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ITHEVOLUME

J

AIMIR 00WNTY NEWSCOLUMBIA ADAIR COUNTY KENTUCKY WEDNESDAY JANUAKY 30 1901 NUMBER 12

5 rp oFFICE DIRECTORYI 1C Kpsaell PostmasterOfllM hours week days700 a m to 930 pm

COUBT DIRECTORY

Ci cm OoURTThree aeasions a yearThirdthird Monday In May andMona y In January

UlTd Monday In SeptemberOtnuU Judge W W JonesCommonwealth s Attornuy N H W Aaron

ttriffJ W BurtClerk Jno B Coffey

OOW TT OoOBTFirst Monday In each monthW Butler

County AttorneyJaeOamett JrOl rkT B BtultB

rnnB H Mitchel-l4assssorO ABradshawSurveyor R T McCaffreoSchool SuptW D Jones

A R Coroner Leonard Fletcher

TITT COU T Renlarcourt second Monday In

Mh monthedgeJ W Atkins

oinej Gordon Montgomery

CHURCH DIRECTORY

PRESBYTERIAN

+ BnBMViiiil STBsrrReT T F Walton

pastor Services second and fourth Sundays

mt ach month Sundayschool atSl a m every

tabh Prayer meeting every Wednesday

mlfhtMHTHODIST-

BUKISTILLB STanat Rev W P Gordon

ator Services drat Sunday In each month

PrayerLeetlngBAPTIST

GumiwBOio BTMBTBev B W BarnettMk r Services third Sunday In each month

Unndayechol every Sabbath at 9 a m Prey r

meeting Tuesday night

CHRISTIAN

CXXFBBLLSVILIB PIED Elder L WilliamPastor Services First Sunday In each

month Sundayschool every Sabbath at 9 amPrayer meeting Wednesday night

LODGES

MASONIC

COLUMBIA LODOK No 96 F and A MRegn ¬

tar meeting In their nail over bank on Frl

darng ton or before the full mcon In each

month 0 A KEMP WM-

Tii STUMS Sec-

trune CBAPTBB R A M No7 meets

Itrat Monday night In each monthJ E llua ELL H P

J O RUSSBLL Spcrctary

aVScnSS C cS

HENRY W EDDLEMAN40-8WMARKET ST LOUI3VILLEKY

Also Dealer In

I FINE STETSON HATS AND ALL

OTHER STYLISH BRANDS

Remember the place 408 West Market

Hancock HotelBURKSVILLE STREET

Columbia Ky

JUNIUS HANCOCK Prop0lThe above Hotel has been re ¬

LII 0tted repainted and is now ready for-

t c comfortable accommodation ofguests Table supplied with the besttoe market affords Rates reasonablefood sample room Feed stable at

°

llctl

iiBOllllRIkL HOTBLI

JAMESTOWN1KY

tHOLT VAUGHAN Proprietors

I 0I openedTahdHolt looks after the culinary department andBees that the table U supplied at all timeswith the belt the market affords The-tfroprietors are attentive and very polite togu tt3 Good sample rooms and the building

Jonvenleat to the business houses FirstcasPveiyettaebcdtpthehutet Terms veryic >oq

Lalllldryui

iiLEBANON KYi 0fl n THOROUGHLY equipped modern

fl laundry plant conducted by exper¬

f ienced workmen and doing as highgrade work as can be turned out any-

placer In the country Patronize aome institution York of Adairusseli Tapipr and Green solicited

iProtrREED MILLER Agents

Qolumbla Kentucky

Ac0t take a peek of any od kind o

pills to cure a pint of discjiso fobs

a dose of Morley Little liver Pills forJ1IIiow v 11 8Uro you °

eP itcoaleu pneadoso to ld b-

ll

r

L tdI 2

TuG Queen

Is Dca O1

Death Finally WIIts theStubborn S t r u g 1 e

With Victoria

The End Carne at EtaI P Hf Tsnfarthe 22d list strrrQd fcy

nr Ghtifra

FLAG ATWAHfN T t3 MWHfcVD

By the Associated PrrtsLondon Jan 21 626 p m

The Queen is dead

A telegram from the Prince ofWales to the Lord Mayor timedat Osborne 645 p m carriedthe news The text of the PrinceWales dispatch to the Lord May-

or¬

is as followsO borne 645 p mMy be ¬

loved mother has juii passed awaysurrounded by her children andgrandchildren Albert Edward

