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Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895)
Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895) Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Champ & Miller Paris, KY 1898 bou1898010701 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895) Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895) Champ & Miller Paris, KY 1898 $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. t- - miiBqfy jpayn I - -- TV 7f JEW V p iM SS Ej E Atiii OUR NORTH MIDDLETOWN AM tJ5 i NEWS Established CHAMP MILLER Editors and Owners PRINTED EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY feb j 1881 EIGHTEENTH YEAR PARIS BOURBON CO KY FRIDAY JANUARY OAK or MAHOGANY YourEIfe Insurecl- - lc a Day -- 7 1898 ¬ NO 2 Interesting Paragaghs Gathered By A Special Scribe finish leather seat full size for 225 Many others just as good rf feVi THIS PEOPLE CAN BE TRUSTED Tnlpflrn wriiif i tn thnir min infprpf Oin s rlts nn fifinthfir ITrimi- We can give ure the past week show they have been investigating tyou the names of quite a number who have bought Leather Furniture h the past week of us Rather good proof isnt it of PRICE AND Vui juxi i l uu cuintJ in Miter luuiviug vi niu uuiei nuco uiu wo will sell you city 1 It THIS WE ARE PREPARED TO PROVE THAT Our line of Dutch lamps at 350 are unequaled in the THAT Our S150 S225 and S300 Chairs are unmatchable any- - H H w pncea rictu res surpasses anytuing 150 and ever seen in the State selling as they do for 60c 75c 125 where 175 THAI uur great sale oi 10 w r-f THAT Thtt line of Fancy Furniture consisting of Desks from 450 up Stools and Taborettes from 150 up Tables from 125 up i Cabinets Music Stands Settees and countless other pieces are unap- proachable for stvle and price I SPECIAL SALE OF CORNER CHAIRS npholsteeed in silk damask at 450 See 350 rugs in windows -- Mahogany finish I rJ C f Wrisrh tsTGelery Tea cures consHna- died on Monday tion i cn picadaches 25c at druggists Mies Lnla Bishop Weaver of the Mndison Institute spent the holidays As they contain recent improvements with her mother Mrd R D Weaver Insure ml the Northwestern to greatly enhancing their musical worth Charles W Wall of this place and day to morrow may be too late which cannot be obtained elsewhere Miss Sarah Eliza Henry of Montgomery county will wed at Little Rock on We are sole representatives and intend- ¬ Wednesday Jan 12 at 1 p m ing purchasers will avoid errors and mis- ¬ QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE ¬ Miss Catherine Gaitskill after spend understanding by conferring with us ing several days with her parents Mr and Mrs John C G iitskill at Side View has returned to her studies at Mthe close of business on the 31st day of December 1897 Hamilton College Lexington I2M23 w 4th St CINCINNATI The following men were sworn in as Sole Stelnway Representatives Directors of the Deposit Bank Wednes RESOURCES LIABILITIES H W Loans andHUDiscounts less day with T J Judy as President DR CALDWELLS Capital Stock paid in cash K M Rogers R C Skillman E 100000 00 loans to lirectors 151541 41 Surplus Fund A Loans to 30000 00 Thomas W A Thomason H Omgers Rogers and J T Collins John 1 Overdraftsfspjeured and unse ¬ 10500 00 Undivided Profits 12776 69 CONSTIPATION 1 Deposits subject to check on Fishei will continue to serve as cashier cured WL 3841 46 which interest is not paid 155463 20 A member of a crowd of school girls Due from NKTional W GG239 1G Banks on road to Paris Friday Dec 24 lost 298239 89 from State her pretty ostrich boa Finder will Due A pony came to our place 3 miles Banks ariBankers 4536 25 please return him to The News refrom Paris on Jackstown pike about porter at the Cliue House and receive a 70795 41 two weeks ago Owner may have 5460 48 reward If a gentleman is so lucky as Other RealjEstate same by proving property and paying to find the boa we will besides the re- ¬ Mortgages 40993 81 for keeping and advertising ward introduce him to the charming Other Stocksiand Bonds 4875 00 J L DEAVER Buys its the chance of a Specie 1022 32 Miss V Bryan and B F Hopkins are in Atlanta Georgia B C Skillnian late of this place is now in Phoenix Arizona Miss Sallie Judy who has been ill for several weeks is improyine Miss Louie Fox of Aason county is the guest of Mrs C C Clarke Miss Julia Desha of Uynthiana is visiting the family of C W Gilkey Rice Harris of Kansas City Mo a brother of E L Harris of this place G J There can be no stronger guarantee gjven you We dare not use a banks name without authority if you doubt it wfFte thm Good health is the best life insurance Wrights Celery Capsules gives you good health they cure Ljer Kidney and Stomach trouble Rheumatism Constipation and Sick Headaches 100 days treatment costs lc a day A sight draft on above bank in evjpjy t box which brings your uionepBack if we fail to cure you Sold by WWE Brooks druggist Our insurance is protected oy bankable paperjm the Capital City Bank of Columbus4 J HOW TO FIND OUT Fill a bottle or common glass with urine and let it stand twenty four hours a sediment or settling indicates an unhealthy con- ¬ dition of the Kidneys When urine stains linen it is evidence of kidney Too frequent desire to urinate or trouble the palu in back is also convincing proof lhat ¬ neys and bladder are out of order the kidWHAT TO DO There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed that Dr Kilmers Swamp Root the great kid- ey remedy fulfills every wish th relieving pain in the back kidneys liver bladder and every part of urinary pas- ¬ sages It corrects inability thehold urine aud to scalding pain in passing i or bad effects following use of liquor wine or beer over- ¬ comes that unpleasant necessity aud being of compelled to get up many times during the night to urinate The mild and the extraor-¬ dinary effect of wamp Root is soon realized It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing ca es If you ned a medicine you should have the best Sold by druggists price fifty cents and one dollar lou may have a sample bottle and pamphlet both sent free by mail Mention The Paris Ky News and send your address to Dr Kilmer Co Binghampton N Y The proprietors of this paper guarantee the gen uiness of this oiler 24sp lmo ¬ - Kurtzman Pianos Sill r m4 ¬ Have for years been known as araeng the best Over 10000 are in use iii Cincinnati and surrounding territory These celebrated instruments are law Better Than Ever HfOTTPilBOjSr BJOsTK Ernest Urchs Co ¬ SY WP PEIPIS3 N Poiy Taken Up Paris Ky ¬ BROW Lit O liU 320 KL-ST- - Ill Mi tmmmtiimmm uo ofvrv 5 k S inas supplies K L See my select stock of Christ i life time At an early hour last Saturday night three affable lady teachers of the K C and B College- - Miss Allie Hart of Paris Miss Allie May McUorkle of Eminence aud Etha Van Arsdell of Honstonville all of whom spent the holidays at their homes gaining there- ¬ by enlarged ideas of the world and the returned to worlds surroundings their school work in one of the most gifted little hamlets in the bluegrass Mondays reopening was an epoch in the K C and B College that will mark the beginning of a new era of greater pros- ¬ perity -- Currency Furnituremsaj Fixtures k S fp 8710 00 9732 32 500 00 298239 89 Money Wanted I desire to borrow 2500 on first mortgage on city property Address G care The News Paris Ky tl Roxy m State of Kentucky CounEvjfof Bourbon C S8 lOdc tf BuckripjgWbodford Cashier of Bourbon Bank a Bank located and doing business atjfcfo 335 Main street in the City of Paris in said County being duly sworn sayfthit the foregoing Report is in all respects a true statement of the condition Qthe said Bank at the close of business on the 31st day of December u 1897 to thefoest of his knowledge and belief and further says that the business of said BankWisrbeen transacted at the location named and not elsewhere and that a gentle I have for the above report is made in compliance with an official notice received from the pony which sale now driving to my I am Secretary oJf State designating the 31st day of December 1897 as the day on which delivery wagon Apply to such reportjball be made Pony For Sale eight-year-old irr 1 r iirifiiiiMifiri- f- A L -- H JUbUP n liliifni witwfirk -- j SubscriMiand sworn to before meL B WOODFORD Cashier li- - -- nil l 4 Figs 8 to 15c lb Raisins 8 to 15c lb Candies 6 1 4 to 25c lb Dates 7 1 2 c lb Oranges 25 to 40c dozen Apples bananas prunes grapes pickles dried fruits oysters celery crackers turkeys The cheapest line of fire works in jrans Come and see me -- xh sraaafiryVisos Woodford -- 3 Cashierhe 5th I JM DAVIS Director - 10dc i a jjiiL5iiii tf - 0 GROSCHE m Paws Ky ft -- - j- iU islui ia-- M - - IT - MMBHHHHiHEMll TgW 0 t I EDWARDS JE3 r91ITisP now generally acknowledged that many unscrupulous millers mix corn flour corn starch and the refuse of sugar refineries with their flour in order to enhance their profits Some of these ingredients are positively injurious as food and contain no nutritive prop- ¬ erties whatsoever We do not wish as yet to mention names but it has been proved by competent analysis that more than one mill selling flour in Paris has ¬ been detected in selling blended flour We unhesitatingly guarantee that every sacs of flour of whatever grade that goes from our mill is pure wheaten product Our mill is open to inspection at any time and we have 110 machinery for making blended flour as many mills have If you want to be sure that you are buying good pure wholesome flour buy that made by us which is sold by all leading grocers tHENRY SPEARS Notary PublicJ E F CLAY- Director W O HINT0NAgl3 5BBSs 1 i I v mm QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE Agricultural Bank of Paris Kentucky At the close of business on the 31st day of December RESOURCES Loans and Discounts less loans 205595 81 to Directors Loans to Directors officers 4933 39 not included 9G0 00 Loans to Officers 5543 8b Overdrafts unse ured Due from National 28836 41 Banks Due from State and Banks 13257 9S Bankers 42094 39 4000 00 Banking House and Lut 98230 91 Mortgages 674 00 Other Stocks and Bonds 7867 00 Specie 3786 00 Currency 1897 Fire Wind and Storm Insurance OLD THE VERY BEST RELIABLE PROMPT P AYING Hi LIABILITIES Capital Stock paid in in cash 100000 Surplus Fund 90000 Undivided Profits 5834 Deposits subject to check on which interest is not paid 179101 00 80 60 31 NON UNION BIG ROUTE FOUR BEST LINE TO AND FROM 374935 91 4 TOLEDO DETKOIT 1 All Points in Michigan f CHICAGO White City Special Best Terminal Station Paris Milling Co ST LOUIS Avoiding The Tunnel siJ Ky News Culled Exchange Clearings for CARLISLE 250 58 11903 58 00 WE ARE THE PEOPLE -- TST-jES iteics carters For Correct Styles and Dunian Plats Knox Styles 3 New line of Shirts from 75c up The very latest collars and cuSs strictly up to date Collars 15c to 20c Cuffs 20c and 25c per pair Latest Neckties 25c 50c and 7j5g i m H j jWfv dsJscc r3yriHT gRur gents furnishings Ful and complete line of OUR HOLIDAY BARGAINS 30 Business Suits for 35 S35 Business Suits lor 30 m m Qur 40 Business Suits for 35 rur iSold by others for 55 to 60 Our 35 Overcoats for 30 Our 40 Overcoatsfor 535 Sold by others for 60 1- - Oux 30 Overcoatsfor 25 1000 and Fixtures From Nic as County Furniture Precincts 374935 91 Died At his home near Ellisville on Tuesday Dight James H Gilford aged 50 State of Kentucky ss County of Bourbon Thos A Dorsey sold a ouse and lot in Dorsiana to his son Edward O for Jno 3 McClintock Cashier of the Agricultural Baud a Bank located and 1000 cash doing business at No 341 Main street in the City of Paris in said county being true Married On Jan 2d 1898 Mr Jas duly sworn 6ays that the foregoing Report is in all respects a day statement of of December close of business on the 31st B Thomas and Miss Pickett Porter the condition of said Bank at the and further says that the business of 1897 to the best of his knowledge and belief both of Nicholas said Bank has been transacted at the location named and not elsewhere and that Died At his home near this city on report is made in compliance with an official notice received from the Saturday night last Mr Andrew Smith the above of State designating the 31st day of December 1S97 as the day on which Secretary aged about 68 years such report shall4 be made Married On Dec 30 1897 Mr Subscribed and sworn to before ra by 1 JNO J McOLINTOCK Cashier Peter Henderson and Miss Nannie L HENRY SPEARS Director Jno J McClintock Cashier the 4th Sparks both of Nicholas f JNO C CLAY Director 1898 day of January Died On the 2d inst Herbert Ennis J J D MCCLINTOCK Director P I McCarthy N P five year old son of Harry and Stella Day after a lingering illness On Wednesday night Miss Blanche Ratliff entertained quite a number of Bank of the condition of the Agricultural young friends at the home of Mr C C Statement of Paris Ky incorporated at close of business Dec Ratliff Communion services will be held in 31 1897 the Presbyterian Church Sunday morn- ¬ LIABILITIES RESOURCES ing Also preaching Saturday morning Capital dtock 100000 00 at 1045 Real Estate Banking House 90000 00 5000 00 SurpluB Furniture According to commissions issued by Other Stock etc 674 00 Gain and Loss 5834 60 Gov Bradley on the first instant Drs 179101 81 5553 83 Individual Deposits Munger Dills and Howe will compose Overdrafts 309720 11 Due Banks 00 the County Board of Health for Nicho Loans and Discounts 11903 58 Cash las County the next two yeari 42094 39 374935 91 Due from Banks I BOSTON Wagner Sleeping Cars Buffett Parlor Cars Wagner Sleeping Cars Private Compartment Cars Elegant Coaches and Dining Cars Be sure your tickets read via BIG Passenger Traffic Mgr D BvMAKTIXf NEW YORK FOUR o Mccormick j Gen Cincinnati PassTTkt Agt O TH32 NEW YORK WORLD THRICE-A-WEE- K Wi SsJ - EDITIOJT 18 Pages a Week 130 Papers a Year FOR ONE DOLLAlt t Pablibhed every Sunday Alternate Day except - ¬ Try our L 8 Trousers Sold by others for fi k We mean what we say and can prove it The above prices are for Cash fePARIS FURHISHIHGTAILORIHG H S STOUT Manager JOE MUXSON 1 CO Catter Disponed of as follows in electric bells or electric burglar Gross Earnings past six Dividend No 42 12094 74 5000 00 months alarms in storerooms or residences Gain and Loss remaining 2611 52 Expenses Paid 3198 56 Added to Surplus 673 10 Can recharge and repair old batteries 14706 26 Gain and Loss remaining 5834 60 and overhaul old wires and make as good as new Terms extremely reason- ¬ 14706 26 able Wood Grinnan Jno J McClintock Cashier states he is cashier of the Agricultural Bank of Paris Ky and that the above is a true statement of said Bank to the best of his v knowledge andkbelief Jno J McClixtock Cashier Wrights Celery- Tea reflates the SubscriDadlrad sworn t I3fore me this 31st day of Dec 1897 liver and kidneys cures tiation Buckner WoodFokd Notary Public and headache J5c at - I offer my services to the public to put 37493591 -- rts The Thrice-a-Wee- k Edition of - SIhe New York World is first among all weekly papers in size frequemjy of publication and the freshness accuracy and variety of its contents It has all the merits of a great 6 daily at the the price of a dollar weekly Its jmlii cal news is prompt complete accurrste and impartial as all its readers wi tn- tify It is against the monopolies and for the people It prints the news of all the world having special correspondence froM aa important newb points on the globe Iff has brilliant illustrations stories by great authors a capital humor page complete markets departments for the household and womens work and other Bpecial departments of usual We offer this unequaled in wapaper and The Bourbon News tog her one year for 225 j ne regular subscription puce- - f the two papeis is C30Q C i- As 73-i-R -- is- - m IF intrt 1 W - IS C t JfeSSV 33- -- - -r-4- fai v lHitiTiT ir - - A THE PUBLICATION Of Pensioners List Causes Applications CIVIL SERVICE Bill Drafted to Make Sweeping Change in tiie Law The Most Important is the TRAIN R0BBEES1 Bind and Gag a Messenger on arTjiEx press Car Near Port Arthur Kan I for Cancellation of Pensions Counterfeit Establishment of a Five Year Tenure of Office ti I J Y w Washington Jan 6 Senator Maspn Wednesday introduced a bill fixing a special tax upon the manufacture of mixed flour manufacturers being re- ¬ de- ¬ quired to pay 100 Washington Jan 5 Since the agi- ¬ fined by the bill to be Mixed flour is the food product tation concerning- the publication of made from wheat and mixed with the list of pensioners commenced Com-¬ ground corn or other foreign sub- ¬ missioner Evans has received several stances A fine of 1000 is imposed for letters from pensioners requesting a I he manufacture of this product with cancellation of their pensions One crut paying the tax and like heavy pensioner in Michigan enclosed his fines are oth- ¬ provided for certificate and stated his desire to have er violations An internal revenue the same recalled as he was not en- ¬ tax of four cents for each ten pound titled to the governments bounty He packages in addition to the customs added that he would endeavor to re ¬ duty is imposed upon imported mixed turn all the money drawn since 1895 flour when the pension was granted Among the numerous bills intro¬ United States Treasurer Eoberts duced Wednesday were the following Tuesday sent the following telegram By Mr Lodge granting right of way to all assistant treasurers through Alaska to the Alaska North- ¬ Discovery of dangerous counter-¬ western Railroad company from the feits compels retirement of all 100 sil-¬ Lynn canal via Chilkoot Pass to the ver certificates Forward all such northern boundary of the territory notes to this office for destruction Be Representative Johnson of North cautious in receiving denomination akota Wednesday introduced a bill and kind mentioned to repeal the law which has just gone Another of these counterfeits was into effect relative to pelagic sealing Tuesday discovered in a package re- ¬ and the importation of sealskins taken ceived from Chicago So far as known by pelagic sealers the only cities in which they have ap- ¬ The bill for the reform of the civil peared are Chicago St Louis and Phil-- service law which has been drafted by adelphia a special committee of republican Pension Commissioner Evans has in members of the house of representa- ¬ preparation a circular letter to mem- ¬ tives opposed to the system in its pre- ¬ bers of congress asking their sent form makes sweeping changes in the order recently issued pro¬ in the present system the most impor ¬ hibiting the further consideration tant of which is the establishment of of pension claims until one year has a five year tenure of office elapsed from the date of last for those government em action This step was necessary ployes who are brought within because of the frequent calls of the terms of the bill The measure congressmen for a statement show ¬ limits the application of the civil serving status of claims which congested ice system to the departments in Wash ¬ the work of bureau to such an extent ington and to such other localities as to seriously interfere with routine where the total number of employs ex- ¬ business There are few instances ceed 25 All appointees are commis where additional evidence of further missioned for five jears with the disability occurs within a year and ac¬ power of removal clearly regulated cording to the new rule the case may and vested in the appointing power be taken up after that time and if it It is provided however that no remov- ¬ contains additional evidence of such al shall be made for political or a character as to warrant a re opening religious causes and in case of removal of the case such action will be taken the causes shall be specified and the The special committee appointed by papers made a record of the office the recent conference of the members All persons now in the public service of the house of representatives oppos- ¬ are to terminate their service five ed to existing civil service reform has years from the time that the act takes agreed on a measure and will report it effect The measure recognizes the to the conference sometime Wednes ¬ general eligibility of these persons day It makes a number of changes for reap pointment in the offices now in the classified ser- ¬ It includes in the civil service postal vice and limits in specific terms the clerks and letter carriers in offices hav ¬ powers and duties of the civil service ing over ten employes exclusive of commission subordinates It limits the civil service regulations to clerks whose compensa- ¬ THEODORE DURRANT tion is from 900 to 1800 per year and The Condemned Murderer Makes Several includes as clerks copyists computers Requests Concerning His Execution counters and draughtsmen San Quentin Cal Jan 5 Theodore It is pointed out that the essential Durrant has rehearsed the scene of his idea of the foregoing bill is to take out own death At his own request made of the civil service all responsible and absolutely without emotion he has important officers limiting it only to been told every incident that will clerks in Washington and certain large mark the minutes of his last hours of cities and in these cases fixing a ten ¬ life ure of office of five years The mem¬ From the moment that he awakens bers of the special committee framing next Friday morning until Warden the bill are well pleased with their la- ¬ JHallgiyes the signal to spring the gal- - bors saying that the orignal purpose of sWffffliei5doIIHSiaiifc knows the civil service hasbeen retained and ti is expected of him that its radical expansions have been Tne condemned has made the follow cut off ing requests concerning his execution Representative Clark of Iowa intro ¬ First That the rope used to hang duced a bill making the gold dollar the him shall be destroyed immediately af sole unit of value directing every na ¬ ter his death so that no person can say tional bank to redeem its notes in dol- ¬ that he holds a piece of it as a me- ¬ lars of such value and restricting the mento denominations of treasury or national Second That none of the spectators bank notes to ten dollars or its mul- ¬ shall be allowed to gaze upon his feat-¬ tiples those outstanding of less de- ¬ ures after he is executed nominations being called in and Third That no autopsy shall beheld standard silver dollars given in ex- ¬ after death and that no physician be change and certificates destroyed allowed to examine his body while after July 1 1900 the treasury Fourth That after he is pronounced is to refuse all such certificates as pay dead his remains shall be delivered to ment of public dues The national his parents as soon as possible bank acts also are amended to charter banks with a paid up capital stock of GOLD DEPOSITS 20000 which may issue currency to Of Great Richness Discovered in Labrador the amount of the face of their securi- ¬ A Gold Seeking Expedition Will Start in ties they deposit with the government the Spring the tax on circulation to be one half of N S Jan 5 Representa- ¬ one per cent payable annually in Jan ¬ Halifax tives of a Canadian and American com ¬ uary pany who visited Labrador for the Wasjpingtox Jan 6 Senator Teller purpose of erecting saw mills report Col Wednesday introduced a concur- ¬ A rnmk Withdrawal of All 8100 Silver Certifi- ¬ cates A Measure to Be Introduced Changing the Civil Service Law - Dangerous The Local Safe Was Opened and Everything of Value Was Taken The Through Time Lock Safe Was Not Touched Robbers Get Considerable Boodle messenger seems to have seen express car as the climbed into the train left the depot They overpow- ¬ ered the messenger bound and gagged him and rifled the car before the train came to a stop When the train slowed up at a railroad cross- ¬ ing known as Air Line Junc- ¬ about three months of inactivity Kan- ¬ sas Citys train robbers scored another brilliant achievement Tuesday night This time the Kansas City Pittsburg Gulf road is the sufferer The companys Port Arthur special which left the companys depot here at 640 Tuesday night was robbed before it had passed beyond the city limits Two men whom no one but the express ¬ Kansas City Mo Jan 5 After ¬ of the city they climbed out of the car and disappeared Nothing was known of the robbery until a Negro train helpless express messenger After the train had been stopped and others of the crew had come forward and released the express messenger it was found that the robbers had rifled the local safe taking from