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Reflae- cn ar howlers, The fact retains the same, | t however, that the prices of farmer's | products are going up and the crops|™ have never been more bountiful; and} I the prices are going up in strict con- formity to the law of supply and de-| 5 THE PADUCAH DAILY SUN. Published every atternoc Sunday, by , except THE SUN PUBLISHING COMPANY, INCORPORATED, revel é eat amount of damage P.M. Pisnee INT AN smn |mand, This law is, however, too the Condition} ot Labor. night Bet Gree, amo , os 9 4. Ronee deep for a free silverite editor. The throughout Henderson county. We ie Panton less that is said by the calamity} Omaha, July 26.+-The condition | Cumberland Presbyterian church was ess that Is said by the calamity’ of the labor market in Nebriiska has| struck by lightning and damaged to howler about ‘trusts sending UP) heen attracting considerable attention | the amount of $400, Also a large prices’? the ‘better, considering that} recently. In ordet to secure exact | barn on the Elm farm was destroyed \THE DAILY SUN the Dingley law is not as favorable to| details on the subjgct and get a defi-|by lightning. | It was full of hay and Titi give mpectal attention to att jocal nap-|the trusts as was that wonderful|nite idea as to Ahe situation, Mr. /farming implements. Loss about) | enincy of iverest im Paducail and ne luct of Demotratic legislation, | Thomas Sturgis, A leader ot, organ-/2000. ‘The lightning also killed Sot neglecting general Dew mnernout re-jProduct of Democratic legisiation, | od inbor in Ougaba, has tiiade a very | three horses for James ‘Tillotson in given as fully as space will parmit without re- Gard to expense. IHE WEEKLY SUN sign. 1s devoted to the interests of our country pat 8 fous, and will stall times Denewsy and-ea'! "The kicker, must kick fervaining while keeping lus readers posted On all political affairs and toptes;while It will fang the must héwl, elee he be a fearless and tireless exponent of the doe: |" a wines and-teachings of the National Republi: } would be forgotten in the rush of in + And in the universal the Wilson-Gorman tatiff, which even president would not a Democratic however, howler can party. “CORRESPONDENCE. A.spectal feature of the weekly edition of Tae Son will be its Correspondence Depart nent, in which It hopes ably to represent every locality within the limits of its cirew lation. creased busit joy which bails the advent of prose perous times. There are none so blind as those who won't see. ADVERTISING. KENTUCKY FARMERS HAPPY, Rates of advertising will be made known on re Application — ‘Office, Standard, Block, 118 North Fourth treet Big Rise luthe Price of Leaf To- ssOther Adyanc-s. bai Daily, per annum.. Daily, Six months. Daily, One month, Daily, per week.... $ 4.50 2.25 Louisville, July 26.—-A wonderful 40 | change has been made {n the spirits 10 cents} of the Kentucky farmer during the , “ ri in past three months. A rem: babe on rae . 1,00 | rise in the price of leaf tobacco was Specimen copies tree the first significant change in the vee long era of depression. This began to develop in April, aud by the time tre rise had culminated, about the rr rr | py idiile of June, prices had advanced Twat portion of the Mississipyy]™ every grade from 100 to 300 per cent, For the past two years tobac- valley that a few weeks ago was in-| 14 at prices below the\ cost of production, and as almost every Ken- tucky farmer grows it, its depreci- ation was mainly responsible for the flood of silver sentiment Jast fall. The wheat crop has been eXtra- > ”y dinarily large, and is the finest “ s are beter in Paducah,”’ is] ordinarily large, : tehchel. quality ever know: The state agri- the remark that is made he oy cultural commissioner estimates the streets any day by merchants without | yield at double that of last year. regard to patty, creed or previous] The surplus is three times 9s great. condition of political affitiatfon. The] Potatoes are being sold at $1.80 a bricklayer and any} >arrel, against 40 to 60 cents last carpenter, the bricklayer and aby] ar, and onions, cabbages and other member of any trade will tell you the’ garden staples are as high, while same thing. crops have been ee iarge ‘that ship- ments