bee (earlington, ky.). (earlington, ky) 1903-08-13 [p...
TRANSCRIPT
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I TftEB6I3j 3AgLINEiTO tSt KY
INIOUSTPtUnionCEdited by a White Ribboner
t yVty Iy Qy tray VL 31 cY scYCJCY ty>IL>sy
A very eojoynble meetlnc of theW C T U was hold with MrsWebb on Monday afternoon Aug 8
Three now department of workwore assumed mid superintendentsappointee
Mrs Knte Withers was appointedon Flower Mission Work i Mrs MIJJ Long Superintendent of Narcot ¬
lea mid NonAlcoholic Medicationand Miss H E Brooks Press Su ¬
pllntendontInext
Monday Aug 17 at 280 oclock Aninteresting programme has S beenprepared for this meeting
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Programme for meeting of W CT U at Mrs M B Longs next Mon ¬
day afternoon at half past two
oclockThePatent Medlciife Remedy
A selection by Mrs Mollie McGaryTemperance Training in the
Home A selection by MrsIWLGordon Jr
Ifood Suggestions A selectionby Miss Celeste Moore
All friends of temperance are mostcordially invited As these rshave alt boon prepared by specialistsIn these lines of work it is hopedthat much interest may be arousedin these subjects
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That Temperance Camp Meeting
A rare opportunity not likely tooccur every year for an outing at atrifling expense is the TemperanceCamp Meeting at Sulphur Springsin Ohio county beginning SaturdayAugust 15 aunt lasting nine days
The Springs are said to bo unequal ¬
led in their medicinal value Therewill be good music throught the entire session and three services aday in tho mornlnlT afternoon andevening
Col T B Domnree Prohibitioncandidate for Governor Mr O TWallace candidate for Lieut GovMr R Sidney Easton candidate forState Auditor Miss H E Brookscandidate for State Supt of PublicInstruction j Mr Louis Hancockcandidate for Representative from
county j Mrs Mary EBalch State Gor Sec of the W CT U Mrs Celeno Hulcoe Durbinso woliknown throughout the stateanti Rev B F Sheller ProhibitionEvangelist aro among the speakerswho have been engaged
rho first three lectures are freeAfter that an admission fee of toncents a day will be charged Tick-ets
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for the entire services can behad at halt price if bought in ad ¬
vance Children under ton years ofage admitted free
Reduced rates of one and onethird fare have boon granted on allroads Buy your ticket for Narrowson the 1 C thirtyone miles southof Owensboro and ten miles northof Horse Branch Sulphur SpringsIs four miles off the road Racksmeet all trains Fare fifty cents forthe round trip
Good board can be had at thehotel for one dollar a day For rat ¬
es by the week write the proprietorMr Webster Cato Many partiesbring tents and camp oflUlegrounds Tents can bo rented fromthe proprietor at very low ratesGood livery accommodations-
For any uther Information in re ¬
gard to the grounds write Mr Web-ster
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Gate Sulphur Springs OhioColy For information concern ¬
ing the services write Mr H WDavis Manager 027 Trcderlca St
KyAliersFeed your hair nourish it jgive it something to live Ort T
Then it will stop falling nodwill grow long and heavyAyers Hair Vigor is the only
Hair Vigorhiir food you can buy For 60years it has been doing justwhat we claim it will do Itwill not disappoint you H
hair net to bo short nut after Busing Ayera Hair Vigor a short time U bPRuti Vto now fourteen India Im I
aspIndldrouittomoafturbcigalmost K
ilttS J II FIBER a
I Allda b0letefor J o AYKU coIowoll MUM I
g r
Short HairFoleys Kidney Cure will cure all
diseases arising from disorderedkidneys or bladder
Sold by John X Taylor
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The Early Autumn Fashions
Perhaps the most importantitem in the early autumn ward ¬
robe is the topgarment the bat-
or jacket No one type ofis especially favored Long anshort coats loose and tight coatsare equally popular There hasnever been such a variety of ma ¬
terials that can be combined inthe same costume as is offeredthis season Silk velvet clothand chiffon are associated innearly every toilette that is in ¬
tended for dressy wear wIllIeeven the gown that is to do dutyfor walking and ordinary oc-casions will be distinguished b-
atY
least two contrasting ma ¬
terials There is nothing quiteso charming as the roan fash-ioned
¬
from one of the new pann-
valetse
in gunmetal effect Thirich shimmering gray velvetwith tiny flecks of white over itaffords a rich background for ex-
quisite embroidered and lactrimmings The shirtwaist cos ¬
tume that has been so popularduring the summer will comeforth with renewed attractive-ness
¬
in the autumn and thwardrobe that does not includeat least one velvet or velveteensuit < made in this popular stylewill be incomplete There areinnumerable pretty materialsthat will delight the heart of thewoman who persistently cling-to shirtwaists The new flan-
