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Sistersville daily review. [volume] (Sistersville, W. Va.) 1905-1907, May 24, 1905, Image 2

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i Well Bred People j
Use Wheeling Bakery Bread. That is the reason we have such ]
a large trade on this Bread. It comes in the following:
JUBILEE, SWEET HOME, ]
RYE, LOAFA, J
? ?
GRAIIAM, GLUTEN, j
i
HEARTH,- RAISEN.
And the Famous "Tenia,*' which cannot be beat in the j
world. That's saying something. But we have the proof.
#
L. L. FRANTZ
"THE J. K A DING GROCER'
316 Diamond ot? Sistersville, W. Va. |
CONSERVATIVE INVESTOR
Should always make
his wants known to
us. We can supply
him with gilt-edged
bonds or other choice
investments to net 4,
5 or 6 per cent.
TYLER COUNTY BANK
1 Sistersville, W. Va.
Fisk's {
Corner
|
It is about time for Singer
agents to appear in the country
selling Singer sewing machines at
fabulous prices. I offer the same
machine at $18.50 to $24.80. I
hope no lady in this county will
l)uy before consulting me. I am
not selling machines on commis
sion. The agent is, and you need
not forget he is going to make
you pay all his bills, besides he
can repair and make as good as
new any machine in this county.
Don't trade off the old machine
nntil you consult me.
L. L FISIv
401 Diamond Street,
Pianos, Organs, Sewing Machines.
FOR STYLE AND SERVICE
BUY THE TRAVELLER.
Black vici shoes $3.50
Black vici Oxfords $3.50
Black velour calf shoe $3.50
Black velour calf Oxfords. .$3.50
Tan Russian shoe $3.50
Tan Russian Oxford $3.50
Tan Russian Oxford $3.50
Patent kid shoe $3.50
Patent kid Oxford $3.50
Any man that appreciates a
jood shoe can 't afford to miss see
ing this line.
Kotzebue & Murrey
The Shoe Sellers,
623 Wells St.
THE TOMBSTONE CENSOR.
lie Sec* Tliat No I Usee inly IiiNcrfp
tlun >!nr* tlie Oraelery.
A tombstone censor is employed by
most large cemeteries. It is tin* duty
of this unit to see that nothing unseem
ly in the way of a t imbstone is put up.
A young engineer in a Norristown
mill was hilled l?y the explosion of a
boiler, and the family of this young
man. believing that the mill owners
had known all ?: that the boiler
was defective. ariuaily had carved on
the toiuhstone the sentence, "Murdered
by his masters." The tombstone cen
sor. ??f course, refused to sanction such
an epitaph.
On the death of a certain noted prize
tighter the surviving brother of the
man wanted to put in a glass case be
side the grave a championship belt,
four medals. :i pair of gloves and other
trophies of (lie ring. But the censor's
negative was tirm.
A widow who believed that the phy
sician was responsible for her hus
band's death wished to put on the
tomb, "lie employed a cheap doctor."
but the tombstone censor showed her
that such an inscription would lay her
open to heavy damages for libel.
Atheists sometimes direct in their
wills that shocking blasphemies be
carved on their monuments. The cen
sor. however, sees to it that these blas
phemies do not disfigure the cemetery. ;
?Philadelphia Bulletin.
I
rrovfd \othln jf.
"Do you believe in betting on race I
horses?"
"Sure."
"But you lost?"
"That's nothln'. That skate I bet i
on's no race horse."- Houston Tost. j
An ImpoMMlhle SuKSreotlon.
"What n pity real detectives ar? not
as brilliant as story book detectives!"
"It wouldn't work," answered the
police officer. "They'd all reaign from !
the force and write novels."? Wasli
Imrton star.
Why Suffer From Rheumatism?
Why suffer from rheumatism
when one application of Chamber
lain's Pain Balm will relieve the
pain? The quick relief which this
liniment affords makes rest and
sleep possible, and that alone is
worth many times its cost. Many i
who have used it hoping only for
a short relief from suffering have
been happily surprised to find that
after awhile the relief becomes
permanent. Mrs. V. H. Leggett
of Yum Yum, Tenn., U. S. A.,
writes: "I am a great sufferer
from rheumatism, all over from
head to foot, and Chamberlain's
Pain Balm is the only thing that
will relieve the pain." For sale
by HiH Bros.
WASHINGTON LETTER
[SpccisU Correspondence.]
Secretary of War Taft is giving a
jpod deal of energy and thought to the
solution of a problem which is of far
greater i>ersonal importance to him
than the affairs of state. He Is busy
trying to reduce his weight, which Is
more than 3(?0 pounds.
With Mr. Taft it is a question of his
health, for the doctor has told him that
if he does not materially reduce his
weight he will suffer during the two
mouths he will be confined to a steam
ship next summer 011 his trip to the
Philippines. In his extremity he has
taken up horseback riding in desperate
earnestness uml takes a long trip every
afternoon. With all his weight Mr.
