The Paducah Daily Sun Newspaper, January 29, 1897, Page 3

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“ pik ae To KANSAS CITY, ST. JOR St. Louis Br i cis TRY THE ew FAST TRAIN KANSAS AND NEBRASKA LIMITED, [RON Mourns IN Route. | ‘The most direct lin a Memphis to all pofits in ARKANSAS AND SFEXAS, WEST AND SOYTHWEST. Free Reclining Chairs og All Trains, Turoven Coacies To Dauias Axv Fort RTH, books on ar States, rther feformation, call on your local Uiclet agent, RAILROAD TIME TABLES. Nashville, .C pattanooga & St. Louis ~~ Railroad. PADUCAM AND MEMPHIS DIVISION. 04% a.m. B ek 18s 4 to Hollow Rock Junet, 10.8 4 opm NowTH BOUND. 6 00 Chattancogs ‘ Jackson gr Lexington. * Lv. taomitock Junct be Paris a Paducah 0 AIL UrAIRA OR Aa car service between Pa Boater is, Nashville and Th aqoan aba Jacks Souinirest bes’ Weieb, D. P. A, Mom peaiey oP ang TAA PE Boor y 8" Wurnhain. Sepot agent, Paducah, Kv ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD LOvINvILLR AND: MEMPHIS DIVISION 4 Note 2 No? Nortonviiie Ly Central cu AF Louisville Cinetenaut Sovrn Bouxy LyGineinnatl. 1! AT Memphis New Oricatis ‘carrying }allsal Micah Loulsvilie sleeper ries P: "Dirwet a nine thor worth uth Sader the Palmer, and a . F “Bt Louis SOUTH BOUND o St. Louis Pinokne yville Carbondale wp tor meals ‘This if the popul ar $10: ebair For farther pleneta, His c n with bern P aan argh and, Le wu yen, ran fram Cin Pullman REA EVERY aii and ones ‘THuot Louisville to the Pach Tn addition to he 180 ection will be mad Sncinpatt WwW Gan Francise:,, via Nv Foute. Comfortable tipe # Fouts train between\ Cipelonat and Memphis, ‘Throug hea SH from Memphis. inter route to Call’ weather, Also CITY OF MEXICO 1 central and v Orleans, by tne {ilinols, Soundern Pacins Ratiroads, Ticked Rates a. iow as A Any Other Route rot I< inte ain ume can be had te and nd, AG Louisville. A. IL HANSON Incorporated 1888 established 1855, Johnson d Steam Engines House n2303 of all kinds, Papvealt, 120 §. Fourth, Roo! ice in all tho courts of the colatidon of caimas promply atte ¥ Se ge ace ‘The — | a ipa our “/1 Do Repalr Wark of \Every ig Evansville, see and Cairo Packet Line ‘Owned and Operated’ by the Tennessee and Obio River ‘Transpor- tation Co, INCORPORATED | Hvansville and Padueah Packets (Dally excep HOPKINS a, mn WLR and JOHN S a at 0:30 o'clock Sten. JOP} | Paducah and Caire t Line (Dally ¢ DICK FOWLER, ducah at 8 a, m Steam, Leay J. H, FOWLER, Supt ed Memphis, New Orleans & Cincinnati Packet Company. Agent Wall Paducas, We're aa he first tg show FALL STYLES | | fIn all \th gns and color) They’ ready for your inspection, Finest line off\ Picture Mouldihgs In the Pity Have you seen fhe Bites ? A YARD OF\FA “t Prices Reaso: LF BALTHASAR Unda Paraen House | lates in DoW \ 423 B' way y,"’ inquired a witness yester- day in the Grief damage suit against the city, now being tried before Judge Bishop, ‘‘is the law in Tilinois like it is in Kentucky!" He was obviously addressing no one in particular, but there was quite a crowd standing around the stove in court room. I don't suppose there's any ma- terial difference,’’ replied Willie Farley, who will soon pe admitted to the bar, «Why did you ask??— this prompted by pure legal inquis tiveness. “Oh, for no reason in particular,” the interrogator rejoined. ‘Here a man is suing the city for $5,000 because it had a cess pool it couldn't get ridof. If he wins his case I’m xoing to move to Cairo and get rich in two years. That is, if the law there is the same, and the jury will stand by me,’ '* Daring the past few days of ex- treme cold weather, it is rather singu- lar that more robberies have not occur- red, because this sort of temperatture makes tramps bolder and far more] desperate than at other times, It is really pitiful to see a poorly clad, half frozen, and evidently nearly starved human being shivering in an atmosphere bordering on zero. At otber times the tramp is more inde- pendent, for be does not suffer, but when the icy blasts mingle with his tattered garments and cut his emaci- ated frame, his appeals for food and OAT RANDOM. The circuit court is now over week be payers a great deal of time paying for bas been dragging throug! she court for a whole week. I don’ the law. why laws are not passed enabling th courts to more expeditiously transac their business. rect