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MJlifcirtSJiLitj, THE CAIRO BULLETIN, SATURDAY MORNING,' FEBRUARY 27, 1909 HE CAIRO BULLETIN . KutnbllRhtxt IHllH. BblUhed rlfy nnd Hiinday by tha Hulk-tin Company at 7i'lilo8tiect. Phoiiutti j Subscription Rates by Mail. I ': Invariably CasTi In Advance. )na year, Dally and Humlny Jfi.00 Subscription Rates by Carrier. Carrier In Cairo. J Carrier outside of Cairo .fine a month .tioc a month I Notice to Subscribers 'iihacrlbrrs will confer a favor bv rejortlnt( t this ofllcc any lack of prompt delivery on fle part of carriers. littered at th Cairo pontoflice an aecond class Mall Matter. CIRCULATION STATEMENT. Vverngo number of complete and perfect copies of the Cnlro Bulletin printed daily and Sunday during the year 1908 2084 Average numcber of complcto and perfect copies of The Cairo Bulletin printed daily and Sunday during the month of January 1309 2422 : ' January Circulation, 1 21SI 2 2452 3 .2387 4.. 2417 6. 2444 6 .2427 7 2435 g .24:10 9 2430 1C... 17.., 18... 19... 20... 21.., 2. 23... 24... 25... 2G... 27... 28... 2D... 30... ..2421 ..2373 . .2420 . .2423 . .244 ..2434 ..2423 ..2424 ..2370 ,.242') ,.2420 .2410 ,.2t:.s .2123 .2139 0. 2380 1 2440 2.. 2416 3 2432 2427 5.. ;..242l si..; ... 3S0 Tbe above Is a correct statement of he crculatlon of The Cairo Ilullotln forthe year 1908 and for the month of January, 1903. CLYDE SULLIVAN, Business Manager. Subscribed and sworn to before me ILIa 3rd day of February, 1900. LEO J. KLED. . , Notary Public. The Bulletin Is on sale at the fol lowing places: Coleman's, 214 Eighth Street, i Halliday House News Stand. Blue Front Restaurant. I TODAY 111 HISTORY rm miiiiiii)iiiii i February 27. .7807 Henry Wadsworth ' Longf.llow, American poet, bora. Died March 24, 1882. 1847 Americana defeated the Me! cacs at battle of Chifrrntmttfc 18.1 Meeting at Washington of j int tig'ii ct jiia.'ssion, on Alabama claims. n 1300Cronje surrendered to the Brit lsh tPaardeberg. 1908 William O. Bradley, Rfpubll- can,' elected United S.a'cs sc.- ator from Kentucky. Bicgraphy. Prince Carl cf Sweden, brother of King Gustav V. and one of the iwsi popular members of the Swedish royal family, was born in Stockholm, February 27, 1 SGI . received an excellent and liberal education-, as be fitted the Eon cf the late King tv.-irtr II., himself one of the mcnt Larntd rules ot his time. I'lluee Carl la; lecn called the handsome: t princ Pi Europe, sl and a baif Pet in h I ;1 1 a dashing cavalry officer, and a inn; t democratic man in manner aid labits. tit t t tttttttt I ttt 1 1 ttt 1 1 CAIRO IN 1875 s s??rrttir)vtmmtrtit (From The Cairo Bulletin published by John H. Oberly). A Cairo babe ball club wut to Murpbysrboro tn July 0th and .defeat- eJ the Murphytb'iro c!i:b by a s oi" : cf 34 to 14. Of the Cairo club. Par ? ker and Pettis alone are with us. .The excHi&ienitts en the Idle- ill on the 4th of July were so well j treated by the officers of the let i tbat they adopted resolutions of i thanks to the latter, and pubii dic I ! the resolutions in The Pulieti". ; Among the signers er. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. ' Chas. Cunningham. Missel Minnie, ' Uiatlle and Toodles Sptoat, H. C Hughes atid Mr. Hyman. On tbe evening ef July 7th, the Taylor Literary society held Its regu : lar meeting at the city council cham- ' her, at which Edward Tblekcke d- Jivered an original oration entitle I "The Rising Generation." which wis m pronounced the fittest fTort heard j since the organization of the society. j Lawrence J. Byrne, an old and re ( stcted citizen of Cairo, Hd on July J 5th. His funeral was largely at 1 tended. f A twelve pound cirl arrived at lh" home of R. J. Cundiff on July f'th. Wm. Elliott amdied to the city fonuell for the u.e of St Mary's park M a cow pasture. a that