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Bee (Earlington, Ky.): February 23, 1899
Bee (Earlington, Ky.): February 23, 1899 Bee (Earlington, Ky.) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Bee Publishing Co. Earlington, KY 1899 bee1899022301_sn87060004 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Bee (Earlington, Ky.): February 23, 1899 Bee (Earlington, Ky.) Bee Publishing Co. Earlington, KY 1899 $IMLS This electronic text file was created by Optical Character Recognitio n (OCR). No corrections have been made to the OCR-ed text and no editing has be en done to the content of the original document. Encoding has been done through an automated process using the recommendations for Level 1 of the TEI in Librar ies Guidelines. Digital page images are linked to the text file. ;,iftU .!?'S rcwj , ,; frlf$l,'.Wv4,ptf ,,sf "N :r5 - .TS2- .' vt fit WW V .' ., 1 r'5t fSTRYWETV f&K I3( NO. 8 CONDENSED TELEGRAMS. I. M. Seebring has been arrested ut Mneon, Mo on a charge of robbing tho post office. H TENTH YEAR. COMPROMISE SOUGHT. EARLINGTON, HOPKINS COUNTY, KENTUCKY, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1899. All IS Muhlenberg County Wants to Clear 011 Debts. The Amer.'caii Troops Occupying ill II 111. TO IMPROVE A City Debt HAVANA. FIFTY-FIFT- CONGRESS. or Twenty-Fiv- e Million) Will bs Created and the Proceeds Expended In Imjiiovements. A Complete OFFER TEN PER CENT. From Saturday's Courier-&utna- l. the Suburbs and Business lias Been Resumed. " A M it- 'St ' r " Vm S'sfP. i r t s v- - County Judge T. J. Sparks and INSURGENT ARM IS OlSiri fG RATING. Mr. W. A. Wickliffe, an attorney of Greenville, Muhlenberg county, dan. Miller Hy llo Can Mnlnlnlu Ills wltli III l'mant Foroe Ameriwere in the city yesterday on imca u I'nitarlhm Wiiilnd (in Ilia Iiluild of portant business connected with Negrua Affaire Tl.oro ud la Celiu are the settlement of Muhlenberg counVery EacouB'l7 ty's obligations upon the bonds isManila, Feb. 2, 5:15 p. ni. Tha sued for the Elizabethtown and United StnU'B trniiHport Newport has Paducah railroad in 1869. This arrived here from Hollo with disGen. Miller debt, in all, amounts to about patcher from nil quiet at to Oen. Otis. Hollo. Tlio She reports $910,000. American troops there nrc occupying The gentlemen named came to the suburbs of Jnro and Molo. has been resumed generally with the city to effect compromises with the outside tforld; Home rice Is comof the whole issue of bonds ing in from the provinces, and thcro holders at "to per cent, of the debt on the has been no fighting since February All is quiet old bonds, which amounts to about 12. causing some at Manllu. The heat Ij inconvenience, but no $800,000. They had some success casualties have been reported. in their mission and returned home A Dispatch From Clan. Old. last evening. Washington, Feb. 22. The Avar deIt appears that there are two sets partment has received the following: "Manila, oi bonds, there being a new set, WashingtonFeb. 21. Gen. Miller reports on the debt on which is now $1 10,000, 10th lust.: Insurgent forces a few given in 1878 on a 30 per cent, tulles out from Hollo; believed to be compromise with holders of old disintegrating. Can maintain his position with present force. Business in bonds. These new bonds are be- the city is being resumed. He hns ing paid dollar for dollar by the sent up four representative men, officials from the capital of the island of county. Kegros, where the American Hag judg- raised and American protection was There are a great many rements against Muhlenberg county quested against a small insurgent on the old bonds, both in the State force in the islands. Affairs there and in Cebu are very encouraging. Shall and Federal courts. Executions endeavor to maintain and Improve have been issued against Muhlen- present promising conditions. Affairs berg county, all of which have been here remain quiet. A Finull Inmirent force east of city was driven away, returned "no property fund." The with a considerable loss to enemy. Signed. "OTIS." latest execution was one involving the amount $30,000 on interest to THE MILES INQUIRY. a judgment in the Federal Court at Owensboro in favor ot Evansville Ventilating Ilia Qoestlou or Itafrlterated unit Canned llonst Ueef Furnished United States Marshal parties. to tin Atuiy. is just now going through James Washington, Feb. of the formality ol serving this execu- Inquiry engaged in 22. The courtthu investigating tion, but there is no reason to be- beef charges preferred by Miles lieve that there will be any prop- continued yesterday the hearing of testimony erty found, is Muhlenberg county versy. A bearing upon the contronumber of army oMccrs who has, lor reasons generally adopted participated in the Santiago campaign by jt citizens, steadily resisted any were heard, rraetlcally without exception the condemned tho attempt to collect payment of the canned roast officersfurnished as a field beef judgments. ration, and reviewed complaints about It which the men very generally made, , : "We have secured compromises ?1f&'6t J5o,eooor fGo.ooo of the debt declaring it unpalatable and wanting In nutriment. ' on the did bonds." said Judge On the other hand, the tefrlgerntsd Sparks at Seelback's Hotel yester- beef suffered but little at the hands of being generally conthe witnesses, day afternoon, "and expect to sidered that it itwas gpod when delivcompromise much more of the ered from the transports and when it debt upon this basis. No new escaped the decomposing eiTeot ot the tropical sun en route to the several .bonds have been issued for the commands it wns found to be satisfacpayment of the compromise sum. tory. Our people seem to feel that a STRICKEN BY APOPLEXY. compromise upon this basis is Fletcher, ot Missouri, In a Dangerequitable. About three years ago ous Condition from i Stroke a brokerage firm in this city disof Apoplexy. posed of about $30,000 of claims Washington, Feb. against the county at eight cents Thomas Clement Fletcher, 22. Missouri, of was stricken by apoplexy In Wlllard's on the dollar. hotel, "The execution to be served by at the Monday afternoon, and anow lies Kmcrgency hospital In serious Marshal James against the county condition. On account of IiIm age, 72 not in the nature of a proceeding years, the chances for his recovery are taken by a formes Marshal in what regarded us very slight. He has been in bad health for some time past, and is known as the Collector Capps two weeks ago was compelled to take case. In that instance the Marshal to his bed. He came out for the first time Monday, took a posse into the county as an the morning ofbut complained during pains in his limbs. He cseort to a collector who was mak. was conversing with Mr. C. E. Ilotli. ing a levy for a judgment. There a former Mlssourlnn, when he suddenis nothing of the kind going on ly fell heavily to the floor. Ho was taken at once to the Emergency hosnow." pital. His condition at last reports To-eltl- Busi-ne- ss Havana, Feb. 22. The worl: on the city finances, in which Mr, Ifaslclns, the expert accountant, has been engaged, la drawing to a close. He will report to Gen., Ludlow, governor of tho department bf Havana, that tha city is nblo to bear a $25,000,000 debt. Tho present obligations, amounting to $12,500,000, will bo refunded, and the remainder ot tho new bond issue will be used for Improvements. If the existing debt alone was refunded, Mr. Hasklns thinks it could bo dono at four per cent., and tha total issue of $23,000,000 would bo fa vorably received in New York at flvj per cent. There are no legal obstacles In tho way of on immediato refunding, provided the city council wished to do so. DELAY IS DANGEROUS. The Administration Determined to Extend American Jurisdiction Over the Philippines. Ilap-Id- ly Report of the Relief Work of the War Department Sent to Congress. SUCCINCT STATEMENT OF CAPT. P. II. RAY Nothing Found In Either Alaska or the Northwest Territory to Jostlf y the CI real Ituili of People There, or the Enormous Investment In Transportation and Trad-InCompanies. e Adjutant-Genera- l, Washington, Feb. 18. The administration has determined rapidly to extend tho jurisdiction of tho United States over tho whole of the Philippine group, acting on the theory that delay in this case is dangerous, and that nnarchy and a general paralysis of Huch interests as tho Islands support will be brought about through a failure promptly to replace the Spanish sovereignty over tho islands by that of tho United States. This decision involves tho necessity of a naval campaign, and tills will bo instituted as soon as Admiral Dewey receives the reinforcements in the shape of gunboats, now on the way to Manila. THE KLONDIKE OUTPUT. A Mining Expert. Jnst Down from Daw. son, Estimates the Season's Output at 810,000,000. . Nanaimo, B. C, Feb. 18. Among tho passengers on tho steamer Amur was M. Marks, an Australian mining expert, who has como from Dawson for the purpose of obtaining thawing machines. These, ho says, aro being successfully used in Arctic mining. Machines now in operation thaw from ten to twelvo feet per day, as against two feet by the old process. He estimates this season's output ot the Klondike country nt $19,000,000. Good coal is said to have been found a few miles from Dawson. GAINING STRENGTH. Heller Ualnlnt? O round that Ilonapartlsts and Orleanlst Tretenders Will Fall to Demonstrate. Paris, Feb. 22. Wild rumors are afloat as .to the doings and intentions ot the Bonapartists' and Orleanista' pretenders; but the general belief is that neither will do anything serious in the face of the general acquiescence tu M. Loubet's election, although further disturbances are threatened. . WORKED SUNDAY. Coal Loaded to Relieve People of Nashville. m n , The mines of the St. Bernard Coal Company here and at Mor tons Gap were run for part of Sun day last in order to relieve the necessities of the people of Nashville, Thirty-on- e cars of coal and one car of coke were shipped that day to Nashville dealers and the railroad officials delicvered allot it there by Monday morning. The city was Very short of coal Sunday and those who had coal delivered all day. The miners needed the usual Sunday rest, but they cheerfully went to work in a humane spirit and worked heartily for the , relief of others less fortunate. A biscuit & "';...' Y - fcvH ' "f" - ' wM,V7- , . - k ' An Ancient Biscuit. story that savors of Pompeiian research is fold by Monroe Calvert and John Pleasant, two workmen in the Arnold mines at this place. They exhibited a biscuit which they say they found under a pile of slate in a compara- tively dry place in that mine. The biscuit is in a good state of preservation, hut is said to be tasteless. TJie interesting thing about it is tliat, found where they say, it must Dangers of the Grip, Mr. Frank D. Rash expects to Ifave been there for the last twenty-fiv- start for Boston the last of the The greatest danger from La Grippe is of years since the Arnold mine is week, probably leaving here Sat- - its resulting in pneumonia. If reasonable care is used, however, .and Chamberlain's just now being developed after urday. CouRh Remedy taken, 'all danger will be having been closed for the past avoided. Among tho tens ot thousands Miss Sue R. Burr is out again who have used this remedy for la grippe quarter century, and attending her school duties at we have yet to learn of a single case having resulted la pneumonia, which shows conMrs. John Crawford, who has Madisonville this week. clusively that Ibis remedy is a certain preventive of that dangerous disease. It will been visiting her daughter, Mrs. la grippe in less time than any other Ernest Rash, for the pas two Dr. W. Godfrey isHunter, minis cure in Washing- treatment. It U. pleasant nnd safe to take. ter to Guatemala, For sals by St. Bernard Drugstore, weeks, has returned to ton. Heihas a thirty-da- y leave of Ben T. Robinson, Mortons Gap; absence. George King, St. Charles. life-lonn. Death of a Man of Mystery. Galena, Kas., Feb. 20. J. S. Graham, a wcaltliy miner, died hero yesterday ifter a brief illness. Although he had amassed a fortune in Uie lead mines in this vicinity, Graham never revealed t. As far as can be his antecedents. learned, Graham camo hero five yearo ago from Colorado, whero he owned nil son. "Up to date no paying mineral lodes interest in the Silver Plume mine, and of either gold or silver have been dishod been in the lumber business. covered in north Alaska, so far as A Financial Sensation In London Man and known. Money Missing. DEVELOPMENT WILL BE SLOW. Feb, 10. A sensation has London, "I am now fully satisfied been caused in financial circles by the near future Alaska will be that in the the source extraordinary announcement that tho of great wealth, but the development MUlwall Dock Co. would pass its divi- will necessarily be slow owing to the dend owing to tho discovery of a de- climate conditions. I ficit of over 200,000 ($1,000,000.) Tho early introduction of recommend the chqirtnan ot the company lias disap- and cattle and extrahorses, mules inducements peared nnd tho shares have dropped should bo held out for the developabout twenty points. ment of agriculture in the valley of "" Ulg Fire on Ilroadway, New York. the lower Yukon especially. Wild hay New York, Feb. 21. Fire did dam-ag- o can bo obtained thero in great abund estimated at $100,000 in the build- ance, ana oats, barloy and spring ings in Broadway, occupied by tho wheat can be successfully cultivated was slightly Improved. spool silk manufacturing firm ot Bcld-in- g as well as potatoes, turnips, and all vegetables, all Bros. & Co., Hamburger & Hob-ma- the more hardy gat-deAN ADVISORY COMMITTEE. cigars, tho Postal Telegraph Co., of which would bo required for many years to meet tho local demand, and Blum's railroad ticket ofllco and It Is Intended to Advance Democratic Inby reducing the cost of tarnsportatlon & Co., silk manufacturers. terests Along the Unas ot the and food render it possible to profitaAn Old Postmaster Dead. National Platform. bly work a large per cent, of the York, Pa.. Feb. 22. John Logan, mines now lying Idle." ' Washington, Feb. 22. Chairman one of tho oldest postmasters in the Jones of the Democratic national com- United States, is dead at his home at mittee hqs appointed an advisory com- was appointed postmaster during tho SPAIN'S TWENTY MILLIONS. mittee to the national campaign com- was apointcd postmaster during the mittee, the object being to advance tho administration of President Van Bu-re- Tho House Committee on Appropriations Ordered a 1'avorablo Iteport on Intcrsts of the Democratic committee in 1837, and has filled tho same the lllll to ray It. along tho lines of the national plat- office continuously. form. The committee, of which Mr. Kxecntlve Nominations. Washington, Feb. 21. The house Jones himself is a member, includes Washington, Feb. 22. The president committee on appropriations ordered Stephen M. White, of California; D. J. Campau, of Michigan; Norman Mack, sent these nominations to tho senate: a favorable report on the bill to pay ot New York; John 1. Altgeld, of Illi- Joseph A. Olll, ot Kansas, judge of the Spain $20,'000,000 for the Philippines. An amendment declaring the, policy nois, nnd George Fred Williams, of United States' court for the northern Massachusetts. The headquarters will district of Indian territory; David D. of the government toward tho Philip- Shelby, of Alabama, United Srotes cir- pines wns defeated by a party vote. bo in Washington. cuit Judge for the fifth circuit. Chairman Cannon was directed to call Passed Over the Governor's Veto. up the bill under suspension of tho Bt, Paul, Minn., Feb. 22. By a vote Balled for Apia. Shanghai, Feb. 22. The German rules. of 40 to 10, or four more than needed, the state senate passed over tho gov- warship Coromoran has left Kato JESSE JAMES ON TRIAL. ernor's veto the bill appropriating Chow for Hong Kong and Apia, Samoa. The Coromoran is a third class $20,000 to pay bounties earned under A Case that 1'romlsos to lie Uneof the Most tbe beet sugar bounty law. It now cruiser. Sensational In the Annalsof Jackbecomes a law. son County, Bio. Hob nardetta Strikes It Illch at Last. Toledo, 0., Feb. 22. Tho Blade anTo Settle la Unam. Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 21. The triul Sacramento, Cal., Feb. 32.A num- nounces that Robert J. Burdctte, the of Jesse James, son of the noted to marry Mrs. P. C. ber of young men in tnis cltv aro or- - humorist, is bandit of the same name, on a charge ganlzlng a colony to settle on the Is- Baker, a very wealthy widow of Pasa- of train robbery, began in tho crimg dena, Cal., who has been his land of Guam. They propose to eninal court here. Judge Dorsey W. gage in the raising of the staple prod- friend. Sho lias one son about the Shackelford, of Jefferson City, is tho same age ub Mr. Burdett's son. The ucts of the island. two" young men are dose friends, nnd trial judge, and it is expected to bo one of the most sensational inquisiLibeled by si 8allor, are delighted with tho match. Seattle, Wash., Feb. tions in th'o criminal annals of Jack3. Frarv Schwam, a sailor, has libeled the ship the result of A Patrlotlo Knactment ' son county. On liberty of six, this trial Marion Chllcott for $2,500 damages for men and Albany, N. Y., Feb. 22.