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AIR TIGHT HEATERS, OAK HEATERS, BASE BURNERS, STEEL RANGES, COOKING STOVES, on OIL HEATERS, | | Coal Vases, Coal Hods, etc., easy payments or cash. See our $4 Oil Heaters. No soot, smoke or odor, and are absolutely safe. Bargains in Suites, Wardrobes, Folding Meds, Sideboards, etc. , to mak room for holiday goods. Now is the Time to Buy. JAS. W. GLEAVES & SONS H.S. Taylor & Co. REAL ESTATE BROKER RENTAL AND INSURANCE AGENCY Office 110 South 3d St. Real Estate bougnt and sold on comission. We will be pleased to have your property on eur list. Close personal attention given to collection of rent and management of property. Represent first-class Fire Insurance Companies. Risks solicited. References by permission— AMERICAN-GERMAN NATIONAL BANK, CITY NATIONAL BANK, CITIZENS’ SAVINGS BANK, FIRST NATIONAL BANK. » achat tad @SVOEWVVATHA * $ $ 3 $ WHAT DO THESE KIND OF ACTIONS LEAD TOP We all know. Soon this happy young man wlll have to be thinking of a ring for his young lady. Come to us —we can suit her taste exactly, We are getting in new goods every day—be pleased to show you. WOLFE, THE JEWELER 408 BROADWAY $ WWE ao<>> weeees LOW RAT E ‘TO sr, LOUIS, $ ° 3 i. 8 rooms,| Ou account of the meeting of the Pi hae ey ay greets bh Lot|Good Road & Public Improvement 40x140 feet. Price $650, Want ma sin had Air peste, peor nt Jot - 7 ‘road will on ‘ov. 19th, 20th an WaeR 8 Se 08, Bok Bea OPE a as oall \toketa. 60 BC. LOUle and tee turn at one fare plus $2.00 for the jround trip, good returning until Nov. 26, J. Donovan, Agt. tf Franklin schoo! preferred. W. M. Janes, $28 Broadway. ‘The Sun is only WD Jcents a week. 50c. mey suve your life. Planta- tion Chill Cure has saved thouser 1s- | bushel Te; nut Ge jover screens into wagon. ‘Phone field yesterda L. S. Gleayes the city Louis, will be married Sunday in the Many of the couple's friends do not credit the rumor, as it was generally wedding was to eccur in January. PROFITABLE SESSION Forty-two Saloon Keepers Fined Future Great ing. charged bath. the lines. the Y. M. ©, Harold F. sulting in much good o'clock, to which every: at 7:30 in the evening fur men only,|They Have Stood Bor Twenty The very Mr. Sales to illustrate his songs and ermons are quite attractive. lectures are absolutely free. PADUCAH COAL & MINING CO, Tradewater Coal Guaranteed equal to Pittsburg coal, Price delivered, lump, 8; nut, No shoveling ; Office at Bl PERSONALS. Mr. George ©, Thompson left afternoon for Chicago on business, Cash price at elevator, lamp} coal pres this IMPORTANT MEETING. turers’ Association Meets To- night in Called Session at the City Hall. A Full Mee bers is Desired as the Busi- ng of all the Mem- ness of the Mveting is of the Utinost Importance, Miss Grace Smith returned to May after a visit Mrs. W, Mr. J It is reported and ayoung lady of understood IFor Violation of the Sabbath. Two Pleaded Not Guilty—Bad @Vayis Held to Answer—Short Session This Morning. There was a short but profitable session of the police court this morn- Forty-four saloon keepers were violation of the Sab- two pleaded guilty, and the total fines and costs amount- ed to 8609, 84, guilty were Se with All but two to not pl Bud taining money by false pretenses. is alleged to have belonging to R. West End, and selling them to Geo. Meadows, who lives on Island. Creek, | for that Davis declined to testify duced he was at home all the day he was charged with taking | opicers, He failed, as the only wit- ness who made any definite statement | at all gbont the time, said it waa! ~ Wednesday instead of Thursday. Davis was held to answer in the sum of $150, and went to jail fault of bond. stolen some G. Crozier, One Davis sell 25 cents, he saw the three witnesses to prove the forenoon M.C. A. ‘The A yles, of Chicago, are Afternoon services are held 4 fine stereoptican used ARGUMENTS TOMORROW. Arguments will be heard tomorrow | (4, morning in the police case against with malicious assault will speak for the defense and Coun- ty Attorney Graves for the iton, For fresh oyters in