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Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895): October 19, 1897
Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895): October 19, 1897 Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Champ & Miller Paris, KY 1897 bou1897101901_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): October 19, 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. ah - - - Si- - fP3SV -V ilM v3 rw jiv ai V1 KSl - - - v - - - - - j- - - liur gsgv v T - TH MILLER BOURB ON FEINTED EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY N EWS Established x CHAMP Editors and Owners teb i 1881 SEVENTEENTH YEAR PARIS BOURBON CO KY TUESDAY OCTOBER 19 1897 NO 84 C 8 - F BROWER CO i Our special sale of oriental goods planned months ago opens with great promise to day It is 3ertainlyi Av 5eauxnui uonecuion And we feel that the people of Lexington and vicinity will appreciate the advantages of this opportunity and V Purchase Freely Every make and design every combination ot colors 8 to i 10 - ranging in price from s- Wear Considered They are the cheapest rugs made Look them over Visitors to the city especially invited y First Floor Prices in Plain Figures READY NOW li F BROWE nmn uv mhaham u JilU Hi TIME TABLE 1 I RC0 J ymfA C feet in front snip on nose foretop clip- ¬ ped mane worn by harness on shoul ¬ News Notes Gathered In And About The ders A liberal reward for recovery of mare Apply to Geo Stoker or T M Burn Purnell ftobt Savage spent Sunday in Flem Lost A black cashmere fringed ingsburg with friends shawl on Main street vosterday morn- ¬ Mr Jas F Woolums spent Sunday at ing from a boggy Liberal reward for Maysville with friends return to T M Purnell Mrs Dicy Thorn lost her sorrel1 family hoise this week from colic GOSSIPY PARAGRAPHS to Lexington Mrs F M Hurst went Theatrical And Othervrise Remarks In yesterday to visit relatives ijll The Foyer Sheriff Beeding and family of Paris Georgetown amateurs will produce visited relatives here Srlnday to night the play ABox of Monkeys Frank Bowden of Paris was the guest of relatives here Sunday The Czanhaa made nobles of Jean and Mr Jas Dailey of Lexington was the guest of friends here Sunday Edorard De Reszke the opera singers Mr Tice Hutsell of Chicago arnvecT Saturday and is the guest of relatives EdwardLangtry husband of Lilly Rev J R Laird returned Saturday Langtrythe actress died Saturday in from attending the Synod at Bardstown an asylumUn London Sheriff Morris Hook of Augusta was fi the guest of Mr Jas A Butler Sunday Miss Harriett Wellington Glascock Mr Hanson Peterson of Cynthiana visited friends here Saturday and Sun gavea Grecian entertainment last night day in the Owenton court house M Mrs W H Fritz of Carlisle is the guest of Miss Bettie Hamilton near Hogan8 Alley one of the liveliest town Mr Louis Regan of Moorefield will of farce comedies will be seen at the move into the Speith property this opera house on Wednesday evening the MILLERSBURG - FALL SUITINGS OVERCOATINGS Now than after September 18th So come and avail yourself of this opportunity Any one who will place their order between now and September 18th can save at least 5 We want early Fall business We will make things lively this Fall if first class good high class tailoring and low prices will do it Remember our motto W keep faithwith the public by doing as we advertise FOR 5 LESS 30 -- FINEST BUSINESS SUITS In the world from Our fall stock of suitings has been arriving daily We have al- ¬ ways undersold other tailors from 810 to S15 dollars on a suit Other tailors will add So more to the cost of theirs on account of the tariff We will not Therefore our prices will befrooi 815 to 820 less than elsewhere All work done at home 25 TO week 27th i EAST BOUND Have You A Piano Would you like it a good piano exchange it for a better one 830ain 600pm 1115am 840pm 1125am 850pm 830am 5o0pm i30pm 923pm Lv Winchesterll58am 950pm 915am 705pm Is 950am Mt Sterliugl225pm Ar to 310pm Ar Washington 65mm 705pm at Philadelphial0l5ain 908pm 1210un ArNew York Louisville Ar Lexington Lv Lexington IjV WEST BOUND t t We Have Pianos and if you will answer the above questions we will send you a copy of Musical Celebrities a booklet 5x4 inches 80 pages containg portraits of thirty eight famous singers musicians and composers ¬ run daily Trains marked thus cept Sunday other triins run daily Ar Winchester Ar Lexington Ar Frankfort Ar Shelby ville Ar Louisville 730am 450pm 655am 250pm 800am 520pm 735am 345pm 911am 630pm 1001am 750pm 1100am 815pm ex- ¬ Through Sleepers between Louisville Lexington aud New York without change For rates Sleeping Oar reservations or any information call on Div Pass Agent Lexington KV iwjiyjaBiui4jtiiggiagMMPMiM in o Mention where this advertisement was seen and enclose a two cent stamp for postage sv-w- a- orGEORGte W Barney jagenr jjocjNrbjxv Ky Paris Ernest Urchs121 - Gq Mr Lewis Layson returned Sundry to Detroit after a weeks visit with his parents Messrs H M ONeal and Joe Con nell visited lady friends near Carlisle Sunday Mrs Victor Shipp of Paris was the guest of her aunt Mrs W M Miller dunday Mr Jas F Summers and son Jack went to Flemingsburg Friday to visit relatiyes Mrs Alex Wallingford of Flemingsburg is the guest of her sister Mrs J Ed Hull Mr Chas Calvert and wife of Mason were guests of the McClelland Bros this week Miss Ella Shipp of Paris was the guest of Rev Danl Robertson and family Sunday The Torrent excursion Saturday took one hundred and twenty five persons from this place W G McClintock went to Mt Ster- ¬ ling Saturday to attend Mondays court day sales Mrs W F Turner of near Paris was -- r pft Kisses taken without the consent of the fairiady are quoted at 840 each by a New Albany Ind court There will be plenty of unkissed kisses in New If F P Lowry Joe Munson Cutter- - and Coatmaker Co formerly witb H S STOUT Company i Manager Paris Furnishing and Tailoring Co ¬ Albany in future t Creston Clarke plays at Macauleys in Louisville this week appearing in The The Lady of Lyons Last of His Race He made a pro and David Garrick uouncedhit in Lexington Friday night Three persons were killed and oyer a scoreirgured in Robinsons opera hoase Cincinnati during the performance of Dangers of a Great City Friday night The great central truss of the ceiling crashed down among the audience and it is a miracle that many more were not killed Of the many taken to the hos- ¬ pitals several will die while others will It is be crippled or maimed for life quite a coincidence that The Dangers of a Grreat City was being played and em Buggy 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 BUGGIES BA10UGIES SERIIES The public is invited to inspect our stock and compare our prices We have engaged experienced expert workmen to do onr work and insure satisfaction and guarantee all jobs to be first class everything in the vehicle line and 123 West Fourth Street CINCINNATI O tapaHwmMnvrjili tlieguest of jNrBmJesdJgamilki Friday and Saturday attraction and superstitious persons The M F C is being painted a neat will note that the accident occurred on ftone color and is otherwise being sub- Friday stantially improved ¬ Call and see us Prompt attention to all orders h H A SMITH f BOURBON FISCAL COURT Office over G S Varden 12 Co o ID R e Office Hours 8 to am 1 to 5 p m be held at the several voting precincts of Bour bon county at the next regular Novem ber election 1897 to take the sense of the legal voters of said county shall issue bouds not exceeding the sum of 50000 for the purchase and maintein ance of the turnpike roads in said county free of toll to the traveling pub lic It is therefore ordered that a poll be opened in eaoh of said voting pre ¬ cincts in said county and the Sheriff of said county is hereby directed to adver ¬ tise said election and the object thereof ¬ ¬ It is ordered that an election V X for at least thirty days next before the day thereof in some newspaper having the largest circulation in the county and also by printed hand bills posted up at aud three gilts of same not less than four public places in each One male pig voting precinct in the county and at the litter Eligible to register and of best Court House door individuals Good ED D PATON C B C C strains of blood five months old weight 135 pounds Call on or address By virtue of the above order I will at GEORGE CLAYTON thp next regular November election Hutchison Ky 1897 open a poll at each of the voting places in Bourbon county to take the sense of the legal voters of said county as to whether they will issue bonds not O W exceeding the sum of 50000 for the purchase and mainteinance of the turn- pike roads in said county free of toll to the traveling public E T SEEDING S B C Poland China jHoi S FOR SALE HINTON Agent Fire Wind and Storm Insurance THE VERY BEST OLD RELIABLE PROMPT- - A DESIRABLE FARM P AYING NON UNION At Private Sale A desirable farm containing BLOWS NURSERIES CUMMINS Oi SITUATED ON THE HAWKINS Acres TURNPIKE FALL 1897 Full stock of Fruit and Ornamental Grape Vines Small Fruits rees Asparagus and every thing for Or ¬ chard Lawn and Garden We have no Agents but sell direct to¬ the planter saving enormous commissions Catalogue on application to 8 MILES WEST OF PARIS tion well watered for man or beast even in this dry time is well improved Notice to Tax Payers I or one of with new dwelling six rooms and hall necessary out buildings including an my deputies will be at Millersburg excellent frame tobacco barn sufficient Monday October 25 at two oclock p to house 14 acres of tobacco a great m to collect taxes for the year 1897 E T Beeding HILLENMEYER HF abundance of locust timber Sheriff Bourbon County Ky Lexington Ky Mr Jos H Hawkins who lives near the farm or Mr Connor who lives on Messrs O W Rankin and Jas it will take pleasure in showing it to Hutsell will leave to day as delegates to purchasers the Grand Lodge of Masons at LouisConsiderthe Quality Terms Onerthird cash balance in ville Mr Hutsell will have a car of In buying your childrens School one and two years with interest from horses shipped to him Friday and will Shoes New Fall stock now arriving date go on to Alabama low prices but quality good J Q WARD CLAY RION Stolen From hitch rack at Millers Attorney in fact burg on Saturday night a black mare 12oct 6wk For E M Hildreth about 15 hands two white ¬ ¬ - is offered at private sale on easy terms The farm is in a good state of cultiva- ¬ was Mary and Lizzie the guest of Misses Taylor for several days Mrs Joe Grimes and daughter Miss Mary vent to Louisville and Bards town yesterday to vist relatives Miss Gene Layson returned Saturday oieht from an extended visit with rela- ¬ tives at Wilmingto and Hillsboro O J H Fulton will be found at his shop at all times Clean quick shave for ten cents shampoo and hair cut in best style County Clerk Ed Paton of Paris was here Friday shaking hands and also visited his daughter Miss Effie at the MFC Mr Frank Cliff of Maysville and Mrs Geo M Bascom and child of Sharpsbnrg are guests of Mr John Peed and family Mrs Ed Robertson and two children nar Agnsta and Miss Maude Spears of Lexington are guests of Mr Jas A Butler and family Mr George W Bain will lecture at the opera house for the benefit of the ladies of the Presbyterian Church Monday night Oct 25th Evans the miller will grind your corn any day trad yoa cow feed or sell you flour as low as any one He also will saw your lumber It Miss Sallie Barnett will open her millinery store this week m the Woolums residence near the depot and will be glad to have her friends call Dynamite is popular just now in this section being used in blasting out ponds pools and wells in an attempt to find water which is daily gettmg scarcer Messrs T Righter and Kirby Denton Mean ¬ visited friends here Sunday while their horse wrecked their buggy and left for Paris taking the shafts with him The following deligates of this place are attending the Methodist Colored Conference at Louisville Rev Sam Mitchell Rev Jas Bell P E and Sudie Miller all colored The Flemingsburg nine will play the Ewing Station nine to morrow on the Carlisle grounds Several players from here will assist This wilK be tho last game of the series Mrs C C Cook of Georgetown notice to tax-PAYERS Tax receipts for 1897 are now ready and have been for some time Please call and settle at once and saye HIGH ST COR FOURTH PARIS KY ¬ i penalty 7B W W Mk W IW Ml ri E T BEEDING HUTCHISON SB C EJECTION I WHEN APPLIED TO Fresli Paragraphs About The People In This Vicinity J R Bagge bought of Marshall Bros of Avonv43 hogs at 3 50 per hundred Wood Bagge shipped a car load of hoes and cattle to Cincinnati Tuesday T Pronounced by Experts the Standard of the World Ask your dealer for WINCHESTER make of Gun or Ammunition and take no other FREE Our new Illustrated Catalogue New Haven Ct nicht Judge H ¬ Howard and John Woodford were in this precinct Friday look- ¬ ing after voters lyiiss Fannie Claybrook and Robt Meteer went on the excursion to Tor- ¬ rent Saturday Born At Petersburg Ky to the wife of Rev J W Harris Oit 14th a son Weight 14 lbs seventh child Mrs Emma Carpenter has rented the rooms at Moreland Lodge vacated by Bev W Dorsey and will take posses- ¬ sion this week C ¬ WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO dividends to policy holders are unequaled and to procure Northwestern dividends you must carry Northwestern insurance tf The Northwesterns iiratfl ENNYROYAL PILLS The only safe sure and reliable Female PTTTi ever offered to Ladies especially recommend IR Send for circular ift MOTTS CHEMIAL Prlc For SalejBy W T Brooks CCX 0Tw - Druggist aiSZSS CIM1ATI M 1 hTl SIn WMTTEMORES daNdY Rest gapB A THE SUN The first of American Newspa- ¬ pers OHAS A DANA Editor The American Constitution the FRANKFORT 1897 DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY EAST BOUND Lve Frankfort ArrElkhorn 630ami 300pm In Effect March on garfl American Idea the American Spirit These first last and ail the time forever Dailyby mail Daily - - Sunday by mail 6 8 a year a year Arr Switzer Arr Stamping Ground Arr Duvalla Arr Georgetown Lve Georgetown Arr Newtown Arr Centreville Arr Elizabeth Arr Paris- WEST BOUND Lve Paris 643am 651am 702am 708am 720am 800am 812am 822am 828am 840am 330pm 358ptR 348pm 3pra 415pm 430pm 442pm 462pm 458pm 10pm RUSSET SHOES WILLIE BUTLER At The Sunday Sun the world copy By mail Price 5c a th9 Bootblacli Isgrigs Davis Thompson -S A greatest Sunday Newspaper in 3 ArrElizabeth Arr Centreville Arr Newtown Arr Georgetown Lve Georgetown Arr Uuvalls Arr Stamping Ground Arr Switzer Arr Elkhorn GEO B HARPER 1000am 1040am 1056am 1110am 1125am 1135am 1155am 920am 932am 938am 948am 580pm 542pm 548pnx 1 558pm 6 0pm 63 pm 646pnv li pnx 7 A pm pm inm X a year GenISupt Address THE SUN New York Genl Pass Agt Frankfort Ky jr tJs - C D BERCA W v g A- v fr A i m- -Js vi i1 N THE BOURBON NEWS TUESDAY OCTOBER 19 1897 THEATER DOME y In i i SOLITARY POSTS FIELDS RESIGNATION A MIGHTY FEAT Iron Bridge Replaced by One of Steel in Two antl One Half Minutes Assistant Secretary of War Starts Out Accepted By President McKinley With Kindly Expressions of Regard on a Tour of Inspection He wm Vislt Fort Crook and lb e Military Departments of Dakota Columbia Cali lornla and Texas CoL Robinson lie-tires Lieut Baxter Promoted y Robinsons Opera House Cincinnati Falls During a Performance j3 Mpy Justice Field Resigns Because of the Duties Three Persons Instantly Killed andThat The Span Was 3453 Feet Long 25 Feet Wide Wounded Some Patally In a Panic and 30 Feet Deep Nearly 1700 Tons of of His Office Becoming too Arduous for Followed The Play Billed for Next Steel and Iron Moved a Distance of Sis Strength His Judicial Career Week Was Under the Dome Covers Many Years of Service at Least 25 Feet ¬ - I Washington Oct 15 The following retary of War Meikeljohn left here letter was given out Thursday afterThursday night on a tour of inspection noon Court of the United States f of military posts in the west Since Supreme Washington D C Oct 12 1897 his appointment early in the spring Dear Mr Chief Justice and Brethren Neat Mr Meilkeljohn has been on duty with- ¬ the close or last term feeling that the duties out intermission at the war department of my oflJce had become too arduous for my transmitted my resignation to the where he has made a most favorable strength Ito clay of De president impression by his courtesy and prompt cember next take effect on the first and this he has accepted with ness and energy in the dispatch kindly expressions of regard as will be seen of public business The assistant from a copy of his letter which Is as follows Executive Mansion i secretary goes direct to St Louis Washington Oct 19 1897 f where he will inspect the post of Jef¬ Steven J Field Associate Justice ferson barracks and visit the site for a of Hon Supreme Court of the United States the rifle range for the Jefferson barracks Washington D C My Dear Sir In April troops and adjacent posts which has last Chief Justice Fuller accompanied by Mr as been offered for sale to the department Justice Brewer handed me your resignation the justice of the supreme court of associate The next stopping place will United States to take effect December 1897 Mr Kas be Fort Leavenworth In hereby accepting your resignation I feel Meikeljohn will visit Omaha where wish to express my deep regret that youyour compelled by advancing years to sever headquarters of the Department active connection with the court of which you of are located have so long been a distinguished member the Platte and will fully inspect Fort Crook near Entering upon your great office in May DeceHiber 1833 you will on the first that city Before his return to Wash- ¬ have served upon the bench of nextperiod of 3J for a ington he expects to visit also the head- ¬ years and seven months a term longer than quarters of the military department of that of any member of the court since its creaDakota Columbia California and tion and throughout a period of special im- ¬ Texas and such intermediate army portance in the history of the country occupied with as grave posts and stations en route as can be confronted that public questions as have ever tribunal for decision inspected conveniently within the time I congratulate you therefore most heartily limited for his trip it being upon a service of such exceptional duration I overlook purpose of the the assistant fidelity and distinction Nor can commission the fact that you received your secretary to familiarize himself as fully from Abraham Lincoln and graciously spared as possible with army life and some of by a kind Providence have survived all the the more important military matters members of the court of his appointment that come before him for official action theUpon your retirement a both the bench and sustain great loss but the Before returning to the war depart ¬ highcountry willand great ability of your work character ment Mr Meikeljohn intends to visit will live and long be remembered not only by liis home in Nebraska for the purpose your colleagues but by your grateful fellow of attending to some private affairs countrymen With personal esteem and sincere best that demand his consideration and to wishes for your contentment and happiness cast his vote in the coming election in during the period of rest which you have so that state well earned I am dear sir Washington Oct 15 Assistant Sec- ¬ J ¬ ¬ 1 ¬ assistant quartermaster general will be placed on he retired list of the army on his own application under the 40 years service clause He is a native of Maine and was graduated at the military academy in 1853 He was transferred from the artillery branch to the quartermasters department in 1863 and served throughout the war His retirement and the promotions consequent thereon leave a vacancy in the list of captains and assistant quar- ¬ termasters which was filled Thursday by the appointment of First Lieut John Baxter jr Ninth cavalry ¬ On the Retired List CoL Augustus G Eobinson William McKinley vice a Having been elected a member of the su- ¬ preme court of California I assumed that of- ¬ fice October 13 1857 holding it for five years seven months and five days the latter part of the time being chief justice On the tenth day of March 1863 1 was com- ¬ missioned by President Lincoln a justice of the supreme court of the United States taking the oath of office on the twentieth day of the fol¬ lowing May When my resignation takes effect my period of service on this bench will have exceeded that of any of my predecessors while my en- ¬ tire judicial life will have embraced more than 40 years I may be pardoned for saying that during all this period long in comparison with the brevity of human life though in the retro- ¬ spect it has gone with the swiftness of a tale that Is told I have not shunned to declare in every case coming before me for decision the 1 conclusions which my deliberate convictions compelled me to arrive at by the conscientious exercise of such abilities and requirements as I possessed It is a pleasant thing in my memory that my appointment came from President Ljncoln of Up whose appointees I am the last survivor to that time there had been no representative A new empire had here of the Pacific coast risen in the west whose laws were those of an ¬ The land titles were from other country Spanish and Mexican grants both of which were often overlaid by the claims of the first settlers To bring order out of this confusion congress passed an act providing for an- ¬ with the other seat on this bench intention that it should be filled by some one familiar with these conflicting titles and with the mining laws of the coast and as it so hap ¬ pened that I had framed the principal of these laws and was moreover chief justice of Cali fornia it was the wish of the senators and representatives of that state as well as those from Oregon that I should succeed to the new i position At their request Mr Lincoln sent my name to the senate and the nomination was unanimously confirmed of its members was the venerable Chief Jus- ¬ My judicial career covers many years of ser- ¬ Very truly your Cincinnati Oct 16 At the beginning of the first act of Dangers of a Great City at Robinsons opera house Fri day evening there was ai sharp crack in the ceiling of the theater and a piece of plastering a foot long and three inches wide fell into the orches tra from the east side Many of the audience started to their feet but there was no further intimation of trouble At the end of the second act the stage hands were setting the scenes and little Alice Opie child specialist was in front of the curtain doing her Suddenly and act as Yellow Kid warning the huge without further dome of the theater fell with a dead crash onto the chairs a distance of a hundred feet A panic ensued Women screamed men groaned and the most frightful scenes were enacted The little child actress ran behind the curtain and all lights were extinguished by the break ing of the main electric wire In five minutes ten patrol wagons and as many fire engines and ladder companies were surrounding the opera house and a howling mob was rushing about interfering with the work of rescue Capt Conway and his salvage corps who were first on the scene seized half a dozen bodies and not stopping to see whether they were dead or alive galloped off with them to the hospital As fast as the patrol wagons arrived they were filled with limp bodies and rushed to the hospital While the excitement was at its height another crash came It was the entire ceiling tearing away from the rafters and tumbling down upon the mass of struggling humanity be Iotv It sounded like a whirlwind and the noise was heard for a square around Hundreds rushed to the front of the building on the outside but were met by the streams of people rushing from the inside and driven back across the street Many were crushed under foot A man named Goldbergs living at 642 Barr street was carried in to the drug store of Al Boehmer at Eighth street and Central avenue He had a frac tured skull and was taken to the city hospital will die Mrs George Kleeman died at the hospital at 10 p m She was the daughter-in-la¬ ¬ ¬ w ¬ the capitol at 510 oclock Thursday morning on a bike for New York He goes via Baltimore Wilmington and Philadelphia and hones to break the -- record between this city and New York and reach his destination in 24 hours He was paced by single riders between here and Philadelphia and be- tween the latter city and New York J will be paced