-'lsenate will depend the the cruel ana Inhuman treatment of passed a bill yesterday making It a perhaps tho lives of several, as train Copt. Weeden and First Ortlcer War-re- misdemeanor to use theliatlonal fiajj robbery is a capital Offenso in Missouri. for advertising purposes. food-packinBi-OoEx-Gon, cr n, Washington, Feb. 21. Secretary Alger has transmitted to congress a complete report on the relief work of the war department in the Klondike country, undertaken under act of congress as a result of re orts that extreme distress among the miners followed the influx to tho gold country during 1807-9It embraces the detailed reports of Capt. Y. II. Bay and Lieut. W. P. Richardson. Aside from details of the relief work, Capt. Ray's last report, dated May last, contains the following interesting statement: CAPT. RAY'S STATEMENT. "I deem it of the greatest importance for the development of the country that roads should bo opened, so as to enable the people to enter the country not only from the Yukon to the open sea in our own country, which is of the greatest importance, but to enable miners and prospectors to get Into the interior with their supplies. Under existing conditions persons can enter tho country only by tho one great highway the Yukon river and they can not hope to be landed at any point in Alaska earlier than July 1. g "The districts ore from CO to 150 miles back from the main stream. There aro not any summer trails except foot trails, and provisions and mining tools can only be transported on tho backs of men. "I do not find anything either in Alaska or Northwest territory to justify the great rusli of people to that country, or the enormous investment now being made in transportation, trading and mining companies. In Northwest territory no discoveries of extraordinary richness have been made since that of the Klondike, and the claims are almost entirely confined to Bonanza, Eldarado, Dominica,' Ilonka and Sulphur, with a few claims on Bear creek. In this district nil rich claims arc well known and held nt very high prices, and while tho whole country has been staked it has been done far speculative purposes, nnd no work is being done except such ns is necessary to hold title until they can be sold to the unwary newcomer or disposed of In tho states for corporation schemes. Capt. Constnntine, of the Conadian, Northwestern mounted police, is my authority for denouncing the move ment as a fraud. "In the abscence ot any other industry, except cutting wood for tho river boats, I do not seo anything in the future for over 90 per cent, of the people now flocking to that country but disappointment and suffering. Even those who obtain employment at $1:50 per hour, find that after deducting the cost of candles, etc., they do not net to exceed $2 per day, and they tell me it is barely enough to tide them over the Idle seagold-bearin- (Second Session.) In iho senate, on the 16th, tha military academy appropriation bill was passed; tho army reorganization bill was reported from committee, nnd the naval personnel bill wan taken up and read. The post office appropriation bill was then taken up and Its Consideration occupied tho ercatci part of the day, but It was not finally disposed of in tho houso the paragraph In tho sundry civil bill carrying tho appropriation of i20.000,000 for tho payment of Spain under tho terms of the peaco treaty, was stricken out under a point ol order. Sir. Hepburn (la.) moved to recommit tho bill with instructions to report It back with tho canal bill Incorporated In It. On a want of quorum the motion went over. In the senate, on the 17th, a resolution was adopted Instructing the president of the senato to express to the government and the people ot France the sympathy of the reniue In the death ot President Fauro. The naval personnel bill was Seventy-fou- r private pension passed. bills were passed, and the Alaska code bill was read In the houso the sundry Civil appropriations bill was passed wltn-othe Nicaragua canal bill rider. The naval appropriation bill was taken up, and over hnlf of It was completed. Tho bill carries JS.000,000 more than the largest naval' bill heretofore passed. In the sennte, on the 18th, after the passage of a number of bills ot llttlo Importance the consideration ot the post ofllco appropriation bill was resumed In the house several bills of minor importance were passed, after which tho house went Into committee of the whole, nnd resumed consideration ot the naval appropriation bill. At two o'clock tho committee rose, and the remainder ot the session was devoted to eulogies ot the ldts Representative Northwny, of Ohio. In tho senate, on the 20th. much time was devoted to consideration of the post ofllco appropriation bill. At two o'clock the army reorganization bill was taken up and made the unfinished business. This action disposes finally (for this session) of the bill In the house a separate bill appropriating J20.000.0W for payment of Spain under the treaty was rules, under suspension of Sasscd, bill to reimburse states tho moneys for expended In organizing volunteers for service In the Spanish war was passed under suspension. In the senate, on the 21st, houso bill to relieve mortgages and notes from double taxation was passed, as was, also, tho post office appropriation bill, after Mr. Butler's amendment to reduce tho appropriation for railroad mall transportation, was defeated The senate then took up the army reorganization bill In tha house, after much discussion, an amendment to the naval bill appropriating to complete tho three buildings authorized to bo erected at tho naval academy at Annapolis, Md., was passed. The houso rached the last page of tne naval bill, and adjourned with a point of order pending. ut nntl-scalplS720,-0- I1B II. IF INTERIOR DEPARTMENT. The Noit Secretary, Hon. Ethan A. Hitch- rock, Late Ambassador to 'Russia, at Ills Post. Washington, Feb. 21. Mr. Ethan Allen Hitchcock, of St. Louis, recently United States ambassador to Russia, w4 CL dsrKsaem X r ! iysKcy Jfe took the prescribed oath and entered upon his duties ns secretary of the Interior. LOSS OF THE ROSSMORE. The Ilrltlsh Steamship Ilosimore Abandoned at Sea In a Sinking Condition. ETHAN ALLEN HITCHCOCK, New York, Feb. 18. The steamer Rotterdam, just arrived, reports that on February 0, in latitude 40:33, longitude 48:20, she sighted the Urltish 6teamer Itossmore. from Liverpool for Italtlmore, In n sinking condition. Tho Rotterdam took off all on board the Rossmore, 42 in nil, including eight cattlemen. The Rotterdam stayed by tho Rossmore for CO hours. Capt. Duncanson of the Rossmore reported that nine members of his crew had been taken off by 'the steamer Trojan before'the Rotterdam came up. FLOATING FLAMES. The Floating drain Elevator Columbia on Fire In North Hirer, New York. New York, Feb. 21. Tho floating grain elevator, Columbia, took fire at TJer 33, North River, at noon. Tho flaming elevator was towed out into the stream, whero she is still burning. She will likely be a total loss. Fire boats aro throwing great quantities of water upon tho flaming mass, which presents a novel sight. The loss will probably reach $200,000. Not Expected to Itecover. Washington, Feb. 18. Representative Cranford, of Texas, is very ill at tho Providence hospital, in this city. He has been so low that his friends do not expect him to recover. DTe is suffering from a complication of diseases Which the doctors have been unable to Died of OIU Age. Chicago. Feb. 20. David Dradley, president of the David Bradley Manufacturing Co., nnd proprietor of the first foundry in Chicago, died yesterday of old age. He was born in dro-toN. Y., in 1812, and camo to Chicago, 04 years ago. I'hotograpbs of the Duo d'Orleans Seised Paris, Feb. 18. At the meeting of the cabinet last evening M. Dupuy, the premier, announced that 5,000 photographs of the Duo d'Orleans had been seized on the frontier. light Metneeu Itnsslaus and Chinese. Pekln, Feb. 20, A serious conflict hns taken place between the Russians and Chinese at Tallen Wan, 300 ot the latter being killed. It is said to have originated in a question of taxes. n, Ilurnedat Ilunnewell, Kas. Wichita, Kas., Feb. 19. At midnight, Friday, fire wiped out the business portion of Hunnewcll, Kas. Ten buildings with the contents were burned. Their loss is heavy. Ten Tlullcllujn Within an hour( at Warren, Ark., M. Loubet, President of the Senate, Gus Waters was Indicted nnd sen Elected by the Assembly fenced for forgery. Gov. Stephens of Missouri has parat Versailles. doned Louis Main, sentenced to tho penitentiary, for robbery in the first degree. M. MELINE WAS HIS ONLY OPPONENT. The body of Private Hardwlck, who lias been missing from Fort Bliss, Tex., wns found near El Paso,- - The clothing Tha Had Withdrawn from the Con- had been rifled. The house of representatives passed test, Bat tho Progressionists Insisted on Voting for nim M. Cavalgnac, Oen. a bill appropriating $20,000,000 with Jamont, Oen. Sansslei and Others Got which to pay Spain, on the ratification of the peace treaty. Scattering Totes. f State Attorney Vaughan of MacouParis, Feb. 19. From nn early hour pin county, III., has entered a nolle prosequi io the stutions of tho railroad lines leading against Gov, Tanner.indictment found to Versailles wero crowded with peoJoe Covert, a prominent lumber ple gathered to witness tho departure man, was killed near Dexter, Mo by a of tho deputies and senators. M. mill hand, who wonted a watch which Deroulcdo arrived hero by tho Lyons Covert held in trust. The Cretan chambers were opened railroad and was met by members of Monday by Prince George, the high the Patriotic league. Tho assembly met at one o'clock. commissioner of the powers, who reIt. Loubet declared tho sitting open ceived n warm greeting. Backmailers are nt work in New amid tho applause of tho leftists, M. Loubet proceeded to draw York city, using composite photographs to accomplish their ends. The for tellers. The voting began with tho letter Idea wns imported from Paris. Robert Lee Etter and his young wifa "D," nnd M. Dausette, moderate republican, representing in the cham- were burled in the same grave in their ber ot deputies tho Fourth district wedding clothes of a year ago in cemetery, St. Louis. of Lille, in the depyartment of the Tho crew of tho wrecked schooner north, cast the first ballot. When M. Paul DeRoulede, organizer Bnyles reached Portsmouth, Vo. They of the League of Patriots, and deputy wero three days without food, water lire. The captain's wife perished. representing tho second districts of orWichita (Kas.) citizens have raised Angoulemc, voted, ho attempted to $300 to speak from tho tribune, whero tho pealing pay the attorney's fees in aptho case of Paddy Shea, conurns were placed; but M. Loubet forbade him to do so, which called forth victed of murder in tho second degree Agulnaldo's claim protests from tho rightists and ap- rated a humane war that he inauguis disproved by plause from tho leftists. the fact that his men fire on the Red TIIE BALLOT COMPLETED. Cross peophj nnd on wounded men. In tho meantime, tho voting con- The Red Cross workers now go armed. tinued, and at 2:40 p. m., tho ballot Mario Blanche Obrey Anderson has was completed. While tho checking confessed that, on the morning of Febwas in progress, tho members of tho ruary 9, she put poison in tho coffee assembly left tho hall and assembled of Dr. nnd Mrs. Anderson, her foster In tho galleries and corridors, where parents, at Des Moines, la. they discussed the chances of the Xavler Scharwenka, the famous pielection. anist and composer, has suffered a Tho progressists insisted on voting paralytic stroke in Berlin, whero ho for H. Meline, although ho had with- resides, nnd it is a question if he will drawn his candidature in favor ot M. ever fully regain his powers. Loubet, which explains the vote cast The old fiddlers' contest for the benfor him. efit of the I. O. O. F. old folks' homo M. LOUBET ELECTED. at the Mattoon (111.) theater Monday Tho votes not given to M. Loubet or night, was n grand success in every M. Melino wero divided between M. respect, nnd was witnessed by the Cavalgnac, Gen. Jamont, Gen. Saus-sie- r largest audience assembled this season. and others. It is officially announced that M. William Jennings Bryan has accept" Loubet has received 483 votes, to 270 ed the invitation of the Ancient Order of Hibernians to deliver the St. Patcast for M. Meline. The announcement of the result was rick's day oration in Bloomington, 111., greeted with prolonged applause, but will speak there on March 10, as mingled with violent protests from he is to be in Louisville, Ky., on the tho rightists, and tho leftists shout- 17th. Owing to the fact that a number of ing "vivo la republlque." M. Cbauveau then declared the sit- American. gamblershave been plying their trade among' the'soldieri of "the" ting closed. A squadron of cuirassiers, which ar- Seventh nrmy corps, in Cuba, several rived at tho palace to escort tho new gambling outfits have been seized and president, wns greeted by tho crowd destroyed In Gen. Fltzhugh Lee's camp. outside with cries of "vivo Paraee." Mrs. Mahal.a Bentley celebrated her Calm prevailed, although tho crowds One Hundreth birthday anniversary were increasing in size. Monday, at the home of her son, Preston W. Bentely, In Bloomington, III. THE G. A. R. COMMANDERSHIP. She wns the second white child bore The Judffo Advooate General DeclkYas that In Kentucky, and wns born atBoones-boro- , in that state. the National Executive Committee Mast Elect. George B. M. Harvey has bought tho North American Review from Lloyd Minneapolis, Minn., Feb. 19. Capt. S. Brice and David A. Monroe. Tho Ell Torrance, of Minneapolis, judge ad- price Is reported to be $225,000. Mr. vocate 'general of tho National G. A. Harvey has taken possession of tut R. organization, has made his decision property, and will assume editorial diin the matter of the disputed succes- rection of the magazine with the May sion to tho national commandershlp number. made vacant by the death of Col. SexI'rof. Stephens Found Guilt of Arson. ton, of Chicago. Tho decision is that Easton, Pa., Feb. 19. Prof. Stepha successor must bo elected, that there la no promotion in the G. A. 11. ens, who has been on trial for a week charged with setting fire to Pardee through death. Capt, Torrance holds that the execu- hall, Lafayette college, was found tive committee of tho National council guilty nt noon, the jury being out has full powerto elect the commander. only an hour. It will bo unnecessary to call n meetMurder Iu the Second Decree. ing of tho national council. The deWichita, Kas., Feb. 20. The jury lit cision is sustained by a lengthy and the Paddy Shea murder case yesterconclusive memorandum. day returned a verdict of murder in NEBRASKA WINTER WHEAT; the second degree. He was tried for killing Ed. Dawson, a noted crook, last Advloetf from the Northern Portion of thei July. State Show Great Damage Done by Cold Weather. THE MARKETS. Neb., Feb. 20. Advices to Omaha, New York. Feb 22. 1899. CATTMD-Nat- lve Steers...; CO fij S 60 the Beo from its regular correspond- DOTTON-Mlddll- nB 6tf& 6H ents in northern Nebraska indicate FLOUIt-Wln- ter Wheat.... IS ti 101 WHKAT-N8 W that tho winter wheat crop has been COKN-N- o. o. 2 Z Rod 44U U)',it badly damaged by the recent cold OATS-N- o. 2 ip K 19 25 it 10 W Mess the I'OHK-N- ew snap. Those who have examined bt: LOUIS. fields say that if there had been even COTTON-Mlddl- lne 60 GH a light covering of snow tho germ UEKVisa sieers ............. sxi ii tw Cows and Heifers. 2 60 O 4 00 would have withstood the extreme CALVEB-(p- er 100) 6 00 u 6 60 3W M 3 &.M cold. As it was, however, tho ground HOUS U'ftir to I'noice at SIIEKP Fair to Choice.... 3 tO & to. was bare nearly nil over the state FLOUR Patents (new).... 3 60 & 3 70 Clear the time the sevens weather came on WHEAT-N- o. and Straight. 2 80 Q 3 35 tf & and the result is that iu many locali- CORN No. 2 2 Red Winter 74 (P 7 23 UMip ties the crop will be a total failure, OATS-N- o. 2 2 UYi: No. it while in others it will bo very light. TOBACCO Lugs 3 00 Q 8 60 Leaf Uurloy.... ilQ ft 12 00 Dodgo county reports tho most severe IIAY-Cl- ear Timothy 7 60 Q S 60 damage. 18 10 if UUTTER 23 2 tf UGC1S Fresh Death nt the Feast. StandardMess(new) .... J 9 60 PORK Cj G Rib Boston, Feb. 18. Amid the un- UACON-Cl- ear Steam it 6 bounded enthusiasm that prevailed in LAUD Prime CHICAGO. 3 the Merchants' building at the ban. CATTLE Native Steers... 3 75 & 6 C5 45 3 SO HOGS quet of the Home Market club, to SHEEP Fair totoChoice Choice.... 2 60 (t 4 60 Fair President McKlniey, Thursday nigh, rLOUK-Wln- ter Spring Patents.., 110 O i 70 3 40 Pate death stulked in and claimed ono ot WHEAT No. 2 Spring- its... 67 & 3 70 72 & 73Vi No. 2 Red men present. Tho vie-titho prominent UWip 35 was Frank E. Taft, of Whitlns-vlile- , CORN-N- o.No. 22 Mixed lm& 2 V4 OATS 9 20 Q 9 25 with PORK Mess (new) Mass., who was stricken KANSAS CITY. apoplexy nnd died in a few minutes. CATTLE Native Bteers... 4 60 tj 5 60 3 40 & 3 65 HOGS All Grades 72 Q Husband and Wife In tho Same Grave. 73 IVHEAT No. 2 Red (new). SO 2 White O S0V 111., 18. Robed OATS-N- o. Feb. Metropolis, 2 CORN-N- o. j,... S2H0 S3 Colo and his wife, two old residents oi NEW ORLEANS. (65 Q 4 30.. this town, wero buried in tho samt FLOUR-Hl- gh 2 Grade ft 43 rORN No. grave. Cole was a cousin of Frank OATS 'Western 34 O 1100 (J 13 60 and Jesso James and tho Youngei HAY Choice 9 76 10 00 Mess PORK Standard Brothers. They visited him hero sev- BACON-Sl- de & 6V4 . COTTON-M.dd- l.nf .... O eral times under assumed names. 