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Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895): July 23, 1897
Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895): July 23, 1897 Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Champ & Miller Paris, KY 1897 bou1897072301_sn86069873 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895): July 23, 1897 Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895) Champ & Miller Paris, KY 1897 $IMLS This electronic text file was created by Optical Character Recognitio n (OCR). No corrections have been made to the OCR-ed text and no editing has be en 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 Librar ies Guidelines. Digital page images are linked to the text file. a -O- - - - Jb v - -- J -- - 5 4 i v - TB i - v c - - k v v r s RBON Editors and Owners r m j vr hphvl flv n - CHAMP O V MILLER PRINTED EVJSRY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY iii ii - MMWfclfaMMMMWiiBririWWCPIfc4i SEVENTEENTH YEAR J22I32BS3 k y- A PARIS BOURBON v 00 KY -- MSIDAY JULY 23 1897 Cullt1 HbV X4 jmiijjhw EEC ifcOCMM3BWaM vl fc d EgBB3iS3fiB8BPp1fPMiBlBWPPCTBTTgyXffJgBBlgMKyg Established feb i issi WBMB nnifuwwwwwuwiitPTWWaWM ii NO 59 j 7rinw j- j IKUHIMM irjiwr J WVIJWi TfTHVJTV MILLERSBURG Cleara bbbbAbS ij aa rivuMLja - im iu ji CARLISLE HI wwm w I News Notos Gathered liurcr In Ami A1out The News BOkj Xrom Irecinets HS Nicholas County rower Scott Hot Weather Goods In Great Variety Frazee - tini pij W B HH Mrs M V Shaw wnt to Winchester Saturday to visit relatives Mr Claude Viinont has been very ill for the past week with flnx Miss Sadie Hart of Paris is the guest of her aunt Mrs W M Miller Mrs Mary McCJann of Pari3 is the guest of her sister Mrs Ben Jones Miss Lula Grimes is visiting Miss Jennie Lander near Flemingsburg Miss Edith Bush of Winchester is guest of Miss Allie Clarke this week Mr Geo Wadell Qf Atlanta Qirulit ing his sister Mrs E T Befding in second bprSi DiED--Near the wlfeojfflDr im Frankfort on 14th inst to Keller a son Corner Main and Broadwaj7- Lexington Ky j Flora on 21st inst of consumption Mrs Robert Bfadj Burial at EllisOim Thursflay his home in tbis city on Died i undayppjg after several weeks illness Mr WEhian Gillespie aged 03 years The of Mr F P Browning and MissSvatherint Arfthdejinnn nnmirr- ed Wednesday evening at the Catholic m ving Uhurchj tained- - Paris Mr anidftlr8 Jas A Spencer enter a6at sixteen couples of the young folJBs of this city at their home Lawn Furniture Hamniocks Mosquito Bars9 Straw Mattings At Lowest Prices l PRICE Boys Boys Boys Boys Boys Boys 1 vFn IBM RELIABLE CLOTHIER Suits at 60c worth 1 Suits at 100 worth 150 Suits at 150 worth 200 Suits at 75 worth 250 Suits at 200 worth 300 Suits at 250 worth 400 This is an opportunity you should not miss You can be assured of getting bargains at this sale no paper talk but actual facts Our Furnishing Goods department is com- -roui wi rT4u jjite new sijta ui bJLiuLs iiiiSuWtai tJLi i- riying every week 4 his home near Days Ferry in thjBcmmty ou Friday last Daniel W family Day agejipJU jTears He leaves a widow Miss Mattie Power went to Hunting and severaB grown children jfBj ton and Vancebnrg Thursday to visit Mr FJilc C Taylor and Miss Madge friends Mann enwctained about 40 couples of Mrs Duke Watson and daughter young fKnds at the Taylor residence Willie of Mason are guests of MrsvJasr last huratay evening Dancing was I Miss Isabelle Pickerell of Carlisle is the guest of her uncle T D Judy and Tnesdayeht DiEDfp Fine Medium and Low Priced Chamber Suits Parlor Suits Folding Beds 3rass J3eds Iron Beds Odd Dressers Wash Stands Chif- ¬ foniers Dressing Tables etc Popular Finishes In- ¬ spection Invited cxaMxwaMfi engagH3and delightful refreshments Arthur j in Kitn m wn t Mr Jean Britt of San Francisco was were served the guest of bis brother Vm Butt The 4gMLrvnJ sa3s The uarlisle BaHHBWCTK I OMfBCO ri 581 Give us an early call 5 - Paris were down Mondav tn eive the Fire Laddies some instructions about the Engine Carpenter Hunter captured nine premiums at the Lancaster Fair last week valued at 325 on three horses They will show next week at Richmond Messrs H H Phillips M V Shaw E P Clarke Sanford Allen and Addison Turner are in Cincinnati this week Who pay cash like todeal where they can get the henefit of cash on tobacco business and to see baseball We appreciate that kind of trade and you can save money hy dealing games with us We will make our Fine Black Worsted Wheat is selling here at 67i Black- ¬ berries 2o cents per bucket Hogs 3 per cwt and New York cattle at 450 per cwt Several lots sold Wednesday to Winchester parties Mr Jno Fritz who lives with C R Turner was kicked Tuesday by a FOE jennet His upper lip and face were considerably lacerated Dr Miller took eight stitches in the wound President M H Current returned Monday from a visit to the County agencies of the Hurst Home Insurance Co and reports all in good shape and This will be a saving to jou ofj10 to 815 the company in a prosperous condition Mrs C H Cooper Mrs Tillie Davis and Miss Mattie Davis of Maysville and Mrs R E Harris of Germantown who have been guests of Mrs Mary Caldwell and family returned home T v aBBBMHBfcraft and daughter Dayton O to visit has afsopBuade an individual assign left Wednesday foi monttowjngsame party Mr Cheatham relatives assumefjitnbro debt when he purchased Miss Bessie Spencer and Mrs Fannie the plaiptjhan he was able to meet Porter of Carlisle visited friends heie owing jIMBTs failure to realize on some Wednesday other proggrty he held He struggled hard toloxercome it Mrs Kosebery Rogers of Paris h s did nofesucceed fie anc we reirret he and his wife left been the gnesr of MissLida Clarke for Tuesdajafteruoon for Texas to make several days that Sfatefe thpir home We wish for Miss Lucile Alexander gust of Mr them prosperity in their future home j aud Mrs as Woolums returned to taiiiDuiiitura May sville Monday Mr Arthur Thomasonis at home on a The fojldwing is the temperature as visit from Chicago after a two and one noted yesejrllay by A J Winters Co half years absence v of thiscifcy Mrs Dave Cook Miss Alma Cook and 7ia Miss Nannie Bowden of Paris are 70 8 alrnm guests of Mrs Nancy Allen 9 p im1 ft 79 0 10 avs K Miss Fannie Whaley of Cynthiana 83 11 aiinlH has been the guest of the Misses Layson 12 iivjsaafe5 near town for the past week SVA n ii on S Mrs Jennie Elrod and Miss Gene 90 3 p mK- guests of Mis 92 Walker of Louisville 4p s r mg Jno Peed returned home Tuesday 924 7 p MU 84 Hon W- - C OweDS of Georgetown came down Wednesday to visit his mother Mrs Owens and sister Mrs G Bryan - Monday Mrs Zene Flaugher assigned to H Elctriht CoMrhas Green Cheatham M Tajand PfftTT iB x so w lH ki w m rs U ajt H fi ICO n kZ ffl fi 7B jg Oarpets Furniture Wall Paper Draperies TT v i riiiiijiijumJ 1 Ii A SMITH Co 8 to 12 a rn 1 PA rpMftTlT1Q US AND FORKIGN EUGENE W JOHNSON OfBce over G S Varden Office Hours SOIilCITOR AND ATTOKNJEY IX PAT ¬ ENT CAUSES 1729 New York Ave AVashington D C Ofiice establishetl 1SGS v to op in Charges moderate Correspondence Requested 2mar lian98 tjgTJrjrggmvsmmjavcag -- - -- 111 -- - inA Having purchased John Glenns carriage works and repository on corner of Fourth and High Streets Paris Ky we are now prepared to do all kinds of repairing painting and trimming of vehicles such as carriages buggies etc We also keep on hand a select line of new GGXES iM 3fClislDQdteyo CLOTHIERS ¬ 1 perv miWrftlielvrehicl euHneiiiSGhe riuhlic is invited torjinsnectouri O llclVC CllclgCU CJV JGJJCJJ yW j qjwjjciu OUUVilV IUU Ul7lIiJil C UU1 JJlXVyCO Of Hockingport O lccoimnentls Wrights to do onr work and insure satisfaction and guarantee all workmen Celery Capsules jobs to he first class Hockiugport O August 14 596 Call and see us Prompt attention to all orders To the Wright Medical Co Columbus Ohio I have been using Gentlemen Wrights Celery Capsules for stomach trouble and constipation for some three months and find them even greater than recommended With pleasure and un- ¬ solicited I would recommend them to HIGH ST COB FOURTH PARIS KY the suffering public w mm uui ui jnm ui Yours very truly D F Simmons Sold by W T Brooks at 50c aud 100 VytT VilSIWH5Si per box Send address on postal to the Vright Mod Co Columbus Ohio for trial size free mrm r m I1 BAMIGI1S SUtf IM tion sick Headaches W Of S wrignrs ueicry Tea cures constipa25c ¬ at druggists Trousers 35Q 4 and up Paris Furnisiiiog and Tailoring k H S STOUT Manager Feed Lansing vlEfrw 96 Cutter W S ADERsar Mr and Mrs Alex Odor of Cynthi ¬ Sold by all druggists at 0ir andl per box ana were guests of Mr Claude Yimont Send address on postal to the Wright Med and wife Wednesday on their way to Co Columbus O for trial size free the Ratcliff Thompson wedding at Tiles Piles Piles Sharpsburg Miss Thompson is a sister of Mrs Vimont Dr Williams Indian Pile Ointment will Monday Peck P O Wrights Celery Capsules To the Wright Medical Co Columbus Ohio Gents have purchnsel a box of Wrights Celery Capsules from lames T Blaser drug- ¬ gist Wsiverly O and used them foV Stomach 1 was unable to Trouble and Constipation do anything for nearly two years 1 used three boKesof your Celery Capsulesand they have cured me For the benefit of others so afllictedl wish to send this letter Very truly yours Anderson Pike Co O Recommends iV i 1 W At Who Write For Price List Or call 33 r The only safe sure and reliable Female PILIi w L9 Ui r ever offered to Ladies A I especially recommend ed to married Ladies Ask for DB MOTTS PEITHYEOYAI FILLS and take no other Gentlemens Tan Shoes VW Send for circular Price 100 per fcox 6 boxes for 500 The latest and best tans for Summer DR MOTTS CHEMICAL CO - Cleveland9 Ohio wear Genuine hand welts for 250 to 3 50 per pair vWill not squeak and For SaleBy W T Brooks Druggist just the thing for the Summer months CLAY RION rlili EdOTT9 II v III all cure Blind Bleeding Ulcerated aud Itching Piles It absorbs tin tumors allays the itch ing at once acts as a poultice gives instant relief Dr Williams Indian Pile Ointment is prepared oulv for Piles and Itching of the private parts nd nothing else Every box is guaranteed Sold by druggists sent by mail for 50c and SI per box WILLIAMS MhG CO Props Cleveland O For sale by W T Brooks druggist 21jy-9G-- ly Prices 1 at the Works QUEEN CRESCENT gB Slightly Used Pianos of standard makes are better than new ones of low grade and occasionally can be bought fot less money We have now a few unusual bargains in LEXINGTON STOVE WORKS Lexington JSJTake Chestnut Street car for the Works the Whitest SEVENTH ST EAST END CITY During the Tennessee Centennial ahd International Exposition at FRANKFORT CIMMATI RY Nashville Tenn a low rata special tariff has heen established for the In Effect March 1 1897 sale of tickets from Cincinnati and other terminal points on the Queen DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY Crescent Eoute EAST BOUND Tickets are on sale until father notice to Chattanooga at 535 one Live Frankfort 630am 300pm way or 575 round trip from Georgetown the round trip tickets being ArrElkhorn 63am 320pm good seven days to returnx other tickets with longer return limit at Arr Switzer 65 am 332pm 702am 348pm s Arr Stamping Ground 865 and at 1180 for the round trip 708am 358pm ArrDuvalls 720am 415pm These rates enable the public to visit- Nashville and other South- Arr Georgetown 800am 430pm live Georgetown at rates never before offered Vestibuled trains os the finest Arr Newtown ern points 812am 442pm 822am 452pm Centreville class are at the disposal of the passenger affording a moBt pleasant trip Arr Elizabeth 828am 458pm very interesting scenery and important Arr Paris and enabling one to visit the 840am 510pm Arr grounds in and about Chattanooga Lookout fountain and battle WEST BOUND Chickamauga National Military Park Tickets to Nashville to visit Lve Paris 920am 530pm 932am 542pm ArrElizabeth the Centennial can be repurchased at Chattanooga for 340 round trip Arr Centreville 938am 548pm C Route Arr Newtown 948am 558pm Ask your ticket agent for tickets viaXJincinnati and the Q 1000am 610pm Arr Georgetown Or write to South juve ueorgetown KiA R BLACKWELL 1040am 635pm W 1056am 646pm Arr Duvalis 1110am 653pm Arr Stamping Ground 1125am 704pm Arr Switzer Georgetown Ky 1135am 711pm Arr Elkhorn c Cta 1 -- High Grade Pianos used so little as to be practically good as new indeed not one person in a hundred could detect the difference as they are in perfect condition throughout We invite you to call Full particu- ¬ early and investigate lars cheerfully furnished buyers out-of-to- PRIDE OF PARIS The Best Purest and - ¬ FLOUR PARIS MILLING CO Ask Your Grocer For It - i i M - We are sole representatives for the celebrated STEINWAY PIANOS - - lWfl QR V - X -- ArrFraukfort v- 1155am 725pm Ernest Urchs 121 Co - Take No Other H rr W CI RiNEA TisoNGrenLPassrAgent Cincinnati 0 T- - GEO B HARPER Genl Supt CD FiJANKFORT KY BERCAW Genl Pass Agt and 123 West Fourth Street c EVERY SACK s CINCINNATI O GDIRAHTEED1 4 - - - v fi V T 2 z THE BOURBON PEEK-A-BO- O NJ31 th Cl ZRIDAY JULY 23 1897 - ON THURSDAY The Senate May Reach a Vote on the Conference Report The Republicans Will Vote Solidly for the K port Supported by the Silver Re- pablicaus and One or Two Demo crats and One Populist ¬ n ¬ GEN GAKCIA iMay Be The Boone Miners Work TVhen No Strik ers Are ia Sight Troable is Expected at the Allison mines Near Canonsbarg Pa the Next President ban Republic o Washington July 21 The indica- ¬ tions when the senate adjourned Tues day were that a vote would be reached upon the conference report on the tariff bill some time during Thursday or at the latest before the close of the week There may be a change in the conditions which will postpone a vote but it is difficult to see what could cause it The opposition to the bill realize that there is no possibility of preventing adoption of the report and their present purpose is only to secure what advantage they can by exhibiting- what they claim are the in- ¬ consistencies of the measure It is true that at one time they had some hope of being able to secure the recommittal of the bill but a thorough canvass re- veals no foundation for this hope It develops the fact that tbe Republicans will vote solidly for the report and that they will be supported by Messrs Jonesof Nevada silver republican and McEnery of Louisiana democrat and also probably Messrs Mantle and Stewart silver republicans They have also discovered that Senator Kyle pop who is absent has left strict instruc- ¬ tions that he should not be paired With the adoption of the report thus assured the democrats probably will not attempt to prolong the debate be yondthe arrival of Mr Turley the new senator from Tennessee They will continue to ask for an explana ¬ tion of changes made by the confer- ¬ ence but these will not occupy a great deal of time The general opinion is that the quorum of the senate will disappear very soon after the disposal of the tar- ¬ iff bill but the determination of the supporters of the Harris Pacific rail road resolution to secure a vote upon it before final adjournment may delay that consummation for some days Washington July 21 Representative Mitchell of New York has intro duced in the house a bill to establish a currency reserve fund for the redemp- ¬ tion of United States and treasury notes of 1890 The fund shall airere- gate at the start 150000000 of which not over S100000000 shall con ¬ sist of gold and the remainder of United States and treasury notes ¬ - Trouble and much of it seems to be in store at the Allison mine three miles west of Canonsburg The men want to go to work but are afraid They fear another invasion of the strikers and do not want to be targets for a mob that is liable at any moment to lose control of itself Wednesday night everything was quiet about the mines and the citizens of Canonsburg was awaiting the arrival of the invaders It was the intention of the strikers to begin their July 22 Pittsburgh Pa ¬ C t Hnnhnac wiij Harrow iimao vt a xuuuvw From B Tn pedo Several Spanish Soldiers Killed and Wounded Feeling Growing la v Spain That Cuba Be Dropped trr FINAL PREPARATIONS FIFTY FIFTH CONGRESS Made for the Dedication of the Logran Statue at Chicago 7 Extraordinary Session Chicago July 22 The final prepara ¬ Washington July 16 Senate Pacific railway the tions have been made for the dedic- ¬ senate affairs occupied the attention of res- ¬ throughout the day and the Harris ation of the Logan statue Thursday olution pending judicial pro ¬ relating to the ceedings against the Union Pacific road final ¬ ly went over until Friday Early In the day Senators Stewart and White indulged in sharp personalities in connection vith the contest over the San Pedro Cat deep water harbor The joint resolution was passed accepting the invitation of France to participate in the Paris exposition of 1900 House No business was transacted by the house Thursday Immediately after the jour- ¬ nal was approved a recess was taken on Mr Cannons motion until Friday Mr Cannon having given assurance to Mr Bailey that In his ppinion a partial or complete conference report on the deficiency bill would be ready by that tune Washington July 17 Senate The open session of the senate was brief and uneventful Friday The Harries resolution relating to the Union Pacific railroad was further dis ¬ cussed At 30 the senate went into executive session remaining behind closed doors until 6 oclock and then adjourned until Saturday HonsE Tbe house Friday agree5 to the par tial conference report on the general deficien ¬ cy appropriation bill was then concurred in ths senate amendment fixing the limit of cost of armor plate for the three battleships now building at 8300 per ton This was the main point in dispute between the two houses A strong effort was made to induce the house to agree to a substitute proposition fixing the 400 limit at as recommend- ¬ ed by the secretary of the navy but after three hours debate the house by a vote of 142 to 45 concurred in the senate amend- ¬ ment On motion of Mr Hrodcrick rep Kas tbe senate resolution directing the sec- ¬ retary of war to Issue 1000 tents for the use of the Grand Army encampment at Leavenworth Kas next October was adopted Mr Can ¬ non then called up the conference report on tbe general deficiency bill which meantime had been agreed to by the senate The house concurred in the senate amendment appropri- ¬ ating 5000 for removing obstructions in the Kootenai river Montana Adjourned until 1 ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ LOGAN - MONUMENT R Distinguished Guests Who Are to Take Part in the Dedicatory Ceremonies Gathering in Chicago Chicago July 21 Distinguished guests who are to take part in the Lo gan monument dedicatory ceremonies have already arrived Prominent t among them are Secretary of War Alger who made only a short stop in the city and will return July 22 Maj W F Tucker of the United States army of Gen Logan Mrs Logan Tucker and George Edwin Tucker A St Gaudens the designer and sculptor tof the monument itself and Assistant Secretary of the Navy Roosevelt It was definitely settled Monday night that President McKinley would not be able to come W Beach Tay- ¬ lor Logans old private secretary was In Washington to urge the attendance of the president but the fact that congress is just about to pass the tar ¬ iff bill requires the presence in the capitol city of the nations chief executive ¬ son-in-law ¬ ¬ are stricken with fear and anticipate The Allison mine had 40 trouble men at work until noon Wednesday when the plant was shut down in ap parent anticipation of trouble Dur ¬ ing Wednesday afternoon a committee from the Enterprise mine three miles up the road paid them a visit The committee wanted to find out what the status of the situation was They decided that the Enterprise would not work under the present surroundings o At the Boone mine a game of is in progress The men want to work as long as there are no strikers in sight Manager Hitchman of the mine said that he would not attempt to operate the plant as long as there was any indication of trouble He said he was prepared for any emer- ¬ gency and intimated that the trouble would blow over in a few days At a committee meeting at the min ers headquarters in this city Wednesday afternoon the question was discussed-how it would be possible to march a body of men to stop the min ¬ ers of the New York Cleveland Gas Coal Co from working Every phase of the subject was discussed but no plan could be hit upon It was the general opionion that the mines of this com ¬ pany are impregnable to attack be- ¬ cause of their geographical position The expected meeting of the board of arbitration did not take place Wednesday the western members not reach ing the city As soon as they arrive arrangements will be made for a gen ¬ eral meeting of operators The situation among the strikers in this district is practically unchanged The suspension is complete with the exception of Dearmitts mines and though considerable destitution and suffering is reported among the strikers and their families the deter ¬ mination to tight it out is apparently as strong as on the first day of the strike ¬ peek-a-bo¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ The men are fully determined to carry out their threat of making the march They expect to start with GOO men and be reinforced with about the same number from Bridgeville and Toms Run The men will start with several days rations and expect to be in shape to watch the offending mines for sev eVal days Wednesday morning a num ¬ ber of the men going to the Allison mine were stopped by the committee of strikers Many of them did not go to work J H V Cook said that the names of the strikers would be pro ¬ cured and they would all be arrested for intimidating his employes Sheriff Vernor Clark of Washington county is fully prepared for any army of marching strikers that may invade his domain It is not generally known that at G oclock Tuesday night he had nearly 300 deputies sworn in who are available any time From the inost re ¬ liable information it was learned that they are all ready with the requisite number of firearms and are prepared to do business The sheriff is on the ground in per- ¬ son and if there is a false movement made on the part of any of the strik- ¬ ers drastic measures will be resorted to The miners who want to go1 to work march to Canonsburg Wednesda3r night but a telegram from Bridgeville an- ¬ nounces that owing to the heavy rains of Wednesday evening it was decided to postpone the tramp until Thursday Nine Sailors Drowned LOGAN MONUMENT -- Southampton July 22 Nine mem- ¬ bers of the crew of the Belgian steam-¬ er Concha were drowned in conse- ¬ quence of the collision of the vessel named on Monday off the Isle of Wight with the British steamer St Fillans The Concha which was from Mediterranean ports and bound up the channel was sunk while the St Fil lans bows were badly damaged The last craft named which was bound from Rotterdam for New York brought seven of the Conchas crew to this port the Negro who caused the trouble at Riverton is probably swinging from a convenient limb between Riverton and Cherokee Wednesday night Speaks was captured near Riverton Wednesday morning and at 8 oclock Wednes day night officers started for Tuscum bia with him A hundred armed men started after the officers swearing they would hang the Negro before he could be taken five miles They un¬ doubtedly carried out their threats ¬ ¬ The Illinois congressional delegation will be represented by a committee consisting of Messrs Mann Belknap Foss Lorimer Prince Jett ind Campbell The civic and military features prom- ¬ ise to surpass those of any similar demonstration that has ever been held west of the Allegheny mountains Ten thousand soldiers in arms 2000 vet-¬ erans who followed the lead of the fighting commander whose deeds are to be perpetuated in bronze 3000 members of uniformed orders to which Gen Logan belonged during his life and a multitude of civilians organized under various names will march in the monster parade which is to be the to attend Secretary Gage also will not be able Probable Lynching in Alabama Florence Ala July 22 Jim Speaks spectacular feature of the unveiling of the momiinent in Lake front park next Thursday afternoon The work of the committee on marine