by tandem teams of the New York Athletic club Washington Oct 15 United States Consul Smyth at Carthagena in a report to the state department says that as a result of the new United States tariff a most notable increase has followed in the shipment of ivory nuts from that port to the United States The new tariff on vegetable ivory but tons has caused the crude article to be shipped to the United States instead of to Europe where it was formerly large ly jnanuf adtured into buttons ¬ Bicycle Run Lieut H D Wise United States army started from the east front of Hong- Ninth street was badly hurt and taken to the hospital Henry Fleck 602 Broadway in balcony and two children have not been heard from They are not at the hos- moved ¬ ¬ of Nick Kleeman 817 Sycamore street daughter of carriage maker on East Pearl Hall of 18 The feat of replacing an iron bridge span 242 feet long 25 feet wide and 30 feet in depth with one of the same dimensions of steel was accomplished in this city Sun ¬ day in two minutes and 32 seconds In this space of time nearly 1700 tons of iron and steel were moved a distance of 25 feet and there was not a slip or a hitch in the entire proceedings This remarkable feat of engineering was accomplished at what is known as the connecting railroad bridge over the SchuylkiJ just above Girard avenue It is the bridge that bears the tracks of the New York division of the Pennsyl ¬ vania railroad the busiest division of the Pennsylvania system The time set for the replacement was the 48 minutes intervening between the passage over the bridge of the Chestnut Hill accommodation trains leaving Broad street station at 247 p m and at 335 p m A work train crossed the eastern end of the bridge and stopped The gangs of trackmen began to unspike the rails of the westbound track on the old span This done the grapplers of the work train took hold of the ends of the rails the engine started up and the entire length of rails 242 feet was snaked off in short order Meanwhile four stationary engines one at each end on a level with the bridge foundations and another at each end on scows securely moored at the base of the bridge piers were puffing and emphasizing their readiness for the task they had to do There was said to be less than a hundred horse power represented in these four en-¬ gines yet so well was everything ar-¬ ranged that they moved the leviathan without any apparent overexertion Then the signal was given for the little stationary engines to assert themselves It seemed as if they all started at the identical instant There was a tightening of the cables an almost im-¬ perceptible creak of a wheel somewhere and the big bulk began to move northward It was like clockwork As the edge-- of the iron span began to show beyond the bridge piers the crowds on the north side of the river set np a shout and as the breadth of the new steel span began to disappear behind the piers the crowds on the southern coigns of vantage also joined in the cheer and almost before the cheer had died away the mighty feat had been accomplished In just two minutes and thirty two seconds from the time of starting the engines the new span occupied the exact position from which the old one had been re- ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ Philadelphia Oct Ceatala Mercary mercury will surely destroy the sense of as derange the whole sysRailway Postal Lines smell and completely it through the mucous There Are 1164 entering tem when surfaces Such articles should never be Manned by 7854 Clerks used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians as the damage they will do is possibly deThere Are 42 Steamboat Lines With 57 ten fold to the good you can Cure man ¬ Halls Catarrh rive from them Clerks Grand Total of Miles Traveled Co Toledo ufactured by F J Cheney by All Classes or Service 282830031 no mercury and is taken in ¬ O contains Pneumatic Tube Mail Service ternally acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system In buying Cure be sure Washington Oct 18 An abstract Halls Catarrh taken internally you get the and matta genuine It Is of the annual report of the general su- ¬ In Toledo Ohio by F J Cheney Co Tes ¬ perintendent of the railway mail serv- ¬ timonials free Sold by Druggists price 75c per bottle ice follows Malls ramuy fins are me ucau were ¬ ¬ POSTAL SERVICE BeWare of Olataasots for Catarrh tfeat lines with 1164 railway post office lines manned by 0854 clerks 33 electric and cable 102 57 At the close of the year there clerks 42 steamboat lines with clerks making total number of lines 1239 and total num¬ ber of clerks 7013 In addition to 311 clerks assigned to these there were duty at important junctions and depots and 238 detailed to clerical duty in the various offices of the service making a grand total of 7562 clerks The miles of railroad covered by rail ¬ way post office car service was 154225 of electric and cable 303 and of steam boat lines 7459 The grand total of miles traveled of all classes of service was 282SS00S1 There were 654 whole ears in use and 173 in reserve and 202G apartments in cars in use and 540 in re ¬ fruit in the orchard Do You Of Course Not Huggins Isnt Miss Boxy a peach Mr Miss Kittish Yes but she is not the only Detroit Free Press Play Whist Euchre or Other Gaines It The F F V playing card is better than any 50 cent card on the market Send 15 cents for one deck or 25 cents for two decks stamps or currency to C B Ryan Asst Genl Passr Agt C 0 By Cincinnati 0 thejr are dying to do anyway Washington Democrat Sudden cold soreness stiffness Promptljr Use St Jacobs Oil Sudden cure Sure How accommodating some men are to their wives when asked to do something ¬ pital A ¬ ¬ ¬ neros who has just escaped from the narrow walls of a Cuban prison has been offered a home on the wide prairies of Kansas where the barbed wire fences are the only suggestions of a irocha The womans auxiliary of the Cuban committee met at the home of Mrs Martha 3S Purdv and discussed Cuban affairs congratulating each other on the escape of Miss Cisneros in whose interest the society had petitioned the pope and queen of Spain for clemency In the midst of the rejoicings Mrs Purdy announced that she wrote to ¬ EVANGELINA CISNEROS Offered a Home by Mrs Martha M Tardy of Kansas Chicago Oct 15 Evangelina Cis Miss Cisneros in New York Stephen J Field offering the young refugee a permanent home Following is the courts reply with her father and mother Mrs Supreme Court op the United States Washington Oct 13 1897 f George M Munger in Greenwood Dear Brother Field We are profoundly county Kansas Mr Munger now lives moved by the letter in which you announce to near Eureka where he has a large fruit us your retirement from the bench The term- ¬ tice Taney and among the associate justices was Mr Justice Wayne who had sat with Chief Justice Marshal thus constituting a link between the past and future and as it were binding into unity nearly an entire century of the life of this court During my incumbency three chief justices and 10 associate justice have passed away leaving me precious rememberanccs of com- ¬ mon labors and intimate and agreeable com- ¬ panionship The volumes of our reports show that I alone Dome have written 620 opinions If to these are The cause of the accident Friday added 57 opinions in the circuit court and 365 night seems to be easily discovered prepared while I was on the supreme court of California it will be seen that I have voiced Among the first who entered the build the decision in 1042 cases ing after the dome had fallen wag These many years have indeed been years of President George W Rapp of the Cin labor and of toil but they have brought their own reward and we can all join in thanksgiv ¬ cinnati Chapter American Institute oi ing to the Author of our being that we have architects been permitted to spend so much of our lives It was not that dome said he in the service of our country pointing to the huge heap in the cen With profound respect and regard I am my ter of the floor that caused tha dear brethren trouble The fault lies with the rool Very sincerely and always yours water works department is at the hospital seriously injured Samuel Rosenblaum agent 16 of the Working Boys home on Sycamore street was in the gallery He is at the hospital in a dangerous condition The following are in the hospital more or less seriously injured Delia Algeier and her three children Mrs J and Daisy Fairhead S E Long Mary Scudder of Newport Ky Grace Conners C J Weiss Will Morton aged 17 Sixth and Broadway jumped into a pit Fred Jenks aged 26 1216 Richmond street T C Wiley Dayton Kyi W J McCabe Clint Deal Jacob Weil Mary Hess John White Amelia Weil ¬ daughter of George Otte of the CHARLES A DANA The Famous Editor of the New York Sun Passes Away Surrounded by His Family for several hours and his family and physicians were at his bedside when the end came His condition had been such for several months that the members of his family kept themselves in constant readiness to go to On Satur his beside at any moment day morning he had a relapse and it was apparent that recovery was imposMary Howe Mary Moorman Twelf til sible Several timeSjhowever he rallied but toward night he began to sink and Clay streets ¬ The dead are An unknown man During the night there were feeble ralSun Miss Lucy Cohen and Mrs Geo Klee lies but they did not last long day morning it was seen that the end man ¬ The show being played was Dani was but a few hours off and his atggrs of a Great City The show under tendants remained almost constantly lined for next week was Under tha at his bedside The end came quietly ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ New York Oct 18 Charles A Dana editor of the New York Sun died at his home in Glencove Long Island at 120 oclock Sunday afternoon Mr Danas death had been expected There were 559 casualties during the year in which 14 clerks lost their lives 33 were seriously and 75 slightly injured This is a larger number of casualties and fatalities than has occurred during any previous year since the or- ¬ ganization of the service The passage of a bill for the relief of the families of clerks killed in the line of duty of clerks injured and unfitted for service permanently or temporarily and for the retirement on partial pay of clerks who have served so long as to be unfitted for service has again been urged The annual report of W S Shallen berger second assistant postmaster general made public Sunday night gives an interesting review of the prin ¬ cipal developments in the entire postal transportation service of the United States and connecting foreign mails It shows an aggregate of appropria tions for this large part of the postal service for the current year of 51041 23S the probable deficiency- is 500 000 making the estimated expenditures this year 51541238 This will be SI 623045 or three and one quarter per cent more than for the fiscal year just closed The estimate for the fiscal year 1S99 is 53337200 which is 1796 021 more than the estimated expendi- ¬ ture for the current year The an nual rate for the inland mail service in the year just closed was49SG2074 and for foreign mail service 1791170 after deducting S25S029 for intermediary service to foreign countries Last year there was only one pneu matic postal tube in operation in the country that in Philadelphia Since then four more contracts have been executed in Philadelphia New York Boston and between New York and ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ serve The number of pieces of all classes of mail matter distributed on the ears during the year was 115715400S0 ex ¬ clusive of registered matter and city mail Of registered matter thero were 16250663 pieces in all The amount of city mail distributed for stations and carriers during the year aggregated 462469040 pieces The in ¬ crease of ordinary mail handled over the previous year was 37 per cent A comparative table covering a period of 10 years shows that there has been an increase in the amount of mail handled of 772 per cent and increase in the working force of 4S6 per cent A lawyer doesnt know everything but he thinks you think he does Chicago News Vexed Yes the nerves by Neuralgia St Jacobs Oil soothes cures it Never strike a man when hes for a loan Chicago News down--espe-cially Scrofula Cured Face and Head Covered with Sores but Hoods Has Cured Them but since taking Hoods Sarsaparilla these My face and head were a mass of sores sores have all disappeared I believe Hoods Sarsaparilla has no equal for scrof- ¬ ula Ida A Weaver Palermo 111 nOOU 5 Brave as Lions parifla Is the best In fact the One True Blooa Purifier to take lie cure liver ills easy25 cents 5easy to operate Hnodc pi ALABAMA LADIES TA 1 24Mft f jenixur tim wruea My Ilusband was cured of Biliousness by Dr 31 A Sim- ¬ mons Iiver 3Iedi cine which I have used 10 years Have tried both Zeilins and Black Draught and 31 A I think theMedicino Simmons so far Superior that rmf Pneknee of it is or four of either the other kinds worth three caused by non development of the parts sometimes by obstructions in mouth of vagina and sometimes by consti- ¬¬ pated bowelshnt usually results from a de bilitated conditionof the system which pre- ¬ vents nature from overcoming any unusual exposure such as fright or getting feet wet Dr Simmons Squaw Vine Wine builds up the system and cures tho disorder while curea Dr M A Simmons Hiver Medicine appe ¬ the constipation indigestion loss of tite pains in back hips head and luaua which are usually present Is sometimes Insufficient Menstruation ¬ WW Shellmon Ga writes I have used Dr 31 A Sim mons Haver 3Iedicine 15 years It cured me of Tor- ¬ m ¬ Brooklyn Concerning this new postal feature Gen Shallenberger reports It is quite possible to carry second third and fourth class matter as well as first when it can be made profitable Ex- ¬ tensions to stations several miles distant from the main office event ¬ ually will save clerical force as well as expedite delivery in distant The most cities from 12 to 24 hours source of revenue to the important department will be the large increase of local correspondence and special de- ¬ livery letters The extension of the tubular system will be necessarily slow and probably confined to populous ¬ have been fited by it in their old age Have used Black Draught but think Dr 31 A S Im 31 far superior to it plaint pid Liver Indigestion Nervousness and Sleeplessness It cured my Wife of a Female Com My two ¬ ¬ Aunts greatly bene centers Skin and Eyes Yellow This disorder finds it3 direct cause in soma derangement in the liver and its closely allied glands The bile instead of passing out through the bowels has been obstructed ¬ andfindingno outlet through its usual chan nels has accumulated and been taken up by the absorbents and distributed over thq system poisoning the blood and disturbing all the functions of the body In the treat ment of this disease Dr 31 A Simmona Liver 3Iedicine should be taken night and morning until the complexion becomes Spurn Frauds that court you for your money The imitationa that try to take the place of the Original Dr M A Simmons interested dealcra liver Medicine while byadvertised as not Bold as the same are the same and yon may be courted and deceived for your money at tho expense or your health Beware ¬ WINDSOR Loss N S trusses farm lived for a time in Cuba where Tic has yet many friends and ac ¬ quaintances and he speaks Spanish fluently He and his wife are much interested in the Cuban question Was it Murder or Suicide Mr--Mung- er Baltimore Md Rogers- - a grocer West Randall street and Mrs Ida Wright his mis tressj were found dead in Rogers house Thursday morning Both had been shot- - The police lookupon it as a case of murder and suicide but Rog¬ ers relatives insist that it was the work of a former admirer of the wom ¬ an Her husband is living and is thought to be in West Virginia The only other person in the house was a Yi r daughter of the dead woman knew nothing of the trasredv until awakened several hours after it oc 136 1 at Oct 15 Matthew VJ ft M curred ination of a judicial career of such length and distinction can not fail to Inspire among all your countrymen and indeed wherever the realm of jurisprudence extends a keen sense of loss which to your colleagues assumes the as ¬ pect of a personal bereavement For the intimacy necessarily incident to the conduct of work so constant so exacting and of such vital importance as ours inevitably draws us together by tics of the closest char- ¬ acter which can not be dissolved without emo- ¬ tions of deep sadness and regret We feel that our parting involves not simply the de- ¬ privation of the assistance afforded by your learning your vast experience and your earn- ¬ estness in advocacy or your convictions but the severance of those relations which have contributed so much to lighten the hardest la ¬ bors of the road This is not the time or place to dwell on the reputation you have achieved as a jurist Thi record is made up and may safely be commited to the judgment of posterity But we can not part with you as an active member of the court without the fervent ex ¬ pression of the hope that you may be spared formany years to enjoy the repose you have so thoroughly earned and the commendation be ¬ stowed on good and faithful service shrunk until the bolts and naiis afforded the smallest possible security One of these trusses had rotted away from its fastenings it has parted and thrown the two sections down and they in their descent pulled the dome with them These wood trusses are of pine and they shrink very per ceptibly in the course of years They should be examined overy five or six years Modern structures are put up with steel trusses The roof of this theater is liable to come down any ¬ ¬ The house has been built more than 25 years and the wood has Almost Completely Destroyed by Fire Nearly Four Hundred Buildings Burned 83000000 Yv CHARLES A DANA minute Friday nights disaster recalls forcibly a more fearful one which took place in the same building in February 1876 Friday night there was a real cause for the panic and loss of life then there was no cause whatever except the wickedly foolish cry of fire started when a little sputtering hiss came from the calcium Aight in The house the upper gallery was packed mostly with women and children to witness an allegory of America given by hundreds of school children ¬ ¬ - The extreme heat of Saturday and Friday had much to do with hastening death On Friday Mr Dana showed signs of distress and everything pos- ¬ sible was done to relieve him He had been weakened by his long illness and during the summer was several times thought to be on the verge of a fatal collapse but each time rallied ne did not improve much with the coming cooler weather and the sinking spells became more frequent On Friday Mr Dana was able to take only the lightest nourishment and this condition continued Paul Dana and his sisters Mrs Draper Mrs Under- ¬ bill and Mrs Branan were at his home on Saturday morning and were warned to remain there They were at the bedside when death came Halifax N S Oct 18 Historic Windsor one of the most beautiful towns in the province was devastated by fire Sunday morning For six hours beginning shortly before 8 am the fire fanned by a violent northwest gale raged so fiercely that the lo- ¬ cal fire department was absolutely helpless to cope with it and within half an hour dfter is discovery the mayor began to call for outside assist- ¬ ance Long before noon the town had been eaten up almost completely the area covered by the flames being nearly a mile square and of the four hundred or more buildings that occupy the section barely half a dozen scorched structures remain Amons1 the buildings that escaped are the Windsor cotton factory Kings college the Anglican church the Edgehill School for Girls and the Buffrin hotel The total loss is estimated roughly at 3000000 While a number of the heaviest losers are partially insured and some of them pretty well covered the total insurance is calculated to be not more than half a million British Outpnt of Steel Oct 18 The Times an- ¬ London nounces that the British output of steel during the first half of the year 1S97 was 2050927 tons the largest out-¬ put ever known for a similar period in the history of Great Britain or of any Go to your grocer to day and get a 15 c package of if Gran - 0 ¬ It takes the place of coffee at the cost Made from pure grains it ful Insist that your RTocer gives you GEAIN O u wcuyuu mmauoa V is nourishing and health ¬ a Wfefcmm FREE-- - hours elub has issued a manifesto which was storm struck this locality ¬ distributed throughout the city Fri which has broken all records here for day stating that the time had come for this time of the year In addition to Canada to throw off its connection 36 hours of continuous downpour it is still snowing with no indication whatwith England ever of a letup Ex Senator Jones Remains Wanted Greenbacks Exchanged for Gold Durrant Breaking Down Gold Found in Wisconsin Pensacola Fla Oct 15 The re New York Oct 16 The Bank of the San Francisco Oct 18 Theodore A Janksviltk Wis Oct 15 Gold has mains of ex United States Senator British North America imported 500 been found in Rock county within Charles W Jones arrived here from 000 in gold a few days ago and Friday Durrant the convicted murderer oi eight miles of Janesville Two farm Detroit Mich Thursday morning bhey sent the gold to the sub treasury Minnie Williams and Blanche Lamont vhose fate depends upon the action oJ ers were in the city Thursday with The funeral services were held in the asking for greenbacks in exchange the supreme court of the United States samples of gravel taken from the farm afternoon at St Michaa Catholic The treasury officials declined tho is reported to be breaking down vhich showed sold in fair Quantities church which was crowded r proposition ¬ Francis Seeley government tea inspector con ¬ demned 830 chests of tea which arrived from the Orient on the steamship Mon mouthshire Several days ago he con ¬ demned 422 chests consigned to a Chi cago firm The entire lot was found to ha old trashy tea unfit for use Portland Condemned Tea Ore Oct 15 the coal operators of Kanawha valley and their men has failed absolutely and President Ratchfordleft Thursday night for Columbus disheartened over his failure - Heavy Snowstorm Revolutionary Talk In Canada Denver Oct IS A special from Montreal Oct 16 An organization effort to adjust the difference between known as the Canadian- Independence Crested Butte Col says A snow- ¬ 36 ago The Conference Was a Failure Charleston W Va Oct 15 The ¬ a illustrated catalogue free Wfocisiffi Repeating Arms Co tJehd Your name on postal crd nd we will send you our 136 page loOWlNCHESTEHAVe NEW HAVEN OWN ¬ other European country - ¬ -- Kennedy who has been on trial in tho criminal court for the past week Kverv homeseeket shnniit iriiMc t tr charged with being the leader of the G - AManchester la W A IvfcliTOND a P a Louisville Ky or S G Chicago Alton passenger train rob¬ HATCH D P AG Cincinnati O bery at Blue cut in December last was the IILINOIS CENTKAL for n i roe copv of ltArROAS SOUTHERN HOMESEEKEJSS OUlI acquitted Sunday Alleged Train Kobber Acquitted Kansas City- Mo Oct 18 John F SOUTHERN I Ufimnnnnlni ftJ ira uosoe IIUHUJOGGMH iJA l- - -- tr THE BOURBON NEWS TUESIMfJ OCTOBER 19 1897 rv DONT CROWD - IP -- ft B- F- - fer Big folks crowdin down the small Wonder why they cant be lovln Aint much difference after alL Though Im poor and you my brother Are a solid man of means IFolks caxt tell us which from t other Through tkem new X ray machines Seems to me that Id be willin When Id got an easy berth Other people should be fillin Up a little of the earth I should hate for death to find me Grindin my existence out Hoardin cash to leave behind me For my heirs to fight about Makes me think of children playin Makin sand heaps on the beach Handful onto handful layin High as ever they can reach Till the comin tide a frothin Sends a big wave toward the land And that pile just melts to nothln But a hummock in the sand So my brother dont be greedy Kinder help us on our way Them thats wealthy them thats needy Are the reglar kind of clay And the march of time is swellin And the years are brlngin round Rich and poor a common dwellin Just a hummock in the ground Jje Lincoln in L A W Bulletin Whats the use of all this shovin - panted his eyes full of pity andyearn ing tenderness as he took both her They say the nerveless