75 7U V. Dupuy Aaked to Itetaln tho l'remeishlp. WHEATNO.No. 2 Red Z Mixed 34V ZZYM CORN Paris, Feb. 10. President Loubet OATS-N-o, 31I 2 Mixed 29H& 10 23 4 10 60 New Mess has asked M. Dupuy to retain tho pre- PORK ear DACON-Cl6. Ribs 6ft& miership and the present cabinet. ;OTTON-Mlddl- lng t it CVt dur-whtBelle-fontaine (J Choice-Dilry.... I HASH TUNING GRAY? What does your mirror say? Does it tell you of some little streaks of gray? Are you pleased? Do your friends of the same age show this loss of power also? Just remember that gray M once the change begins. without - helo. while dark hnlr luyiuiy ucuillLtt Wild! .. hair never becomes darker M Tirair 1 vigor fails. It is just as sure as that heat melts snow, or that water quenches fire. It cleanses the scalp also and prevents the formation of dandruff. It feeds and nourishes the bulbs of the hair making them produce a luxuriant growth. It stops the hair from falling out and gives a fine soft finish to the hair as well. wpon request. We hare -. book on tlie Hair and Scalp vblcn jou mar obtain tree It 70a da not obtain all the beneflU tou expected from the me ot the Vigor, write the Doctor about It. Addreis, DK. J. C. AVER ujwcii, Mail. will bring back to your hair the color of youth. It never Creek Record. A big record for coal shoveling was made Tuesday night at the Arnold by Cliff Mason and Pete Simms. Tlfese two men shoveled 1400 bushels of coal, loading two large gons. Then Foreman George Wyatt told them they could quit, that they had done enough. ., The.work.Avas.unusuaLallrarourid r , AJr''5' ','ayiV"," mat nigm. xiirec macnincs cue six and rooms. The above amount of coal was cut, digged and loaded and three and f rooms were left to start on Wednesday morning. one-half one-hal- Red Hill Jottings. Mr. Tom Grace, one of the foremost young men of Red Hill vicinity, took courage to join the Crofton Military Company last week. Tom says there is a time for all things and now the war is over it is time for him to prepare to fight, bu! if the Philippine Insurgents get much worse, it will be time to run. Messrs. Deonio Price and T. Mamby made a business trip to Norlonville last Spanish-American week. , t Willie Davis, who baa been qjiie sick.is reported much, better. The recent cold weather found a great many of our people out of fuel, but they scon hustled about and laid la a goodly supply. Ask Mr. Oilmus Mcintosh if be took in the grand ball at White Plains on Ibe gth? Mr, J. H. Dentou, one of our hustling farmers, is Ibe happy possessor of twenty young lambs, and he says be bad to do some pretty tall hustling to keep them from freezing to death during tbe recent cold weather. It is reported here that a certain young man of Manalngtcn will soon marry. Nit. Messrs. Leo Price and W.C. Lyell mado a business trip to Hopkinsvilla last week, Patin Crick, tbe champion coon hunter, oi Ibis vicinity, says he bas succeeded in catching nineli-tbtethis wintrr. It is a pleasure to announce tbat Mr. Luke Crick is again at his post of duly, having just recovered from Ibe effects of a carbuncle on his neck. Miss Bertba flight and sister visited the family of Mr. James Miles last week. Much sorrow is felt here at tbe death of our friend Mr. Guy Moore, of Norton-villwho died of a severe attack of la grippe. He was a good citizen and well liked by all who knew nim. Sincero sympathy is extended to tbe sorrowing family and friends. It is rumored here that Red Hill will have a baie ball learn next year. This ought to be, for our little town only lacks a base ball team and a bootblack to be in the front rank. Mr. Henry Davis says he loves all of tbe girls, but it is a bard mailer for him to find out whether tbey love him or not. Try, try again Henry. U No Hoo. tt . in g, :K e' The Stanford Interior Jounal, at Five miners were killed Tuesday at Blockton, Ala.by an explosion Stanford, Ky., has been barred the use of the mails because there was of dynamite. a case of smallpox in the Journal building. Robert J; Burdette, the humorist, is to marry Mrs. P. C. Baker, a wealthy widow of Pasadena, Cat., who has been his lifelong friend. Gov. Bradley has fixed March 3d and 4th as the dates for the dedication of the Kentucky State Tuesrl.av's renort of the cold re serve in the United States Treasury gave the amount at $226,977,- - Digest Your Food. Dr.BulTs COUCH SYRUP Cures Pleurisy and Pneumonia. Earl-iogtb- Ninety per cent, ot ail sickness is caused by food oot being properly digested, it creates poisons and goes into your blood 170. aod then you are liable to almost any disease the human system ( beir to. Use Dr. Municipal elections in large Catlstedt's German Liver Powder and 'Dannriiilir'iniq 1flVf PlVPli watch Ibe results. You will feel the Rood effects after taking one dose. Give it a smashing majorities for the Repub trial aod be convinced. Price 23c. For tale by St. Bernard Drag Store. lican uciceis. Dr. Olio's Spruce Gum Balsam Cures Your cough, just the medicine for chilBradley has fixed April 18 dren. Gov. Some len or more mines around Peoria, were sbul down last week 00 account of tbe severity of tbe weather rendering tbe boilers and steam pipes useless, and on Saturday Ibere was a veritable famine of soft coal in tbat city. Not even during a strike has coal been any scarcer. 111,, S' : h rtftc monuments at Chickamauga Park. Tho best remedy for lung affections. Small dows. Prlco S3 cts. at druggwts, as the date for the execution of Bob Blanks at Mayfield. Subscribe for The Bee. Murat Halatead, commissioned by the Government ai QftcUl Historian to the War Department. Tbe book was written in army camps at San Francisco, on the Pacific with General Merrill, in the hospitals at Honolulu, in Hone Kong, In tbe American trenches at Manila, in tbe Insurgent camps with ' gulnatdo, on tbe deck ot tbe Olympia with Dewey, and in the roar ot battle at tbe IdU ot Manila, Uonanita tor stents. Hrimrut ot original pictures taken by government on the spot. Larue book. Low prices. Dig prottls. Freight paid. Credit glren. Drop' all trasby. unofficial war books. Outfit tree. AdV-dresF. T. uarber, Scy., Star Insurance Bldf ," ChicsgOj WANTED ACTIVE SOLICITORS ot the Pbllllplnei,"by tor "The Story -t - '. I . ff i:' . " y-"..-- Br4, !WFr provides for a the cold ox out of the ditch and tifan of they have the thanks of all , those collection of buoys anchored off wave-motio- n :' rifitffHiir r7 v ' t 7r '.,'- - 7, ' S53FJ?S tw Jiu'l ' f -- P""?"' 7 '" CCbaJH. Bee r. people in many places who were shore, which are to compress air which is to be stored in a reservoir dependent upon their efforts. and used to run engines. Some PAUL M. MOORB, Editor and Mne-ePresident McKlnley. large buoys are making now for use The following characteristic ex- in testing this plan, and it is anBEE PUBLISHINB COMPANY. pressions of President McKinley, nounced that the device is to have Incorporated taken from his recent speech be- an elaborate trial next summer on Entered ths PcttoSee at Batllogton i Stcond fore the Boston Commercial Clubs, the south shore of Long Island. tan mailer. are having, as they deserve, the Both of these schemes arc said SUBSCRIPTION HATES: careful perusal and consideration to have enough capital behind them of the American people: to make a thorough test of their Hot only is our business Rood, but our fioo Una Year,iUUr'nadanea possibilities. 50 " " Six Mombt, is good. There is no longer fear of ThreeMontht. " S Severe buffering Serious Caso of Internal Ulceratod Piles Cured by Hood's Sarsapa- rllla Able to Work for the First Time In Four Years. W'vyiw NEIGHS AND BRAYS 71 " f'T' '"' OP THE ' - 6DiqiR." from the Toombs.' i money A I" :0 I recognized by tbe leading commercial naand Hanufacturers tions has been maintained, and it has been Farmcrs done without a resort to loans. Tbe cause THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 23. 1899. Traveling the Same Road to of sound money has advanced in tbe last Prosperity. Honest finance has made posibe- two years. The Filipino insurgents are tive gains. I do not think we quite appre- From New York Commercial. ginning to realize their (oily and ciate the full measure of its success. An examination of American exBoth branches of Congress 00 the 4th of ports for 189S reveals the fact that Is the best IntacttheOnoTrue Blood Punier. more peace than war is in prospect March next will have an unquestioned mato in the islands. for every dollar's worth of Ameri- Hnnrl'c Dlllo easy Wtaxe, easy 86c.buy, easy to operate. jority opposed to fcny demoralization of can manufactures rather more Evans is our currency, and committed to uphold tho Congressman ASSOCIATION'S STRENGTH. candidate for the seat as District world's standard. Certainly for two years than $2 worth of American agria every branch of the national Government for Kentucky made vacant will be united for good currency and the cultural products found their way Judge How long this gratifying by the resignation of Judge Barr. inviolability of our national obligations abroad. Condition of the Y. 11. C. A. in proportion will continue it is very and credit. The investments and other Kentucky. Surely Kentucky ought to afford enterprises of tbe people can, therefore, hard to guess, in view of the report of the Executive The strides which American manufaca decent home for her Governor's. not be unsettled by sudden changes. d We have been engaged in war. Two turers are now taking to secure Committee made at the State ConThe rebuilding of the old mansion to fill its former pro- hundred and seventy thousand of our citi- their full share of foreign trade. vention of the Y. M. C. A. held at have been in the field; our sailors portions is not an advance in any zens been afloat in two hemispheres; and But the lead which agriculture Henderson last week is filled with have interesting statistics. The number sense. yet tbe business of the country has been still has in this country over manof associations shown to be in the Something like $12,000 has been steadily growing, tbe energy of our people ufacturing is sufficient to promise State are twenty-nin- e eleven in multiplying, and a long lease of life to American inquickened, our resources subscribed to the guarantee fund at the end of our glorious land and naval cities and towns, twelve college progress along present for the Louisville May Musical triumphs, we bad oar country in a condi- dustrial associations, five railroad associalines. bus tion of almost unparalleled activity and Festival by the public-spirite- d onntr. Aadreituaiorpariicoim. s debased currency; H has been happily dis Specimen coplaama'tled irii'on'appHeatlon. iba pelted. Tbe highest and best standard of Correinondenti wanted in all parti THEY GO HAND IN HAND. "My husband was taken with severe internal ulcerated piles. IIo was onco ap parently cured bnt the old trouble camo back as bad as ever. Ho bocamo very weak. After a whtls he gave up all other medicines and began taking Hood's Sar- saparllla. This medicine did him wonderful good. In about tw months ho was able to walk out in the tho yard. When ho had taken seven bottlea be was able to ride out overy day and work a little and ho bad gained 10 pounds In weight, no Is now about as well as ho ever was and has been at work on his farm. Last fall ho sowed his own wheat, this being tho first work ho had done for four years. I think Hood's Sarsaparllla tho most wonderful rnedlclno in tho world." Nolia. E. Head, Deatsvillo, Kentucky. t'tUrk d MMiBKttfvvrtMiawMtwHMuuaKMauakUfcrMwuBufcMiHiMkKiiMaaMaaani Hood's Sarsa- parllla Walter John Twyman laid in a stock of provender last week, consisting of a bale of straw and an eighty-pounsack of bran, and announced that be was going to fatten his horse. His announcement was greeted with loud applause and fervent amens from his delighted audience, for they truly sympathized with the poor animal which looked like an animated and in a certain sense was certainly one of tbe Knob-bienags even seen in these dig gings. John put the equine up and began feeding adult doses of straw and bran. To economize on bran he mixed it fifty per cent, with sawdust, obtained from the mill near by, and reduced the straw in proportion. Five days later that borsa was deader than the traditional door nail, and Twyman called on tho "hoss editor" to explain the animal's death. After bearing all the details, the "man of nags" decided that it was bran new diet. We hope that all will pnl by The esaraple of this wretched man. bat-rac- Two Suits. Two damage suits against the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Mr. William .Day will please accept our arc to come up at tho spring term double and twisted thanks for a large sec of Christian circuit court. One is tioaot a sassafras root, which he present- that of Mrs. Victoria Cannon on ed us a day or two since, thereby enabling account of the death of her husthe "nag man" to work out tbe beverage band J. G. Cannon, who was killed problem by sassafras root, instead of cube by the cars near Kelley January or square root. Mr. Day well knows that 25. She sues for $25,000. The we are a tea totaler tbat is wo sometimes other suit is brought by John take a little teapot course. We mean Chi- Knight, as committee for Abraham nese tea, such as is universally found in Sergeant, colored, for $5,000. Ser tbe stores. geant has been adjudged an imbeLet poets line of mtafrai tea, cile. He was struck by an engine And other teas ticbew, at a Hopkinsvillp crossing one day Dut tbe "nag ma a" balls from Tennenee, this month. And slnca of "Mountain Dew." and Stokes were mightily "off their base" when tbey built that cupboard, disease by the timely use of Tutt's Liver Pills, an old and favorite remedy of increasing popularity. Always cures sour stomach, malaria, indiges- tion, torpia liver, consupanuu ana an uiuous uibco. Arrest . . 4 SICK HEADACHE, $ & - TUTT'S Liver PILLS DOWN IN THE MINES. PROGRAMME. ForLaOrlppe. Thomas Whitfield & Co , 240 Wabash Recital to be (liven by Miss Bessie ave., corner Jackson St., ono of Chicago's oldest and most prominent drueslsts, re' Swartz Cherry, Thursday Eve. commend Chamberlain's Cough Remedy crippe, for it not only cives a prompt riarch 2, Assembly HalJ. Q and lacomplete asrelief, but also counteracts any tendency of la grippe to result In Prologue "Physical Expression." pneumonia. For salo by St. Bernard Recital "The Boot Race" Murray. Drugstore, Earlington; lien T. Robingon, Recital "The Gobllng-gate...Burdelte. Mortons Gap; George King, St, Charles. Recital "Home, Sweet Home." . .Duprez. Mrs. Robert H. Drown, of Recital "Faithless to the U. S.' ....Hale. at Hop-kinsvill- c, COMSDY SKETCHES. half-burne- "So Was I." "This Little Pig Went To Market." "A Matrimonial Controversy." Whs sacrificed fill horse to try "Love At First Sight." Or. M. A. Simmons Llrer Medicine by tipell-In- x A Utile adnlleratcd bran. fiom the body tlia exeMi ol Dlle and Acldi, "The Negro Lullaby." Improves the Attlmllatlrerroceiiei, Purifies tha Recital "The " Dickens Blood,Tonetupatul Strengthen,. One night last week Mr. Mansel Sisk Recital "Yankee Dixie Doodle.". .Broum was posting up some accounts and was Pantomine "Nearer. Mv ' God. to Thee ine spotted lever still rages antt-kamnia, took morphine through mistake Friday night, thinkingj.it was and was barely saved by the doctors. .. Child-wife.- iness men of that city. The Fes prosperity. Our domestic situation is fortunate, intival is assured, but the fund is yet deed, considering tbe new questions which to be swelled. Kentuckians should we must meet and solve. That they will be proud of the success of this un be settled on tbe line of right and duty I dertaking, whether they live in the can not doubt, and that the business men of Boston, and of tbe whole country, will city or not. The Guthrie Courier has been beenbought by Mess. Claud Mims, the banker, and Prof. M. M. Faug- hender, the public school teacher of that place. This is the second change since January 1st, and will be permanent. It is not probable that Candidate Warrior Jennings Bryan's portrait will reappear at the top oi its editorial columns. be aa active and helpful force in their rightful solution I confidently believe. He Has Brayed. Congressman Wheeler of the First district of Kentucky has fixed himself with his colleagues ia Congress if not with his constituents in the wild and wooly First. The sentiment at Washington seems to have been expressed by Representative Fitzgerald, who arose after Mr. Wheeler had made his point A late review of the building of order which defeated the measand lumber trade situation sums ure in its present form to pay Spain the condition up in the following the $20,000,000 necessary to make language: good our obligations assumed by Tbe month of January was more satisfactory this year than it has been for sev the framers of the peace treaty.and eral years, and from every indication this said: will be tbe greatest year ever known in the I wish to say, Mr. Chairman, that the history of American lumber business. gentleman from Kentucky does not repre There is an enormous amount of sent the Democratic party in making these building in progress and all mechan- points of order. ics throughout the country have plenty of work in sight and most flittering prospects. Much to the discomfort of the Democrats and especially of Kentucky Democrats is the fact that Congressional record shows that the only objection made to the payment of the debt of $20,000,000 to Spain, contracted by the debt making power of the government, the President and the Senate, in the peace treaty, came from the Democratic side of Congress and from Kentucky. The honor (?) of this illustrious action rests upon Congressman Wheeler of the first district. the second installment of n War," in Jfarftr's Magatint for March, Senator Lodge discusses the coming of war, the destruction of the Maine, the signing of the Ultimatum, and the battle of Manila. This is the first account of the war by a man who has already a national reputation as an historian, and it presents a calm, dispassionate, and truly historical account of the exciting of 1898. events Among other special features of the March magazine is the opening Princess installment 'of "The Xenia," a new serial by H. B. IK This astute Kentuckian will not feel quite so smart when he hears from those of his constituents who do not believe in repudiating even national obligations, and finds he stands entirely alone in Congress on this question. Ooebel's Chances. From Walter Forrester's Free Press. "The Spanish-America- It has been matter of observaby Simon Pokagon, a Indian, whose father was present tion these many years that the ocean could do any amount of at the massacre. work if only a harness could be devised that it would work in. The Humane Work. The news has gone abroad widely tides rise and fall, but it is only in turns a of the extra work done by the coal rare cases that of Earlington and Mortons wheel. The waves are never at miners Gap during the coal crisis, and the rest, and motion is force, but the spirit in which the work has been motion of the waves is rarely put done by the operators and the men to harder work than blowing a has been a subject of especial com horn or ringing a bell on a buoy, meat. The vigorous movement of At this time, when the state of the coal by the officials of the business favors all sorts of new in Louisville and Nashville Railroad duitnal ventures, it is interesting here has also been widely men to notice the appearance of two schemes for making the ocean furtioned by the daily press. It has been a question of hu- nish power for use ashore. One is manity rather than of profit that an invention patented January 31, has led the coal operators to run which aspires to turn the tides to the mines part of two Sundays, account as a power for driving running electric during the fearfully cold weather when men were without fuel and motors, and making compressed The air. It calls for an inlet or pond almost freezing elsewhere. humane side of the situation it was which the tide shall fill, and in too, that appealed to the men which the water shall be retained upon whoae efforts depended the bv a dam. A Dig noat, witn a output of the much needed