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*, “saws “it v ES THE PADUCAH) DAILY SUN Published every afternoon, except Sunday, by THE SUN PUBLISHING COMPANY. EROORPORATED Vick Paesiprst SEORETAUY TREASUKER 214 Broadway. No. Daily, per annum in advance. $ 4.50 Daily, Six months ‘* « 2 Daily, One ql 4 Daily, per ween... ae | ate | Weeki, per Specimen copies fice MONDAY SEPT. 19, 1898 2S 9DG8IDAPROOO DIN DODI DMD! STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. We, the undersigned, re- respectively the Manager, the Circulator and the Pressman of the Paducah Daily Sun, do state that the average circulation of the Paducah Daily Sun for the twelve months end- ing July 33, 1898, was (1545) Fifteen Hundred and Forty-five. At E. Younc, Manager. S. A. Hit, Circulator. Ep T. WeTHERINcTON, Pressman. The above was subscribed and sworn to before me this 1sth day of August, 1898. W. F. Paxton, Notary Public. better protectionist than ever,”’ says Mr. Erdman, ‘‘My experience in Breslau has convinced me that noth- ing can protect this country from be- jog flooded with the products of pau- er lebor except a strong protective tariff. The Lingley law, radical as it is, does not go far enough, for labor is s> cheap over there that they are still over-running this ¢ounty | with their manufactures. Their busi- | niss bas not been seriously injured, her, for many factories are ramning | with their ei lay and night to keep up American orders | “The manufacturing industries of | Rresinn have fovvessed wonderfully during the past six or eight years beea of the very low rales ef wages that prevail there. Wage lower in Silesia, Posoo and that part | of Auttria bordering on Silesia than has caused many industries to come | there. Tw self kuow of a firm *h»* | moved a linen factory trom N berg. | varia, to Silesia, for no other reasot: than this cheap labor. It is | so cheep that you can frequently find | aman, bis wife and children all at work in @ gisss factory at pitiful | sages (hat aggregate only 50¢ ad An ipstence that come under wm ervation shuws what danger in this to us. A contract for $50,000 worth of printing was let to a Sil house by a great Ameri~ can firm—the Arbuckle Bros., coffee roasters. It was for poster adver- tisements of the firm's coffee. The work was done in a sloveuly and dis- agreeatle fashion, but it answered the Arbuckles’ purpose, for it wae done much cheaper than any Ameri- ean firm would take it for. This printer told me that be had men trav- eling a'l over the United States so- liciting such work, and that he can underbid any American printer, be cause of bis cheaper labor, He ad- mi'ted that his work was not so good as done here.’’ TOOM WHITEWASH.” It is somewhat strange that the mayor and city council will allow « member of the police force or any My commission expires January 22, 1902. Tue romor that the school boaru is going to resign is probably ap error. But it right do worse, Tur. people of Paducah don't ‘‘re- fer with pride’ to our streets any more. In fact they don’t refer to them at all if they can help it. Ir has been hinted that the reason the coal dealers are so anxious to sel! coal now is because ofter the wet weather sets in, it will be impossible to deliver coal in this city on account of the muddy streets. Boss Croker is having a hard time deciding on the financial ;lauk in the platform to be formed at the coming democratic convention of New York te..."Ce.witver members of the “Party have the votes snd the sound money members, the cash. It is said that Croker bas decided that the New York democrats shall support the Chicago platform, he having learned that any other course would produce a split in the convention Croker i ound money man him- self, but he has started out to makes record for himself as a ‘nocs"’ ir und he ay the necessity Of complete baiwony & home. A SULDIEKS OPINION, Col. E. 8. Gaither, commanding the Second Kentucky regiment, which will be mustered out in # few day now at Lexington with his regiment. Col. Guither is one officer who can- not be accused of entering the ser- jce for any but patriotic motives, He bi en colonel of the Second Kentucky for\several years and has done much work for the state guards and bas at various times been called into active service in various parts of the state. babar’ Col. Gaither says of army life: ' ‘Tam done with military ork forever. Some people and ‘yf es aeemed to think there were hard- ships to bear. and every time gota little sick he wrote hou) and his people complained to the war