To this a sympathetic reply wasmade

The Queen is shirt to hnyo badefarewell in a feeble monosyllableto her family assembled at herbedside at midday

Washington Jan 22T henews announcing the death of theQueen was conveyed to PresidentMcKinley simultaneously with itsreceipt by the newspapers Al-

though¬

he had been kept advisedof her condition the news of herdeath was a great shock to him

Ae soon as officially notified hewill send a message ofcondolenceAppropriate resolutions w e r o

passed by the Senate of the Unit ¬

ed States and the flag on the Ex ¬

ecutive Mansion was placed athalf mast Bo far as any recordgoes this is the first time in thehistory of this country that thismark of respect has been pnid tothe memory of a foreign ruler

IMPORTANT EVENTS OF TUB REiatf

18W May 24 Botn a Kensing-ton Palace London

1829 January 28Death of herfather the Duke of Kent

1887i June 30 Sqcceeded heruncle William IV

1838 June 28Coronation inWestminister Abbey

1840 February 10 Married toPrince Albert of SaxeCpbnrgGotha

1845 Repeal of the corn lawsResignation of Peel

1848First visit to Balmoral1851 Opening of tho Great Ex ¬

position1822Death of the Duke of

Wellington1855 Crimean wa-ri858The Jndfen mutiny Pos ¬

sessions of Eaat India Companytransferred to Crown

1801 March lODeathof hermother the Duchess of Kent De-

cember¬

14Death of Prince Con

sort1865Death of Lord Palmer

ston1867Lord Derbya reform bill18681874 Irish Church dises ¬

tabli hed i new ballot acbj nettlemeat Jlabama claims j abolitionof purchase jn the anny

874 77Teaty of nr1inJqc ¬

quisition of Cyprus dual ponfcrol

of Egypt wars in Zululand andAfghanistan

1877 Proclaimed Empress of

Lydia188085Irishland act wars

in the Transvaal Egypt mId Sou ¬

dau1885 Home Rule Bill j divis ¬

ion between Liberals and liiberalUnioiliBtSh I

1887Jubilee fifty years cel ¬

eb ration1892 Letter pf thinks tothe

nation for sympathy onjleathpfDuke of Clarence

1894rReciremBptof Mr Hurtstone j opening of Manchestership canal

Jubilee sixty years cel ¬

ebratiouI1898rDi cavery of the Sondun

2Y +l1ightl fh u i

J

r Cr-

tv

k

1 1

day beginning of the Boor war1900 Proclamation of the ac ¬

quisition of the South African Re-

public¬

and Orange River FreeState alliance of nations for theprotection of foreigners in China

QTJKENB RELATION TO ROYALTY

Mother of Albert Edward heirto the throne

Mother of Victoria DowagerEmpress of Germany

Grandmother of Wilhelm Em ¬

peror of GermanyGrandmother of Victoria Alice

Czarina ofRussiaGrandmother of Marie Princess

ofRoumaniaGrandmother

of Victoria GrandDuchess of Hesse-

Grandmother of Sophia Duch-

ess of Sparta wife of heirappar ¬

ent of Gr oe-Granimother of Elizabeth

Grand Duchess Serge of RussiaGrandmother of Ernest Grand

Duke of Hesse

GreatGrandmother of theICrown Prince of Prussia heirap ¬

parent to the German EmpireGreatGrandmother of Qlga

Grand Duchess of Russia heiressapparent of Russian Empire

THE REION OH VICTORIA

CourierJournal

Tqc inevitable end foreshadowed by

several days of dramatic reports from

the Isle of Wight has come at lastand Queen Victoria is no mureDeath which knocks with impartialstroke at the palace of the King andthe hovel of the peasant visited herisland home yesterday and put an endto leer suffering in the eightysecondyear of her ago Qbe of the four soleregnants over the empire of which shereigned she had worn the crown lon-

