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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 bou1898012801 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. - tfSTi wra u CHAMP MILLER BOURB y ii NEWS IH IM PRINTED EVERY Editors and Owners TUESoix AND FRIDAY Established feb 3 1881 EIGHTEENTH YEAR PARIS BOURBON CO KY FRIdJ Jacksonville town Uagoocf JANUARY 28 1898 Jackstown Paris Kiserton Ruddles Reporter NO 8 cover a wide range The twelfth biennial report of the Main and Broadway Bateau of Agriculture Labor and Statistics of the State of Kentucky has s just been issued by Hon Lucas Moore Commissioner The report is the most comprehensive and yaluable one yet Consigned to the past are the old time Led with their high posts made by this Bureau The News here- ¬ their towering canopies and their fluttering draperies with reproduces from it the sketch of Paris written by ex Mayor W L THE BED OF TODAY Is ofiron or brass Light clean attractive and strong it combines Yerkea and the sketch of Bourbon bed The prices County written by WalterJChamp g58 in attractive form all the requisites of an C F BROWEK CO Paris and Bourbon Sketched Little RocgMillersburg North Middle Mills ShaJcespeare Shawhan PARIS Plum The Bed of the Future up-to-da- te BOURBON COUNTY -- i Formed in 1775 from Fayette county and named in honor of the famous House of Bourbon of France Bourbon county was one of the nine counties organized by the Virginia Legislature Maple and Mahogany chamber furniture in attractive styles before Kentucky became a State It is bounded on the north by Harrison the east by Montgomery the south by Fay- ¬ FOLDING BEDS ette and west by Scott and is watered Chiffonier Beds full size by Stoner Houston and 1500 1800 2000 Boone creeksHinkston south fork of and the Mahogany finish upright bed wih lSx40 French mirror at 3000 Licking river The county has a population of 16976 Located in the heart Look at our East window Cut Price Sale of Pictures of the bluegrass region the gently un dulating soil is wonderfully fertile pro ¬ Q 3 ducing generous yields of wheat corn The - All new designs barley oats hemp tobacco etc Wall Papers now open and ready for inspectionvirgin half of the soil produces about and colorings See ns before placing your order Liberal Discount for 150000 bushels of bluegrass seed per contracts now year which sells at twenty five cents War per bushel from the stripper and fur According to the census of 1790 the nishes grazing for sheep giving an an the population of the town was 358 In nual wool clip worth 15000 for valu 1890 the papulation was 5500 not in ¬ able horse mule and hog stock and for cluding the suburbs numbering about 300000 worth of fine export beef cattle 1500 people The present population as Carpets Furniture Wall Paper every year which grow to an average indicatedjjjby the vote of the city is 6000 weight of 1450 pounds dcores of the Besidesjprivate schools Paris has an bent race horses the turf has ever known efficient system of public schools At jiiuif were bred in Bourbon county InMrnrHiruwHii present the white school occupies a The soil furnishes an abundance cf commodious ten room modern building primitive limestone not susceptible to erected in 1890 at a cost of 25000 polish for building purposes In the The average enrollment is 450 with an county are two undeveloped lead average enrollment of sixty in the high mines one in Paris and the other near school department The colored school Millersburg Near North Middletown has a well arranged sevi n room build is an oil well bored during the civil war ing Tne average enrollment is 3ou but it was not worked after Confederate The banking facilities of the city are scouts spiked the borings Oak wal- ¬ excellent There are five banks with an nut ash hickory elm sugar tree wild aggregate capital and surplus of ¬ cherry mulberry and box elder consti- ¬ 950000 tute liberal timber resources Walnut Paris has all the modern improve ¬ timber is being rapidly cut away ments nine miles of paved sidewalks 10000 worth having been sold this year water works electric light gas plant 1897 Though the soil is finely adapted etc x tos dairying truck farming and fruit ¬ The court house erected in 1873 at a growing it is not extensively carried on cost of 130000 in beauty of situation The fruit crop averages probably 6000 and architecture and completeness of ar- ¬ per year None of the streams are rangement is probably the finest in the 1 jjAviuble or could be made so by locks State The city has also a handsome or dams and commodious opera house built in There are two hundred and seventy 1890 iix miles of excellent turnpikes and Paris is a railroad center roads radi- ¬ thirty nine miles of dirt roads in the ating to the east west north and south county Bvery mile being free The Here are theheadquarters and most im¬ xoaua were acquired oy ine -- uscai courn portant dipping pbintr off the SjaikCs by purchase gift and condemnation division of the L N railroad- It is The aggregate cost of the pikes was also one of the termini of the Kentucky 55000 The pikes were freed without Midland railway a lawleas or violent ant The rate of The city has a first class fire depart ¬ taxation for the purchase and maintei ment and all modern facilities for dealno of turnpikes is twenty five cents ing with fires and an efficient police on the one hundred dollars The thirty force eight miles of the Louisville and Nash- - There are tbrpe newspapers The Bour- ¬ 1 ville Railroad comprising branches in bon News Kentuchian Citizen Paris four directions to Lexington Coving ¬ ton Winchester and Maysville and the Frankfort Cincinnatis Kentucky Midland eleven miles going to George5 SALE town and Frankfort afford competition tnd give Bourbon excellent shipping OF facilitfe There has been no railroad ttunstruction in the county during the pat two years It has been prcpo ed to J extend the Frankfort Cincinnati road to the mountains of Eastern Ken n tucky in Bourbon aiv several oait aud sul ¬ 2SL phur springs but none have sufficient SCOTT circuit court merit to justify being made health reaorta Tnereareno water falls or iratei breams in the county though the J W Nutters Admr Plaintiff Vrt waters ui oiouer ana jainxsion are utilized in operating the machinery of J W Nutters Heirs and Creditors several flouring mills Bourbon has no Defendants natural curiosities save a few Indian fEwds and a buffalo trace on Cane By virtue of the judgment rendered Ridge but in her soil reposes the re- ¬ in the above cause at October Term mains of Edward Boone the pioneer and 1897 I will sell at public sale to the Indian fighter and brother of Daniel highest and best bidder on Boone Bones of masti dons have been found in excavations near Paris MONDAY FEBRUARY 7 1898 The average price of farm land in Hats Knox and Dunlap Bourbon is sixty dollars per acre The being first day of February Term of Styles 3- farm hands employed are colored the Scott Circuit Court at the West Front wages being fifteen dollars per month Court House door in Georgetown Ky There are no foreign colonies in the about the hour of 12 oclock M on a New line of Shirts from 75c up county Bourbon has no fruit or vege ¬ credit of 12 18 and 24 months in equal table canneries or cheese factory to wit The very latest collars and There is an excellent opening for to- installments the following land bacco hemp broom corn manufactur ¬ cufis strictly up to date A tract of two hundred 200 acres of ing interests and fruit canning enter- ¬ land in Fayette county Ky adjoining Collars 15c to 20c prises The county furnishes an abun ¬ the lands of B K Nutter of Robert dant supply of these products 20c and 25c per pair Cuft Beatty of Carrick brothers and of the The county seat of Bourbon is Paris a heirs of Dr Peters The Horeb turn- ¬ Latest Neckties 25c 50c and beautiful and enterprising city of about pike cuts off a few acres of the land on 75c Fu1 and complete line of 7500 inhabitants The city is located the east and borders the remainder on on high ground and Stoner and Hous- ¬ the east and Elkhorn passes through gents furnishings ton creeks which flow through the the south end of it cutting off a few jtrqHT j corporate limits offer fine advantages acres from the main tract and it is and locations for factories The city is bounded on the north by a dirt road healthy and is a delightful place of leading from the Horeb pike to Lemons residence having electric lights water- ¬ mill works electric fire alarm system com Our 30 Overcoatsfor 25 Our 30 Business Suits for 35 petitive telegraph and telephone com- ¬ Purchaser to give bond with good and Our 35 Overcoats Jor30 Our 35 Business Suits for 30 munication ice factory handsome sufficient surety bearing interest from Our 40 Overcoatsfor 835 Our 40 Business Suits for 35 business blocks and residences well ap- ¬ date to have the force and effect of a Sold by others for60 Sold by others for 55 to 60 pointed stores fine theater and school sale bond A lien will be reserved on buildings and nine churches The peo- ¬ the property sold until all the purchase ple are progressive intelligent robust money is paid Try our 8 Trousers Sold by others for 1 and hospitable JAS F ASKEW The only college in Bourbon is the we say and can prove it We mean what M C S C C Millersburg Female Collegea flourishing The above prices are for Cash institution which has been recently This is good land suited for tobacco improved and refurnished The public hemp corn wheat grass etc Dwell ¬ schools are in admirable condition ing house and necessary outbuildings on CO The public fund is supplemented by it local taxation in but three of the county districts The county has no bonded S debt The rate of taxation is eighty seven cents on the one hundred dollars W O JOE MUNSON Cutter fifty sevea and one half for revenue nine and one half for vgeneral purposes and twenty five cents for turnpikes The only safe sure and Bourbon county is in the Seventh Tenable Female PILL Congressional Fifth Appellate Four- ¬ ever offered to Ladies THE VERY BEST especiaUy recommend teenth Judicial Twenty eighth Senator- ¬ 0 ed to married Ladies ial and Seventy fifth Legislative Dis- ¬ OLD PROMPT RELIABLE Ask for DR HOTTS MNyBOYAL PILLS and take no other tricts P AYING T Send for circular Price 100 per box 6 fxnccs Tor 500 Postofpices Austerlitz Cane Ridge kkalHBaM3faM y 33R MOITS CHEBXXCAJL CO Cleveland Oliio renterville Clintonville Elizabeth NON-UNIO- NFor SalelBy W T Brooks Druggist Glenkenny Jhcondida Hutchison 350 450 500 etc White Enameled Dresser 1250 and 1350 ¬ ¬ 3 S capital city of Bourbon Paris count israffthe confluence of Houstou and Stonerffcreeks It is the center of the noted jBluegrass region which for beauty an productiveness is unsur ¬ passed Iji8 claimed that within a radius of twenty miles around Paris lies the finest body of land in the world Paris is tfie center of this rich and prosp ronsjequntry The earlhistory of the city is in- ¬ volved in obscurity The earliest authentic record shows that he land upon which it is built was pre empted in 1784 by ToBn Reed of Maryland In 1786 thelpresent site of Paris was selected asythe county seat of Bourbon county which was then a county of Virginia and comprised all the north eastern part of Kentucky By an act of the Legislature of Virginia in 1789 the town was established under the name of Hopewell It was subsequently called Bourbonton In 1790 the nume was changed to Paris Tne name both to county and city was given from a feeling of gracitude to France and the Bourbon dynasty for the part taken by the French ppople in the Revolutionary thev The factories comprise two large and well equipped distilleries a large flour ¬ ing mill with a daily capacity of 150 barrele an ice factory and four establishments for handling and cleaning bluegrass seed Many tons of this seed are sent yearly to Europe The two streams furnish an abundance of water for manufacturing purposes The city is a shipping point for immense quantities of wheat corn hemp tobacco and walnut logs The churches are numerous two Presbyterian Christian Baptist Episco- ¬ pal Roman Catholic and Methodist A handsome