The Paducah Daily Sun Newspaper, September 20, 1897, Page 2

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~ “ANE PADUCAH BAILY § DAILY SUN, oe — Published wi afternoon, excep Sunday, by THE SUN PUBLISHING COMPANY, INCORPORATED ‘etaeaniniog se amaeee VICK PRESIDENT 4.D. o saaibidon teas. nny, Wii. wanton ULL RASURE DIRKOTORS: FM, Pusher JR. Smith, BW Clements, JK iliamson J.J THE DAILY SUP ve special attention to ALL local hap- hes {interest in Paducah and Weintvy, lwcting general news, which will bs given as fully as space Will DormMit without Te= ard Lo expense. THE WEEKLY SUN te) to the interests of our contr} ss, ad Will at all times be newsy and en. tertaining, while keeping 1t8 readers posted on all polliteal affairs and toptes:while it wil be a fearless and tireless exponent of the doc ‘wines and teachings of the National Republi- oan party. CORRESPONDENCE, A special feature of the weekly edition 6t ‘VaR SUN Will be Its Correspondence . Depatt- iuent, in ‘Which it hopes ably to. represen every locality within the limits of its lation. ADVERTISING. Rates of advertising will be made known 00 applicatic Ofice, Standard Hlock, 11h North. Fourth suree Dally, per annum Daily, Six months ily, One month, + per week. Weekly, per annum in ad- : Specimen ‘copies free MONDAY, SEPT, 20, 1897. ——————— REPUBLICAN TICKET. Clerwof “neCourt of Appeals, JAMES BAILEY, of Magoffin Couaty, Representative. FOURTH DISTHICT M ILIVINGSTON, County Judge, JOH Cireuit Clerk, County Clerk, County Ati Nia F Magistrates istrict, P. HERBST. pint Festi HOOK. A. TORKENCE, BA NAY setenv District, OGAN MRO -Bighth District, SHELBY BRADSHAW. . Constables. First Distriet, BP. JOHN h Distrtet, JOHN SAY K vengh Dist ight Distr®t, , HENSL Land W. J. WHITE. XLLISON and GE Biiiind Ward, WM. BORNEMANN and 0.1. Pourus Ward, T. P. CARTER and L. F. ifn ward. CHRIS LEMGEL ‘and JAcoH, it Commonweaith’s Attoriey. Sam Houston ix a candidate for the nn Wy pt Attorney for the mop sea of Mct racken road, ey po elagpion A MOMENTOUS CAMPAIGN. Of all the political ‘campaigns that are to be waged thisMall, that in the city of fee <i New York, will be by far, re is mi yt jomen- wn fi to the _p ait sh beet: pat- ronage of that city amoyfnts to nearly $25,000,000, aud ie Party thativins this fall will not only’ bave that vast sum ag its viet | but will have the }, bd be behunge ifseltjin power te many years to come, Tammany will make a tremendous effort to re- gain its supremacy, ‘The Citizen's Union has nominated Seth Low for mayor, what the oe mnt: in aap trol of Senator Platt will do. It is undoubtedly a fact that the great mass of the Republicans of this coun- , try would prefer to see Mr. Low en- _ dorsed by the Republicans, /To an observer at this distance the/nomina- tion of » Republicdén for mayor in opposition to Seth Low apd the Tam- many nominee, means certain suc- ess for Tammany. Mr. Low is a Republican, bat he expresses Complete’ sympathy with the purpose of the Citizens’ Union to. se- cure for (he great city a mayor free from all partisan obligations, Civil survice refcr a, tle right f munteipa, home rule, compensation for fran- chises |agd hpaesf enforcémen' of labor laws are some of thg subjects touched upon in the letter” of accept- wave, which letter is a nyddel of what nigipal or county office shop|d subseribd to. ‘The key nduget ¢ leer is ap #4sertion by Mr. Low that he could accept no nontiaetion to whith there was at ed auy obligation, expressed or ied, cas of election, other itt Hiya Teast the inter- a condidate form Pa-l of prosperity,” It can only live on the reopening of mills, mines, and ? yi ?