it every ¬ thing of value They had made no effort to disturb the through safe which is protected by a time lock From Air Line junction a telegraphic report of the robbery was sent to the city and pro the train ceeded south The Wells Fago ¬ tion near the southeastern limits porter entered the car and found the ¬ ¬ that rador are on the same range as those on the Klondike Preliminary arrange ments for a gold seeking expedition which is to start by vessel in the spring have already been made 1 great mining country There exists the government be paid in standard strong evidence that gold is to be ob1 silver dollars and that such payment tained in quantities equaled only by is not in violation of public faith or in the deposits of the Klondike In fact derogation of the rights of the public it is asserted that the deposits in Lab or creditor The resolution vs re- ¬ ¬ ¬ of gold of great rich- ¬ bonds of the United States principal ness aiid is destined to become a and interest should at the option of posits that country contains de- ¬ rent resolution declaring that the ferred to the finance committee There was a very large attendance in the hall of representatives when the house reconvened Wednesday after the holiday recess The galleries bers of the Ohio delegation both democrats and republicans were absent Without any preliminary business the house went into committee of the whole to resume consideration of the legislative executive and judicial appropriation bilL All the features of the bill had been disposed of except the appropriation for the civil service ¬ Beet Sugar Factory atOgden E H Co rev of Cleveland O have bsed a contract with David E Ecles Ld John Clark of Ogden Utah for le construction of a beet sugar facto The terms of the con ry at Ogden provide that the factory will have tr ict va laily capaity of 700 tons and shall be completed in time to handle the beet When completed the r6p of 1898 represent an expenditure of plant will ILos Cal 5 Angeles Jan were crowded It was noticed that with one or two exceptions the mem- ¬ ¬ Tabfout 8700000 Ogdensburg N Y Jan 5 The Ash¬ ley Hardware and Iron Co the oldest hardware establishment here was closed by the sheriff Tuesday on three executions amounting td 16000 Other claims are being filed and will reach about 40000 The stock is estimated to inventory at 30000 VanCourtlandt Ogden of this city was married Tuesday to Frank McNutt of Richmond Ind The wedding was a very quiet affair only the intimate mends of the families being invited Archbishop Corrigan performed the ceremony Mr McJNutt was secretary of legation at Madrid when A Louden Snowden was United States minister J to Spain and later held a like position -- Closed hy the Sheriff commission upon which by previous arrangement there was to be an in definte general debate Assistant Secretary Vanderlip said Wednesday that there need be no fear that the treasury will contribute to any stringency in the money market and that if any occurred it would not result from redemption of outstanding currency sixes The treasury had con- ¬ ducted the Union Pacific settlement so as to avoid tight money London Jan 0 The Brussels corre- ¬ spondent of the Daily Chronicle says that the nephew of King Leopold of Belgium Prince Albert Leopold the heir presumptive to the Belgian throne will make a long tour of the United States and Canada Will Visit the United States it but circles however the impression is that the robbers secured several thousand he did not then understand the meas- ¬ ure and was induced to support the dollars in money and jewelry The report received at the express measure by Senator Foraker who was companys office here states that the here at that time urging the members The debate robbers entered the express car as the to pass the law became general and it was train was passing Kyrads having freely charged by members in their forced the rear door with a jimmy E N Hyde of Kansas City was the ex- ¬ speeches that Senator Hanna was at press messenger Upon turning from the state house two years ago as well his work he looked into the barrel of a as Senator Foraker lobbying for the six shooter The messenger offered ho 50 year street railway franchise law resistance though he was well armed Other proceedings in the house were and after the robbers had bound him merely routine but the old lines of one of the two stood guard over him Monday were drawn whenever the steering committee so desired In the while the other rifled the safe senate there were mo new develop- ¬ The robbers are described as smoothfaced young men and the fact that ments Senator Burke continued to co- ¬ both were extremely nervous while in operate with the democrats At 11 a m both branches of the legis- ¬ the express car is taken as evidence that they are new recruits to Kansas lature met in joint assembly to can- ¬ vass the vote of the last state elecCitys force of train robbers tion It was a dull proceeding in strong contrast with the scenes at the THE ST LOUIS CLUB same and place Franchise Sold to John T Brush and Asso¬ when hourtwo houses one week hence the assemble together ciatesThe Transfer Made for joint ballotting for United States Indianapolis Ind Jan 5 Accord ing to the News John T Brush is like- senator During the two hours dely to become the owner of the St Louis voted to canvassing the vote the sen- ¬ baseball franchise within the next24 ators and representatives put in the hours Accompanied by William H time conferring on the senatorial con- ¬ test opin it was Schmidt Mr Brush left for St Louis ion andHanna the concensus of votes was short three that hoping to close the deal which has and that the opposition was becoming been pending for three weeks Mr more concentrated for Kurtz for the Schmidt took with him certified checks short term and Bushnell for the long for a large amount of money and it is term believed that the deal all but pay ¬ IN CONGRESS ing over the money has been com- ¬ pleted for several days Mr Brush Both Houses Meet After the Holiday Re ¬ has held several conferences with Chris cess and Discuss the6 Civil Service ILaw ¬ Washington Jan Von der Ahes representative within sentation of replies of Senate The of prethe the last month and it is said on good cabinet to the resolution the members calling for informa- ¬ authority that he has secured an op- tion as to the application of the civil service tion on the St Louis franchise It is law to the various departments of the govern- ¬ together the thought that in addition to Mr mentestablishing with the consideration ofcen- ¬ a bureau for the twelfth bill Schmidt A G Spaulding C C Spink sus precipitated a sharp civil service debate of St Louis and A C Anscn are in- ¬ in the senate Wednesday Mr Cullom 111 ¬ terested with Mr Brush in the pur- the author of the resolution thought that modi- ¬ fication in the law ought to be made as the au chase of the Browns thorities had far away the origi ¬ St Louis Jan 5 Formal transfer nal intention drifted authors of fromcivil service of the the of the St Louis Browns was made to law Mr Allen charged Neb that Mr John T Brush at 4 oclock Mon¬ the law was openly and daily violated and day Messrs A G Spaulding C C said it was a hiss and byword among the peo- ¬ Mo declared that Spink and A C Anson are said to be ple Mr CockrellSecretary Sherman to it was presumptuous in make also interested with Mr Brush in the recommendations to congress that certain posi- ¬ tions in his department should be excepted purchase of the Browns Wednesday morning Messrs Von der from the classified service when the president had full authority the exceptions he Ahe and Muckenf uss were found and recommended Heto make an effort was being thought emphatically denied in toto having made to tie the presidents hands Mr Davis seen Mr Brush or Schmidt and even chairman of the committee on foreign rela ¬ gave stated they do not know whether the tionsdaily notice that he would next Monday¬ and thereafter move that the senate contwo Indianapolis gentlemen are in the sider in executive session the Hawaiian annex ¬ city and that no deal has taken pJace ation treaty until it was disposed of finally as yet House The civil service debate began in the house Wednesday based on the item in the Cheaper Gas for New York appropriaAlbany N Y Jan 5 At the open ¬ legislativeforexecutive and judicialthe commis- ¬¬ tion bill the maintenance of ing session of the senate Wednesday sion It promises to continue at least until the Senator Guy of Bronx introduced a end of this week with a possibility that it may generally on But it bill providing that gas shall be fur ¬ run longer that the isappropriationadmitted bill in the both sides nished for 1 per chousand to private will stand as the anti civil service reconsumers in Greater New York formers do not seriously contemplate an The debate and for 75 cents per thousand for mu- ¬ attempt to strike it out therefore is only preliminary to any pro- ¬ nicipal buildings institutions and gramme which the enemies of the law streets The bill places the jurisdic may agree upon The members of the house over gas meters and all mechani- are divided into three camps on this question tion cal appliances for the measurement of those who stand by the law those who advo- ¬ gas in the hands of the board ofpublic cate its entire repeal and those who desire its modification These divisions were apparent improvement The bill covers- entire in the debate Wednesday the nature of which Greater New York was not as stirring as had been anticipated Messrs Moody rep Mass Grow rep Pa Ignatius Donnelly to Marry and Greene pop Neb defended the law St Paul Minn Jan 5 The an- ¬ Messrs Dockery dem Mo Robb dem opposed it Pearson rep nouncement was made Tuesday that Mo andwhile Mr Landis N C Ind favored rep outright Hon Ignatius Donnelly the well modification of the law known populist leader famous also as Fatal Quarrel Over Money Matters author of many popular books and up Chicago Jan Edward M Hunt holder of the Baconian authorship of an ex deputy sheriff was shot and Shakespeares works will in six weeks killed Wednesday afternoon hy V marry Miss Marian Hansen who has Kay Smith a bailiff in Judge Hortons been stenographer in the office of his court and a nephew of the judge The newspaper The Sage of Nininger men had quarreled some time ago over as Mr Donnelly is called is now GO a small sum of money due from Smith to Hunt years old and Miss Hansen is 20 ¬ ¬ ¬ Contain Mercury mercury will Burely destroy the sense of as Bmeli and completely derange the whole sys bill repealing the law for 50 year fran- ¬ tem when entering it through the mucous never be chises to street railways This repeal- ¬ surfaces Such articles should reputable used except on prescriptions from ing bill was introduced by Representa- physicians as the damage they will do is tive Bramley of Cleveland who is ten fold to the good you can possibly de one of the republicans opposing rive from them Halls Catarrh Cure man Co Toledo ufactured by F J Cheney Co controls the express business on Hanna and the Bramley bill was con- ¬ O contains no mercury and is taken In the Pittsburg Gulf road At the ex sidered as aimed at Hanna After ternally acting directly upon the blood and surfaces of the system In Dress companys office here C R Teas Bramley spoke for his bill Mr Boxwell mucous Catarrh Cure be sure you buying get the Halls replied and charged Bramley with us ¬ genuine the local manager stated that there It is taken internally and made was not much of value in the local safe ing this bill for defense and buncomb m Toledo Ohio by F J Cheney Co Tes and that 200 or 300 would probably at this time Boxwell said he voted for timonials free Bold by Druggists price 75c per bottle cover the companys loss In police the 50 years franchise law in the last Halls Family Pills are the best legislature and was sorry for ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ THE OHIO HOUSE By a Unanimous Vote Passes the Measure Repealing the law for 50 Year Fran ¬ chises for Street Railways Columbus O Jan 6 The senatorial contest became more bitter Wednes day than ever After the sensational developments Tuesday night in connection with the repeated changes oi Representative Griffith and othei doubtful members the skirmishing proceeded more clandestinely on both No claims of changes were sides made on either side It was the purpose of the managers in not holding any caucuses to be able to keep theii own secrets till the balloting began a week hence It is believed that secrel compacts are being made that will not become known until the votes of members are recorded The situation Wed nesday was the same as after the caucuses of Saturday night and the organization of the legislature on Monday All those who changed their preferences Tuesday were brought back dur ing the night to their original places There was much comment Wednes day on the departure of Congressman Grosvenor for Washington after ex Secretary of State Ryan and others had recently been there in the interest of Senator Hanna The Hanna men insisted that there would be no legatee while the opposition insisted that they had Hanna beaten now and would beat Secretary Sherman Assistant Secretary Day or any other one that the friends of the national administration brought out in place of Hanna The feature of Wednesday was the passage in the house as its first measure and by a unanimous vote of the ¬ ¬ ¬ HELD AN ACCIDENT POLICY If a man has no dust his name is usually A Cyclists Disgust at Not Being Harts mud a man has horse sense he should know In sl Collision If when to say neigh This is the story of a somewhat unusual If the cat scratches you it is always the accident It happened on the Conduit road Ironical Ifs M ¬ If canes were to eo out of fashion some Lyoung men would have no visible means of support Chicago News missionary Training School writers sign of the Maltese cross If a man would follow the advice he gives to others he would soon be perfect If the mercury goes higher than usual next summer blame it on the Dingley bill If women were as fond of appearing in print as in silk there would be more lady ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ The Chicago Medical Missionary Training School 1920 Wabash avenue has been established for the purpose of preparing Christian young men and women to laboi in city missionary and rescue work Consecrated young people of both sexes are received as students without regard to creed provided they are prepared to devote theii lives to Gospel philanthropic work The instructors are physicians trained medical nurses and philanthropic workers who give their services free and students are fur nished with room and tuition free of charge and boarded on the European plan at a cost Post of from 1 to 125 per week for meals The All kinds little or big St Jacobs OiP superintendent of the school who may be Surely cures aches and pains addressed at 1926 Wabash ave Chicago will give all the information needed regarding No man ever had as many suspenders aai this purely non sectarian benevolent eshe wanted Washington Democrat tablishment its aims and work Blacker the spot surer the cure UseSt It Is to He Hoped So Jacobs Oil for bruises Hogan Oi wonder who will be th last man on airth Love is thin when faults are thick Farm GioganOi dunno anny more than you But it is hoped that hell he an oondertaker Journal so he will know how to bury himself dacent ly Indianapolis Journal hu--man- ity ¬ ¬ ¬ one evening early in the fall and the man ivho told me about it was an eyewitness way appropriate by It is singularly be an eyewitness the he isfor that he should A man on a bi- ¬ an oculist by profession cycle was scorching cheerily along on the way to town when suddenly there loomed up Dut of the darkness in front of him a heavy wagon and a team headed straight for him There was no tiirie to turn out The wheel crashed into the wagon pole and the rider fall ¬ was thrown completely over the horses ocu- ¬ wagon The ing between them and the list ran to the rescue expecting to see a limp mass of bleeding and unconscious Instead he saw a kicking and swearing person who was apparently unin ¬ jured The bicycle was a Chinese puzzle of twisted wire Are you hurt asked the oculist The swearing person picked himself up and stopped swearing He gazed at what had once been a fair young bicycle Hurt he said in a tone of deepest dis gust Hurt Me Of course I aint hurt Washington Ive got an accident policy ¬ if 1 M Hoods Sarsaparilla Beware of Ointments for Catarrh Chat ¬ Absolutely cures scrofula Salt rheum Dyspepsia rheumatism Catarrh and all diseases Originating in or promoted By impure blood It is The great nerve tonic Stomach regulator and -- Strength builder A perfect type of the highest order of excellence for me this morning Had Looked Them Over Mistress Bridget are there any letters Bridget Only two postal cards but there s nothing of importance in them Fliegende Blaetter t X I - remedy for sea sickness Nausea dyspepsi biliousness constipation malaria nervous ness and kidney trouble all succumb to its beneficent and speedy action Reports of maritime disasters along the coast come in thick and fast People who go down to the sea in ships should bear in mind one thing in particular namely that it is highly desirable to take along a supply of Hostetters Stomach Bitters as a ¬ Destructive Storms Alone the Const z Not Necessarily rents that forty-dollars-a-mon- th house of yours does he He pays too much rent Landlord sighing You dont knowhim -- Puck Waller So Bilker I itm 111 i m m ha term Mlai Everyones favorite adjective which he secretly enjoys when applied to himhelf is prominent Atchison Globe People overlooked the importance of permanently beneficial effects and were satisfied with transient action but now that it is generally known that Syrup of Figs will permanently overcome habitual constipation well informed people will not buy other laxatives which act for a time but finally injure the system Buy the genuine made by the California Fig Syrup Co ¬ ¬ ¬ TRADE MARK In Olden Times WalteiBaftel BSi ¬ ¬ Breakfast J ¬ that Van Noodle Dyerknow Miss Tungbit old duffer Chapwith called me a muff the other night Miss lungbit Indeed Why I think you more closely resemble a boa Harlem Life nciia ABSOLUTELY PURE Delicious How silly it makes one feel to reach out to shake hands and not be noticed by the other fellow Washington Democrat cannot speak too highly of Pisos Cure for Consumption Mrs Frank Mobbs 215 W 22d St New York Oct 29 1894 Of course the cold cash we hear so much about comes from the Klondike Atchison Globe Sudden weather changes bring rheumatism St Jacobs Oil makes prompt cure ¬ Nutritious Z ¬ I COSTS LESS THAN ONE CENT ACDP Be sure yon get the genuine article made at Dorchester Mass by X WALTER BAKER X ESTABLISHED 1780 CO Ltd t X ¬ 6 SOOTH CAROLINA HEARD FROM you must tell your troubles tell them to a reporter Atchison Globe If This with Sciatica Put a pain to sleep St Jacobs Oil dees Torment cured pleasure when I vi MJJttstcrts v Unbidden guests give they go Rams Horn Feet Sick Headache masmim Sleepless Nights and H Goeth S C mites For several years I bad Buf fered much from Cold gtftjpfRqg eseTVShD v eeeflBB found no relief until I commenced taking that greatest of all medicines Dr Iiver Medicine It is better than the others 31 A Simmons SSSIkSSS ¬ ¬ fK09ujSKgL WJbpltL i Wk BSSSrSSSSm Enlargement of the Womb This may be caused by congestion inflam ¬ mation or tumors The symptoms are a dull pain in the lower part of the abdomen sometimes depressing or sinking down or the womb and some uneasiness in empty ¬ ing the bladder and bowels Costivenesa should be avoided by using Dr M A Sim mons tivor Medicine in small doses and our Mexican Female Remedy used as an injection and theperaistent use of Simmons Squaw Tine Wine will brinK about a cure ¬ lr ¬ yTvJflBffBiBk iEKESJO JfujlaAntfMt ¬ - ¬ 5 Grand Rapids Mich Jan 6 James E McBride a member of the populist Oviedo capital of the province of that name in the Asturias district says national committee and prominent in that 200 kilogrammes about 440 Michigan populist circles was arrested pounds of powder exploded Tuesday Wednesday on the charge of emat the San Manjova factory Seven bezzling 300 from a client were killed outright and many badly To Stimulate Exports injured The buildings were complete A Monster Petition St Petersburg Jan 6 In order to ly destroyed C A petition Cleveland promote exports the railroad commitsigned by 4000 republicans has been Russia Orders Arms tee has ordered a reduction of 20 per Boston Jan 5 The Winchestei cent in the freight rates o flour go forwarded to Columbus protesting lat Home when Gov A G Porter of against Bushnells Arms Co Indiana represented- - this government pecanoe club met conduct The Tip ¬ telegraph has received a large order by ing to Russian seaports and a reduc Wednesday night for 4 from San Ut the Italian capital Francisco The tion of 16 per cent on grain intended The bride is the purpose of expelling McKisson arms are supposed to be for theBuV to be ground at seaports prior to ship t in orphan and possessed of a fortune Mason Bramley and Burke sian government m t ment imsdatSlOOOoan -J ¬ The McXutt Ogden Nuptials NewYobk Jan 5 Miss Margaret Seven Killed in a Powder Explosion Madiud Jan 5 A dispatch from Charged With Embezzlement 0Jan ¬ ¬ ¬ Both tho method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys Liver and Bowels cleanses the sys tem effectually dispels colds head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation Syrup of Figs is the Irregular Appoint only remedy of its kind ever proThis condition is a symptom of some COB Btitutional derangement of tho system es duced pleasing to the taste and ac pecially of indigestion ceptable to the stomach prompt in slererfm dyspepsia generally has in mind aa its action and truly beneficial lie its In body Bl Ho is as miserable capricious appetite is more than the wnims of a spoiled child at times effects prepared only from the most there food at others a healthy and agreeable substances its ing of is a craving forthought of eating loath even the very This and many excellent qualities commend it condition rendors life miserable M Ashould be corrected by the use of Dr Sim to all and have made it the most znons Liver Medicine Knocked1 Out Zeilins big fraud Bas popular remedy known lust been knocked out by the Supremo Court The merchants Syrup of Figs i for sale in 50 were induced unfortunate stuff find who to buy the them selves with goods that cannot be sold aa cent bottles by all leading drugbe Supreme The United gists Any reliable druggist who States Court Court enjoined it old proprie knocked out the tors of article now may not have it on hand will pro- ¬ TPraupht tho perpetrators ofcalled Black as fraud Moral Donrt tamper with frauds cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it JDo not accept any HOWE ShorthaudBookUeepIng Penmanshlpetc b mall substitute DTMnV taught competent Expense low Positionwnen Write ¬ ¬ 03OT Hattieville S C says Have used Dr M A Sim ¬ mons Liver Medicine six years in my family My Wife thinks there is noth ing like it for Consti ¬ pated Bowels and Bil ¬ iousness It cured mo of Palpitation of Heart Have used Zellins Regu ¬ lator and think Dr M A s X M tho best and uso no other ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ - CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO SAN FRANCISCO CAL PATS Aatrlttp Corrnpondtptt Collese for catalogue Blddcfortl Me IDUISVUIE KY KM YORK Kit PATFIIlTi Patent Sollcllers rtt EDGARTiTr ill f Lit i 0 A i0 fpplD9WtaisBdwjXewTorav K- - tfrr r3 i - ilrrfiKr n trti MfciiiitaMaiM 1 i km in ii mum ii u Tfr T - ii iii iilliiliii iniTr in s F SiEria11 fS XTxavmxaauu- lW- - -- l bpw - fVBp v i jI Tit f - 1 fs r Si THE BOURBON NEWS FEIMY JANUARY K 7 1898 - a i m f rzsc JURY Id KEN Bradleys MessQoe Sunn Reeomib MODS ol Economy Advocated and New Public Buildings Suggested estate Property by Tollgate Raiders Wants the Separate Coach Law Repealed A Reform School is Urged The Indebtedness of the State Is Depreciated -- Ky Jan 5 Gov Bradley sent the following message to both branches of the legislature Wednesday 3y authority of law enacted at the lastses- sion the 500000 bonds were prepared and bids taken therefor These oonds only bear 4 per cent interest payable semi annually and have but ten years to run but despite these facts they were sold at a premium of 747 per cent This is the best