nels¬
I
are wonderfully soft andfine and come in very prettycolors The heayy cotton fabrics
madras cotton cheviot fleecebacked pique and ctinvaswill-all bo Worn even during the win ¬
ter and they have much torecommend them Handwork ismore in evidence than ever inthe fashionable wardrobe Ev ¬
ery season seems to bring forthsome new suggestions for the useof black velvet ribbon and nowwe have wonderfully pretty I
block or strapped work of thSribbon velvet over lace collarsand also on skirts and sleevesShirring in all forms is remarka¬
bly popular this season and ac ¬
cordionplaiting continues infavor not only for skirts but forjackets waists and accessoriesHigh in favor are linen passe ¬
menteries pendants and em ¬
broideries and they are used totrim gowns of almost every raplterial and buttons playa con-
sPicuous part in the trimming ofstreet dressesFrom The De ¬
lineator for September
Take With Cramps
WmKirmso a member of thebridge gang working near Little portwas taken suddenly ill Thursdaynight with cramps and a kind ofcholera His case was so severe thatho had to have the members of thecrew to wait upon him and Mr Gifford was called and consulted Hotold them iio had a medicine In theform of Chamberlains ColloOholeraand Diarrhoea Remedy hewould help him out andacoordlnglyseveral doses were administered with-the result that the fellow was able tobe around next day The Incidentspeaks quite highly of Mr GilfordsmArgusThisin your home It may save life
DrugstoreEarUngton ¬EarUngtonLarmQuthDBeryI
Early yesterday morning Mr WillLarmouth and Miss Sue DBorrydrove to Nortonvllle In time to catchNo C8 and went to SpringfieldTonn whore they were quietly mar ¬
ried returning on No 54 last nightThe groom is a popular young rail-road
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man and the bride is a verybeautiful and charming young ladyMr and Mrs Larmouth havo thebest wishes of a largo circle of friendsin their married life
Puts an End to It All
A grievous wall ofttimes comes as-a result of unbearable pain from over-taxed organs Dizziness BackacheConstipationButPills they put an end to It all Theyare gentle but thorough Try themOnly 25c Guaranteed by St Ber-nard
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Drug Store-
Subscribe for the Bee
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d
111IceoeeleesoeelMe1-
A most valuable find of a purepeacock coal has been made on thoproperty of the Nortonville CoalCompany The vein was discover ¬
ed where it cropped out of theground about a half mile from thepresent shaft and when it was open ¬
ed was found to be about four footthick and of the best grade Ittakes its name from the many col ¬
ors to be seen on its surfaco as theanglesd tthe find and tho new vein will beworkedas soon as possible
Unionism of the radical varietyhas been running riot in Coloradoand at Idaho Springs recently cul¬
minated in the destruction of thetransformer house of the Sun andMoon mine which operates withnonunion men One of theM +wreokers a member of the miners unionwas shot and killed Twentyonemembers of the union Including itsPresident were arrested and werlater drummed out of the city bcitizens who ordered them neyer toreturn The Sun and Moon was firstaffected by the miners strike lastFebruary and last month began
onunion menne of MinersIs a strong and a violent organiza ¬
Lion with many outrages notchedupon its record but It does not con ¬Coloe ¬
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rage and tho subsequent ejectmentof the unionists who participated ameeting of citizens of Denver hasbeen hold at which resolutions woreoe f
slout the rioters
Read the story of the Franklinsand Flake on the first page of THKDIm and note the kind of unionthe U M W of Linton Ind liveunder Evidently the citizens ofthespeople for no protest has been heardSuch is the union that CampbellPurcell Wells Hicks Wood Cowould fasten on the free miners ofHopkins Co if they could Secret ¬
aryTreasuror Geo Baker of Dis ¬
trict 2HU MTW of A makes hisreport for the three months of AprilMay and June 1003
He reports payingOfficers Salaries and Ex ¬
penses 207145Lawyers 258500Court Costs 7 87000Auditing Campbells Books 8869
Aidt 11800
Total 578904This roportshows that out of ev-
ery¬
100 cents expended =
Aid gets 2cOfficers get 30oLawyers and Courts60 cAuditing Campbell lic
This is a remarkable showing In ¬
deed for a benevolent organizationInstead of organizing for betterconditions of employment It wouldsjiem that District 23 is organizedfdr the benefit of its officials andlawyersP est Chas Wells received in
the three months458 24Or 15275 per month
Vice Prest W E Hicks got 89200Or 18008 per monthThe aid was as follows
Angelina Bailey 4050Mrs Bertha Broomfield 2000Mrs Taylor 700Charles Placktnan for burial
