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The Bourbon News: Tuesday, September 18, 1900.
The Bourbon News: Tuesday, September 18, 1900. The Bourbon News. 400dpi TIFF G4 page images Champ & Bro., Paris, Kentucky : 1900 bn1900091801 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. The Bourbon News: Tuesday, September 18, 1900. The Bourbon News. Champ & Bro., Paris, Kentucky : 1900 $IMLS This electronic text file was created by Optical Character Recognition (OCR). No corrections have been made to the OCR-ed text and no editing has been done to the content of the original document. Encoding has been done through an automated process using the recommendations for Level 1 of the TEI in Libraries Guidelines. Digital page images are linked to the text file. BRO Editors and Owners TWENTIETH YEAR PRINTED EVERY TUBSD FRIDAY Established February PARIS BOURBON CO KY TIIMSDAY SEPTEMBER 18 1900 Jt J 1 1 THE NEWS I rA- MP 11881 tL r Y A I t r BOURBQN ANA = BIT Persons who contemplate the purchase of a pleasure vehicle of any kind will find a desirable line to select from at my warehouse We have sold- a number of handsome wagons and traps and all have given satisfaction Of course we sell almost everything that runs on wheels Dont think 6 buying see my line and get my prices xf ifI lr- I gjf L Ourr 1 s Pleasure Vehicles- I I 1 I i e SI nt Ill-Iji9OQc- l ij I I I R YR A A tr 0 If 1 g- S until You JT- r r If you have made up your mind to buy good Shoes why not buy a pair of Hanan Shoes There is but one thing to the Hanan Shoe and you willad mit it no equal Perfect Workmanship Perfect Style Perfect Comfort Perfect Durability Fully Guaranteed Fall styles made in Enamel Vici Kid Velvet Calf Patent Vici Widths B to E Have the exclusive sale for this city GEO McWILLIAMS doinvestigate BEST ON EARTH IS THE HAHAN SHOE s Asti STAGE STORIES Amusement Announcements Chat Bits of Gossip The Lyons Comedy Co stranded last week at Berry Roland Reed opened the season at the Oincinnati Grand last night in his new play A Modern Crusoe The Pike opened wjth The Charity Eads Bernard Thornton formerly of this city has returned from the Paris Exposition and is now assistant treas urer and press representative at the Grand Opera House Eighth Avenue and Twentythird street in New York The Graham Earle Company began a weeks engagement last night at Grand presenting the comedy The Inside Track before a fare audience The companys repertoire includes such as Two Married Men The Country Girl Counterfeit Money Aunt Jerusha Black Flag Monte Cristo Rosedale and Don Caesar de Bazan The prices will be ten and twentycents The bill for tonight will be The Country Girl the comedy in which Ada Rehan made a great hit Every person purchasing a ticket dur ing the engagement will be given a number which will entitle him to a chance in a drawing on Saturday night when a ten dollar gold piece will be given the person holding the lucky number At the matinee Saturday a ladys watch will be giveaway It is now on exhibition in A J Winters Cos window Manager Porter received the following telegram from the manager of the opera house at Carrolton Ky where the company played last week Graham Earle a good popular price show Gave satisfaction here THE Wine Woman and Song pany attracted a very large and fashion able audience Friday night to the Grand and every number of the excellent vaudeville program was generously ap Nethersole Crane Goodwin Hopper Maude Adams Francis Wilson and Pauline Hall The vaudeville features were all excellent being about the same that were given here last season The show is playing in this week Mary Mannering is making elaborate preparations for the production of Janice Meredith at the Star Theater in Buffalo October 1 The dramatic version will be in four acts The opening scene will the farm of Squire Meredith in New Jersey The second act shows the homely of the Revolutionary time in a which the livingroom in the farmhouse The third act is laid at the headquarters of the drunken Hessian commander at and here Janice is under arrest for aidiug Brereton to escape The last act is at Yorktown on the day of the surrender of Cornwallis SHORT NEWS STORIES Brief Paragraphs About Important Happenings The protracted meeting atEast Union Nicholas county conducted by Elder A W Hookendqffer closed with twenty nine additions The Seventh Ohio Cavalry will hold a reunion in Cynthiana October 18th James Jenkins 22 was murdered over a poker game by Wm Hulett 16 at Lexington Sunday morning The Elk carnival at Louisville began yesterday and will continue for two weeks The Fall Festival at Cincinnati begins tomorrow and continues ten days terOdd Ball the lauded h 1 be a II 1 life scene represents Trenton Lobby plays Corn t inn an Louisville POINTSArr ALLOF OUR STAR SHOES THEy- ou get the prmie requisites 6f a satisfactory Shoe Fit Grace Style Durability and Comfort and dont pay too much for these at 300 J 1 4 you in footgear anywhere in town PARIS CASH SHOE STORE COURT HOUSE SQUARE BUYing we buy and selling we sell you will to doas as find it difficult MILLERSBURG Jennie in Paris Rev of Louisville preached Jack left to attend State Lexington The L N sold 225 tickets to fair Friday and Saturday Miss MaWe Barnett has a line of Fall hats examine before you buy Harold and Newt Tabb of Mt Sterling visited friends here Sun dayDr W M Miller is on the sick list Mr Chart Chancelor is somewhat im proved Mrs J Cantrill of Georgetown visited he n at Training School Sat urday a Mrs and son returnedNutter a visit with parents at guest of Mrs O W Johnson Mr Martin bought eighteen good yeanling 800lb steers at Berry last r Mrs Miller is visiting her parents 3 and Mrs Robt Howe in Rev J has closed a meeting at Baptist Church FOR S Mr Ja with her 20 head of good grade ra dehorned CONNELL BROS Butler and family a two weeks visit tfes in Bracken killed night at Ruddles Mills passenger train McClintock shipped a double lambs and car of cattle East of cattle to Cincinnati Rev M Evans has put a twenty horse gasoline engine in his mill and it on half cost of coal Mr Ernest Swift of Louis ville of cousin Mrs John In gels spend a week at Blue Licks fS Miss Same McIntyre has returned from Ba Creek Mich and the cattle that are affected WIth the pink eye doing well and treatment is successful so far Miss Minnie Rule is very ill with typhoid fever at the her daugh ter Mrs Dave Judy in Carlisle Mr Judy is much better Mr J Will Clarke is still agent for the Bourbon Steam best We send Wednesday and return Friday All work guaranteed John Barbee took first premium on harness mare and John Hunter first on mare and second on combined ring at Mt Olivet last week Prof and Mrs C M Bests entertain ment Friday evening was quite a suc cess and many persons were present to meet the new students and welcome them to Millersburg- Mr Louis Rogers and family of Cane Ridge are with her father J G Allen since their fire Thursday They lost almost everything but were insured for 500 on household goods Many fanners have finished tobacco raised in County Several farmers left it in the fields being unable to get sticks or room of it is badly worm eaten The best place to get school shoes is at Harry Simons THE FARM AND TRUF News For the Farmer Trader and Stock Raiser The Ewing Fair cleared 482 this year Lieut Gibson the famous race horse has broken down and will be retired to the stud W Jv Loughridge of Lexington bought 1899 crop of hemp at 6 per 112 pounds Last week in Cincinnati J W Thomas Jr sold seventeen hhds of tobacco at 18 to 6 and W T Overbey sold twelve at 1425 to 1225 L Joseph has bought sixtyfive export cattle from G CThompsoe fiftyseven from Henry Thompson and thirtyfive from Drake Thompson They are to be delivered in November Count Waldersee commander of the allied armies in China has cabled to G of Lexington to send huh twoN fine Kentucky cavalry horses They cost 500 eachr and were shipped yesterday to China- C F Neagle leftLexington yesterday with a string of fifteen fancy horses to take in the Western Circuit of fairs beginning at Springfield Ills and closing- at Kansas City and St Louis He has The that has taken 108 premiums in the past three years I Deduced Rates To Cincinnati DBHE N will sell tickets ojpinoinnati and and oner 9 0 Miss B tT Pnrnell is visiting Miss K hell B at Baptist Sunday I son j G m Lagrange Mrs Fisher of Maysville is the aunt near townc Qn wee j e CovingtQ Sunday wit n additions yearliu f om I oks had a cow and calf Mcln r d po ei aud s Tli6 n r r F v rePor homeof Laundrythe cutting It is the crop I P Dolans 4 D Wilson t 1 J third J Pt 19th lst thr2 th 28tkt 4 i n Church Collier Lexington colored Ca and yesterday h Taylor Indian t returned Forres day crossing b late Hof an car v is king are guests yesterday duti s A er er erinar s ever Frenchman trip4 one fiu and r IRON BEDS Having purchased a large stock we will now give you BOTTOM prices you call at our store and look for yourself will be convinced Also a nice line of Misses Rockers They are selling fast Come and get one Dont let this Sale slip Tnis is for ten days only NEW FURNITURE STORE NEXT DOXXR TO HOTEL 1 If AaFa VVBEELERSt I t t PARI KY II t WINDSOR I Cut VV- r Prices GET READY For the pretty weather which is due here now We have anticipated- its arrival and secured a J- I I i 11Iil ftf T j Which are the handsomest to be seen anywhere ant which excell in comfort and durability anything we have ever offered the trade Many different styles enough to fit any foot or taste Call early and get choice in style and fit DAVIS THOMSON ISGRIG i k Ladies Low Cut Shoes 0 SEED C S BRENT BRO m SEED WHERt I NEB SEED r IOllTllEI1J RYES TIMOTflY Removal Sale In preparing to move to my I have decided ta 0c Shirt Waists at 25c MY f- X 4 Sc Lawns at 2 JL2e You will not soon have so good a chance to secure such good at so low a price as I am offering these and Lawns Call early before they are air gone i t- e SHIRT WAISTS New Store sell allmy AND ALL f ShirtWaists I i SiIl9 I 1 J 1 1Ia11YO- 1sh DryGoods StoT 4 BOUKJBOST NEWS PAKIS E v TUESDAY SEPTBMBEB 18 1900 I 2 1 THE F r i 1 1 H jt t Search for Unfortunate Victims at Galveston Still Progressing- The Cleaning Up antI Disinfecting- of Streets S torCM and Build GOCM Bravely On Order Out of Chaos Galveson Tex Sept 14 More than 2000 dead bodies have been identified and the estimate of Mayor Jones that 5000 souls perished in great hurricane does not ap pear to be magnified The city is be ing patroled by the troops and a citi zens committee and a semblance of order is appearing AUstin Tex 14 Advicfes Sayers Thursday indicate that several trains loaded with supplies destitute are en route to Galveston The arrival of these supplies will relieve the situation at Galveston very materially as the governor is in formed that quite a lot of clothing is included in the list Gov Sayers made the following statement Thursday night The city authorities at Galveston are in full contrOl and every effort is being made to find and bury the dead to the debris and to sanitate the city Contributions of the mostliberal character are rapidly reaching me and I shall see that the money is used to the very best advan tage for the sufferers and that there shall be no waste of the magnificent contributions coining from the free hands and generous hearts of a sympathetic people of the people of Texas I desire to express my acknowledg ment to the people of the United States for the ready and generous responses they have made in coming to the aid of our afflicted people The number of deaths the amount of and the losses of property are far greater than anticipated The secretary of the navy has placed the revenue cutter Galveston at my disposal rind I have in turn placed it at the disposal of the mayor of Galveston The addition of this cutter to the boats already loaned by the federal government will give us five boats at Galveston to handle supplies and passengers to and from the mainland and I anticipate that their presence there will relieve the situa tion very materially Galveston Tex Sept first real attempt to clear away the great mass of debris piled along the beach front for a distance of several miles was begun Friday Advertisements printed in the News which appeared Friday morn Sng asking foi hundreds jt men and to dp this work A multitude responded They were formed into squads and promptly put to work with police and deputy sheriffs in eharge It is hoped that a vigorous prosecution of this work will lead to the early recovery of bodies still ui the debris That there are of them there is no shadow of doubt It is difficult indeed to imagine how half the people that did escape got free of this fearful flotsam and jetsam Telegraphic communication has been partially restored the Western Union anti Postal companies having reached the city with one wire Xarge forces have been at the lines of both companies Austin Tex Sept 15 During Fri dayGov Sayers received quite a large number of subscriptions and it is estimated that the total subscription lists to date here and at Galveston will reach 1300000 GOY Sayers states that as soon as possible he will prepare a list of subscriptions by states and give it out During the day Gov Sayers ordered a train load of provisions to be sent from Dallas to Galveston under guard to prevent any possible interruption by marauders and also ordered pro visions and clothing sent from San Antonio Galveston Tex Sept 15 The Galveston throughout the again evidenced Friday morning when local bankers w re notified by cable that the Liverpool cotton exchange had subscribed 1000 for the relief of the sufferers and that more win follow The people are profoundly grateful for the generous response of the world to their appeal for relief and from a wish to be worthy of the aid extended to them they are speaking more hopefully of reconstruction Galvestou Tex Sept 17 What a contrast Last Sunday glodm deso lation and despair prevailed in this storm torn city Sunday hope and determination haVe seized the people they realize that the task them is gigantic yet with the gener ous aid that is flowing into them in a broad stream from all parts of civilized world and their own purpose the sick anl wounded will be healed the destitute relieved and the recuperation of Gal ill be speedy and the city fvill be rebuilt and placed on a more enduring foundation and her commercial career started again Such is the spirit displayed today by this grievously stricken people You can hear no complaining no expression of want of confidence but only of hope zeal and determination and this is exemplified by the vigorous enterprise visible on every hand Although it is the Sabbath work is pushed undeir a systematic plan of operation that is rapidly bringing out tdf chaos The search and burial or cremation of the unfortunate victims within the corporate limits is rapidly prosecuted by a largf force in organized squads tin tier military direction Down the CREMATING THE DEAD lugs the to- GO for the destitution 15The Y many workalong fel or as efore indomitable A remove s I I I Iq were 3 i worth I 4 the cst 4 t i being island and on the mainland the work of interring the dead is conducted with the same system Looting and the desecration of corpses have ceased since the military have assumed control and they are cooperating harmoniously with the civil authori tiesThe clearing up and disinfecting of streets stores and buildings goes bravely on and the sanitary condition of the downtovn portion of the city has been greatly improved Mayor Jones stated Sunday there would be no letup in the work until the en tire city was cleansed and disinfected Dry goods stores and clothing houses resemble great laundries and every available space is occupied with goods hung uj to dry Fortunately the weather is clear hot and dry for the purpose Those merchants whose stocks were but slightly damaged have been doing a rushing business and so have the restaurants but their stocks very limited and fresh meat difficult to obtain Extortions- are rare exceptions although tie sup ply of food at hotels and restaurants- is limited This will be remedied in a few days Since all the railways terminating here have united upon one bridge and are pushing the work night and day with a large force reconstructing it while the tracks are being re stored on the island and mainland by large forces it is confidently assert ed that Galveston will have commu nication directly by Wednesday next If this is it will relieve the existing situation wonderfully as all supplies are now brought in by boat The injured and sick under the thorough system inaugurated by the board of health and local physicians aided by volunteers from the out side are receiving every care and attention and are doing as well as could be expected under the circumstances which are being improved daily churches in the city either be ing wrecked or ruined with one or two exceptions divine services were in most cases suspended Mass was celebrated at St Marys cathedral Sunday morning and was largely at tended Father Kirwin preached an eloquent and feeling sermon in which he spoke of the awful calamity that had befallen the people After ex pressing sympathy with the afflicted and distressed he advised all to go to work in burying the dead That was their first duty the next was to bring the names of the widows and orphans to the church and they could rest assured of the unfortunates be ing cared for Father Kirwin said We will build- a more secure larger a better here and need never fear a repetition- of the calamity of the century This young priest has been one of the most active in relieving the hull caring for th Ewdundea ddinii for ting fhe and Vurying thV dead Bishop Gallagher who has been earnest and active in his efforts to mitigate suffering and extend com fort is in receipt of a telegram from Archbishop Corrigan of New York stating that the diocese of that city would see that all Catholic orphan children sent to his care shall be kindly cared for The grand committee I 0 0 F here Sunday and local relief committees to look after and care for the sick and the destitute of that order for whom an ppeal has been sent to the lodges of the union for relief The keeper foi the life saving sta tion at the western extremity of the island got in Sunday He reports the station gone and that a frightful scene of desolation exists there He reports that 180 bodies were buried there that the prairie and marshes are strewn with the carcasses of ani mals and reptiles and that the stench is stifling New York Sept 17 Late Sunday night it was announced at the chancellery of the cathedral that the amount collected in the Roman Catholic churches in this city for the Gal veston relief fund would probably amount to 15000 New York hall was filled Sunday with people who came to attend the memorial service for the Galveston dead under the auspices of the Salvation army Three hundred and fifty dollars were raised for the fund Atlanta Ga Sept 8 000 has been subscribed in Atlanta for the Galveston Sufferers A por tion of this is already in the hands of Gov Sayers Coal Goes Up in St Louis St Louis Sepk 15 The immediate effect the threatened anthracite miners strike in this city was an ad vance of the price from 675 to 725 a ton