bulk or can to Caliesi’s. F, Bradshaw will tomorrow afternoon give a quilting party at her home on West Broadway. Hon. W. M. Reed and Stenographer|* Miss Lulu Flowers left this morning for Eddyville to take depositions. Miss Pearl Read left. this morning for her home in Owensboro, visit to her brother, after a J. Bead. A big german will be given at the Palmer house on the 5th inst. be the last before the holidays, and the list is now at Wallerstein's. that a young man of St Tt will that the ufelter and Bussell Davis was charged with ob- lines of the lines, in de- court in the} Frank Clayton, charged Major Harris prosecu- to Mrs. os The and Manufacturers’ requested and urged special meeting of t to be held tonight at 7 hall. The object of the express the opinion of the men of Paducah who comp. sociation the most question now before the whether or not Paducah interest due on her boi put in the repudiation, A full meeting is desired By order of the president GEO. H, DAINS, See MOTHER GOOsE BAZAAK, members of the Commer Association art to be pres wat the city business on important all pay th or shail be The ladies of the First_] chureh who-haye the Mothér € bazaar in charge request all who have made articles for the bazaar to se ved them to Mrs, Nannie Cochran’s, South Fourth street, next Monday If not deliyered on that day they will be called for on Tuesday AT WORK ON THE DOCKET. prist All the ‘employes about“the county court house are busy arranging thé docket for the approaching term of circuit court, which begins Monday Jailer Potter had a force of men at work today cleaning out the court room and getting things in shape for ie term LADIES’ ML SOCIETY, Ladies’ Mite society. of the Baptist chureh will meet Frt so'elock with Mrs at the residence of Mrs North Fifth street Richardson, Sec OLIA CIRCLE, sd First day afternoon at Mary Kidd George Davis Mrs. MAG witness testified pa is All members of the Magnolia circle but Intro-| No 2 are requested to meet at thelr that hall this evening at street as there will be Mr. A. T 730, on Third an election of Iseman, W. G LOST, of | Three ply black th cape, some” where between Fourth and Ohio and Arcadia. Leave at this office 10, ‘OLD BUILDINGS 60,!* meetings being conducted in ci hall by Evangelist The Old Paint Shop Being Torn re- | Down at the Illinois 4! Central, e is invited ; by Years—New Tracks to be Built. | Roadmaster H. U. Wal of the | Iinois Central,arrived this morning Jand superintended the demolition of | the old machine the east of the Illinois Central road, It was stated several weks ago that the old buildings would be torn down, to make room for 1 the lo- cal yards, The old buildings have been here for twenty years. General A J G°/T. Donovan kept the expense account on them when they were built. in ‘78, All the} shops, on new tracks { i The Commercial ‘aad Mavufac- | § Until recently the old machine shep was used as a paint shop, bat lately it had been used for nothing except a a will he constructed thas tracks where the old decaying buildings stood. hew COULD GET NO WoRK. A Trae and Tonching Story of Mt fortune and Mivery Ami We mty. A young herself. “Those nequainted with her” wonder why she wis throw off her life that her failure to secure work have preyed upon her mind.” “May have preyed upon her mind An honorable woman, she wished to support herdtif honorably. Sb to pay with money that she had carne her small bills lodging, food and \ tries twice to kill won whe hes to “It in said, however may 1} you surprised that she assockation | meeting is to} © the as-| attitude of resorting to) dress, And she could find no work, Are beca dis s led to think that She is only one of many, And thei | are some women who sti!! live and o casionally wonder whether it wouk not have been wiser if they had put av | end to themselves. Tow many men are there to-day tr Boston, do you suppose, wh work, without money, and una work of any kind? You nine t's thetr own fault t of ten; and they need for there are all sorts ot organizat whieh express e of helping | not suffer \ charitable