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Bee (Earlington, Ky.): n. Thursday, October 13, 1898.
Bee (Earlington, Ky.): n. Thursday, October 13, 1898. Bee (Earlington, Ky.). 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Bee Publishing Co., Earlington, KY 1898 bee1898101301 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Bee (Earlington, Ky.): n. Thursday, October 13, 1898. Bee (Earlington, Ky.). Bee Publishing Co., Earlington, KY 1898 $IMLS This electronic text file was created by Optical Character Recognitio n (OCR). No corrections have been made to the OCR-ed text and no editing has be en done to the content of the original document. Encoding has been done through an automated process using the recommendations for Level 1 of the TEI in Librar ies Guidelines. Digital page images are linked to the text file. Jfe Jr I I r JD Si lc I11 shipmentciyou can get anything needed in the i 4school room at prices that cannot Jbe undersold See him at 1 MADI80NVIUE KY NINTH YEAR HOPKINS COUNTY KENTUCKY THURSDAY OCTOBER 13 1898 NO 41 l JCiplUI IQOOOO Stock Paid In surplus Fund 18871COMMENCED BUSINESS IN I JNO G MORTON BANKERk accountAness men wo are talidugthoy rrI know all about Itbut to salaried men wago camera and to women E Theres Safety It the bank Is a f good one Theres convenIence 4 the money always ready nod out of reach of your own petty squan dering too It Is easy to ppcnd small sums when you bavo a largo sum In your pocke- tMADISONVILLE KENTUCKY I GEORGE KING DRUGGIST ST CHARLES I KENTUCKY Nice Line of Druggists Sundries Inscriptions Carefully Compounded W A NlSUiri rretMenl U W WADDILL Soutxtu BANKMDIsoNvILLE Captal Stock 50000 Transacts a general banking business and Invites the accounts of the citizens of Hopkins and adjoining counties finest and most secure vault io lhil section of Kentucky NASHVILLE CHATTANOOGA AND ST LOUIS RAILWAY PULLMAN PALACE 8LCCPINO CARS U el ween Nashville and Chattanooga Ala bama Augusta Macon Jacksonville Knox vlllet Ashovllle Philadelphia New York Portsmouth Norfolk Jackson Memphis LluHoclr Texerkana Sherman Waco Dallas and Fort Worth Palace Day Coaches on all Trains Information pertaining to TICKETS ROUTES RATES ITS Will bo elc follr furnUhed open 111 tJ01I toTicks Iigenti or 10- i lbrjIAjwIcfcJi Division PnsmnRrr ARCDI Tenn J II LATIMIJhv Southeastern Passenger Agent Atlanta Ga- D I MULLANEY Northeastern Pass Act 59 W Fourth St Cincinnati O K C COWAKDIN Western Pass Agent Room Ky Exchange Building Si Louis Mo mtItU V IIILL Northern Pass Agt Room 328 Marqnetl Uldg Chicago J L KDMONUSON Southern Pass Agt Chattanooga TennW DANLEY Grnl Pass and Ticket Agt tiA5tvII41 TINH ST JflJIIES DTEL ST LOUIS EVJEJOPBHN PLAN Rates 76c and 100 por Day I RESTAURANT POPULAR PRICES IPINNERi ISPECIAL BREAKFAST AND SUPPER No 1 fled f Steak or Mutton Chops Potatoes Cakes or Waffles Coffe or Tea an4 Fruit M No 1 Ham Two Eggs loutocs Cakes or Watfles ant toffe or Tea No 3 Pork Chops with Potatoes aol Cakes o- rVamessn4CoffeorTea20 No I Lake Trout Hitter Sauce Cakes or Warns an4 ffcellr Tea2O- Ut WttMaistf te tIWiJ 0111 u L fto 0 TWQ ics Dutttr Toast apt Coffee or Tea IS I Tako Market St Cars direct to Hotel I Try Kiirojicin Jlan Cheapest and best only I Vnj for wliat you get- TH08 p MILLER PntllDINT U i Tlie Southern Farm Magazine 1 gp BALTIMORE MD IIUdSIII IW M4uufacturcr Record Publishing Co A Monthly Illustrated Journal devoted to Southern Agriculture dealing with all mailers related to General Farming Live Stock Poultry Dairying Truck Farming Fruit Growing and every farm interest and pursuit in the South It is widely read by Northern and Western farmers contemplating moving South to be in every Southern iliiltf for it S8 qf the South by lljo Soiih qnd for the South EDiroitiAL coNrniuuTOUs Ch1 W Dabney JrIll Df LUt- ICI United Slules Assistant Secretary ol Agriculture Ex Director d5lales ARrlculiur Expcrlmnnt Station fn to North Carolina President Unlvernllyof Tonheswo and President I T Sntes Agricultural Experimaut Station VlIJPOSSIO I f JI at lIlt 11 41 jItCornlJllssoner ot Agriculture lot I of Culture and Cur I f ing of Touafep for ty S tenth census t 4 II rabacro l ear Sheep Husbandary11 VVrjaMGrowiriK Grasses and other rgrteullural works The regular subscription price of r tint Southern Farm Magazine is ti a year hut we offer it and TUB BitE t1oyiller one year for frjo i fiirlJ rQI Uif KB yonqefd them j1f1t1lhrn only putP drugii such ai pre sold by re druggists We keep only Ihu bust That Is the great dis unction to be looked tar when the tlmo comes that you need thorn Nowhere elso will you find so com 1 p plete a stock A good IImno begin 1 Vat spring rrjedrclae1 TiRNIrL P HbTO e BRYAN IIOPPIIRManagr Ti z Twig PRESIDENTS DAY A Mighty Throng Greeted President McKlnloy ant Party at tho Omaha Exposition WERE ESCORTED DY THE AKSARBEN Tho 1rci Iticntf Address to the Auemblcd Multitude Contained Congratulation Over tho Unexampled Prosperity of the Walton and a Eulogy on tho Patriotism and Valor of Iu Defenders Omaha Neb Oct 12Tho third tIny of Omahas peace jubilee and Presi dents tiny at the Tranamlsslsslppl exposition opened with lowering sky About ten oclock however tho sun burst forth in nit Ittt radiance making the hearts of thousands of pcoplo feel ritBlerThc president was up early and at nine oclock was In tho parlors of the Omaha club where he greeted the members of his party and other dis Unul hell callers StintS for Ilia Exposition Urunudi It was after ten oclock when the presidential party escorted by Presi dent Wattles and members of tho en tertainment committee in carriages ptartcd for tho exposition grounds They were headed by n platoon of mounted police while the president antI party wero escorted by tho board of tho governors of tho AkSarBcn mounted anti dressed In their regalia The party proceeded directly to tho grand plaza on the bluff tract of the exposition where on the music pavil ion the formal exercises of the tiny oc curred An llntliutlaetlo Greeting Trcnldcnt McKInley probably never received n more ontluiBlnntio greeting titan that which awaited him nt the exposition grounds By far tho great est crowd In tho big western shows IiUtory FO Inr ell crowd t lint Its innn born arc almost Impossible to estimate thronged about tho lingo platform from which tho president made Ills ad dress Hardly one nentcnce wap spok en by him which did not evoke from the people cheer upon cheer After President Wattles had Intro duced tho distinguished guest of tho exposition It was fully five minutes before tho subsidence of tho applause permitted tho prenldont to Ixpin his address which was OH follows Tho PrMldonlM Addrru Gentlemen of the Transmlulanlppl Ex position and FollowcllUotu It Is with rcnulna pleasure that I moot onco more tha people of Omaha whoso wealth of wulcnmo Is not altogether unfamiliar to Inn and whoso warm hearts have before touched and moved mo 1of this ro newcil manifestation of your regard awl for tbo cordial reception of today my heart respond with troroumt gratitude find n deep appreciation which I can not conceal nnd which tho language of com pliment Is Inadequate to convey My greetIng IK not alone to your city and tho Intn of Nohraska but to tho of all tho states of tho Transmlssfsslppl group here and I can not- withhold congratulations on tho ovl dence of their prosperity furnished by this great exposl Ilr If testimony were needed to establish tho fact that tholr pluck has not deserted thorn and that prosperity is again with them It Is found hne picture dispels nit doubt In nn ago of exposItIons they havo add ed yet another nuutnltlccnt example Tho hlllorlcnl celebration nt Ihliadplphia Rlll- tChlcnRonnd tho exhibit nt Now Orleans Atlanta and Nashville are now n part of tho past and yet In Influence they stilt live and their beneficent results aro closely woven with our national do it Similar rewards will honor the authors nnd patrons of tho 1rnnsmll lslppl and International exposition Their contribu tion will mark another epoch In the na tlone material advancement Ono of tho irroat laws ot life Is progress nil nowhere hav9 tho principles larr bee so strikingly Illustrated as In th United century and a do coda of our national life havo turned doubt Into conviction changed experi ment Into demonstration revolutionized old methods and won now triumphs I which have challenged the attention of I the world This Is true not of the accumulation of material wealth and advance In education science Invention and manufactures but above all In tho rtlrvationtyke free Hitherto In peace- tnfi I in wnrlwith additions to our tern tory In our laws wo have steadily onfored the eplrtt of the copfiututlon secured to us tho noblo toirBncrlflco and farseeing sagacity of our ancestors Wo have avoided tho temp RainVlth tions and abiding faith In their stability wo have made the triumphs of our syv tern of government to the progress nnU froapenity ot ourpioplo lnspiraton to the vhoIo human race Confronted at this moment by new and grave problems we must recognize that their SlIIlUOn will affect not oureelye3- tuone but otherlt of tho family of na- tIoll this ago of frequent tntorclariR an4 nut not our International responsibilities If yo would must be met with courage and wis dom and tvo mutt follow duty even If do opposes deliberation can bo too tlro or Bellcontrol too conatnut In hour ot our hlstoryWQ ova the temptation of uniluo as rc 3101l1 to secure tuch re will promote our owi and tho general good It has boon said by some one that the normal condition ot nations Is war That Is not truo ot tho United States Wo novel enter upon i ifar until every effort for pence without It has boon exhausted Peace with whoso blessings wo havo boon so singularly favored Is tho nation al desire nnd the goal of every American aspirationOn 28th of Apill for tho first time for more than a generation tho United States sounded the call to arms The banners of war wore unfurled tho best ar I bravest from every section respond ed n mighty army was enrolled the north and south vied with each other In patriotic dovotontclenco was Invoked 10 IIrpl lll weapons were ruebd to JoinedInVP unteoro and all the rcoploralllcd to tho support of tho 10- public was no In tho line no In tho match no fear In the- heart No resistance to tho patriotic impulse at home no successful resistance to the patriotic spirit ot tho troops light jig III or on foreign shore Wlittt a wonderful experience It has boon from tho nnt achievement The storm broke sal siiddoniv that It wns hero almost small1thouihfoent and fifntuirnto In Its bflIero amid mallnr Our rmy had years lttJ b Ofl reduopd It n iuftco footing Wa 1Mw1 nvo nurpaso4riImiilcnn putrlotlfiir was and trs were llmttcia Tho eouragcoui Iroved101IIa IIi r1 of a contury ago wore divided lId at witr with each thor vr ariTuY unit oil under tho holy standard of liberty rattlotsm ImnlHhnd Iarty t111t4lM pC for time lltinaltieIdlist wan inprupmtea I or hlVi3iOfl or 11- 1PIIY i mer InclfcntOIl or our mighty ro gorvo power la of tha beglmilna of wir what shall wo say now with hoiuillUca near It hand so wo fervently Wo Matchless In its tuntits tlod in Its complete lulck t ccosslon with which victory followed vie jry attained earlier than was hollowed to bo possible ne com prehensive tn Ito swcrp tjiat over If mnn fils the t tI lrtiOsdQ1Irrustbt tM vur cln army tir the American and tho Americamu mshmdforth in un nullied glory while the humanity or our purposes ann tno iiiuKiiuiiiiiiuy ui our conduct have given to war always hor rible touches of noble generosity Chris tian sympathy and charity and examples of human nrnndour which can never bo lost to mankind Passion and bitterness formed no part of our Impelling motive It is gratifying to fool that humanity triumphed at every step of tho wars progress The heroes of Manila anti Santiago and historyhey ants of Washington and Greene of Jones Decatur and HuIILnnd ot Grant Sherman Sheridan ognlli of Far rngut Porter and Cushing and ot Leo Jackson and Ixingstrect Now names stand out on the honor roll of tho nations great men and with them unnarcod stand the heroes of the trenches anti tho forecastle invincible In battle and uncomplaining In death Tho Intelli gent loyal soldier nnd sailor anti marine regular and volunteer nro entitled to equal rraiso os hnvlllG ilone their whole duty whether nt homo or under tho baptism of foreign lire Who will the splendor of their achievements Who will from them their wolloarned distinction Who will Intrude detraction at this ttmb to belittle tho spirit of tho American youth anti impair the usefulness of tho American navy Who will embarrass tho government by lowing needs of dissat among tho bravo men who stand ready to servo and die If need bo for tholr country Who will darken tho counsels of tho republic In this hour re quiring the wisdom of all T Shall wo deny ourselves what tho rest of tho world so freely and so justly accords to us Tho who endured In tho short but decisive struggle Its hardships Its cllmPionIts victories will never tolerate impeachment either direct or Indirect of those who won a peace whoso great gain to civilization is yet unknown and un written The faith of a Christian nation recog nized the hand of Almighty God In the ordeal through which wo have passed Divine favor seemed manifest every where In lIghting for humanitys sake wo have been sIgnally blessed Wo did not seek war To avoid It If this could bo dono In justice nnd honor to tho rights of our neighbors and ourselves was our constant prayer The war was no moro Invited by us than were tho questions which are laid at our door by Its results Now an then we will do our duty Tho dayPatienco blned with sincerity of purpose and un shaken resolution to do right seeking only tho highest good of the nation and recognizing no other obligation pursuing dutynight Wo may not at all times bo to divino tho future tho way may not always seem clear but If our alms aro high nnd unsol llsh somehow and In some way tho right end will bo reached Tho genius of the nation its freedom Its wisdom Its hu mnnllYIItl courage Its justice favored providence will make It equal to every task and t 10 master of every cmorGon6y tttJ 4mP- iMtiuiuturUcnernl Smith Bpoko Too PostinnaterOcncral Charles Emory Smith followed the president with a brief address complimenting the peo plo of tho west on their great exposi tion Then tho band played Yankee Doodle The Star Spangled Banner and Dixie Tho crowd gave three mighty cheers for their president anti the party left the platform for luncheon JOINT PEACE COMMISSIONS BpanUh Intimation that the loco Proto eel sea S Not Signed for Them In Good Faith Paris Oct 12jjsitting toiayof the joint pence coutnlcslona of the United States and Spain was devoted according to the Qatilols to an exami nation of tho solution which It Is pos slbloto plvothotwo qucstlnnnlhtho protocol The Philippine question tho Onulois adds won discussed inci dentally the United States com mis sinners seeking to impose iv system of compensation for claims connected with the entire group by assuming the debt provided Spain guaranteed the Cuban debt The Spaniards It further appears wish the United States to assume tho Cuban debt nnd to hand over to Spain all the won material in Cuba and Por to nico The discussion still according to the Ganlota was very animated Judge Day the president of the American commisxlon and Senor Montcro BIos time president of tIme Spanish commis sion having received precise Instruc lions from their respective govern mcnts the American consider that they can not discuss the principles forming the base of the protocol tq which the Spaniards rrply that the protocol was signed at a critical inoinint and under so pressing line cessity that it can not be considered 011 expressing the will of the nation A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS The Iollco of zcsisas City oruuinndcd tq Irodaco Jcsso James In Judge Uenry Court Knnsna City Mo Oct 12A wrU of hnbcns corpus tvns grnntcrt In the ease of Jesse Invncp gpn pf the nQlcO l ntult pf thnt inline arrested Tticq tiny on the iiHepetl charge of hnving Ritilty knowlcilgo of the recent dIM ponvl Ioclllo train robbery Youno palice secret P C Fnrr nn nttorney nntl nn oldtime friend of the James family applied before Judge Henry of the county court for the writ It was Im mediately grouted nnd n warrant for the production of young Janice issued for service Arbitration Suggested St Petersburg Oct 12Tho news papers hero urge