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” . ? - »~ o x. » 5 . 4 . x VIA NEW ORLEANS Jn connection with the Southern Pact Through Weekly Tourist Sleeping Car [gartog Cinctnnaat and Loutsviiio on tiiino' Central Ratiroad fast "New Orleans Limited” EVERY THURSDAY and Padneab every Friday morning, for Los ra cise veithout change. ao wary 4, 1888) with the Sunset Limited Annex ff the Southern Pacitic, giving spectal through rs of agents necting i service to San Francisco, Ps Sr the iluols Centeal Railroad and ine G, HA’ Commercial A\ A. Figagon. 0B, Ci ¥ ‘A. Seliund, PA oh thst T ade ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD ‘Time Table {x effect Jancs!Y * #4. ;|eourse, not be questioned. ties are consider- of introducing in nce that will en- ae ‘the arrest and search every suspidious dharacter caught on the streets after 11 o'clock p.m. It is their hope that by this means they will be enabled to catch the thieves and burglars who infest the city. Few people have any business on the streets after 11 o'clock at night, and if the person caught out at this hour isa well known citizen, he will, of Ifa stranger, and bis purpose in ont is a lawfal one, he can casily show it. An ordinance is now pend- ing before the council giving the po- lice a right to arrest all vagrants, loiterers and ‘*bums," A certain young lady of decided attainments day—practices the 6 and oftentimes with open. ‘the window The windows are not opened to give the neighbors the benefit of the notes that float in the vicivity, but .|to give the fair young vocalist « big- AND MEMPHIS DIVISION UNP— No 22 Noth Now ane. 7X pm 9 oan Mins. i a7 aim 188 pin Tham 845 pm Ly Jackson, Tenn. 10% arm 1005 pm LY Catto, Mle oon 1088 am te ‘ 7100 ' am Kr Padue tapm ‘Iisa 80am LvPaduean pan 400 am Ae Princeton. apm 96s am Ar Evansville ..... 845 pm Ar Hopkinsville, ..°6 00 pm 205 pm Ar Nortonville. ....528 pm 338am 10.80am RA Goutravchy "61s pm 4 19am 1 88 ay Atiorse Brauch, 72pm Sitam 1.22 pm Ar Ow naboro,....°0 4 pm *9 0) 315 pm misville. ....1048 pm 7 6S $15 pm * Cfncinuatl 7am 1156 au sourm BousD— No 2 No 235 te eie stam 8s pm Ly Owensboro..... $05 am % 15 pm Ly Hopkinayille. 31Spm ef sam Cy Evansville .....890am 990 pm 44)8am_ 11.89 pm Flopm S48am 1915 iw a 290 as 890 pan Ar Pulte, 30pm bosem 715 pm Ar Jackson, Tenn... 605 pm Ar Mompata. ® pm Ar Jackson, Mine. 218 aca Ar G! avilie Mi Shera: 405 arm 7am am OUIS DIVISION. Alt tree Tien do fon F 4 8 carry Pullman ouiecaloeptne Ueketa, oF reservatto ar Cvehian Tube. have a rumbling sound hy cloned of ie nothing but an In arch. which “ any Sold by Drugaists Malt’s Family PLL ——_— eee IF YOU DRINK, DRINK THE BEST You CAN FIND IT AT THE... NEW RICHMOND HOUSE BAR| : Mitchell Bozeo, Propr (+ j Finoet of Wines, Liquors and Cigars always on band. G. R. DAMIS, FoR AGeME Front Rank and Trivmah Furnaces. Call on him and get estimates for heating your residence, Tin, Slate and Iron Roofer. 129 8, Thid St. SS BROADWAY HOUSE. Rest hotel in the city Best accommodations, nic MEALS 25¢ $1.00 PER DAY. Corer Broadway and Kighth street MAVEIEED, KY. J. R. Hesten, Pro HENRY BURNETT Aitorney-at-Law Will practice in 118 South Fourth St., Papucan, Ky REMOVED! J STEAM LAUNDRY To No, 120 North Fourth St, How Machinery Good Work Satisfaction Gdaranteed, J, W. YOUNG:& SON, PELEPHONE ‘foo. OR. J, D, SMITH'S ger Supply of atinosphere to convert into baru. "8Y She was rece. |' dear life, or rather pro for dear life—everybody kno: difference between singing and prac: ticing—when the little neighbor boy, who was sitting on the front fen evjoying with rapt attention io his youthful guileness the solo, lost his equilibrium and took a tumble. The ~tly singing away for setiging away “4 the little fellow was carried into the house, and while no one for a mo- ment intimated that the musi¢ had anything todo with his misfortune, the young lady, in deference to the badiy bumped little head, sang no more that day, The following day, however, she began her customary practice at the usual time atthe old stand, As the notes emerged from the