Newspaper Page Text
___ • ____ Devoted to Home Interests, Local and Oeneral News. ' von MK XMI_CKKKDO. WAVXK (».. W. VA., WEDNESDAY^ MAIU'H i'.». jgg N { M,,,,,{ li; BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL CARDS. J. R. GIESkE, Architect, Ceredo, VV. Va. Office at Hoard Brick. J. H. MEEK, ATTORNEY AT LAW, WAYNE. W. VA. Will practice in Wayne anil adjoining counties. J K AV. AV. MARCUM, Attorney-at Law, Ceredo, W. Va. Will practice in all the coortaof W. Vi. 1 Boyd aud Lawrence county. Ky . WWayn.-,omit\ visitors DANIEL WRIGHT, Painter = Paper Hanger Ceredo, W. Va. Work done, In the best style and at reasonable prices. 1‘aluts and Wall Raner for sale. | W. H. ADKINS, THE BARBER, guarantees his work 10 SUE Ell® ill! IMS] ION Go to his Rhop and get n clean shave and a nice hair cut and you will look leu yearn 1 younger. JOS. HELSTERN, Prop’r. FINE WINES, LIQUORS, AND CIGARS. Tho oldest Saloon in Huntington. 930 Third Avenue, HUNTINGTON, - WEST VA. JOHN W. DILLON, Catlettsburg, - - Kentucky, Sells Henry Diston & Sou’s SAWS, GUMMERS, And Swages, and is agent for the >pitman & Taylor Mauufac* tufingCo., and the Queen of the South GRIST MILLS And Mill Supplies. ESTABLISHED IN I87«. THE HUNTINGTON THEATRE. j HUNTINGTON. WEST VA. Saturday, March 22, Special Engagement, Tennessee’s Pardner* Prices 25c, 50c, and 75c. Curtains nee promptly at 8:30, Eastern time. 8treet cars wait until after the perform ance for Ceredo and Keuova people. “GRANGER” Does Not Delievo in the “Lons Distance” Treat ment of Smallpox. Ki». AovaK’Ck:— Nothing has oc casioned as much comment and brought out as much criticism lately as the manner that the smallpox has been ham)led in the county by Dr. J. C\ Bantiehl, President of the County Board oi Health—character ized as the “Long Distance Treat ment.” N\ hile down at the county seat I was amused at the numerous com ments on the street corners in regard to this method. The common ex pression is that the Dr. feels of the patient's pulse with a long pole and that he will never have the smallpox unless he happens to change ends with the pole. This sounds like an exaggeration and it is too, because he never gets close enough to small pox patients to even examine them by this safe method. Another per son says that the Dr. had employed a Dr. at Hast Lynn some time ago to visit some patients on Beech Fork and to report over the telephone from that point, and that he required the M. I). to change his clothes be fore he won hi receive his report at 1* miles distance. Of course this is only a joke, but it is a very good illustration of the long distance treatment. The smallpox so prevalent now over the county all started from the Wayne jail and is costing the tax payers a considerable sum to tight it by the long distance method. 'Phis disease was pronounced small pox by a man w ho knew it two weeks before it was found out by the Hoard of Health and then it was not found out by investigation, but from Mingo county, a man by the name of Vance having left the jail and was reported sick from that county. The County Court has to pay all expenses and for medical treatment of smallpox patients and it seems very strange that while they are paying for medical services that they do not employ a man who is not afraid of the disease and one who would at least visit the sick. There has been something like 100 cases in this county in the past year and it is a notorious fact that the only medical treatment has been by messenger, and all the examinations made by the President of the Hoard of Health has been at a great dis tance or looking through a window glass at a safe distance. By this system the President only finds out a case of smallpox alter the case has sufficiently developed to l>e recognized by any citizen. This accounts for the great spread of the disease and the great cost the Coun ty Court has to pay for such service. Our merchant, Mr. (L \V. Work man, i* having a very good trade now. Kggs are beginning to corne in market and are more plentiful than they were a short time ago. The tie business is getting lively now on the It. R. We noticed Mr. Chadwick, of Huntington, and Mr. Himes of Ash land, showing their wares to our merchants a few days ago. Ora xorr. Kobo, W. Va., March 14, 1902. Mrs. C. K. VanDensen, of Kil* bourn, Wis., was afflicted with stomach trouble and constipation for a long time. She says, “I have tried many preparations but none have done me the good that Cham berlain's Stomach aud Liver Tab lets have ” These Tablets are for sale by W. M. Bloss, Ceredo: R. N. Williams, Ksnova. Price, 25 cents. Samples free. I Control