that tho question of the possession of Fushodn on time Nile in dispute between Great Britain anti France bo nettled by nrhltrntlon Tlie fink at LantliiRo- AVnshlrgton Ort 12A dispatch from Icn Wood commanding at San Hugo says that there arc 081 fevat cases and 1150 sick in his command llnstlio Approrat of the 1rcsklent Paris Oct 12Time Lafayette mono ument committee has received n Ills patch from President McKInley hlgl Iy approving tha J to ircpt f rnomtmcnt ttu tntlltettQ In connection with the Paris exposition of 1000 Mr MoKlnlcy says tho project ought to be realized with grandeur Expected at Ilnvnnn Havana Oct 12 LloUtCol Livermore pt tho corps of engineers nnd Col Ceo E Waring Jr with tia member of tho United States board appointed to look after s 1 Cuba no cxpefVfd by the 1loni lnt jtcnmcr Mascott They will occupj npnvtmcnta nt tho Hotel Piuwjo steamshipCymric from Liverpool and Queenslown were 23042 crates of Irish onions It is said that there is a scarcity of onions in the New YorjjC market anti that the lolon tho Cymric was shipped on speculation One fare for the round trip is the rate to Henderson this week on account of the Tricounty Fair j i KILLED BY HIRELINGS Many Strikers Killed by Plnkcrtons Guarding Imported Negroes- at Virden 111 A BLOODY BATTLE NEAR THE STOCKADE Ilcporti IlccclTCd by the Gorrrnor nt Bprlocllcld Say that Over a Hundred Men Have IJcon Killed Including SoY crnl OdScorg Troo s Unto llecn Ordered to lro ood to VlrUcm Carllnvlllc lIhOct 12 PlnUcrton detectives In time employ of time mine operators fired into n crowd Of miners at tho platform in Ylrdcn and it Is re ported that 10 or 12 men were killed The Plnkcrtons were guarding a train loaded with negro miners im ported from Alabama and the shoot ing took place us the striking miners iu largo numbers swarmed about time station when tho train landed The miners who were armed re turned the fire and several hundred shots were exchanged Time best in formation is that ten white men were killed five fatally wounded anti five perl ouoly wounded A Chicago Al ton special pollccmll11III among the killed Ills name in said to bo n Klley When the Chicago Alton train bearing the negroes arrived it was met by fully 1500 miners who were lined up on each side of the track between tho telegraph office nnd time mlno of time ChlcngoVirdcn Coal Co Time train was stopped Immediately in front of the cast gates of the stock ade and the trouble began President Hunter of the miners says that the attack was made by the Pink erton guards nnd VIIS unprovoked Time miners are now bringing in some of their dead from the stockade nnd everybody Is excited Tho city marshal has telegraphed tho chief of police at Springfield to send a special train with doctors Sheriff Davenport lies sent n telegram to Oov Tanner asking that troops be Rent immediately A Ilallct Klddled Train An Officer Shot to Piece anti the KnRlnccr Wounded Springfield 111 Oct 12A train riddled with bullets has just pulled in to tho Chicago Alton depot here from Virden 111 Ono deputy in dead ITo was riding on tho front car with a Winchesters and tho miners fired on him He discharged his Winchester and was shot almost to pieces En gineer Bert Krygor of Bloom ington who was drawing tho train was shot in the arm Ho gave way to Engineer Anderson at Auburn about twelve miles north of Virden who brought in the train at a mile a minute the engine full of bullet holes There were about 2000 armed miners In Virden The train was Joaded with negroes who say they came under false representations by opcratoro- SupU Lukins Stilled Ylrdcn HI Opt 12Fred Luklns superintendent 9f the ChlcagoVirdcn mIne anti tho man who brought the negroes here paid tho forfeit with his life lIe died surrounded in his cellar where ho was riddled with bullets A Statement thn Fifty Miners ocd SU Ofllcen vrcre Killed Chicago Oct 3t The officials of the Chicago Alton railroad nt 245 made the following statement We hue just received a report that 50 miners and slx ofllccrq wero killed in time riot pt VIrden 111 P II Klley one pf the watchmen sent from here to guard the switches of our road was one ot the killed These switchmen were sent down to Virden for the ex press purpose of operating the switches anti were Instructed to go unarmed Worse anti Wane Over Ono Hundred Men Reported Killed Springfield 111 Oct 12Go Tan ner has received a telephone message from Sheriff Davenport of Macoupln county that tho fight between the mi nets nnd those guarding time stockades is still going on and over one hundred killed The governor ordered Copt Craig in coin inn ml of Battery H and Sons of Veterans companies nt Pana to pro ceed at once to Ylrdcn- Gov Tanner sold I shall give Cunt Craig who will command the troops nt VIrden orders to suppress riot protect life anti property and q not ullow imported laborers Q bo uui loaded at that 111 lice since the mine owners hoe carried out their threat influenced by avarice and gain to pre cipitate thin riot anti bloodshed I do not propose that they shall further disturb the peace of time state The mlno owners nnd managers are re sponsible for nnd guilty of he VWt dcr brought about by this conflict and should bo Indicted by tho grand jury of Mueoupin county for murder as I believe they will be ItiMili of n VrriTiin ICdltiir TroyN Y Oct 12 Charles L Mac Arthur the veteran editor of the Troy Northern Budget died nt his homo in this city shortly after midnight naed 74 years Dr Bullsougwhoopingcough h andure can al oV1111 ways rellon It Children it DOHI arc unall Prict 25 cnfe J The Royal is the highest grade bskhs0 powder knoWn Actual tests show It uoes one third further Ibis say other brsnd Itml b4KIHG- j POWDER Absolutely Pure 4ROYAL lAKina FOWDCK CO HEW ioc JOTHERWISE UNNOTICED r he I 0 0 T Is holding Its forty fifth nniiunl session at Danville 111 A jury to try Dr Itlco nt Salem 111 l the murder of hln wife has been ficcurcd and the trial Is In progress Mr anti Mrs J Charles of Fort Scot Kas celebrated their fift- ycIit of their wedding Tuesday Zi T Iliggs anti wife celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of their marriage Tuesdnyat their country home near Sturgeon Mo Corn Smith who was serving a life sentence at Anamosn In for the niur dcr of her father committed suicide by swallowing spiders By order of time board of education in Uttle Ark the American flngwlllherenrter fly from the public school buildings of that city The commercial bodies of St Louis will adopt vigorous measures to pre vent Chicago from dumping her sewage into the Mississippi river Charles W Seymour a farmer who lived near Payson III was thrown from his horso nnd instanly killed The animal had stepped in a hole in a bridge Iu pumping out tho Infanta Marin Teresa the aft engines nro being worked by hand There is a good prospect thnt she will sail north next week Charles Hoover nnd Charles Edwards were arrested at Hannibal Mo in the net of negotiating n check with the signature of K II Stillwell sold to have been forged Tho cotton gin house of W C nut rims one milo northeast of McKInncy Tex was struck by lightning and totally destroyed About forty bales of cotton were burned George Walker n wealthy former who lived sic mllea cast of Astoria ill committed suicide by shooting al most his entire head away with a- 1meil loaded shot an- Orixlunthcrs mountain near Moun talnboro Ala Tom Reynolds killed iTntncr Sutton with a knife Reynolds had been knocked down by Sutton who was on his prostrate form when killed What is supposed to bo pink eye hue made its appearance In several dif ferent herds of cattle northwest of Mount Vernon III and Is causing much uneasiness amongst the farmers of time county accepttiidnjune1tlonthe party or plIes enjoined This was not dqno The American commissioners at 1arls have declared that tho United States would have absolutely nothing to do with the Cuban debt and re fused to hold out any hope ot Q porn promlso on tho moint Tho Pnrispaporschnrgc that the and den stoppage of work on tho Castcl Ipno new red marble palace was caused by the fact that the count was drawing commission of 40 per cent fjpm the builder on nil tho bills A safe owned by II Y Swain at the village of Valdron 111 was cracked by expert dynamiters and 50 in cash anti 17000 worth of notes anti other valuable papers including SOOQ of township school district notes were stolenWichita Kas society people have organized what is known as n non treating club The constitution oi the association says thnt it shall be unlawful for any member to Invite another to have one on him There arc about 40 members Wall street admirers of the rival New York gubernatorial candidates were Irt a betting mood Tuesday and several wagers were recorded Two bets of 1000 to 800 were made by tho Roosevelt men Smaller bets at odds of ten to nine were made in the hotels PRISONER EIGHTEEN YEARS SuRorlnca of nn Old Illlnutian In Cuba lox Defending n Native Woman from Spanlili Soldiers Ilockford 111 En sign nn engineer of the oUtlnt Ruclno 1k Mississippi ralirgad anti n resident of thht city muny years hOI returned old and broken in health with n sail story of imprisonment and suffering In Cuba When Ensign left Ilockford he went to Cuba where he obtained a situation as an engineer In n sugar refinery One night Knslgn with two fellqw workmen resisted an assault mvdo up on n native woman by Spanish sot diem The net morning Ensign naye nil threv were taken prisoners to Imvaim where they were placed In Morro catitle One of tho men died in seven Tnonths nnd the other lived 2S yoaiBlnr n years and Sire months Kn sign alleges he was confined In hmm caulk allowed to epralc to no one tnt only to walk through a cprridor SjlO feet long for recreation At tho cx plntirin of tiicmt time Ensign says ho unst taken out to vvrk with a ball and I aln on his ankle constructing m- mtiII At that he worked five years HI l remsip friendly with the priests and attnulcnts in n neighboring mon imlary and ono right wan spirited nav 11111 placed on n manofwar that filmily Inrrtrd him In Mexico When 111C1 In prison llnslgn claims ho liad certldiiitri of tleposlt to th0 feyI1i Y f rr r REDS WILLSURRENDER- When the Protocol Is Arranged the Hostile Indians Will Re turn to the Agency THREE COMMISSIONERS FIXED IT UP Further War lisa This Horn Averted The Indians Alluiln to iho Iteccnt Hat tic nt u Little Vim and Declare that None of Their Number wore Klllmt or Wounded St Paul Minn Oct 12A Walker Minn special to the Dispatch saysi Tho Hear Island or Pillager Indians will surrender nnd war bus been averted It only remains for the terms to be arranged before the hostiles will come into the agency Father Aloysius Homnnutz Gus II Ucaulcu and Chief OayGwaChcWayUlmung the three peace commissioners who left on time Flora Tuesday evening for the hostile camp got back at 4 a in The Trip to lime Indian Cmnp They got to tho camp at Black Duck point nt the mouth of time Boy river at nine oclock T isdny night In diana on watch responded to signals and the three peace commissioners went ashore In ft skiff currying flour bacon sugar rice tobacco and canned goods Tlity met o large number of Indians back In the woods nnd wcro given n cordial greeting Hands were phakcn nil around nnd the battle of n week ago was tallied over Time In diana alluded to it OK a little fun No ItiJIans Killed or Wounded They asserted thit none Qf their number were killed r vqundcd Hug AhMahGeHhig w s not in confer ence with the pence commissioners but his greetings were shouted back and forth across time little buy be tween him anti the commlHsloncrs ire waited nil tiny for the emissaries to appear anti left for his house qcrptm time hay soon after dark When time boat got In sight tho Indians sent hlgfireheld for three hours Tho Indians were familiar with every movement of time troops Why Didnt tbo Newspaper Men Come They asked why newspaper men had not come out and said they expected them When It was explained that It was thought advisable for only a few people to go out the hostiles laughed nt the fears of time people and invited tho correspondents to go out A report In writing to be made to Indian Commissioner Tones was re ceived at a Inter hour The emissa rIca refused to mako public their report until submitted to Commisloncr Jones further than to say tlmt the Indians will come to tho agency when a reply is sent back to time statements In the report of time commissioners CITY MARSHAL KILLED Patrick Gunning City Mnrihal of Kirk wood Mo Killed by Goo Unto nu Unruly Negro St Louts Oct 12 Patrick Gun ning city marshal of Ktrkwood St llIedinnd David Willis lore under arrest as witnesses Gun was appointed marshal of Kirk wood only lust Friday In succession to William Kncrin who resigned responsibletogTuesday evening n crowd of negroes gathered in front of Fiscks barbershop in Ktrkwood miming ordered the crowd to disperse George hates alone refused tQ move and tho mar shal pushed him from tho sidewalk There was a scuffle between the officer end the negro Finally Marshal Gun ning had recourse to his club As the ofllcer raised hla stick notes backed oil time sidewalk flutes drew a revol von took deliberate aim and fired three times One bullet struck Mar shal Gunning over the right eye In flicting n wound which would of itself have caused death Another struck Gunnings heart After being wounded tho marshal pistol1I ter wits injured or not is unknown The marshal staggered into the House cigar store anti there fell dead Dates anti another negro who was with him nt the time ran west on Main street escapeSheriff Is in search of Dates Sinai Orders for the Wilmington Boston Oct 12Time gunboat Wil mington has received sailing orders for next Tuesday and simultaneously tho navy yard ofllelala got word to rcodybyWON tiiccRsary to work overtime in all depnvt incuts to do so All rcuntoer Coming Home from Parta Rico AgentBornlKthe executive committee that nil vol unteers in Porto Itlco have been ordered home anti 10000 regulars will be sent from the United States to tube their places hemmer of Important Dispatches San Francisco Oct 12Muj W A Simpson who arrived on the transport inmporttmmitdispatches tho nature of which he will not dis close rime Northern Presbyterian synod of Missouri will build a church house nt Columbia for time accommodation of students nt the state university The situation in Paris seems to be critical More troops arc be ing gathered there No prospect of a settlement of the big strike which the railroad men and bakers may join t McGEES 25c CHilL CURE KNOCKS OUT CHILLS AND FEVER ruuutuuiO- wui DelOlooIl OiuuUol It nn u mntj ntttAM LUGIUD IOSTLZ Ii t I ii t0And school supplies from A D SISK Special inducements will 11 be given Calt ann see his prices IMADISONVILLE KY fJT EARLINGTON Uaibl- or3fopkins s12Samuel exact reproductions of the 10000 originals by Muvllle which will be given you ABSOLUTELY FREE by your grocer ss conditions named below These Plaques arc 40 Inches In circumference are free of suggestion ofIadvertising whatever will ornament tho most elegant apartment manufacturing concern ever before gave away such valuable presents to itc customers They ate not sate at any price and can be obtained only in the manner specified The subjects American Wild Ducks American Pheasant i English Quail English Snipe The birds are handsomely and stand out natural as life Each Plaque Is bordered with band ofgold ELASTIC STARCH Row To Got Thom has beenthestandard for yearsDflraQ of tbTee 10 Cent or TWENTYTWO packages of 83SMILLIONFlatiron to rOo coivofrOni theIr ono of these to show you plaques and tell Every Grocer Keeps Elastic Starch II far n SrorcI1r Ciijit tlaTC Portland Oct 12Gov Lord has appointed a coimnlttcoof flvewcll known citizens of Portland to collect funds for tho purchase of a qword to be presented to Capt Clark of the battleship Oregon Mrs George Hold for time Common 1leui Court Canton 0 Oct 12Mrs George was held to answer to the common picas court nt the conclusion of tho preliminary hearing and her case will be investigated by the next grand jury She was remanded without ball On Fall Time Again Northbrldge Mass Oct 12Tho Whltingvillc machine works are on full time after a shorttime schedule for years Many orders have been received of late including the ma chinery for a large cotton mill in Russia Admiral Sampson lies Recovered Havana Oct 12 Admiral Sampson who has been under time weather for several days Is now recov ered Maj Beebes condition contin ties favorable Dr Lame who is in