open case ments and ascended and descended and borried to and fro about the neighborhood, a littie girl across the street rushed excitedly to her mother and innocently exclaimed, ‘Oh ma- ma! little Johnny Green has fell off again aud alawoot killed him- ss hollering the Worst you ever heard }"" The people of Rowlandtowo are still claimoring for fall mail delivery, and ther prospects foa obtaining it are thought to be better than ever be- fore The people out there have long ‘|done without wany things they badly need, not because it was not the de- sire of those in power to avcord t them what they are justly entitled to, but because it was impossible as the saying is; however, pezseverance will finally reap its reward, and the people of Rowlandtown will doubtless have wany things before the summer is here. PROUD OF HIS ENGLISH. How a Gentleman of Uboilaol Said Good-By. H. Hughes tells some about his recent t in cians were cutertaine ‘ En « eon exten y the Holland 4 mat Hughes and his cor \ ‘ visit r 1 i Kp king HH for or Frenchman w I t « tial! When € Were f ve, my Inn y dd Py mine, 1 ' t ad of¢ nac and arted i nimyself, whe ad. I udling a and knew hi he looked very studious, and | At la dit ant and stow han ex moved inc up the book his pocket w iy amphi on “We are ready for carreages had lined up before the en- trance to the hote] and arrangeme had been made to take tion in time for our train direct] upon our return from t garden Fearing that he had not the time or opportunity to bid me a persona u, my Hollander came up ast the carr yrous hands r the drive a us tot rin, n enthused to make rity? I know the others were awed by the superior linguistic accomplish ment of their confrere, for they looked it.” Louis Republic THE TWENTIETH CENTURY. It May Not No One Knows What Bring Forth. It may be that we are, with respect to the coming century, in the same immature mental condition in which the people of the eighteenth century were with regard to the nineteenth. If some one in the preceding century had dared to predict the wonderful achievements of the nineteenth, he would probably have been declared a fool and treated as was Robert Ma in Germany in this century, who, after the discovery of the law of the servation of force, was put into an lowe of Lede Niath, betwoet Breidway and Jet. how corner Nintewhd Jeflerson, Vele- neane asylum, A like fate might be- fall the man who should dare noy y | ginnings or well advanced rc cope ror tne twentieth | time will show; but in ofpérimentat century, and to predict the progress | work in the laboratory it will be cer- of the human mind in the varioug] tain to find a ready field of ve filneel domains of scientific research. After | —Scientific American all, those may be right who, in spite ae of all those acquisitions on which we so justly pride ourselves, are of opin- ion that we are still moving in only. t&e initial steps, in the leading strings oF evolution, and that we are yet very far from the goal of those material and ideal aims which the human race in its unremitting onward struggle ia destined to attain, or to show its ca- my of attaining. The great Sir isaac Newton used, perhaps, the most appropriate simile when he compared Would Make a Great Hit What a hit some theatrical com- pany could make by giving 1a country schoolhouse that a | take-off on town people! ‘Theatrical companies are always putting carica- ture farmers on the stage, in town, ‘and it is no more than fair that the country folks should get Atchison Globe. —It is estimated that, on an aver- was men with children who on the sea-]@@e every penny in circulation chore are picking up here and there | changes hands «bout nine times-a acurious pebble or colored shell while | Week. wo the great sea of truth lies still un- Sen te teenie —There are more blind people explored before them. We can only conjecture as to the probable progress, as we cannot know which position we occupy in the course of human evolu- tion, whether we are still in its be- This lies hidden in the bosom of the future.