black series of reservoirs on it, supported diamonds. And the railroad of- by a frame work, is part of its apficials and men were imbued with paratus, and the general idea is to the same spirit and did all that fill the floating reservoirs from the was needed to get the coal to the pond at low tide, and get power as long as the tide continues to ebb towns that were suffering. as in their power lay all from the waters thus stored. So far The other scheme for the utiliza- these did what they could to take full-bloode- d Marriott Watson, author of "The Of special interest Adventurers." is an article entitled "The Massa E. cre of Fort Dearborn, at Chicago," The Democrats over the State have been disappointed in Goebel. He is a failure as an orator and utterly without personal magnetism. He relies solely on his superior shrewdness to win. If he has a single real personally devoted political friend in Kentucky that fact has not been developed. Every man who follows Goebel does so as a matter of interest, and nearly every one would rather be for some " bne else. It is doubt ful if Goebel can get the instruc tions of a single Congressional dis trict in the State of Kentucky, and he will not likely be consulted as to the ticket. This will leave Urey Woodson, of Owensboro, with nothing but a superb suit of curly hair and a wild yearn for an office. The only other two Goebel men in the State are Appellate Clerk Sam Shackelford and Charlie Lewis of Shelbyville. These two roosters will be allowed' to pick gravel with the other chickens, but that is all they will get out of the game. To Harness , - the Ocean, S. Martin in Harper's Weekly. tide-wat- er Time was in our history when tions and one among colored men. Twenty eight associations report the cultivation of the soil embraced of 3,964; a totstl membership interests so preponderant that twenty-twreport current exthey had but to demand a certain policy at the polls for that policy penses for the past year, $47,371. to be adopted, no matter how en- Three associations report buildings tirely destructive it might prove owned valued at 137,500, sixteen to every other than the agricul- report furnishings valued at Sixteen report 5.772 volUnder such cir tural interest. umes in libraries; seventeen recumstances manufacturing had pretty hard sledding in this coun port reading rooms with 1,002 vistry tor many years. No sooner itors daily; seven report educahad it lifted its head and at- tional classes; eight report gymreport young tempted to flourish as it should nasiums; twenty-thre- e men's meetings; twenty report than the agricultural interests, conceiving that American manu Bible classes having a weekly atTwenty-twfacturers were being encouraged at tendance of 222. men are giving their entire time the expense of the tiller of the soil, changed the policy of encourage- to the work in the State as secrement to manufactures at home to taries, assistant secretaries and one ol encouragement to manu- physical directors. leaving factures abroad, the The event of the past year was smokeless chimneys of American the opening of the Owensboro 25,000. The plants as a pathetic monument building, costing fickle patriotism of Ameri- railroad department is growing to the can farmers and the pitiful short and new associations are contemsightedness of unbridled human plated for the West End of Louisville, Corbin and Paris. selfishness in general. Times have vastly changed The association had a tent with since then. The farmer has each of the four Kentncky regilearned the value of the adjacent ments mustered into the service in manufacturing village as a market the late war. The total receipts and has come forth fully to realize for State work during the year the truth of Adam Smith's declar were 3,542.71. In addition was spent for army work. ation that tne nome market is twice as valuable, sale for sale, as There rests a debt of 1,009.50. the foreign market. On the whole The committee will need 4,000 though availing himself of the for for next year. eign market as an outlet for his Among the recommendations of surplus, the farmer has become a the Executive Committee are the More regular and sturdy champion of American following: manufacturing. The reason why special religious work for young a good lead in agriculture is ne- men; an effort 'to secure eligible cessary to the country's general building lots and the accumulation industrial thrift is that a large ag of building funds; insurance on ricultural export indicates that personal property; organization of food is cheaper here than it is at towns in the order of their importleast in tne countries wnicli pur ance; a more uniform observance chase our food, which are chcifly State Day. the manufacturing countries. As long as foreign laborers engaged st. Charles. in manufacture arc compelled to We are having Tine weather this week. pay at least as dearly for their There is lots of sickness here at present. food as American laborers in the Miss Jagoe, of Madisonville, is visiting same pursuits, our manufacturers relatives bere. cannot complain that they arc Mrs. Barton Crulchfield has tbe grip. Mr. W. . Fault has been very sick, but hampered in their struggle fot for is now convalescent. eign markets by the higher cost of Mrs Annie Rainer is on the sick list. provisions here and their conseGeorge Fault is in California, recuperat quent compulsion on that score to ing his health and visiting relatives. pay higher wages, and thus go It is rumored that Miss Annie Grlbble handicapped into the foreign will attend school at Greenville next term market. Mrs. Pink Harlin, of Madisonville, who Just as long as manufacturing has been visiting relatives at this place, re and agriculture go hand in hand turned home Friday. and agree mutually to enjoy beQuite a crowd of boys and girls have tween them the great blessings of greatly enjoyed tbe past coasting season. the American policy ol American Several of our people attended tbe fun' markets for American products, so long will the road to American eral services of Mrs. Rasb, at Grapevine, greatness and predominating in- last Wednesday. Mrs. J. H. Fox is sick. fluence in the world's affairs be unobstructed. But if either of Rev. Wright filled bis regular appoint these great interests becomes jeal- ment bere Saturday and Sunday, ous of the other and carries its Tee at. Dernard mines are running a grievance to the polls, an interne- day and a quarter eacu day. uusinrss is cine struggle is iikely to result, rushing. during which the wealth of the Mrs. Briant is quite ill this week, great American market will be disMiss Nora Faull received a box of Calisipated among foreign producers. Then the American people will forniais flowers, last week, from ber father, again learn the bitter lesson that who now in that State. Mr C M. Day, of Crofton, came down lamily quarrels arc the most destructive, as they arc the least ex- last Sunday to see his best girl. cusable, of all quarrels. Mr. Lee Sisk has moved back to the city, o 12,-703. using his spectacles to assist failing vision. During bis labors he felt some foreign sab- stance betwixt bis teeth, and taking off his specs, he used one of the side pieces of the same to dislodge the annoyance. By sticking the piece between his teerb, like a toothpick, be soon accomplished bis pur pose, but when he attempted to draw it out again, it stuck bard and fast. He made several convulsive efforts to ierk it out. and failed; then becoming alarmed, he pranced and bellowed about the room like a calf choked on a turnip. The uproar he created soon drew a crowd, who grasped tbe situation and also grasped tbe old man, whose eyes hung out on stems with terror, and held him until one of their number released the spectacles. No doubt the qnettlom'of the day Will ott hit mind perplex, Uut naver ajaln will he attempt To pick his ieetli with speci. Statue Poses (In Greek costume.) Stebblns. "The Niolads". . .Stebblns. (In Greek costume.) Pantomine "The Indian Gial". .Stebbins. (In Indian costume.) about Henderson. One family at Audubon was almost wiped out by the plague. Dr. Otto's Spruce Qum Balsam. A physician can prescribe Dr. Otto's Spruce Gum Balsam. Tbe Formula is on ibe package. Cures your cough in day. Very pleasant to take. Children cry for it. Large size bottles, price 15c and 50c. For sale by St, Bernard Drug Store For a beautiful complexion use Dr, German Liver Powder. In addition to the above a duet will be rendered bv Miss Lclia Dean and Mr. W. C. McLcod wilh Miss Ethel Evans as accompanist. Misses Sullivan and McGrath will furnish some music on mandoline and guitar. Proceeds of entertainment will be divided with public schools. Admission 25 and 15 cents. Carl-stedt- 's The National Congress of Mothers at Washington adopted resolutions urging Congress not to admit Brigham II. Roberts, the Mormon. Wisdom and Judgment compels you to seek immediate relief from tbat cold or cough Dr Sawyer's Wild Cherry and Tar has cured thousands and will cure you Sold by St Bernard Druggist. Ninety Per Cent. o POLITICAL POINTS. The friends of Lieut. Col. David R. Murray, of Cloverport, are wanting to run him as a candidate r for the Congressional nomination in the next election. The Republicans of the Third Railroad Commissioners' district will hold the district convention at Richmond, April 12th to nominate a candidate. Hon. R. Frank Peak, of Oldham County, it is said will quit the race for the Democratic nomination for Attorney General, because he cannot devote the necessary time to a thorough canvass of the Miss Jettie Davis, of Paducab, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Soulbwortb, at this place, Miss Claude Simms is visiting ber Correspondent. mother at Dawson. water-wheel- s, P tj.u T IT ... .,,.., nf T7irllnntnn flllorl hi. X. M...Mb.WU, ...tWM ..... AY... at the Christian regular appointment church Sunday morning and evening. He is tbe right man for the place and much good will be done. Hon. Theodore Uark, ol Dawson, was here this week, shaking bands with tbe boys. County Clerk John Brasher was in the city Sunday evening. Miss Bettie Davis is able to be out again, after a week's illness. . Mortons Uap News. Tl the mask ball, State. and all say it was a grand success. cures W Mr. Dulin Crabtree.of Christian county, CUBAN Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Rheu- - was in Mortons, on business, Monday. matisra and Sores. Price, 25 cents. UJ John Coyle is all smiles it's a boy All doing well. Sold by St. Bernard Drug Store. sQuite a crowd attended Planters OIL Of the people ere afflicted with some form of humor, and this causes a variety of diseases. Tbe reason why Hood's Sarsaparllla cures wben all others fall is fonnd in tbe fact tbat it effectually expels the humor ocroiuia, sail rneum, Dolls and all erup That "loo many cooks will spoil the tions are permanently cured Dy tnis great soup," was very forcibly exemplified in medicine. wanted a this office. Tbe Hood's Pills large cupboard made with enough compart- and liver tonic. are tbe best family cathartic Gentle, reliable, sure. ments to place a dozen copies of each issue of this paper for a year. Tbe job was let LOCOMOTIVE BLASTS. out to Hodge, Peyton and Stokes, of tbe force three genSt. Bernard mechanical tlemen who have assurance enough to un An appeal from thousands of railroad dertake changing tbe axis of tbe earth, or men to the Indiana legislature knocked append an addition to tbe universe. They Ibe 2ent fare bill (n tbe head. This bill worked on the job by "fits and starts" and tbe employees tbonghl it passed, meant a 'between drinks." Subsequent events has redaction of salaries, while tbe shippers of led the nag man to believe that the drinks freight looked upon it as meaning inpredominated over the "fits and starts. creased freight rates, to make np tbe defiA day or two since a teamster entered the cit caused by cheap and profitless fare office and announced that be had brought rates. tbe coveted file cupboard, and everything Agent TeHl, of Nortonville, who is now to the devil sallied from the taking a vacation, contemplates making a out to view it. Truly it was a thing of visit South through Alabama and other 'smiled clear beauty. The states before resuming work. back to bis back collar-buttotbe gentle The change of location of dispatchers' compositors warmly applauded its oeauty. tbe devil executed a doable shuffle, and office from Ev.nsville to Earlington is the "man of nags" grinned like be bad thought to bo a good move, viewed from a been tendered a swig of "mountaia dew," business standpoint, and will no doubt when, of course he smiles not only from prove beneficial to tbe dispatchers, who bave for months past been overworked. pleasure, bat also from a sense of dew-tI alack Dispatber Wise thinks it likely be will alas, tbe whole layout and But oh When that be compelled to rent a house at Madisonwas premature in rejoicing beauteous cupboard was carried in and set ville, as he has so far failed to find one up, it canted way over to ono side, like an here. Italic capital I, or the Leaning Tower at Dispatcher Sheridan comes well recomPisa. It was about two inches shorter on mended and he has already made a good tbe right side than on tbe left, as though impression on those with whom he Is suffering with a violent stitch in that side, closely connected In his tabor and it apor afflicted with a "spinal curvation." Tbe pears to the onlooker tbat a good selection openly asserted that it was for tbe position pf Chief Dispatcher has because it was not raada by "upright men." been made. Judge Cowell contended that Its builders While the many triends of D. M. e men." Tbe devil were not regret to learn tbat bis health has insisted that they most likely thought tbey become so impaired as lo cause him to Tbe "man of give op train dispatching, tbey are pleased were building a "lean-to.- " nags" still insists tbat it was only a "me to know be will still remain with the comchanics' lien" which tbe builders bave re pany. Tbe company has shown ibeir aptained upon their work. By mounting tbe preciation of bis faithful labors by providshortened side upon a brick, and conceal ing him a place, and he is in- - every way ing the base with an armful of old papers, worthy of the kindness tbey bestow. the dingus looks all right and will serve a On account of Increasing bnsiness, the good purpose. But tbe "boss editor" will railroad company bave given Agent e ever maintain tbat Messrs. Hodge, Peyton an assistant In tbe person of Mr. S. W. Motbersbead. .Operator Will Bainbridge, of MadisonW X ville, is now operator at Mannington. He is one of tbe youngest operators on the ! Henderson division. For tbe benefit of tbe railroad company exclusively, another telegraph wire was cut into the Empire office last week. James Slaton and Joe Faulkner bave been switchmen in the Earlington yard tbe past week, and the boys are hustlers in(I deed. We are informed tbat additional side tracks wilt be laid bere Ibis summer. Tbe railroad officials who bave been here for You EMULSION J some time recognise the fact that sideabout SCOTT'S track room here is not sufficient. and have a vague notion Rumor says tbe car shops here are to be oi! with that it is cod-live- r torn down and larger ones built in the near futire. its bad taste and smell and j The late severe cold spell did much all other repulsive fea-- 3 damage to tbe witeson tbe Henderson ditures. It is cod-live- r oil, the vision, so contracting them as 16 cause purest and the best in the them to break in many places. world, but made so palataConductor Joe Powers and crew were ble that almost evervbodv out the cold night, and Joe has a frosted fool, frosted fiogers and a peeled ear. One Nearly all can take it. children like it and ask for S of bisbrakemea likewise suffered. They o bad trouble with the. engine on the Hendermore. ii son bridge, and were detained there some time, in fall sweep of tbe cold wave. The crew was out tbirty-tw- o hours between i Howell and Nashville. ii Bloomington, III.. Feb. 19. Railroad looks like cream; it nour-- 1 men here are marveling over a phenomeIshes the wasted body of nal occurrence on tbe Chicago and Alton last Wednesday night. A freight train the baby, child or adult belter than cream or any ' ' was going west on tbe Kansas City division Wben near Prentice, III., on account of a other food in existence. It broken wheel, one of tbe cars was thrown bears about the sime rela-from tbe track into the ditcb, nearly 15 tlon to other emulsions that feet from the rail. The track was not injured. The couplings at both ends of the cream does to milk. If you have had any experienced car were automatic, and tbe car slipped out without breaking those on tbe two cars with other "just as next to tbe derailed car. The two secpreparations, you J J tions of the disunited train soon came towill find that this is a fact. i gether again and coupled automatically, The hypophoiphltts that are !" ! The air connection was broken, but, although the train stopped and tbe air was rnmhlnfl wlili h rnA.tivrr nil again connected, the trainmen did cot g!vc additional value (o it because miss tbe car, and it was not missed until they ione up the nervous system tbe conductor looked over bis train at and impart strength to the whole Ryodbouse. Tbe car was found in the body. ditcb next morning by the roadmaster. loc and Ji oo. aUdruukti. SCOTT d WWNF, ChtmUta, New York. Railway men hero say tbe accident Is the WW most phenomenal on record. r . editor-in-chi- Gov. Bradley has fixed April 18 as the date for the execution of Bob Blanks at Mayfield. editor-in-chi- ef editor-in-cbi- To Cure a Cold In One Day One would thlak tbat It there ware Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. time a country coal mine could bo werkad All druggists refund money it it fails to cure. 25c. Tbe genuine has L. B. Q. on with profit, it would be this wiattf with each tablet. the extieme cold weather and great dessxad forcoaLbut Louis Houlihan disposed et his It is thought that the quails in interest in tbe Rocker mine, last week, Kentucky have been well nigh ex- finding tbe operation ot a saall relas away terminated by the extreme cold from tbe railroad not a rety strofltable weather. calling Mr. Tbomis Stone became tha successor to Mr. Hovlihaa. The Cade, Klnx ! all BlrdJ. is noted for its keen sight, clear and disEight cars ot coal