outfit of Ella Givens 4750ExTreasurer Campbell is not re ¬
ported by the new Treasurer Bakeras turning over any funds If theAuditing Committee which cost8859 had discovered what Camp ¬
bell and Wood had done with the235000 received by them since April
1 logo it might have been of valueThe National Board is even more
liberal than District 23G W Pur =
oell drew from the National Treas ¬
ury in 1902 225885 as reported byNational SecretaryTreasurer Wil ¬
sonWllatagraft these official broth ¬
ers of the U M W have and howthey do live on the fat of the land
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Foleys Kidney Cure
Will cure Brlghts DiseaseWill euro DiabetesWill cure Stone in Bladder
BladderDiseasesSold by John X Taylor
Dead
Mrs Bud Adams who hits boonsick a long time with pulmonarytrouble died Monday night Thedeceased was the wife of Bud Adamswho is an employee of the L NR R Sho was 85 years old andleaves a husband and three littlechildren Sho was buried at GrapevIne Tuesday afternoon
WANTEDTo sell or trade a lotof nice Jersey cows with calvesfor anyoldthitig W CMdteod
I
r To Cure a Cold in One DayiTake Laxative Bromo Quinine TabletsSeven Million motes sold In past 12 months This Signature
COUNTRY EDITORs
An Eloquent Encomium Upon theRural Press by the Editor of
a City DailYfWHAT HE THINKS OF
THE WEEKLY PAPER
The editor of Atlanta News incontributing his regular Saturdayevening column to that paperrecently paid the following glow ¬
ing tribute to the country news ¬
papersSitting here with the debris of
k weekly toil about usscatteredandy ay gh
above a mass of Georgia papersthe pen of Saturday Evening is
filled with a sentiment of tender¬
ness for the Country NewspapersHow quiet and yet how poten ¬
tial a work they do in the realmof newspaperdomJnnd howthankless ofttimes are theirxla-bore
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Quiet unhonored sometimesdesperately obscure many timesengaged in a hand to hand com ¬
bat with direst poverty and thechances ten to one against themit i3 jut simply superb to seethem come up to the scratch ofeach succeeding issue dauntlesscheery insouciant Micawberlike as before
Wo have often thought thatnothing but the strange fascina-tion
¬
of seeing ones thoughts onpaper on fair black and whitecould ever explain the sublimepertinacity with which some ed ¬
itors do stick to their thanklesscalling but we do honestly be ¬
lieve now that there are many ofthem who appreciate the deepimportance andresP9nsibility oftheir rank to it thelove of the thing and wheresuch a one does exist true to theinstincts of his craft in its high ¬
est plane imbued with the desireto elevate enlighten instructdefend and represent the peopleof whom he is the political or ¬
ganic center holding his honordear and the honor and goodname of his people precious pan ¬
dering to no false sensations andpoisonous sweets of scandal thatwould please but debase keepinga white example of politicalfaith and public morality andpolitical honor in the organthrough which he speaks thesentiment of his fellowcitizens
when such a one can be foundwe doff our hats in professionalrespect to the niost valuable andinestimable citizen of the Re ¬
publicTheimportance of the country
newspaper is rarely consideredIt is to the body journalisticwhat agriculture is to the bodypolitic the bone and sinew of italltlie feeder of the big metro ¬
politan journals whose thunder ¬
ous roar is but the concrete soundof the busy voices of the rural
pressThecountry papers are the
thousand small steams that flowinto the maelstrom of the me ¬
tropolis the various courierswhich swiftwinged with theirtidings to the great herald arter-ies
¬
that throb out our states tothe world
And again we say that theeditor who in the full light ofhis realized responsibility ful-
fills¬
to the extent of the manthat is in Trim the high urappling duties of his station is acitizen who ought to wear the
laurelBravelittle sheet that it is
wrapping in its history a thousand heartaches and crampedambitious of bitter sacrifices he-
roically¬
made without a blot up ¬
on its record of faith and purityand not a foul scandalous linetomar the symmetry of its truthand constancy
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In the fellowship of journalismit is the quite goldenheartedgentleman stainless and pure asthe white soul of him who guidesits cruise over the deeps andshallows of this stormy age ofjournalismFrom
city to the countryfrom the throbbing pavement tothe waving fields we send todaythe highest greetings of the craftwho wield the pen
Throat Cut at Uniontown
What appears to have been anunprovoked and malicious actoccurred in this city Saturdayafternoon says the UniontownTelegram A young man by thename of Richey because he ask¬