- E | resumption ef specie payments, the om “| tional debt, the passage of a tariff York and on it he ought to win, country, which party, in reality be- lieves in civil service reform, and honest and economical municipal government THE PA OF FREE SILVER Hon. Charles I, O'Ferrail, Dem- oeratic governor of Virginia, in a speech Sept. 11 said: , am confident that the doctrines bf thé Chicago “platform will not much longer be masqueraded as Democratic principles, Free silver is retreating before the returning tide “hard times,’ It is beginning pant fof breath already, under the prodéure of the advance in wheat and factories. ‘The free silver campaign slogan of last fall, ‘as silver falls, wheat falls; as silver advances wheat advances," is no longer heard, aud the people are fast learning that it is the law of supply and demand, and before the people of Greater New/of the Chicago platform, (' He} will be taken by the free silver peo- | Will have the good wishes of the great | ple as an evidence that their cause is mass of the Republican’ party of this}mot dead, but is the rather destined result to survive and to. ne supreme, It can ly be seen, therefore, of what’vast importance it is to the cause of sound money, of good gov- er ot and of the supremacy of .~ Mr. Bailey be elected this all, ~~” The Republieqns should see that he has good audiences wherever be goes and that he gets the full party vote. And if he getb the full party vote Kentueky will got help to rm- vive the hopes of/the free silver party. prance! SROs BUSINESS JMPROVEMENT, yaa Marked Clianges that Have Taken Place Since Me- Kinley’s Election. Silver Has Nothing to do With Prosperity, But Protection not the pttee of silver, that controls the prices of \he farmer's products \{and the laboring man’s wages. Free, walimited, aud independent coinage of silver jis doomed, and no strong political arty of the present, or future, will ver 14 itself to death by declaring fgr it in national con- vention. GEM’ FROM REED. Within the last few days Hon. 'T, B. Reed has expressed his opinion on the situation as it now is. Below are given 4 few extracts from his peeches and articles ; ‘All the symptoms of prosperity fare here. Men are willing to lend fiioney and sensible men are willitg to take it and risk it in new enter- prises. o @ word, it looks like 1879. ‘sEvety historic period of revival has been like this, Some event at the right moment happéns, lke the Heating of money in motion by redue- tion of the interest on part of the na- bill, which, rightly of wrongly, the people believed in. /Human nature and human affairs, inade ready for the change, have always done the rest.’” ) These blind’ leaders of the blind are explainingfwhy the rise in wheat isyno help to farmers. It is only an aocident, they say. Poor crops else- where, and/so we sell at a profit ;that is all. You will be no better off in the end, for such accidents cannot happen in the future. You will hav to pay high prices for what you buy and so you will bein the same ¢: in another year as you were year be fore last.) What idle talk this is! ‘he returns from the wheat crop and the other cereals spent in purchases start {the nation to work.’’ “A good many questions have been settled these last few years. In all the debates in the house this past ses- sion, there was bat one man who even mentioned the ‘consumer,’ and he was from Kentucky. In other years, if you could believe our de- bates, we had no population except ‘consumers ;’ producers did not exist. Not a word did \we ‘have inthe de- bates of this year alout the need of low prices. We ‘already had them, and months which used to start the echoes in wild lodgivgs for low prices were sdevising i plang for raising prices.’” ee » ‘THE STATE CA IGN. ‘The campaign in Kentucky may be said to begin/in reality on Friday of this week, when J. G. Baily and Joe Parker, the noi ees respectively of the Republican and Populist parties, speak in joint debate at Falmouth, Mr. Bailey will stand for the Repub- lican doctrine of sound money, hav- ing gold ag the basis of currency, #8 now, With guch use of silver as is pos sible consistently with maintaining its parity with gold, and a system of bimetalhsm which can he established by international fagreement and forthe . Republican doctrine of protection which will promote our own industries and give employment to our own people. Mr. Parker will fight for the Populist doctrines, which were mainly adopted by the convention that nominated Mr. Shackelford. tue silver Demooragy, is not making ably represented on the stump, and] t there will be uo dearth of a pyrotech-| nical display of the doctrines of the Cl © ‘There is more in this campaign to|t mere election of their nominee for ap pellate court clerk. The effort to e|perity could only come through the The crowds of buyers who visited the ciation were even larger