hopkinsville kentuckian. (hopkinsville, ky) 1901-06-07 [p...

1
5 ft- U r ° tuJItutDoltic ft tntuctu an u iALF A iWljUON 1 Wim i U Curds SuySSam Jones H Ueehifttven That Much v Wiliram 15 Curtis special t respondent 6c the Chicago RecOrd Herald on his recent southern tr i encountered Sam Jones at Savan ¬ nah ants gave him a pen sketch concluding as follows People down here who know Jones say that he acts this way simply to advetise himself and attract at ¬ tention that he is sincere and lion cat in Ha efforts to do good an confer unbelievers to Christianity In ccl r to accomplish his however and reach certain classes who cannot be reached in any other way he uses bad grammar tells racy stories and plays the buffoon His talent as an actor cannot b exaggerated His magnetic power is intense Hecan excite the emo- tion ¬ i an illiterate audience to a dejir that is almost incredible and ply upon their senses so that in ont moment they may be shriek- ing ih laughter and in the next Bobbi tf with genuine tears Jones is Bind to have made preaching paytie started out as an ordi ¬ nary cia CUlt rider at a salary of oWl a year which was contributed jointly by half a dozen feeble coun- try ¬ churches bm his fame and in ¬ fluence grew rapidly and has con tinu d growing without any relapse until now he can draw a r audience than any man in th South Colonel Bryan not excepted and makes not less than 1000 a Week profit from his evangelical labors His wealth is rated at 500000 in vested in plantations and stocks bonds and other securi ¬ ties He has recently erected for himself a handsome residence cost ¬ ing with its furniture between SO 000 and 60000 Although he is a man of no education himself he is sending his children to the best schools in the country and ap- preciates ¬ what they can gain there by UNCONSTITUTIONAL So Decides Judge Barker In Re ¬ gard to Sunday Law Louisville Ky May 25Judge Henry S Barker of the criminal division today handed down a iwrittcn opinion in which he decides ithattue Sunday closing law is un constitutional He holds that the law is a piece of social legislation and is aimed at the liquor traffic whereas newspapers theaters the butcher the baker etc are un UffljesteJ in their occupations on Sunday The decision is in con ¬ formity with the one handed down a uuinutfr of years ago by Judge 1Vi1Ia1P Jh4U WO USE CALLING Statesmans Seedy Appearance the Cause of an Amusing Blunder A gentleman prominent in English political life but careless of his dress was once on his way to call upon a cabinet minister and stopped a man in the street to inquire tho way HCan you tell me where Lord liyps said the statesman < i t V no use your going there was the unexpected reply But do you know where he lives fYc but its no use going there Th inquirer began to get angry I didnt ask your advice I simply wanted to know where Lord livesOh well go down that street yon- der ¬ and its No 20 but I tell you its no use your going there for Ive just been there myself and hes already got a man JL UU Irhd advertised for a serv ¬ ant the day before and the states- man ¬ EO the story goes went at once and bought a hatLondon Tit Bits Trivial Cause of war Capt Robert Jenkins the master of a sloop trading from Jamaica was in 1738 boarded by a Spanish vessel and barbarously treated Going to England he appeared before the bar of the house of commons and exhib ¬ ited an ear which he alleged was his own and he asserted that the Span ¬ iards had cut it off Edmund Burke declared the whole thing a fable but Poultncy Pitt and Wyndham used the incident as political capital and it was finally tho cause of a declara- tion ¬ of war against Spain Chinese Censorship The censorship is avery real thin In China There anyone who writes an objectionable book is punished with 100 blows of the henry bamboo ttid hanisllel for lif- t 3 N2 T J A GET UPS Tlmts the tnornihg call of Chanticleer Its a welcome cry to a well man But to a man whose sleep seems to have been unison unreftoshing stupor who wakes eyesthrobbing i a bad taste the mouth it mentis only a new Jays miseryIn a physical condition health most surely and swiftly restored by the use of Doctor- PlerccsGolden Med ItI stomach and organs nue ¬ through the stomach diseases of liver lungs kidneys etc whirl have their in a diseased condition of we digestione of the bloodmaking glands andevery organ is benefited by the resulting inc- rease of rich pure blood Golden Medical Discovery contains no alcohol and is entirely free from opium cocaine and other narcotics Your Golden Medical Discovery and Dr greatbellefit of Viola Fulton Co Ark Before I used the above mentioned remedies Was not amend digestion bad a continual feeling of AnyoneIn could do no better than to take treatment of Dr R V Pierce I know his medicines ore til tljtbt In this class of diseases AdviserI on receipt of 31 onecent stamps td pay ecpeuse of mailing only In paper covers It onecent stwnps Address Dr R V Pierce Buffalo Y Feele Prom Our Special Correspondent Franklin Ky June 3rd 1901 EDITOR KENTUCKIAN How do you feelr There Is nothing more delusive than your feelings or more decep ¬ tive of real condition They are the most real things to you and you wish them to be treated especially if they are unpleasant or painful We respect your feelings and