sale of state bonds ever made in the union outside the state of New York The present bonded indebtedness is 3483- 99086 The floating debt past due is 1552 12533 with bonded debt added it makes a total indebtedness of 504616619 Resources of the sinking fund are 58661272 After deducting the latter amount the net amount of indebtedness is 445950347 Of this amount the educational bonds are not subject to redemption but constitute a perpetual debt the interest upon which is payable semi-annual- ly Frankfort To the shame of the commonwealth I am again compelled to call your attention to the fact that organized bands of lawless men have continued and are continuing their nefarious work throughout the state notwithstanding the passage of legislation especially intended toprevent their operations In Hancock county in open day and without masks or evei pretense of secrecy a Negro was forcibly taken from the jail and hung on the public streets of Hawesville Rewards were promptly offered but the coroners jury doubtless composed of blind men before whom none but blind witnesses testified returned a verdict that deceased had lost his life at the hands of persons unknown to them There can be no excuse or palliation for the conduct of the brute who was swung into eternity but nevertheless the mob in hanging him were guilty of murder Such swift punishment is not attended by the anguish and suffering endured by the con- ¬ demned criminal and docs not inspire the dread or terror of a legal execution Doubt- ¬ less had the guilty wretch been given his choice of punishment he would have selected that meted out to him So that in his illegal execution the law was robbed of its victim ue punishment inflicted less severe than it ould otherwise have been and the law vio- ¬ lated and trampled under foot As said in my inaugural mob violence whjse home is in the breast of cowards should be prevented at all hazard or if com- ¬ mitted promptly and severely punished It is an open declaration of contempt for the laws the courts and the administration of justice and instead of promoting destroys the wel- ¬ fare of the state The commission of crime to punish crime can find no apologist in Christian civilization In this connection allow me to call your at- ¬ tention to the insufficiency of the law concern- ¬ ing an attempt at assault In such cass iwhere the person assaulted receives injury the -- k fffiphejpenitentiary for not less tffivn ten years Your attention is especially directed to the frequent occurrence of what is called turn- ¬ pike raids Persons engaged in this character of crime have become more emboldened while law abiding citizens seem to have become paralyzed The Martin law although well in- ¬ tended has failed to accomplish its purpose I have faithfully tried to enforce it by offering rewards and employing detectives but do not know of a single conviotion under its On the contrary in many localities public sentiment is reported as indorsing the crime In nearly every instance wnere these crimes have been committed the vicious are loud mouthed in approval while peaceable cit- ¬ are overawed and izens more or less afraid to speak This appears strange in a state which boasts of the prowess of her sons Nevertheless it is true Be it said however to the credit of Kentucky that the citizens of the greater portion of the state condemn such high handed out- ¬ rages I am satisfied in numerous instances many of those who pose as good citizens have winked at outlawry because the result would be the depreciation in value of turnpikes and thus enable the counties to purchase them at nominal prices thereby preventing in a large degree the levying of taxes Advantage has leen taken by some of the fiscal courts of this condition of affairs and counties have become beneficiaries of crime which would not have been committed but for the worthlessness and cowardice of officials and the corruption of citizens who openly countenanced the law breakers Frequently counties have voted for free turnpikes by large majorities and at the same time voted against the issuance of bonds to pay for them In other words they declare they will have free roads without making com- ¬ pensation Under such circumstances as might be ex- ¬ pected turnpike stock owned by the state which was valued at 400000 three years ago and which produced nearly 24030 dividends annually is comparatively worthless In many places turnpike officials fear to ask for guards lest their houses should be burned or they should be assassinated In one case the state inspector was sent to the scene of trouble to make the application for guards but on his arrival was notified by the former gatekeepers that they would not collect toll be- ¬ cause of fear that the guards would not pro- ¬ tect them or that the guards would be soon withdrawn when they would be killed It is very clear in many places that peace officers in are in sympathy - with the mob ¬ others that they prefer that the out- ¬ turnrages should continue and the pikes be bought for a song rather than the county should be taxed to p ly for guards and in others that guards can not be found who have the courage or desire to do their duty Again the friends and relations of the raiders and in some instances the raiders themselves have been appointed as guards and promptly surrendered to the outlaws Arbitrary prices merely nominal have been placed upon some of the roads and the owners notified that they ¬ must accept them or be forced to cease the col- ¬ in all localities the counlection of toll But ties have seen that pikes were assessed at good values and taxes promptly collected In one instance the raiders carried their work to its proper conclusion by robbing the gate- ¬ keepers of the tolls This evil so long continued is seeking other fields of operation It naturally occurs to the im ¬ raiders that if tollgates can be taken with like property can be taken in punity all other - - manner And so it is these- knights of tho have undertaken to regulate the quantity road destroy- ¬ of tobacco thefarmer should cultivate have no- ¬ if he dared to disobey ing his plants tified the miller that he should charge no more them threat ¬ for flour than the price fixed by torch farmers shotgun and the ened with the who bad posted their lands if the boards were not taken down and they allowed to hunt with ¬ out hindrance and notwithstanding all this high handed conduct not one of the ruffians has been punished Candidates for office have been known to openly champion these criminals in order electee while to be and have thereby been good govern ¬ who have stood for those ¬ ment have almost universally gone down to de ll this spirit is not stamped out the day is pro--visio- jury as the extent of injury may demand ns 1 - not far distant when the atate will be com- pletely under the control or swash bucklers and highway robbers who will rob steal and murder at will The stock in turnpikes owned bv the state is bought from taxes assessed upon the whole people and was thereafter set apart as a por- ¬ tion of the sinking fund and under the pro- ¬ visions of the constitution can not be dimin- ¬ ished by act of the legislature until the debt of the commonwealth is paid Thousands of public spirited citizens and in many Instances the widow and the guardian of orphans have uave juvesiBu in tnese stocics reiymg on tne laws of the state and their enforcemet for pro- ¬ tection Granting for arguments sake that free roads are desirable it by no means follows tnat tneir owners should be robbed and plun- ¬ dered You are now boldly confronted with the ques- ¬ tion whether these crimes are to continue or whether the state has the will and the power to protect the lives and property of its citizens In January 1896 1 recommended in a general message and again at the called session the passage of a law making the counties where mob violence prevailed responsible in damages to the widows children or heirs of persons killed and responsible to those Injured in person or property This law has proven salutary in every state of the union where it has been en- ¬ acted With it should be connected the abso- ¬ lute right of change of venue so that trials may be had by unprejudiced juries in un- ¬ prejudiced communities I have been in- ¬ formed that among other contentions which prevented the adoption of such a statute it was asserted that corporations would burn their property or prevent the collection of tolls in order to sue the counties and that persons would have their relatives killed in order to recover damages from the county These ob- ¬ jections are puerile No one more deeply deplores the present con- ¬ dition of uflairs than myself and to no one is it more painful to make such a confession but when human life is cheap when millions of dollars that would otherwise seek investment in Kentucky are being turned into other chan- ¬ nels when we are becoming a spectacle in the eyes of the people of other states and other countries not only love for my native state but official duty demands plain speech and prompt and severe action It is idle to talk economy in the public serv- ¬ ice as long as extravagance is suffered to con- ¬ tinue It is better to curtail expenses than to increase taxes Hitherto the attention of your predecessors has been called to this matter without success I hope however that differ- ¬ ent action will be had by you Useless offices should be abolished The bu- ¬ reau of agriculture has been fully tested and if common experience and general opinion are worth anything has fallen far short of accom- ¬ plishing any material good Yet thousands of dollars are expended annually to carry out its purposes This can be abolished only by con- ¬ stitutional amendment whiKh I recommend may be done Register of the land office entails an expense of thousands of dollars each year without cor- ¬ responding benefit The present salaries are in nearly every in- ¬ stance twice as much as they were at the con- ¬ clusion of the war when the premium on gold was greater than ever before There is no rea- ¬ son why such a condition of affairs should exist Perhaps the most exclusive drain on the treasury is criminal expenditures In this are comprised jury fees witness fees sheriffs marshals jailers and constables fees costs of examining courts etc Under the present laws a large number of persons are yearly sent to the penltentiarj who should be fined and compelled to work out the same on the county roads Shortly after the present administration came into power the contract with the Frankfort Chair Co was forfeited by the directors of the penitentiary on account of the companys failure and refusal to pay its indebtedness to the state and the Inability by reason of that fact of the directors to continue opera- ¬ tions The large amount of floating debt then owing and which could not be paid for lack of funds in the treasury rendered it imperative in carrying on work in the penitentiary to col- ¬ lect from the company all money due There was no other source from which the funds needful to pay operating expenses- - could be had In this condition of affairs the company demanded that the directors should not ap ¬ point a superintendent they had selected This demand was disregarded whereupon the company purchased at a discount a sufficient amount of warrants owing by the state to cover its indebtedness and offered the same to the auditor in payment refusing to pay a sin- ¬ gle dollar in money By their own action they terminated the contract It then became necessary to advertise for bids for convict labor which was done prompt- ¬ ly resulting in what is known as the Martin contract for the employment of 650 men Con- ¬ siderable complications have grown out of this contract and in order that the real merits of the transaction might be understood I ordered State Inspector Lester to make a careful exam- ¬ ination of the working of the same and for that purpose ordered him to employ an expert accountant His report will be placed before you and will doubtless have your close study and attention The contract has not realized the money which it was thought it would at the time it was made and there is now a controversy be- ¬ tween the state and Mr Martin in which the former claims that the latter owes the addi ¬ tional sum of 23000 Following closely upon the termination of the contract with the Frankfort Chair Co came the destruction of the workshops at Ed dyville fire by This threw out employment large of a number of convicts and the Mason Ford Co declined to engage further in business at that peniten- ¬ tiary except to work up a small quantity of ma- ¬ terial on hand but agreed to and did hire 400 convicts at 35 cents each per day to be em- ¬ ployed in the manufacture of shoes and brooms at the Frankfort penitentiary provided that the portion of the shops destroyed by fire prior to December 1895 should be rebuilt and an ad- ¬ ditional building erected Under great difficulties the shops were con- ¬ structed and in addition to this an expendi- ¬ ture of nearly 10000 made in equipping the Frankfort penitentiary with machinery The penitentiary is now better equipped with ma- ¬ chinery and better prepared to make convict labor profitable than at any time in the past I suggest that an appropriation be made to pay for the workshop at Eddy ville aud thus save the payment of interest by the state Your attention is called to the danger of fire in these institutions The directors of the penitentiary at Frank- ¬ fort are now paying for water the enormous sum of 5000 per year I suggest that you investigate these matters through committees and take such action as you believe the interests of the state demand Our charitable institutions are in a most thriving condition The total expenses for the asylums for six months of 1895 and corre- sponding months of 1896 are 1895 10383793 1896 17522098 showing a decrease of 2361695 i and an average decrease in per capita of 1135 j I again urge upon your honorable body such j legislation as will carry into effect the present statute concerning houses of reform It is rec- ommended that you so amend the statute as to provide specifically for the issue ot a warr nt in order that this great work may be speedily completed I urge upon your honorabe body to take the necessary steps immediately looking to the erection of new and suitable state buildings i The common school system is the nursery of i liberty and everything should be done that Is calculated to improve and enlarge it Much progress has been made in this direction but v ere is room for greater advancement It is claimed that Kentucky pays twice as much for school books as states north of us If this be true such laws should be enacted as will remedy it If uniformity in teit books should be required the prices would nccessari- Jy be reduced And among other matters your attention is called to better school facilities for the Nc- groes The old common school law which leved a tax upon blacks and whites to be used separately for each r ce was held unconstitu ¬ tional and after a vote by the people the fund wjvs divided equally per capita Is the colored people are genenilly poor and ui able tc pay large costs of transportation it Is suggested that another normal school should b- i established in western Kentucky i I - The corruption of the electi ve franchise and the defeat of the will of the majority should not be tolerated for a moment Appreciating the full force of this sentiment the makers of our present constitution defining who should vote provided that -- the first general assembly held after the adoption of this constitution shall pass all necessary laws to enforce this provision and shall provide that persons il- ¬ literate blind or in any way disabled may have their ballots m irked as herein required In conformity to the foregoing section and in order that every man may be able to cast his vote I again recommend that a circle or square should be placed below each party device in which the voter may make his mark Many mistakes are made under the present regula- ¬ tion as many in one political party as in the other and in this way persons deprived of their votes Every facility should be afforded the humblest man in the commonwealth to in ¬ telligently cast his vote and have it counted Mutations Sa politics in the end bring retribu ¬ tion to any party that denies or abridges the rights of citizenship Where registration is necessary especially in large cities it is charged that regularly registered voters some instances in are falsely impersonated and on this persons account are not en- ¬ who titled vote and in this way prevent legal voters from exercising their privileges As to whether this charge be true I do not know but the fact that such a thing might be done is suf ¬ ficient to call for the enactment of such laws as will in some measure identify the lawful voter Primary elections should be prohibited from being held at the tame time or place where regular elections are held They consume time and create confusion and undue excite- ¬ ment The selection of candidates should not be allowed in any way to conflict with or affect the election of officers There is a diversity of opinion as to whether canvassing or examining boards have the right to pass on rejected ballots This should be made plain and the right of every citizen guar- ¬ anteed to have his vote counted as cast whether there is or is not a contest The law should be made so explicit that no citizen shall lose his vote on account of the technical fail- ¬ ure of any officer to discharge a plainly minis- ¬ terial duty when the officers of the election are satisfied that the ballot was in fact deposited According to the present law when any party has failed to nominate a candidate by convention or primary election upon a petition signed by the requisite statutory number any individual however objectionable may have his name placed under a party device Fre- ¬ quently this may prove distasteful to the party and should not be allowed Section 1458 Kentucky Statutes prohibits the secretary of state from certifying and the county clerk from placing the name of a candi dateproperly certified to have been nominated on the ballot whenever notified by such candi ¬ date that he will not accept the nomination Section 1464 Kentucky statutes provides that in case of death removal or resig- ¬ nation after the printing of the ballot certain steps may be taken to meet the contingency I suggest that in either state of case referred to in the last named sec- ¬ tion or in the case mentioned in Section 1458 it be made the duty of the secretary of state or clerk to at once give notice to the chairman or secretary of the state central committee dis- ¬ trict or county committee and that pasters may be provided and used in such case and proper steps taken by the party organization such as will enable such party to supply the place as provided in Section 1461 Section 1557 Kentucky statutes prescribes a fine of 50 and impris onment in the county jail against any officer upon whom a duty is im- ¬ posed in Chapter 41 who shall wilfully neglect to perform his public duty or who shall wil ¬ fully perform it in such a way as to hinder the object of the law a glance at the many im- ¬ portant duties which this section governs will demonstrate that the punishment is entirely inadequate as to officers of reg- ¬ istration anu officers of regular and pri ¬ mary elections Particularly is this true as to the duties assigned to the secretary of state in certifying nominees the clerk in the proper preparation or distribution of stencils and ballots the sheriff In delivering ballot boxes the county judge in the appointment of officers of election and giving the notice of same the admission of unauthorized persons into the booth or within less than 50 feet of the polls the counting of votes and the preserva ¬ tion of contested ballots Section 1448 Kentucky statutes limits tho appointment of officers of election to house- ¬ keepers Many competent persons are exclud- ¬ ed by this section and it should be altered Proud of the glorious achievements of the white race believing that it is the superior of every other that by reason of its advantages in liberty education and advanced civilization it can ill afford to place additional burdens up- ¬ on others that are struggling for improved manhood and not fearing for a moment that any race will become its equal I most earnestly recommend the repeal of what is known as the separate coach law The use of intoxicating liquors and the car- ¬ rying of concealed weapons are the fruitful source of nearly every murder that is commit- ¬ ted Local option and prohibition laws are be ing evaded and rendered inoperative by rea- ¬ son of the jug trade Attempts have been made to punish those who deliver whisky in the counties where such laws are in force but the court of appeals has decided that the place of delivery is that where the jugs are handed to the expressman or common car ¬ rier and in this way an avenue of escape has been afforded and the platforms of depots in anti whisky localities are daily covered with jugs In order to remedy the evil it is suggest- ¬ ed that a law be enacted fixing the legal deliv- ¬ ery of intoxicating liquors at the place of des tin tion instead of the jalace or shipment ex- ¬ cept as to original packages from points out ¬ side Kentucky and providing proper punish- ¬ ment for any person natural or artificial who delivers the article at the place or destination Again attention is called to the sale of cigar ¬ ettes and cigarette paper Their use is universal ¬ ly condemned by the medical profession and every day experience I recommend that their sale be prohibited Every year the docket of court of appeals i3 enlarged One cause for it is that appeals are allowed where the amount in controversy ex- ¬ clusive of interest and cost is 100 There is no reason why this rule should be continued Heretof re the thanks of the state have been tendered to the proper authorities for the ex ¬ acted compliment of giving the name of our state to one of the most magnificent battle ¬ ships that the inventive genius ol this great country has ever conceived The honorable secretary of the navy has given notice that it will be launched during the latter part of January next I trust that your honorable body will take such action concern ¬ ing this matter as your patriotism and state pride may suggest and that the occasion may be made memorable and an inspiration to the rising and future generations of our common ¬ wealth In conclusion allow me to indulge the hope that during your session we may hearthy o operate for the purpose of advancing the ma ¬ terial interests of the state and that more sub ¬ stantial good may be accomplished by you than any of your predecessors She Ueconies a Princess KENTUCKY LEGISLATURE Regular Session i Frankfort Ky Jan 5 Senate The sen- ¬ ate wlis called to order at noon Tuesday by LiieurGov Worthington The nominees of Monday nights caucus were elected and the senate adjourned till Wednesday at noon to await the delayed house organization HOUSE At 12 oclock Tuesday the house of representatives was called to order by ex Clerk T S Kirk of Johnson county and opened with prayer by Kev George Dorsie The members came iorward in sections of ten and took the oath of office administered by Squire Thompson Humphreys of Fayette asked if Alvin Bertram had been sworn in and the clerk told him that Bertram was not a member and could not be sworn in This ques- ¬ tion was intended to show and did show that Bertram had no right to vote la Monday nights caucus when his vote nominated Henry Williams to be en ¬ rolling clerk J C W Beckham dem of Nelson and J P Haswell rep were placed in nomination for speaker Beckham received 70 to 25 for Haswell a strict party vote Five members were absent and did not vote The following officers were then elected all of them being the nominees of the democratic caucus Clerk J Breck Hill assistant clerk Green Percy Haley en- ¬ Keller sergeant-at-arm- s rolling clerk Henry Williams doorkeeper W The house M Lyons janitor Morton Swango then adjourned until 11 oclock Wednesday when it will complete its organization and hear the governors message read Frankfort Jan 6 Senate Asenate com ¬ mittee composed of Senators Goebel Jones and Alexander notified the house it was ready for business and a house committee composed of Representatives Charlton Sharp and Clark notiiied the senate The joint