de partment and tome. I hac’ a mes- wage from the war departi-ent while at Chickamauga stating ‘vat the citi- zens of Lebanon had weld ® mass meeting and declared tat their com- pany should be seat tome since there Amere but twenty-three well men in it ¥Gyon investigation I found seventy- one well men and only three sick men, Gov. Bradley came to Chick- amauga when we had but eight sick men in the hospital and ten or twelve sick in quarters. ‘He took away nearly thirty, in- cluding men who were as well as I or any of the others. Men finding out that they had a chance to get home would wrap themselves up in blank- ets, throw themselves on the ground and pretend to be sick. People who go into the army sbould go with the determination of doing what they are told todo. I never ventured to sug- gest tothe s-cretary of war what should bedone with my regiment, since it was not my place to do so. I started out to obey orders and did it, uncomplainingly.”* —o BUROPEAN PAUPBK LABOR, Mr. Charles W. Erdmau, United States Consul at Breslau, is home in wr or Louisville, on a short leave of ab- sence from his post. Mr, Erdman is a native of Bavaria, but he is loyal to the United States, and his feelings have been deeply worked up over the hostility which the Germans show to- wards this county and its institutions. “‘My official residence abroad bas made me a better oa =. city official to ‘*resign’’ as was the case recently when the official should have been discharged. It should not be necessary to instruct the mayor and the council in the rudiments of law, by calling their attention to the fact that the penalties inflicted by law are not for the purpose of re forming the offender in question, but are rather for the protection of so- ciety at large by giving a warning to Allow- iog an official to resign and thus es- other possible law breakers, cape any punishment for bis failure to keep the oath he took when placed in office, may be a kiedness to the offender, bat it 1s most detri- mental to discipline and tends great- ly to cause the public to lose confi- dence city administration. The people don’t expect that the of- fenses of city oflicials shall be ‘whitewashed’? any more than they expect Judge Sanders to go into that busioess. In other words the public want to see fair play and because a man isa city official, it does not follow that he can ‘resign’ and bis resignation be ‘‘accepted,’’ when an in the application of ordinary justice would have given the offender @ dishonora ble discharge. HOKSE KAN AWAY. Accident Which Mr. Will Ware. Painfal Boisil Mr. Will Ware, of the county, wae on his way home Saturday evening late when someone came along in an: other vebicle and collided with his tig, on the Cairo road near the city. It frightened his horse, and his coat, laprobe, and several other things were thrown out. He could not con- trol the fractious animal, and was bimself thrown out a little further vn He was painfully but not seriously bruised, avd has not succeeded it recovering the articles he lost from the buggy. Doa’t experiment, bat get the old reliable Plantation Chill Cure. PARK THEATER CLOSES, Che Last Performance of the Sea- son Saturday Night. La Belle park theater closed for the season Saturday vight, but Man- ager George Harvey will be here sev- eral days winding up his business be- fore returning to Memphis, It was the intention not to close until next week, but the attendance dropped off to such an extent thatit was deemed advisable to end the season, Manager Charles Taylor, who has bad the affairs io bis hands, has pro- vided for the people excellent at- tractions throughout the summer, aud has succeeded in educating the pub- lic up to an appreciation of vaude- ville, which was vot am easy matter, considering the character ot the shows presented befure this season. His managers, Messis Bostwick and Harvey, have wade many fiieuds during their respective managements, and are thorough gentlemen, The theater has been run on a splendid plas, and the pablic will doubtless hope Mr. ‘Taylor will have charge of the theater again next season, $100 REWARD $100. ‘The readers of this paper will be learn that there is at least oue di ease that sclence bas beet abi medical fraternity. tutional ai ‘patient strength by butldiog up tho Constitution and assisting bature in dotug its work, ‘The proprietors have so much faith in ius curative powers, that they offer Ove Hun- dred Dollars for any case that 1t fails to cure, Send for list of estimouiais, ‘Address, F, J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, fold