The Paducah Daily Sun Newspaper, September 6, 1898, Page 3

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ALL THE CITIES NORTHWEST ARE “BEST REACHED THE ‘ . [vansille TeretuteRR 2 THROUGH VESTIBULED TRAINS DALY NASHVILLE Te CHICAGO =i FP. JEFFRIES.G.O.A D.A.NILLMANG.S.A WANSVILLE.IND OfaSmnvicke iti | | H PINGS. CARS FROM | ILLINOIS CENT "RAL RAILROAD ime Table in efoot July 3, 1898, Nowra BousD— No M2 No 24 Leave. New Orleans 72% pm 9. am | | LOUISVILLE AND MEMPHIS: DIviston | | 2’ kwon, Mixe.12 2158 pm } Mompnis......7 50 am 5 50 pn J’kvon Tenn.10 25 am 102 pm Cairo, Tl... 1045 am | No. 184 | Pultop,......12 Spm i201 am ‘Arrive, Padueah....205 pm 1 idan 900 Leave. Paducah 215 pm tam 7 arrive. Princeton... 345 pm 2#am PSam 60 ¢ansville....$ 00 pm 60 am clopkinsville thopm 7p Nortouville,...4 45 pm 39) am 10 am Gontral City... 3 pm ¢ foam i am Horse Branct 682 pur 501 am 107 pm Owensboro. .*10 00 pm *9 0) au 30> pra Louisville... 1000 pm 7,40 am 5.00 pm Cinelonatt -. 7 10am 1) 46 an Bours Bourp— wom OM mt Leave 810 ams 45 pwn 7%) am 9 2 pan am 05 am #1Sam 99 pro 240 pm de 9 2 10 pm 3 48 am 11/085 4p No 181 290 pm 3.6 am 40 p | 250 pm 5.08 am 7 00 p | 600 pea 605 pm $2 pms tam 218 am 158 pos 3.0 arn 6 45 pas | swam sw am 7 ® pm | | Jew Orieans ST, LOUIS DIVISION ir, which ‘Noe 808 end 24 carry I’ullman buffets ears and [ree ree! cinest! 98 Ld Seton Evans ‘Tratas Bl and BE run solid becween Otacin | nati aed New Orleans, carrying Pullman bul | Fer ua 241 run golld between Pade | Qed Hopkinsville. DP a, St. Lo Paducab KV resoves. C4. a Exposition Omaha, Nebraska} JUNE 1 TO NOVEMBER | ——1898 — Best reached from the south, east and west by the |MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY In elegant equipment, consist ing of reclining chair (seats free of extra charge), Pullman buffet sleeping cars and comfortable high-back seat coaches. REDUCED RATES FROM ALL POINTS DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE See nt for tickets, time tables and — other information. R.T. G, MATTHEWS, T. P. A. LOUIRVILLE, KY. ea een It You Want Your Laundry Done Right Have it done by THE CHINES 102 Broadway. Clothes cal and retarned promptly. SAM HOP SING & CO — ‘Whn in Metropolis atthe stop STATE HOTEL. Special rates by the Ad Hod D. A. BarLey, Propr. Betweon 4th and 6b on Ferry °* ST, JAMES HOTEL SAINT LOUIS EUROPEAN PLAN Rate. 75¢ and $1 per Day Restaurant, Popular Prices SPRCIAL 260 DINNER AL BREAKFAST SPEC) SUPPER Meotaieat oF mm UN Ooh G rai 3 Cakes Or ate pac aloes, CAKES OF WAT, Not No. Nod No.4 sei 01 eeramion and cof Tiaee trout, butter sanice, em fies aad codes, tea, mili 0 1No, 6 Oatinead, and cream, oF ‘ Tous, bawerend cofee ¢ iia 1No,6 ‘Two eggs, butter, Losst and C * Pree Make Market street care a and “ealon rect to hotel ‘apest and best— Try European Plait. ¢ ‘Second Hand Goods igtsoat encks prices paid by 1 AAA BOUGENO & SON tyeet, We also carry 8 line of new Se comes, ec, Call and get our eee sewhere. We nso €x- Tor ad DwALER I are particularly ering of color ach in such @ h are not w: Ne; shirt waists. tle aroTeApet NEM ORLEANS | ironed and Anish a |e a manner Laundry in fail to please, 6 shirts, starched a: careful in the laan ed goods, handling way that even dyes ‘aranted fast will not by the Star Steam | which cannot | STAR STEAM LAUNDRY, J. W. YOUNG 120 North 4th PENSI w JAMES A. ' CUED Mocr anty a! FOR B AOKE, OR FOR NECESSITY & SON, Proprietors St Leece Block ONS! AR CLAIMS! WOODWARD Claim A and. Notary & specialty, Padueat all are interested. A subject in which theregis interest is the subject of ‘glasses. Thero are few people who do not need them, May n great risk A little got all tang Gave it up a 9 a, m.—Gc wl} ing for the fc helped myself not so thick as 10 a, m.—1 sharpening. ‘I time. They w had tortind 3p, m.—Suc y tome f 6p. iv that jovk Staple and Fancy Groceries, Canned Goods of All Kinds, Car Tt ond Adams on purpes 8 p. m.