— Ludwig Buchner, in Popular Science Monthly. among the Spaniards than any other European rac —It is 21 years since Queen Vie toria was proclaimed empress of India. A MOTHER’S LOVE. Saved Mer Son’s Train, But Lost Her Own Life. The west-bound limited had just, by the narrowest chance in the world, escaped a collision with a stalled freight train on the curve in Bleeker’s cut. The watchfulness and nerve of old Pat Donohue, the veteran et The Good “I am not good enough,” tested, “to tie the shoe!” She started, almost at once Very well, then,” she replied, icily. ase be good enough to call an A. he pro- lacing of your but recovered herself neer, had, for a moment, stood alone in between life and death or seriou jury for scores of passengers. Int smoker, the nen were talking a ould hav® supk throu sh the Fee meeenepecenc ai) n sidewalk; for there were "lenty, of [adventures on land and flood, : f - rotten planks right near where Pi ial teference to railroad w were.-Detroit Journal aia 2 “mar gales worst experiences that Ihave eve: have amounted to just about as u as this did. I had one, howeve V'll never forget “It was on the Vermont Centr —Ziggsby—“There goes a fellow who whistles at danger.” Perksby— he must be a very brave fellow! no is st A locomotive Bost thousand driver.” —Two n some ten years ago. I had beendown in Boston spending a weck with a party of good fellows, and just be » week was up ran acr ner crowd who were going up Lake Champlain, We had bee: pretty well acquainted, and as it hap pened we had the smoker tauch to ourselves on the trair two trains leave London ordinarily every $4 honrs. hundred LIQUEFACTION OF AIR. ied First Discovery of a Method—Easier Process Now in Vogue. It has long been known that air, ic 4 “It had been raining up there in like any other gas, was theoretically | 1,6 Connecticut valley for a week and capable of liquefaction, and that its], li creek had turne: ng condense ion was merely # questic of suitable apparatus. ‘To Prof. De- war, of Glasgow, belongs the credit of first liquefying air in limited quan- scugeary re duction of tem- hiersd by a succes torrent. <A stick of driftw: ame jammed across the pir igh trestle and in a shor engugh bushes and loo: cumulated to back upt considerable he: ix ht. I evaporations. Tbe T last, gav wevor, was too costly tof «we shot have any commercial val ing storm. W 1 The ec quefaetion of ait} down in Muassac n large q cen rece otbeck 4 Iding her wic Suddenly we heard t mendous blasts of t en felt the grinding vania, and i laut the Sian, we ¢ ; hibited in an extreme vineer ata series of experiments during alecture | ii, head parks rto | 1 gue delivered by I . mt andacompany of p Th yaa tho firet public exhibit ion oft the vi as it kind of this article in States. Tho laws governing the existence of air in the liquid bedraggled, 1 gray-haired won f antern Jay near the | in th gase atrong a play at | even.— te C. nth street, Street Charen Met Pe om. school 9a. m. P reachin, Rev. W. 8, Baker, pastor ble. Sureet 9 a. th. Pi tor B. Church, vices Wa. 1. aNd 7 p, 0.8, F&A. tu each m londay eveniug’ tn Chapt Esther Chapter tngets. ard. Monday even Queen Ladies month at 7:30 o'cloc! MaAOuic Jiell, 3rd floor, over 2% Broadway UNITED ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS No. 77, fabernac 4 Houser intra Pr Qdd Fellows Ha, 1 of Ruth, ky Lodge No. Kent 1 fourth Tnesda; Hroadway Til Broadway Golden | day ik earh month, AL 1g Brose sy, Coren ay nights in ev day ights In each cle, No. nig! ah m in each month Tent, No. §. hb monut Garfeld Palatty ay evening ine ma. 1 ery, night In exc for w the same as those al a substance with which we are | familiar. Above a ¢ mpera. rs Fa e| ture and pressure (212 d) es F.and | von cry <i atmospheric pressure at a evel) ‘ water exists as a vap m 212 fit with | s 1 tthe Shu a below ‘or PI s his | ti r, as we know it, isa Phe old jady ‘had iv | mal condition awa ihe ar ; lower tL r \ at if w we re a- |, owas wa ' tion i p € quefaction rd t R r 311.8 that, if a rs ) . at wed ¢ 1 by ¢ " he heat Detrott s | f the su " m, thereby re u cold. He ¢ SPANISH PRIDE } A Certificate Satisfied That of a De quare it through a coil ppncageaels ae SR Rg gtr feated Navy Captain. This « ream of air ciret 5 und @ second coil throu f Dader \ npressed air is flowin, hrane, emperature of the la from t ure lower nds of metal; t men and a bre pounds. ‘Phe Spanish ha h ship in the nig rather et olficers mad, So when the ¢ h the cane up he hove t m surrender, Suddenly a puff of wind jon of solids, varried him Te and boarded, ‘The Speedy lay s her opponent was unable t en it was pour until it hit} sorbed the heat ofthe glass, Thecold [the guns sufficiently w is given off condensed the moisture | the Englishman made es t n the air above the which fell] The boarders, after n the form of hoar frost, A piece of | carried the enemy 1 tin thrust into the liquid made it boil | was over the Spanish ea and the tin was rendered as brittle as Jed some te from as ay in which | to the w glass, Copper and platinum were not " y affected, and it isevident that these} the ship. He received one Il metals will make suitable receptacles | certifies that Capt for this new liquid. When it was Spanish frigaled } boiled over a furnace the ebullition | like,a true Spar feated was, of course, excessive; but the mo- eman was gr . and ment’ water was poured into the boil- | #0 was the nation, returning ng Miquid, mer was i ly] keme he was ima given an: 4 nd mercury were [other and more imy mmand fron the new product The liquefaction point of the two constituents of air is —Army and Navy Journal Pie in Chicago diffdrent, that of oxygen for given Pastry statistics show presbures being several degrees high- y devours 5, "162, er than that of nitrogen, Hence, as the temperature cf the liquid rises, the nitrogen is the first to escape as & The remaining liquid is propor tionatély. rich in oxygen—a fact which is proved by the bluish tint] __y; js estima etured which a standing vessel of the liquid 100,000 pianofort assumes if exposed to the air, Just every year in London. what the economic value of this new — ———. and extremely, interesting product is, lice wade a raid on ration of the holy o ove Washington the untiring labor e pastor is th There was Street n Jetropcls, Hl. occ and in al! it was day the Washington chur Phe so CHTCROHES, thodist)=Sun- Preaching it 8% and W. stoner, pastor. n and Ohio (Methodist) Sun- Preaching t's. mi. ald 8D. pastor Fashinxton ¢ Sat Church Bunda Whoo! va tw. Preaching 8 p v. Hagwhins, pastor, Meh ae & P aa Seventh Street, Baptist Church.—Sunday ing, I &, m. and 8 p.m, ig tisyh church Sunday choo! # a Nam 7:90pm, Rev. J. rch. (United Brethren Sutiday school 8:30 a.m. & AM. Meets ing in each month M, ont eets jst at 7a AM each mont a eo No, 8 (Lae hb Monday evening tn each mouth No. 4 ing in each meets tho first hiisday evening ih each month ows Hall, $e corner 7th & Adams. No. 48—Meets first and ay evening in gag gOBED a" 0 rind Master's Council No 70.—Meets ¥ “yeniug in each month at 2831—Meets y evening in Colored Odd Fellows’ Hall, nesday evening tS OF FRIENDSHIP, eats every second | ineach month wt | p ery month. rhacie No 30—Meets second month 65, Meet hts fy each Meets tirst | t ‘ah Tent Meets second saturday rh sode, the artist was not influenced um, No, 80 ‘month at | t # well-known journalist on the staff Drill Corps h woathat n a cole rdinance. and zeal lughly excursion reet 000 worth of real estate ual property. A FIGHTING ENGLISHMAN. Anecdote of Sir Henry Havelock-Allan t Siege of Plevna ; letick Villiers, ( . a 1 > little on the a “tired, and ith a hard v kept up | could be a heavy ’s horse ie rider to the general drew rein at shout his prostrate ‘ “What are you doing (reat heaven Get up » you hear, sir? This is 1, Mount at once.” half-stu strug- pled By this time Sir Her his horse and br to him, His companiow like adrunken man, and, n rtain whether e was mopping i h his pockes heavens! and you call \ Englishman Mount at louted Alla Lis col- 4 netively obeyed wi mur s he was reelin | Sir Henry rode hy his side, mu jin \ are hurt, I know; but for \G lon’t show it before these Tlay Vhile the Sua S! “Well, he desi some more titles so tha at he we them on himself y eee that we hines. to look up © can con- » there is Ce NLORED DEPARTMENT. il communications and mat: of news pertaining to this iin should be addressed to Merriweather, 221 South sored | Equitable ‘Lite Assurance Paducah Lodge No. 1515—Meets every firse | Messrs, Muir & Mi Aud Muy Mouday ineach month at Jojored reeiate guemet Ha jway Co. a Fetiows Fatt Paducah Water C: Paducah Putriarchs No, 4G U 0 0 F— Am.