lnclo.ure was badly neglected by the city an J apparently ahandene d. The applies 1 LEGAL DECISIONS fttltmiV.1 Va...al.e..a.a Usurpation of Woman's Last Word Prerogative. -An iiilerestinK problem as to the Isuiea made by pleading Is presented in tllerrlck and Stevens vs. Sargent and U-ihr, 117 Northwestern Reporter, 701. The abstract of appel lants sits tfoiitt a Petition, an Amendment and Substantial Peti tion, an Amciv lment to the Substitu ted Petition, 'Answer, Cross-Petition, Cross-bill and -Counterclaim, Keply to the Answer a ! i Cross-petition, of the Plainliff, clo.siiii; with a document en titled Amendirc nt to Answer to the Defendant's Crt sH-potition and Coun terclaim and .in Amendment to the Cms-petition, at 1 as a reply to the Amendments ofi the Defendants Filed Since Last Term of Court. Tlie Iowa supremo court, jitter reference to its voluminous und' confusing character, remarks that it twins to demonstrate that the deten n illation to have the last, word is a characteristic not pe culiar to the sev: against which it has often been charged. Hunting Deer tfor Pleasure as En gaging in Act of Professional Hunter. Cue l.nne Insure. himself as a "sheep farmer," agreeing" that, if injured vhil- doing any act. pertaining to n more hazardous occiipti ion, he was to re ceive the indemnity fixed for the Pr ior. The civil conn of appeals of Tex as, in Lane vs. Ge neral Accident Co., 113 Southwestern Reporter, 321, held that insured, wh was accidentally shot by a companion while hunting deer for recreation, was entitled only to the indemnity lixed lor a profes sional hunter. TJio court remarked thrt pursuing wild deer for the pur pose of killing th .mi was undoubtedly it ii art pertaining to the occupation of a hunter. RAM'S HORN BROWN'S PHY. PHILOSO- When you whittle, try to make something. Thoughts are things for brains to work with. The more helpless we are, the moro able Clod is. Cod loves to watch a real man go end grow. Every man needs Christ and Chri3t needs every man. Let the aim be high and the en deavor wyi not be low. Some of our bfat lessons are learned irom ottr-wwst-iwifctakei The man who has no mercy on him self will have little chanty fur others. The Christian who is not wanting more religion will soon be without any. Cod must have us all the time, or he cannot make us fit for bis presence at any time. There can, be no failure when we arc doing our best at the thing Ucd wants done. The devil fpeli right at home In the company some highly respectable peo ple regard as good. Character decides everything In this wnrld, from the weight of a brick to the size of an army. The vahie of the servire dees not depend so much upon what Is done as on tbe heart with which it is done. There is a lot cf preaching that would never be called preaehlna if the preacher didn't take a text. A man Is always greater than the thing he does; greater than the thought he thinks, nnd greater than the song he sins. Indiana polls News. EPIGRAMS. ' The real wit baa little to cay, but makes tbat little tell. Rattling nnrestril lmnes Is a poor way of getting a living. The young long to be harpy; the old wlfh to be wise. Consideration Is th timet powerful link In the chain of love. The wi:psf are the least sure. The fool has no doubts. Politeness Is one of ho best Invest ments known. It pajs enormous divi dends. Pools have their nses now as In an cient times but their professor carries few honors. It is well to "hold hard"' when writ ing letters. Written words have double weight. Egotism and Flattery walk slrnper Ingly arm In arm, whlla Wisdom chuckles. The nnb enfhmws acrordine to bis host's bank aTonnt, and his final re ward is the door. v It's a tosfutp as to which Is the more Intolerable, the Inveretate croaker or tbe Inveterate joker. Castles In Spain would 1 c A- KcMftil if one only could keep them from toppling over. Minna Thomas Antrim, I Ttt Smear ffaganre. . Rats and SVJice Drive them out of the house to die with Stearns' Electric Rat and Roach Paste Money back if it fails. 