Taft knows how to ride, and only once
has Colonel Edwards, who always leads
the way. succeeded in getting him into
a hole where he was forced to dismount
, and lead his horse. That was when
they struck an almost peri>endicular
declivity of fifteen feet with only one
doubtful break in the side.
An International Alliance.
The next international alliance to In
terest Washington will be the marriage
of Miss Frances Newlands, youngest
daughter of Senator Newlands of Ne
vada, tj Lieutenant Leoi>old von Bre
dow of the (Jerniau army, which is
scheduled to iu place in this city
about the 1st of .May. immediately aft
er the arrival of the bridegroom elect,
who obtained the consent of his em
peror and sailed for America April 20.
Lieutenant von Bredow, who is now
stationed in Berlin with his regiment,
the Cuirassier guard, is well known in
Washington, where he was an attache
of the (Jerinan embassy during 1!K)3.
Miss Newlands is the youngest of the
three attractive daughters of Senator
Newlands, and through their mother,
who was a Miss Sharon of California,
Inherited large fortunes.
A Heniurkable Plant.
Those in charge of that section of
the government greenhouses devoted to
tropical plants and agriculture recent
ly witnessed the blooming of a very
remarkable r<lant. This is the Amor
phophallus riviere, a plant indigenous
to Cochin China and the only speci
men in Washington. The plant looks
like a giant Jack-in-the-box or Indian
turnip, the specimen in question stand
ing live feet nine inches in height. The
stalk is given, mottled with curious
looking white reticulations, which
en use it to resemble the bo;ly <>f a
snake. The blossom opens out in the
same pulpit fashion as the Jack-in-the
box of our southern woods, and out of
this rises a giant purple red spathe.
The blossom has a most pungent, sick
ruing ami disagreeable odor, which in
the present case so permeated the
greenhouse in which the plant was
placed that work had to be almmh/aed
there for nearly two days. One man,
an employee of the department who
has this greenhouse under his care,
contracted a severe headache as a re
sult of inhaling the odor.
X i' iv Army iioNpitnl.
Secretary Tail approved the recom
mendation of Surgeon (Jeneral O'Heiily
for the erection of a new general army
hospital on the Cameron tract on the
west sitie of Hrigluwood avenue, near
ly opposite the .-.attic National ceme
tery. Congress lixed the limit of ?-ost j
of this hospital, including site, at $:i00,- '
til mi and appropriated $1(10,000, which
was made immediately available, for
the purchase of the site.
The property acquired for the pur
pose contains about forty-three acres j
and cost about $08,000. leaving $2,000 |
of the appropriation to be devoted to 1
other expenses in connection with the
new building. The property is owned j
almost entirely by ex-Senator Donald
Cameron of Pennsylvania.
Fntrbnnk* In Marble.
The vice president in cold but con
vincing marble will soon occupy one
of the two empty niches in the vice
presidential Valhalla along the walls
of the gallery of the senate chamber.
Here a long procession of other presi
dents of the senate, sawed off at the
waist, glare down sepulchrally on the
up to date proceedings below. The
bust of Mr. Fairbanks, for which he
has been sitting all winter, 1* now in
the plaster stage of its artistic evolu
tion. Franklin Simmons, its sculptor,
will take It immediately to Rome to be
done in marble.
Government Pre** Room.
The press rooms of the government
printing office are said to be a verifi
cation of the saying that "the use of
paper is the barometer of a nation's
progress," for the greater the progress
of the American nation the more
presses the public printer ls compelled
to install. The press room of a mod
ern newspaper is one of its show
places," and the same holds true of the
government office. Some idea of the
magnitude of the main press room of
the largest printing office in the world
might be gained from the statement
that the daily consumption of paper
Is about nine tons, 300 pounds of ink
being required. Twenty tons of paper
of different kiuds are used each day
In the operation of the entire plant,
over twenty-five cars being required
to deliver a month's supply of tills one
item from the mills.
\o Hnntlnic Permit* For Alnaka.
Secretary Wilson stated recently that
It had been determined not to issue any
hunting permits for Alaska this year.
| Game continues to grow scarce in the
territory, and the greater the scarcity
the worse becomes the conditio? of
the natives, who depend entirely upon
their game supply for meat in the win
ter tea son. No permit! were issued for
hunting last year, and persons bunting
! without permits will be severely han
dled. Moose especially are said to be
disappearing fast, and tbe problem con
fronts the government every winter of
whether assistance should not be giv
en tbe natives In the way of food sup
plies to tide them over tbe season.
CARL 8CHOFIELD.
I
AN OCEAN ENIGMA.
Mr*terr of the Fate of the Crew of
the Ship Marie Celeste.