attendance says there Is no cause for alarm Forty Sailors for Dewey Fleet San Francisco Oct 12On the One lie which has sailed for Hong Kong were 40 sailors for Deweys fleet They were In charge of LieutenantCom mander Lombard and destined for the Another Trunk Line Into Kansas City Kansas City Mo Oct 12Time Jour nal says Kansas City is to have anoth er trunk line Within a year tho Gal veston Houston Kansas City road will bo running Into tho city Part of the road hIs already been built and most of the right of way surveyed Will bo UueiU of tbo Army ot tho Tennei lee Toledo 0 Oct 12Gen F D Grant has signified his intention of being n guest of the Army of tho Tennessee at Its annual reunion in this city Oc tober 2G and 27 Ho will be accom panied by his mother Mrs C Grant GcnKilbourn will bo a guest of honor Slay Sleet Next nt San Franclico Washington Oct 12The house ol bishops of the Episcopal council voted to hold time convention of 1001 at Son Francisco In tho deputies an effort was made to concur In this action but on objection to immediate considera tion of the bishops went to time eaten dar Arebblihpp Clmppollo Named ss Apoitolll Delegate to Cubs Washington Oct 12 Cardinal mho bons who is hero attending time met lug of the archbishops at the Catholic university received a cablegram from Rome announcing that the pope had appointed Archbishop Chuppclle oi New Orleans us apostolic delegate U Cuba THE MARKET REPORT r WEDNESDAY Oct 12 GraIn Dud 1roTlilun St LoulsFlourlatcnts J340ft3GOi other grades J2300330 WheatNo 2 red CW70C CornNo 2 mixed SOVic Ont- lNo2 23l4c Hay Prairie J5OOO7BO clear timothy 70001000 lluttor cream cry 19tf2ltec dairy KcgaFresh 13c Idird Prlmo team 4C5c Pork olVoolCholeo 01DocemberalDocemberChicagoClosIng quotations Wheat October 61cj December GIViQGIHc May d53c Corn October 30Hc December 30o May 32c 1lsootober 22Ae December Z2CT22HC May 23 PorkOcto bar B72a i flecembpr 182 January SIlf Yi Larl1october 175 December 180 January Short ribs Octo JnnunrytUvo Stock Mar lie I St LoutsCattlo Fancy exports 5103 5to butchers St25ft5UO stockers SJ7U 425 cows and hclfprs 24 4oa tIl H lacking W5W380 butchers 3BOO38tMi lights 25Q370 8hoci 300al25j HOCXS650 per 100 Ibs Chicago Hogs LIghts W45 382H mixed 23600300 heavy 3303W rough yorkers P80 CattleBeeves- tl0675 cows find heifers J2OOft4G5 Texas steers I3WS390 westerns J3G04J 460 stockers and feeders J310O460 Sheep Native sheep J310Cf470 westerns J358 465 lambs Kansas City Cattle Nnttvo 8tccrsJI2S 540 Texas steers J2K5IP490j Texas cows 20 cows 4i6 stockers and feeders 3004f446110g imlxodU365 SheepLambs PWf5S0 mUttons J300O4W CimmclnnatihlogaActivo at J300380 Cotton Quotations for middling range nstot 6oMemphis 4AFREE for a few months to all users of the celebrated ELASTIC STARCH FlatIron Brand To Induce you to try this brand o starchso that you may find out for yourself I IIomyGAME PIQUEst any and for are embossed a 25 h ThoIM the oSSnoOre two entirely byDewey S R87 45 Present yourASK Illinois Central R R ANNOUNCEMENTS rp The Illinois Central now 9i1PI hai on tale nd will con tinue the same until tripTIIf It I points on In lines in the South Ita 1 j to a largo list of summer resorts In the North Its fast double dally service to SI Louis ChIcago Cincinnati and Louisville enables ono to and comfortably the mountain resorts of Virginia the White and Seaside of New England the Thousand Islands thin lake and forest resorts of Michigan Wisconsin and Minnesota the Hot Springs ol Arkansastbe Yellowstone Park or tIme resorts ot Colorado rm entirelyAhliLI U U LI1JI 11 and conditions brought down to date of the Central I Southern Home Homescete seekers Gntdehas Justbeeaiaue Is a 64pag lll Hrat V J cd pamphlet contains a large number II 11111 of letters from Northern farmers IT ULuu nowjrosperouslyhocated on the line of the Illinois Central Railroad In the States of Kentucky Tennessee Mississippi and Loulsana and also s detailed writeup of the cities towns and country on and adjacent to that line To homeseekers or those search of a farm this pamphlet will furnish reliable Informa lion concerning time most accessible and prosper ous portion of the South Free copies can be had- by applying to the nearest of the undersigned Tickets and lull Information as to rates In Con nection with time above can be had of agents ol the Central and connecting lines S 0 Hatch Dir Pats Agent Cincinnati John A Scott Dit Pass Agent Memphis Wtn Murray Dlv Pass Agent New Orleans A H Hanson G P A W A Kellond A G P A Chicago Loulsdlle athkAikt DR OTTOS p SPRUCE GUM BALSAM CURES YOUR COUGH IN A DAY 25 50 CENT BOTTLES Sold by St Bernard Drug Store 50 YEARS IMPROVEMENTS IN FARMING Published by the NEW YORK TRIBUNE Second Edition 32 Pages 18 by iaj Inches A general review of time advances and improvements made in the leading branches of farm industry during the last half century Special articles by the best ag ricultural writers on topics which they have made their life study Illustrations of old fashioned im plcmcnts A vast amount of practical infor mation A valuable aid to farmers who desire to stimulate production and profit Extremely interesting and in structive ONLY 15 CENTS A COPY by mail Send your order to- THE BEE EARLINGTON Kv Co Compound prescriptions properly it takes time It requires experience and complete knowledge of drugs It requires the druggist to have a largo amount of drugs fresh drugs He must give the best possible work and for compensation 30 must be reasonable WITH THE ABOVE FACTS REMEM HER WERE CAREFUL ST BERNARD DRUG STORE Arc you a subscriber to Tiiz BKE You should be v 4 JTw t a OCQe IeePAUL M MOORB Editor and Manager L BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY Incorporated r Entered the Pcitoffict at K rllnnton na Second Utt miller r SUBSCRIPTION RATES ivF One Vearitrleilylnadranee It 00 II 50i ThrcoMontlIS 5- Slnjlle Cople S Specimen caplet milled free on application Correspondents wanted In ill patti the county Addreti nt for parllcnlari c 1 f THURSDAY OCTOBER 13 1898 it p TilE Separate Coach law has been declared constitutional by the c tr Kentucky court of Appeals ROADEN P ROPER has bought i the Sebree Herald from Geo S Beard who retires from the news paper business in Webster county THE authorities at Washingtont announce that no delay will be t permitted in the evacuation by the t Spanish troops of Cuba and Porto Rico i TilE Kentucky crop report pub lished in another column has a soulcheering and barnfilling air about it It is good for the blues Read it l TilE democratic calamity howler is still in action through the press and on the stump But the falling off of his following is the most in r teresting feature and the saving clause in the situation JUDGE BURNIIAM has overruled 4 the motion of Hon Geo W Jolly to reinstate the injunction against Fowler Vance and others which iei was recently dissolved by Judge Dorsey in the Henderson Circuit Court i THE parents and friends of the members of the Louisville Legion held a mass meeting last week lor the purpose of insisting on the re ccall of that regiment Looks as If though the Legion should be allowed t to have a little army experi ence in view of their great anxiety to go to Porto RicoIk IT would be well for every one L of our readers to study carefully I the circular letter on the Preven tion of Diphtheria issued by the Th State Board of Health which we publish today It is based on 4 positive scientific knowledge and filIIof the most practical sugges tions about what is necessary to do in order to control the disease lION CiiAUNCEvF BLACK Chair man of the National Association of Democratic Clubs in speaking ofC the Phillipincs says From the day the Spanish power to hold themt r was practically destroyed by Dew cys fleet their permanent posses sion by the United States becameI Wg inevitable He says the Ameri can people will not permit the abandonment of any of the Phil lipinc Islands and as to President McKinley he says the President can hardly desire to ignore the public opinion of the country and could not if he wished Upon the question of the Nicaragua canal he has this to say With the Nicaragua canal com C pleted as a government work as it must and certainly will be we shall hold the keys to the Carribean and- othe Gulf and be prepared to enter safely with no fear of check or re verse upon the boundless field of enterprise and trade which awaits us in the Orient and in all the 0Americas as well t- Will Vote for Jolly The Owensboro Messenger says the gold Democrats of that city will vote for Jolly and vents its anger in these wordsINearly every goldbug in town registered as a Democrat but nearly all of them will vote for Jolly It is a part of the gold bugs nature to pretend to be a Democrat f but his acts on election that he is a Republicanas Democrats and Expansion Tho Democrats are not by any means obeying the dictum of some tofthe leading lights in the party who announce that territortal ex pansion must not be nor are they in sympathy as a whole with the 1 platforms of their various conven tions which have declared against 3 expansion The Macon Ga AkL1 J i p A Telegraph reports that a prominent Georgian and democrat who called in at the office of the Telegraph sev era days ago said that while his congressman was making speeches against expansion he was sure that 95 per cent of the people of his district were in favor of holding all that was won by us in the war with Spain This paper thinks the 95 percent an exaggeration probably but says the Democrats are far from lining up solidly on one side of this question Hon Chauncey F Black the Chairman of the National Associa tion of Democratic Clubs has an nounced himself strongly in favor of territorial expansion He says that the Phillipincs are ours to day in a more certain sense than Porto Rico and the people of the United States will not consent to the recession of them to Spain or to be parcelled out among other European powers He believes we have no right to abandon any of the Phillipinc Islands and declares that the Americans must keep the Phillipincs if for no other reason than just because we have themThere are we believe thousands of Democrats less widely known but each with as potent a vote as the distinguished gentleman quoted who entertain the same ideas with a profound conviction of their correctness that will not down at the multiple ghosts of convention platforms nor be turned about by the exegencies of a needed political issue New York Republican Platform Notable among political plat forms this year is the New York State Republican platform upon which Col Roosevelt begins his ride to the executive mansion of that State This platform was moulded on national lines In brief it is in its principal points as fol lowsWe congratulate our army and navy upon the splendid victories of the war and we welcome home our brave soldiers and sailors who by their courage and sacrifices have added a new dignity to American citizenship and given new power and meaning to our flag We have abiding confidence that the president will conclude this peace upon terms that will satisfy the conscience the judgment and the high purpose of the Am erican people We realize that when the necessities of war compelled our nation to destroy Spanish authority in the Antilles and in the Philippines we assumed solemn duties and obligations alike to the people of the islands Wt conquered and to the civil ited world We can not turn these islands back to Spain We can not leave them unarmed for defense and untried instate craft to the horrors of domestic strife or to partition among European powers We have assumed the responsibilities of victory and wherever our flag has gone there the liberty the humanity and the civilization which that flag embodies and represents must remain and abide forever Wi renew our allegiance to the doctrines of the St Louis platform We continue to condemn and resist the Democratic poli cies declared at Chicago The organized Democratic party of the nation adheres to these policies of free silver and free trade and denies the right of the courts and of the government to protect persons andI property from violence We are ready to meet the Democrats on state issues but in a larger sense this cam paign is a national campaign and our pea pIe cannot escape its national consequences The election of Republican members of congress and of a Republican state legislature will mean that New York shall standI for the m tintenance of the gold and for such a revision of the currency laws as will guarantee to the labor of the country that every paper promise to pay a dollar issued under the authority of the United States shall be of absolute and equal value with a gold dollar always and everywhere We commend the administration Coveru or Slack It has been wise statesman ike careful and economical and has reoI suited in the lowest legitimate tax rateI which the state has had since 1856 The Republican parly af New York has always been the parly of honest and economical administration We pledge the candidates this day nominated to a resolute and IhorI ough continuance of the investigation so fearlessly begun by Governor Dlack into all mismanagement of the canals If there are errors in the system and the law we will correct them If there has been fraud we will detect and punish the wrongdoers A Great Crop The estimated average yield of corn per acre for the entire State f Kentucky is 32 bushelsJ These are the official State Agricultural Commissioner This is 94 bushels per acre greater than the 1897 averagej The average for the ion is 31 bushels There will be no lack of the products of the corn in this good year Found a Real Coon Henderson JournalrYardmaster Dicks and Freight t Clerk Ferguson of the L Noheard a peculiar noise in a box car loaded with cotton yesterday and n investigation was made Inftead of finding a half starved manor boy they found a real live coon not the kind of coons that gtveI the policeman so much trouble on o the Midway but a thoroughbred raccoon which had by some means gotten sealed up in the car 1 at some cotton platform Thee coon was not very savage and soon made friends with Mr Dicks whoa took it home with him KENTUCKY CROP REPORTS Condition of Crops and LIve- Stock October ist 1898 For the October Report Replies Were Received From 147 Cor respondents Represent ing 103 Counties Following is the full crop report of Lucas Moore State Commis sioner of AgricultureCORN The corn crop has been further benefited during September Late corn which is usually cut off by the closing of the season is this year as well matured as early corn The warm rains have how ever kept corn in a sappy condi tion and a number of complaints have been received of damage in shock caused by heating Grass hoppers in the western section particularly have stripped the stalks of their blades and in some instances this lids occurred early enough to cause damage to the grain Local wind storms have blown the corn down badly in the western and southeastern sections and the hot weather and rains have caused all cars touching the ground to rot The estimated average yield is 323 bushels per acre for the State The average yield for 1897 was estimated at 23 bushels per acre By sections the yield averages 31 bushels for the western 35 for the north central and 27 bushels for the southeastern section Very few counties report the crop not as good as anticipated earlier TOBACCO The great improvement in the tobacco crop noted in the report of September 1St has continued throughout the month of Septem ber and the crop is reported mainly housed in good condition A very small per cent remains uncut and with favorable weather in the next few days this will be saved Widely varying views are expressed re garding the acreage housed this year but the opinion is general that where the stand is an aver age one the yield per acre is one of the heaviest produced The estimated average yield per acre is 740 pounds for the Burley disrtict and 805 pounds for the Dark tobacco district The weather during the month has not been favorable to proper curing and a great number of reports of houseburn ing are received Some of the finest crops in Woodford county arc said to be ruined by rust CLOVER SEED The number of acres of clover cut for seed compared with the acreage of 1897 is 74 per cent The average yield per acre is estimated at 19 bushels With the exception of the shortage in acreage the show ing is quite satisfactory The gen producing tucky farmers to