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The Public Ledger from Maysville, Kentucky • Page 3

Publication:
The Public Ledgeri
Location:
Maysville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

mm ifm A1 TyTT DAILY OUR PRIDE llli T-' ill Or WSSKLT RKPUBLIOJN-mi. QAlCr I'VBIUQ LEDQEU-im. Mr. Tliriothy Buckley of tho county was a visitor in the city yesterday. Mr.

John T. Fleming of Aberdeen was on this side Mingling with tho big crowd yesterday. Rev. Father John Mackey, President of Mt. St.

Mary's Seminary, Price Hill, Cincinnati, was the guest of Rev. Father Jones Sunday on his way to Moransburg to visit his brother, Mr. Thomas Mackey. Kentucky Red Man, Louisville We are pleased to report Post Sachem Walter C. Wormald as showingsatlsfactory improvement, and to predict an early return te hfo's greatest blessing good health.

Chief Wormald recent-ly passed through the rather trying ordeal of a surgical operation at St. Anthony's Hospital, where ho was confined for six weeks. This is the second operation in less thaa three years. Prior to that time he had enjoyed splendid wi 4 Pr f'Rtl healths He is now at his home 613 West roadway, convalescing. He walks about a "little nearly every day and Hopes soon to be able to follow the hunt.

Chiel Wormald is a' valued member of the Great Conacll of Ken- tucky and of Wyandotte Tribe of Maysville. BIG DAY IN MAYSVILLE Yesterday Business Boomotl and All Were Hustling Yesterday was County Court Day, and it was a cracker jack, at that too. The town was full of people, plenty of stock on the market, prices fairly good, the merchants busy all day and the Banks taxed to their utmost to accommodate customers. Early in the morning John Daley's office was besieged with a throng all eager to get some of his free distribution, and in a very short timo Captain William Daugherty had dispensed 75 packagoa of corn and 30 packages of seed potatoes, and could have given away fifty bushels if that amount had been on hand. With each succeeding Ceurt Day the crowd grows larger, more stock on the market and business more animated.

There was a big crowd from across the river, and on their return tbey all carried bundles home with them. fl5CWMfJ Coughs Coughs a regular men a neny hATB fJougns ir vires ffc LOOKING FOR Wall lo old atock. nil new iiiittoniH. and Vfuil Mouldings nt W. H.

RYDER. 7 W. Second Street. Phone 185. CHANGEABLE WEATHER MEANS CHANGEABLE HEALTH! One should alwas boon the look out for any change In their health.

When they feel tbey are taking the least cold they should commence-taking some good cold remedy. There Is none better than LAXATIVE PIIOSPIIO QUININE! A mild tonlo laxative which opens the system and keeps it In good working order; combined with I'hospho Quinine makes an excellent remedy for tbe prevention and cure of colds and la grippe. JOHN C. PECOR PHARMACIST. We Challenge Comparisons I -USE- ROLLER KING FLOUR 'State National Bank.

1)1 MAYSVIIIfc, Capital Ntock, 0100,000 Morplue, WOlta A 9SSBRAL RAN KM AUSiMJUf SAMbKL M. HALL eildent. tsIoRpKiiitf; Paper! MAY3V1LLU MAYSV1LLE, KY, TOESDA MARCH 2507. dTTAll ntnticr for publication mint be tinnttril In before o'clock n. in.

Amor Smith reappointed Collector at Cincir-nati, will resign as Southern Railroad Trustee. I A landslide in the Kanawha District on tho C. and 0. early this morning, delayed train No Westbound several hnun. REVIVAL Dr.

Baker's Interesting Mooting at M. E. Church In spite of tho inclemency of tbo weather, a good-sized crowd was out at tho revival services at the Third Street Methodist Church lost evening. Those who came were abundantly repaid for their effort, as Dr. Baker preached one of the most helpful sermons ef the series from tho text, "Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled." He said that the hunger and dosiro of the normal Christian for spiritual food should bo as evident and Manifest as the huoger of the normal human body for its food.

He pleaded with his hearers to not he as dyspeptics, satisfied with a mere pittance, but to be strong, healthy, hungering Christians for the fulness of God's blessings, and the promise is that they "shall be filled." Services today at 2:30 m. and 7:15 p. m. All are invited to this feast of spiritual things. DEKALB tODQE, 1.

