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_ THE WY, WEEKLY TRIBUNE Good weight fleeced ribbed vests for women, regular 25c quality, only 15c¢ here. Extra heavy silk taped, fleeced ribbed ladies’ vest 25¢. x These ladies’ fine Sas paas cotton vests and drawers, soft and |tucky politics which if continued will| warm, cannot be excelled at the price, 49c each. Children,s merino vests at 10c, 15¢ and 25¢. 3 Men's heavy weight fine merino vests and drawers, kind usually sold for 75c, at 50c now, Better Buy Time to Buy New Ideas THE PADUCAH DAILY SUN Published every afternoon, except Sunday, by THE SUN PUBLISHING COMPANY, IMOOMPORATED Pars TREASURER DIRROTORS. W.F. Paxton R.W. Clements, iamson John J. Dorian No. 214 Broadway. CHILDREN’S Heavy Quality Cotton Union Suits 25 cents, and 76 cents. Daily, per annum in advance, 8 4.50 Weekly, per annum in ad- vance..... +. 1.00 Specimen cop e TUESDAY, OCT. 18, 1898 WHAT KENTUCKY NEEDS, The refusal of the city council to exempt the Kilgore factory from tax- ation illustrates a tendency in Ken- utmost farthing in dealing with cor- porations, As regards the Kilgore ter petation the council placed upon 8 That Dress Now nee en ordinance. Values are Better Dressing Saques, The Kilgore factory burned down. are Better, Red, pink, blue and gray—95c and /1¢ was rebuilt upon tne idea that it A large assortment of two-toned novelties and Tartan plaids for|Fancy Waists waists and children’s dresses—ioc and 15¢ yd. an Thirty-four-inch wool novelty | $4.90 and $5.90. dress goods, thirty pieces to select from—25e¢ a yard, Puritan Kid Gloves would be exempted from taxation for five years under the ordinance ex- In silk, satin and velvets, light/empting manufacturing plants tor d dark colors, very stylish—Jehst period. The council interprets the law as applying to plants coming y All-wool and silk and wool mix-¢ The best dollar glove on} the] built sfter being totally destroyed by tures in exclusive dress goods|market, comes in all the popular|arg, yr, Kilgore had no plant here novelties—39 a yard. shades. Handsome black crepons—75> to $3.50 a yard. ‘ Fur Collarettes A new fabric for tailor suits, un-] Best wrap of the season. ion cloth, 52 inches wide, in tans,] You must have one. and was compelled to build one just as he would have had todo had he come here from some other town. The difference is very slight, but it browns and greens—85c yard. New stock all in and selling} has been found by our city council. All the new shades in satin fin-| rapidly. ished broad cloth—$1,00 yard. One Dollar ‘The greatest mistake that Kentucky has made is the attitude which state legislation has assumed in regard to corporations, The last legislature Don’t wait. Comforts ‘The warmest thing in town at the price. Made of soft cotton, covered | #emed to run wild in its opposition with pretty silkalines, zephyr to everything in the nature of a cor- poration. It was proposed to regu- late freight rates on the railroads, to tackd, size 68x72 inches. Sage s s : rie tell the newsgathering associations | inery p nin | | bow they should run their business, DISPLAYING CHILDREN’S HATS AND CAPS, Many just received from the iarge fashion centers. Many made from our own design. We will save you money on every For Forty-eight inches wide, stylish fringe top and bottom, $2.50 a pair. If you want a handsome carpet of ingrain, velvet, Milton, Tapestry or Axminster, we can satisfy you. We have the only expert carpet layer and artistic draper in Paducah. ur Shoe Department ing generation, and prices so low. line of child’s kid shoes, ine of child’s kid shoes, 75¢ buys line kangaroo calf shoe: 75¢ buys line bright grain shoes, 5 80c buys line bright grain shoes, $1.00 buys line bright grain shoes, $1.50 buys line kid or calf, sizes 2 All of above are solid, good wearers. See our general line for fall in all grades. You will like the goods and the prices. LINOLEUMSsS. Good Quality COCOA MATTINGS $1.00 buys line kid or kangaroo calf, 8'¢ to 11. $1.25 buys line kid or kangaroo calf, sizes 11's to 2. to increase in every possible way the liability of corporations; in fact the aim and intent of the last icgislature seemed to be to make life so burden- purchase, some for corporations that they would leave Kentucky, or go out of business, We find aJl over the state and par. ticularly in the country and the small- Fee OTe ae cgiten, sors. sncperetsah NEW OIL CLOTHS such as railroads and banks. The fact seems to have been forgotten that 20c & yard. | railroads are an absolute necessity, that they are the most important fac. tors in industrial nnd agricultural