the paducah evening sun. (paducah, ky) 1908-04-09 [p...

1
< zrr44 n yy au 3H THE irA7 TG SUN PAGE THianB > q 0 j 11 Wo have none through our alack and taken out nil the small Idtshnd broken sizes and placed them on our counters with n price tickets on them which tiro making them sell mighty fast Better come ut ot ce anti save yourself some money i HERE ARE A FEW LOT 1 ILittle Gents Vlcl Hals worth 115 and b125 cut toSSc LOT 2 Youths Box Calf Bluchers worth 8150 I cut to J8c LOT Jhays Satin Calf IIuls worth 8123 cut to secp LOT 4 Youths Box Calf Blue ers worth 82 cut 6Mcna Box Calf Satin Calf Vlcl etc In Bats or Bluchers None wotthlm than 1200 cut to j120 Lrr aLadles Patent Leather Silk Cloth Tops regular price I2GO cut to 120 LOT iKndleR Hals Vlcls etc cut so on to the end of the chapter A call will convlcc you b J pollt forget the great bargains we ore offering in Mens Punts worth 125 rl 1 CO 200 and 250 No men who l I I CASH 112 b I 1 < WJ S t c = > iG c 0 = 0 IS CAT i i I = = Tim KtnuiKtt Horror Wlilrli Taos Ir WWH IVrl Wlwn n Ihtlakws XiCfs I Nil Gil C iiws Near Tliuin Lice lln vi Koldlor Aro Nat 1 Ifennpt A harmless necessary cat In t t thwo words Shnkoipeare has made Shylock describe an animal whl 3r r IIIn the dOMrlittlon I 4 as very accurate The t rat i Is n graceful Inoffensive cronltiro atsodartl I with domestic J SCOBOS flag thinks of it as purring by the bttrtU an emblem of homollke cone foft tho gentle Companion of maiden Indies Its only depredations are dl > roettHl towanl tho mice which make tits maldim ladles nervous There- fore ¬ It IB not only a pot but aura lector An InlriiM Itcptiliiioii I 1 Curiously enough however there ajninny persons who do not share this kindly feeling toward tho cat In thou the presence of a feline ex- cite a sort of nervous agitation which rangoa all the way from illallkn to aversion and oven to an actual terror to groat ns to Induce convulsions Thus there are some who simply not like cats and do not care to- t r t havo thorn around Others detest thorn and drive them from tho house C Still others feel so Intense n form of ropulilon as to be unable oven to look upon a lit without shuddering and almost to faint it a cat should brush against them Iorsons who are affected In this wnylo an extreme degree are so acutely sensitive as to make then con rebus of the presence of n cat even before the cat Is actually seen SrlrntlMM Gill It This peculiar form hlllIlholllI or nervous agitation was long ago CUT PRICE SALE ON Ladies Mens Childrensh SHOES EXAMPLESe to8110L- OT Patents toBRoan- d 73cIllTord THE MODEL PADUCAHSDHEA- PI SIOREh SOUTH SEfrQJ4D STREETt r WHAT FEAR- HJ bomolIho amiable 0do C 9 S observed and noted A few years ago It was scientifically studied by Dr Awir Mitchell who called It cat fear Professor Harry Thurslon Pock coined for It the Oreek com pound word Aelurophobla which Dr Mitchell accepted and which is- i now generally used by wrrlters on tho i It i It subject It might bo thought that cat fear Is peculiar to neurotic patients to persons suffering from nervous deblll ty and perhaps to fanciful women But the strange thing aboift cat fear Is that It affects not only men but manly men In the full vlgorof health men In fact who are noted for reckless courage a When Xnixilron Slilvrntl Is Thus the French statesman Ben- Jamin Constant relates that on oco occasion ho found Napoleon shivering In his tent his face blanched to a j deadly pallor and great beads of sweat standing out upon his brow Tho hero of fifty battles was so shaken by terror as to be almost on the verge of syncope i What l lalt demanded Constant- in i alarm A cat a cat cried out the Em- peror There a cat somewhere In I tho tenth i A hasty search was made and at J tint It seemed as though tlie Empert or had belt mistaken but presently the cat was discovered sound asleep behind a screen i Ulicn Ixiiil ItolHils Ix ost Ills inc Tho greatest English soldier now alive Lord Roberts Is also subject to i cut fear This virile sane well bal lanced soldier the hero of Candahar and the Conqueror of the Hoer Ilopub coolI t marksmanship Transvaal rHU t I Unnatural FoodI Makes unnatural demands upon tho digestive organs 4 0 Nature hOB tilled Ihe well known cereals Wheat and Barley with nil tio various food elements for building body tiestus and for storing i up energy In the system GrapeNuts tr rood made from 11 heat and bailey has long been known as the e ideal rr food for athlete invalid man woman and child t It is promptly digested by the weakest stomach nnd is quickly available in tho blood for rebuilding waste brain and UPI vp cells the natural supply of a natural waste i ialI ti i t 1 Theres a Reason 1 FOR A GRAPENUTS e I men will flee the presence of a harmless necessary tat The story Is told