302. box 36e: 1oji. boi 1 1 00. Sold everywhere ur sunt cxprcai prcpuld ou rocuiia ot price. STEARNS' ELECTRIC PASTE CO.. CHICAGO. ILL WHEN THE PHRENOLOGIST FELL His Knowledge of Horses Was Evi dently a Weak Point. Mayor Reybnrn of Philadelphia told at a dinner a horse story. "A farmer visited a phrenologist," ho said, "lie had heard that the phre nologist thought of buying a horse. He had his head examined nnd his bumps revealed surprising things. " 'Your tastes are the simple, home ly and pure tastes of a farmer,' said the phrenologist, 'and a farmer I take you to b. Am I not risht? Aha, I thought so. You are unready and fal tering in speech; you fled it diinctilt V) express the simplest ideas. You k.je sadly deficient in judgment and have no knowledge of human nature Your Innocent and trustful disposition renders you 1111 easy dupe to design ing men, and your own perfect hon esty prevents you from either suspect ing or defrauding any one.' "The phrenologist the following week bought a horsi? from the farmer. The horse was knock kneed, it was 23 years old, it had a bad tnipr, and it balked. Though th farmer had only paid 515 for tho animal, h secured wirln.ut ditnculty 150 from the phre noglst. for it. '"It's wonderful,' saiil the farmer to himself, as he hastened toward -the bank to deposit the nionr.y "it's jest wonderful Hist a man should know so much about men end no; know a thing about houses:" "I.troit Free Press. ALWAYS SOUT.OE Or VEAKNESS. Pretense Otrarts from the Power , to Accomplish Tl.ere Is nothing which will add an much to one's pow er as the conscious ness of being absolutely sincere, genu ine. If your life is a perpetual lie, If you nve conscious that you are not what you pretend to be that on are really a different person from what the world regards you ; ou are not strong. There Is a restraint, a perpetual fighting against the truth going on within you, a liirucele which saps your energy and warps ycur conduct. Jf there ii ;i mote at the bottom of your eye you cannot look the world squarely in the face. Yoir vision la not clear? Everybody ReeR that you ore not transparent. Thre Is a cloudiness, a haze about your character, which raises the iriter-1 legation point where you ko. Char acter alono is strength, di-ccit is weak ness, sham and shoddy are powerless, and only ihe Renu'ne and the true are worth wb.'. Exchange. Blessings of Idleness. Perpet ial devotion to whnt a man calls his business is only to be sus tained by perpetual neglect of many other things. And it not by any means certain th:H a ni.vi's bu.dn.ss is the ni )st important thp.g he ha to do. To r.n Impert'.il e-n.'m.ite it will j seem cl'jir th-it many of the wisest, most bijfieili i nt p;rts that are to be i plnved upon the t';f-tfer of lif-; are TiU' i by gratiiitou ? p'rfor;ners, and fas n-rono: tb-; world at large as fiases of idleness. For In that the. filer r.ot only ti c working gen' If-nrm. rlncl ng i haniliennhldM and diligent fiddlers in the orchestra, but those, who l.iol; on and ela;i 'heir himls from the benches, do r ally phiy :i port and fill Important offices toward the gen eral result. Hobert Lniis StCveii?oii. "The Devil and the Deep Sea." ' Ilazlitt's "'English Proverbs" gives th proverb us iietWixt til" devil and the Dead sea," and tjuotes it from Clarke's "pawmlologla." 