ger¬

than qll combined The firstknown as Bloody Mary reigned butfive years while Elizabeth her success-

or

¬

was Queen for fortyfive and Annebut twelve years Combined theirreigns covered but si tytwo yearsthat of Victoria was oversixtythreeyears

While it is difficult to draw a com

parison between the reigns of Eliza-

beth

¬

and Victoria owing to tlie differ ¬

ence between the tares In which theylived and to the intervening changesin the condition of civilization and re¬

gal authority It is not to be question ¬

ed that the verdict of posterity willaward to Victoria the merit of havingthe more brilliant reign when weighedby the test of human progress andmoral evolution If the Elizabethanage was illumined by tbo genius of

Shakespeare and Bacon it was darken ¬

ed by the ignorance and poverty of themasses and by the cruel excesses of

the sovereign In contrast to thesephysical and administrative defectsthe reign of Victoria is as incomparable as the electric light of the Nine ¬

teenth century to the rush ligbtpf theSixteenth Ascending tbe throne durlug the ministry pf Lord John Russell

just after the great measures of relig ¬

ious and economic reform had beeninaugurated she became and contin ¬

ued through her life the embodlmentofthat peaceful revolution in the Eng ¬

lish Constitution by which the royalprerogative was shorn of its absolutismand England became thoroughly con ¬

stitutional monarchy in which talewill ort e people expressed throughParliament became the dominant fea¬

ture of Government Under the en¬

lightened statesmanship of Gladstonethehome government wfts still furtherliberalized the federative prjqcipje of

the colqqial sjstcin successfully organ¬

ized and the empire made more homo-geneous free and prosperous Success

followed her armies in the few wars of

national character in which tbecountry was engaged aud if in the

latter year her mind was wrackedwith care it may be ascribed directly

toa reaction from the liberal policy ofGladstone and to a reversal of tnatfinstitutcd by him iu SjouthAfrica

In all that implies the eleva-

tion

¬

of the musses their edu ¬

cation their physical comfort aidmoral progress the reign of Victoria

must stand lanpballeuged longevity

has been extended by the practicaladoption of s ientitp suggestions freedom of discussion and enlargement of

suffrage have tees promoted and fortbe first time since Ireland became anIntegral part of the empire there isanapproximation to an actual as welt asa nominal accord v

ihifc Hasty glance kt thjcLcondttlod

to i4p

> 4

J

J tsc itI

1

in which Great Britain finds itself atat the close of the long reign of Victo-ria has not taken Into view the greatstrides made within the period in thepractical arts in sciences inventionand the appliances of war as well as of

peace For while the period coverthe perfection of ocean navigation thedevelopment of the railroad the in¬

vention of the telegraph the tele-

phone¬

of armored warships and long

range cannon and small arms much of

tbe credit of origination belongs toour own country and the progress ofGreat Britain by their use has been bY

adaptation rather than discovery Norwhile for the development of her ems

pire can entire credit be given hersince the day has passed when the will

of the sovereign in that country canbe called the directing power of theGovernment inasmuch as that is ves-

ted

¬

in the Ministry yet when it hasbeen shown to what extent the exam ¬

ple Of an evil life can lower the moraltone of a country and weaken its pow ¬

for good full credit should be ac-

corded

¬

to the Queen for the virtuousexample she has always set for herpeople and the discreet influence shehas asserted for their happiness Well

shall It be for her country It ner suecessqr coming to the throne at an age

when the enthusiasm of life may besaid tq be dulled and the cares of hisstation may become onerous sbalprofit by the precepts as well us theexample of his mother and deliver intotbe hands of his heir the scepter as

unpolluted as when he received it

Every man who has a wife shouldcarry some life insurance for her bene ¬

fit Life is uncertain and death is assure to come as night is to follow day

Your life Is wortl more to your familythan your house and barn You havethem insured grid if they do not burnyou get no return and probably willpay on tbem for a life time You knowyou arc bound to dleyou know not thehour or the day death may come Whynot act wisely and take on some life in ¬

surance for the benefit of your familyTbe Connecticut Mutual is worth millions of dollars tbo best dividend payIng company in the United States See