of how once at a splendid banquet at which Lord Rob erts was the guest of honpr he was seen In the festivities l to shudder and grow pale Ills titled host whispered to him anxiously Are you 1111 Xo replied Lord Roberts greatly agitated but there must be a cat In the room I think you are mistaken said is host wondering I cannot be mistaken returned the great soldier There Is a cat = 1 feet I It If you will pardon mo I will leave the room He rose hastily and went Into an adjoining apartment The servants were assembled and a search l was made Ina remote corner of the banquet hall was found a kitten It was removed and then Lord Roberts once more took his place at the table This strange obsession hasbeen va ¬ riously explained Some would think It due to prenatal Influence The pres ¬ nt writer Is Inclined to think that cat tear Is analogous to snake tear Is Cut Pvnr 1 tlio Sumo an Snake Frnr We may lay It down as a general which will hardly be dls ¬ puted nnd that all white races have an Inborn horror ot the serpentI This horror can never bo eradicated It Is In the blood Moreover It has nothing to do with the fear Inspired by tho serpents power to harm and kill for It Is excited Just as much y the nonvenomous as by theveno mops snake In fact It Is not so much a tear as an Indescribable loath Ing The mere dread of Injury Is a whol- ly ¬ different sensation and this dread of Injury is all that tho darkskinned races feel Thusa Hindu shuns ai cobra and Is terrified by Its presenceI ut be Is terrIfied In precisely the and to tile very same extent at he approach of a maneating tiger In both cases the quality ot his emo tlon Is Identical On the other hand as Kipling has noted In Kim the white man does not shun tho snake because he Is afraid of It but because It makes him sick and faint even td look upon It Now the particular loathing which Is excited In all white persons by the serpent extends to creatures or even to Inanimate objects which resemble or suggest the serpent The l Ilrrndof Writhing Things Thus most of us will shudder and shrink back when a large eel I Is thrown writhing all our feet We know perfectly well that It U not a snake Yet we do not like to touch and most of us do not care to cat As to objects that are Inanimate we all know that many of them areI utterly condemned when we call them snaky Snaky locks snaky ring ¬ lets snaky eyes snaky movements thcro are a score of such expressions which mean that we regard with re ¬ pulsion the things to which they are applied Coming to the point now little reflection will show that a cat essentially a snaky creature Most of us do not realize thiS bccaiisee we lack the obsrvlng eye habitt pf comparison we lire not ulrasen sltlve Hut just watch a cat as It moves about at ease as U lies In the sun or as It curves Itself In Us u ual position when about to sleep Its stealthiness Its sinuosity the undulations of Its lithe body nro all closely comparable with what wo notice In Uio snake If the cat has glary fur and If It be barred with stripes there are mo ¬ ments when the resemblance Is so striking as to almost make us shiver are many who feel this at times but only In n momentary way and In a special mOod Others however are always con ¬ scious of It or at least they are conscious ot a feeling of repulsion which they cannot explain but which In all probability represents the ser ¬ pentdread the loathing of the snake and of everything that suggests the snake even when ones mind Is not aware of the underlying reason It Is the dread which explains the nntlpalhyto cats which was felt by Napoleon and Lord Roberts ant which Is felt by many others of less note and In a greater or less degree We may call it catfear If you like hut In the last analysis it Is a second- ary ¬ manifestation of snake fear To name It more exactly It should bo called iathorror since It is far more overwhelming more Instinctive and more profound than any fright which other apparently more alarm Ing creatures cause Those who would interpret tho Bi ¬ ble with strict lIteralness may hold that it springs from tho original curse laid on the serpent In the Garden ot FMenDecanse thou bast done this thou art cursed Upon thy belly thou shalt go and dust shalt thou eat all the days of thy life And I will put cmlnlty between thee and the woman and between thy seed and her seed Ho shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heelThe Scrap Book ylI Man didactically began Prates ¬ sor Broadhead Is the only animal 1 that laughs Ehyaht broke thnisbcuzhels money to another animal and is there fore obliged to laugh whenever the latter animal gets off his favorite fun ¬ ny storyPuck Is your husband having any luck at the racetrack Some luck answered young Mrs Torkins Ho hasnt caught cold nor had his