de- porch and hal! velopment; also the fact 1s forgotven trackers, 50c @ yard |that railroads can only be built by large, aggregations of incorporated capital, Individuals do not build railroads. The magnitude of the un- patterns, 3 yards long, heavy|dertaking requires great capital, and when a number of persuns unite in such large enterprises, the company must be iocorporated in order that the individuals in the company may have their rights protected. The same is true of banks. They faifill » part in everyday business life The materials now used in shoes for the youth, comprising vici kid,] upon which the very life of business box and kangaroo calf, certainly warrant the assertion that at no prior depends, There is hardly a manu time were the same facilities offered for artistically shoeing the gt0w-| racturing concern in the country but what relies upon the banks to tide sizes 5 to 8. Rie to si, it over the dull seasons by help- , 5 to8. ing itto weet pay rolls and other to 8. expenses, when collections are dull @ torr. 11'e to2 and sales slow. In innumerable other ways banks aid a community; and yet when it 'g to 8. comes to taxation or toa liberal treatment by state legislation, it looks as if the people of Kentucky Tt might be well to look into our low shoe stock#for temporary use. | W@re determined that every bank in The prices are very low at this season of the year. ELLIS the state should close its doors. So inequitable is the method of taxation that banks pay vastly more taxes ac cording to the business they do, the money they handle or the profits they make than spy other line of business ad bd in the state. We want tosee the time come when the people of Kentucky will 219 BROADWAY appreciate the real benefit that cor- porations and banks are to the people 221 BROADWAY themselves, We hope to see the time when foreign capital will not shun Kentucky as it is doing today. 8 Hundreds of plants are being located The New York in the states all around Kentucky that would come to this state were For National Family and your favorite home Paper, THE SUN, Paducah, Ky. our laws more liberal. A new com. THE GREAT mercial spirit has suddenly taken hold of Kentucky. This is evidenced by the formation of commercial asso- tions all over the state, similar to Newspaper the one just organized here. But FARMERS the labor of these associations will be to # certain extent handicapped until and VILLAGERS | the people sce to it that our laws re- garding incorporated capital are made more lenient. BOTH One Year for $1.00 i = the nation and world, comprehensive ot short stories, scientific and mechanical information, illus: | (it 0 :arsdaibaden ‘articles, ‘he Pi copy \, iue- | CATARRH CURE to every member of every fi 1 es you all ese sexta, the senior partoer of the firm ‘ot ¥ &C }., doing business in the 0 has an agricultural department of the Rao. ‘Count i ED tarrh LL | that cannot be cured by ‘4 instructive and entertaining petore me RANK J. CHENKY. + nC Notary °0 | tte directly on the wo gad wat social kaepe i jmur} 4, W. GLEASON, Daily, Six months “ + 2.25] Daily, One month, “ * 40] Daily, per week.......... 10 cents| do the state an irreparable injury, It} seems to be the tendency to extort the | factory the trouble arose from the in-| here to locate, but not to plants re-| --LADIES Fall and Winter Infants’ Wrappers Infants’ Sleeping Garments Children’s Vests and Pants Health Underwear for Children Children’s Union Suits HOOKS OF THE DAY The latest poem by Rodyard Kij ling is called “The ‘Truce of th Bear It narrates an adverture of a na tive in the Himalayas with a bear “Adam: zad, the ve that walks like a man.”’ The native follows the bear for (wo days and overtakes it As he raises his gun to fire, the bear rises on its hiod legs Horrtble, hairy, humas, with paws hike bands in prayer Making bis suppiiea. rose Adamrad +h bear pauneh And my heart wa hed with pity for the monstrous pleading tht | Touched with pity and wouder,{ dd not tire then— I have looked no more on women=I have walked no more Nearer he tottered and nearer, with paws bana that proy From brow to jaw the steel shod paw, it ripped my face away Fifty years later the white bunters in that locality are followed by ‘*Ma- tuu, the old blind beggar, bandaged from brow to chin’? (the nazative)— Eyeless, nove'ess, Iiplass—tootbless, of broken speech, the doorway he mumbles TF, ending as he begar h Adam-zad—the bear For pitta no truce with the bear. When he shows Some callow critics of Mteratare are making themselves ridiculous by iaterpreting this poem as an all of the czar’s disarmament