bearing on the issue at all, in the way of justice. Not long sinc sumed a whole week of the court time, aud now the defeated litigan asks the court to let the perform. ance be repeated. be some way to keep such cases ou! of court.” According to County ham’s *‘statement under oath,’ in the November ele ballots. The 1834, over, precincts was 167 ballots left that ran short, about 400 extra ballots somewhere. Verily, figures are things, but they very seldom prevar. icate, No doubt many of the older citi- zens and all the old time marines of this city will remember the steam- boats of the ‘‘Davis Line’’ that plied velter become truly pitiable, and it s indeed a hard Learted person who an turn him away from a door Whence eminates the wasteful heat of a cheery fire and the savory odor of plenty. Yet there are many of this ilk. pati Bradley-Martiu’s ball, whic! 4 » be given at the Waldorf hotel i New York next month, is now the talk of the country’s clits It is to} ),000, and the pricipal ob ject in giving it, it is to excel thore given by a ia opulence in former y rge $250,000 is a amount to Galt House LOUISVILDE, KY. | $3.00 te B 8 per Books only $1.00 ALR and bpwa COBLER, Maniac Thousands of ug a ae ent | FURWACES, TIN, 8h AR AND IRON aX? AR. 129 South Third Street Horse Shdeing Na Spyoiaity- y A a horse's fim tide jo pion Work Gt poaalin Always on band ready f THENRY GREIF, see PANY} ROADWAY ple 78 us vi Jo gubranteed 314 Up-to-date pe ‘| Quick and reliaiile Messengers furnisiipd to walyy Is to\ any notes and smail pare part of the city, EDWIN W. OVERSTREL TEL, 1. NO Mana oA EE SUSI ICE BALLS, AND QPENINGS TeuMs REASON BLE. \ Ep\Ovekpy, Manager, Res. 406 N. 12th St H, G. Harris, Stenographer tn Of ; dw WILLEA ‘| ™} hall was the Cumberland river in the long ago s before the war, when steam- vs it was fascinating to those who {followed it for an occupation. ‘There were three brothers more or less in- terested in the steaimers and | names were Almou Davis, but Capt. much the senior of the other two and was regarded as the head of the line, jow in’? in Gne night when 4 very’) Among the numerous steamers they small portion of it, would relieve| ran, the writer remembers the Al much @uffering in Gothaw, as well] onia, the J. G. Chie, the as the outside world, and as usual) siyntsville, the Red Rover, the Dr. the preparations have precipita ated | bertson, the Josephine Savage, the much censure on the heads of the | Sligo, the V. K. Stevenson, the femily from pulpit, press and publi-) Mayduke, and a number of light oan, |draught upper Cumberland wet end- ore reasonable view | to take of it nis fortune might be | it to better use, it must be ad- d,but likewise it might be put to | 50,000 put this much circulation is| But there's a Orse USE circulation, added to the certain to help some one If Mrs. Bradley-Martin didnot give All, she would in all proba: bility kev the money, and as long unspent it precious little ood to any one else. We would all ike to have ne rich divide up with an hardly expect them to} nobody should com- wed where it if not is, but we ¢ o Hence in when money is p! an be worked for by someone, y all who need it. It is indeed an ill wind that blows | ‘The most generous man I ever echoed a tramp at the city hall the other morning who had been allowed the gratifying privilege of spending the night on the floor in the saw,”” city court room. Some one asked him the question, He was an old man, and I asked yto eat. He took xed suit of clothes, took out him for somethi me in, gave me a a good breakfast and then $5 and that. The only thing he give me was advice ora roasting, and I was glad of it, for 've had plenty of both from people who needed it more than I did gave me lidn’t Bat that old man hended me the 85 1; “Take that, my friend, | get whatever you want. If you want whiskey, gi If you war nething else, something else I don't know mie ther you're rihy or not, and I don’t care, but w that you need it worse », [guess that inakes you e the tramp in piniscent tone, ‘that was the erous man [ever run up He mused a moment and wile that expressed ‘+1 guess he must have * repeated t are with a then words ad¢ been a tramp once himself!" He then asked the city hall s if they could accommodate him and of course hw little bre they could not before the war writer was connected