pockets picked WnBhington star BOMB THROWER ADMITS CRIME Solig Sllveritcin Improvised Bomb to Kill Police Approaching Death Forris Ills Hnml- niiil l Ho Tots Story of Union- S< iniru Tragedy KNKW GOLDMAN AND IIRKKMAN Now York prIl9lIh the death meted out to him by his own hand less than a day or a night away Selig Sllverstcln the Union Square bomb thrower has confessed to the police And this confession shows that I It t was a plain cheap handrolled cigar ¬ Etta that stood that day betwech some thousands of persons and the destruc ¬ ton that Sllversteln had planned fo the police Also It proves that the deluded man went to Union Square with murder l In his hart Fourth Deputy Pollco Commission ¬ er Woods now has In his possession the confession which Sllversteln inado Friday loithp prison ward of Bellevuo Hospital to the detective who has ben his pretended attendant Sitting beside the frightfully In ¬ jured man last Friday afternoon the detective told him that spinal menin- gItis ¬ had set In and that even If I ho could survive the wounds made by his bomb he must die in a little while of the disease Sllversteln then de- cided ¬ to talk Dud told the detective that he rondo the bomb himself using n brass ball of the top of a brass bed- stead ¬ and filled with broken nails nitroglycerine nail gun powder Then said the anarchist I tool my bomb with a piece of string for a fuse and walked over to the park When I got there I put the fuse Inside the little hole In one side of tha round knob And then I saw a po- liceman who had beaten me and I walked over to where he stood and sat down upon the fountain Cigntilti1 I KxploIon mrtrlend ant Why I didnt Intend to set oft the bomb until inore policemen came around But I was excited and I roll ¬ ed a cigarette and lit It to stop my nerves I was going to use It too t to light the fuse of thho bomb when the time came 1 Then I t took the bomb out of m y pocket and bold it behind my back In my right l hand I held the cigarette lu mj left hand and then I got ex ¬ cited again and put my left hand be ¬ hind me and the light of the cigarette caught onto the fuse of the bomb and 1 before I knew It and the next I knew I was lying on the ground with many f policemen over me and a dead man at my side Did you know the map lying dead 1 beside ou1 queried the officer No Do you know Alex Berkman Invited to Hiiiles Yes I know him and I know Em ma GoldmanBut says ho doesnt know you Well I know him and he knows me I Was that the first bomb you ever wade No I made one other When was that the policeman asked But the dying man became suddenly suspicious You want to know too much he swapped You go to hell In the hospital tonight It was said that Sllversteln would dIe of menin- gitis ¬ within fortyeight hours at the roost hind this disease not attacked him ho would probably havo recov ¬ ered from his wounds NO DISKASK ON MONEY Physician Declares It Foolish to Cot ¬ cider It u Medium of Trans ¬ mission Dr AiH Doty health officer pf this port who for years has been making a study of Infectious diseases and especially the medium of thei transmission does not agree with t1 theorists who contend that money i- a I is transmitter of disease Dr Doty said yesterday that while bacteriological examinations were presented to show that different forms of bacteria were found on money d practical and careful observation ha proved that Infection was caused and epidemics were spread In nearly all Instances by personal contact with I Infected persons and more especlall with ambulant cases rather lha through the handling of money an clothingConcerning the current agitation on money as an agent of disease Dr Doty said The theory that money acts as a medium of infection Is a plausible one particularly as It deals with an agent which Is being constantly trans- mitted ¬ from one person to another and among all classes of people Cloth- Ing rags merchandise cargoes vessels etc are all regarded as means by which disease Is commonly trans milted This belief Is popular because It offers an explanation of outbreaks of infectious disease tho origin of which unknown Modern sanitation Jls j k r Paducah made buggies have more strong features of real merit than any other line of vehicles on the market Celebrated for durability comfort style finish and distinctive- ness that means quality We use the best of material throughout Visit our factory and rinspect the work while in course of construction before being covered by paint an oppor ¬ tunity not offered when buying stockwork See us before buying We make the price HARDY BUGGY CO Incorporated F Paducah Ky however ddes not regard as valuable theories which are unsupported by tact of practical experience The theory that money sets Asa medium carries with It no satisfactory