prope A warning to to the world to the peace overtures of the Rus: monarch, “Looking Backward" is now is- sued as one of a ‘memorial’? seri of Edward Bellamy’s works by Houghton & Mifflin. Sylvester Bax ter writes aw introduction, reviewing the dozen years since the book « out, in the light of today, pay high tribute to Bellamy's deeper intellectuality and love of his race. Vor, as Mr. Baxter says, ‘“Theae are those who have made strenuous ob jections to the ideals of Edward Bel- lamy on the ground that they are based on nothi ter than purely material well- The book ‘‘Equality’’ is also pane- gyrized in the same pretace and Je scribed as a comprebensive econow its name. Another book in the series is called “The Blindman’s World and Other Stories,” aud boasts a prefatory sketch by W Howells. The “Blindman’s World’’ is vot widely known. It purports to bea paper fouud among those of ‘the late Prof Mars—u favorite trysting place for write. R. H. Rasseli & Co. have yot out a souvenir picture book, showin Maud Adams in various phases poses as she plays Babbie in ‘Tt Little Minister.’ The cover is of ately, and the drawings are excellent tion, and of © beautiful quality of drawing One full page reproduc Allan Gilbert, and is a fin trait, Daudet in the November terest, written as it will be by an in timate friend and constant an ion of the subject, and illastr by so accomplished a Raffaelli, number of the Pall Mall, tells the storyof ‘The Advanve on Khar tum,’’ which should be thrilling, when matter and manoner are taken into consideration, 4 ROLL OF HONOR, The following is the roll of honor for the Fifth grade of the Fra school: Minnie Blood worth Jessie Taylor, Effie Cunningham, Ella Williams, Mamie Katterjobn, Alice Tudor, Bertha Jones, Helene Clark, Leeman Like, Pearl Miller, Eunice Wood, lip and Children's Underwear. at 15c, 25¢ and 50¢. 0 cents. 25c and 50c. WRIGHT’S 50 cents, Ladies’ Vests and Pants LITERARY NOTES, | *=vs.oF ¥ ; - irting is dangerous bugle} During the 1 Chats 80; iv’eaptto strong personal own Topics. between Lawrence 1.—Dr. A.—“My dear Vernon, and the forr you ever think of Why, 1 worry!” | under Vernon. Ii Servant—"\ tory and I'll ma iare I have not served.” Meant—He— | ip 17 She—“Some- Tle—“What can you read in ” She—“Not much.”—Bos- “Do you think that Spain oan read ! z on the wall by this “T’m afraid asked Cawker. replied Cumso. “About 70 per Spanish people can’t read | “Did you ever meet a woman whore > you think of | }, aw—“Oh, he fs | g, 1 who thinks that | him at his word, gave him ne end of the} mand of six men-of-war and ther end flops up in the | on him and shows his disfigurement, con-| stantly warning the hunters to make ¢ a delightful time in my! one day c hours for] only s airy room. Nocharge | of {his « Ail kisdeod | fone A well-stocked | Vern charge for cork- | Washington » HO sere for the| 4 MODEL OF THE EARTR. yed at home”— IRRIGATION IN EGYPT. The ce Records Found of the Primitive System | Used 6,000 Years Ago, n engineers | t a plan for $ to restore | ed fields, stem of ir- ut no less | every r : t very The chang : f ely vindicated the rej ich convin pyramids of | aw treatise on’ the subject that gives it) mn carliest dynasties | ar 8 who ruled in | would t ree ve traced; and S. Erastus Larrabee,’’ and is a re-| ¢ t door is cital of experiences on the planet| reformers and experimentalisis who} ba brown with Scotch thistles, appropri-| ¢ ia likeness, with perhaps one excep-| ton of charcoal—as it looks—is by | hed por. | quit « 1 warriors and | ¢; the eame in | ty of James Ga: | Magazine should be of surpassing in-| His Opinion Unchanged. ven as that of L | ska were C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne, ia the same} ne I ever r man| by its ct. 'L rsoand | ger of offending ¢ sandbank. | ans, however, if we a tof his|to him— t, beca teyeloneT | ble, ar te Journal. MOUNT VERNON. © Washingtua Obtained Its Name. 25c and 50c, \5c, 25c, 50c¢ and $1.00, presence, this 8th day of Becemmeer et!" my | Ladies’ Union Suits 50c, $1.00, $1.50 and $2.50, nd Wentworth undertook a joint ex ey met with failure ct of the climate on the health of the troops. It. is esti- | tor book, Bloom Balm Co., Atlante sated that not less than A owing to the effe 20,000 Brit- home, Ver | turning to e south a was formed mar disposed to enter Er | mined, however, by sin of war,” remarked the | etance. He fell in love w things, “is eldest daughter of Will effectual anti-toxin | of the county of that r 5 n Detroit Journal, | 1743 they were married and « e you served | on his estate on Hunting creek t give me a | herited