Undoubtedly the most extraordinary
of all the mysteries of the sea is the
fate of the crew of the ship Marie
Celeste, a more fantastic creation ap
parently than novelist ever wove. She
left New York in 1887 for Euroi>e, her
personnel bring thirteen, including the
captain's wife and child. Two weeks
later a British bark sighted her in the
Atlantic. There was no sign of life on
t?oard. A boat was sent to her, and
a most exhaustive search proved her
to be as silent as the tomb, as desert
ed as a pesthouse. Everything was in
its place, even the boats at the davits.
The hull was undamaged, the cargo
untouched. Iliggiug and spars were
intact: the sails were all set. The
crew's weekly wash hung above the
forecastle; an awning covered the iK>op.
Binnacle and wheel and rudder ?? re
complete. The sailors' kils and din
ners were seen in the forecastle. In
the cabin was a sewing machine, with
a child's garment under the needle, and
<?n the table a h;ilf eaten meal. The
chronometer ticked undisturbed in the
chartroom: the cash box was unritieil.
The logbook, posted to within forty
eight hours of the visit, showed the
passage to have been favorable; the
chip's appearance proved there had
been no storm. Evidences of a strug
gle or piracy or murder there were
none. Yet thirteen people had disap
peared as if spirited away by some
supernatural agency, and from that
day to this the mystery has never been
unraveled, though the United States
government spared no effort to solve
it.? 1\ T. McGrath in McClure's Maga
zine.
The Cinme of Quintain.
The game of quintain survives only
in the village of OlTiiam (ireen in Kent,
England. It is so named from an in
strument used in tilting on horseback
with the lanee. It consisted of an up
right post, surmounted by a crossbar
turning 011 a pivot, which had at one
end a tl.it board and at the other a bag
of sand. The object of the tilter was
to strike the board at such a rate of
speed that he would be past and out
of the way before the bag of sand, as
it whirled round, could hit him in the
back.
There is a Difference.
The difference between Kenne-I
dy's Laxative Honey and Tar and j
all other cough syrups is that it !
moves the bowels, thus expelling!
a cold from the system. This re
laxes the nerve tissues and by its
healing and soothing effect on the
throat and lungs the cough is re
lieved ? cured entirely. Kenne- 1
dy's is the original laxative honey '
and tar. It contains no opiates. |
Good . alike for young and old. !
Sold by Opera House Drug Store, j
Steven Hon and Wnllace.
Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace once
found himself at a club in Edinburgh,
where he fell Info conversation about
Russia with a youth who put forward
some views in which he could not 1
acquiesce. "Oh," said this personage,
"it is al! very well for you to say that
you do not agree with me. but I know
all about it. I have just been review
ing Wallace's ?Russia.'" "And I have
just been writing it." was the natural
reply. The former speaker lived to be
famous. He was R. L. Stevenson.
Sorrow.
Sorrow is not an incident occurring
now and then. It is the woof which is
woven into the warp of life, and he
who has not discerned the divine sa
credness of sorrow and the profound
meaning which is concealed in pain
has yet to learn what fife is.? F. W.
Robertson.
Cleared for Action.
When the body is cleared for ac
tion by Dr. King's New Life Pills
you can tell it by the bloom of
health on the cheeks; the bright
ness of the eyse; the firmness ol
the flesh and muscles; the buoy
lancy of the mind. Try them. Ai
D. A. Ilendershot's drug store,
,25*.
sometime*!.
Ethel? Mamma, why is the wife of a
lord called "Lady?" Mamma? Because
that is her title. Ethel? Rut can't peo
ple sec that she's a lady without being
told so?? Town and Country.
Avurlre.
I Avarice is generally the Inst passion
j of those lives of which tin- first part
I has been squandered in pleasure and
: the second devoted to ambition. ? Joha
! son.
Even an electric button won't accom
plish much unless if Is pushed.? Phila
I delphia Record.
- - - - - -
Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy the Very Best.
"I have been using Chamber
lain's Cough Remedy, and want to
say it is the best cough medicine
I have ever taken," says Geo. L.
Chubb, a merchant of Harlan,
Mich. There is no question about
its being the best, as it will cure
a cough or cold in less time than
any other treatment. It should
always be kept in the house ready
for instant use, for a cold can be
cured in much less time when
promptly treated. For sale by
Hill Bros.
PENSION DECISIONS BT THE
ASSISTANT SECRETARY
OF THE DEPARTMENT
OF THE INTERIOR.
DIVISION OF PENSION? Act
March 3, 1899. Where the husband
by his cruelty and abuse, drives
his wife from the matrimonial
home it may be presumed that he
intended to effect a separation by
i his own wrongful and illegal acts.
Held: That his wife is entitled
to one-half of his pension, she
being in necessitous eircumstan
C6S.