by dealers Friday A further advance is expected after the strike goes into effect The visible supply of hard coal is small as bituminous coal is generally used Peter Mnher Defeats Jim Jeffords Philadelphia Sept Ma- her of this city completely out classed Jim Jeffords of California in the two r4unds of what was to have been a sixround fight the Pennsylvania Athletic club Friday night At no stage of the fight did the Californian show any cleverness Iu t Give Ui Their BomlN Washington Sept 15 Assistant Secretary Vanderlip has given notice to banks having old 2percent bonds on deposit to secure deposits of pub lie moneys that the bonds must be surrendered at once and other bonds substituted or their deposits will be decreased A named Walter was arrested at San Sebastian Spain on a charge of platting with narcliists to lull a European moitarchf ar done city ere 17Carnegie relief 17Nearly r f 15Peter af Swiss j J i All gent organized VV Russian General Admits His Troops Will Winter at TienTsin V SixtK United States Cavalijy at the Summer Mouse of American Legation in the- s Western Hills Peking Sept 11 via Taku S iytv 14 The allied generals were in GOI ference four hours today the principal topic being how best to encourage the Chinese to return to work It was agreed that looting should cease and that foraging parties should hereafter be accompanied by an offi cer who should give receipts for all supplies taken The question of wintering at Tien Tsin was brought up with a view of ascertaining if possible the attitude of the Russians v Gen Linevitch admitted that most of his troops would winter there At the Japanese legation it is now believed that the man who have killed Baron Von Ketteler is the actual criminal The Japanese believe that he has been paid to accuse himself by the Russians in order l o discredit Prince Ching The Japanese favor Prince Ching and the Rus sians Li Hung Chang The 6th United States cavalry ill leave tomorrow for the western hills where is located the summer hpuSt of the United States legation Two thousand Germans under Glnv Hoepfner have left for SiangHsang LiangHiang a walled city by Boxers who recently attacks ed a party of German soldiers The city has one gun Washington Sept 17 Nothing came from Gen during the day and the situation regarding the question of the withdrawal of the troops from Peking it was stated was unchanged When Li Hung Chang reaches Tito Tsin he will assume the viceroysliip of the great province of OhiLi jthencejv he will proceed to Peking Whether with his new office as viceroy and with the additional powers he may have as a peace plenipotentiary he will be able to meet the demands of the foreign governments for the complete restoration of order the preservation of peace anti the protection of foreigners are questions wihich must answer themselves as time progresses It is understood that up to this time there has not been any serious con sideration by this government of the personnel of any commissioners that may be appointed to secure a peaceful and stable government Several names havebeen mentioned but this 3s as faij as t ma pr- gressefl Nothing official has reached this government of the reported rejection by Germany Lu as a peace negotiator with Li Hung Chang and Prince Ohing It would not be surprising however if this were true as the dfficials believe Germany or any other government would be justified- in refusing to treat with a person who has been regarded in part at least responsible for much of the iiurin tha has been The Paris dispatch announcing the discussion of the possibility of a in some other country than China for the purpose of settling terms of peace caused some discussion in diplomatic and other circles Such a suggestion has not been made to this government however arid nothing is know of it here TienTsin Sept 13 via Shanghai Sept 15 The Russians it is reported here are rapidly pushing troops into Manchuria where all indications point to extensive 9perations before the arrival of winter They have suspended work on railroad to Peking which adds to the complications It is believed that their object in this is to compel the other powers to consent to the destruction of Peking Tlje Tu Liu expedition has returned- to TienTsin The march back was and it that the Boxers have retired in force to a village 30 miles up the Grand canal The Americans did not participate in the burning and looting of Tu Liu and this caused considerable comment among the other commanders The 6th United Statps cavalry it is reported here have been ordered- to camp at YangTsun up the PeiHo with a view pf strengthening the liDo of communication- A Remarkable Family Tusumbia Mo Sept remarkable birth is reported here from Marys Home a little town near this place Mrs Henry Smith wife of a tiemaker became the mother of five boys at one time They are reported to be well and weigh a to al of 30 pounds Smith according to reports has a remarkable family He has been married about seven years arid is the father of 16 children Only one time has there been born a single baby at a single birth There are two pairs of twins two pairs of triplets and the quintet reported Killed Hi Enemy Clarksville Tenn Sept 15 During the renewal of an old grudge between T R Nelson and Will Dorris of Robertson county Tenriessee the former was shot and killed the latter Dorris fled to Kentucky and has not been arrested Road Completed With Gold Spike Chattanooga Tenn Sept 15 rTHii last spike a golden one was driven fa ther Tennessee Cerifeal railroad track at Obids River connecting Nashville and Krioxyille by a linoc- dritrtrtUvS by the Illinois CentralS CHINESE SITUATION L The r i i claims t occupied Chaffee bas 1 ofYung done conference j the unopposed is reported 17A thY VV yt DEATH OF SICARD Retired Rear Admiral Expired Suddenly of Apoplexy at WeHternvllle N Y Rome N Y Sept 15 Rr Adm Sicard died of apoplexy at his summer home at Westernville Friday morning The house in which he died wqs erected by William Floyd one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence he Rr Adm Sicard Rr Adm Montgomery Sicard was retired in 1898 Since 1851 the ocean Tijh n civil war with several blockading squadrons until 1SG2 when he was made lieutenant commander After the war Sipard spent two years at the naval academy anc tw6 years on the Pensacola In 1881 he was made captain and in 1894 he was promoted- to commodore and later to rear ad miral When the Spanish war broke out Adm Sicard was placed in of the squadron at Key West but he became ill and was invalided Rr Adm Sampson succeeding him TO SAFEGUARD KRUGER The PortugueHe Government Authorizes HiH Departure Front liourcnco Marques Lisbon Sept Portuguese government has telegraphed to the governor of Mozambique authorizing the departure of Mr Kruger for The governor however must satisfy himself that Mr is re ally going to Europe Meanwhile he is instructed to take all precautions to safeguard the personal security of Mr Kruger The Hague Sept 17 The government of the Netherlands has tele graphed to Lourenzo Marques offer ing a Dutch warship to bring Mr Kruger to Holland London Sept Kruger ac cording to a dispatch to the Daily Express has arrived ate COR3ETT IN QUEENTOWN He Emphatically Denies That Ills Fights With Sharkey and McCoy Were Fakes Queenstown Sept press representative on boarding Friday the Cunard line steamer Campania from New York handed to James J Corbett the pugilist a number of dispatches relating to the charges made against him in New York He read them and said It is ridiculous to say that my fights with Sharkey and McCoy were fakes The of Mesdames bett and McCoy he said are too ridiculous to speak about Corbett and Marguerite Corneille the actress were booked as Mr and Mrs Martin Her mother was with her and Corbett occupied a separate state room A JEALOUS ITALIAN Kills His Wife and Two Men Runs Amncl Killing Five Others Wounding Two and Suicides Casetera Italy Sept Longo on returning from the United States to Pastona a small town in this district killed his wife in a fit of jealousy and then two men of whom he was jealous Having committed the triple crime he ran amuck killing five others and wounding two fatally Then he went to the local cemetery and committed suicide Capt McQncHton Killed Washington Sept war de partment Sunday received information from Gen MacArthur of the tragic death in the Philippines of Capt Charles McQueston of the 4th regular United States infantry the result of wounds by a soldier whom he had attacked during a temporary tilt of insanity Took His Own Life Tuscaloosa Ala Sept 15 A man supposed to be Prank McGill of Brownwood Tex who came here from Jackson Miss killed himself after having told several persons had lost a daughter and three grandchildren in the Galveston flood Among his effects was a letter from the the First National banlc of Brownwood Tex in Murder Clarksville Tennj Sept farmer named Touch Wooten living near Clarksville was shot down in front of his own gate his alleged slayers being two brothers named Winters The tragedy grew of a dispute over a corn deal Killed the Victor Clarksville T nn Sept 15rAt Dewey Trigg county Ky near line Dave Kennedy a merchant shot and fatally wounded Jim Walker wha had got the best of Ken nedys ina fight was his He served during the command i 17The Europe ruger 17Mrs 1zo i t j ili- J n r 15A allegations or 15Caetano 17The he casbierof 15A out Lour rNar9ufts- Ended thee nbsce nephew One Hundred and Forty Thousand Men Are Involved The Miners in the Anthracite Regions Malting Preparations for the Coming Struggle Indianapolis Ind Sept of ficials of the United Mine Workers of America Thursday issued a statement to the public giving the causes that have led up to tKe strike which was ordered Wednesday Among other things he says The wages of the anthra cite miner for many years has been less than 250 annually During that period of time the cost of many of the necessaries of life has been increased over 20 per cent An increase- in the cost of living without a corre sponding increase of wages is equiva lent to reduction in wages The laws of the state of Pennsylvania make 2400 pounds a ton of an thracite coal yet anthracite miners are compelled to mine from 2700 to 4000 pounds br a ton and in addi tion to that are docked exorbitant amounts often reaching 12 per cent of their daily earnings for any im puriti s which may be sent out with their coal Where they are paid by the car instead of being required to furnish a wellrounded heap on the car at the breakers as was originally agreed to they have gradually been compelled to ihcrease the amount of coal in each car by building the same perpendicularly from 6 to 18 inches above the edge They are compelled to purchase the powder used in mining from their employers paying 275 per keg for a grade of powder that can be purchased elsewhere for 150 per keg and which wholesales for about 1 per keg They are required by many of the companies to deal in pluck me stores or leave their employment They must pay to the company 1 per month for a doctor whether they need him or not and have no voice in saying who the doctor shall be The smallness of their earnings together with the great cost of living has compelled them to take children from school before they have reached the age prescribed by law and place them at work in the breakers- in order to keep the from starvation When any miner Reeling the burden of these has gone to the management and asked to have them removed he has been told if he does not like it he can quitHazleton Pa Sept the exception of President Mitchells ar storm center of the present coal between capital and labor Nothing occurred to disturb the serenity of the Sabbath Quite a large npmber- of miners came to town but soon left when they found that there was no news floating around With the exception of the engineers firemen pump runners and repair men no one was around any of the in this vicinity Public meetings of miners were held during the day at Harley Ebervale and Freeland on the north side Shepter and Harwood on the west side and at Colerain south of here The largest gathering was that at Freeland 12 miles north where the union men are not so strong as the organizers would like to have them This meeting was held in the open air arid was addressed by National Committeeman Benjamin James and- a number of other leaders well known in these regions There were 2000 persons in the crowd When Mr James asked all those to raise their hands who were against a strike not an arm went up Harrisburg Pa Sept 17 The miners in the Lykens region are divided on the strike question and it is expected that at least half of them will go to work A meeting- of the union men at Lykens was held afternoon at which it was de cided not to work but it enough will stand by the company to operate the mine Reports from Wi conisco are that the men will obey the strike order as long as there is any hope of a compromise with the operators A secret session of the Lykens and Wiconisco miners was held Sunday night at Lykens to invite the mine employes at Williams town to join the strike The men there do not belong to the union and are opposed to a strike because of the refusal of the miners at Lykens and Wiconisco to support them in the strike of 186 Was Won America Paris Sept 15 The grand race of the nations one of the leading events of the cycling carnival at Vincennes was Friday won by America Great Britain Italy Austria Belgium Prance and Holland also competed each country being represent three men Cooper McFarland aiuV Banker American The distance raced was 1500 metres Murdered By Two Columbia S C Sept A Brown an English artist was shot and killed and robbed early Saturday morning Sunday the coroners jury found that Brown had been killed by Paul K Bratton and that the latters brother John was an accessory Gen McClernand Growing Weaker Springfield HI Sept McOlernand is continually growing weaker This was the statement given out Sunday night by Dr Bow cock Who had been at Tjft Tjtdsid several hours ORDERED 14The average 17With I little Sundry that var minesI Sunday isthought B Germ ny d dthe team Brothers 17Harry 17Gen 1AB1O STRIKE Coal- their ritai ithere was hown here Hazltlasth Monday conEititut Jim- A CHESAPEAKE OHi6lYU- S EFFECT JULY Ifc 1900 XAST BOUND LY Louisville Ar 11 Oam 8 x Lv Lexington 1120am 845pm 812am Lv 11 57am 9 8 50am 6 30pm- ArMt Sterling 925am Ar 6 2 40pm 10 15am 7 Ar New York I240nn908pmW- BST BOUND Winchester 7 37am 4 38pm 6 20am 2 Ar Lexington 8 12am 5 7 05am aj30pi Ar 9 09am 6 14pm Ar Shelby villa 10 Olam 7 Ar Louisville 11 00am 8 00pm Trains marked thus t run daily except Sunday other trains run daily Sleepers between Louisville Lexington and New York without For rates Car reservation or any information call on F B CARR Agent L N R R Paris Ky or GEORGE W BARNEY Div Pass Agent Lexington Ky FURNITURE CARPETS VyALL PAPER ETC FUNERAL FURNISHINGS Calls for Ambulance Attended to Promptly Day Phone 137 NONUNION AGENTS RELIABLE FIRE INSURANCE LOW RATES 5 BROADWAY PARIS KT- 0Blma99tf New Railroad to San FranciscoS- anta Fe Route by its San Joaquin Valley Extension one management all the way from Chicago- to the Golden Gate Mountain passes extinct vplcanos petrified forests prehistoric ruins Indian pueblos Yoseniite Canon of Arizona en service that has made the Santa Fe the favorite route to Southern California Fast schedule Pullman and Tourist sleepers daily Free reclining cars Harvey meals throughout General Passenger Office Tke Atchison Topeka Santa Fe Ry QUEENaCREStENT ROUTE Superb Vestibuled Trains FROM CINCINNATI To Lexington Chattanooga Birmingham Meridian New Atlanta Macon and onvllle Through Sleeplag Cars to Birmingham Cds lurabua Albany Knoxville Asheville Jacksoa and Shreveport Through Cincinnati to Lofli Angeles and San Francisco Thursday Direct Route to the Southwest via New Or leans via Shreveport 3 DAILY TRAINS TO CHATTANOOGA Send for Literature and Time Tables WantedAn idea Who can tbo- of eotno BlmpM1 thing to I t t 8 8Oam 6 OOpm 12 25pm 9 43pm 7 bOaf Ax t t w Night 100 SMITH ARNSPARGER T s I I i i i 1 J- f route- S h h darne 19 gra e I J r t hair CHICAGO r VFTOtSCt r tdNc theY wealtL WEXu CO te f Jla r oJ ute TXMZ TABIE ti DAYISI- S 4hetpnly line with trackand trains u der S Grind-S a S SSSS I I S o S- To VIA THE I L may you Write Ar-MV C 1800 prao e l a4v d byisiIaj THE BOURBON PARIS K miESDAY SEPTEMBER 18 1900NEWS r 3 11V t I No Chance for Rust Householder I want you to senfl a man upi to the house to take out the meter Gasman What for Householder am going away for three months Gasman Oh dont worry about the meter It wont get rusty rN Y Weekly A Study in Homonymy She said I do not know These words I dreamed she spoke That since It seemed as though She could not yes evoke She said I do not know Twas different when I woke The language fools one She said I do not No rown Topics j liE HAD MARRIED HER so I used to pay that woman compliments five years ago do you pay hernow He Alimony Cincinnati Enquirer- In Campaign Times They sang long ago in dull accents of woe A delicate dirge of The Man with the Hoe But BOW when political strife stirs the throng Its with the barrel most the throng Washington Star Bond of Sympathy D9 you like young Mr Cliffords looksYes I do very much Dont his ears seem rather long Yes they are rather long But you must remember that Im a Alissoury girl and dad made his fortune trading mules Cleveland Plain Dealer Inanimate Inanities They tell me said the Hammer VJ tlJiat you think yourself a clever acjjt- A i QiIjaintiso many said the Tack tbfrfc when I stand on my head some one is apt to get stuck on me Indianapolis Press Easily Refuted Railway railway mad am is strictly up to date in every re spect Madam Nonsense Look at this woman on your excursion folder her sleeve have been out of style for three years Ohicago Record Carrying a Mortgage must have built that fine house of his under a mort gage flidnt he Wilkins I notice his shoulders are beginning to look like a Mansard roof N Y Weekly Posterity SuRer The Newriches have no children have they No They havent any time to raise children Theyre too busy cultivating their ancestors Philadelphia Press Alack Alan The milk of human kindness- Is seldom rich with cream In fact of earthly things but few Are really what they seem Daily News CHEERING HeI SheWhat i 04 wHo moves r J r- UD AgentOur BilkinsJimson I hic o t f this is the young lady i t Well I can only say she doesnt look quite the idiot she must be to want to marryyou Ally Sloper But AVe Dont TJKis world Is full of beauty As other worlds above AiumfKWQ but did our duty be full Chicago DaUY News Their Substitute HTdwao you suppose Adam and Eva reckoned the time without clock or tree Topics nc aCncr the Brands Mrs Starvem Will you have some milk and seine sugar in your tea GrimSftiaw If you please just a little drop of water a litti grain ofi3 Tqvgnj Topics Mttf Impolite Janltori my wheel rnslde think cduld with Gieyelarid Plain Dealer PapaSo e of love calendar 1J but they had a dmte d ltttheYTD n r an 1 rou that jUou 1tnht I mtlczow madam C3it d e I lib I Blessing in Dlaerulae Good morning said the proud mother of the girl who fozzled the piano wretchedly I hope my daugh ters playing disturb you