with a ¢ of players who were fullilling an en- | gugement in this city and St. Clair gave our perform- where we ¢ avees. No doubt the old citizens coentiic old] will remember a rather gentleman who was «nightly attend. f the ‘sone the} compat years 3 occupied ant and nearly al same seat which was close up to the orebestra, His name Captain Dent, and hebad been an old soldier of | the Mexican war. He was an ardent admirer of the histrionie art, and a | than elegant. ‘The writer remembers that one night when the orchestra had been reinforced by the addition of two or thiee instruments, and were rendering a selection In which the piano took the lea ad aud in which thunder, anvils and otber loud sound- ine things were to be imitated, Capt. Dent got excited, and, standing up, yelled to (he thumper of the ivories, “Say, you fellow rattling those bones, hold up a while and give that fiddler HOUSE_/ AND, SIGN PAIN! ER, Ne) residence 1017 Jackson Sh PAYULAL, rs} a chance.”’ \ties on the No recall many doubt those named above musing, pleasant ngerous experiences ) the memories of those persons ed to. Among the numerous old » found employment on these aded son of the nerald Isle whose patronyonic was ers. will nd perhaps lu tars wh steamers was a red h Capt. Almon to keep for him. Billy had one peculiarity ;he would never accept avy position on steamer in service except that of a roustabout, although be would act watchman on one if she was ‘tied up.”” He was as comical a genius as he was ugly of feature, and often kept the passengers and crew in a merry mood with his quaint sayings as he would be going in and out on the stage'planks with freight It was after the Federal gunboats, Conesto- Lexington and Tyler, had de- | scended the Ohio and driven us from |™, our trade from this city to Nashville, that the Mayduke was running from the latter city as near to Smithland as we dared to come, and Billy was among the crew on the forecastle. Late in the fall one trip we had been down our way up, lauded at Clarksville. The river was low, and a heavy snow storm was raging, was let go and we started up river our progress came to a sudden check. The Bouy ferry snow it was bloc ored divines and more gonverts to John the Baptist, 1 up with two col- some twenty or waters of the Jordan of holy wnt then by the icy aqua of the wild Su- wanee. While we were lying out in | the stream under slow bells awaiting | , one old sister the baptizing to end whose avoitdupoise would have nd who required the strength of both ministers to wai dip her into the bosom of the ¢ bat chilly river and raise sooner replanted her rocky bottom stream than she broke forth into the Hughes, the pilot, cote ahead, Billy remarked that ii ever he went to heaven by of Cumberland river he he d—d 1 he wouldn't take the trip "OL. Dr. Mendenhgll’s Improved Chil and Fever Cure, guar “Its ashame the way the tax. payers of this county are imposed deohall, and take no o! DuBois x upon,’’ remarked a prominent law- yer yesterda: hind the docket, and @ mo- notonous case that is costiny ‘he taxt vey ar- know that any one is to blame excepe But for the life of me I can’t see As il is they are compelled to hear evidence of no di- and this is the principal stumbling block a case over $15 worth of land con-|°" ‘s| The ferry boat Bettie Owen, owing There ought to Clerk Gra- he sent to the county precincts for use n, 2301 blank official count shows that the total vote cast at the county This leaves yet there was not enough by a total of about 75 ballots in the three or four precincts and still there are treacherous ing was as profitable a business their ames and Owen Almon was -|where there were large crowds all City of |day. ~| reported at the time of this writing, as far as Hillman’s Rolling Mill, and on Sunday afternoon, on and when the line |" the landing was just above the wharf and the channel ran in close to the shore. Notwithstanding the cold and the the dootrines of | awaiting to have | ¢ their sins washed away if notin the equaled that of Barnum’s fat woman combined her - gai oa i e, youn p's Pride Lodge peda! extremi- of the most fervent hallelujahs and declared raug the bell to the way in the month of July instead of November. teed to cure | Chills and Fever ayd alaria in all forms. Tasteless. \Price, 50 cents, Look for the picture