display is nearing completion and the outer har bor will be alive with crafts on Thursday The assemblage of boats on the lake front Thursday afternoon will be Monmouthshire and many persons the finest thing ever seen on the lakes were injured there and in other places ¬ ¬ London July 22 Various sections of England were visited Wednesday by thunderstorms In the northwest ern part of London floods have occurred stopping railway traffic and much damage was done Two boys were killed by lightning at Ipswich Floods have also occurred in Essay Birming ham and Warwickshire A boy was killed by lightning at Rhymney in ¬ Fatal Storms in England ¬ ¬ t Utah Pioneer Jubilee AN EXPLOSION TO KLONDYKE in the Cartridge Factory or the Winches ¬ Passengers Must Wait for the August ter Arms Co Four Killed and Fire In Boats The Journey is 7000 Miles From jured Chicago New Haven Ct July 22 Four Chicago July 21 P B Weare vice women and two men were killed Wed- ¬ president of the North American Trad ¬ nesday by an explosion in the loading ing Co is receiving hundreds of let- ¬ department at the armory the Winters asking information regarding the chester Repeating Arms ofCo Five Alaskan gold fields He said Tuesday others were taken to the hospital bad ¬ The boats which sail from Seattle ly injured The dead are W F Bau this month are full every passage mer Mrs Mary Baumeister Miss Josie taken That means that any one who Brennan Miss Ida Brown Wm wants to go to Klondyke must wait for and Miss Tracy Gonroy Fatally Hill¬ inthe August boats And the journey jured Geo Bardorf and Edward Bar is 7000 miles People talk about it dorf as if it was walking across the The explosion occurred in the load ¬ street They dont realize what Alaska ing room Employed in this room is what the Yukon is They will need were 150 hands two thirds of them a map to convince them of the truth girls or women Nearly all of the fethat the country of the Yukon and its male hands are employed on the load- ¬ tributaries in Alaska and British ing machines The full complement America is as large as the wholeof the of hands were at work in the room United States east of the Mississippi when the explosion took place Forty that it is longer than a trip to Europe feet of the side building was blown out before they reach the Behring sea and and hurled in pieces many feet and the mouth of the Yukon that by the fragments of human bodies were scat- ¬ time they strike the Yukon the Alas- ¬ tered about All available physicians kan arctic winter will be upon them the fire department the police the By September 25 the winter sets ambulance and hospital corps were down and the Yukon country is frozen speedily summoned Harrowing scenes solid until next May were enacted as the vast throng conThe expense of getting from Chi- ¬ gregated about the place cago to Seattle is 60 and from Seattle As rapidly as a victim was seen to be to the Behring sea is 150 There will alive the sufferers were teuderly cared be thousands of eastern men who will for made as comfortable as possible go but of course the coast people have and conveyed with all possible speed everything in their favor One thing to their homes Two of the bodies had must be remembered that the Klon- ¬ been decapitated Others had been dyke country is in British domain and partially torn asunder and still others will be governed accordingly had been dismembered The officials of the company extendSWIFT JUSTICE ed every effort to assist in the work of Will Be His Portion if Captured Two relief Boys Fatally Assaulted Perhaps the saddest scene was enact- ¬ Wheeling W Va July 21 Tues ed when John Baumeister but recent- ¬ dajT afternoon at a farm house near ly married learned that his wife was Moundsville two boys Stanley Mason among the dead At the time of the aged 12 years and Willie Mason aged explosion he was at work but a few 4 years were attacked by an unknown feet from her The cause of the exman with a briar hoe and terribly cut plosion has not been determined It and beaten The older boy will die may have been due to a cartridge im- ¬ before Wednesday morning Mrs Ma- ¬ properly placed in the loading ma- ¬ son and her husband separated four chine years ago and he went to Edward Bardorf died after being the lower end of the state The au- taken to the hospital thorities believes he committed the Favorable to the Workmen deed as he was seen in Moundsville Pittsburgh Pa July 22 The finish ¬ Tuesday night A reward for his cap- ¬ ture has been offered by the mayor of ing scale of the Amalgamated associaMoundsville If captured he will un ¬ tion has been signed by Jones Laugh doubtedly be given a dose of the swift- ¬ lin and work will be resumed at once est kind of justice He attempted to The scale as signed was a compromise kill his wife after the children were but is said to be favorable to the work- ¬ assaulted but she escaped by a mere men The firm of Jones Laughlin is chance the first to sign the finishing scale in the country and it is thought that Steamer on a Rocky Reef Alpena Mich July 21 The pas- ¬ othor firms will soon fall in line The senger steamer Alpena of Detroit in scale has now been signed for all de trying to make port during a fog Tues ¬ partments on the extensive plant of Laughlin and the entire day night got off her course and ran Jones upon a rocky reef at Averys dock works will be in operation in a few The passengers have been brought days giving employment to 3500 men here No further efforts were made Uold Discovered in Missouri to release her Tuesday night The Columbia Mo July 22 A gold dis- ¬ steamer is resting easy with no sea covery on the banks of Dry Fork running creek near New Florence in Mont- ¬ Miners Wages Raised by Hillsboko 111 July 21 The Cof gomeryAcounty Mo is announced the Broadhead geologist of Dr G feen miners have received an addition- ¬ al raise of five cents making ten cents state university M A Bigg the dis- ¬ in all since the beginning of the strike coverer has sent several consignments The mine receiver says he will con- ¬ of quartz to Dr Broadhead and essays¬ tinue to make reasonable raises to by the latter have proved the genkeep his men at work and will pay the uineness of the find Dr Broadhead ¬ scale agreed upon at the end of the will visit Montgomery county to inspect the vein strike ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ NewYobk July 21 A special disj patch to the Sun from Santiago de Cuba is to the effect that Gen Calixto Garcia is almost certain to succeed Salvador Cisneros Betancourt as presi- ¬ The dent of the Cuban republic election will be held next September Senor Leandor Gonxales Alcarta formerly a Spanish soldier arrived from Havre Sunday and immediately offered his services to the Cuban pa- ¬ triots His offer will probably be accepted Senor Alcarta was sent over to Cuba as a trooper during the last war THE LATE GEN LOGAN by the Spanish government and fougnt Already several of the governors of on the Spanish side When the war closed Alcarta settled in Cuba and be the different states accompanied by For criticising their staff arrived and more came in came an autonomist Gen Campos he was expelled from Thursday morning The various regi the island early in the present war He ments of the regular army which have went to Spain and after a time was ar- ¬ been detailed to appear iu the parade rested for conspiracy He was kept in are all in the city with the exception prison until a month ago when he of those at Ft Sheridan The Fourth was released on bail which he jumped infantry cauie on the morning train He now intends escaping to France to devote himself to the cause of Cuba libre Havana July 21 The Spanish gun ¬ boat Maria Christiana under command of Lieut Crogner had a narrow escape from destruction while recon noitering the River Baines in Santia- ¬ go province recently The vessel stop- ¬ ped just short of a dynamite mine which was exploded without much damage to the ship The Cuban camps along shore kept up a hot fire on the lisjMslSSLsWfcMilssaBSfcJi warship and killed and wounded sev- ¬ eral of the Spanish soldiers New York July 21 Letters to prominent Cubans in this city from friends in Madrid say that the Span- ¬ ish populace is tired of the Cuban bur ¬ MRS JOHN A LOGAN den and the feeling is publicly ex- ¬ pressed that the Spaniards had better Mrs Logan and her party arrived let Cuba go The opinion is expressed from Pittsburgh Wednesday uight by that Spain has reached a moment like the Pennsylvania road aud the mem that when the English became per- ¬ bers of Logans old regiment the suaded of the futility of their efforts to Thirty first Illinois have come in to subdue the colonies which now form the number of 150 the United States ¬ ¬ During the Tennessee Centennial and In- ternational Exposition at Nashville Tenn a low rate special tariff has been established and for the sale of tickets from CincinnatiOres- terminal points on the Queen other cent Route further noTickets are on sale daily untilway or 720 Chattanooga at 675 one tice to round trip from Cincinnati the round trip tickets being good seven days to return other tickets with longer return limit at 990 and at 1350 for the round trip These rates enable the public to visit Nashville and other Southern points at rates never before offered Vestibuled trains of the finest class are at the disposal of the passenger affording a most pleasant trip¬ and enabling one to visit the very interesting scenery and important battle grounds in and about Chattanooga Lookout Mountain and Chickamauga National Military Park Tickets to Nashville to visit the Centennial can be repurchased at Chattanooga for 340 round trip Ask your ticket agent for tickets via Cincinnati and the Q I C Route South or write to RINEARSON Genl Passr AgentCincinnati u ¬ ¬ ¬ Queen Creacemt 4 Wa l - er ¬ prestidigitator The press and public accord me a gratifyingly high standing and my fellow artists are pleased to look upon my work as being skillful beyond thatof my com- petitors I have always regarded myself as being a past master in the art and science of legerdemain But yesterday I met a gentle- man who is so clearly my superior that now I know myself to be but the merest tyro struggling with the rudiments of my profession I can cause a small flowering plant or shrub to grow from the seed in a few moments in full view of the astonished audi- ence but the man of whom I am speaking has created an enormous family tree hun- ¬ dreds of years old in a few hours NY World ¬ His Snperior am usually rated as a clever perform ¬ modestly remarked the well known a t -- ¬ ¬ W wm W ¬ Alabama concluded his remarks in favor of the resolution and Mr Stewart spoke in op ¬ position to it Mr Thurston of Nebraska was speaking m opposition when at 5 oclock the senate went into executive session and shortly tbcreaf terward adjourned House The conference report on the tariff bill was adopted by the house shortly after midnight Tuesday morning by a vote of 185 to 118 and at noon Tuesday the report will go to the senate for action there Thisieclipses all previous records The result was accom- ¬ plished after 12 hours of co ntinuous debate But two speeches were made by the republic- ¬ ans one by Gov Dinglev in opening the de ¬ bate and one by Mr Payne N Y in closing it The democrats were thus forced to put forth speaker after speaker In all ten democrats and one popu- ¬ list speeches were made Messrs Wheeler Ala Swanson Va Ball Lanham and Bai- ¬ ley Tex Kelly N D Fleming Ga Han ¬ dy DeL McDowell O Berry Ky and Mc ¬ Millan Tenn being the speakers The sugar schedule was the main point of assault but the most interesting feature of the debate oc- ¬ curred when M Bailey and Mr McMillan the two rival democratic leaders crossed swords on the question of orthodoxy of the raw ma- ¬ terial doctrine the former opposing and the latter championing it Washington July 21 Sen at- e- The tariff conference report was presented to the senate Tuesday but little progress was made on it beyond the formal reading of about two thirds of the report There was nq indication of when the final vote would be reached During the day Mr Tillman dem S C openly threatened a filibuster until next December if cotton bagging and cotton ties were not restored to the free list but the threat was regarded as somewhat facetous The sugar amendments occasioned a long de ¬ bate during which Mr Allison stated that the conference rates were lower than thoso of ibo senate and largely a concession to the house Senators Vest Jones Berry and White ques- ¬ tioned this statement urging that the sugar trust secured larger benefits from the conference sshedule than from any previously of- ¬ fered The lumber amendment also brought animated criticism from Senators Teller and Pettigrew Early in the day the senate passed a joint resolution authorizing and requesting the president to take all necessary steps for the release of the Competitor prisoners from prison in Havana Washington July 22 Senate The sen- ¬ ate concluded the formal reading of the tariff conference report Wednesday The debate was spiritless in the main Early in the day Mr Jones Ark made a contest against the conference committee on the ground that it had exceeded its authority in so amend ¬ ing the paragraph relating to printing paper as to place a retaliatory duty against the countries paying an export bounty on wood pulp- His point of order was debated at much length and finally overruled by Vice President Hobart This removed the only ob- ¬ stacle thus far encountered by the report The reciprocity amendment and the amendment of the stamp tax on bonds and stocks devel- ¬ oped much criticism House When the house met Wednesday Mr Evans rep Ky from the committee on ways and means reported a joint resolution requesting the president to make sueh inves- ¬ tigations as will elicit all thefacts in reference to the restrictions put upon the sale of Amer ican tobacco in foreign countries under what are known as the regie or government con- ¬ tracts It also authorizes the president to enter into negotiations with governments of those countries with a view to obtaining a modification or removal of these restrictions ¬ - Washington July 20 Senate Monday in the senate was principally devoted to a discussion on Mr Harris resolution relating to the Union Pacific railroad Mr Morgan of Monday The following conversation took place be ween two gentlemen in a crowded London club room They had been talking about the condition of things when they first came to London Mr Rawson said When I first came to London I had only a ragged coat with a knife and a few mar ¬ bles in my pocket You were better off than I then for I had neither a coat nor a waistcoat nor a knife nor even marbles Nonsense was the reply How could How They Came to London that be The roar of laughter that arose could have been heard miles away Tit Bits I was a baby in long clothes Well I will tell you When I came here operator estimates that it costs an average of 10 cts per 100 lbs tahaul milk to a cream ¬ ery and haul the skim milk away again He is going to save all this by placing with his patrons Dairv Separators and have wagons call for the cream In this way the farmer will get the full advantage of the Separator and creamery systems will have the warm fresh skim milk at home for stock feed and will not be at ex- ¬ pense of carting his milk to a creamery Before ordering these 500 Separators val ¬ ued at over 50000 the merits of all the different Dairy Separators on the market were very thoroughly considered and prac- ¬ tical tests were made by Mr Moody It was finally decided that the Sharpies Separators made at West Chester Pa were the most desirable and best made ma chines and though costing a little more money it was thought they were well worth ito tne aitterence asked and tne order was jxmrrw irr given to that company ¬ ¬ v ¬ THE XARGEST SINGLE ORDER FOR CREAM SEPARATORS EVER GIVEN A Noted Iowa Creamery Operator Or ¬ ders Five Hundred at One Time W I Moody Iowas greatest creamery oi a Dicycie There are cases mamma explained the young woman when the proper hise of a bicycle is almost imperative and Im sure that mine is one of them Nonsense returned the elder woman Thats very nice talk from the point of view of a dealer in bicycles but that is all Now if you want exercise But I dont mamma interrupted the young woman hastily It isnt exercise that I need but recreation and theres no recreation in doing the housework none at all Chicago Post A It was Its during a controversy over the value Different You Xiiotv ntFwvWMJKMn wwi nrv -Q i- Death and the people of Germany are alike in one respect Name it The people pf Germany like touse money direct from the mint Death loves a shining mark too burgh Chronicle Telegraph Go on Resemblance Pitts ¬ I i Real Warm Weather Rest and Com ¬ There is a powder to be shaken into the shoes called Allens Foot Ease invented by Allen S Olmsted Le Roy N Y which druggists and shoe dealers say is the best thing they have ever sold to cure swollen burning sore and tender or aching feet Some dealers claim that it makes tight or new shoes feel easy It certainly will cure corns and bunions and relieve instantly sweating hot or smarting feet It costs only a quarter and the inventor will send a sam- ¬ ple free to any address You ought to be ashamed of yourself said the judge to the gentleman who had been caught picking pockets at a funeral Have you no sense of decency Yes judge but you know people in a place like that are so easily touched In- ¬ dianapolis Journal Use Gentleness fort Passed Port Towxsevd Wash July 22 Owing to the present rush to the Klondyke gold fields and the still greater rush which is expected next spring the Puget Sound Tugboat Co has decided to put a steamer on the Yukon river to carry passengers and freight from St Michaels to Circle City ana tne ivionayice valley bteamboat men here estimate that beginnincr about the first of next April a large steamer can leave the sound for Alaska daily with all the passenger and freight accommodations crowded Houghton Mich July 22 Several hundred miners from Ohio and Penn sylvania bituminous coal districts have reached here in the past few da3s in search of work and report that thousands more aro coming drawn by reports of prosperity in the copper dis trict It is true that the local mines are working more men than ever be fore at the highest wages paid east of the Rocky mountains but there are already 2000 idle men in the district and the prospects for coal miners se curing employment here are small ¬ ¬ ¬ To Put a Steitmer oti th Yukon River The Appropriate Place or I s Miners Goinj to Miehieran ¬ Be gentle in stimulating the kidneys otherwise you will excite and weaken them V The happiest results follow the use of Hos- tetters Stomach Bitters to overcome renal inactivity Avoid the unmedicated fierystimulants of commerce The kidneys have a delicate membrane easily irritated and upon this the action of such excitants in pernicious Malarial complaints indiger-tiori rheumatism neuralgia and biliousness suecomb to the corrective influence of the - Bitters ¬ Well Whirlev dirl vmi fir creature returned your love Yes iiwr as soon as I offered it to her Detroit Fres i- ¬ She Had Scrofula7 Purified the Blood with Hoods I was troubled with scrofula f or ei bt s A- - A -- The pio Salt jubilee began Tuesday and for neer the remainder of the week will be witnessed one of the greatest celebra- ¬ tions ever seen in this inter mountain country Visitors have been pouring into the city and the streets are Lake Utah July 21 Memphis Tenn July 21 Harvy De Herry colored who was to have beet hanged Tuesday for attempted out xage upon a T yearold white child ha been granted a respite of 30 days by tin v lay or croTvded Respited for Thirty Days New Iberia Li July 22 About 730 Wednesday morning at Baldwin in St Marys parish a Negro Jack Davis alias Buddy Jack was hung by the aroused citizens of the town for criminally assaulting Widow Marcol who had been during the early hours of the morning at the house of Dr Lytic bin tr in Louisiana tecot living near Scranton Constantinople July The Snltan Issues an Irade 22 tan has issued an irade sanctioning the powers The sul ¬ lettlement of the frontier question in iccordance with the wishes of the - rr i - - - Bessemer Ihr Iron for Germany Chicago Juty 22 The Industrial London July 21 Miss Jean Inge low the distinguished poet andnovel World to morrow will say Three ist died in London Monday night She thousand tons of besseraer pig iron the was in her 77th year Sir John Charles product of a Milwaukee mill have been Bucknill one of the founders of the sold for export to Germany Many volunteer movement of 1859 is dead other foreign inquiries are at hand in this market He was in his 80th year From the North Pole Gave Him the Death Penalty Christiana July 22 A telegram Richmond Va July 2L Jackson states Wilson a Negro who attempted an as-¬ from Stavanger caught that a carrier¬ in the neighsault Thursday night on Miss Gilliam pigeon has been in Rifylke with a cf York county was arraigned in York borhood of Soevde of its feet and the ring ipon one county court Tuesday and pleaded silver stamped upon its wings guilty and the jury gave him the death following North pole 142 W 4702 Denaltv Death of Miss Jean Ingelow - 1 searching one day he came upou a lit- ¬ HoodR Pillo nnro tinnt nn noW tle stream which flowed down the side of the mountain and emptied into a basin The water was clear and in peering down its shallow depths Phiscater discovered gold He picked all his metal out of the ice cold water i years and I had as many as eight ruunin--soreat one time Nothing seemed to do Returns With S50000 in Gold me any good until I began taking Nev Carlisle Ind July 22 Frank Sarsaparilla I continued using thisHoods medi Phiscator of this city who went to ciue until I had taken six bottles when the the Klondyke Alaska last winter has side just returned with S50t000 in gold Miis A G Haxcher wei Perfectly well Rolfe Iowa Phiscater reached the field in the dead of winter He dug a hole in the ground large enough to hold himself Is the Best in fact the One True Blood Purifier and provisions After many weeks of ri Hoods Sarsaparilla muigesuon 2oe-- - K - - i n- - v - rj J I t II it- B 7 wH Y - J iii - fc THE BOURBON NEWS THE ROAD AND THEV RIVEFL It was a wondrous road and beautiful Ah Thorndyke glad to know you Mr Thorndyke As I was saying if In places youll come around It wound around the foot of wooded hills I have no idea of investing in Alla-¬ iNow underneath great beetling cliffs with coochee Philip interrupted hoping to sullen faces Im in Alabama for my health Then down the softest valleys where the escape trills and I dont expect to stay in town very Ot sylvan songsters filled the laughing long flowef od meadows con- ¬ Oho yes for your health eh With music till the hour of evening j sumption I suppose Well well in prayer hen picking its way through undis ¬ life were in the midst of death and no covered starlit shadows To places slumberf ul and strange to care man knowTeth the day or hour Tho road was wide and long it had no PBTD AT JULY 23 1897 if it would be a ques of - a M v i a gfiif lL V sap The end no mortal eye could see Forms tantalizing beautiful well worth tho winning Seemed ever beckoning to some good to be And so the road wound in and out across morasses That shook beneath the tramp of host on host While up and down and through the dark- ¬ ened mountain passes The tireless way led on from post to post Eeside this ancient road unseen unheard known beginning b a jfcV VSm St S a v of dread They could not near the dip of oars nor yet the singing The fragrant airs across the river bore hey could not hear the eager swish of angels winging Their joyful errands on the sunlit shore 3he river was not always deep for spark- ¬ ling shallows Made music sometimes for the childrens M a river Forever hugged the shore Its stealthy tread So soft and velvety it was neer caused a shiver Among the heedless throng nor thought Mr Fench seemed nonplused for the moment but he rallied immediately and went on witfi increasing zeal In that case Mr Thorndyke what better legacy could a man leave his folks than a few solid investments in our promising young city Why my dear sir as a stranger you can have no idea of the vast and wonderful re- ¬ sources of this marvelous region abso ¬ lutely no idea at all And Allacoochee is the natural center for the whole coun- ¬ try the point where all the industries within a radius of 500 miles are bound to cluster Just run your eye over this map look at that for a location This part thats piatted off is as level as a floor and heres tho railroad running straight through the middle of it he was leaning over the back of the seat now holding the map spread out before his unwilling listener plenty of room for sidetracks over here you see and for the shops that the roads going to build Then here are the spurs down I See J - v 3V 2f Sometimes a glimpse across to where the sweet marshmallows Were growing filled their wistful eye3 with tears And once a little one the darling of her mother Her bare toes gleaming on the shining sand Quick followed by her loving watchful brown eyed brother Went wading througn the ripples hand in hand And they were seen no more their sunn3 faces hidden By floods of mist perchance by floods of ears ft p And always somehow somewhere some- ¬ time still unsleeping The voiceless boatman of the silent sea Was waiting at the brink unmindful of the weeping To row the traveler to the far countree Edward A Jenks in N Y Sun tears But no one left that dusty crowded road unbidden I watched them closely through the maze of years h-I m asked you if you were geing to Allacoochee r k A CASE IN EQUITY BY FRANCIS LYNDE Copyright 1895 by J B Llpplncott Co V - A CHANCE ACQUAINTANCE resinous smell of old field pines blew in at the open windows of the car and Thorndyke lying- back in his seat with half closed eyes tried once more to set in their proper order the events of the last few days in New York There was no particular reason why they should be assorted and labeled save one the memory of them seemed to be slipping away from him There were times when he could not be sure that he had signed his will when he could not re- ¬ member what he had said to his mother at parting- And as for that pathetic little scene in the dimly lighted at the Morrissons it might happened ten years before He have asked himself if it were possible that it was only two days since he had choked in trying- to say good by to Helen It was beyond belief the miles of distance had somehow become transmuted into years of time and the memory of that evening- only two evenings ago was al- ¬ ready beginning- to fade Was it only because the change of scene and of en compassment pushed the things of yes ¬ terday aside to make room for newer impressions or did the reason lie in the grim fact of irrevocability Thorn dyke pursued these reflections so far into the field of abstractions that the man in the next seatspoke twice before he g ot an answer - embankment stream The afternoon sun skirted the had dropped behind the summit of Johns mountain but his oblique rays still poured into the valley through occasional gaps in the ridge projecting grotesquely leng tihencd shadows of the moving- train half way across to the western slope of Jubal mountain A ccol breeze fragrant with the breath of wild honejsuckle and spicy with the ¬ - The train on the Chiwassee Valley ex ¬ tension lurched uneasily round the curves in the new track of the branch line leaving- a trail of sooty smoke hanging- in the foliage on the mountain side and stippling- the pools in the river with showers of cinders from the - J to the rolling mill and the furnace on the bank of the river this one goes up to the coal mines and that to the iron mines across the Little Chiwassee This piece of grounds reserved for a woolen mill and that strip down there by the Thats as you please to look at it river is taken ior a swing factory So far as natural resources go place baby swings you know a sawmill a is solicT There is any quantity thebuild ¬ of planing mill a sash and door factory ing material marble sand and lime- ¬ a stone fire clay timber coal and iron Philip made two or three wild passes If a city may be built upon the mere at his human bluebottle succeeding presence of raw material Allacoochee finally in interrupting with a promise is a fact accomplished to caH upon Mr Fench at his office and That implies a doubt may I ask the pleading weariness as an excuse for not reason investigating the subject on the spot Certainly though Im not at all sure Fench folded his map and rested his I can make it plain All the advantages case with the promise but he kept up I have named and a dozen more are here a running fire of encomiums on the new to be sure but theyve always been here south and Allacoochee which the effort and it for our friends the pro- ¬ at postponement had only changed from motersremainedout that they would war ¬ to find particulars to generalities while Philip rant all this including the visible part leaned backr in the corner of the seat of Allacoochee by a comprehensive ges and gave himself up 4to an ecstasj of ture ¬ More loathing While the endless tale of vantages may than that inthe same ad ¬ be found plenty of loprosperity continued the light Avent calities in the south some of them out of the sky and it was quite dark much more accessible than this valley when the brakeman thrust his face into And then have an old fashioned idea I the car to call Allacoochee Thorndyke gathered up his belong ¬ that cities cant be created arbitrarily They smoked in silence for a little ings with a sigh of relief and presently while and then Thorndyke took a card found himself standing under the glare ¬ of an electric lamp on the station plat ¬ from his case and handed it to his comform trying to hazard a guess at the panion Let me introduce myself he said best hotel in the place as the names I just got in last night and you may were shouted out by the knot of yelling be able to tell me what I want to know hackmen I am entirely at your service Mr Here you are for the Allacoochee house in green bravery to the line of rugged cliffs at the summit of Jubal moun tain d middle distance of valley where the course of the Chiwassee river was defined by a bed of fleecy mist ruffled into semi transparency by the warmth of the morning sun to the left be ¬ yond the narrower atrip of mist mark ¬ ing the windings of the Little Chiwas- ¬ see the bold forehead of Bull moun ¬ tain overtopping the town These were the frame for the picture which human activity was etching into the level area inclosed by the two streams Long vistas of streets marked by furrows turned at the curb lines open spaces dotted with the stakes of the surveyor and heaped with piles of brick and lum ¬ ber uncounted numbers of half buildings upon which the work- ¬ men clustered like swarming bees the muffled drumming of hoisting engines the strident exhausts of the locomo- ¬ tives in the railway yard the clang of hammers in a boiler shop everywhere the sights and sounds of restless in- ¬ dustry and impatient progress Under such circumstances the gre- ¬ garious impulse asserts itself irresisti- ¬ bly Thorndyke looked about him for a possible sympathizer and by a proc- ¬ ess of natural selection which is as un ¬ accountable as it is inerrant he pitched upon a young man sitting apart from the various groups on the veranda Drawing up a chair he began to un¬ burden himself It beats anything I ever heard of he said What is there behind it all Standing as a target for the gunnery of other peoples surprise was no new experience for the man of Philips selec tion and he smiled good naturedly A good many people have asked that question I cant answer it to my own satisfaction but others would say the coal and iron the lack of important manu ¬ facturing centers in the south and the consequent pressing need for one just here the climate and a hundred other things besides Are the coal and iron realities Oh yes very much so this moun- ¬ tain behind the hotel is a vast coal bed and that one over there pointing to the cliffs across the Little Chiwassee is equally rich in iron of fair quality Then the people are not merely crazy enthusiasts after all ¬ -f-inished on the steps of the veranda Philip saw troublesome and a background of wooded slopes rising tion of money money Protheroe stopped abruptly and twisted his mustache I wish you hadnt said that he added frowning there are some few things in this world that cant be bought with money a foothold in Jamie Duncans home is one of them I beg your pardon Philip protested flushing painfully at the thought that Protheroe had misconstrued his mean ing I only meant that I am able and ¬ vNo it wouldnt be a question ¬ ¬ ¬ Something gripped his throat and an uncontrollable lit of coughing strangled him and broke the sentence in two When he put a handkerchief to his lips it came away spotted with blood and Protheroe saw it about a foot and a half long It is For heavens sake I had no idea found as far north as Colorado and as you were that far along Let me help far south as Texas Those found in you Colorado are marked with dull brown He led Thorndyke to the elevator and stripes by no means beautiful but as through the long corridor on the upper you travel south you will find the king floor making him lie down as soon as snake more and more beautifully they reached the room marked and when you reach the bor- ¬ Is there anything else I can do for ders of Mexico the finest specimen of you shalM call a doctor he asked any snake in the world can be found Thorndyke shook his head Its They are most intelligent reptiles and rather worse than I gave you to under ¬ can easily be domesticated- They can stand my plvysician in New York al- ¬ be fondled without the least fear and lowed me six months and Ive eaten will not attack a human being unless into one of them pretty deeply already aroused The king snake is most Six months Did th man send you graceful in reprfse and when in action down here to die its movements are- like lightning It amounts to that but I knew It A dealer whom I saw in HJarlem has was the only chance for me over 100 of them in stock and he told Prothero made two or three turns up me that he sells something like five and down the room and then stopped a day They bring all the way from with his hand on the doorknob Ill two dollars to five dollars apiece be back after awhile to see how you are New Yorkers know little of snakes in the mean time you lie still and just said he to me and least of all the make up your mind youve got to win king snake I received two or three its more than half the battle Youre 67 them from a friend of mine in Texas sure theres nothing I can do for youlast year and kept them as curiosities Nothing thank you but you mustnt I put them in a case in my window and let me impose on your good nature 1 the beauty of their colors attracted can ring up the office if 1 need any- ¬ many people I received dozens of in- ¬ quiries about them The majority of thing Protheroe went down the hall talk ¬ the people never head of a king snake ing to himself Poor fellow Im and when I told them that the snake afraid its all day with him I ought was not dangerous and related little to be ashamed of myself for pretending incidents of their intelligence the peo- ¬ to misunderstand what he said about ple were simply wild to get one This paying his way I am ashamed and Ill may have started the fad for king snakes but at any rate to please my prove it by trusting the poor devil customers I had to order a large stock and Elsie of the snakes and now I have more TO BE CONTINUED demand for them than for anything - Willing to pay for what I get I SNAKES AS PETS Large Demand for Ivinsr Snakes In IVew Yorlc City may seem strange to make a pet of It a snake but it is not so strange after all when you know the particular reptile which seems to be becoming a fad in New York It is the king snake and it can be truly called the peacock of its species It is most beautifully marked sometimes in red and black stripes and again in- white and black stripes It has seldom been known to hire a hu ¬ man being and yet it is a terror to all other snakes Small as the king snake is it never hesitates to attack another snake no matter how large and it is a rare case when it does not suc- ¬ ceed in killing its enemy The king snake when full grown is - A LITTLE NONSENSE Sh What is a crank Would-Why a person with one idea Why no lis you call me a crank never gave you credit for having one Yonkers Statesman idea Dont you think these stripes be-come me asked the summer awning5 Thev ought to run crosswise said the You are uothing window savagely Cincinnati a daylight robber but Enquirer Tommy Paw what is the differ-Mr ence between well and good Figg Well I have noticed that alout the only time you can be depended on to be good is when you are not feeling Indianapolis Journal well He - t - s said Mr Cumrox thought- fully I was glad to let my daughter go to the queens jubilee It will make WelL r her happy for the next ten years No Longer than that perhaps After ten years she wont care to seem familiar with anything that happened Washington Star in 1897 Maud When we were out riding on our bicycles yesterday Harry put his hand on my shoulder a moment He pretended he wanted to help me along I made him take it away imme- ¬ diately Irene That was right Maud Yes It was the only dear thing to do His hand is so large and Chicago Tribune ugly you know Do you think your sister likes me Yes she stood up for you Tommy Stood up for me Was at dinner anybody saying anything against me No nothing much Father said he - v thought you were rather a donkey but sis got up and said you werent and told father he ought to know better than to judge a man by his looks -- Household Words STORY OF CHARLIE ROSS Dcntli of His Father Revives Interest Charlie Boss the son of a man whose death was announced in late dis- ¬ patches was abducted July 1 1874 He and his elder brother Walter were play ¬ ing in front of their home in East Wash ¬ ington Lane Germantown when two men who passed by in a buggy offered to take them for a ride if they would walk to the top of the hill The boy a walked to the top of the hill and were taken into the wagon Walter wanted the men to take them to Main street and buy some fireworks but they said they would take them to Aunt Susies a fictitious person They plied the boys with candy while the team was driven toward Kensing¬ ton At Palmer and Ftichmond streets Walter was given a juarter and directed to get fireworks in a cigar store When he returned the men and his curly haired brother were gone H C Peacock a friend of the family took Walter to his parents It was some days before anything of the nature of a clew came to the search¬ ers This was in the shape of a letter from the supposed abductors It was grossly illiterate and informed Mr Ross that the writers held the boy so securely that no earthly power could reach him and that he would not be delivered without the payment of a big ransom The father was warned that any atempt to recover the boy by detectives would result in the boys instant death The writers promised to communicate with Mr Ross within t a few davs They wrote two days later demand ing 20000 ransom for the return oi the boy This sum was promptly raised by friends of Mr Ross but U16 police stepped in and asked to be given the conduct of the case This was granted and Mayor Stokely offered a reward of 20000 iors the arrest oi the kidnapers and the return of the boy This immense reward attracted world wide attention Mr Ross received 16 letters from tho abductors during the four following months but they were so carefully dis guised that no clew could be found to ¬ ¬ ¬ in tlie Boys Abduction AN OLD SALTS BLUNDER by Taking else He Suffered Granted Too Much for s Inn Right dis away for de Mountain Shut yo fish trap niggah draw-ixjg--roo- m - - - What did you say I asked if you were going- up to Alla coochee said the voice It was an unpleasant voice reminding- one of the buzzing- of bluebottles and other annoying- insects Thorn--dyk- e looked around and saw a wiry little man with keen eyes a thin beak- ¬ like nose scanty black side whiskers and a straggling- mustache drooped in an evident but unsuccessful attempt to Foreseeing cover the faulty teeth tedium in the face he answered vague ¬ ly Yes I believe my ticket reads to that luctant effort your pardon Philip said coming- back to actualities with a re 1 beg- - ¬ - - - - point by any such mild discouragement 1 My name supposed so he buzzed The human fly was not to be silenced is Fench Jenkins Fench Allacoochee Land Manufacturing- and Guaranty Improvement company Drop around building- 422 Broadway to my office when you get settled and Ill give you some pointers thatll put you right in on the ground floor What name did I understand you to - handing Thorndyke a card which ingeniously combined the name with a somewhat ungrammaticai advertisement of the Johannisberg Notwithstanding the poets doubting question there is alwa3rs more or less in a name and the Hotel Johannisberg gained a guest that night upon no bet-¬ ter grounds than that the word awoke pleasant memories in the mind of a man who knew Europe rather better than he did his own county As the omnibus jounced along over the un paved streets Thorndyke amused him ¬ self by picturing the probable contrast between the backwoods tavern and its high sounding appellation He was rather more than surprised therefore when the omnibus stopped in front of a three storied building standing in a park like inclosure and ablaze with gas and electric lights and as- ¬ tonishment rose into admiration when a liveried servant ushered him into the magnificent rotunda floored with marble mosaic and wainscoted in quarter sawed oak Everything about the place was cosmopolitan and modern from the convenient telegraph office in the corner to the suave clerk who might have been a swift importation from ttfe best appointed hostelry in New York Glad to welcome you to Allacoochee Mr Thorndyke he said hospitably when Philip had registered Were a little crowded to night but I can give you a good room on the second floor if that will answer Im not particular so that its com fortable replied Thorndyke glad to have his forebodings dispelled Is supper served Dinner if you please corrected the clerk affably summoning a call boy Show Mr Thorndyke to his room No 83 And Philip followed his guide to- the elevator with an un- ¬ comfortable conviction growing npon him that he had somehow stamped himself as provincial by suggesting supper instead of dinner The meal was excellent and well served and the comfort of his room aCter two weary nights in the sleeping car made Thorndyke a late riser on his first morning in Allacoochee After breakf ast he went out upon the veranda to give the feeling of appreciative sur prise a chance to expand with a wider view The Hotel Johannisberg was - sah right hyah son yass bus fo de Hotel say contradicted Philip Tneekly passing his card across to tho man of business say 9 I didnt Tit for Tat A British sailor being a witness in a pulmonary murder case was called to the stand Yes pulmonary and was asked by the counsel for the Protheroe reflected for a moment crown whether he was for the plaintiff This country is said to be favorable or the defendant for consumptives on better authority Plaintiff or defendant said the than that of our friends of the pros- ¬ sailor scratching his head Why I pectus I mean and if you ask my ad- ¬ dont know what you mean by plaintiff vice He paused and looked inquir ¬ or defendant I qame to speak for me ingly at Philip friend ¬ pointing to the prisoner Yes please go on Youre a pretty fellow for a wit- ¬ I should say that you might find out ness said the counsel not to know what it will do for you by getting board what plaintiff or defendant means at some farmhouse in the valley You Later in the trial the counsel asked could put in your time tramping about the sailor what part of the ship he was and the scenery would give you an ob- ¬ in at the time of the murder Abaft the binnacle me lord said ject There is only one difficulty the sailor What is that Abaft the binnacle replied the Farmhouses where you can get any ¬ thing to eat besides bacon and corn barrister What part of a ship is pone are not plentiful in this part of the that Aint you a pretty feller for a coun- ¬ country Having his recent experience with the selor said the sailor grinning at the ¬ railway eating houses before him counsel not to know what abaft tho i Philip shuddered Im willing- - to binnaclcis The court laughed Harpers Bound rough it he said but Im not anxious to add dyspepsia to my other ailments Table Dont you suppose I could find a place Moving the Well where the bill of fare wouldnt be quite A family who have recently taken no limited into their employ a rosy cheeked Irish coffee-colore- d Youll find very few of them in say that her blunders this mountain region roughly speak ¬ cause them amusement enough to com¬ ing there are only two classes of white pensate for any trouble they may en- ¬ people a small minority of well-to-d- o tail One day tlrfe man of the house planters and farmers and a large ma ¬ stated in Bridgets hearing that he in ¬ jority of poor folk tended to have a wood house built on a Thats rather discouraging and yet piece of ground which at that time en ¬ it seems as if I ought to be able to find closed a well And sure sorr said the ¬ what I need I dont expect much in inquiring Bridget will 3011 be movin the way of accommodations Id be the well to a more oonvanient spot whin satisfied with good plain country board the wood bbuse is builted ir smile we get among farmers in the crossed her employers face and in such as ¬ north stantly Bridget saw that she had made of but one place near here a mistake of some sort I know Its mesilf that answers your description Its thats a fool Im thinkin she said owned by the Town company asd its in a Scotch family up on the Little Chi ¬ h astilyi bound to retrieve herself at situation on a slight knoll at the foot wassee but I- - hardly think you could coorse vrhin the well was moved ivery of Johns mountain had been chosen get in there drop of wather would rimout avrt with a view to the prospect Standing Do you think not Id try not to be Youths Companion maid-of-all-wo- rk Thorndyke The reply was prompt and courteous and Philip read Robert Protheroe C E on the card which was handed him My physician has sent me here he explained and he tells me I must live out of doors How shall I go about it How do you want to go about it Philip laughed Ill have to confess that my plans are a trifle indefinite I had an idea that perhaps I might go into the woods with the lumbermen or the turpentine gatherers Youre still too far north for that there are no lumber camps or turpentine forests in this part of the state and if there were I hardly think the life would be what you want Your trouble is talize them The king snake delights in feeding on mice It can go without eating for nearly six months at a time but when it is really hungry it will attack any thing As a result I am obliged to keep ocean - r3 ji 1 xa J i KMx on hand large number i yuiijou sum you naa saili eu ww ivD demands a for them as a of mice to meet repast for the lantic am not surprised1 that Yes thats where I got my experi ¬ king snake I ence But it was on Lake Superior i hat people take to this reptile so much I found myself with nothing to tie to especially women It is the most except an old washstand It was three beautiful snake of which I know and Y Herald the most intelligent days before I was picked up Werent you almost dead NEVER pay cash Pretty near From hunger Advice of a Business Mn11 Who Be ¬ Partly that And I suffered some lieves in Bnyinsr on Credit from thirst But the most of it was Never pay cash for anything if you humiliation The first thing I asked for want to get commercial rating said a was a drink of water I had suffered business man the other day Get agonies My throat was parched and goods on credit even when able to pay my tongue felt like a herring One of spot cash for them and pay the bill the men in the boat looked at me as if with promptness when it becomes due he thought I was delirious but whew If you do this long enough 3011 will I repeated my request he took a tin can probably get the reputation of possessleaned over the side of the boat and ing all the money you have got trusted dipped me up a drink Then I realized for and at any rate will be known in for the first time that Iwas on fresh wa