last night No said Mrs Nexdore it pleased us immensely Some most uninteresting people came to call on us early in the evening but they didnt stay long Philadelphia Post He Made Her Tired Henry she said you dont know what soothing influence you have on me My darling he whispered softly while a glad light came into his can it be so Yes she said when you are here- I always feel inclined to Bits An Experienced House Agent Kush around to 126 Bank street quick and get last months rent Bookkeeper Whats up Agent As I passed there this morn ing I heard a baby There wont bo any spare cash around that house for six weeks at least Ive em my Y Weekly Plenty of In That Doctor said the patient instead of relying upon an electric battery to give me occasional shocks why couldnt I go into Oh you have such violent shocks said the cautious physician Chicago Post He Is a Genius You ought not to be so hard on papa said Miss Kittish really is a very smart young man What is smart about him asked papa He says that he thoroughly under stands the currency Daily News Ode to the Mosquito Musician of the midnight hour Perdition seize thy cruel power Oft has thy buzzing minstrelsy Most to destruction driven me As thou didst wildly hover near Buzzing about my slumbering ear Oh would that I might end it all By smashing thee against the walL Chicago Daily News MIGHT HAVE BEEN WORSE didn a sleepTit Agent ha selfN Shocks thoughtfully 1 r mustnt He questionChic- ago eyes politics Rudolph S Who are you Why ef Im a burglar Oh I was afraid you werethe American- In Demand Do you expect to be as much in de mand among your constituents as usual asked the friend Yes answered Senator Sorghum Im in all kinds of demand Some ol my constituents want to reelect me and some of them want to have me by the grand jury Washing ton Star Her Wifely Encouragement Mrs Gayye My husband gave up al expensive habits a short time ago hew did his eco nomical reform work First rate dear while it lasted He saved up money enough the first week to buy me anew hatjThe Smart Set Different Did you ever enjoy a straw ride in the country No By George old you ought on once I have I sirid I never enjoyed one Puck Up Date Club Dinner hearthat oid Moneybags blew you off to a dinner What like Jumpuppe Simply grand The menu embraced indigestion in at least- a dozen of its forms Town Topics An Esthetic Diversion- Is your new boarding place aristocratic Yes very when we begin to eat corn off the cob our landlady gets up from the table and starts a musicbox to playing Chicago Record Quoted Returned made two speeches at the convention Did you see me quoted Constituent Yes I saw by one ol the papers that a lot of you were at 600 apiece N Y Weekly His Philosophy She I wish I could be as contented- as you He Oh I aint 1 dont think its wuth white to worry about it Puck Different has a vrqnderf c American VA 1 1 plumberChicago his nss BrightAnd I man to- go I to JasperI l DelegateI i ontented nJy r Henpccl voice b s feli3sHalti more l j i f I n0i indicted F wait 5 selling 3 SnarleyDOflU think YowNo = THE MAN SCOLDS He Gives the Guilty Ofllce Girl Some Information About Hia Business The young man whose person was swathed in an impenetrable bandage composed of multitudinous towels stuck one hand out of his lineou prison shook a sampler of his collection fiercely toward the young woman sit ting before the typewriting machine Do you know wfliat it ison this towel he asked relates the Chicago Inter Ocean The ywung woman looked sharply at the multicolored stains that had broken out like a virulent rash on th6 saffron surface of the towel in question It looks like ink she hazarded And thats what it is saidthe man Bed ink black ink blue ink green ink Howd it get there The young woman squirmed Mygujodoiessshjesaid How should I know I didnt put it tihiere The man ceased to wave his war flag and held aloft a clean towel as a sign of truce Im glaU to hear he said I thought mebbe you did know I thought mebbe you put it there your self The girls seem to think towels are made just for straining ink and such things My oih my the uies that office towels put to Bootblacks use tihem to polish shoes scrub women take them for floor cloths and diust rags and you girls use them toY machinerags and general utility purposes Sometimes one of you of mischief ytouve done but its no use to crawfish to me I can tell the guiltj one every pop Its fun though to hear what some of you will say when cornered Why there was a young woman up on the sixth floor of this buildnng who ran out of work the other day and what did she do but dabble the office towels around in a puddle of purple ink for a pastime When I came around on my collecting tour I asked her about it Audi what do you suppose she said Well sir she swore up and down that she had bad the nosebleed and had used all those towels to wipe her nose on Wouldnt thiat jar you You ought- to have heard me talk to her I Laid flown the law to the queens taste Holy smoke said I Youve got the funniestHjolored blood I ever saw And its a wonder to me said I that you dont literally welter in your own gore alosin so much blood as this at The girl had backbone and wouldnt own up but I knew all those purple spots were ink just as well as it seen her playdn in it If you girls knew the first thing about the towelsupply business the man went on in an aggrieved tone you would be more careful upon my word you would Just let me give you- a few statistics as a moral guidance The firm I work for Buts good mar into their ow ls Taut which with the abuse ani office towel is subjected to is worn into tatters in three months Somehow shoe polish and ink will eat holes right through strongest of toweling Our firm handles about 80000 towels a monthj that means 240000 in three months Now if you girls would be reasonably careful those 240000 tow els would last a year easily but with your reckless extravagant ways we have to lay in a new stock four times- a year which brings thefigure up to 1000000 towels that we have to make every 12 months mind you is the number handled by one firm alone When you multiply that by tlhe dozen or more other concerns in the same business you have a total of at least 12000000 towels that are destroyed everyyearbytheindascriminate and even criminal use of ink and shoe blacking Sonvrtimes I think you gina must be in league with the linen mill so that they can get a chance to sell us towel folks 12000000 yards of goods each year instead of 3000000 yards which we could get along with if you girls were not so destructive and would do the right thing by us The girl at the typewriter imxchine turned pale Oh dear she said I had no idea that the towelsupply business had such gigantic proportions I feel for all the world like a thief or a murderer Ill furnish my own tow els after this CONTROLLING SYMPATHY We Have No More Right to Be Prod gal with It Than with Onr Fortunes- It is commonly said that no man or woman can be perfectly happy in this world for if all that was necessary to make one happy fell to his or her lot unhappiness would creep in through seeing the suffering and sorrow of others says A S Atkinson M Br in Womans Home Companion This sympathy with the people around us serves us many valuable lessons and we would not eliminate it from our lives if could But we have no more right to be prodigal with our sympathies and emotions than we have with our fortunes It is as much our duty to hold our powers of sympathizing with others under control as it is to curtail our passions Excessive expenditure of nervous en ergy for others is a crime upon our own natures and we have no authority to justify us in its commission Yet the man or woman who sees only the gloomy side of life will waste energy and emotions in this way if there is no other channel through which they can be expended for self A clear comprehension of the sufferings rim4h world is necessary for our well eilig but undue emotional sympathy over them will accomplish nothing but evil We merely add ing any degree thttt ol the worlSu v TOW t nd Uneasily that axe hItt- ers spongeS will try to wriggle when accuSed the Ihad J last a tlhe aT- tained world e brooding or light In ever I S out onetime trial fha- ith oiihary usagigul ear And that of 1b our osn burden without n iS l i 3 t USED IN THE STATESJ Trains Were Employed Q riffjgally During Ke Civil War WJjjf Jn This Conw ry V JAJS with a great many other utili devices the Americans were the fifst to construct an actual armor pjated train During the civil war 5n the states a mob destroyed the opidges on the Philadelphia Wilming ton Baltimore railway and in order to prevent a recurrence of the disor lefs and to protect the line generally the government hit upon the expedient of converting a long flat baggage car a small movable battery The car built up and covered in with thick Btieet iron in which were pierced a umber of loopholes for musketry Port holes were arranged at the center and at each end and a cannon on a traversing turntable was mounted for duty at each or either of the portholes projectiles used were of a somewhat extraordinary character being nothing more or less than disks cut from boiler plates Perhaps the most effective use of the armored trains up to recent says the hicago Chronicle was made by the French during the siege of s these trains both engines and carriages were bullet proof and contained number of loopholes Each train car laying four small cannon which could be readily and expeditiously maneu yered from the train was capable ofrSiolding 500 men Considerable use was made of these trains in bringing in provisions to the beleaguered Pfenchmen and they were turned to account by the communists afterward against the government troops until hair position was outflanked by heavy aaval guns In the year 1S82 an armored train Yhich was only partially protected by boiler plates and sandbags was used d ainst the Egyptian rebels under Aafabi Pasha A similar contrivance employed at Kassasin previ the British advance on Telel Kebir One operating in Chili during the civil war and a sandbag protected or armed train equipped with a field gun was utilized with in the Sou3an quite recently In Cuba a and truck protected with lihreeeighthsinch boiler plates was n in advance to pilot and protect from the rebels the trains between and Santa Clara The South African armored trains now being employed by the author tics consist of nothing more or less thap ordinary cars covered with from half to threequarters an inch of common steel the locomotives being similarly protected and a placed it front with a gun in advance These trains are of course of little or no use if the line falls into the hands of the enemy a few dynamite cartridges- or the removal of a rail or two as was painfully demonstrated in the recent renctgr them a sbujce more qf danger than service The German emperor has an idea that war cars can be constructed on a plan which he has devised which will enable tnem to traverse at will over a battlefield or territory which does not present impossible difficulties He proposes that each car shall be complete in itself and in size about that of a Pullman The sides are to be cpnstructed to fall just above the level of the ground in order to protect the wheels These plated sides will consist of steel of great force and will be pierced with a requisite number of port or loop holes for quick firing and machine guns and rifles In order that a pos sible enemy may not oe able to get on top pf the car it is to be made with sharp bayonet spikes protruding from the sides and roof The whole idea seems very chimerical but as the worldfamed Krupp is responsible and has now an experimental car in progress it would scarcely be safe to say that there is nothing in the idea CHINAS GREATEST AC1 OR- riia Sir Henry Irving of tile Mongols Has n Great Reputation Tho brighest light upon the stage in China i in many respects a dupli cate of Sir Henry Irving The drama is highly esteemed by the Celestials and those who strut and upon the stage are regarded next in rank to the mandarins says a London exchange- In a severely plain and simple place of amusement in Peking devoid of or namentation of any kind a recent arrival from the flowery kingdom had pleasure of seeing Fon Chong Mai the Sir Henry Irving of China act the leading part in a play entitled Ching WonBohow The plot of this play contains nothing new to an English man familiar with Shakespeare There is scarcely an incident or prov erb in the piece which not recall the work of the great poet Pon Chong Mai is a popular man and a great actor For over 300 years his family has been identified with the actors art and when he acts he is often attired in a costume which an ancestor wore two centuries ago on the stage He is a man of the keenest perception highly educated in Chinese arts and sciences and should he by any misfortune be obliged to quit the stage he could earn his living in al most any business or profession His memory is prodigious and be pos sesses a repertory which includes all the great religious plays of the Mandarin dialect some of them filling scores of volumes Like his great English contempo ary he is a splendid Vacation EcqnomjV While away Kitty you saved houst money of course i vjgfs Harry albtf bu f red c t ian was years r also to C lon ter to the a he ao s Iwas l 1 on ice Ort 1Ii PeftQt- Q i Q T 4 i Pain oi locomotive cir fufe1cin 1raiu would geographical resisting rel companion- saved It all FIe 5 I Hamijbton theological seminary claims to be the oldest Baptist seminary in the world Among the 569 at the University of Lausanne this summer thero are women but of these only five ara Bvd s 55 being Russian women and o- thesO 44 are studying medicine John H Smith the only native of Finland on the police force of New York city recently secured the permission of the elders of Calvary Presbyterian church of that city to hold services for his countrymen in the church building- on Sunday afternoons The Finland ers of New York never have had a place of worship The general Presbyterian assembly- of 1900 meeting at St Louis to celebrate the advant of the new century by special services to beheld in connection with the session of the assembly at Philadelphia in 1901 part of this celebration will be a report upon the twentieth century memorial fund which the general assembly authorized Colgate university has had no addition to its endowment during the past year though several large gifts have added to itsworking equipment among these the new presidents house just completed at a cost of about 27000 and an addition to the campus valued at about 4000 The endowment proper has increased by natural growth un der the provisions of gift of the Dodge meTnorial fund about 20000 According to the latest authorities there are TO distinct churches of the Presbyterian family These embrace- in round numbers 29800 congregations 26600 ministers 127000 elders 4900 000 communicants 337000 Sabbatih school teachers 3500000 pupils The Presbyterian churches contribute for home work 32090205 and about 35 640700 for foreign missions They support S40 ordained foreign missionaries 1306 medical missionaries 465 ordained native workers and have among the heathen over 148000 pupils AND CHURCH HE JUST PLAYED ON A Terre Haute Musician Who Tooted Defiance at the Bolts of Jupiter Over in Terre Haute on the banks of the Wabash there is a brass band which has for a good many years borne the reputation of being one of the best if not the best in the state Whenever this band appears in the streets of Terre Hante or any other city in Indiana it is sure to attract- a crowd and the quality of the music it renders makes this fact easily ac counted for says the Indianapolis News The band has a solo alto player who is a genius in his He can play anything that can be into or scratched with a bow and his part in the music by the band is always aAfjimportanl pne lphis artist is a German more Or less jphlegmt tic in temperament It has often been said that nothing seemed to rattie him when out with the band and hiftstolidi ty in the face of accidents is a byword with the other members of the band have run into the parade runaway horses and teams have scat tered the other members of the band like chaff before the wind but the solo alto kept serenely on without even los ing step The other memberS of the band iQok on Gus as a kind of uncanny being absolutely devoid of nerves On a recent Sunday the band was engaged to play at the baseball park in Terre Haute and wlyle waiting for the car that was to take them out a storm came up The band went to Sev enth and Main streets to wait till the clouds rolled by and while waiting they gave the guests of the Terre Haute house at the corner a serenajIe Sev eral selections were played but still tIle rain kept up or down and lightning began to blaze Finally as the band was getting in best licks at On the Banks of the Wabash the storm reached its climax The front the hotel is ornamented with several towers above the fourth story and just as Gus was beating down strong- on the solo part of the air so dear to Terre Haute people lightning struck one of the towers and ran down the front of the building The bolt was of sufficient force to create a panic Chairs were overturned and their oc cupants knocked galley west tiling from the roof felt in a shower and the members of the band were hurled into the street or against the wall of the hotel man who operates the tuba was thrown into the middle of the street car tracks arid others were lying around in more or less picturesque attitudes for half as block All except Gus When the smoke cleared away there stood the solo alto playing as if nothing had happened and competent witnesses declare that he never missed a note With his eyes hall closed he was blowing away at The Banks of the Wabash and not until he reached the end did he pause looked around for the rest of the band and askedin a surprised tUlle Vots de matter off you fellers Nobody has told him yet they say It wouldnt be any use because Dewey- on the bridge at Manila was in a panic compared to Gus Value of the Museums Education lain mainly in the Exjhoolroom and the lectureroom in the study and the library the oppor tunities of museums and exhibition and of travel commonly come too late to be of much real use Here as in some other respects our children are more fortunate and are having not only a better time at school now but are obtaining a better preparation also They are going to the to the city and to the country they are often learning first to observe keenly to re rnentber vividly to interpret shrewdly and to question v to read afterward nteroaTion SCHOOL stude 1 4 Animportant wa blow Streetcars it Th away Then- h baying hunt 1 7g 4t I L ts determined oft muslims tont2t1y 5 r 1HARLESD WEBB J Special attention given to Collectlbxyr Office on Broadway PARIS KENTUCKY IHAKLES B DlpKSON DENTIST Office over the Bourbon Bank PARIS KENTUCKY PHILIP 1 DENTIST Office In Agricultural Dank building Can be found at office at DENTIST Office No Broadway j PARIS KENTUCKY J WHXIAMS Office in Simm Building PARIS KENTUCKY WM KBNNTEY M PHYSICIAN SURGEON V Office in Agricultural Bank Building 7 to 10amOFFICE HOURS 2 to 4 p m 7 to 8 p m- L Ns E ARRIVAL