committee then waited upon the governor who formally sent in his message which was read House The house opened Wednesday morn ¬ ing with prayer by Rev George Means The house then hurried through the journal and went into the election of their troublesome nominees George Kendrlck was elected cloak room keeper by a strict party vote and then came the bitter pill South of Trimble put J H Ely colored of Todd in nomination for as ¬ sistant cloak room keeper and Ogden of Louisville named the colored candidate for page Most of the democrats voted for the Colored house nominee and all the republicans voted for theirs One or The two men explained their votes absence of some of those who did not vote was a little conspicuous as they had been in the house a few minutes before Thirteen demo- ¬ crats did not vote for Ely but were absent There was no trouble over the election of young Lockey the son of the populist member from Trigg who was given the nomination for one of the pageships but some democratic members were again absent for a few minutes The election of the pages completed the organ ¬ ization of the house but it comsumed the time until afternoon The governors message was then read A t will enter the comine vear prepared to rive to the readme public that which has made it famous to the past quarter of a century contributions from the pens of the great literary men and women ot tne - -- nuiiu uiuairdicu uy luuiug uihsim t unci iauic uvci ii fjiusbiuo - P H OUR PACIFIC PROSPECT CANAL PROJECTS FOR X NICARAGUA B9 Urn DA VID TORPIE KASTERX SIBERIA ASD THE PACIFIC By STEPHEN BOASAL TUB C0K3ERCIAL iaPORTANCE OF AS ISTUHIAN CA5AL By W0RTHIXG7QX C FORD THE DEVELOPMENT OF OUR PACIFIC DOSAH By CHARLES FrLUUillS i Striking novelties in short fiction will by Henry Seton Merriman author of The Sowers be contributed by such authors as V D Howells Richard Harding Davis Brander Matthews Frederic Remington Ruth McEnery Stuart and others There will be a series of articles oa ART AND THE DRAMA EUROPE POLITICAL AND SOCIAL THE PROGRESS OF SCIENCE AMERICAN CHARACTER SKETCHES STUDIES IN AMERICAN SOCIETY ARMIES AND NAVIES RODENS CORNER THE NOVEL OF THE YEAR Sub Postage free t all subscribers in tke United States Canada and Mexico BROTHERS Pubs N Y City Send for free prospectu 4 a year Address HARPER Gen Lew Wallace H S Williams W D Howells Oweu Wuter C D Wnw r mSfWSmBSIM wzat S JL Crockett PROPOSAL daring 1898 will present to its readers a faithful pictorial repre ¬ sentation of the worlds most interesting and important iwws THE NEWS THAT BECOMES HISTORY National and Inter- - The Weekly will continue to particiDate r in the great political events of our coun ¬ national Politics try It will treat of the social and eco ¬ Social and Economic nomic questions and of the development Questions of the middle corre- ¬ Industrial Enterprise spondent in the west Its special trace Klondike region will Art and Literature the story of the great gold discoveries w jg55Sk To Turn the Property Owned by the State Hoard of Agriculture Over to the State G LONG SERIALS AND SHORT STORIES TH Carl Schurs holding its annual session in this city has before it a proposition that tho property it owns be turned over to the state and that it become a state organ ization Several 3rears ago the supreme court held that the body was a private corporation ¬ Indianapolis lnd Jan The state board of agriculture which is Two long serials will appear during the year contributed by authors of inter- national fame and will be illustrated Owen AfowSSSSSiiTa BTI VliSS R STOCXTOX rlrtrr These and a score of eouallv nrominent Pyle writers will contribute short stories to the ohn Kendrick Bangs WcKKtYin J898 making the paper espe Mary E Wilkins cially rich in fiction Other features are the S Wister DEPARTMENTS W Caspar Whknay AND SPECIAL ARTICLES F R Stocktoa Gov Mount delivered an address be- ¬ leaving the farm Statistics and observation strongly tend to show that the urban population is rapidly in creasing while that of the rural dis trictSiis increasingat a far less rate The casual observer might conclude that this is to the advantage of the farmer as the tendency is to the decreasing of producers and increasing of consumers The careful student of economics how ¬ ever wants to understand the reason why there seems to be so little attraction in country life Farmers as a rule are inclined to talk farming down instead of exalting its possibilities One of the gentlemen above referred to said that some aggressive efforts are needed to attract attention and add interest to farm life The superintendent of public instruc tion informs me that the total amount annually expended in the cause of education in Indiana would not fall short of 10000000 I am in favor of the broadest kind of education but I want farmers educated in the science of agriculture asAvell There is practically no instruction as to how crops grow the elements of plant food they require how to conserve and how to restore those elements to the soil There is little or nothing in the text books of our schools to interest children in na ¬ ture study Angry Republicans at Itfarysvllle ¬ fore the board He said A few evenings ago I heard a dis- ¬ cussion among distinguished gentle- ¬ men of this city It was the consensus of opinion that the most discouraging outlook for agriculture was found in the fact that too many young men were THIS BUSY WORLD FOREIGN NOTES By E S 3TARTIA By POULTXEY BIGELOU- LETTERS FROM LONDON AMATEUR SPORT By ARXOLD WHITE By CASPAR WHITNEY A SPORTING PILGRIMAGE AROUND THE WORLD In the interest of the WEEKLYCaspar Whitney is on his way around the world He will visit Siam in search of big game making his principal hunt from Bangkok He will visit India and then proceed to Europe to prepare articles on the sports of Germany and France 10c a coy settd for free prospectus Subscription UQ0 a year K W D Howell Postage free in the United States Canada and Mexico Address HAKPKIl BROTHERS Publishers New York City 2 Henry James -- L ¬ ¬ a thoroughly ¬ JIFM w HizcloKm periodical for women will enter upon its thirty first volume in i8q3 During the year it will be as heretofore up-to-d- Paris and New fork Fashions A A MIRROR OF FASHION Fashion Each issue will contain carefully pre ¬ pared drawings of the advance fashions of Paris and New York Once a month the Bazar will issue free a colored fashion supplement Cut paper patterns of certain gowns in each number will be made a feature These will be sold in connection with each issue at a uniform price The Bazar will also publish bi ¬ weekly free an outline pattern sheet Colored Supplement A ¬ Cut Paper Patterns Bi Wezkly Pattern William Black Sheet 1 LONG SERIALS AND SHORT STORIES Two famous authors will contribute lone WILD EELEN T t 00 uie senaisionesio me uazak in 1093 Tl t By WILLIAM BLACK first deals with Scotch and Continental RAGGED LADY scenes the second is a story of a young By W D HOWELLS girl versatile and typically American These and a scor of other equally Mary E Wilkins prominent writers will contribute Octave Thanet short stories to the Bazar in 1898 H P Spofford making the paper especially rich in Katharine Oe Forest M S Briscoe fiction ¬ ¬ A wMn Sr I ¬ DEPARTMENTS AND SPECIAL ARTICLES By KATHARINE DE FOREST OUR PARIS LETTER THE LONDON LETTER By Mrs POULTXKY BIGELOW A special from Mary sville O the home of Rep resentative Griffith of the state legis- ¬ lature says People here are wild and threats of violence are made against Representative Griffith Two Kurtz jmen from Columbus while here escaped violence at the hands of angry republicans A mass meeting of Griffiths constituents was held Wed- ¬ nesday night and action was taken in O 5 ¬ nar-rowl- Cleveland Jan CLUB WOMEN HUMOR By MARGARET II WELCH By JOHS KENDRICK BANGS There will be a series of articles on Etiquette Music the Voice Art the Play Women and Men Leaders among Women Gardening Housekeeping Life and Health Indoor Details etc 10c a Copy Send for Free Prospectus Sub S4 a Year Postage free in the United States Canada and Mexico BROTHERS Publishers New York City Address HARPER- - W D Howelli Octave Thanet the matter to be held in Columbus The object of O February 23 and 24 the conference is to perfect the organization of the part and to provide methods for pushing a rigorous cam paign in every state in the union conference Jan 6 The executive committee of the liberty party of Ohio has issued a call for a national O Springfield National Call of the Liberty Party ¬ SOME OF THE STRIKING FEATURES FOR 1898 ¬ THREE SERIAL STORIES II BifA RRIOTT WA TSON is a thrilling story of a fight for a treasure concealed in an old castle in the mountains of Wales By ¬ THE ADVENTURERS FOUR FOR A FORTUNE THE COPPER PRINCESS companions who have lo ¬ cated a long lost fortune By ALBERT LEE is a stirring nnrrathe of four By KIRK MCXROE the earl of Cov- schoolhouse at Yeddo was burned entry was married Tuesday afternoon Wednesday Reports from the scene at St Peters church Eaton square to say that it is feared two children are Prince Dhuleep Singh son of the late in the fire Two were thrown from a Maharajah of Lahore The courtship second floor window and badly in of the prince and Lady Anne has heen jured Ths building cost 4500 marked by considerable opposition upon the part of the ladys family Two rival manufacturers of French which was mainly overcome by the in ¬ coffee met before a judge The latter tervention of the prince of Wales took up one of the contestants empty cans James B Kellogg Surrenders Himself I do not consider affirmed the New York Jan 5 James B Kel ¬ judge that this is an honest label On logg1 one of the members of the de the front you place in Jarge letters funct K S Dean Co surrendered him Pure French Coffee and on the back self Tuesday to the police He was in small letters in very small letters held in 1000 bnil for examination on you print A Compound of Chicory the charge of conspiracy to defraud etc person thus addressed mused Kellogg is the reputed founder of the for aThe moment Then he said quite Dean Co Myron L Bernard and Sam meekly will your lordship kind Kellar the president and manager of ly explain Butthe jury by what meand to the firm surrendered themselves Mon ¬ you distinguish between the front and day back of a round oan o ¬ ¬ ¬ try third daughter London Jan 5 Lady Anne Coven- ¬ Schoolhouse Barns With JReported Loss of Life Veedersbukg lnd Jan 6 The the hero has his adventures and from where he rescues the Princess It is in thebowelsof the earth where SHORT FICTION In addition to the three long serial stories the publication of which will continue during the entire year there will be short stories of every kind of which it is only possible to mention a few titles here Hunt the Owler A Harbor Mystery The Blockadcrs By STANLEY The Flunking of Watklns Ghost By JOHX KENDRICK BANGS J WEY3IAN By JAMES BARNES By JOHN A Great Haul A Creature R of SPEA RS Circumstance ¬ By SOPHIE SWETT By MORGAN ROBERTSON Elephant Hunting In Africa By SYpXEY BROOKS ARTICLES ON SPORT TRAVEL ETC PARKER An American Explorer In Africa By CYRUS C ADAMS By W G VAX TASSEL SUTPIIEN Lessons in Flrt By DUDLEY DTiller PRIZE COMPETITIONS Editor s Table Stamps and Coins Photography Short Stories Sketching Fhotography JO Cents a Number Send for Free Prospectus Subscription SI 00 a Year Postage free in the United States Canada and Mexico Address HARPER BROTHERS Publishers Frankliu Square HVY City f DEPARTMENTS and Sheet Laying Out a Golf Course xi v1 0 Stanley J Voyiaa H BVM Watsnn Cyr C Adams Toultney FJyelow Kirk MuarM s itr i - ki iHjaiguy I fffr lFJdb3C35wtj - 1 vz w- I W s pnjpK ri sriI1SpT - ivii y Illlff IHf y j 1411 ifRj - tv jty T1 pt THE B1TTR301S LUUIH Royal mattes the food pure wholesome and delicious M CTS FRIDAY JANUAKY ni Sales aud Transfers Of Stock 212A 7 1888 m Z K proves Money Talks true the session of the Ohio Legislatur should be a pretty lively conversation If the maxim tt -- party Just as Good Emulsion STOCK AND TURF NEWb Turf Nor5B Naucy Hanks 204 is in foal to Biugen Crop 25tc Y t mi AKlH POWDER Absolutely Pure NEW YORK ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO for j Jittle Miss Muffet experience Hi wants somebody to steal his Kurt away as Scotts and we sell it much cheaper is a statement sometimes In this great country of ours any man made by the druggist when Scotts who is achinu for a fight generally get Emulsion is called for This shows Thiit excepting the prize fighter that the druggists themselves regard case Fitz Corbett exactly - It is believed that Hanna yearns Wednesday Senatoi Deboe introduced a bill in the Senate In divide Kentucky into two Judicial dis- ¬ tricts the Eastern and Western In Congress Scotts the Seventeenth Year Established iiiiii I HEWS 1881 Published every Tuesday and Friday by WALTER CHAMP Editors and Owner BBUOE MILLER Make all Checks Money payable to the order of Champ Miliar Orders etc untold benefit should not for one v think of taking the risk of The enational cene in Hanna instant using some untried prepa¬ Senatorial Struggle inspire wavering ration The substitution member with freh confidence in th of something said to be financial Yteni If Mark wi Bo just as good for stand ¬ hi feat will not be tainle ard preparation twenty five years on the market The Democratic caucus to nominate a should not be permitted by State Librarian will not be held until the intelligent purchaser next week A Senate caucus will be honors held in a few days to ratify the selections for committees by the Senatt ¬ ¬ Fitz and Corbett will have to take a phites of Lime and Soda as the back seat when M ary Ellen Lease and standard and the purchaser who Jerry Simpson begin that campaign in desires to procure the standard congressional because he knows it has been of Kansa for Populistic of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophos ADVER1I81NU RATES Displays one dollar per inch for first Inser tion half rates each Insertion thereafter per Locals or reading notices ten cents line each insertion Locals In blacL type twenty cents per line each insertion Fractions of lines count as full lines when running at line rates Obituarb cards of thanks calls on candi dates resolutions of respect and matter of a like nature ten cents per line Special rates given for large advertise ments and yearly cards Legislative News From Frankfort Steering Committee See Be sure you get SCOTTS Emulsion that the man and fish are on the wrapper 50c and 100 all druggists SCOTT BOWNE Chemimts New York ¬ ¬ telegraphed from Washington that Senator Deboe will withdraw his bill to reform the Civil Service and sub- ¬ Ohio Ey Changes Time Chesapeake stitute therefor a bill calling for total repeal He thinks the new bill will be Commencing Sunday December 12th the the time Ohio Rv will more likely to secure Democratic sup- ¬ Chesapeake V Limited train shorten will leave of its F F whili Art - erlins at40 p m Vinchester at 41 p port m Lexington o20 Frankfort l5 p m and Shelby vilie 700 p in reaching Louisville at It is GOSSIPY PARAGRAPHS was elected Beckham of Nelson Spaaker of the House and Senator Wm Goebel of Covington was chosen Presi- ¬ The dent Pro Tern of the Senate other officers elected by the House were Chief Clerk C Breck Hill of Lee county Assstant G reen R Keller of Nicholas county Enrolling Clerk Henry Williams of Bowling Green Sergeant-at-Arm- s Percy Haley of ¬ The Kentucky Legislature convened Theatrical And Otherwise Remarks Iu Tuesday at Frankfort Hon J C W The Foyer Frank Daniels the comedian who is starring in The Idols Eye has made a kissing record His part requires him to kiss each chorus girl several times during the performance and one niht he scored 107 Giving seven perform- ¬ ances a week for thirty five weeks means 26215 kisses The kisses must be the Daniels is real thing no imitation 80 oclock p in making direel connection in Unio i Depot in Lonisvillt with the illi ¬ no s Central Limited Vestibuled train leav ing Louisville at 810 p m carrying Free Chair Car and elegant sleepers reaching Memphis at 700 a m next morning and New Orleans 7i0 p m next evening and making direel connection i n M mpbis or all Texa points Also connects in Union Depot in S W Louisville with the Air Lne B O St Louis in 3 Henderson Route trains for Route for and the West and with Big Four Jhlcago and points North This is the bes t and quickest train service ever given the Blue Grass seci ion for the West and South and is seventy miles shorter to t Louis than via Cincinnati Forfull information call on C O Agents or write to the undersigned No trouble to answer questions -- Kentucky grows over one half of the worlds tobacco crop The Kentucky StocJc Farm has changed its name to The American Stock Faim D B HamptoD of Clatk has sold 69 export cattle weight 1388 for 440 per cwt Jus B Stewart has sold his crop of c u r nnnA j luui awea ui luuhcco ouuu uounciK raised on the Wm Wright fsirtn tor eleven cents per pound In Hauison Simon Weil bought 9 1250 lb cattle at 415 from S B Philips and 32 1100 at 1 per cwt from Thos Philips says the Register Simon Weil has bought 170 export cattle weight 1440 from G Black of Madison at 175 per cwt Weil bought 18G cattle from Farris Whitley of Boyle at four cents The Redmon distiller warehouseetc at Berry were sold ar public sale to John Hinkston lor 3500 He also bought all the whiskey except eighteen barrels at 25 2b and 28 A cents Wm EubaukB of Montgomery sold 15000 pounds of tobacco at ten and one half cents John McLean sold 18000 pounds at twelve cents and Robt Kar rick sold 12000 pouuus at nine aud one hilf cents Faris Whitley of Danville deliv- ¬ ered to Simon Weil 223 export beeves for which they received 14165 The cattle averaged 1427 pounds Over lJOUU0 worth ot export beeves have been sold by BoyJe County feeders and more are to go yet -- GROCERY STOCK NEWT MITCHELL THE POPULAR GROCER Ti T Jl - Jl Wt nntT i vnaiiaa is u iiiv uisi 1 ivin an extra ciioire uue ux qucuiui iuw euuoiiva pro Ttolmv is mAntinned snrrifi nf th sLandard and select StOvk If you want good goods you will find just that sort at my store I will oe Phased 10 nil your oraer una assure you me veiy ucou guuuo to be 1 C2 had EVAPORATED FRUITS Peaches Prunes Apricots Pears to Champgnions French Peas Shrimp Salmon Sardines Pearl Hominy Rice Oat Meal Rolled 0tf- Olives Capers Chow Chow Tabasco Sauce Edam Cheese N Y Cream Cheese Pineapple Cheese Imported Macaroni Domestic Macaroni Pure Buckwheat Flour iVTi nee meat Pure Maple Syrup Nancamp Pork and Beans Choice Celery Nan camp Tomato Catsup Baltimore Oysters V ISGEIG TURKEYS Mixed and Stick Candies Almonds Pecans Filherts Cream Nuts Loose Muscatel Raitins Seedless Raisins London Layer Raisins Citron Figs Dates Finebt Chocolate Candies To Cure A Cold In One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab- ¬ lets All druggists refund the money if it failB to cure 25c For sale by W T Brooks and James Kennedy Paris Ky NEWTON MITCHELL THE GROCER Main St adjoining Northern Bank Paris Ky Miraculous RECEIVED FROM Benefit G V Barney Frankfort Doorkeeper mine county suffering from indigestion which a doctor alleges is caused by the absorp- ¬ tion of rouge from the lips of the girls Of Lexington Ky D P A Dr Miles New Heart Cure W S Anderson Peck P O Buck and Bills Furniture Window Shades Oil Barber Shop Cloths Carpets Mattresses DEALER IN GEO W DAVIS Etc Recommends A pri The Louisville Times says Wright s Celery Capsules To the Wright Medical Co Co unibus Ohio Janitor J M Swango Wolfe county vate letter from a member of the Clay Gentu I have purchased Companv contains the inform- ¬ Celery Capsules from lames T box of Wrights Clement Blaser drug O anl used The following officers were elected by ation that Mr Clement has discontinued gist WaverlyConstipation them forStomach 1 to Trouble and A Southern Gentleman and will play do anything for nearly twe was unableised years I the Senate and I boxes o1 President Pro Tern William Goebel The New Dominion for the remain- ¬ three cured me your Celery Capsules otLers hey so For the benelit of have Mr Clement prob- ¬ aillicted J wish to send this letter der or the season of Covington Very ruly yours W S ABEKS 31 Clerk William Cromwell of Frank- ¬ ably intends to revise his new play and Sold by all box put it on next year in its new form Send address druggists at 50o and SI per Med fort on postal to the Wright Assistant Clerk James E Stone of The play as presented here made a fa- ¬ Co Columbus O for trial size free vorable impresion being strong and wpII Breckinridge Co O J K Lyons of Jessa- ¬ Pike For first class work ing and Repairing Special attention given to LTndertak- - Main Street - - - Pakis Ky class 4nov tf Three A1J work done strictly first Nest door to Bourbon Bank first-class-barbe- rs New Laundry Agency jfeEabsthtown 3 f Sergeant-at-Arm- s Chas E Sommers constructed T v MORS 47- i LAURA WEISEMIH x sS Doofkeepery Robetrt Tyler of Bullitt Jtmn W Vogels Darkest America Of JKurry Incl lircniiiiiipiuls Wrights 0 alitor William Klair of Lexing-¬ Company gave a very satisfactory per- ¬ Celery CnpMileb ton formance last night to a large audience Murry Intl Sept 17 1896 Enrolling Clerk Mrs Caswell Ben- ¬ at the opera house The specialties were The Wright Medical Co nett of Lexington good and included some fine dancing Columbus Ohio Cloak room Keeper John M Rice of and jubilee singing The company is a Dear Siks Latt bpriutj 1 purchased Lawrence county big one and every member can do some- a box of Wrights Celery Capsules fr m Pages Harold Lay Garth Ferguson thing to amuse an audience L C Davenport druggisr Blnffton and John Morris Ind aud used then tor stomach trouble i ¬ m 5 f S Smith and De Kovens new opera The organization of the General As The Highwayman has made a hit no B3mbly was completed Wednesday by the election of Geo Kendrick of New- ¬ less emphatic than did Robin Hood port cloak room keeper J H Ely of People are turned away nightly from Todd as assistant cloak room keeper the Broadway Theater where it is and Emmett Holland Harris- Alexan ¬ being presented in New York der Twyman and Tackey as pages There was an explanation of their votes Maud Adams has celebrated her one by Representatives Ragland Louisville hundredth performance of The Little Nelson of Hardin Brown of Fulton and Minister at the Garrick theater in others on account of voting for a negro New York Her average receipts are by either They were confronted 10000 a week bolting or voting for the negro and preferred to vote for the nominee Miss Harriet Glascock will give a Maysville Representatives Charlton Haswell Grecian entertainment in next Friday night and Sharp and Senators G oebel Alex ander and Jones were appointed a comHelene Mora the female baritone mittee to notify the Governor that the wants to play Hamlet Legislature was ready for business ¬ ¬ with which I had bpen afiiictea 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 not felt better in years Yours Respectfully ¬ per box Send address on postal to the Wright Med Co Columbus Ohio for trial size free Mrs Lauka Weishauft Sold by W T Brooks at 50c and 1 00 Baby M ine Every mother Munsel Carriage Co of Auburn says I write to express my gratitude forthemirac lous benefit received from Dr Miles Heart Cure I suffered for years as result of army life from sciatica which affected my heart intheTVorst form my limbs swelled from the ankles up I bloated until I was unablo to button my clothing had sharp pains about the heart smothering spells and shortness of breath For three months I was unable to lie down and all the sleep I got was in an arm chair I was treated by the best doctors but gradually grew worse About a year ago I commenced taking Dr Miles New Heart Cure and it saved my life as if by a miracle Dr Miles Remedies are sold by all drug- ¬ gists under a positive guarantee first bottle benefits or money re ¬ funded Book on dis- ¬ Health eases of the heart and nerves free Address O I have secured the agency for thp Winchester Power Laundry a first class institution and solicit a share of the public patronage Wort or orders Clays drng store will Two good telephones good for dis ¬ left at Clarke recpive immediate attention tance of 500 miles Will sell cheap Work ri called for and delivered promptly Can be used in the country Appljtto ix n JtJtr Respectfully The News office -for oarticulars J S gt 16ap tf BRur e Holladay BABGOCK of ATOca N Y a LI P USUM9 HBHI veteran of the 3rd N Y Artillery and thirty years of the Babcock for Telephones