hands in his fire aught in the boiler house and spread to the shafthouse in an instant There were powder and giant caps stored there in the back room that was what we heard It was criminal of Mc He Cready having such stuff there lingered over the broken sentences warding off the question he knew must come You see it is the Grubstake he woman she gasped withdraw ¬ ing her hands and making as though she would rush on down the hill to see without waiting for his answer It is hoped that they are all right he reluctantly returned his eyes en ¬ treating her to have hope There are ten men down the shaft but if the air holds good it must be all right There is sure to be time enough to save And papa rather than heard them Her white They cannot get out lips formed the words but he guessed The steam connections and hoister everything went to pieces in the ex- ¬ them k 5T The Old Silver Trail BY MARY E STICKNEY Copyright 1S96 by J B Lippincott Co - LF- - L CHAPTER XI Continued jfteils face was pale and a strange light shone in his eyes as he stepped in front of her barring the way You could love me if you would let yourself I know it and you are false to your-¬ self when you turn from me like this he declared in a tense tone You are making- a mountain out of this trouble of the mines when between you and me ife is as nothing To me indeed there is nothing on earth that counts nothing that I value in the least in comparison with your love If I could have that the rest would settle itself I would con- ¬ cede anything sacrifice anjthing He stopped looking- about with a startled glance his eyes coming back to her face which wore a strangely fright ¬ ened expression There was a strong smell of burning wood about them while a dark cloud was streaming up against the blueness of the sky behind the rocks which cut off all below from - - Is i their view I explosion while the sky seemed black- cned by a rushing mass riddled with myriads of darker blotches of which hundreds seemed to be falling all about them fragments of still burning wood Wild with fright Dorothy had thrown herself into the arms that were in ¬ stinctively reached out to seize her What is it Oh what has happened she gasped hiding her eyes shuddering y ag ainst his shoulder It is nothing sweetheart you are safe he murmured his cheek laid - even as she spoke there was a deafening What is it she exclaimed But n caressingly against her soft hair For the moment it appeared to him indeed that nothing counted against the fact that he was holding her there in his arms unharmed against the sweet truth that she had come to that shelter of her own impulse but tlie man of affairs was quick to awake in him even in all the tremulous joy of feeling that in this unconsidered action she had vir¬ tually conceded his hearts desire But I must leave you dearest You will not mind if I go for a moment to see what it is he urged tenderly holding her the closer to him for the thought of presYou will wait ently letting her go until I come back No I will go with you she rejoined her cheeks still pale with fright Oh I must as his look seemed to dissuade ¬ Tier - His thoughts had flown at once to the Mascot shafthouse from his memory of 1 time when a similar explosion had rent the air to leave him almost penniless Could it be that such devilish work had been repeated She must not No dear one Do you not see come that whatever has happened we shou Id not be seen coming back together he breathlessly argued knowing that here was something she would surely heed he pleadingly Please sweetheart iidded as she still hesitated But must I stay here until you conn back she helplessly questioned trern- bling still as she drew away from him Will you surely comeback Surely if I can If I do not come wait ten minutes and then come yourSo he breathlessly planned self moved to take her again in his arms impetuously showering kisses upon her an spite of all the awful possibilities of the moment mad with joy that she did Whatever happens not repulse him sweetheart he passionately whispered as he left her remember that now you are mine mine Dorothy waited nervously pacing back and forth for a few minutes fry ing to think what she had done what 5t meant and to what end it all portended Did she love him Had she loved him all the while And what would her father say But unnerved as she was with the dense cloud of smoke still rising and the confused sound of crashing timbers and hoarse cries con j tinuajlly growing louder cohereait thought was out of the question Half of the time for which Neil had stipulated had not passed by before she could endure the suspense no longer and was hurrying down the hill herself now iilled with alarmed vexation that she had been induced to delay her coming at all since it needed but a glance in the direction of the fire to tell her that it was the Grubstake buildings which ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ --- ¬ were going She knew enough of the mostly machinery there housed to be appalled at her fathers loss but it did not occur to her to think of the raver menace until she met Harvey Neil coming back to her and somehow comprehended the awful tragedy in his face She stopped as though turned to stone staring at him with wild eyes her lips parted but incapable of utter ring any sound -- I ever dream of To care for you you who such a thing brought him here who were the cause of all this trouble you who if he is dead have been the cause of his death I tell you that I hate you I shall al- ¬ ways hate you As she went on in this growing frenzy she had been blindly hurrying down the hill Neil keeping beside her with watchful eye upon her heedless steps but now he stopped his peremptory look bidding her also pause His face was white and set his eyes were full of sadness beyond words but still his tone You nmst was very gentle as he said not come any farther Dorothy It is They were now so not fit for you burning bits of wood near the fire that littered the grass all about them while the smoke and heat from the well nigh burnt out shafthouse made the air stiflingly oppressive Crowds of men were hurrying up the hill many turning curiously to stare at the colonels daugh ter You must not come farther Neil You said again gently authoritative can do no good here I wish you would let me take you down to my cabin To your cabin no she implacably returned glancing away from him as though her eyes loathed the sight of his But I will wait here if you will face go away He hesitated reluctantly regarding her for an instant but then withaface as sad as her own he walked awaj to send to her a woman he had discovered among the crowd It was a Mrs Morri ¬ son who kept the Mascot boarding house a motherly soul though her ap ¬ pearance always promised ill for the Panting cleanliness of her cookery with good humored hurry she came up the hill to wherethe girl was standing a sort of beaming pity ipon her round ros3 face Dear dear but wed ought to be thankful it aint no worse she fer vently exclaimed energetically stamp irg out a smoldering fagot that threatened to set her gown afire Dorothy turned upon the intruder with a stony stare but then curiously touched by the look of kindly com- ¬ miseration her expression changed her face nervously working in lines of pain as she replied in a strange choked voice But it could not be worse oh it could not Well now it might returned Mrs Morrison in cheery argument I reck- ¬ on theres never anything so bad that the Lord couldnt a found a way to have it worse if Hed a had a mind If thered ra been an explosion in tbe mine stead of 01 top that would a been enough sight worse But bein its the nature of powder to blow up stead of down why it jest natchelly stands to reason that them men aint hurt a mUe Oh you aint no call to take on honey sure Id bet a dollar against a doughnut with anybody that theyre all down there as live s crickets this min ute jest natchelly swearin n rara pagin round like enough because its gettin on toward dinner tame n them without a bite Thats the man of it you know Nawthin riles em quite so much s gettin left at meal times Dorothy looked at her with a sort of dazed bewilderment for an instant breaking out into wild hysterical laughter which almost instantlv turned to uncontrollable sobbing Stirred to quick sympathy be ¬ yond any thought of social differ ence or ufrm length ceremonial the I say Oh how could ¬ inference is that your father and Mc Cready were with ttrem There is no reason to believe that they will not be gotten out all right But you do not believe it I can see in your face that jrou do not she pas- ¬ sionately exclaimed drawing back He is from him with a look of horror dead and you know it And to think that at the very moment he died I was Oh go away from me I never want to see you again never never To think that I should have turned against him for you And he the dearest and best of fathers always so good to me so good It makes me hate you He looked at her with pitying ten You derness as at one distraught do not know what you are saying dear And you he murmured soothingly must not give up I would not tell you so if it were not true Your father is probably alive and unharmed And in a little while he may be with you to laugh at all your fright Dont give up yet sweetheart How dare you call me that you she bitterly retorted her eyes flashing blue fire upon him her face like stone Do you not see that it is a judgment upon me for caring for you for being untrue to him Caring for you did ¬ plosion he slowly explained his voice eloquent of compassion It was im- ¬ possible for anybody to escape after the alarm was given But as soon as Oh darling we can get the fire out darling dont look at me like that Dont think of giving up until we know The men were working in the levels quite away from the shaft and the caught her in a warm motherly embrace and equally obliv- ¬ ious of the strangeness of such resting place the girl hid her face against the ample shoulder with the simple aban- ¬ don of a child There there honey thats right Itll do you good murmured the woman understandingly soothingly patting Dorothys back while at the same time bestowing a nod of intelligence upon Harvey Neil who had rushed up with anxious pained face although too discreet to utter a word of his eager sympathy his wild longing to be of some service to his love Womens hearts is like that When theyre full to bustin nawthiii eases em up like a good cry Continually the crowd was increas- ¬ ing A line of willing hands quickly formed to convey water from the Mas ¬ cot pumps while mothers wives and children of the imprisoned miners sur ¬ rounded by sympathetic friends looked on sobbing and moaning Hardly any impression seemed to be made on the flames until after what appeared a long time in the possessing impatience the extinguisher arrived from camp and even then when the fire was con- ¬ quered progress was tediously slow The heavy blackened timbers were hot and difficult to handle while for want of space only a few could work at clear- ¬ ing away the debris which choked the mouth of theshaft It was not until the middle of the afternoon that an attempt could be made to enter the mine and then it was Harvey Neil who came forward the first to go down A solemn hush fell upon the crowd as they watched him step into the bucket while the crude hoisting apparatus hastily constructed creakingly passed him out of sight Everybody knew that if the air below had turned foul as many held must be the case another victim might be added to swell the horror of that day and hardly a whisper broke the stillness tmtil the signal came to bid them draw him back Then as he reappeared a wild cheer broke from lips turned pale and women sobbed for joy when he told that the air seemed good which prom- ¬ ised well for the men below but he had found some forty feet down fallen tim- ¬ bers so wedged across the shaft that there must be more hard work before the full descent could be made The sun was setting when finally the way was clear Again Neil laid his hand on the side of the bucket although now there were others who would have gone but there was that in his manner which gave him the place without discussion and again the crowd in awed expectancy watched him out of sight He was gone much longer this time and when at length he returned the first look at his face told the staring eyes what it was that corered by a 4 The Proper Authority tance pitying the pain and mortifica Husband I think my dear I must tiqnshc could not but see upon his She says as how you hated her consult a physician face WifeWhat for father V she mustnt never forget it For some remedy for my dyspepsia Of course she dont rightly sense what shes sayin V bein youre a stranger I have most horrid dreams at nightsur- ¬ Better consult a veterinary to hern all the good woman sooth- geon ingly and in all innocence argued A horse doctor mebbe its natchel she should be preju- ¬ Yes A horse doctor should be the Anyhow sheis theres no diced Tit blinkin that Mr Neil n shes so sot best authority on nightmare ¬ I dont believe there would be no man ¬ Bits onreasonable of course but what you goin to do about it 1 s pose her pas set Iher up to it n its only jest natchel her feelin so You cant blame her No said Neil wearily his face as dulled and set as those which had been brought up out of the mine that day I cant blame her TO BE CONTINUED ner of use your seem her anyhow Ill take her back to camp n do for her s much s I can She dont seem to sense that I belong to the Mascot but you why its We And it hard to keep the wolf Away from our front door But sometimes its harder still To keep away the bore N T World NOT VERY MUSICAL Two Terrible Animals the parlor for Tommys sister I aint the kind of a little boy youre always readin about in the papers what bega candy from the fellers that comes to see ther sisters Still if 3ouve got any in your pockets Id be willin to take it Chicago Tribune Why Tenant I demand a rebate on my rent Your darned old water pipe burst flooded my cellar and my chick- Sot One of That Kind Mr Hankinson said Tommy to the young man who was waiting in No ens were drowned didnt you keep ducks North American Landlord But my dear sir why Philadelphia- - BISMARCKS NARROW ESCAPE r His Affair of Honor with a Dead Shot Who Was Offended by His Stare In a little pamphlet regarding the state of the Wiesbadcners in Fried- richsruh there has appeared a Bismarck anecdote which shows how near Germany once was to losing in his youth her great unifier The same anecdote also illustrates how duels are still made - A Sad Blow Mr Bliffers Beg pardon Mr Ham- mer but can you tell me where my wife is seated I cant find her Mr Hammer auctioneer She baa not been here to day Mr Bliffers wildly My My Sho must be dead N Y Weekly Had Thought of That Young man said the elderly gen tleman in a choking voice she is the only daughter I have Yes acknowledged the young man that is one reason I thought I would like to marry her Indianapolis Jour- ¬ tel ¬ nal ¬ I tell coaft you I hate you I shall always hate you ¬ ¬ lay huddled in the bucket at his feet the dreadful something that but a few short hours ago had been his enemy Col Randolph Meredith Dead every one Neil whispered to those nearest as he stepped out upon tthe ground baring his head before he turned back to help the other hands that were reverently oustr etched to lift then to earth the burden he had brought Lange shook hands and the quarrol Long before this Mrs Morrison had was at an end On his way home from persuaded Dorothy to go home with her and Neil would permit no one to go the field Lange remarked to his sec-¬ there with the dreadful truth until onds It is better that it ended it would teams had come to carry the dead down to caanp Then with a slow step have been too bad to blow dayligitfj lagging no less because of the pain through him Almost 50 vears later Lange celc fulness of his errand than for the utter physical exhaustion following the brated in Heidelberg the jubilee anni- ¬ frenzied toil and excitement of the day versary of his graduation After hy¬ he betook himself over the hill to the and his friends had reviewed the stir ring events of the last half century Mascot boarding house ¬ Recalling with sharp sense of dread and the slow welding of divided Ger ¬ Dorothys mood of the morning ha many into one great empire under Bis ¬ thought it better to let her receive the marcks master hand the doctor re awful truth froon Mrs Morrison who marked quaintly It is better that it ended it would however uncouth in speech and man- ¬ have been too bad to blow daylight ner had yet a womans heart to tell her through him N Y Sun how to soften the blow for the unhappy girl Her Letter and His Answer He sat down upon the steps outside Would you be kind enough to return when he had sent her with the mes ¬ my photograph she wrote I garro sage his heart aching for his love while it to you in a moment of girlish folly he waited to hear how she bore it and I have since had occasion to regret meaning by and by to beg a word with that I was so tbouglhtless in such mat¬ her to learn if she would have him ters Of course she pictured that ride to Orodelphia that night to tele- photograph framed and hung up in liis graph her friends or what her wishes room and was inclined to think that he would part with it with deep regret might be respecting her father A long time he patient waited after Just why she wanted it returned is im ¬ Mrs Morrison had reported that the material Of course he had offended girl was crying fit to break her heart her in some way but it is unneeessary refusing the good womans urgency to inquire how The answer to her note that he should come in to supper al- ¬ came the following day I regret it though to please her he accepted the read that I am unable at this late day tea and toast she brought him at the to pick out your photograph How ¬ door feeling the better for the refresh- ¬ ever I send you my entire collection ment which he had been too much numbering a little over 600 and would request that you return all except your wrought up to think of needing It seemed to him hours before Mrs own by express at my expense Chi ¬ Morrison listening at the door and cago Post hearing no sound finally decided that Society Miss Meredith anight now be calm Little Chick What do you let that enough to hear that he waited to see ugly little thing come under your wing her but it was with a frightened air for that after considerable delay shecame OltLHen who had inadvertently back hatched a ducks egg I cant help it 7 Miss MeredithTiad begun taking on my dean Weve got tovput up with the crazy like atthe very idea of seeing Mr7 hcreture seoauae he belongs to our Neil she reported witfai evident reluc- - et you know N Y Weekly ¬ - in Germany Bismarck first visited Wiesbaden two or three years after taking his univer- ¬ sity degree He went one evening to the big dance hall in the Kurhaus and during a pause between dances sat on a sofa talking with a friend and look- ¬ ing at the persons who walked by He had a sharp eye and a defiant air even in his best tempered moods and several men returned his looks with ill natured stares Eventually a young doctor Gustav Lange of Heidelberg walked uj to the sofa and fixing his eyes on Bis- ¬ marck inquired Why do you stare at me Now Lange was a very handsome voung man and Bismarck was in a hap- ¬ py mood These two facts distated Bis- ¬ marcks answer Because I like your appearance But I do not like yours was Langes reply An animated dialogue followed Bis marck at first seeking to appease Langes wrath and Lange trying his best to make trouble The upshot was that cards were exchanged in order that Lange might wipe out with blood the deadly affront of being stared at by Otto von Bismarck The seconds ar ¬ ranged that the meeting should take place in the Grand Duchy of Hesse not far from Biebrich Lange was a dead shot with the pistol and pistols were the weapons to be used in the duel The young physician could hit the two mark piece flipped in the air nine times out of ten It looked Has secocrU un ¬ bad for Bismarck doubtedly felt that he was about the same as a dead man from the moment he stepped into the field and they la- ¬ bored hard to find a peaceable solution of the quarrel The English captain whom Bismarck had made one of his seconds was especially eager to prevent bloodshed and he proposed to Lange at the place of meeting that the principals talk the quarrel over before risking their lives for such a trivial cause Lange said eventually that he would do his best to settle the affair without a shot if his opponent would meet him half way The Englishman hurried to Bismarck with the doctors offer of the olive branch but Bismarck would not have it While the English ¬ man slowly paced off the distance stretching his legs to make it as long as possible the other second argued with Bismarck Lange leaned against a tree and said nothing Just as his sec- ¬ onds were expecting the principals tc take their places Bismarck yielded To the surprise of his seconds he did not wait for any preliminary conversation He walked across the field stretched out his hand and remarked Well we will try to live in peace ¬ ¬ Young Lady to servant Anna put Journal the muzzle on Fido Im going to sing Suspicious Fliegende Blaetter Governess Why dont you eat your consomme Bertie Broke the Record Bertie Cause I asked Harry what Mrs Suburbs My dear our new became of the cook papa discharged kitchen girl is a marvel She has been and he said she was in the soup here three weeks and hasnt broken Puck a single thing Sure Death Mr Suburbs Hasit broken any ¬ She His widow engaged the Oh thing I should say she had Hush Quartette to sing at her hus Mrs Suburbs What do you mean Mr Suburbs Did we ever have a girl bands funeral He I suppose she wanted to avoid before who stayed more than three all possibility of his ever coming to days N Y World life N Y Journal His Occupation Gone Why does the undertaker frown Generally Why does he weep why so cast down Old nature oft is contrary Because to day Deal with her as you may He put away The man who talks the most is he The only doctor in the town That has the least to say ¬ Perils of Society Your daughter madam is suffering from general functional derangement There Ive told her often that at- ¬ tending all them functions d be the death of her Louisville Courier N Y World Chicago News 1 s wJs tr v uu 1 11 rt 1 nun u 111 inr ttii 1 1 MJWUtimiHiiiwmi wimniiumi 11 jwBmmjfHf 11 mmmrxsiGXvw mt 1 3jTj I -- J rhC or lu -- rfihO uf9 n- - The Jap as He Sees Himself The Jap as He Is Oh wad some power the giftie gic us To see oursels as ithers see us Fve foeen trying to catch thai course my wife objects to my smoking Mr Huggins in an untruth aiid I beFilkins Why how could I know lieve Ive done it Jinks You ought to be well enough He Well you ought to be happy acquainted with me to know that I youve been trying to catch him for a would not have married an eccentric good man- years Yonkers Statesman woman N Y Journal She ¬ Jinks What A Normal Woman a foolish question t Of Cansht rt Last - to me Whenever I call cu you you put ly in most of the time 3rawning Indian- ¬ apolis Journal Thongrhtless Girl Mammas Numerous Duties Little Dot Mamma Mamma She What do you mean by circulat- ¬ Mamma in next room What ing the report that I live a Little Dot My kittie has caught n existence How dare you mouse and she acts hungry Please He Well that was the way it seemed come and cook it for her N Y Week Getting His 13ven hand-to-mouth ¬ x JVO ROG3I FOR DOUBT month Didnt Miss Sprockets fatherdielast Yes Post Why the unfeeling cieature never has had the decency to have the frame of her bicycle painted plack Chicago A Fitting- Head - What of it What sort of a head shall I put on this story about the fellow who was tarred and feathered asked the new reporter How will He was a bird do sug-¬ gested the court man Philadelphia North American Mean Thing Miss Chatter 1 knew you would rbe flere to day to see sister Mr Cuddler interrog Intuition Miss Chatter No observation You alwajs appear on the same day that Ethel refuses onions at dinner udge A Uncle Fatenough Why dont Willi come and sit on uncles knee NY Journal Offered In Evidence Judge to plaintiff in divorce You say this woman induced you to marry her while you were intoxicated do you and judgt for yourself In buying diamonds lets not haste But watch lest dealers trick us For oh they have some made of paste With which they love