Your Temper. There are three reasons why one ought to control his temper, am) the ! first is selt respect. When one loses j command of himself and throws the I reins upon the neck of passion he may have for the moment a certain ^ enjoymeut in the license, l>ut there must surely come a reaction of re gret. \\ hen he is calm again and tin* til has passed away, every serious person must bo ashamed of what In* said and what he did, of the manner in which lie gave himself away and I the exhibition In* made of himself, i He will recall the amazement on the j faces of his friends and the silence which they adopted as a measure and the so< thing language which they used, as if they were speaking with a baby, and the glances w hich passed between them. He will not soon hold again with them as strong as he did before this outburst, nor will lie have the same claim upon their confidence as a sound and clear headed man. He has acted like a fretful, pettish child, and has for the time forfeited his title to manhood and the place of a man.— True Pythian. La Grippe Quickly Cured. “Id the winter of 1898 and 1899 I was taken down with a severe attack of what is called La Grippe,” says F. L. Hewett, a prominent druggist of Winfield, III. “The I only medicine I used was two bottles of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It broke up the cold and stopped the coughing like magic, a»d I have never since been troubled with Grippe.” Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy can always be depended upon to break up a severe cold and w ard olT any threatened attack of pneumonia. It is pleasant to take, too, which makes it the most desirable and one of the popular preparations i n use for these ailments. For sale by W. M. Hloss, Ceredo; R. N. Williams, Kenova. The Best Way to Color Easter Eggs. Procure packets of aniline dyes of the various colors you desire: pink, light blue, pale green, yellow, crim son, and purple or mauve are effec tive. Dissolve the dye in hot water and boil the eggs in it until they arc colored the shade desired. Make a large nest of moss, or of green crepe paper cut in strips, if you cannot obtain moss, and place the eggs as a center piece on the breakfast-table. If you wish to give each child one egg as a keepsake have a little nest by each plate w ith the egg in it.— March Ladies’ Home Journal. - — - —— Practically Starving. “After using a few bottles of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure my wife received perfect and permanent relief fr»nri a severe and chronic case of stomach trouble.” says J. I i R Holley, real estate, insurance and loan agent, of Macomb, III. {“Before using Kodol Dyspepsia Core she could not eat an ordinary! menl without intense suffering. ; She is now entirely cured. Several 1 physicians and many remedies had failed to give relief.” You don’t have to diet. Kat any good food j you want but don't overload the J (stomach. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure will always digest it for you. W. M. Hloss, Ceredo; R. N. Williams, Kenova. Tiikrk are some weeks when the world seems to make news and others when tFie news making is done only by the yellow journals. The one just passed, with the visit of F*rinee Henry, the dramatic scenes in the Senate, the final ratifi cation of the Hay-F>auncefote treaty at the State F)epartment, the Mc Kinley memorial services and the action on the railway merger, has been one of real news. --• ♦ -• Mrs. Adkins, of Kenova, visited the home of Mrs. Carl Moore yester day.—Catlettsburg IVcss, March II Old papers for sale at this office. GLYEFESIDE GftSINO IS LEASED. Tltis Bio Plauliousc Will Br. in Gharoc ot N. s. Smith This Summcr. 1 he Camden Interstate Railway 1 ompany today leased the casino at ClytTeside I’ark to N. S. Smith, of Cincinnati. .Mr. Smith has had a life-long experience with theaters in the various parks of the country and is thoroughly up-to-date in this line of work, and the citizens living in this valley, who during the summer months are frequent visitors to this well known playhouse, may con gratulate themselves that Mr. Smith has secured the lease, lie will aho have charge of ill other amusements in ( lydeside I’ark. The company will remodel the casino. It w ill be enlarged the sides will Ik* taken out and tin* stage improved Mr. Smith will arrange at once j lor u good line of attractions the ! coming summer and theater goers jean rest assured that they will have ! the pleasure of seeing some of the best companies on the road at this big playhouse this summer. A new cafe will be put in at j Clydeside this summer, an