1C:;. and adds tills no'e of explanation: "On the horns of a dilemma. In Cornwall they say 'deep' sea, which may be rii'ht." Keddall's "Faef. Fancy and Fable" gh-e the ft llowine fxpar,;tlon the proverb: "This cjiprcssion Is used by Col. Monroe in bis Exi-.Vitlon with Markay's Rglment." printed In lin den In li.17. Th rpetment was with th army of Gustsriis Adolphus and was euguecd In a battle with the Aus trlitns. Th Swedish gunners Ii,i not e)evat their guns snfrirlently, nnd their shot t-dl nineng this Scot'bh reelment. so that 'we were between the devil and the i! p sn.'" MUSINGS. Can we trust tbe sincerity of thrno icople who '"make tip" their minis? TJirow- worry to the winds. The tint breeze will waft it back to ou. A California peach under ni':k nos rp.ii'o ne'tin ; -that is laintieg tUo lllyt "Self Preservation in the fust law of nV.nre." nnd the frrt Isv id rIf pr"j?eTv"if r i licalth. Frotcrt yur b- r.i'h p:t-.rt the con m; n i'i-, a::-l kc-t wc'.l b? using SeM Eremrhvr. la baxc lCc ud 25e. SUCCESSOR TO ffh & ft: W f ' w v 'I w t ! " H l Uotoy;ra.Ji ly eitnwlliwt, Waslitntfton, 1). e. Elihu Root, who recently resigned the portfolio cf secretary of state, has been given the senatorial toga worn for several years by Senatr.r Piatt of New York. Senator Root has also held tha post of secretary of war In Roose velt's cabfnet. MEN SOLD Of BLOCK TYPICAL SLAVERY DAYS AUCTION j HELD IN NEW YORK. Object Is to Obtain Employment for Idle Black Masks Hide Identity cf Persons Fifty Find Relief. New Yoik. An auc'iun of white men the other eight w as the tpectucl : that drew thousands of iicrsons to the Parkalde Pri sbyterian church in Fiat bush. The auction was In reality an object lesson of the conditions prevail ing air.cng working people and served to get jobs for a number cf men. Tbe church was crowded when Kev. John K. Long began an address In '.vhieh ha outlined the pitiable condi tions of many a man who was willing to work but unable to secure a posi tion. Outside the church a crowcLjuf 2, COO persons clamored and struggled to get into the already crowded house of worship. Mr. Long Introduced Edward T. O'Loughlin. who was to conduct the auction. O'Loughlin outlined his plan to which the men l:o would present Lad agreed. This w as to off t them as it were on the block to the terson who would give them a job through which they could earn Lubsistmce and few dollars beside if possible. The money cud, however, was an afler cou-.'deru-tion, as the men who had come to him wanted food and shelter principally. Mr. O'Loughlin then led on to the platform CO r;:ui, young ami old, all more or less bhubiiily garbed anl dis playing in their was the pinch of want. All of the Hum wore black maeks to as to conceal tlvir identity to all but purchasers. Each man was numb red as they were put on tbe block. No. 10 was tUo first man presented, lie was described as an lion worker and molder, long out of "work and in want and willing to work at anything. Suveial men in the audience walked to the ilatforu and, as in slavery days, critically sin vt veil the subject. One mun went fo lar an to feci of the manV limbs ;.n 1 muscle.;. It was final ly announced that the man had been "told" to V. F. Co peland, who would give bim employment in an industrial assoclatl 'ii in New York. The terms were not announced. No. 21 was the next up. lie was d acribed as a man who bad taken part in the Boer war and who bad seen turvlcu in the I'liiD d States army In the Philippine 3. lie was ua electrician by trade. No. 21 wetit to a Flatbush family, the pume of which w as with hold by request. It was announced that the family would give him J55 U.c:ith and board. No. a pointer, wt nt to a Newark, N. J-, man v. bo promised him fll) a v. utk, while No. 11, a gray-haired man, was tfken away by a young man who F.aiJ be would give Mm a Lome and work at once. Thus six men in all were disposed of when, as the hour was waxing late, tbe i-pecta'ors,-many of whom kt only felt the scenes they had. witnessed, formed themselves Into a committee, took charge cf ihe remaining 4 i men an I promised to find