to stick us Li A W BtiHetin Word of Warning Plaintiff Look at her your honor Harlem Life 1 Has Mrs Soursweet been j Dumley successful as a boarding houe keeper V Reads That Way I didnt know that Deacon Good Grumley I should say so She owns a prune orchard N Y World committed suicide Hedidut Who said so In Chicaico This obituary says that he walked 1 wish a pair of rubbers fearlessly down into the dark river V displacement naiiMS tf t Chicago Record - Evidence of Prosperity Truth Y V- - r I 4 Q THE BOURBON NEWS TUESDAY Democratic Public Speaking OCTOBER 19 1897 Crop Etc V to run the risk of annoyance and discomfort Certain to be found in all ready made clothing to save a dollar or two on the price Isnt it better to pay a shade more and get exactly what you want Here you can select not only the cloth and pattern but have the style you prefer the pockets of the kind and number you like and generally get what you order In ready made clothing you haye to take what you can get AV THE 8BUSBQ8 HEWS Seventeenth Year Established 1881 an The following is a list of dates night bv the Democratic nnnna Royal makes the food pure wholesome and delicious 1 STOCK AND TURF NEWb C4F Published every fltextav and Friday by WALTER CHAMP J arf cBBUOE MILLER -- k payable to the order nf CHAMP v av rs i iol v fmifii MmKR Ciriierx etc f V - t 5 i V - l Displays oue dollar per inch for first inser ¬ tion half rates each insertion therealter pel Locals or reading notices ten cents line each insertion Locals in hlact type twenty cent per line each insertion Fractions of lines count hp full lines when running at line rates fard of tnauKh calls on canai- Obituar dates resolutions of respect and matter of a like natnre ten cents per line Special rates uiven for largtt advertise ¬ I A Ul in I t KATKH ments and yearly cards Public Speaking Hon James R Hindman National Democratic candidate for Clerk of the Kentucky Court of Appeals will speak at the court house Tuesday afternoon Hon John W Yerkes of Danville brother of Mayor W L Yerkes will speak at the court house on Oct 25 Hon W M Dickerson is announced to speak at the court house on the 30th Judge H C Howard will speak at the court house in this city on Friday Oct 29 at seven oclock p m Supplemental Registration i 11 N - Monday Tuesday and Wednesday October 25th 26th and 27th are the v days fixed by law for supplemental reg- ¬ fCommunicatedJ At this registration only The Mission of Democracy and the Demo ¬ istration cratic Party ftiose who were necessarily absent from on regular registra- ¬ the city or were sick Civil government was established to tion day can register protect both life and liberty Democracy is the friend of social The citizens of Woodford Scott and order because it seeks to cure social Jessamine will give a grand barbecue evils It is the enemy of anarchy and Saturday in Vileys woods near Mid ¬ violence because it seeks wisely and way Among the noted speakers ex- ¬ prudently to eradicate the wrongs that root of popular discontent It lie at pected to be present are Hon John Or is not the hostile to wealth but it is hostile Carlisle Hon Joaiah Patterson Senator to plunder and it is jealous as it should Wm Lindsay Col W C P Breckin ¬ bebf inordinate power and of the ridge and Judge Yost Saxtons band growtn of an oligarchy in a democratic republic will furnish music for the occasion There must be such a party in this Repre- ¬ country if it is to remain free FOR the consideration of 500 Mr sentative Democracy is the foundation Bryan has consented to speak at a of our political philosophy the voice of county fair in Arkansas Mr Bryan the people the divinity of popular ¬ is quite the rage as a county fair attrac- ¬ rights and it has at all times the eleneeded reform ments of all tion He will doubtless secure the silver Our revolutionary fathers revolted nomination for President in 1900 but he and would not submit to be governed by will never be President The people do a monarchy and would not submit to not want a side show attraction for unjust taxation even upon tea We What is the situation tu day a Chief Executive see this country ruled by tracts for the by the trusts and everything A silver Democrat at Lexington trusts andup in the coils vr a trust wrapped made a spectacle out of himself Wed ¬ Statistics proved that this year cattle nesday night by interrupting Hon were several million short ami the iarui Josiah Pattersons speech Some people ers confidently expected from five to five fat will never learn that the man who in- - and a half cents for their Itcattle not was What was the result terrupts a speaker be he preacher supply and demand The powers met political orator or a patent medicine in Chicago nresided over by Lord fakir always gets the worst of the Armour and the dictum went forth that 450 should be the highest price and argument the farmers were compelled to submit They would have hammered wheat W o Bryan has offered a large sum to thirty cents per bnshel had it back not of money to Ewing College at Benton been due to a widespread failure of the Ills to be known as the Mary Elizabeth crops abroad amounting to almost a fam ¬ All Bryan fund in compliment to his ine in the large country of India can be corner- ¬ products of mother The income is to be used an- - theunder a highthe earth protective tariff and ed nually during commencement week in a single gold standard Restore bimet cash prizes for the best essays on the alisui and a tariff for revenue only and the trusts cannot live science of government The single gold standard has been the dumb silver direct cause of the finaucialdistes8 Sam Shackleford the He said that has fallen upon our people since its candidate has spoken adoption and the highest gold standard Boys I want you all to vote for me authorities admit that it - has been a peThis is better anyhow than a lot of riod of almost unexampled depression silver bosh and Chicago platform rav- ¬ and disturbance of trade and industry with falling prices for nearly all the ings products of human labor including land 1873 demonetization Poor old Kentucky Ohio Maryland sincethe people of thisincountry cling to If and New York have quarantined against the gold standard they must accept the Bryan Bailey Towne and other silver rule of the trusts which means increased orators and Kentucky has to stand em wealth to the very wealthy and increas ¬ ed poverty and degradation for the toil all to say nothing of local talent iug masses by Thomas Gn Hon J W Towne a free silver Re ¬ A recent article written persons Sherman shows that 9600 publican from Duluth has been import- ¬ country are worth an aggregate of in this¬ twen ed to make silver speeches in Kentucky ty four billions of dollars and that for the silver Democrats Silver silver 20000 own more that half the wealth of the whole country while 75000000 are silver is the issue s apposed to own the other half We believe in honest money the gold New Yorkers are betting 1000 to and the silver money of the constitution 700 on Van Wyck the Tammany can- ¬ and the coinage of both metals without didate for Mayor discrimination against either into stand- ¬ ard dollars of final paymeit and redempThe negroes have nominated candi- ¬ tion It is the legal endowment that gives money its value and not the com- ¬ dates for county offices in Jessamine mercial price of the bullion To the Voters of 15ourbon4County The material in a hundred dollar green back is worth probably the fourth Having received the nomination in of a cent and it is worth five twenty-dolla- r the Republican County Convention for gold pieces the world over County Clerk of Bourbon county I take We believe in a tariff so adjusted as this method to ask the support of all my not to foster monopolies and breed trusts friends I pledge myself to a conscien- ¬ and to favor the few at the expense of the tious and faithful discharge of official many and that would equalize differ ¬ duties if elected in November ences and the general welfare of the Respectfully Americian people Wm M Goodloe tf We would then have a government of the people for the people and by the The cheapest place to buy lumber people and not a government of the shingles etc is at the old yard of Tarr trust for the trust and Templin near the L N freight by the trust as represented by Mark Hanna Phil Armour and Go depot Lumber uo Bourbon HM By T H Tarr Manager tf Blenheim Oct 18th 1897 ¬ ¬ Campaign Committee at which public speaking will be held at Little Rock Thursday Oct 21 Speakers Wm M Purnei two p in T E Ashbrook Denis Duudon Russell Mann J M Thomas Clintonville Friday Oct 22 at two p m W M Purnell T E Ashbrook C M Thomas Harmon Stitt North Middletown Saturday Oct 23 at two p m W M Purnell T E¬ Ashbrook John S Smith E M Dick son J M Thomas Hutchison Wednesday Oct 27 at ¬ two p m W M Purnell T E Ash brook R C Talbott T E Moore Jr Harmon Stitt Ruddles Mills Thursday Oct 28th at two p m W M Purnell T E Ashbrook J M McVey G M Thomas S B Rogers Centerville Friday Oct 29 at two p m W M Purnell T E A3hbrook Decis Dundon C Arnsparger Millersburg Saturday Oct 30 at M Purnell T E Ash ¬ two p brook C M Thomas E M Dickson M Paris Nov 1st at two p Purnell E M Dicdson T E Ashbrook W H McMillan James McUlure J M Thomas Paris Monday Nov 1st at 730 p m C M Thomas Russell Mann w w RAlJTtfU POWDER Absolutely Pure I ROYAL BAKIMQ POWDER CO NEW YORK Turf Notjs Corn sold at two dollars per barrel in Bourbon last week Horace Miller bought seventeen wean ¬ ling mules last week from Nicholas parties Bourbon parties sold tobacco as fol- ¬ lows last week in incinnati JW Thomas Jr Paris three hhds at an average of 1150 and four at 1308 Carpenter Jefferson Millersburg five hhds at 1410 and A C BU five at 1035 Sales and Transfers Of Stock ARE YOU WILLING Handsome Historical Lithograph Colored birds eye view of Chattanoga Sparks from a locomotive started fires yesterday which burned 500 acres of grass and burned or killed 200 fine for est trees for J C Caldwell near Dan- I ville Fires are also raging in the kuols south of Danville and if the dronth con- ¬ tinues great damage will be done to property -- P Cleaning and Pressing a Speci ally - LAVIN HUKILL Poor Grade Shoes Are poor in everv respect money Our new stock of School wasters Shoes cannot be made better and are money savers Try us and see j mW mW Cash buyers canget double value to- Yesterdays Temperature Missionary Ridge Waldens Ridge and day at portions of the Cbickamauga field as The following is the temperature as tf Davis Thomson Isgrig seen from the eummit of Lookout Moun- ¬ noted yesterday by A J Winters Co of this city tain Highest style of lithographers art 50 7a m On fine paper plate 10x24 Mailed for Chronic Dyspepsia Cured 54 8a m W C Rinearson 10 cents in stamps 58 9pm Q C Route Cin ¬ Genl Passr Agt 61 10 a m 64 cinnati O 11 am 67 12 m life has 76 2p m The Northwestern Mutual 78 3p m to representatives of its policypaid 75 4p m holders and to its policy holders and is 71 5p m 180000000 an now holding for them 66 7p m excess over premium reoeipts of over tf 20000000 r Men who like a cool quick quiet and If you dont like the wajT we mix easy shave should patronize Crawford feed we will fix it to suit you Bros barber fihop Clean first class J H Hibler Co bath rooms are connected with the shop tf Satisfactory service at all times ho You Play Whist Euchre Or Other ¬ RION CLAY New Laundry Agency 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 Clays drug store will left at Clarke receive immediate attention Work caded for and delivered promptly Respectfully 16ap tf Bruce Holladay Games The F F V playing card is better than any 50 cent card on the market Send 15 cents for one deck or 25 cents T N Kates To Nashville D Cable photographer over Var for two decks stamps or currency to C B Ryan Asst Genl Passr Agt C O Ry Cincinnati Ohio MRS LAURA WEISHAUF Of JUurry Ind Recommends Wrights Celery Capsules The Wright Medical Co Murry Ind Sept 17 1896 Columbus Ohio Dear SikS Last spring I purchased a box of Wrights Celery Capsules from L C Davenport druggist Bluffton Ind and used them for stomach trouble with which I bad been afflicted for more than 15 years Since taking your Cap sules I have lost all trace of pain and my stomach is entirely well I can eat any thing and can truthfully say that I have uot felt better in years Yours Respectfully ¬ ¬ per box Send address on postal to the Wright Med Co Columbus Ohio for trial size free Mrs Laura Weishauft Sold by W T Brooks at50c and 100 suffering for nearly thirty years Mrs H E Dugdale wife of a prominent business man of Warsaw N Y writes For 23 years I was a constant sufferer from dyspepsia and a weak stomach The lightest food produced distress causing severe pain and the forma ¬ tion of gas No matter how careful of my diet I suffered agonizing pain after eating I was treated by many physicians and tried numerous remedies without permanent help Two years ago I began taking Dr Miles Nerve and Liver Pills and Nervine Within a week I commenced improving and per ¬ sisting in tho treatment I was soon able to eat what I liked with no evil effects I keep them at hand and a single dose dispels IMfcV f tAJMW any old symptoms Ji Dr Miles Eemedies are sold by all drug- ¬ gists under a positive guarantee first bottle M benefits or money re ¬ Elftestore JB funded Book on dis- ¬ Wfo Health eases of the heart and nerves free Address HFTEE dyspepsia Tenn Centennial and International Exposition Nashville Tenn May 1st to Oct 3Xst 97 L N will sell tickets rates for the round trip at following April 28 to Oct 15th final limit Nov 7 1260 April 29 to Oct 30f final limit 15 days from date of sale 925 April 27 to Oot 30 final limit 7 days including date of sale 760 FB Pakr Agt tiou sick headat- dens drug store makes fine photos at reduced prices Kodak work quickly done satisfaction guaranteed tf j 1 Sherman Stivers has taken the agency for the Cincinnati Daily Times Star a most excellent paper and will have it delivered to subscribers in any part of the city for six cents per week He solicits your subscription tf Wrights Celery DAILEY m p Nervine S DR MILES MEDICAL CO Elkhart Ind PARiS KY 602 MAIN ST Nashville Exposition Over Deposit Bank Buy your ticket to Nashville via Cincin ¬ nati and Queen Crescent Koute to Chattn Office hours 8 to 12 a in 1 to 6 p m noogax Visit the historic city and the great battlefields of Missionary Ridge and Lookout Mountain spend a day at the Chicamauga National Military Park then refreshed and ready for new conquests continue the jour-¬ ney Low rates to the great Exposition in effect vi this pleasant route The Queeu it Crescent traiu service is per- ¬ fect the schedules fast ones the scenery un- ¬ 1 have from One Thousand to Fifteepfipi surpassed anywhere If you want the journey to be a pleasant Hundred Dollars to loan on first mort- - w one see that your tickets read via Cincinnati gage at eight per cent per annum and Queen Crescent W C liiuearson G P A Cinci nati O HARMON STITT Mouey To Loan Your Ijife Insured lc a Day bank- ¬ Wrights Celery Tea cures constipation sick headaches 25c at druggists W Of Peck P O ¬ To the Wright Medical Co Wrights Celery Capsules Anderson Pike Co O Recommends S Columbus Ohio Gents I have purchased a box of Wrights Celery Capsules from James T Bluser drug ¬ gist Waverly O and used them for Stomach Trouble and Constipation I was unable to do anything for nearly twe years I ased three boxes or your Celery Capsules and they have cured me Kor the benefit of others so afflicted I wish to send this letter Very truly yours W S ADEKS 3r Sold by all druggists at 60c and 81 per box Send address on postal to the Wright Med Co Columbus O for trial size free able paper on the Capital City Bank nf Columbus O There can be no stronger guarantee given you We darn not up1 a banks name without authority if yon doubt it write thm Good hwilih in the best life insurance Wriuhfs 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 monpy back if wp fail to cure you Sold by W T Brooks druggist Our insurance is protected by ranranre3ra3EEaa PS b 1 3 To Cure A Cold In One Day GEO W DAVIS DEALER IN Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab- ¬ lets All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure 25c For sale by W T Brooks and James Kennedy Paris Ky Furniture Window Shades Oil Cloths Carpets Mattresses Etc Special attention given to - word so full Main Street of meaning and about which such tender and MOTHER There is no ing and Repairing Undertak ¬ Paris Ky Do you need anything in holy recollections cluster as that she who watched of Mother over our helpless infancy and guid- ¬ ed our first tottering step Yet the life of every Expectant Moth- ¬ er is beset with danger and all ef- ¬ fort should be made to avoid it gq so assists nature a Q i n the change tak MftfilQT lllUiliul U ing place that the Expectant G17 j Main st Paris Ky P KIELY bedding Do you see that house That is the place to get any thing in that line Pil- ¬ Blankets comforts lows Mattresses and inci- ¬ dentally the best line of Springs ever shown in Paris Prices on Comforts from 1200 7 j cents to Blankets 65 cents to 9 per pair ii PATENTS u- - 8 igJiu15Suoir IN PAT ¬ Friend - Awarded Highest Honors Da-- Worlds Fair dread suffering or gloomy fore- ¬ bodings to the hour when she 2mar ljan98 experiences the joy of Motherhood Its use insures safety to the lives of both Mother and Child and she Mules For Sale L N Reduced Rates is found stronger after than befdre confinement in short it makes Louisville Driving Fair Association Childbirth natural and easy1 as Twenty four cotton mules 14 to 15 h Oct 18 to 28 L N will sell round trip so many have said Dont be fat and plump BENNETT TARR tickets at one fare on 17 and 18 th persuaded to use anything but limited 29th Special rates for trains arriving at Louisville on morning of 22d Also 26th limited 27th F B Carr Agent Cow feed for sale at Mother is enabled to look for ward without ¬ EUGENE W JOHNSON SOLICITOR AND ATTORNEY K ENT CAUSES 1729 New York Ave Washington I C Office established 1858 Charges moderate Correspondence Requested my line Do not buy until you see J to T HINTON -- MOTHERS FRIEND My wife suffered more in ten min ¬ utes with either of her other two chil ¬ ¬ hands high Also 30 sugar mules from 15 to 16 WM TARR Wood Mantels Tiling Etc Furniture of all kind Carpets as low as the lowest CREAM k BAKING POWDtR r ASSIGNEES NOTICE All persons having claims against the assigned estate of Chas R Turner are requested to present them to me at my office in Paris Ky properly proven as required by law Those knowing them- ¬ selves indebted to the estate are request ¬ ed to settle promptly and save coats of 29je Undertaking in all its branches Embalming scientifically attended MOST PERFECT MADE A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder Free torn Ammonia Alum or any other adulterant ent prices worth th dren than she did altogether with her last having- previously used four bot 28sp 3w Spears Stuart It is a tles of Mother8 Friend to any on expecting to be- ¬ blessing says a customer come a MOTHER Hendkbson Dale Carmi Illinois Cool nights call tor comforts and I I have them just the kind you want some heavier than others and at differ ¬ Of DrugclBtl At or sent hy an oa woiipt Hibler Cos i 40 YEARS THE STANDARD teatimoaials They are well made and of prios Write for book eoatainin Mothers free ana valuable Information for all price J T Hinton AOuta Q Tl Bciitill tignUtir lt suit HARMON STITT Assignee mmmi f ilc I Ci THE BOUBBON NEWS TUESDAY OCTOBER 19 1897 -v- 8 H -v n - At wi yy t - - I i 11r- - in M - k r V ttj- - V - iL- c fit I h uV - - J- f j- - S5F f V V 1 t young lady of Cynthiana will occur early in Noyember Coleman Gentry of Lexington and Miss Letitia Lucas of Newtown will be married Thursday afternoon at two oclock at the Newtown Christian Church The marriage of Miss Ellen Hart Talbott and Mr V ai W Atwill of ¬ Mr John Feeney spent Sunday with soloist Manager Scott has arranged Kansas City will occur in that city on for special trains at greatly reduced relatives in Richmond the 27th MisB Talbott is a Kentucky Miss Carrie Butler is visiting the girl teing a daughter of Mr Dudley rates for this occasion All ordeis by I or one of my deputies will be mail or telegraph for seats addressed to Misses Bain in Lexington Talbott formerly of this city and a at the places named below at the Manager Scott at Lexington or Mr Mrs Lee Price and son visited rel- ¬ niece of Messrs Hart and W G hours specified to collect taxes Geo D Mitchell at Paris will receive atives in Louisville last week Talbott of this city Mr Atwill is a prompt attention Mr Harold Johnson of Mt Ster- sou of Bishop Edwin Atwill of Kansas for the year 1897 City ling is visiting friends in the city Gun Club Tournament Ruddles Mills Oct 21 from 9 to 12 a m Mr Joe Brooks and Dr Addams of Have you tried our roller mill meal George Williams Clay of this city Centerville Oct 21 at 2 p m Cynthiana spent Sunday in the city It is the best ever in this market attended the Kentucky Gun Club tour- ¬ Hutchison Oct 22 at 2 p m Mrs W W Massie is spending a Hibler Co XiittleRock Oct 22 from 9 to nament at Louisville Friday and Satur- ¬ few days with friends in Covington day and did some excellent shooting 12 a m BIRTHS Miss Grace Swearengen is spending North Middletown receipts at Friday he tied three contestants Jake a few days wih friends in Lexington The Advent Of Our Future Men And Gay Roger Smith and W A Fawcett bank Women Miss Toinmie Hornsey of Lexing Clintonville Oct 25 from 9 to in a match at fifteen live birds each The Prince of Wales acted as sponsor making a perfect score The purse of ton is visiting her sister Mrs Ernest 12 a m for the Marlborough Vanderbilt baby Millersburg Oct 25 af 2 oclock 65 was divided Saturday Mr Clay Frazier killed 21 out of 25 birds in the contest pm Mr Will Blakemore returned yes- in London last week which terday to Chicago after a visit to friends for the State Championship Near Paris Saturday to the wife of E T SEEDING ¬ was won by Sam Hutchings of Louis- iu Paris James Thompson nee Miss Tillie Fer ¬ Sheriff Bourbon County Ky 25 The birds ville who killed guson a son James William Ferguson Council Wilson and Miss Ida May prize was 210 and a silver cup Bland Rev Dr Yarden ot this city preachLexington visited friends hi Thompson -Ballard Louisville Nath Woodcock Frazier of ed Sunday at the Broadway Christian the city Sunday SCINTILLATIONS Danville and A W DuBray of Da3ton Church iu Lexington Mrs Lillie Gentry Lee of Palmyra O tied Hutchings but lost in shooting Jumble Of News And ¬ Mrs Foster who has been conduct- off the tie Hutchings killed forty Mo is the handsome guest of Mrs John An Interesting Comment ing a boarding house in the Griffith birds straight to win the championship James on Main Street Principal Bell has foroidden football property has moved to Lexington Mr and Mrs Arthur Calvert and at the Harrddsburg High School Will McNamaras New Enterprise daughter of Covington are visiting rel- ¬ Hyacinths Gov Bradley has refused to pardon Bulbs Chinese Llllies McNamara Prof John Doug- ¬ atives in and near the city Will and Tulips also choice cat Roses ex Bank Cashier Shipp at Midway lass of this city who was several of Lexing ¬ Miss Margaret Prewitt W M Goodloe Water was sold for fifty cents per times buried alive by Boone the hypno- ¬ ton is visiting her sister Miss Mary 4fr barrel in Franklin county this month Lost Black and white fox terrier tist and who afterwards performed the Prewitt at Mr J W Harmons Mrs A G Browning of Maysville is with black across hips Reward for in- ¬ feat successfully with another hypnotiz- ¬ Miss Mary Talbott spent Saturday one of the heirs of an estate valued at formation or return to Frank Bowden ed subject has organized a new enter ¬ in Lexington with her sister Miss Anna 4000J000 Paris Ky prise known as The Gypsy Maids Lee Talbott who is attending Hamilton A well dressed white infant was aban- ¬ The company which will be headed by College Rev Norman B Wood will give his Rosella the Wandering Gypsy Queen doned at a negro home in Richmond illustrated lecture The Real Negro as will give theatrical performances Miss June Jameson left yesterday The Saturday to attend college a Bondman a Freed in an and a Free- company be managed by Prof for Terre Haute Ind will Thieves stole 3000 from the bank at at Antioch Uhurch Saturday Mr man Douglass and backed financially by a She will board with her sister Motganfield while the president and evening