business circles where you wouldnt be ter instead of salt and there wasnt the named if you always paid cash A man least excuse for a sane mans going who pays cash for everything is sup thirsty a minute Experience is a great posed to be doing business on small cap- ¬ thing my boy Never turn up your ital while a man who gets things on nose at it But remember that it is as credit or what is better still pays for likely as not to run you intb trouble them in notes is generally believed to if you havent common sense as a com ¬ be operating on such a large scale that pass to steer by Washington Star he has no ready money to spare fpv ¬ ----- Experience said the man who had been telling tales of the sea is a great thing But it gets in the way some- ¬ times Ill never forget the last ship ¬ wreck I was in It must be terrible said the boy whom he was entertaining to be adrift in the ocean It is rather trying to realize that land is miles away no matter whether you measure sidewise or straight down But this shipwreck wasnt on tho Where do the people keep the snakes I asked Right in the house The3r crawl about the floor and make themselves at home as readily as a cat or a dog In fdet they rid the house of vermin anfl no mice or rats remain anywhere near a king snake They are perfectly harmless and will never attack you unless of course you deliberately tan¬ ¬ ¬ small deajs ing business on a cash basis A coun ¬ try merchant I knew who had always paid cash for everything he bought and did a correspondingly small busi- ¬ ness determined finally to enlarge his trade and to do this required the credit he had never before asked for When he came to town and asked the men to whom he had always jmid cash to let him have goods on time they one and all became suspicious of him and re- ¬ fused The very fact that he had al ways paid cash made them think when he finally asked for credit that he vasnt a safe man to trust Moral Never pay cash for anything if you would avoid suspicion N Y Sun ¬ As for getting credit it is the first step thai costs of course but a man can begin by referring people to his landlord and the tradesmenwith whom he deals if he can do no better If he has no- accounts anywhere he must set about having thejn get trust for small amounts and you will in time get trusted for larger ones The first requisite to wealth is not money but credit Get credit and you will do busi ness amounting to an indefinite num ber of times your capital Without dilating further on the ad vantages of credit let me give you an illustration of the disadvantages of do - ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ r Qneer Conduct of n Kentnclcy Tree There is a very remarkable tree in AVltliout Effort the suburban part of town It is an old Anxious Mother I dont understand locust tree and in the dry est of weather iow it is Bertie that you are always at a continued shower of mist or vapor the foot of your class can be seen coming from its branch ea Bertie I dont understand it myself A shower bath can be had beneath its but I know itn drendfvlea87vrBostou foliage at any hour day or nightGlas- - r Transoript -Brow Ky Republican 4r Tlie LiargreHt Onlc In tlie World Two young trees Taised from its acorns have recently been planted near the famous old oak at Cowthorpe Eng land The ancient tree which is more than 50 feet in girth and is believed to be the largest oak in existence is so decayed that it is feared it cannotstand much longer N Y Sun before answering A wise iperson will never believe he said Then God help his poor wife and family He knew about Charlie The child will be returned in a few days The boy was never returned the sup- position being that he met his death in the North river while his abduct ¬ ors were eluding pursuit N Y Her ald Somebody Had Told Hiiu Gently approaching to within ear-¬ shot of his august mother Albert Ed ¬ ward said as if musing aloud Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown The queen looked at him a moment the writers Superintendent Walling of the New York police found the clew that endediu fixing the crime of abduction on Wil liam Mosher and Joseph Douglass bur glars William Westervelt a brother in law of Mosher acted as go between in the attempted negotiations withMr Ross The police of the country were looking for the two men when the res- ¬ idence of Judge Van Brunt in Bay Ridge was entered by burglars on De- ¬ cember 14 1874 The burglars were attacked by a brother of Judge Van Brunt and several servants One of them was shot dead and the other waa mortally wounded They were Mosh- ¬ er and Douglass Mosher was dead Douglass gasped to Mr Van Brunt Its no use lying now Mosher and I stole Charlie Ross Mosher knows all about him When told that his partner was dead ¬ v V sef ¬ everything he hears Leader by the beads of sweat that broke out upon the princes brow Cleveland And the silence was disturbed only t- - Ja 1 -- r V jt en ramj jLiJimww -- S THE BOUKBOT A Pickaninny TNTIfifts K FRIDAY JULY 23 1807 sy At WHEEL NOTES Lines iAbout Devotees Of The Wheel Homo And Elsewhere fr - B4 - I f as- Its a niggah chile black es night Little eyes tramd in heaps o white An hair jes es full o kink As dat on enny sheep I tink An when yer says watermilhon His soul wid joy jes is spillin Ef he doant sing de live long day He whistles evry care away Dats a pickanny Walter Champ in Courier Journal 1 Whats a pickaninny Your CottgK like a doos bark is a sign that there is something foreign Letter From Olympia On Saturday morning a jolly party of fifteen with two cooks left otfthe noon train for Olympia each bedecked with sweet peas presented by Mr Wm Goodloe At Winchester we were joined by Miss Annie Dillard of Lexing ton and at Mt Sterling by Miss Lelia ¬ around which shouldnt be there You can quiet the iicke but the danger may be there SCOTTS just the same EMULSION of Cod liver Oil is not a cough specific it does not merely allay the symptoms but it does give- such strength to the body that it is able to throw off the disease You know the old proverb of the ounce of prevention Dont neglect your cough A book which will tell you more on the subject sent free on e quest - Eds Bourbon News i i POWDER Absolutely Pure food against alnm and all forms of adul- ¬ teration common to the cheap brands Royal Baking Powder CO New YOrk w Celebrated for its great leavening strength and healthfulness Assures the i THE Seventeenth Year Established IIIIIII HEWS 1881 Published every Tuesday and Friday by WAIiTER CHAMP Editors and Owner BBTWE MILLER Make all Checks Money Orders etc payable to the order of Champ Mhmr ADVERlIiUMU RATES Displays one dollar per inch for first inser tion half rates each insertion thereafter Locals or reading notices ten cents per line each insertion Locals in blaci type twenty cents per line each insertion Fractions of lines count as full lines when running at line rates Obituar28 cards of thanks calls on candidates resolutions of respect and matter of a like nature ten cents per line Special rates given for large advertise ments and yearly cards ¬ ¬ ¬ The Executive Committee of the National Democratic party met in New York Wednesday ¬ Gov Bradley has undertaken a col- ¬ lection of pictures of all the Governors tor Lhe company at the springs has been of Kentucky to be placed in the Ex- ¬ unusually large this season the number ecutive office biing nearly a hundred yesterday Among the visitors at the hotel known Tnu Kprtntp nrlrmhprl nnnnimnnslv n to Parisians not previously mentioned resolution empowering the President to in your paper are Misses Ottie McGar take steps for the release of Ona Melton vey and mother of Lexington with her two guests Misses Gassett of Cincinna and other Cuban prisoners ti and Stacky of Louisville Mrs W O Bradley Holders of sugar stocks made two also hereand daughter of Frankfort are for a few days Miss Christine millions in New York- Tuesday through Bradley honored the Bourbon Outing a rise of over five points on the exchange Club with a visit to day She expects to visit Paris soon as the guest of her as a result of the tariff tinkering schoolmate at the Conservatory Miss Butler If the Southern Senators will stand by Marguret Mary Wilson and Lucy Lowry Misses him Tillman offers to keep che Senate in are expected Thursday and several gen- ¬ session until December rather than sub tlemen will come over at the end of the mit to the tax on cotton bagging week Thns far there has been but one spoony couple but other developments The report that Mrs Mary Ellen are awaited consequent upon the arriv- ¬ I Lease the populist speaker wants to be al of other Parisians C GD governor of Kansas will bring forth 4 fel- ¬ comments from the The Perils of Alaska lows ¬ - Johnson Having arrived at Olympia we were objects of much inperest to the natives whp on seeing two two horse wagons piled to the tops with tents cots mattresses bicycles boxes of provisions etc enquired ice cream freezers whether we had come to spend six months or to reside permanently Our two cottages are very roomy so that with the cool mountain air we¬ find no trouble in sleeping under blankets There are five different kinds of water to be had here salt sulphur black sulphur chalybeate alum and copper As a result of their use two members of our party who were on the invalid list are already showing great improvement We have had a couple appointed as waiters and housekeepers for each day and there has been great rivalry as to which could furnish the best bills of fare even to the point or depleting the two weeks supply of provisions but with unlimited supply of chickens mountain lambs black berries aud huckleberries there is little danger meanwhile we are living high and are assured that the weight of the party will be considerably increased The hotel property has been improved by the addition of a long and roomy ve- ¬ randa repainting a new and spacious ballroom wooden swings new cottages etc Wiih the beautiful location scen ¬ ery lovely walks to the springs moun ¬ tain jclimbing to Cariington rock there is much both to rest and delight the visi- ¬ ¬ rode a double century last week Former Congressman W C Owens is a late addition to the cyclers of George ¬ town Prizes valued at 125 will be given in the bicycle races at the Richmond fair which begins on the 29th and continues four days Mr and Mrs Clay Elkin Mr Henry Milward and Misses Susan and Ainelia Milward came down from Lexington yesterday afternoon on their wheels and were guests of Dr M H Daily at the Fordham They returned to Lexington last night Mrs Hattie White of New York t C- - t EPfllnu t JjfT TWO HORSE New Laundry Agency Your druggist keeps Scotts Emul ¬ sion of Cod liver Oil Put up in 50 cts and 100 sizes SCOTT BOWNE New York I have secured the agency for the Winchester Power Laundry a first class institution and solicit a share of the public patronage Work or orders left at Clarke Clays drug store will receive immediate attention Work called for and delivered promptly Respectfully 16ap tf HAY RAKE is the greatest hay gatherer made Bruce Holladay Your Life Insured lc a Day ¬ region bearing millions of dollars worth of gold and bringing news of fabulous fortunes made in a single week by peu niless miners has caused a fresh rush to the new Eldorado and the riotable Cali- ¬ fornia scenes of 49 are being discounted The Kentucky boys have the gold fever again anl are pushing their way with hundreds of others on to the ic bound country of gold The men are not alone in the mad rush for wealth Annie Welds Eugenia Armstrong and Maggie Farrell three brave girls of Ellensburg Washington ascended the Yukon in a sail boat and are seeking wealth in Alaska Annie Graves is another plucky lass who has reached the Klondike Diggings and is battling with the men for gold These girl miners are pretty and there is not a man in the diggings who would not fight for them at the drop of a hat The man who would mistreat one of these girls had better make peace with his maker for his summons is apt to be sndden The eight Kentucky bo3T8 are stalwart healthy and courageous and are likely to get a good share of gold in the Yukon Valley -- able paper on the Capital City Bank of Columbus O There can be no stronger guarantee given you We dare not use a banks name without authority if you doubt it write them Good health is the best life insurance Wrights Celery Capsules gives you good health they cure Liver Kidney and Stomach trouble Rheumatism Constipation and Sick Headaches 100 days treatment costs lc a day A sight draft on above bank in every 1 box- - which brings your money back if we fail to cure you Sold by W T Brooks druggist Our insurance is protected by bank Takes hay from swath to rick Saves time Saves money Makes haying easy i tV Solc3L Toy s Full Details Gladly Given A Railroad Officials Experience R J NEELY 4 - GOSSIPY PARAGRAPHS ¬ Theatrical And Otlievwise Remarks In The Foyer Buffalo Bills Wild West is coming to ne date is Liexmgcon in an its glory August 25 Miss Jean Ingelow the poetess and novelist died Monday night inSLondon She was seventy five years oldj FOR RENT BRICK lone con ply to UJant f nected with railroad construction in Nebraska writes My heart troubled and pained me lor 19 years Shortness of breath was the constant and most common symptom Intense vexcruciating pain gener- ¬ ally followed any severe exertion Faintness hunger without any appetite fluttering that made me clutch my breast and palpitation hat often staggered me as if I would fall were frequent attacks Again everything would turn black if I arose from a stooping posture quickly Sleepless nights with their prostrating unrest were Br Miles numerous and I could Heart Cure get no rest day or night 1 consulted leading phyRestores sicians and tried adver ¬ tised remedies They Health gave me no relief One of Dr Miles circulars described my case so exactly that I took Dr Miles New Heart Cure and I am now a well man I hope every one troubled with heart disease will try Dr Miles remedies If they will write me personally I will gladly give them full details of my experience Edw Edmonds P O Box 65 David City Nebraska Dr Miles Heart Cure issold on guarantee that first bottle benefits or money refunded M H DAILEY MAIN ¬ cottage 10 per 602 rooms First class repair Ap 5 I 3 Among the thousands of daring men -- g Mrs Amelia Kohler to whom Moore ing the idea that the United States is If who are pushing their way to the fabu lous Alaskan gold fields in the Yukon dedicated The Last Rose of Summer trying to pick a quarrel with some one Our troubles with Japan and Spain and Valley are eight Bluegrass boys John died in New York Monday aged 92 Keuney Morrow Shermans letter to Lord Salisbury all Joe Hall Frank Hall Wilmot Edgar Penn Myall Lowe combine to give ground for the impres- ¬ Jake Hall and Catlett Hutzell whose Edith Crane who played Trilby last homes are in Bourbon county near this year is recovering from the bite of a sion city The Hall boys have been in rattle snake received while picking Wednesday President McKinley was Alaska ten years and John Morrow has The foreign press is busily cultivat- ¬ M R EDWARD EDMONDS Or O EDWARDS BC INGELS --Over DepositlBank ST PARIS KY Office hours to 12 a m 1 to 6 pm presented with a Georgia watermelon which was two feet long says a special and weighed 78 pounds It was placed in a golden hamper wrapped in an American flag The President was gratified to learn that it did not contain an office qeeker Advertised Letter List List of letters - remaining unclaimed in Paris Ky postoffice July 22 1897 Abernaty Miss Jones Miss Nannie Baker Maggie King Mr C H Brown Mrs Ellen Lee Mrs Mamie Carleton Mr Geo Law Miss N B Collins Mr Thos Martin Miss Annie Conner Martha Millian Mr Palmer DeShort Mrs L F 2Murray Mrs Eliza Everett W W Nicho Miss Annie Fox Mr R K Palmer Mr Virgil Foston Nancy Rankin Mr Edward Gaines Miss Ella Redmon MissAnnaB Hale Miss Bertha Richardson SallieC Hall Mr G 0 Rose Robt Hill Mary Francis Sparks Miss Minnie Saylor Mr W A Hill Mr J as H Hrmble Mr Chas Stephens Mr H Jacobs Mr J L Storm J W Johnson Lucretia Wilson Mr Wheeler Persons calling for aboye letters will please say advertised W iu Davis P M taken the agency for the Cincinnati Daily Times Star a most excellent paper and wil have it delivered to subscribers in any part of the city for six cents per week He solicits yonr subscription tf Sherman Stivers has ft Awarded Highest Honors Worlds Fair - V CREAM - MOST PERFECT 40 MADE A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder Free from Ammonia Alum or any other adulterant YEARS THE STANDARD spent the last six years in that golden land and all have been successful The other Kentucky boys started six months ago for the new Eldorado and are bat- ¬ tling with thousands for fortunes in j Alaska the country which the United States bouKht from Russia for 7200 000 less than half a cent per acre which now is worth billions of dollars John Morrow has sent enough gold home to his parents to lift a mortgage from their old Kentucky home and put them in more comfortable circum- ¬ stances and the Hall boys have sent money back to invest in a Kentucky farm They were for years employed in the large stamp mill of the Tread well Mining Company at Douglas City earn- ¬ ing four dollars per day working every day except Christmas and the Fourth of July which days the mill observes as holidays Several years ago Morrow and a com- ¬ rade made a trip to the Yukon gold fields only reaching there after expe- ¬ riencing bitter hardships They started on March 15 with 800 pounds of bag- ¬ gage going by the Chilkoot route over mountains lakes and rivers Almost weighted down with baggage their progress was slow Part of their outfit would be carrieda mile and set down while they returned for the remainder At one stage of the journey they were ten days going nine miles over the mountatnshaving to cut footholds in the ice and snow with shovels Once over the mountains they built a boat and traveled a distance of 200 miles on the lakes and Lewis river to the great Yu kon finally reaching on June 15th a mining camp just inside the Arctic circle and in the region of everlasting snow and ice These mines can only be worked during the Summer season which lasts but a short time In Win- ¬ ter the merenry registers 78 below zero at this point and even in July Morrows pick struck ice under the moss which grows profusely in that region Morrow and his companion found the outlook discouraging in the Yukon fields at that time There were six hun ¬ dred miners there and in the camp were not enough provisions to last until the arrival of the Government boat whiqh was not due for six weeks on its trip to rescue unfortunate miners Living at the camp was verv expensive a bar-rel of flour costing 848 Potatoes cost 1 per pound and bacon 1 a pound Whiskey sold for 1 a glass Realiz- ¬ ing that remaining in the camp meant starvation Morrow and his comrade started down the Yukon river in a six- ¬ teen foot boat on a voyage fraught with untold perils In three weeks they traveled nearly 2000 miles on the rapid flowing river experiencing dangerous adventures finally reaching the mouth of the great Yukon where it is 60 miles wide Here they paid 100 each for passage to Seattle But this was several years ago The arrival of steamers from the Yukon ¬ blackberries The Mt Sterling Sentinel Democrat says Paris is a great town for clubs jn one issue or cue jnews there were items about the Outing Progressive Culture and Ice Water clubs Last week wasnt a good week for clubs either Besides the clubs noted there are the Paris Literary Club Monday Night Literary Club several History Clubs Violet Whist Club Musical Study Club the Married Ladies Euchre Club a Cooking Club and several un ¬ named Euchre Clubs Clubs are trumps in Paris 1 ¬ Another Lot just arrived This rocker for Cash only GETTING READY a trying ordeal to face To Cure A Cold In One Day Every expectant mother has Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab- ¬ not lets All druggists refund the money If she does if it fails to cure 25c For sale by W T Brooks and James Kennedy Paris Ky GEO W DAVIS DEALER IN Furniture Window hades Oil Cloths Carpets Mattresses Etc c 9MM Baby Carriages Exactly like cut Jt i Special atteution given to Undertak ¬ JL fMlj get ready for it ing and Repairing IV there is no telling Main Street - - - - Paris Ky what may happen Child birth is full of uncertainties if Nature is not given proper assistance atyour own price is the best help you can use this time It is a liniment and when regularly ap- ¬ plied several months before baby comes Mothers Friend at FOR RENT comfortable brick residence on Third street Paris Ky opposice the residence of Chas Stephens E3q Apply to A ¬ Now is tlie time to buy carpets before the new tariff advances the price I have a big stocfe for you to select from f it makes the advent easy and nearly painless It relieves and prevents morning sickness relaxes the overstrained muscles relieves the distended feeling short¬ ens labor makes recovery rapid and certain without any dangerous after effects ¬ ¬ ¬ T E ASHBROOE fijy tf J P KIELY 617 Main St Paris Ky Mothers Friend iB good for only one purpose viz to relieve motherhood of danger and pain 1 dollar per bottle at all drug stores or sent by mail on receipt of price Free Books containing valuable informa ¬ tion for women will be sent to any addresa upon application to THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO J I T HINTON UNDERTAKING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES EMBALMING SCIENTIFICALLY ATTENDED TO Atlanta Ga - w-- T THE BOUBBOIT NEWS FBIPAY JULY 23 189Z THE BOUBBQX MEWS Seventeenth Year Established 1881 5 i About The 3JI L Turnpike C - US M Ferguson Clay Jr Catesby Wooaford and John COMERS ANt GOERS OBSERVED BY RobtMrs J R Williams and Mrs R A C Clay recently appointed by the THE NEWS MAN Woriiums of Midway are at the bedside Enteied at the Post office at Paris KyM as Bourbon Fiscal Court to appraise that 8eco iiss mail matter their mother Mrs B SLetton who portion of the Maysville Lexington Notes Hastily Jotted On The Streets At of turnpike lying in Bourbon County have The Depots In The Hotel Lobbies And is ill MissLizzie Grannon of this city TELEPHONE NO 124 completed their work and made their Elsewhere A- report Wednesday Miss Ella Mitchell has returned left yesterday for a trip to Niagara SUBSCRIPTION PRICES Falls accompani ed by Misses Mary and They appraise the 1791 miles of pike from Olympia Payable in Advance We have gone through our stock marking down prices on Spring Louise Grannon Katie Breen and Mr at 25000 excluding toll houses This One year S2 00 Six months Mr L V Butler is at home from a 100 and Summer shoes regardless of cost which we cordially invite the Chas Grannon of Cincinnati news costs you cant even get a re ¬ estimate includes that portion of the trip to Nashville public to inspect port FROM A GUN FRKE OF CHARGE pike lying within the limits of the city The Louisville 2imes yesterday said par- ¬ In this sale we include a number of broken lots of the very best Mrs A B Boyd is visiting her of Paris and the Town of Millersburg Miss Elizabeth Cheatham gave one of makes of Ladies button and low cufc shoes in both black And light Make all CJiecks Money Orders It will be remembered that the ents at Owingsville her delightful informal teas last evening colors which will be sold at an immense sacrifice yes far below cost payable to the order of Champ Miilkr Etc Miss Rebecca Doehrer has returned at Tanglewood Misses Duniap of Dan- ¬ Court recently offered 15000 for four- ¬ This is no catch penny advertisement but a sensational sale that will teen miles of this pike excluding tnat from her trip West ville Mary Irvine Davis of Paris Mary make purchasers bappy Yesterdays Base Ball Results Mr Roger Lawson of Cincinnati Hill and Belle Bowman of this city and portion lying in Paris and Millersburg 2 Boston 17 Louisville Col Baldwin asked 45000 aed the re- ¬ was a visitor in Paris yesterday Messrs George Welsh of Danvill Geo 7 Brooklyn 9 Cincinnati sult was the appointment of above Com- ¬ Miss Drusie Bedford who has been Weitzel of Frankfort a Harvard grad ¬ Pittsburg 1 Baltimore 9 missioners to try to arrive at a settle- ¬ very ill with fever is convalescing uate Caldwell Davis and Scott Bullitt Pittshurg 4 Baltimore 3 ment Miss Margaret Terry left yesterday