from Louisville are 75 per How about the advance agent of| cent. greater than last year. It is prosperity? He's all right,/but the] now the season for selling fat cattle, joke has had all the point cpdshed out} 94 as they are bringing high prices , ard times are leaving Kentucky. by the vast crops and tho/cortespond-| hosiers tn agricultural implements ingly big prices tha’ the farmer is} say their trade 1s opening magnifi- getting. The scornet is silenced and] cently. The feeling among manu- the calamity howler has but himself |facturers and bankers over the pass- as an audience’ for his lugubrious}*8° of the tariff Ditl-is one of great wailing. pee aa =e A Glorious Year In a Glorious ‘Tne advance in wheat last fall was Country, , ‘ Times Herald, ) attributed to\M. A, Henna by the! rom all sections of the country silver Democrats. They could think} come news of bountiful yielda of of no other reason, for they had been| wheat, The corn flelds were never told by Mr. Bryan that the law ofjprettier. In Texas, Kansas, {Mis- supply and demand had nothing to] 80uri and the entire Southwest the do with it. Whom do they hold re- only question troubling the people is > € in the harvesting of the immense sponsible now for the wonderful ad- crops. In the South the cotton vance in all the products of the farm’ | yield will be something enormous. The Or are they ly to abandon Bry-| seasons have {been perfect, and in no aan’s pet theory and accept the idea Les on the;dreaded —— worms om A made their jappearance. Emigration that the aWillty and anxiety of the} i, pouring into that country and buyer hag something to do with it. everybody is healthy. The lazy ones only are complaimng. With the in- creased duty on sugar, lumber and other products of that section nearly every industry there will soon feel the stimulating throb of a Republi- TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1897. fruit and grain. ‘ast flood has proved a blessing. The ‘Tue last refuge of the free traders in their attempt to excuse themselves trom the reduction in the wages of Ahe coal miners is in the statement | oan administration, that coal importations were no greater} If one may believe “the published under the Wilson law tban under the} reports from the east, every factory McKinley law. They do not seem|i8 at work. New ones are being to understand that it is the price| tected, and confidence generally has E been restored. Money is easy to fixed by foreign importations rather| obtain, and is furnished at a low rate than the quantity imported which, in}of interest. ‘There are more big this case, fixed prices of the home| buildings now in the course of con- productions, The fact that Nova| struction in New York city and Phil- Scotia coal, mined at the water’s{*elphia than have been seen for 4 . : years. Railroad receipts throughout edge and loaded immediately upon| the country were larger in June than yessels from the mines, coula be for any corresponding period for six brought into the New England ports|years. In the iron and steel pro- with a tariff 35 cents less per ton casing pen all see Ww been “ “i stimulated because of our foreign than prior to the Wilson law, was of! oiers, Our trade with South itself sufficient to turn the tide of} America will be larger this year than West Virginia coal away from New | any other since the reciprocity treaty England and into the West, thus in-| Was repealed, It is true that trouble ducing rate wars and forcing down | ists with the miners in the coal the wages of miners in nearly the}PT0ducing sections, but this strike Y Nel oas been brought about by walking same amount that the reduction in| delegates who have had their salaries tariff reduced the prices of coal in}at heart much more thaa the welfare the Eastern markets. of members of the labor union. —— This trouble, however, promises to Ir seems certain that the new ad- | be adjusted within a day or so. This ministration is to be a successful one | Present strike, with the exception of in ite foreign relations as weil /as in cena one among the tailors in New . : ork, is about the only one that has ite management of internal sffairs. troubled this country during the But little talk is now heard of war|year. Advances have been made