by Drurutsta, 750, Hall's Family Pills are the best, Don’t you know Plantation Chill Cure us guaranteed to cure you? NEWS SUMMARY. ment boasts that the jictator bas received @nancial backing from a European pation, and will be pre pared for any contingency, flo matter Low the Paris peace ¢enference may decide. The official asserts that neither Spain nor the United States can subdue the rebels, who propose io fight for independence. The Philippive national assembly bas re- | solved to reject any proposal for a! jrint Spanieh-American protectorate vr anything of @ Spanish mature. been sent So many soldiers bave here are Bow not over i ome j 00 effective American soldiers ino Porte Rico, including but one troop | anywhere ele in Germany, and this/Of cavalry. Some timid Americans] hat construct electric apparatus are on the island thiek a greater show of military force would be wise untik the native thirst for revenge dies out and the Porto Ricans have learned how to use their new liberty President McKinley still needs tw. men to cowplete the coumitiee to investigate the conduct of the war, and be has iovited two former seuth- erp geverals—Stephen D, Lee, of Mississip; iW. H. Jackson, of | Tennessee. Mr. E P. Howell, one of the committee, after a conference with the President Satarday, exs pressed himself as confident that the to serve. In a speech te an assembly of Porto Ricans a few days ago Gen Wilson pointed out to them that the longth of time required for Porto Rieu to grow from a military de pendency into a eovereign state of the American Union deponds entirely on the Porto Ricans themselves and the thoroughness with which they put behind them all feeling of revenge for past sufferings and address them selves to working out their new con- dition. The British admiral at Candia has demanded of the ‘Turkish governor of Crete the @isarmament of the Mus- sulman population. The powers are disposed to give Great Britain a free hand in demanding redress for the murder of British soldiers. Large bodies of armed Bashi Bazouks and Christians are facing each other just outside the city. At Eminence, Cireuit Judge Car- roll handed down a decision that no building and loan association bas the right to make an assignment. He set aside the assignment of the Emi- nence Building and Loan association and ordered the case referred to the receiver of the court. The French cabinet decided to submit the documents in the Dreyfus case to examination by a commission to be selected by the minister of jus- tice. In consequence of \his decision the ministers of war and of public works resigned The steamer Coptic, which sailed from San Francisco Saturday, had op bomrd a few sokliers bound for Ma- nila, but wany of the passengers are American business men who are go- ing to look over the field in the Phil- ippines. The 10-year-old daughter of Frank Prather, near Morehead, attempted to climb into a scheol house window to get her books, which she had for gotten, The window fell on her neck and strangled her death. Europe is luxuriating in four “war louds’’ just now, and the prophets of evil fod plenty of material in the Dreyfus case, the Cretan situation, Egyptian sffairs, and the old stand- n China by The reports of M eo. Oi given out at W show ere thiag to be lovely inthe Philippines He hae the insurgents well ia hand, and finds them amenable to reason Manila is quiet, and is being cleaned Trade is active. The business is such that although Gen. Otis has cut the tariffs iv half by accepting silver instead of gold, he believes the cus tome receipts will exceed (he expendi tures after the 13,000 Spanish pris oners have been disposed of. The queen regent has signed the decrees ceding territory to the Unitec States under the peace protecol, The Baltimore and Ohio railroa. bas been purchased for $10,000,00( by P. D. Armour, Marshall bield and Norman B. Ream, of Chi President J. J. Hill, of the Grea! Northern road, bas been made the dominant factor, thus forming trunk line from ocean to oc The Baltimore and Ohio is now in the hands of a receiver. Owing to the apparent need of reorganization of the National Guard system, Gov, Bloxham, of Florida, has called a national convention to be held at Tampa, February 8 next The governors of the states are in vited to send delegates from the land and naval militia, A case of yellow fever has been of- fivially reported at New Orleans and the state health boards of Loutsiana Mississippi aud Texas have quaran- tined against that city. Miss