. Young people have great capa- city for memorizing words. Here the judgment must be cultivated. Searching questions may reveal the fact that they know no more of its meaning than they do of Egyptian hieroglyphics, ‘The dictionary is in- dispensable. Every word has in it an idea which is hidden and its force is not seen or felt till understood. E. W. Benton. INDIANS DO NOT FEAR SNAKES Bites of Venomor Rept fect on the Red M Many readers of Harlin Garland’s vr cent story of the Moki Indians’ dance doubtless wondered how it is t the Indians apparently suffer no in conveniences from the bites of rattle lor unquestionably at times the performers in the dance are bitten. The late Capt. John G. Bourke, who was the first intelligent white who wit- nessed the Moki snake dance and kept ® record of it, thought that these In dians possess antidoter we bad not yet discovered. ‘To-day the real sty gutitoxins has commenced, and { pr. A mette, chief af the Pi jnstitute at Lille, that the properties of an pntivenomous serum have been cares fully explained, Dr, Phisalix's exper!- menta show that under certain precau tions @ map or an animal may suffer hardly any inconvenience from the venom of @ viper, Remarkable results have been obtained with the venom of the cobra, When two milligraumes of the dried golwe porson in solution were {ujected Into @ rabbit's ear the animal fier 12 minutes, whep the rabbit was protected by furmer extremely weak solutions of the obra poison and then the sume strong jnfusion of the veaom wea ipjeoted into jt the antya) was not inconvenienced i'r, Calmette’s investigations began with the study of the nature and venom of many different kinds of snakes. Whence does the snake collect its venom? It must take it from its own blood and concentrate the poison in a particular gland. Of course there may be changes in this poison differing fe that found in the grigipa) evurce—the blood gf the wnake ftself, know that’ the plg and the mongoose are not affected by snake bites, and itis natural to suppose that in their blood the something which makes they ima Following the Roux weubod, Dr. Cal qacito wok @ horse, because this animal shows @ natural resistance to snake bites, The horse was inoculated with a lethal dose of cobra palsun and the animal wae vet seriously ivconven jenced, The injections were continued three months, by which time the horse could stand a dose §0 times she lethal PIreNAHA, Phe blaod of the horse had scquired immunity. Taking 20 cublo centimeters of (his horse's serum, it was vo No b= 7 ' " A 5 ~ You can thayfour lights on any timi¢—whenever you need them/“We give continuous service day and night. We don’t use trolley wit€ currents / for lighting. It’s dangerous. Our rates: : 4 Ss Ps, Over 10 lights to 25 lights, 36c per light per tnonth/ ’ Over 25 lights to 50 lights, 35c per light-pfer monthi These low retes for 24 hours’ service apply when. Dill j6 sy /vetore 5th of succeeding month, oF Y A. 0. EINSTEIN, Vice Prest. and Mgr. Teds Expert ‘ SMATH AND (es Bi WILL APPRECIATE YOUR TRADE, F. J. BERGDOLL, PROPRIETOR. 1 Paducah - Bottling - Co., \AGENY CELEBRATED LOUIS O’BERTS_BEER, Of St. Louis. Tn kegs dl boftles, drinks—-Soda\ Pop, Seltyer Water, Orange Also various temperance Cider, Ginger Ale, e Telephone orders filled until 110’ clock ‘ntfnight during week and 12,0'clock Saturdsy nights, Telephone 101. 10th and Madisei, Streets, PADUCAH, KY. CSTABLIS! IED 1864,——o : Miss, Mary B. E, Greif & Co, AQHNERAY INSURANCE AGENTS. .......——— Telephone 174, t PADUCAH, KY * Mh, EONS, DEALER An\: . Hardware, Tinware, Stoves, Cutlery, found 4@ be sufficient “to cure a man buffering from the bito of & deadly reptile.” More purious was this: when 4 enakg was inoculated with the horse serum he did not euffey when bitten by apy other kind or variety of snake.— Carpenters’ Tools; Ete. CORNER COURT AND SECOND STREETS, ADUCAH, . .

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