- Ha . | itigbtful roof. ' "UB ree delivery to sll parta of the eit¥e)'a i sight long: M-i-a-ow Dave reyes and give you b One Day's Doings in not having t pleased with wh I charge you to 31 r same quality spectacles J other parties charge you $3.50 to 85 for J. J. BLEICH, 223 Bi vadway FLAG. nificant te prated DIARY OF A KITTEN. Little Fee of a Bus gry. ‘Tired w y come down, ¢ ke to cream, which was ust ried to do it on lace flimsy stuff W a terrible rack- ast dinner 1; a fine fat fel nother asleep it ip in p tree in herjust forfuu, 8 hat w STad to ree jong time 1 inacherry tree she had been made iny shppet. Got him. y at last on his de- Spall sit here and ging !—Golden |Docturs’ PLANTATION CHILL Cig bD. Ay YHISER. Prescriptions Are given prompt and carefal at- tention by experienced graduates in pharmacy when entrusted to our care. Our Immense Stock Enables us to give you “just what the doctor orders.”” Prompt Delivery We delive edicines or presesine ly to any part of th. OEHLSCHLAEGER & WALKER DORUGGISTS Fifth and Broadway. NPKINLEY’S WISDOM. How the President Forestalled the Plans of France Regard- ing Spain, and How She Was Outwitted. His Foresight and Sagacity Pre- vented a Concert of Action of European Powers Against the United States. B, Curtis in Cbicago Record I have just learned of a very inter- incident in connection with the matic side of the war, which President McKinley’s fore sight and sagacity, The morning papers contain a cablegram from London which describes the efforts of France to obtain concerted action by the powers against the United States for the protection of Spain, aud says that the scheme was pre~ vented by the refusal of England to tip shows join. When the secret history of the war is published it will be discovered that the vigorous independeace of the president was equally potent, if not more so, in preventing an alliance. It will be remembered that a day or two before the president sent to congress bis final message on Cuban affairs the ambassadors and minis« ters of the five great European pow- ers called at the white house to make a joint representation in the interest of peace. They were cordially re- ceived and the president expressed his appreciation of their friendly in- terest, but at the same time and with the courtesy informed them that our government was per- fectly capable of attending to its own cetera, et cetera, et greatest he business, et cetera This was exactly what the ambas- sadors expected. Sir Julian Paunce- fote had conferred with the president in advance and bad been informed of the character of the reply President 1} ments had made a promise to Spain. _|action on the part cf the European ) por interpreted as an entering wedge. McKinley would make to the repre- sentation, so that they knew what would happen before they went on their errand, Nevertheless they were bound to go, because their govern- Shortly afterward a similar inci- lent of even greater significance oc- curred which bas never been alluded to in print, When Mr. Polo, the Spanish minister, left Washington, be placed the aftairs of his legation vintly in charge of the French am- ador and the Austrian minister. When the department of state was notified of this fact Secretary Day, hy instruction of the president, in- formed the French and Austrian gov- ernments that a joint representation of two nations could not be recog- nized ; that be could pot allow the re- sponsibility to be divided; that be would ve pleased to receive either the French ambassador or the Austrian minister regarding any matter that concerned Spain, but be could not receive them both, The objections of the United States were communi cated to the Spanish government, and the French ambassador was instruct- ed to act as the envoy of Spaia. There was no reason at the time why both of these diplomats should not be recognized ; but the president, with wise precaution, determined that he would not permit any joint ba powers in favoy of Spain or any ar- rangement that bad the appearance of # coalition, as be feared that a double representation, which was en- tirely unnecessary, wight he intended 1 do not know whether the president or Secretary Day should be credited with this wise precaution, because the diglojyatic side of the war has involved them both, Yon take no risk on Plantation Chill Cure,as it is guaranteed to cure, DISSOLUTION NOTICE, ‘The ;arnerapip heretofore existing between J. Will Fisher and W. W. Powell, is