we seek always to relieve our patients of abnormal feelings but we do not treat them as other doctors do These feeling arc effects From our knowledge of the human body we examine into the CAUSE and treat the cause Just think of the questions the medical doctor asks you He is careful to consider everything that you tell him Then he treats your feelings If it is a pain he seeks to relieve it If it is inaction he either stimulates or purges Drugs do this but do drugs cure You may have found out that they do not If you have been long sick you have learned the deadly effects of drugs The average doctor depends on what you tell him about yourself You could deceive him If you told him you had a pain in the top of the head he uoutd treat itif in the bottom of the foot j he would take your word for it Not one in a hundred would examine into the cause and the condition of the pain The Os ¬ teopath would do this very thing This is the chief difference be tweenOsteopathy Find other methods Osteopathy seeks the cause and removes it Do you want the cause of your sickness remo ed Invest i gate Osteopathy We will help you Write to SOUTHERN SCHOOL OF OSTEOPATHY Inc Franklin Ky WAS DISCHARGED John L Jones Easily Establishes His Justification John L Jones who shot and kill ¬ ed Thomss Keane at Evansville Ind had his preliminary hearing Friday resulting in his being given freedomThe verdict was that deIfence so far as the coroner was concern ¬ ed Because of this favorable find ¬ ing on the part of the coroner the prisoner was admitted to bail in the sum of 3000 to await the prelimi ¬ nary hearing For Children Nothing that comes in a bottle is more important for children than Scotts emulsion of codliver oil And important means that it keeps them in even health on the highest plane of physical life Do they live on it then No they dont touch it except when they need it When do they need it Whenever they show in whatever way the least disturbance of even balance of health It is not for excepS concitlonI fopd when ¬ ever their usual food does not quite answer the purpose of food IR z FIGHTING MAC I r i irjl Interesting Story Told vOf k Gallant British Omcer and fits Sword An intotoflting story of Gen Hcc + tor Mncdoriald is toldftt UdSS011sLit ¬ tle Folks It runs as < inn Hector Macdonald began life 09 a drapers assistant but finding it too humdrum ho went for a soldietC this was quite to his liking He sawplonty- of service and becausd ho was fond of a scrimmage they gave him his well known nickname So good tt sOldier was he that he was promoted frdm the ranksa rarer honor 20 years ago than it is nownndas lieutenant he went through the first Boer wrjiv In the disastrous battle of Majuba lie lost the claymore that had been pre- sented ¬ to him by his brother officers After the fight Capt afterwards colonel PPF Robertson of the Ninetysecond Gordon Highlanders1 had a talk at Newcastle in the Trans ¬ vaal with Joubert the famous Boer general who died during the second Boer war Robertson was curious to know why so many of the British offi- cers ¬ were killed and Joubert told him the Dutch marksmen took aim spe- cially ¬ at them The reason was that the officers wero all rich men who couldcome and go as they pleased whereas the Tommies were all poor and had to serve tirifo and do their fighting whether they wished to or not fur that was lioirthey made a living Moreover tho Boer farmers had Joubort said no quarrel with private soldiers and didnt want to kill a single one of them Then Rob ¬ ertson told Joubcrt about Hector Macdonald and his lost sword Ah said Joubert that bravo man must have his sword again I will search the Transvaal for it and offer five pounds reward for itJJubert did search and found the sword in the possession of a farmer who on learn ¬ ing the story parted with the clay ¬ more without reward Fighting Mac had the pleasure of receiving his good claymore from the hands of Gen Joubert himself in the Dutch town of Newcastle TANTALIZING TYPEWRITER f I Playwright Who Dictates Hla Product- ions Has Troubles of His Own Of all the girls the most amusing is playwrightis of tjie kind of thing that goes on If you speak during that period the author began I will A period after that the type ¬ writer interrupted No no the word period I will kill you I always get so interested Is this a comedy Yes Maud Spare me spare me You must not call me Maud No nd the character speaks Maud is the girl in the plaX You know Where wris 1 You wore at ° sparomo V Goes down on knees in brackets1 On his krieos1 A I am writing this comedy miss Knees in brackets Yes Whats he got his knees in brackets for Broken I suppose What are you doing Let me see No nono Put that sentences in brackets Enter servant Servant Never have 1 son nothing like that v be Anything of course- I am writing this piece Thats bad grammar yon know Yes I knowl know Put down just what I say Maud look at Sir Oh I forget Yes Look at > In brackets George looks at serv- ant ¬ and shakes Period No And shakeshis head Who shakes his headGeorge or the servant George I said George Oh I He snakes the servants head doesnt he Y t Author faints London TitBits Interrupted J Traffic In Alsace last June trains were seriously obstructed by accumula- tions of a certain kind of worm on the tracks These creatures