brought oat treat the tinct vision. So are those persons who Arnold mine last Saturday ssaraiag catted use Sutherland's Eagle Eye Salve for weak eyes, styes, sore eyes of any kind or granu- thote around at tbe time to look oa la woa lated lids. Sold by all dealers at 23 cents. der at the rapid development of that Bias. It is "now said to be a mistake Atthosgfa a sufferer frees a severe eM, i' Approximately one hundred cars of coal bova been shipped from the New Arnold mine since ii was opened In January . In keeping with their past acts and we mfght say tha spirit ot the organiistlon, which from the outset bas taught Ibe rule or ruin policy, tbe United Mine Workers at Bon Air, Tenn., last week, ordered a strike for some trivial cause, and that right In the face of the fact tbat all around them there was a piteous cry golog up that the people were suffering for want of fuel. But, acting under tbat selfish desire to build up Ibeir organization by showing their power to clog tbe wheels of industry , regardless ot the effect it would bave on poor suffering humanity, Ibey turned a deaf ear to all appeals for aid and 10 their effort to gain a point caused the mine lo shutdown. Bat. If. reports are tree, they bave gone a step too far, and from now oa the operators at that point have determined to be master of tbe situation and will ea deavor to run tbe mines to suit themselves, and regardless of the dictates of U, M. W. Another slide on the railroad runnlag from tbe Whitley Company's coal mine last weak, prevented Manager Roblesoa from furnishing coal to aid in tbe relief of tbe distressed at Louisville and other ; points, but by steady work night and day, bas been able to (gain resume tba shipment of coal Tbe St. Bernard Coal Compxny justly feels proud ot Its employes, foe when ever an urgent call Is made upon them, Ibey re spond promptly, even should that call be for them to work on Sunday. This condition ot affairs Is due lo tba fact tbat the men are kindly treated, well paid and their faithful labor appreciated by tbe operators " of the several mines. Tbe operators of tbe Arnold miss view with pleasure its daily Increased omtpat ot coat, and speak la complimentary terms ot the working force In charge there. editor-in-chi- Wool-dridg- "level-beade- d Eth-ridg- weather ceaM Bee oat TJeicg aU ia bis pawer-,- . Union says they expect 'a full aard frees to harry ateag tbe prodactlea ot csal to ra yield. Were those who were asiag tha mail, abd telegraph to seaa argeet ases All that can be done bas bees done to perfect Dr. Sawyer's Wild Cherry and Tar sages for coal, aa article they wera tbea ' for the quick relief of a cold or coagb. For suffering for, Sale at St. Bernard Drugstore Secretary Atkinson has returned frem bis trip Soatb, much isaprovtd la health, The oldest Yankee girl is Miss but in reciting a history ot his trip, be says Mary Spooncr, of New Bedford, be never before suffered trots cold as ha Mass., who was 104 on February did at New Orleans daring the Mardl Gras 8. Her father, Micah Spooncr, carnival, and it is likely that George wiH was a revolutionary soldier. take tbe precaution to see thai there Is plenty ot coal oa hand there before geiax Working Night and Day. next time. The busiest and mightiest little thing The citlteasotSlaughtersvilla, who were that ever was made is Dr King's New Life d Pills, livery pill is a globule among tbe sufferers last week oa aceoaat . of bealtb, that changes weakness into ot the coal famine, are now agltatiag tha strength, listlessness into energy, brain fag into mental power. They're wonderful in question ot opening a coalmine near there. building np tbe bealtb. Only 23c per box, A raestiog of tba Jeadiag citizens et HanSold by St. Bernard Drug Store. son was held last week to consider the Two of the Kentucky boys who proposition of accepting the proffer ot lea graduated Wednesday at West acres ot land near tbat place upon which s Point Albert N. McClure and L. coal mine was to be opened. Tbey figured N. Bushficld have been assigned that a good veio could, be struck by sinking to duty with regiments now at a shaft about one hundred and fifty feet deep. Manila. that the Georgia peach crop has been destroyed. A Fruit Growers notpreveet lb Preside beteg et the St. fv IV tek-phe- sugar-coate- ' i 'I1; INVCIOU o As soon as coal became preferred freight,, three weeVs' courts ot Dr. It. A' Sim the trouble In having It promptly trans- - ' will to KejoUte tbe Etcre- mom Llrer Mcdlclno lorr Functions that iher will operate without any ported ceased, and coal 'companies aad consumers were greatly aided and made aid winterer bappy by quick delivery of coal-tlarge Scores of wealthy families in markets, such as Nashville, Memphis aad New York have removed to hotels other cities. A two or o Heard out? 0 o o o o o may have heard 0 to escape the discomforts of the blizzard season. Some of the finest mansions failed in their heat ing facilities. $i Wbile tbe coal business bas been com- Coughed is Years. I suffered for 25 years with a cough, and spent hundreds of dollars wilh doctors and lor medicine to no avail until I used Dr, Bell's This remedy makes weak lungs strong. It bas saved my life. J. Ii. Koseil. (Jrantsuurg, III. v. lb During the recent cold spell the game wardens of Talbot County, Md., spread one hundred bushels of wheat and screening to keep the quails and other birds from starving. cores effected by Dr. Sawyer's Wild Cherry and Tar. You get tbe benefit of an eminent physician s perscription for all tnroat and lung diseases, bold at St. Ber nard Drug Store. There Is nothing mysterious in the won-derf- manding great attention, we bave beard bat little of tbe Immense coke trade, bat a visit to tbe Earlington coke) works Ibe past few weeks would bave found It a place ot greakv activity. There a large force ot aae have been employed both day and eight, loading and making coke. Tha salpmsnt has averaged 200 tons daily. One of tbe blessings we must not fall to notice Is that quite a number of men commonly called tramps bave been givea employment there, and they make good hands. Fore t man Summers is again back at the works, using every effort to fill rash orders, Although unable to tatty supply tha great demand for coal tbe past few weeks, only about twenty cars ot coal from Eastern Kentucky and West Virginia mines bava been shipped to help the Western Kentucky operators out in the Nashville.Teaa., market. SQOTT'S EMULSION n o J so-call- good" It was admitted by delegates during tba discussion that a atriko will be necessary to Red Hot From the dun enforce this rate. Tbe thick vein operaWas tbe ball that bit G. D. Steadman, tors, it is believed, will refuse to agree to, ot Newark, Mich., in the Civil War. It the proposed differential rate. The decaused horrible Ulcers that no treatment helped for twenty years. Then Qucklens mand will be made at tbe joint convention Arnica Sal cured him. Cures Cuts, of miners and operators lo be held next Bruises, Burns, Bolls, Felons, Corns, week. Skin Eruptions. Best Pile Cure on earth; A letter received by The Bbb last week Sold by 25 cts. a box. Cure guaranteed. from Mr. Andrew C. Clark", ot Paducab,. St. Bernard Drug Store. Ky says "It the cold wave had continued! Returns to the Railroad. to wave here, I intended to ask yoa or Elkton, Ky., Feb. 18. Elkton's preach-e- r some ot my other friends there to mail tne' conductor, Rev. I. R. Sble, who, for the past few months, has been attending tbe a supply ot coal as I beard coal was being Baptist Theological Seminary at Louis- shipped from there by express. Paducabi ville, will return home ibis week, and on was rather short on King Coal, but we J March 1 will take charge of bis run as passenger conductor on the E. and G. bave lived through Ibe crisis I believe," Railroad. Captain Shle's caused bim to give up school. Weak Byas ars Mao Strong-- , dim vision made clear. iIvm ms.iJ ad P4HfAiNUBIAN TEA cures Drspep. granulated lids or sore eyes otaay kind sia, Constipation and Indi. speedily and effectually cared by tha f Sutherland's Esgle Eya Salve. It's, pel geetion. Regulates tho Liver. Price, 25 eta. np In tabes and sold on a guarantee fay all Sold by St. Bernard Drugstore. good druggists. agreed to deliver ten within ten weeks. -- Pittsburg, Pa Feb. 19. At tbe convenWben criticised for placing a large order lor locomotives witn American builders, tbe tion of coat miners at Pittsburg today a president of a big English railroad ex resolution was adopted fixing tbe differenplained tbat English builders would not tial between the tbe thick and tha thin vela undertake to deliver any locomotives under fifteen months, while one American builder mines at 7 cents instead of 13 cents. It H- - .' Vf 31 ft I J M y :j (3 ItilHIvl 9 ee-o- r i ? $$? ' - fe.y:il4 Bm3Sjmw . - W t i Ht; lr " . nM.r & "By 3nbusttB MJV r m "fifi roe CHRISTIAN CODNH'S nJ w WEALTH. HEADOUARTERS Operating Department Again tablished at Earlington. Es- R0UTE AGEIiIN0R ZERO STORIES. (Ltiot," Final Recapitulation of the Assessment For the Year 1899. Hopkinsville, Ky., Feb. of 17. r '' V ."" - jV' ' -- wr 18 :.. if M m w the county assessment for 1899 shows LOCAL NEWS. tho total assessments on real, personal and railroad property to be show of last week 9,583,380, an increase of more The than half a million dollars over taked more than one man. ' 1898. The total exemptions under V And he "don't know how them the statute aggregate $627,095, IMPORTANT CHANGES FOLLOW. Company, in place of H. C. The territory Fisher, resigned. jegs gits filled nor how them jegs which, added to the assessed val' covers much of the States of gits empty." Great changes arc being made uation of all property in Christian Tennessee, Alabama ,.". in the operating department of the and Mississippi and the salary is Mr. Jno. B. Atkinson left home County, would amount to "'Monday noon for a journey to Henderson division of the Louis $4,000 per annum. Mr. Minor The assessment under the sev- ville & Nashville Railroad. Earl has been in the express business Louisville and Halsey, Ky. ' The Exchange Hotel at Provi-- . eral heads is as follows: Personal ington used to be headquarters of since his early manhood, and has property. $1,584,659; stocks and the officials of this division but been route agent for a number of dence, which was burned last bonds, about fifteen years ago division years. Mr, Minor has succeeded $830,440; farm lands, Thursday night, was owned by headquarters was moved to Hen- to this high position by lits own town lots, $1,904,649. , Mr. John W; Givens. There arc 206 stores in the derson, and some two years later, efforts and from the very bottom One addition was had to the county, and 110 diamonds, listed under Superintendent, now Gen- round of the ladder has worked Earlington congregation of the M. at $5,795. There are 45,865 acres eral Manager J. G. Metcalf, the of- his way up. E. Church, South, Sunday. Mrs. of wheat, 16,787 acres of' tobacco fice was established at Evansville, Best way to Invest 25 Cents. and 47,567 acres of corn in culti- where they have been until now. Kate Withers joined by letter. Antioc, Miss., July The plansaare now again changed. New Spencer Medicine Co. 1st, 1898. vation. Mrs. Penney Beasley, of the Live stock figures follow: Num The problem of moving the many I want to tell you what I think of your Dawson Springs neighborhood, has it Tea. I and ber of hogs, 30,697; sheep, 5,665; coal trains from here and from Nubianfamily, andhaveis used tbat myselfclaim in my you it all been adjudged insane and was sent it. It is the best Liver Medicine I ever cattle, 8,546; mules, 5,697; horses, other mines which feed the Louis- for is tried. the thing to the Hopkinsville asylum Mon ville and Nashville in the Western feel badItand )ust bilious. to take if you 5,694. are day. A. B. Lancaster, Kentucky coal field, of which EarlSold by St Bernard Drug Store. Lost His Jugs. is tho center, during the reington Lawyer Jonson had something Democratic Convention. Will Burrows and wife, colored, cent coal crisis, and at the same queer on his head Friday night The Convention at which will after he had it shaved which the of Morton's Gap, driving a double time handling to the best advantboys say didn't smell exactly like team from Cocncn's stable, en age all the road's traffic, has be settled the contest for the Dembay rum. But bay was the color route home from Madisonville Fri- determined the officials to again es- ocratic nomination for Railroad day night, met a train near the tablish headquarters here. Super- Commissioner for the First Disof the horses. Arnold switch. One of the horses intendent Martin, Assistant Super- trict is to be held at Hopkinsville ' A social given by Miss Lizzie is said to be famous as a runner intendent Mann, Trainmaster Dev-nc- y March 8. Hon. J. F. Dempsey, Huff last Monday evening, in and the whole corps of train of Hopkins ccunty, the present and the team flew up and around honor of Miss Nettie Toombs, of with such force that both occu- dispatchers have been here for the Commissioner, and Col. Tom Slaughtersvillc, who has been vis pants of the buggy were thrown past two weeks and have been as Corbett, of McCracken county are iting here, was much enjoyed by out, so Burrows says. The horses busy as men could be during that the only candidates, with Dempall who were present. then ran into Earlington along time, handling the heavy coal and sey in the lead. Following is a list of the counThe In speaking of the moving of Railroad street and up Main. They other traffic of the road. were captured near the hillside General Manager also paid Earl- ties composing the First Railroad the dispatchers to Earlington, Ed L. Wise said ho was the only one residence of Mr. J. E. Fawcctt, ington a visit during that time and District, and number of delegates of the boys who had ventured to having escaped disaster on all while he was here these changes votes to which they will be entitled invest in real estate in Evansville. sides, and were taken to Toy's were outlined and determined in the convention: Ballard, 8; Ed. has a cozy little home there. stable. The whole outfit was upon. This much is given out of- McCracken, 15; Hickman, 10; It is a little hard on him to change plastered with mud. A woman's ficially, that the dispatchers will Calloway, 13; Carlisle, 8; Crittenremain here permanently The den, 8; Caldwell, 8; Lyon, 5; Livand leave it, but he takes the hat and mackintosh were in the buggy, with sundry bundles, and a Superintendent's office will remain ingston, 7; Marshall, 10; Fulton, cheerful and philosophical view of conjectured. at Evansville for the present at 7; Graves, 23; Trigg, 8; Union 16; a railroad man, and takes the possible tragedy was However, the only fatal result, least. It is learned upon best au- Hpnderson, 20; Hancock, 5; Chrisrough with the smooth without according to the negro who drove thority that tho plans include radi- tian, 16; Webster, 12; Hopkins, complaint. the buggy, was the death of two cal changes and enlargement of the 17; Daviess, 25; McLean, 7; George C. Atkinson, secretary of jugs of liquor which he said had railroad yards and shops here and Breckinridge, n, Marion, 9; Muh,thc St. Bernard Coal Company, been in the buggy. The heavy that in all probability a new depot lenberg, 9; Hardin, 14; Simpson, alcoholic odor about the vehicle will be built within the next six 8; Ohio 13; Todd, 9; Metcalfe, 5; during his recent visit to New learned something about and its driver was convincing months. Accommodations for the Larue, 7; Hart, 10; Warren 19; retail coal. He says enough, but the missing jugs did offices of the dispatchers, train Grayson, 10; Butler, 6; Logan, 16; this not again turn up, and Burrows master and agent are entirely inad Barren 7. he hasn't seen a winter uutil he struck the Mardi went home disconsolate but more equate in the present depot. Millions Given Away. Mr. W. F. Sheridan, who has Gras City. Coal price was not the sober. It is certainly gratifying to the public to been chief dispatcher on the Knox-vill- c know of one concern ia the land who are only high price he struck, but that !..jiV'. a siuuuiuk LI jiuu iuhug ' uiuw, -- J division of the road, has been not afraid to be generous to the needy and Vocal Music Teacher. i mi mm suffering. Tbe proprietors of Dr. King s li,m.;aat-rafniMr, A. J. Showalter, one of the appointed chief train dispatcher, New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs nrrifit'nt lli mid. ihi have away over ten mile man He paid just sixty cents editors of The Music Teacher pub- vice D. M. Wooldridge assigned and Colds,bottles givedthis great medicine; lion trial of warmed by lished at Dalton, Ga., writing to to other duties. The Utter is one and have tbe satisfaction of knowing it has a bushel for the coal he absolutely cured thousands at the .rooms occupied by himself that journal concerning the South- of the oldest and most competent cases. Asthma, Bronchitis of hopeless Hoarseness ern Normal Musical Institute held railroad men on the line, having and all diseases of the Throat, Chest and and wife. Lungs are surely cured by it Call on St. Hit Mansfield, Texas, in November served as agent at Crofton, Ky., Bernard Druggist, and get a free botDunnlnjj-Carro- l. and December, speaks very highly on the old Southeastern before the tle. Regular size 40c and $1. Every Mr. Hanson Dunning and Miss of Mr. J. S. Hendricks as a post line was completed between Hop- bottle guaranteed, or price refunded. Margaret Carroll, of near Crabtree, graduate in the course, and as a kinsville and Evansville. Cansler Discharged. were married Sunday. Ed L. Wise, L. K. Neil and T. proficient teacher of vocal music. James R. Cansler, who is a . Featherstone, with, the chief, He says: member of the Third Kentucky Died. Mr, J, S. Hendricks won tbe lasting have constituted the force of Volunteers in Cuba, has been Nathan Tucker, an old and gntitnds of all by tbe way In which be at Evansville, and W. K. granted a discharge through the farmer of this county, re- looked after Ibe comfort of tbe many Griffin and John Devney have been efforts of Congressman Clardy. siding near Tucker's school house, boarding pupils. He proved himself to Now the force is Cansler was the principal support died Friday night, February 17, be the right roan In tbe right place, and copyists there. will always be most kindly remembered by increased