O. O. T. Regular meeting of DeKalb Lodge No. 12, 1.0 O.

at DeKalb Lodge Hall at 7:30 this evening William II. Davis, N. 0. John W. Thompson, Secretary.

MOHAVE COUNCIL, D. 01" r. Regular meeting of Mohave Council No. tonight nt 7130 o'clock at I. O.

It. M. Wigwam corner Second" and Sutton streets. hvery member is requested to be present. Miss Jamie Flemino, Vocation tas.

Mils Lena Daulton. Keeper of Records. DaneerOUS COUl'hs. hxtr(MrelvnprilnilQrniiBhc at rasp and tear the throat and lungs. that shake the whole hndv.

Ynn nnen medicine, a doctor's medicine, for cougn. ask your doctor about Ayer's rectors! ror tnese severe cases. no ecrU I We pobtlih J.O.AyrCo.. uiiAimm umiuur prwpranonB. lwtll.J Garden Quality and Quantity count.

We give you both; it's our business C. P. Dieterich Bro. MARKET STREET. PHONE 152.

BAWAY TIME CARDS. CHESAPEAKE AND OHIO RAILWAY. Schedule in effect Xov.iitt,isoe. Subject to change without notice. Central time.

Limited for Cincinnati, Iudlniinpolli, St. IiOnie. Chicago, Louisville, NaHvllfe, aiemphlH, A Vent und Southwest Oi31 a 3iS0 ra, dally. West Virglniti KzpresH for Cincinnati. a to, week days.

I.ocal for Cincinnati. 5i30 a 8iSS a ni, week days; dally, Limited or WnslilUKton, llaltimore, l'hll. adelphta. New York, IUaliinoud. Old Point nnd Norfolk.

135 ra and IOiCO rn, daily. West Virginia Kxpross for Illntou. 10:10 a week days. Local for lllnton. 0:83 a week days.

Local tor Huntington. 0:83 a ra, dally; BiSB week days. Traukivt 9iorBt(iMi, OarlUu ATayivU' ruAKurour ami eiNCIOTXATI HAJXWAX Bind Down vu rxnis and k. a. Jitad Dp v.

x. 1:00 8:25 fiill 8:15 X. a. x. 11:26 8:04 8:30 7:09 r.

II. 7:50 11M2 0:60 Lv Frankfort Ar 5:41 Georgetown Tarls Oyntblana 11 Richmond, 5:45 8:21 I r. x. 1 11:54 7:20 8:00 7iS0, WANTED. Let us do your Family Washing.

Rough Dry Only 5c Pound. We Iron all flat work. MODEL LADNDUY CO. Phone 103. W.

PORTER. J.H. CUMMIK8 WftTER CUMMINGS FUNERAL DIRECTORS, 7 ') J. Aeng rtei, MATBriZLJa, KB ttDPUULlOAN. SHORT TALKS BY Lr.

T. COOPER. INTERNAL PARASITES. Cooper's New Discovery has taught me many things, Not least of which is that parasites or tape worms as they are called are responsible for an immense amount of suffering-. Thousands of these creatures havebeen brought to me by people who have taken the New Discovery andlnow know that an immense amount of sup nice evmbrick.

posed stomach 'rouble is caused in reality by one of these parasites. A man or woman may be afflicted in this manner for years and not realize the true cause of their suffering. When I first sold Cooper's New Discovery I did not know that the medicine would remove this trouble. I have since found that it invariably does so. The following letter is a fair sample of the symptoms as experienced by an individual thus effected: "I was always tired.

My stomach bloated and the slightest exertion made me sick, weak and dizzy. My ippctite Was variable and a good nights sleep was unknown to me. When I awoke in the mornings I had i bad taste in my mouth and a coated tongue. I heard of the wonderful benefits that were being derived from Cooper's New Discovery, and decided to try it." "The horrible tape worm, sixty feet long that had been sapping my life iway, passed from my system alive und squirming after I had taken three doses. Now I have a splendid appetite, every trace of stomach trouble has disappeared and my digestion is ijood.

I sleep well and am gaining in itrength every day." Nick 1344 Louis Milwaukee, Wis. We are authorized agents for the Cooper medicines. Call and let us you more about them. THOMAS J. CHENUWETH Senator John C.