For Sale i b A Mmtw l l l ii - gL J DR MILES MEDICAL CO Elkhart Ind feels an i n d e -H M D scribable dread of the pain and OfNo 503 W Ninth Street Cincinnati L OTTIOIAKT Landman Ohio ant upon the danger attend- ¬ The Democratic Steering Committee The Kentucky lress Chairman J House as follows of the Becoming a The name of The Bluegrass Blade C C W Beckham of Nelson South Trim- ¬ mother should be C Moores disreputable paper has been ble of Mercer Thomas Armstrong of a source of joy Bracken Claude Dessha of Harrison changed to the Cincinnati Free Opinion to all but the and it is now published by the Ohio B W Bradburn of Bowling Green suffering- and Liberal Society danger of the ordeal make J R Garrett has discontinued the its anticipation one of misery Thjjs is Speaker Beckham said going to be a business like session You publication of the Georgetown Enter- ¬ will find that the members are going to prise and has taken charge of the be conservatave and some of the best Corbin News in which he has purchased measures yet passed will be enacted an interest is the remedv wrhirh rliVvfs This is a fine body of men and it is Yesterdays Temperature to grow in favor going women of the great pain suf-- most critical pe- ¬ riod of her life TUESDAY JAN month Will be at the Windsor Hotel Ky Paris 11TH 1898 returning every second Tuesday in each Optician Landman has been visiting this city regularly for over five years and has ad ¬ justed glasses to the j eyes of the best people of Fans and Be arbon 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 ¬ Christmas hns come aud gone and I have m patrons to thank for the largest Christmas business I have ever done I am now ready to show you the MOTHERS FRIEND Awarded Highest Honors Worlds Fair -- f DR K VfM CREAM BAKING and ly and make any change necessary to The following is the temperature as tenng incident to maternity this give satisfaction Examination free noted yesterday by A J Winters Co hour which is dreaded as womans References Drs W J Fithian of this city Bowen and C severest trial is not only made Eads Buck Fithian 7a m 43 painless but all the danger is re- ¬ D Cram of Paris 8 a m 4G moved by its use Those who Use 9 a m 461 BO YEARS this remedy are no longer de- ¬ 10 a m 50 EXPERIENCE 11 a m spondent or gloomy nervousness 50 12 m 48 nausea and other distressing con- ¬ 2 p m 34 ditions are avoided the system is 3 p m 43 made ready for the coming event 4p m 40 5 p m and the serious accidents so com- ¬ 40 7p m 86 mon to the critical hour are Trade Marks Designs obviated by the use of Mothers Copyrights c New crop currents raisins citron is a blessing to woman Anyone sending a sketch ana description may peaches prunes apricots hominy oat Friend meal rolled oats best line of furnitur j and carpets in Central Kentucky Do not buy anything in the furniture line until you get my prices The prices are what talk not a lot of pretty reading Come in and see me ZS J T HINT0N Wood Mantels and Tilings 11 Undertaking and Embalming scientifically attended to tt Newton Mitchell P0WDIR MOST PERFECT MADE i all Drug 9100 PEB BOTTLE atreceipt Stores or sent by mail on of price BOOKS Wrights Celery Tea cures constipa ¬ tion arick headache 35c at druggists -- rnfcfc ContaUing invaluable information of intrtr88t to H women will be sent to any address upon application by icertain our opinion iree wuetuer uu Invention Is probably patentable Commnnlca tlons strictly confidential Handbook on Patents patents sent free Oldest agency for securingCO receive Patents taken throueh Munn special notice without charge In the rmfotelr crackers new aufghnm molaaees pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder Free York cream cheese torn Ammonia Alum or any other adulterant A Oysters celery fresh cakes tf and New The BB1PFIELD BEGULATOB CO AtliaU 6a 40 UAV 6 YEARS THE STANDARD - Newton Mitchell PEPSIN SDR INDIGESTION II T CALDWELLS m A handsomely Illustrated weakly Largest clr culation f any scientific journal Terms f3 a year four months fL Bold by all newsdealers Scientific American Braach Offlee MUNN iCo36 New York Washington D C I GYBU W x r WWttir 9ft ii TC S l f r M T kw i Lnii ihniwnffiWggl - IzsH f f L J U- - mr - I f sJHHr c - e v imIMMHMMMHM t - it yvjap MiMMMtM IWi t cf i5r TffwMLtv w v tfv n THE BOURBON NEWS FRIDjSffiL JANUAEY IK JT 7 1898 iriygrrrTr V i f iuvC2sw TIE Seventeenth Year Established lllllll HEWS 1881 Bank Officers Elected PERSONAL MENTION NUPTIAL KNOTS I I A aecor Enleied at the Post office at Paris Ky iiss mail matter TELEPHONE NO 124 SUBSCRIPTION PRICES Payablein Advance S2 00 Six mouths year One HEWS Engagements Anno ancements And Sol ¬ The stockholders of the Bourbon emnizations Of The Marriage Vows Bank have elected the following officers COMERS AND GOERS OBSERVED BY County Clerk Paton issued a marriage THE NEWS MAN President E F Clay Vice President license Wednesday to Wash Sims and as J T Hinton Cashier Buckner Wood- ¬ Miss Marion Young ford Directors L Frank A H Bed- ¬ Notes Hastily Jotted On The Streets At Mr Love Ditto of Pleasureville and ford R G Stoner J N Davis Buck ¬ The Depots In The Hotel tohhies And Miss Lillie Griffith of Georgetown Elsewhere ner Woodford SENSIBLE GIFTS Appreciating the demand for something sensible and substantial to supply the place of a oit time useless Christmas present we have arranged a special sale at special low prices to continue through the holidays At this sale we are now offering Ladies Misses and Chil- ¬ drens and Men and Jioys Shoes in the best and most pppular makes and in the latest toes and shapes at low down prices You should take advantage of this oppor- ¬ tunity What would be more useful or acceptable as a gift than a stylish pair of shoes selected from our stock up-to-d- ate y r SI 00 ¬ port costs you FROM A GUN get a cant even CHARGE re FREE OF Orders Make all Checks Money payable to the order of Champ Miiler Etc Bar- - Surprise Special gain ad elsewhere on this page See Condons Miss Bogardus has arranged to give in Cynthi ¬ a production of America ana 9 -- - The North MidcPetown Deposit Bank declared anannual dividend of eight per cent - I Association will hold its nest meeting in this city on The Bluegrass Dentnl May 3d Thos B Francis was Wednesday this appointed postmaster of Essondida county Cooney Best a ball player who for- ¬ merly played here has been signed by the Newport team of the New England League to WinchesHe ter to organize a class in dancing will return to Paris in a few days to teach a new class The stockholders of the Agricultural Presi Bank elected officers as follows Henry Spears Cashier J J dent McClintock Directors John C Clay J W H D McClintock Jas Howeiton Renick John Roseberry N Kriener Henry Spears JWill Bedford J T Hinton The Citizens Bank stockholders reelected the old officers and directors President James M Hughes Cashier Wm Myall Assistant Cashier E J Myall Directors J M Hughes E P Claybrook Chas Stepheis J T Hinton G G White The Paris Gas Companys stockholders elected J T Hinton Chas Stephens A Shire George Alexander and Benj Perry as Directors Mr Perry is di- ¬ rector for the City of Paris which holds stock in the company The election of a President to succeed J K Ford ac- ¬ on deferred was deceased count of the absence of one of the directors Mr A Shire Secretary is acting President of the company -¬ ¬ Hon Jcbn S Smith is in Frankfort Miss Anna Connell is visiting Miss Gussie Punch in Mt Sterling Mrs W E Boa d an am are visit ¬ ing relatives at Junction City Miss Addie Garner of Winchester is the guest of Miss Lucy Lowry Mrs J S Withers is the guest of her daughter Mrs J W Davis Miss Kate Alexander is visiting Miss Nannie McMeekin in Georgetown Mr Lindsay Vincent of Hunting ¬ ton W Va is in the city on a visit Dr J R Adair has returned from a short visit to relatives in Cincinnati Mrs Wm Wright has returned from a visit in Pisgah and Lexington Miss Clara Wilmoth is visiting her sister Mrs James Lail in Cynthiana Mrs F L McChesney has returned from a three months stay in Nashville Mrs W R Thomas has returned from a short visit to relatives in Lexing ¬ ton were married Wednesday at the brides C home K Marshall Jr of Harrodsburg a K TJ student who is well known in this city was married during the holi ¬ days to Miss Frances Baugh a charm- ¬ ing Lincoln county young lady The groom is a son of Eld C ii Marshall Mr John Vimoiit Lyle son of the late Robt Jbyle and a popular young attorney of this city was married Wed- ¬ nesday morning at eleven oclock at Danville to Miss Imogene Holmes of that city The marriage was celebrated at the brides home the ceremony being performed by Rev Dr Rutherford of Green this city and Rev Dr of Danville Mr Lyle and bride left at one oclock for a trip East Mr Lyle will locate in New York Mr Walter Grove Taylor a promin- ¬ ent cotton merchant of Cincinnati and Miss Otwayana Carr McGarvey daughter of Eld J W McGarvey were married at a yery fashionable and elabor ate wedding Tuesday night at the Broadway Christian Church in Lexing- ¬ ton The brides father assisted by Eld Mark Collis performed the ceremony and Saxtond orchestra played the wed- ¬ ding march The bride was beautiful in a gown of Paris musliu The bridesmaids- Mis3 Olive Fant of Flemings burg Mrs Benj Frazier of Louisville Annie May of Shawhan aud Carrie Garduer ofjFayette all woreParis mus in dresses The groomsmen who also acted as usher3 were Messrs Bird McGarvey of Kansas City T P Haley of St Louis Tom Lewis and Geo Weeks of Lexiugton In cutting the wedding cake at the handsome reception the ring fell to Mrs Frazier the dime to Miss Gardner and the thimble lo Miss Fant Mr E F Clay Jr son of Colonel E F Clay and Miss Anna Carey Ward daugter of Judge J Q Ward were Davis Thomson THE HOLIDAYS Isgrig Ma From January 17th to gains 22d they will hold their Annual Clearance Sale of all short lengths and odd pieces Every represented Dr Joe Fithian has purchased of department will be It will pay you to Sidney B Clay about forty acres of in this sale land adjoining the formers farm at give them a call Miss Esther Margolen has returned will offer the to Cincinnati to resume the study of ladies of Bourbon a week of bar ¬ music Frank Co Prof Osborne has gone ¬ Miss Anna Connell has returned from a visit to Miss Gussie Punch in Rich table linens Choice Stock of kid gloves The largest and most complete stock of handkerchiefs ever brought to the city All the novelties in china etc Ladies and gents umbrellas 41 Fancy hosiery Mens furnishings etc Uome in and see our elegant stock Mt Sterling -- fortv dollars per acre -- - - A Fine Lecture Course C -- fe fc- performed Literary Club The Paris ceremony yesterday his first marriage on secur- ¬ congratulated in the County Clarks office uniting to be city yesterday - in the Evans and Frances Benton color- ing Prof Edwin E Sparks of the UniRobt The Young Married Ladies Euchre veisity of Chicago for a series of lec- ¬ ed after- ¬ -The lectures will be Club was entertained yesterday tures in Paris I have a large stock of comforts and delivered in the parlors of the noon by Mrs J M Hall I can Methodist Church on the following dabs Mrs Belle Hutchison and Mrs blankets all sizes and weights supply any need in these lines from and subjects Jan 14 Jonathan Ed Thompson Tarr were guests of friends look wards and the Early Church medium to fine grades Call and Jan 253 in Lexington Wednesday T Hinton J at my stock Miss Amanda Ratliff of Carlisle Benjamin Franklin and American Di John Marshall was a suest of Mrs Dunlan Howe at Feb 11 Bids will be received at the Paris plomacy Judiciary Feb 2G the Windsor Tuesday and Wednesday postoffice where blanks may be had and The Federal and The American Misses Edith and Kate Alexander until Januarv 17th for letting the con- ¬ Daniel Webster Bar March 11 Wendell Philips Amer ¬ have returned from a delightful visit to tract to carry the mail between the Horace Misses Harriet and Shelby Darnall in March 25 ican Oratory N depot postoffice and L The Lexington Greely and the American Press Eld Thomas Bagley lectured last tickets are placed at the very small sum Miss Carrie Frank giyes a euchre nightat Jackstown school house on of one dollar for the six lectures the thi afternoon in compliment to her and the Islands of the object of the club being not renumera charming guest Miss Hallie Matthews Australia He will return shortly to tion but only to charge the amount that of Louisville Pacific Australia his native land to eDgage in wilt cover the expense of the lectures Misses Nellie Mann of this city and gospel work Tickets can be obtained from any memAlice Pendjeton of Winchester were VMP ber of the club Of guests of Misses Sue ancLSallie May GHBfrial of Sam Harris colored t Km Andersonin Georgetown last week vHutchison precinct who was arrested SCINTILLATIONS liere Monday ior stealing two muiea Mrs Lillie Gentry Lee who has 4 Favette and self An Interesting Jumble Of News And been the winsome guest of Mrs John from farmer Comment iug same will be held this morning be- ¬ James left yesterday morning for a Fayette sent thirteen prisoners to the visit to friends in Augusta before re ¬ fore Judge Purnell pen last week turning to her home in Palmyra Mo Garrison who was arrested John Nansen the Arctic explorer who Miss May Benjamin who has been mpon complaint of his wife for failing lectured in Louisville Wednesday night the popular guest of Miss Ida Friend for to support their child was tried before sleeps fifteen hours a day a fortnight will retnrn to her home In Tnde Purnell vesterday Garrison Gov Bradley has asked for the Jresig Irvine to morrow and will next week gave bond with surety to give 40 per year to support the child and the case uation of Dr Huff Superintendent of enter school at Madison Female College the Feeble Minded Institute at Richmond was dismissed A Liverpool syndicate is to build an Mr Charlton Alexander Jr was Mrs A P Bender of Louisville immense tobacco manufactory in Louis in Cincinnati this week a guest at the will deliver a free illustrated health ville giving employment to 790 men St Nicholas The Enquirer Wednesday ¬ lecture at the Second Presbyterian Robert Evans stabbed George Dun printed a lengthy interview with Mr 7 at 230 p m Church Friday Jan can a schoolmate to death at Russell Alexander on the export cattle trade Why American Women Grow ville Subject Both youths were seventeen done in the Bluegrass Admission years old While Still Young Old Mioses Mary Juett and Louella free The ladies are all cordially invit- Owing to the discovery of a dangerous Fisher of Cynthiana were handsomely t ed to attend The counterfeit 100 silver certificate six remembered Christmas morning one day Secretary former received a White bicycle and ten being discovered in A Tobacco Barn Burns Gage has called in the entire issue of pounds of candy and the latter a gold Will Fuhrmans barn one mile from 20000000 and will destroy the plates watch studded with diamonds Jacksonville burned Wednesday night The January number of Ednj The Leader last evening stated that destroying a ten acre crop of tobacco v ijer of the Pepper distillery Month au Eastern Magazine devoted to The crop was insured for 500 and the the says that the stoiy about Col Pepper music literature society art and the barn for 1000 offering to giye a 500 diamond studded stage published a splendid likeness of Fast Pacer Sold bottle to br ak on the battleship Ken ¬ Miss Emily May Wheat of Louisville as a specimen of Kentucky beauty Douglas Thomas and J E Clay sold tucky is a fake OBITUARY to Richard and Samp Wilson of Lex Boston parties the ington for Frank Co will hold their An- ¬ To pacer Split Silk by Bourbon Wilkep Respectfully DedicatedDead The Memory Of The nual Clearance Sale from Jan for 3500 Split Silk paced in J09J J H Blackford who was badly in ¬ nary 17th to 2 2d inclusive All last year going halves in 2 21H jured by a C S tram while crossing a short lengths of dress goods track in Lexington died Wednesday silks linens Jj white goods Ham X Hostler Uurued night He was 57 years old and was a John Brown colored who has for noted turfman His first wife was a burgs laces etc will he offered N daughter of John W Letton J E at prices regardless of cost years heeri a hostler in the L yards in this ei y narrowly escaped Sanduskj who was with Mr Blackford Remember the date January burning to death about one oclock was killed instantly 17th to 22d -Wednesday morning While h waa A Good Memory working under an engine his oil soaked Advertised Letter Llst If saves money and also good health clothes caught fire presumably from bis oftenare troubled with constipation indiges von letters remaining unclaimed tion or any form stomach torch Tom Allen attempted to estin ber to take home ot bottle of trouble remem m List of Ky postoffice Dr Caldwells a Paria Jan 7 1898 gni8h the blaze on Brown when his own Kliger Mrs Louisa Wc lo doses 10c large sire 50c Anderson Jim lothes took fire Allen soon put out the you SITrial sizes T Brooks druggist Paris Bailor Malinder and 00 of W Mink Margaret ljan xm blaze on his own clothes and jumped on Ky Bedford E G 2 Porter Occident Richardson Thos the engine for a bucket of water to Isgrio t aie Carr Will Lulie Davis Thompson Cage Mrs Rogers throw on Brown In the mean time offering surprising bargains in mens Claburn Hannah Robison MoHie Wm Brown became thoroughly scared and and boys stylish shoes The prices are Darby Thos L Swart Mr J B 2 started to run but was soon caught by right Sparks Mattie Duck James tf Fletch Mrs Celia Spears Mr Jim the water on him and Allen who threw Sidener Mary M The Northwestern is carrying neai ly Green Florence doubtless saved his life Brown suffered Taylor Wm Hall Mrs F M 1000000 insurance on the lives of eriou8 burns Bouibon Countys representative citi- Hicks Miss Annie Trumbo Amando zens Call on R P Dow Jr for Hutsell Master C R Wilson J C Hutsell John T Williams Josie 26oc 8t particulars We are offering splendid shoes in Hunter Mrs Susie Wilson Frank toes and shapes at low prices White Wm The Paris Telephone Company Johnson Bell guitable sensible gifts for ladies misses Persons calling for aboye letters will will issue their new telephone please say advertised or children W L Davis P M card on January 5th All those Davis Thompson Isqrio Judge W M Purnell Miss Bessie Woodford has returned home from a visit to the Misses Simrall in Covington Miss Bessie Owens has returned to Maysville after a visit to Miss Nannie Clay at Marchmont Mr Harry S Orr the well known is commercial traveler of Louisville was G TUCKER 529 MAIN ST PARI KY ¬ CONDONS OnLB i jo clay waud ¬ ¬ a- - united in marriage ypsterday afternoon in a beautiful ceremony performed at To close out all Winter goods during the next days the home of the bride in the presence of about one hundred and fifty relatives we will sell everything in stock at prices less than cost and the contracting parties Thee nojattendants were Dress Goods formerly 75c and SI 00 per yard at 39c Sastons orchestra played music mbiaciDg sweet and low while Rev Dr E H fancy weaves broadcloths novelties and whipcotd diagonal merges Table linens and napkins large variety at cot Rutherford pronounced the pretty cereAll our underwear at much less than cost mony which linked their lives until Penangs and percales formerly 8ic to close 4c pei-- yard death do part Pee our hosiery at 10c and 15c per pair worth 25c The bride who is one of the loveliest L Notions of every description less than cost of Kentucky girla beautiful gentle MntSHKHH 10 4 New York mills sheeting worth SOcforlSI Jl1a Jte ainiabler wa8 exceedingly lovely in a bplendid bleached and unbleached cotton 5c per handsome wedding gown of white Duchess satiu the waist and sleeves be ¬ She ing trimmed with Duchess lace rryuiMtM wore a veil aud carried loose a bunch of ¬ l- f Oik S -- -- LSI3iOISrJBlljS rnJLJL3LCTlT2T v r i The groom a gradnate of Yale and a leading farmer who is a prominent WE HAVE KE0EIYED A SPLENDID ST00K F figure in Paris society was attired in k conventional eyeuiug dress IMPORTED SUITINGS AND TROlISEBIflfi After the ceremony the bridal party and the guests partook of a dainty lunch ri A large number of elegant presents attest the esteem in which these two young people are held by their friends Our Prices are lower than any house in Central Kentucky vvbe2 H1 Mr and Mrs Clay left on the 340 L N train for a wedding trip in the South quality and style are considered We ask rou lagive us a call brides roses FOE FALL AND WINTER Look at our special offerings in ladies misses and childrens shoes nice for the holiday trade Davis Thompson Isgrig PEDDLERS JFJLjZE II S E TIPTON EKSE FOR SALE Cutter merchant tailors CHEAP license to peddle goods with one horse wagon in Bourbon couuty uutil 1898 the 29th day of November 5 -- cost 1150 Apply at Will sell for 3t The News office A MfJHLaT Our dill iMyiUU 1 five-year-o- ld STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF THE OVERCOSTS Elegantly trimmed and made by first class tailors andi you will never pay 3000 or 3500 again We make pants for 500 that are good and the bests for 800 These would cost you 7poand 1200 any- where else Cleaning and Pressing a Specialty I0H1B0N BAIK incorporated PARIS KENTUCKY at the close of business ZD3S30 Real estate Stocks Cash 31jst9 RESOURCES 1897 5460 48 500 00 Furniture Fixtures - Loans and Bills 203035 22 4875 00 LAVIN Dre from Banks Overdraft Capital Stock Surplus Undivided Profits Due Banks 9732 32 70795 41 HUKILL S 3841 46 298239 89 100000 30000 12776 155463 00 00 69 RING IN THE NEW YEAR LIABILITIES It r by ringing in your soiled inn jip Individual Deposits Undivided Profits Remaining 20 00 this laundry and we will wri out all of the old years dirt and send it home as emmaculate anc white as a sucldngdove TBere is no hnndry in Kentucky that can grvesuch eminent satisfaction ia olor polish and condition as LmenuMf 298239 89 11353 39 June 30th 1897 6 ¬ Gross Earnings past months 8311 53 up-to-da-te 19664 92 Current Expenses Disposed of as follows 2118 84 769 39 Taxes paid Dividend No 13 Undivided ProfitB remaining 4000 00 12776 69 19664 92 wanting their names to appear westerns dividends to on the list will please notify J R The North folfcy holders are unequaled and to Baker at the telephone ex Drooare Northwestern dividends yoa t orymem ¬ siut carry Northwestern insurance tf change Found A bunch of key Owaer Subscribed and sworn to before me can get them by calling at Thi News this 31st dayof December 1897 office Henry Spears Notary Public Buckner Woodford Cashier The Bourbon Steam Laundry lermrjie No 4 W M HINTON JR BRO AM 1 Proprietors - mtfrir -i f - - W-i -- r J j iW - AJ A 58Eiv - f srvm XW BP WJTOjl Krg5Rw 1KSlWr ir1 tr THE BOURBON NEWS NEWS 1881 U fHE BOURBON ANGELS UNAWARES teventoenth Year Established Published Every Tuesday and Friday by Editors and Ownm if- - EIDAY JANUARY 7 1898 to Europe at once in your charge Mrs dens very materia ily by not attempting Gerard needs complete change the boy to shoulder them must see something of the world and We paced on together but Nancy had Nancy of course will be counted in moved farther from me as if repelled 602 MAIN ST PARIS KY What do you think of my plan by my discretion When she spoke her Over Deposit Bank Your plan I said drylj-- takes me voice had lost its warmth by surprise I shall not bother you again said Office hours 8 to 12 a in 1 to 6 p m Surprise the word but feebly ex¬ she presses the condition of ny feelings The fiend tempted me to reply Mj- - own secrets Miss Nancy I would Had Demetrius dared to make this sug gestion in the teeth of what had oc- share with you willingly One of them curred in the cave And if so in the you surprised this rnoming ZOIHSKTTXfS name of the Sphinx to what purpose I could not possibly have selected a knowing as he must know that I less opportune time for such a bald Co Office over G S Varden Trulj- - when love enters should refuse to become a party to his statement infamous scheme Was master in col- mens hearts their wits often leave lusion with man Xo I couldnt be- their heads 8 to 12 a m 1 to 5 p m e Office Hours lieve that What then The scoundrel Nancy with a womans consideration was a consummate judge of character pointed out a loophole of escape and he had had abundant opportunity Mr Livingston is the tide coming in L C MOORE J It ADAIR to study the idiosyncrasies of Hugo or going- out Livingston He probably counted upon But my blood was up and the fever of my promise of secrecy and