this day diasolved ay mu- tual consent, Mr. Powell setiring, land Mr. Fisher continuing tle busi- ness, will collect all aecountsand pay 9)} dlabts due by the late firm; 1, Will Fiter, Ww WY. Maye}l. Sept. 1, 1894, , ys Plantation Chill Cure i3/made by Vaz Viect-Mapsfield Drug Po., heace \s relighty, ‘ Wholesale Agent. o NEWS SUMMARY. established s rigid quaran’ all points. board against New Orleans pending the in- vestigation of two suspicious fever cases. Washington today, and the cabinet may consider the draft of instructions to the Paris commi: hospital at camp Hamilton, Lexing- ton. at camp Thomas better than he had expected. States who are charged with the im- transportation of the troops, peace commissioners. has declined to serve, and it is said that three others will decline, if they have not already done so. the Madrid officials are even talking of the futility of sending any com- missioners to Paris at al up during the next three weeks, and by October 1 itis expected that all the soldiers engaged in the Santiago campaign will have been mustered out, sent to garrisons at different points east of the Mississippi, except the convalescents, who will be allowed to go home on furloughs. quence, unfit for their responsible duties. en the weak points developed in the National Guard system by the expe- rience of the war, Chickamauga reached Lexington at 9 o'clock Sunday morning. the along the route by their friends and one car was sent oo to Covington and Newport. Monroe left that place last night. convinced that it was not really need- ed, a3 the sick soldiers are well cared for at the Fort Monroe hospital. on the train, attention was suddenly attracted by bowed to him en ‘The Memphis board of health b ie against The Mississippi state of health has quarantined Gen, Luis N, Pando, formerly commander of the Spanish troops at Manzanillo, who was said to have mbarked at Havana for irge of a fund of 12,000,- is in New York. President McKinley will return to joners. There are now 660 patients in the Only one death bas occurred. Gov. Bradley found the conditions ‘The commissioners of the United portant duty of arranging for the evacuation of Cuba by the Spaniards and of seeing the evacuation com pleted left New York yesterday for Havana. They will lect the best points of debsrkation and designate the time and manner for the assemb- ling of the Spanish troops, must pay all the expenses of the is having trouble with its Senor Castillo Some of Camp Wikoff will gradually break if volunteers, or, if regulars, The insurgents at Manila have again occupied the trenches from which the Americans drove them be- fore the surrender of the city. The opinion generally prevails at Washington that the mismanagement, sickness and deaths in the volunteer camps ous defects in the system, by which inexperienced men been due mainly to se ational Guard were put under command of officers who often owed their appointment to political iofluecce and were, in conse- It is expected that an effort will be made in Congress to strength- ‘The Kentucky hospital train from Many of ick soldiers were met at stations ‘The relief train from Fort Those in charge of this train are Forty-nine men are coming home WILLING TO SWAP. Thought the Woman's Exchange Meast What It Said. Mr. Hiram Henpekt, of Frog Hol- low, had finished his business in the city and was slowly drifting along with the tide of humanity toward the Pennsylvania railroad ferry when his a sign on 9 buildjng he was pass: y’S EXCHANGE, : fives ae cond A smile of anticipation lighted up his countenance as he turned aside and entered the building. A middle-aged, sharp-featured lady in eyeglasses came forward and he stepped up to the counter, and after owt looking her over he said: “Excuse me, madam, but air you the only one they've got on hand at present?” “The only one on hand? What do you mean?” was the puzzled reply. “The only woman, of course. I hain’t got Hanner along with me to- day, but I noticed that this was a woman's exchange, an’ J thopght Jd drop in an’ look over what you had on hand, an’ if I liked the looks of any of ’em I’d bring the old woman in the next time I come to the city Gently, the lady in charge explained his mistake to him, and Mr. Hiram Henpekt, of Frog Hollow, resumed his homeward jour- ney, a crestfallen and bitterly disap pointed man.