stone church has this year been built by the latter denomination There are for the colored people four churches two Baptist Christian and Methodist The assessed value of property is 2500000 and the rate of taxation is 140 The bonded indebtedness of the city is 71000 Such is a brief sketch of Paris The growth of the city has been steady Its citizens are enterprising yet conserva- ¬ tive and have built up their city upon a sure and lasting foundation ¬ ¬ MASTERS SALE OF City Property Bourbon Circuit Court Economy Building Plaintiff vs Loan Association Salhe Thoma etc Defendants By virtue of a judgment of the Bour ¬ bon Circuit Court made and entered ia the above styled cause on the 18th day of December 1897 1 will sell publicly at the court house door in Paris Ken ¬ tucky about the hour of noon on MONDAY FEBRUARY 7TH 1898 the following descrii ed real estate to wit MASTERS SALE OF c F ¬ BROW tax GO ¬ ¬ m M fl T Bourbon Circuit Court Economy Building of Paris Kentucky Plaintiff vs m-i-- Loan Association N E P Best etc Defendants mas supplies Nuts 10c lb 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 Paris Come and see me See my select stock of Christ By virtue of a judgment of the Bour- ¬ bon Circuit Conrt made and entered in the above stvled cause at its November term 1S97 1 will sell publicly at the Court house door in Paris Kentucky of a judgment to 8al on Said made ii satisfy a judgment in favor of the MONDAY FEBRUARY 7TQ 1898 plaintiff herein for the sum of 640 66 The certain house and lot situated on the South side of Chestnut street now Seventh street fronting on said street 40 feet aud extendirg therefrom be- ¬ tween parallel lines and with the line of Josephine Wilson on the East and the line of Mrs Anna Elgin on the West to the line of Manuons lot and is the same property conveyed to said Sallie Thomas by John L Trunale and wife by deed of date May 7th 1890 which is of record in the Clerks office of the County Court of Bourbon county at Deed Book 73 page 22 and is part of the property conveyed to John L Trun- ¬ dle by Selby Lillestcn and wife Said sale will be made upon credits of six and twelve mouths for equal parra of the purchase money and tor which the purchaser will be required to exe- ¬ cute bonds with good surety to be ap- ¬ proved by the undersigned Master Commissioner bearing interest from date until paid at the rate of six per cent per annum having the force and effect ¬ I - ¬ ¬ HI amounting prin- ¬ and interest the day of sale to Beginning at 1 on the southeast edge of the sum of 692 65 and the costs of this 7585 making the total the pike leading from Millersburg to suit to wit sum to be raised on the day of sale the Ruddles Mills and running N 48 W 2976 poles to 2 and of stone fence cor- ¬ sum of 76850 ner to Wilder then with stone fence as EMMETT M DICKSON it meanders N 50J E 5 40 poles to 3 N 33 E 1 48 poles to 4 N 43 E 2040 Master Commissioner Bourbon Circuit poles to 5 a stone corner to S Thompson Court then N 57 W 5230 poles to 6 corner to McMillan Talbott Attys Sarah Moore then N49W 2208 poles to Laypon then S 54 to a stake corner W 5312 poles to 8 the north edge of the rock on said pike then S 38 i E 6948 poles to 9 corner to Jerry Hall then N OF 48 E 961 poles to 10 a stone corner to same then S 48 E 20 poles to 11 the Southeast edge of the rock in said pike then N 72 E 28 poles to 12 a bend m the pike then N 83 E 1456 poles to the beginning and containing 33 acres and 29 pMes aud is the same property conveyed to the said Nannie E P Best by M L Pressly by deed of record in tht office of the ulerk of the Bourbon C mnty Court in deed book 71 at page at aboutjthe hour of noon the followper cent per annum ing described tracts of land to wit on cipal ¬ 30th 1896 until paid at the rate of six with interest thereon from September Y3 ASSIGNEES SALE a Bonrbon County Laud ¬ 9 EDWI ¬ Favette Co Land Pari WE ARE THE PEOPLE Also a certain tract of land lying near the above tract beginning at a stone snrner to J Bruce Smith then S 48 E 19 poles to a stone on the N margin of the Ruddles Mills Turnpike thn cross ing the pike at the bridge N 39 W 14 poles to a stone on the N margin thence N 48 of the pike E 10 poles to the beginnig containing 1 acre and 23 poles and is the same prop Bourbon Circuit Court Nannie T Martins vs Exr Plaintiff T M FLjW etc Defendant erty conveyed to N Headquarters For C orrect Styles ¬ OUR HOLIDAY BARGAINS ¬ PARIS FURNISHIHG k TAILORING H STOUT Manager HINTON Agent Fire Wind and Storm Insurance tnriV PENNYROYAL PILL L Presley by deed or so much thereof MONDAY FEBRUARY 7TB 1898 as may be necessary to satisfy the debts interest and costs of this action about the hour of 11 a in oclock at th Court house door in Paris Bourbon Said sale will be made upon credits of County Kentucky expose to public Bale six and twelve months for eqnal parts of the following real estate located near the purchase money and the purchaser Ruddells Mills in Bourbon County Ken will be required to execute bonds im- ¬ tucky to wit mediately upon the conclusion of said sale with good snrety to be approved by A tract of 131 acres 0 roods aud 17 the rndersigned Master Commissioner poles of land tying in Bourbon County payable to said Commissioner and bear- Kentucky near the town qf Rudiella ing interest from date until paid at the Mills adjoining the lands lately owuei rate of six per cent per annum having by J W Mcllvain the Millersburg the force and effect of a judgment Ruddells Mills turnpike the Willis Collins estate the farm lately owned by Said sale is made to satisfy a judg-¬ Bourbon County as a poor houce farm ment in favor of the plaintiff Economy the lands of J J Dimmitt and others Building Loan Association of Paris 121 acres 0 roods and 17 poles thereof be ¬ Kentucky for 1479 88 wifh interest ing the same lands conveyed to T M thereon from the 30th day of May 1896 Fisher by Willis Collins and others by until paid and 10 costs of former suit deed of record in the office of the Clerk amounting on the day of sale to of Bourbon County Court in deed book a judgment in favor 52 page 8 and the remaining 10 acres 163961 and of the Eagle Tobacco Warehouse Co being the same lands conveyed to said for 60000 with interest thereon from Fisher by Joshua Barton and others by the 23d day of February 1897 until deed recorded in the office of the Clerk paid at the rate of 6 per centper annum of the Bonrbon County Court in deed amounting on the day of sale to 634 40 book o2 page 9 to which reference is 10429 making made for a description of said lands by and the costs to wit sum to be raised on day of sale metes and bounds the total 237836 Terms This sale will be made upon SMMETT M DICKSON credits of 12 aud 18 months for equal Master Co nmissioner Bourbon Circuit parts of the purchase money and Court purchaser will be required to execute bond with good surety to be approyed of McMillan Talbott Attys by the undersigned assignee bearing in ¬ terest from date until paid at the rat1 of 6 per cent This sale will be made free from the contingent dower right of the wife of T M Fisher For further in formation apply to the assignee at Rich ¬ ADMINISTRATORS I0TICE mond Ky H B HOGG Assignee of T M Fisher All persons having claims against C Or McMillan Talbott F Clay deceased will present the Attys for Pltff same properly proven according to law Paris Ky to the undersigned Administratora 1 All persons knowing themselves in ¬ debted to C F Clay deceased will TRUSTWORTHY and please settle promptly with the Admin- ¬ WANTED gentlemen or ladies to travel for responsible established house istrators in Kentucky Monthly 65 00 and ex-¬ S B CLAY B J penses Position steady Reference Enclose self addressed stamped envelope Administrators of C F Clay deceased The Dominion Company Dep- t- WV ¬ h P Best by M By virtue of an agreed order of sal in the above styled action entered at tho Nov 1897 term of the Court the under ¬ signed willl on ¬ ao te ¬ -- lljan 4wk w Chicago 16nov 8f 3 fc i TEE BOURBON NEWS FRiDAY JANUARY THE WITNESSES Who 28 1898 BEYOND BELIEF Heart Was Stuck on Hia New Brow Refused to Testify Before h Bribery Investigating Committee Are Threatened With Proceedings In Con tempt This Includes A B Voorheis and Rudolph E Koehler Alien O Myers Sr Proves a Warm Witness Hanna I heard of Maj Dick as managing Hannas campaign at Cleveland Then he came to Columbns and took charge of Hannas and Boxwells campaigns there I have known of E G Eath bone in Ohio politics for the last ten or twelve years When there has been any ticklish work to do he has done it One of Rathbones special occupa- ¬ tions in the last campaign seems to have been to secure democratic votes when possible I never saw H H Hollenbeck to know him I never saw Gen Henry H Boyce nor did I ever hear of him until this present case I do not know S D Hollenbeck but I know of him in his political connections The first I eer heard of HH Hollenbeck wasthrough his connection with the attempt to bribe John C Otis After the second telephone call I was told that Hollenbeck would leave Columbus with money in the morning I turned the matter over to Kurtz as I did not want to mix in with affairs involving republicans I sent for T J Mulvihill to go with Ed Archer to We follow Hollenbeck to Cincinnati did not want to use detectives Next morning my boy came to Co lumbus with the stenographic notes I called Kurtz so that my boy could tell the story to him I thought then that they had secured all the evidence possible in the Cincinnati matter and I advised that the matter be made pub¬ lic as soon as possible At noon Mulvihill and Archer re ¬ turned from Cincinnati and said that they had followed H H not S D Hollenbeck until he had registered at ¬ New York occupied room 226 from January 7 to January 10 Mr Dunbar testified to having his suspicions aroused and to the clerks watching Boyce Cincinnati Jan 25 It was nearly 10 oclock when Mondays investigation began Allen O Myers sr was the first witnessed summoned He gave his busi- ¬ ness a newspaper man not a jour- ¬ nalist Maj Dick is the secretary of the republican executive commit- ¬ tee and the personal manager of Mark ¬ Cincinnati Jan 22 The legislate committee investigating the Otia charges of bribery in the recent elec tion of United States senator at Columbus held a session here Friday nig ht and will continue its sittings here Saturday All members of the committee were present together with quite a delegation from Columbus and others from different parts of the state Horace B Dunbar president and manager of the Gibson house was the only witness examined Friday night The clerks and others about the hotel will be examined Saturday Mr Dunbar was on the witness stand during the meeting and produced his hotel register showing that Henry H Boyce of ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ j I CAME TO AN END tMA 4 MONETARY CONVENTION t The Coal Operators and Miners Adjust Their Differences Nearly 200000 Soft Will Not Remain for Any Length of Adops a Set of Resolutions After a Two Coal Miners Get an Advance ofj6c P Ton Havana Harbor Time in Hours Discussion Chicago Jan 27 The interstate joint convention of bituminouscoal Spain Has a Numerous Fleet Near Cuba operators and miners came to ah end They Recognize the Conventions Obliga ¬ Executive and Which Are Small Gunboats Mostof at 10 oclock Wednesday night Tha tions to thethe Plan of CommitteeKe Currency Approve There Are However Seven Cruisers miners were jubilant over the results forir as Recently Submitted One of Which is Armor Protected of their ten days session for it means to nearly 200000 soft coal miners an Indianapolis Ind Jan 26 The Havana Jan 26 It is not likely advance of ten cents per ton and a monetary conference which opened in that the United States warship Maine uniform day of eight hours at uniform will be kept long in Havana har ¬ day wages And the operators con ¬ this city Tuesday is the result of a bor but that she will be replaced in gratulated one another with a victory movement started by the Indianapolis board of trade a little more than one the course of a few weeks by one of over themselves year ago