PAYMENT OF PENSION UN
DER ACT MARCH 3, 1899. s When
a pensioner refuses to execute his
pension voocher for the purpose
of depriving his wife (who has
been awarded one half of his pen
sion under the act of March 3.
1899) of her part of his pension,
j payment may be made to her upon
I her supplemental voucher upon
satisfactory proof to the Commis
sioner of Pensions of the existence
of the pensioner during the period
for which she claims pavmenl.
DISCHARGE WITHOUT HON
OR. This soldier having been
discharged from service under j
special order mustering out his
organization became of its refusal
to obey orders, and such discharge
being held by the War Depart
ment to be a discharge without !
honor, he was not honorably dis
charged from such service, and is
not pensionable under the act of
| June 27, 1890.
SERVICE- ACT JUNE 27. 1890
'EVIDENCE. The claimant hav
| ing made due proof of the number
of day's service required by sec
ition 2 of the act of June 27, 1890,
I if he meets the other requirements
[of said act, is entitled to a pen
sion, notwithstanding the holding
of the War Department that he is
not regarded as having been inthe
military services of the United
States.
LIFE OF DUTY? ACCIDEN
TAL INJURY. The soldier was
shot accidentally, by a comrade
whom he had pulled out of bed
"in a playful manner". Held.
That the wound was not received
in the line of duty, and hence no
pension can be granted there
fore.
A De*perare Remedy.
Agent? I caiiie to deliver your book
on "How* to Play the Piano." Lady
Rut I didn't order any such book.
Ajrent (consulting his notebook)? Have
you a next door neighbor named Jones?
Lady? Yes. Is it for her? Agent? No;
she ordered it for you.? Cleveland
Leader.
When Tliey Could Xol Affrff.
Judge? It is your duty, gentlemen, to
reason with one another. The Fore
man? Some people ean't reason. Judge;
.hey can only arcue.? New York Press.
In talking some folk never stop to
1 ihlnk. while others never think to stop.
ARTISTIC
JOB PRINTING.
i
The Daily Review has during
the past week received several
hundred dollars worth of new job
type of the latest and neatest pat
terns, and is now thoroughly
equipped for turning out the best
possible job printing in the most
artistic and up-to-date styles.
The book bindery has also
been improved, and we have every
facility for making books, rebind
ing old books, binding magazines,
etc.
Our prices are reasonable; our
work unexcelled. Telephone Sii
tersville Daily Review, No. Gl-2,
and our representative will call cn
vou.
r
DR. J. R. FINK,
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN i
'Phone 189L. MoCoaeh Bldg.
Sistersville, W. Va.
OSTEOPATHY >
Skilled Osteopath*; not only cure
and prevent disease but thejr
teach the art of keeping well.
Osteopathic treatment never
forces but removes barriers and
obstructions from nature's path
way.
The skilled Osteopath plays up
on the bifferent parts of the hu
man anatomy as an adept musi
cian upon his harp, tuning it and
making all the parts respond and
act in harmony.
If you would escape that an
nual attack of hay fever, antici
pate the season and begin Osteop
athic treatment.
VACATION
DAYS
Have you began to figure on
when you are going to take your
vacation, and what a good time
you expect to have? Why don't \
you also figure on bringing your
visit home with you to be enjoy
ed over and over again. #
THE ONLY WAY? Take a ko
dak with you: buy it now and get
familiar with it. We instruct all
purchasers how to use the kodak
to get the best results, and it
might also be a good idea to have
some new photos taken of you**
self to take along. You all know
the kind we make. A pleasure to
give to or receive from a friend.
Prices as reasonable as first-class
photos can be produced. A full
line of photographic goods for
sale. Finishing for amateur pho
tojrraphers.
KERR'S NEW GROUND
FLOOR STUDIO
*
| 601 Wells Street.
'Phone 39.
Letters Unclaimed M. y, 23, 1905. ^
I Anderson. Mrs. K?*n.
| Heck. Mr. II. E.
Craiir. Mr. Joseph.
Early, Mrs. Mary.
Ilauglit. Miss May.
Hill. Miss Anna A.
Joiips, Mr. Frank A!
?Jnn?*s, M r. J. O,
Kennedy, Miss Lizzie.
Lehman, Mr. J. J.
McCormick, Mrs. Harry.
McCullough. Mr. John.
Stoner, Mr. Davie.
GEO. E. WORK, P. M.
First National Bank
Of Sistersville, W. Va.
We ask for new accounts because we are capable ef ren
dering the best banking services and accommodations, and be
\
cause we offer that higk measure of security that appeals to
the prudent and conservative people of this community.
We invite your consideration as a desirable bank in whieh
to have an account.
Four per cent interest is allowed on time deposits.
Capital $100,000.
Surplus, $50,000.

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