—St. Louis Post Dis- patch. He sat holding her head in his ha is,” he said, “is the miserable end.” ‘hat is to say, apecifically, the head was the miserable one. And there were no bromides in the house. —Indianapolis Journal. The Woman Who Throws. When a woman tries tg save steps by throwing an article she makes her self twige as many steps; firet going to pick up the artigle whieh she threw, and then carrying it in an enpeaie direction to whereshe intended to put K3READ IS THE STAFF OF LIFE CONSEQUENTLY HAVE IT & PURE Diploma FLOUR 1 *380LUTELY PURE Every barrel, half barrel, sack or Pereare suaronsed to be made From 'U; FT RED WINTER WHEAT —noné finer. All firet-class retail rs sell it. Best families buy it. YOUR MONEY BACK it not as rep- resented. BREVITIES OF FUN. May—“Flirting is dangerous busi- ness.” Belle—“That’s so; it’s apt to lead to marriage.” —Town Topics. Think, Indeed.—Dr. A.—“My dear young lady, do you ever think of mar- tying?” “Think! Why, I worry!” —Life. “The tocsin of war,” remarked the observer of men and things, “i ia doubtless the only effectual anti-toxin for the war fever.”—Detroit Journal. Mistress—“Where have you served before?” § ust give me @ city directory and 1’! mark the places whare I have not served.” —Flicgende Blaetter. Meaner Than She Meant—He— “Can you read faces?” She—“Some- times.” He—What can you read in my face?” She—“Not much."—Bos- ton Courier. “Do you think that Spain can read the handwriting on the wall by this time?” asked Cawker. “I’m afraid not,” replied Cumso, “About 70 per cent. of the Spanish ade can’t read at all.”—Town Top! “Did you ever meet a woman whose very voice thrilled you with unspeak- able em ” “Yes; that’s the way n? my mother used to get me up in the ning.”—Chicago Record. ave here,” said the subordi- nate, “a terrible situation.” “Yes,” E is Guaranteed COLORED DEPARTMENT. Misses Birdie and I. V of St. Louis, of Metropo Cherry, of C yesterday, Reinfrow, nd Miss Luvenia Lee, paid Mrs, Fannie ark street, a fiying visit Mrs. Fannie Cherry, of Clark street, who bas been very ill with malaria fever, is now wuch better, Mrs, J. A. Porter, of North Eighth street, left yesterday morning for her old home, Dyersburg, Tenn., on a three weeks’ visit to relatives and friends. Some of our young lady bicyclists are not up-to-date on bicyele attire Knickerbockers, bloomers, divided skirts and all that sort of thing have If it fails to cure go to your merchant AND GET YOUR MONEY BACK. We will refund to him. Price 50 cts. AN VLEET-MANSFIELD DRUG CO., Sole Proprietors, MEMPHIS, TENN. J. G. GILBERT, tail Agt, WELL, IF THAT DON'T BEAT THE BAND Uncle Sam says. That’s whatyou will say when you see our extremely low prices on furniture and house furnishings for the month no charms for them, but there is one young lady in this city who no doubt by this time has undergone a change of heart. She was out on ‘‘the silent steed’’ the other day and for awhile seemed to be one of the only pebbles on the beach. But it was not long, like poor Cervera’s squadron, she was beached. Several times her skirts became entangled in the spokes of her beartless wheel, but she had succeeded in alighting and adjusting matters, but unlike the ‘rough riders,"’ she made one mount too many. She had not gone far before her skirts became so entwined in the machinery of her wheel that she had to call a gentleman who was near to assist her in extricating her under- pinning. This is sufficient grounds for a divorce from ber wheel, but she may appear again as the pew woman. It is to be supposed that in a big city like ‘‘Chi’’ the proper thing at all times and under all circumstances to do, if one wishes to cut any sort of ice, is to come handsomely down with the cash—the cold cash and nothing else. But our city can boast of a young man who recently made a trip to the big town up by the lake and took the cake, and he didn’t have to walk for it either. It happened io this wise: He was present on one occasion where there was a piano and piano players; but singers were like the war baloons at Santiago, high and scarce. took advantage of it. Hesang, ‘The Song That Reached my Heart,’’ and eaid the Spanish general; “and when they learn the facts in Spain we may not have any situation at all.”