were the fortunate ones present Philadelphia 4Cleyeland 6 The State owns one half of the stock for a visit to relatives in Kanses City St Louis 8 Washington 9 in the M L pike and Bourbon NUPTIAL KNOTS Mr J H Lapsley of Harrodsburg J New York 3 Chicoga 4 County holds 10000 in the same stock guest of his son Drt F L Laps Engagements Announcements And Sol- ¬ Second game and the city of Paris owns 4000 of the is the emnizations Of The IVIarriajje Vows ley same Joe Glenn of near Paris has ac- Elmer Smith and Mrs Eliza Clifton Mr J H McKernon of the Adams A Committee representing the County cepted a clerkship with Price Co ¬ and City visited Frankfort Wednesday Express Company was in the city Wed both of this county were married in o County Clerk Patons office by Judge vW Cash buyers canget double value to- - to consult in regard to the purchase or nesday 4p day at Miss Aline Wilson has returned Howard yesterday donation of1 the States stock in the inThe Democrat says that a Winchester terest of free pikes The absence of from a visit to Mrs H W Wilson in y tf Davis Thomson Isgrig girl has refused four offers or marriage certain officials rendered the visit fruitl- ¬ Cynthiana The Commissioners Messrs PERSONAL MENTION Miie Sre Anderson of Georgetown is theretty guest of hef sister Mrs A J Great Mid Summer Sale of Fine Footwear i Davis Thomson Isgrig v - v i ¬ - V A at the Baptist Church Sunday morning at 1030 oclock Vi The Midlands Sunday Trains Dr J R Adair is very ill with fever at the home of his mother Mrs Sallie Sunday trains will be run on the Keni Adair near Shawhan tucky Midland on August 1 15 and 29 In future bicycles will be carried free East bound trains will run as follows by the Kentucky Midland Railroad Leave Frankfort 7 a in Georgetown 7 50 arrive Paris at 825 Leave Frank when sent at the owners risk fort 525 p m Georgetown 610 p m Mrs Eliza Ogden stumbled on the arrive Paris 645 p m West bound porch of her residence Wednesday and Leave Paris 850 a m Georgetown 925 broke one of the large bones in her arrive Frankfort 1030 a in Leave 7 p m Georgetown 735 arrive Paris wrist Frankfort 830 The earnings of the L N the sec The East bound train will be held at ond week of July were 395390 an increase of 26400 compared with the cor- Georgetown until the dollar special arrives from Cincinnati if the business responding period of 189G from Paris justifies Dollar excursions N will sell round trip will probably be run from Paris to Cin The L tickets from Paris to Cincinnati at 125 cinnati on those dates pver the Midland Sunday Tickets good only on regular and C leaving Paris at 445 a m o train 3 Rev F W Eberhardt will preach ess for the present ¬ Miss Maggie Jameson of Cynthiana is a guest at Dr John Jamesons on Pleasant street Misses Mary Ashbrookand Birdella Megibben of Cynthiana are guests at Mr R B Hutchcrafts Miss June Jameson is spending a ¬ in the past two months and has two others under consideration Miss Lula McGuire of Lexington and John D Ferguson of Chicago were secretly married on the night of July 4 under a tree in the country near Jeffer- sonville by Justice Keigwin SCINTILLATIONS An Interesting Royal Muslin Underwear Onyx Fast Black Hosiery New Shades in Kid Gloves All the New Colored Ribbons Ready Made Dress Skirts Ladies Collars and Cuffs Furnishings Etc Eo v3C i i i ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ Fv Keutuckians in Alaska A burglar entered Mrs Bucks residence on Pleasant street Wednesday There will probably be many other night and stole a sack of flour a bucket Kentuckiansjbesides the eight Bourbon of lard and a comb and brush county boys in Alaska soon in search of The union service will be held at the gold Dr H C Bowers of Louisville First Presbyterian Church at eight has sold his drug store and started for oclock Sunday night Rev Dr Ruth- ¬ the Yukon Valley A dozen others from Louisville will also leave shortly erford will conduct the service for the ice bound land of gold J S Jim Blue the Lewisburg negro who Barbee and Bailey Warfield of Eastern was shot on the excursion from Mt Kentucky have already gone to the new Sterling last Thursday night by Hock Eldorado People from all parts of the Mason of this city died from the ef United States are flocking to Alaska and fects of his wounds the California scenes of 49 are being 4k Wanted To buy wheat Will pay discounted tnWifftiesMarket cash price Sacks A man who has just returned from the Alaska gold fields says it is hard to furnished get along in Dawson City on less than E O Fretwell 50 a day P O Box 230 Paris Ky ¬ Commercial Tribune Good times for shoe buyers this last Sunday contained a most interesting article by W A Hill Jr on the High week at Davis Thomson Isgrig tf It Power religious sect of this city -was a graphic description of a wierd Wanted To buy wheat Will pay Service The Cincinnati Cooper Cos Shows exhibited to the highest market cash price Sacks furnished four good sized audiences here Wednes E O Fretwell dag and yesterday The performance P O Box 230 Paris Ky was well worth the money and was equal in merit to many larger and more I i - V X t STOCK AND TURF NEWS pretentious shows Hon J T Hinton will soon begin the Sales and Transfers Of Stock Crop Etc v Turf Notes erection of a handsome storeroom on Wheat sold at sixty eight cents at Lex- ¬ Maine street between Seventh and Eighth which he recently purchased at ington yesterday Masters sale The lot now has a one Much wheat has been ruined in Gar- ¬ house on it story frame rard by excessive rains J K Redmons colt John Havlin won The City Council last night elected J a 300 purse Tuesday at Oakley J McClintock a Councilman from the¬ August Belmont has ordered a 5000 First Ward vice Wm Remington reO Hin ¬ statue of his favorite horse Henry of moved to Third Ward and W ton as Councilman from Second Ward Navarre vice C E Nippert removed to Cincin- ¬ John D Harris of Madison has sold nati his crop of wheat at sixty cents per 4 The Mt Sterling Sentinel Democrat bushel for 6000 bushels Smock Bros of Mercer raised 100 says The July number of the Empire magazine contains a beautiful little acres of wheat which averaged over Aunt Geraldines thirty five bushels to the acre story entitled Charge the work of Miss Willie Hurst Andrew Whitley of Boyle has sold of the Commercial Hotel of 125 acres of wheat which averaged oyer Johnson this city It is indeed a nice little story 30 bushels to the acre at 65 cents and shows that Mis Johnson is above In Scott county Sunday night lightning the average girl in intellect We hope struck and killed J L Lukes valuable some day to find her up in G in the thoroughbred mare Andata which was world of authors She was in worth more than 1000 Cases In Court foal to Hanover and had a colt by Queer Hanover at her side In Squire Lillestons court Henry A bis crowd attended Mt Sterling sen- ¬ Coleman a cullud gemman was court Monday There were 1000 cattle ¬ tenced to thirty days in jail for borrow on the market but trade was dull except ing and wearing a pair of John Erions in sheep R S Thompson of Bourbon trousers without the consent of the bought a lot of 600 lb cattle from Samowner ple Co at 285 per cwt and Jim Annie Williams was fined 10 for Craig of Paris bought a bunch of 90 lb fighting and cursing a colored friend sheep at 2J- centg and throwing whiskey in her face At Louisville Wednesday the banner Entered At Richmond price of the season for leaf tobacco was horses have realized for a hogshead of Henry county The following Bourbon been entered at the Richmond fair races bright red Burley which was knocked The which begin Tuesday and continue four down at 24 per hundred pounds entered lucky farmer who sold- - it had three Turney Morris have days Dorfinark Barou Wood Nellie T other hogsheads and made a crop aver- ¬ General Helm and Katie S Doug age of 1794 per hundred Thomas has entered Laura T Corinne Joe -- Bailey Geo Alex Hattie Green Wanted To buy wheat Will pay Jim Simmons and Carley John T Hedges will go for the money with the highest market cash price Sacks and Harry furnished Queenell and Shirque E O Fretwell Gaitskill will take over May Christine P O Box 230 Paris Ky Affie and Tom ¬ - few days at Leesburg Harrison county with Mrs Malcolm Boswell Mrs James McChesney and daugh- ¬ ter Lucie Belle arrived home yesterday from a visit in Mercer county The young men of this city will give an informal dance next Thursday evening at Odd Fellows Hall Mr D C Parrish left Wednesday Mr E for a yisit to his brother-in-laA Tipton at Anaconda Montana Misses Mary Fleming Varden and Effie Paton have returned from a de ightf ul three weeks visit in Lexington Mrs Wm Hinton and Miss Josie D Hastings of Covington are visiting Mr and Mrs James Hinton at Wood lawn Misses Frances Reid of Mason and Gertrude Renick of Clark were in the city Wednesday en route to Muir to join a house party Misses Lucy Lowry and Mary Wilson left yesterday for Olympia to join the Bourbon Outing Club which is camping at the resort Miss Mary Irvine Davis left Wed- ¬ nesday for a visit to Misses Bessie Cheatham Texie Woodson and the Misses Wheat in Louisville Miss Mattie Varden who has been in Lexington with her father Rev Geo Varden who has been very ill returned home Wednesday afternoon Miss Sue Clay entertained a party of friends in handsome style Tuesday even- ¬ ing at Auvergne the beautiful home of her father Hon C M Clay Jr Rev Dr Geo Varden and wife re- ¬ turned yesterday from a visit to relatives in Lexington The former was danger ¬ ously ill during several days while in Lexington but is now greatly improved Misses Elizabeth Van Meter of Danville Margaret Woodford of Mt Sterling and Misses Bessie Wood- ¬ ford and Elizabeth Spears are a charm- ¬ ing quartet of young ladies now being entertained by Mr and Mrs W L Yer w -- kes 111 Mr Harry Morgan of Champlain son of Mr Woodson Morgan former- ¬ ly of this city was in Paris yesterday greeting old friends He was en rovte to Cincinnati from Flemingsburg where he had been visiting friends Mrs B O Billingsley of Washing ton and Robert O Burbridge of Phila- ¬ delphia are now visiting their mother Mrs RS Burbridge at Brooklawn farm Mrs Burbridge has been quite sick from nervous prostration but is improving slowly Miss Mary Brent was the charming hostess at a delightful informal dance given Tuesday evening at her home on Houston avenue The guests were Misses Bessie Woodford Margaret Mt Sterling Woodford Elizabeth Spears Laura Trundle Elizabeth Van Meter Danville Maria Spears Rebecca Mayes Daisy McComas Cincinnati Olivia Buckner Mary Lou Fithian Dr Geo Spencer Dr M H Daily Messrs Frank Walker Ed Tucker R P Dow Jr Oakford Hinton Strother Quisen- berry Warren Bacon Julius Purnell Talbot Clay J D McClintock Chas Winn Walter Champ The following persons participated in a pleasant dance given Tuesday nigh t by Miss Nellie Stoker at Mr Matt How- ¬ Lucy Misses Fannie Rion ards Downey Mamie Rion Lucretia Barnes Nicholasville Clara Wilmoth Helen Connell Jennie K Purnell Nannie Swearengen Grace Swearengen Cannie Grimes Katie Russell Louise Russell Nellie Mann Sadie Davis Messrs Ed Hutchcraft Frank Hallam Strother Ben Downey Mitchell Mt Sterling tley Jameson Louie Hallam Morti Kir mer Hallam Miller Mcllvain Jim Chambers Duncan Taylor Lyt Pur ¬ nell Frank Bowden Chas Wilmoth John K Spears Roy Clendenin Frank Daugherty Croxton Rion 529 Main St Paris Ky made 2000000 in sugar speculation Suits were filed Wednesday at Frank- ¬ fort to secure 12000 insurance on the life of Dick Tate A Lexington man who is too modest to have his name printed has invented a folding umbrella Two rape fiends will be legally hanged in Virginia This is the only way to of stop this foul crime Richmond and The Georgetown All our 50c dress goods now 25c Nicholasville pike in Fayette will be Lawns formerly S- and 10c now oc made free to day Choice of our finest lawns 12tV to 20c now 10 Sea Island percales best quality now Sic Miss May Conover a pretty young Largeline of Pnang formerly 8 l 3c now 5c lady of good family has joined the 72 inch bleached table linen 1 kind now G5c Salvation Army at Cloverport Ky All our table linens formerly 50 and 75c- - now 40c Mrp W J Cocke of Asheville N C 50 doz finest linen napkins 75 and 1 a dozen formerly Miss Minnie Lyne of CynthiOur finest kid gloves 175 kind now 1 ana committed suicide at the former Standard brands bleached and brown cotton 5c place 10 4 Utica sheeting full width 18c A dispatch from Burlington N J Best dress and apron ginghams 5c says that fiftv one small frogs were Ladies Summer vests 25c kind full tapedj 10c taken alive from the stomach of Peter Cunningham A John Hiecdns quarreled with his v sweetheart Rachael Crutcher at Lex ington and brained her with a fence JJt picket Both colored The residences of Ben Rucker and Dave Adams burned Wednesday after- ¬ noon at Georgetown Loss about 5000 The property was insured Jake Marks sent to the penitentiary from Louisville for grauds larceny on has the testimony of his mother-in-lamother-in-laToo much been pardoned was the comment on the pardon wrote Corporal Yours until death McDonnell to his sweetheart whom he was to wed in seven days Then a bolt of lightning from a clear sky killed him and shocked fourteen others in a mili-¬ tary camp last week in New York Gov Bradley issued a pardon to George Dinning colored recently sent to the Eddy ville prison for seven years from Franklin for shooting Jodie Conn The Governor gave a review of the case and his reason for giving the pardon lESly The Louisville School Board will file suit in the State Fiscal Court to compel aLJEZ-OIIlsrO- the State to pay the per capita to which I to the the city is entitled according school census recently taken State Su- ¬ WE HAYE KEOfclVED A SPLENDID ST00Z IF perintendent Davidson 3 till disputes the accuracy of the censns IMPORTED SDITHGS AND TROUSERINGS Because she was not permitted to marry her lover Miss Experience Gil- ¬ ford of East Blueeill Me has not spok- ¬ en a word for fifty years Her vow ex-¬ Our Prices are lower than any house in Central Kentucky wheia pired last week and dressed in her bridal dress she tried to speak but her quality and style are considered We ask you to give us a cali vocal muscles refused to work Miss Gilford has taken to her bedv A sad Experience sure Highway robbers are getting exceed- ¬ FXNJSi MERCHA VT TAILORS ingly bold in Kentucky Monday Jeff S E TIPTON Cutter Lancaster a farmer of Stamping Ground was held up and robbed in an alley in Georgetown but recovered his money We are also agents for the celebrated Chas E Smith Shirt Full line of samples At Lexington Lawrence Gentry 18 was shot and choked into unconsciousness and robbed The robbers in both in- ¬ stances were negro men -Wantedv tTo buy wheat Will pay Ladies Green Oxfords We have a fine flexible oxford in this the highest market cash price Sacks 50 YEARS new color made of dark green Durree EXPERIENCE furnished kid medium pointed toe hand made EO Fretwell and as soft as a glove See them 280 Ky Jumble Of News And Comment In two davs J R Keene of NewYork 1 LJ j lVJX 0 OUT - SA F t All our Summer goods marked down to sell at once Here are a few tie Bargains - - V i 1 i - large variety of other articles all marked down to one half former value at CONDON w w Buy your binder twine of me Quality first class prices the low- - 0 EDWKRDS Paris 1 FOR SPRING AND SUMMER - h 4 IT- P O Box Paris RION CLAY Men who like a cool quick quiet and easy shave should patronize Crawford Wrights Celery Tea regulates the Bros barber shop Clean first class liver and kidneys cures constipation bath rooms are connected with the shop druggists headache 25c Satisfactory service at all times STRftY HORSE TAKEN iyjnjra TRADE MARK DESIGNS COPYRIRHTS Arf tf and sick at all 975 round trip to Nashville by repur- ¬ Visit chasing tickets at Chattanooga A stray horse came to my stable on Chattanooga Chickamauga Lookout High Street Paris Ky on Friday July Mountain enroute to the Exposition 16th Owner by proving property and Superb vestibuled Trains paying charges may have same W C Kinearson Genl Passr Agt Cincinnati O J U BOARDMAN K V OP Nashville Anyone sending a Bketch and description may quickly ascertain free whether an invention probably patentable Communications Btrictly confidential Oldest agency forsecuring patents in America We have a Washington office Patents taken through Munn Co receW apecial notice in the SCIENTIFIC I AMERICAN beautifully illustrated largest circulation of uuyscienunc journal weekly terms 300 a year SIX months SnftiJmfin cnnloH nnA H Avn Book ok Patents sent free Addresa 3G1 Broadway Now York MUNN CO s tt- - -- kr i v -- - iU - V -- Z lfJvJ- - fft- 5ii - L rV V - -- A v SW JZr-- ja4fe aassi 3 1 r j r -- I F fcjr 6 THE BOURBON NEWS EMBAY JULY 23 1897 But the Englishman was determined for having a kodak he purposed get ting some views of these nearly un ¬ ¬ V i i s V Z55J THE BOURBON NEWS h- - Seventeenth Year Established 1881 Published Every Tuesday and Friday by WALTER CHAMP BRUCE MILLER I Editors and Owners WIDDER The Gallants Deserted When They STILL A COMMON SENSE i - f - IV f S J u a1 11 him and she as regularly after inspecting the address refused to accept it Some humorist on one oc- ¬ casion sent out large numbers of let- ¬ ters each on a sheet as large as a ta- ¬ lar to the fleeing women but the men I had my rights and whats more to blecloth all of AAhich had to be deUv ffllf4ftAirAfc fflJffftfLAAftAtfffRffAfliriLftflAnjrr mistaking his motive believed it to be the pint I licked her departed one in ered as single missives ettuntuturtuwMUMunnMtMvnuuitML This system practically stifled Avrit an insult to their wives and gathering a far font two weeks afore lie died a dis- ¬ If ye want a man with a record widder ten intercourse among the orking stones began to pelt us from fin Adventure in Jfeoceo I reckon minell fetch ye class and pressed ith severity upon tance ItVpurty far Bill she replied the middle class but the rich and high ¬ Our guide cried for us to mount and WWfoWMWWMMftimumWMAMMM ride for our lives and indeed we needed but jest let me ask ye what amount o ly placed entirely escaped postal tax- ¬ ation The privilege of franking no other encouragement At the first cash ye kin call yer own Cash he exclaimed in great sur ¬ the correspondence not only of ALL the Barbary states Morocco volley the camera was hopelessly What difference kin that make ministers peers and members of par- ¬ and for one I was heartily glad prise is the most oriental iiK character ruined to a and to day retains all the usages and Away we went at a breakneck gallop own widder with 5000 cash of her liament but of their relatives friends and acquaintances While in one year customs of the time of Mahomet Trip- ¬ end our mules being struck by flying But but I haint got no 5000 cash early in the queens reign no less than by the fierce dogs oli Tunis and Algeria under French in- ¬ stones and worried ¬ 7400000 letters Avere franked a single fluence have become greatly modern of the shepherds were soon unman- Bill shouted the boys as they London firm paid annually 11000 for being so narrow The trail ized railroads and the conveniences of ageable that but one mule might pass at a time stopped elbowing each other and feil postage and a Ariter in the Quarter civilization have been introduced until Ye haint wuth ly reterred flippantly to so slight and the town of Algiers has been called I had the post of honor if it may be so back in amazement 5000 rare an incident in a laborers life as Little Paris but Morocco under the called being well in the rear the¬ Sho in course- not but less tulk the receipt of a letter guide was far ahead with the English Among the despotic rule of the sultan still holds about this marryin bizness Now man who had caused all the trouble packets franked Avas a grand piano to its barbaric customs Im perfeckly Avillin to An army of clerks Avas employed to fix a close second ¬ Xot a wheeled vehicle is allowed with But Broncho Bill stampeded the the charges to be collected and the During that ride I enjoyed much the in the dominions of the Father of the crowd by leading a fbreak for the road postal revenue remained stationary be Faithful and all merchandise must be same sensations as the renowned Gilpin transported upon the backs of camels may have experienced my legs flying and although the Widow Shepardson tAveen 1815 and 1835 although in the mules or men The country is rough in the air and clutching wildly at the gave pursuit they were soon lost to same period the population increased and unbroken bridle paths lead from pommel of the high Arab saddle The view in a cloud of dust And as Can- ¬ from 19500000 to 25000000 Moved by this state of things parlia- ¬ one settlement to another and the na Arabs are notoriously fleet of foot and tankerous Charley remarked half an y followed us in a howling mob Our pace hour later as the breathless crowd ment in 1839 adopted Rowland Hills fives have such a fanatical prejudice against foreigners and innovations that was so rapid that it destroyed their aim lined up f or some pizen at the bar of proposal of uniform inland penny postage which came into operation on progress under the circumstances is an but I was struck several times in the the Cactus saloon The Widder Shepardson are still a January 10 1840 The Avriter possesses impossibilitj The Moors are intense widder and bound to be fur all I kin a copy of the Quarterly BevieAV of fatalists holding that what is good do in thecase X Y Journal 1839 in AAhich a contributor believed to enough for their fathers must suffice fiercely denounces the be Croker for themselves t A MEDICAL WARNING scheme Will clerks he says write Indicative of the aversion of the Arabs only to their fathers and girls to their for- to any improvement presented by Medicine Should Never Be Careles sly mothers Will not letters of romance Talcen eigners is the following incident The c promoters In regard to liniments let me Avarn or love intrigue or mischief increase of a British cable company tyou of the fact that most of the lini- in at least equal proportions We upon the failure of repeated attempts AA hether social and domestic cor- ¬ ments Avhich have great poAver for good doubt to gain consent to establish a terminal contain sufficiently large quantities oi respondence AAill bemore than doubled for their line in Tangier bethought - them of a novel idea such poAverful drugs as ammonia A gigantic exemplification of the old One of their rechloroform aconite or opium to pro proverb Pennywise and pound fool- ¬ provided with nu- ¬ pair steamers being duce serious or even fatal poisoning i ish etc merous electrical appliances such as Macaulay says that the penny post taken internally and therefore bottles motors fans and miniature railroads containing liniments should not ho AAIien first established Aas the olbject anchored in the bay opposite the city - The sultan was given a banquet on placed in the closet Avith bottles con- of violent imective as a manifest con ¬ taining medicines for internal use trivance of the pope to enskwe the souls board and the contrivances pleasing Further than this liniment bottles of Englishmen It Avas described as him the whole lot was presented to should ahvays be of a peculiar shape or sedition made eas3 so much that lie The postal au- ¬ him delighting him ¬ bear a mark so startling or peculiar in thorities aaIio in 1784 had opposed the straightway gave the company the deitp appearance as to call attention ti institution of mail coaches Aveie im ¬ permission The cable was laid sired the fact that the liniment is poisohoaa placable enemies of penny postage and all the trouble believed to be at if taken internally an end but the orthodox Moor not The postmaster general of 1839 Lord AWAY WE WENT All medical men of large experience Lichfield based his objections on the having been subsidized as had been his royal master conceived that both his back and once in the head the last have frequently met with cases in curious ground that the building at St Avhich patients have placed a bottle of Martins-le-Gran- d Avould not be large feelings and his religion had been out¬ nearly knocking me from my mule ¬ Ac raged by the Christian dogs The Arabs pursued us for about five medicine to their lips and taken a enough The secretary Col JSIaberly cordingly one dark night he went down miles