or even reasonable proof It Is true that from time to time the results ot bacterio- logIcal examination are presented to show that different forms of bacteria are found on money No one who Is familiar with the subject doubts this but the same organisms may at al most any time be found on our hands on stair railings and nil exposed places These bacteria are as n rule harmless and some of them are bene- fit to mankind Even from a boa terlologlcal point of view thre are reasons why money would not be likely to transmit disease Howevei this question must be decided prln clpally by reliable statistics and the results of practical experience Whoever may be Inclined to Inves tlgate this subject in a reasonable way and will visit the Treasury De- partment at Washington where an enormous amount of old and filthy handIled formation from bank officials will find that those connected with this work do not contract Infectious dis case any oftener than any one else There Is no reason why persons thus employed may not contract In- fectious disease because they are sub ject to the same outside exposure that others are but this furnishes no proof that money Is the medium of transmlslon It Is rather to be re garded as a coincidence There Is APPKAUING OLD Acts as n Ear to Irolltnblo Employ ment You cannot afford to grow old In these days of strenuous competi ¬ ton It is necessary to maintain as long as possible ones youthful ap ¬ pearanceit Impossible to do this without retaining a luxurious growth of hair The presence of Dandruff Indicates the presence of a burrowing germ which lives and thrives on t the roots o the hair until It causes total bald ¬ ness J t New bros Herplclde Is the only known destroyer of this pest and It la as effective as it Is delightful 1 to use iHerpld rfo makes an elegant hair- dressing as we11 as Dandruff cure Accept no substitutethere Is none Sold by leading druggists Two sizes GOc and 1 Send lOc In stamps for samplo to The Herplclde Co Detroit Mich W B McPher- son Special Agent Backache rin in the Hips and Groins In most cases are direct results ol WEAK KIDNEYS and IN ¬ FLAMMATION OF THE BLAD- DER The strain on the Kld ¬ dnays and inflamed membranes the neck of the Bladder producing th pains LARKS KIDNEYd G osEs WILL CURE IT Vtf Two dosese give relief and one box wll cure any ordinary case of Kidney or Bladder tfouble Removes Gravel cures Diabetes Seminal Emissions Weak and Lame Back Rheum ¬ them and all irregularities of the ofKidneys and Bladder In both men and women Sold at 50 ants a box on tho No Cure No drugstore sole ascots for Paducah or sent by mall upon receipt of price to Lark Medicine Co Louisville Ky probably no doubt that In rare In ¬ stances money like other things may act as a means of transmitting disease but It Is so uncommon that we must J not give it undue consideration for t there are so many other Considerations i with which we must deal In protect- ing ¬ l the public health that constitute a real menace that we should rather devote our energies to these than to conditions which are based on theory k The fear that money transmits dis- ease Is I am quite sure due to the fact that It is quite frequently od and filthy While this Is unpleasant In many ways It does not Indicate thet presence of pathogenic organlsmss that is the germs which transmit Ins fectious diseaseNew York TrlbI uner Blessed I Is tho chaperon who hath eyes that tee not and ears that hear not I I Kiiiw What She Liked Otto Christmas time when I lived at PlaInfield a lady sent her cook to buy the ChrIstmas turkey But when tho cook returned she had two chickens MarthaV the lady said I told you to get turkey nqt chicken x III know mum Martha answered but I dont like turkey Philadel ¬ Philadelphia Chronicle IIKALTH AND VITALITY Molts Ncvcrlno Pills The great iron and tonic restorat- ive for men and women produces s strength and vitality builds up the and renews the normal vigor sale by druggists or by mall 1 box C boxes for 5 Williamsi Mfg Co Cleveland 0 The average man doesnt waste any politeness on his wife 1z 1Y I 1 Give Us a Share of YourG I INSURANCEAll x I E J P A XT ON LILLARD SANDERS Phone3s Phone 76S w 1i 1r i YOU HAVE YOUR OWN IDEAS about the fit of your shoes if they arej j to give you real satisfaction they must fit not only your feet but your ideas i I Our immense stock of shots affords you opportunities to get fitted in eeryx way and our salesmen are glad to give you intelligent assistance in find N N- r ing what you want You are sure to itWe I make a specialty of fine repair ¬ ing we cant make a new shoe out of an old one but we can come nearer to it than any other shop in Paducah Florsheim Shoes 5 and 6 t1 American Gentleman Shoes 250 to 500 Douglas 3 to 5 v I LEND LER LYDON X09 Broadway