J E Murrell Columbia Ky

The Farmer of The Future

The farmer who understands chem¬

istry who is able to analyze tbe forcesof nature to mix brains with soil willbe the great farmer of the future

SuccessTosure he will Farming is a

science and a business as well aud nota haphazard occupation to be taken upand put away in a careless or Indiffer ¬

ent mannerFarming is no more to be carried on

as it was 25 or lop years ago than man-

ufacturing¬

banking insurance or run ¬

ning a wholesale grocery house was

carried on 25 or 100 years ago Conductany of these businesses as they were

done then and they will go Into bank ¬

ruptcy in six mouthsWhy then expect farming to be car ¬

rled on now as then Everything elsehas progressed whynot farming too

the foundaUqn uu which all other busi ¬

ness restliiEverything comes out of the groundat last and what we eat and whatwe wear are produced in the raw stateby the farmer Ileis necessary to ex-

IstenceDoes It not show the wonderful vi ¬

tality of the calling that it has fur ¬

nished a living to thousands when inso many igstWgces it has been conduct-ed exactly as it was 50 years ago Anddoes it not show what great profitawait those who take it up as abusiness and managp it wlh the same

watchfulness as successful commercialinterests are managed If some of

the Kentucky boys who are leavingthe forms to go into law medicineand business will study farming as theydo law and medicine they will find ita profitable undertaking and an inde ¬

pendent one and at the same UtIle

oneof the most hcalthfql gad enjoy¬

able occupations to he foynd on toelist It will be a t lof good omenwhet ttye yin°8 mop Of tulent take upagriculture as a serious studyEx

Approaching NuptialsMr C IL Cabell a promlnentyoung

farmer and trader of Camp KnoxQrceq county will be married at2 mtoday to Miss Lynn Dowdy a high ¬

ly accomplished young lady daughterof Mr Tom Dowdy who resides nearGreeosburg Theceremony will takeplace at Ebenezer burch which hasbeen beautifully decorated Buy TFWai too of this city will officiate

The attendants will be MrEi Wil¬

son and Miss Pearl Strader the UshersMessrs Chas Buchanan itni XJabellPenlck This popular couple have thebest wishes of their many ffientis

I

<

f

i4 f r + r

Embarrassing Appointments

The President has appointed the son

of Justice Harlan of the SupremeCourt Attorney General for Porto Ri-

co and the son of Justice McKenna tobe Captain and Inspector General onthe same island These appointmentshave been for some days the subjectsof dignified but yet sharp comments InIthe newspapers It has been freelyassumed that there was Impropriety innaming the sous of the Judges who areto pass on questions of Porto RicanGovernment to places in the insularservice

It is a very delicate thing to evenIremotely intimate that so high a Courtcould be influenced by such family taivors especially since we have had ItsoIindustriously dinned into our ears furIfour years that it is wrong to look uponany Court as a thing susceptible to hu ¬

man Influences So the opposition tothe appointments Is put on the ground

that they are an embarrassment to theJudges and some go so far as to say anaffront to the distinguished jurists be-

cause they have the appearance of aneffort to influence judicial opinionswith patronage They have the flavor

of trying to get votes on the bench byIthe same means that Mr llanna forexample employ to get votes for aSenatorship in a Legislature