-Ger. National Bank. Meciseviry second Friday evenin in each Hon. Henry Burnet sored Odd Fellows’ Hall. Mesirs, Quieies 4 ‘Guteley. st No Tuesday in'each month at| ‘Through th mist of early morning ie Temple—Meets second urs. |ON€ antagonist is lying on hig back of ets | £ Vest Tent, Meetst third saturday | fi t No. S84 meets 4th | j 1 Baptist chureh in Louisville one | ¢) night lost week and captured & gang | repaired to a restaurant on the boule- of crapshooters. “They were somes | yard, with a view of enjoying a good wha ised when they found that) dinner, and afterward of going to the (et daa Papeete st epgea) masquerade ball at the opera, They | [WAG Was GeNSE te MD gaine, all agreed to go as Pierrots. As they The baptizing yesterday was one Jall wore masks, some one suggested of the largest ever witnessed in this | that should adopt some distinc: Over 900 people witnessed the | tive sign by which they could recog- quite strengthening to | Pp. Baptist | to witness the |; a glorious sro holds in the South alone | y | Celebrated Picture Represents a Scene u thicket @ carriage waits to drive off Meets first ana | With the successful opponent. ‘ach month First-class... Horseshoeing‘and Blacksmithing The only place in the city canipped ) with the necessary tools to do first. class carriage and wagon work, Building new work a specialty. Established 1865. Incorporated 1883, Johnson .. Foundry and Machine.,. Company Steam Engines, Boilers House Fronts, Mill Machinery And Tobacco Screws, Brass and Iron Fittings, Castings of all kinds. PADUCAH, KY Dallam & Bowden, Attorneys-at-Law, Equitaste Buipe,, Lov isyit-re, Ky REFER BY PERMIRSION TO OUISVILLE tas amin ga ual’? Oo, PLashty Trust and 8. V. Co. Soctet; HSears: Summary & Dove DUCAH A DUEL IN THE SNOW. in Real Life, Everyone hag geen ihe engraving of erome’s beautiful but sadly effective Low,” says @ ef Gazette. writer in the Westupinet war! his adversary, Jean- ig on a friend’s arnye’s \Swiy walk- ing away from the scene of the en- Ounter. Both are wearing the mas- erading costume of a Pierrot. Ina There is every reason to believe rom recently disclosed information by M. Alfred Darimon, that in por- raying on canvas that impressive lely imaginative caprice, but that ne has reproduced a scene in real life. The facts are as follows: The duels sts were M, Jules Brame, a former minister of publi¢ instruction, under he second empire, and M. D. D--—, q of one of the most influential newspa- pers in the north of France. When the duel occurred both were studying for the bar. One Shrove Tuesda hey, in company with friends, ha nize one another in the erowd. D. suggested that they should yin a label bearing a number to their backs. The idea was unanimously adopted, and D, D—— prepared the Jubel accordingly. While so doing a liabolical idea came into his head. It Was carnival time; why should he not have his little joke?” When it was Jules Brame’s turn to have a ticket sinned to his back his friend D, D—— ad written jn darge letters beneath the number, “E am Jules Brame.” One can casily imagine what was the re; » sooner had Braine set foot u the main passage to the premiere than he was followed by a lady i raleric wearing a mask, who, on his preparing uter a private box, eried out: “I wish you success, Jules Brame.” Later on, on reentering the passag: he was surrounded by a group of jasqueraders, who with one voice 1 out: “Good-day, my dear hat proved to him that he was known to everyone, although he was puzzled to understand how it Passing in front of a box opener, the girl burst out