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Page 1: The Paducah evening sun. (Paducah, KY) 1908-04-09 [p 3].nyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7tdz030q0z/data/0634.pdf · r WHAT FEAR-HJ bomolIho amiable 0do C 9 S observed and noted A few years ago

< zrr44 n yy au 3H

THEirA7 TG SUN PAGE THianB>

q0

j 11

Wo have none through our alack and taken out nil the smallIdtshnd broken sizes and placed them on our counters with

n

price tickets on them which tiro making them sell mightyfast Better come ut ot ce anti save yourself some money

i

HERE ARE A FEWLOT 1ILittle Gents Vlcl Hals worth 115 and b125 cut toSScLOT 2 Youths Box Calf Bluchers worth 8150I cut to J8c

LOT Jhays Satin Calf IIuls worth 8123 cut to secpLOT 4 Youths Box Calf Blue ers worth 82 cut

6Mcna Box Calf Satin Calf Vlcl etc In Bats or BluchersNone wotthlm than 1200 cut to j120

Lrr aLadles Patent Leather Silk Cloth Tops regular priceI2GO cut to 120

LOT iKndleR Hals Vlcls etc cutso on to the end of the chapter A call will convlcc you

b

Jpollt forget the great bargains we ore offering in MensPunts worth 125 rl1 CO 200 and 250 No men who

l

II CASH

112

b

I

1 < WJS

t c => iG c 0 = 0

IS CATi

iI

= =

Tim KtnuiKtt Horror Wlilrli Taos IrWWH IVrl Wlwn n Ihtlakws XiCfs I

Nil Gil C iiws Near Tliuin Licelln vi Koldlor Aro Nat 1Ifennpt

A harmless necessary cat Int t thwo words Shnkoipeare has made

Shylock describe an animal whl3rr IIIn

the dOMrlittlonI 4 as very accurate Thet rat iIs n graceful Inoffensive

cronltiro atsodartlI with domesticJ SCOBOS

flag thinks of it as purring by thebttrtU an emblem of homollke conefoft tho gentle Companion of maidenIndies Its only depredations are dl >

roettHl towanl tho mice which maketits maldim ladles nervous There-fore

¬

It IB not only a pot but auralector

An InlriiM ItcptiliiioiiI

1 Curiously enough however thereajninny persons who do not sharethis kindly feeling toward tho catIn thou the presence of a feline ex-

cite a sort of nervous agitation whichrangoa all the way from illallkn toaversion and oven to an actual terrorto groat ns to Induce convulsions

Thus there are some who simplynot like cats and do not care to-

tr t havo thorn around Others detestthorn and drive them from tho house

C Still others feel so Intense n form ofropulilon as to be unable oven to lookupon a lit without shuddering andalmost to faint it a cat should brushagainst them

Iorsons who are affected In thiswnylo an extreme degree are soacutely sensitive as to make then conrebus of the presence of n cat evenbefore the cat Is actually seen

SrlrntlMM Gill ItThis peculiar form hlllIlholllI

or nervous agitation was long ago

CUT PRICE SALE

ON

Ladies Mens Childrensh

SHOESEXAMPLESe

to8110L-OT

Patents toBRoan-d

73cIllTordTHE MODEL PADUCAHSDHEA-

PI SIOREhSOUTH SEfrQJ4D STREETt

r WHAT FEAR- HJ

bomolIhoamiable

0do

C 9S

observed and noted A few years agoIt was scientifically studied by Dr

Awir Mitchell who called It catfear Professor Harry ThurslonPock coined for It the Oreek compound word Aelurophobla whichDr Mitchell accepted and which is-

inow generally used by wrrlters on tho iItiItsubject

It might bo thought that cat fearIs peculiar to neurotic patients topersons suffering from nervous deblllty and perhaps to fanciful womenBut the strange thing aboift cat fearIs that It affects not only men butmanly men In the full vlgorof health

men In fact who are noted forreckless courage

aWhen Xnixilron Slilvrntl Is

Thus the French statesman Ben-

Jamin Constant relates that on ocooccasion ho found Napoleon shiveringIn his tent his face blanched to a j

deadly pallor and great beads ofsweat standing out upon his browTho hero of fifty battles was soshaken by terror as to be almost onthe verge of syncope i

What llalt demanded Constant-in

i

alarmA cat a cat cried out the Em-

peror There a cat somewhere In I

tho tenth i

A hasty search was made and at J

tint It seemed as though tlie Empertor had belt mistaken but presentlythe cat was discovered sound asleepbehind a screen

i

Ulicn Ixiiil ItolHils Ixost Ills incTho greatest English soldier now

alive Lord Roberts Is also subject to icut fear This virile sane well ballanced soldier the hero of Candaharand the Conqueror of the Hoer IlopubcoolI t

marksmanship Transvaal rHU

t I Unnatural FoodIMakes unnatural demands upon tho digestive organs

4 0

Nature hOB tilled Ihe well known cereals Wheat and Barley withnil tio various food elements for building body tiestus and for storing

i

up energy In the system

GrapeNutstr

rood made from 11 heat and bailey has long been known as thee ideal rr

food for athlete invalid man woman and childt

It is promptly digested by the weakest stomach nnd is quickly

available in tho blood for rebuilding waste brain and UPI vp cells the

natural supply of a natural waste

iialI tii t 1

Theres a Reason

1 FOR

A GRAPENUTSe I

men will flee the presence of aharmless necessary tat

The story Is told of how once at asplendid banquet at which Lord Roberts was the guest of honpr he wasseen In the festivities lto shudder andgrow pale Ills titled host whisperedto him anxiously