one to one andonehalf inches long near sunset crept upon the track over a section more than half a mile long and when night came on remained on the rails in heaps sometimes two inches thick stoppedby vary to divide a freight train and for- ward it in two sections the track was so slippery lulus terrestris is tho nam < of jthe insect which is a near re ¬ lation oi the tropical centipede Paris Letter Like Clock Original ideas resemble clocks when they strike oneChicago Daily News Of w E W ATKINS EDAREI E Successors Watkins Edwards > Corner Eighth and Virginia Sts Building formerly Occupied by the = McCormick Harvester Co and the D M Osborne Co K > S = Will handle lull line of Farming ImDliments Con EE sist- ingoflOsbornesFullL 5 3 j i g Bin dersMowers Hay Rakes Tedders PamousRival Disc Harrows t < v Also Binder Twine fc Huber Threshers Owensboro Wagons and Buggies P aid0e t Cultivators Disc and Shovels Corn Planters Plows Etc k 3 Sn In fact everything found in a FirstClass Implement House We have the i i MILWAUKEE MOWER i E I And Full Line of Repairs for these Goods = S Affetits for the Globe Fertilizer Our Mr Edwards will have charge of the house and Mr Cooper will Solicit for + I same Mr Watkins will have charge of the Qracey business Mr Efbrlfe ° Brad shaw will also assist in the sales and orders given him on his Rural Mail = a Route will be greatly appreciated thanking friends for past favors we ask a con- tinuance of their patronage Respectfully E Watkins Edwards Co E Phone 346 HOPKINSVILLE KY E Pid1iia1es a j i i iain city PrOperty I 4t oho e o 0 0 0 0 i < c I < < iFor the purpose of tthngup the Estate off D R BEARD Decea sec1 the following described real property being a portion of said estate and situated on the West side of Main street in Hopkinsville Iy wil be sold on the premises at PUBLIC AUCTION on e Thursday June 20th 1901 at 2 oclock P M I VIZ N- One I three story brick store room and lot jon the corner of Main and Eighth streets fronting 26 feet 2 inches on Main street and running back 100 feet and now occupied by Sam Frankel One threefstory brick store room and lot immediately North the above described store room front- ing ¬ 19 feet and 8 inches on Main street and running back 136 feet and being the same in which Burchs i grocery business is now conducted One threestory brick store room and lot immediately North of the one last abovedescribed fronting 19 feet and 8 inches on Main street and running back 136 feet now occupied by Davis Grace Co At the same time the following described real property belonging to the undersigned W T BONTE and situated on Eighth street in Hopkinsville Ky and which incumbered by a mortgage in favor of the estate of the said D R BEARD deceased be sold for the same purpose by agreement on the premises at PUBLIC AUCTION viz One twostory brick building and lot fronting 75 feet on Eighth street and running back North 30 feet immediately West of Sam store and mw occupied by the Hopkinsville Carriage Company One threestory brick building and lot immediately West of the last above described lqtr fronting 91 feet on Eight street running back North 30 feet and now occupied by JP H Winfree The above described property belonging to said D R BEARDS estate and also the property becldoif ing to said W T be first sold in parcels respectivelyas above set forth andwili n be1Wa respectively asa wjiolc and the bids yielding the money accepted TerD1s iI J ird of the purchase money to be paid upon delivery of deed onetbjrd intwelve mouths and the remaining one third in eighteen months with a lien upon the property to fiecure the unpaid pur ¬ chase Deeds to be July 1st 1901 Property to be sold subject to the legal rights of rent ¬ hifUllP t IVi rxP r T r f Jjpl R H Holland 11 of D R Beard 7 Deceased j iW WT Bonte c 7r POSITIONSOuaranleed Under Ret Our faculties Ipr Mewing poiltlons and the proficiency ol our Graduates are ton times more tronjlr endorsed by and merchant Uian those of Qtlier college Send for catalogue DRAUGHONSr tom flCAL au3INESS f9 NashvIHe Tine At Louie Mo QalvestontTexnontfforaery Shreveport Cheap board Car Mrs paid No vacation Inter any time Beet patronized In the South Uookkeeplnv Shorthand ntc taughtby malt ffirltnfoy prieD lilt Homo Study SchoUrahlp I Pree by doing a little writ Id f at your home w man ti voice Ltiat necessarily a husky disposition L do N TIME ABLEI TRAINS BOOTH No 55 Hopkinsville Ao 616 a m No 58Fast 040 601 a m No htNast wail 522 pm TRAINS vovra No 62St Lou ELk mall 950 a m No 56 Hopkinqvilla Ao 825 p m No 54 Fast Line 1160 p m osl and NoM make connection at Si Lout foun weUaDd a MoUaniboro for ahawneetown branch stations BS makes at Guthrie foe Louisville Memphis and atNaehville- for AI points south No lil oonneots a forfowltng preen- andLoutavilte and Intermediate points be- tweenJutlrieRren and orKlkton at OutbrlA for U points between Bowling Green l- Ie nLLER4eli mI f- r OIBOUIT OUUKT DIREOTOKY Februarytermhreeweeks septembertclI11tbreoweeb armelaweexalFlretMond In Jane tern our weekii t srthIMondsy in September t Apriltermthroe two weeks Beoond Monday In Noyembet tent three weeks LTOKJIrWona in W eo K l ores Monday la seeks Aret Monday in AsaBaatternsI weeksIn some Swiss hotels a fixed j charge of 200 is made in case ot the death of aguent u I U