for the those out As starving. Last spring in this city a young man of more than ordinary parts—a writer t singular origi lost his place He was a floorwaiker in a shop of law prices. He was discharged because business was slack, and is services were not needed. The proprietor, of his own accord, gave him an excellent letter of reeommendation. The lad— for he wag hardly 20—tramped the city ) one end to the other, He tried ta obtain work ev i His acquainta t ed in him, He w t to the char itable organizations, ape after angther A prominent clergyman expressed an interest in him he said that if th- young man would send him his addres» he would no doubt be able to do some thing for him. The young man sent his address, and inelosed a stamped en- velope. There was no rey not the slightest intimation that the clergyman had ever heard of him or from hfm. No work, no promise of work in shop, fac- nth desperate femy , hy of Marie An French peasants were plity tory, or ever stree and as @ last young man tried the newspaps lie wus not without exper talent had been recognized in New York by newspapers and magazines; But, again, he could not find employment AU the time he was living with his ounger brothers mother and tw mother was he 9"” vvage-earner, an rhe we -s earning eight dollars a week brought up to work, but the did what she could and without complaint. For a month inthe summer was without employment, The young man grew thinner and thinner, yet to say, he was never with work fe friends ade @ litle purse for him, and sent him to a illage, where his nd where there even chance of gaining » ion. ane She was not she, toc strange out hop lere was 1 th ago so! congenin This is not a fairy story told to fil! space. It isa true story. We know the young man, the clergyman, the offi cers of the cbaritable organizations the friends. And yet if this aume Ind had flang himself Into the Charles and left a no*e saying: “Ll eannot find work and I will not be a burde ther,” you reading it would have sald: “Poor, faint-hearted fellow! No work? Why ¢ charitable associa he come to me’” likely There was something out He probably drank, or he had been discharged for negligence. pevhaps theft. At any rate, there are always superfluous men.” And t are women, young and old yes, here in Boston, who are told daily by the citizens and the citizenesses that they are superfluous, they are not want. ed, there 1s nothing for them to do. Hence gespair, Hence suicide shame.—Loston Journal. n to my n didn't he go t tion? Why Or—and it is hav “ him more you would said Couldn't JogKle Without His Jag. powders are the greatest af ts preven dare ROVAL BAKING FOWOER 00. NEW an o1d-time yaudevinemanuger.- “I hac one of the best jugglers in the business under an engagement once, and he had no sooner opened than he started on a highly ornainental spree. He did his work all right, but I got tired seeing him wandering around with his" jag and told him I would cance! his date at once if he took another drink. He promised to stop, and that night he treated the audi to a few things not on the prog: bottle slipped out ly brained the ore For instan me. ry ina and n ba ashed tting a canr to the footlights and s or ten dollars’ worth of faney in When he ¢ anke roll eigh candeseents me off ngement > any thing to ob his subsequent perform: perd, Hetween t stupor on @ trun Queer peop! Times-De nes he would sit in 6 in his dressing-room New Orleans “Why does B ants go around with his Ned down over his forehead and reall bunched up po him look Iike a monkey.” “Tt know ft. Some one who hi grudge against him once told him he looked Ike N and lieved it."—Chioag Another Name Cruelty ts but 9 cowardice, <1. AL W expression of Bulletin Misrepresented. said the this news » understand,” t you want * was the emph who. be notoriety. “I such paper sued f propose io put up w gross mtsrepresentations, us t the truth as en " howd?” divorced t it was ai least five times.” ton Star In the Doctor's Office After sittin in a doctor's office ten ninutes, st > the doctor finds no trouble ing him that there are « things in him that need cutt —Atchison Globe. Vital Deficiency. “T can’t understand what thi cients saw in their p: “Nor I. Of course it wasn’t an- nae in their time.”