till at last Ave heard their criea draught of its contents in a dark room constantly repeated This plan Ave to the beach and cut the cable with an grow fainter in the distance and finally under the impression that there Avas knoAV ill fail ax The line was repaired but when ¬ cease It was a sorry band that halted only one bottle upon the shelf when As Ave knoAA it succeeded and the any Arab had a grievance against about two miles ever farther pn to repair in reality some other member of the penny rate has been generally adopted the hated foreigner lie immediately ap ¬ damages I was the greatest sufferer family had placed other bottles there in Europe as Avell as in the United plied his efforts to destroy the cable being so lame letters rose that I could hardly sit my In this Avay serious cases of poisoning States The number of 299000000 have occurred It was repaired three times when the mule in In other instimpps from 80000000 in 1837 to Avife rising in the night to give sone 1S47 and for the year ending on March company resolved upon this expedient Our guide informed us that our great- ¬ One dark night the cable was taken up est danger had lain from the path be ¬ medicine to her husband or child has 31 1897 they must be about 1900000 and carried underground to the office ing so circuitous and picked up the Avrong bottle iu the dim 000 The postal surplus Avas in 1839 and a dummy cable was laid in plain the Arabs might easily precipitous for light and administered a fatal doss 3632133 1059510 and in 189G 97 have sight for a few hundred feet The de ¬ over the hills and arousins- run ahead- Avith terrible result of letters which Avas in The number the counvice was successful and although Mr try Where medicine is ordered in drops 1S37 about three per head and in 1854 have headed us off We were ¬ Moor often took occasion to chop the obliged to travel very slowly for the you should ahvays obtain a medicine 15 per head is noAV 77 per head Londummy to pieces for a long time the rest of the way to avoid holes and pit¬ dropper from a drug store and avoid don Fortnightly RevieAV whereabouts of the true cable was un- ¬ falls and darkness falling suddenly as attempting to drop the medicine from Ijaujvliter ami Wrinkles known it does in this climate we made poor the bottle as it requires a Aery steady 2sine persons out of ten if asked to The international lighthouse on Cape progress At last however the lights hand and accurate counting to aAoid a give Avhat they consider the cause of Spartel at the entrance to Gibraltar of Tangier appeared in the distance mistake Finally let me warn you against one wrinkles would probably reply that it straits is one of the points of interest and we were soon at our hotel is Avorry and care This however is in this neighborhood It is supported The landlord to whom we recounted common habit Ahieh is closely con by no means always the ease for as a by themaritime nations of the world the adventure assureckus that our good nected Avith the use of battles contain matter of fact many of them come marking a point very dangerous to ing old medicines and is strongly con is after all an - navigators and ifvsituated opposite the fortune was due to the fact that the demned by oculists who most fre from laughing Thereto knoAv Iioav t i shepherds were poor class Arabs hav ¬ art in laughter and old Spanish town of Tarifa whence we ing no guns and inasmuch as Ave had quently meet Avith it the habit of pre laugh is really quite as important as to derive our word tariff this town being taken his advice in hiring his mules serAing old medicine droppers Avhich know Avhen to do so If you laugh Avith the first place where such duty was rather than the horses of the Irish have beenused for dropping fluids into the sides of the face the skin Avill work levied stablekeeper as the mules Avere far the eye Quite frequently powerful loose in time and Avrinkles Avill forrr One mornirig ateompanied by two surer footed medicines dry in these droppers and in exact accordance Avith the kind of English acquaintances and an inter- ¬ However that may have been I Avas when they are used some months af The man Aho preter and guide a Spanish Jew the perfectly content to congratulate for the introduction of eye Avash laugh you indulge in Avill have a series him es a smirk writer set forth to visit this celebra- ¬ on his foresight and retired Avith the they produce symptoms Avhich very ahvays Avears of semi circular wrinkles covering his ted light firm resolution never to venture be- ¬ seriously alarm the patient and AAhich cheeks A gambler who is accusAfter two hours of rough riding we yond the city limits unless escorted by may to some extent mystify the practi ¬ suppress his feelings generally drew up at the lighthouse terrace at least a regiment of the native sol- ¬ tioner H A IIareM Din Chautau tomed to has a deep line running from each side quan Jr where the keeper a pleasant old Ger¬ diery Detroit Free Press of his nose to the upper corner oi mr man furnished refreshment for man Bean Sonji mouth Avhich in time extends to tin Keeping Up Appearances and beast We then spent an hour or There are a great many people who chin forming the shape of a half moon A performance of The Barber Avas two inspecting the lighthouse and look ¬ dont knoAv beans so far as cooking A cadaverous person is usually marked ing through the big telescope by which being given in honor of Rossini in the thern properly is concerned according with two wrinkles one on the jaAv and all vessels are sighted local theater While the oAerture Avas to the neAv hygiene of foods The Jour the other under the eye meeting at One of my English friends had heard in full sAving he noticed a huge trum- ¬ nal of Hygiene gives this recipe for a right angles at the cheek bones Th of some wonderful caves situated upon pet in the orchestra manifestly bloAvn perfectly nutritious and entirely di ¬ wrinkles form on the brow - the Atlantic side and much against Avith remarkable force and continuity gestible bean soup Soak the beans students schemer come round the advice of our host and the guide by a member of the band but not a over night in water to Avhich a little while those of the his eyes and resemble the spokes of we resolved to visit them and return to f sound in the least akin to the tone of soda T Y Ledger has In the mornirig Tangiers by a roundabout Avay It was that instrument could he hear At the rub thembeen addedremove the skins wheel--SAvell to urged that this Avay being much longer close of the performance he inter- - which are indigestible and the causcoi Why He Was AiiRry we should not reach home until after AieAved the conductor and asked him to What makes Biggs look so sour at the gases geneiated by eating beans dark and as the only inhabitants of the explain the purpose of the noiseless Put the beans in a kettle cover with you co an try Avere the nomadic tribes of trumpet He ansAvered Maestro in 0 he was talking about reincarna then wash boil till derough laAvless shepherds the venture this town there Avas not a living soul cold water tine sieve tender a quart a Have of tion and that sort of stuff and an ou Id be extremely hazardous It is avIio cau play the instrument there- ¬ through heating in a double boiler clared that Ave have all lived before acflangerous for a foreigner to go a mile fore I specially engage an artist to rich milk and stir iuto the beans till of the prop ¬ Why he said 1 knoAV I am a mere outside the city limits after nightfall hold one up to his lips binding him by consistency Season to tnste This cident in this world without a soldier and many travelers an oath not to blow into it for it looks er very But what made him mad nutritious and especially good by so doing have been robbed some Avell to have a trumpet in an operatic is I told him Siot to let it occur again for delicate people Dttroit1 Free limeslosing their liyes orchestra San Francisco Ars onaut Press Cincinnati Commercial Tribune ia Avell Avith -- Of all the gifts this side of Heaven That ever were to mortals given were several miles beyond and as it was Thebest to have the worst to miss The truest sweetest source of bliss getting late in the day we thought it The one rail left of Edens fence home Stands the pure charm of common sense prudent to take the path forthan two We had not gone more To earn our right to daily bread miles when we arrived before a small To not regret when time s fled collection of shepherd huts and tents To wisely speak and act and think in front of which a number of women To keep lifes boat from ruins brink To balance every hours expense and children were seated Stopping to We need the aid of common seiise inquire the road and to refresh our airnest mules with spring water the English Sometimes no doubt we need to view I ar everybody exclaimed bow ¬ sThe lightning bolts some genius threw man thought to obtain pictures of this ing and smirking But now we need well mixed and stirred wild and picturesque group Sure its me yer arter ehV she With silent thought or spoken word Now among the country Arabs there rather anxiously queried A sort of human fools defense is a strong supersition regarding the The wholesome aid of common sense Yo bet was the hearty reply lens as Some things perhaps must still be taught camera they looking upon the Wall then boys its the Widder Where mighty minds their power in the Evil Eye and believing that one at Shepardsons bizness to make one o wrought t whom itis directed will be bewitched ye happy but dont ye rush her Shes But how to guard the priceless wealth and certain to suffer from some calam- goin to set right yere and pick the man Of peace and love of youthful health ity And how to keep our own few pence with the best record if it takes a month Our guide seeing the Englishman and she gits left in the end Spit out Is taught alone by common sense unslingthe camera called to him to de- yer records some o ye We pray for faith and light and peace sist and we having heard of this suFor sins remove and loves increase Every one who had a record arid For strength to meet the tempters power perstition whicli amounts to fanati- ¬ every one who hadnt began talking at For dying grace for dying hour cism added our protests but in vain once a moment vBut now right in the present tense and no sooner did the women see the drew but after demanded Broncho Bill Give us O Lord good common sense silence and kodak leveled at them than they set up said his guns To keep from useless jar and strife a fearful shrieking and turned to run And bless the changing1 path of life let for the houses At the sound of their herNow ye critters akeep shet andhold To make each fountain purer still har us one at time Jest cries from nearly every rock and bush To take from loss its fatal chili And bring thy own sweet recompense a man sprang into view and rushed on till I tell the dear widder that Im We bow to thee blest common sense toward us The Englishman thinking one o the fittinist fighters in the ken- i O S Ross in Boston Transcript to appease them held up a Spanish dol- ¬ tr3r ought to ie in the legislashure if ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ -- known caves After some hard riding over rough mountain paths the loose stones flying from under our mules feet and in some places so steep that we were obliged to dismount and lead our animals we came upbn two shepherds who were smoking by a spring Learning from them that the caves ¬ day at Injun Creek that Widow Shep ardson had just fallen heir to 5000 there was a cyclonic rush of suitors for her cabin that carried everything before it and the widow who sat on her doorstep smoking a corncob pipe nearty fainted from surprise Avhen the excited crowd piled into the yard and shouted as one man Widder will ye marry lne Shoo she faintly ejaculated when she could get her breath and realized what was wanted of her Its tookeuj this crowd a powerful long time to ask me that queshun and I hope yer in Discovered Her Poverty When somebody started a rumor one OLD POSTAL USAGES Csfrious Phases 6 the Early Euglisli 1 Mail Service When Queen Victoria ascended the throne there Avere no telegraphs in this country and feAv railways The mails were forwarded by coach and the post- ¬ age rates were to all but the o prohibitie It cost 4d to Is 3d to send a single letter under an ounce in weight from one part of the kingdom to another There were some 40 charges varying according to distance the average rate being 9d or half the days Avage of a laborer A single t letter meant a sinerle niece of nnmr adhesive envelopes had not been in- ¬ vented and the addition of a second scrap of paper made the letter a dou- ¬ ble one The postage Avas paid on delivery by the recipient and as no credit Avas given the incursion of a postman into a poor neighborhood Avas watched on all sides Avith fear rather than hope Coleridge the poet saAv a poor declining to accept a letter on the score of inability to pay The good Aveli-to-d- SHOOTING A RHINOCEROS experiences After Big Game in Africa Shortly after bagging his and India Iwo of Them Charged a Hunter in an African Forest Mr H W Seton Karr describes his natured bard doubtless Avith somedif ficulty found the required ninepence despite the Avomans remonstrances When the postman had gone aAvay she shoAAed Coleridge that the letter AAas but a fblank sheet of paper Her broth er had arranged to send her at intervals such a sheet addressed in a cer ¬ ¬ tain fashion as evidence that all Avas AA AA rJ coa--ere- d -- H -- N W-h-- a-t - I ¬ ¬ ¬ AA - -- ¬ ter-AA-ar- d ¬ I ¬ i ¬ ¬ -- i - - i rfc BsS affair for Iverson it was an amusing Olympia expursion party As I came round a bush I saAv at the episode to an bottom of a kind of natural alley in the that Avitnessed it ogourred to Iverson The incident in the forest framed in like a picture by from the main- rhinocer- ¬ while he Avas crossing the trees a massive old female When in Ta- os She Avas facing me and standing land to his island home purchased a half in sunshine half inshadoAV From coma the ranchman had to salt it a bush protruded the hind quarters of quarter of a hog intending another Signing to the Somalis to doAAn for future use Steilacoom in hir Shortly after he left keep back I instantly sat doAvn and skiff he noticed a large school of por dreAv a bead upon her chest The disbut it tance Avas about 70 yards and although poises folloAving in his wakethe car- the wind Avas adverse to her and Ave reAer occurred to him that connection made no noise she must have seen us iass in the boat had any folloAving his like moving shadoAvs in the trees and ivith the school of sea pigs boat Avas evidently full of suspicion and disWhen he Avas about in midchannel the trust about 150 be school which If I ever took careful aim it Avas at gan to close innumberedand two of the on him that moment and under cover of the to ork up alongside of smoke I shifted my position as the rhi- ¬ leaders began wasv noceros came charging doAvn upon us his skiff By this time the rancher io v giving three or four sharp Avhiffs like scared and he bent all his energies jets of steam eA idently with the inten- ¬ reach the island shore hnt his efforts tion of clearing the enenry aAAayfrom to pull aAvay from his- fishy pursuers t as well the rear before making her escape to proved futile for he might justattempt Vward the front against the wind HaA try to outroAV a tornado as to hogs ing as she supposed effected this ma- to escape from fleet tailed sea As Iverson AAas nearing the shore and neuver a Aery usual one on the part the of the rhinoceros she SAverved off and when almost directly opposite tAvo the the tAvo broke aAvay across the forest United States penitentiary 20 min- that for crash after crash dying avray in the dis large porpoisesSAvimming about to the -so close tance marking their course as they re- utes had been ceded On perceiving the rhinoceros go boat that he had struck them several off apparently uninjured my Somalis times Avith his oars suddenly shot cut gave full Aent to their disappointment of the Avater into the boat knocking the force as making extravagant gestures and us rancher oAerboard Avitlt suchupset the to break one of his ribs and ing AAThat sounded like bad language about yet still in half Avhispers as they kneAA skiff For a short time the waterminia- his boat had the appearance of a instinctively that the animal might not have gone far after all especially if the ture maelstrom as the hungry sea hogs one I had fired at had really received a fought and quarreled for the carcass of the land pig mortal AAound to his The tracks Ave noAv folloAved Avere to Iversoii SAvam Will skiff and clung the guiiAvale Jenkins wholiAes V deep holes and furrows imprinted by BosAvorth the animals at full speed We had not near theand seeing landing hearing the the latter part of X gone far before I again saw the larger racket the trouble put off in his boat and resof the tAvo rhinoceroses standing broad ¬ cued him side on and quite motionless under a position from his extremely perilous bush Avhich concealed the head Giv as Dr Macklinson of Steilacoom ing my three Somalis to understand sent for and dressed- the mans wounds that they must remain quiet I aimed and prescribed for him The doctor re- once more at the animal shoulder tak ports that his patient Avill be all 4 ing care that no tAvig or branch Avas in in a feAA days but his patient saysright vv that the line of fire knoAving how easily a he ill sell his ranch cheap for he JPiV bullet may become deflected Mv sliot says although he has been a meat eater Avas folloAved by a couple of short 11 all his life yet so long as he has to angry snorts the stamp of heaA y feet on the island he will never attemptlive to and an appalling crashing Avhich ad- ¬ take meat over in aroAAboat Anyway vanced and then SAAept round toAvard he says that he has to take too many the left Another cautious advance on chances or as he expressed it dont our part and not far off I saw near the mind being held up on a street Icar or center of an open space the smaller of higliAA ay but I do draAV the line at be thetAvo rhinoceroses but not the larger ing robbed in broad daylight of my ra M one tion of bacon by a measly lot of wild A shot delivered standing from the sea hojrs Chicago Chronicle shoulder Avas folloAved by two shrill SWITCHING LOCOMOTIVES squeaks as the animal tottered a feAv paces and fell over on its side a sound The Superiority of Electricity Overmost disproportionate to the size and ASteam nn a Motor V Jm bulk of so large a creature but Avhich I The most striking thing abouti thejginstantly recognized from Sir Samuel behavior of the electric locomotiveit--thBakers description as the death cry certainty Avith Avhich it may be of the rhinoceros and the hearing of it inoAed over short distances Aarying filled me AAith a hunters joy While I from a feAv inches to a feAv feet The AAras reloading the Somalis hadcreptfor obedience of the motors to the con- ¬ AAard with their spears relying upon troller is practically instantaneous their OAvn agility in eA adingany charge thus doing aAvay at one stroke Avith delivered by the larger one AAhich I one of the chief draAvbacks to steam kJ kneAv must surely be someAA here near SAyitching engines Avith AAhich there at hand After peering over a Ioav bush is a noticeable delaA- - between the time they executed a Avar dance upon the Avhen the throttle alve is opened and ground beyond for there Avere the tAvo the pistons begin to move in this way rhinoceroses lying stone dead almost often causing the engineer no matter side by side My Somalis gave Avay to hoAv careful he may be to overshoot shout and exuberant mirth they his niark Avere transformed from scoAA ling fiends This delay iu action AAhile generally soured bj- - the AAhite mans folly into only a feAv seconds in each cae radiant broAvn angels and I alloAved amounts up seriously in the course of them to stroke my face- and pat me on a whole dajs Avork and is the chief the back Avithout a reprimand Cen cause of the proAerbial lateness of turA freight trains Avhich have much SAvitching to do at intermediate sta- A Forgotten Author The oldest American man of letters tions From the fact that the move- ¬ is Theodore S Fay noAV living abroad ment of the electric locomotive can be at Berlin ait the age of 90 He is mostly graduated so nicely a full third of the forgotten and his books are all out of time usually occupied by the steam loprint Yet he Avas a man of some note comotives can be saved particularly as single empty cars unprovided atU1i in the literature of his day His Norman Leslie and Hoboken automatic couplers need ne er be bunt ¬ M were in every circulating library and ed off by too rapid an approach of the Avere Avidely read 50 years and more engine as frequently happens under ago He Avas a contemporary of Ir- SAvitching conditions as they now are Again the acceleration of the electric ving Willis Bryant Halleck Percival and others of that period He had a locomotive is so even that the freight position in the diplomatic service be cars of a comparatively long train are ing given the place of minister to started one after another Avithout SAvitzerland by President Van Buren jerking and Avithout apparent strainN v who Avas very kind toAvard literary A Aveak draAv bar is thus protectedi men Irving Avas appointed minister against sudden fracture and no easingto Japan b3 him HaAvthorne had his off ith consequent reduction iu position in the Boston custom house speed and delay in getting under Avay during his administration Bancroft Avas is necessary as in the case of the steam H made collector of the port of Boston locomotive The electric locomotive and James K Spaulding Avho had Avrit further is fitted Avith a quick acting ten at least one noAel Avas a member of air brake the pressure for Avhich is M7 his cabinet It Avas noted as a curious kept at its maximum by an automatic fact at that time that the literary men electric air pump instead of the com- ¬ of the country Avere generally demo ¬ paratively slow acting steam brake crats Mr Fay has never resided at Avhich is usually atfached to steam home since he lost his foreign mission SAvitching- - engines The highest rate of IM u ti The charms of European life were too speed permissible in such cases may r much for him Boston Herald therefore be indulged in ith the cer¬ tainty of a quick stop shourd occasion SIT The Kins of Slam and Italy An account of a drive Avhich the require it f MJl The handles with Avhiclb an electric king of Siam recently made Avith King Humbert during his visit to Eome is locomotive may be operated is an- ¬ other point in its favor Tbere i published here in Paris The tAvo so ereigns drove through parts of the city neither the internal pressure of thi n AAhich the ecclesiastical element is steam against the throttle alve SioC very largely represented The royal the stiffness and weight of the link re V aarriage haAing passed before several versing gear to overcome A dainty t groups of seminarists the king of controller handle Avhich could be moved 6 Siam noticed that these did not folloAv by a child and a reversing handle al- - vf the example of civilians and salute most equally light and movable one J anu arrange tne paths for the current A King Humbert Have jou noticed a he finally said to the king that these Cassiers Magazine Vmen ith large hats who look at us so Inconsequential fixedly do not salute Ah yes renis juasnip fut you Americans plied King Humbert indifferently that is because the are attached to make such a roAv about the most in ¬ the Vatican But this did not appear consequential things dont ye know Miss Columbia Yes I suppose ifcV to the king of Siam to be a good does annoy you to be lionized Detroit enough reason for he replied in the NeAvs most natural manner in theAvorld Is It because you haA e no gibbets The mosque of St Sophia at Con- King Humbert explained that these things stantinopleAvas built over 1000 yearswere of a past age and that in Italy th ago and the mortar used is said to have ieath penalty haxl long ago been nboh been perfuiped Avith music Tliemiisk shed London Post odor is still nerceptibicV V ence ¬ J first elephant the author started after the tAvo horned rhinoceros He gives the folloAAing account of his experi- ¬ CHASED BY HUNGRY PORPOISES Remarkable Experience