by promoting Griffin and of his mother and sister and the 1899. jII. He.is no less competent as a teacher Devney to be dispatchers who will discharge has been granted on """' than at a secretary, and those in search of operate the trains from Earlington these grounds. He will come home Mr. W. H. Fox and Miss Eula a good vocal teacher, whether for normals north, the light end of the road, when the military routine of the dis or mere elementary classes, could do no Menser were married yesterday at hour shifts. The charge has taken its course. write bim at Mansfield, working twelve better than to the residence of the bride's father, Texas, for terms, three first mentioned dispatchers Mr. J. D. Menser, at Dawson Mr. Hendricks lived in Hopkins will work eight hour'shifts, operat An Honest fledicine for La Grippe George W. Waill, of South Gardiner, Springs. and Muhlenberg counties in his ing tne trains trom earlington to Me., says; "I have bad tbe worst cough, 4 lyouth, but his home is now in Edgefield Junction. Two new copy-ist- s cold, chills and grip, and have taken lots Died of Burns. but profit to tbe will be added to the force. of trash of no account Cough Remedy ven is tne dor Chamberlain s The four year old daughter of Texas. He is at present teaching of the new copyists. only thing tbat has done any good whatwas vocal music in this county, and has Jewell is one B. F. Zintmycr, of Manitou, I Thus the full lorce in the Earl ever.chills,have used one have all bottle andI cold and grip left me. tbe burned so that she died Friday prospects of teaching other classes office is eight congratulate tbe manufacturers of an clothing caught from after his work at White's School- - ington dispatchers' Wast. Her men, instead of six1 as it was in bonest medicine, for sale by bt. Uernard house is ended. Drugstore. Earlington; Ben T. Robinson, the' grate. Evansville. Mortons Gap; ueorge King, bt. Charles. $100 Reward, $100. Home Burned. Dispatchers Wise, Neil, and Rev. John fl. Crowe. V The home of Wilson Hampton The readers of this paper will be pleased Featherstone arc married men and The congregation of the M. E. at tbat Ihere was burned Friday morning last, lo learn tbat scienceIshas least one dreaded Wise owns a hbme in Evansville. Church, South, been able to cure disease and many other and scarcely anything was saved. In all its stages. Hall's Catarrh Cure is Chief Dispatcher Sheridan and people who know personally or Ibe only positive enre known The. advanced age of Mr. Hampton cal fraternity. Catarrh being toa tbe medi- Dispatchers Griffin and Devney by reputation Rev. constituJohn M. makes the loss a heavy one. tional disease, requires a constitutional and the copyists are single men. Crowe, are looking forward with treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken There has been a growing internally, acting directly upon the blood pleasuro-tthe meeting which that (lad Dog. among railroad men that and mucous surfaces of tbe system, thereeminent preacher and evangelist is Marshal Barnett killed a dog by destroying ibe foundation of tbe dis- Earlington was .the point from giving tbe patient strength by Monday morning that was effected ease and up the constitution and assisting which the roads's traffic could be to hold here in April. The date building with the rabies or Gome strange nature In doing its work. The proprietors best handled. Now that convic- set for the beginning of the meetso curative powers disease that made its removal ad- have tbey much faith in itsof One Hundred tion has become settled, and the ing is April 9th, the second Sunday offer a reward that visable It belonged to a colored Dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send facts as stated have followed and in that month. tor list of testimonials. Address, family in the edge of town and a Consumption Cured. P. J . CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. O. are following. Sold by Druggists, 75c. hog was also found qn the place Dr. Otto's Spruce Gum Balsam will cure Wonderful Discovery. similarly affected. Tho hog was any case of consumption if taken in time. Lunstord, Ala., April 15, 1S9S. Consumption starts with a slight cough or An Artist. also killed. This where, consumption gets its Co. Mr. Bryan Hopper is famous lo- New Spencer Medicinebeen troubled with cold. and it you will use Dr. Otto's Spruce start Dear Sirs: I have Twelve Divorce Suits. cally for the beautiful and very liver and stomach complaint. I bad no Gum Balsam, you will cure the cough, lungs and throat, and avoid tbe heal and Hookinsville. Kv Feb. 18. arcistic photographs he makes of appetite took my general health was very most the dreaded of all diseases, consumption. medicine from four different bad. I Friday was the last day for filing bits of picturesque landscape. doctors and they failed to do me any good. Delay in attending to a slight cough may Large bottles. suits for the spring term of Circuit And his fame is spreading abroad. I got no relief until I began to use your cost you c.your life. For sale size St. Berand 50c. by valuable Nubian Tea. I used about two Price 35 One hundred and ten During a visit to Mr. Ben W. dollars worth of it, and it did me more nard Drug Store. Court. than all .juits have been filed. The docket Robinson at Halsey, Ky., last good gained the medicine I everintook. I e weight pounds Third Kentucky Boys. There are year Mr. Hopper made some rare have my health is very good. J can sleep lighter than usual. and 'Polk Laffoon, Tom Stewart, soundly and my appetite, is excellent. I forty-ninequity suits, twelve of views of mountain scenery, among can recommend Planter's Nubian Tea to Walter Nisbet and John Nunn, all which, are divorce petitions. to any com- of whom were transferred to the which were pictures of a. remark- the world as being a stateAny which is now the munity. write one who doubts this commissary department before the able log house Oscar Baker. ment can Ball at Nortonvlllc. Third Kentucky went to Cuba, are Sold by St. Bernard Drug Store. Mr. and Mrs. Robinson Invitations are out for a ball to home of still at Columbus, Ga., and want only one of its kind. nd is the Early Chickens. be given at Hamby Bros.' Storeto cither be mustered out or sent house, at Nortonville, Saturday Mr. Hopper has just had a letter From the Glasgow News. to their regiment in Cuba. Louisevening, February 25th. Trains from Mr. E. T. Halsey, of Last week while tlie mercuryr Brave Men Fall several copies of .will stop at all points on both ends ville, requesting around the zero was Victims to stomach, liver and kidney photograph, one of which he of the road for passengers, and this mark, Mrs. Clarence Wood,, of this troubles as well as women, and all feel tbe in tbe special rates will be given at Hotel wants for James Lane Allen the place, had two hens to hatch twen results in loss of appetite, poisonsheadache blood, backache, nervousness, celebrated Southern writer and anfeeling. But Nortonville to all who attend the ty chickens, which are as lively and tired, listless, leel like no need Listen to and thrifty as any hatched in April. there s Gardner, toIdavlile, that. He says'. ball. The managers are Ed Cayce, other to send to England. Iod. . W. MSk earliest birds we "Electric Bitters are just the thing for a These are J, E. Tefft, R. L. Blanks and GaCU1AN BELIEF cures have heard of this year, man when be is all run down, and don't u Neuralgia and Toothache briel Stokes, and they promise ex- IM4i4AM crS care whether be liyes or dies. It did more sretavwi iBflyajainutea. Sour Stomach cellent music, good order and a aad Bosamer Compl&latt. Frieo, 25 Coats. Continued success can come alone from td givo me new strength and good appetite merit. Dr. Sawyer's Wild Chqrry and than anything I could take. I can now good time to those who attend. Sold by St Bernard Drug Store. Tar is steadily increasing in sales because eat anything and have a new lease on 'Saloons there will be closed on it is the best cough remedy on the'raarket. life." Only 50 cents, at St Bernard Drug I Sold by St. Bernard Drug Stor.e. Store. ' Every bottle guaranteed. - that day. Subscribe for The Bsk. one-man Ken-Kentuck- y, . $io,-aio,475. . Or-lean- The final recapitulation Trees Burst by the Cold. Promoted to Acting Superintend-o- f From the Hawesville Plaindealer. Southern Express ComBeech trees that have stood the pany. cold for a century bursted into Bowling Green, Ky., Feb. 18. splinters Sunday night and look as BACK TO THEIR FIRST LOVE. A letter received this morning if they had been struck by lightfrom Route Agent Lucien Minor, ning. This does not obtain to a Louisville and Nashville Dis- - of this city, brings the news that few instances, but is general patchers Office Permahe has been made Acting Superin- wherever that species of tree tendent of the Southern Express grows. Much apprehension is .felt nently Located. for the timber in general. A Public Statement rrom A Public Man Hon. W. II. Ohley, of State oi Wett Virginia, writes on open letter. CffxnLKSTos, W. Va., Mar. 0, 1898. To whom it tnay concern : n "I most heartily recommend as of great benefit in cases of catarrh. It b espcclully beneficial wherever the mucous membranes arc nftccted. As e tonlo it certainly has no superior.'" W. II. Oiilkv, of Stato. Bright Idea. From tbe Versailles Sun. A negro who made hres last week for a Versailles household that was minus a cook manifested great concern for the head of the house, who had to make a pilgrimage each morning half clad, through a frigid hall, to admit said African. "Look here, boss,' he suggested on the third day, "ef you'd jes' git up 'bout 5 in de mornin' and Hon. V. n. OiiLKr. ha- - cured thousands of obgo onlock dat do', den when I cum 6 dcy wouldn' be no needecssity stinate cases of catarrh, nml is perhaps at tho only efficient remedy In cxlstenco ob yo' gitten out o' yo' wa'm bed for catarrhal diseases; but thcro nro Po-ru-- g,, Oil Polygamlst Roberts. a'tall." And he didn't understand his employer laughed. Killed with catarrh and need why still struggling as thesa the unqualified help. To such countless multitudes of people who are. Bishop Dudley on Saloons. Speaking to the Y, M. C. A, State convention at Henderson, Bishop Dudley said: ''This gives me the opportunity to insist that I was put down wrong in a recent interview, in which I was reported as saying that the saloon was a necessary evil the devil was considered a necessary evil. I hold that the saloon is the worst clement of our civilization and is doing more to degrade our young men than anything else. Maybe the Y. M. C. A. will some day put something in the place of the saloon. The saloon is inevitable and will remain until something takes the place of it. "I once thought of being a candidate for school trustee in the city of Louisville and dropped into tlib Mayor's office one day to consult with him concerning the matter. I told him of my intentions when the the boss gambler of the city, who was sitting near by, said that he was for me and would insure my election. I didn't think the com bination would mix and withdrew from tne canvass before announcing as a candidate." a Snake in the Snow. From the Richmond Pantagrapb. a by recommendation of Found a Ohley Is directed. K. of P. Charm. Owner can is scientific and purely vegetable. All have it by identifying and paying druggists sell it simplicity of tho combination, but also to tho caro and skill with which it Is manufactured by scientific processes known to tho Califoiima Fm Svnur Co. only, and wo wish to Impress upon all tho Importance of- - purchasing the truo and original remedy. As tho genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by tho California. Fig Svnup Co, only, a knowlcdgo of that fact will assist one in avoiding tho worthless Imitations manufactured by other parties. Tho high standing of the a Fio Sriiup Co. with tho medical profession, nnd tho satisfaction which tho genuine Sjrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes tho nnmo of the Company a guaranty of tho excellence of Its remedy. It is far In ndvanco of all other laxatives, as It acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without Irritating or weakening them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, plcao remember tho name of the Company Cali-foilm- THE EXCaiENCE OF SYBUP OF FIGS is duo not only to tho originality and CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN-- for this notice. Charles Ballard, colored, of this city, brought into the Pantagraph office Wednesday afternoon a snake he had killed in Capt. J. T. Shack- The reptile leford's front yard. was crawling on snow which was more than twelve inches deep. It measured nearly three feet in length. Bee office. Apply at The FKAXCI8CO, CeL LOUISVILLE, Kr. NEW YOKE, N. Y. From the New York Journal, Horse's Hoofs Frozen. From tbe Jackson Hustler. William Lockard, one of our blacksmiths, reports a singular case that came under his observation Saturday. In shoeing a horse for one of his customers he noticed that the animal's hoofs were frozen. When he ''attempted to trim the hoofs, particles ot same broke off like ice. Mr. Lockard says in twenty years' experience in that blacksmithing he has never seen a similar case. Good for the Children. If there are any who suppose that Brigham H. Roberts is going to give up the fight he is making to secure a seat in Congress and resign, they mistake the desperate character of the man. One incident in his career shows his bulldog tenacity. Roberts, with two other Mormons, went to Tennessee to do missionary work. His companions were killed by angry citizens when the nature of their mission became known, and Roberts himself barely escaped with his life. Determined to secure the bodies of his comrades, and knowing upon his return to the scene of the trouble that recognition would mean instant death, he disguised himself as a tramp. As such he again invaded the enemy's country, secured the missionaries bodies and carried them back to Utah. Wanted Male Help. Wanted A hustler to sell an W. A. NISBB'l , President O. W. WADDILL, Cashier article affording good profit. A 2K"opkins (Lounttj specialty for which there is a steady and increasing demand. No samples required. Good situation for right party. Only those meaning business need apply. Madisonville, Ky. CleveAddress 'Manufacturer," land, Ohio. Gapfal Stock, - - - $50,000, Nice, Salted Straw. 30 cents Transacts a general bankine business per bail, at W. C. McLeod's. and invites tbe accounts of the citizens ot - Subscribe for The Bee. Hopkins and adjoining counties. Has tbe finest and most secure vault in tbat section of Kentucky DkBuU's COUCH SYRUP 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE fioro throat and constant congblncin-dlcat- e on affection of tho bronchial tabes which may dovolop into pleurisy Inflammation of tho lungs. Do not or wait; but uso Dr. John W. Bull's Cough Syrup at once and bo enrod. Sore Throat Capital Stock Paid In, Surplus Flint $50,000. COMMENCED BUSINESS IN 120,000. 1867. JNO. G.MORTON, fc3AisrKE:R. Tbe advantages of a bank account are numerous. It is not to bus! ness men we are talking tbey know all about it but to salaried men, wage earners and to women. There's safety if tbe bank is a good one. There's convenlence-tb- e money always ready and out of reach of your own petty squan dering, too. It is easy to spend small sums when yon have a targe sum in your pocket s, high-price- d high-pric- e Mrs. Ella Hinson, of Hiuton, Ala., Drowsiness, Lethargy, A Slug gtih writes us August 1 2tb, i8g8. "I advise all and a feeling Llrer camel Dr. M. A. Simmons of Apathr. mothers to 'give their children Planter's arouses the Lirer, and cheerful Nubian Tea when they are puny or fret- Liter Medicine a sluggishness. ful. I keep this medicine in the bouse and entrgj succeeds when the children are ailing I give them a Temporary Dispatchers' Office. dose and tbat is tbe last of it." Sold by St. Bernard Drug Store. The office of the tram dispatch- Cures Hoarseness and Sore Throat. Doses are small and pleasant to take. Doctors recommend it. Price Jjcts. At all druggists. JAflES QUALLS Killed by -.- r Falling From His g rs Horse. Quails, whose home was James near Hanson, fell or was thrown from his horse Sunday morning and killed while returning home from Madisonville where he had spent Saturday in drinking heavily. He was found by J. C. Sisk about noon Sunday lying in the road covered with blood and died Mon day morning. The young man was a son of A. F. Quails. A ers of the Henderson division of the Louisville and Nashville Rail road will be for the present in the front room over the St. Bernard Drugstore. Tho wires were run in and the furniture and instruments located yesterday. This arrangement has been made for a term of six months, at the expiration of which time it is believed the railroad company will have built a new depot, with all necessary office and and passenger accommodations, made important, changes in the railroad yards and shops here. Dr. A. Slack, o( Cog Hill, Tenn., writes; I handle Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine because it seems to give better satisfaction than anjr other lirer medicine. iyTOjra Anyone sending a sketch and description mar nlcklr aicortiln onr opinion free whether anirantlon la nrobablr nitentable. COmmnnlrattonjatrtctlj confidential. Handbook on 1'atents sent free. Oldest irencr for securing paLcnu. Co. rccvlTS Palenla taken throuen Uunn tptttal notice, without chary, in tne MADISONVILLE, - KENTUCKY Thadc Marks desiqns Copyrights Ac. Don't Use Drugs unless yorneed them, and then only pure drags, such as are sold by responsible druggists. We keep only the best. That is tbe great distinction to be looked for when the time comes tbat you need them Nowhere else will you find so complete a stock. A good time to begin tbat spring medicine. Mounted weoklr. Largest dr. nlatlon of any eclenuno loarnal. Term. H a eari four months, It. Bold trail newidcblcrs. l handsomelr Scientific jft.cricd.1. Branch Office, 836 ST. BERNARD DRLd 5T0RE, F SU Washlsjroo, r. C BRYAN IIOPPBR.Manager. I''CiB.M J. W. TWYMAN. DEALER IN Timely Hint Fox-riens- er. You should be wise and see tbat your blood is rich and pure and your whole system put in a perfectly healthy condi- y'Earlington is again to have a tion by the use of Dr. Carlstedt's German watchmaker. Mr. W. G. Barter, Liver Powder. Then you will be free of Equality, III., will be here in fr.om malaria, typhoid fever, colds and the occupy grip. Dr. UarlsteuTs uerman Liver row- - about two weeks, and will der is the beet medicine money can buy. a window in Campbell & Co.'s For sale by St. Bernard Drug Store. Mr. Barter is a young drugstore. For your Cold try Dr. Otto's Spruce man, single, and is said to be an Gum Balsam. Price 2jc and 50c a bottle. Stoves and Grates, CASTUGS AND TINWARE. gup.