realize handsomely on their crop this yearP- ASTURES Pastures are the finest ever yearTheherbage now and the parched condition of vegetation at this time last year is striking indeed The condition averages 102 for the State On October 1st 1897 the condition was 47 The highest condition is shown in the central section where the average is 105 LIVE STOCK The condition of live stock with the exception of some disease in localities is in keeping with the pasturageCattleThe abundant grazing and fine corn crop has increased the demand for cattle to such an extent that correspondents report the younger classes of this stock arc not to be had at any price An epidemic of Bloody Murrain is reported in Estill county confined- to yearlings and calves and from which many of these have died No losses had occurred during the past few days the disease Pinkeyeisderson and Jessamine and distemper is prevalent among horses and mules in Fulton County Scab prevails to some extent among sheep in Kenton county and in sheephavegrub produced by the egg of a certain fly deposited in the nostril of the animal There appears to be no abatement in the numbers of grasshop which have infested the State during the late summer and fall These insects have destroyed much young clover as well as early sown ye and it is feared they will in une the early sown wheat which is beginning to come up Farmers are holding off sowing wheat in many counties waiting for their disappearance Crops are now out of danger and a frost would be gettingidIndications in a number of coun acreagf pared under the most favorable conditions and the crop will have ll the advantages to be derived rom this source Mr Jas F Freeman of Howell nd who formerly was a resident f Earlington for some years has recently received the democratic nomination for representative from Vanderbug county Indiana The specialditionman is one of the most popular en in the county and numbers his hosts of friends men of both political parties Earnings of Railroads Manufacturers Record The New York Journal of Com merce after a study of the figures presented in Poors Manual relat ing to the earnings of railroads in this country presents some obser vations which are worthy of serious consideration on the part of persons interested in the health of the great developers of the United States It says People have not yet got out of the way of thinking that the loss of the railroads is the gain of the community at large But when it is considered that the railroad properties of the country represent today 5516056292 in bonded debt and 3621340647 in capital stock it must be obvious that con ditions which tend to depress the earnings of so huge an aggre gate of capital must profoundly affect every productive interest in possibleIprofits in the shape of capital stock and the discounting of bonded issues the fact must be recognized that to keep any rail road in actual operetion requires every year a large expenditure of capital for the replacing of perma nent way and the renewal of equipment It is in short highly probable that the great trunkline systems of the country with their valuable terminals and franchises could not be replaced at a sum very much less than that repre sented by outstanding stock and bonds Looked at in that way there is certainly no aggregate of capital in the country employed in any productive industry which yields such slender returns This is a view of the situation which will be quite novel to individuals who have been operating in politics upon the basis that cor porations particularly railroad corporations are subjects for discriminating taxation It will surprise them to learn that the proceeds from railroad investments are com paratively so small When they have recovered from the shock of that discovery it may dawn upon them gradually that the railroad is a productive power and that its capacity in that direction will be seriously impaired should it be used only as a producer of revenue for the State under a system of onerous taxation devised to make votes for the demagogue Apart from the benefits to a community arising from the first expenditures for the construction of a railroad advantages are derived from the money spent in maintaining the equipment and the roadbed to say nothing of improvements which are made to meet new demands If the ability to make these expenditures is crippled by inroads into the earnings through unjust and unnecessary taxation not only is the income of the community diminished in more than undue proportion but the trans portation facilities must detotrate and the community thereby be de prived of the means of keeping pace with others which arc en lightened and progressive This is a practical light upon conditions which exist in more than one State It has nothing to do with the morality or rather the immor ality of legalized plundering of corporations simply because they arc corporations It should lead voters to think Not Brought By Luck New York Pres- sProsperity has been here now a year keeping pace evenly with the steps of the administration of its advance agent It was not brought by luck It was not broughtnor was it dissipated by war It came by the execution into fact of the two watchwords ofI the campaign of 1896 Sound Money and Protection And it would staybe there no mistake as to thatfor not one moment after in the popular car the echo of those watchwords died In all the shifts and changes of party strife this is the one fact for plain people business people working people to bear in mind POLITICAL POINTS Gen P Watt Hardin has an nounced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for Gov ernorJohn S Rhea has opened his campaign in the bloody Third- ja Blackburn will make three speeches in that district for Rhea The Paducah Sun says the Republicans of the First district are perfectly harmonioushaving no candidate to fight over or vote for Mr C W Metcalfe of Pine ville has withdrawn from the race for the Democratic nomination ofI Secretary of StatesIt is announced that Gov Brad ley will make no contest for the republican nomination for reelec tion Attorney General Taylor may have no opposition for the nomination I f PREVENTION OF DIP11TIIEIUA Circular Issued by the State Board of Health of Kentucky- To the Health Officials Physicians and People of Kentucky The usual prevalence of diph theria in many sections of the State makes it the duty of this Board to again call attention to the best known methods of preventing the occurrence and spread of this diseaseDiphtheria is both contagious and infectious and is distinctly a preventable disease being easily limited to the first case or cases When it gets away from the pri mary cases and makes its escape upon the community somebody is to blame The sooner we accept this as a sanitary maxim the sooner we shall begin to do our duties as individuals and communities- On account of its frequency and fatality this disease is of far more importance to the people of Ken tucky than smallpox yellow fever or cholera When a child has sore throat and especially if diphtheria is in the neighborhood it should be im mediately separated from other children until a competent physi cian has seen it and decided wheth er or not it is affected with a con tagious disease- If diphtheria strictly isolate the case at once in an upstairs room if possible and as disconnected as practicable from the living and sleeping apartments of other children No one except the physician and nurses should enter the room p and they should take every precau tion not to carry the infection to othersPlacard the house and keep all other children all having the care of children and all who go where children arc away from it Notify the health officer of the town or county within twentyfour hours as the law requires and he will co operate with the physician and family to keep the disease from spreadingThe from the mouth and nose should be received on soft cloths and burned and other dis charges should be disinfected and all refuse from the sick room burned All utensils used in feed ing the sick should be washed separately from other dishes and should remain some time in boiling waterDisinfect all bed and body cloth ing and other like things as soon as removed by immersion for at least six hours in a solution of chloride ofIiime four ounces to the gallon of water They may then be wrung out and put in the wash Remember however that no disin fectant in the occupied sick room can do away with the necessity for abundant fresh air and sunlight The isolation of the patient should continue for ten days after all trace 01 the disease has disap peared and until he has had a dis infecting bath and had been clad in garments which have not been in the sickroom No person from a house where there is diphtheria should be permitted to go into public assemblies and no child from a house where this disease has prevailed should be allowed to attend school without a certificate from the health officer that it is safe to do so Aftercomplete recoveryor death always thoroughly disinfect the room and its contents preferably with nascent formaldehyde or where this is not availableby burning three pounds of sulphurmoist ened with alcohol for each 1000 cubic feet of space previously stopping all openings and damp ening the floor bedding and cloth ing and leaving the room tightly closed for twelve hours The room should then be thoroughly ventil ated and all ledges woodwork etc washed with strong soap and rinsed with a disinfecting solution In case of death the body should bcwrapped in a sheet saturated in a disinfecting solution and buried without public service In giving notice of death newspapers should state that it was from diphtheria and that children and those having the care of children should not attend the funeral The board urges the use of anti toxin in every case as soon as the disease is recognized and recom mends that immunizing injections be used for all children who have been seriously exposed To be effective tho precautions herein suggested should be rigidly observed Imperfect isolation and disinfection arc worse than useless giving rise only to a false and misleading sense of security County and municipal boards of health have full authority under our laws to enforce these rules and will fall short of their duty if fail to do so Copies of this circular and o- fiiilar ones in regard to scarlet and typhoid fever and consumption for free distribution may be had upon application to the Board at Bowling Green By order of the Board J M MATHEWSM D Pres Jij McCoRMACK M D Sec L LOCOMOTIVE BLASTS It is a pleasure to record the fact that prejudice against corporations is fast dy lug out and no helter evidence of that fact can bn found than the justice they now receive when pleading their case be fore courts A mere claim against a com pany does not now as in the past guarantee the claimant damages This was amply illustrated at Madlsonvllle last week when- a man on a trumped up claim sought to obtain heavy damages but the jury plainly saw it was a case wherein the company was not In the least to blame and therefore found accordingly The dispatchers were again compelled to make a temporary office at Howell one day this week on account wreck of wires at EvansvilleAgent and Foreman OBrien were called to Madisonville this week as witnesses in an important case A damage suit for twentyfive thousand dollars was knocked out by the railroad company at Madisonville this week thus it can be seen that Gordon ft Gordon L N attorney understand how to deliver knockout blows- Superinlenllent Martin and Tbos Walsh M M came down last Friday and spent several hours at Earlington attend ing to some important business President M H Smith of the L I N passed over the Henderson division last week on an inspecting tour Dy a fire at Clarksville last week the Louisville A Nashville were heavy losers several box cars loaded with merchandise being consumed besides their freight depot The Santa le railroad In Kansas touches fiftynine counties in the State The family of Agent Etheridge is now visiting in Nashville Tcnn The telegraph line between Nashville and Gulbrie will soon be rebuilt The heat here dnnng the last three days has been terrific Passengers who came on the union Pacific train from the West tell a story that seems incredible yet Is vouched for by reliable men At Bellevue the beat so warped the rails that the passing of the train over the main track was made impossible for the time and a side track was utilized watch stood in the shade of the buildings polDtsrthe ties a half foot over on the roadbed The train men assisted by the passengers were compelled to use a stout chain and handspikes to bold the rails In plumb white their train passed over the defection The train came to Topeka behind time and the passengers report a thrilling ride Topeka telegram to tbo Chicago TimesHerald An Innovation has been made by the Chicago Mion of appointing a chaplain for the road t Union Pacific Denver Gulf has also tinted a chaplain and railroad people y the Illinois Central has such an appointment under discus sion Just who the Illinois Central chap lain will be remains a matter of specula ion as yet There are no applications font for ministers usually do not care to canvass for positions like this It is said however that not only the Illinois Central but quite a number of other large roads In the country are discussing the question of chaplains From Hanson Tom Quails and Will Combs started Tnesday for Btsbee Arizona Rev P E Gatlin the pastor of the Baptist church here is conducting a series of meetings The indications for a good meeting are favorable Miss Beulab Asbby of this place who has been afflicted for some time is no better Montague Barnes have opened up a new stock of goods in the old stand of Weir Bros This firm also occupy their former place of business across the street Ray Day the oldest son of Mrs Susan Day died at his home three miles west of town on the morning of the 7th lust Ray was a good boy and will be sadly missed by his mother sisters and little brothers who are left to mourn his loss They hue our sympathy Rev D S Campbell has gone to Rus sellvllle on business Jesse Edwards who has been quite sick the past week is out again we are ablo to reportMiss Minnie Slaton has just returned from Sturgis Ky where she has been tin guest of relatives and friends T L Asbby is having his two stor brick store house completed and when finished it will add much to the attractIve ness of our thriving little town The new residence of Dr T H Wells In the west part of town is almost ready for occupancy The people of that part of town will welcome the doctor and his good family Hanson has now more than twenty deep wells ranging from fifty to one hundred and seventy feet deep These wells furnish an abundance of good pure water which has added greatly to the health of the community Poole Mrs Dr Tbornberry has typhoid fever but is not thought to be in a dangerous conditionMiss Cora Cavanah of Wanamakcr visited relatives in town last week Dock Allen and Harry Jones are home on a furlough the former is very sick and will not be likely to return for a while yetLast Thursday John S Lisman found his kitchen overrun with uninvited company and every one was loaded with good A Strong Fortification Fortifythcbodyagainstdiscascby lute cure for sick headache dys pepsia sour stomach malaria constipation jaundice bilious ness andall kindred troubles The Fly Wheel of Life Dr Tutt Your Liver Pills are the flywheel oflife I shallever be grateful for the accident that brought them to my notice I eclI as if I had a new lease of lifel J Fairleigh Platte Cannon Col Xutis Liver Plis things to oat and tool possession of every thing on the premises and spread a repast that would have done honor to any occa sion which was partaken of by twentyfive unbidden guertt It was the occasion of Johns fortythird birthday We wish himI many happy returns of the dayIOur farmers have succeeded in curing up their tobacco crops very satisfactorily and are engaged now in sowing whealI Tho crop bids fair to be the largest ever sown here H G Allen of Crittenden county was with us last week The Masons havo moved into their new hall at this place Obituary Willie Cavanah was born 1897 and died October 1st 1898 For quite a while the angels had been beckoning to our loved one but not until the last call was sounded on October 1st did she heed the summons to depart then with a peaceful smile she closed