Of TRAINS t From Cincinnati 1058 a m 1010 si From Lexington 511 a m 745a m f833 p m 027 p m From 505 a m 740 a mjj 828 p m From 742 m m 825 p a DEPARTURE OF TRAINS To Cincinnati 515 751 outl 840 m Eo Lexington 747 am 1105 a m 545 1014 Co Richmond 1108 a m 548 p roj 1016 p m Co Mayaville 750 a m 685 p m F B CARR Agent EERrSSTOTEiHDTlSSTl JEST c- I ATTORNEYA LAW FOLEY J JeT MMlLLAN v JOHN ATTORNEYAT LAW D I- BAILnOAD TIME t l I a m L ni p ni THE il PRflrESsIISLcUE S i SS 7S I CA1ilj pin EREAT THE GREAT I have a complete line of the great Majestic ranges For gas fittings bouse window screens refrigerators etc can give the best line for the least mon BENJ PERRY PARIS KY ELKHORN ROUTE LOCAL TIME CARD IN EFFECT DEOEilBEtt TH 188- JEA8T BOUND i No 1 I No 8 i No POM PMS Mixed ye Frankfort a 7 uuum a itipJii i vpL Lvo Flkborn 7 Uam 3 52ppa 1 20pm 4 CQpna 1 Lve Mtamplnsr Grnd 7 2 om 4 1 65pia Lye 724am 4 Lve Johnson 739am 422pm Lve Georgetown LTO C 8 R b 7 50am 4 SSpm V 00p Lve Newtpwn 8 17ara 4 j- LveEllxabeth 8 80am Arr Paris o I 840aml 610pm f- VfSffl BOUND T- foa I No 4 i PM Mixed LvePartao 9 Warn 4upm rLve Elizabeth 1 Ive Centrerllle 555pm i 963am Lve C 8 Ry b 1024am srrpra 7fiOaBkt Lve Georgetown 10 33am 6 20pm 7 61am Lvo Johnson JQX7am Lvo Duvall 10 4Sam 6 82pm Lve Stamping Grnd 1C 50am 6 8 Slam ll07am 855am- rrFntnkforta 7 10pm 9 15ant Dally except Sunday a Connects L fc N bconnects with Gk- C connects with Ky Central KENTUCKY VENTRAL POINTS 340 7 0 Lr Frankfort Ari r2u 7V 4 1 7 0 LT Georgetown ArlOr28 617 510 840 AT Pins LT 0 0 40 8 0 Ar Lv 545 616 114S Ar Lv 709 355 720 100 Ar Klchmond Lv 2Oa GEO B HARPER Qenll JOB X G P A My agency laenres ajalmstVJe- SJSBSJ MAJESTIC furnisht Csl plumbing metal roofing door Y r Frankfort Cincinnati RYif 5 Lye Switzer 7 Uam 7 Sam 2 Lve I 4 l 6 OOpm 9 tOam t 9 LV Newton pm tve ii QOhi Lye Elkhom 6l 11 SOam Winchester 20 Sup NB W TON slid stwaool1i old W- nmpt eoIOl Arj tJ a 4 fi0p 825am pm rT-I 5 4arn i 6 8 40ua PLIAM 1M iriS win 0 W THE BOURBON NEWS PARiS KY TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 18 19CO4 1 H K t s 4 0 Twentieth 188- 1BWIFT CHAMP f Editors and Owners DEMOCRATIC TICKET For President JEON W J BRYAN For Vice President STEVENSON Of Illinois For w B MOODY- Of Henry County For j C W BECKHAM v Of Bardstown ANNOUNCEMENTS JAILER We are authorized to announce WM C DODSON as a candidate for Jailer of 3krafborTCounty subject to the action of the Democratic party We are authorized t6 announce GEQ- 3V JUDY as a candidate for Jailer Bourbon County subject to the action of the Democratic party We are authorized to announce W H BOONS as a candidate for Jailer sub ject to the action of the Democratic party We are authorized to announce WM- Bx NICKELS as a candidate for Jailor of Bourbon County subject to the action of the Democratic party We are are authorized to announce SAML T JAMES as a candidate for Jailer of Bourbon subject to the action of the Democratic party Frank Duvall of Raddles Mills be my deputy ASSESSOR We are authorized to announce W B RNOKARD as as a candidate for Assessor c Bourbon County subject to the action of the Democratic party We are authorized to announce HAR VSY HIBLER of Paris as a candidate for Assessor of Bourbon Coanty with HENRY Ii CAYWOOD of north as deputy subject to the actioa of the Democratic party We are authorized to announce CHAS PBDDICORD as a candidate for the office of Assessor subject to the action of the Democratic party If elected my will be W G McClinteck Political Topics David B will speakin the Third Indiana District Hon J Y Yerkee speaks at Cynthi ana on the 24th The nest Indiana Legislature will be jQemocralic by twelve majority Senator Deboe is announced to speak atMadispnville and Hartford tomorrow Democrats of Bardstown will give a grand barbecue Saturday 6 Jones of Toledo is out in a card denouncing the Republican admin arid declaring his support of JMr Bryan V Mr Bryan spoke Saturday night at Sfc Louis to 15000 at the Coliseum Hall The meeting was under the auspices of the National Democratic Committee of Commercial Travelers Beckham and Wheeler spoke at Bowling Green Friday night to what was largest political gathering in the history of the Third district The crowd was esti mated at from 8090 to 9000 Bryan and Beckham Clubs are all the go Eight clubs with a membership of 1231 have been organized in Daviess county Bowling Green has a club of 250 members and Midway has one with 100 The Democratic Committee of the Seventh Appellate District met Sterling Saturday and issued a call for a convention at Winchester September 29 to nominate a candidate for Appellate Judge County conventions will beheld Sebtember 24 W J Bryan spoke to 15000 people from an old band stand Friday at Columbus O The meeting was a great contrast to the Hanna speaking fat Youngstown where 3000 people gath ered to hear Hanno speak from a special 43000 see the big parade with costly floats A Cool Million dispatcll from New York Saturday Richard Croker called at headquarters of the Democratic State Committee taking with him iarmony joy and report has it flOpJ 000 in money It was the first time since Bryans nomination that the Tammany chieftain had visited the State Executive Com mittee headquarters where the friends of Senator Hill are charge There was a long conference Mr Croker said he would call at the headquarters daily and spend all the time with the committee that they would allow him to He expressed himself as very con fident of the Democrats carrying New York State Senator James K Jones Chairman of the Democratic National went to Washington today with Representative James Richardson He will return on hnd rill going West i OURBOR JEWS YearEstablished PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY CHAMP fN Qr LAI y r f fidd1 town The o Gov congreSsman probably the I at JIt standand A said to daY r in Committee D M ave 1 I lEt t WALTER 1ca 1 deputy Hill October fie or ration the send daYs here before The Legislature THE Senate did not meet Saturday and the House adjourned ac complishing anything Beginning today there will probably be lively sessions of the Senate and House as the work will be transferred from the committees- to the floors of the two bodies at least until the appointment of conference committees by which means an effort will be made to reach an agreement between Senate and House WE are prepared to paint buggies carriages etc in class style at reasonable priscos E J MoKiaiEY SON Ladies buy you a pair of good shoes at costbefore I move HARRY SIMON Thieves stole all of Eld Howard Grees clothing while he was absent from his home in Maysville A young ladies oratorial contest will be held at Nicholasville on the 28th for a prize of a diamond ring The con testants will be Miss Marie Griffin Lexington Miss Katie Haselden Dan ville Miss M E Allen Millersburg Miss White Walnut Hills Miss Margie Rue Harrodsburg Miss Lillian Armstrong Flemingsburg Versailles Ladies will organize a stock company to build an opera nouse Tlie shares will be 10 each 4 v Any advertised dealer is authorized to guarantee Banner Salve for letter czema piles sprains cuts scalds burns ulcers and open or old sore Clarke Kenney A Few Corn Extras Born oysters are good if properly made Half grate on a rather fine grater eight ears of corn that Is neither young nor very old scraping out all the remaining pulp from the hulls on the cob Add to this the beaten yolks of two eggs one level teaspoonful of salt onefourth as mudh pepper and the whites of the eggs beaten to a stiff froth Fry in little cakes shaped like oysters in a spider in sweet leaf lard hot enough not to soak into the batter readily If the corn is so watery that the cakes spread too much add dust to make the batter stiffer Use neither milk nor Morris Kretschmar in Womans Home Calve Slept at Windsor If Calve did win a wager of 1000 by sleeping at Windsor castle the night she sang there for the queens entertainment she will probably not be Invited soon again It is Queen Vic torias custom on these occasions to send the performers back on the evening Mme Calve the story bad such a cold was invited to remain She is Said to have wagered 10 against 1000 with Alfred Rothschild that sbe cwild do ILi New cut steel buckles are most of them long and come in a variety of shapes Some of them are made to stand upright and have only one end Intended to be visible This is a pretty ornamental point from which the restof the buckle broadens out It has long been rumored that the bolero would disappear This is not yet the fact It has however changed its form and is quite short at the back leaving the hips bare but the long fronts often extend some inches below the waist line Mine Ada Adini who Is achieving Paine as one of the most distinguished Brunhildes of the foreign stage is an American by birth Her home is in Paris and her husband M Libmet is publisher of Le Monde Artiste Illustre Amy Wintcrgreen the first vol nurse to go from Chicago to Cuba and Miss Adele Pinner have charge of the nurses at the emergency hospital recently opened by the Chicago Womens Medical club People who at night are troubled by mosquitoes should rub camphor on the pillow to prevent themselves being stung A little spirit of camphor rub bed over the face answers the same purpose J I flourElla Companion U that Sp l a f cracker same according to cut Miss Public Sale I will sell at the court house door for The Midland Savings and Loan on Saturday September 1 Two Frame Cottages with lots 50x150 feet each on Lillestan Will be offered separately then together A T YTHet SHEEt FOR SALE ewes Nearly all black faces BISHOP HIBLER 3SRO The most fastidious epicure in Kentucky can find a Hundred things to please his palate at our store known to fancy grocers always instock All goods fresh andall orders filledprompt ly Name your menu then call us up well do the rest I I Two hundred and gool- fPI it 5 t easers I Everything Saloshin CO Association venue t t ve Palate t The Harvest Is Ripe 1 2500000W- ill be paid by the CINCINNATI for nearest correct answers on the Population of the United States for 1900 Each ten years the Census report shows as follows Year Population Year Population 1810 7239881 1 SO 31443321 1330 12SVG020 1880 501557 3 1840 17069453 1890 62622250 1850 23191876 1900 Guest will be the population of the United States excluding recent acqui sitions but the States Terri tories and the District of Columbia fp the nearest correct guess received 3000iG To the second 150000 To the third 75006 To the fourth 500 oc To the fifth 250OC V 20001 To the seventh 1500C To the next 10 eachl100 amounting to 100000 To the next 50 each 50 to 25000 To the next 100 each 25 amonnting to 25C3 OC To the next 500 each 10 amounting to 5QOOQ To the next 1530 each 5 amounting to 765000 Total number ef premium 2197 amounting to 25 OOOOC 100 for a years subscription to the WEEKLY ENQUIRER must each Eleven yearly subscriptions and eleven guesses for 1000 In case of a tie money equally divided This Contest will close October 31 1900 See WEEKLY ENQUIRER for full particulars ENQUIRER COMPANY Cin cinnati O ENQUIRER I 18209633822 1870 38558371 What oJ To the accompany guess i sixth n Dont For Wf SELL THE CELEBRATED Just a Jt jy- kt Radiant Horne s tE- I LQwrv0 J Mom nt I 14 1t- r 1 We want to show you our Line of PURE SPICES We think that you will be sure to buy when you have inspected our goods Pickling season is near and to use cheap spices Our Spices are guaranteed pure We have our own make of pure Apple Vinegar aud the H J Heinzs Spiced Apple Viuegar If you want nice pickles use Ht inzs Spiced Vinegar People are delighted with Magic Oil it saves so much chimney cleaning If you v ant your to have pure fresh Candies Send them to us PRATHERS 431 MAIN ST PARIS KY you cant atlord I i I cuct r hand Y HE Summer harvest is now all ripe and the time is here to gather it and prepare for winter Dont forget that you will need good shoes for the coming Winter and dont forgot that ye keep the best stpjjk of them in of Qhildrens Misses and Boys school shoes was never better and TVO were never better prepared to fit your little ones with shoes that will f comfort and good wear You will also find v 1 J r rlinePails give So is cur hanest for Shoe for the school children Prices are low rang ing from 50c for Infants Shoes to 200 for Misses Quality always the x BEST for the prices asked our prices very satisfactory to the ono who pays bill Cor Fourth and Maiii Sts faris Ky the ClayS 111111 elieII lie11110811 11 1IlIel lie Laoe tore FKAJVK CO LEADERS OF STYLE AND FASHION SUITABLE FOR MAKING SUITS AND SEPARATE SKIRTS J- iAre very and desirable this We have a vory large stock of the above in Doublefaced Materials Blacks Oxfords Blues Browns and Castos Shades Also a Complete line of Singlefaced Goods in Extra Heavy Weights Goods are to without linings yv f 9- v Frank Go 494 Sii eei7 PARIS KY c fID JIgYJ DRESS GOOn J t tl t J t- l att rr- zAg nh fDrBut rick P thfn d D rt- J IF t J iEijt scarce season Thee above be made ups r 1ito t Get Left Belinid float By not keeping your eyes open to the gpod things that I J am offering think it over too long because the prices I am making you on e GoCarts Wall Paper Dont last always Come anyway Hammocks I Refrigerators Carpets j i ort Carriages ands a 4 and laok f Undertaking in branches Embalming scientifically to Carriages for hire Furniture repaired Household oods moved VOOD MANTELS TILINGS always on hand TELEPHONE NO 36 allits and attended I can furnish you at any an experience man for H work J LAMPS in CentraiSteiituckyT- IGHT PHONE322 OR 56 to that OrTHE J T HINtON Y nHn iiiiniiiHiriiiiiiiiiiiiiniiuiUiiiH v j I have also lust added the CE in State to large of yehicles andfitis ready to anstf yourcalls at any time v 1lB I j 1 I I I hand m theso est aheady stock THE BOURBON NEWS PARIS 3 TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 1 1900 c f 0 L 5 Til Illltll liltth Year JEstablibhed 1881 Entered at the Postoffice at Paris Ky as second class mall matter TELEPHONE NO 124 SUBSCRIPTION PRICES Payable in Advance Onayear S200 SlTTnonth8 liO Make all Checks Money Orders Etc aable to the order of CHAMP BRO QUARTERLY court begins this morn esLiGOttfeoitSwere reported yesterday in Mason Fleming and Bath Every pair of school shoes that I sell is warranted HARRY SIMON thiiareh their new shoes while Harry Simon is selling them at cost the 24th will be the Year Price Cos store will be closed on that day A colored lodge of Elks was organized- in Paris last week Buck Freeman is the leading spirit in the lodge ABOUT six hundred colored people from Pasas attended the colored fair at Lexington Friday and Saturday WET said damaged wheat We prepared to handle grain See u before E F SPEARS ONS IHave few good buggies yet hand which I close out at cost JESSES HAGGARD WE hare a few tired buggy wheels for sale six dollars per set 15mayt E J MAY SON FOUR Mormon elders iiave been hold ing nicely meetings in Winchester and are anid to have aaade a few converts A FULL attendance is desired at the Baptist Ghurola when action win be taken in regard to a pastor SHoEs tat please in style fit am price ale what the wants All guaranteed at Davis Thomp son decStf LOST Staall memorandum no use to anybody but owner Finder please leave at THE NEWS ffice liberal reward WANTED Copies of THE NEWS of July 13 and 31st any subscriber who has them send them in to THE NEWS office THE City Council has ordered a fire alarm box placed at the Grand Opera THousfe corner ahdhas bou lsi r hundred feet of new rubber hpse THE Adams Express Co will hold an old hoss sale at Winchester on Octo ber 18th when the unclaimed packages from eightyfive Kentucky offices will resold Ti Paris stockholders in defunct Southern Building and Loan Association at Knoxville were made hapey yes the receipt of another too per cent dividend THE L N will run an excursion from Cincinnati to Natnral Bridge on Sunday Sept 23d at 150 the from Paris Train passes this city at 940 a i CHAS Hurl asks all of his patrons wiiQ have overcoats to be cleaned and pressed to bring them in early before the rush begins All work guaranteed to be satisfactory SEED WHEAT FOR have some fine Northern seed wheat of extra fine quality Nothing T5ut wheat Call to see us before buying Imo PARIS MILLING Co THOIIAS BEOS opposite Windsor Hotel are prepared to clean and press Fall and Winter clothing and overcoats making them look like new Send your work in early so you can getit promptly Dyeing a specialty WANTED Fifty acres of corn with lot to feed on Also wish to rent a farm 300 to 500 acres of laud from due to three years money rent Address lockbox 867 Paris Ky 4sep4t FOR SALE Scholarship to Com mercial College of college Also scholarship to Lexington Business College Good chance to secure scholarship at reduced price cooler weather has come do not fail to visit Whitlpoks gallery if you want strictly firstclass pictures An experienced operator in charge and satisfaction guaranteed Gallery in Agricultural Bank building PARIS between two circuses and is several thousand d liars better off because neither shew came here The Wallace circus exhibited at Maysville and the John Robinson slfow amused a large crowd at Lexington WARRREN yesterday received frc m E G Norton of Eustis Fla the skn of a rattle snake which was seven felt and three inches in Length The snake was killed ly Mr Norton and i iCovered by Mr Bacons dog whichhe was training The skin is on exhibition in Parker James show window Iwen Buy your Jewish New are on Sunday 1 some c earthly and get 00 u the terdayfby Ct tI SALEWe II Kentucky WilburSmiths Nowthat BACO W if i L NEr Today a zit 1 r sgrig 4 w round- trip i was yesterday i r L s + Rev Manns Farewell Sermon A large crowd gathered at the Metho diSt Church Sunday night to hear Revs E G B Mann deliver his farewell sermon Rev Maiinstext was I have yet many things to say unto you but we cannot bear them John 1612 The was earnest and powerful and his closing remarks affected his many friends During his paptonite the congregation has erected a beautiful 17000 church buHld- iiisr ami IW credit for his efforto in raising the money During the past month he has hopes to raise the balance less than f500 before be leaves tomorroW morn ing for Conference Rev Mann has many friends to his departure and to wish him much success wherever he may go Judge Webbs Sentences Wilson Porter Wes Berry and Geo Johnson were each 7SO in Judge Webbs court for using profane in sulting language Roe Davis was fined fifteen dollars yesterday morning for chewing a piece out of hit Lest girls Jim Spears colored was taxed ten dollars for exposing his person was fined 2750 for a gun and was entenced to ten days in jail Chas Hughes drew a 750 prize for a breach of the peace Zeke Carter got one of the same value for being disor derly and Louis Johnson was also taxed 750 for fighting Ed Skinner was soaked for a tenner for disorderly and hawing on his fighting garments- A Constables Caper YESTERDAY morning a constable from Georgetown or Cynthiana came here in search of a man wanted for horsesteal The constable found his man in a street saloon and before leaving the place they had a couple of drinks at the expense of the prisoner On the to the Paris jail