of M I a Skiff with Fresh Meat Avho owns a ranch on Olie Iverson McNeils island near the United States penitentiary af Tacoma Wash had anlikeexperience the other day he is not y to forget for many a long day and while it was undoubtedly a very serious v ¬ u- AA - - - ¬ ¬ -- ¬ ¬ ¬ AA - ¬ AA S ¬ -- - - j - tSJ e -- A - -- ¬ noA--el- s ¬ ¬ - - AA m AA t A -- v -- JT 3 AA ¬ T iv - - f u- J -- t V o- - -- V ri v t j ft THE BOURBON NEWS FRIDAY JULY 23 1897 TONG-PAK-SUK THE FARMING WORLD HAY GENERATES FIRE MODEL DAIRY BARN Conven ¬ ience and Labor Savins Device This dairy barn is one designed and built for a wealthy dairy farmer just outside of the city of New York It is a basement barn 36x100 The excavation was made in a side hill and the wall B some 130 feet long was built somd years ago The old barn or rather barns and stables hadtourned in July The new barn was set up from the wall some 14 feet in order to permit of a driveway on that side of the barn as well as to admit of more light and better ventilation The silos which also had burned were to be erected at the north end of the barn The cows were to face the feeding alley to admit of convenience and ease in feeding the N i AND THE DEVjL -- ABOUT STAMPS ¬ It Contains Every Known KeasoualilyWell Authenticated Cases of Spontaneous Combustion Whether or not hay ig nites spontaneously has never been determined Usu- ¬ ally the fire has originated where con- ¬ siderable quantities of clover hay have been stored In nearly every case the stacks or buildings were entirety- - con- ¬ sumed so it was irqgxjssible to deter- ¬ mine the origin of the fire At the Penn ¬ sylvania experiment station barns in lb95 fire was seen dropping from the ceiling of the cow stable Investigation proved that the fire was confined to a mow of hay 1Sx23 and about 23 feet high The draughts were stopped and the top of the mow kept covered with wet blankets Openings were made in the sdes of the barn and all the hay about 30 tons was pitched une removing mis cue jsnure out center of the mow was smouldering and ready tb Nburst into flames when ex¬ posed to the air Fortunately a hydrant was near at hand and the top was kept constantly saturated and the barn thus saVed All the center of the mow was thoroughly packed hot and smoking The high temperature of the hay made dt decidedly uncomfortable for those who were removing the smouldering ¬ Tong-Pak-Su- iiiiv j vi wn in iii a t I I B ii Corean Iejrend as to IIoSsv Their Me thnsaleh Beat the Adversary The Coreans have an interesting legend concerning the manner in which k the Methuselah of their got the better of Satan mythology Tong- lived 1000 years and acquired great wisdom The latter years of his life were spent in fishing but not wish ing to diminish the stock of fish in the river he used a straight piece of wTire instead of a hook Thus he was able to enjoy the excitement and pleasure of fishing for several centuries without catching a single fish Realizing that sooner or later the devil who did deaths errands would b looking him up he changed his name and abode with each generation and u the meautime thus eluded him the evil one disguised himself m a - The British government has resolutely refused to issue any jubilee stamps this year although the temptation ipust have been very great to thus easily add to the revenues of the kingdom A young school teacher of Aargau ¬ ¬ ¬ Switzerland found among some old pa pers an envelope franked with a strip of tsixBasle 2 rappen stamps The en- ¬ velope is1 in excellent condition and shows a very plain cancellation of the Kruezlingen post office and the date 18130 The lucky finder asks 2500 francs fi00 To get good results in any kind of shoot- ¬ Allens Foot Ease a powder for the feet ing uniform reliable ammunition is abso It cures painful swollen smarting feet and hitely necessary Experience has taught instantly takes the sting out of corns and the most successful hunters that it pays to bunions Its the greatest comfort discovery always use ammunition made by the Win- ¬ of the age Allens Foot Ease makes tight or chester Repeating Arms Co New Haven new shoes feel easy It is a certain cure for Ct as it is unequalled for accuracy reliabil- ¬ sweating callous hot tired aching feet ity uniformity and strong shooting quali- ¬ Try it to day Sold by all druggists and ties Winchester ammunition can be bought shoe stores 25c Trial package FREb everywhere as it is in great demand all over Write to Allen S Olmsted LeRoy X Y the world Like Winchester guns it is the standard of the world It costs no more His valet got even with Reginald for dis ¬ than inferior makes and it is a thousand charging him said one young man How times better Send for a large illustrated inquired the other Set his watch ahead catalogue free so that Reginald got his evening clothes Washington Star on at half past five Always ing Hints to Hunters Shake Into Your Shoes y for the envelope Doin What does that man Slicky do for a liv ¬ ii j rjsCff ttaA I I I 1 ii i n in mil mi i t I mf c jiJpBEaEa6SB hmwmjj i IIIIII t IIII III ppiirifijrtu ii i 1 II I I I l Ii I IIII 1 1 1 I 1 1 I i V ji m xT ll nam 1 1 j tfodder The holes burned through the mow floor were above the middle of the sta-¬ ble and not near the walls It was evi- ¬ dent that the fire could not have been accidental or incendiary The hay was second growth clover and timothy mostly cloverv and when harvested was thought to be in unusually fine condi- ¬ tion The fact that it was very com- ¬ pact gave color to the theory that thj combustion was spontaneous Exam- ¬ ination of the hay after being thrown out of the barn showed that a large proportion of it was so thoroughly charred that it would crumble when handled Some if it had not been sub- ¬ jected to so great a heat and was only brown in color but was wholly unfit for stock For several days previous to the fire a peculiar odor had been noticed about the barn and examination seemed to in- ¬ dicate that the rowen was heating but there were no indications of fire The odor soon became ho strong that it waa compared by some to that of burning grain While positive proof as to the origin of this fire may be lacking the circumstances are such that it is safe to consider it spontaneous American PLAN OP DAIRY BARN silage from the feed car The rnantire carts were driven through the basement in rear of th e cows Two large cistern s were provided in a subcellar forcollect ing the liquid manure Horse stable room for the milk wag¬ ons and ice house occtipied the wing etc with root cellar beneath and storage The superstructure for hay above was fitted up with feed bins feed mills Automatic watering-devices were sup ¬ Agriculturist ABOUT EARTHWORMS How they Maintain the Living Lay¬ er of Vecretable Mold A discussion on the subject of earth- ¬ worms and vegetable mold appeared in a recent issue of Longmans Maga ¬ zine The writer Grant Allen states that it was Gilbert White of Selborne who first of all pointed out the impor¬ tance of earthworms as producers and maintainers of living layers of veg etable mold It was the patient inves tigatibhsof Darwin however which fully established the fact and raised it to the rank of a scientific discovery ¬ plied for each caw and the water fur ¬ nished by a large spring some half a mile to the eastward on a hill It is a very convenient an Mgement and the cost was a surprise to the owner who had been told that such a ibarn could not be erected for much Jess than5v000 The frame is made after the plank sys ¬ tem and was begun by four house carpenters who had never done any barn work and two common laborers on Monday morning and on Friday mornixtg of the same week it wasraised thus effecting- a saving of over 240 in the cost of iraming in addition to the saving of 320 in the timber required John L Shawver an National Stock ¬ man - flowing Corean robe which covered up his tail concealed his horns under a mourners hat three feet in diameter and wrapped his legs in curious padded stockings so that he easily passed for a native lie heard that Tong was fishing in the Hau river So he col- ¬ lected a quantit3r of charcoal and washed it in that stream This of course blackened the water and Tong being surprised and annoyed went up to discover the cause Finding the devil washing Ihe charcoal he asked what he was doing The devil replied that he was trying to make it white Old Tong in his astonishment was thrown off hisguard and said Thave lived in Corea hundreds of years and of course have met many fools but I never saw a big enough fool to itry to wash charcoal white The devil at once knew his man and unfolding his tail by way of exhibit ¬ ing his warrant of arrest seized Tong and hurried him along in the direction of the dark portals through which all mortals must pass On the way the devil being in good humor over his success chatted pleasantly with Tong who ventured to ask him what he most abhorred and was most afraid of The devil made a fa- ¬ tal blunder one which might have been excusable for si mortal he told the truth He said he hated and feared ¬ Before stamps came into use postage was paid aver the counter to the post- ¬ master and the amount written on the envelope It is amusing to hear that people of high social standing did not consider a postage stamp an ornament to a letter and preferred to pay the postage in money Pamily crests and Btamps on one and the same letter was a sign of poor taste in those days When the first perforated issue United States 1855 60 came upon the scene some post offices had large quantities of the 1851 imperforates on hand which were not exchanged for the new stamps It was understood that the stamps of the old design had to be sold before any of the perforated issue was disposed ot This seems to explain the reason for the existence of the occa- ¬ sional cover found bearing 1851 stamps although posl marked at some time dur ing the 1855 60 issues vogue Mekeels Stamp News ¬ ¬ For board and lodging he does the ho- ¬ tels and for clothes he does his tailor Out- ¬ side of that he does the best ho can Dedealings and have won tlie confidence of troit Free Press their customers They ask the public to be- ¬ lieve that the house which leads and con- ¬ IliBhly Illustrated Pnblications Descriptive of Yellowstone National Park trols the best source of supph is the best Black Hills Summer Tours to the North and house to do business with Northwest Tours to Colorado Pacific Coast Dead beats all know just what property and Puget Sound Farm Lands in Northern Missouri Nebraska and Wyoming and is exempt from execution Washington Homes in Washington and the Puget Sound Democrat Region will be mailed free by the under- ¬ signed Send fifteen cents for a large col- ¬ I have found Pisos Cure for Consumption ored wall man of the United States or a pack an unfailing medicine- - F R Lotz 1305 of superior playing cards L W Wakeley Scott St Covington Ky Oct 1 1894 G P A Burlington Route St Louis Mo Everv man thinks he is the hardest man to shave in town Washington Democrat It often happens when it is predicted that a man will come to some bad end that he comes to two or three Atchison Globe Halls Catarrh Cure ¬ - the original house to sell reliable bicycles at low prices direct to the rider They have built iip a large business by their honorable The Mead Cycle Company Chicago is once usea lor money Well I dont believe people had much money in their pockets in those days Uows were Is taken internally Price 75c A cold church can only be warmed by fire that comes from Heaven Pertinent Questions Why Will a Woman Throw Away Her Good Looks and Comfort IN CYCLEDOM f ornia are preparing to fight the L A W on the question of Sunday racing John S Johnson the professional will not be able to ride until nex fall as he has not fully recovered from his The Associated Cycling clubs of Call m sA 0sv Ifox ms Whv will a woman drag1 out a sickly half hearted existence and miss three quarters of the joy of living when she has PROGRESSIVE METHODS his first writing on the subject appear ing in the Gardeners Chronicle Later he issued an entire book on this inter- ¬ esting matter Darwin showed that earthworms act upon the soil in three ways In the first place thejr open up and loosen the ground for the roots to penetrate more perfect aeration of the soil being thus obtained The acids they secrete also act chemically upon the layer of rocks beneath in a way that assists the disintegration of the latter In the second place they crush in their gizzards small fragments of stone and liberate their component elements In the third place they drag down into their burrows countless numbers of leaves which they eat and cariy up the refuse to the surface It is computed that no fewer than 5300Q worms inhabit an acre of garden soil These worms pass through their bodies teir tons of material in a year and throw it up as mold at the rate of one inch in depth every five years The greater part of the mold is composed of a refuse of vegetable matter and is teeming with myriads of bacteria Even after allowing for other cooperating causes earthworms are responsi- ¬ ble for the formation and renewal of this layer of vegetable mold ¬ ¬ ¬ Always Sells Well People who buy butter place greater stress upon the appearance of the package as it comes from the hands of tha dairyman than many of us are inclined to think For many years it was the fortune of the writer to buy the b utter Rsed in his household TSuch an experience will soon convince one of the value of neat- ¬ ness in butter making We indeed suf¬ fered many things from those who of-¬ fered us their wares Poor tubs and pails with brine leaking through the stained and discolored staves half salted and over salted goods under colored and over colored butter butter fresh and butter old and altogether un¬ pleasant to look upon all these and more were presented to us for pur ¬ chase When we came on the farm we deter- ¬ mined to make the best butter we could and offer it for sale only in the most attractive form possible My wife had the advantage of having been born on a farm and further of having had for a mother an excellent butter maker and our goods were always good But ¬ ter made in the summer would stand ¬ Butter JPnt Up in Attractive Packages GARDEN TOOLCHLST ilt Saves Hundreds of Stens in Doinjgr -- until the next spring without injury We used the very best oak tubs and took every possible pains to have our butter salted properly Recently we ha ve procured a butter carrier with trays etc and a fine print Butter put up in this way presents a charming appearance The other day I offered a fine line put up in this way to the city trade There was but one comment That looks fine anyway or Isnt that lovely butter It took me but a short time to dispose of all I had on hand and at something above the market price One man took a lot without tasting or even smelling it but he had had some before and knew what ¬ This method of putting up butter we Where it is possible a little garden continued until June when we began to house to hold tools wheelbarrow fer ¬ tilizer etc should be built on the edge put it down in tubs for storing until tof the garden to save steps in hunting next fall It is not strange to me that so much v butter is sold at a low figure when I see how absoluely inferior much of it is There would be a decided irnprovemenc all around if everyone used the greatest possibJe care from milking to market ¬ ing to do their work thoroughly and well If those who do not exercise this care could be compelled to buy for a year or two I believe their eyes would then be opened to the great value of neatness in the dairy E L Vincent in Western Rural HANDY TOOL CPIEST tlie Work it was - illness It is a singular fact but true that themajoiity of cyclists depend princi- ¬ pally upon the right foot to push the machine along In proof of that if the balls on a crank axle are examined those on one side will be found more worn than on the other One of the best methods known for but four terrestial tilings a branch of keeping bright the nickel work about a thorn tree an empty salt bag a a bicycle is to wet a rag with a solu- ¬ worn out straw sandal an ox and a tion of hyposulphite of soda and wipe particular kind of grass that grows in the article with it drying with a soft Corea the foxtail and that when towel and afterwards rubbing with a these were put together he could not piece of chamois skin go within 30 feet of themare being im-¬ In Mexico In return the devil asked Tong wrhat proved as a the roads bicycle riding of he most feared Tong being wise and not because ofresult demand from the riders a experienced lied and said he was in as a class but because the wheel has mortal terror of a roasted ox head and made its way into the families of the mackalee a kind of beer goyernors high officials of Shortly after the exchange of confi- ¬ th variousand otherThat brought the states dence Tong noticed that they were necessity of good roads home to them passing a thorn tree around the roots as nothing else could with the result of which foxtail grass was growing as above stated and curiously enough under it was an An exchange admits that the habit of old salt bag and a cast off ox caudal gripping the handle bars in the middle so making a sudden spring from the ungraceful but vwan ts to know why side of the devil he gathered up the is is it called injurious The writer must bag the brass and sandal and hanging be very unohserving if he has not no ¬ them on the branchy of the tree his ticed that when the hands are brought charm- wasperfect Thcdevdl could Jiot together on the bar the shoulders are come within 30 feet compressing the Of course the devil used every in- ¬ thrown forward thus chest Surely that is injurious if any ducement to get Tong to come forth but the old fellow stuck to his post At thing can be last the devil went off and got a roasted TESTED RECIPES ox head and cask of mackalee and Mjarshmallow Cake One cupful rolled them in to Tong confident from what he had told liim that Tong would sugar five tablespoonfuls butter one be driven outside the magic circle But cupful milk whites of four eggs two when he saw Tong eating heartily of eupfuls flour two teaspoonfuls baking the beef and drinking the mackalee powder Flavor with lemon Stella Pudding Three eggs 2 with gusto he realized that the game tablespoonfuls brown sugar one cup- ¬ was up and despairingly departed Tongs long life was due to the acci ¬ ful chopped raisins three quartdrs cup- ¬ dent by which his page in the Book of ful of milk one heaping tablespoonful Pate stuck to the next one so that his of baking powder flour to make as name was overlooked When ultimate ¬ stiff as cake dough Steam 35 minutes Snow Pudding Dissolve one half ly the complaint was made that Tong had lived too long it took the registrar box gelatine in one quart hot water of the lower regiops 34G 3Tears to hunt add one cupful sugar and the juice of up his name in the archives Chicago two lemons When this begins to jelly add the whites of three eggs beaten Record mix thoroughly and put on ice Serve The Danger Side of Lightning Ilods with cream The conventional lightning rods that Omelet with Corn Prepare as you one sees over houses and barns In the do baked omelet but at the last be- ¬ countiy and small towns afford but lit- ¬ fore putting into the pan add a cupful tle protection to the buildings Small as this security is it is Avholly lost if of green corn cut from the cob Pour the so called conductors are improperly the omelet into the frying pan con- ¬ constructed and not in perfect order taining two tablespoonfuls of butter when they in fact become an abso- and cook loosening it constantly from lute menace to the building they are the bottom to prevent its scorching reared to guard It is essential if the When done double over and serve conventional rod is to be set up that Leisure Hours the work be intrusted to reliable and capable persons otherwise it may beTHE MARKETS come a shining invitation to dangers Cincinnati It is probable therefore all things con- LIVE STOCK CattlecommonS 2 25 July3 2i 00 sidered that a building is as well if not 3 90 4 25 Select butchers 5 75 CALVHS 1 air better protected without such con- HOGS Commonto good light 5 0J 3 25 3 60 ductors as are in general use as with 3 75 3 70 Mixed packers 3 70 3 25 Light them It is safe to assert that the great SHEEP shippers 3 40 3 00 Choice majority of buildings damaged or de LAMliS Spring 5 10 4 75 3 uo 3 aa stroyed by lightning were provided FLUUK winter runny 74 GRAIN Wheal No 2 red with lightning rods and in the major 71 va No 3 red 28 Corn No J mixed ity of these eases the conductors invited 20 OaUNa 2 2 35 the thunderbolts and for some cause Rve No - nn 31 9-- health almost within her grasp If she does not value her good looks does she not value her Why my sister will you suf fer that dull pain in the small of your back those bearing down dragging sensations in the loins comfort V lasts What a woman needs who is thus af fectedis to strengthen the ligaments so- they will keep her organs in place There purpose than Lydia E Pinkhams Vegetable Com ¬ Is nothing better for this pound The great volume of testimony which is constantly rolling in proves that the Compound is constantly curing thousands of just such cases The following letter from Mrs Marlow is only one of many thousands which Mrs Pinkham has received this year from those she has relieved surely such testimony is convincing My trouble commenced after the birth of my last child I did not know what was the matter with me My husband went to our family physi ¬ cian and described my symptoms and he said I had displacement and falling of the womb He sent me some medicine but it did little good I let it go on about two years and every time I did any hard work my womb would Finally a lady friend advised me to try Lydia E Pinkhamsr come down Compound which I did The firstbottle helped me so much I cou--- v Yegetable tinued to take it right along My back was almost the same as no back I could not lift scarcely any weight My life was just a drag to me To day thanks to I am well of my womb trouble and have aL good strong back 111 Mrs Marlow Milford Mrs Pinkhams Vegetable Compound 99 BO bowel caused by constipation pro¬ ceeding from the womb lying over and pressing on the rectum Do you know that these are signs of displacement and that you will never be well while that that terrible fullness in the lower- - CONSTIPATION t l9eMM9aMtliMII lMt No part of the human body receives more ill treatment than the bowels Load after load is imposed until at last the intestines become clogged refuse to act worn 2 out Then you must assist nature Do it and see how easily you will be I mm Catcd By S t l I t t i f CANDY CATHARTIC I I m t Not a violent mass of mercurial and mineral poisons but a PURE VEGETA- BLE COMPOUND that acts directly upon the diseased and worn out intestinal canal makes it strong and restores muscular action at the same time gently stimulatingthe liver and kidneys Not a patent liquid or pill form dpse but a CANDY TABLET pleasant to eat easy and delightful in action t f They are indeed WHIlldlllM WiYiWiYiYtYiY AliL DRUGGISTS NATTTPFS OWN REMEDY 10c 25c 50c 265 J A HANDFUL OF DIRT MAY BE A HOUSEFUL OF SHAME CLEAN HOUSE WITH ¬ ¬ -- iWMMWOTMMMWWMWMWATOWTOW SAPOLIO mTTLE of Hires Rootbeer on a sweltering hot day is highly essen- ¬ tial to comfort and health It cools the blood reduces yfcur ¬ ¬ ¬ OL Fi Iff tones ¬ probably improper construction coulc not lead the lightning harmlessly to the earth J E Powell in Ladies Home Journal named Brown One morning recently a Chicago lady HAY Prime to choice PROVISIONS Mes rorlc Lard Prime steam BUTTER Cboicc dairy Prime to choice creamery APPLKS Per bhl POTATOES 11 00 11 50 8 75 3 90 6 2 50 1 80 4 35 8 mate from NEBRASKA malariafree abun an dance of pure water a soil which is unsurpassed for FARM richness and is easily culti-vaDeu yielding ail va- ¬ of crops That is LANDS rietiesNebraska offers to what the home seeker Lands are cheap now Send for a pamphlet describing Nebraska mailed free on ap- ¬ plication to P S Eustis General Pas 7 senger Agent C B Q R E Chicago A dry healthy cli- ¬ The Bet Was OlY New Per bbl NEW YORK 16J4 3 00 1 90 4 70 81 110 temperature the stomach ajBARTSM NOTICE NAME THUS SELF ACTUAL SHADEROLLERP for ifcools But many think this out of the question