by Jupi- ¬ spring in my veins ter the truth flashed upon me counted Hang the tide I replied The tide further upon my opposition and my of my life is setting towards you so subsequent dismissal from the service strongly that I can stem it no longer No 3 Broadway Paris Ky of Gerard I would try and balk him Nancy sweet Nancy I love you A tremulous sigh escaped her lips If Demet rius said I lightly is Office Hour - 6 to 12 a in and 1 to in the house I should like to talk this I love you I repeated with a lovers 5 pm odc tf over with him foolish iteration I love you TO BE CONTINUED Demetrius returned at once to RULLERl THE COW PEA A Vegetable Unknown to tlie North That Has Many Uses in tlie South The cow pea is not mentioned in tlie market quotations and it is not found among- the heaped up varieties of peas at the produce dealers Planters even - J m as far southward as the Potomac are unfamiliar with its merits bait further down on the coast in the Carolinas and in Georgia the unpretending little len- ¬ til is of consequence It stands for the coin of the country in certain seasons and is a recognized factor in the Christ- ¬ mas trade In that region when a farmer white or black refers to the amount of peas he has harvested it goes without say ¬ ing that he is speaking of the cow pea And it is the cow pea that the quail has in mind when he calls Bob white Peas ripe so confidingly across the fields The black eyed pea the aristo- ¬ cratic little lady pea the speckled pea the sugar pea the garden pea and so on may have their special uses and patronage but the cow pea heads them all in solid practical benefits for man and beast in that region Peas aint cost you nothin to make like cotton and dey aint debil you een de raisin like rice says a black sage and economist When yous got a half bushel or maybe a bushel saek of peas clung across your shoulder it same like you got de 75 cents or de 125 right down in your han And he puffs out his withered cheeks and blows ener- ¬ Slimy kind ocuss that ther Greek Mr Livingston Im a liar if he didnH A figure by my fireside stayed Plain was her garb and veiled her face scare the puddin outer me A presence mystical she made You dont look as if you were easily Nor changed her attitude nor place scared said I y Did I neglect my household ways I aint he replied thats a fact For pleasure wrought of pen or book but the Greek he done it An it warnifc She sighed a murmur of dispraise At which methought the rafters shook rigilt neither Ilim an me never was friens When he comes a sashayin Me young Delight did often win along as if he owned the hull earth I My patient limits to outgo aim ter look jest a leetle mite above his Thereafter when I entered in guest did threatening head as if I didnt see his royal high ¬ That shrouded show ness an that mads him an tickles me snows of life to chill me fell The Jap laugiied loudly 1 had known for Where many a gracious mate lay dead some time that he and Demetrius were And moved my heart to break the spell unfriendly By that ungracious phantom laid So he scared you Now who art thou that didst not smile Yes sir Ye see he bosses it around When I my maddest jest devised the house but Im the chief here an Who art thou stark and grim the while That men my tune and measure prized dont allow no monkey business on my premises Well sir after you left Without her pilgrim staff she rose Her weeds of darkness cast aside Mary the housemaid come out an she More dazzling than Olympian snows an me had a leetle howdy do Shes The beauty that those weeds did hide Danish is Mairy an not one o yer scary Most like a solemn symphony ones Why That lifts the heart from lowly things Get along with your story Jap Im The voice with which she spoke to me in a hurry Did loose contrition at its springs Mary was tellin me about the doins O duty visitor divine with the gentleman as was hurt an Take all the wealth my house affords givin me the hull song an dance But make thy holy methods mine Speak to me thy Surpassing words Where were you Jap The honest fellow blushed By the Neglected once and undiscerned I pour my homage at thy feet flickering light of the stable lantern I Till I thy sacred law have learned could see his freckled face blazing Nor joy nor life can be complete We was in the hay mow he said re- ¬ Julia Ward Howe in N Y Independent M H DAILEY ¬ ¬ H A SMITH ¬ ¬ - Moore Drs Adair Dental Surgeons luctantly Yes getically at the fanner full of thrashed peas he is winnowing at that moment Some people is got grudge gainst cow peas cause dey was knowed for cheap eatin in de slave time he goes on Stringin owners what had a ob hands to feed an wasnt qual ¬ sight ity buckra nohow usen to gie dese people peas rations count ob de nourish ¬ ment an de lig ht suspense Dat fac dont count nothin dough wid people what onderstands rightly bout tings ¬ zJy-HORACE LrgnnroiiY vaoiell- Jap Dye think he demanded eagerly tnat ther Greek was on to the racket o me an Mary sittin in the hay mow Gosh I guess he was stuck on Mary hisself Whv that accounts for the Go on - Where you generallj sit eh he admitted with a sheepish Mary likes the smell o the hay grin Copyright 1896 by J B Lippincott Co rmove and sir when she got through tellin me how the pore feller couldnt speak nor She went into all those details milk in the cocoanut Of course Well Cow peas is curious Dey got magic in em In course if a man eat em when v t t an horse an cow all both goin to perish in dere tracks if dey tackles a new ripe pea field fore de sap is cure but dat aint sayin nothin gainst the nour- ¬ ishment in em an de good dey does do de ground what they plant in an de capital taste they tases wid bacon deys pulled green or dey ain done cook enough he gwine spicion it Deyll gie mule de colic too fore deys ripa eider rice YM if you plant em whedder in black jack Ian or a miry bottom or way up on de hill Whedder de season wet or dry dey goiron growin all de same Is a wat studies de signs closer 1 almanac butwhenlcomes across Cow peas is bound to grow wherever Jiarm Ill as so pvor yaYic wont sprout cow peas be looWzin out for kingdom come Peas is a Clirin kind of crop too When yous got a no count cotton patch whats been plant yeatr in and year out till its plum threadbare and all run down you gie it two or free dose of cow peas and in a comple of seasons it will be tone up to de old standin N Y Sun QUEER SUIT FOR DAMAGES CHAPTER VI Continued tongue as usual had outstripped my halting brain I was still in my salad days and a novice in the art of dialogue I suppose said Gerard carelessly that you have fallen in love with Nancy The question took me so completely by surprise that my stupid face flushed scarlet I began to realize that this man whose bodily presence was so con- ¬ temptible was conversationally speak- ¬ ing dandling me in his arms I dont blame 3rou continued Ge ¬ tones rard in his most matter-of-faShe is a pretty girl and very intelli- ¬ gent It would interest me to know wh et he r e r sh e Xo she doesnt Thank you I like to be posted Xo no dont frown I dare swear that she will say yes and you may live to wish it had been no He had dropped his tone of banter and spoke gloomily in sour raucous accents This man had achieved much that the world prizes His keen brain and extraordinary acumen had borne him triumphant upon the top wave of success Now that he had brought his heavily freighted vessel into safe har- ¬ borage he had leisure to read the log and estimate the wTear and tear I watched him as he leaned back wearily against the well padded cushions of the buggy and made a small calcula- ¬ tion Divide wealth as many millions as 3 ou please by health subtract time and what is left Answer the man be- ¬ side me haggard wizened premature Aiy ct ¬ by a Jilteil Lover Because a doctor in the employ of the city told her to be vaccinated instead of married a fair young- maiden of At-¬ lanta Ga jilted her fiancee on the eve of their marriage and received the virus in her arm instead As a consequence the jilted lover is going- to sue the city for damages for the loss of his bride For several days past a force of physi- ¬ cians and policemen has been visiting every home office shop and store in the - City of Atlantn Ga to Be Prosecuted i J city vaccinating- by force when neces- ¬ sary and one of the unwilling girl vic- ¬ tims was a girl of 16 who was soon to have become the bride of Col E E Cav aleri 74 years old and a veteran of the union army Cavaleri states he was en ¬ gaged to the maiden and loves young drear i was not marred until the doctor came upon the scene In his vaccinat ¬ ing i ounds he met the young woman who demurred to being- vaccinated be causij she said she was going to get mar- ¬ ried The old gentleman says the doc- ¬ tor dissuaded her from getting mar ¬ ried saying- that it would be better for her to get vaccinated than married The girl finally consented to be vac- ¬ cinated and when the aged lover re ¬ turned to his promised bride he found a cool reception She flatly refused to marry him giving as a reason that the doctor had advised her that vaccination was better than marriage All he could say availed nothing She was obdurate and declined to marry I am the sufferer the city is respon ¬ sible and it must pay me damages and a good sum too Cavaleri said Col Emilio Cavaleri in his youthful and hot headed days belonged to the famous secret society of the Carbonari in Iiaty He was suspected by the au- ¬ thorities of being engaged in a conspiracy to assassinate the pope and after many daring adven ¬ tures succeeded in escaping to this country lie is a man of edu ¬ cation and comes of a good Italian fam- ¬ ily He is a venerable looking man with long white hair and beard and refined but careworn face The girl who was to have been his bride comes of an old and wealth Georgia family Chicago Chronicle - ll Ucclianiv lluricd in Westminster Notwithstanding all that Britain owes to mechanics there is but one workman who received the highest funeral hon- ors of being buried in Westminster ab- ¬ bey and that was George Graham a fa ¬ mous scientific instrument maker of his davfl who in 1700 invented the dead beat les lenient in clocks Grahams ob- J5 es were attended by the Boyal so 1 in a body Chicago Chronicle i j But Jap how do you know he was really in the mow Why sir when I come up with the lantern I see the hayseed and sticker grass on his coat I bade Mr Byers good night and walked thoughtfully to the house My seeing him Demetrius is overcautious deductions in regard to this affair differed materially from those of honest a fault 011 the right side I could not believe that De He asked me innumerable questions Jap metrius had willfully set rolling- the about the lad displaying his talent for cross examination and with it his re- shock of hay If he had concealed him markable love for his son Mrs Gerard self in the barn for some specific pur it appeared had been kind enough to pose would he court detection for the give me more credit than I deserved sake of playing a prank or to gratify Hardly The hay and her husband expressed his appreci- ¬ a personal spite my efforts in a characteristic badly piled and undermined had ooeyed ation of the laws of gravitation Possibly in the fashion You are not giving me value re ardor of eavesdropping- the Greek had ceived he said brusquely but youve displaced the shock unwittingly He had studied the habits of Jap and his done all I asked and more I wondered whether Mrs Gerard in best girl and wishing to learn the her letters had mentioned my excur- exact condition of affairs in the house sion into Cupids domain and answered had turned his knowledge of sociology to good account Very slimy as Jap ob- ¬ the question in the negative served An Anglo Saxon blessed with ¬ Im a generous man Gerard con tinued with that curious inflection in the Greeks upbringing would have his voice which I had remarked when he scouted such methods but the secretivg nature of Demetrius stimulated by ter had pressed upon me his rarest wines and my stepdaughter 5 011 have found ror of Burlington accounted satisfacout of course that she is my step- torily for everything The fellow was poltroon daughter will be handsomely dow- an Mark Gerard dined alone with Nancy say I shall give her a pic ered I dare ture or two that Constable perhaps and me He was in no mood to talk and g ulped down his dinner in gloomy if silence Since we parted in the stable If I repeated yard his manner had entirely changed If she marries the right fellow TVhat I asked myself did he mean From his gestures rather than from his That there was meaning behind every words I inferred that he was intensely word he spoke I could no longer doubt nervous I laid this to the charge of De- ¬ Why did he remind me of a spider metrius and unduly irritable Nancy Why humiliating reflection did I too seemed depressed and abstracted compare myself to a fly These ques She replied in monosyllables to my few tions were adequately answered later questions Our talk for the present was over The Nancy go to your mother said Gerlights of the house were in sight The ard as the coffee was brought in I familiar roar of the surf became louder wish to talk with Mr Livingston and louder and the dogs a brace of We imshed our chairs from the table handsome bloodhounds bayed melodi- ¬ and lighted cigars ously Demetrius said Gerard is not a By Jupiter said Gerard sharply coward -bhat is the voice of Demetrius 1 merely bowed having resolved for I strained my ears in vain but a large the future to curb my tongue figure loomed suddenly in the foreHe proposes Gerard spoke slowly ground watching me narrowly between half That you Demetrius my compan- ¬ closed eyes he proposes to take en- ¬ ion shouted tire charge of of this madman You Yes came the measured response He rolled up carefully the loosened it is I wrapper of his cigar and I chafing at The Greek however had no intention the delay forgot my good resolutions ot stating his business in my presence and blurted out He assisted his master to descend from What disposition does he make of the high butrerv and followed him re- - me spectf ully into the house I remained Pshaw said Gerard frowning with the horses and helped the coach what a hot head it is I he empha man Jap Byers an excellent fellow to sized the pronoun twas an effective unhitch them and his tongue He trick of hisi I mv lad have rjleasant- battered volubly er work for you I shall send my f ariuly after all he had seen the complication of my falling in love with Nancy had counted the probability as gain an extra rivet to bind me to his service What a puppet I had been Im sorry the boy is from home he muttered I should have enjoyed So ¬ ¬ ¬ - gray Why yes an she had it straight from Miss Nancy too Wimmen folks must talk or theyd naterally go crazy Well sir shed got at last ter the end o the yarn an Id told her good by an vi as wavin her adoo as she stood in the doorway when all of a suddent a big shock o hay comes a tumblin down an ketches me right twixt wind an water It come nigh killin me an Mary too Why the girl most split herself a laffin An Mr Livingston his pleasant voice hardened that ther Greek damn his soul done it I expressed my astonishment He done it outer meanness I never suspicioned the cuss know in that the hay was kinder poorly piled an that Id bin keerless about the handlin of it But jest before you drev up I hap ¬ pened ter start out fer the house an then changed 1113 mind an walked around the barn Well sir as I come around that ther corner I saw the Greek standin like a statoo on a pedestial Where did he come from Why from the mow o course He inped me off ter the house an then crawled out He must ha know n that Danish Mary an I was friens an he calkilated ter make an everlastin scarecrow outer me before her the son of a gum I dropped onter his racket rigilt awaj the second I seen him He come there a purpose Id a thumped him good if it cost me this place but the dogs begun barkin the Greek he speaks to em as if mo- ¬ lasses candy wouldnt melt in his mouth an the next thing- I knew he was talk in with Mr Gerard But cuss him Ill He -- Mark EMPEROR AND TAILOR How far is it to the island I asked Not more than two miles Danger to Nicholas in 1S44 xVn Inci ¬ I rose to my feet dent Which AVas Suspicions Mr Gerard I must see Demetrius to ¬ June 6 1844 This was the principal night Within two hours you shall have racing day and the course was exceed- ¬ your answer ingly crowded Emporor Nicholas He nodded and puffed at his cigar magnificent donation to the Ascot turf As you please he said indifferently had become generally known and the The immortal Lincoln said that you reception of the rojal cortege was could fool a part of the people all the cheering vocifererous During the day time and all the people part of the some few attempts were made at getting time but that no man could fool all up a demonstration of unpopularity the people all the time but they failed signally and a ragged In considering the relations which boy was arrested carrying about for existed between Mark Gerard and the gratuitous distribution a circular got Greek this piece of wisdom bubbled up up by the Poles wherein the assassina- ¬ out of my memory and lent an agree- ¬ tion of the emperor before he escaped able effervescence to my reflections from England was distinctly threatGerard was a brilliant man in his way ened and recommended but I had come to the conclusion that The police commissioners showed Demetrius was the stronger mentally one to me and every possible precau- ¬ of the two and exercised a potent in¬ tion was of course adopted by sprink- ¬ fluence upon his master I still clung ling a number of constables in plain to my theory in regard to the Greeks clothes among the masses on the cowardice otherwise I should hardly course but I confess that I felt some- ¬ have trusted myself alone with him what uneasy know ing how easy it is He had no intention I was convinced for any enthusiast or desperado who of meeting or nursing Burlington He is content to sacrifice his own life to was fooling Gerard He should not I take that of another decided fool Hugo Livingston About this time there was also an at- ¬ The night was perfect an idyllic tempt b3 a mad or hot brained Pole to night for lovers The moon lolled lazily enter the emperors room This ob- ¬ ject he purposed to effect b3r imperson- ¬ U ating a tailor from whom a pair of trousers had been ordered for his im ¬ perial majest3 ne offered Snip a large 1 i sum of mone3 if he would allow him to deliver these in his stead and the latter ¬ Henry L Casey Dentist Veterinary Surgeon All diseases of the domesticated ani ¬ mals treated on scientific principles Diseases ot the hog a specialty Office at Turnby Clark Mitchells lower stable RLUSS NURSERIES FALL 1897 Full stock of Fruit and Ornamental Grape Vines Small Fruits Trees Asparagus and every thing for Ol chard Lawn and Garden We have no Agents but sell direct to the planter saving enormous commis- ¬ sions Catalogue on application to H F HILLENMEYER Lexington Ky RAILROAD TIME CARD L N R R ARRIVAL OF TRAINS lfxl From Cincinnati 1058 a m 538 p m 1015 p m From Lexington 439 a m 745 a m 333 p m 627 p m From Richmond 435 a m 710 a m 3 28 1 From Ma3 sville 742 a m 325 p m DEPARTURE OF TRAINS pm Mr fcSr suspecting something wrong handed him over to the police who on search¬ ing him found secreted about his per son a long thin knife or stiletto This incident did not tend to diminish our anxiet3 or sense of responsibilit3 for the personal security of our imperial guest and in spite of the frank and princely agreement of his manner and the ga3reties to which his visit gave rise I for one wished him with all my heart safe back again on the other side of tht ¬ 445 a m 755 a m 340 p m To Lexington 750 a m 1105 a m 545 p in 1021 p m ToRichmond 1108 a m 543 p m 1025 p m To May sville 750 a m 635 p m F B Carr Agent To Cincinnati channel Cornhill Magazine VICTORIAS CORONATION OATH nMEyiEr TIME TABLE - MMPftfm git even ¬ ¬ ¬ - ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ out-and-o- ut ¬ Questions and Answers in the Royal Ceremony EAST BOUND Queen Victorias Coronation Boll t t is described b3 Florence Ha3ward who Lv Louisville 8S0om ftOOprn copies from the official records the fol Ar Lexington ll15nmSlipm followed his master rospectfully into the Lv Lexington ll2iam lowing- oath signed and subscribed by Lv Winchpsterll58im JwOpm 8Mtm 55flpm house HiZipm l5sun ttttUpia the queen on her coronation Ar Mt Stering122opm 9o0pm 0aiii 7Q3pm in the sapphire heavens The air was Washington i5 mm 340pni Archbishop Madam is 3 our majesty Ar PhiludelphiaI0lnam 705pm Ar ¬ soft and odorous languid with the per willing to take the oath Ar New York1240nn 908pm fume of a million flowers And the The Queen I am willingWEST BOUND voice of spring whispered her old old Archbishop Will 3ou solemnly prom t t story ise and swear to govern the people oS Ar Winchester 730am 40pnt 655am 250pm Where are you going 800am 520pm 735am 345pm Ar this United Kingdom of Great Britain Ar Lexington 911am 030pm Frankfort It was Nancy She flitted towards and Ireland and the dominions thereto ArShelbyville 1001am 72Upm me a slender Naiad like figure il ¬ belonging- according- to the statutes in Ar Louisville 1100am 815pm lumined by the silvery beams Trains marked thus f run daily ex-¬ parliament agreed on and the respective cept Sunday other trains run daily Who would not wish to be abroad laws and customs of the same Through between Louisville such a night as this Miss Nancy Im The Queen I solemnty promise so to Lexington Sleepers New York and without off for a walk do change Ill go with you she replied MamArchbishop Will jou to jour power For rates Sleeping Car ma is asleep and my father her voice cause law and justice in merc3 to be any information call on reservations or hardened doesnt want me executed in all 3 our judgments F B Carr I hesitated Agent L The Queen I willN R R If you dont want me too orGEoRGE W Barney Paris Ky Archbishop Will 3 ou to the utmost My scruples fled Div Pass Agent of 3 our power maintain the laws of Lexington Ky Im going to the island Miss God the true prof ession of the Gospel you would like to see and the Protestant reformed religion Nancy Perhaps Mark established b3 law And will 3 ou She made no reply and we started maintain and preserve inviolably the FRANKFORT CINCIMATI RY side by side not a yard between us In settlement of the United Church of Eng- ¬ In Effect Marcli 1 1897 silence we paced down the path to the land and Ireland and the doctrine wor- ¬ sea and descended the steps which led ship discipline and government there- ¬ DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY tb the sands I forgot Demetrius for- of as b3r law established within Eng ¬ got everything save the one intoxicat ¬ land and Ireland and the territories EAST BOUND ing fact that I was walking alone be- thereunto belonging And will ¬ 030am 300pm 3ou pre- Lve Frankfort neath the stars with the woman I serve unto the bishops and clergy of jrr jiti k iioru 43am 320prn ti51am 332pm loved But what I forgot Nancy bore in England and Ireland and to the 702am 348pra Arr Stamping Ground mind 708am 358pm churches there committed to their Arr Duvalls 720am 415pm Mr Livingston she said in confi- charge all such rights and privileges Arr Georgetown Lve Georgetown 800am 430pm dential tones I have watched for this as b3 law do or shall appertain to them Arr Newtown 812am 442pm 822am 452pm irl LLU Ll LVllicail opportunity I want to ask you what or an3 of them 828am 458pm Arr Elizabeth I have not the heart to ask mamma and 840am 510pm The Queen All this I promise to do Arr Paris what I wont ask my father WEST BOUND The things which J have here beforq Is it something I can answer promised I will perform and keep Lve Paris 920am 530pm I think so 932am 542pm ArrElizabeth So help me God Victoria B Ceo 938am 548pm Arr Centreville Is it something I ought to answer tury Newtown 948am - - ¬ - ¬ 1 - ¬ ¬ I ¬ ¬ ¬ If you have my welfare at heart she whpered softly you will tell me the truth all the truth about this mysterious affair Hitherto Mr Liv ¬ ingston Ive taken persons and things as I found them Effects have inter¬ Miss Nancy - ested me rather than causes There is father for instance who has lived apart from us all these years I accepted that without inquiry but now it seems odd Where was the necessity The reason the cause must be a strong one Then again there is this mad socialist What is he