they stopped in at had two more rounds of liquor at the prisoners expense The constable became so joyful jthatx he tore up the warrant despite the prisoners protest They both left the place together and started out of town Diligent inquiry failed to reveal the mames of either man City Property SolI SATURDAY Auctioneer A T Forsyth sold B January his twostory brick residence on corner of Seventh and High streets to Frank Bedford of this pity for four thousand five dollars Auctioneer Fcrsyth also sold on Saturday the residence of the late Mrs Mary B Owen avenue to Mr Rudolph Davis The price paid was U20 Two cottages on Lilleston avenue property of the Midland Savings Asso ciation were sold by auctioneer Forsyth- to Mrs Rachael Ashbrook for 535 A Invalid Swindler THE warns Jbhe public to watch for a smooth individual who is people of sympathetic natures He travels as an invalid without means en route to healthier climates gains ad mission to residences where ne is given foQd and shelter and then skips out with any valuables he can find on the premise A good deal of money considerable jewelry and a number of watches have been stolen by him The rascal is described as about five feet ten inches in height weighs 180 to 135 pounds lightcomplexioned and has a hacking cough i i For Stricken Galveston Tint Paris Literary Club has under aken to raise money for the suffering people of stormstricken Galveston and appeals to the public to give liberally Mrs Win Myall Mrs John Stuart arid Mrs Brice Steele have been appointed a to receive and solicit funds Donations can be given to the committee or left at the Citizens Bank I The City win be asked to donate P c v f fw fVmrK Five Children Poisoned j TJIREE children of Mr Pigg and two children of Will Jacob living on Dorsey Rays farm were very ill Sunday from ptomaine poison in vanilla icecream The parents of the children ate the ice cream but were not made sick Mrs Pigg took extra precautions in making the icecream because she had read just a week ago of ptomaine poison The children were waited on by Dr Wm Kenney Tlie Huddles Mills Burgoo THE burgoo given Saturday by tie Damocrats of Ruddles Mills in Ed Bed fords woods an event There were about two hundred persons present and the burgoo was pronounced exceptionally fine Speeches were made by Mr Horace Miller Judge Smith Mr F L McChesney pf this city About twenty Parisians attended the burgoo Bryan at Cyutliiaria THE Cynthiana Democrat states from reliable authority that Hon W J will spek in that city on some date between October 1st and 15th It will be an allday rally and the Maiden be visited by the largest cro d inJior history now Mann great raised nearly 4 00 dueon thefchurch and 1 GeorgeJohnson ing Main w 4 forE N ws I I Council I I r was I Dem ieratio Oft d l i i sermon deserves regret I another bar and r and on Duncan victimizing committee i arid BrYan S T8B M0 3 THRONG Notes Guests Arrivals aiift Departures Societys Doings Mrs Ben Holt left yesterday for Louisville Mr Sam Clay has returned from White Sulphur Springs Va Dr A Robertson of Louisiana is the guest of Dr Silas Evans Miss Laura Estill of Lexington ii5 the guest of Miss Kate Alexander Miss Carrie Frank left Saturday for a visit to friends and relatives in Louisville Mr and Mrs Speed Hibler Save returned home from a visit in West Vir giniaMrs Newton Mitchell left for a visit to relatives in Shelby county E Simms and daughter Miss Lucy Simms left yesterday for Louisville Mr Jbl T Hinton went over to Olympian Springs Saturday to remain until today Mrs Allen Kiser who has been dangerously ill for several days was re ported better yesterday- Mr C W Townsend the well known newspaper man of Lexington- was in the city Saturday Miss Tillie Toolen has gone to Terre Haute Ind to accept a with millinery establishment Mrs F B Carr and daughter ar rived home yesterday afternoon from a short visiHn Richmond Mr and Mrs A Woolstein of Cyn thiana were guests of Mr and Mrs L Woolstein in this city Sunday v Miss Elizabeth Skilhnan of North Middletown is the handsome guest Qf Miss Iva Colluis on Eighth street W E Williams and children returned Saturday to Midway after a visit at Mr J H Lettons near Paris Mr and Mrs Amos Turney and daughter Miss Jessie Turney arrived home Saturday night from Sheepshead BayMr arrived yesterday afternoon from St Louis to visit his brother Mr R J Neely on Duncan avenue Mr F H Dudley of Winchester was in the city Saturday to sell Mrs Mary Owens residence on Duncan Mr Jennings Greenleaf and Miss i Van Greenleaf of Richmond j guests of Miss Lizzette Dickson Satur j day afternoon Misses Kato Alexander ancQNannfhe MI f ington Friday aighir Mrs George Crosdale and Rena and sister Miss Ida Arkle hays j arrived home from their trip to Detroit Toronto and other cities Hopson Lowry arrived home Sunday from Washingtbn D C where he has been for some time learning operate a lineetype machine Miss Olive Fant came up front Flemingsburg yesterday afternoon to be the guest of Miss Lizzie Mannen Tur fey and attend the two germans this- week Mr and Mrs George Bell Messrs Frank Carr E T Hinton Charles Wilmoth Clell Turnoy and Judge H C arrived home yesterday from Olympian Springs Phil Terry formerly of city sails today from New York London on the Kaiser Maria Theresa Mr Terry is starting for Japan on his fourth trip around the world Mrs Wm Robinson and son Mr- Lauham obinson who have been visiting Mr and Mrs John Gass on avenue left yesterday for Lbuijs ville accompanied by Miss Mary Webb Gass i A dozen or more society young ladies of this city gave a swell last night at Odd Fellows Hall in com pliment to the Jolljv Bachelors Club There were about twenty couples present The music for the dance was by orchestra of Lexington The Bachelors will give a return german at Odd Hall tomorrow nigt Saxton will also play for this function A telegram from Carlisle states that Jasper Simms aged fifteen suffered so intensely with his eyes that just before his death they protruded and lay on his cheeks swollen and distorted Mr Coming HON JOHN W YERKES Republican candidate for Governor is scheduled to speak in this city o i Tresday afternoon Sept 25th at two oclock WHITLOCKS phct gallery in the Agricultural Bank building is getting business from every point in the county and is giving excellent satisfaction Mr Young the artist in charge is thor oughly uptodate in his work and is especially srccessful in photographing the little folks- I beg to inform the public that I am a constant buyer Igr cash of old Line Life Insurance policies including endownijiut pr- discriuutions running or paid up Paris Ky if S iJ j Mrs W position a MI s Sam Neely I I t pf naura- t1l fen t ger lr1 i I I i I i Howard Mr this for I Sa tons graph I ront nlllelY dciJ 5c 4 i t t I x About Our n yester- daY avenue K were 5 will be gne Mrs s d C an iii Lem daughter Duncan german furnished FelloWs YerIces o The Pair SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY Never before has any house attempted- to offer the values we propose to offer you this season Those who our advicewill be benefited Dont spend a dollar for merchandise until you have studied our prices and compare them yith those of other houses Silver steel knives and forks will wear anti not tarnish per set 79c imported fancy handle scissors a bargain 23c music rolls 48 und clock ornaments cut to 69c rolled plate collar buttons worth 5c a dozen at 2c a dozen childs set of knife fork and spoon in a telescope box worth iSSc now at lOc ammonia large lOci rolling pins 8c blacking brushes value at 25c now extra fiber whisk brooms 9c all colors in childrens celluloid round combs 3c red rubber balls 4c bicycle wrench 8c tape lines 50 foot long 22c wood mouse traps each 3c large A B C plates each 4c large 15c fruit sieve at 9c school black boaru erasers 5c bisque dolls movable limbs each 5c kid body dolls 10 inches long with shoes and stockings a bargain each 8c water proof school satchels clasp and neck band at 3c and5c Japanese tooth picks 3c a box Wall paper paper 1 Get our prices THE FAIR REDUCED fare round trip plus 200 Kansas City via Big Four Quickest time best dining car service Only 18 hours and 40 minutes from Cincinnati to Kansas City On account of National Conventions of the Christian Church tickets will be sold from all points on the Big Four Route on October 10V 12 and 14 available return from Kansas City on the date of execution by Joint Agent for which a fee of fifty cents will be charged but not later than Oct 20th at one fare plus 200 for the round Trains leave Cincinnati from Central Union Station and enter St Louis over the New Merchants Bridge avoiding the tunnel and make connections in the magnificent Union Depot St Louis with all Western lines Lv Cincinnati d8 80am 72 20pm d8 Ar St Louis 645pm 94pm 730am 700am 700am 530pm d Daily f Except Sunday Remember passengers from the South make connections in Cincinnati in the Central Union Statipn and in St Louis in the Union Depot the largest in the world Famous NoonDay Train unequaled for service and equipment The fine track and roadbed of the Big Four is unsurpassed Warren J Lynch Gen Pass and Tkt Agt W P Deppe Asst Gen Pass Southern Agt Cincinnati O C C Traveling Pass Agt Chattanooga Tenn loseptd- V Y BIRTHS AtTuscumbia Mo five sons were born to Mrs Henry Smith at one birth babes weighed thirty pounds In Sejen years has given birth Otsixjfeen Ghildren two Pairs of twins of triplets a guuitefr- orn last week MATTERS MATK1MONIA1 The marriage of Miss Belle McDowell DtdElichmond and Mr C M Woodbury President of the Mingo Coal and Coke Company of Middlesboro will be solemnized in Richmond tomorrow Grand Opera House L H RAMSEY Lessee and E S PORTER Resident Manager ONE WEEK Cofflffleiidng Sept 17 THE EVENT OF THE SEASON GRAHAM EARLE AND MARGUERITE EARLE Supported by a Strong Company of Six teen People To night will be presented the The Country filrf Nothing New and Popular Plays PRICESloc and 2oc On Saturday evening a Ten Dollar Gold Piece will be given away Every person purchasing a ticket throughout the week will receive a number entitling them to a chance At the Saturday Matinee a Solid Sil ver Watch will be given away The Bourbon Court of Claims will meet Thursday October 4th All persons holding claims against Bourbon are hereby that they are required to file same in my office on or before Mondav 24th DENIS DUNDON County Attorney WANTEDFi- fty bushels of hand stripped bue seed Will pay fifty cents per bushel M B LOVELL Paris Ky Mare Taken Up Brown mare six or seven yearsx d taken up at our stable Cwuer must advertising charges etc Paris 1 C hat dsome now 6c 14c I I RATEsOne triJ Ar KanssCity Agt JE c MrsSmith J But Fan LAIM I notif ed ept pay tiOV r r Y j size for Tkt Reeves eneral Clark a The twq pairs f r evening o 6L QQRT Of fil Y1Ila7 J- X + You want a new Dress or Separate Skirt Why not buy it now when you can find a large arid well selected stock of ZIBLINE3 TWEEDS SCOTCH CASSIMEES COVERTS Come in and let hs talk to you on the above subject- sa mmmmmm m mmmmtmrng Sin Mens Everything thats wearable and him in alluring and newest fashions with prices sort that make purchases awaL your inspection We have rather more to choose from and prettier than weve had some other seasons You know that this means a deal of attractiveness with a good range of very prices PARKER JAMES S Y M B 0 D iUUUUUUU UUAi UiUlUUUUUUK- e S Root eS8 I c o 4- Gm TUCKERm c urnishingsQ I Nei Goods v 4correct- or F == = 0C a 1S 0W Put One minute No on In Sewin Fits Frame any V 100 fora new = A J WINTERS CO uUlm TlIJ SILKi f i D- Ad astable o i Will exercise good judgment in buying her groceries getting only the freshest and best Being next door to a wholesale grocery we keep the very best and freshest goods to be bought If we havent what order it only takes a moment to get it We have many Summer dainities for the table and will be glad to tell you of them Our Phone is Orders filled The melancholy days have come the saddest of the year But not ready for them until you have seen our PALL SUITS and OVERCOATS for Men Boys at prices within the reach of every one SPECIAL Boys Odd Knee at 250 THE HOWARD HAT in Fall style are ready for your PRICE CO Dan Jordan Clerk A WISE WOMAN you I IJQW 5PftPtRS Ihur I and dren pants I ft 1- oIf i c FrorF1T areYau i H chi I w 1 4 e w j THE BOURBON NEWS PARS KY TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 18 1900 3 THE BOURBON NEWS Nineteenth Year Established 188L Publshed every Tuesday and Friday SWIFT CHAMP Editors and Owner NIGHT ON A CATTLE RANGE Theres a weirdlike charm n the night on the breast of the western Where a stillrfess falls like a veil of peace day in its glory wanes Where the night breeze kisses the fevered earth and the gems of the ream With their twinkling sparkles of light till the heavens with beauty teem The heart beats soft with a soothing sense of freedom and calm delight As we lie and gaze at the vhippoorwilla oerhead in their playful flight Where the grasses rustle a lullaby by the breath of the night wind stirred And the dogwolf howls in the sandy hills and the cowboy sings to his CC there the breast ofa rising slope the in uqiet lie Nor raise their heads when the shadowy form of the rIder passes them by But close their eyes when the soothing song of the tireless watcher they hear song that tells them to lie in peace no danger is lurking The weary man from the citys noise OK the grass in his blanket lies And reads a story of peaceful rest on the scroll of the starlit skies And dreamily watches the fitful flight of the restless nocturnal bird Where the dogwolf howls in the sandy hills and the cowboy sings to his herd How noar to the presence of God we feel How sacred the stillness seems How the wearied soul in its newfound rest with the joy of existence teems How we almost think we can see the faco of the Father of All up there In a twinkling frame of the silent stars that jewel the midnight air What fancies fill the delighted brain as we float on a dreamy sea- To the mystic shadows of Slumberland from the cares of the earth set free Float on till the last dim vision of earth by the finger of sleep is blurred Where the dogwolf howls In the sandy Kills and the cowboy sings to his herd James Barton Adams in Denver Post Lifting the Shadowy fourthstory lodger was always Great boxes of flowers and chffons came to her room to be sent out agavin in bewildering creations tied up in dainty white boxes marked E Downing milliner But no one ver came to her rooms except her customers to the great surprise of the curious old lady who in the rear and kept close watch for a year over the slender pretty blackgowned little miyiner No is with one exception One day a tall woman clad in deep mourning had climbed the steep Stairs and remained closeted in the fourthstory front room for hours Voices rose high but the curious ears in thetrear could catch no word until Leave him Never never Elizabeth may you never regret your determination Your parents at least fulfilled their duty re plied the lady in mourning as she slowly descended the stairs Elizabeth Downing closed her door and sank down among the chiffons and flowers sobbing sobbing so bitterly that her tears fell upon the soft masses crushing their fresiiness ELy cruel they are It is their pride snot their love which is killing me My God how I have suffered and must fpr four long years She dragged to the window and stared up at the sky gradually cloud ing in the soft haze of spring twi light At last her eyes rested the evening favorite star Her thoughts flew back to that night besidethe lake so peaceful in its quiet beauty that she had turned to him find whispered How I love to live If this moment could only last forever But a telegram had broken In upon her delight recalling Jack tc town On business Fafal word that htd broken so many womens hearts They must return at once Jack explained and she had quieted her re grefs stifled by the anxious lines that furrowed his face Suddenly as she moved about the room gathering up their belongings he had her in his arms saying Elizabeth if you ever learned a He paused an instant then resumed slowly If anyone should speak ill me to yQu would you still love me Nothing could make me doubt youBut if I deserved it You She trembled at his discomposed features but answered firmly Even if you deserve it She remembered every detail of that cheerless journey to town and the rough men who had met them in the station She still felt trembling lips pressed to hers in a farewell kiss Go home to your parents love I must b away so long anguish of those first days swept her again But she would wait for him would help him expiate his shi and then together they would go forth into the world and live down the dark stain of their past And so she continued in her life of abnegation until one spring day she moved from the little room into a dainty apartment near by and busied herself preparing a gown of soft white material The lines faded from her face a faint rose tint flushed her rheeks and a glad light shone in her x Then one evening she appeared in the white gown a great cluster of red roses breast and stood looking around in the glow that the shaded lamp shied over the little parlor with its cluster of roses like those wore Jacks favorite flowers she murmured I wonder will be notice b WALTER CHAMP f f asthe cattle Th near t t 0 t t t 0 tt t t iI- t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t THE dwelt onethat d r i soft 1tpi lIners P have rself upon starhis clasped J file over eyes at her soft D r i o 1 t I i herd- S I I j 4 j i 1 1 1 i 1 I l thea opne tud a i vluenhe reeoni7edas thelitt1emil xclained 1 4 I S 4 Jacks 1 4 b lie + + them Ht said he would be here promptly at tight The clock pointed- to a quarter of eight How slowly the minutes dragged along eight oclock at last Theji five minutes past then tenOh if he does not come she moaned A rustle at tne door attracted her attention she flew to it throwing it wide open Was that her hus band that shrunken haggard man with furtive hunted eyes and the ghastly pallor she as he stepped past her without a glance of recognition at her She followed him into the parlor longing to throw her arms around him but not daring to do so He spoke You are frightened you dont recognize your husband and he smiled grimly an old man at 35 Lifting his hat he showed her his gray hair Then he continued almost fiercely An illassorted couple indeed You so young and fair for I have never seen you so beautiful before Does that annoy you dear she asked holding out her arms to him Do not touch me he cried shrink ing from her Do you think I have fallen so low that I have so little honor or delicacy left that 1 would let you in your purity touch such a polluted thing as I No I was weak to come but henceforth we will live as strangers I am unworthy of you- I implore you4 Jack Elizabeth you are free he cried with brutal energy I release you now Get your divorce Anything if you win only forget me He turned to the door but she barred the way with her arms Never You shall not desert me I have suffered and endured for five long years I have forsaken my fa ther and mother have slaved to repay the debt to clear your name All for love of you And now when in the