at 780 Cincinnati man The Pettibone Co of Palmer Graham cashier were at dinner Mr S E Tipton and daughters confec- Cincinnati is making the costumes Fugazzi the F A nervy thief at Georgetown sold and caterer yesterday received a The company will start soon for Seattle Miss Tipton and Mrs D C Parrish were some stolen chickens to their former tioner fine line of Lowneys famous chocolate and will go from there to Alaska guests of Mr and Mrs E A Tipton in owner who had not missed them bon bons in all size packages They Prof Douglass will act as correspondent Lexington Saturday and Sunday A match race between John R Gentry Mrs Ernest Richey of New Paris are exceedingly dainty and toothsome for the Cincinnati Post while in Alaska arranged to take 0 who was formerly Miss Bessie and Robert J has been Try a box 27 For Womans Eyes Brepden of this city arrived here Sat ¬ place at Cumberland Park on October One night last wek thieves stole a 200 Howard Crockett of Wilmore was The womans edition of the Mt Ster- ¬ urday for a visit to friends and relatives and skinn ling Adoocate which appears Friday lb ho from Mr Win Tarr Mr James Withers of Cynthiana fatally shot by his own pistol The hide on Mr TaraV will be an excellent paper filled with ed it and left its was the guest of Mr and Mrs J W shooting is said to have been accidental farm Last year they stole two hogs excellent articles on a yarietyiof sub- Davis Sunday Mr Withers health is Mrs Jeff Coffee of Madison eloped to from him and left the hog Bkins as evi- jects This edition shonld prove inter- ¬ much benefited from a recent stay atl Indian Territory with her cousin Win dence of their visit esting to the larLP number of Paris Mt Clemens Mich Johnson leaving a husband and three The public cistern on the court house ladies who are members of literary The hundreds of friends of genial daughters nearb grown Gen Fitzhugh Lee was robbed of 190 square which has furnished water to clubs as it will give them the best work Henry Saxton of Lexington will regret The to hear that his wife is dangerously ill in by pickpockets in Richmond Saturday The of their Mt Sterling friends several hundred people is dry drug Lexington but trust that her improve- night while helping some ladies on a water has not been pure for some time paperj will be on sale at Vardens street car at a Wild West show ment and recovery will be rapid and it is probably a fortunate thing that store the cistern has been pumped dry Mis3 Ex Cashier Shipp of Midway was The Danville Advocate says Public Speaking To day Hazelrigg of Frankfort Miss Margaret taken to the Frankfort penitentiary Sat- ¬ Hon J R Hindman National Demo- ¬ Woodford of Mt Sterling and Miss urday He is said to have aged rapidly charged Johnson Lamb colored Ken- ¬ Elizabeth Spears and Miss Bessie Wood- ¬ since his conviction and is in a feeble with attempting to rape Lilly Turney a cratic candidate for Clerk of the tucky Court of Appeals will address ford of Paris will arrive Friday to visit condition ¬ fourteen year old colored girl of Millersburg had his examining trial Satur- ¬ the citizens of Bourbon county at the Miss Elizabeth Van Meter In Georgia Sunday Sam Jones cele- ¬ court housb this afternoon at two day in Squire Lillestons court Lamb Miss Lottie Lee Kenney of Russell brated his fiftieth birth day with a big Mr Hindman is a gifted by the oclock was held in 300 bond for trial rave Miss Sadie Kenney of Kansas dinner which was attended by fifty gentleman and one of Kentuckys best Circuit Court Mary Kerr of Fayette guests Sam is now old enough to citizens He should be greeted by a City and Miss are guests at Mr Matthew Kenneys know how to preach without being large audience Kentucky the near Paris Miss Mary Prewitt of Lex ¬ vulgar On account of Scbool Association Attendance at Paris High ington is expected to join the party in a Medical Midland County Judge Bullock of Lexington Thursday the meeting at Cynthiana was arrested Saturday and held to Prop E W Weaver has furnithed few days Midland No 1 will F C Kentuckj on charges of assault with a pistol News with the following compara- ¬ ahead of time from The Yesrun forty minuces and carrying concealed weapons OBITUARY statement of the attendance at the to Paris to make connection tive Georgetown It will be Respectfully Dedicated To The Memory terday Judge Bullock was fined 25 and Paris High School white N L with costs on each charge but both sentences noticed that there is a large increase in Of The Dead were suspended both the enrollment and average attend- ¬ Col John L Loan a noted rational- ¬ you been coughing a ance How long have In Germany recently a young fellow ist of Nicholasville died last week attempted to make a kissing record by Dr a month or a year day a week Sep94 Sp9o Sp96 Sp97 trouble and the excessive us kissing his sweetheart 10000 times in Pine Tar Hony will cure that No enrolled Belles 427 from liver 399 323 292 395 4U of cigarettes cough There can be no doubt of it be- Ave belonging 292 316 ten hours stopping a few minutes every 365 394 equally Ave attendance250 288 edi- ¬ Mr Charles A Dana the famous cause it has cured many others half hour The young man scored 2000 investigate tor of the New York Sun died Sunday kisses in the first hour and 1000 in the severe Every one should Successful Excursions graet remedy afternoon at his country place near second He had reached 750 in the the merits of this The Cynthiana Military Bands excur- ¬ Glen Cove L I of cirrhosis of the third hour when his lips were paralyzed Noah Williams who has served a sion to Natural Bridge Friday was a liver Mr Dana has been ill since and he became unconscious The train was com- ¬ June 10 last He was seventy eight term in the penitentiary for obtaining great success Our stock of lmnber is dry and bright years of age See picture and dispatch goods nnder false pretenses being sent posed of eight packed coaches Bourbon Lumber Co up from Bourbon has been arrested at The excursion run Saturday by the on second page By T H Tarr Manager tf He Carlisle Christian Church to Natural Cynthiana for highway robbery Patrick Winn aged about eighty drew a knife on Simon Freidrich held Bridge and Torrent had eleven well fill- ¬ wiio has been living on Mr Catesby Pure Tin cans glass and stone jars him up and relieved him of fifteen cents ed coaches farm died Saturday night spices and cider vinegar for pickling Woodfords He is survived by a wife and several guaranteed pure Friedrich had the balance of his money Card From Dr Creason His funeral was con- ¬ grown children concealed in his shoes Newton Mitchell tf I have decided to continue the practice ducted yeaterday morning at eight well of medicine in Centerville precinct oclock at the Catholic Church by Rev Frank Snyder of Louisville Insure in the Northwestern to- ¬ husband of Those who favor me with their pat-¬ Edward Burke Burial at the Catholic known in Paris being the day to morrow may be too late ¬ Miss Lula Martin has resigned as Sec- ronage will receive the very best of cemetery retary of the Kentucky and Tennessee my ability and attention as a physician James Wornall aged sixty six died of Respectfully Board ot Underwriters at a salary of Mr at Lair Sunday 2t J A Creason M D feveran ex Bourbon and leaves Wornall 3000 per year and has been appointed was a wife special agent for the Liverpool London ¬ nee Sophia Edwards sister of Mrs Belle and Globe Insurance Company for KenLost On yesterday a feather col- ¬ Hutchison and the late Ossian Edwards tucky Tennessee and Arkansas with lar between the residence ot Mrs Ev headquarters at Louisville The posi- ¬ Rogers and the cemetery Finder will Funeral this afternoon at two oclock at Cynthiana The active pall bearers are tion is a promotion for Mr Snyder please return same to The News office Ossian Edwards T J Wornall T J 2t and receive reward Megibben T S Riley Frank Chandler Meeting 4fr Bourbon Club J T LaiLWni Ballenger Dr J T For Rent Desirable brick cottage Ware the Bouibon Dancing The members of Club are requested to meet to night at five rooms good cellar and other im- ¬ 730 at the Windsor Hotel provements on South Main street Dont you let your grocer give you L Spears Pres For particulars apply to -any but roller mill meal ncaisTcifo J T Hinton tf Hibler Co t Again Dr Catlett Wins The Northwestern is carrying nearly Turney Bros good and We sell all kinds of 1000000 insurance on the lives of coltDr Catlett won the Belle Meade Bourbon Countys representative citi- ¬ shingles posts etc cheaperlumber any ¬ For Sale By than Stakes Saturday at Morris Park near Bourbon Lumber Co zens Call on R P Bow Jr or W S one New York The race waa worth 1200 By T H Tarb Manager tf DeLongfor particulars tf s to thewinner ¬ One of the finest concerts ever heard in Kentucky will be that given by th e COMERS -- AND GOERS OBSERVED BY Seventeenth Year Established 1881 THE NEWS MAN famous orchestra leader Anton Seidl Entcied at the Post office at Paris Ky as who has just returned from a most suc iss mail matter 8eco cjc s ul season in London and on the Notes Hastily Jolted On The Streets At The Depots Tn The Hotel Lobbies And European continent at the Lexington Elsewhere Opera House on Tuesday evening Octo- ¬ TELEPHONE NO 124 the preMr John N Davis was in Cincin- ¬ Mr Seidl is ber 26th SUBSCRIPTION PRICES mier director of Grand Opera and nati Sunday Payablein Advance Grand Orchestral concerts in this coun- - j Capt J R Rogers is in Louisville 2 00 Six mouths One year 3100 try to day Every member of his grand on a business trip news costs you caut even get a re ¬ orchestra is a musician of international port FKOX A GTTN FREE OF CHARGE Miss Nannie Roberts is visiting reputation and several of them have friends in Cynthiana Make all Checks Money Orders Etc been members of Royal Court Orches ¬ payable to the order of Champ Miller Mrs Mattie McCarney is visiting tras in Europe Mr Seidls Orchestra is accomp mied by Mme Julia Rive King relatives in Lexiugton THE BDURBQH HEWS Great Musical Festival At Lexington PERSONAL MENTION NUPTIAL KNOTS Engagements Announcements And Sol- ¬ emnizations Of The Marriage Vows - Marriage seems to be a failure at Paducab There 125 Civorce suits on PUT OUR NAME On your list when in need of Footwear Our new stock of Shoes is arriving daily which comprises zill trcfe new shapes and tips better values than we have eVer been able to offer before lohn Lair of Lair and Miss Meek Moore a pretty the docket there The marriage of Mr Our Childrens School Shoes have been selected with much care insuring both durability and comfort Ask for school tablets fres for the little ones when making your purchases NOTICE TO TAX PAYERS Davis Thomson Isgrig ¬ ¬ ¬ My importations for this Fall and Winter of Ladies and Chil ¬ drens Dress Goods exceed in cost of investment 10000 anv other pui chase I ever made in this one line of goods With forty years experi- ¬ ence in Dry Goods business in Paris I saw it was to your and my in- ¬ terest to secure these goods under the low tariff consequently I invested every available dollar I had in goods at low prices The new Dingley tariff bill has already made and will when set fully at work make all classes of Dry Goods fully double in price what they were un- derthe Wilson or low tariff I have the advantage of this My goods were bought when cheap and it is my intention to hold them down as long as a yard of them lasts If you want to save money in your pur ¬ chase this Fall and Winter come and see me and examine my srock and hear prices before you invest elsewhere ¬ ¬ G TUCKER 529 0 h MAIN ST PARK KY WE ARE ALWAYS AT IT Adding new lines cutting old prices with a store full of new Fall Goods tosh w you Large line of new Dress goods Fall Underwear fr Ladies Genwool 25c a yard tlemen and Children of every de ¬ strictly ¬ up-to-da- te ¬ ¬ Novelties in Plain and Fancv scription at Half the usual price Dress goods at50c sold everywhere Blankets SI kind for 49c and eJs for 75c to 1 per yard all wool at 8250 per pair Splen ¬ Handsome line of Silks Velvets did line of Bfd Comforts and Braids of all descriptions for Full line of Hosiery one gre trimmings special being our Ladies and Chil Penangs Pecale and Fancy drens full seamless ac 10c Outing Cloths 5c 7c and 10c We are the only store in towa Table Linens and Towels at old prices notwithstanding tariff ad that cames full line of lephras Ice Wool and fancy yarns vance of 20 per cent We still sell 104 Pepp- - cl sheet Notions of all kinds and in Dress linings we will save rou 25c ing at 8c and extra go- d bleach- ¬ ed and unbleached cwtton at 5c on the dollar ¬ 1 - Family Portraits life size Free of charge ¬ ¬ CONDONS WiiBr iS mB ¬ 1897 NEW HOOSIER WHEAT DRILLS Both Shoe and Disk -- J Oldest and Most Reliable Built See them f For Sale Just received Toy O- - 35333 v ARBS Car of the Celebrated STEELE SKEIN BIRDSELL WAGONS Call and examine before you buy an-swer ¬ 0 EDWARD 3FtxIiS iF JBti y i i WE HATE EE0EIVED A SPLENDID ST0OK ¬ IMPORTED SUITINGS ASD TROUSERINGS FOR FALL AND WINTER Our Prices are lower than any house in Central Kentucky quality and style are considered We ask you to give us a call JSJr BE a wh8D M B ii FJLIVE S C33HCI3C ArT TAILORS Shirt Full line of samples if 1 E TIPTON Cutter E Smith We are also agents for the celebrated Giias H DONT TRUST EVERY LAUN DRY SIGN YOU SEE ¬ A a rl street while traveling down Consult your friends first whom you see wearing unfrayed beauti ¬ fully laundered linen and yon vi 1 find when you come to inq u whose laandry they patronize that 4 it was I three-year-o- ld CHOCOLATE BON BONS F FUGAZZI The Bourbon Steam Laundry W M HINTON JR Telephone No 4 BRO Proprietors n I fi 11 ii s v T V r I S lL-- - I f a Br THE BOURBON NEWS T UESBAYOCTOBER 19 1897 THE BOURBON NEWS Seventeenth Year Established 1881 Published Every Tuesday and Friday by WALTER CHAMP I BRUCE MILIiEKfkaHoriMWiOwntnl THE DOME OF PICTURES In a tittle house keep I pictures suspended the other side JTet behold It has room for all the shows of the world all the memories JSere the tableaux of life and here the groupings of death WALT WHITMAN Ah each man bears his Dome of Dreams A picture dome Whereon are painted homely cares tefeats and triumphs and despairs A gallery thronged with wider themes Than those of Home The pictures of this Dome of Dreams Are memories Young Barefoot wandering through the dew Through daisied fields when life was new By woodland paths by lilied streams And blossomed trees The picture of a maid at school With floating hair Transfigured hi the mist Is she On that dim shore of memory Lifes dewiness about her cool And pure and fair The picture of a road that leads From an old home A boy that from a wooded swell Looks through his tears and waves farewell-Then It is round It Is only a few inches from one to it is not a fixed house - - I- l I J4 lb k down through unknown hills and meads Afar to roam The picture of the long long way He traveled far Fair fruited hillside slanting south Baked herblets upland smit with drought And night paths with no gleam of day Without a star And pictures of wide sleeping vales And storm tossed waves Of valleys bathed in noonday peace Of sheltered harbors of release Blue inlets specked with sunlit sails Of open graves t And pictures of fair islands set In golden foam And pictures of black wrecks upcast On barren crags by many a blast But on Life paints more pictures yet Upon that dome Sam Walter Foss In N Y Sun PERILS I OP AUTHORSHIP I wWWAWWWAWMVAWMVAMWWW teaspoon and tried to finish her roll and coffee John had just left for his office They had been married three months and the serious aspects of life were for the first time presenting-themselves MILDREDS as she toyed with her pretty face wore a new I wish I could do something to help John thought Mildred as she gazed abstractedly out of the window He to work so hard and she gave a lit- ¬ lias tle sigh What can I do she pondered What can I do she asked herself again and again as with deft touch she straightened and arranged the dainty apartment Suddenly her race looked as if a door had opened and flooded it with sun¬ light V a story I know I can if I try People do not have to be so awfully clever to do that It is a knack not a talent who has made There is Mrs money and her stories are only heaps of poor trash all of theni John says so Before another hour had passed the outline of a plot was dancing in her excited young brain and as soon as she could get the time she sat down with pad and sharpened pencil Then came a pause How shall I begin She drew little geometric figures on the margin of her paper as she reflected her thoughts seeming to revolve in a circle returning ever to the place from whence they started Finally she I know what 1 will do 1 will write wrote In a small village on the banks of Oh tlhat is so commonplace No that will not do And she tore off the first sheet of her pad and reflected again then wrote a Frank Atwood was the only sou of No no that is too stupid and the second sheet of the pad went into the waste paper basket She recalled what John had said of the superfluous first three pages which might with benefit to most stories be eliminated for John was a journalist and literary critic and his standards and ideals were just on the measure of her own So she thought Avith great deference of what he bad said about - tedious preambles He is right she said with decision It is the personal interest in the char- ¬ acters which we art looking for in reading a story All that comes before that is tedious superfluity I will dash right on Avith a letter from the heroine which will at once explain the situation So with the con- ¬ fidence which came from feeling herself at last on the right track she wrote Dear Frank I return herewith the let- ¬ ters which of course I have now no right to keep I need not tell you what it cost me ¬ -- said yesterday but I am at last resolved I will not see you again Any attempt to snake me break this resolve will be fruit- ¬ less God knows you have only yourself to blame that this marriage has Please- maam said the cool com¬ ing suddenly in upon the young author ¬ Please maam the butcher is ess here Will you come and see him and give the order yourself about havin them chops f reached or whatever it is Oh what a bore sighed Mildred 1 was just getting into the swing of it And she left the manuscript upon her desk to be resumed later Tho matter of the chops disposed of there were other things requiring at- ¬ - I have reflected much upon what you - i tention At last however she Avas at her desk again She read over the letter with which her story opened to see how it HcaUy sounded said shi I think standing and you need not trouble yourself Why John said she have you lost your senses No on the contrary I have recov- ¬ ered them I am no longer a dupe 1 Avas fool enough to think you Yes is it you Alice John for Gods sake tell me Avhat Yes Mamma does not feel very well this means said he Mildred Oh Mildred and wishes you to take luncheon with Be breaking doAAn utterly Why did you u She has sent the carriage ready to come as soon as it arrives Ob not tell me like an honest Avoman that viously no more authorship to day So you loved some one else slipping her paper into the desk she John you knoAv I departed Stop said he Stop do not stain authorship your soul with any more falsehood The neAv purpose of brought a great light and hope into You need not have married me God Mildreds life She pictured to herself Avent on the Avretched man review- ¬ knows I Avish you had not his reading her story possibly ing it After he has written all lands She tried to put her anus about him Avill tell him as he paced to and fro in rapid strides of nice things about it I that I am the author or and her but he pushed her away angrily No heart turned cold and sick what if he no more of that That has lost its should say it was trash For of course charm like other good critics John Avas selMildred burst into tears dom pleased If things were all excel- ¬ I never would have believed lent what would be the need of critics you Avould be so so cruel sobbed So he had cultivated the artof discover- she What have I done ing flaws in what seemed to ordinary Done shouted the exasperated readers pure gems He had developed man done Why you have spoiled rather a talent for pillorying people in the life of an honest man AATho doted on a single terse phrase and Avas much 3rou believed in you like a trusting valued for his skill in beating down fool who Avould have risked his life on with the editorial club tender young your honesty aspirants Avho Avere trying to make Stop said Mildred and she gath themselves heard This sounds brutal ered Herself up to a fuller height than But he Avas only professionally brutal Johns eyes had ever before beheld in In his personal characteristics none her She too was angry now could be more tender or sympathetic If you have any charges to make I Mildred knew of this caustic vein and demand that they be definite and not in believed it too as she did also all of base innuendo You are very cruel and Johns attributes and gifts but she also very insulting to me I shall not thought if he should say any of those remain in this house to night nor redreadful things about me what should turn to it until you have apologized I do I should never never tell him And she SAvept from the room and from And so during the entire day she Johns astonished sight thought and planned new intricacies A moment later he heard the messen- ¬ of plot suggesting themselves vivid ger call then heard his Avife give an or- ¬ and interesting scenes coming before der for a cab then saAv her packing a her stimulated imagination handbag He intended doing so him- ¬ Her mother urged her remaining and self But somehow having her do them sending for her husband to dine Avith was infinitely harder to bear them Her secret desire Avas to return Mildred was very angry Not a she looked at her mothers Avistf ul thing of his she said to herself as she but face and had not the heart to refuse stripped off her rings and gathered her She would stay and send for John My purse too she thought trinkets That gentleman arrived at home at and Avent to the desk to find it Her hus ¬ the usual hour As he put his latch band had been Avatching for this He key into the door he smiled thinking kneAV she would try to secure that let- ¬ of the quick ear Avhich Avas listening for ter Oh it and of the pretty apparition Avhich said he you are a little too By Jove would meet him in the hall late You should have thought of that he thought what a lucky fellow I am before These to her unmeaning words ut- ¬ But the expected figure did not come of a tered with much concentrated bitter- ¬ to meet him He Avas conseious little chill of disappointment and still ness made her seriousty doubt his san- ¬ more as he wandered through the rooms ity She looked at him curiously Hoav else could she construe this incompre- ¬ and found all silent and deserted hensible fury she pursued He rang for the maid The thought had calmed her resentment Where is your mistress She is out sir Theres a note sir She Avent to his side placed her hand My dear John someAvhere and she looked anxiously kindly on his arm Oh it is on her desk said she said she will you explain to me Avhat about Avith returning memory starting to go all this means He felt touched and oh Iioav he for it longed to take her to his heart but that No matter I Avill get it and John turned his impatient steps toward his could never be again Will you first explain to me he an- ¬ Avifes room There was no note on the desk and quite naturally he opened the swered trying to be hard and cold lid His e3res Avere riveted upon the explain to me AAhere you were yester- ¬ day Avords befoie him Certainly he is mad she thought Dear Frank I return herewith the and she tried to be very calm letters which I have no longer any right Ah yes he Avent on You can look to keep I need not tell you what it very innocent but woman look at costs me He felt as if his blood Avere turned that and with tragic gesture he held up the paper into ice Mildred looked at it bewildered then I have reflected much upon Avhat she read Dear Frank A gleam of you said yesterday light first came into her face and grad Yesterday John felt as if heAvere and he had ually deepened into an expression of in Yesterday going mad so trusted her The room had groAvn terest and amusement She understood black and a great sledge hammer was it all John looked to see her crushed de- ¬ beating at his brain