homes and jobs for them. Mr. Iiong and several others then addressed the p'oile eutsMe the church, teii'tig what Pa 1 been done and askir.? all for tho many unem ployed In Greater New York. John D. Rockefeller, who had born Invited to be present, sent a telegram regretting lis Inability to attend. A Connecticut girl has forgotten her name, which is lank ingritndo to idnw to t! 1 arents ar.d r datives who qnarrelej for weeks before selecting It for ber. 1'- iroit Free Press. Slaughter cf the Birds. It is s;iid that the jump- hi. El-jnEhter for r!"res a:,J oth'r deccr; Ua ii StiLtfiifC'C SENATOR PLATT VILLAGE WHERE WIFE RULES. Husbands Relegated to Background at Llangwn, England. , London. There is one place In tho Pritish isles where tho motto "The hand that, rocks the cradle rules tbe world" falls flat, and that is in Llan gwn, a little oyster village on an es tuary of the great harbor of Miiford Haven, for in Llangwn it Is the man that recks the cradle. When you speak ef Llangwu you rm.an the Llangwu wumau. It Is she who goes, out fishing; It is the who, quaintly dressed in short homespun skirt, fi It bat and red shawl, and with a donkey pannier, iia,vks her oysters and iiMi round the countryside, and It is she who holds the purse and dresses the family including the men. . She holds her sway by the moral suasion cf physical force. She is a match for a varsity rowing Uluo In points, uny waterman in strength, and any fisherman round the coasts of four nations in doggedmas against wind and tide. In um'auntedness lu a high sea, or in net handling. Mentally she is onlto up to tho tin.es. Llangwu women were among the first to apply for saiall holdings. Llangwu women have banished tha public house, and there are many Llangwu women awaiting old ago pensions. Needless to ray she Is a liberal. Ib.?r life is severe and Spartan. Her religion Is of the breed of that of Cromwell's lronsbb s. The Llangwu man is somewhere In the background, llo is ji domestic animal. He has not even a claim to bis own name. He U "Mary Pi.lmer's man" or "Hessle Lleweyllin's son." There is no off hand talk of "the wife" or "tho missus" in Llangwu. It would appear that Llan i;wn io the Utopia cf the uuffraglsts. Not so, however. The women of Llan gwu have not the slightest need for the vote. Their men havo it which is quite enough. DEAD GERMS KILL LIVE ONES. Form Anti-Toxin Againct Pneumonia Eioo-J Poisoning anil Typhoid. lloston. After t wo years of work and experimenting, a vaeeine, which, it is -.aid, wlil cheek the germs of pneumonia, blood poisoning and typhoid fever, baa been discovered in the laboratory of Tufts Medical srhoeil. The announcement is mado through Lr. Timothy Leury, bead pathologist at the school, who s.dd that an anti toxin for those three diseases had been perfected and that arrangements would soon be made to supply phyrl claa.5. The Tufts putho'o;-:i..;.i worked Into practical uso the theories ad vanced by t!ir A. K. Wright of Lemdon, that dead g tins automatically create an unit toxin In the blood for, all liv ing germs of the Fame hind. In olher words, dead germs i. the blood form a polscn that Is f:tal to all living germs of the? Fame kind with which It comes in contact. Following out this theory. It was proved that it is pos sible to Inject Into the blood dead germs and that after the Inoculation they will form this anti toxin, fatal to all living per:r:s of the same kind. Working em this, it was only a ques tion of isolating the germ in question. C:r!'e Dream Finds a Gem. Shamol.lr,. Fa. Driving Miss Jennie Neibour to her homo at Johnson City after a carria,..1 ride to this place, John A. D'rk'.e of WilJimsport later discovered that he had lest a tl.10 diamond rhirt stu 1. He cailed on Miss Neibour early the next day and told of bio lo.-s. the ivM she dreamed he had lost the i.