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Page 1: Hopkinsville Kentuckian. (Hopkinsville, KY) 1901-06-07 [p 2].nyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7fj678tm1g/data/0380.pdf · < i tV no use your going there was the unexpected reply But do you know

5

ft-U

tuJItutDoltic ft tntuctu anu

iALF A iWljUON1

Wim i U Curds SuySSam JonesH Ueehifttven That Much

v

Wiliram 15 Curtis special trespondent 6c the Chicago RecOrdHerald on his recent southern tr i

encountered Sam Jones at Savan ¬

nah ants gave him a pen sketchconcluding as follows

People down here who know Jonessay that he acts this way simply toadvetise himself and attract at ¬

tention that he is sincere and lioncat in Ha efforts to do good anconfer unbelievers to ChristianityIn ccl r to accomplish hishowever and reach certain classeswho cannot be reached in any otherway he uses bad grammar tellsracy stories and plays the buffoonHis talent as an actor cannot bexaggerated His magnetic poweris intense Hecan excite the emo-tion

¬

i an illiterate audience to adejir that is almost incredibleand ply upon their senses so thatin ont moment they may be shriek-ing ih laughter and in the nextBobbi tf with genuine tears Jonesis Bind to have made preachingpaytie started out as an ordi ¬

nary cia CUlt rider at a salary ofoWl a year which was contributedjointly by half a dozen feeble coun-try

¬

churches bm his fame and in ¬

fluence grew rapidly and has continu d growing without any relapseuntil now he can draw a raudience than any man in thSouth Colonel Bryan not exceptedand makes not less than 1000 aWeek profit from his evangelicallabors His wealth is rated at500000 in vested in plantations

and stocks bonds and other securi ¬

ties He has recently erected forhimself a handsome residence cost ¬

ing with its furniture between SO000 and 60000 Although he is aman of no education himself he issending his children to the bestschools in the country and ap-preciates