but he read on spairing and penitent and instead he upon AAhat you said yesterday but I am at last resolved I Avill not see you witnessed this unaccustomed- - this ex- ¬ again Any attempt to make me break traordinary change and laughter God peal after peal of silvery laughter rang this resolve Avill be fruitless Iciioavs you haA e only yourself to blame through the rooms She tried to speak but could not that this marriage has John stood for a feAv moments as if John in his turn began to think that turned into stone his face blanched she Avas mad At last Avith tears run ¬ his muscles tense Then a ray of hope ning down her cheeks not from grief seemed to come to him There is no this time she said Oh you dear silly silly thing Oh signature it is not hers He looked Hoav could he doubt it again He you dear goose thats my story and knew too well the turn of every letter I Avas going to surprise jou and bring He Avas alternately livid Avithrage and you ever ever so much money and and ehokingAvith grief His dream of happi- now you have gone and spoiled here she began to cry in earnest And ness vanished Something like a curse you have said such cruel came from between his closed teeth cruel She loves this man and she meets Her sobs together with Johns great him and tells him so and only yesterenfolding arms stifled the rest Oh my day Oh it is too horrible too horHe buried his face in his hands angel my angel I have been such a rible N and groaned I shall go awaj I shall brute Can 3 ou ever forgive me Y Graphic never At that moment the telephone bell rang He took no notice of it I shall never Again it rang long WHY SOLDIERS WERE TOO SHORT and loud What should he do There Prince Hismurck Myxttlied by Criti ¬ Avas no one else to ansAA er it he must cism of German Troops go So he said huskily Hello Just at the time when vague reports Mildreds silvery voice replied Avere beginning to creep abroad that John is that you Germany was meditating fresh exThe situation Avas shocking Hoav tension of her frontier at the expense could he reply but there Avas no of Holland a Dutch officer of high rank time for reflection He lcneAv that the happened to be visiting the court ol central office Avould share all his confi- Berlin and among other spectacles go dences through that infernal piece of up to amuse him a revieAV was organ- black Avalnut and ebony So he said ized at Potsdam Yes What does your excellency think of Why do you not come Dinner is our soldiers asked Prince Bismarck as one of the regiments came marching aiting for you How Avell he kneAv the pretty inflec- past in admirable order They look as if they knew how to tions of that voice I Avish no dinner I am going away fight replied the visitor gravely but they are not quite tall enough good by The prince looked rather surprised It might have been the conventional but made no ansAver and several other telephonic good by or it might conregiments filed past in succession but tain aprofounder meaning the Dutchmans verdict upon each Avas The effect at the other end of the line Not tall cannot be described Ten minutes later still the same grenadiers enoughguard At length the of the a cab drove furiously up to the door of made their appearance a magnificent the apartment house and Mildred Avith body of and stalwart white face and fast beating heart enough toveterans big even thegiant-loA-in- g have satisfied rushed into the room and Avould have father of Frederick the Great rushed into Johns arms if he had let but the inexorable critic merely said her Fine soldiers but not tall enough You are going away she said Then Prince Bismarck rejoined breathlessly These grenadiers are the finest men in You are a very clever actress said army may I ask Avhat your that gentleman Tepulsing her intended our whole is excellency pleaedto mean by saying embrace that they are not tall enough A what said she amazediJohn The Dutchmaro looked him full in the and then she Unly your up the broken thread took self to blame that this marriage has A violent ringing at the telephone again Hallo said our broke the current young novelist Mildred is that you off very well that starts FIREPROOF WOOD FOR SHIPS Seme of tlie Advantages and Dlaad- - s HUMOR The Genuine Article la Becoming AMERICAN HUMOROUS ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ make a thorough investigation of the use of fireproof Avoody and the result is predicted that the government Avill find it advisable to cancel contracts that have been made for fitting1 vessels under construction with woodlthus treated The board of bureau chiefs has re ceived several reports already The Columbian iron works at Baltimore reports that five coats of paint Avere tried on a single section of fireproof wood and it refused to receive any of them Of the superintending constructors at the Aarious naval stations one report declares that the tools employed in Avorking the wood have been badly cor- ¬ roded by the chemicals used in the fire proofing treatment Another makes a report upon the corrosive effect upon the steel and iron- in the ship It is also reported that the AAoodl is exceedingly porous and is apt to make the decks of a ship spongy An article recently ap peared in an English service paper writ ten by an expert in which the writer describes the decks of the armored cruiser Brooklyn- as of noninflammable Avood andi he contrasted their appear- ¬ ance disadvantageously with those of He also pre the British Avould not AAear dicted that the decks Avell and Avas generally uncomplimentary to jnoninflanumabLe Avood Prof Biles the Avell known English expert hasxeorrected this statement by declaring the decks of the Brooklyn are not of noninflammable Avood but that they are thoroughly sound andi tho ¬ roughly durable andinevery respect up to the mrk The decks of the Brooklyn are of Oregon pine The gunboat Helena is fitted- AAith a deck made of fireproof ood arid the board of bureau chiefs is to make a close inspection of the ma- ¬ terial and its effect mpon- the ship and report upon the advisabilitjr of its use in the future The only laTge vessel in the navy the decks of which are built Avith the fireproof Avood is the battle ¬ ship Iowa The subject of moninfiammable Avood Avas discussed at much length by the international congress of naA al archi ¬ tects andr marine engineers Charles E Ellis describing the process of making ¬ ¬ - Very Scarce Noninflammable wood or fireproof America was once famous for its hu wood as it is commonly spoken of out ¬ side of the circle of experts has re ¬ mor It Avas a continental humor an ceived considerable attention from extravagant humor a humor that de naval constructors and naval engineers lighted in antitheses and contradiction since the Yaloo river fight in the China but it Avas genuine and hearty and con Japan war and more especially at the tained many honest laughs It is be-a¬ recent international congress of naval pertinent question to ask what has come its makers architects and marine engineers at gone of this humor Are successors Have they left it no London and from the naval authorities So Avhile never before in of the United States and- Japan The theit seems for have chief of tho bureau of ordnance of the beenhistory of the republic comicthere so many professedly pub United States navy recently made some lications and Avhile never before has the tests of fireproof Avoodr for the purpose joke been as assiduously pursued never of reporting upon its value for use in the output making boxes for fixed ammunition before has meager and of real fun been as pitifully small His report declares that the Avood by The comic papers although in num ¬ being treated with the chemicals used bers as the sands of the seashore con- ¬ in the fireproof process lost consider ¬ tain little else but boiler plate jokes able strength and was difficult to work The situations never change new ideas that it also corroded a piece of brass are never introduced everything is as placed between two pieces of it ab ¬ hopelessly artificial and jejune as the sorbed moisture toatmarked extent and perspective of a Chinese landscape refused to receive paint This report painting There is no episode except resulted in instructions by Secretary the one of catastrophe no lovers ex-¬ Long to the board of bureau chiefs to cept those kicked off the premises no ¬ ¬ vantages Incident to Its Use ¬ - She decidedly You shouldnt say J I wont He wont to me you should say I pre She But that wouldnt fer not Hanrlem Life be true Hard Luck I see in the paper that some feller has a corner in Avheat Gosh replied said Mrs Beanpod Sorry fer him I Farmer Beanpod hed a Avhole field and wisht Id hed more Philadelphia North American ¬ tramps but those fleeing from the pitchThe party paused now to contemfork of some caricatured agriculturist plate Ixion on his wheel I dont see or dodging the assault of an impossible Avhere the torture comes in Avhispered dog Bicycling is limited to corpulent Aeneas Pluto AAho Avas personally middle aged persons or to shadoAvy conducting the tour of the distiiir spinsters or to scorchers whose physi- guished Trojans through Hades point- ¬ ognomies are borrowed from the rogues ed silently to the name plate it Avas a galleries All negroes are represented last years Avhecl The son of Anchises as baboons all Irish as barbarians all shuddered and hurried on Truth Germans as beer drinking idiots and Thus I have been thinking all Hebrews as people intent upon de ¬ mused Gen Weyler and no one seemed frauding insurance companies Avell enough acquainted with him to We are told that the caricaturists have dispute his assertion That if I had a neAv device by means of Avhich they that overland route through Alaska noAv Avork by mechanical process The dOAvn here in Cuba And he looked product indicates that the machine has daggers so forcibly that bystanders gone into general use As the essence could even observe the trade mark on of fun is surprise Avho can be amused the handle Id make a great old AAhen you know before a look at the trocha out of it Truth cover not only the general run of the contents but the detail as well The SILK HAT AND OVERALLS Give me a kiss ¬ ¬ ¬ Twin Whiff ett is perfectly crazy about fishing TripletWHeJudge anglermaniac Let me Display No Unnecessary May Eeelast Saturday was Miss How not Tewers birthday was it It passed off did the day pass off quietly It Avas her fortieth Chicago Tribune He Isnt it a disagreeable fea ture of golf losing the ball so often She Oh no thats the only way George and I could get out of hearing Yonkera of the caddie for an instant Statesman He Overheard at Bar Harbor - 3 ¬ ¬ ¬ - men-of-Av- ar ¬ poverty of mental resources shoAvn bAr our so called comic Aveeklies demonstrates that to be funny all the time is not to be funny and that to be humorous all the time is to be systematically dull American humor is becoming ex ¬ tinct and the substitutes for it are the dreariest outputs in the Avorld There Avas American humor and there have been American humorists The equal of Phenix Artemus Ward Orpheus C Kerr Mark Twain Josh Billings Charles W Poster Q K Philander Doesticks P B Philip Welch Hans Breitmann and the like noAvhere existed Persons old or young Avho ¬ ¬ ¬ A liittle Story of Street Life Which DoAAn Avere ing recently two men briskly Toints a Moral on Broadway one bright morn- ¬ walking feed the broad colusmns of the so called comic Aveeklies are happily anonymous Des Moines Leader - AA CHEAP WAY TO GET NEWS Economy Shown uy Business Men on Even a penny is a large amount of money to people these days In fact it has looked quite large to a considerable portion of the traveling public ever since the transportation lines com- ¬ menced operations and men have been accustomed to read papers while in the Alley I Trains - transit and abandon them Avhen near ing their getting off places This read ¬ ing the paper on the trains is as much an industry Avith many men as the Avood nonoombustible They saidt that it in- ¬ daily business at their offices Aveight from eight to fifteen buy the papers at the stations Avhere creased the per cent and thatthe arguments for its they get on the alley L trains read use rested upon tAAo grounds only i e because it is noninflammable and be- ¬ cause by reason of its loAvconductivity of heat it may be employed in substi- ¬ tution for material of greater conduct ¬ ive power Others spoke favorably of the ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ A ¬ ¬ -- material Its chief draAvbacks Avere represented to be its weight and cost Prof Biles suggested that the effect of eather on the wood- might be nullified if the decks were washed Avith a solution of the chemicals used in the fire proofing process The system is really an American- invention and so much discussion Avas given the subject by the congress that toe British admiralty ihas ordered a series of experiments to be made at the Chatham- dockyard in order to obtain additional and Aaluable information of the adAantages or of the fireproof Avood X Y Tribune An Arciiaoologricnl Tliief It Avould seem that French thieves and housebreakers Avhen searching for art treasures are more or less affected by the genius of their spoils Becentl3r an enterprising but undiscoAered per ¬ sonage managed to effect an entry in- ¬ to the Maison Caree at Nimes and to carry off the famous Goudard collection of over 8000 Eoman coins In- ¬ stead of rushing off wRh them to the tices them thev- suppose Chicago melting pot he seems to have Avan Chronicle as dered about the other interesting relics Camphor Trees in Florida of antiquity for Avhich the old provinThe failure of the aaoiMs supply of cial city is famous and after some hesitation selected the immediate neigh- camphor Avould deprive mankind of ai borhood of the Tourmagne that still great boon There is probably no unexplained enigma of the past for actual danger of such failure yet the a hiding place The spoiler of the camphor trees of China Formosa and Maison Caree in his choice seems to Japan have been destroyed so rapidly in have leaned to the iews of those ar- ¬ recent years that the question has been chaeologists Avho maintain that the discussed Avhether they can be replaced Tourmagne Avas a treasure house in It AAould be desirable if possible to Roman or pre Boman times At any cultiAate them in lands lying nearer to rate he used it as such for the Avhole the great centers of civilization and ex- ¬ collection was found stored aAvay periments are said to have shoAvii that there and has noAv been once more the climate of Florida is well suited to renlaced in its usual and accessible their groAvth Cultivated in Florida bY scientific methods it is claimed that the show cases N Y Times life of the trees could be saved instead The Trne Scriptural Age of Man of being destroyed in the process of colWe have all heard of the well Avorn lecting the precious gum as has hither- ¬ axiom attributed to the psalmist The to been the case in the east Youths days of a man are three score and ten Companion but in Genesis vi 3 ill be found the A Difference Yet his days shall iolloAving passage Jones BroAvn Lend me 50 old man be an hundred and tAvcnty years This AA - ¬ - - dis-adA-anta- ges ¬ them hurriedly AAhile riding north Avard and toss them aside at Twelfth street They are of the class Avho stand lip betAveen the two last stations in or ¬ der to croAvd to the front door and get off first In every car there are always men AAho do not rush to get off They play Avith Avatch chains gaze at the readers and vary the monotony by looking out of the windows They have no papers but the- - want them So AAhen the busy readers rush to the front and leave their dailies behind these thrifty men proAA 1 about under seats and on seats looking for a chance to procure the news at no cost to themselves The trainmen of course are busy on the platforms and haAe no opportunity to pick up the papers Avhen the owners have abandoned them Noaa these economists have favorite sheets They seize the first at hand on the chance of finding one of their favorite publication Then they hold on grimly still looking eagerly about If they locate one they most affect they seize upon it AAith a look of exultation drop the other and pass out of the car calmly folding up the paper as if theAr had been immersed in the neAAs and never noticed how near it Avas to Con- ¬ gress street Its cheap and nobody no¬ ¬ - subdued tone Much bliged to yer sir The man in the silk hat boAved cour- ¬ teously in acknoAAledgment and re crossed the street to his waiting friend Seems to me you took a good deal of trouble to set that boy right Avas someAvhat himself to his friend Avaded through the mud on the crossing and with the plumbers apprentice at his side searched the signs without success Then he took the boy to the drug store on the corner and helped him run over the names in the directory until he found that the boys employer had made a mistake in the number The correct address Avas substituted and the lad in overalls put upon the right track by his distinguished guide with such marked courtesy that the boy paused as he turned away to say in a They were dressed AAith great care and good taste Shiny silk hats fresh gloves and glossy shoes indicated not only attention to little things but also a comfortable income Both men had alert intelligent faces and each looked as if he might be somebody The younger man seemed to be unknoAvn to the majority of those on the street but in his companion pe ¬ destrians recognized one AAhose reputa- ¬ tion is national and AAhose picture has appeared at one time and another in newspapers all over the country At the corner of Cedar street stood a short chunky lad perhaps 15 years old dressed in overalls and jumper In one hand he carried a piece of lead pipe in the other a soiled scrap of paper His smutty face hadi an anxious look As the two Avell dressed men reached Saj the boy he stopped them AAith boss kin yer tell me where dis place is and he held out the scrap of paper I been chasin meself all up an down de street an I cant hit de combination The older man took the paper Avith a pleasant smile and said I shall be A ery glad to help you if can I He read the address and saw at onco that the place AAas probably on the other side of the street He excused the younger mans greeting ¬ up rude themselves Itseefnsto me a good deal worse to be impolite to a boy like that than to be impolite to a man in my oAvn set Youths Com- ¬ panion groAV manners said the other Boyslikehim are quick to learn They AAork hard and get on fast in business or trade be ¬ cause some one corrects them when they make mistakes But how can they learn politeness They get their man ¬ ners from the people around them If everybodys rude to them they must It AAas a good chance to teach him s ¬ ¬ Failed to Register Properly Well hoAA married They registered Mr and lady so I assigned one to a room in the third story and the other on the etor of the Sylvan hotel of La Porte AAho placed a man and Avife in an situation one night last eek It as in the corridor of the Hutchins that Mr Scott AAas relating the incident to friends What did they do They remained up one half of the AA AA should I knoAv theyAvere A second floor said M E Scott propri- ¬ awic-AA-a- rd 1 ¬ ing for each other to come in Hoaa did WI13- - night in their respective rooms wait¬ the man came creeping down it end AA Dismal DaAvson Vhen I think how I used to be at makes me s ck Everett Wrest On the dead was you All fone Bttn Outlines Wbem a man is in love dceahe ever any good She Well I Avas so good at one time dat ever make mental reservations io re I not only bought booze on oredit but gard to his adored one age Avhats the bought her so often dat de barkeeper AvheriamaniAreallyinilove ago He No face and replied Avith significant em ¬ She ShoAvsit Why she has her A very clever actress said he quite phasis I mean that we can flood our buried nearly tt inch deep St Loui3 he hasnt any mentality Detroit Free had a rubber stamp to put me nam as if she had not spoken but hereafter country 12 feet deep aovrn wit Indianpolis Journal Press London Tit Republic vve wi have a more perfect under- - Bits nal 0o ¬ passage seems to have been overlooked as I have rarely seen it quoted al ¬ though curiousty enough it exactly corresponds to the theory that man should attain five times the period of reaching his maturity Alice Glenesk in Nineteenth Century Ont of Sisht jje Do you think she shows her BroAvn Jones handing him half dollar Why yes certainly 0 I mean 50 not 50 cents will you the stairs between 12 and 1 a m to see what Avas the matter Was he mad Say dont mention it But Ill bet he doesnt register that way again a Houston Tex Post A Man Well I mean 50 cents N Y Jour ¬ of Standing- - ti vL J j yaaa - I4iia a iiimmi urn hhiiumi ru siitJw4a i3tadbk TTgcxuTygra JL hbmi h - -- - itisimigttgsM tMBfetfr Xii- - nKk imy uTfrjuAi1 An THE BOURBON NEWS TUESDAY OCTOBER 19 1897 AGRICULTURAL HINTS It Improvement of Roads The farmer should be particularly in ¬ INTELLIGENT EFFORT Counts an Much as Meey in tlie I CURING KICKING COWS A CHILDS RECOVERY From Paralysis and Six Years of Convulsions Little Fannie Adams of Umatilla Cured of a Dreadful 3ialady A Cure of Unusual Interest A Reporter Investigates From the Lake Region Eustis Fla For some time past the Lake Region has been receiving reports from Umatilla Fla of an almost miraculous cure that had been effected in the case of Fannie Adams a daughter of A J Adams of that place and last Saturday a representative of this paper made a trip to Umatilla for the purpose of determining the authenticity of the same The family live a short distance from the village where it was found that the people were cognizant of the cure which had been effected and were rejoicing with the family in their new found happiness The father A J Adams is a hard working honest farmer from east Tennessee and the family came to Florida four years ago in the hope that a change of climate would be of benefit to their afflicted child Much of their earnings have gone for doctors bills whose services proved unavailing The representative ws greeted by Mrs Adams from whom he gained the story of her great trial Fannie the youngest child was born in east Tennessee and was seven years old on the third day of February 1897 When ten months old she was stricken with paralysis which affected the entire left side This stroke of paralysis was followed by convulsions and from the time little Fannie was ten months old until February 1897 there was not a single day or a night that she did not have spasms of the most distressing ¬ ¬ ¬ Xvery Saturday Tourist Sleeping Ca Aa Ounce terested in having good roads first be ¬ maintain them as real estate cannot escape taxation and secondly for the reason that he has occasion to use them to a greater or less extent in the prose ¬ cution of his business And the last may often outweigh the first in dollars and cents when is taken into con ¬ sideration the moving of heavy loads for a considerable distance over poor roads Here ss a view of the case that should not be lost sight of It is not those alone who drive for pleasure or busi ness over our highways that should ask for or demand their improved condition This is for their interest and cavoiiieiice it is true and rightly too ¬ cause he is usually taxed heavily to ¬ Kindness Is AVort c Peond of Pounding Mxich oE the trouble caused by kick ing cows is caused by bad management on the part of the milker In our experience there is not one cow in a dozen but which if kindly treated will soon dispense with the habit of kicking without severe measures being necessary It pays to be gentle and quiet in hand ling the cows and to let them know that you are their friend and will not harnn them They will soon learn to respect you if you will treat them kindly It is all well enough for a cow to know and understand that the one who does tho milking is the business manager but kick for the good reason that the milking process hurts them says a writer in the National Stockman There are also occasionally cows that lack from pure meanness However these make ex- ¬ cellent beef The gentle Jerseys are fast taking the place of other breeds on the farm and the ones we have are real pets as gentle quiet apd well behaved as need be We never have any trouble in milking them but often milk them for the first time an the yard without even fasten ing them though we are well aware that the Jersey has plenty of mettle any amount of it when