laughing. He in- quired angrily what she was laughing at, “Why,” she replied, “1 am laugh- ing at the funny idea which led you to pin a label on’ your back with your name on it.” And suiting the action to the word, she unpinned the label and handed it to him. Jules Brame considered the not only in bad taste, bus insuiting He sought wie nis comrade, and, find- mig him in the saloon, he reproached joke him angrily in the hearing of the crowd, insisting that he should apola gize openly then and there, D, P—, resenting hig friead's attitude toward declined to apologize; a duel, therefore, in accordance with French habits and customs, was inevitahde. Seconds were gt once chosen; short swords were procured, and in their costumes the antagouists started for the Bois ve Boulogne, Fortunately the duel did not end fi tally, as seems to be the i case Ithoug {| Gerome’s women chiropodi ruptey. Wilderness of Newfoundland Phe caribou or reindeer of New- foundland roam over an area of some 25,000 miles of unbroken wilderness ‘ GREIF: & CHRISTY 319 COURT STREET 319) Rose & Paxton Give you All Kinds of FIRE me Insurance TORNADO Over Citizen’s | Saving Bank. HALF IN TWO Wall Paper, perroll.................. ' ; Cc Fifty cent Window Shades for.. ; .80¢ Hand-made shades in any size. Picture frames made to order. paper hanging done in any part of the county by G. CG. LEB Look f¢ Fine Nona! Pot RTH REET or the Big Sign when you get on Feurth street. SCIENTIFIC AND FIRST-CLASS BLACKSMITHING “1 REPAIRING pe HORSESHOEING All work guaranteed. A. W. GREIF, Court Street bet, 2@ and 3d. verything in Its eason : of canned goods. Our meat market is ieesellen, sane everything in the line of Wem P F. LALLY. ST, JAMES HOTEL aut Al. | Rates, "$0.00 Par Day. Room and Breaktast, $1.00. European Plan, $1.00 Per Qay. Goop Rooms. Goop Mxaxs, Goop SERVICE. When you visit St. Louts stop at ST. JAMES HOTEL BROADWAY AND Wauxt ears direct to Hotel IS_ THE RECORD WE MAKE. UR stock of staple and fancy groceries is Telephone 118. Cor. oth and Trimble. CITIZENS’ SAVINGS BANK, Paducah, Ky. Re Th iTéh 226 Broadwa; Capital and Surplus, $120,000.00 Open from § a. m. to 3 p.m. On Sat- urday nights from 7 to 8, : 10 THEIR LESS FORTUNATE SISTERS A svar one 72 BEAery Interest Paid on Time Deposits OER HE MISSES BELL’S OFFICERS. Jas. A. Ruby aera ReRbr. “Aawit Cashier | | CQ omplexien Tenie in Jas. R. Surra, Geo, ©. WALLACE, | W. F. Paxton, 'E. FaR.ey, Rupy, FISHER, F, KAMLEITER, Geo, O. Hart, ‘The Misses of thelr wonderful ) per bottle, which dapary oki oa eerres: OCsTs YOU HOTHIKG vot exacily ws claimed, £0 thet { | i | | J, W. Moore, DEALER IN Staple and Fancy Groceries, Canned Goods of All Kinds, Free delivery to all parts of the city, ‘hin the reach Lely clear a poor com uify & good one. Huis a. ermus offer should ed 9 plexion and be Will be given prown ist paly thout cha 3 Iiteres ng pap let Will Le seus upon Te ress all communteations and send all orders to The Misses Bell, or THE BELL TOILET Co. Cor, 7th and Adams, No. 78 Fifth Avenue, New York, A. S. DABNEY, ® DENTIST. 406 S°0ADWAY, DR. W. C, EUSANKS, When in Metropotia stop at the STATE HOTEL. $1.50 a day, Special rates by the week. D. A. BaiLey, Propr. Detween ith and 6th on Fe BLOOD POISON] —_ J. J. PURSLEY A SPECIALTY |All Kinds Uoholsterine end Reoairs Ofte: K sidence, ‘0. Primary! Seeandary Tertiary BLoot ON FURNITURE. IPE! Mirrors replated and made good »3 on BURE B15 10 10 35 Days new. Mattresses made to order, O'd price wi stoves and eecond-hand furniture TAKEN IN EXCHANGE FOR WORK. il and meke Charges very South Fitch Send word, and 1 will estimates on work. reasonable, No sa F a ad I ‘Taken ewwulry " A WR TIEMENT 1) Ph |t 1. He reyyvered very quickly Jand \he awa antagonists b fast | f | friends aguia “| tO 82.0 | f Comfortable § na * a sdlpdater rth gor Galt House LOUISVILLE, KY. Aunerican Plan 83.00"to 85.00 per day, Rooms only $1.00 and epwaris, A. Rk. COOPER, Mana * PkhL ott physieh 1809.00 capital benind our wucowuitional Dsoluite Proof sent sealed on Jase book sent tree, MEDY CO. vemple, Chirago, 1.