Spooner of Wisconsin, has resigned and will quit tbe Senane May 1st, to practice law. He is one of the ablest men who ever Bat in the Senate. GREATEST OF ALL LAWYERS. Men of Eminence Award Palm to Benjamin Harrlcon. A jrroup of lawyers were dlscusBlngr various legal questions In the lobby of the Ebbltt hotel at Washington.

The conversation had turned upon the big men of tho legal profession. "I am of the same opinion as the clerk of one of the circuit courts of Ohio," said A. H. Petty, of Urbana. "We had been talking of various lawyers who had made national reputations, and In that particular circuit many famous men had practiced before the courts.

Tho clerk, who had had long experience and was a man of keen observation, asked me whom I regarded as the greatest lawyer I had ever heard plead. I could not then call to mind any one who, In my opinion, stood out conspicuously above a dozen big men. 'The greatest said tho clerk, 'that ever appeared In a court In this country was Benjamin Harrison. Ho never made an argument in a court room that ho did not Instruct tho man on the That was high praise, but looking at It afterward I came to tho same conclusion. He had the greatest legal mind of any lawyer In the last 30 years in my opinion, and many others with whom I have talked aro of the same belief." Washington Post.

A Cigar 8tore Secret. Every tobacconist has on his counter a machine for cutting off the ends of cigars. These machines are popular for tho reason that they pay for themselves many times over every yoar. The ends that, smokers cut off aro carefully gathored from tho counter, and it takes but a fow hundred of them to make a pound of good tobacco. This can be sold for 40 or 60 cents.

Somo cigar store clerks aro vory solicitous to see that the patron doeB not overlook tho cutting machine. They push it towards him, and ho is Impressed with thoir politoness. These clerks haw for a perquisite the machine's cuttings. This adds sevoral dollars weekly to their salaries. Few Good Stories Written.

"Since tho world beijan," says Julian Hawthorno, "thero havo boon written perhaps 100 supremely good works of notion. Assumo that the first of these was tho Iliad, now nliout 3,000 years old. One hundred good stories in 3,000 years is a stoty every generation. Since tho battlo of Waterloo, than, thero havo been rather less than three of them. Probably wo aro overstating the numbor rather than tho contrary.

When you consider tho matter, threo supremely good stories in a hundred years Is a very high averago." OiS COPY ONE CENT. 1,000 ROLLS Wallpaper To be sold out at 5c for 8 yds Good news to those having water in their homes. The entire lot maybe sold to one person in a few days. ACT QUICK. J.T.KackIey&Co.

Wanted Men and Boys To learn first class trades Moulding and Gore Making. Apply to Superintendent FOUNDRY The man who will turn down a publication simply because he considers its rates too high is likely to get stuck with a one-eyed animal at "a very low price" in his first horse trade. Infant Induttriet. The same with Book and Job Printing. The right kind, free from typographical errors, and done by skilled workmen, at Ledger Printery.

Gage marks 24.9 and rising. The Coal City and Crescent have gotten Into the Pittsburgh harbor with empties. Ihe Courier was Inspected at Cincinnati, pronounced o. and pat beck into service. Tho J.

T. Hatfield and R. P. Gilham passed down with tows ef coal from Pelnt Pleasant. 3 8 The S.

H. II. Clark on her up trip recently, took two barges of molasses, from New Orleans to Pittsburgh. Bridal couples will soon be rushing up the river on their bridal trips. There is always a rush In the spring of them on the tine boats.

i Captain William Roe and Captain Gordon Green have bought the Patterson wbarfboat at Pittsburgh, and Captain Roe has bought an in-terest In the Galllpolls incline, which will be ready for business about April 1st. River operators around Pittsburgh are endeavoring to have traffic up stream as well as down and contend that with a system of locks and dams, when delivery of freight can be guaranteed with soma certainty as to time, the up stream traffic will be great. Jamestown THE CINCINNATI COMMERCIAL TRIBUNE IS IN THE WORK HARNESS Departmental our store. By giving special attention to tho most minute details we turn out Harness whoso longevity rivals that of the Deacon's wonderful one-horso shay, which, as you all know, was so wonderfully constructed thnt it did not wear out in any one particular place, hut, after bring used for one hundred years to the minute, went to pieces all ut onrc. Our workmen, being skilled at their work, know, as did tho Deacon, thnt 'Tis mighty plain that the wtmkes' phice inus' etan' the strainin', the way t' fix it, uz I maintain is only je' to make thnt place uz strong the rest." Wo can give you the nnmes of some of our customers to whom we sold work hnrncss when we first went into business, and which is still as good as new.