——Puck. Askins—“What do you think of Puffington?” Grimshaw—“Oh, he is the kind of a man who thinks that when he steps on one end of the country the other end flops up in the London Figaro. ve had a delightful time in my holidays. No regular hours for meals, A large,airy room. Nocharge for hot and cold baths, All kinds of fruit and vegetables. A well-stocked wine cellar, and no charge for cork- age, and, above all, no faa for the servants.” “Delicious! Where is this ideal spot?” “I stayed at home.”— Tit-Bits. IRRIGATION IN EGYPT. Records Found of the Primitive System Used 6,000 Years Ago. While modern English engineers are steadily carrying out a plan for irrigating Egypt that is to restore prosperity to its sun-parched fields, an English Oe ira at Hierakonpolia the records of a primitive system of ir- rigation that was carried out no lese than 6,000 years ago. The change- less ea hus rarely vindicated the rep- etition of its history in such gonvine- ing sort. Before the pyramids of Gizeh were planned or the mighty steps of Sakkara oat yates at the very dawn of those earliest dynasties of primeval monarchs who ruled in the hoary dawn of Egypt's history, the limestone mage-head of King N Mer recorded the turning of the first sod in some primitive scheme of canel- ization, Even then four distinct types of population can be traced; and on the pivot of an ancient door is carved the bent figure of a bound cap- tive, supporting its weight upon his back, exactly like those Romanesque or early Gothic figures to which Dante compared the suffering souls in his “Inferno.” Even so longagothe vase of eoulptured diorite shows # ekill in working hard material that would be difficult to surpass to-day; and the toilet dish from Denderah, dating about 2450 B. C., is as delicate a bit of workmanship in the same stone ag copld ever be produced, Prof, Petrie found an ordinary coat button, too, carved roughly te. that opens up quite novel problems of attire before the days of “double-breasted vests.” The land of slaves and warriors and priests has always been the same in its essentials The beauty of its ar} alone has perished.x8t. James Ga aabig His Opinion Unchanged. Two citizens of Nebraska were gapight in one of those violent fannel- shaped clouds, and, as they scooted slong in the midst of ruins of build {nga and flying trees, one of them re- marked; “Phis ts the worst eyclone I ever saw “Ignorant map,” cried the other, in tones of scorn that wero almosp drowned by the rush of the storm, “can’t you distinguish a cyclone from atornado? Are the teachings of sei- ence altogether lost upon you? Thia is a tornado, and, as dleseribed by Prof. Loveland and Meteorologist Gee, it b—" Just then a church steeple trans fixed the epeaker and he perished in it—Atehison Globe. One as Bad as the Other. Talkerly—We must not forget that we owe » debt tg posterity. Buzzfuzz—I can’t see yh we ving should prefer terity to treditont-Tows Topics great agony, while the other man drifted along for ten miles or so and was dumped softly into a sandbank, As he brushed the sand out of his teeth and ears he remarked: “Well, that was the worst ‘Nebraska State gpclovet k fournal, “The Sweetest Story Ever Told.’’ It is useless to say he brought down the house, MARRIED, Miss Genever Gilbert and Mr, Spencer Boyde were quietly married last evening at the residence of the bride's parents on North Ninth street. Rev, C. G. Hardison united the young pair, HUXLEY AND HOPPE-SEYLER. Two of the World's Great Died in 1895. In the summer of 1895 the world lost two men, each of whom, in his own way and in his own country, had exerted an unusual influence on the development of science. They were born and they died within a few months of each other. Each was en- dowed by nature with the gift of see- ing the relationship of apparently un- related phenomena; each passed through a medical training; each de- voted time, much against his will, to dissection and anatomy; each was