doing- at large And what is the nature of his grudge against us I dont ask these questions out of idle - curiosity These questions Miss Nancy not answer I can v ¬ ¬ or yon will not You cannot She spoke impatiently I hesitated What should I say Im old enough to know these secrets if secrets they be and strong enough to share my Anothers burdens Poor dear mamma how old she looked to ¬ night 1 You can lighten your mothers bur wealth3 New Yorkers The people are proud of the revolutionar3r history of the place and one of the residents has a local reputation for his knowledge in that line The other da3 some work ¬ men dug up a lot of Bones which were prompt- - conveyed to the village his ¬ torian and laid on his table As the stor3- goes he adjusted his spectacles asked as to the precise location where the relics were found put on his think ¬ ing cap and immediately proceeded to remember After remembering for a few minutes he distinctly recalled the fact that Gen Benedict Arnolds horse was shot under him while the revolu ¬ tionary war was being- fought at that identical spot and was buried where it fell The bones now occup3 a show ¬ case in the local museum of history in the rear of the village store Butthe horns which were dug up at the sanie nl ace were hurriedly buried cpain Hartford Times - that fine old town down in Fairfield count3r which has man3 residences of Benedict Arnolds Horned Horse A good stor3 comes from Bidgefiekl Arr Arr Georgetown Lve Georgetown Arr Duvalls Arr Stamping Ground Arr Elk horn GEO B HARPER Genl Supt Frankfort Ky 046pm 053pra 70 1 pm 711pm Ut Viam 725pm C D BERCAW Genl Pass Agt 1000am 1010am 1050am 1110am 1125am 1135am 558pm 010pm 835 pm 0 3 HOUSE AND LOT AND BLACK ¬ SMITH SHOP FOR SALE DESIRE to sell my house and ot with blacksmith shop at Jackson ¬ ville Ky I will sell for half cash balance in twelve mouths For further particulars address Dr call on ¬ I 13oct tf BENJ F SHARONv acksonville Ky JOHN CONNELLY PARIS KENTUCKY Work guaranteed satisfactory Call promptly answered Your wotk i solicited Pricco reasonable m A5SI 1 Stl - 9 T M I v y V -- J KfBM 1 jfsflfr- - L v r -- r J J - V i Vw wuw tmwiiwiw 3SBfeagEJ fir V f THE BOURBON NEWS FRIDAY JANUARY THE FARMING WORLD TREATMENT How to Secure 7 1898 SHED FOR MACHINERY An Investment Which Pays Mon Select a site convenient to the lanes leading to the various fields and at a proper distance from the other build ¬ ings to insure safety in case of fire I find 20x40 feet a convenient size on an average farm Divide into three spaces two of 13 feet each and one of 14 feet Inclose these spaces on three sides and on the fourth fit double doors Win- ¬ dows can be placed where desired Common lumber will answer using good shingles for roofing and pine LAST OF OLD CREMORNE Site of tlie Famous London Garden to Be Built Upon OF COWS Than Ordinary Interest tv rc St From an article written by George Sampson of the Sharon Wis Beport sr we take the following The functions of the cow are to take jrour coarse fodder and grain and man ¬ ufacture them into milk Providing she is so fed that she can sustain her body and in addition produce milk at a profit she is a good cow You know Satisfactory Results in Karan Dairying I there are any number of cows that do not pay for their keeping but in this age of progress we can ascertain be ¬ yond a shadow of doubt whether or not e cow is a profitable dairv cow There are three things you must con- ¬ sider 1 the quantity of milk given 2 the quality by the Babcock test 3 the length of the period of lactation After having succeeded in establish ing a herd of good dairy cows comes the important part of taking proper care of them Milch cows must have a variety of feed as no one kind of feed contains all the different- elements which both sustain the body and pro duce the milk We will see later what ¬ -- About an acre and a half of ground in Chelsea which has been used for the past 20 years by W J Bull the or- ¬ chid grower and nurseryman has been sold and is to be built upon The piece of ground possesses a history and no ordinary one for it is part of the site of old Cremorne What recollections must rise in the minds of those who knew London and were acquainted with London 20 or 25 years ago at the mere mention of the word Cremorne It is strange that there should be no book dealing with this place in which was reflected for 30 years that which was universally known as London life The doir gs at the gardens dur ¬ ing these years must provide ample ma ¬ was in 1843 that Cremorne was first opened as a place of entertain- ¬ ment The programme was always a varied one and the element of sensa- ¬ tion was always in request Balloon- ¬ ing was the venture which never ceased to attract for it was conducted in those days with more than the ordinary amount of danger The number of hair- ¬ breadth escapes run by the aeronauts was fearful One would come to smash at Walthamstow one dajr another would go for a little trip to Kent and alight with more celerity than grace on the green of some sleepy village Cremorne had many managers but the one remembered best is Baum During his regime the place attained a No money was great reputation spared to provide attraction and it is certain that the people who went there enjojed themselves to their hearts de- ¬ sire Any evening Cremorne was worth a visit but the time to see it at its best was after some great event such as the boat race or the Derby What a night might have been said with good reason then There was a leaven of what is carnival esque about it there was an extra fastness in the fun an unusual spirit of gayety abroad License for extra time had been grant-¬ ed and fresh arrivals came pouring in until a very late hour The theaters and music halls all sent their audiences down Cremorne acted as a focus so to speak and centralized all the scat- ¬ tered rays of revelry of the metropolis Clubites hired cabs and made their way down to the gates with all possible speed The end of Cremorne was in 1877 First of all some one libeled Mr Baum about the gardens and there was an action Mr Baum got one fourth pence and had to pay his own costs A few months later Mr Baum made an appli- ¬ cation for the renewal of his license but the number of people who gave no- ¬ tice of opposition was so great that Mr Baum withdrew and the gardens peace- ¬ fully expired Such was Cremorne and now the last remnant reminding one of its former glories is to be swept away- London We desire to call our readers attention to the Farmers Handy Feed Cooker which is sold at the low price of 1250 for 50 gallon capacity Farmers Handy Feed Cooker Wjj A TALE WITH MES PXNKHAM About the Cause of Anemia ¬ terial - u T - It ELEVATION OF MACHINERY SHED - ¬ milk is composed of and you will un ¬ derstand why she must have a variety of feed Do not feed your cows before milk ¬ ing So many do this in order that the cow shall stand better during- the proc- ¬ ess of milking You will ask why Most of the milk is secreted during the process of milking and the cow must use her blood in the udder If she is eating this blood rushes to her stomach - lumber for doors Make good joints to prevent the entrance of fowls and sparrows which are extremely fond of roosting on the implements The floor should be 12 inches above the sur- ¬ face of the ground The approaches to the doors can be made of earth or gravel foot space and with it the remainder of the har¬ vesting implements In the next space put the tillage implements and in the last the vehicles It is very important to have a place for every article and keep every article in its place When the implements are placed in the shed apply a coating of an order to carry the nutriment to the kerosene oil to the bright parts of Cast¬ different parts of the body and the con- ings and where liable to be injured by sequence is that there is a lack of blood rust Do this twice a year Also get in the udder to produce the best results Extreme care must be taken not to feed 13 20 J So anything that will flavor milk just bevwcia iajrTwaettzftorrt fore milking as it will then pass into the milk but feed directly after milk- - Put the binder in the 14 ¬ Everybody comes into this world with a preI disposition to disease of some particular tissue in other words everybody has a weak spot In ninety nine cases out of a hundred the ¬ weak spot in women is somewhere in the uter ¬ ine system The uterine organs have less resistance to disease than the vital organs thats why they give out the soonest NTnt- mnrc fTinn rt no wnman in a hundred nay in five hundred has perfectly healthy organs of generation This points to the stern necessity of helping ones self just as soon as the life powers seem wmmwMmBmmmmmmGSs1B33Xmmmmmm ami jv to be on the wane wSBHiiliBiHiHwlL - Jv Excessive menstruation is a sign of physical weakness and want o tone in the uterine organs It saps the strength away and produces anemia blood turns to water If you become anemic there is no knowing what will happen If your gunaa and the inside of your lips and inside your eyelids look pale in color you are Why not bulla By feeding poultry and stock with cooked in a dangerous way and must stop that drain on your powers food during the winter months at least one up on a generous uplifting tonic like Lydia E Pinkhams third of the food is saved also having stock Vegetable Compound in a healthy condition preventing hog Mrs Edwin Ehrig 413 Church St Bethlehem Pa cholera among your hogs and insuring the laying freely during the winter says hens tell l ieei it my duty to write andam you tfcat months when eggs are always wanted at I am better than I have been for four years high prices This Cooker will pay for itself Lydia E Pinkhams Vegetable Com in one weeks time and is without doubt the I used pound one package of Sanative Wash one box of s- best and cheapest on the market just what mmmW its name implies a Farmers Handy Feed Liver Pills and can say that I am perfectly cured Cooker Upon application to the Empire Doctors did not help me any I should have Manufacturing Co 613 H St Quincy 111 a in my grave by this time if it had not been been for your catalogue giving a full description may be SjUHpVi fc medicine It was a godsend to me I was troubled with obtained They are made in all sizes excessive menstruation which caused womb trouble Saved Tlieir Lives and I was obliged to remain in bed for six weeks Mrs was at an afternoon tea and the crush Pinkhams medicine was recommended to me and It was simply horrid It seemed that nothing would save the few men present when one after using it a short time was troubled no more with flooding I also had severe pain in my kidneys This also I have no more I shall always recommend the quick witted woman exclaimed Ladies please remember there are gentlemen in the Compound for ithas cured me anditwill cure others I would like to have you crowd It was all that preserved the poor In such cases the dry form of Compound should be used things from a horrible fate Philadelphia publish this letter North American fc There Is a Class of People I 4tmm r Am wPkmmmWK if 1 k Mmmmib t nipf 1 - hh n kmmu9mm mmmwmmm W vativ nr -- ¬ ¬ msr Who are injured by the use of coffee Recently there has been placed in all the grocery stores a new preparation called GHATN O made of pure grains that takes the placeof coffee The most delicate stomach receives it without distress and but few can tell it from coffee It does not cost over i as much Children may drink it with great benefit 15 cts and 25 cts per package Try it Ask for GRAIN O ¬ ¬ ass9saaassaasssaagsssaas i PAINT WALLS CEIL to i m MURALO WATER COLOR PAINTS FOR DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS ¬ -- MARKETING BUTTER I Best Time to Sell Is as Soon as ttt Product Is Ready GROUND PLAN OP SHED The question often arises with dairy farmers who make and market their half a gallon of boiled linseed oil abd own butter shall I sell or hold for high apply to woodwork especially where er prices Butter depreciates from the the paint has worn off Repeat this op-¬ moment it is made till it is consumed eration once in five years Use good under ordinary farm conditions and is machine oil on all bearings Run the binder and other harvesting always liable to fluctuations in price which are as often against the holder machines into the shed every day as as in his favor and he is always losing soon as the da3s work is over Allow the interest on its value as long as he no implement to remain in the fields It is thus holds it Holding for a higher price for any lengthy period ready to be taken out on the shortest 4s one form of speculation a business farmers have no occasion to indulge in notice and in good working order Be- ¬ It is true a rise in property may some- fore using an implement tighten all times be foreseen making it pretty safe loose bolts Keep all knives colters to hold for a time but when a dairyman skimmers ete sharp and in good re¬ would not think it wise or safe to buy pair The work wTill be more satisfac butter or cheese to hold for a better tory and the draft lighter A work jirice he had better not hold his own bench with a vise and a few tools for The fact that it turns out that he might repairing would be a good investment Orange Judd Farmer have done better by holding than by selling when his goods are first ready GARDEN AND ORCHARD for market is not a sufficient reason Do not use coal tar on wounds caused for his holding at another time for the chances will as often be against him by pruning Use wax or paint Never plant too many summer apples and whichever wav it is he must al vays endure tihe losses from injury Winter apples are what you want shrinkage depreciation waste and use It is profitable to buy canned fruit if of capital Therefore as a rule we say you have none It is a health promoter it is most prudent to sell always when Keep the squash in a dry room where products are read3 for market and most the temperature never goes below freez especially so with butter which is al- ing ways suffering from depreciation in Onions rot so easily that when grown quality Rural World for the market should be sold as soon as ¬ ¬ Cholly What do you do when your father wont let you have any more new clothes Chappie I get a new tailor N Y How to Work It m World Accounted For Whats all this Austri an trouble about anyway over Its allOh a question of national language I see that accounts for the war of words Philadelphia North American To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets All druggists refund money if it fails to cure 25c ft ft ft ft a ft ft ft THE MURALO CO grocer or paint dealer and do your own kalsomining This material is made on scientific principles by machinery and milled in twenty four tints j and is superior to any concoction of Glue and Whiting that can possibly w be made by hand To be mixed with Cold Water If you want something extra buy some MURALO from the same dealer This material is a Hard Finish to be applied with a brush and be- - 0 comes as hard as Cement Milled in twenty four tints and works equally as well with cold or hot water EgPSend for sample cards and if you can-not purchase this material from your local dealers let us know and we will Or put you in the way of obtaining it sfifr I SeSSSS6r NEW BRIGHTON S I NEW YORK W the measles attacks him late in life cago News gia It is always hard on a man when love or Chi- ¬ Feeble nerves severe weather neuralSoothing cure St Jacobs Oil ¬ ¬ If a man has money it is a sign that he is mighty careful with it Atchison Globe While asleep cured soreness All right St Jacobs Oil did it stiffness CURE CONSTIPATION f DRUGGISTS 8Sm g - Mail As a matter of fact nobody believes in a hell except for his neighbor Rains Horn L25c 50c SIyyyK2 ¬ ¬ fc possible Woodpeckers Are Helpful Uncultivated orchards suffer more There is no longer the prejudice from drought than do those that are which used to exist against the wood- ¬ cultivated pecker as the destroyer of valuable Cider is quite as dangerous a trees which it used to be believed he as can be given the 3oung It beverage¬ is an appecked so as to start the sap to flow ¬ petite breeder ing The work he does is almost al Ashes spread broadcast in the orAvays on dead wood and he only pecks holes in that to find the insect that has chard at the rate of half a ton per acre deadened the wood and if allowed to will be very useful Mulching of the strawberry bed live would ultimately destroy the tree grape vine roses etc should be done There is aio more valuable insect de-¬ stroyer than the woodpecker It is as soon as the ground freezes It is of no use to expect to make a suc- ¬ one of the few birds that stay with us all winter and its cheerful pecking cess of house plants if the temperature can be heard in almost any woodland varies from freezing to 70 degrees at this season The only complaint we Blighted leaves or branches on the ever heard against the woodpecker is fruit trees should be cut off at once that he destroys early cherries But and burned to prevent the disease he has earned his part of the cherries spreading by previously destroying the insect en eniies that would have killed the tree American Cultivator Mouumcrt to the Potato A curious monument has just been discovered in the dense undergrowth of the so called Brandhai in the Upper Hartz It is a granite block about seven feet high nesting on a stone pedestal and on an iron tablet attached to it is Here in the following inscription the year 1747 the first trials were made with the cultivation of the potato The German peasant at the time did not take kindly to the potato plant on its Introduction to the countrj-- It had however a great friend in the king Frederick liL who was convinced of Every farm should have an acre of orchard 40 apple trees and 60 divided between pears peaches plums and cherries sajs a horticulturist The apple eater the man who always has an apple in his pocket to offer you is usualy a good fellow and much safer than a man who has ten cents to buy a drink for you Western Plowman ment to Ioreigm Sisters Among Europeans of what are called the upper classes much surprise is constantly expressed at the freedom with which American women travel unescorted through Eiirope A recently recalled American minister to a continen- ¬ tal court was once asked by a court official Haf American wifes no hus at all then They come three bands four six at once to court They ask to be presented to the king they ask to be invited to state dinners they must walk in mit a duke There are not dukes enough to go round Why do not their husbands come and walk in mit some duchesses At the Austrian court no Americans outside of the diplo- ¬ matic circle are presented very few at Berlin while Queen Margherita of Italy who has been more hospitable to our people than any other continental sovereign has recently declined to receive any married woman unaccom- ¬ panied by her husband Have they no homes in their own country these poor ladies asked a French woman that they spend months or years in Europe wandering about alone It was ex plained to her that American men often remained at home earning the nionev ¬ TOURING ALONE American Wives a Source of Wonder ¬ WOMEN THE MARKETS TiTK STOCK CattlecommonS Select butchers CATjVES Fair to good light mmimrm 2 To 3 00 5 75 3 00 3 35 3 40 3 55 6 3 75 4 35 6 50 3 55 4 GO Cincinnati Jan m A FAIR FACE CANNOT ATONE ¬ ¬ HOGS Common Mixed packers Liprht shipners SHEEP Choice IjAMBS Goood to choice 3 So 3 45 T FOR AN UNTIDY HOUSE FLOUR Winter family GRAIN Wheat No 2red 4 10 5 15 Qt 5 05 3 80 28 24 NoSrrd Oats--N- o Corn No 2 mixed 924 924 ¬ HAY Prime to choice PROVISIONS Mess pork Lnrd Prime Steam BUTTER Choice Dairy Prime to choice creamery POTATOES Per bbl CHICAGO Rve No 2 2 9 25 11 f 47 9 50 10 00 4 60 13 7mwwwmwMmnmmmmmmmmmKmm Making Up POLI Her Mind APPLES Per bbl 3 25 2 00 4 70 23 3 75 2 25 4 80 90 855i FLOUR Winter patents GRAIN Wheat No 2 red No 2 Chicago sprins CORN -- No 2 OATS No 2 PORK Mess LARD Steam NEW YORK 89i 26 9 10 4 75 4 80 26 22 9 15 4 77 5 15 1 00 35 49V4 Why Ethel what are you doing with that big medical work in your lap Well Arabella youd never guess I am quite sure You are not going to make a physician of yourself are you Not at all I am trying to find out which of my two suitors I love enough to marry What do you think of that ¬ FLOUR Winter patent No2red CORN No 2 mixed OATS Mixed PORK New mess LARD Western BALTIMORE RY- E- 8 50 9 5 10 4 65 2H 00 ¬ FLOUR Family GRAIN Wheat No Southern Wheat Corn Mixed 4 40 2 its valued but who was obliged to use forcible measn es to get the people of Pomeranxa and Silesia to plant it The action of the Hartzers in voluntary adopting the plant was evidently thought worthy of a memorial says the Sunday Companion Records of Famous Cows The records of ome cows are aJjnost Apples Cannot Be Cooked A peculiar feature of the apples grown in this section the last season is that they will not cook properly Many a housewife has been surprised that the best varieties of cooking tip- ¬ ples cannot be cooked as usual They are tough and stringy and when sliced for cooking retain their shape no mat- ¬ ter how long they may be kept on the stove instead of cooking to pieces as they should Grocers and apple men have been flooded with complaints about the apples they sell The unusual condition of the fruit explained an old apple grower and handler the other day is due to the dry weather that came just when the fruit was filling and ma- ¬ turing Kansas City Journal necessary to send their wives and daughters abroad for the education which foreign travel gives If that be so she replied they will study art and languages hard so as to return quickly to those who work for hem They will not buy costty clothes nor push their way into everj- - court iD Eu- ¬ rope Chicago Chronicle Oats No 2 white Rye No 2 western CATTLE First quality HOGS Western INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN Wheat No 2 Corn No 2 mixed Oats No 2 mixed LOUR Winter patent 3RAIN Wheat No 2 red ilorn Mixed Oats Mixed OltK Mess wARD 96 92 32f4 4 50 96VS How can a cyclopaedia of medicine help you Mr Spondulicks Well its this way is 57 years of age Heis worth 400000 and has consumption MrDukkats is 65 years old He is worth 500000 and has incipient Brights disease I thought perhaps this medical book would help me to make up my mind I have about decided that I love Mr Dukkats the better Which would you love N Y World ENDYOWJ NAME OH A POSTAL ND AVE WILL SEND YOU OUR 136 ILLBSTRATED CATALOGUE FREE - PG WD WteIffiREPATlMARMSGJ 180WINCHE5TERAVC t HEW HWEN QiHU my 32J4 30 52 4 70 4 00 02J4 25 22 Sufficiently Stuffed Already chieftain graduated from college He so stated I believe replied the head chef deferentially If that is the case continued the dusky potentate I think you may dispense Avith N Y Press the stuffing Pa what is the difference between a violinist and a fiddler Pa Anywhere from one to five thousand a year Boston Transcript Did you say the cannibal that the captive had just been inquired scribe to The Corn Belt a monthly pa-tures and Information about tho West It will be sent for one year for 25 cents postage stamps accepted Address The Corn Bklt 209 Adams Street Chicago If you want to read FADRIIIIA durlncr this winterp subject of tho cheap homes and prosperous IN THE and elsewhere sub ditions in Nebraska - con- ¬ ¬ WEST 0 lltl I K6 LOUISVILLE 3 75 4 00 Shaker Indians lohn Slocum the Shaker Indian died at his Mud Bay camp the other day Slocum became famous about five years ago by passing to Heaven through the avenue of a trance where he remained several days before returning to his mundane sphere On his return he pic tured Heaven in glowing terms to his associates declaring that lots of In dians are there and that each had a horse and plenty of salmon Every In ¬ ¬ Steam 94 28J4 25 8 50 4 37 The Difference Seattle SC S free information SEATTLE WASH CHAMBER OF COMMEBCE BUREAU HiffiUa HgdliitSl OUTFITS SKILL OF DOCTORS TESTE Uej Fifteen Years of Suffering 6 Seattle Klondike Alaska Washington State Seattle 65000 population Railroad Commercial Mining anil Agricultural Largest City Safest Routed LOWEST PRICES Centre BEST Longeat Address SECRETARY CURED ITS Positive STOPPED FREE PERMANENTLY Insanity Prevented Ty DR KLINES GREAT marvelous Pauline Paul a Holstein has a record of 31 pounds and 1 ounces for one day Paul DeKoe pro ¬ duced over 1153 pounds in one year Other cows of that breed have also ex- ¬ cellent records Mechtchilde producing 