Do you not think this is full value received for every cent invested? PAULINS MADE TO ORDER WHILE YOU WAIT. MIKE BROWN THE "SQUARE CODNTItY PRODUCE Today's Quotations Dy E. la. Mnnoliee-tor, Keystone Commercial Co. Prices oi.

i-ected at 9 o'clock this morning Turiceys, per 8c Chickens, per 8o Batter, per B) 15o Eggs, per dozen He Rabbits 40a per dozen Sponge Lady Fingers! FRESH EVERY DAY AT TRAXEL'S! Catest SEfctttS The second Russian Parliament meets today in St. Petersburg. The whipping post Is to be revived in Mary land after having been in disuse for twenty years. Satirday Sadler Brooks, colored, was sentenced to receive nins lashes and a jail sentence for beating his wife. The city of Paris has closed a contract with the Paris Eloctric Light Company for thirty' five new arc lights for the principal streets at an annual cost of $90 per light.

These will make Paris one of the btst lighted cities lathe State. Colonel E. Polk Johnson, special agent of the United States Traasury, has resigned. lie was appointed by Secretary Carlisle in 1893. Col.

Johnson is a well-known Kentuckian and was formorly Public Printer and Editor of the Frankfort Capitol. Ship subsidy bill killed as result of Democratic filibuster. LaFollette bill, limiting houra of railroad operators to nine hours, passed. President signed bills as fast as presented to bim. Announced that in 190S tho treasury will have a surplus of $20,000,000.

Special Judge William Carnes, has notified Commonwealth's Attorney J. P. Adams to be at Jackson Tuesday, as ha intended to go Into trial of Jndge James Ilargis on that day. Possibly for the first time in the history of Kentucky a special judge will be escorted to tho place of his court by troops. A TRIP TO THE Li MEZ L-i JT1 JDw i i 1 FOR 155 WOMEN.

WILL YOU BE ONE? SEE DEAL" MAN. I B3TA1I nintlrr lor pntillcntlon tamt be iiiwiiicu in ocioro ociocu, a. nt. "LIVES OF GREAT MEN ALL REMIND US" The story of how Marshall Field amassed his great fortune may be told in few words. He had something to sell and advertised it.

Sergeant Sanford succeeds the late Detective Gaffney at Covington. President Roosevelt appeals to the country for aid for starving Russians. The home of Ed Bobbitt at Mooresville destroyed by tiro and two of his children were ere mated. Governor Swettenham of Jamaica has tendered his resignation as a result of tbe impudent letter he wrote U. S.

Admiral Davis. Out of the fifty-nine Important recommendations that President Roosevelt made to the list session of Congress, eighteen have received fovorable consideration. Attorney Jerome finished cross examining Dr, Evans in the Thaw case and the testimonyof other alienists is now being taken. Nothing-now in the case, except a dozen wise doctors sat watching Thaw all day. Denfueu Cannot be Cored by local applications.

aithevcannotreachthedli. eased portion of the ear. There is only one way io cure deafness and thnt 19 by constitutional reme dies. Deafness Is caused by nn Inflamed condi tion of the mucous lining of the Eustachian tube. Win ti this tubo la Inflamed vou have arumhllnir sound or Impcrfecthearlng, and when It Isentlrely closed, deafness Is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to Its normal condition, hearlnz will bo destroyed forever; nlnec ises outof ten arecaused byCatarruh.uhlchls nothing but an lnflummed condition of the mucous surfaces.

We will clvo Oue Hundred Dollars for anvcaia of denfness (caused by catarrh) that cannot bo cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure for circulars free. F. J. CHENEY A Toledo, n. Sold by Druggists, 75? Tako Hall's Family Pills forcoustlpatlon.

Zh vs vf? as ra 5f( a urn '4 stMnH 'IBctiH 15 vi.S 1 "MJh.4&f.

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About The Public Ledger Archive

Pages Available:
33,940
Years Available:
1892-1923