eyes of the world you are cleared and mine mine you would forsake me You are exonerated before the world to me you werenever guilty Why do you wish to leaye me Nothing can rehabilitate me in my own eyes The man I robbed is dead his family execrates me No no she interrupted eagerly His wife has me that she believed in you Would take you back again tomorrow She never wished to prosecute you And now weve re imbursed hej Reimbursed her he repeated wonderingly A ray of joy flashed in her eyes- I she said simply My saint he said bending over hand she held out to him Stay she whispered But he recoiled from her No that would be cowardice you shall not burden yourself with a man cut off from the world Jack she whispered reproachfully I have waited five long years I cannot She started Jack you dont love me any more I venerate you as a saint I have forgotten how to love as an equal l1 red ritten haveworked the i i- my aX liJ1QtJ A Y r r took ypuoLte1 o ou4ro happiness i h DO NOT TOUCH ME The taint of the prison is on me I went in there resigned determined God knows I meant to pay him back that I only thought of the pleasure I meant to give you But I cannot stand the pity you would give me for love No dont interrupt I had time to think it all out during those long years of infamy Expiation I have washed the taint away In infamy I say he answered savagely tearing her hands from his neck Let me go out into the shadow where I belong I will Dot cloud yow v I will go with you she sobbed iesperately if you can only come to ice in the shadow I will join you I will steal You steal Elizabeth Yes I love you the more for what you did because I know I was more to you than anything else in the even than conscience and I will steal to go with you She paused overcome by her grief The young man breathed convulsively No he itcannoVbe cpnvict You are my love my husband I belong where you beldjg in the dark nessor in the light The mans implacable face relaxed A spasm of anguish contracted his features then a mental vision swift as the flashing star showed him the pride that disguised his cruel egotism with a false mask of deliQajcy in his refusal to accept the salvation that lay in her love He fathomed tile depth of her suffering the intensity of that soullove that had wrought its work of expia tion in greater anguish than his own and for the first time in his life Bending over her his trembling fingers touched her cheeks her shoulders then with a convulsive wb clasped her in his arms I his soul Phliadelptila Iftin toe iate life Th worldmore I am- a he- lmed 1 Hen re h tf j cried tlsnadcfrdn MILK FOR CONSUMPTION Ihonld Be While the Amimsj Heat Is Still in It and the Imat The last quart of the milking or the strippings taken immediately after milking before it has parted with any of the animal heat is the most valuable thing known to build up a person who is thin and emaciated from any disease writes Dr B J Kendall of Saratoga Springs N Y My theory for years has been that the strippings was nearly all cream which I have demonstrated to be a fact I also believed that when taken immediately after milking while it contained all the animal heat and be fore any change had taken place that it would be absorbed at once into the circulation and not go through the ordinary process of digestion This- I have also found to be true- I direct my patients to begin with onehalf pint and gradually increase the quantity until at the end of a week they are taking a quart at a time or as much as they can possibly drink without causing too mUch dis comfort This should be followed up regularly twice a day- I have known of many cases who could not drink the cold milk or even milk which had stood for an hour or two and yet these persons could drink a quart immediately after milking without the slightest derange ment of the digestive organs In consumption the patient steadily loses in weight and although the old methods are used faithfully to try to build up the strength yet the patient steadily loses flesh It is no uncommon thing for my patients who have followed my instructions to gain five pounds a week in weight No other plan I have heard of has proved so successfu- lIt should be remembered that it is very important to select a cow that is healthy and one that gives rich milk Then it is also of very great im portance that the very last f the milking or strippings should be taken and of equal importance that this should be taken immediately after milking while it contains all the ani mal heat No other food is so natural and none has ever proved so success fulThe consumptive will soon find a change for the better if the above instructions are followed J have this pan in hundreds- of cases in the last few years and I know that there are thousands of cases whose lives might be saved if the above instructions were followed Of course in most cases a certain amount of medical treatment is also necessary- A PINEAPPLE FRAPPE DeJIclpus Frnit Ice to Tale tJuj Ittc This is simply Another name for a sorbet ahalffrozen fruit ice which was served after the roast at dinners in place of a Roman punch or similar mixture containing liquor or of some kind Under the name frappe fruit sorbets are served in glasses in the evening as a lemonade or sherbet might Ije served the New York Tribune One of the most delicious of these ices is a pineapple sherbet Boil to getherfor 20 minutes one pint of sugar and a pint of water Add the grated pulp and juice of a sweet pineapple Let the mixture boil two minutes longer Add the fresh juice of two lemons Add the beaten whites of tO eggs and freeze the mixture un tilit is thick or frappe half frozen but not until it is frozen hard Serve it in little glasses as a sorbet is served Another rule for frappe in which orange juice and pineapple are both used calls for a grated pineapple and- a pint of water and a pint of sugar frozen together for minutes and- a pint of orange juice with a little of the peel grated in Let the mixture boil for three minutestogether then add the juice of three lemons and freeze the mixture onehalf Serve like any otner ices Every Girl Should the Art Every girl who is planning to be a housekeeper some time and is busy learning how to be wants among other things to learn how to prepare and pack a dainty luncheon It is an important part of her training She may want to pack a picnic luncheon a luncheon for a traveler or for someone whose daily duties take hintaway from home and where there is no op portunity to obtain a luncheon so that he is dependent upon the luncheon basket There are all tJiese to be pro vided for occasionally besides the schoolchild And she wants to know how to cater to this clientele You instinctively know the one who prepared the luncheon by the way the basket is arranged and what it contains Sallie j Toy White in Womans Home Deviled Tomatoes tablespoonfuls buttefmto the blazer and before lighting the flame adds to the butter half a tea spoonful of oniom juice ten drops of tobasqo sauce or a pinch of red pepper half teaspoonful of dry mustard a scant teaspoonful of sugar a table spoonful of vinegar and a scant teaspoonful of salt Light the flame stir the sauce together until it is smooth and lay in the tomatoes sliced but not peeled Cook until tender and serve Good Housekeeping Peach Fritters Cut the peeled fruit in with sugar moistened withmaraschine anti roll them in powdered flipping them in the Jtjjav Pry 6 an ajnber olor roil i serv hot St Louis Republijb Taken of the lUliklDIr l7 tmui I f ftt 2 Learn Companion Put two a sprinkle and 4 r iP f tested Qofftaishig4- t 4 L1qiir wino says s 4 macaroons before ga JUSIT MISSED CHRISTIANITY CftlmiVc Sdarcli for the Incarnate God 4s in000 Allies Short of the True Coil One of the most interesting chapters of Chinese history is that which con cermg the embassy sent out in 65 A D by Emperor Wingfte1 to find the incarnated God Rumors of the Christian men penetrated to tthe court of Peking in that year These eventually reached tihe ears of the emperor Calling the literary and scientific men before him he demanded to know their opinions says- a London exchange After long consultation it was de cided to send an embassy to God with rich offerings and to ask him to come to to preach the true word So a great caravan of richlydecorated camels was gathered and magnificent loaded upon their backs There wetre superb silks glittering precious the choicest incense magnificent ivory carvings and the finest products of all China Attended by a huge retinue of coolies and servamWaiid soldiers the embassy con sisting of Chinas most learned men started south along the coast line for in those days it was not safe to travel too far inland Days weeks the caravan traveled Each day prayers were offered for the incarnate God On went the cavalcade passing beyond the boundaries of China into the unknown land beyond Everywhere the mission went the word of the search waspassed and soon a huge army entered India Once there the stories of the incar nate God became more circumstantial- and with renewed courage tIDe ambassadors pressed on At last southern India was reached and a positive cletw discovered at least so the embassy thought Yes the nativeshad heard of a great prophet He had performed miracles bad disappeared in a mi manner none knew whitiher He had lived and was born on an island south of India across the water which the Chinese dreaded But as was the fear thc Desire to accomplish their purpose and so in gdii for Ceylon The weather favored them and soon they set foot on the is larieL home the unknown prophet Thflire where the knowledge of his existence was fresh in the minds of the people where the Botree or tree of knowledge whierehe had gained inspiration way still standing where this personality was not yet forgotten the ambassadors gained their knowledge oi Buddha Gautama Siddartha the allwise They confusted Buddha and his works for Christ and His miracles Had they gone 1500 miles to the west they would have received the true word and China mIght have been the greatest Christian nation on earth in 1SG9 nn l Unjque Graveyard At the corner of Tremont and School streets in Boston stands one of the most historic churches in that city This church is Kings chapel and when it was built it took the place of a small wooden chapel standing on the same ground The little wooden chapel had been erected in the year 1669 and the land on which it stood was taken from the public burial ground by Gov Andros It was the first Episcopal church in Boston anti its attendants were chiefly the Brit ish officers und loyalists It had the first organ ever heard in New England- a certain Thomas Brattle having given- it the instrument in 1713 In the year 1740 the corner stone of the present building was laid by Cow Shirley but the church was not completed until 17S9 Iiuthat year George Washington was present at an oration given in the church celebrating its comple tion and he contributed fire guineas- to the church During the siege of Boston this was the only church in which regular services were held attended by the British officers When the city was evacuated by the Britisl the rector sailed away to Halifax carrying with him the church register communion service and vestments arid the church was closed A few years later it became the First Uni tarian church and It is today one of the most important of the Unitarian churches Gov Shirley lies buried in a tomb beneath the porch of the church and in the old burying ground at the side and in the rear of the church are the graves of many of the good men and true who were amongthe founders oi the city of Boston Here may be seen the graves of John Winthrop of Gov John Leverett of Mary Chilton of Lady Anne Andros wife of Sir Edmund the governor Lady Andro died in February 1GSS and her funeral was held in the evening by torch light The funeraj of Gen Joseph Warren who was killed at the battle of Bunker Hill was held in this church The body was followed from the townhouse to the church by s great procession and the funeral oration was by Perez Morton In later years the funerals of many distinguished Bostonians have been held from Kings chapel French Style of Starting Foot Ilaces In an American sprinting race the starter orders the runners on thedi marks then tells them to get ready then calls out set and a couple oi seconds later fires the pistol At the Paris races the French starterordered tie men on their marks called out and fired the pistol so soon afterward that the Americans not g into a crouchingposition After jIbe first heat or two the Americans were always set by the time attention and started at word i- steaatibf pistol thatsi gcining ayar Qi- twov Littte CJuonicle religion its miracles and holy tile incar nat il offerings stopes an4 raqulous ofwater Vas tro g r rude boats they set of till NbT bE DEADi Lm DHERE i Its 1 attention J auld wasoc led th 7f t arid r ICing dhapel Boion Flrsk1 ltuUt VERY NEAT SWINDLE Express Companies Mulcted by a Sharp Chemist Fncliagren Stamped as Valuable Destroyed liy Chemicals and Sender Then Collects Heavy Damages from the Company Express companies at St Paul Than have discovered an extensive swindle that has mystified them for more than a year and removes sus picion from many employes The leading manipulator of the work haa already managed to secure thousands- of dollars from the companies who had believed the shortage to be due to neglect or loss on the part of the employes The man who is being looked for is known by so many names that it has not yet been ascertained what his right name is or who he is He is a chemist by profession and it is by the knowledge of this art that lIe has man agedi to make large holes in the financial records of the companies It has been discovered by special detective officers who are in St Paul how he has up to date managed to be so successful in his plans He appears in New York at one of the local express offices with a package valued at 10000 which he ordiers sent to some part ol the states He then follows the package to the place of its destination where under a he ap pears as the party to whom the package was sent The package is looked for but notwithstanding the fact that it is registered on the books it is not to be recovered The sender then returns to New York where he presents hjs claim for loss of valuable property sent in care of the company It has been discovered that instead of plaejng the property of value in the box it contains a preparation which so entirely destroys the cover ing of the parcel and everything in it that not a trace of it is to be found This has occurred a number of times and from certain indications it would appear that he is not alone in his operations as a number of times the package has been called for by a FIND MOUNTAIN OF COPPER Biggest Surface Showing in the World Discovered Near Vancouver A veritable mountain of copper has been Discovered within 30 miles oj Vancouver B C at Howe sound by prospectors engaged by H W Treal of New York and Sir Charles Hibberi Tupper of Vancouver Both Treat and Sir Charles declare it is the biggest surface showing in the world J332 all over the mountain have been taken and it is claimed the ore ran extremely rich On tne Daisy claim the chief showing in the group nature has done according to Treat what a gang of 200 miners could not do in five years a stream of watei having worn away the soft schist and exposed a bluff of sheer perpendicular cliff of copper ore 428 feet high Surface openings have also been made with powder which exposes the big quarry of copper for 1500 feet The famous outcropping is less than half a mile from the famous Britan nia group of prospects which sold it London recently for 1500000 It is claimed by Treat and Sir Charles thai their properties have a bigger showing than the Britannia group and th Britannia mines according to the re port of the New Yprk engineers had 9000000 tons of lowgrade sigh before 300000 hind been spent on MARKET REPORTI Cincinnati Sept 15 CATTLE Common 3 40 B 4 25 Extra butchers 5 50 5 65 7 00 packers 5 50 5 55 Mixed packers 5 25 5 50 a 3 60 LAMBS Extras 5 50 FLOUR Spring pat 3 90 40 WHEAT No 2 red 76i CORN No 2 mixed 43 OATS No 2 mixed ftp 23 RYE No 2 55 HAY Ch 13 25 afrz 45 6 80 BUTTER Chi dairy J 14 Choice creamery 22 APPLES Ch to fancy 2 27 2 50 POTATOES Per brI 1 25 1 40 TOBACCO New 3 50 995 Old 12 50 CHICAGO FLOUR Win patent 3 SO 4 00 WHEAT No 2 red 77i 79 No 3 spring 7a 76 2 40 4l OATS No 22 22V RYE II 52 PORK Mess 11 90 11 95 LARD Steam S 77 6 80 NEW YORK patent 3 7o 4 oo WHEAT No 2 red 80 2 mixed 47 OATS No 2 mixed 25 RYE 57 171 PORK Family 15 00 1575 BALTIMORE WHEAT No 2 red 73 7314 Southern 72 74 CORN No 2 mixed 46 2 mixed 25 25 V CATTLE Butchers 4 80 5 55 HOGS Western 6 25 INDIANAPOLIS WHEAT NO a red 75 CORNrNo 2 mixed 41 OATS No 2 mixed fifo 21J LOUISVILLE FLOUR Win patent 400 WHEAT No 2 61 CORN Mixed V OATS Mixed Mess ir different name 4 woman ot sayS orein th property w CALVESExtra HOGSChoice SHEEPChoice 2 75 4 hh timotby I PORKMess LARDSteam 12 CORNNo 2 u i LOUR rin I CORNNo LARDSteam j e iOATSNo 6 20 I so r 70 lORK 5 LAnDS ea1U u G 7qQ- f 25 t 4 t1250 THE LEADING PRACTICAL SCHOOL Bookkeeping SDortfianfl Telegraphy Courses graded Short Practical Modem Not mol for Teachers 2fo vacation Cheap Board club or private Best Home Courses Shorthand or Teachers Individual In Three Commercial Branches Enter to Both Sexes Diploma- POSITIONS may be bank until position Is secured former pupils hold- Ing alone For lull particulars address B B JONES President For partiemlirs concerning LEXINQTONi KV OME STUDY PIKE CAMPBELL Manager Centrally located Convenient to business portion of city and all theatres Only good hotel In Louisville giving 2 rate Excellent service iSoctShi ATTENTION CITIZENS Now is the time to bring in your en glues mowers and farm machinery for repairs Also Mower and binder blades And forget your lawn mower gas and oil stoves which I will make a good as new Gas steam and water pipe fitting Steel ranges repaired All work guaranteed SEWHALLS MACHINE SHOP Cor Third and Pleasant Sfc JOHN CONNELLYP- ARIS KENTUCKY Work guaranteed satisfactory Oilta promptly answered Your work fit Prices reasonable HOTEL LEXINGTON KY dAS CONDOR Prop Newly furnished and improved Service excellent Rate 2 per day Headv quarters for Bourbon people HB DIRECT LINE BETWEElf CINCINNATI CHICAGO VIA INDIANAPOLIS AD MONON Connecting at Chicago for theNORTH ASTD at Cincinnati with all Roads for SOUTHERN cmEi AND THE Health and Pleasure Hcsortoi o FLORIDA CALIFORNIA Four trains weekdays Sandbjni- CENrCINNATX and CHICABDr ears Pullroan Compartment and Standard Any Agent OP Representative ofi1 the C H 01 will be pleased to Information or D G WARDS Passenger Traffic Manager KIDNEY DISEASES are the most fatal of eases 8uaiaBtni Remedy or refunded remedies by eminent best feKicfcy and Bladder frRKSS 50c and JO- OGfeAJUatJSlNJS Book- keepInG DepartmcntsAll E1 LexIn n Dept B AVENUE HOXE LOUISVILLE ont J PLUMBmEl J 1J REED l AND W S- And I r4 I 1 NAXICO1 three CaroB t jINClNNATI OHIO J 11 all cJis FOLEYS KIDNEY CJJRE 1 Con recognU d 1 I I BBtONE5EflkE- GSPINKePr4WI 4 ddws 1JVPII RY r I i S ROth S I and furnish sddr + BOTJI O 18 J irl J t c i9j JJt r J f d f I TIlE tEWS PA1IS X TUESDAY