The Philadelphia Times goes so faras to say that no more shocking at-

tack

¬

upon the independence of the ju¬

diciary ever has been made It saysjtbe Justices named owe it to them ¬

selves and to their associates to forbidthe acceptance of the appointments of¬

fered to their sonsItA sense of pro-

priety would suggest this at any timeit continues but under existing cir¬

cumstances it is essential If thePresident is devoid of such sense itshould be taught him and the Senatemust refuse to confirm these indecentselection

This is making an issue indeedPerhaps though the young men mayIbe obstinate They are of course over21 years of age and beyond the legalcontrol of their eminent fathers Per ¬

haps they are beyond the limits of pa¬

rental moral suasion

It can hardly be possible that theJustices asked for tbe appointment of

their sons especially when Porto Rican establishment and possibly theexistence of the office of AttorneyGen ¬

eral and Inspector General themselvesare involved The Senate would notlike to affront the President or theJustices by rejecting these nomina ¬

tions especially if tbo men are quali ¬

fied and moral fit which is probably

the fact It would be almost huaiiliatiug confession fur tutf 1rcskleut to

withdraw the nominations It may bu

argued that nobody bas a right to keep

these men down simply becautc tbelrfathers are Justices of the SupremeCourt On the other band it may be

suggested that a great many other pen ¬

pie have to submit tobeinrfkeptdowuThere is very far short of u sufficientnumber of olflees to go round notwithstanding the tendency to rapidmultiplication After all the greatmajority must be private citizens

Altogether it is a hard subject totreat The Enquirer Is disposed tocongratulate itself that the settlementis not in its hands This muck may

be said qnyhowi It would have beena lucky thing If the appointments hadnot been made It looks as if the delcafe question had backed up to McKIn-

ley himself Cincinnati Enquirer

Change of Appointment

I wish to state that for reasons whichthe preacher in cbarge and the presid-Ing

¬

elder thinks altogether satisfactory the quarterly meeting has beenchanged from Columbia to Carmel and-will he held at the time flnUi appoint ¬

ed February 2 and a 1001

J L Murrell P E-

I1ruAibled Jqto Mr Blackmonsdrug store tine evening 1 says Wesley

Nelson of Hamilton Ga and be ask¬

ed me to try Chamberlains Pain Balmfor rheumatism with which I had suf¬

fered for a lung time I told him 1

had no faith in any niedjclpe as theyall fql1 RtUe saldj Well if Cham-

berlains¬

Pain Balm does uot help you

you need nut pay for it I took abottle of it home and used it accord ¬

tug to tbe directions and in oneweek

I was cured and have notsince beentroubled with rheumatism Sold by

M Cravens

Cornelius AlvordJr the defaultingnow teller of the First National Bankof Now York watt sentenced to 13

jear s iiuprlScJnmeut

OBITUARY

A sad day reaches every homeGod saw fit in his wonderful pbw¬

er and Jwisdom to call from hisearthly cares Bro B D Robertsand thereby caused great sorrowand sadness in the home of hischildren George Leslie and Miss

Annie Roberts with whom he had

been making his home for the lasttwo years He had all the carethat loving children friends antineighbors could bestow But Godsaw fit to call hun home to glorynotwithstanding all was done thatcould be done to relieve his suffer-

ing¬

He had been ailing for sev-

eral¬

months He bad been heardsay time and again I am only

waiting my summons Bro Rob ¬

erts was 67 years 4 months and28 days old when he died Hewas married to Miss Sallie Huggard Dec 81 1862 and lived withher until her death March 281888 Of this union were borneight children five of whicharestill living He professed religion-in 1858 had never united himIself to any Church but had livedup to the standard of Christianfaith until the day of his deathThe unmistakable evidence ofIwhich he left while departing thislife showed that he had not livedin vain He was always ready tolend a helping hand to his friendsand neighbors When well waskind and pleasant and had a goodword for every one ho met Hewas never heard to speak evil ofany one and was honest alwayswalking in the path of rectitude