than had been General Hine mine on l Hindman, the nominee of | expected. It was found necessary to the National Democrats, is speakiog| yake use of a second register for the for sound inoney aul free trade names of the visitors and two lines by the Joint Trafic railways. They ago plattorm. ed on the west by the Mississippi, in the free silver Demovrats than the|the east by Buffalo and Pittsburg. The indications are that another $50,- 000,000 at least goes into the pockets : of New York merchan‘s by this move- clect their nominge is an effort to] ment, ‘The visitors generally brought show the real strength of the free] good reports of the business coudi- silver sentiment jn Kentucky, {t| tion, and their presence and cheerful And Home Demands Have Vast Influence. Washington, D, C., Sept. 18.— Reporis of business improvement continue to come in from every ai. rection, and business men from parts of the country are in the E st them stop over in Washington eo route with good news of ity good prices, moftgages being paid off, and a marked change in the views of the people. ‘You could not realize what a change has come over the people,”’ said one gentleman who had just come from the Pacific coast. ‘I came through the great Northwest. ern country, where the free silver ep- idemie was raging at this time last at the change. The demand for the free coinage of silver has disap- peared, and thousands of men who advocated it a year ago now admit that they were wrong. Tens of thousands are indicating their grati- hear of any who regretted his vote tection.”’ “What has brought this change in so short a time?’ ‘Improved business| conditions, improved — confidence,)_—_ improved wages and improved prices. They have all come steadily since the it became known thata protective tariff law would be promptly passed, and bave come in the face of a steady fall in the value of silver. This fact shows to even the most unthinking that they were being imposed ujon last year by the statdment that pros- free aud unlimited coinage of silver and has thoroughly disgusted them short a time.”’ “But the silveriies say that the high price of wheat is d shortage abroad and that ‘in question has nothing to da with ii “On the same theory it jm argued that the low price was due to the surplusage abroad, and that the with that, and that vance of wheat alone tat conve us silver’ theory was a hombug. ‘The find undoubted proot/of this in wool, which is a great staple with them as 50 per cent in the past year, and yet silver has fallen meantime. Aud there is no excuse for \he statement} that this advance is due to a big for-| eign demand, The wool of the country has been within the last fev | months jammed full of our wool, aud yet the price of our product: has ad- i vanced 50 per cent, in the face of | this large supply and also in the face of the fall in silver. How do you account for thi Simply because silver has nothing to dO with it, but protection, prosperity and home | manufacture have everything. Aud | the people are seeing it, a.dare see ing bow nearly they came to being made ‘monkeys’ of in last fall's election.’” Parties arriviag here from New York say that city is full of bustliog | eager merchants from the West who | have come there under a special ex-| purpose of taking them to New York | aud bringing them into closer husi- ness relationship where practicable, headquarters of the Merchants’ Asso- Mr. Shackelford, the nominee of | were formed by those who wished to] ) record their arrival. The number : registered was twice as large a8 that any speeches, but will go around the Pho registered on the first day of state giving the faitiifyl the ‘glad] che first excursion from the same ter- hand.’’ His party will, however, be/ritory. Many of the merchants yrought their wives and children un- ler the reduced rate privilege granted ‘ame mainly fiom the section bound- he south by the Ohio river, and in lines in the battle of the money standards were first drawn, It was here that sound money won its first pronounced victory, and the loss of Keutucky by the free silver people was really the worst blow that party ests of the city the parsmount eon- “Perk in The -charge of every duty, Upon this platteym Seth Low goes few months, Kentucky concludes to \ was fn this state that the present confidence proved very encouraging to the mercantile community and added to the weight of evidence of return of prosperity, has received at the polls, If, after a|this city on Tuesday, Ovtober 5th, year's sober thought aud in the face] when Buffalo Bill's Wild West and of all the developments of the past]Congress of Rough Riders of the World will be here. It is the exhiii tion par excellence, and you 1a 1 ; ¥ ne cast in ber lot with the adherents to] er have another opportaaity tw the silyer standard, and the devotees’ upon its like again, To Cure Constipation Forever. ake Cuacnrets Candy Cuthartic, Ie or %e iC. 6, C-fail Lo eure, dpugyiots refund mouey No one can afford to miss being in “TROLLEY DAY, Tomorrow the Street Cars Will be in Charge of Ladies, A Splendid Program Will be Rens dercd at La Belle Park in Tomorrows +I the entireProceeds of of the Broadway M go to the abdne din addition Yo which is a concert at Labelle Pa privilege of havi y by a preity girl will be void, afd it is safe that even themost irs charged, that i You can count though, the fair conductor won't latest novel- wool 36-in black 9¢ to $1.00. k Jacquard} to $1.00, buying their fall stock, and some of | Je Conductors—Mrs. noy, Misses Martha 1 1g, Linoleyhns,Rugs, all the/most reli. nakes ggid the latest Louise Caldwell, Jennie Young, Mattie William, year, and.was absolutely astonistied | § by the follgwing Mesdames Gus Tate fication that it failed, and I did not|® for McKinley, sound money and pro- | J 119 B. OGILVIE & CO.) Laura Saunders, Willi tion of McKinley and egpecially since | be succeeded by: I never saw so sudden \a change in 0 | 1 be | Son, Nellie Stokes, silver question had nothing to do} » Georgie Bognin, is about the | truth of it, too, But it i@ oot the ad- | | } them hat the ‘hand/in-land-with- | 7 aud remain unti the car itis in Ohio, Wool has advanced | ¢ Pe »bert Bonnin | Hessle Pattefson Lizzie Chapeze, country is consumed at home. This | t Refreshments Mill be served a Belle park, and jn the evenit pand will assist in renderin € Catareh lowing program: Overture—Dean's Band. Selection—Denn Hobson, Chasiain and Green (Becher)—Miss f Selectioy—Desa cursion arrangement made for the || Will Brazelyon Sel@vtion—Dean's Band, Vogal solo, with Violin Ovli- gato—"I Ireamt’’ Quartette—Slected Sdlection—Dean's Band COOK REMEDY CO} POISON A SPECIALTY. Braguary, Secondary « ty WW 15 0 3) DA. OIliZENS SAVINGS BAN K, fare and ‘hotel itis, wha m9 iF you HAVE * Mucous Patches in Open from # a, m. to Pr Ass’t Ou lenge the world for: ry . R. Smrrn, ), WALLACB, Pax to: E, FARLEY, xo, O, Hat, EMEDY CO Itnost all jhe new colors} | > patté?ns-and weaves. All) wool ty 0 toited Cheviots| @ at 25c, 3% and 50c. Nov-| 3 elty dress patterng from $3 weaves and|f dress Ry eposits ident Cashier r gets Leewe- a ae ee ‘Evansville, Padueah and Cavro Packet, “Feast of # § “Schul’s Fall: sho sin the : ay of new Vand Operated by th and Ohio River Transpors ’ Took Up,” “SHOES. We Shoes of all siz and Paducad Packets (Dally exee WLEK and Jt NS, HOPKINS ac Head AUB) CK ba, you a good sh Better shoes at Office Hours; apm | Sa _m. to 12 m.,2to 6 p.m. andatniga ee telephone No. 31 ee oe \BLISHEL GENERA AGENTS, Pelephone 174 OADWA 8, Pro. late and Iron footer, | seam Clarence Dallam The People’ 5 Light = PO Me rama Ti IND st Py LAMSON, LD. a S Specialty. i tion in avel corkected. rape Work of Every King, ORK GUARANTRRD\, HENRY GREIF, TL $e ~ S-GHNSTER TER, Sojititor of Pénsi eteyhn of fur yea ’ Year's of ) Experience MONARCH ied JSBELL, M.D, s#inn and Surgeon, Ye SSESESSE “WAHL & : SSSSSSSSS ‘ction Guaranteed, v. YOUNG & SON, PHONE 200, Sith Fourth Stree | Line tation Co. RPORATED, LLtne (ally exoepe 1308 A Bd ~P ABNEY, BROADWAY 280-8180 lll Browdway a Cis atreet ris 129 8. Thid Se. Paguean, Ky. Attorney-at-Law Louivite Arest Beitding, PADUCAM Sivenhdiallway Co t Na wake ephone 130. jephone 160 and “aren rr o, 1194 Broadwa: Shoeing sod ready for work: Claims, in the war of 1861-96 laims Yofore the Bureau ; of Perpions, at Seventh St, ‘STEAM, rl DEALM In ; sapla and féncy Groceries, Canned Goats inds, Free tstivery ta.) parte of the city.

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