in with Spain, The all branches of science. Nicola Tes- desire for a settlement of the Cuban |! bas startled the world with a dis- question remains, vovery in telegraphing. A half hun- dred useful electrical appliances have to be a geperal belief that the end is} been developed. The Roentgen rays to be acgomplished by {he peaceful means ‘of diplomacy than’ by the ave recently proved of incalculable benefit to surgery. The steel indus- forces of war. Spain/has already | *Y> | intimated that the relotse of Ameri. | Promises great results, intense, popular But there seems he members of \his American family | am n notwithstanding that convicts are to offer evidence in my behalf, I believe that the tife will be short when Iam 4 free mag.’”’ The rain and electric storms that raged Sunday morning and Sunday pgether before a great feast of the ealthful fruits of the earth. MPROVEMEN TIN NEBRASKA Building and Gootl Crops Better elosé study recgntly. He is state or- ganizer for ie International Typo- graphical Ugion, president of the board of digectors of Labor Temple, and occupies other positions of !m- portance in Jahor cireles the Hibbardsville section and des arge stock barn beside. troyed a | It is now almost settled that J. G Bailey, of Magoffin county, will be the Republicag nominee for clerk of Oa the | the court of appeals, ‘The convention Seer will meet on | caer 10 at “Thefe is a very distinct improve: |and the 119 counties will be entitled | ment among the laboring classes of| 4g 1090 delegates. Judge O'Rear Omaha} and Nebraska. This lias] of Mt. Sterling, or E. T, Franks, of been naticeable since January 1, ‘The | (wenshoro, may be temporary chair! improvément has been mitch more] man, and Judge George Denny per- marked jn the painters’ and carpon-|manent cairn J.T, Herd wil-| ters’ trades; so much 80, In fact, | likely be secretary of the convention, that a few months ago everybody in) aie British government has this line in Omaha had all they could] 4,411.) to intectore in the eaee do, Last \year and previously for) or the gentence of Mrs. Florence some time, this line had been abso! ara virick, on the ground that there] lutely stagnant, Noemployment was |) ee ol jude | was no reason to be bad. This is not due to the ment in the matter. | exposition work, but to improve ee ean Curistina and King] ments fn ptivate\ property and house] | (ueen Regent = Anita aan now building. Unskilled labor is much| Alfonso, of ‘Spain, had & narrow wages during the past year was about ee “woods at St. Sebastian a heavy 10 per cent, but some trades have dofhras sorerapiclenc fl been frighttally reduced. ‘This does load of shot tiscutlmN Oy oe not apply to organized labor, how-| Who was out I hele pReeaDUG, paket had not noticed close to their | ched ned. ever, since that is closely w and rates have Keen well mair The interior of the state is much bet- ter, especially for unskilled labor, due to splendid ¢rop prospects. Still the Free Labor Employment huree operated by tlie state, shows several | applicants for positions from the| small towns, where the feeling is not} as good as in the rural districts.” NEWS AND COMMENTS. The Account in the News Was Four months and twenty days~ af- Somewhat Premature. ter the administration begun, its tar- iff bill was enacted. This is quicker time than was ever before made with | a measure of this sort in the United States since the tariff firat became » partisan issue, Jt is the quicke time evet made by a partisan or non- partisan tariff except by the first| The tariff act ever passed in the United} States, the one which President Wash- ington signed on July 4, 1789, four LIGHTS WILL STILL BE CHEAP, deal May Mean the Consoli- the Two Street and the dation of Railroads Two months after the government went Electric? Companies. into operation. On that tariff, of course party lines were not drawn. nalahes The Moors at Tangier imposed upon American citizens until two of | SEPTEMBER | ISTHE TIME FOR TRANSFER our warships appeared in the harbor, and now they are paying our A miral ‘‘unprecedented _ honors. There is nothing like an up-to-date navy to encourage peaceful civilities. A letter from an Alaska gold/Street railroad and miner sayé the temperature one day last winter dropped