SEPTE3tBMt SYMPATHY Now the storm Its fury oer Fain would lull the waves to retLoudly beating on the shore As a wild bird beats its breast Through a hedge of ragged clouds Gropes the moon her lonely way Twixt the thicket peering far Here and there a little star Wheresoeer perplexity Felt the touch of sympathy Sentinels in black and gray Dark the distant mountains loom Trees their leafless branches sway Grim guardians of the gloom Hush the while within their arms Any nightbelated bird To whose twitter of content Winds are moaning sad assent v In all earths perplexity Things of earth give sympathy In the hush of silent grief Angels bend their heads to hear In the hour of unbelief God is drawing very near And by passion tempesttossd He was tempted like as we Deep in our Gethsemane Suffering on our Calvary In all mans preplexity God and Heaven give sympathy I Gertrude Eleanor Van Pelt In N Y Observer Copyright 1897 by F Tennyson Neeiy CJTAFTEK What on earth does John Folsom want of a housekeeper asked the helpmattm of his friends at Fort Emory and in the busy bustling town Why dont lie marry again queried those who would gladly have seen some unprovided sister niece or daughter thus cozily disposed of It was years since Elinors mothers death and John Folsom seemed i o mourn her as fondly as ever and except in midwin ter barely a month went by in which he did not wake his pilgrimage to her grave Yet despite his vigordlls years in saddle sunshine- or storm and his thorough love for outdwr life Folsom now well over 50 could so longer so lightly bear the hard lilt of the field He was amazed to see how his sleepless dash to headoff Red Cloud and his days and nights of gallop back had told upon him Women at Fort Emory who looked with ap proving eyes on his ruddy face and trim erect figure all so eloquent of health and who possibly contemplated too his solid bank account and that fastfounding house the finest in Gate City had been telling him all winter long he ought to have a companion an elder guide for Miss Elinor on her return he ought to have some one to presidi at his table and honest John had promptly answered Why Nell will do all that which necessitated their hinting that although Miss Fol e om would be a young lady in years ehe vas mly a child in experience and would be smich the better for some one who could take a mothers place No one could do that said John with sudden swiSiming of his eyes and that put a sudden stop to their schemihgs for the time at least but only for the time Taking counsel together and thinking how lovely it would be now if Mr Folsom would only see how much there was in this unmarried damsel or that widowed the coterie at Emory again returned to the subject until John in his perplexity got the idea that propriety demanded that he Should have a housekeeper against his daughters coming and then he did go ftnd do in his masculine stupidity just exactly what they wouldnt have had him do for worldfe invite a woman of none their number had ever heard to from Omaha and take the domestic nTsimagement of hi liearth nnd home 11 he knew of her was what he there She was the widow of a volunteer officer who had died of disease contracted during the war She was childless almost destitute accomplished and so devoted church dities She was interest ing and refined and highly educated He heard eulogiums pronounced ty the good priest and some of his Bock and Mrs Fletcher ia substantial person of some 40 years at least was duly installed Fort Emory was filled with women folk and consternation most of ithe men being aficld The seething question of EhV hour was whether they should call on her whether she was to be received at the fort whether she was to be acknowledged and recognized- at all and then came mirabile dictu a great govermrent official from Washington to inspect the Union Pacific and make speeches at various points along theeroa1 and Mrs Fletcher mind you to church the very next Sunday en the honorable secre tarys aVmiSat by his side when he drove out to this band1 at Emory and received on the colonels veranda and that settled it Received and acknowlejdgedi and visited she had to be She well prove a woman wor h knowing fortnight she IIGUJ made the new homestead blossom like the rose Within a month everything was in perfect order for the reception of Elinor ond her School busy anxious month in whicU Folsom was flitting to finfrato Benc and Frayne as we have seen to Hals ranch in the Medicine to JRawlittle and anti the reservai IF northwestern Nebraska so Itappened that he was away he night Maj Burleigh on his way to dropped in to inquir ebujflteee irFoWom amoment on impprtant bus ness the servant said he Av Tipt ic town had gone she Omaha She v oulrt inquire of Mrs Fletcher and meantime would T GENERAL CH KiR VCONTINUED 1 neverneglf ted tame whom o com I lIeU d l the walked 11ear him I frienda Dow Larpmie nfl I thought p yet- I 4 to- ILer with i- WithinTa ndit lithe 1o I the major step inside Step inside and stand wonderingly at the threshold of the pretty parlor he did and then there was a rustle of silken skirts on the floor above and as he turned to listen his haggard careworn face took on a look something like that which overspread it the night he got the ter at that told of be wilderment and perplexity as a quiet modulated voice told the servant to tell the gentleman night not return for several days Burleigh had no excuse to linger none to ask 10 hear that voice again yet as he slowly de scended the stepss accents were still strangely ringing in his ars Where on eartli had he heardthat voice be fore CHAPTER VI The quartermasters depot at Gate City was little more than a big corral with a double row of low wooden sheds for the storing of clothing camp and garrison equipage There was a black smith and wagon repair shop and a brick office building Some cottage quarters for the officer in charge and his clerks corral master etc stood close at hand while most of the em ployes lived in town outside the gates A singletrack spur connected the de pot vith the main line of the Union Pacific only 500 yards away and the command at Fort Emory on the bluff above the rapid stream furnished much to its disgust the necessary guard A much bigger plant was in contemplation near a larger post and town on the east side of the great di vide and neither Fort Emory nor its charge the quartermasters depot was considered worth keeping in repair except such as cpuld be accomplished by the labor of troops which was why when he wasnt fighting In dians the frontier soldier of that day was mainly occupied in doing the odd jobs of a day laborer without the recompense of one or his privilege of quitting if he didnt like the job That he should know little of drill and less of parade was therefore not to be won dered at But what he didnt know about guard duty was hardly worth knowing He had prisoners and property of every conceivable kind Indians horse thieves thugs and deserters maga zines and medicines mules and munitions of war Everything had to be guarded The fort lay a mile to the west of and 200 feet higher than the railway hotel in the heart of the town It looked down upon the selfstyled city and most of its womenkind did the same on the citizens who were it must be owned a rather mixed lot The sudden discovery of gold in the neigh boring foothills the fact that it prom ised to be the site of the division car shops and roundhouse that the trails to the Upper Platte the Sweetwater the park country to the south and the rich game regions of the Medicine Bow all centered Hshere and that stages left no less than twice a week for some of those points and the whole land was alive with explorers for a hundred miles had tended to give Gate City a remarkable boom and Laramie thriving frontier towns with coroners offices in full blast from one weeks end to the other and a double force on duty Sundays confessed to and exhibited pardonable jealousy Yet there was wisdom in the warning of an old friend and fellow frontiersman who said to Folsom You are throwing yourself and your money away John Theres nothing in those gold stories theres nothingin that yawp about the machine shops all those yarns were started by U P fellows with corner lots to sell The bottom will drop out of place in side of ayear and leave you stranded All the same had Folsom bought big blocks and built his home there It was the nearest town of promise to Hal Folsoms wild but beautiful home in the hills and almost as he loved Nell his bonny daughter did the old trader love his stalwart son Born a wild westerner reared among the Sioux with only Indians or army boys for playmates and precious little choice in point of savagery between them Hal had grown up a natural horseman with a love for and knowledge of the animal that is accorded to few Ills ambition in life was to own a stock farm All the education he had had in the world he owed to hit kindness of lovinghearted army women at Lara mie women who befriended him when wellnigh brokenhearted by his mothers death Early he had pitched his tent on the very spot for a ranch mans homestead early lIe had fallen in love with an army girl who married the strapping frontiersman and was now the proud mistress of the promising stock farm nestling in the valley of the Laramie a devoted wife and mother The weekly stage to the rail way was the event of their placid days except when some of the officers would come from either of the neighboring posts and spend a week with her and Hal From being a child Mrs Hal had developed into- a buxom woman with exuberant health and spirits Life t6 her might have some little monotony but few cares many placid joys but only great dread Indians John Folsom her fond fatherinlaw was a man all the Indians trusted and most ofthem loved Hal Folsom her husband had many a trusted and devoted friend among the Sioux but he had also ene mies and Indian enmity like Indian love dies hard As boy he had some times triumphed in games and sports over the champions of the villages As youth he had more than once found favor in the dark eyes that looked coldly on fiercer fonder claimants and one girl of the Ogallallas had turned front her kith and kin and spurned more than one red lover to seek the young trader when he left the reservation to build his own nest in the Medicine Bow sjid they told a story as pathetic as of tile favorite Jiiiigbter of Qltf Sintpffaliska chief C Renosomething Folsom t aroundall that dehicate Mr ft Cheyenne consumptive one of the Brule Sioux who pined and died at Laramie when she heard that the soldier she loved had come back from the far east with a palefaced bride There were red men of the Ogallallas to whom the name of Hal Folsom was a taunt and an insult to this day men whom his father had vainly sought to appease and they were Burning Star the lover and two younger braves the brothers of the girl they swore Hal had lured away South of the Platte as it rolled past Frayne and Laramie those Indians were bound by treaty notto go North of the Platte Hal Folsoni was warned never again to venture These were the stories which were well known to the parents of the girl he wooed and won but which probably were ly explained to her Now even behind the curtain of that sheltering river with its flanking forts even behind the barrier of the mountains of the Medicine Bow she often woke at night and clutched her baby to her breast when the yelping of the coyotes came rising on the wind There was no woman in Wyoming to whom war with Red Clouds people bore such dread possibility as to Hal Folsoms wife And so when Marshall Dean came riding in one glad June morning bronzed and tanned and buoyant and tpssed his reins to the orderly who trotted at his heels while the troops dismounted and watered at the stream Mrs Folsoms heart was gladdened by his confident and joyous bearing Twice thrice he had seen Red Cloud and all his braves ajhcl there was nothing said he to worry about Ugly of course they are got some imaginary grievance and talk big about the warpath Why what show would those fellows have With their old squirrel rifles and gaspipe against our new bree6U loaders They know it as well as w do Its all a bluff Mrs Folsom You mark my words said he and really the boy believed it Frequent contact in the field with the red warriors inspires one with little respect for their skill or prowess until that contact becomes hostile then its time to Ivejjp every sense on guard and leave nQ point uncovered But what if the should let them have she anxiously asked You know tJh a is Red demand Oh said Dean with confidence born of inexperience in the ways they wouldnt be such fools Be notf l breechloader 1 that au bur ali Not even her picture sides if they do lIe added hopefully youll see my troops come trotting back full tilt Now Im oh a good time at Emory and on bringing sister and mine up here to Sfe youIt will be just lovely said MrsV Hal with a womans natural but unspoken comparison between the simplicity of her ranch toilet and th probable elegancies of the young ladies eastern costumes Theyll find us very primitive up here in the mounf- tains Im afraid but if they like scenery and horseback riding and theres nothing like it A Oh the3re coming sure Jessies letter tells me thats one of the big treats Mr Folsom has promised them Just think they should be along this week and I shall be stationed so near them at Emory of all places in the world How long is it since you have seen as your sister calls her asked Mrs Hal following the train of womanly thought then drifting through her head as she set before her visitor a brimming goblet of buttermilk Two years She was at the Point- a day or twt the summer of our graduation he answered carelessly A real littje Indian girl she was too so dark and shy and silent yet I heard Prof M s daughter and others speak of herXIater she pleased them so much and Jessie thinks theres no girl like her And you havent seen her since not even her picture asked Mrs Hal rising from her easychair Just let me show you one she sent Hal last week I think theres a surprise in store for you young man was her mental addition as within doors fi The nurse girl a halfbreed oneltof the numerous progeny of the French trappers and explorers who had married among the Sioux was hushing the burly little son and heir to slee- pn Ids Indian cradle crooning some song about the fireflies and the bigeyed owl and the mother stooped to press her lips upon the rounded cheek and to flick a teardrop for Hal second had roared lustily when ordered to his noonday nap Away to the northward the heavily wooded heights seemed tipped fleecy summerjclouds and oft to the northeast Laramie Peak thrust his dense crop of pine and scrub oak above the niass of snowy vapor that floated lazily across that grimvisagedV southward scarp The drowsy hum ofo insects the plash of Wiip ters sply on the ear Under shade of willp anti cottonwood cfcliTtef and horses were lazily switching at II your fishing ElinorPappoose shetripped He clia away lunnmg fen y the swarm of Plats and flies or dozing through the heated hours of the day Out on the level flat beyond the corral the troopers had unsaddled and the Chargers many of them stopping- to roll in equine ecstasy upon the turf were being driven out in one big herd to graze Without and within the ranch everything seemed to speak ol peace and security The master rode the range long miles away in search 01 straying cattle leaving his loved ones without thought of danger The solemn treaty that bound the Sioux to keep to the north of the Platte stood sole sentinel over his vine and fig tree True there had been one or two instances of depredation but they could be fastened on no particular band and all the chiefs even Red Cloud and insolent swag gering Little Big Man denied all knowledge of the perpetrators Spot ted Tail it was known would severe ly punish any of his people who trans gressed but he could do nothing with the Ogallallas Now they were not 200 miles away to the north their ranks swollen by accessions from all the disaffected villages and turbulent young braves of the swarming bands along the Missouri and Yellowstone and if their demands were resisted by the government or worse if they were permitted to have breechloaders- or magazine rifles then just coming into use no shadow of doubt remained that war to the knife would follo T Then how long would it be before they came charging down across the Platte east or west of Frayne and raiding those new ranches in the Laramie valley To Be Continued An Epitaph That Failed A Louisville wit goes to church or did go to church where a prominent member of the congregation who had- a pew close by used to slumber through the entire service When the text was given out he nodded and by the time the pastor got a good start he was ob livious of everything until the pastor woke him up After awhile the man died and one day shortly afterward- one of the friends of the family came to the wit and said See here old boy I dont pretend to be smart and upto date like you but Blanks wife has sent for me and asked me to arrange about the inscription on her husbands mon ument She wants something short and appropriate and over this she is going to have his name and the date of his birth and death Im the last per son in the world to undertake such a jobs so I thought you might help me out Why with pleasure said the joker and his grin should have warned the caller but it didnt Taking out a pencil and notebook the fiend wrote a line or two and handed it over See how jou like it he said and as the ap lieant read the lines they ran as and then Maeiblv Asleep as usual You can betvyour dear sweet life that inscription was never shown to the widow Louisville Times Slips of the Tongue It is an invariable rule that mem bers of the house of commons must address their remarks to the house through the chair and though in the flow of argument an orator is often without remonstrance to use the second personal plural in admon ishing his opponents the first words are always addressed to the occupant- of the cnair This like many other rules of debate has percolated from the house of commons down to all our minor assemblies and the consequence is that few members find any difficulty in complying with the custom Not infrequently however ruling hab its prevail and a new member invol untarily discloses the nature of the assembly to which he has ueen accus tomed In a debate on the Irish land bill in 1894 Mr Kenny an Irish Q C convulsed the house by addressing Mr Speaker as My lord Mr Powell Williams in the same parliament saluted him as Mr Mayor and an effervescent Irishman Mr Bodkin astonished the speaker by giving him the dignity of Your reverence Gentlemans Magazine Cjen Botha the famous Boer once fought something like- a duel with Wools Sampson be remembered as areiorm prisoner During the Boer war of 1881 Mr Sampson on the British side andl Bo that on the Dutch during an outpost skirmish potted at one another from behinti stones Sampson thought he hit Botha and raised his head above the stone only to find himself hit in the neck That was one to Botha who jumped up elated Sampson a once dropped him Got him said Sampson and raised himself to look Got him saidi Botha