In such a case the gar ¬ den tool chest may prove serviceable It is made to stand the weather and long enough to hold any garden tool that is ordinarily used such as rakes hoes forks shovels etc It will also bold the garden seeds at planting time Every thingis thus right at hand and hundreds of steps are saved in do ¬ ing the work The same chest will also prove serviceable to take to the Held in ease of the general farmer thus saving long trips back to the farm ouildings for some lool or other Such Jevices are in the line of economy of labor and it is often econoni3 of labor that makes the balance come on the right side of the ledger in these days of N Y Tribune t Jpw price proceeded from the No2red breakfast table to the telephone in thi CORN No 2 mixed hall closet to order things from her OATS Mixed Why Eggs Should Be Washed FOKK New mess LARU Western When eggs come to market they are market man Hello said Mrs Brown is this CHICAGO assorted according to quality and ap- ¬ the Oakland market FLOUR Winter patents pearance If a case containing 30 dozens GRAIN VVheat No 2 red Yes No 2Chicago spring has in it half a dozen eggs that are soiled Well this is Mrs Browns residence CORN No 2 ¬ the whole case is condemned and reOATS No 2 duced in grade selling at a lower Will j ou please send me a larger thick PORK Mess LARD Steam price than clean eggs no matter how juicy steak by four oclock TIig boy employed in the Oakland BALTIMORE fresh the dirty ones are You may market happened to answer the tele- FLOURFamily No 2 think that your eggs bring just as good Chain Wheat Corn Mixed a price if they are somewhat soiled but phone and promptly responded Oits Na 2 white Well you just bet your sweet life if sold in that condition they reduce tlie IiARD Reflned PORK Mess price of the whole case they are in and lwili Do you know sir to whom you are CATTLE First quality the man who buys them from you makes indignantly inquired Mrs HOGS Western allowance for such things so you not speaking INDIANAPOLISonly get a lower price but others are Brown GRAIN Wheat No 2 Sure I do said the boy Yourt Corn No 2 mixed affected in the same way Wash soiled Oats No 2 mixed Jenny Mrs Browns cook eggs before marketing them Farmers LOUISVILLE You are mistaken young man You Voice FLOUR Winter patent are speaking with Mrs Brown herself GRAIN Wheat No 2 red Anything that adds to the comfort of Is that so replied the boy Then Corn Mixed Oat3f Mlxed the cow will put dimes in her owner that case madam well callihebe PORK Mesa in Dff rrElectrical Review J pocket LARD Steam 7 ¬ FLOUR Winter patent GRAIN Wheat No1 northn 8qR30 MAT fc 93 83 217 7 75 8CJ 31 4 35 4 00 22 8 25 4 40 4 25 k ban E 7D 63 HIRES Rootbeer should be in every 7 J rzAvLABEL ON THEGENU1NE AND GET OTjfr HARTSlD E 50 78f 26 17 7 70 4 640 home in every 78J 2Gtf 18 rsaj fc 30 r20 -- IB office in every work-¬ 7 75 4 07tf 82 lOtf 3 80 4 15 31ft 23 3 80 4 10 - 23J H 50 16 85 4 15 4 20 82tf Ultf shop A temperance drink more health- ¬ ful than ice water more delightful and satisfying than any other beverage pro- ¬ x duced rywhere 8r SLOS WILLIAMS MFC M HOW TO BUILD ask CO KALAMAZOO MICH iZOl Hires Co Philadelphia X pack ace makei gallons Sold er VrtonlThT the Charltl K STOCK COAL HAY GRAIN AND COTTON SCALES Weeks Scale Works V DllCri I A BUrrllLUj U I Affllllll at I L0 111 UB 11JI1W1 Mfl I H 25 193 3 75 4 00 S75 50 cases treatment Free ANK - nPnDQYMV and mJTfWL I testimonials for Send book of and TVhUkey Habit cured homo witnoutpaln Boole of Particulars sentPJBtEE BM WOQLLKYMD Atlanta Ga DISCOVERT gites qulclcrellef cures worst XtJ 1 BrH H GKKXKS SOK8 and 19 clays ltUxu Ga RFT RIRH fpCKLY S 70 28 20H 9 00 4 00 Scad for 300 ImtchUom sa Western Wheel work o MAKERS oOoH- E 1606 - - - 1 CATALGVCFREE WHEW WRXTTX6 TO ADTTEKTISEX please state that yea ww tlte JLdverUt teat Ib tkls paper y a - i it X t v i HKK V r -- r - - a -- ycTrr - Wj A - V -- iiVi v- - - wVJi - - -- V - 8 I I THE BOURBON NEWS FRIDAY JULY 23 1897 ANNOUNCESLENTS FOR JAILER I k v TrlWvi - 8 Bit - fV MASTERS SALE OF MASTERS SALE I - k We are authorized o announce Wm Collins as a cant da j for Jailer Qf Bourbon Couuty sul je c to the action of the Republican party x FOR CIRCUIT CLERK ity Property BOURBON CIRCUIT COURT L xid 31 BOURBON CIRCUIT COURT OF TWIN BROTHEKS jap fl t jfi a irv - - If SSp J party - We are authorized to announce A - J SoiiEY as a candidate for Circuit Clerk subject to the action of the Republican - W F Turner etc Plaintiff Economy Building and Loan Association Plaintiff Bridget Connelly Defendant vs FOR ASSESSOR i We are authorized to announce C J Assessor of Bourbon County subject to the action Daniel as a candidate for of the Republican party Hough as a candidate for Assessor of Bourbon County subject to the action of the Republican party FOH POLICE JUDGE We are authorized to announce C L We are authorized to announce Wm Remington as a candidate for Police Judge subject to the action of the Democratic party Wb are authorized to announce John R Adair as a candidate for Police subject to the action of the Democratic party Judge for Police Judge subject to the action of the Democratic Clark as a candidate We are authorized to announce Newt party Benj We I- r to announce as a candidate for Mayor of the City of Paris subject to the action of the Democratic party Welare authorized to announce W T Brooks as a candidate icr Mayor of the city of Paris subject to the action of are Perry authorized for mayor the Democratic party ASSIGNEES NOTICE assigned estate of William Sndduth are requested to file them at once verified as the law requires Aiiy claim not tiled may ba barred as provided by law n 11 f f krv Ui t v jaii yeiauua iiuviui uiitiuia njniuoir lud A - - rv j-- 1 r a - v y- T J Q WAED JR J20jy Q - Assignee lmo Ward Atty yff w TyT ASSIGNEES NOTICE persons having claims against assigned estate ofH Margolen are requested to present them at once properly proven- as required by law to Those the undersigned in Paris knowing themselves indebted to fl Margolen are requested to pay promptly and thereby avoid court cost ALL - bon Circuit Court made and entered in the above styled cause on the 30thVday By virtue of a judgment of the Bour- ¬ of June 1897 I will dell publicly at the Ky on bon Circuit Court made and entered in Court House door in Paris the above styled cause on June 30th 1897 I will sell publicly at the Court SATURDAY JULY 24TH 1897 House door in Paris Ky on between the hours of II a inland 2 p SATURDAY JULY 24TII 1897 in the following described real estate m to wit between the hours of 11 oclock a and 2 oclock p m thu following de- ¬ A certain tract of land lyius in Rud- ¬ scribed real estate to wit dles Mills Bourbon County Kentucky sit- ¬ described bs follows A certain house and lot city Paris of the uated in Beginning in the middle of the County Ky on the north Ruddles Mills Millersburg pike and Bourbon side of Georgetown turnpike and bound- ¬ running S to a stone fence in Petersons ed as follows line then W to the line of Sharps on said pike heirs then with same to Stokers line Fronting 50 feet corner and extending back therefrom the then N to Conways Conways then line E to another corner with same width as in front 15 feet to thenN with Conways corner to corneijjof the lot of Jno B Northcott bounded on the West by Mrs Lavins lot and on the storfi lot then N with Same lo the mid east by an alley and is the same prop- dle of the pike then E with the i middle t erty conveyed to Bridget Connelly from oi sam piKe to tue qegiumug containing John M Daniels and wife by deed about 7 acres of land with the improverecorded in the office of the Clerk of the ments thereon Or so much thereof as Bourbon County Court deed book 07 may be necessary to satisfy the debt as page 258 Or so much thereof as may hereinafter set forth be necessary to satisfy the judgment in Said sale will be made upon creditsof favor of the plaintiff against the defend- ¬ six and twelve months for equal parts of ant herein as hereinafter set forth the purchase money for which the pur ¬ Said sale will be made upon a credit chaser will be required to execute bonds of six and twelve months for equal parts with good surety to be approved by the of the purchase money for which the undersigned Master Commissioner bear ¬ purchaser will be required to execute ing interest from date until paid at the bonds with goo J surety to be approved rate of six per cent per annum and bav by the uudersigned Master Commission ¬ ing the force and effect of a judgment er bearing interest from date of sale un ¬ to Said sale will be til paid at the rate of six per cent per judgment in favor made the satisfy a plaintiffs of annum having the force and effect of a aerainst the defendants for 65000 with judgment interest hereon from March 28th 1895 Said sale is made to satisfy a judg ¬ at the rate of six per cent per annum ment in favor of the plaintiff herein to wit 89 55 and the costs of this against the defendant herein for the sum snit 6950 making the total sum to of 45117 with interest thereon at six be raised on the day of sale 80905 per cent per annum from November EMMETT M DICKSON 80th 1S96 and also for 1000 with interest thereon from November 30th Master Commissioner 1S96 said debts aggregating principtil and interest on the day of sale 48000 McMillan te Talbott Attys and costs of this suit aggregating 6275 making the total sum to be raised jon the day of sale 54275 This July 13th 1897 OF A M -- Jas H Fisher etc Defendants By virtue of a judgment of the jBpur v - - r I Dry Calico 3c i M hu hk Shoes 600 300 300 200 1 Mfc glens Suits were Mens Suits were Slums Mirw 790 Efifl ¬ a ¬ Crash 4o Towels 5 up Lace Curtains 40c up Window shadfts 10c up Bed Quilts 49c up Ticking 5c up White Goods 4ic up Challie 3c Lawn 3c Gingham 3c etc 20 yds Pea Island Brown Cotton SlOOi ZU yds bleached Muslin 100 14 yds Lonsdale and Mason ville Bleached Muslin Dress Gingham 5o Handsome Percales 7 c Black Sateen Tie prs Mens Pants 25c worth 75c prs Mens Pants good values 49c worth j125 prs Mens wool Jeans Pants 72c prs Boys Knee Pants 25c Mens Suits were 15 now 900 S12 now - S10 now 600 Glens Suits were 88 now 8500 -- ¬ 2oc Dress Goods now 19 50c Dress Goods now oWc 75c Dress Goods now 49c Cottonade lOic rl Ladies Skirts 9oc Ladies Shirt Waists 25c up Curtain Scrim 5c up - Shirting Cotton 4c ud x Mens Suits were 86 now 8375 I V Mens Suits were 175 now 295 Knee Pants Suits 49c Knee Pants Suits 81 J Knee Pants Suits 12 Knee Pants Suits 150 Mens Shoes worth 175 now 125 Mens Shoes worth 250 now 8190 Mens Shoes worth 3 now 8225 Mens Shoes worth 375 now 8275 t Mens Shoes worth 4 and 450 now 325 Mens Laundered Shirts White and Colored 44c V Mens Laundered Shirts worth 81 now 6vc Big4ineof Sheet Hats Trunks etc at Special - ft - r - r4 j -- 1 j nues iui x en 17 ays S - 7 PUBLIC SALE Hill Silks at special prices Special prices on our Ladies and Childrens Shoes aiid Slippers in Tan and Black EMMETT DICKSON ly Master Commissioner PIP ises on frP vl Pffl - MASTERS SALE OF LOUIS SALOSHIN Assignee NEAS PARIS KY I will 10 With every purchase at our store you g t a coupon and when you get 810 worth of coupon tickets yori get tree a large handsome glass framed picture xwjiiiHinuer unese are special prices lor 1U days Dont delay Come now and vou will reap a harvest REMEMBER THE PLACE FREE -- i tf Harmon limy Stitt Attorney offer at public sale on theprem Property Iii Millersburg Ky ¬ Wednesday at oclock a Sept 15tn 1897 V - ASSIGNEES NOTICE All persons having claims against the assigned estate of T H Tarr are hereby BOURBON CIRCUIT COURT notified to present same at once properly proven to the uudersigned or same Economy Building and Loan may be barred by law Association of Paris Ky Plaintiff K -- Mann T E ASHBROOK Assignee of T H Tarr 22je Ashbrook Attys G-- ASSIGNEES NOTICE ft- - All persons having claims against the assigned estate of Chas R Turner are requested to present them to hie at my office in Paris Ky property proven as required by law Those knowing them ¬ selves indebted to the estate are request- ¬ ed to settle promptly and save costs of suit j29je HARMON STITT Assiernee ASSIGNEES NOTICE BOURBON CIRCUIT COURT Lizzie M and Sidney D signee Plaintiff vs Clays As ¬ Lizzie M Clay etc Defendants Claims against the assigned estates of Lizzie M and Sidney D Clay must be presented for allowance before the first day of September 1897 Unless pre- ¬ sented by that date they will be barred as per order of court in the above styled action Creditors are notified to have their demands properly proven an3 pre- ¬ sent them to the undersigned at the Citizens Bank of Paris Ky or leave them at tne law offices of McMillan including the debt interest costs and as herein- ¬ after set forth Said sale will be made upon credits of six and twelve months for equal parts of the purchase money for which the pur- ¬ Talbott chaser will be required to execute bonds WM MYALL witn good surety to be approved by the Assignee of Mrs Lizzie M and Sidnev undersigned Commissioner and payable D Clay till lsep to said Commissioner and bearing in- ¬ terest from the day of sale until paid at the rate of six per cent per annum hav ¬ ing the force and effect of judgments Dissolution Oi Said sale is made to satisfy a judgment in favor of the plain- ¬ The partnership of Drs Roberts tiff herein against the defendUssery is by mutual consent dissolved ants herein for the sum of All accounts of the firm are payable 1388 26 with interest thereon at six per to Dr Roberts and he assumes the in ¬ cent per annum from January 30th debtedness of the firm 1896 and also the further sum of 2250 W C USSERY with interest thereon from May 6th H H ROBERTS 1896 making the total debt and interest April 30 1897 t on July 24th 1897 153620 and the cost of this suit 88 50 making the total sum to be raised on the dav of sale the sum of 162470 This July 13th 1897 bon Circuit Court made and entered in well fenced and abundantly supplied the above styled cause on the 30th day with everlasting springs and pools for of June 1897 I will expose to public live stock and is mostly now in grass The improvements consist of a modern sale at the Conrt House door in Paris built two story frame residence situated Ky on in a lovely woodland with lawn extend ¬ ing to the pike and contains a hall and SATURDAY JULY 1897 seven rooms bath room kitchen and between the hours of 11 oclock a m pautry a long veranda in front with and 2 oclock p in the following de- ¬ rear porches above and below handsome cabinet mantels and tile hearths in scribed real estace to wit That certain lot of ground known as each roQm and all handsomely papered lot No 61 and 02 in plat of town of and finished in walnut and cheny Millersburg Ky which is of record in There is a large dry cellar of several the Clerks office of the County Court of rooms with inside and outside entrancee said county fronting on the wesc side of a splendid cistern of pure water at the Main st 99 feet and extending back door There are four servants rooms threfrom the same width as in front 198 ice house barns stables carriage house feet more or less to back street and is meat and poultry houses with yards and bounded on the north by the lots No 63 and all necessary outbuildings a fine and 64 formerly owned by R L Crig orchard in fact with the location valu- ¬ ler and on the south by 6th street and able improvements and the fertility of is the same property conveyed by Eliza- ¬ its soil it is one of the most desirable beth A W Bryan to Mollie E Bryan homes in the Bluegrass region of Ken- ¬ by deed of record in said Clerks office at tucky deed book 60 page 201 and on which Mr N H Bayless of Paris Ky will lot is situated a dwelling house a brick take pleasure in showing the farm to building known as Bryans Hall and anyone or will furnish any additional other improvements Or so much there- ¬ information desired of as may be necessary to pay the Terms One third cash in band one W Bryan etc Defendants By virtue of a judgment of the vs Bour- ¬ to tue estate Socrates Bowles deceas- ¬ ed lniown as the Goodman Place and is the same conveyed by E B Bishop and Lizzie It Bishop his wife to said Bowles See Deed Book 73 page 294 in the Clerks office of the Bonrbon County Court The farm lies four miles eiist of Paris Ky on the Paris Jackstown turnpike and contains 293 acres 3 roods and 39 poles of first class bluegrass land all mthe of farm belonging BOUEBONS BIGGEST BAKGAIN JBSINGERS 701 703 MAIN ST PARIS KY pTTHr2T TTWTTW 187- naTn dbdhnMMjufc - V VfriSB MASTERS SALE OP dEgSEi HOUSE ASDLOT AM BLACK eaq w SMITH SHOP FOR SALE Mil judgment 1 1898one third March 1 deferred payments to bear interest at six per cent per annum from day of Possession given im- ¬ sale until paid mediately after first payment is made 1 will also sell at the same time 2 extra work mules third March 1899 cow Lot of corn and hay 1 -- Paitneisi AT Some furniture etc r The property of the deceased ROBT L BOWLES Executor Palmyra Missouri Farm implements Forsyth Auctioneer ¬ W O HINTON Agent Fire Wind and Storm Insurance THE VERY BEST OLD -- The first of American Newspa- ¬ A THE SUN RELIABLE PAYING PROMPT- - pers OHAS DANA Editor EMMETT M DICKSON m Master Commissioner NON UNION BLDBGRASS EVERYTHING for Orchardof Lawn OrnaFull stock mental and Fruit Trees Grape Vines ¬ to Cumberland Falls Rugby Burnside Asparagus and Small Fruits We emagents but sell at liying prices ploy no Spring City and Lookout Mountain direct to the planter Telephone in is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in Liberal rates and limits Ask your office Strawberry and general nursery the world Catalogues on application to agent about it Price 5c a copy By mail 2 ayear W C Rineabson H F HILLENMEYER The American Constitution the McMillan Talbott Attya American Idea the American 16jy 3t Spirit These first last and all the time forever Summer Tourists Daily by mail - 6 a year Low rate round trip tickets are now Daily Sundayby mail 8 a year on sale from Queen Crescent stations IRSil 1897 ¬ The Sunday Sun Address THE SUN New York 4 GenlTassr Agt - Cincinnati0 l26feb tf Lexington Ky DESIRE to sell my house and ot with blacksmith pIiod at Jackson ville Ky I will sell for half cash bal BOURBON CIRCUIT COURT ance Hn twelve months For further EAST BOUND particulars address or call on t t1 F P Colcord Plaintiff Lv Louisville 830am GMpm BENJ F SHARON vs 1115am SlJpm Ar Lexington 13oct tf Jacksonville Ky Lv Lexington H2oam 850pm S30am 550pm David J anuary etc Defendants Lv Wlnehesterll5Sam l2Jpm 915am 080pm Ar Mt Sterlingl225pm O oOpm 950am 705pm By virtue of a judgment of sale made Ar Washington 63 am 810pm Ar Philadelphial0i5am 705pm and entered in the above styled cause at ArNew York 1210un fcOSpm the March term 1897 of the Bourbon PARIS KENTUCKY Circuit Court and the amended order WEST BOUND made and entered in same case at the tt Ar Winchester 730am 150pm 055am 250pm June term 1897 oi said court 1 will Work guaranteed satisfactory Calls Ar Lexington 800am 520pm 735am oSphir sell publicly at the Court house door in 911am U80pm Frankfort promptly answered Your work is Ar Shelby Paris Ky on Ar ville 1001am 72vpm solicited Prices reasonable 1100am 813pm Ar Louisville Trains marked thus SATURDAY JULY 24 1897 run daily ex- ¬ cept Sundny other trains run daily XasUville Exposition the following described real estate to Through Buy your ticket to Nashville via Cincin ¬ Lexington Sleepers between Louisville wit and New York without nati and Queen Crescent Koute to Chatta ¬ That certain tract or parcel of land nooga visit the historic city and the great change lying near Little Rock Bourbon County battlefields of Missionary Ridge and Lookout For rates Sleeping Car reservations or Mountain spend a day at the Chicamauga anv Ky miorniation call on National Military Park then refreshed and Beginning at a stake corner to lot No ready for new conquests coutiuue the jour-¬ F B Carr 0 and running S 43i E 28 poles to a ney Low rates to the great Exposition in Agent L N RR stake corner to No 7 thence N 48 E eiFect via this pleasant route service is per- ¬ or u eorge w Barney Paris Ky The Queen Crescent train 50 2 poles to a stake corner to same in fect the schedules fast ones the scenery un- ¬ Div Pass Agent Thos Woodfords line thence with said surpassed anywhere Lexington Ky IryouAvant the to line N 27 4 W 289 poles to a stake cor- ¬ one see that yourjourney read be a pleasant tickets via Cincinnati ner to No 5 thence S 48i W 648 poles to and Queen Crescent AV C Kinearson G P A Cincinnati O the beginning being a tract of land sold to the defendant David January by RAJXltOAD TIME CARD L X Kates To Nashville Caleb Shumate and conveyed to him by deed of record in Deed Book 72 page 87 L i NRR Tenn Centennial and International of the Bourbon County Court ARRIVAL OP TRAINS Also the following described tract of Exposition Nashville Tenn May 1st to 97 Oct 31st L N will sell tickets Eivui vmemnan nib a m 538 land m 1015 Beginning at an ash trefee at F in the at following rates for the round trip plat corner to H T Wilson and thence April 28 to Oct 15th final limit Nov 7 From Lexington 439 a m 745 a ni 339 p m with his line N 43 W 131 poles to a 1260 April 29 to Oct 30final limit 15 From Richmond 627 p amm 742 a m stone corner to lot No 3 thence N 48 435 E 4948 poles to a stake corner to lot No days from date of sale 925 April 7 in H T Wilsons line thence with 27 to Oot 30 final limit 7 days including From Maysville 748 a in 330 p ml said line N 86J W 729 poles to the be ¬ date of sale 760 DEPARTURE OP TRAINS ginning from which said tract there is F B Carr Agt To Cincinnati 445 a m 755 a m to be excepted from the effect of this of ten acres of land which 346 p m sale a tract To Lexington 755 a m 1127 a m- 10 acres was sold by the defendants said 545 p m 1021 p m David January and wife to Thos To Richmond 1125 a m 543 y m Berry and conveyed to him by deed of D 1025 pm record in Deed Book 75 at page 258 x To Maysville 755 a m 635 p m leaving in the tract now occupied aa the t premises of the defendant herein the Of No 503 W Ninth Street Cincinnati F B Carr Agent Ohio tract of land to be sold containing 10 acres 2 roods and 14 poles Will be at the Windsor Hotel Paris Said gale is maue to satisfy a judg ¬ Ky David ment against the defendant January by F P Colcord for his debt TUESDAY AUG 10TH 1897 and interest amounting on the day of returning every second Tuesday in each W MILLER sale to 41861 and the costs of this month OSCAR exclusive agency has received 7046 making the total sum to suit Optician Landman adjoining counties for for this and the sale of on the day of sale 48907 be raised has been visiting this entitled The First city regularly for over Battle It is written in Mr BrvanS Said sale will be made upon a credit five years and has ad- - best style clear of six and twelve months for equal parts concise wESBk J iSjijusted glasses vs to the His inspiring language and logical of the purchase money and for which full of keen eyes of the best people satire and brilliant the purchaser will be required to exe- ¬ rhetoric w iU harm of Paris and Bourbon interest and instruct not only cute bonds with good surety to be apthose who Com- ¬ Countv and has proven himself corn were his most devoted proved by the undersigned Master followers thorough reliable also his most missioner payable to said Commission- ¬ petent can cet Landmans and honest The erlasses from books contains ardent opponents You er and bearing interest from the day of about 600 printed store Clark Clays sale until paid at six per cent per an ¬ visits and whendrug makes between his from large clear type with 3fuU page he his num said bonds to have the force of a visit he will examine your eyes regular illustrations a magnificent thorough- ¬ presentation plate judgment ly and make any change necessary to preface handsomelyand an autogranh bound in give satisfaction Examination free half morocco or EKLMETTM DICKSON lReferences Drs W J Fithian 225 and 275 eachMaToVders11 Bowen and C Master Commissioner Eads Buck Fithian Nation AddrlL D Cram of Paris 9jy-3t--F Miller Hutchison Ky mmh a 1m 8 mm EI ijmmAM yjiJU TIME TABLE 1 JOHN CONNELLY -- jeei3ctimo8so- - m HW jVCijf 1 - fr W - OPTIOIA3ST L H Landman M - t - The First Battle 1 ¬ StTO5 V If - J - -- lLi I vw v v j wi a yJL L j VJ j r - -- - i1 rana fe1 fc - - vrtx vfi