improve ment that the public will appreciate. I he schedule of cars this season will be a great improvement over last. In fact nothing will be left undone to give the public a good service and Clydeside will no doubt be more popular than ever before._ II untington Advert iser. Con III Not Breathe. Coughs, colds, croup, grip, bron chitis, other throat and lung troubles are quickly cured by One Minute Cough Cure. Otie Minute Cough Cure is not a mere expect orant, which gives only temporary relief. It softens and liquifies the mucous, draws out the inflama tion and removes the cause of the disease. Absolutely safe. Acts at once. “One Minute Cough Cure will do all that is claimed for it,” says Justice of the Peace, J. Q. Hood, Crosby, Miss. “My wife could not get her breath and was relieved by the first dose. It has bfen a benefit to all my family.” W. M. Bloss, Ceredo; R. N. Wil. hams, Kenova. ——-- ■ — A glance into the future by a southern Kansas editor: “Theooal less man put a csrelets arm around the waist of a hatless girl, as over the dustless and inudless roads in a horseless carriage they whirl, bike a lead less bullet Irom a harm less gun by smokeless powder driven they tly to taste the speechless joy of endless union given. Though the only lunch his coinless purse affords .to them the means, is atastless meal of boneless cod with a “side” of stringless beans. He puffs a tohac. coless cigarette and laughs a mirth less laugh, when her papa tries to coax her bark with wireless tele graph.” —- ■»#». - An exchange savs: “Bury the croaker out in the woods, in a beau tiful hole in the ground where the humble bee hums and the wood pecker peeks and the straddle hug straddles around. He is no good to the town, too unpractical, stingy and dead, hut he wants the whole earlh and part of the crust and the stars, that shine over his head. Then hustle him off to the dead, and hury him deep in the ground, he’s no good to us here, get him out of the way, and make room for the man that is sound.” For flu* Complexion. The complexion alwavs suffers from biliousness or constipation. Unless the bowels are kept open the impurities from the body ap pear in the form of unsightly eruptions. DeWitt’s Little Early Risers keep tha liver and bowelt in healthy condition and remove the cause of such troubles. C. E. Hooper, Albany, On., says: “I took DeWitt’s Little Early Risers for biliousness. They were just what I needed. I am feeling bet ter now than in years.” Never gripe or distress. Hafe, thorough and gentle. The very best pills. W. M. HIoss, Ceredo; R. N. Wil liams, Kenova. The pickpocket may not be absent minded but he has moments of ab straction. Love looks through a telescope. Envey looks through a pair of green spectacles. •'I r IlllgllOS llopl'M to (irt Washington, Mar. 13.—Repre tut!vo llugh«*s has had the pleasure 1 ot tiling with the committee of public buildings and grounds a report in support of an increase in the appropriation for a Federal building at Huntington. One re port sent to the committee recoin 1 mended the construction of a building for the accommodation j of the postoflice only, omitting provision for the United States courts. It was to he a one-story structure, the estimated cost of j which whs $100,000. Mr. Hughes informed the supervising architect that such a building was not wanted; that the Federal courts were without quarters, and he asked that the report be revised. It was revised and Mr. Hughes hopes to get an appropriation of $200,000 or more. Danger of Colds aiul La Grippe. The greatest danger from colds and la grippe is their resulting in pneumonia. If reasonable care is used, however, and Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy taken, all danger will he avoided. Among the tens of thousands who have used this remedy for these diseases, wo have yet to learn of a single case having resulted in pneumonia, which shows conclusively that it is a cer tain preventive of that dangerous malady. It will cure a cold or an attack of la grippe m less time than auy other treatment. It is pleasant and safe to take. For sale by W. M. Bloes, ( orodo; R. N. Williams, Kenovp. Onk or two small Democratic pa pers in this State are so annoyed by the prosperous condition of affairs under a Republican administration, that they are likely to hite them selves and be poisoned to death. 