fror father. On its! k the places | est point | —Fliegende house ar rn } in honor of his M \ ’ or you with unspeaks | The i Gimbal. was 6 inet? 8} that's the way | x love ofa 8 tme up inthe | i oe hic ik cme he fiend cord. |, | fsom an W subordi- | go" 4 cil WSO t shle é: wad } nd when | 4), ‘ n we may 1 in the "—Puck. the rank miral of blue. He until the d Cighty-Four Feet in Diam fect-Lessom in Geography. Prof. Elisee Rec konpe mighty) St. Paul's, ‘T » at the | tar dist nd cap- vests.” | s art 1 utility BOB EVAWS’ PHRASES. Gee, it| To call a man a phra most cases trans- | is nothing else, and fore the d in| characterization i phrases t einey ond, bec bly other known remedies fail, Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) will quickly cure. ‘Thousands of testimonials at- test this fact. No ca tism can stand before its mag is the best cure for all bi skin diseases ever discovered. He- ware of substitutes said to be ‘just as good.’? $1.00 per large bottle, A NOTED JOURNALIST CURED AND TESTIFIES, I was nillicted for three years with rheumatism of the ankle and joints to such an extent $iat locomotion was difficult, and I suffered great pain, I was induced to try a hot- me 3000 |tle of B. B. B., and before I had English |completed the second bottle f expe- lies was |rienved relief, and four bottles ef ! won the }fected an entire cure. Six months British [have passed since the swelling and} Vernon | pain dieppeared, and I will state that | th cure, for which IL am very grateful | HEADACHE AND INDIGESTION CURE v is able to act talk. When he expla ory won over A us for concise, V | OMlce (It is hardly nee A CIRCULATING LETTER. s Started On Its Never-Ending Trip Half a Century Ago. | Aa Ob | .!! H. T. RIVERS « Physician... and Surgeon OMice Sixth and Rroadway, at Infirmary, Office Hours: | ito 10 a, m 8 to4 p.m, 7:30 to 8:80 p. m, Telephones 68 and 296, DR, J. W. PENDLEY oO Re 16 South Fifth Street. 06, #4 Tennessee street. phone 416; Residence 416 DR. KING BROOKS Dentist and Oral Surgeon 120 North Fifth Street. F ‘elephone Call 402. DR. H. T. HESSIG Office 418 Adams street. Telephone 270. DELIA CALDWELL, M., D, Physician and Surgeon Office and residence, 622 Broadway. Office hours, 9 to 11 a.m., 2 to 4 p,m Telephone No, 191 Dr. J. E. COYLE Physician and Surgeon 2 Broad St. Telephones: Office 378, Residence 432. 4 I dence 1100 South Fourth St ‘DR. A. T. HUDSON PHYSICIAN Office with Dr. Brooks, Telephone 45. i may save your f ire has saved thou apital and Sarplas, #30 y National Ba S. P, HUGHES, Président, C. £. RICHARDSON, Cashier, 1 to think bed would | But, | rtant ecien- | ors given every their accounts and re | tte t over | jus A. S. DABNEY, DENTIST Casrne.e Buroine Fifth and Broadway OR. J.D, SMITHS wily tn, rather the We Has Invariably Mado Them at the d by Prof. Proper Time. ker isin rong intimation that he n Broadway and Je corner Ninth and Jefferson AMSON, M.D, After eminent physicians and all HARRY F. WILLI ’ Physician and of Rheuma- | heal. | ing power, Send for book of partic- | ulars, free. It contains evidence! that will convince you that B. B. B, | Moder t erage k.- i “tice, No, 41256 Broadway, —_—— HUSBANDS & CALDWELL Residence 622 Broadway. W. M. JANES REAL ESTATE AAD MORTGAGE LOAKS mortgage re |OFFICB 8284 BROADWAY ring of colored goods, handling each in auch a way that even dyes which are not waranted fast will not shirts, starched and plain, 4. ties, socks, ete., cleansed AR STEAM LAUNDRY, J. W. YOUNG & SON, Proprietors. 120 North 4th St. Leece Block. Have You a... Water Filter? Ifnot,{dont’t fail to vee |F.G. HARLAN, JR, AQUAPURA The easiest filter on earth to clean. Call and see prices. 122 Broaaway Telephone 113 FOR A dOKE, OR FOR NECESSITY all are interested. A subject in which therefis general interest is the subject of glasses. There are few people who do not need them, May run great risk in not having them, We fit your eyes and give you better sight. "You are pleased with what we )RNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW urth St, Padueah, Capital and Surplus, $305,000.00 ‘American-German do for your eyes. I charge you $1.00 to $1.00 for same quality on her parties charge you $3.60 to $5 or, ectacles (J. J. BLEICH, 223 Broadway Second Hand Goods Highestccash prices paid by WILLIAM BOUGENO & SON go8 Court street. We also carry a line of new ti re, stoves, ranges, ete. Call and pet betore buyine elsewhere, We ale out B, B. B, has effected a permanent | W. G. Wuupy, A'lanta, Ga For by druggists. Address National Bank PADUCAH, KY. It You Ly Your Laundry Done Righ paitbernde an © vew goods for old,