her eyes in death and her spirit winged its flight to that realm where trou bles aro unknown and peace and happiness reign supreme She leaves a mother two sisters a brother and an aged grandmother besides other relatives and a host of friends to mourn their loss But their loss is her gain for she told them during her illness that death had no terrors for her for she was fully prepared to go No sleep so beautiful and calm so free from trace of pain so fair to look upon as was hers She seemed an angel just from God waiting for the breath of life to be restored to ber all traces of suffering nnd care were gone and peace and happlnes were born in hit beauty and profound repose and still her former self lay there unaltered in Ibis change Weep not dear ones for Willie for in a little while your summons too will come and sbe will bo one of the angels to hold out her sweet hands and beckon you on and guide you across the dark river to dwell forever more in that beaut tisulland of peace Uy one of her friends Dixon Kr MONTIS Oox Holding Their Wheat An official of the Atchison To peka 8 Santa Fe Railroad Cum pany is quoted as saying that the last flour mill in Topeka Kan has shut down for want of wheat to grind It is estimated that 75 mills in the state arc idle from this cause It is said that the farmers arc holding 70000000 bushels of wheat because money is plentiful and they look for better prices The natural result of this said the ofhcial will he a temporary de crease in gross earnings on the Kansas lines after August i compared with corresponding months of 1897 when wheat was being rushed to market The movement will however be reflected in the earnings of subsequent months Subscribe for TUB BEE Funny Advertisements Curiously worded advertisements which arc funny without intent papersitrecently offered a prize for the best collection of such announcements and the following is the result Annual sale now on Dont go elsewhere to be cheatedcome in here A lady wants to sell her piano strongironFor SaleA pianoforte the property of a musician with carved legsWantedA room by two gen tlemen about thirty feet long and twenty feet broad LostA collie dog by a man on Saturday evening answering to Jim with a brass collar round his neck and a muzzle girltierto take care of children and a good sailorMr Brown furrier begs to an nounce that he will make up gowns capes etc for ladies out of their own skins Bull dog for sale will cat any thing very fond of children WantedAn organist and aj boy to blow the same IWantedA boy to be partly behind counter WantedFor the summcra cot age for a small family with good drainage Lost Near Highgatc archway an umbrella belonging to a gentle man with a bent rib and a bone handleWidow in comfortable circumstances wishes to marry two sons To be dissoscd of a mail phaeton the property of a gentleman with a moveable headpiece as good as new The last is tho copy of an in scription painted on a board which adorns a fence in Kent Notis1f any mans or womans cows gets into these here otcs his or her tail will be cut off as the casomay be Manchester Guardian Earlington has had a fullshare of destitute travelers the past week None however go without aid unless there be such manifest imposition as puts mercy to flight And so for this reason the open havinJbecomevery many opportunities oflcrcd by the traveling poor for the exercise ofcharity There may be other than angels entertained unawares but many Earlington people treat all as the golden rule provides f n re1 rI I 5 i T BePLUG r rd Remember the name buy again I S t1 f j i 1 trAtH f 4 1 r etPIy 4Iia S S Sw 4 The low york WoeKI Tribune THE GREA- TNATIONAL FAMILY NEWSPAPER For FARMERS And VILLAGERS And your favorite Home Paper EARLINGTOJI BOTH ONE YEAR FOR 125 mIe 4ce1Iti las Dn ABtlcultur Department of the bUhett mont ill comprelienibioond toeveryTH E SEE wlthyouririgEinewsy C Send all orders to THE BEE Earjinii Ky5 rAtli iJf f I IIJ-T 7 Lr LyI r- f I i I I 01 r JI tf itr lre l3ee t 23y ZJubustrn we Ltjrtoe LOCAL NEWS There Is no new thing nowl Thai talso P1 In line altered form would greet us Could Solomon now shoot the chutes And have appendicitis L A W Bulletin I Mrs Ernest Rootz and daughter Nell were in Madisonville Tues day Mrs Ed L Wise of Evansville visited her sister Mrs J B Head of tIlls city last week Frank Coffman and Walter t Stodghill of Madisonville were in this city Sunnay afternoon 1 f Mrs J T Barnett and Mrs J b Browdcr Myers arc in Ilslcy at the bedside of Mr Leo Salmon Col R W Wood and Miss Dona spent a few days last week yith relatives in Evansville Ind H1 t Circus Monday in Madisonville yVGo and have Hardman make you iEomc nice photos3 for 25 cents Mr William Covington and wife ffMkltof the Nebo country visited the milY of Mr O J Farnsworth SE Sunday 1 ESV Rev I H Tee has let the con e tract for his new residence to Lee fjp Oldham of this place The new q house will be built in a very short while There was third degree work at M the Masonic lodge Monday night Some Madisonville Masons were expected out but the evening was I so stormy they did not appear v Every carpenter and mechanic of any description is now so busy that one cannot get the sunshine u 4- F or tho rain stopped out when he 4 wants Everybody must take his turn 1 Charlie Egloff thinks ho would I Jj like to abandon rural life and be if come again a resident of the town i1J uince he has figured on the dis i rtance he walks to and from home It in the course of a year liJJf The Daptast and the Christian t li r brethren of Sebree arc likely to I precipitate that relic of old time t fei church scraps the religious de t y g bate May they embrace and make Ir4tlclorc the debate comes b l rJ JR Rash Manager for CompanysIJrCa tT buying goods to fill their big and 2 i complete general stock of grocer tJi vf ies dry goods clothing shoes S hats furnishings etc 4 A number of our citizens arc tIjt preparing to ornament and improve their premises by planting choice I i shade trees along the fronts of their lots A nurseryman has been do ing a thriving business in Earling 4 ton during the past week The Grand Lodge of Kentucky Masons will meet in Louisville r1next week Mr Henry C Bour land Master of the E W Turnerw yLodge this place will attend the meeting and possibly some others 1 will go from Earlington Ii Mr J E Kemp who is in Colo I imfjf IL is much pleased with his progress r as are his friends and relatives in Kentucky Me will remain in Colo 4 rado for an indefinite period and will probably make that State his permanent home Messrs Barnett and Arnold the c Enrlington liverymen who have been quite successful with their horses at more than one county fair this year took two premiums at the Caldwell county fair last weekand sold there one of their horses for a fair price These men arc progressing as local dealers in horses t Mr W A Toombs after spend ing a fortnight at Dawson Springs 1and nearly eating out the Arcadia Hotel is home again with new light in his eye and new and voluminous flesh on his bones Ith b does his friends good to look upon his rejuvinated frame There is a story about an avoirdupois gain of near a pound a day but we leave the hoss editor to tell that to the marines The Masonic Grand Lodge of Kentucky will meet in Louisville- on next Tuesday October 18 The I question of negro Masonry will o come up for consideration A committee consisting of Past Grand Masters Judge J Sonic Smith Chairman James W I Staton of Brookvillc and Bernard G Witt of Henderson will report their opinion with the history and present status of the negro lodges I air grand lodges in the United States The action of KentuckyI is expected to have great weight witlv other states 1 tel t I Reunion of Veterans Mr R W Wood of this place has just returned from a reunion of Company A 42nd Indiana volunteers held at the home of Peter Truckey in Evansville on October 8th Col Charles Dcnby who commanded the regiment during the Civil war was unable to be present on account of his connection with the War Investigation Commission but sent a letter of regret winch was read to his old comradesThe JournalNtws of Sunday dcscridcs the mcetjng fully how these old veterans wept over eachother and renewed old ac quaintance and fought again the battles of 6r to 65 Peter Truckey had his spinal column pierced by a bullet in the charge up Lookout mountain and was made a cripple for life The meeting between Comrades Truckey and Wood is described as very pathetic They had not met for years Prominent among those present way Judge H A Mattison of Evansville Only twentyfour answered to the roll call A splendid repast was served The Magazine Club The first meeting of the Ladies Magazine Club for the year was held at the home of Mrs J it Rash on last Thursday afternoon and a full attendance of the ladies gave evidence that their interest in the club was as lively now as last year No articles were discussed Arrangements for this years work were talked over some change of the plan of work was discussed but the club decided the old way was the best and the work will continue as before The report of the secretary on last years work read by Mrs McGary was quite interesting and showed that the club was in fine working order all year Mrs Jo F Foard was unanimously reelected president Mrs W F Burr vice president and Miss Celeste Moore secretary After the selection of magazines the club was served with delightful refreshments a fit ending for a most pleasant after noonMrs Gco C Atkinson and Miss Burr will lead at the next meeting with Mrs Wcndel Thursday Oct 20th at 3 oclock Dr Cordier Monday afternoon Dr Albert Cordier passed through Earlington en route to Nashville Teen to attend the meeting of the Mississippi Valley Medical Association of which ho is a prominent member and to visit his mother and sister Since his first call to see a patient which came to him at Old Petersburg something more than seven teen years ago in answering which he rode a mule with ears a yard long the Doctors lines have fallen in more pleasant places By dint of hard work and good fortune he has come to be one of the widest known surgeons in the West He makes a specialty of abdominal surgery and occupies one of the best chairs in a Kansas City Medical College He usually stops at Earlington when he comes this way and may this time stop for a days fishing at Loch Mary and to see his old friends The Flower Show The Chrysanthemum and Flow er show to be given at Evansville Nov 8th to 12th by the Press Club promises to be the society event of the season in that city They have engaged the best sing ers in the country and have se cured the best music that can be had A great many new and novel features will be presented and all the railroads leading into Evansville will run excursion trains at very low rates of fare The fact that the Press Club is at the head of the affair is a guar antee that everything will be first class There will be over S8oo in prizes for the florists and they will all try to do their best to get the money Quite a number of our citizens will attend Hotel Latham The Latham Hotel at Hopkins ville has been Jeased to Mr Lloyd Whitlow of Henderson who was manager of the Barrett House at the latter place at the time of its destruction by fire Mr Whitlow is a popular and successful hotel man with wide experience in the business The Latham has been repainted and redecorated inside An electric plant an ice plant and a cold storage room have been added at a cost of about 10000 The house will bp opened the lat ter part of October Louisville Day Members of the Louisville Commercial Club and other citizens of that city will visit the TriCounty Fair at Henderson tomorrow A band will accompany the party and Mayor Weaver and other city officials will be there OUR QUARANTEO 10000 IN OOLD We will pay Ono Hundred Dollar In Cold fof and erery cascof and colds when no benefit Is derived from tue use of Dr Ottoq Spruce Gum Ilaliam It Contains nothing In and li BO pleasant to take Uewar of Imltatloui So4 by St Bernard Drug Store I SEMIANNUAL MEETING Second District Educational AsI sociation of Kentucky To be Held at Madisonvllle Friday and Saturday October 28th and 29th 1898 Frldty nornlnir As oclatlon Openi at 930 930 to 1000 Devotional Exercises 1000 to 1015 Welcome Address J J Glenn Madisonville 1015 to 1030 Response C E Dudley Pres Corydon 1030 to 1045 Recess for Introduction Social 1045 to tioo Music ii oo to 1130 Paper Education al Value of Travel Miss Katie McDumcl Supt of Christian County 1130 to 1145 Music and Adjournment Afternoon Seulon 130 to 145 Music E Dorland LOUisvillet205 to 215 Solo Mrs Geo W Rash 215 to 230 Address Teaching a Profession Prof H Boring Madisonville Discussed by E B Bourland Earlington 230 to oZ4sRecesst245 to 300 Music Misses Lula Clark and Mattie Gray 300 to rsPaperPrimary Work Miss Powell 315 to 33sAddressTheTeachert as a Factor T H Smith 335 to 345 Discussed by Asso ciation 345AdjournmentflcnIn 700 to 73oMusici730 to LaWoon MadisonvilleI8 15 to 825 Music 825 togxAddrcss Prof W H Bartholomew Louisville Ky Saturday Morning 900 to 93oDevotional Exercises 930 to 1000 Address Needed School Legislation C E Sugg Henderson 1000 to roiFurther Discussed by Miss Mary Sasseen Hender son 1015 to 1025Recessp1025 to McCartney in Education Supt Ltvingstonh 1050 to iioo Discussed by Prof W H Bartholomew iioo to 1115Paper Independi ent Thinking D tons Gapr1115 to 1135 Paper Unconscious Factors in Education Miss H E Brooks Madisonville 1145 to 1200 Paper Vhat the Kindergarten does for the Publict School Miss Elmira Madisonville 1200 to 130 AdjournmentNoon Saturday Alternoin 130 to 145 Solo Miss Hattie Gooch Hanson 145 to IsAddress What Have I We Done Superintendent Mc Henry Rhoads Frankfort 215 to 230Paper Drawing andc How it Should be Taught Miss Annie Valderaur Madisonville 230 to 255 Address Needs ot a Teacher E F Parish Morgan field 255 to IsFurther Discussed by the Association 315 to 330 Miscellaneous Busi ness and Adjournments Madisonville will entertain the Association A rate of one and onethird fare has been secured from all railroads Persons attend ing should buy a through ticket to Madisonville and get a certificate from agent that they paid full fare This certificate when signed by the Secretary of the Association will entitle holder to return ticket at one third fare Those who ex pect to attend will please notify the Secretary Miss Sallie R Brown Madisonville on or before October 20thrDeafness Cannot be Cured by local applications as Ibey cannot reachp the diseased portion ot the ear i only one way to cure deafness and that is by constitutional remedies Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of tbe Eustachian Tuber When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing and when it is entirely closed deafness is thec result and unless the inflammation can taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition hearing will be de strayed forever nine cases out of ten areI caused by catarrh which iu nothing butc an Inflamed condition of the mucous sur facesWe will give One Hundred Dollars fors any case of Deafness caused by that cannot bocured by Halls Catarah Cure Send for circulars freeJF I CHBMBBY Co Toledo 0sSold by Druggists 750 Halls Family Pills are the best Hade Him PayIThe Owensboro Messenger hass just ended a test case to decide whether a man can be made to pay for a newspaper that he has been reading for years The man had repeatedly ordered it stopped and did not pay for the time in arrears Ho continued taking it from the postoflicc and read it every week The court held if the man got the paper from the postoffice and read it and received the benefit of it he should pay for it and gave judgement in favor of the Messenger Notice All parties having claims against the estate of Sr E Stevens will present them to me duly attested within the next thirty days Those owing the estate will please come forward and settle promptly as I am anxious to close up the business W A TooMDS Admr of So E Stevens Earlington Ky Oct 13 1898 i 1 Protracted Meeting The protracted meeting at the Christian Church according to announcement in Tint BEE two weeks ago was begun last evening by Rev I H Ted assistad by Rev Jas C Creel of Plattsburg Mo At the Christian Endeavor Sunday evening a most cordial invitation was extended to Christians of all denominations to attend and take part in the meeting The invita tin is reiterated by authority to day through THE BEE Rev Creel is a Kentuckian