conditions arc favorable for its development Let the dog chase the cows to and from the pas ture and this mettle will soon be ap parent as will be the decrease in the ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ fornia will leave the Ghicago Union Pas senger Station of the Chicago Milwaukee bt Paul Railway at 10 oclock running over the Chicago and Omaha Short Line to Omaha thence via Lincoln Neb Colorado Springs and Leadville Colo Salt Lake City and Ogden Utah Reno Nevada and Sacra mento CaL arriving at San Francisco at ¬ TAKING CARE OF HIMSELF Every Saturday nihtMidland Route tour Jack Was Making Money in Ways ol ist cars en route to Colorado Utah and Cali His Own Choosing Route to California M O OPEN LBTTEK to Ailing Women ¬ 1 These popular every Saturday California excursions for both first and second class nassengers not foreign emigrants are personally conducted by intelligent com- ¬ petent and courteous couriers who will attend to the wants of all passengers en route This is an entirely new feature of tourist car service and will be greatly ap- ¬ preciated by families or parties of friends traveling together or by ladies traveling alone Particular attention is paid to the care of children who usually get weary on a long journey Remember that the Midland Route Tour- ¬ ist Cars are sleeping cars and are supplied with all the accessories necessary to make the journej- - comfortable and pleasant and the sleeping berth rate is but 600 for two persons from Chicago to California Ask the nearest ticket agent for a tour- ¬ ist car folder giving complete informa- ¬ tion about the Midland Route or address Eastern Manager Midland Route No 95 Adams street Chicago 111 or Geo HHeaf ford General Passenger Agent 410 Old Colony Building Chicago A 8is 845 p m Wednesday ¬ Doctor Madam your husband hasparaly Matter of Fashion A District Sadly in Need of llOJtD NEAR SWIFT WATER N H Suporvisor a Good Rod their good or bad condition HANDY BAG HOLDER Good roads in such cases mean the rsaving of time the greater durability The Gut Explains How It Ih Mailennf Put Together of vehicles and the wear of teams A correspondent of the Canadian Now the farmer to say nothing of he others can afford to pajT a fair orlib Farmers Advocate furnishes the fol eral road tax provided he is assured lowing description of a handy bag that it will be so expended as ix result bolder The illustration wall enable in a corresponding improved condition anyone to understand it Take a piece 27 inches long and of the roads go so far toward recon ¬ from the middle of it cut a piece 15 Nothing will ciling tfarmers or others lo the paying inches long and one inch deep Then of what they might term a large ftigh take a piece of band iron 33 inches long and bend it as shown at 3 mak- ¬ wayitax as to find that it is expended and above all that a ing C three inches long- D six inches certain amount is devoted to improve- - and E 15 inches long Make a couple of ments of a permanent character each holes at C and F so that loop may be year This is evidence that cannot be overlooked or refuted but is anever present fact a monument to the skill and faithfulness of the intelligent road niaker We want just all of thas kind of work that can practically be devoted to the purpose Here in Vermont one fifth of tthe tax for roads is to be put into improvements of a permanent character This is Jarge--l- y used in cutting down and lengthen- ingthe grade of hills or in the build- ing of stone or macadamized roads WYhat little of this kind of work that has been done since the new road law vwentinto effect has proven so satisfac tory that it makes us wish that the good work could have been commenced DEVICE FOR HOLDING BAGS many years ago then we should now have something worth while toshowfor fastened to A by means of screw nails HER SCOLDING LOCKS vthe expenditure of so much money This loop projects out in front of A Here where stone is plenty and not The back leg- is a slat three feet long She Tried to Oblige a PrJend Jlut She toofar away it costs from fourtofivei and three inches wide and is fastened Got Angry About It dollars a rod to build a good road to A by means of a hinge The- other Some people ai e absolutely devoid of tact fsomethingtkat should last maeay years two leers are each about 3 1 3 feet long One of these is a youthful matron who only requiring a little attention in keep- - and are attached to the headpiece A wishing to make her very dearest friend another young ingthe ditches open and the covering at an angle of about 45 degrees This decided on the matron a birthday present purchase of a handsome pair iin order will make it stand firm In the cut in of shell side combs Taking the worst pieces of road first A and about two inches from each end Nothing could have been more appropriiitvxviil soon be found that commendable screw a couple of screw nails G and ate for the blonde tresses of her friend and progress is being made as these jalaees H leaving about half an inch pro- - the giver felt much pleased with her selecwhen she went to calLon her and give were always requiring attention and truding To fasten on the bag double tion the pretty ornaments her wever long in a satisfactory condition she I thought you would like themone side over the iron loop and hook Good drainage for roads should be the other side on the screw nails then said when her friend had admired them and rapturously thanked sought for as this is of the first im- - move back the slat until the bottom so handy her fasten up your you will find them scolding locks to jportance The ditches should be placed of the bag rests on the floor What do you mean asked her friend in well back from the roadbed so as to a surprised tone Did you never hear of scolding locks prevent undermining or gullyingQLL GOOD GARDEN They are the short ends of your hah that Hills should be carefully looked atfter are always flying and the grade made as easy as possible ilt Is One in AVliicIi tlie AtniOKPbone so much but side loose They botherin one orcombs keep them Can Circulate Freely Thesurface oftheroad should be some der besides being very becoming orna What is or what is not good garden ments what rounded so that the water nnvy So you think I have scolding locks then ireadily pass off atithe sides ratherithan soil is often a great question The cusmust be a scold Thanks awfully dear run along on thewheel tracks washing tomer often complains to the Jiursery but I dont believe I need any combs Keep away the dirt and forming holes and men that though he planted his trees them for your own scolding outfit and the jgullies The surface should also ibe in the very best soil yet he bad little face of the dearest friend clouded with kept clear of small stones that ameal success Veiy few people seem to un anger well just as you like Good by Very ways so troublesome Passing overtlie1 derstand that good soil is one in which dear and the donor of the combs snatched jroads once a month for this purpose the atmosphere can freely teireulate them up and carried them home where she The earth must not allow the air to cir had a fit of hysterics And all because she should be more generally practiced - lOtflate to such an extent as to lose its needed a little tact Chicago Times Herald Small repairs should always be atrtended toan season asin this way large moisture but it must have an abund How to Make Tea anee of smallspaces which wilLcontaln expense can often be saved Move than half the Tea consumed in the will pay to gotwo miles if itean small quantities of air before plant United States and Canada is of Japanese it growth the majority of Americans apaiot be obtained nearer to get gravel Wllltthrive We sometimes speak of air parently yet not understand how to prepare do jplants but in truth all plants rare ir with which to fill had places in roads so as to develop the delicious qualities parts of the cexuntiry where stone plants no matter whether growing on it which it contains The Japanese Oovern In has appropriated a large aid is scarce and grave1 can be had good¬ oroCks or trees ior whether growing in anentJapanese Tea growers and fund tomerthe Tea Toads can be made by msing this ma sthe learth Air is of far more to the coots than to the leaves chants in prosecuting this educational work terial plentifully on tiie surface Of and it is hoped that American ladies will course this means thatithe roadbed is When therefore we have a stiff elay be apt students The main Bureau of the Japanese Tea Guild has issued an official thrst put in good condition for the earth to deal with we make a good soil irecipe riravel This method is used to some by applying sand or vegetable matter tion offor making Japanese Tea the transla whidh is as follows extent at the west arad even here in which when it irots wrill leave small First Use a small dry and thoroughly lean porcelain teapot the east whew stone abounds gravel spaces in wThich air may be collected can be conveniently obtained It is for the same meason that we crush Second But in one teaspoonful of tea vhere it 5s much prized hard clods for a liard clod has no air leaves for each cup of tea desired teas poor Third When using Japanese 11 is possible lhat in the future port- ¬ spaces When broken to pieces pul on the required quantitv of fresh boiled water lid from 2 able stone crushjing machines will be verizing is the technical term we to 8 and let stand witli closed leaves In minutes Never boil the largely tused in road making in the simply give the chanee for atmospheric to retain the natural country by means of which this plenti air o spread throughout the whole orderleaves should be kept flavor Japanese tea in tight can or ful materia can Us put to some useful mass For rthe same reason what is jarfree from moisture Note To thoroughly enjoy the natural purpoes known as a wet soil is a bad soil beshould be the pur ¬ cause water cives out tihe air There is delicate and sweet flavor of Japanese Teas Above all jtings it neither sugar nor eream should be used pose to get the best men possible for the no air an earth which is V Trying to Defraud Her work of road supervision and having has been noted that the useof a hole ih keep them until others the boistom of n flower pot is not so Horton How is it that you always put on obtained them such a long face and talk so discouragingly equally good or better can be found to much to allow the escape of wter as it when your wife happens to be present And take their places is to permit fresher air to flow in the at other times you are the most enthusiastic In this way going slowly it may be spaces of earth when the water leaves prosperity boomer I know of but surely forward in the right direc it In the language of gardening n Henley I firomised her away back last sealskin sacquc tum the iime will not be far distant good soil Is oae which is perfectly spring that Id get her a new up Cleveland this fall if bitsiness picked nvjien a great improvement in our high Meehanfs Monthly aerated Leader ways will be apparent all over our land Tickets to American Fat E R Towli In Farm Field and Fire ¬ All through the vwinter the apples ExcursionHorse Poultry and Dairy Stock side should be frequently examined so as to Shows Chicngro Nov 2 13 any that are rotting remove Via the North Weiern Line will be sold The United States has not many over at reduced rates each Tuesday and Thurs When the leaves of the fttooseDerry day during the show limited to Monday 0 sheep for every 100 of population AddIv to acrents 100 grape or currant fall- cuttings can be folio wine date of sale while Australia has 3000 totriry North Western Ry j Chicago made from the new growth of population j being-faithfully around the horns or the neck but the farmer who has to move his cowts will lead easily with a and most five ring produce to market or place of shipment halter A good motto for dairymen to or in the daijy prosecution of his work needs to use the road gains or loses put in their hats is this Anovmceof an this direction in accordance with kindness is worth a pound of pounding i ways three or four and sometimes as high as ten in one day The family was all broken down with yield of miilk care and Mrs Adams states that for one There is another item in regard to year she did not go into her kitchen to super- breaking cows to lead A cow that is intend ner household work All the hngers¬ or the right hand or are enkindly treated can usually be caught in larged and misshapenthe little girl her bit ¬ caused by the pasture by placing your arm about ing them during the fearful suffering The her neck If caught in this way they case baffled the skill of the best physicians will seldom make any effort to get and they were frank to say that they could the cause or away Place a five ring halter on tho not determinethe afflicted child prescribe a remedy to aid oow as this doesnot hurt like a crope But what a change now in that household ¬ nature Not a single convulsion but al ¬ Oh doctor Im delighted Wife I thought it was nervous prostration and thats so common you know Boston Traveler ¬ Who are injured by the use of coffee Re- ¬ cently there has been placed in all the grocery stores a new preparation called GRATN O made of pure grains that takes the place of coffee The most delicate stom ach receives it without distress and but few can fell it from coffee It does not cost over as much Children may drink it with great benefit 15 cts and 25 cts per pack age Try it Ask for GRAIN O ¬ There Is a Class of People Why dont you give that son of yours a asked one business veteran of anchance He must inherit some of your suother perior business qualities and the time will come when you must have some one to look after your affairs He cant manage them without the necessary training Tlnnt vrrti snnnose that I have canvassed the whole situation I have let that boy J handle a small fortune and the results nave been so unsatisfactory that I have given him formal notice to look out for himself But he seems to have plenty of money Thats another thing I dont like I have cut off his allowance yet he lives well and never enters a complaint Last spring 1 thought I would have to put up the office blinds for want of ready cash My collaterals were not available and creditors were pushing me The boy walked into the office one afternoon when I was in the throes of despair said Things lookin blue governor laid down a certified check for 20000 and walked out I owe him that yet but am holding it back till I can see that he needs WIiqti T rrnvn Viim mnnpr hllV wheat him how the market was liable to and told go he ignored my advice and bought millions of eggs right in the midst of hot weather mind you On learning where they were stored I notified the health department and requested some of those in the vi cinity to bring proceedings when the nuis sance asserted itself I learned incidentally afterward that he had a patent process foi preserving eggs and cleared up a big pot ot money Wheat hadnt gone the way I predicted but it was his business to do as I told him Recently he made 15000 at some shooting game I dont know just what it was but one of his friends said that Jack had taken a long shot at a horse and won I hope the rascal had to pay for the horse Detroit Free Press ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ Prom Miss Sachner of Columbus To all women who are ill It af-¬ fords me great pleasure to tell you of the benefit I have derived from tak-ing Lydia E PinJihams Vegetable Compound I can hardly find words to express my gratitude for the boorl ¬ given to suffering women in that excellent remedy Before taking the Compound I was thin nervous sallowand was trou bled with I H- - leucor rhcea and my men- ¬ riods were very irreg ¬ strual pe- ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ular ¬ To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets All druggists refund money if it fails to cure 25c ¬ A farce Mamma what is a farce Why it is the way your father went around and watered all my dried up plants the Detroit Free morning after I got home Press m m -- - i ¬ for little Fannie has recently been released from her six years of agony which brings the light of happiness to the faces of the parents In January this year Mrs Adams who had purchased some of Dr Williams Pink Pills for Pale People for her fourteen year old daughter determined to try their effect upon little Fannie After three or four doses she noted an improvement and she then told the father what she had done He at once went to the village and bought another box and up to this time six boxes have been used The first pills Mrs Adams states were given in January the latter part and certainly not earlier than the fifteenth or twentieth and the child had her last convulsion on February 3d nearly three months ago Her general condition has improved in every way and it was not a month after the first pills were taken when she began to walk without assistance The pills were bought at the drug store of Dr Shelton in Umatilla In answer to the question did he to his personal knowledge know that the remedy had benefited Fannie Adams as was stated by her parents the doctor said that he wasa regular practicing physician and as such was loth to recommend any proprietary medicine but still he was ready to do justice to all men and he did know that Dr Williams Pink Pills for Pale People had benefited Fannie Adams and also volunteered the information that he knew of other children in the village who had been benefited by their use Dr Williams Pink Pills for Pale People contain in a condensed form all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to females such as suppressions irregularities and all forms of weak- ¬ ness They build up the blood and restore the glow of health to pale and sallow cheeks In men they effect a radical cure in all cases arising from mental worry overwork or excesses of whatever nature Pink Pills are sold in boxes never in loose bulk at 50 cents a box or six boxes for 250 and may be had of all druggists or direct bv mail by addressing Dr Williams Medicine Company Schenectady N Y ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ Hot Surprising Pisos Cure is the medicine to break up Forrester How time does fly childrens Coughs and Colds Mrs M G Lancaster I dont blame it Think how Blunt Sprague Wash March 8 94 many people there are trying to kill it Harlem Life A girl wearing an organdie dress thinks she looks good enough to eat Washington Shake Into Yonr Shoes Democrat Allens Foot Ease a powder for the feet It cures painful swollen smarting feet and Fortify Feeble Lungs Against Winter instantly takes the sting out of corns and with Hales Honey of Horehound and Tar bunions Its the greatest comfort discovery Pikes Toothache Drops Cure in one minute of the age Allens Foot Ease makes tight or new shoes feel easv It is a certain cure Important Doctor Youll for sweating callous hot tired aching feet beThe your feet in aPoint or so on week Patient Irj1- it to day bold by all druggists and shoe On my feet But how soon will I be on stores 25c Trial package FREE Write to my wheel Puck Allen S Olmsted LeRoy N Y - Lf 9xP v tried three phy sicians and gradually grew worse About a year ago I was advised by a friend to try Mrs Pinkhams Sanative Wash and Vegetable Compound which I did After using three bottles of the Vegetable Compound and one pack- ¬ age of Sanative Wash I am now enjoy- ing better health than I ever did and attribute the same to your wonderful remedies I cannot find words to ex press what a Godsend they have been to me Whenever I begin to feel nervous and ill I know I have a never failing phy ¬ sician at hand It would afford m pleasure to know that my words hacl directed some suffering sister to health and strength through those most ex cellent remedies Miss May Sachneb 348K E Sich St Columbus O f I Some things are easily cured the Self Evident Miss Courtright What do you think of a Worst pains by St Jacobs Oil man who will marry a woman for money When money talks we never pause to criti--cis- e Mr Spooner All I can say is that such a its grammar Chicago News fellow must be hard up Cleveland Leader What is it Lame back Use St Jacobs Oil Wake TJpu Yes wake up to the danger which threat- ¬ What is it now Cured Right ens you if your kidneys or bladder are inact- ¬ Dissatisfied people are as a rule loafers ive or weak Dont you know that if you fail to impel them to action Brights disease or Atchison Globe diabetes awaits you Use Hostelers Stom- ¬ ach Bitters without delav It has a most beneficial effect upon trie kidneys when sluggish and upon the bowels liver stom ach ana nervous system shocked He RnlHed tlie Wind The ship had lain becalmed in a tropicaT sea for three days Not a breath of air stirred the mirror like surface of the sea or the limp sails that hung from the yards like drapery carved in stone The captain re- solved to wait no longer He piped up air hands on deck and requested the passengers to also come forward I must ask all of you he said to give me every match yoir Wonderingly the passengers and have crew obeyed The captain carefully ar ¬ ranged the matches in his hand as each man handed him his store until all had been col- ¬ lected Then he threw them all overboardf but one drew a cigar from his pocket and striking the solitary match on the maipmast endeavored to light it In an instant a furious gale swept over the deck extinguished the match and filled the sails and the good ship Mary Ann sped through the waves on her course Philadelphia Inquirer ¬ What a nice companion a fly makes after you have had an experience with a mosquito Atchison Globe Here Here The Missionary Im What are you two fighting about The Combatants Jonah an de whale Puck To St Louis and the West 53 miles the shortest from Louisville makes the quickest time Pullman Sleepers Parlor and Dining Cars For complete information address In Darkest Africa mm Take the Air Line JP Maffett Traveling Passenger Agent Knoxville Tenn R A Campbell General Passenger Agent St Louis Mo people pills stand without a rival as a reliable family -- - Grocers and women are very unfortunate they are compelled to please through the stomach The eye is pleased a dozen times where the stomach is pleased once Atchison Globe The consumption of Star plug tobacco is the largest in the world No other tobacco is so good as Star plug in all respects The people who reall know what love is are afraid to tell for fear their knowl- ¬ edge will give away an unpleasant experi- ¬ ence Atchison Globe Great Nerve Restorer Free 2 trial bottle treatise Dr Kline 933 Arch st Phila Pa m m medicine They cure sick headache biliousness constipation and keep the body in perfect health In many homes no medicine is used except Dr J C Ayers None So Good as Star Tobacco - ¬ ¬ - No fits after first days use of Dr Klines Fits stopped free and permanently cured - ¬ No odds how little a man does he likes to tell how he used to work Washington Democrat Certainly it does Truly surely St Jacobs Oil cures rheumatism Thousands know it m m 5 4 ¬ VL No man is too shiftless to feel a little bit romantic about his marriage Washington Democrat Sore all over and stiff Cured all Over by St Jacobs Oil and supple -- ilpireS 18 FAMILY I The subscription price of DEMORESTS MAGAZINE is reduced to 100 a Year anally Masrstzlne la more n Fniiblon Scmoreiti F most progressive writers of tho day and is abreast of the times in every thing Art Literature Science Society Affairs Fiction House- hold Matters Sports etc a single number frequently containing from 200 to 300 tine engravings making it the MOST COMPLETE AND MOST PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED of the GRMT MONTH- - 100 for 25 A VPAD PAD DEnORESTSI www 1 i THE MARKETS LIVE STOCK CattlecommonS 2 25 4 00 Select butchers 5 75 CALVES Fair to good light HOGS Common Mixed packers Xiipht shippers SHEEP Choice LAMBS Good to choice J 5 than Magazine although It gives the very latest hoiue and foreign fashions each month this is only one of its manv valuable f anturfis It has something for each member of the family for every depart- ment of the household and its varied contents are of the hlchost grade making it pre eminently The Family Magazine of the Sj World It furnishes tho best thoughts of tlie most interesting and SE 2 He ClNCIXN ATI Oct Si C 3 25 1 40 iP IMI m i ih 3 85 yo Gh4 95 a 90 fa 4 05 10 t oo 5 00 3 50 650 ¬ GEAIN-Wheat-- FLOUR Winter family No red iJ X Corn No 2 mixed Hye No 2 HAY Prime to choice PROVISIONS Mess pork