This commercial body took the cruisers such as the Marblehead The following are the resolutions or the Montgomery It is not deemed adopted with but two dissentingvvotes upon itself the inauguration of a move- ¬ ment whose primary purpose was mon ¬ proper to venture one of the heavy Resolved That an advance of ten cents per etary ¬ reform Without any assurance draft battleships like the Iowa or In ton for mining screened coal take effects in the diana into Havana harbor save in an Western Pennsylvania district Hocking Val- ¬ that the object of its endeavors would and bituminous dis ¬ be realized in a national sense the emergency because it would be a ley O districtday of Indiana 189S April a trict the first and needless exposure of the vessels to ac- ¬ relative run of mine price be determinedthatall board of trade issued invitations to in commercial organizations of the cen- ¬ cident the districts namedby a uniform flat or Akron The Spanish government has a nu- ¬ shaped bar screen of 72 feet superficial area tral west which brought together the merous fleet in Cuban waters but most one and one fourth inch space between nucleus on which to days national that the price of run- of the bars of the craft are small guuboats used mine coal in Grape creek district and inthe In ¬ convention rests Indianapolis Ind Jan 27 The for maintaining the blockade against diana bituminous district be 40 cents per ton filibusters There are however seven for the same district based upon 66 cents in monetary convention convened at 10 cruisers of which one the Marques De Pittsburgh thin vein district and that in Hock ¬ oclock Wednesday and that on after Pending the report of the commit- ¬ La Ensanada is protected with some ing Valley and Indianahour day shall andin ef ¬ April 1898 the eight be armor although she is not larger than fect in all districts here represented that uni- ¬ tee on resolutions the secretary read a some of our gun boats being 1064 tons form wages for day labor shall be paid the number of telegrams from the various displacement The other cruisers are different classes of labor in the field named commercial bodies of the country en- ¬ differences in any the Alphonse XIII 3900 tons Conde De and that internal price and conditionsofshall dorsing the plan of the commission states both as to E J Parker of Illinois presented a Venadito 1189 tons Infanta Isabel be referred to the states affected thafa we fur ¬ resolution approving the efforts of the 1190 tons Isabel II 1152 tons Reina ther ngree to the use of the diamond bar screen Cristina 3520 tons Reina Mercedes of the present pattern in the block district of National Business league to forward privilege of run of mine as the movement for the establishment of with 2090 tons There are 19 gun boats Indiana desired the the market conditions may be by a national department of commerce none over 550 tons as follows The convention completed its work and industries the head of which shall Alvarado 100 tons Aguila 71 tons by naming a scale committee to con- ¬ be a member of the cabinet Alsedo 215 tons Caiidad 34 tons Cen sist of the national executive board of At the conclusion of Mr Fairchilds tinela 34 tons Contramectre 179 tons mine workers the district presidents address a motion was made and carried Criolo 179 tons Cuba Espanola 255 tons Delgado Parejo 255 tons El De and secretaries and two operators from that when the convention adjourn it pendiente 257 tons Diego Velasquez each state to tabulate the scale and be subjeet to the call of the executive arrangements for put ¬ committee Permanent Chairman Shav 300 tons Fernando El Catolico 500 perfect all the tons General Concham 524 tons Gar ting it into effect on the date set It declared that this convention never dien 524 tons Magallanes 524 tons was determined that hereafter the¬ adjourns and E O Stannard of Mis- ¬ will meet Pizarro 300 tons Ponce De Leon 200 miners and operators a scale for in Jan souri took the gavel to preside uary each year to fix the 12 The next speaker was Congressman tons Sandoval 100 tons Vasco Nunez months beginning April 1 Pittsburgh Jesse Overstreet of the Indianapolis 300 tons De Balboa Besides these gun boats there is a Pa was selected for the next annual district who introduced the monetary Mr Overstreet transport the Legaspi of 1249 tons joint convention which will meet on bill into congress commended the commissions work namely Ga the third Tuesday of January 1899 and five torpedo vessels The scale committees final report as This is not the time for stopping this licia 570 tons Jorge Juan 935 tons Fili outlined above was presented at the movement said he pinas 750 tons Marques de Milons 570 Mr Overstreet thought the bill would tons Nueva Espana 630 tons and 24 afternoon session and with it came the protests of two Hocking Valley opera- ¬ receive the thorough attention of con- ¬ small launches tors Messrs Morton and Ellsworth gress and said that Speaker Reed They insisted upon a differential be ¬ would in no way retard its careful AT KEY WEST ing established between their scale consideration If we are defeated Additional Men Put on the Fortifications and that of the thin vein of Pennsyl ¬ said he we shall not be conquered Work Rushed Night and Day Mr Wheelock of Minnesota chair- ¬ Key West Fla Jan 26 A govern¬ vania and quoted masses of statistics to show that if the plan were put into man of the committee on resolutions ment carrier pigeon returned Tuesday operation Hocking Valley mines would asked John C Bullitt of Philadelphia morming with a message from Adm be compelled to close down in face of to read the resolutions The resolu- ¬ Sicard to the commandant here stat ¬ competition from Pittsburgh and West tions recognize the conventions obli- ¬ ing Virginia Operator Bobbins of Penn ¬ gations to the executive committee Squadron maneuvering between sylvania finally proposed that the and cordially approve the plan of cur Tortugas and Northwest Lights question of differential in favor of the rencey reform submitted by the com- ¬ The torpedo boats Dupont and Por- ¬ Hocking valley district be left to arbi- ¬ ter in this harbor are acting as dis tration This was at once accepted by mission which is set out as follows 1 To remove at once and forever all doubt patch boats the Hocking Valley operators- but as to what the standard of value in the United brought out a demand from the opera-¬ States is and is to be 2 To the United tors of Ohio outside the Hocking val ¬ States at establish the credit of the nations the highest point among ley that they be included in the arbi ¬ of the world 3 To eliminate from our currency system tration and be allowed a differential as those features which reason and experience well WARSHIP MAINE In cold weather - - 1 The lady in the railway car would have claimed undisputed recognition as the most overdressed person in any of the counties through which the train passed had it not He was one of the been for her son weary faced scrupulously clad little people who afford support to the theory that poverty may be a comparative blessing to the very young He aid not look as if a genuine good time would fit him The am bition to drill him into unflagging had met wth obvious and pa Nourishing stream He sat with his neck thetic success stretched out to keep from wrinkling his To every organ lace collar The novel which his mother ponread was one of the most recent and derous The title in large gilt letters Was Mixed Maxims turned toward the aisle as she held it beman is known by the trumpery he A fore her turning the pages with suspicious infrequency A mist had gathered on the keeps Never put a gift cigar in your mouth pane so that the boy could not look out of The lack of money is the root of all evil the window Instinct was more powerful Where wisdom is bliss tis folly to be ig-¬ than culture and before he thought he had taken his gloved finger and rubbed a round norant A pitch in time saved the nine spot through which he could look with one Chain up a child and away he will go indigeye His mother fairly gasped with Virtue is its only reward nation The course of free love never did run Henri she exclaimed smooth Yes maam A bird in the hand lays no eggs You bad child How can you do such All that a man hath will he give to hia things wife He made no reply but penitently turned Many hands like light work his back upon the mental luxury with his own wise which he had hoped to provide himself Its arollingchild that owesthe wormfather stone catches The But his mother evidently prided herself Osculation is the thief of time upon her achievements as a domestic disA thirsty man will catch at a straw ciplinarian In a loud voice she continued Straws show which way the gin goes Now you sit there perfectly quiet and Heaven lies about us in our infancy and remember what I tell you If you do anything-like this world lies about us when we are grown that again As she paused to consider her threat the up child gazed into her face with tense appreIt is not good for man to give a loan The wages of sin is debt hension Every Ill open that window and toss you out Wells indogma must have its day Carolyn Chap Book and let the car run over you so that all the wheels will cut you up in little bits of pieces Fits stopped free and permanently cured His eyes grew big with dread and in tfo fits after first days use of Dr Klinea tones of mingled incredulity and dismay he Great Nerve Restore Free 2 trial bottle exclaimed treatise Dr Kline 933 Arch st Phila Pa Mamma In my new brown suit Washington Star A party at the house is all right if it doesnt disarrange ones things Washing ton Democrat What He Objected To Dr Molar kindly Now does that hurt With a rub or two lumbago is often cured Horsphiz I dont mind you working on By St Jacobs Oil Small Cost big profits the tooth so much if you would only keep your sleeve button out of my eye Roxbury Its wonderful what a lot of things you Gazette may learn about yourself if youll only read the papers To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tabletc All At once use St Jacobs Oil for sprains druggists refund money if it fails to cure 25c At once it will cure Athletes know this ¬ Snit ¬ ss We need heat The blood must be Warm rich and pure Hoods Sarsaparilla Keeps the blood In perfect order Sending it in a ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ m m How many men there are who have the off the backs of their coats Wash ington Democrat buttons ¬ Upon the well being of women especially of working women the whole welfare of so ciety rests The proof of it is thousands say St Jacobs Oil cured us of neuralgia ¬ Sudden cold brings soreness and stiffness St Jacobs Oil brings a cure ADVICE TO MINISTER Given by a Minister Preachers who practise it will preach better No class of people Is so liable to throat trouble as the great class who make up the Gospel ministry The strain put upon the vocal organs by constant exercise the sudden change from a heated building to the cool air when the vocal organs are in a state of complete relaxation the fact that a minister feels impelled to use his voice when actors and lecturers would take the needed rest these are among the reasons why Clergymens sore throat is known as a special disease The Rev E M Brawley D D District Secretary of the American Baptist Publication Society writes from Petersburg Va the account of an experience of his own which is profi table reading to those afflicted with Bron chial or other throat troubles The substance of the letter is as follows ¬ ¬ - PROHIBITIONISTS The National Conference in Session in Cin¬ cinnatiProminent Leaders Present Cincinnati Jan 27 At 92 a m the Gibson house where he was placed in the hands of other people to watch They had secured possession of a telegram to young Hollenbeck warn ¬ ing him that he was being followed by them and giving an exact description of themselves Boyce Allen 0 Myers further said gave one detective the slip in a cab faster than the detectives I gave the officer a sound rating and hired an- ¬ other detective who traced Boyce to 263 Broad street the house of John hotel Wednesday the National Prohibition