MJ. C, Meus Sold by DRIFTWOOD GATHPRED ON THE LBEVFE. NOTES. Only one boat out of this port this morning. The Tennessee river is frozen over at Knoxville, h| Navigation is completely suspend- t/ed in both the Mississippi and Ohio rivers, Trafic on the levee today was dead and the wharves are complety 1e | deserted. t) The men who have barges at Brooklyn are in constant fear that the ice will do them some harm. The Dick Fowler on her arrival here from Cairo will go into ice ha bor until navigation opens up. e | to the heavy ice, never left her moor- ling at the foot of Court street this morning. it} The Ashland left tor, Danville this morning as usual at 10 o’cloe! this being the only boat out of this harbor this morning. The Metropolis packet Geo. H. Cowling has gone to bank for some slight repairs on her machinery, as well as on account of the ice. Very little work is being done at repairing the City of Paducah which ison the ways, on account of the severe cold weather. The river continues to crawl down the official gauge at the foot of Broadway with a drop of just one foot last night. Ola time river men expect big) water this spring owing to the heavy snows in the mountains at the head of both the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, A streak of ice about three blocks long stood substantial in the middle of the river opposite the wharf this morning, being jammed upon the big bar which is located |there. The ice continues to pass this place in large quantities this morning, and instead of lessening in amount it seems to have added considerab! It is also growing thicker constantly. The pedestrians deserted the levee this morning and took refuge from the cold blast, which swept directly up the river, in both the boat stores The ice this winter is ruoning thicker and heavier than it has for several years as last winter the ferry | boat made her regular trips, but now iv is impossible for her to venture out, The Clyde is due here out of the ‘Tennessee river today, but had not although she is expected to arrive at wharf by this afternoon, and will leave on her return to Florence, Ala., tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock. bas’ ieotiad ar ame the writer) ‘The Dick Fowler, which took a Hat hae tees know ‘that Billie large crowd to Cairo yesterday to was so lo in the employ, witness the performance of the Della of the brothers on their differegfial’OX opera company at that place last steamers that he enjoyed their cv ight, had not made her appearance dence and esteem to an extraordi@ ere % & late hour this forenoon, but nary degree. He had been with {'* expected to arrive here all 0. K. them in the days when they keel-] It looked somewhat like Sunday or boated, before ‘they ever owned a|® national holiday in the venue of steamboat, aud being of a saving |First street this morning ; and so it is turn had amassed considerable|® holiday with most of the river men money, which he always left with|@round this harbor now, as naviga- tion is completely stopped by ice and therefore the steamers have all taken ive harbor at the banks, thus throw ing a great many river men out of employment. COLORED _ DEPARTMENT. CHURCHES. Husband Street Chureb (Methodist) — day school 9am. Preaching lia m and m. Rev C, M. Palmer, pastor. Burks Chapel, 7th & Ohio, (Metho Sun: y school, 94 in. Preaching lam and 8 p Rev. E 8 Burks, pastor. Washington Street Baptist Chureh.—Sunday school#am. Preaching § pm. Rev. Geo. W. Dupee, pastor Seventh street Baptist Cl school, 9am. Preaching, 11a Rev W. 8. Baker, pastor St, Paul A. M. E. ehureh, Sunday school 9 a. im,, preaching li &, m, and 7:90 p. m., Rey, J.G Stanford, pastor. St.James A. M.E. church, 10th and Trimble uaday school # D-in.» preaching 3 p canford, pastor. treet Christian church—Sunday m.; Preaching, Ita, mand prayer services, Weduesday even- %), Sunday school ‘teachers’ meeting, y evenings, 7:90, All are cordially in ie Cotter, paste reh.—Sunday mand 9 p ia. JDGES, Masonio Hall 4 Broadway, third floor Mt McGregor Lodge No 20 ~Meets every frst ‘Thursday evening 1b each month. 