—Detroit Jour Plantation Chill Cure is made by Van Vieet-Mansfeld Drug Co., hence is reliable. FOR SALE, n Padu- acres, A good farm, six miles fri cah, on the Cairo road, of 300 200facres cleared and balance in tim ber. Apply to CE Real EstatezA JENNINGS, Paducah, Ky Droggists will say they sell more Plantation Chill Cure than all others. ESTRAY NOric A back horse, 15 hands high, 5 years old, with fore-top clipped ; branded “L'’ on left shoulder; has saddle and collar marks. Ten dc) lars reward will be paid for his re- tara to Dr. C. A, Isbell, 723 South Sixth street, Paducah, o17 Io WE CLOSE OUR DOORS FOREVER The Great Half-Value Clothing Sale, in the White Building, 422 Broadway, retiring from business for good and all. News of the Utmost Importance to the People of Paducah and Vicinity! Owing to the expiration of their lease on December 25th, the great Half-Value Clothing Sale have decided to clos affairs and quit the field for good. Our complete stock of Men’s, Boys’ and Children’s Clothing — >= MUST BE TURNED INTO CASH!_——— Without regard to cost or original value, affording the people of Paducah and vicinity an opportunity to SAVE S01 75 PER CHNT On every dollar spent. Men’s Suits from.... + $2.00 up to $10.50 Boys’ 3-Piece Suits from Children’s Suits, knee pants.... Men’s Overcoats and Ulsters..... Boys’ Overcoats and Ulsters.... ..45¢ up to $2.50 ..$1.90 up to $8.00 .- $1.50 up to $4.50 Im ible to le any more prices, as ev aed w manufacturers’ cost. oadw a: Every Suit, Overcoat and every pair of Pants in this immense stock is n Nothing reserved; nothing omitted; everything goes. All goods marked in plain figures, .. $1.75 up to $6.50 ~ 't delay. Pe and the tremendous reduction will ¢ out their entire stock, wind up their ow to be closed out regardless of cost or consequence. be shown on each article. Children’s Overcoats, with capes. Men’s Pants from.... Boys’ Pants from....... Children’s Knee Pants from..... ing in the whole stock is marked to sell Come at once. . $1.00 to $2.00 + +eee++50e to $3.00 +» 65¢ to $1.40 :S5e to 45¢ You take no risk on Plantation Chill Care, as it is guaranteed to cure. Third Street is still the street Mrs, M. E, Lesh still the place to buy Hats Cheap No Trouble To Show Goods 427 BROADWAY About Filters, but think it best just now to keep mum on ac- count of the weather, and tell you about Moore’s Air-Tight Heater. ihey cou'd not Le made better at any price. For sale only by Scott Hardware Co. Keep n stock the follo wing brands of Shotguns: L. C. SMITH, NEW BAKER, ITHACA, WIN cereale | ALSO LOADED SHELLS M. E. JONES | BARRY & HENNEBERGER Crabiree.. COAL. deanefietd Screened Lump, 8c; Egg, 8c; Nut, 7c; All sizes Anthracite, $7.50 per ton, Clippings, 4c per Bundie, We will take care of our customers, so send us your orders, SVOT CASH -.Telephone 70 Fender Coal « Gives entire satisfaction, and we are proudSof our system of screens. They are the best in western Kentucky, Prime Lumps8 cents; Prime tgg 8 cents; Roller Screened Wut 7Zcsnts, Old Lee Anthracite $7.50" Central Coal and Iron Company... JEFF J. READ, Manager Lh cet gp lag Yard, Tenth and lefeesea MRS. R. BURGAUER, Solicitor} aay THE LEVER THAT MOVES THE COAL » market in the intere ¢ is qn WE WILL senVE consumers “OMPTLY PRICES AS Low AS THE LOWEST ANTHRACITE, ST. BERNARD © COAL AND COKE, ALSO PITYSBUGH GOA FOR SPOT CASH ONLY (INCORPORATED) TBLEPHONB NO. & HENRY MAMMEN, Jr. OOK BINDER A thoroughly casipped Book-making plant, You need send not out of town. t Flat-Ovening Books RROADWA Dalton, The Tailor, Should Have Your Patronage, for Three Reasons... Yo Three tor 250 FOURTH AND BROADWAY OVER M’PHERSON’S ORUG STORE FIRST..... SECOND ,. | THIRD.. He gL siantees.a perfect fit, He cloes all his work with home labor, . - He will sell you a suit of clothes made;to order 4s cheap as you can buy @ custom-made Better Than Imported * a ¢ 4 ST. BERNARD COAL COMPANY“