conference was called to order by Chairman Samuel Dickie at the Grand Rev Spence of Tennessee and Rev Holliday of Ohio opened the meeting They went to a place near the depot where he joined Hollenbeck and the two left Columbus on a train for the north Garfield I understand that what you have given is what youve heard Well I dont testify to what you un ¬ derstand said Myers Burke I want you to state what if anything was done by you to in-¬ fluence votes against Mr Hanna Garfield I suggest that you tell the witness that he need not give any ¬ thing that will incriminate himself Myers became excited He said I and day need no advice sir Im just as able to Mrs Ketchem Sued protect myself as you Garfield This Chicago Jan 26 Mrs Minnie is an insult to me I dont propose to W W Ketchem widow of the late take it Any man who states or in ¬ well known club man John B Ketchsinuates that any testimony I have em has been sued by her former attorgiven I can not substantiate is a liar Detectives Miller and- Schlesinger ney D C Hansen for 20000 to which he alleges he is entitled as recompense were called for but were not present Harry M Daugherty A B Voor for services Hansen asserts he at hees director and Rudolph E Koehler tended to all the legal matters arising secretary of the Union Savings bank from the death of Mr Ketchem drew up the will in dispute at the present refused to testify During the noon recess Chairman time and made all preparations for the hearing of the contest in behalf of Mrs Burke authorized this statement The committee will adjourn the Ketchem Gen Clays Wish Cincinnati investigation in time that the senators can make the 5 oclock Frankfort Ky Jan 26 Gov train to Columbus Bradley Tuesday received the following As soon as the testimony of all better those willing to testify shall have been White Hall Ky received by the investigation commit- ¬ Wm O Bradley Governor etc tee contempt proceedings will be Have laws passed in Kentucky in brought against those who have re- ¬ the states and congress preventing the fused to testify publication of anonymous letters in Columbus O Jan 26 The senate the newspapers Please send this wish committee investigating the alleged of mine far and wide as I wish it tc attempt to bribe Representative Otis reach the people in his recent senatorial election did Cassius Marcellus Clay not hold a session Tuesday The com- ¬ A Heavy Snow Storm mittee adjourned subject to the call of the chairman and it is not settled pos Chicago Jan 26 A heavy snow itively when the committee will meet storm is raging throughout northern There is a probability how- ¬ Illinois and the again ever that the committee may meet and mail servicenorthwest Telegraph is crippled Wednesday night ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ Taylor with prayers Almost all the prominent leaders of the prohibition party in the United States were in the assemblage Among them were Joshua Levering and Hale COMMODORE MONTGOMERY SICARD Johnson presidential and vice presu dential candidates at the last election The former carried important dis Joshua Levering made an address at patches in cipher to the admiral Mon the banquet in the evening She made the trip to Tor day night Hale Johnson of Illinois read a patugas 70 miles away in three hours per on Can we Compromise on a Lowand 25 minutes returning in three er Plane hours and 40 minutes Those who tcok part in the discus- ¬ It is reported and generally believed sion were Dr Isaac Funk of New York dere that the Maine sailed for Cuba ex State Senator H B Metcalf of early Tuesday morning The Dupont Rhode Island Mrs Beauchamp of and Porter are kept conveniently un Kentucky Col R S Cheves of Tender steam so they can leave at any nessee Col T B Demaree of Ken xoment tucky and W T Wardwell of New Intense excitement exists here York Additional men were put on the forEARTHQUAKE SHOCKS tification work here Monday night and everything is being rushed night Houses in Helena Ark Shaken to Their ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ Foundations Helena Ark Jan 26 At 750 oclock Wednesday night this city was startled by a severe earthquake shock Houses were shaken to their founda- ¬ tions and a succession of noises was heard that sounded like immense ex- ¬ plosions The people who had assembled in the Presbyterian church for prayer meeting rushed out of the church expecting the walls to tumble down upon them There were three distinct shocks within quick succession the first being the most severe and the three occupying less than half a dozen seconds They were followed by a trembling or shaking motion and not by the usual swaying and waving mo¬ show to be elements of weakness and danger 4 To provide a paper currency convertible into gold and equal to it in value at all times and places in which with a volume adequate to the general and usual needs of business there shall be combined a quality of growth and elasticity through which it will adjust it- ¬ self automatically and promptly to all varia- ¬ tions of demand whether sudden or gradual and which shall distribute itself throughout the country as the wants of different sections may require 5 To so utilize the existing silver dollars as to maintain their parity with gold without im ¬ posing undue burdens upon the treasury 6 To avoid any injurious contraction of the currency 7 To avoid the issue of interest bearing bonds except in case of unlooked for emer- ¬ gency but to confer the power to issue bonds when necessary for the preservation of the credit of the government 8 To accomplish these ends by a plan which would lead from our present confused and uncertain situation by gradual and pro- ¬ gressive stepswithout shock or violent change to a monetary system which will be thorough- ¬ ly safe and good and capable of growth to any extent that the country may require Approving of the expressed purposes of the commission and of its plans we do most earn- ¬ estly and cordially commend it to our fellow citizens as worthy of their approval and adop- ¬ tion and we urge upon the congress of the United States that the prin- ¬ ciples embodied by the commission in their report should be enacted into law with the belief and expectation that the effect would be to secure a solid substantial and stable financial system that would redound to the credit of the country and insure a state of prosperity that can not be achieved unless there is a system of finance the integrity and adaptability of which can not be questioned or gainsaid The time has now come when the prospects for the establishment of the gold standard upon a firm and enduring basis are brightening and encouraging The people want a note currency which shall be as good as gold This movement proposes to bring about ¬ J C Three months ago I took a violent cold which resulted in an attack of acute bronchitis I put myself under medical treatment and at the end of two months was no better I found it very Ayer Co Dear Sirs Petersburg va difficult to preach and concluded to try Dr Ayers Cherry Pectoral The first bottle gave me great relief the second which I am now taking has relieved me almost entirely of all unpleasant symptoms To ministers suffering from throat troubles I recojsmend Dr Ayers Cherry Pectoral Prevention is better than cure A bottle of Dr Ayers Cherry Pectoral kept in the house will effectually prevent the rooting of a cold and its consequent devel opement into some dangerous malady This remedy has no equal in Bronchial troubles The most stubborn cases have yielded to its use It is equally effective for Asthma Croup Whooping Cough and every disease that attacks the throat or lungs For years Dr Ayers Cherry Pec- ¬ toral has been put up only in large size bottles at a price of 100 To meet an increasing demand for a smaller sized package the remedy can now be obtained in half size bottles at half price 50 cents Send for Dr Ayers Curebook free and you will get a clearer idea of the great value of Dr Ayers Cherry Pectoral Ad- ¬ dress J C Ayer Co Lowell Mass - HOT SHOT A if FivePointed Discourse A Five CUdSZC Finger Exercise n W in reference to the Estey Or-¬ gan We will do as speakers do make a point on each fin-¬ GcneralDebility It is perfectly harmless and I think far Superior to Zeilins Liver Medicine and Black Draught in strength and action Ark wrltM ontory Cholera Mor ¬ bus Dyspepsia and Hot Springs Ark writes For 25 years have used A Simmons Sr M Medicine for JLiver Biliousness Torpid Iiver Diarrhoea Dys cLCy cZte ger If you want them all at The people want a volume of currency ade- ¬ quate to the general and usual needs of busi- ¬ ness with a quality of growth and elasticity through which it will adjust itself automati- ¬ cally and promptly to all variations or demand whether sudden or gradual The people of the western and southern states wish the issues so distributed as that the scarcity of currency will no longer hamper and distress them in their business operations A method is proposed whereby their wants can be supplied and their demands can be complied with ¬ We appeal to them Ave appeal to all patri- ¬ tion Telephone messages from coun ¬ otic citizens to unite with us in an earnest and determined effort try points indicate that the shock was legislation as to secure from congress such will wisely but surely eventuate felt at many places in bringing about sound financial methods and in building up and establishing confidence se- ¬ Confesses to Murder curity and safety in business transactions and Baltimore Jan 27 Angolo Car in the ownership and value of property That the executive committee be continued bone is in a cell at Sing Sing N Y vith power and authority to add to their num- ¬ awaiting the execution of a death sen- ¬ ber and to fill any vacancies which may occur tence for the murder of Natalo Brog and also with power and authority adopt such no in New York while Alexander measures for procuring the needed legislation Ciaraineilo the guilty man is in a cell from congress as they in their judgement may deem advisable and expedient at the Central police that result once send to the Estey Organ Co eBmttleboroJ Vt IpI Bilious JTover and cured my Wife of Nervous Head ache I find it far Superi- ¬ or to J II Zeilins Liver Regulator also far ahead ¬ mons Iiiver Medidno 10 years in my family It has cured cases of Enlarge ¬ ment of Liver and Spleen Williford Have TjEed Dr M A Sim- ¬ of Black Draught San FARSV3 SaUers Seeds are Warranted to Produce E Walter LeRavsrille Pa astonished the world bv urowinc250 bushels Sailers corn J lirelder Miihicott Wis 173 bush barley and P Sinnot Randall Iowa br crowinir 196 buh Salzers oati per acre If you doubt write them We wish to gain 150000 uew customers hence will Bend on trial 11 plcga of rare frm leeds Hoc Pea 40c Wheat Sheep Rape Jerusalem 10 DOLLARS WORTH FOR 10c iorn etc T Sand Vetch in ¬ city v in expressing the vana and her visit is inopportune opinion that and calculated to encourage the in-¬ surgents It is announced that fol ¬ lowing Washingtons example tho Spanish government will instruct Spanish warships to visit a few Amer ican ports sailing foi The steamship Lahn Europe Tuesday will take out 175O0C Ounces of silver ¬ The Union Madrid Jan 26 The newspapers vator which is situated in East ele St generally comment upon Secretary Louis and owned by the United Eleva Longs explanation of the visit of the tor Co at St Louis was totally burn United States battleship Maine to Ha¬ ed Tuesday night with the contents agree 26 Comments on the Maines Trip St Louis Jan Million Dollar Fire in St Louis ¬ ¬ about 3000000 bushels of grain A greater part of this was corn Eighty five cars loaded with corn destined lot Newport News and owned by E B White Co was also consumed as well as the Chicago Burlington Quincy freight house adjoining the elevator Numerous cottages to the east of the elevator were also burned The total loss it is estimated will be 1 ¬ 090t00ft The latter has confessed his At 2 oclock after two hours of fa- ¬ ji no ¬ crime and has surrendered to the de- vorable debate the resolutions were The conven- ¬ tective who arrested him the knife unanimously adopted with