by birth and his native State was his home until about 15 years ago when he went from Henderson to Missouri In that State he has been in the work of the ministry and in addition has owned and published for a number of years a religious paper flore Soldiers The Eighth Cavalry passed through on several sections of the Chicogo and Nashville limited last Saturday night They came from Fort Mcadc South Dakota and were bound for camp at Huntsville Ala and thence as the troopers themselves thought to Cuba in a very short time It seemed a little odd after so long a cessation of southward moving troops to see this regiment go through George Toy Doing Well Geo Toy who had so narrow an escape from death as recorded n the last BEE is rapidly regain ng his usual strength and is expected to be whole again in a very short while The first ride he has taken was not behind the horse that kicked him Georges friends were at first very fearful of the results of that powerful blow on his temple and his rapid recovery is cause for earnest congratulation fleeting Closed The meeting that has been in rogress at the General Baptist here for some days pastas closed in order that the pastor Rev Rev T E Smith and others attend the Association which s in session in Webster county Dixon Two new members were received into the church Sunday and baptized in Loch Mary Rev Smith ot the General hap ist church says his congregation at Veazey arc about to break ground for a new church building which will be erected this fall Free Pills Send your address to H E Bucklen Co Chicago and get a free sample box of Dr Kings New Life Pills A trial will you of their merits These pills are easy in action and are particularly ef fective in the cure of Constipation and Sick Headache For Malaria and Liver troubles they have been proved invaluable They are guaranteed to be perfectly free from every deleterious substance and to be purely vegetable They do not weaken by their action but by giving tone to tbe stomach and bowels greatly invigorate the system Regular size 260 per box Sold by St Bernard druggist A NEW ARENIC ERA Consolidation of the Great Adam Forepaugh and Sells Broth ers Shows Prom the New York Times Mr 1 A Bailey solo owner of the Great Adam Forepaugh Shows and the Oarnum Bailey Circus has just concluded arrangements with Messrs Ephriam Lewis and Peter Sells by which the prop rty known as the Sells Brothers Enor Railroad Shows is consolidated with tbe Forepaugh enterprise The Great Adam Forepaugh Show was- ounded nearly half a century ago and urchased by Mr Bailey on tbe death of owner in 1890 It was famous for its menageries These together with the cages horses and all the material of tbe Forepaugh Show will be added to the al- eady big show of the Sells Brothers There is a heap of suggestion in the above brief and authoritative reference from one of the leading and always most great dallies of the country It- ontains positive and entirely unbiased assurance that such an immense combination has been formed between the wealthiest and most popular arenic proprietors and managers that no auditorium in tbe world the possible exception of the new Chi ago Coliceum could begin to accommodate its plethora of wild beasts circus hippodrome and special exhibits That the en ire resources of Americas two leading have been united to be exhibited for but the one price heretofore charged by each while its appearance at Madisonville on Monday October lyth serves no ice that no other big show will visit this this season and is a warning to Inferior ones which most of them will heed to our great relief and benefit Among tbe most noteworthy of this in numerable aggregation of marvels acts merrymaklng performances will be een the largest finest and only double free street parade which will include all the established processional glories of the two shows with many wild beasts and spectac ular features added two distinct herds of performing elephants educated in different schools and each famous for unrivaled proficiency in odd and comic actions two grand menageries neither of which has ever been surpassed in either size or qual ity and which contain many rare wild beasts never before exhibited ana nowhere else to be seen a circus confederation in cluding three rings two Olympian stages an animal arena artificial lake for aquatic performances Including terrific dives by a troupe of Hawaiian pearl divers nmpblbi ous actors a thrilling aerial exhibition and introducing something like hundred bril liant and novel acts by the most noted of home and foreign artists and a gay glorious and rushing programma of the hippodrome races of Neros era and the tboroug bred struggles of these fast times In which wild beasts fleet horses and famous male and female charioteers jockeys and bareback riders will break the record and create a furore More of the best for tbe money will be than any one would dream of asking and the event will mark a new and greater era In the most popular kind of entertainment proOltosSpruce GnmDa1samttJe most giisan and lIable remedy for eonghscoldi croup and all soreness of the throat chest inngi Largo bottle SSc and SOc Sold by Si Bernard Drug Store r A KILLED BY PROVOST Member of New York Regiment Shot by Aivie Kitchen Of Company H Third Kentucky VolunteersSerious Trouble- Narrowly Averted The man who was shot and killed at Lexington near midnight Sun- day by Provost Guard Alvie Kitchen of Company H Third Kentucky was at first thQught to to be private Hefferman of Company L lath New York regiment but proved to be private A M Doucet a young Swede belonging to the same regiment and who had on his person an old pass in Heifer mans name Kitchen was arrested and lodged in jail to be given a trial by court martial To a reporter he said I shot the man because I bad orders to shoot at any man who would not halt when ordered I came down Corrall street from Megowan and saw a crowd of soldiers standing on Dewees street I asked to see their passes and while I was examining one this man whom I shot ran I called to him twice to halt but be did not heed the command and I fired in the air to frighted him He continued to run then I fired the second shot which struck him lie ran some distance before falling and I did not think that I bad killed him as I fired tow Tbe man came out of a bouse on Dewees street and when be started to run one of his shoes came off I fired because I thought I was in the rightProvostMarshal Gaines had this to say about the orders he had given his guards Sunday morning at guard mount I went before the guard and gave them orders which came to me from General Breckin ridge with reference to a guard using a gun when to use it and when not to do so I told the men when necessary to control the men to use their clubs or club tbe guns but never to use a bayonet or place a ball cartridge in the magazine unless they ex pected to fire tbe next moment to protect their live- sThere was considerable excite I ment for a time over the incident and the New York men wanted toI lynch Kitchen A heavy guarde was placed around the jail trouble averted Kitchen is a member of the Henderson com apany Beats the Klondike Mr A C Thomas of Marysville Tex has found a more valuable discovery than has yet been made in the Klo ndike For years be suffered untold agony from con sumption accompanied by hemorrhages and was absolutely cured by Dr Kings New Discovery for Consumption Coughst and Colds He declares that little value in comparison with this mar velons cure would have it even it cost a hundred dollars a bottle Asthma Bron chills and all throat anti lung affections are positively cured by Dr Kings New Discovery for Consumption Trial bottles free at St Bernards Drug Store Regula lar size 50 cts and fiod Guaranteed to cure or price refundedeLetter ListlThe following letters uncalleda for In the Earlington postoffice sent to tbe dead letter office unless called for Abernatby Haddie Hyde Earnest registered package Mavberry Mary R Brantley Addie Morton LucrlBrown J W Brown Sallie McClain LucyaBone Lucy Neal Alice Brown Vm Petty GeoaBradford Mattie M Phillips MarymBridle Wm Reynolds Baker Maud Richardson Ed Cherry R S Rather Mrs Wm Eldria Reid W HbCorran Lillian Sesdville D Cook Jno Stennetl jennietDorris Dendis Schindler Dunlap James Ltanley T A Daks Dora Scruggs C AtDickerson Minnie White Cbas Fork Jas White ItrankaFinny Mr Walker Cbas Frenvods R L Young Steve Graham JasaSON Better Than A Klondike dold Mint lostWhen I 25cltt a bottle of Dr Ottos Spruce Odin hat I pInbeallb tJeware of lul Irll t cold Sold by St Bernard Drug btoreb Clarence Browning Dead The remains of Clarence Brown ing were brought here yesterday and interred at Grapevine cemetery in the afternoon the funeral going from the house of Dr P B Davis Clarence was formerly a citizen t of Earlington where he was more familiarly known as Bud His death occurred at the home of the family in Caldwcll county The cause of death was pulmonary phthisis and the end has been a hourly expected for some time We extend our earnest symp- athyCASTOR I A For Infants and Children The Kind You Have Always Bought Boars tho Signature of Mr Edwin Phillips who is at Dawson Springs for his health does not send home the most cheering news of his certain imoprovement He is blessed a fair appetite however and hisc trouble is thought to be of stomach so that his family hopes there is promise of improvement Uucklens AmlcnSalveITbe best Salve in the world for CUISf Bruises Sores Ulcers Salt Uheilm Fever Sores Tetter Chapped Hands Cbllblalnsc Corns and all Skin Eruptions lively cures Plies or no pay ulred It Is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded Price 330 per box For Sale by St Bernard Drug SioreIMr C T Minter the proprietorS of the new St shop was in Earlington yesterday- Dr Ottos Spruce Ram Balsam U 1sdentlkIremedy bawd on modern discoveries corn pounded by cbemliu of renown wbo baTe given 7OUdrngtstBold lu two iltct 25c and we Sold by St Bernard DrugStore tviIWhy let your neighbors It And why give them a chance to guess you arc even five or ten years more M Better them good reasons for guessing the easyforquickly as gray hair Allers LIOIIc1Is o It hides the under a luxuriant growth of hair the color of youth It never falls to restore color to gray hair It will stop the hair from coming out also It feeds the hair bulbs Thin hair becomes thick hair longhairIt cleanses the re moves all dandruff and prevents its formation a book on the gladlyPI benentltho doctor about It Probably there Ii somo dlmeuUy ltem which maybocully removed Address Dr J C Ayer Lowell Mss DOWN IN TilE MINES Peace now seems to reign supreme at tbe Carbondale mines since It is again under the control of tho independent man who s not controlled by labor trouble agitators r In other words the United Mine Work rs who have for the last few months kept things in a turmoil and thrown obsta cles in tbe way of a willing worker making living Hopkins county is not a good place for labor organizations as the miners are too independent to be dictated to by tbe men who in words only profess to be a friend to the miner The dirtiest fling at the Hopkins county miner appears In last weeks United Mine Workers Journal when contributor sayr hat the condition of the miner in this county was even worse than that of the convicts that once worked the mines at Central City Tho writer callsour miners serfs Why does be do so Simply because they have thus far shown them selves possessed of too much manhood be led around by tbe nose by false lead ra who teach false doctrine for the sake f the paltry sum they receive for organiz and who would forever destroytbe peace nd prosperity that at present exists in this county Are our miners justifiable in in dignantly resenting such unjust and undeserved insinuations The order to which the writer of this dirty fling at the miners belongs could not have taken a step or said ylblng more contemptible and more Injurious to his cause than what he has said done and thanks to him be has done uch to cement the good feeling that prevails In this county between the miner and operator Recent events show that mem ers of this order drove by force from the Taylor mines nonunion men who wanted o work but refused to join the Mine Workers Twenty or more members of his order working at Render McHenry nd Williams mines encouraged by the success of tbe lawlessness at Taylors ravished a woman The details of this wful tragedy are too terrible to publish Tbe woman is dead and her husband who to protect her from these fiends will probably die These depraved brutes only fit for the hangmans noose were ap prehended and through remarkable trav sty of Ohio county justice are out on ond One of them had been employed at Williams mine After a few days In jail ho returned to the nino to go to work and was refused a place by the management as being utterly unfit to work with honest men And now this order of Mine Workers takes up this depraved convict and demands that tbe mine owner put him back o work threaten a strike if tbe demands not acceded to but finally call on the arbitration board to try the case What an bonest 11 organization I No member can do wrong Nothing too mean or con temptible Nothing too wicked or vile for member to lose cast or forfeit the title of brother Only be a member and one may commit murder ravish women or starve innocent children and the order will protect 2 Tbe Giant Coal Company which is said to be located in Hopkins county and tbe location of which at the present time is puzzling the railroad company is claimed by the operators to have an output of about 200 tons daily Naturally the company would like to know where tbe mine is so as to solicit their business but thus far It seems to be a giant on paper only If reports now In circulation be true the of the Cooperative Coal Company f Darn ley have at last had their eyes and through the directors of that- ompany at their last meeting made the demands that hereafter during the winter of the year three cents per bushel be paid them for mining coal Tbe demand is a just one as they only ask for standard wages such as are paid by the Bernard Coal Company Thomas Longstaff on account of waiting a sick friend at Ilsley has not been able to fill his place at the cooperative mine for the past few weeks Tbe operators of the Pana Ills mine have by their straightforward and manly action dispelled much of the illfeeling that existed there at tbe beginning of the strike After a careful consideration of all points the rights of tbe property owner and op erator has been admitted as well as that of the miner who at all times possess the the right to seek work elsewhere when tbe terms do not suit him while the law recog nizes tbe right of tho operator to operate t Y 0 Ibis mine in a fair affd legitimate way to a profit or else shut down the mine Tbe operators at Pana have chosen to con tinue doing business and they deserve no condemnation for seeking to obtain laborers who will work Foreman Thos Robinson of the Empire mines says that the agitator can still be seen walking around the premises of the Empire Coal Co and that in the face of the fact he has been frequently notified that his presence was not in the least de sirable Here is a case of direct trespass and why not enforce the law and show the man or men who tries either by persuasion or intimidation to interfere with a miner following a peaceful vocation that such acts are unlawful and wrong and can not be tolerated There is a strike at a neighboring mine Tbe United Mine Workers after agreeing that nonunion men should be allowed to work what a blessed privilege in this free country decided that the mine should stop work until three or four Amer ican citizens who declined to receive the benefits of this organization be made to join whether they wished it or not So all work was stopped Not much grub was in the pantries not much flour in the barrel but this did not matter tbe wives and babies might go hungry but these three or four miners who didnt know what was good for themselves should lob Well the pantries and the flour barrels were empty and it was decided by the Committee that the country around and about should be levied on for support Now our country people are foolish enough to believe that men who can but wont work shall go hungry Tbe farmers work hard for what they gel hence when this Committee visited the country around about the farmers did not throw open their granaries and meat houses for the