to 72 degrees be- low zero, freezing his bottle of ‘‘pain killer,”’ and he believes it was 10 de- grees colder during the night. new diggings are not a good winte! resort for people with light clothing. The Populist Senators talked against the variff bill and then dodged the vote. That party lacks courage as well as common sense. Ordinarily this is the dull season | The time specified for the transfer of of the year, but signs of business| the property, should the déal be von- activity are multiplying on every hand in spite of the hot weather. It is an axiom of economics in the United States that. when the farmers | WAl/ace means the consolidation of are prosperous the whole country is| the two street railroad companies and prosperous. In 1897 the condition] of the two electric light companies, of the farmers is better than it was} Just how the consolidation will be before in half a dozen years. The crops are large here and small abroad which is one reason why the increas- ed home supply will be accompanied | the by good prices. Another reason is| price of that the general business situation here is improving steadily and rapid- ly, and this will greatly increase the home demand. The one country in the world in which the pessimist will be an anachronism, for the near fu- ture at least, is the United States. In the banks of the New York Clearing House Association there} was last week ;an increase of over $5,500,000 in deposits, of over $4,600,000 in surplus reserve, and of nearly $400,000 in loans. The gain in the latter item was small, but as it follows immense increases in previous weeks for a month or two past it was remarkable and encour- aging. There has been an increase of $105,000,000 in deposits and of $55,000,000 in loans in the New York banks as compared with this ime in 1 by the ‘News’ yesterday of the completion of the Electric Light deal was somewhat premature. he today is this: The publication situation as it stands Mr. Geo. C. Wallac option on the Pay has received an e's St.det Railway and the Paduedh tric Company plant for $135,000. The details of the trade have not yet been arranged and much yet must be the deal can be said to be completed done before summated is September 1 It is surmised that the sale to Mr. accomplished cannot now be learned, In the event of the consolidation of electric light companies, the lights will probably be raised. But the stockholders of the Paducah Electric Light Co, hav positive assurances that the lights will price be raised to no unreasonable and that the people of Paducah will , fit, not of the still get their lights as ch other [city cheaper than any size in the country. On the hurricane deck of the Alki yesterday stood a young man with straw hat, and bright, beardless, full face, his elbows planted on the edge of a lite-raft, his chin resting on his palms, and at his side w: very pretty. young woman, Everybody noticed them, but nobody knew that the young man is a grandson of old Wy 3. It is no wonder that] John Brown, who died at Harper's the stock market is strong, and that| Perry, the public confidence is rapidly re-! Young John Brown ia dentist. turning. ‘The improvement which} fe came to Seattle some six years has taken place in the geveral busi-lago, He soon married Miss "May ness situation all over the country in Hughes, one of the prettiest girls that t c he past few months is greater than) ever lived in or saw the town of Black occurred in the same length of time] Diamond, or man: larger city for before since 187, whet the resump-|that matter. Dr. Brown practiced tion of specie payments, supplement-| dentistry in Seattle, Everett, Salem, ed by the large crops in the United|Qre,, and several other places States and the small ones abroad, | While here he bad offices in the Col- ushered in an era of business pros-| jing building. On the south side of by a new appliance of heat, ‘Tennessee is : celebrating her 100th anniversary as ean prisoners in Cuba is near at/a state in the glorious Union, and hand. Our new minister to Spain is happy inthe remembrance of past greeted with assusances even before | events to know that her efforts to se- he has started that the Spanish Queen oe phy ease, riers Fe re will accord bim/an audience almost | [TOs | belng Sonstrantes in Ala, catalan bap bama at the present time than in any upon his arrival in the land of the | other state in the South, Louisiana Dons, even going so far as to breek|is preparing to double her sugar an established custom in so doing, | fields. The South is now queen. ‘And all this with the knowledge that] _ Equally gratifying as are the inci- " ‘ dents mentioned above is the fact he bears 19 reality an ultimatum from his goverument as to the continuance of the Quban war. The beginning that for the first time since the civil war we have seen Democrats and Re- of McKjnley’s administration is most auspicious publicans together nt the nation’s capital, discussing in a friendly, im- partial and non-partisan’ way those things best for the people. ‘There BAYING AT THE MOON, _ {has uot been an instance during the extra session of congress just ad- ~ With bountiful crops Afie prices of | ourned where the “bloody shirt’ the farmer’s products ‘will Zo'down, | was waved. And then we have seen just when the new tariff sends the/five or six panes of the South, jose 4 elected by a Bourbon constituency, prices of trust keh pba ia: foie with the epablioas, thus fare: does the poor farmei "Ting a wedge that may soon split the comin’ and a-gwine.’’—Register, “Solid South’? wide open, Truly The above sounds very much like| may it be said that the good God, in the Register had gone over to the|/his infinite wisdom and superlative fession of Noah d|strength, has brought order out of | shaw said: free silverites, body and soul, an pad cost in its lot with the calamity chaos and has once again brought all | ¢ perity such as the country had not} the latter are still the words, ‘Dr. previously known. John Brown, Dentist,"’ painted over The Twenty-tifth United States io-!q patch as big almost as a Klondyke fantry bicycle corps has completed] mining claim. Ur. Brown went last its ride of 1900 miles from Fort Mis-| year to Cook Inlet, coming out with soula, Mont., to St. Louis. ‘The! ine same amount of gold as all the distance was covered in forty days,| others, Like his grandfather, he only thirty-five of which wereactually | has not given up, but goes marching spent on the road. The average| on to the gold fields. distance traveled each day was fifty- yp toe es two and two-thirds miles, Over part Casino, Kamona Park, of the country the daily average was] Tonight the Grand Fire and Snow sixty miles. scene in the ‘Streets of New York BT hoe ecie aial will be a wonderful thing, For real mee Sime Teyloe, obeirman| eT ood grad ettects the Casing § of the Barren county Republican committee, has received assurances |Fenowned gnd sy dl hp that he will be appointed postmaster |¢arned. —/An excellent new cast ns at Glasgow. It is one of the best|been secured and the performsucs " will be first-class, as always, paying postoffices in westera Ken- cane. tucky, on account of the numerous Pensions, star routes, All persons holding examination The Rev, Hinshaw, who is serving] orders to go before a Paducah vw, a life sentence in the Michigan City, | ining board, can get full infor Ind., penitentiary, for the alleged |by calling at my office. I hu murder of his wife, expects soon to} ceived instruction from commissio ii | regain his liberty, owing to the con-| of pensions on the subject. Baney. Mr. Hin- James A, Woopwanp, ot raisell by false hopes, and | Evansvit Tennessee and Ohio River Transpor- , Paducah and Cairo Packet. Line. Owned and Operated by tho tation Co. INCORPORATED. nd Paget Packots (Daily excep “Sunday and J. HN 8, HOPKINS 19.80 6 cle > La, m. JOE FY) eave Pac ucas ° auty excoot |< COW Big, Padvenn a, ae sont PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL degree, of Towa, is known at home as “Toadatool Tom, heoanse of his exhaustive knawledge of -Miss Edith Rotch died tently in Boston and left $10,000 to the Bhelter d Girls, am institution at syracuse, N. Y. The money will be ta new dormitgry Dr. Persifor Frazer, th¢ well-known scientist of the Philadelphia Academy t Sciences, will represegt that institu: tion at the international geological con gress in St, Petersburg August 14 The honorary degree of LL. D. wat red on Hon foun Hay, United ambassador /to the court of St. James, and Of/ master