His funeral was conducted byRev H T Jesse at the Baptistchurch near when the deceasedhad lived many years A host ofrelatives and friends followed theremains to their last resting placeFive children and one grandchildsurvive him While it is theirloss it is his eternal gain Trulywe can all say we miss him

A NEIGHBOR

FROn SOMERSET

Editor New-sCounting all the cases that have

been in town that are thought tohave beon smallpox and some

that were claimed to b3 chickenpox the number runs up to aboutforty All are doing well andsome have entirely recoveredMr John Eads has had the worsecase ot all but he is receiving thebest of attention and it is thoughthe has passed the worst stage andwill he a well marked piece of humanity fas1 May und his twodaughters went to the hoapitalwithhis von who has the pest Theyall having beeu with him since hehad the disease and theywere boarding and could getno other boarding house The at ¬

tendants at the hospital are DrTubbs m charge George HamJohn Hopper Chas Eckstein andHarvey Pratt Miss Rebecca andGertie Barnett and Jim Greengrandson of Mrs Pupplewell weresent to the hospital this eveningThursday Dr S 0 Ends of Ar¬

thur Iii is here to be with hisbrother John who is down with

pestMrsH Hope whose hus ¬

band was lately pastor of theChristian church ut Monticelloand who lately died there has re¬

moved with her children to Cana¬

daMissSallie Barnes of near

Crealaboro Ky spent several dayswith relatives und many friendsof this pluuu last week We haverecently learned she will remain mSomerset only u few days on ac¬

count of smallpox will start forhome WedneHilay accompanied byher sister Oilie Her many friendsregret that her visit call not becontinued uiid sorry to say thatold Pnluaki has lost two amongher brightest jewels and Russellhas won

Judge Jas Dentous resigignation as refers in Bankruptcy hasbeen handed to Judge Walter EaveilS but no appointment for hissuccessor has been made

Said Parker is ut home fromxillgtollEverett

The death of Representative Clarkof New Hampshire makes the 14thvaciiucy In the house of Representtivvsiif the Fiftysix ih CuugreruccasJLuaifd by death

J1Q 1QfiIriY t+ Blacksmiths +

A-NDWoodwork rj

Columbia Kyt au prepared to do all kinds ef

Work In my line and If you need raBnggiesorI keep for sale wagon and bumotboltsfaction guaranteed Give me a callKewlyPnrnlahed American Plan lilt

Per Day

Hie Sdosiers 3otclMEALS 25c

523 W Market SI LOUISVILLE KV

NIC BOSLER ngr

Wllfflore HotelW M WIL5IOBE Prop

Gradyville Kentucky11

THERE is no better place to stop

hotelGoodFeedstableGORDON MONTGOMERY

tgl llDat aCOLUMBIA KY

Adafrandadlofningcounties

drugstoreDR M 0 SALLEE

DLT1STetaCareful attention given to mr

dentirnrriI

OPiflCEOver Hughes CofiVHunter

COLUHBIAjKY

FRANK M BALLBNG El-

iROMnscnNorwnWITH

< 60WHOESALE

Dry Goods Notions It6tLOUISVILLE KY

SHEET IRON STOVES

AND

Tin Ware Manufactured

BY

1 T nunGEO N SONCane Valley Ky

NET PRICE LIST

AIR TIGHT STOVESlength Price

roln f M221n 7t-

r fn 90iSle 3 Jfr

iCommon Drum Stovemmtli 2+

a SK-

241n 7M251n a 7o

Stove Pipestip In 1E-cGin 13cam lie

Elbows65K8 In ljc

YETINERY SURGEON

fistulo Pollevil Splints Savln or any edt ¬

gital work done at fair prices IGUARANTEJSATISFACTION I am fixed to take care aistock-

S D ORENSHAW-Jmile from Columbia on Disarpolntment

RBIAURAN 1fJLMiJS BETA Pro rlet-

orLEEANON KYThisstand is located near the rle

pot and meals are furnished at allhours at 25 cents per meal The besteatables the country affordf i iieipin Ii kUtinff room for lafllefl

aL

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