a he put a bullet into his adversarys side but he showed nimself too soon for Samp son brought the score to Irj later years they yarned about this occurrence over drinks in Johannesburg Colliers Weekly Runs In the Family- A young gentleman took his little sister with him while calling the other evening at a house where he is a visitor The little girl made herself quite at home and showed great fondness for one of the young ladies hugging her heartily very affectionate she is said the lady of the house Yes so like her brother ed the unthinkingly Buffalo Courier The Rocket The first locomotive engine which proved a practical success was produced by the two Stephensons and Was called the Rocket In October 89it received tfye prize offered by directors of the Liverpool fc Mai- cnes1er railroad indi the question as- io the superiority of Jhes Ipponrotive engine as a motive power was then settled Detroit rep defiant George IJ 1 died t t allowed A LongRnDg Duel commander whowill H reg lion Ud steam J fol- lOws evens the Pre eegD Crescent Route forms close connection at Cincinnati with the great trunk Lines G R L Big Route D C O railways handling through traffic expeditiously to all summer resorts of the Torth Special Low Excyr RatesAre now in effect da from all points South over the Queen Crescent via Cincinnati to Chautauqua Niagara Fals Tfeou and Islands PutInBay Petoskey M icldnac and summer resting places on Mountaa9 LaB Seashore i A New Ticket to Alactcinac You can buy a ticket to Szackinac now at excursion rates that wilt take you to Chicago thence the ladal steamer Manitou to Mackinac returning via D C steame or Detroit and C H D Ry to or the reverse 1 fncr summer trip was never offered The famous resbrts of the South are also open now The sea son at Rock Castle Springs Cumberland Falls Ky and Rhea Springs Tenn promises to be the most successful ever known Queen Crescent trains are of travel Through Pullman daily from all southern cities Parlor observation and chair cars from Chattanooga andAttalla on day trains Free reclining chairs from Chattanooga on Fast schedules track smoke no dust no Send for free information as to summer resorts and Queen Crescent service to O L Mitchell D P A Chattanooga Tenn or call upon your ticket agent W J MURPHY General Manager W C RINEARSON Genl Passenger Agent CINCINNATI The linesPennsylvania C iiandErie C I er e and b I to Ky 1 Q- I Cec a d Sc oedo e = B F MONDAY J F MONDAY THE ART STONEWORK CO- Bo F MONDAY Manager Layers ofCement Work Artificial Stone Plain Flagging Slaughterhouse Icehouse and Cellars All kinds of drainage pipe laid Carriage Cistern tops lawn and pavements a specialty Curb stone gutter fiaggin stones fire places etc Dealer in English German and Portland Cement o Address B F MONDAY Paris Ky Sidewalks SELECTDRVIS Old smokers say SELECT are the best Cigars that can be built for the money The smoke that satisfies The embodiment of perfection they steady the ort c linn aW diacKtion Cant tell them from a 10 cent cigar etc This popular Cigar now on sale atG S VAKDEW COS and JAMES FEE SONS gsssecds f cefcftesi 1 Factory Loaded Shotgun Shells 1 LEADER and REPEATER loaded with Smokeless 1 powder and NEW RIVAL Black powcler- g Superior to all other brands for UNIFORMITY RELIABILITY AND I STRONG SHOOTING QUALITIES I Winchester Shells are for sale by all dealers Insist upon having them when you buy and you will get the best jjj U nickel U U II e l W i loadedwith t- I I I 5it l IIIiE IEifililiellifiIiIi IffIiIiIJItI 5fi5Ef ff EtIi DAVIS IINCHESTERij = A NEW TRAIN WEST The St Louis Limited BIG FOUR TO TEXASKANSAS Leave Cincinnati 1220 noon Arrive Indianapolis 325 p in Arrive Louis 945 p m PARLOR CARS MODERN COACHES DINING CARS- Ask for Tickets via Big Four Route WABESlSr J LYNCH Genl Pass Tkt Agt W P DEPPE A G P T Agt J E REEVES Genl Southern Agent Cincinnati O C C CLARK T P A Chattanooga BEAltA VIA and 1USSOURI Summer0 Excursions I II Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you artificially digests the rood and aHi eo v exhausted wItis the latest discovered digests ant and tonic No other preparation can approach it in It iaand permanentlycven Dyspepsia Sour Stomach Nanse 11 otherresults of Prepared by E C DeWltt A Co Cbltago W T BROOKS My agency insures against fire wind and oM reliable prompt paying companies nonunion WO HINTON Agent LIME I- Xfyotwaat JOT w lt hat T your order t my cfltoe a jftxi tr tl AU wibM promptly aUt 44 to eat 8 and I th ttan tU SIck dl1Q stormbest a tf KOdOJ I cW4 THE BOURBON NEWS KY TUESDAY SEPTSMRBEJ 1900tot v c II 8 PAR IJ In Egypt the custom is for to hide their beauty the lower part of the face with a veil In America the beauty of many of our women is hidden because of the Hidden BI uty y I coverin sickness pecu llor to the sex If the Egyptian custom pre vailed in this country many sufferers would be glad tc cover i i premature their sunkencfceeks- nealthv weakness and t the their f complexion from the eyes of the World the veil of the Orient female brings out a womans true beauty makes her strong and well those organs upon which her whole general health depends It corrects all disorders It stpps the drains of Leucorrhcea It restores the womb to its proper place Jt removes the causes of headache backache and nervousness It takes the poor de bilitated weak haggard fading woman and puts her on her feet again making her face beautiful by niaklag her body well Druggists sell it for 1 a bottle Bend for oar free illustrated book for women The Braftdeld Regulator Co Atlanta Ga Tnt progressive nations of the world are the great food consuming nations Good well digested gives strength- If you cannot digest all you eat you need Kodol Dyspepsia Care It digests what you eat You need not diet yourself It contains all of ths digestants combined with the best known tonic and reeoristructives It will even digest all classes of fo ds in a bottle No other preparation will do thie It instantly relieves and quickly cures all stomach troubles W T Bumps or Bruises Sprains or sores barns or scalds wound or cuts tetter or ecze i a quickly oared byBanner Salve the most medicine in the world Nothing else just as good Clarke y Does It Pay To Buy Cheap remedy for coughs and colds ia all right but you want something that will relieve and carevthe more and dangerous results of throat andlung troubles What shall you do Go to a warmer and more regular climate Yea if posible if not posible for you then in either case take the ONLY remedy that has been introduced iu all civilized countries with success in severe throat and lung troubles Boacheea German It not only heals and stimulates the tissues to distroy the germ disease but allays inflammation causes easy expectoration gives a good nights rest and cures the patient Try ONE bottle ed many years by all druggist in the world Sold by dealers in all civilized countries oct27ly spell it cough coff cangh kauf kaff kough or kaugh but the only harmless remedy that quickly cures it is One Minute Cough Cure W T Brooks i r i The emergency bags sent by a church to Kansas soldiers in the Phil ippmes contained among the necessities- a box of Hazel Salve the well known cure for piles injuries diseases The ladies took care to obtain the original DeWitttj Witch Hazy Salve knowing that all the counterfeits are worthless W T Brooks- e It Isa Curse Constipation is and afflicts too great a portion of the American people There is no excuse for it either aswe sell a that will banish the curse and with moderate use will keep you well It is Dr Galdwells Sold in lOc 5oc and 100 size sale by Gl Varden Large sun spots astronomers say Caused the extreme heat this and doctors declare nearly at the prostra- tions were induced by of the stomach Good health follows good diges tion Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what you eat If you have indigestion or dyspepsia it will quickly and permanently cure you J W T Brooks Bradfields Regulator oofl Brooks- e all Ache p severe Re commend C can U and kin a curse re Pepsin summers w I g in menstrual i 1 a I l J You f a + CUBAN SENORITAS LEARNING TO BE SCHOOLTEACHERS Story of a Welling Dress Battle With the Tan When the Heart Is Henry Work For Leisure Hands Chinese Ver ne American There are 700 Cuban senoritas at Harvard college struggling with the English and absorbing American fads The young la dies are very enthusiastic and eager to learn all they can As they stroll about under the elm trees they make pretty pictures with their dark eyes and flashing teeth But beneath the sunny exterior of most of them are hidden sorrows The sight of a senora in widows weeds tells with out words the story of a home ruined by the war Dark eyed senoritas whis per of sweethearts who went to fight their oppressors and never returned Most of these Cuban women and girls are of good families whom the despoiled of their wealth and estates The only alternative left them was to teach Some of the girls attending the college are as young as 14 but have the mature appearance of tropical races A fact much comment ed upon Js the superior refinement of the women teachers as compared to the men but one of the senoritas explain M 1 3WoRLD Dress educational i war = A CUBAN SCHOOLMAAM ed this by the fact that the best young men of her country were killed during the war while the flower of the women remained The senoritas are refreshingly sweet and guileless They are enchanted with everything and everybody and are themselves creating a very favorable impression But they indulge in one propensity which the Cambridge their hostesses pro tem con sider bad form They like to stroll bareheaded on the bridges after evening has set in Nearly all of the seno ritas wear buttons bearing their name and address so if they wander too far and lose their way some kind person may lead them back to their temporary abode Among the distinguished Cuban wo men at Harvard is the widow of the late General Hevia She is said to be a beauty and dresses in perfect taste The fairest of all the senoritas is a tiny Amelia Sicro a blond with dark eyes who has a devoted admirer in the person of an American officer who made her acquaintance during the war and has called on her every day since her arrival at Harvard Then there Is the poetess of Cuba as she is called the Senorita de Leon whose works have been translated into English She was educated abroad and speaks English and French fluently Senorita Clara Garaballo was the teacher chosen to carry the Cuban flag In the procession after their arrival Her father was a wealthy lawyer and planter One of his sons was killed in the war and the other disabled for life Kursery Thermometer- If you want to take a childs temperature to see if he Is feverish first shake the thermometer till the Index is below the arrow mark then put the bulb end well up under the little ones armpit against the skin and hold his arm close down to his side for five minutes The top of the index will then mark the temperature The proper temperature is 984 de grees F A degree above this indicates considerable inflammation Be sure and see that the quicksilver Is below 98 degrees before using it or you maybe alarmed unnecessarily sprite very l housewives e OYSTERS We have just received our first ship ment of FRESH BALTIMORE CANNED x will continue to receive them dur ing the remainder of the season As usual we will have the freshest and finest stock in the city Grocers A Preacher- Of Watterloo Ind Rev S P Koltz writes1 have been afflicted over twenty years with dyspepsia or sour stomach Have tried different remedies without much benefit A lOc bottle of Dr Old wells Syrup gave me great benefit Have taken nearly one large bottle and feel like a different person For sale by G S Varden Co Are You With Us Do yon feel just finer than anybody all the time If you take Dr aldwells Syrup Pepsin you may feelgood the year round It guaranteed to cure constipa tion indigestion all stomach and bowel troubles or lOc size G S Varden Co will tell you all about it A 20Pound Baby can take Dr Caldwells Syrup with as much safety and beneficial re sults as an It is a mild liquid laxative and children thrive upon itSyrup Pepsin assists nature in cleansing the system and its use is not attended with any of the unplesant gripings and nauseating caused use of gocalled cathartis bottle 10 doses 10 cents Also sold in 50c and 1 size by G S To Asthma Sufferers Lawson Elvidge of Harrington Ill says he was cured of chronic asthma of by Pholeys Honey and Tar It givas positive relief in all asthma so disease not com pletely cured is robtoad of all its ter rors by this great remedy Clarke r Kenney Womans Rights Many women suffer all sorts of so called female weaknesses justbecanse their kidneys are out of order and have a right to know Foleya Kidney ing women Clarke Kenney v Question Answered Yes August Flower still has largest sale of any medicine in the civilized world Your mothers and grandmothers never of using anything else for indigestion or billious ness Doctors were scarce and they seldom heard of Appendicts Prostration or failure etc They used August Flower to clean out system and stop fermentation of digested food regulate the action of the liver simulate the nervous and organic action of the system and that is all they took when feeling dull and bad with headaches other aches You need a few doces of August Flower in liquid form to make you isfied there is nothing serious the ter with you Sold by dealers in all civilized countries To The Ir j A rich lady cured of her deafness an noises the head Dr Artificial Ear Drums gave 10000 his Institute so that deaf people un have free Address No 407 The Nicholson Insitute 780 Eight Am DeWitts Little Early Risers purifying little pills W T Brooks To prevent consumption quickly and troubles with Une ute Cough Cure W T Brooks Poisonous toadstools resembling mush oonis have caused deaths this ear Be sure to use only the genuine Witch Hazel Salve There are only original Witch Hazel Salve It is a safe and certain cure for piles and all skin diseases W T OYSTERSa- nd Pepsin size Varden long standing cases when 0 Lure is lust what is needed by most all t t un ma oct 27 Deaf Nicholson Si t able to procure the Ear New York prompt palatable pleasant f J the same care when you auk for DeWitts poisonous counterfeits DeWitts is the 1 Fee Son and TryalOc I the r the 4 may ar powerful car Min Observe Sl Yd = + = IK When the organs fail to off the waste material from the system there an abnormal accumulation of matter which poisons and the blood and it becomes sour and aoid While the skin the seat of irritation the real disease is in the blood Medicated lotions and continued and the condition is often aggravated and skin permanently injured by their use is This poison is carried through the general circulation to all of the and reachingthe skin there is a r and eruption and by certain peculiarities we recognizeTetter Acne Salt Rheum Psoriasis and other troubles more or less severeis powders the and but never cure no matter how and faithfully 1I DIseasesexcreto i I disease is mere M shin deep Hie estire circulation Is poIsoned The many preparations of arsenic mercury potash etc not only do not cure skin diseases but ruin the digestionconstitution S roots herbs and barks of great purifying and topical properties quickly andeffectually cures blood and troubles because it direct to the root of andneaithv action tn r rrrQ o S S 8cures permanently because it leaves none of the original poison to referment in the blood and cause a fresh attack vHealthy necessary to preserve that clear smooth skin and beautiful con the blood rider It has been curing blood a ceiutury no other ini4viue cant show such a blood di who win in aiding bywho desire it Wr ally and freely about your case letters are held in stric tconfidence We make no for this service Our book on Blood andDiseases will be seat free THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY ATLANTA The rsoonand S S natures own remedy made of nothe different cleanses and enriches the blood and thus relieves the system of allpoisonous secretions pl so much all S S S can be relied upon with certainty to N min ra1s is icharge of physICIans Inta 1f Vice i our S SS freein SS tongs no poisonous urel vegetable and harmlessOur medical L nirtment isin large experience treatinand skin e r ltiir anon annlication E4 f Ityou ai sick all over rind know just what olio you its ten to one your kidneys are out of ordnr Foleys Kidney Cure will bring you health and energy Clark Kenney din 4 19 i j j f The entry into womanhood Is a critical a Little menstrual disorders started at that time soon grow into fatal complications That this Wine establishes a painless and natural menstrual flow once this important Is started a life will usually follow Many women young owe to of Cardui There is nothing like it to give women freedom and to fit women for duty of life 100 bottles at druggists Della M Straycr Tully Kane 1 have suffered untold pain at menstrual periods for a long tjme was nervous had no appetite and lost interest in everything In fact was miserable I have taken four bottles of Wine of Cardui with Thedfords BlackDraught when needed and today I am entirely cured I cannot express the thanks I feel for what you have done for me For advice in cases requiring special direc tions address the Ladles Advisory Department The Chattanooga Med Company Chattanooga Term L H Landman H D Of No 503 W Ninth Streob umcmnan Ohio Will be at the Windsor Hotel Paris v TUESDAY SEPT 11 190O returning every second Tuesday In each FEEENCE leading physician In aris Kentucky F W Shackleford r Contractor and Builder YoungWomen ftma1e troubles are filling y j Miss I I I r t or graveyards ui function o IS1iY P 0 Box 0 J School time is here ahcl your Girls and Boys need gCfil strong dur able Stockings which will withstand their running ancl romping We have the kind that fills thel fll Come and see these English RCbb Hose warranted stainless all a splendid quality per pair lOc or three for 25c- Dooleknee Ribbed guarantiee fast dye tfyo thread wellI worth 2Oc per pair i e Extra long narrow Ribb Hose blaefe and stainleas all sizes a WM regular 25c grade per pair Real Mace Cotton Ribbed Hose Kernsdtoorf Prince Black double knee per pair L 2STc ABOUT SHOES A GREAT CHANGE TO SAVE J As you all know we are going to quit handlingShoes in order to handle a larger stock of Dry and Ladies ReadytoWear Garments Each arid pair of Shoes will be sold at exaotly cost price ATTENTION for He announcement of the o Dress Goods Respectfully H EYMTtN SIJ- A Wnri ot Two v sizes Hose P f sit MONEY I Watch our I I- rGL Izeuma AboHt f 1 S lOc r every a COOL Of course the weather is hot but we have a remedy for it For bur men friends we line of light Flannel and Serge Suits and odd coats straw hats negligee duck trousers thin underwear etc For the ladies we have a fine line of organdies lawns dimities muslins shirt waists of every pat tern muslin lingerie fans para sols all Summer goods of every description Just come in and see tbeloi TWIN BROS Cl 4III I i U nL SOME III u- li READINGIII III i I u i U n UI III havea tl i U U III n U1 tit III u lU I t eo S l i4- S c 11 1111 fit 1- iii p iiiI- t 111 tt I G shirts tt 111 t tt 1 lU 111 tTtA- AA ttf 11