¬

what they can gain thereby

UNCONSTITUTIONAL

So Decides Judge Barker In Re¬

gard to Sunday Law

Louisville Ky May 25JudgeHenry S Barker of the criminaldivision today handed down aiwrittcn opinion in which he decidesithattue Sunday closing law is unconstitutional He holds that thelaw is a piece of social legislationand is aimed at the liquor trafficwhereas newspapers theaters thebutcher the baker etc are unUffljesteJ in their occupations onSunday The decision is in con ¬

formity with the one handed downa uuinutfr of years ago by Judge1Vi1Ia1P Jh4U

WO USE CALLING

Statesmans Seedy Appearance the Causeof an Amusing Blunder

A gentleman prominent in Englishpolitical life but careless of his dresswas once on his way to call upon a

cabinet minister and stopped a manin the street to inquire tho way

HCan you tell me where Lordliyps said the statesman

< i t V no use your going there wasthe unexpected reply

But do you know where he livesfYc but its no use going thereTh inquirer began to get angry

I didnt ask your advice I simplywanted to know where Lord

livesOhwell go down that street yon-

der¬

and its No 20 but I tell you itsno use your going there for Ive justbeen there myself and hes alreadygot a man

JL UU Irhd advertised for a serv¬

ant the day before and the states-man

¬

EO the story goes went at onceand bought a hatLondon TitBits

Trivial Cause of war

Capt Robert Jenkins the masterof a sloop trading from Jamaica was

in 1738 boarded by a Spanish vesseland barbarously treated Going toEngland he appeared before the barof the house of commons and exhib ¬

ited an ear which he alleged was hisown and he asserted that the Span ¬

iards had cut it off Edmund Burkedeclared the whole thing a fable butPoultncy Pitt and Wyndham used

the incident as political capital and

it was finally tho cause of a declara-

tion¬

of war against SpainChinese Censorship

The censorship is avery real thinIn China There anyone who writesan objectionable book is punishedwith 100 blows of the henry bamboottid hanisllel for lif-

t

3 N2

T J A

GET UPSTlmts the tnornihg call of Chanticleer

Its a welcome cry to a well man Butto a man whose sleepseems to have beenunison unreftoshingstupor who wakes

eyesthrobbing i

a bad taste themouth it mentisonly a new JaysmiseryIn a physicalcondition healthmost surely andswiftly restored bythe use of Doctor-PlerccsGolden MedItIstomach and organsnue ¬

through the stomachdiseases of liverlungs kidneys etcwhirl have their

in a diseased condition of wedigestioneof the bloodmaking glands andeveryorgan is benefited by the resulting inc-

rease of rich pure bloodGolden Medical Discovery contains

no alcohol and is entirely free fromopium cocaine and other narcotics

Your Golden Medical Discovery and Drgreatbellefitof Viola Fulton Co Ark Before I used theabove mentioned remedies Was notamend digestion bad a continual feeling ofAnyoneIncould do no better than to take treatment ofDr R V Pierce I know his medicines ore tiltljtbt In this class of diseasesAdviserIon receipt of 31 onecent stamps td payecpeuse of mailing only In paper coversIt onecent stwnps Address Dr R VPierce Buffalo Y

FeeleProm Our Special Correspondent

Franklin Ky June 3rd 1901EDITOR KENTUCKIAN

How do you feelrThere Is nothing more delusivethan your feelings or more decep ¬

tive of real condition They arethe most real things to you and youwish them to be treated especiallyif they are unpleasant or painfulWe respect your feelings and weseek always to relieve our patientsof abnormal feelings but we do nottreat them as other doctors doThese feeling arc effects Fromour knowledge of the human bodywe examine into the CAUSE andtreat the cause Just think of thequestions the medical doctor asksyou He is careful to considereverything that you tell him Thenhe treats your feelings If it is apain he seeks to relieve it If it isinaction he either stimulates orpurges Drugs do this but dodrugs cure You may have foundout that they do not If you havebeen long sick you have learned thedeadly effects of drugs Theaverage doctor depends on whatyou tell him about yourself Youcould deceive him If you told himyou had a pain in the top of the headhe uoutd treat itif in the bottomof the foot j he would take yourword for it Not one in a hundredwould examine into the cause andthe condition of the pain The Os ¬

teopath would do this very thingThis is the chief difference be

tweenOsteopathy Find other methodsOsteopathy seeks the cause and

removes it Do you want the causeof your sickness remo ed Invest i

gate Osteopathy We will help youWrite to

SOUTHERN SCHOOL OF OSTEOPATHY

Inc Franklin Ky

WAS DISCHARGED

John L Jones Easily EstablishesHis Justification

John L Jones who shot and kill ¬

ed Thomss Keane at EvansvilleInd had his preliminary hearingFriday resulting in his being given

freedomTheverdict was that

deIfenceso far as the coroner was concern ¬

ed Because of this favorable find ¬

ing on the part of the coroner theprisoner was admitted to bail in thesum of 3000 to await the prelimi ¬

nary hearing

For ChildrenNothing that comes in a bottle

is more important for children thanScotts emulsion of codliver oil

And important means that itkeeps them in even health on thehighest plane of physical life