1 odge No 6—Moeets every first ‘h month, , Ladies—Moets every Susannah Court No fourth Monday im exeb inonths ware Lodge No i—Meets every se 1d’ Monday in eaob month INDEUENDENT ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS. A Fellows’ Hall, se{cor 7th and Adams Housohold of Ruth, No 48—Meets first and third Friday evening in each month at Colored ws Hal a! Lodge No 15i5—Moets every first Monday in each month at Colored jows’ Hall, 2 | Paducah Patrtarchs No 79, G UO 0 F— Meets every second Friday evening month at Colored Odd Fellows’ Haill Pa-t Grand Mast Jounci! No T—Meets every fourth Priday evening in each mouth at Colored Odd Fellows’ Hall, Western Kentucky Lodge, No Beil Meets wery second and fourt t in Sheattath wt Colored Odd Fellows Hall 0 1783—Deets in each fr een month at ball over No 2 Mroadway. UNITED BROTHERS OF YRIKNDOLIP. » | St Paul Lodge No (Meets every second nd fourth Monday eventog in each month at | Baoadway, more ee pene i ~ iictie [that Ler soul was filled with the] sisters of the Mysterious Tem Mt No Ce rae ath {Grace of God. Billy, who was out |i mntway Whenever a drama about Jeune {eat the jackstaff, turned around! Golden Rule Temple-Aects recond Thurs blood and thunder, exciting COW |and anid to the captain on the root, | 4 i #4ek month a4 Brosaway bats and tenor vould arise to | "C&Pt: Charlie, it’s more likely her $38 v. m. T. 777. elmaxes Captain Dent would arise [belly is full of Robertson county."”|,,ceramonial temple, Mo. trate trod an ¢ his feet and expr ie eee sive | After the last candidate had been wighentuianerani oe noni language sometime immersed. gad just belore Poust fra Weruerday nights ii each month, Quren Sarat Tabernacle No. 90, meets neo: ond and fourth monday nights in each month if | Madaline Tabernacle, No. 2, meets first and third sbursday nights {n eaen month, ly vf the West ‘Tabernacle, No, 65, meets {| second’ abd fourth Thursday highis in each jouth, MPride of Paducah Tent, No, S.meet first Sat urday afternoon in each mouth, Star of Paduoph Tout meets secand Satur day p,m. ineach month Vill tine West Tent ineets third Saturday. p.m. in each month, ‘Graua Army of tbe Republic meets second fourth i a in each month in UK-T' hall over Martin's barber shop, I) ‘Po insure insertion, “matter intend- * led for this column must be delivered at this office not later than 10 o'clock a.m, [llinois ST.- LOUIS No clinkers, no Washed Pea Coa! their thousands use no other. L Coal far excels all other coal for grates or stoves. Washed Coal. If you want the best coal in the city you can get it of Illinois Coal Compr» y who handles the celebrated AND - BIG - MUDDY - COAL. dirt; but pure, Yea coal. Our ce] 1 beats the world for furnace or cooking? We only charge one price the year around. The poor get their load of coal\as cheap per bu el as the rich of bushels. Try our coal\and you will ump, 10c.; Egg, 9c.; Washed Pea, 6c. BAKNES & ELLIOTT, Proprietors Illinois Coal Company, A. S. DABNEY, ® DENTIST: 406 BROADWAY, ~ J. W: Moore, | DEALER § Stapla aad Fancy Groceries, Canned Goods of AU\Kinds Free delivery to ali parts df\the city. Cor. 7th and Adams.* ODD BREAKS OF SPEECH. fome Mixed Metaphors and Weird Ar rangements of Words A coroner's jury in Maine reported that “Deceased came to his death by excessive drinking, producing apoplexy n the minds of the jury.” An old French lawyer, writing of « estate he had just bought, added “There is a chapel upon it in which my wife and I wish to be buried if God spares our liv On tombstone im Judiana is the following inscription: “his mofu- ment was erected to the memory of John Jinkins, accidentally shot as a | mark of affection by his brother.” | A Michigan editor received some verses not long ago with the following note of explanation: “These IInes were written 50 years ago by one who has, | for a long time, slept in his grave mere- ly for pastime.” A certain politician, lately condemn- ing the goverament for its policy con- cerning the income tax, is reported to have said: “They'll keep cutting the wool off the sheep that lays the golden eggs untdl they pump it dry.” ‘An orator at one of the university unions bore off the palm when he de- clared that “the British lion, whether tt is roaming the deserts of India or climbing the forests of Onada, will day before, #0 that he lost nothing but its shell.” A reporter in describing the murder of © man named Jorkin said: “The murderer was evidently in quest of money, but luckily Mr. Jorkin had de- posited all his funds in the bank the hay before so that he lost nothing but ‘Dp his life,” i A merchant who died suddenly left In his bureau @ letter to one of his correspondents which he had not seale«! His clerk, seeing it necessary to send | the letter, wrote at the bottom: “Since writing the above I have died.” An Oklahoma editor expresses his | thanks for a basket of oranges thus: | “We have received @ basket of oranges from our friend Gus Bradley, for which | he will please accept our compliments, Some of which are nearly six inches in | diameter.” The Morning Post im 1812 made the following statement: “We congratu late ourselves most on having torn oft Corbett’s mask and revealed his cloven foot. It was high time that the hydra | head of faction should be soundly wrappéd over the knuckles.” | An English lecturer on chemistry | said: “One drop of this poison placed on the tongue of a cat 4s wuflicient to Kill the strongest man,” and an Eng- lish lieutenant said that the Royal Niger company wished to kill him to prevent his going up the river until next year, A clergyman im an eastern town warned his hearers lately “not to walls in a slippery path, lest they be sucked, waelstrom-like, into ite meshes!” ‘This metaphor suggests that of another dlergyman who prayed that the word might be as a nail driven in asure place, sending its roots downward and its branches upward. The present duke of Leeds is reported to have accused the late government of making a direct attack on the brewers by means of a side wind. {t was dur- Ing the late administration that one of the Irish whips telegraphed to Dublin that “the silence of the Irish members would be heard im the house af com- mons no longer,” It was the celebrated Sergt. Arabin who, at the Central oriminal court, in- formed the prisoner before ‘him that “if there waa a clearer case of a man robbing his master that case was this case;” and, after passing sentence, con- cluded: “I, therefore, give you the op portunity of redeeming a character ix retrievably lost.” Tn the Irish house of commons of 1798, during @ debate on the leather tax, the chancellor of the exchequer Sir John Parnell, observed that “in the prosecution af the peasant war ever; one ought to be ready to give his last guinea to save the remainder of his fortune.” Mr. Vandeleur replied that “a tax on leather would press very heavily on the barefooted peasantry of Ireland, At ® recent temperance gathering an orator exclaimed: ‘The glorious work will never be accomplished until tbo good ship Temperance shall sail from one end of the land to the other, and with ® cry af ‘Victory!’ at each step she takes, shall plant her banner every city, town and village of the United States.” Another speaker said that “all along the untrodden paths of the futurp we can see the hidden te of an unseen hand. We pur- ue the shadow, the bubble bursts and leaves the ashes in our hands!”—Ram's —— Wal 2 Paper and Window Shade IN THE LATEST PATTERNS. —— PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO\ALL ORDERS——_ Ww. S\ GREIE, No. 132 S. Third Street. Telephone No. 371, A.W. GREIF, The}... Ex CKSMITH AND Horse Suoer, WILL APPRECIATE YOUR TRADE; F. J. BERGDOLL, PROPRIETOR Paducah + Bottling - Co., AGPNT CELEBRATED LOUIS O'BERTS BEER, Of St. Louis. e@ Inkexs d bottles, Also various temperance drink&——Soda Pop, Seltzer W range Cider, Ginger Ale, ete. Be gp hae Telephone orders filled until_11 o'clock 'at{night during Week and 12; jo’ clock Saturday nights, Telephone 101. 10th and Madison Streets, PADUCAH, KY. Paducah Electric Co. INCOBPORATED. R. Rowtanp, Treas. | M. Broom, Pres? F. M. Fisnzr, See, ST. i STATION 217 N. SECON We use troNey wire currents You cau t your lights Chany baa Si You need them, | give continu ious service day\and night. We don’ for lig It’s dangerous, Our rates: Over 10 its to 25 lighty, 86 per tight per month. Over 25 lights te 60 lights, \$5e per tight per month. \ Vhese low retes for 24 hours’ service apply when billNig paid betore Sth of succeeding month, A. 0. BINSTEIS, ICE, SKATES VERY CHEAP ESTABLISHED 1864, Miss, Mary B, E:-Greif & Co- GENERAL INSURAD cE AGENTS... SN scsisnionse 174, oo Ranpone, KY Jas.A.Glauber’s Livery, Feed and Boarding Stables, ELEGANT CARRIAGES, FIRST-CLASS DRIVERS) \ BEST ATTENTION TO BOARDERS — Stable---Cornar Third ang Washington-Stroets i | | ‘

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