1 bey would rather have Democracy ami ruin, than Republicanism and joy. Fortunately solid business men who belonged to the party of mould and decay, do not lake this view, and have come over to the right in Hindi numbers as to relegate Democracy to the rear for tune and for eurnity. — Slate Journal. - -— Tilkme are only a few gilded domes in this country. One of the first in the United States was erect ed on the State House at Boston, and me of the most notable is that on the new Congressional Library at Washington, Chicago is soon to have the most iini<|iie and probably j the most beautiful, on the new Fed eral Postoflice building. In this case the dome will be of glass with gold leaf on the inside, thus securing the effect of a great mirror with a gold en backing. The surface will be smooth and glistening, the rains will wash it clean, and the gold will be protected from dirt and weather. Col. Bryan has repeated bin former statement that he would not give bond that hewotild not run for the Presidency again. It might be a good plan for the Democrats to put him under bond to keep the peace in the party ranks. Mr. Hr van in Ills frantic appeal for a million postal cards to influence the Senate to vote for the popular election of that body, seems to for get that the Senate was fundamental ly created to resist, not to surrender to popular clamor. • +»■ — Hon. Kdward Kyle, Sr., of Cab ell county, died at his home at Cox’s Landing, Wednesday, March 12th, 1902. The deceased was one of the most prominent men of Cabell coun ty. ——— - — — Genius is the ability to make other people furnish the money to carry out your plans. - - —..i When a wealthy bachelor lays bis heart at a girl’s feet she certainly ought not to kick. ■ ——————^ KENOVA NEWS. Reporter. •I M. Stevenson, is improving nieelv. * ( unstable Mays, of Ceredo, is again making his daily visits to our j «»ty. II. II. Soabrook, of Washington, IV C ., was at the (Kenwood, Satur day. Mrs. k K. Rideout has been visiting home folks at Portsmouth, ()hio. Parris King visited relatives and friends at his old home near Puler* ton, Ky., last week. .1. \V. Oaks, who was injured by falling from Ins engine on the Valley Division, is improving. \. A. Kiton, of KlueHeld, Divis Superintendent of the N. <fc W. K’y, was in the city, Saturday. Mr. \V. <i. Smith, who has hecn ♦ piite sick caused from vaccination — is able to In* about again. 'The little daughter of C. B. •lollett, who has been very ill for the past few days, is improving. H. liaskerville, of Roanoke, N n., Traveling Auditor of the N. it W. R’y., was in the city Sunday. I he Sunday prayer meetings at the ^ . M. C. A. have been changed 1 roin 1 MO to - lOO o’clock, slow time. Mr Frank Starkey, who is em ployed by the C. A (). R’y Co. at Ashland, Ivy , is at home on a visit. Mr. C. P. Iehle, Superintendent of the Kenova Association, is now enjoying the pleasures of his new home. He has a handsome resi dence. Rev. D. H. Reid, of Point Pleas ant, who is visiting his father-in *;ivv—Rev. F. (». Preston, at Cat letts bn rg, Ky.—was in our burg Thursday. 'The Kenova Loan <t Trust Co. recently got a supply of beautiful new one dollar hills. We should like very much to secure a few of them—on subscription. W in. 1 bornpHon, of Columbus, ° , purchased tii<; Ferguson homestead at North Kenova. Ho will temodel tin* old house and use the same for his summer residence. I he N. it W. carpenter force, under the supervision of Morgan Walker, in the absence of J. W. Thompson, are rebuilding the found dation ol the Coal Tipple at this place. The young man who knows how to lay «>fT corn and potato rows, and lo regulate the disianec of the same so as to get the gr aiest crops, is worth a cow pen full of kill gloved fellows who know how to lead a fashionable waltz. Netting a plow just right and a*l justing the gears *o that the harness will not injure the horses, are worth a thousand fold more to the country than to know how to pose in the parlor. Yes, a girl who can bake a loaf of bread and cook the meat just right is worth a whole seminary of those soft-headed, silly angels who sit in the “palah” and let “rnah” do the work in the kitchen.—Kx. Sold by All Newsdealers Furnishes Monthly to all (overs of Sonor and Music a vast volume of Nsw, Choice Copyright Compositions fey the moat popular authors. 32 Pagos of Piano Musio J h Hong, ft Instrumental 10 Complete Pieces for riaao V With Interesting Musical I Literature Once a Month tor lOCont* Yearly Subscription, $1.00. In one yesr you get nearly tOO Pages of Mws1o, comprising l»i Complete Pieces for the Plano. If bought hi any tousle store at one-half off, would cost fWOO. If you wilt t send us the name and address of (lee per formers on the Plano or Organ, we will send you a sample copy free. J. W. PEPPER, Publish*, Catalog Rand A Orch. Music and I net.— Eighth A Locust Sts., JR Philadelphia,^