Do they live on it thenNo they dont touch it except

when they need itWhen do they need it

Whenever they show in whateverway the least disturbance of evenbalance of health It is not forexcepSconcitlonI fopd when ¬

ever their usual food does not quiteanswer the purpose of food

IR zFIGHTING MAC I r

i irjlInteresting Story Told vOf k Gallant

British Omcer and fits SwordAn intotoflting story of Gen Hcc +

tor Mncdoriald is toldftt UdSS011sLit ¬

tle Folks It runs as < innHector Macdonald began life 09 adrapers assistant but finding it toohumdrum ho went for a soldietC thiswas quite to his liking He sawplonty-of service and becausd ho was fond ofa scrimmage they gave him his wellknown nickname So good tt sOldierwas he that he was promoted frdm theranksa rarer honor 20 years agothan it is nownndas lieutenant hewent through the first Boer wrjiv Inthe disastrous battle of Majuba lielost the claymore that had been pre-

sented¬

to him by his brother officersAfter the fight Capt afterwardscolonel PPF Robertson of theNinetysecond Gordon Highlanders1had a talk at Newcastle in the Trans ¬

vaal with Joubert the famous Boergeneral who died during the secondBoer war Robertson was curious toknow why so many of the British offi-

cers

¬

were killed and Joubert told himthe Dutch marksmen took aim spe-

cially¬

at them The reason was thatthe officers wero all rich men whocouldcome and go as they pleasedwhereas the Tommies were all poorand had to serve tirifo and dotheir fighting whether they wished toor not fur that was lioirthey made aliving Moreover tho Boer farmershad Joubort said no quarrel withprivate soldiers and didnt want tokill a single one of them Then Rob ¬

ertson told Joubcrt about HectorMacdonald and his lost sword Ahsaid Joubert that bravo man musthave his sword again I will searchthe Transvaal for it and offer fivepounds reward for itJJubert didsearch and found the sword in thepossession of a farmer who on learn ¬

ing the story parted with the clay¬

more without reward FightingMac had the pleasure of receivinghis good claymore from the hands ofGen Joubert himself in the Dutchtown of Newcastle

TANTALIZING TYPEWRITERf I

Playwright Who Dictates Hla Product-ions Has Troubles of His Own

Of all the girls the most amusing is

playwrightisof tjie kind of thing that goes on

If you speak during that periodthe author began I will

A period after that the type ¬

writer interruptedNo no the word period I will

kill youI always get so interested Is this

a comedyYes Maud Spare me spare

meYou must not call me MaudNo nd the character speaks

Maud is the girl in the plaX You

know Where wris 1You wore at °sparomo VGoes down on knees in brackets1

On his krieos1 A

I am writing this comedy missKnees in brackets

Yes Whats he got his knees inbrackets for Broken I suppose

What are you doing Let me seeNo nono Put that sentences inbrackets Enter servant ServantNever have 1 son nothing like thatvbe

Anything of course-

I am writing this pieceThats bad grammar yon knowYes I knowl know Put down

just what I say Maud look atSir Oh I forget Yes Look

at >

In brackets George looks at serv-

ant¬

and shakesPeriodNo And shakeshis headWho shakes his headGeorge or

the servantGeorge I said GeorgeOh I He snakes the servants head

doesnt he Y t

Author faints London TitBitsInterrupted

J

Traffic

In Alsace last June trains wereseriously obstructed by accumula-tions of a certain kind of worm on thetracks These creatures one to oneandonehalf inches long near sunsetcrept upon the track over a sectionmore than half a mile long and whennight came on remained on the railsin heaps sometimes two inches thick

stoppedbyvary to divide a freight train and for-ward it in two sections the track wasso slippery lulus terrestris is thonam < of jthe insect which is a near re¬

lation oi the tropical centipedeParis Letter

Like Clock

Original ideas resemble clocks whenthey strike oneChicago DailyNews

Of w

E WATKINS EDAREIE Successors Watkins Edwards >

Corner Eighth and Virginia Sts Building formerly Occupied by the =McCormick Harvester Co and the D M Osborne Co K>