-ui on a Btrcet here. Firlile hurried to town, and, aided by tcvral men, lx.i:i senrchins at the designated cpc.t, where George Iesslsj kicked over a pile of leaves and found ths diamond. Serious Mistake. The i; an who ft vets his umbrella a!iii suspect tbat it is a sign of genius. VISITS WITH A Charitable Act. Yesterday morning it rained like well, like whnt 'Tlupy" Shuto would call "like time." 1 lings grabbe-d his umbrella and ran madly down the walk. lie was late, as usual, and there wasn't an other train for an hour, lie wanted to get to tho city at the usual time and he didn't want to get soaking wet doing it, either. To run with an o p e u umbrella, however, Is some thing of a feat. Inasmuch as run ning at all was hard for Rings, he didn't make much, progress with the Impediment, Fi nally he .stubbed his toe and fell head first Into tho offending u m -brella. The train was whistling for the station us lie scrambled to his feet, and with the torn and muti lated umbrella dangling behind him, made one final dash for tho last coach. Of course he caught it. They always do only they always look so blamed funny: , Someb-.-.dy had Mings' place in the whlst game when he got wind oaoimh, to walk forward to the smoker, so he snt in moody silence all the way to the "city. It was st'll raining when he emerged from tho .subu.'hnn depot and, to add to his discomfiture, the umbrella was so fatally wrecked that it only groaned and lipped when he tried to raise it. Finally a street car came a'otig and Pings climbed aboard. P wrs jammed full and everyone was soggy and cross. A fat woman gouged Pings in the ear with ber dripping umbrella, a blonde lady tawed his ne-se by whirling quickly and striking bim with tho rim of one of these outlandish wbl-' hats, and a ra:hier In a restaurant called him a beast because be inadvertently stepped en her protruding toe. Then a fnt mn cS'ti in nml crowded - Pines ad he could scarcely hjing onto the car strap. The fat man didn't have change and he looked in all his pockets, jostling Fings woe hilly as he searched. Finally he pro duced a $5-bill and had that changed. Then he stuck the remaining $I.0j in his outs-id.) oat ' pocket atid was quiet at last. I'.y the time liings got oft that car in front of his office, he was hopping mad. lie was saying nil kinds of things about the street car manage ment when he reached Into his over coat pocket and was surprised to feel something sliek and metallic, as well as what he ihfluglit was a piece ot scinp paper. Fings felt again. It was money! i'ings took it out. as be rode up in tbe elevator. There was just 4.05. In a Hash lie remembered the f it man's change nnd realized that tii" portly .gentleman had i-lipped the money pit, i his overcoat Kicket by mistake as they stood side by side In tho car. .bines whistled blithely an he opened his olior- door and entered. "Morning, Miss .Tones," h -chirped cheerily to his private secretary. "It makes a fellow glad to be alive thfu Jays!" Moral Isn't it really wonderful how a H'tlo easy money will transform a man? (?i T (J) Fancies. Tb- the I:, friei.d.s lean who P.-.t money In ;i not l.oiv.t of it to lib When a woman hasn't anything els" to worry about, sdie b ;-ri;is to Imagine there ar" bu'. j'l.irs about. r'r ' A way to prove your friend Is tc try leirewln;? money of him. If you want to lose him, b'Pti him money. t -ft v? A favorite nnnt of mine sends me' a tem toin for ("hrlFtniai. It is an Ms totle fte.ttnmini. I tried It on my tiulldoK put he doesn't peetrt to ap preciate mmic. I guess be is not a Krid Indian. Speaking if Indlnns, re minfls me that i ars ao when a man w as sn;i ound: il by Indians, ho surren dered. Now, he buvs. V, r) The Reason. An Ohio pchoel tfafhT, wlillf rltjn nji.n n trnin. f' It Miiirtliin? crawlinir In l.er siui-t-w..i!t. wliieli ii di-ovrod to l.i ii ni'ii'se. Slie illd not faint, hi:l tried to s't;r,- -f thv patenter to reai-h Pi r. ti.l !