Grace Perkins has proved that she is not the victim of the Bridgeport, Conn., murder, by reap: peariog at ber home justin time to stop ber own funeral, Homer Taylor, who killed Hon Posey D. Ball last June, was acquit- ted at Headerson Saturday, A London psper gives currency to @ report that Emile Zola is about to become a pric st President Maso, of the provisional Cuban goveroment, has issued a proclamation to the Cuban army an- nouncing the end of the war through the assistance of the United States, and urging upon the Cubans the task of making Cuba vorthy of the friend- ebip of the United States. Fernando Freyre, auditor general of the Cuban government says the Cubans will not lay dowa their arms until an independent government bas been established, and will also oppose American occupation afier the Span- iards have evacuated. Senor Freyre she is confident from the corre- Dr. Edwards, Kar, Kye, Nose and| President McKinley that the United Throst Specialist, Paducab, <9 . spondence vetween Senor Palma and Gen, Nebo hue deBately deste | lend them support by making more Mire - pendence, even though there m later be « desire fur aunexatior has been called tor October ng other things, a com- 7 med to go to Wash- vould get up before a crowd of jogton for conferences as to a form . 1 ask them if they had heard | of goveroment, which, he declares, race had voted to give €40, Will” be built as ucarly as possible “s money to ® mad vpon the lines of that of the United sed to transmit messages by States. fa wire between Baltimore ngton. ‘The ridiculous: | was so apparent | the people. Brown's plat- ed of only one plank, { was the criminal record of his Plantation Chill Cure is made by Van Vieet-Marsfield Drug Co. ’ Wallace’s action could not’ be} THE IRON INDUSTRY. mucous wi te Is at Present Very Active in Germaay— | !\ mn the people— Enormous Exports. ac tes a The iron industry is at this mo). You may t bolt ; Mer aay ment very active in Germany. te ee ne ent cumane re ceives in particular numerots orders | M0, S10 & &par “ oie ate | for economical railroads, bridges and. “\O'"™" Vote away Une pad i neers the works of machines. The factories | ‘") yy eee eater onde the gentleman is here be especially busy. It ia. true gat) fore You. Ask him if have told the} certain manufactures, pipes, for ex. | '""") “a Se ample, have had such’a development | *°10 1 ea sted that that they have not yet found markets hal votrtawas the monmeuad at for their entire production. On the | |‘ 1'ty explain what Morse proposed other hand, the middle manufact ores | ee eee een ieeon to-day buy their iron, steel and half- | °°" aa: i oat | stituents made up their minds that he manufactured products at prices 90) v4. vither a reomething worse | high that they have great difficulty ana Lo wan Uilenataee er oat d under at | to work at a profit. A remedy for this ’ : condition is sought in agreements ng to know that Wal: which aim to unify prices, regulate production, and distribute orders for estab: rin civili nimportant fac export among all the manufac lm tion: but I suppose ¢ people both small and great. The Bethat district k he was r at he deserved defeat.”— a the pre 5 asks the producers of coal and ore to unfavorable terms to manufacturers] | who refuse to enter into the syndicate. In 1896 Germany exported 1,615,- 000 tons of iron, of the equivalent of the total French production of both iron and steel. ‘mong mo < one which appears full of futugey!°\) orge, and promise it is the one which buaigey 8°" °°") fe lern industries if there PROFESSIONAL H. T. RIVERS »Physician... and Surgeon ) Ofiice Bixth and Broudway, aoe at Infirmary. “Let's chew this instead.” PeOTALS, 1 Browlway There has never been any question of rivalry about {tle PLUG It is acknowledged by all to be the Victor. Its campaign has been successful because its forces have been irresistible. These a. J.D, SMITHS, races, Fhe mm Ml ‘hewsly th, rather he our on Brondway ame Je HeHRY F, WILLIAMSON, MLD, Physician and ithow, No 41255 Broadway, ssp =. high age and z quantity “s ice. t way can z jou a cae ppeenity: really atid DR, J, W. PENDLEY 4 ; OMfce, 116 South Fifth Street. Residence, 904 Tennessee street. Office Telephone 416; Residence 418. chewing tobacco for 10c. itself with the applications of elée tricity. The Germans have stepped into line here with remarkable energy. sure Hours. every morning.