Are you 1111

Xo replied Lord Roberts greatlyagitated but there must be a cat Inthe room

I think you are mistaken saidis host wondering

I cannot be mistaken returnedthe great soldier There Is a cat= 1

feetI It If you will pardon mo I willleave the room

He rose hastily and went Into anadjoining apartment The servantswere assembled and a search l wasmade Ina remote corner of thebanquet hall was found a kitten Itwas removed and then Lord Robertsonce more took his place at the table

This strange obsession hasbeen va ¬

riously explained Some would thinkIt due to prenatal Influence The pres¬

nt writer Is Inclined to think thatcat tear Is analogous to snake tearIs Cut Pvnr1 tlio Sumo an Snake Frnr

We may lay It down as a generalwhich will hardly be dls¬

puted nnd that all white races havean Inborn horror ot the serpentI

This horror can never bo eradicatedIt Is In the blood Moreover It hasnothing to do with the fear Inspiredby tho serpents power to harm andkill for It Is excited Just as muchy the nonvenomous as by theveno

mops snake In fact It Is not somuch a tear as an Indescribable loathIng

The mere dread of Injury Is a whol-ly

¬

different sensation and this dreadof Injury is all that tho darkskinnedraces feel Thusa Hindu shuns aicobra and Is terrified by Its presenceI

ut be Is terrIfied In precisely theand to tile very same extent at

he approach of a maneating tigerIn both cases the quality ot his emotlon Is Identical

On the other hand as Kipling hasnoted In Kim the white man doesnot shun tho snake because he Isafraid of It but because It makeshim sick and faint even td look uponIt

Now the particular loathing whichIs excited In all white persons by theserpent extends to creatures or evento Inanimate objects which resembleor suggest the serpent

The lIlrrndof Writhing ThingsThus most of us will shudder and

shrink back when a large eel IIsthrown writhing all our feet Weknow perfectly well that It U not asnake Yet we do not like to touch

and most of us do not care to cat

As to objects that are Inanimatewe all know that many of them areIutterly condemned when we call them

snaky Snaky locks snaky ring ¬

lets snaky eyes snaky movementsthcro are a score of such expressionswhich mean that we regard with re ¬

pulsion the things to which they areapplied Coming to the point now

little reflection will show that a catessentially a snaky creature Most

of us do not realize thiS bccaiisee welack the obsrvlng eyehabittpf comparison we lire not ulrasensltlve

Hut just watch a cat as It movesabout at ease as U lies In the sun oras It curves Itself In Us u ual positionwhen about to sleep Its stealthinessIts sinuosity the undulations of Itslithe body nro all closely comparablewith what wo notice In Uio snake

If the cat has glary fur and If Itbe barred with stripes there are mo ¬

ments when the resemblance Is sostriking as to almost make us shiver

are many who feel this attimes but only In n momentary wayand In a special mOod

Others however are always con ¬

scious of It or at least they areconscious ot a feeling of repulsionwhich they cannot explain but whichIn all probability represents the ser¬

pentdread the loathing of the snakeand of everything that suggests thesnake even when ones mind Is notaware of the underlying reason

It Is the dread which explains thenntlpalhyto cats which was felt byNapoleon and Lord Roberts antwhich Is felt by many others of lessnote and In a greater or less degreeWe may call it catfear If you likehut In the last analysis it Is a second-ary

¬

manifestation of snake fear Toname It more exactly It should bocalled iathorror since It is farmore overwhelming more Instinctiveand more profound than any frightwhich other apparently more alarmIng creatures cause

Those who would interpret tho Bi ¬

ble with strict lIteralness may holdthat it springs from tho original curselaid on the serpent In the Garden otFMenDecanse thou bast done thisthou art cursed Upon thy belly thoushalt go and dust shalt thou eat allthe days of thy life And I will putcmlnlty between thee and the womanand between thy seed and her seedHo shall bruise thy head and thoushalt bruise his heelThe ScrapBook

ylI Man didactically began Prates¬

sor Broadhead Is the only animal1that laughs Ehyaht broke

thnisbcuzhelsmoney to another animal and is therefore obliged to laugh whenever thelatter animal gets off his favorite fun ¬

ny storyPuckIs your husband having any luck

at the racetrack Some luckanswered young Mrs Torkins Hohasnt caught cold nor had his pocketspicked WnBhington star