of arts op Elisha Dyer, governor of Rhode Island y Brown univergity, recently. Nansen, the explorer, is at present 4 St. Petersburg, and Is said to be or nizing a novel business enterprise He is forming/ an international com: ny, with a capital of 50,000,000 rubles exploit the Hehes of the far north On his last journey he found on the —Congressman U for Unprotee f i that are said te be enormously rich Nansen’s company is to mine and mar ket these ores. —The queen regent of Spain has e marriageable daughter on ber hands Mercedes, princess of the Austrias, 4: ow 17, and propositions for her han¢ viready congidered at the court. For six months before h of the king, Mercedes, who was named for the first wife of her father, was queen af Spain, But Al fonso XIII. appeared on the & back seat LIGHT OF FIREFLIES. It Resembles the X Rays BBG Help Se 4 Prot. Muraoka, of Tokio, has given further details concerning his {nter esting investigation of the luminous ra diations emitted by fireflies It has ng been believed by many workers on light, and especially on phosphorescent light, that in the glow wgrm and the firefly nature has indicated the true so lutiowof the problem of prod without heat, and Prof’ Mu coveries seein to lead/to 1 the subject. His igquiries were sug gested to him by thé resemblance of the light of fireflies €o that of fluorescent bodies, some of #vhich have been shown by H. Beequegél to emit radiations po sessing propgrties analogous to those of the Roentgén rays. The experiments ig by placing a number of flies, < have been w phases of Were in varying from 500 to upwartls of 1,000, in a small) flat box, in which the? were Y under @ net made of hemp. The box also contained:a photographic dry plate, ontact with which were plates of ale—copper, alur itm, vine and brass—all of similar thigknesa, sheets of cardtboarth both er tire and also with cruciform patterns cutoutof them. These were sometimes nterposed between the sensitive plate and \the met and sometimes used aloné with the sensitive plate. Thin wooden boards were alse employed for the same purpose. The sensitive plate and the objects in contact with it were wrapped in several thicknesses of black paper and left in the box with the flies for two nights. The experiments were photographie durk re tiflcial ght being care luded.. The sensitive plates, as Wrapped up aud addition made , Silk, ete s blackened were always more or Prof. Muraoka’s ex nts kx? to the following conclu The light of the files in its behaves Ike ordinary m8: 1 miginal state ght. 2. The light contains rays which pass through cardboard, metal plates, te., to the querel photographic layers of care nd posses properties analogous of the Roentgen rays or Bec- F i® covered with ard Jt presents ap ap- pearance which calls to mind the per meability of iron to magnetie lines of force. 4, The properties of these fil- tered rays appear to Be influenced by the materials through which they hav passed, perhaps the thickness of the materials, 5, The properties pos sessed By the radiations and specified under No, 2 are apparently nonexistent or, at Jeast, undiscoverable until after “filtration.” The Roentgen rays are milarly undiscovered until after “fil- ration”——1, ¢., through the glass of the Crookes tubes—and “filtration” may perhaps afford a means of rendering the X rays homogeneous. 6, The fil tered firefly rays undoubtedly admit reflection, Refraction, interference and polarization could not be demonstrated, but Prof. M they took place Auore oka is of the opinion that The filtered firefly mble Becquerel's @ proper- between the ultra- the Roentgen rays.—St tiom, pulation is the center of the inhabitants of the If the United States were con: with all its people as the center of popula uld be the point where the whole it be through the net res 8 a plane balanedd and remat juilibrium, It ex nt of the move- ments of population fpom decade to Jecade, This point, ackording to the rensus of 1590 is locate at 39 degrees 1,9 minutes north lajtude and 85 de- minutes west longitude, about ) miles east of Columbus, Ind. It moves vestward about four miles a year, and * now three-fourt\s of a degree south nd more than 17 degrees east of the enter of area.