—T¥ A Foolish Proposition, They were wise enough to acquire, & Ww nk of e man whe few ‘years ago, patents of inventions] y:1) : rick « miter made in other countries and to make ne it 5 aid thiek fe0 a series of applications of them. They Rae have had especially the art of obtai ON } f supposing ing orders from all parts of the worl these have established the prosperity of their works and permitted them to give a prodigious development to fe their installations. Iti nishing to see how a certain auch a ca al man ever did that.” —( . v News LET US HAVE PEACE number of large houses or societies Ae have, without making any essential pepe he? (Byatt 1b on gn dae “Peace hath her victorios no less re- eries and developed in 15 years an in owned than war.’ dustry which is to-day cited throngh- | “To the victors belong the spoils.’ out the world as a model.—Raphael- Georges Levy, in Chantauquan To our customers belong the profits this week. We have met the ENERGETIC ROYALTY, se enemy and-—we’ve got ’em. As a Rule They Are Light Sleepers and Early Risers. HAVE SILENCED THF till 12 o'clock and is of high prices with the bar seven in the morn to the trade Ou coa and biscuits are b all times the LOWEST now knock all the rest in the shade During the day she does not, as many women half her age do, take a re | From our «ess goods may yet be se g nap. lected some choice things in bo! She prince of Wales isa notorious} Weather stuff, on which we won’ ly bad sleeper—insomnia being the | quote any prices, though others dc only enemy to his well-being—and [that for a bluff, These goods you the princess of Wales, al:lough she you wish them; yourselt now allows hersclf an extra hour img make the prices to suit. And wher the morning, made it a rule until her you have spent a few dollars you get children were quite grown to be up} fine picture to boot. We are sell- and ready for the day’s duties at nine img the handsomest DRESS SKIRTS o’elock. And this, althou sold in this end of the state; retired before two o’clock less than the goods can ing while at Marlborough house, for tat, all home made and right the princess made it @ practice, asso 4p to date. Our LADIES WEAK little time was lwft her during the day, JB'e es the fairest, and looks lovely !to write her letters ‘ tures less fair; Our styles, | mark” after 12 o'clock at night, ever the rarest, ‘‘are return from the great entertainmen' fair women declare. And during the London season. ever forget us, when The emperor of Austria is another CE SHIRTS and FINE monarch who breakfasts with thegSHOES. They know we keep the lark, while the empress adopts much J@##or'ment from which they can the same hours as does a hospital Je@sily choose. nurse, only allowing herself a eb Our SHOES are the best and sleep from eleven o’clock at night un- gcheapest on top of the earth—or be- til three in the morning, when she} !©¥—snd every last pair 18 a8 ‘solid’ rises and insists on the members off 8 the rocks in the Forts of Morro her unfortunate suite doing the same, J YU may fancy this quite out of rea- and immediately proceeds for long}9® but a trial will prove it. is walks in the mountainous regionag¥@- Just to wind up for the sea- where she usually elects to stay. gon, FORTY CENTS buys a LOW- The emperor and empress of Gen JRUARTER SHOE. = many are the eatlicst risers of all Eu}, 22 GAITERS and BUTTONS and ropean sovereigns, but with them it is] VACHS we can fit every foot tos a case of following out the rule off “1:"", ‘‘Cousin Georgie, how dainty “Barly to bed and carly to rise makes {YOUF feet look !"* “+4 wear Dorian’s a man healthy, wealthy and wise,” for, shves—don't you see unless actually engaged at a court fes- Rich people are pleased with the tivity, they retire to rest as early as Beauty of our LINENS, LACE CUR ten o'clock, At five o'clock in the TAINS and RUGS, aod other folke summer and six o’clock in the winter think it a duty to follow the taste the emperor is Dy and about and the J% “big bugs. empress rises only a little later, that tan have a be Our trade is iner she may be ready hereelf to prepare) Realty —our prices creating « my her lord and master his first cup of fe hold fast the trade of the wealthy, coffee. The children of the imperial a4, ‘the poor we have always with pair aro brought up to follow their parents’ example in this, as in every way.