-vwf- Wr. g!ir,tv-sw;.q- 1 Contractor of all kinds Tin, Galvanized Iron and Copper Work. AND SATISFACTION GUAHANTEED. HOOFING AND GUTTERING A SPECIALTY jo-ce- excellent workman. He will probThe passage of the special train ably get the appointment as watch yesterday morning bearing the inspector lor me u, in. Company from French Opera To Sweeten the Ureath, Brighten the Eje.Clear Nashville to St. Louis attracted a tbe Complexion and Insure the Natural Dlooin of crowd to the station. The French-ie- s Health, use Dr. M. A. Simmon's Liver Medicine. aboard had a good deal, to say about Cozart's "Cafe." The L. & N. officials expected to put the train through in nine hours. f H''"e''iiitii'teitiittii'i'i'e''''iiiioi6''e''tiO'0i'tC' pu ny my up Jifflampibnpa,a.gi jp mVP YOUR ORDERS SOLICITED 'lntl 'ijffMt jcyji niyji.ii.yii piKsyjmyjma Who Does the Livery Business s i Ask your neighbors. They all say that we h haul better loads, best teams, and always at the right price. fur-nis- 4 i $ erffc con-victio- n CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Boars tho Signature of . open mi Night. MwK...fcrffeM!t.Astf A.fnl'.inrl'i Manufacturer of High Grade .. ,. New Machines. W. Lam has Mr. Repair Work a Specialty. ordered two new machines for the Pow-dermines. The building will be conBJeix-lix-xgjtojr- a, structed and the mines will soon be in full blast again after a most disastrous fire. wish to state to the general pubMr. Lam has charge of Powderly and lic that owing to the demand for efOakley mines and has made a most new work", as well as all classes of ficient manager. Greenville Tribune. It is rumored u3&fM& THOS. B.YOUNG Boots and Shoes, tbat J. ly Barnett & Arnold. iftYrrl! hirgJit Arfrhirftr f'l' t qiogjii jf!raVat iflfoilf B tfa.,.-,A.W&.1&.- Ky. M. McCORD, Contractor and Builder 15 YEARB EXPERIENCE. I "s thirty-fiv- repair work, I have procured the services of a first class shoemaker Dr' fiom Evansville and am now pres the forerunner to consumption. will cure it. and Bell's promptly on give such strength to tbe lungs that a pared to do all work cough or a cold will not settle there, short notice. All work guaranteed Twenty-fivcents at all good druggists. to fit and give satisfaction. Lung; Irritation e EARLINGTON, KY, All Classes of Buildings Erected and msrlA rnmnlptft r:w1v fnr nrnimnev. in. . -- r ciudin? the furnishine of all materials. mechanical ana common laoor. e God-sen- d . Coal Co., atSeamokin, Pa., is reported as saying: 'The old'fasbioned cold winter we have been favored with will, In all probability, clean ud stocks of anthracite everywhere. which must result in a good demand for coal during the coming summer and fall." Aq official of the Pennsylvania ST.JfllllESflOTEL, ST. LOUIS. EUROPEKN 25c. RL-7t- .. nRTAIt ex CDCrM. -- rPrice reasonable and satisfaction guaran- H eiven on all kinds PICATION8 A CONTRACTS )MHi a DRAWN UPON SHORT NO- - of Building and Special Werk. Give me a 6 chance at your work before,.;,leting contract, e M TICE. .. a-t- j runai & u,ci,, VI i llv 'fonry cyj tiyiy m,;,uJ"."it"'.i;.ma;iun,g u T!,rpu!iTpnp5iyj see-sawin- g run-dow- n rldllf We pay penses for Poultry Mixture in tbe country. Hustlers DINNER. SPECIAL wanted. Reference. Address with stamp 6 Lafayette American Mro. Co.. Ave., Terra Haute, Ind, SPECIAL BREAKFAST AND SUPPER. 1 Bef StW. or Mjlton Chops. Potatoes. WANTED SOLICITOR ACTIVE lor "The Story of the Philllplnei" by No.Cakes or Waffles, Coffe or Tea and Fruit. . M Murit llilitaid. commfuloned br lbs Gorern- - No. Ham, Two Eggs, Potatoes. Cakes or Waffles 33 anJ Cof!e or Tea. ment at Official Hiitorlan to tho War Department. No. 3 Pork Chops with Potatoes and Cakes or Tbo book was written In armjr camps at San FranWafflesani Coffee or Tea.... 20 cisco, on tbe Pacific with General Merrill, In the hotpltala at Honolulu, In Hone Koni, in the No. i Uk Trout, Butler Sauce. Cakes or Waffles 0 and Coffee or Tea. American trenches at Manila, in the lommont campa nith Apilnaldo.on tbe deck of tbe Olympla No. 5 Oat Meal and Cream, or Uoulllon, Hot Rolls, la Uutter and Coffee or Tea . (all of with Dewey, and In tbe roar of battle at the and Coffee or Tea 1J Manila. lionanta (or acentt. Brimful olOrisinal No. C Two Eggs. government photographer on pictures taken br Take Market St. Curs direct to Hotel. the loot. Large book. Low prices, lllg profile. Freight paid. Credit siren. Drop all truhr un- Try European Flan. Cheapest nnd best, cnlj official war books. Outfit free. Addreti, V. T. jay for what you get llatber, SeCy., Star Insurance Uldg., Chicago. THOS..P. MILLER, PRIBIDIHI OCU716I 124-12. . Butter-Toast Rates: 76c. and $1.00 per Day. salary of $15 per week and exman with rig to introduce our RESTAURANT POPULAR PRICES. GEORGES O. TOY, C'9ii iihh'hh ma''m a e m mvmm ' : immii H'f "'' BIHiliiKi First-Class 4&Ll ucccssorto Isaac Davis.) LIVERY & FEED STABLE. At tbe Old Stand, on Main Street, just west of depot, EARLINGTON, KY. Equipment and Prompt Service. iiiI'Hi MHHif V; . 4:- - Q V-SaB. - fTjrf 'Tw5(r ""Tb-- v JW'T r T WW''HsPVF . (l V vw? "V" , I? - v.- JSSSSS LITERATURE ;Sii . SSS9fi3iSS55539iSKS5JsaSSSSSSS THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. LESSON IX, FIRST QUARTER, INTER- NATIONAL SERIES, FEB. 20. I Text of 3T ... vi- I AV.D.llowcUi - i...i Ariit.Mr iiMtm Tilt a comL&ifttWtly ot tot mzncii tianouit; CRITICAL REVIEWS ir treated from with to wltk. BELLES-LETTRE- the Lraaon, Juliu vii, 14, 28- 1 Memory Veraca, Golden Text, John tH,37 Commentary Prc-pnrby the Iter. D. M. Stcnrn. 2S-3cd i ST. BERNARD COAL COMPANY INCORPORATED. a T mi 2THR0UQH VLST1BULE0 TRAIHSDAILY Enillth and American woik, S 51 to fr n Social arilc.M appear t " AmODS ftir DOOKi. wniian MAX mOLLCR EDMUND G0S5B DBAN 5TUBBS SIR HERBERT MAXWELL and from tlmt to time original piecei of literary work, poeml, Dctwa, ud s nuyi are publUbed, but fa cub cut only from the pena ol miters, auch ai aEOROQ MEREDITH RUDYARD K1PUN0 ... l -I t If 'wu Inntirt K.icn we etc m teiainr amuc in .L. nmisra wi u .J.tnrlal rKK. Trine ir Itadrt we prepared by the editor, and did xdulTtly with literary lubjettt. uiijiwwtMi"" "' ... J lleory'iati AMERICAN LETTERS letter, written by William Dean Howell, dealt In that The authors original and keen way with aubjtcta ol vital Intireil in the American world ol lcttera and art. French. EnglUh, Cerman, and Italian letter will be rmfcllihed, mallng thlt periodical ol treat value to reader interetted in the growth ol literature. and men ol Hie ability, rrtUaJw appear. Ideational work by Henry Rudyud Klplug will be pobliibed, deroted to deecrlptlre article on tuch tubjecti a rare and ipeclaf editloni ol lamoui booke, noteworthy curiou bookt, American cditlooa, etc FOREIGN LETTERS June, SPECIAL SUPPLEMENTS A FREE 10 i"j i.iiiiUDt vtiiv -j .... .a? T tTrn iTTTD VC fammtl TViffnll lltnTllcRitlitl Elf duUngul.hed men ol letteri (jo la all) lor one year' lubicripUoo. 11 PREMIUM OFFER nadiwdj HsS,91SGSSSSSSS!2SSS3S9SSSSS9SSSSi ha.. hiddpd ncx Cntt a Ccpy Trial Subscription, 4 Weeks, 35 Cts. Suhscrlptlon, U Q 00 a Ytar r, nrriTilPBe,. . -Publishers. New York. N. V. w Tho Kind You Havo Always Bought, and which has bccii in uso for over 30 yenrs, has homo tho signature of . and has heen rondo under his pcr- " -rVV7- sonnl supervision slnco its infancy. 'CZCC&fitr Allow no nnn to elocnlvn mil in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes nro hut Experiments that triflo with and endanger tho health of Infunts and Children Experience against Experiment. 11 U WBi if F could not. AVhon will tho enemies of God stop imnglntng vnln thlngsf Not till tho antichrist, yet to bo manifested, Is destroyCHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR. ed, and satan shut up In tho pit, and oven after that thoro shall bo onomles of God Topic For Hie Week Ilefrjnnlwr, Feb, until satan Is finally cost Into tho lako of 10 Comment Itev. S. II. Doyle. flro and tho kingdom comes. Tone A rnlAslonnry church. Acta xlil, 83. "Then snld Jesus unto them, Yet a (A missionary meeting.) llttlo whllo am I with you, nnd then I go Bears Tho church at Antlocb was the most unto Him that sont Mo." Tho tlmo was short until Ho would glvo nimself up and illustrious church of npostolio dnye. It lot them tako ntm and kill Him, but oven surpassed in ltd aobioveraouta oven tho in death Ho woujd go to tho Father, and church nt Jerusalem. It wna founded after tho resurrection Ho would in His as a rosult of missionary effort, it was glorified body ascond to tho Father. For nourished and built up by uiissiouanec, moro than 80 years Ho had willingly ab- and in tho providence of God it becumo sented Himself from His homo In glory, bearing all manner ot humiliation and tho starting point from which proceeded scorn for our sakes, and soon Ho was to tho grent missionary movements by bocomo our sin offorlng, bearing our sins which tho heathen world was brought to tho foot of the cross, by which wo in His own body on tho cross. 81. "YoshallEcek Moand shall not find ourselves know of God and salvation Mo, and wbero I nm thither yo cannot through Christ. tnc crnTAun eoMFAHT Tf munnat ariicrr, new ton city. como." In chapter vill, 21, nosays: "I go This church may tbereforo bo looked My way, and yo shall scok Mo nnd shall upou, in a peculiar sense, as a missiondlo In your 6lns. Whithor I go yo cannot come." In verso 24 of tho samo chapter ary church, and by studying it wo may Ho says, "If yo bollovo not that I am Ho, learn what a missionary church should yo shall dlo In your sins." Now Is tho be. Every cburoh should bo n missiontlmo to sock Hlra, for It is written, "Scok ary chnrch, and every Christian yo tho Lord whllo Ho may bo found," and should strive to mako his all who truly sock suroly And (Isa. lv, church one. Let us, therefore, study tho Popular Proprictatv 0; Jer. xxls, 13; Math, vll, 8), but If tho characteristics of this world renowned Medicine Sold at Retail sinner will 'not yield to tho seeking Sa- missionary church and try to make oar viourfor Ho Is always seeking over slnco for Five Cents a Package Ho sought Adam hiding from Him In churches liko 1. Tho church at Antioch was a well the first experimental Eden thon thcro Is n possibility of the oxporioncoof Prov. J, 28: "Thon shall they informed church. It had "prophets and direction that step in a call upon Mo, but I will not answer. They teachers," Tho prophets "were under may lead to revolution shall scok Mo early, but they shall not find the ecstatic influoncoof the Holy Ghost. Mo." Tho teachers woro expounders of Chrisir the trade. 85. "Thon said tho .Tows among undor the teaching of 'tho A Nw fork company of manufvturli g chemUte.the Illpana Chemical Company, no go that we shall tian truthBy Whither will compottd plao' '1 upon the market about rive ; .u u medicinal tablet or "tebuit "been such ominout propbots and Spirit." go unto tho disnot find Him? Will Ho jf oompreueil ixjwdered prrparatluu, t . t rtaln medicinal drugi wbU li had u le of more general uae amoiitf nittllcnl men than any other, ror the cure or al persed among tho gentiles and teach the teachers as Antioch possessed it is easy if auch Ilia common tosnenu liaw Ibrlr origin la an Impuliixl dlgntlou or letlatlnn gentllest" If they bcllovcd Him to bo for us to believo that they wcro not ror oaiuniiaung vihiiiukmuk nuir. nouruoiavu. weurvl capaclirilia inciuaea unurrxuoii.uuMjiuing kaiu iu mciuuv uu iv.ij v rh. hub ikihi i loifue or possessed of a dovil, as they said, they only informed as to their personal and .llu..1 iir whlh th Dhrtloten U called tlDOll tonrenerlbe. In preparing their standard could not think of His going to heaven to local needs, hut also of the need of the for the acceptance of the American t filj theoorarianr lata down the crlnclrjia prepared uliou'.J U) the hlgbeat grade, that everything entering Into the packet In'act andotunimpaired tnrougliand ao extended leavo them, but oven If Ho should posany world for tho gospel. Wo cannot imagiand protected a to retain It qualities bpseof time In any climate. Only the chclcrst drug anould be uaed, their preparation sibly laa good man and go to heaven ne) Barn a has and Paul ueglocting the lateit perfrtid method ot modern aclence.the tabulra ahould be In acoordanee with the surely thoy would find Him, for wcro they causo of heathendom. A church that packed In jclara, protected by abtorbei t ct.tton.and aecurely corked. Kven the cork uaed havo been of a grade aohlgh In 114 icqulrcment that no manufacturer of tbeae not all going that way, nt least in their aspires to ho n missionary church must erery day Hopper could aupplr more tb a small proportion from hie output that Anything moro than a own opinion? would meet the exacting peclncatlon. Tho rlaat vUI were In turn packed In Poxe ol aquality not surpaated In beauty and perfection of workmanahlp by thoee need by the mero man thoy could not coo Him to bo bo well informed along missionary IlaTtngaetlhrlrnlghatandard, moit fwtlJIou dealer In jeweUand oniamcntiofgold. and so thoy understood Him, not bocauso lines. Knowlcdgo creates nn interest andnererconontlugto Tary from It. the proprietor resorted to the accepted modern methods of making their commodity known, and seven hundred thousand dollar they would not receive- Illni. and inspires with a desiro to help in within five year In newspaper advertising ba Informed every American cltlren 80. "What manner of saying is this that tho work of evaugoliziiig tho world. It concerning tun sutmrlor and eurprblng qualities of HI pan Tabule. Iletng thoughtful and painstaking obatrrera of the changed condition that sweep no said, 'Yo shall seek Moand shall not is the lack of information that causes over the commercial world, and careful to note erery circumstance baring a bearing upon the succassf ul prosecution of their trade, the manager of the company bare noted find Mo, and whoro I nm thither yo can- many churches to bo indifferent to misthat thrre la a present Insistent demand for a lower ptlce for every article that not ooniof ' " It Is not strango that those sions. reaehea or approaches an unlrertal use, and that the peLple, although requlrlcr the unbellovers could not understand His best of everything, resent being eauea upon to pay neavy cercantagM for superfluous wrnpntnv. and packing or unnecessary protection against deterioration that might re2. Tho church at Auticcli was a spirword, for oven tho disciples aro heard saysult In years, but I needless In the case ot n purchaa lnloded to be consumed In a beendlacovered, and proved by the testcvtlmeand actual experience. week. It haa also ing on tho night beforo Hla cruolflilon: itual church. They fasted and prayed. mat mnu i kuuivi uu uv. uavvmlsjht muusui; tv .urn. vt ijbkiimv. ur ummniioa 01 ex iuu "What Is this that Ho with? A little They kept aa far as posslhlo from tho at rtrst have been expected. Inasmuch aa, under rellence from exposure that favorable conditions, those that have lain loose lnadrawes, traveling baa or pocxet while. Wo cannot tell what Ho saith" world and as close as posslhlo to God. are found to be practically aa fresh and a efflcaciou aa ror several week or month (John xvl, 18). Thoy wore on intimate tonus witii tho ever. Acting upon these tninrestlon, and noting particularly the unimpaired prosperity ot 87. "In tho last day, that great day of Holy Ghost. IIo spoke to them and regreat newspaper now sold for a cent Instead of the old rate at Ave times that amount, cried, saying, If vealed His will to them. Moro devo-tiotho feast, Jesus stood and and the general tendency In all directions toward low raws and Increased sales, the company have entered upon the experiment of putting up Klpaju Tabule In pasteboard any man thirst, let him como unto Me and cartons, which they will offer to the trade upon terms which will permit ol a package moro praying and self denial, sold by the druggist or storekeeper at a price lower than ever Defore adopted for drink." Had they considered tholr own being tabules, or doses, tor one half a cent each. n p prleury medicine FIVE CENTS-t- en Scriptures thoy might havo thought of moro of tho Holy Ghost would mako Theoompany will not discontinue the manufacture and al In the form with which Isa. lr, 1, or Jcr. li,H13, or tho rock that many a church moro of a missionary t'm people hare learned to know and value the Rlpan Tabules, but will offer the cheaper benefit of auch a maydeslr them. It should beplalnly Moses smote, but they were blinded. Their church than it is. understood that the quality of the medicine I Identical In both aorta, the only difference t pack, being In the form and comparative cost of packing or putting up. The S, Tho church at Antioch was au hearts woro hardened, their ears heavy ones are not yet to be had of all dealer, although It la probable that almost any drug(Isa. vl, 10) bocauso thoy would not seo obedient church. It obeyed tho Holy gist will obtain a supply when requested by a customer to da ao t but In any case a single carton, containing ten tabules, will be sent, poatage paid, to any address for five cents In nor hear nor bollovo (Aets xxvlll, Ghost without hesitation and without ttnmps. forwarded to the Itlpans Chemical Co., No. 10 Sprue fit.. New York. Until the Tho fountain of living water was now in complaint. The Holy Ghost requested gonlsnre thoroughly Introduced to the trade, agents and peddlers will bo supplied at a price which will allow them a fair margin of front, vis t tdoten cartons for Mcenta. tholr midst, and yet they would not drink, 8 gross (TO r-13 rinxen (lit carton) for for 30.5i, 23 gronS,rjoO carton) for for thoy preferred their own cisterns. In that Paul and Barnabas bo soparated for v jluu, I.B.U ntm mgv(uti(to. vwee. carton) iui obaptcr 3 wo learn how to bo born of water n special work. They fasted and prayed and tho Spirit, in chapter 4 wo learn that and laid their hands upon them "and wo may bo wells of 'water, but horowo eent them away." Tho taBk assigned to learn that wo may bo rivers of water, tho missionaries was tremendous. The bringing health nnd llfo wherover wo'go must havo eoomod insurAiyAArlAAAAAAAAAA 'AstKAeV (Ezok. xlvil, 0). Most saved pcoploaro difficulties irXAAAiArlAA AAAAAA AAAArAAAAlA AAAMLWWA mountable;, yet thoy obeyed at once; again;-- fow aro i Johnli. Castlcmau, Breckinridge Caatltman I content justboto bo born yot thoy went, poor, uupracticed and Arthur 0. Lanyhair, willing to well, but fower still caro 75" to say how rnuoh unarmed, and in spite of all obstacles to bo rivers. It is for us of tho Word wo aro to havo In us (Fh. v, succeoded. Au obedient church must bo, a missionary churob. Tho command of 18; Col. Ill, 10). the Master is to send tho gospol too very creature) in tho world. Tho cburoh that No NIkM There. In heaven abovo there Is no night fails to do its sharo of tho work is n To shroud tho day In gloom, disobedient church. For God Is there, and IIo Is light, 4. Tho church at Antiooh was a solf Anil lie doth heaven Illume. denying church. Sonio pooplo may The Larges Fire Insurance Company in the World. No night of Borrow spreads a shade think itgavonothing to miesionsaHow To pall tho sunny hours. mlstakou they are! They gavo ff gift For Joys are there that never fado Does the Largest Business Transacted In Kentucky. that must have boon a great sacrifice, And, never lose their flowers. w that must havo cost muoh solf denial on Does the Largest Bussness Transacted in the Southern Slates. There Is no night ot weeping there their part. They gavo Paul and Barnabending skies. To dim tho bas! What church would wont to deny For tears havo ceased and every caro itself of such workors as these? It would And with them grieving sighs. certainly cost moro than to givo money No night of trial there descends Barbea & Gastlotnan,! to tho causo of missions. To cast Its shadows dun, Blhlo Readings. Ps. ii,l-0- ; Isa. xlil, For thero tho Christian's battle ends, EARLINGTON. KY. MANAGERS. And victory Is won. 0, 7; Hi, 7; Hah. i, 15; Math, xlil, Southern Department, Resident Agent for Earlington and xxvlll, 10, 20; Luku 11,25-32- ; And thcro no night ot death e'er falls Vicinity. John Hi, 10; xv, 10; Acts i, 8; viii, Home Office Louisville, Ky. To breathe Its noisome breath, x, 14, 15; Rov. Rom. i, For over heaven's crystal walls vvw VVVVVVVVnVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVyvvwvsfWVwvwyywvwvy. vwvr Ne'er leaps tho form of death. xxii, 17. Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphlno nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee It destroys Worms and allays Fcvcrlshncss. 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. Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. What is CASTORIA Drops by D SI. Bteams. 11. "Now about tho midst of tho feast Jesus went tip Into tho temple and thought," Ic una tho feast of tnbernaclo. and Ills brethren who did not bollovo In Htm had In n sort of Encoring wny advised Him to go up to tho feast. His roply was, ''My tlmo Is not yot como," bo thoy Vfcnt without Him, but Ho went up later, and as Ho taught tho Jovrs wondered at His knowlcdgo and His teaching, as Ho had not been to tholr schools. His reply ip to thorn was, "My doctrlno Is not Mlno, but His that sent Me" (verso 10). Ho took no credit for His words or works. Ho 1? sought no glory for Himself. 28. "Thon cried Jesus In tho tomplo as Ho taught, saying, Yo both know Mo. nnd yo know whonco I am, and I am not como of Mysejf, but Ho that sent Mo is truo, whom yo know not" They had said, Wo know this man whenoo Ho Is, but when Christ comoth no man knovreth whonco Ho is (vorso 27). Thoy know that Ho wm from Kazaroth and of humblo parontago, and that was all thoy professed to know, but If they had been honest thoy would havo sa!d,Wo know that Thou artn teacher como from God (John 111, 2). 9. ' But I know Him, for I nm from Him, ond IIo hath sent Mo." Ho said again, "As tho Fathor knowoth Mo, oven so know I tho Fathor" (John x, IB) ond again, "Ko man knowoth tho Sou but tho Fathor; nolthcr knowcth any man tho Fathor savo tho Son and Ho to whomsoever tho Son Will reveal Him Math. xl, 27). In His prayer Ho said, "Wrlghtcous Father, tho world hath not known Thee, but 1ft I havo known Thco, and theso havo known that Thou hast sent Mo" (John xvll, 25). 00. "Then they sought to tako Him, but no man laid hands on Him bocauso His hour was not yot como." Many n tlmo would thoy havo taken Him, but thoy could not touch Him till tho appointed time. When thoy did finally tako Him, It was because He allowed thorn to, and when Ho died Ho freely gavo up His life. Ho laid It down of Himself; thoy could not tako It from Hhn (John x, 18). 81. "And many of tho pooplo believed on Him nnd said, When Christ comoth will Ho do moro miracles than theso which this man hath done?" 'Whllo some and eomo bcllovcd not and many who professed to bollovo turned back and 2$ wolked no moro with Him (chapter vl, GO) Ho kopt steadily on bearing l.tithful tostlraony nnd doing tho Father's works and will, suro that all whom tho Father gavo to Him would como unto Him (chap-to- r vl, 37) and that Ho would seo of tho travail of His soul nnd bo satisfied (Isa. Copyright. 1899, Miners and Shippers of CQAL AND COKE. ,T, ft ft I General Office, Earlington, Knetucky. IMS1W mmm WIS 0.f1illLLMAM.G5J NAJttVILLCJtrrH mmm ftON rWMLEAHS M NASHVILLE s JAMES R. LOVE, Manager, Cap!. R. G. ROUSE, Mgr, Palmer House, Uroadway, raihicah, Tennessee. Kentucky. S. H. NEWBOLD, Manager, 342 W. Main Street, Louisville, Capt.- T. L. LEE, Manager, Corner Main and Auction Streets, Memphis, Tcnn. Kentucky. A. S. FORD, Manager, 327 Upper Second Street, Evansville, Ind. 201 N. Cherry Street, Nashville, CHICAGO. VgWoSSo F.P.JEFFRIE5.0.P.A fVAHlVIUE.IND. - W7lTLole--3&l- s & BRO. Memphis, Tenn. HESSER & MILTON, Rialto Agente-HUN- T Building, St. Louis, Mo.; J. W. BRIDGMAN, Room 316, Western Union Building, Chicago, 111. NASHVILLE, , CHATTANOOGA 3AND ST. LOUIS RAILWAY. PULLMAN PALACE I I 5 FAMOUS ND. 3 COAL, THE np R. Ti TTn-- nil -- FrTim T?.a-plmovY- n nrnrmfl jvnrl nVmrlftR SLEEPING. CARS Uetween Nashville nnd Chattanooga, Alabama, Augusta, Macon, Jacksonville, Knox-vlllAsbeville, Wathlngton, Baltimore New York, Portsmouth Philadelphia. Norfolk. Jackson, Memphis, Llltlo Rock Texerkana. Sherman. Waco, Dallas and Fort Worth. : ! : Mines. Only Vibrating Screens and Picking Tables used. THE BEST SELECTED COAL IN THE MARKET. Palace Day Coaciias on all Trains Information pertaining to TIOKHTB. A J ROUTES. RATES, BT8 ) Will be ebtetfully furnlibed upon application to Ticket Axenti, or lo .. WELCH. Division Passenger Agent, Memphis, Tenn. II. LATIMER, SouilT.islern Passenger J BRUSHED GOKE FOR BASE BURNERS AND Why buy High-price- d FURMES. t & UU, 11). 83, "Tho Pharisees board that tho pco-pl- o murmured such things concerning Him, and tho Pharisees and tho chlof priests sont ofilcors to tako Him." Thoy might havo remembered that a certain king of Syria did his best to tako KlUha, but In vain, or that Ahab did his best to And Elijah, but also failed; that Sennacherib would havo takon Jerusalem, but 2 5 Anthracite Coal, when you can get ST. BERN- ARD CRUSHED COKE for a much less price? One ton of the Crushed Coke will do the same work as one ton of the best Anthracite Coal. Agent, Atlanta. Ga O. J. MULLANEY. Northeastern Pan. Agt. 39 W Fourth St Cincinnati, O. R, C. COWARDIN. Western Pas. Ageot, Room 403, Ry Exchange building, St. Louis, Mo. URIARDF. HILL, Northern Pats. Agt. Rocm 328 Marquett llldg Chicago. J. L. EDMONDSON, Southern Pan. Agt. Chattanooga, Tenn. W. L. DANLEY, Gea'l Pas, and Ticket Agt. Nashvilu, Tbnm ASK YOUR DEALER FDR IT AND SAVE MONEY Com- are attending school at Hopkir.sviIle, are and more toward machine mloing. mencing with 1895, the following per cent, at borne 00 a visit. Myrta is on the sick of the product of each year' was mined list this week. with machines- Mrs. N Y. Iticbardson went to Madison-vill- a ..,2611.197 41 Monday to see ber daughter, Mrs. It. !& 43 ...301 189a. Statistics From State Mine InP Drake, who is very sick. There are 171 mining machines in use Several ot the boys attended the ball at spector Stone. in the various mines. Of these, 132 are Crofton (be 14th. operated with c impressed air and forty-nin- e Mrs Sarah Todd, who has been very with electricity About 1 300.000 tons of ths product sick, Is !mproinr, GOAL OUTPUT LAST YEAR. were marketed outside of the State of Ken Mrs. Effie Long, otnear Mopkinsville, is tucky, as against only 31 per cent, thus spending a few days wilb her sister, Mrs. marketed ofthe 1897 product, khowiog a essie Denton, near Red Hill. In The History Of healthful growth nn .his important line. The Operator Crossvay is to leave Manning-ton- , As compared with 1897, there was a loss much to the regret of bis friends A The State. in the production of coke of 10,891 tons. heart welcome is extended to Ibe new man, wboevtr he may be. ACCIDENTS. Mr. Nollie Richardson is on tbe sick list The fatalities of the year among the emONLY SIX FATAL ACCIDENTS, tbis week. ployes were reduced to the minimum, there Miss Hattie Cordier retnrned to school having been only six. This is the lowest number ever reached in any one year, ex Sunday evening. l Lexington, Kv., Feb. ao. The Hon. cept in 1896, when there were but six Tbe has exchanged hands and G. W. Stone, Stats Insp:ctor of Mines, is deaths. Out the production of 1898 is wilt resume work in a few days. now putting the finishing touches on bis greater than that of 189G by 359,654 tons, Mrs. Hoard and Miss Martha Curts annual report for tho year 1898 It will making the record of 1893 better than any visited in Mannington Monday. probably be ready for the printer by March in the history of the office. None ot these Rev. G. Teague will preach at Goad's 10 Most of the statistical tablesare made deaths resulted from bad mine conditions, Chapel tho second Sunday. Come and up, and the following extracts from the re- but from defective and careless operations. bear him. ports will show tho year's output and con- There were noteworthy nonIf any little word of mine tain other matters of interest regarding fatal accidents during tboyear, twenty-fou- r May make a life the brighter; Kentucky's coal mines: of which are classibed as serious and If any little song of mine twenty-thre- e as slight, KENTUCKY COAL May make a heart the lighter, Complete returns from all the commerGod help me speak the little woid PROSPECTS FOR 1899. cial coal mines of the State for 1898, exAnd take my bit cf singing, The prospect for a still larger yield the cept one small mine (or the month of DeAnd drop it in some lonely fats present year is excellent, and such expeccember, and it estimated, show a total And set tbo echoes tinging. tations will most likely be realized, unless production for the year of 3.542,13210113. OiArrwinox the work shall again be seriously hindered This is the .greatest in the history of the by strikes. No calculations can be made State, and 338,079 tons in excess of the Mrs. U. P. Henry, of Madison-villon the basis of strikes among the employes output of 1S97. which wn larger than that was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. as such may be general or merely local of any previous year. and of longor short duration. Earnest Rash, this week. The production of tha several counties for 1897 and 1898 in tons of 2,000 pounds, Wire Puller. is as follows: MQHCMEKTS MINING. GENUINE CASTORIA tho Signature of ALWAYS lr C&a7&& In Use For Oyer The Kind You Me Always Bought 30 Years. Lare3t . 0. J, Famsworth, Afent, Earungton, Ky. saw-mil- MEDICINE for the A Illinois Central R. R. ANNOUNCEMENTS The IlllnoU Central M bat on sals, arxt will cob- llnn ll1 ,,m en lernber jo, iJfl, round tirp A iummer tonrlit llriiatt front polnttonllt llaet la tbe Soelk J Vil 1 Ijv) to a tare lilt ol tiuimtr rwertt In the North lit fatt donbto dally terrlct to St Load, Chlcazo, Cincinnati and Lonitville rnablat one lo loach qutcMy and comfortably the mountain retorit ot Ylittaia, tbe hoahuid. Whlta alountaint and Scatlda ot tbe Thomaod Itlandt, tbe lake and lorett rtweftt ot Michigan, Wltconaln and Mlnatttla, tho lk Sprluji of Arkantaa, the Yellowtlont Prk or lb retoitt ot Colorado, it H'ATTTiTP'PI lI I1 MILLION.. a forty-seve- n them-solve- s, JLVUllllJ Til rPTP It II I h 11 I N JL sr aacer-talne- Nr niitlif-r- n e, -and condition-lo dan, ol st'Wirisi. , tbe bioofH&air Central's lIOfflloLlKCrh j"VbIinie.11I a ' "m i llrealhlll Uuiler.... Carter Counties: Bell llojrd.. ., . Charlie Cowell moved everything 1897. . 1893. ur (Jolofed (Mti?ens. 80,737 171,888 9,316 30.512 66,891 l9,C9J 17.983 Christian Daviess Hancock Henderson Hopkins, Johnson., Knox. .. , . 131,691 . 36,326 3,349 19,901 111,214 nve-een- Laurel Lawrence Lee McLean Muhlenberg Ohio Rockcastlo Union Webster Whitley Total , VuUM 961,411 7,488 164,883 294,073 37,744 11.915 30,833 261,784 460,693 49,519 9,493 11.699 114,836 66,496 7,141 9,435 89,393 961,716 10,964 from the .ground up in his hustle yesterday to get the new dispatchers' office wired and batteried and All communication, an-- i ttullnr of ni-- i ptr lalninc 10 this column ibould be adrfrro-r- l 10 Cto. ALrjAKDiK. Uarliniclou, kv. His efforts are instrumentalized. crowned with success. MORTONS OAI. ed pamphlet, contain a larae Borate Northern tururi I II III P I11' IIUIU.U nowprotperoailifUcatade ib Hm of the Illinola Ctntrtl RaltnU la lbs Slatet ot Kentucky, Tesntitte, MUaittipfl and Lonliana and alio a detailed wrlte-a- p the tltlea, towns and country on and adjacent to that line. To homeietkira. or theie tn tearcb ot a farm, thlt pamphlet will lurnlih reliable Uferaaa-Ho- n concerning; the raoit acceulblt and pro"et-ou- t portion of ths South, Fre copia a tut be bad by appl)lnf 10 the neareit of the ondertianed. M inattrat-- $' ,y 283.311 171,919 3J.231 11,313 208,307 436,319 79.435 123.351 54.096 396,310 3 94J9 3,oi6 H7.7JJ 70.386 197,713 1.1. M 3.304,033 3H.131 The year's output would probtbly bays been 151,000 tons larger but for serious st rit.es and suspensions of work in several localities. comclo'sed with ninety-fiv- e emyloying a miximum force of 128 mines. 8, 4C8 employes and operating The cannel production of each year is included in the above amounts, but 1898, when compared with 1897, shows a loss of 0,621 tons in this product. n The year panies!, Roval Insurance Co. OT Livcrpool MACHINE MININQ. The tenJsncy of the operators is more Tlckett and full Information Will Hamilton and Arthur Holland, left nection with the above can be at to rates In conhad ot agents ol Sunday niftht for Madisonville lo wotk for the "Central" and connectinc lluei. (1 Hatch, Dl. Pais. Age.nl, Clnelanatl. S. Mannington News. Reinecke & Co. John A. Scott, Dlr. Pass. Ajiat, Mtnpklt. On account of the cold weather "Chat' Thero has been a great deal of sickness pan. Agist, Nt Oiltans. Win. Murur, Dl terbox" has brrn almost frozen to death befe in the past month, among those who and could not give the news of the toun are still on Ibe sick list are, Messrs. John A. H. Hanson, G, P. A. W, A. Killond, A. ft. P. A. Chicago, LtslitlHs. The weather is getting good and things are Gray, Wilson Hopson, Dodd Porter, Imp is "Chat Vaughn, Will Green, Mesdames Caroline thawing and coming to life so terbox," too. Toa Aro Going Williams, Martha Estus, Nancy Smith, The farmers of this place have been very Ella Patterson and Mrs, Mattie Green. You busy delivering tobacco for 'the last Rev. Pettis, of Madisonville, was here Sunday. You Aro Going Mrs, Dan Cates and sister, Miss Effie Mrs. Mary Darretl, ot Hartford, is at visiting the bedside of ber mother, Mrs. Estcit Slaugbtersville, are Drasber of You Are Going their sister, Mrs. Ellen Cates, this week Isom Palmer, of Empire, was here with us some time, she Sunday. Miss Effie will be lUCHB8 TICKira VIA TftH has many friends who give her a hearty An Infant boy of Mr. and Mrs. Dave welcome. Ratcliffe died last week. Mr. Frank Wright, of .Earlington, was Mr, Noah Dulin, of Johnson's post up in these diggings Friday and returned borne Sunday, ui course, iranic wantea office, visited at Mr. Geo Johnson's Saturday and Sunday. a party somewhere. Misses Hattie and Myrta Cordier who Virgil Jagoe went to Central City SunLouisvii.tr. a, Nashville n. r. day, feu-day- If Are ft tkrtk, 8oe& tf Em If West; Sf .. a Here is one of thoBQ who are either so prejudiced against" all ad- PAUL M. MOORE 1 vertised remedies, or have become discouraged at the failure of Allbus Chambers has gone to Earlington to work, Pearl Crittenden, of Crabtree, was here last week. Reverends Hayden and Gordon were here last week. Rev, .Gordon is expected to preach here Sunday. and bo eccuna A Tho Maximum Tho of Safety, Maximum of Speed, The Maximum 31-3- 20-4- 14-1- SUBSCRIBE FOR THE BEE m ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR. ' 5. .t No darkness there, no waning llghtl Oh, what a heaven thlB A heaven with radiance over bright And with unclouded bliss! Philadelphia Ledger. All ukTAllS. Dost Cough tjyrup. Tnatca Gootl. DceRJ in timo. hold nr druggists. LUHtS WritHE Mi')ft .1 .'Jaw?-- ) Tho longor a settlement tho greater tho probability et its continuance. Tho hardest rubs como somewbero about tho second aud third years. Christian Reg. Strer. A rulo of parish llfo Is that just in proportion to tho length of a ministerial Eottlomont nro tho chances for its longer contiuuanco. Within tho limits of old ago and disability tho rulo holds good. MinUtcrlnl Settlement!. other medicines to help them, and who will succumb to the grim destroyer without knowing of the wonderful value of Foley's Honey and Tar for all Throat and Lung FOLEY'S BANNER SALVE is a Healing Wonder. Don't Use Drugs sponsible druggists. We keep only tbe best. That is tbe great dis- tinction to ba looked for when tbe time comes that you need them Nowhere else will you find so complete a stock. A good time to begin tbat spring medicine. of Comfort, The Minimum of Rate. pure drugs, such as are sold by unless you need them, and then only re- Hates, Time and all other infcrmalloa wks be cheerfully furnished by C. p. ATHOnt, o, p. a., I.ojisvxe, S, W. W. ETHRIDGE, Aoent. rby ST. BERNARD DRLO STORE, BRYAN HOPPBR.ManizerT JOB WORK-:a . r t-- Subscribe for The Bee. Will receive Dromot atten.; 1 uonattnisoince. .Estimates furnished upon application. . J "