which the murder was com- ¬ tion adjourned subject to the call of mitted the executive committee One of the Murderers Shot to Death A Claim Against the Spaniards Natchez Miss Jan 27 The names Buffalo N Y Jan 27 A A of the two Negroes who mortally shot Heard western passenger agent of Lnanes earu Tuesday at lforest plan- ¬ Lehigh Valley railroad and one of the the tation are unknown Parties return ¬ joint owners of a sugar plantation ing from the scene of the trasredv Wed located We will furnish nesday report the mother of the two the statenear Havana has filed with Of XaXVSS duplicates department at Washington a STOCK aeaa JNeerroes wiio elnhhprl tmn no- claim of 91000 against CTTTS in any Spec the Spanish Out shown or any other¬ Beard over the head after being shot government for property destroyed on imen Book at or below down and who escaped to the woods plantation and for loss of revenue Quoted prices for same when help arrived was captured Wed- - the riH Kellogg Newspapr Conesday by a posse shot to death andj for three years Spanish Vessel to Visit Our Ports left in the swamp The rest of the Xlectrotypers and Stereotypers Madrid Jan 27 The Spanish bat- ¬ Negroes who were implicated scatter- ¬ ¬ ed before the nosse arri vpy A thpv tleship Vizayo of 7000 tons displacewould have shared the same fateNasthe ment has been ordered to visit Ameri 835WnfllSt old woman nnr toiVI i F norlwit can ports i Cincinnati uvuiBU ri station in this cluding our mammoth seed uataiozue icuinc about the JtOO cold prizes lor Deit name ior our I new marvelous corn ana oan rruuigics also sample of same all mailed you upon receipt or but iuc postage positively worth 310 to cet a start iuuuuu oois Heed Potatoes at iou a ddi 85 pigs earliest veieUDie A Simmons Livor Medicino which cured ks- fizersiTw me of Chronic Consti TrWl tZSS5nfit mmmga pation of long standiiave used it in sfMUWMW my family 30 years for Sick vwiia Biliousness Kidney ftMWJmb Headache and Bowel WXmtS2iTroxiblPS Complaints I took one dose of Zeilins Liver Regulator and some of the Sticks in it lodged in my threat causing me to vomit and I took no more of it 1 refer to any County Officer in Bandera County - Antonio T o m rrr more old past and feel that my days have been lengthened by Dr M Tvrirfv3 CcamrTex 11 V 1 iJ LIVE STOCK rHi - jl a fc- - 35 lEimr -- CUTS Neuralgia and Pal pitation of Heart k I tried Thedfords Black ¬ J A Simmons Iiiver Medicine cured me of Draught and it did no Canton JLexas writes One Package Dr M fsi good - andsomelj bound brimful of liow to be sent free to 1W0 young men lrents certificate of obodlence ftdnstry who nd courtesy to others C M 8TKBBIXS nirtidalefK sa 1000 gopiesobsk economy new on social cthlca political Ideas Y ¬ Jfl BestCoush o Syrup Tastes Good Use Pjj - v - r 0 THE BOURBON NEWS FRIDAY JANUARY 28 1898 Ah it was so fine to have a horse bi tween my thighs and a weapon in my grip I waved it above my head and shouted in my exultation The chief had come forward with that odious smiling face of his Your excellency will observe that this Frenchman is our prisoner he said You are a rascally robber said the Englishman shaking his sword at him It is a disgrace to us to have such allies By the Lord if the general were of my mind we would swing you up to 3 SPANISH SHIP ITFTYglFTH CONGEESS By the de- ¬ KENTUCKY LEGISLATURE Regular Session I COPYRIGHTED - I CHAPTER But all the time I was taking- the very keenest notice of everything which might possibly help me I am not a man who would lie like a sick horse waiting for the farriar sergeant and the pole ax First I would give a little tug at my ankle cords and then another at those that were around my wrists and all the time I was trying to loosen them I was peering- round to - in CONTINUED thing- in my life the clinking- of horse- ¬ shoes and the jingling- of bridle chains - heard as plainly as ever I heard any- see if There was one thing which was very evident A hussar is but half formed without a horse and there was my other half quietly graz¬ ing within thirty yards of me Then I observed yet another thing The path by which we had come over the mountains was so steep that a horse could only be led across it slowly and with difficulty but in the other direction the ground appeared to be more open and to lead straight down into a gently sloping- valley Ilad I but my feet in yonder stirrups and my saber in my hand a single bold dash might take me out of the power of these vermin of ¬ - in my favor I could find something which was with the clank of sabers against stirrup irons Is it likely that I who had lived with the light cavalry since the first hair shaded my lip would mistake the Help sound of troopers on the march comrades help I shrieked and though they struck me across the mouth and tried to drag- me up to the tree I kept Help me my brave boys on yelling Help me my children They are murdering- your colonel For the moment my wounds and my troubles had brought - ill myi h J FiHlJWW the rocks ing with my wrists and my ankles when their chief came out from his grotto and after some talk with his lieutenant who lay groaning near the fire they both nodded their heads and looked across at me He then said some few words to the band who flapped their hands and laughed uproariously Thing s looked ominous and 1 was delighted to feel that my hands I was still thinking- it over asd strain - ¬ nf nSV to KELP Mi ft COMRADES HELP ¬ on a delirium and I looked for nothing less than my five hundred hussars were so far free that I could easily slip them through the cords if I wished But with my ankles I feared that I could do nothing- for when I strained it brought such pain into my lance wound that I had to gnaw my mustache to keep from crying- out 1 could only lie still half free and half bound and see what turn things were likely to - - take For a little I could not see what they were after One of the rascals climbed up to the top of a well grown fir kettle drums and all to appea- - at the opening of the glade But that which really appeared was very different to anything which I had conceived Into the clear space there came galloping a fine young man upon a most beautiful roan horse He was fresh faced and pleasant looking with the most debonnaire bearing in the world and the most gallant way of carrying himself a way which re- said the brigand in his suave voice He shall come with us to Lord Wel- ¬ lingtons camp Just a word in your ear before you take him He approached the young officer and then turning as quick as a flash he fired his pistol in my face The bullet scored its way through my hair and burst a hole on each side of my busby Seeing that he had missed me he raised the pistol and was about to hurl it at me when the English sergeant with a single backhanded cut nearly severed his head from his body His blood had not reached the ground nor the last curse died on his lips before the whole horde were upon us but with a dozen bounds andas many slashes we were all safely out of the glade and galloping down the winding track which led to valley It was not until we had left the ravine far behind us and were right out in the open fields that we ventured to halt and to see what injuries we had sustained For me weary and wound ed aJ I was my heart was beating proudly and my chest was nearly burst ing my tunic to think that I Etienne Gerard had left this gang of murderers so much by which to remember me My faith they would think twice be- ¬ fore they ventured again to lay hands upon one of the Third hussars So carried away was I that I made a small oration to these brave Englishmen and told them who it was that they had helped to rescue I would have spoken of glory also and of the sympathies of brave men but the officer cut me short Thats all right said he any in¬ ¬ ¬ the nearest tree But my prisoner cisive vote of 41 to 25 the senate Thursday de- ¬ cided to proceed at once to the consideration of the resolution Introduced a few days ago by Mr Teller CoL providing for the payment of bonds of the United States in silver at the option of the government Mr Vest announced his intention to secure a final vote upon the resolution as soon as one could be reached and accentuated his intention by forcing the dis ¬ placement of the census bill with the Teller resolution as the unfinished business The day after two oclock was in executive session House Speaker Reed from the rostrum of the house and Mr Bailey leader of the demo- ¬ crats from his place on the floor glared at each other at the close of the Cuban debate Thursday and joined an issue of veracity This sensational episode completely overshadowed the interest in the Cuban debate which has continued uninterruptedly in the house for three days during the consideration of the diplomatic and consular appropriation bilL Washington Jan 22 Senate An agree- ¬ ment was reached by the senate Friday that a final vote on the Teller resolution providing that the bonds of the United States be paid in silver dollars and all pending amendments thereto should be taken Thursday Mr Alli- ¬ son of Iowa made the significant statement that an amendment to the resolution ithat would cause some debate would be offered late in the discussion but gave no intimation of the nature scope or amount of the amendment During the greater part of the afternoon the senate was in executive session and at 415 adjourned House There was a preliminary struggle in the house Friday over the bill for the relief of the book publishing company of the Methodist Episcopal Church South which was before the house last Friday By shrewd maneuvering its opponents succeded in preventing action Friday Previous to the consideration of this bill the house passed the bill to extend the pub- ¬ lic land laws of the United States to the terri- ¬ tory of Alaska and to grant a general railroad right of way through the territory The urgent deficiency bill was sent to conference after the silver forces with some outside aid had suc ceededin concurring in the senate amendment striking from the bill the provision requiring the depositors of bullion at government assay offices to pay the cost of transportation to the First Regalar Session Washington Jan 21 Senate 21 Senate BUIs intro ¬ Secretary duced Thursday To prohibit the seining etc Long said Wednesday that he had re in lakes and ponds owned by another without 3 of Kentucky ceived no notice from the Spanish his consent to amend chapter Proposes to re statutes relating to salaries minister or from any other source that duce salaries of state officers as follows Gov- ¬ nave oeeu oraerea ernor to 85500 adjutant general tol800 at ¬ opauiau 3000 to visit United States ports They torney general500 to auditor commonwealths 3000 in attorney to to were perfectly welcome to come and spector of mines to 81800 inspector and exam ¬ go as they please he said and as far iner to 2500 judge of court of appeals to 540W Visiting United States Ports Will Be Made Welcome Presidents McKlnley and Dole Make Calls Upon Each Other Washington Jan Fbamckort Jan 27 ¬ uieu-ui-w- ur ¬ as he was concerned he would be de- ¬ lighted to have them come Spanish warships have frequently visited the United States since the insurrectionary movement broke out in Cuba three years ago without having excited the least unfriendly comment and there was no reason why any significance should be attached to their coming again whenever they felt disposed to do so ¬ ¬ ¬ - Al SENATOR MASON ¬ fPBHP ¬ mint Proposed an ¬ Hawaii was somewhat extensively nexation ¬ reviewed by Mr Morgan Ala Monday while speaking to a question of personal privilege Thn Alabama senator had been represented as saying in executive session substantially that ex President Cleveland was in favor of Hawaiian annexation This statement called out a denial from Mr Cleveland and in support of his original statement Mr Morgan addressed ¬ the senate at great length One of the feat- ¬ ures of the session was an elaborate speech by juries sergeant Mr Turpie of Indiana in support of the Teller Trooper Jones horse hit with a resolution The pension appropriation bill pistol bullet on the fetlock was called up and