-. t tie- Intruder. Thr was nut :i l.;in ell tl.e tl.iill v lio el.ireil to tat kk li e 1-x. Til. it's wh.it a woman cl.i f.,r always aavii, so reany pin points bristling aboJt l;.-r e lethtiiK. '.1 ii; Seme Women, An ni-an3' ny nomen r no po!tt t th.-ir company. Thy rrit th rom I rv ct th train. V!f hf-T. n'MWl about rarrvie bfT vshf. fi;p? about paying ,vP Tr-'.t cr far. f.-rem wbrr pHe inig. on tiem and tl.en ha. a grat sigh of relief when she clje-s go. Wise Rule in Austria. The Foverrimcnt of Attstrii n;.-;;nr ppciil Inducements to farmers who will reclaim water lands aid mak use of thrru OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. Cairo, Alexander County, Illinois. Population 16,147. Clerk, It. A. HATCiriOIt. Treasurer, THOMAS E. MAIIONEY. City Attorney, I-TtAN'K MOOKE. Comptroller, ERNEST NO It I M AN. Polico Magistrate, A. .!. ROSS. Chief of Polico, M. S, EUAN. Alexander County, Population 27,467 County Clerk, JESSE E. MILLEli. Circuit Clerk. ALFltEU HltOWN. Sheriff, FRANK E. DAVIS. States Attorney, ALEX. WILSON'. County Superintendent of Schools, I'ltOF. S. E. (K)TT. Assessor and Trcnsurer, FRED I). N ELLIS. Board of County Commissioners. .1. .1. JEN'NELLE, Chairman. C. V. iVEFF. j 1 PR. EDWIN CAUSE. TIME CARD CAIRO ELECTRIC RYS Unit I ino cars due to leiivo Neconit Kt. hc Dili LUIt tni! north on t!ommortl Ave every 15 mlioilm from ii a. m. in II l. in. (lo'liiu norUi.on Walnut St.every l&mlnute from (1:08 a. in to 10:M p. in. Poplar St. line STlnXVu" lug north em llolhrook., t ,fi7; H:37; :; fi:W 7-1 J n.m. and on tho name minutes evory lioiil until l(i:andll:l'2 p. m. I. ulna wesl on I weiity-hlishtn rt. si tJ, tCl'i- (:M H'l'i and 7M i. m'd on name min uted every hour until I0::H and U:0 p. in. I'oplar St. earn duo to paxn St. Mary's ai 15 inliiiiUw after lenvlnit (Second St. Belt line Owl Cars y.'SV m.t 1:: a. m.; 2:.W a. ni.; 3::0 a. ui.; :30 a. in.; 6::i a. ra. North on Commercial 1? p. ra. I a. m. 3ft m.:t a. m. 4 a. tn. 6 a. ni. licit andtuvl earn arnniia in raw wm Thirty-fourth (St. 1& mlnuti afler leavln Hucoiid St. BOOTS AND SHOES Manufactured. - Repaired. Work neatly nod quick Iv done hy machine or l v hand. HiIiik your Shoes here vt In ti In need of n pairs. E. THALMULLITR .jus Co m in crcl a I - N C x t to Hotel Marlon. is 2&GOOV . fbA w5cvr J&iLixcs , of Bus ntcss .i B a en wntuso -MiTHut is fjxc Stationim: lc Yot.t f'uxo; nmcDitisds ToAsrEx rtT O.v Ttic Way Vovh rms from Nqwir You (as) Arrow S'qt To , l&zlito qjJEfijTATfOS'ttt PRICES WITHIN EASY REACfl OF ANY BUSINESS. IET IS QUOTE YOU. THE BULLLTKN CO. V. (". N ICItoI.s. J".. P. K I l ent N K. Kilcoync Electrical Co. House Wiring and Fixture Work a Specially, Temporary !l.idiinrlrt f)I." Hn.ihlnlon Avenue. Heine V, iicii :ini Src us fur Contracts. Tbe Boit BaftMklac Drink la tha HarlJ -' IH BOTTLfa ti all (Otd Dan, irorrJt aa Rtaali ToENGLANDand Hie CONTINENT ll ih t.tr)t, FM ti9 It-vitiom blc-rn-.tepm cf (lie NorthGerman Lloyd i EalFM ltli Wlrcloi tri m1iw ! tli I I i '.i.inr,T...ei - ll'l . I ' - ri. HH Til. HI RllC- HM. siiim -Kr.i4....rs. , f " I-"""'""' ..( M, K'lscr WU1..-1 r. II ." K W 'llhrls Oo l,mM ri tnuiiti.i nictiuii tui. rsttnt j "Fredrick imC'inr- . -V'txm" Hr-'l-mnn'i 'iiijH'v.'!.ll. ti tn ) bll'lltll tH. ro Cto.n" .-.k.r"' "PrKi'm licae' it,n t.v " Ail-crf Ccnr.Klions rrrtrriitij tfcf Clake Applr OCtRlCHS & CO., Gtncral Afnii, Rw1., , New V. '-t m I.'- l Aeenl Iron Moiuilaiu By. Jan. U, lfJO!3. Trains at Cairo. III. Departnrea S",-. 41 I.Mvm dnitr TrIOa.m Nn. t il be.-. i e-s .lally - p.m. Arrivals No. in Arrive d-.llv Il TPa m. N o. 4 1 Arrive daPy TrSi p. m. Arrival and departure from w harfboat fxt of Klfhlh sire-e-U - - 3. Z. tLBY,