benefit of miners who would not work nor let others work And the disappointed Committee returned with a total collection of two apples But these two apples were not as potential as was the apple we read about in a certain Garden and hunger would not down Then did this great organization of mine workers open up its heart to the cry of distress and after long wailing sent five bushels of meal and fortysix ponds of bacon to the 300 hungry ones doubtless with the expectation that the miracle of the loaves and fishes would once more be seen on earth We always thought George Atkinson bad a great love for pie but the idea of him going all tbe way to New Jersey to take part in a pumpkin pie festival Here is what some eastern papers have lo say of the secretary and his brother of pumpkin notorietyMayor Harker of Mullica Hill gave a dinner in honor of Mr George C Atkin son of the firm of tbe St Bernard Coal Co of Earlington Kentucky a brother of Warren Atkinson to the members of the Harmony and P K Club at Eagle Hotel last night The table was prettily decorated with pumpkins and blossoms in honor of tbe Pumpkin King Mr Warren Atkinson and the joke was hugely enjoyed by about twenty of the prominent farmers of Harrison township Warren Atkinson who grows more pumpkins than any other man in Gloucest er county and has been termed the Pumpkin King was banqueted together with bis brother from Kentucky on Thurs day evening by about two dozen of his brother farmers A huge pumpkin nicely decorated made the centerpiece on tbe table Iron Hill Mr T B Kemp moved to tbe Hoods neighborhood We regret giving such a good neighbor away Mr George B Lamb visited his father inlaw Mr Robert Lucas near Rosebud SundaySG D Kemp and G E Towery went lo Repton Saturday On the 2nd while Man and Eddie Towery were looking at a pistol the weapon was accidentally discharged the ball striking Eddie Towery and inflicting a serious wound He is suffering a great deal just now G E Towery and G D Kemp went to Marion Monday OLD FRIEND Excess baggage checks arc not now embellished with a war tax stamp The question is up before the Commissioner of Internal revenue and awaiting the decision of the Attorney General the rule is suspended WHY COUGH Why cough and risk consumption when tho celebrated Dr John W Bulls will euro nt oneo 7 Itnoverfallstoeurothroatnnd- lung troubles For bronchitis soro throat and hoarseness itis invaluable DL3ulftCOUCH Will cure a Hacking Cough Doses are until cud pletxint to take Doctors wmmendit It lrlccs eta At sU druggIsts WILLARDHOTELw t MANAGER a and 250 IN LOUISVILLEf f At 1ft c 1 2Ln ar 1d Yk1fI1I1 TIm EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is duo not only to the originality and simplicity of tho combination but also to tho caro and skill with which it is processesknownCo only nnd we wish to impress upon all tho importance of purchasing tho true and original remedy As tho genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the CAUFOUNIA Fm Svnur Co only a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless partiesronsiA Fia Svnur Co with the medi cal profession anti tho satisfaction which tho genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families makes the namo of tho Company a guaranty of 111 excellence pf its remedy It is far in advance of all other laxatives as it acts on the kidneys liver and bowels without irritating or weaken lug them and it floes not gripe nor nauseate In order to get its beneficial effects please remember the name of the Coany CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO sAx FIIANCISCO Cot LOUISVILLE Kr NEW TOIIK N Y The Hawaiian Islands The Chicago NorthWestern jRailway has issued a booklet with the above title giving a brief de scription of these Islands their topography climate natural re sources railways schools popu lation etc It contains a folding map and mentions the various steamship lines plying between the Pacific ports and the islands Attention is also called to the un paralleled facilities offered by the Northwestern Line the Pioneer Line west and northwest of Chicago for reaching San Francisco Los Angeles Portland and other western points The booklet will be sent to any address upon re byWChicago 111 DR L D BROSE PRACTICE LIMITED TO DISEASES OF THE EYE EAR NOSE AND THROAT sot UPPER FIRST STRIC- TEVANSVILLE I- NDCrIsedIs German LIVUSPowder CURES The entering wcdgc 1 nearly aU Diseases TONI z human system is PRICE 25 S Sold by St Bernard Drug Store i1 ON1E M01RMElfS tf I fr j 8El 4LC4oq 11418 czCZLsgL A DiJ Farnsworth Agent IEARLINGTON KY 4i0t slC 2 a s u3 sSSS S Ii IGEOF G12 0Successor to Isaac s- TOYI nEST Livery and Feed Stable At the Old Stand on Main p Street tlenot just west of t5r EARLIWBTON KENTUCKY FirstClass Equipment and Prompt ServiceI Irbw44444spspuLss4Ia4sIIassSS HOUSBJ 88I4r jiiriiAX IA I p r 5 4 New Goods Cheap I 4 I Ftl will be very great this fall to in t LIiTemptationspurchase elsewhere bel are looking j- J at the splendid bargains we intend to offer you but we have never failed in the past to be able 3r orlto meet any emergency and feel very confident bit l that as heretofore you will find we are still at a the bottom in prices Will it be asking too f 4lmuch to suggest that you look over our stock i4 elsewhere and com Mt i llIHeryou have priced goods pare quality and price We can assure you 4 lthat you will not regret it Very truly J i I l ANDERSON WALLER 4 4i9 i ql MADISONVILLE KENTUCKYA fi 79y y i k k VJI iiS Io Tho Kind You Havo Always Bought and which has been c in iiso for over 30 years has homo tho signature of mul baa boon nindo under his per p C44798oual supervision sinco its Infancy 110 ono to deCeiVe you in this All Counterfeits Imitations nnd Substitutes are but Ex periments that trifle with nnd endanger the health of p Infliuts and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castorln is a substitute for Castor Oil Paregoric Drops anti Soothing Syrups It is Harmless and Pleasant It contains neither Opium Horphino nor other Narcotic substance Its ago is its guarantee It destroys Worms I and allays Feverishness It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic It relieves Teething Troubles cures Constipation and Flatulency It assimilates tho Food regulates tho Stomach and Bowels giving healthy and natural sleep Panacea Tho Mothers Friend ivGENUINE CASTORIA r AL- WAYScto Signature of 7r The KM You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years THC eiHTtUH COMPART TT MIHIUY BTHCCT NCWVOHK CITY L 1II MEDICINEfor I MILLION A Popular Proprietary Medicine at Retail Five Cents a Package the first experimental step in a direction that may lead to a revolution in the trade tI A New York company of manutnctnrlnc rbemUti tbe lUpmt Chtmleftl Comimnr ploood upon Ibo nCrkCt bout flvo WI ru A medicinal tablt or tbu1e compoiea oroomproucd powdered lrtpIUatl Wi vt certain medicinal dron which had been racer other for the cure or alto moro uao amouE medical men then any lovlatlon ot such 11U common to man u liavo their origin In an or weakpM capacity ror aiilmllatlnK rood absorbing nourUhment and eliminating waile The cojlofuo Included under thli heAd U raid to Include nearly erery direr lor which the physician Ii called to nreKrlbs In preparing their itandard reined ror the acceptance American people the company the principle thAt rvertlaInZ tflterIflJ Into tim packet be or the and Jprepared and protectod a to retain Iu luallll intact and unimpaired througb txtended or climate Only ebolcet drugs should used their preporllon- abou1 boIn accordance with tho lutoit iwrrcctcd method of modern science tbo tabulci packed In claw protected by absorbent cotton and securely corked Even the corks used have been of a grade so high In lt requlrementi thai no manufacturer of these dr7 coull moro Ih a proportion from his output that would meet the exacting specifications The glass were turn packed In boxes of quality not surpawed In beauty rflC on nt by those used by the most dealers jewetsaud ornnmcntsofotd lIrtng hlgblandard rni never from it the propeiriora resorted 0 trsiltolelrmethods riiaking lhrv commodity known and seven hundred Pi rested witbin She years In wtvertislng baa Informed every American citizen concerning Iho sujerlor and aurpriring of ltlprna Tabulca- Iielnr oCenthoughtful n i lnlAklng of We changed conditions that sweep oYcr the commercial world and carefu to note every circumstance having a bearing upon the ueoournl prosecution or Iheir trade the managertl or tliecoinpany havC noted that them II n present demand or Io lower price for article IliaC feftObo or approaches itn untveraI use anti that the pe411e although requiring the best evertiling resent being called upon to AIrlntJterloton for superfluous I wrapping packing oe unnocesnary that might re a utI Years but Is Ebltnn to be consumed In a- I Jnrge1Icn Ii liM also and actual rzperlencr thaIthcTabUIes do not have tim tendency to loss of QuallUet Qr diminution or cx- I reliance from that mlllbt at liavo been expected Inumuch a under favorable conditions those that have IIoIetdrawee a traveling bag or pocket I for several weeks or months aro Sound as fresh and u efficacious as ever IAeIIngupon those lunreentloni nnd particularly the unimpaired prosperity of now sold for n cent Instead of the old rate of five times that amount and the general tendency In all directions toward low rates and Inereawd sales the company bavo cntercl upon tbo experiment of putting up Illpans Tabules In pantoboanl cartons which offer to the trade upon terms which permit ot a package being sold by therwill or storekeeper at A price lower than ever adopted for a p FIVK CKNT8 ten tabules or onehalf a cent each iAed notdlscontinuethe manufacture 3irl the form with which the have learned to know and value the lUpansTabules but will Direr the cheape- rporlexperimentrIlyfnrthe toneflt of such as may desire them It should be plainly understood that tbe the medicine Is Identical In both sort the only difference L tielnglntheformrndcoreparrtivscoCot packing or putting up Tbeflvreent pack t nrseroziotyettobohaZoall It tllrobable that almost any dru 4 ilst will obtain a IUftTwro by a but In a single F carton I to any ceMa in- sitntiipi forwarded to the lUpans Cluica1 Co No Q April00 tlt New York 35n111 the Illm thoroughly Introduced to tbe trarlo allenll and peddlen will 00 supplledat a- i lines which will them a fair tnarttln or ITOntvl1 dozen cartons for 40 cents iLi 12jiotun III cartona for IIn II gross netrtolll for 23gros 3Q certona for 8100 Cash with tho order In orcry cue A I b TE AAAA A AA 1 John II CaMleraan Arthur G Lan liatr llrecklnridec Caitlleaian I Royal Insurance Co V IOfLiVcrpool ComQ Y In the World the Largest Business Transacted in Kentucky Inoes the Largest Ilnssness Transacted in tile Southern States PAUL M MOORE EARLINGTON KY Resident Agent for Harlln lon and L Vicinity n n Sold for workmanship nrcna Barbee Castleman MANAGERS Southern Department Homo Office Lnuisvillft Ky To make our Funeral j Equipment the best in this part of the State Anything and everything you want in livery PRICES ALWAYS ARNOLDItqpai c iirq ir a THE SUNDAY S01IOC LESSON lit FOURTH QUARTER INTE NATIONAL SERIES OCT 10 Text of the Lesion II Chron xxtr 13 Memory Voncs 011 Golden Tnt II Chron xxxlr 13 Commentary by th flew D M Stcnrns 4 And It onmo to poss otter this thn Jonsh wns minded to repair tho housoof tho Lord Aftorthodcwith of Jehoshnphnt who did right in tho sight of tho Lord II Ohton xx 02 tho story Is n sad ono of unbelief and rebellion until Jonsh nt tho ago of 7 mid under tho guidance of Jcholiu tho priest bcRnn to do right In tho sIght ot tbo Lord verses 13 It tuny Imvo boon 20 yonrs or jnoro tilLer tho death of JabosM phnt that tho tcmplo BO long ncglccl began ngnln to bo honored Tho nogloot of tho toinplo mount tho ncgloot of OOt1 B Gather of nil Israel monoy to ropnlr tho houso of your God from year to j atr and BOO that yo hasten tho matter It III Interesting to now thnt tho nogloc houso of tho Lord was n safo hiding plooo for tho child Jonsh forslxyoara II xl n What n comment upon tho dlsui of Gods dwelling placo III tho midst of Israel mid their utter forgctfalncsa of Oodl ThlacompuUorynttompt to rnlso the nrni cy for repair Is very much lIko tho wny most Christians net now but It IAnot tho Lords way Tho Lovltcs probably under stood this and therefore wero slow to obey tho kings command 0 Tho collection of Mosos tho serTal of tho Lord anti of tho congregation of Israel for tho tabernacle of witness ThoI king called for Joholadn and naked why tho Jxjvltos had not bccnroqulrod to brIng this in Tho answer of Joholadn Is not given Prayer Is moro powerful thnn nr gumcnt anti possibly priests and Lcvl gnvo themselves to prayer In Ex xxx 11 10 there Is tho record of tho ransom or atonement money which every man Anvo when enrolled In tho army of Israel but this money was used to build tho tab nnclo Ex xxxvlli C5C8 In Dout xl10 IT thoro is n record of an offering frt ly given whoa tho pooplo cnmo to Jorusn lorn to worship tho Lord nnd this Ithlnk would bo tho proper offering for the roo pollS Notice that this was brought to tho temple 7 Tho sons of Athallnb that wick woman had broken up tho house of God nnd nlso nil tho dedicated things of tho houso of tho Lord did they bestow upon Baalim Is thoro any danger of our tnklng things that belong to God and like tjlat wicked woman nnd her sons giving them to Baal Let Baal stand for alt other lodoxoopt tho Lord Jesus Christ then If honest would wo not havo to say 0 Lorl1 our God other lords bosldo thco havo bud dominion over us Isa xxvi 10 Whnt ever is given to self or the world of thnt which belongs to tho Lord la lllto tnkh trout tho Lord to give to Baal 8 They inado n ohest and set it with out at tho gate of tho houso of tho Lord In II Kings xli 0 it is said to havo beet placed beside tho altar on tho right side ns otto comoth into tho house of tho Lord Dy comparing tho two verses wo sea tha It was done by Joholada tho priest at tho tings commandment The altar suggests tho sacrifice Gods love to us tho cost o- our redemption tho lovo of Christ which wnstralnoth us to yield nil wo are ant have cheerfully to Him Giving is onsy when wo consider Him who so loved us that ITo gave Illmself for us What car ivo give compared With Ills girt 0 And they mado a proclamatlc through Judab and Jerusalem to bring In to tho Lord tho collection II This Is ivholly different from sending out thi priests to gather It verso 6 This is thi way tho other is mans way Whet the tabcrnacla was to bo bu1t proclaim Ion was mado that all who wcro wlllln might bring their offerings nnd the rosult was that so much canto In that Moses had to command tho people to stop brlnglo Ex xxxv SO xxxvl 0 7 It was tho lamo willing spirit that provided for tho amplo I Chron xxIx 0 I believe that It people woro taught tho privilege of glv lug because of Gods groat gift to thou they would today give as freely ns in tho lays of Moses and of David I bavo seen It and know It and havo board of the snwo iplrlt in other parishes whoro tho cffori to rnlso monoy wore set aside and the pee plo permitted to glvo willingly 10 And all tho princes nnd nil thc xwplo rejoiced and brought in and cost Into tho chest until they bad made nn md David prepared for the temple with all his might bocauso ho had sot Ills alice Ion to tbo houso of his God and when tin woplo gavo ho said Who am I and what Is my pooplo that wo should bo able tc otTer so willingly after this sort for at- things como at Tbcoandof Thlno own hnvo TO given Thee I Chron xxlx 2 0 14 Chcrp is that scnttoroth nod yet incrcnsotl Ivory nian according as ho purposotb It lilt itoar so let him Ionot grudgingly or of necessity for God lovcth a cheerful giver n hilarious giver Prov xl IH II Cor Ix 7 11 Thus they did day by lay and lathered money in abundance tVhpn tin- chest was lull they counted it nnd put U up in bags and put tho chest in its Illnco again Compare II Kings xii 10 It was so easy to thus gather It No ono wa skod to give All gavo as they were ted und no ono know but tho Lord who gait much or llttlo Doubtless then as when long afterward lIe sat over against the treasury many who wero poor gOo mora In proportion than somo of tho rich In tho day of tho rewards each ono shnll be recompensed according to his works Rov u1 12 and Ho who roods tho heart will reword righteously 12II And tho king and Johoiadagavo It to such as dill tho work of tho service of the housoof tho Lord i