—Leigure Hows. - — HE LOST HIS SEAT. Oar PICTURES—the cems of Mmmoxtars—in every ‘‘sweet home’’ ought -to be, when just for a few dollars’ purchase, you're wel- ac i come to some of them free. ongressman’e Advocacy of the Tele Ai) will admit the above contains Sraph Defeated Him tor Reslection, “Wriore truth than poetry.” _ Dr. Gatling, the gun man, is a rela- erybody come to this winding- tive of Gen. Lew Wallace, and tells up sale of the season. the following story about the latter's suntan JOHN J. DORIAN, father: WO, 205 BROADWAY, - PADUCAH, KY. “David Wallace was a member of congress from an Indiana district when §, F. B. Morse asked the govern- ment to give him $40,000 for the pur- pose of building the first telegraph ine from Baltimore to Washington. Wallace was a member of the commit- tee to which the bill providing for the appropriation was referred, and it happened, when the matter came up for consideration, that he was absent. ‘The vote in committee was a tie, so Wallace was sent for. Ile voted to nventor the $40,000, and, ac y the bill went through is happened along toward the end of Wallace’s term, and when he went home to strive for reelection he found that the news cone gt action on the Morse telegraph appro: priation bill had preceded him, A man named William Brown, who aft erward became prominent in congress, had been nominated by the demo crats, and he was conducting a vigor- ous campaign, “Tn those days joint stumpingéoura were customary, und the two candi. Melil-Effinger & Co Undertakers and embaimers, Telephone 1¥5 Liet@ Ue ephon+150 180 8 Thing 7G. Busbaves. S. B, Caldwell, Jr HUSBANDS & CALDWELL YEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW South Fourth St, Padueab, Ky actice in all the courts of this eom- : al litigation and cases A. L. LASSITER Successor to B, B, DAVIS Architect and Superintendent Sf. States willjrecoguize Cuban inde-| through»the district. asking for the dates went from place to place Floor Fremember the name when you buy again. ee 900069000 000006 HENRY MAMMEN, Jr. BOOKBINDER Jook-making plant. 1a} of town, Dentist and Oral Surgeon 120 North Fifth Street. Telepbone Call 403, DR. H. T. HESSIG Office 120 North Fifth street, Residence 418 Adame street Telephones: Residence, 270. DELIA CALDWELL, M, D, THE GREAT Physician and Surgeon Office and residence, 622 Broadway, National Family Newspaper Toloptone Ne. Sol. ibaa F re aes TiuaGnne Dr. J. E. COYLE Physician and Surgeon and your favorite home paper, 1522 Broad St. Telephone 878. ve ? 1 FE SUN, Paducah, Ky. Paducab, Ki BOTH OnezYear for $I.00/pr, 4 i THE W. Y, WEEKLY TRIBUNE pes.an scricuitarat department of the D AT, HUD SON the nation and world, comprehensive and relisble market reports, able edi torials, interesting short stories, ecient iflc and mechanical information, illus- | Office with Dr. Brooks. Telephone 45. Residence 622 Broadway. trated fashion articles, humorous piet res, and is instructive and entertaining HENRY BURNETT to every member of every fainily THE SU gives you all the local news, politicn! and social, keeps you In close touch 08 bi neighbors anc is, on the farm and in Attorney -at-Law Will practice in all the courte, [wel A thoroughly equi You need send noth Patant Flat-Ovening Books The Ne RROADWAY ss Omive, 402. w York Weekly Tribune the village, informs you as to local prices for farm pr: ts, the condition of crops and prospects for the year, and is a bright, neway, weleome and indis- pensable weekly visitor at your home and fireside Send all subscriptions to THE N, Paducah, Ky -OBERTS BEER It leads al. 18 South Fourth St., Papucag, Ky THOS. E. MOSS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 116 South Fourth Street, Is rapidly becoming the favorite with the ;eople of this city, others, for the rene. that it is ABSOLUTELY PURE HANDLED IN BOTTLES AND BY THE KEQ BY PADUCAH BOTTLING CO. F. J. Bergiloll, Proprietor. Tenth and Madison streete Telephone 101, Orders filled until 12 por “~la Pop, Seltzer Water and all kinds of Temperance D*~" W. M. JANES REAL ESTATE AND MORTGAGE LOANS Bee me to buy, sell or mortgage realty. OFFICB 628% BROADWAY Miss R. B. Hay ED H. PURYEAR "ite. 8. Hey Attorney at Law And Notary’ Public, Real tstatel and Life Insurance Agent, and Abstractor of Titles Formerly master commissioner of the Movrack court. Practice in ail the Courts of thie Wed Winter is Coming If you wish to keep warm, pre- pare for it by employing us to put in a complete guaranteed 70° temperature steam or hot water system. This is your best opportunity. Minzesheimer Plumbing Comp’y 104 North Fifth Street Under Palmer House Telephone 362, lecede! and as guardian of inf: Bonds security given cy ewenr sens for ,0Mice No. 127 South street ‘Legal Row), Paducah, Ky, Have You a... Water Filter? Tf not, dont’t fail to see F.G. HARLAN, JR, QUAPURA. The filter thie clean, Gall sug dea get pe!