39 pounds 10 ounces in one week Ge nesta 23 pounds 5 ounces Jewel 2d 27 pounds 13 ounces and quite a num ¬ ber have exceeded 20 pounds in a week Of Jerseys Lanseers Fancy is credited wiih 03C pounds and 14 ounces in a year with 0fordtKateIiaof St Lam- ¬ bert and others exceeding 20 pounds in one week Oak trees do not make a desirable Kbade tree It is difficult to transplant an oak tree we would say to an in ¬ quirer - other Indian of the Mud Baj- settleHint for Potato Growers ment thus providing for the perpetuaAs the potato is so largely water it tion of the Shaker religion Portland might be supposed that it is not at all Oregonian exhaustive But the potato crop is al- ¬ ways sold from the land instead of be ¬ It Didnt Work ing fed on it The only thing that the Dugan I am afraid Bridget Father potato takes from the soil is potash that you are as much at fault in this and this is largely found in its leaves quarrel as Patrick You must learn and stems The tubers also contain to exercise forbearance and remember some potash and it is this which black ¬ that a soft answer turneth away wrath ens the knives and hands of those who Bridget OHoolihan Begorra yer peel and cut potatoes A large crop riverance thats jist wot stharted the of potatoes it is estimated will take throuble Pat came home from his 100 pounds of potash an acre from the worruk and axed wot was there for soil The best potato growers practice dinner He was toired an hungry an a system of rotating grain and pota- cross as two sthicks so he was an1 3 toes and in this way keep up the fer- ¬ give him a soft answer tility without much difficulty DakoU Well what did you say Field and Par MCowld mush Detroit Free Press - dian at Mud and Oyster bays became his followers and for the remaining years of his life he wielded a marked influence upon his disciples Consciotis of approaching death he cast his man ¬ tle of leadership upon Dick Jackson an ¬ ¬ ¬ I thought I should surely die the severity of the disease or the prompt and perfect cure performed by Dr Ayers Pills Similar results occur in every case They where Dr Ayers Pills are used helped me right away is the common expression of those who have used them Here is another testimony to the truth ci this statement I formerly suffered from indigestion and weakness of the stomach but since I began the use of Dr J C Ayers Pillsj I have the appetite of the farmers boy am 46 years of age and recommend all who wish to be free from dyspepsia tc take one of Dr Ayers Pills after dinner till their digestive organs are in good order Wm Steinke Grant Neb Dr Ayers Pills offer the surest and constipation and all swiftest relief fromThey cure dizziness its attendant ills nausea heartburn palpitation bad breath coated tongue nervousness sleeplessness biliousness and a score of other affections of the that are after all only You signs finda more more can deep rooted disease Dr Ayers Pills and the information about Ayer Cure diseases they have cured inby the s cured book i a story of cures told sent tree on nacres i- rnr fnrill AMmu rtfannAA CVf Spasms and St Vitus Dance No Fits or Nerrousneig uue- - Treatise and S2trial bottle free 10 patient NERUF RESTORER thev paying express charges onlr wben re ceived Send to DR KLINE Ltd Rcllevue institute of Medicine Arch Sweet PHILADELPHIA PA ¬ nt 933 auHARTSHowisaav When the stomach begins to fail in its duties other organs speedily become affected in sympathy and life is simply a burden almost unbearable Indigestion and dyspepsia are so common that only the sufferer from these diseases knows the possibilities of misery that inhere in them A typical example of the sufferings of the victim of indigestion is furnished in the case of John C Pritchard He went on for fifteen years from bad to worse In spite of doctors he grew constantly weaker and thought he would die He got well however and thus relates his experience For fifteen years I was a great sufferer from indigestion in its worst forms I tested the skill of many doctors but grew worse and worse until I became so weak I could not walk fifty yards without having to sit down and rest My stomach liver and heart became affected and I thought I would surely die I tried Dr T C Ayers Pills and they helped me right away I continued their use and am now entirely well I dont know of anything that will so quickly relieve and cure the sufferings of dyspepsia as Dr terrible Ayers Pills John C Pritchard Brodie War- NOTICE NAME TiiUB foA3Z OPIUM 1 IhfM I1 OH a irZJW LABEL THE GENUINE ANT nirr ARISHOl Hi Weeks Scale Works EAY COAL STOCK GRAIN AND COTTON SCALES 9 and TVhlskey WOOLLEY Is Habit cured ntbomcwitnuitt Book oL naiit PfirllLMilarssentPKKE Atlanta B M Q MVVHP ttBKlM4 I1 iii 1 Wl I ilii ill I I Mn J Ml Sn nililfS WHFRt- - Alt- FIRC I HILllt kbUL Best Lough Syrup Tastes Good TJso u ume oia hv druoreistn HI I n WJ ii iMWjiMV ¬ A N K E -- ren Co N ¬ This case is not extraordinary cither in j ti request by the J C vi C is Ayer Co Ivowell Mass WHEN WRITING TO ABVJEKTISEKS pleuae state that you saw 4he Advertlws 1690 ut In tU paper -- - lr s Jr0lmmmmmmmW IHfcht A m J teref rA- - xi-- a- -- u - tr pr ET wjr jfTMMBfaw ji V fe w T f ijmi - niwiw J p -- fcMgi twrw jfcBtwiHJ im HMIMMIMgraiiMIMimgMiT iTti ii v iwaaipy f iiamMammMntmMimrSmTnmiTmmKmlmMm - WflMlMml1TTllllBraifll M1IM1MMI mn r m iiu var n 1M iimii -- j - ii rri v v liBiBV r -- - n - inn - tt fc -- - r niwr---- i - - ii miwirwf t-- jr jiiwi afTrri y fir - - t- - r- - W iiwr J m m H i i y I fy IT r THE BOURBON NEWS FRIDAY JANUARY It was wreathed with the lotus in Egypt and twined with thyme and parspy The Charm of the Popples Very anoient is the history of the pop ¬ ¬ 7 1898 H urn rwm n inr fm H THE COMMERCIAL TRIBUNE MILLERSBURG m- - hn fi V Encyclopaedic Almanac ami Year Book News NTotea Gathered In AndAbout The for 18Q8 Free to Every WVekly Rurc Subcribr Mrs Jas Summers is still quite ill Wedcsire to cau apccitl attention to Mrs Wm Ardery has returned from the advertisement t rhi Commercial of this paper Indiana Gazette on another page An Encyclopaedic Almanac and Year Mr Layson Tarr is visiting friends in Book free with each yearly subscriber is Nashville certaiuiy a great stroke of enterprise on Mr Will Judy Jr is quite sick with the part of this popular paper typhoid fever Notbiug like it has ever been off red The Weekly Commercial Gazette has Mr Abe Clarke of Mdson is visiting been recently enlarged from eight to ten relatives here this week pages and the price remains the same Dr Wm Savage returned Tuesday to as heretofore only 50 cents per year the Onio Medical College Now is the time to subscribe 12uov 6t There is only one small dwelling house in the Burg that is vacant The Northwestern Mutual life has John Thornton of Tyrone is here this paid to representatives of its policy- ¬ week visiting his mother and sisters holders and to its policy holders and is Misses Edna Lillie and Lida Robert now holding for them 180000000 an fcou returned Monday from Falmouth excess over premium receipts of over Mr Jas Judy returned Monday from tf 2000i00 a visit with lady Irinnds at Taylorsville Mr Jas Cray and family of Mt Olivet are guests of relatives here this week Miss Lula McNamara returned Tues day from a visit with relatives in Mays ville Mrs Wm Milam guest of Mrs H H Phillips returned to Maysviile Tues day after a weeks visit At the Council meeting Tuesday night C W Howard was elected Town Clerk aud Ed Ingels Treasurer Catarrh invariably leads to consump- ¬ Mrs Sanford Carpenter tion Growing worse and worse each from Atlanta to attend has returned her winter those who rely upon the usual Mrs Ada Smith who is quite illmother treatment of sprays washes and inhal ¬ Mrs Louis Rogers of Cane Ridge ing mixtures find that it is impossible to check the disea e with these local ana Miss Fannie Harris of Carlisle applications which only reach the sur- were guests of Mrs Owen Ingels Tues- ¬ face- The offensive discharge increases day all the while and gets deeper until it is The Best Bros returned Tuesday to only a question of a eort time when Danville College and Mr irahaui the lungs are affected The importance of the proper treat- ¬ Smedlny returned to Georgetown Colment can therefore readily appre- ¬ lege ciated But no good whatever can be Mr Chas Johnson moved Wednesday expected from local applications as into the brick residence opposite the such treatment never did cure Catarrh new Methodist Church on Pleasant and never will Being a blood disease street of the most obstinate nature Swifts Mr Jas F Woolunis attended the Specific SSS is the only remedy wedding Tuesday at Muirs of his which caa have the slightest effect upon Catarrh It is the only blood remedy sister 1iss Hattie to Mr Viley of that goes down to the bottom of all stub- ¬ Fayette born diseases which other remedies Misses Lizzie Taylor Lucile Judy and cannot reach Lee Young of Mt Sterling left yester ¬ Mrs Josephine Polhill of Due West day for Indianapolis to visit Mrs S H S C writes I had such a severe case of Creighton Catarrh that I lost my hearing in one The Masons have commenced to reof the bone in my nose construct the Miller building into a ear and part Ploughed off i was constantly treated lodge room Mr Erion of Paris ifc with sprays and contractor for the job washes but each Mrs Mary Vansant of Elizaville and winter the disease seemed to have a Mr essie Anderson of Poplar Plains firmer hold on me were gnests of Mr J F Summers and I had finally been family Monda3T and Tuesday declared incurable J no Hamilton aui Sherman Hall rewhen I decided to ceived 1000 insurance on their tobac try S S S It co It was paid by R B Boulden oi seemed to get right the London Globe and Liverpool t at the seat of the Co commenced to teai Ausier disease and cured me permanently cupalo from the old Metho for I have had no touch of Catarrh away the old dist Church Wednesday preparatory to for seven years The experience of Mr Chas A Parr remodeling the building into a grocery of Athens Ga was like that of all room others who vainly seek a cure in local Mrs Jos T Batson age 52 died at Hill ircaLmeui nc says buried For years I suffered from a severe Lexington Monday and washusband Wednesday She leaves a case of Catarrh the many offensive tiere and son Taylor and a daughter The symptoms being ac- ¬ deceased was a niece of the late Wm companied by severe Skinner pains in the head I took several kinds of Weather Predictions If or January medicines recom- ¬ mended for Catarrh Hicks predictions for January are and used various local Expect high barometer and cold weath- ¬ applications but they had no effect whatev-- s er about 7th A reactionary storm per- ¬ pr T tc inrJnrprl tn iiroy m n 7k iod will center on the 9th to 12ch moon take S S S Swifts Specific and after four months I was being on the celestial equator on hei perfectly well and have never felt any swing southward on the 12th Look foi effects of the disease since a very sharp cold wave to press close Those who have had the first behind these reactionary storms reach touchof Catarrh will save endless suf- ¬ The next fering by taking the right remedy at the ing even southern extremes outset Others who nave for years tegular storm period is central on tin sought relief and found only disappoint 15th covering the 14th to 17th At the ment in local treatment will find it wise close of this period moon will be at ex to waste no further time on sprays washes inhaling mixtures etc whioh treme south and at her perigee Change are only temporary and cannot save to falling barometer warmer and many them from dreaded Consumption reactionan7 storms will center on and They should take a remedy which will touching the 21st aud 22nd These in cure them because it can reach their trouble SSS is the only blood reme- ¬ turn will be followed by another generdy which can reach Catarrh it promptly al and severe change to colder Watch gets at the very bottom of the disease about the 22nd to 24th The last regand cures it permanently SSS Swifts Specific is a real blood ular storm period for January will be remedy and cures the most obstinate central on the 26th About the 26th cases of Catarrh Rheumatism Conta- ¬ and 30th look for general marked win- ¬ gious Blood Poison Cancer Scrofula ter storms and Eczema which other so called blood remedies have no effect upon whatever V R Smiths College Lexington Ky is the only blood remedy guaran- ¬ fc Catai rh to ¬ ¬ Consumption ley in Greece It was also one of the flowers dedicated to Venus and the witches who wrought their spells and muttered their incantations on the mountain tops cast into their brew the horned leavos It was early recognized that the poppy in its simplest form is one of the most decorative of flowers Its simplest form is of course the wild flower of four petals It is treated decoratively in a number of ways either as a flat de sign of the lifted cup or as a conven- ¬ tional representation of the four petals encircling the receptacle or as the stem upholding the domelike and sometimes strongly ridged seed pod but after all the most marvelous artistic suggestions are found in the sharply outlined leaves which rise to slender Gothic points I These serve as models of leaf design and were carved boldly and delicately in the stone of aacient cathedrals There is always something artificial in the appearance of the cultivated popHfca vj iBSy TiaatiMa pies They lack tho stability or reality and ever suggest the gypsy masquerad- ¬ ing as the princess Poppies with very few exceptions Then come to TWIN BROTHERS to Do you want to be happy and make all your friends happy are not in the least difficult to grow We have the largest grandest and prettiest stok of holiday of Christmas presents Seed sown in the fall or spring will make your selections We are giving goods away you might say so low are we selling them produce plants that flower all summer goods ever displayed in Paris They do not demand an enriched soil To make room we have decided to sacrifice our immense stock of and profuse watering but grow in an independent careless fashion that is a relief after an experience of the exac AND tion of some plants Nancy M Waddle AND in Godeys Magazine TWIN BROTHERS WILL MAKE YOU ¬ ¬ w -- X1 fV ¬ MENS BOYS OVERCOATS CLOTHING LADIES JACKETS CAPES COMFORTS BLANKETS BOOTS SHOES ETC ¬ Traps and Trapping The ways of trapping are as various as the ingenuity of savage or civilized man can devise I like best tho traps that one can make They seem to give tho animal a fairer show they develop nearer we can get to the savage way the more fun it always is Steel traps have a placo that wooden traps can nev- er fill but give me something that I can make with my own hands with the simplest tools out of whatever materials the spot affords where the animal lives Of all the animals in this country there is none that affords less harmful sport than the rabbit more properly hare of which there are several spe- ¬ cies Its wonderful powers of increase enable it to hold its own as far too many of our best and most valuable animals do not Furthermore rabbits are very easily trapped Every one knows its little trail as broad as ones hand through the bushes or broom sedge or its footprints as it hops over the clear snow Here where the path goes undor a fence rail it has stopped to gnaw The rabbit follows this path in season and out though in the far north where the snow keeps piling andpiling up its little road may change with each successive snowfall Trappers there put out a large number of snares setting themjright in the mid- ¬ dle of the paths Harpers Round Ta- ¬ ble ¬ our own constructive faculties and the Read eveiy line in this advestisement it will advise where to buy and save Bis Bargains in Capes that were S200 now 95c 250 now 125 3 50 now 195 5 00 now 2 50 600 now 300 750 now 425 900 now 500 1000 now 625 1250 now 700 1500 now 750 Jackets that were 300 now 200 4 50 now 225 500 now 250 600 now 325 750 now 375 850 now 425 1050 now 525 1200 now 5v5 1500 now 698 Giving away Overcoats and Ulsters that were 300 now 195 500 now 275 7 50 now 375 1000 now 500 1250 now 7 00 1500 now 800 2000 now 998 Make your Christmas selections from our beautiful stock of silk handkerchiefs linen handkerchiefs initial handkerchiefs mufflers fine hosiery fine gloves fine jewelry fine garters neckwear fine shirts cuff buttons ear rings stick pins hair pins fine purses silk umbrellas kid gloves fine plush cases brush and comb sets water sets mirrors boas perfumes glove cases Toys dolls carriages wagons baby houses dishes drums chairs guns ships desks watches tam- ¬ bourines accordions vases sideboards carts sleighs trains bed steads cradles bureaus trumpets dancing figures whips games puzzles rockers wheelbarrows Big Bargains also in MENS and BOYS SUITS Free Free We give a Large Handsome Framed Picture when your purchase amounts to 1000 We give Cupon Tickets with everything you buy of us no matter how small Remember the place to save money is at ¬ XS TWXUXT BROTHERS 701 703 MAIN ST PARIS KY Ml ¬ BOURBONS BIGGEST BARGAIN BRINGERS UK T-- y- VST S3 RAILROAD TIME CARD r mjr3im ¬ ¬ ¬ IiUthers Bones It is generally supposed that the bones of tlie great reformer were torn from their last resting place in the church of the castle of Wittenberg dur ¬ ing the Thirty Years war and scattered to the winds like those of Wyclif At all events no trace of Luthers tomb has hitherto been discovered One of the biographers of Luther Herr Koesfe lin of Halle has however raised no little sensation in religious circles in Germany by a recent article in a theological magazine which throwsover the accepted explanation of the disappear- ¬ ance of the returners tomb as mere fic- ¬ tion He declares that two workmen engaged on the restoration oil the church in Wittenbecg castle came across the coffin and body of LutherfwithoutT let- ¬ ting any of their comrades know of their find It is alleged that they enter- ¬ ed the chapel by night and dug out the remains secretly reinterring them in fear of arrest There ought to be no difficulty in discovering whether thero is any truth in Herr Koestlins state- ¬ ment Westminster Gazette ¬ L ARRIVAL N R R of trains fie World Local State aiiii Nallonal WILL BE FOUND IN From Cincinnati 1058 a m 538 p m 1015 p m From Lexington 439 a m 745 a m 333 p m 627 p m From Richmond 435 a m 740 a m 328 pm From Maysviile 742 a ui 825 p m DEPARTURE OF TRAINS Almanac 0 THE BOURRON NEWS AND THE Encyclopedia Oiaaoinaacfti WfiWI i 3 To Cincinnati 340 p m Lexington 750 a m 1105 a m To 545 p m 1021 p m ToRichmond 1108 a in 543 p m 10--- J p m To Maysviile 750 a m 635 p m F B Carr Agent T 445 a in 755 a m Villi Will Answer MjiiGrjqAaifl rnimiLi nT RER 1 We have arranged a Clubbing Rate by which we can cive 8olh Papers One Year for Regular Prlae for Both is only t 225 275 lf GIMEME EAST BOUND 01 R cbcyclopeaiu TIME TABLE 1115am 840pm Ar Lexington 1123am 850pm 830am 550pm Lv Lexington Lv Winchesterll58am 923pm 915am 630pm Ar Mt Sterlingl22opm 950pm 950am 705pm Ar Washington 65 am 340pm Ar Philadelphial0l5am 705pm 1240nn 90Spm Ar New York WEST BOUND Any Question You may Ask It We save you generous part of this snm Send or bring your cash with order to THE BOURBON NEWS Paris Ky ANTED TRUSTWORTHY and active gentlemen or ladies to travel for responsible established house in Kentucky Monthly 6500 and ex- ¬ penses Position steady Reference Enclose self addressed stamped envelope The Dominion Company Dept W Chicago 16nov 8t w teed SSS Is where hundreds of clerks farmer boys aud others have invested 90 for tuition and board for an education and end coutain9 no mercury potash or are now getting 1000 and over a year flier dangerous mineral The Kentucky University Diploma be mailed free by Swift under seal is presented graduates of this Books will Specific Company Atlanta Georgia honored and responsible college Read ad and keep this notice for reference Remember in order that your letters may reach this college to address only W R Smith Lexington Ky Purely Vegetable 4J Monthly 65 00 and ex-¬ in Kentucky penses Position steady Reference Enclose self addressed stamped envelope The Dominion Company Dept W Philadelphia TiniM Chicago lGnov 8t TRUSTWORTHY active W ANTED gentlemen or ladiesand to travel for responsible established house Petit Larceny Not Womans Sin Alone The story comes from England of a novel being found in the strong room of a firm of publishers written entirely upon the note paper ef a London clnb The thing is significant for two reasons First because the novelist was a man and second because petty larceny has long been supposed to be tho prerogative of woman It is a fact that in this country at least it is women who pilfer the detachable privileges to be found in railway stations the waiting room of department stores hotels and like places It has been found necessary to chain Bibles themselves Itisn tsovery long ago fchat when a woman arose to read her bulky extemporaneous address at the meeting of a certain womans club her listeners upon the back of each sheet of manuscript could descry the sign and seal of a woll known hotel This wasnt so bad of course as a whole book but it was -- bad enough A Star Attxaotlon Lost Lv Louisville 830am 600pm Standard American Annual PRIGE Ar Winchester Ar Lexington Ar Frankfort ArShelbyville ArLouisvllle 730am 450pm 655am 20pm 800am 520pm 735am 345pm 911am 630pm 1001am 720pm 1100am 815pm ftas and Opinions OF Trains marked thus f run daily ex- ¬ cept Sunday other trqins run daily Through Sleepers between Louisville Lexington and New York without change For rates Sleeping Car reservations or any information call on orGEORGE W Barney h GENTS National Importance THE SUN CONTAINS BOTH Daily by mail Daily and Sunday by mail 6 Ueady Jan 1 18989 On Ail News Stands j tt Large VjjrTke Quce fc Agent L F B Div Pass Agent Lexington Ky a rir mng TjOa N R R Paris Ky Carr t t v t3 w O Better More Complete Than Ever - 8 a year a year y h most widely sold Annual Refer Booh and Political Manual published The Sunday Sun the world Price 5c a copy By mail HOUSE ASD LOT AND BLACK ¬ J R ADAIR Drs Adair Moore Dental Surgeons - WLDOUO shoes are tho productions of t k from the bit material osible r Also SSGO and 30 Moes U jgsOO aud 175 s n W Ii Douglas shoes i by ovf r lOOOOO wrirers r in style fit and durab shoe eer offered at t Tle are made in gliaj and stjles and l t f Jt Miner ni ii it i n wfussL j i No 3 Broadway 6 to 12 the slioc alone has distanced v W L Douglas 350 S c 14 3orSHOE years luls fr 1 it U 5 p m Office Hour Barnes People talk about Jonah as SMITH SHOP FOR SALE though he were the unluckiest man tho world ever saw DESIRE to sell my house and ot with blacksmith shop at Jackson- Shedd And so he was Think of the hard luck of a man who has passed ville Ky I will sell for half cash bal through his experience in not being an ance in twelve months For further Ky actor With tho notoriety that that lit- ¬ particulars address or call on Paris PARIS KY 602 MAIN ST BEN J F SHARON gave him Jonah Over Deposit Bank Jacksonville Ky 13oct tf a in and 1 to tle whale experience could have played to full houses indefi- ¬ 3dc tf 8 to 12 a m 1 to 6 p m Office hours nitely Boston Transcript L C MOORE THE WORLD Pulitzer Building New York hthe greatest Sunday Newspaper 2 i a year I M H DAILEY Address THE SUN New York BLUMS IRSERffi FALL 1897 Full stock of Fruit and Ornamental Grape Vines Small Fruits Asnaraens and everv thino- fm n chard Lawn and Garden v o uivu uu Agonts Dm sea direct to the planter saving enormons commis- ¬ Trees - tor I JSSOO w orkmen e prices 25 ils Mid Henry L Casey Veterinary Surgeon Dentist 1 -- eet uy est iri- - it If VsiUr i IMUt pnpi5v J P KIILY All diseases of the domesticated ani- ¬ mals treated on scientific principles ir cata Diseases ot the hog a specialty Soldby Offipfi at Tnrnrv lirt Mr flower stabl- keeping lat hours or fron long travel lay upon tm lids in the morning t iore dressiug a if t white linon clotlttat has been di d in water as hoBjpTuu p can bear iu When the cloth cooa TT m it in tb hot atfr again J- z vc hour cs U allt treii -- If the eyt s get tired and red from -- 1 OHN CONNELLY pjj tj2sel5o5 PARIS KENTUCKY Office over G S Varden 8 Co Work guaranteed satisfactory Calif proirtl pc - 1 Yrur woik Offief Hums P s t aonable sions Catalogue on application to IjA1N N H F HILT T3NMEYER to 12 a m 1 to 5 y m vY PERFECT r i n IN ii ORIGINAL iJC-V -- r nr te SfflfeOfr lutfj Iftifo im bhimmhijihii mm muuafiWllUijAiaKli wBgpEr rmlsIk Nifr -- t