BOMB THROWER

ADMITS CRIME

Solig Sllveritcin ImprovisedBomb to Kill Police

Approaching Death Forris Ills Hnml-niiill Ho Tots Story of Union-

S< iniru Tragedy

KNKW GOLDMAN AND IIRKKMAN

Now York prIl9lIh thedeath meted out to him by his ownhand less than a day or a night awaySelig Sllverstcln the Union Squarebomb thrower has confessed to thepolice

And this confession shows that IIttwas a plain cheap handrolled cigar ¬

Etta that stood that day betwech somethousands of persons and the destruc ¬

ton that Sllversteln had planned fothe police

Also It proves that the deluded manwent to Union Square with murder lInhis hart

Fourth Deputy Pollco Commission ¬

er Woods now has In his possessionthe confession which Sllversteln inadoFriday loithp prison ward of BellevuoHospital to the detective who hasben his pretended attendant

Sitting beside the frightfully In ¬

jured man last Friday afternoon thedetective told him that spinal menin-gItis

¬

had set In and that even If Ihocould survive the wounds made byhis bomb he must die in a little whileof the disease Sllversteln then de-

cided¬

to talk Dud told the detectivethat he rondo the bomb himself usingn brass ball of the top of a brass bed-

stead¬

and filled with broken nailsnitroglycerine nail gun powder

Then said the anarchist I toolmy bomb with a piece of string fora fuse and walked over to the parkWhen I got there I put the fuse Insidethe little hole In one side of tharound knob And then I saw a po-

liceman who had beaten me and I

walked over to where he stood andsat down upon the fountain

Cigntilti1 IKxploIon

mrtrlendantWhy I didnt Intend to set oft the

bomb until inore policemen camearound But I was excited and I roll ¬

ed a cigarette and lit It to stop mynerves I was going to use It too ttolight the fuse of thho bomb when thetime came 1

Then I ttook the bomb out of m y

pocket and bold it behind my backIn my right lhand I held the cigarettelu mj left hand and then I got ex ¬

cited again and put my left hand be ¬

hind me and the light of the cigarettecaught onto the fuse of the bomb and1

before I knew It and the next I knewI was lying on the ground with manyf

policemen over me and a dead manat my side

Did you know the map lying dead1

beside ou1 queried the officerNoDo you know Alex Berkman

Invited to HiiilesYes I know him and I know Em

maGoldmanBut says ho doesnt

know youWell I know him and he knows

me IWas that the first bomb you ever

wadeNo I made one otherWhen was that the policeman

asked But the dying man becamesuddenly suspicious

You want to know too much heswapped You go to hell

In the hospital tonight It was saidthat Sllversteln would dIe of menin-

gitis¬

within fortyeight hours at theroost hind this disease not attackedhim ho would probably havo recov ¬

ered from his wounds

NO DISKASK ON MONEY

Physician Declares It Foolish to Cot ¬

cider It u Medium of Trans ¬

mission

Dr AiH Doty health officer pfthis port who for years has been

making a study of Infectious diseasesand especially the medium of thei

transmission does not agree with t1

theorists who contend that money i-

a

Iis

transmitter of diseaseDr Doty said yesterday that while

bacteriological examinations werepresented to show that different formsof bacteria were found on money

dpractical and careful observation ha

proved that Infection was caused andepidemics were spread In nearly all

Instances by personal contact withI

Infected persons and more especlallwith ambulant cases rather lhathrough the handling of money an

clothingConcerningthe current agitation on

money as an agent of disease DrDoty said

The theory that money acts as a

medium of infection Is a plausibleone particularly as It deals with anagent which Is being constantly trans-mitted

¬

from one person to another andamong all classes of people Cloth-

Ing rags merchandise cargoesvessels etc are all regarded as meansby which disease Is commonly transmilted

This belief Is popular because Itoffers an explanation of outbreaks ofinfectious disease tho origin of which

unknown Modern sanitationJls j

k r

Paducah made buggies have more strong features of real merit than any other line of

vehicles on the market Celebrated for durability comfort style finish and distinctive-

ness that means quality We use the best of material throughout Visit our factory andrinspect the work while in course of construction before being covered by paint an oppor¬

tunity not offered when buying stockwork See us before buying We make the price

HARDY BUGGY COIncorporated F

Paducah Ky

however ddes not regard as valuabletheories which are unsupported bytact of practical experience Thetheory that money sets Asa mediumcarries with It no satisfactory or evenreasonable proof It Is true that fromtime to time the results ot bacterio-logIcal examination are presented toshow that different forms of bacteriaare found on money No one who Is

familiar with the subject doubts thisbut the same organisms may at almost any time be found on our handson stair railings and nil exposedplaces These bacteria are as n ruleharmless and some of them are bene-

fit to mankind Even from a boaterlologlcal point of view thre arereasons why money would not belikely to transmit disease Howeveithis question must be decided prlnclpally by reliable statistics and theresults of practical experience