Tho money is first provided and then tho work is carried on Whoa tho Lord would send Ills servants Joseph and Mary down to Egypt Ho fIrst provided tho gold that was necessary through tho wlso mon who camo from Lint cost Whoa IIo wants anything done lie always provides for it fully Whoa nny thIng seems as if it ought to bo dono and tboro Is nothing to do It with either it II- Inot tho Lords work or it Is not tho time to ilo It But when Ills work is dono In- JUs way and in lIlt tlrao nil is easy How iwato found ns faithful as tho mOil Into whoso bands tho money was given and no reckoningkept II KlngsxlllGi 10 So tho workmen wrought and the work was porfoctcdby them and they sot- tho houso of Old in his state and strength mod It II The next verso says that tbx work was finished and they hail a surplus of money Thoro is no straltncss III- tho Lords provision Ho does exceeding abundantly There Is a house now being illdod tho church of God tho body of Christ nud many are seeking in many ways to gather monoy to do tbo work and thero is n lack of funds and many bin nnccs Ibo JUijda CoTcnnnt Tho Lords covenant however hns- nn element in it tWIt lifts it above the piano of umerohUDUln bargain Though it also involves two parties and contains Hidltions pledging benefits yet what is divinely contributed is tho only con deration of value hero and what it iccivcd is nil in favor of man who hoi nothing to otTer as an equivalent returs or payfor tho good itbrings RcfQYXfJ Church Messenger The Dead Line In tho ministry there is e great deal of talk ofmen reaching tho II doad lino No man over camo to thst point nules- ho chose to como to it A dead lino is not necessary In tho ministry any moro than in any other profession and will never be approached tho minister devotes himself as thoroughly to hi workas tho lawyer Limo physician ond- tho merchant do to theirs Prcsbytcrl on Banner CURLS WHLR ALL LSk FAILS heat Cough syrup 1Leii Good 7oo- In timo itId by dniirglt IwJ1y sfiu r ST BERNARD COAL COMPANY t 4INCOflPOHATED IMiners and Shippers of COAL AND COKE I I General Office Earlington Kentucky I Ii BrA rlch Offices IJ JAMES U LOVE Manager 201 N Cherry Street Nas villc R G ROUSE Manager Palmer House Broadway Paducali 1 If Tennessee Kentucky jfe S H NEWBOLD Manager 342 W Main Street Louisville CAPT T L LEE Manager Corner Main and Auction StreetsaaJ Kentucky Memphis Tenn jft iAS FORD Manager 327 Upper Second Street Evansville Ind C VVholes le j eritts JOHN T HESSER Mauser Building St Louis Mo J W I 11BHIDGMAN Room 85 Hartford Building Chicago Ill ir- I I THE FAMOUS ND 9 COAL iFor all uses from Earlington Diamond and St charlesiMines Only Vibrating Screens and Picking Tables it iiused THE BEST SELECTED COAL IN THE 5 5 MARKETifII I BRUSHED COKE FOR BHSE BURNERS AND FURNKGES I buy Highpriced Anthracite Coal when you can get ST BER Iid one ton of the best IASK YOUR DEALER FOR IT AND SAVE MONEY ft 31i ast t tsssa 1w 1 1 I CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR froplo For the etk Ufglnnlnc Oct D Comment by Kov S U Doylo Torte rntrioUsm1rs xxxlll 122 Rlcasod U tho nation whoao God is tho Lout and tho people whom Ho hath chosen for liii own Jnhcrltonto r xxxlll 12 The God of the American nation Is tho Lord and Lie bath blessed it Since tho days of Gods chosen eoplo no pee plo havo had such evidences of Gods special favor and blessing as the Amen can people Tho baud of God can be clearly soon in tho history of onr boo loved country from tho day of its dii covery until the present moment Ho bath clearly chosen us for his own In hcritnuco God has blessed us with I many blessings Ono of the greatest ol those blessings is a God given patriot ism American patriotism is of n high and lofty character Tho country econi to have a peculiar power of inspiring tho intcnscst love and dovotlon of itl citizensA of a fow of tint character tics of this patriotism will prove that this is true and show that it is ono ol Gods choicest blessings to the American nation 1 It is n patriotism that pervades nil classes Tho development of closccs It ono of the greatest dangers that con fronts a republic but so long as all classes fervently love tho nation and arc willing to inako heroic sacrifices for It hjs danger is not present To tho pros fnt jtimo at least title has been truo In tho frying times of a foreign war rich nnd poorjilikohavp proved their patriot ism Wealthy aristocratic educated Hamilton Fish gave his Ufa for ph country just as willingly as tho poorest and most ignorant volunteer and this is but an illustration of what has bcci universally true May it always bo sol 2 It is n patriotism that pervades nIl sections Tho war with Spain has forever destroyed all sectional feeling A patriotic son of the south was tho first American soldier to shod his lifos blood on Cuban soiL In every way tho south baa shown its loyalty and devotion to tho flag Tho Vonl rebel is forever bsolete in the American vocabulary 1boro is QUO country ono flag ono pa triotjsin =tho greatest blessing thpt has como to ns as a rosultof the war 0 It is ft patriotism that pervades all nationalities Our nation is young It has been populated by nlj nationality Our national existence dopejdo nppj our ability to assimilate these vnronj nationalities and to mako thorn flrsi Americans and then English Gormnni or French Had wo not been able to do this instead of having ono great American nation wo would have had a coun try mado up of a little England a littlo Germany and a littlo Franco Under the bcssiug pf God this work has boor dono No waller from what nation vo may have comp wp AP Americans first and Americans i3i 4 It is n rcliglopo patriotism a pa triotism that seen the hnnij of fc4 A tho destiny of nations anti that A9 knowledges His leadership anti that looks upon patriotism itself as n roll glous duty solemnly owed to God hint self Bible Headings Ex xxxII 31 03 I Jluth i 10 17 I lungs xl 1433 Pa cxxxvii 10 cxlvii 20 Provo xlv 04 isa Ui Math xxiii 07 Luko xiii 04 GC IXI4H4 Rom ix 15 I I Tim Li I 2 ne awn uf Ucflcloii Reverence is the son of religion When that is gono there Is jolt with which God can bo pleased Whcr nothing is sacred everything becomes common oven God himsolfLutheranfl- ellgteus Items Bompas ot tho Episcopal church hnaappointed a young clergy satin to undertake mission work in tho Cloudiko and hall instructed him to on leaver to build n church and schools there A Mormon mission composed of 20 members la reported to exist under the shadow of Harvard at Cambridge Mnsa Thoro are DO Methodist UiilHoopa diruxJiiiH i m tlti limitH of Iiieapi Thin tn v vr UMI 11 tiw 4II- eddtrtrt i 1 tf elII JtItt1I1I IIHdIUlI fillet rtv ur Eeleted iiens All communieationt Sal mitten of newt Iov Ulninz to this column should be aildreued to CEO ALtiixnin Karhn lon Kv I There was a large crowd of friends from Madisonville Sunday to attend the services at the Baptist church Rev Fisher has moved his family here from Henderson Mrs Walker is very sick Rev Anderson of Madisonville preached the annual sermon Sunday al the Baptist church The choir was also hero Uen Fitzpatrick while al work in the mines Monday night was slightly injured Mr Herbert Garrett returned home from St Louis Sunday night Doctor Chambers of Greenville was in the city Tuesday Tim AfroAmerican League will meet at the Jjptlst church October 27- Miis Mabel Jackson of Madisonviltu is Herding school at Darlington this year Rev Lany of Madisonville was in the city Tuesday Miss G itewood says Why Earlmglon icople are above the average in inlclli enca is llial they receive the light from be great magnets of intelligence dwelling jeie hence they shine by radiation fur hero resides ihe excellence of eighteen hundred and iiinctyciuhl years of civilizv lion Mr Charley Williams and Miss Jennio Pelsce of this place were married October 10 at ljn homo oj the groom The ceremony was pcrformpJ by Rey 1 Jt Jailry MORTONS GAP Mrs Lizzie Drown is recovering slowly from her severe illness Mrs Sue Mitchuton anti Mrs Mice MarIon of Madisonvillcr are visiting here Mr Richard Drown was painfully though not seriously hurt by a runaway mule in the mines last weak Messrs Hoyson and Littlepage were at Madisonville Saturdiv night Frank Sharber attended circuit court at Madisonville Friday and Saturday Mr A Watson went to E rlngton thin day MIJJ PliM Drown of Hopkinsville is visiting Mrs Richard Urown There was a social at Mr isaac tjancea Thursday evening In honor of Mr rater Torans Iwenlyhrst birthday Ho told a young lady that he could marry now with out consulting with any of his friends It she would consent Rev William Steward was very much pleased with the storm party that visited him Saturday night He says that he could entertain conference a wcckal his home were it in session Mrs Annie Edmunson who is teaching at White Plains was at home Sunday Program The Hopkins County Teachers Associa lion will convene al Hanson Ky on Friday October 21 1893 900 a mWhat are the advantages and disadvantages of concert reading for oral practice lUy I H Slaton 930 a mWhat is the educational value of pictures in text books in reading Uy Mrs Ida B rooks zooo a mTho responsibility the teacher by II S Sanders 1045 a mUow parents may help govern the school by P R Cabcll 1130 a mMusic in the school by W II Rou- ioo p mMethodi in fractions by William C Orion 130 pmCnmparatitre chances of the city and country bred youth by W I- enningsJ 330 p mWhat is real teaching by Miss Lottie Gitlewood 330 p mTh teacher in society1 by lames Cargllo 400 p mUlography and literature In the schools by Rev S O Moore Recitation by Miss Ella Hawkins Adjournment L WINSTBAD Sec- Wht Foreign erTIlnk 01 oarlttllwjyi Wba a few foreigner bays sa4 qf American railways miy blS of nerest- Li Hung Crii7g the greif viceroy of China said Nowhere else in the world are there such fast and luxurious trains as In America Marquis Yamagata field mars al of the I apanesa empire snldi The speed the comfort the luxury of your railroads is a marvel to me Prince TlilbofT imperial minister of rail roads of Russia aIdII There is nothing in Europe to compare with your railroads Sir hoary Truman Wood special repro entatlve ot the British government to the worlds fair in 1893 said that nowhere in Europe could there be found such luxury- In travel and such excellent service as are given on the railways of the United Stales rru TT lngottthoold Kbig Jn tho nw Jwgovt O Mae J laiio- trU9 We bring to OU th tow WWl m frPPJ Jpiney forests of Norway r fDR BELL- SPjneTarHoney Ntur Jf most nmurDJ rmedYI Improved by scIence to ti P1UB1Jt c t Pasfg CUro for coughs colds and all Jnfime4 5uaccf of the Lungs and Bronchial Tubes The sore weary coughworn Lungs are exhila rated the microbebearing mucus Is cut out the cause of that tickling Is removed and the Inflamed membranes ore healed and soothed so that there is no Inclination to cough I SOLD BY ALL GOOD DRUGGISTS Stile Only 2So 60o and 100 SIxM JImlJlfII BE URE YOU GET PinTlrItIDtptpllSwtIIalloo1J8bJllllliloo weak Inura I1 41fr 1 r 4 Paul Leroy Oeaulteu one of the grea est economists of Europe write The continent of Europe br the bonds in whic it has always held private enterprise hu been able to follow only with a tardy slep the example of the United States which nation has realized in its railroad 71cr three ideal conditions rapidity cflicienc and a good market while Europe cave opod in administrative formalism was des tined to atliln neither of these throe con dillon The City ot SI Louis now possesses the distinction of having the largest paucnger railway station in the United States I Is Cjo feet long and Goo feet wide and hu thirty tracks enough to handle ten Incest jag and ten outgoing trains simultaneous It is known as the union station and I he territory owned by the company operat- Ing it covers twentyseven acres The City of Boston has the next to the largest station for passenger service in Ihe country The union station in Uoston on the North Side has a length of 500 feet II width of 46 I feel and twentythree tracks lioth of these huge stations are to be surpassed by the new Southern Unic Station in iloslon upon which work was begun in January 1897 and which is DOW ncaiini compliMinn It Is designed to be the biggest railroad station in the United Stale The walls are built the sic work is all in place and the material is on the ground for the completion of the structureThe of the Southern Union Sta lion in Horton is to bo 710 reel iud th width Cjo feet When ll Is completed there are lobo tracks fur thirty train and the waiting room is to bo 265 feel long The station b to be lighted with electrIcity iijd fhere WjlI fjo stram heat n corpprcssc alt plant jc 5njikjnK nachlpery yentjla log apparalii1 anti n carbealfng plant to jclher whit ten gleim hollers and electrl engines capable of furnishing 1500 horse power The interior walls and ceilings at tho iostpn Malion life tq be qf white en imclc4 brick antI tilt rqadbcd of tin tracks is to bo lajd on a concrete floorin which is watertight Tbe prominence of Qoston as a railroa center as shown by the sttu of its passoc get station mast be a surprise to many for the territory served by Ooston It prac ically limited to New England and It much of it there Is very little growth ol population The city of Chicago on the other hand ii entered by railroads repre tenting a mileage of 93000 Nearly 300 through and more than 60 local train irrive there daily in the passenger service anti I hgfC 9FP ihfy fie companjw having a terminus llierp but the hutIwsi V r viddamong tiglil Dliipii5 npnp of which rs 1 uni enough iQ Iw cumparsd with pithu of Ihosu in Uoilun The G nlnl Pcppl ocillort in Gbici ij hiji in ari at- Li ij 0 ii fet aid U uud by the I llnoli Vntriil hut Michigan Central and the lug Lour roidd WILt Is known stint Dear born Street St 4101 Is not so liege but it ills the u IJIIJrcrnOI uf eight railroads TbufiMfii IYO verr liriie rProa r sla Iliolis in plilUdelph Ibe lietiimvlxanlj Reading qf these the Reading 5 the longer nuJ the p nn ylyaa4 the roaJerj and an wMih rath r than length r fjjuUles 1iii numwr of irtn that can be indltfd tho jiniijlvunh siiiiin ii prac cilly the mira oarvlciililj Influence of Newspapers Soniw f rciblu editor epitomizes the influence of the newspapers in allowing terse langifagc It has made Presidents killed pod 1 furnisheil bustles for beauty and polished genius with tho sand iper of its criticisms It has made the world get up at roll call every lIIornillland has given the pulpit 14ngspf jfori and a voice of steam It has set the price on a bushel of wheat and made the country post I office the goal of the country scribe It has curtailed the power tof kings embellished the shelves of the pantry and busted rings it los opposed fraud brought crim inals to punishment j it has fur ntshcd the whole female race with dress patterns it has converted bankers into pauper made saw yers college presidents it has educate the homeless lad and robbed tho philosopher of his reason It smiles and kicks ntul dies but it cant suit everybody and the editor I is unwise who tries it I Special Rates to Bvansvlllc On account of tho Old Soldiers Army Dinner tho L N UCR sell roundtrip tickets to EvanIf villa at one faro on Oct 15 limited returning to Oct 16 A Brainy Hawcsville RepublicanI I 5 Mr E P summoned to Washington and as he is the most courteous and brainy SbRepubitcan thatjtheThe yellow fever epidemic Js alarming in the number of cases lit the south but trifling in the rate t of mortality exhibited 3 BEST TRAINS TO Kansas City Montana Colorado Pacific Coast Of OmahaSt Black Hills VIA St Louis or Chicago VESTIBULED TRAINS SLEEPERS DINING CARS CHAIR ulRS SATS FRL s f M HUGO TKAV PAWR AOtHT DT LOUIW i HOWARD ELLIOTT Ottri non BT LOUt Ma W WAIIELLYovrtppuflAor4sy Louis ZTHROUGHIVESTIBUlED 1RDtI6rSUIrl5UfrT CARS tRot IOk1 4 Ii JIESGPA DnilWA1i r- f H l qc flr1yIl4Eif1f tJr ARlBO mEXPERIENCE Anyone lendlnc a ikelf h and descrlt n1Ii ky reo wnDtarr dmpinnlionsrat ties clOset agency roe InJeniiiiA weekl dr lormlo a M U UrlJt ttlloo V 81 WIIIIIDllrQIIJI If You Are Gong North If You Are Going South If You Are Going East If You Aro Going West r flHA U 9fys VIA r j4 + Louiavnic 6 NABHVILIC R RI AND eo cicun- oTf8 MgxiIWffl of QgqtfITill Maximum JfSpeed I Thy Maximum of Comfort The Minimum of Rates Ratei Time and all other Informallon will be cheerfully furnIshed by C P ATMOBC q r Sq 8f tf F1t9t f W W ETHRIDGE AOENT 4 rlsssi4sesIsI444e + I DETECTIVE f l I localjItyS4+ j1 1 N C