debated for nearly three Trooper Jones to go with us Ser- ¬ hours but was not passed the senate adjourn ¬ ing until Tuesday the disposal geant Halliday with troopers Harvey point of order madepending an amendmentof a of- ¬ against and Smith to keep to the right until fered by Mr Allen of Nebraska to the pending 25 Washington Jan Senate ¬ jHE SAID A FEW WORDS TO THE BAND J tree up on one side of the glade and tied a rope around the top of the trunk He then fastened another rope in the same fashion to a similar tree on the other side The two loose ends were now dangling down and I waited with some curiosity and just a little trepidation to see what they would do next The whole band pulled upon one of the ropes until they had bent the strong young- tree down into- - a semi circle and they then fastened it to a stump so as to hold it so When they had bent the other tree down in a similar fashion the two summits were within a few feet of each other though as you understand the3T would each spring- back to their original position the instant that they were released I already saw the diabolical plan which those miscreants had formed I presume that you are a strong man colonel said the chief coming toward me with his hateful smile If you will have the kindness to ¬ - minded me somewhat of my own He wore a singular coat which had once been red all over but which was now stained to the color of a withered oak leaf wherever the weather could reach it His shoulder straps however were of golden lace and he had a bright metal helmet upon his head with a coquettish white plume upon one side of its crest He trotted his horse up the glade while behind him there rode four caveliers in the same dress all clean shaven with round comely faces look- ¬ ing to me more like monks than dragoons At a short gruff order they halted with a rattle of arms while their leader cantered forward the fire beat-¬ ing upon his eager face and the beauti ¬ ful head of his charger I knew of course by the strange coats that they were English It was the first sight that I had ever had of them but from their stout bearing and their masterful way I could see at a glance that what I had always been told was true and that they were excellent people to fight they touch the videttes of the German hussars So these three jingled away together while the officer and I followed at some distance by the trooper whose charger had been wounded rode straight down in the direction of the English camp Very soon we had opened our hearts for we each liked the look of the other from the begin ning He was of the nobility this brave lad and he had been sent out scouting by Lord Wellington to see if there were any signs of our advancing through the mountains It is one advantage of p ¬ House The house spent a couple of hours Monday transacting business relating to the District of Columbia and the remainder of the day on the Indian appropriation bill During the consideration of the latter bill alively po- ¬ litical debate was preoipitated by an allusion made by Mr Simpson pop Kan relative to an alleged interview with the president on the subject of immigration Mr Grosvenor occasion to express the opin ¬ took president ion had never the that used some of the 1 nguage imputed to him and the debate drifted into a general discussion of our industrial conditions in the course of which the strike in New England the high prices for wheat in Kansas and the defaulting republican officials m Nebraska successively played their parts Messrs Dingley Greene pop Neb and Mercer rep Neb Grosvenor rep O and Simpson pop Kan participated session of the senate was characterized by a heated almost acrimonious discussion of the financial question For nearly four hours the Teller resolution was under consideration the principal speeches being made by Mr Allison Iowa Mr Berry Ark and Mr Hoar Mass The sharpest colloquy was at times indulged in between the advocates and the opponents of the resolution the debate often approaching The feature of the discussion bitterness was a speech delivered by Mr Teller the author of the resolution his statement calling out a suggestion from Mr Hoar that he Mr Teller ought to have them stricken from the record In response to an inquiry by Mr Spooner Mr Vest admitted that he thought the system of coinage referred to in the resolu- ¬ tion meant the free and unlimited coinage cf silver that admission apparently giving satis- ¬ faction to the opponents of the measure House Under the parliamentary fiction ol discussing the Indian appropriation bill the house devoted almost the entire day to a polit- ¬ ical debate in which the main question was whether prosperity had come to the country as a result of the advent of the present admin- ¬ istration As the speeches were limited to five minutes each many members par ¬ ticipated and partisan spirit kept the interest keyed up to a high pitch The ccrimony which usually characterizes such debates was almost entirely absent but al ¬ though good natured some hard knocks were given and received Mr Smith the delegate from Arizona made an attack on the system of educating the Indians and Mr Walker moved to strike out the appropriation for the Car- ¬ lisle school No vote was taken on the motion Tuesday Washington Jan 27 Senate For more than six hours Wednesday the senate had un- ¬ der discussion the Tellers resolution providing that the government may pay the principal and interest of the bonds of the United States in silver By agreement the resolution and pending amendments are to be voted upon be- ¬ fore adjournment Thursday The debate Wed ¬ nesday was devoid of the sensational incidents and acrimonious colloquies which characterized that of Tuesday but it was replete with argument and oratory The time was con- ¬ sumed by Mr Teller silver Col the author of the resolution and Mr Daniel dem Vi who supported the resolution and by Mr Hoar rep Mass and Mr Piatt rep Ct in opposition No set speeches except Mr Hoars whose speech was in reply to some points advanced by Mr Teller Tuesday No other business was transacted House The house devoted another day to the consideration of the Indian appropriation bill most of the time being consumed as on the two previous days in discussing extraneous subjects By far the most interesting feature of the day was the debate on the question of reducing the mail carrier service in the large cities owing to the failure of the senate to at- ¬ tach the estimated deficiency of 8160000 to the urgent deficiency bill This subject has been agitating the metropolitan cities ever since the order was issued for cutting down the force on February 1 A dozen representatives from as many different places interested against the proposed reduction and urged an immediate appropriation The motion to strike out the appropriation for the Carlisle Indian school was defeated after considerable debate 29 to 65 Ten pages of the bill were disposed of Wednesday The conference report on the urgent deficiency bill was adopted bll Washington Jan 26 Senate Tuesdays against officer well cried the young in sufficiently bad French What devils game are you up to here Who was that who was yelling for help and what are you trying to do to him It was at that moment that I learned to bless those months which Obriant the descendant of the Irish kings had spent in teaching me the tongue of the English My ankles had just been freed so that I had only to slip my hands out of the cords and with a single rush I had flown across picked up my saber where it lay by the fire and hurled myself onto the saddle of poor Vidals horse Yes for all my woundad ankle I never put foot to stirrup but was in the seat in a single bound I tore the halter from the Well well t- - HE NEARLY SEVERED HIS HEAD FROM HIS SHOULDERS wandering life like mine that you learn to pick up those bits of knowledge which distinguish the man of the world I have for example hardly ever met a Frenchman who could repeat an Eng lish title correctly If I had not traveled I should not be able to say with confidence that this young mans real name was Milor ¬ ¬ loosen these cords I answered I will show you how strong I am We were all interested to see wheth ¬ er you were as strong as these two young saplings said he It is our in¬ tention you see to tie one end of each rope round your ankles and then to let the trees go If you are stronger than the trees then of course no harm would be done If on the other hand the trees are stronger than you why in that case colonel we may have a souvenir of you upon each side of our little glade He laughed as he spoke and at the sight of it the whole forty of them laughed also Even now if I am in my darker humor or if I have a touch of my old Lithuanian ague I see in my sleep that ring of dark savage faces with their cruel eyes and the firelight flashing upon their strong white teeth CHAPTER IV Hon Sir Russell Bart this last being an honorable dis- ¬ tinction so that it was as the Bart that I usually addressed him just as in Spanish one might say the Don As we rode beneath the moonlight in the lovely Spanish night we spoke our minds to each other as if we were brothers We were both of an age you see both of the light cavalry also the Sixteenth light dragoons was his regiment and both with the same hopes and ambitions Never have I learned to know a man so quickly as I did the Bart He gave me the name of a girl whom he had loved at a garden called Vauxhall and for my part I spoke to him of little Caralic of the opera He took a lock of hair from his bosom and I a garter Then we near- ¬ ly quarreled over hussar and dragoon for he was absurdly proud of his regiment and you should have seen him curl his lip and clap his hand to his hilt when I said that I hoped it migat never be its misfortune to come in the way of the Third TO BE CONCLUDED 1 THERE WAS POOR VIDAL BEFORE THEM R It is astonishing and I have heard many make the same remark how acute ones senses become at such a crisis as this I am convinced that at no momentis one living so vividly so acutely as at the instant when a vio lent and foreseen death overtakes one I could smell the resinous fagots I could see every twig upOn the ground I could hear every rustle of the branches as I have never smelled or seen or heard save at such times of danger And so it was Jhat long be- ¬ fore anyone else before even the time when the chief had addressed me I had lxeasd a low monotonous sqund far away ijadeed and yot coming- nearer aft vfiry insj4ntC At first it vvas but a murmur a rumble but by the timeshei Iiad finished speaking while the assassins were untying my ankles in order to lead rae to the scene of my murder I - ¬ much as snap a pistol at me I was be- ¬ side the English officer I surrender to you sir I cried though I dare say my English was not much better than his French If you will look at that tree to the left you will see what these villains do to the honorable gentlemen who fall into their hands The fire had flared up at the mo ¬ ment and there was poor Vidal exposed before them as horrible an object as one could see in a nightmare Godam cried the officer and Godam cried each of the four troopers which is the same as with us when we cry Mon Out rasped the five swords and Dieu the four men closed up One who wora a sergeants chevron laughed and clapped me on the shoulder Fight your skin froggy said he for tree and before those villains could so ish Life says that the Swedish lan ¬ guage is rich in proverbs Many of these are exactly the same as are found in English The burnt child dreads tho fire and Better late than never for instance Others while corresponding to proverbs in English have a turn peculiar to themselves The following are a few examples When the cat is away the rats dance on the table One bird in the hand is better than ten on the roof When the stomach is satisfied the food is bitter To read and not to know is to plow and not to sow That which is eaten from the pot never comes to the platter A new broom sweeps well Swedish Proverbs Mrs Baker in her Pictures of Swed-¬ The President and Mrs McKinley entertained the diplomatic corps Wednesday night at the first