Whoever may be Inclined to Investlgate this subject in a reasonableway and will visit the Treasury De-

partment at Washington where anenormous amount of old and filthy

handIledformation from bank officials willfind that those connected with thiswork do not contract Infectious discase any oftener than any one else

There Is no reason why personsthus employed may not contract In-

fectious disease because they are subject to the same outside exposure thatothers are but this furnishes noproof that money Is the medium oftransmlslon It Is rather to be regarded as a coincidence There Is

APPKAUING OLD

Acts as n Ear to Irolltnblo Employment

You cannot afford to grow oldIn these days of strenuous competi ¬

ton It is necessary to maintain aslong as possible ones youthful ap ¬

pearanceitImpossible to do this without

retaining a luxurious growth of hairThe presence of Dandruff Indicates

the presence of a burrowing germwhich lives and thrives on tthe rootso the hair until It causes total bald¬

nessJ t

New bros Herplclde Is the onlyknown destroyer of this pest and Itla as effective as it Is delightful1 touse

iHerpld rfo makes an elegant hair-dressing as we11 as Dandruff cure

Accept no substitutethere Is noneSold by leading druggists Two

sizes GOc and 1 Send lOc Instamps for samplo to The HerplcldeCo Detroit Mich W B McPher-son Special Agent

Backacherin in theHips and Groins

In most cases are direct resultsol WEAK KIDNEYS and IN ¬

FLAMMATION OF THE BLAD-DER The strain on the Kld ¬

dnays and inflamed membranesthe neck of the Bladder

producing th pains

LARKSKIDNEYd

G osEsWILL CURE IT

Vtf

Two dosese give relief andone box wll cure any ordinarycase of Kidney or Bladdertfouble Removes Gravel curesDiabetes Seminal EmissionsWeak and Lame Back Rheum¬

them and all irregularities of theofKidneys and Bladder In both

men and women Sold at 50ants a box on tho No Cure Nodrugstoresole ascots for Paducah or sentby mall upon receipt of price toLark Medicine Co LouisvilleKy

probably no doubt that In rare In ¬

stances money like other things mayact as a means of transmitting diseasebut It Is so uncommon that we must J

not give it undue consideration for t

there are so many other Considerations i

with which we must deal In protect-ing

¬

l the public health that constitutea real menace that we should ratherdevote our energies to these than toconditions which are based on theory k

The fear that money transmits dis-ease Is I am quite sure due to thefact that It is quite frequently odand filthy While this Is unpleasantIn many ways It does not Indicate thetpresence of pathogenic organlsmssthat is the germs which transmit Insfectious diseaseNew York TrlbIunerBlessed IIs tho chaperon who hatheyes that tee not and ears that hearnot

I

I

Kiiiw What She LikedOtto Christmas time when I lived

at PlaInfield a lady sent her cook tobuy the ChrIstmas turkey But whentho cook returned she had twochickens

MarthaV the lady said I toldyou to get turkey nqt chicken x

III know mum Martha answeredbut I dont like turkey Philadel ¬

Philadelphia Chronicle

IIKALTH AND VITALITYMolts Ncvcrlno Pills

The great iron and tonic restorat-ive for men and women produces sstrength and vitality builds up the

and renews the normal vigorsale by druggists or by mall 1box C boxes for 5 Williamsi

Mfg Co Cleveland 0

The average man doesnt waste anypoliteness on his wife

1z

1Y

I 1 Give Us a Share of YourGI INSURANCEAll

x

IE J P A XT ON LILLARD SANDERS

Phone3s Phone 76S

w1i

1r

i

YOU HAVE YOUR OWN IDEASabout the fit of your shoes if they arejj

to give you real satisfaction they mustfit not only your feet but your ideas

iI

Our immense stock of shots affordsyou opportunities to get fitted in eeryxway and our salesmen are glad togive you intelligent assistance in find NN-

r ing what you want You are sure to

itWe

I

make a specialty of fine repair¬

ing we cant make a new shoe out ofan old one but we can come nearer toit than any other shop in Paducah

Florsheim Shoes 5 and 6t1

American Gentleman Shoes 250to 500

Douglas 3 to 5 vI

LEND LER LYDONX09 Broadway