ed Raymond Freaney colored tomove so that he may pass alongthrough a narrow passage wayreceived a long gash in the neckfrom a knife in the hands ofFreaney From all information-we were able to obtain the actwas entirely unprovoked Rich ¬
ey simply inked the negro to al ¬
low him to pass and Freaneywithout a word drew a knifeand slashed at his neck inflict ¬
ing a long wound which if buta little deeper would have prov¬
en fatal Richey after beingcut drew his own knife andstruck at Freaney but does notknow whether he cut him or notThe affair occurred in an out ofthe way place and Freaney madehis escape and has not > et beenapprehended The act was wit ¬
nessed by a crowd of negroes butthey of course knew nothing ofit a few minutes after it hadhappened
gasolineIhere created a very good impres ¬
sion Several negroes were ar¬
rested on suspicion but it wasclearly shown that Freaney wasthe guilty one
SPECIAL TERM
Circuit Court Opened at Madisonville
Monday to Clear Civil Docket
A special term of circuit courtopened Monday with Judge J FGordon presiding on the benchThis term was set at the last termof court by Judge Gordon to enablehim to clear the large civil docketthat had accumulated and a numberof cases will be disposed of Theterm will last two weeks The fol ¬
lowing cases are set for this termFOURTH DAY
J P Adams vs W A NisbetAda McCoy vs Relneoke Coal Min ¬
ing CoFIFTH DAY
Turner Blackwell by o vs Reln ¬
eoke Coal Mining CoJ P Merrill vs Louisville Nash ¬
villa RailroadLee Moore vs city of Madisonville
SIXTH DAY
Calvin Brooks vs Reineoke CoalMining Co
B D Campbell vs J P Merrill
REPAIRAND
TIN SHOP
J M WEAVER Proprietor
The wagon ofJbuy shop
ii
Cures CrfpIin Two Days
on everybox25c
M E Boyle vs city of Madison ¬
villeJordan Cross vs Louisville
Nashville RailroadEIGHTH DAY
Frank Dunbarvs Illinois CentralRailroad
C J Samples vs T L SlatonNINTH DAY
Jim Moore vs Reinecke Coal Min-ing
¬CorW C Hopewell admr R W lCooley vs Louisville NashvilleRailroad
TENTH DAYJ L Hancock vs Louisville
Nashville RailroadWilliam Ambrose Hardwick vs
John Riley Franklin
DELAYED EDITORIALThe following editorial mailed
from Denver Colo reached THEBEE too late for proper position
On account of family illnessand other conspiring circum ¬
stances the editor has been ab ¬
sent and unable until this weekto publish his story of the mag¬
nificent trip arranged by Secre ¬
tary Morningstar and enjoyed byso large a portion of the KQtucky Press Association Thestoryappears on the first page ofthis issue The Association un ¬
der the administration of retir ¬
ing President Thos G VatkinsIof the CourierJournal has hada profitable and progressive yearand is in better shape than everbefore The recent state meet-ing
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at Lexington was one of thebest ever held and the tripthrough Canada to the Atlanticcoast was a notable one Thebusiness of the Association un ¬
der the newly elected presi sdent is in the hands of astrong Executive Committee selepted from among the most ex ¬
perienced and earnest newspaperworkers in the State There arematters of importance to thepress of Kentucky now underconsideration which this andsubordinate committees willwork out during the prosentyearAll newspapers in the State notnote affiliated with the organiza-tion are asked and will be urgedto join in movements along busi ¬
ness lines for mutual benefit
Daisy Turned OverWhile a crowd of EarlingtOn peo ¬
ple were enroute to Pappy HatchWhitflelds one night this wgek thedriver turned the Daisy over andthrew the occupants out in the mudAfter they had clawed the mud fromtheir eyes they discovered no onewas hurt nnd proceeded on their waymuddy butt rejoicing Want of spacekeeps us from mentioning names
Rumor says there will be twomore weddings in our town in thenear future The signs are good aswe cant help but notice Thatwonderful little Godoflove doesswoop down on our town sometimesand my I what havoc he does playiwhile he tarries 1
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The Death Penalty
A little thing sometimes results indeath Thus a mere scratch insig ¬
nificant cuts or puny boils have paidthe death penalty It is wise tohave Bucklens Arnica Salve everhandy Its the best Salve on aarthand will prevent fatality whenBurns Sores Ulcers and Pilesthreaton Only 25c at Drug Store
AUldnds of tin and gal-
vanized¬
iron work doneTin roofing a specialtyBicycle repair work doneon short notice Satis ¬
faction guaranteed andprices to suit Office op ¬
posite J M Oldhamswagon shop
LIGHT ON THE SUBJECT
M OLDHAMlies been lately fittedwith an electric
dynamo also a new Morgan sC Wright the setting machineI am now prepared to put on rubber tires on short noticeBuggies and wagons made to order and kept in repair oneyear All repairing work promptly done and satisfactionguaranteed
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