state dinner of the season Contrary to the usual custom Secretary of State and Mrs Sherman assisted in receiving the guests in the east room The decorations of the state dining room consisted largely of roses and orchids Alternate placques of these flowers were laid the length of the table The mantels were banked with cut flowers roses hyacinths and carnations while a profusion of smilax was draped above the doors and cobweb like from the ceiling and chandeliers The window spaces were filled with palm and rub ber plants President Dole of Hawaii arrived here at 220 oclock Wednesday after- ¬ noon and in behalf of the government was welcomed to the national capitol by Secretary Sherman and Assistant The presidential Secretary Adee party was belated by storms along the way and it was three hours after the scheduled time that the train swung A Ohio depot into the Baltimore crowd of several hundred had assem- ¬ bled on north Capitol street and three platoons of mounted policemen were on hand who acted as an escort Mr Sherman offered his arm to Mrs Dole and escorted her to President Mc Kinleys carriage The platoons of officers wheeled about the spirited bays of the white house carriage stepped off at a lively gait and the party proceeded to the Arlington where the Hawaiian executive will be the na- ¬ tions guest In the second carriage were Minister Hatch of Hawaii Assistant Secretary Cridler and Mr Doles private secretary Washington Jan 27 President McKinley s call on President Dole Wed nesday afternoon was entirely formal and did not last longer than 15 minutes He was accompanied by Mr Porter and Col Bingham and was met by Assistant Secretary Cridler and Mr Hatch the Hawaiian minister who in troduced them to President Dole Mrs Dole and the other members of the partj After a mutual exchange of courtesies President McKinley return d to the white house At 415 Dole returned the visit of He drove over President McKinley to the white house in a magnificently appointed carriage in company with Minister Hatch and Assistant Secretary Cridler His private secretary Maj Iaukea with Maj Heistand and Lieutenant Commander Phelps and Dr Day followed in another carriage At the entrance to the white house the visitor was met by Col Bingham and the party was led at once by him to the elevator whence they were soon transferred to the library on the There President Mcsecond floor Kinley was in wating and gave his guest a greeting After a few words of general conversation the two presidents retired to a couch in one corner of the room and spent about five min- ¬ utes in consultation It was said that this talk was purely unofficial and per- ¬ Then the party was escorted sonal down stairs and returned to the hotel Washington Jan 27 The senate committee on post officers and post roads Wednesday had under consideraMade a Clean Ureastof It tion the advisability of establishing Toledo O Jan 27 Lavina An¬ the system of postal savings banks in drews proved to be the star witness in the United States The discussion was the William Havers Nel- ¬ general and the only conclusion reach- lie Thomas Williamrobbery case the Graham and Mason was ed that Senators witness were charged with robbing prepare should Butler and 423 The Andrews woman could be used Hovers of a bill which took the stand and made a clean breast as a basis for future deliberations of it all This was done because of the fact that C L W Freight Wreck there were a large number of measBridgeport O Jan 27 Wednesday ures before the committee all looking to the same end It is intended that afternoon a serious freight wreck oc ¬ he bill to be prepared by Messrs Ma curred on the Cleveland Lorain son and Butler shall supplant all these Wheeling railroad at Crescent five and they were requested to have it in miles west of here Twenty five cars shape to be taken up at the next meet- ¬ are in the wreckage and the track will be impassible for some time ing to be held a week hence ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ -- ¬ ¬ ¬ and other minor changes An act to- amend Section 183s of Kentucky statutes Requires the county tlscul court to hold four terms each year one each in January April July and Oc ¬ tober Johnson of Lawrence To amend Sec- ¬ tion 1085 of Kentucky statutes Requires mag ¬ istrates to hold court once each month instead The senate adjourn ¬ of once iu three months ed till Saturday at 11 a m in order to attend the dedication of the A and M college build ¬ ing in Lexington Friday Housk Bills introduced To regulate the analysis of fertilizers to regulate the sale of leaf tobacco- in the public markets to regu ¬ late the costs of taking depositions act requir ¬ ing that shorthand reports of depositions shall be transcribed in long hand and then sub ¬ scribed by the witnesses in the presence of the officer to require news organizations to- sell their news to any paper demanding it act pro ¬ viding for a state board of embalming to- - li- ¬ cense embalmers and regulate the practice oi embalming act requiring laborers to be paid every Saturday in lawful money Adjourned until Saturday at 11 a m Fkankfoht Ky Jan 25 SENATE New bills introduced Monday To appropriate-25-00to improve the sewerage system of the Cen- ¬ tral asylum at Lakeland to change the time of holding circuit court in the Twenty fourth ju ¬ dicial district composed of Pike Floyd Mar ¬ tin Johnson and Knott counties Bills re ¬ ported by committees Act regulating the ad ¬ mission of applicants to practice law to pay Judge Bennetts widow balance of his salary act for benelit of J E Robbins No expression of opinion act to limit fiscal courts in making appiopriations to officers Reported with a substitute net providing that the court of ap ¬ peals should elect a male state librarian in 1900 House The committee on elections reported favorably the Chinn school book bill providing for the contract system of supplying schools books if they can not be secured cheaper by state publication it further provides for a school book commission of seven members the governor to be chairman and the superin ¬ tendent or public instruction to be secretary the coutracts for books at a certain price to run for a period of live years before a new con ¬ tract is made The bill also fixes a maximum price of certain school books Bills reported by committees To adopt the Barbour and Carroll edition of Kentucky statutes Approved To amend the champerty and maintenance statute Adverse report and the bill killed bill defining the term adverse pos- ¬ Adverse report and killed bill ex ¬ session tending the time six weeks in which quail may be killed Adverse report and killed A num ¬ ber of prominent democtatic leaders are here working quietly to have a very important change made in the election laws The pro- ¬ posed bill which has not yet been perfected will provide for a state board of election com- ¬ missioners who shall appoint three commis- ¬ sioners in each county whose duty it will be to appoint the election officers in every election Fkankfort Ky Jan 26 Senate Bills introduced Tuesday To prevent any discrim- ¬ ination against the currency of our nation and to protect the debtor class of our citizens- - It provides that where a particular kind of mon- ¬ ey is specified in a contract it shall be con- ¬ strued to mean any lawful money of the United States to regulate the practice of pharmacy and to establish a beard of pharmacy Re bill Senate enacts the present law 4 as a special order came up No It provides that road overseers can not use their own teams and not be interested in teams of others in working county roads The bill had been adversely reported by the commit- ¬ tee and on motion of Senator Stege it was re- ¬ committed to the committee on agriculture Bills reported by commit-¬ and manufacturers tees To authorize the use of short term con ¬ victs in construction of courthouses jails pub ¬ lic roads bridges etc and to authorize the working of violators of the penal laws thereon in payments of fines to create a board of peni ¬ tentiary commissioners and regulate the penal Institutions of this commonwealth House Fifty five new bills were introduced Tuesday among them the following To re ¬ quire all passenger trains to stop at county seats making it a felony to sign the name of another to a petition memorial or remon- ¬ strance without permission to reduce the toll rate on toll roads for various animals and ve- ¬ hicles to levy a tax to erect a state house at Frankfort and create a board of state house commissioners Provides for raising 300000 to amend Section 4 Article 5 of revenue law so that whisky shall be assessed for county and city taxeslike other merchandise to amendSec tion 4300 of Kentucky statutes so that county roads may be maintained either by taxation or bonds allotted or both to abolish the office of adjutant general abolishing the offices of tipstaff etc of court of ap- ¬ peals and creating office of special law clerk to said court prohibiting any discrimination against any coin or money in contracts for the payment of money to prohibit the granting of licenses to merchants and druggists to retail intoqicftting drinks Fkankfort Ky Jan 7 Senate Tho senate committee on charitable institutions Wednesday afternoon by a viva voce vote de- ¬ cided to report favorably the nomination of Dr E M Wiley gold democrat of Harrods burg as superintendent of the Lexington asy ¬ lum A yea and nay vote would have shown a majority of the committee to be against Wiley but the anti Wileyites did not care to antagonize their friends on the committee and the favorable report which in this instance means nothing was allowed to be adopted House The commonwealths attorneys won their fight inCthe house Wednesday defeating bill which proposed to Mr Humphreys abolish this office and consolidate it with that Mr Humphreys made a of county attorney strong p ea for the bill claiming that its pas ¬ sage would reduce the expenses of criminal prosecutions in the state 560000 a year Mr Chinn of Mercer and Mr Bradburn of War ¬ ren both members of the judiciary committee led the fight against the bill Mr Tracey of Covington made a warm fight in the house in behalf of his bill providing for a more rigid examination of applicants for license to prac- ¬ tice law The judiciary committee had report- ¬ ed it adversely and finally succeeded in hav ¬ ing its report sustained rms ¬ ¬ ¬ Daniel Hanna SuetL for Divorce 27 Hanna the only son of Senator Hanna Cleveland O Jan Daniel R old one is best for the corners wTHEtoinjonsTof men who think bvp always growing- and changing- like liv 4 ing children Hamerton - buan his hy Wednesday sued was The de- ¬ wife Carrie May for divorce cree is asked for on the ground of gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty The couple were married in They have three sons aged 9 8 1887 and 3 years respectively They separ- ¬ ated three weeks ago Crushed by a Tree Kenton O Jan 27 Richard P Shaw living six miles south of Ken ton aged 27 was crushed to death while felling a tree Wednesday i Wednesday after noon Consul General Lee visited the Maine returning the official visit paid him Tuesday by Capt Sigsbee He was accorded the usual salute The local papers insist that the Maine is here on a friendly visit and with the view of offsetting Jingo speeches in Washington English Bank Payment English Ind Jan 27 Assignee Arnold was in English and made pay ment to the depositors of the defunct banks of 33X cents all amounting tc over S1000Q Havana Jan Consul General Lee Visits the Maine 27 i S 27 Dr Joseph the oldest practition er in Fairfield county was killed by a Lancaster Sharp Killed By a Train O aged 70 Jan Hocking Valley Todedo passenger train Wednesday afternoon near his home at Sugar Grove while Columbus walking on the track Toledo O J Jan 27 The Craig Ship Building Co here has been awarded the contracts to build a twin screw tug at a cost of 850000 to be used in the Bacific coastvtrade The tug will be shipped from here to San Francisco in sections Contract Awarded to Toledo Parties 41 THE BOURBON Legislative Royal mattes the food pure wholesome and delicious TTSFRIDAtY vP THA4maHl ui