a@ fighter for what he believed true; each was gifted with a winning personality that attracted friends from all sides; each was a great teacher, having a ready sympathy for young students, n Whe and each was remarkable for the breadth of his k ledge and the keenness of his insight. One was Thomas H. Huxley, an Englishman, the other Felix Hoppe-Beyler, a Ger- ry similar in natural gifts, though Huxley and Hoppe-Seyler were, the different environments un- der which they were placed deter- mined their development in radically different Tusley, though pos- sessing a ng natural tendeney to- ward physiology, was forced to be come an anatomist, and from a very early date his great controversial pow- ers were called into such requisition that his name became almost a house- hold word among the English peoples. Hoppe-Seyler, on the other hand, while still very young, was given 4 decided impetus toward ihe study of the chemistry of organism, and, aa a joneer in a new science, was little nown outside the immediate circle of his personal friends and scientific colaborers.—Albert P. Matthews, in Popular Science Month ie Thank Tank.” Mrs. Sarah Taulbee has the thanka of the editor and his better seven- eighths for a flue mess of string beans, frs. Nannie Kash will please ag- cept the thanks of the editor and his better seven-eighths for a half bushel of nice apples. Our colored friends, Noah Taylor and Sarah Isom, have the thanks of the editor and his better seven- eighths for some nice fruit. (rs. Ellis Johnson, of Lacy Creek, will please accept the thanks of the editor aud his better seven-eighths for @ bountiful mess each of beans and beets, Mrs. Belle Godsey will please ac- copt the thanks of the editor and his better seven-eighths fora dozen of the | finest cucumbers we have seen this season, —Hazel Green Herald. Expense of Atlantic Liners. It is etated that the first cost of building a fleet of Atlantic liners isa trifle compared to the money spent in running them. In less than three years it will exceed the cost of con- ‘atraction, such is the constant ex- | penditure in wages and repairs, ete, He saw his chance. He] ( of August. Weare offering special bargains in furniture, iron beds, stoves, carpets, mat- tings, trunks, etc., for the month ot August, in order to make room for our fall stock. Now is the time to buy cheap. We are also manufacturers of all kinds ot mattresses and awnings. The leading uphol- sterers and repairers of furniture in the,city. Your credit is good, GARDNER BROS. & CO. Telephone 896. 208-205 South Third. KEEP OUT OF REACH OF THE SPANISH GUNS! «.TAKE{THE.., C.H. & D, » MICHIGAN THREE TRAINS DAILY FINEST TRAINS} IN OHIO FASTEST TRA.NS IN OHIO Michigan and the Great Lakes constantly growing in popularity. Everybody will be there this summer. For inform- ation inquire of your nearest ticket agent. Everything in Its WE MAKE. UR stock of staple and fancy groceries is complete and up-to-date. Splendid line of canned goods. Our meat market is unexcelled, having everything in the line of fresh and salt,;meats. P. F. LALLY Commercial House Corner Third and Jefferson Rates $1.00 Per. Day; Meals 25 Cents We have taken charge of this well-known and popular house, and our aim is to make it the VERY BEST DOLLAR A DAY HOUSE IN WESTERN KENTUCKY. Our rooms are clean and well ventilated, and newly furnished throughout. The tables are supplied with the very best the markets afford, Special rates to regular boarders. Twenty-one-meal tickets $3{25, MEADOWS & PRYOR, Proprietors Telephone 118, Cor. oth and Trimble Miss Mary BR. E. Greif & Co GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS. ....... Telephone 174. t PADUCAH, KY 1+) SCIENTIFIC AND FIRST-CLASS BLACKSMITHING <1 REPAIRING be HORSESHOEING All work guaranteed. A. W. GREIF, Court Street bet. 2d and 3d. ONE TRIAL BOTTLE This Offer Almost Surpasses Bollef An External Tonle Applied to the Sula: “Beautificett soy Magic. THE DISCOVERY im: AGE ‘A Woman was the Inventor, fo not produce ® ti FRE isetrae altsteds ad ‘THB MISSES BELL, 78 Fifth Avenue, New York City, @old inPaducah by W. B, McPherson, Cor, 4th and Broadway,

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