S= Will handle lull line of Farming ImDliments ConEE sist-ingoflOsbornesFullL

53j ig

Bin dersMowers Hay Rakes Tedders PamousRival Disc Harrowst < v Also Binder Twine

fc Huber Threshers Owensboro Wagons and Buggies P aid0e

t Cultivators Disc and Shovels Corn Planters Plows Etck 3

Sn In fact everything found in a FirstClass Implement House Wehave the i

i MILWAUKEE MOWER iE I

And Full Line of Repairs for these Goods =S Affetits for the Globe Fertilizer

Our Mr Edwards will have charge of the house and Mr Cooper will Solicit for +I same Mr Watkins will have charge of the Qracey business Mr Efbrlfe°

Bradshaw will also assist in the sales and orders given him on his Rural Mail = a

Route will be greatly appreciated thanking friends for past favors we ask a con-

tinuance of their patronage Respectfully

E Watkins Edwards CoE Phone 346 HOPKINSVILLE KY E

Pid1iia1es a

j ii iain

city PrOpertyI

4t oho e o 0 0 0 0

i< c

I

<< iFor the purpose of tthngup the Estate off

D R BEARD Deceasec1the following described real property being a portion of said estate and situated on the West side of Mainstreet in Hopkinsville Iy wil be sold on the premises at PUBLIC AUCTION on e

Thursday June 20th 1901 at 2 oclock P M

I VIZ N-

OneI

three story brick store room and lot jon the corner of Main and Eighth streets fronting 26 feet 2inches on Main street and running back 100 feet and now occupied by Sam Frankel

One threefstory brick store room and lot immediately North the above described store room front-ing

¬

19 feet and 8 inches on Main street and running back 136 feet and being the same in which Burchs i

grocery business is now conducted

One threestory brick store room and lot immediately North of the one last abovedescribed fronting19 feet and 8 inches on Main street and running back 136 feet now occupied by Davis Grace Co

At the same time the following described real property belonging to the undersigned W T BONTE

and situated on Eighth street in Hopkinsville Ky and which incumbered by a mortgage in favor of theestate of the said D R BEARD deceased be sold for the same purpose by agreement on the premisesat PUBLIC AUCTION viz

One twostory brick building and lot fronting 75 feet on Eighth street and running back North 30 feetimmediately West of Sam store and mw occupied by the Hopkinsville Carriage Company

One threestory brick building and lot immediately West of the last above described lqtr fronting 91feet on Eight street running back North 30 feet and now occupied by JP H Winfree

The above described property belonging to said D R BEARDS estate and also the property becldoif

ing to said W T be first sold in parcels respectivelyas above set forth andwili n be1Warespectively asa wjiolc and the bids yielding the money accepted

TerD1s iIJ

ird of the purchase money to be paid upon delivery of deed onetbjrd intwelve mouths and theremaining one third in eighteen months with a lien upon the property to fiecure the unpaid pur¬

chase Deeds to be July 1st 1901 Property to be sold subject to the legal rights of rent¬hifUllP tIVi rxPr T

r f Jjpl R H Holland 11

of D R Beard 7 Deceased j

iW W T Bontec 7r

POSITIONSOuaranleed Under Ret

Our faculties Ipr Mewing poiltlons and theproficiency ol our Graduates are ton times moretronjlr endorsed by and merchantUian those of Qtlier college Send for catalogue

DRAUGHONSrtom flCAL

au3INESS f9NashvIHe Tine At Louie Mo

QalvestontTexnontfforaeryShreveport

Cheap board Car Mrs paid No vacationInter any time Beet patronized In the SouthUookkeeplnv Shorthand ntc taughtby maltffirltnfoy prieD lilt Homo Study SchoUrahlp

I Pree by doing a little writ Id f at your home wman ti voiceLtiatnecessarily a husky disposition

L do N TIME ABLEITRAINS BOOTH

No 55 Hopkinsville Ao 616 a mNo 58Fast 040 601 a mNo htNast wail 522 pm

TRAINS vovraNo 62St Lou ELk mall 950 a mNo 56 Hopkinqvilla Ao 825 p mNo 54 Fast Line 1160 p m

osl and NoM make connection at SiLout foun weUaDd a MoUaniborofor ahawneetown branch stations

BS makes at Guthrie foeLouisville Memphis and atNaehville-for AI points south

No lil oonneots a forfowltng preen-

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