VUliOlN Oa M Cu 3 05 5 35 fit 3 70 92 90 2GJ4 XIES 3 Demoreata Magazine Fashion Department is in every rstj 2 far ahead of that contained in any other publication Subscribers are entitled each month to patterns of the latest fashions in womans attire at no cost to them other than that S necessary postage j and wrapping 5c NO BETTER CHRISTMAS GIFT 2 the handsome Bv subscribing ¬ eon-se-quenG- ¬ ¬ ¬ Lard Prime steam BUTTER Choice dairy Prime to choice creamery APPLES Per bbl POTATOES Per bbl NEW YORK FLOUR Winter patent No 2 red CORN No 2 inixed RYE U A J SjillXCu PORK New mess LARD Western CHICAGO 21 40 9 50 8 75 4 20 13 14 5 5 vnu can cat the magazine at the rpdnpprt nriro nnri witl also rnipivn 5 cent Xmas Number with its beautiful Danel nictnre BimnlRmpnt Kemit 5100 by money order registered letteror check to the DEMOREST PUBLISHING CO HO Fifth Avey New York City AT OSTCE 50 5 00 24 2 50 1 90 5 25 1 Greatrou will send Clubbing Offer for 23th Special Promptran Imvo Subscriptions nnv lis vonrsubscrintion before December voti vnii of the offers below In some cases you will note we furnish the two publications at tho regular price Oi me iirsu naiiieu onu ttiuiie ajiu uutr iiiciuuus ui cuunv cicji puuncmjun ior a mil year Publishers You Our price price save to you 8400 nu juemorestB Magazine LOO Harpers Magazine tl00 100 05 195 The Christian Herald New York 60 25 Womens Home Companion McClures Magazine Cosmopolitan Magazine Munseys Magazine Housewife Ladies Homo Journal Address BEMOKEST PUBIiISEUXG 100 100 100 GO Tf 1897 rinrnf 317g 4IV yja 1 17 M 9 00 23 9 75 4 C5 5 10 100 COMPACT HO Fifth JLveune New York S e 175 175 125 lSO 25 25 25 25 20 ¬ ¬ CORN No 2 FLOUR Winter patents GRAIN Wheat No 2 red No 2 Chicago spring PORK Mess LARD Steam BALTIMORE 500 87 25s 75 4 25 4 60 948 875 7 80 4 27 4 85 97 3135 S5tf 18ls wat-er-tigh- t FLOUR Family GRAIN Wheat No Southern Wheat DO YOU KNOW THAT THERE IS SCIENCE IN NEATNESS BE WISE AND USE T 2 mm 91 31- ¬ ¬ ¬ CATTLE First quality HOGS Western INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN Wheat No 2 Corn No 2 mixed Oats No 2 mixed LOUISVILLE FLOUR Winter patent GRAIN Wheat No 2 red Mixed Oats Mixed PORK Mess LARD Steam Cora - Corn Mixed- Oats No 2 white Rye No 2 western 27 52 3 90 4 15 4 7o 52H SAPOLIO Hs9LfAmjLVSSli M mf B JLMMia lfftiW jmbI1 yT MB duMH m lp i2 tfi 20 3 75 4 00 tt h ii I cases CURES 93 30 Best Cough Syrup Tastes Good TJsc in time eoia ov aruggists- - WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS treatment Free ANK DROPSY mmti9 E KEW SCOVEBY d-c- Send for book of testimonials and quick roller and cures wore t gitM Dr H II OREENS 8iHS in JlUaatak 1679 - M 9 50 4 21K 62ii J C4 WHEN WKJTIXGV TO ABVF ItTlf3Eli plcna6ctatc that yon saw the Ateette lacnt la thlc paper s fi W 8 THE BOURBON NEWS TUESDAY OCTOBER 19 1897 hK Inherited S HERMIT 01 ANTRIM AN EDUCATED THE OLD FLYBOOK It Is Dearer to the Angrier ThanlAisy HOW TO PIND OUT MANS SOLITARY EX-- ISTENCE IN IRISH CAVES - Blood Taint Here is a case of inherited blood taint which resulted in what threatened to be s complete wreck of an innocent young 3ife The most serious feature of being afflicted with a blood disease is the fact that innocent posterity must suffer The aaan or woman with the slightest taint 5n the blood forces the undesirable leg¬ acy of impurity upon their children whose veins flow with the impure inher ¬ itance which handicaps them in the race f life No child who has a trace of bad blood can be healthy or strong and those pre- ¬ disposed to Scrofula are liable to a great Ieal of sickness because their constitu- ¬ tions are weak and cannot withstand the anany dangers which beset the path of hildhood Medical statistics show that amajorityof lung troubles result directly from Scrofula so that a child afflicted wiiu mis uiseiuc is iiKeiy to laii a lim to dreaded consumption Mr W A Clayton of Addie N C 1elieves SSS is the only blood remedy which can have any effect whatever npon obstinate caes He says boy had the worst My ever heard of He case of Scrofula I Y- tfhere Is a Mystery About Him and fro One Can Tell Whence He Came His rood Consists of Potatoes Only but He Cooks Them Before Eating - -- l c -- three-year-o- ld r - MR W A CLAYTON V 11 A i relief and treated by the best doctors He seemed to get worse all the while iowever and the disease finally resulted in curvature of the spine making him utterly helpless The bad sores on his neck increased in size and were a source of constant pain He was in this pitiful condition for two years when some one recom- ¬ mended SSS stating that it had cured some of the worst cases of blood diseases As soon as his system was under the ef iect of the medicine the sores began to get better and in eight days were com- ¬ pletely healed Before long he could walk on crutches and was improving every day In three months he threw aside his crutches for he had no further use for them the dreadful disease had been eliminated entirely from his sys- ¬ tem and he was restored to perfect iealth The cure was a permanent one as no sign of the disease has returned for ten years SSS is a real blood remedy and promptly reaches all deep seated and obstinate blood diseases it matters not what other treatment has failed It is lhe only remedy which acts on the cor- ¬ rect principle of forcing the disease from the system and getting rid of it perma- ¬ nently Tetter and all other blood diseases It is Cancer Catarrh Eczema Rheumatism S S S is a sure cure for Scrofula was given many blood remedies without Purely Vegetable and is the only remedy guaranteed to contain no potash mercury or other harmful mineral Books on blood and skin diseases will be mailed free to any address by the Swift Specific Company Atlanta Georgia ASSIGNEES ALL UTOTIOE persons Naving claims against assigned estate ot H Margolen are requested to present them at once propei iy provin as required by law to the underuirncl in Paris Ky Those snowing themselves indebted to H Margolin uv requested to p iv promptly amVtherehv avoid court cost There are portions of the north of Ire- ¬ land where nature assumes a grand and wild aspect On the coast of Antrim there is no armistice in the furious bat- tie that since the first ages of the ter- restrial globe was engaged between the wavpsaud the rocks Columns of basalt like gigantic sentinels stand on guard to resist the invasion of the ocean and the profound excavations made under the granite rocks that protect this por- ¬ tion of the soil of La Verte Erin prove that the waves must have frequently made most vigorous onslaughts and only retired after they had mined a land which they could not conquer It is not difficult to imagine that this maiestic and desolate site should have seduced one of the vanquished ones m life one who had absolutely decided to separate himself from the society of man The real hermits are becoming more and more rare indeed it was be- lieved that they had completely disap- peared but if a vocation for that smgu- larly abandoned profession could still be felt by any one it might be in the presence of the marvelous spectacle of that sea whose waves never subside of those grottos whose pillars and vaults possess a power which the art of the architect can never equal Nature her- self seems to have created in those rocks a refuge for the shipwrecked for the proscriLed and perhaps also for those who despise the vanities of life About ten years ago a mysterious in- ¬ dividual made his home in the grottoes of the coast of Antrim The approach of any human being seemed to inspire him with an invincible repugnance As soon as the cavern which he had select- ¬ ed for his refuge was discovered by the fishermen of the neighborhood he immediately disappeared and took up his quarters 20 or 30 kilometers farther on in another retreat which appeared more inaccessible For a few months his domicile was in an old abandoned mine the principal gallery of which advanced under the ground to the distance of about five kilometers but as the inhab ¬ itants of the nearest village had long before carried away the beams that sus ¬ tained the vault to convert them into firewood the hermit was obliged to quit that dangerous refuge where he was constantly exposed to the danger of be- ¬ ing buried alive So he installed himself in a grotto the access to which was more easily discovered but it was less obscure less humid and less liable to cave in There he flattered himself that he would find at least some of the con- ¬ ditions of existence that belonged to the men of the caverns But it was in vain that he hoped to return to the life of the first ages of prehistoric humanity He- was obliged to pay tribute to the exigencies of civilization and to mani- ¬ fest less repugnance for all contact with his fellow beings One day he found an empty barrel that the tempest had tossed upon the shore and he could not resist the temp- tation of bringing it home to serve as a bed Some indiscreet persons taking advantage of his absence to visit his apartments discovered that he had a pot for cooking his food Where did that cooking utensil come from Was it also a piece of wreckage rolled up upon the sand by the furious waves or was it the last souvenir of civilized life car- ¬ ried away by the anchorite who while endeavoring to return to the conditions of existence that belonged to prehistoric times could not abandon the habit of ¬ - ¬ Other Possession ment or settling indicates an unhealthy sedi- contut Kiuneys wnen iUX Is there anything closer to an anglers VJZZr I jaevjaence or kidney mine stains trouble Too desire to urinate or pain in the heart than his fiybook Iktfow of a case frequentalso oacls is convincing proof that kld- where a burglar among other things u uiuuuer are out oi order the WHAT TO DO took a fiybook He was arrested and luere is in speedily convioted and imprisoned He expressed comfortDr the knowledge so often that Kilmers Swamp Root cleared things out pretty well in the the great kid ey remedy fulfills every wish tn relieving pain in the back kidneys liver house but the owner seemed to care for bladder and every part of the urinary pas- nothing about the missing fur coats gei II Crrects inability to hold urine aud in passing or bad effect fol and other scalding pain liquor sealskin sacks silverware lowing use of wine or beer over- ¬ valuable Lares and Penates but he did comes that uupleasaut nec ssity and being of to get bftwail the loss of his book of flies The compelledurinate up many times during the night to The mild and the extraor ¬ 0ther things he could buy again but to dinary ettect of wamp Uoot is soon realized highest for its wonderful cures it get together such an assortment of valu of stands the distressing ca es the most If you able flies seemed to him an impossible a medicine you should have the best ued Sold by druggists price fifty thing He had been years collecting Yon may have a samplecents and one dollar pamphlet them picking up odd ones Here and both sent free by mall bottle and The Paris Mention Ky News aud send your address to Dr there until for quality and variety vilmer Co Bingbampton N Y The proprietors of this paper guarantee the gen his book could not be excelled 24sp lmb It was a fly storehouse as it were uiness of this offer No matter where he intended fishing or whether for trout bass or salmon he The best feed in the world corn could always find a choice assortment meal ground oats bran to draw from with which to fill up a Co Hibler supplementary book Spears Stuart Although it was some time ago he yet bewails the loss of that fiybook Wrights Celery Tea regulates the Many have been the efforts to get track He has gone to liver and kidneys cures constipation of it but all in vain nn in and sick headache 25c at all druggists AVTPT1RA nf RM1ainfi to the a distanfc cifcy a endeavoring to pre- q COnvict to divulge the vail upon Good times for shoe buyers this hiding place of the book but without A persistent search of the week at success DaVISTHOMSON tf ISGRIG pawnshops and periodical advertising produced no better results have There were flies in that book for trout Piles Piles Piles and salmon in Irish waters flies for the trout of the Scotch lakes Dr Williams Indian Pile Ointment will salmon and Bleeding Ulcerated and Itching and the English streams and flies for cure Blindabsorbs Piles It ¬ the salmon of Norway The favorites ing at once acts asthe tumors allays the itch a poultice gives instant relief Dr Williams Indian Pile Ointment from Maine to California and from one is prepared only for Piles aud Itching of the end of Canada to another were collected private parts and nothing else Every box Sold iu that wallet anything and every- - is guaranteed and SI by druggists sent by mail for 50c per thing from the feather down midget MG CO Props Clevelandbox WILLIAMS O For sale by with cobweb gut to the lordly salmon W T Brooks druggist fly absolutely irresistible to the lurk-¬ ing salmon deep down in the icy pools of the Cascapedia There were flies in that book on I D which famous bass trout and salmon had been hooked each fly carrying with Of No 503 W Ninth Street Cincinnati it memories of battles fought from caOhio noes among the rushing swirling waWill be at the Windsor Hotel Paris ters Forest and Stream y 1 01JMtercommonfour hours a it stand twenty Bnss with rine TELE NEW YORK WORLD THRICE-A-WJEE- K AGENTS WANTED FOR EDITION JUVENILE HOLIDAY AND 18 Pages a Week 156 Papers a Year FOR ONE DOLLAR Published every SuikiIy -- STANDARD SUBSCRIPTION BOOKS largest publishers and manufacturers of Finest line VinnkR in the United States holiday and other subscription of new books on the market THE SIL Also agents waited for and best text- ¬ VFR SIDE the latest book on the silver question by the great B Conkey Company the Day except By the W The Thrice-a-Wee- k Edition of The New Youk World is first among all weekly papers in size frequency of publication and the freshness accuracy and variety of its contents It has all the merits of a great 6 daily at the silver leaders the price of a dollar weekly Its politi- ¬ EXCLUSIVE TERRITORY cal news is prompt complete accurate LARGEST COMMISSIONS and impartial as all its readers will tesPRICES BELOW COMPETITION tify It Is against the monopolies and Write at once for circulars and special for th1 people terms stating your choice of territory It prints the news of all the world having special correspondence from all W B CONKEY COMPANY important newb points on the globe It 341 343 345 447 349 35 L Dearborn St has brilliant illustrations stories by Chicago I4sep 4wk great authors a capital humor page complete markets departments for the household nnd womens work and other special departments of usual interest We offer this unequaled newspaper and The Bourbon News together one year for 225 The regular subscription price of the two papers is 300 ¬ BOUSE AKD LOT AND BLACK ¬ SMITH SHOP FOR SALE T DESIRE to sell my house and ot with blacksmith shop at Jackson ville Ky I will sell for half cash bal ance in twelve months For further particulars address or call on BEN J F SHARON Q3oct tf Jacksonville Ky Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain free whether an invention is probably patentable Communications strictly confidential Oldest ajiency for securing patents in America We have a Washington office Patents taken through Munn Co receive special notice in the TRADE HARKS DESICNS c COPYRIGHTS SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN beautifully illustrated largest circulation Of any scientific journal weekly te ms 3U0 a year iou3ix mourns specimen copies ana xlax book on patents sent Iree Address 3C1 MUNN Broilntty Now York CO L H Landman H OCT QUEEN CRESCENT ¬ ¬ MOONSHINER IN REAL LIFE Quite Different TUESDAY month 12TH 1897 1 LOUIS SALOSHIN Harmon airav Stitt Attorney Assignee ASSIGNEES NOTICE Allpersous havingclaims against the assin l tK of T H Tarr ire- hereby notified to pr Mnt same at oucd properly proy i ri- - undersiim or same - ¬ l may be btnv 1 by law T EASHliROOK 22jel jJann Ashbrook Attvs Assignee ot T H Tarr B G FOiJK ROUTE BEST LINE TO AS FROM TOLEDO Alt Points in B - DETROIT Micwiii - OHIOAC ue City Sp - Terminal S Jpe iivo ing rnt i i ST LOUtr J Mum v Buffett Par BOSTON rMfr Sleepin i j Cars W Cars Pri te Comp Elegant o u hes and D NEW YOE yiI r Sleeping Cars Be sure tickets re FOUR Traffic Mp B HART Greu Pass srKCIXKATI V BIG O Mc COIUIICK Pa From His Confrere as Seen on the Stage The Kentucky moonshiner in real life does not resemble his counterpart de- ¬ scribed in novels and impersonated on the stage in the least He does not wear top boots and a slouch hat As a rule he is too poor to possess the former and he is more apt to go barefoot or to amble along in a pair of wornout bro gans than to wear top boots His hat is usually a torn straw Jimmy and his clothes are yellow and faded wii age Eegularly on days when the grand jury meets in Louisville a dozen or more of the moonshiners are presented for in- ¬ dictment They present a woebegone appearance as they pass along the streets in charge of the marshal In their own poor homes in the mountains they are hospitable but of the stranger ever sus- ¬ picious The latter may make his bed in the one room where the entire fami- ¬ ly sleeps but his request for a taste of liquor brings forth a statement that none is to be had this side of the store At the same time a still mav be in operation within ten feet of his whereabouts The store represents to the moun- ¬ On winter taineer all civilization mornings he will tramp to it through cold and snow to sell a few stiff rabbits and swap yarns not overbrilliant One of the mountaineers chief sources of income is his honey and this finds ready sale at the store The moon- ¬ shiner seldom receives money in pay for his wares but is paid in a bit of bright calico for his wife or a shoulder of ba- ¬ con If he can add to this a few pipe cooking his food fuls of tobacco he is well satisfied with That is a question which has never the results of his labors New York been answered and it is also impossi- ¬ Commercial ble to find out where he gets the pota- toes upon which he lives Did they come What Typhoid Fever Costs from the discreet charity of the poor A correspondent of the Washington fishermen of the neighborhood who at Post gives the following appalling ty- ¬ the proper time renewed his provisions phoid statistics Every year in the or in separating himself from the world United States 400000 people are sick did he make arrangements for the trans- ¬ with typhoid fever Forty thousand of portation of his modest provisions That them die They are sick 28 days on an is also a mystery which has never been average out of every 3G5 days Thus fathomed One point however is cer- ¬ we have 11200000 days of sickness tain and that is that the hermit deter- ¬ from this disease mined to livo upon potatoes alone One Every case of this sickness means one day a sailor offered him half of his din- ¬ month generally two mouths of idle- ¬ ner The hermit pretended to be glad to ness If the wages of the patient are accept the gift but he never touched only 50 cents a day there is a loss of the food In the absence of the kind 15 a month Generally this sickness hearted sailor he tossed it into the sea means a loss of wages in two months Apparently he also vowed that he would time of 60 or 80 The average loss of never enter a house and never touch a wages for six weeks would be 50 Add piece of money He kept his resolutions to this the doctors bill Tvhinh is anv- Nothing could ever induce him to cross where from 60 to 100 we will say the threshold of any one of the little 6T Tf the patient lives in the city and houses of the fishermen who began to has a trained nurse for only three weeks have a sort of affection for him and there is another 45 Ten dollars for never once was he known to beg The the prepared food ice milk etc only liberality that he would accept and brings this moderate bill up to 165 that he solicited rrom tne munificence Multiolv this bv the number of people of strangers was a match to light the sick and we can see every vear in the firewood gathered for cooking his pota- ¬ United States 66000000 lost to patoes tients by the inroads of this one disease The Eev J H Bernard endeavored to lift the veil that hid the origin arid Looking Back ward antecedents of this mysterious person You must feel very happy in this age The man of tLe caverns of Antrim lovely cottage you call you own j endeavors m vain to live the life of a How can I when I think of my fam savage It has been recognized by more - ily that owned an estate of thousands than one sign that he has received a of acres with a castle and a whole regi good education irom time to time he ment of servants rear to me nsheriuen snmo passages WUtt J irrTic n rlirl fhrvrr Inco ifV frr cn iue but he never comments During the eleventh century u th Thero is no evidence going Brooklyn Life to we that the juan has any particu- la form o iniHy bevond rserhans Stockport England boasts one of the v inn narmic om the love oi solitude largest Sunday schools in the world Eb i lwa and neut ajpear- - The total number of scholars at present ance md seei j be sound rl vigor- - on the books is no lewer than 4 834 ous i body Ho - aks with u accent while there are 238 male and 195 fe so t t it is iir ble to fix f locali ¬ nrnle toad- rs a grand army of over came ni which se dom 5i 0 smi s but he d snt look On the cont jry e has resigned a- mated that over 2000- rfect- IV nV vYhoheis eri to the nmimfac- ny in Vl Vutl fin t tbout tn wessuchanex dinary 4ii in tell London blgarb -I returning every second Tuesday in each Optician La ndman has been visiting this city regularly for over five years and has ad- vsl WKt Usn insted glasses to the eyes of the best people of Paris and Bourbon County and has proven himself competent thorough reliable and honest You can get Landmans glasses from Clays drug store between his Clark visits and when he makes his regular visit he will examine your eyes thoroughly and make any change necessary to give satisfaction Examination free References Drs TV J Fithian Eads Buck Fithian Bowen and C D Cram of Paris ¬ During the Tennessee Centennial ahd International Exposition at Nashville Tenn a low rataspecial tariff has been established for the sle of tickets from Cincinnati and other terminal points on the Queen Crr scent Route Tickets are on sale until father notice to Chattanooga at 5 35 one way or 8575 round trip from Georgetown the round trip tickets being good seven days to return other tickets with longer return limit at S865 and at 1180 for the round trip These rates enable the public to visit Nashville and other South- ern points at rates never before offered Vestibuled trains os the finest class are at the disposal of the passenger affording a most pleasant trip and ennbliner one to visit the verv interesting Rcennvv and imnortant o o J r 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 C Route Ask your ticket agent for tickets via Cincinnati and the Q or write to South W R BLAOEWELL ¬ Georgetown Ky or WC Rinearson Genl Passr Agent Cincinnati 0 Agency of The Globe Tailoring Company Cincin SALES AGENCY OF THE GLOBE TAILORING CO CINCINNATI OHIO i nnci WwMm Ntf 7 tv x flHSKsmom pjJYBgtatal nati 0 Builders of the Best Clothes in America Critical judges of quality and style are the cns they tteeleganceofoor garments most Now that 17 suit made just as yon want iior yon can let us fashion 10- - Builders of the Best Clothes in America The most popular Coat fit pj worn is the Three Button Cutaway Frock When cut and made right thsres nothing so neat and dressy Were offering a Handsome Made Clay at THE SUIT 20 you vant it as Thenthereare others at less some at more At any point in the Same we save you Twenty Per Cent WE ARB REPRESENTED BY itandifllbemade right Always r We are represented by us respon BE TIME ¬ ¬ Mr Katzensten the celebrated cutter of the Globe Tailoring Co will be at Twin Bros the 11th and 12th of October Monday and Tuesday with 300 latest patterns of imported Pall goods You are invited to call and see the line Mr Katzensten tie expert cutter will take your measure for Suit Coat and Vest or Pants and we will make them to order from any of the piece goods you select Prices will be reasonable All we ask remember to call on these days October 11th and 12th and you will He on time5 w 4 X- T- 1 ifl BROTHERS TAILORING DEPARTMENT BOURBONS BIGGEST BARGAIN BRINGERS 701 703 MAINIST PARIS KY f- - 4 IMPERFECT IN ORIGINAL