—William George Jordan, 0 Ladies’ Home Journal ees Seventy Wive: Living in the Satis eservation is a tall, eree “ey ind long-haired Indian who has a won- erful matrimonial history. He is Chief therof Chief Moses, and is a typical member of s race, Tanawnsha is 73 years old, t shows no signs of breaking down, ugh he claims to have had'70 wives, 1 his present spouse is a vigorous g woman of 2 rs, When asked ont his children he said they were ke the leaves of the trees and seat: ered all over, from the lava beds of fanawasha, b | ppearani “As for this new evi- Notary Public, lence, I don’t know what to say, 1]22j2 712 South Fifth street, city. on and California to the pine-clad Montana,—Yakima Herald, e of sumniemfabrics must be sold in a short time to make reatly for early fall lines. consideted sold regardless of cost. prices below on a few lots, These kind of prices est ¢ yoe everywhere, your choice for ast deposits gf iron and nickel oree | 200 price. plete and this sale is rarely equaled. Come early and get choigé of pat terns, k you for. ur entire line of wa luding dimities, 1 te, Our Stock Prices will pot be ill be ee our Everything always bring ts rade. 50 pieces of lawn and dimiti lormer price 84 fo 124¥c, our clos- ng price 5¢ 0 pieces wash goods price 6 to your choice tar 4c 10 pieces lawn Worth-5 to 6c, closing prices 3 ‘vc. Organdies. All fine French Orgastdies, new nd handsomest destgns, worth 15c buys atty 300 organdy, lawn, or dimity in the house. All other wash goods at half Our stock is large and com hirt waiste at reduged prices. $H. DIEHL & SONS E, GUTHRIE & CO, 315 Broadway—Phone 155. Crowds are awaiting the Bargains to begin at Edelen’s Next Week. STOP And sgt the sc counter. Pretty Datted Swiss worth 1oc at 5 1 piece Grass Cloth worth toe at 5c French Ginghams worth roc at sc. 2 pieces Satsumar werth 12$ at 5c 2 pieces brillianteen wth 15¢ at sc Outing Cloth worth roc at se. styles Satine worth yoc at 5 double width wth 7 ‘vc 1 piece crepon worth 12'¥c at §c Coods that cost no less than 6c and upwards Ladies, dg you want a nice wool en dress for g trifle? One month more and school begins. The children MUST have dresses. Why not get the benefit of this sale? Come before they are gone. Pretty'plaids, noveltiesjand many uoreseent raya. 3. When the Jother weaves worth asc for 13¢ Best $1.00 kid gloyes for 79c Big values in Corsets. All best brands at extremely low prices Cuffs, 10¢ per pair, worth rscand 20 cents, Collars 10 ¢ and 15¢ each, worth 20 and 25¢ each, It will cost you noting to visit this closing out saléy So come one come alland be begtefitted J. H. Edelen, 214 Broadway. Pretty dinities worth 8 1-3¢ at sc. | We mean what we say: our stock of low cut goods will',be sold at pri ‘és that oannot bei had elsewhere in the city.) All colors, all styles and’toes. Now is the ‘ime to buy Df footwear At Phone 310. $ 310 Broadway. PP. FF. DALLA —IS HEADQUARTERS FOR—— Holiday Groceries, Fruit Cake Materials, Apples and Oranges, Fresh Canned Goods, &c. HOME-MADE LARD A SPECIALTY. Telepnone 118. Cor. 9th and Trimble Sts, FREE aay, So Rocking Chair > DORIAN’S. < leisure, This is something every one enjoys in moments « and it is a thing of beauty for the hc +? FREE TO OUR CUSTOMERS + DRY GOODS, FINE SHOEM AND FURNISHING GOODS. to us. fe will Ot them neatly at small cost, JOHN J. DORIAN. 205 BROADWAY, PADUCAH, KY Kindly bring your F Ww FJ. BERGDOLL, Paducah - Bottling - Co., | AGENT CELEBRATED LOUIS O'BERTS BEER, Of St. Louis. In kegs and bottles, drinks——Soda Pop, Seltzer Water, Orange ef Also various temperance Cider, Ginger Ale, etc. Telephone orders filled until 11 o'clock at night during woek and 12 o'clock 4 Saturday nights, Telephone 101, 10th and Madison Streets. PADI Wall-Paper »' 4 Window Shades, IN THE LATEST PATTERNS. PROMPT ATTENTIONGIVEN TO ALL ORDERS WwW. S. GCREIF, No, 132 S. Third Street. Telephone No, 871 CVCVEVUUUVUVVUUTUUV YY £ Ed. D. Hannan, Steam, Gas and Plumber. Sanitary... RIN ALL KINDS OP... Fittings and Fixtures, Sprinkling Hose. 132 South Fourth Street. ‘AH, KY. é Court Street Telephone No ORO OUO0O8 0-32300000000 Rose & Paxton <2 Give you All Kinds of Insurance | Office over Citizen’s Saving Bank. ESTABLISHED 1864,———-o : “sy Miss Mary B. E. Greif & Co. GENERAT, INSURANCE AGENTS. |. //... | Le f