iicauiicni iff- JANUARY 28 Adulterated Flour 198 HAVE YOU DECIDED TO BUY 4J- I vsssazxjJiuiJSaiimAXi IoIng8 9 pOYM The Kentucky Legislature which gave promise of being liberal in thought conservative and cautious in action be- ¬ lied its promise yesterday when Senator Lindsay was denounced in violent terms and a resolution passed by a vote of 05 to 24 asking him to resign because o his views on the financial question llArlAHn muuci ii Consumption The latest work on the treatment of diseases written s Absolutely Pure POWDER Senator Goebel has received a letter from R L Eades of Greenville who says that tie marriage of persons b tween whose ages there was a disparity oi j fifteen years or more was worse than the to marriage of first cousins He urged the passage of a bill to prohibit the practice to -- by forty eminent American physicians saysj Cod Jiver oil has done more for the con v sumptive than all other reme-dies put together It also u The hypophosphites says of lime and soda are regarded jg oy many English observers as specifics for consumption1 tt f 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 bnt 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 sack of flour of whatever grade that goes from our mill is pure wheaten product Onr mill is open to inspection at any time and we have no machinery for making blended flour as many mills have It is now s j53bm A Jed Es593Gi3E3SKflBR fHsVV ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO NEW YORK The House passed the Desha Bill repealing that section of the mob law which requires the appointment o guards upon application to the County ¬ Scotts Emulsion contains the best cod liver oil in a partially digested form combined with the Hypophos- phttes gj 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 THE BOURBON HEWS 1881 Judge Wednesday Senator Carter introduced an act making it unlawful for any corporation to contribute to campaign funds and providing for a fine of L0000 for each offense It will attract much attention Paris Milling Co Seventeenth Year Established ¬ Published every Tuesday and Friday by WALTER CHAMP Editors and Owners BBUflE MILLER Make all Checks Money mayable to the order of Champ Miller Orders etc to to ADVER2IS1JVG BATES Displays one dollar per Inch for first Inser tion half rates each Insertion thereafter per Locals or reading notices ten cents ilne each insertion Locals in blacl type Mr Tracys bill requiring railroad twenty cents per line each insertion of lines count as full lines when companies to carry bicycles as baggage Fractions running at line rates Obituar38 cards of thanks calls on candi was passed by the House with an dates resolutions of respect and matter of a amendment fixing 10 fine for refusing like nature ten cents per line Special rates given for large advertise ments and yearly cards Tuesday the General Assembly elected A bill which has been introduced in Miss Pauline Hardin State Librarian the Legislature denies a yoter the right The Democratic club is taking a hand of suffrage unless he has paid his poll with the Legislature to secure the Hon tax It should certainly pass ¬ ¬ ¬ dfc The House passed the bill repealing to the guard sections of the Martin Auti to to Turnpike Raiders law quarter of a century is in exact accord with the latest views of the medicalprofession Be sure you get SCOTTS T7 - f - - of Lime and Soda This remedy a standard for a A Good Memory w often saves money and also good health If 4 you are troubled with constipation indiges- ¬ tion or any formof stomach trouble remem- ¬ ber to take home a bottle of Dr Caldwells Syrup Pepsin and health will be restored to loc lo w you SITrial sizes T Br doses 10c large size 50c and 00 of W oks druggist Paris ljan m m Ky l5 A NEW CARPET THIS SPRING AH SCOTT druggists 50c and 100 BOWNE Chemists New York offering surprising bargains in menjs gj and boys stylish shoes The prices are w i Davis Thompson Isgrig are right W Of Peck P O tf 1 paid to representatives of its policy- To the Wright Medical Co Columbus Ohio aolders and to its policy holders and is Gents I have purchased a hox of WrightV now holding for them 180000000 an Celery Capsules from James T Blaser druggist Waverly O and used them for Stomach excess over premium reoeipts of over Trouble and Constipation I was unable to tf do auythiug for nearly twe years I aseri 120000000 three boxes of your Celery Capsules and the have cured me For the benefit of others To Cure A Cold In One Day ifllicted J wish to send this letter Very truly yours Wm J Bryan to speak at Frankfort Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab W S Mr Bailey vof Texas and Speaker during the session The local committee Sold by all druggists at 50c andAndersm 81 per box lets All druggists refund the money Reed had a little tiff the other day about favor February 22 and will urge Mr rjeud address on postal to the Wright Med if it fails to cure 25c For sale by W thejr veracity the Texan insisting that Bryan to speak at the Opera house with Co Columbus O for trial size free Brooks and- James Kennedy Paris D r 3 j was aa trouu aa iir rveeu htj J Ky ma worn MRS LAURA WEISHAUF several distinguished Kentuckians inis very true no doubt but Mr cluding members of the Legislature on That Of Murry Ind Recommends Wrights Reeds word appeals to be law that date Celery Capsules ¬ v- Wrights Celery Capsules Anderson Pike Co O Recommends S Cion Wrights sOiC hca Are equal if not superior to any shown in Kentucky selection now and get choice of a beautiful assortment CARPETS You will find the line of My 1898 Jliiil Of Make fyour The Northwestern Mutual life has 898 WALL PAPERS Match the carpets beautifully and I can show you the best made in price quality beauty and workmanship Special prices on contract work Persons anticipating having any papering done will do well to get my prices before trie busy season commences r - ¬ The Kentucky Press Journal and W B Brewer of the Pem- ¬ broke Review have been appointed mem- ¬ Suffered W P Walton ot the Stanford ¬ bers of the Executive Committee of the Kentucky Press Association to fill the vacancies caused by the withdrawal from juurnalism of J R Williams of the Midway Clipper and Capt W T Havens of the Mt Sterling Sentinel Democrat Mr Desha Breckinridge who has been the capable managing editor of the y Lexington Herald has bought the in- ¬ terest of his partner Samuel Boyle and has assumed complete control of that excellent paper Mr Bovle will devote his time to his paper the American Stock Farm SCINTILLATIONS Murry Ind Sept 17 1896 The House has passed Mr Hintons bill repealing the law for the protection The Wright Medical Co Columbus Ohio of purchases lessees and encumbrances y Last sprint I purchased Dear Sirs of real estate a bos of Wrights Celery Capsules fr ni L C Davenport druggist Bluffton Governor Bradley has sent to the Sen- ¬ fndand usp1 them tor stomach trouble ate the following name to be trustees of with which I had ben afflicted for more the A and M College at Lexington than 15 years Since taking your my I have lost all trace Judge Joseph L Landes Christain stomach is entirely well of pain andany I can eat Judge Wm H Holt Frankfort J B thing and can truthfully say that I have Marcum D F Frazee of Lexingtou not felt better in years and R C Stoll of Lexington an alumYours Respectfully nus Mrs Lauka TYjsishauft W T Brooks at 50c and 100 Sold by Send address on postal to the power- per box Tne cigarette trust has sent a Wxight Med Co Columbus -- Ohio for ful lobby to Frankfort to prevent if trial size free possible the passage of the bill to preHOW TO FIND OUT vent the use of cigarettes in this State Cap-suk-B 20 Years Elegant line of Pictures and Room Mouldings Send me your old furniture to be repaired Your furniture moved by experienced hands JTHINTON Wood Mantel furnished complete ¬ Undertaking in all its branches Embarming scientifically attended to CARRIAGES FOR HIRE ¬ ¬ - ¬ Your Life Insured - lc a Day ¬ Fill a btte orcoininon and let it stand i i oy bank able paper on the Capital City Bank ol An Interesting Jumble Of News And Columbus O There can be no stronger Comment Our insurance is protected Mt Sterling ladies will petition the Legislature to pass an anti cigarette bill In fifteen years Sam Jones has preach- ¬ ed to 25000 people and has made the best life insurance Wrights Celery Capsules gives you good health they cure Liver Kidney and Stomach trouble Rheumatism Constipation and Sick Headaches 100 days treatment 500 000 costs lc a day A sight draft on above Hon R D Hill of Williamstown bank in every 1 box which brings was yesterday appointed United States your money back if we fail to cure you Sold by W T Brooks druggist District Attorney for Kentucky Burglars are infesting Lancaster and Georgetown and the good people sleep with one eye open and one hand on a shotgun A pretty girl living near Flemings- burg is said to be dying from a dose om ground glass and paris green taken with suicidal intent 1 N Chambers of Wolfe county has brought suit in the Madison Circuit N Riilroad for Court against the L 10000 damages for the killing of his eon Monroe Chambers near Ft Estill Madison county December 31 1896 and the case is now on trial before Judge Scott The Merry Mardl Gras -- guarantee given you We dare not use a banks name without authority if yon doubt it write them Good health is STOCK AND TURF NEWb Sales and Transfers Of Stock Crop Etc Turi Notes Daniel McFadden of Montgomery has sold 15000 pounds of tobacco at 13A with urino hours a s di mentorscttlin Indicates an unhealthy con dition of the Kidneys When urine Jiijhi linen it evidence of kidney trouble Too frequent desire to urinate or pain iu the back is al5 convincing proof that the kidneys and bladder are out of order WHAT TO OO There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed that Dr Kllmeis Swamp Root the great kid ey remedy fulfills every wish in relieving pain in the back kidneys liver bladder and every part of the urinary pas sages It corrects inability to hold urine and scalding pain in passing i or bad effect fol lowing use of liquor wine or beer and that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to get up many times during the night to urinate The mild and the extraordinary effect of vamp-Root is soon realized It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing ca es If you ued a medicine you should have the best Sold by druggists price fifty ceuti and one dollar You may have a sample bottle and pamphlet both sent free by mall Mention The Paris KyNKWsand send your address to Or Co Kilmer Binghampton N Y The proprietors of this paper guarantee the gen uiness of this offer 24sp lmo ¬ ¬ ¬ rtver--omes gla M writes ES MARY LEWIS wife of a promi nent farmer and well known by til old residents near Belmont N Y GROCERY STOCK a constant sufferer from nervous prostra- ¬ For twenty seven years I had been ¬ -- V I cents Fletcher Mann and Henry Fuhrman Every expectant mother haa went to Fleming yesterday to buy a trying ordeal to face If she does not mules A Barren County farmer raised 900 D H bushels of artichokes on one acre of ground the past season and says they Of No 503 W Ninth Street Cincinnati are the best things on earth to fatten GETTING READY tion and paid large sums of money for doc ¬ tors and advertised remedies without bene- ¬ fit Three years ago my condition was alarming the least noiso would startle and unnerve me I was unable to sleep had a number of sinking spells and slowly grew worse I began using Dr Miles Kestorative Is daily displaying an extra choice line of Special Fancy groceries Nervine and Nerve and Liver Pills At first etc Below is mentioned some of th standard and select stock the medicine seemed to have no effect but you want good goods you will find just that sort at my store will after taking a few bottles I began to notice be pleased to fill your order and assure you the very best goods to be a change I rested better at night my appe ¬ tite began to improve and I rapidly grew had better until now I am as nearly restored EVAPORATED FRUITS to health aa one of my age aaay expect God Apricots Pears Pea hes Prunes blesBDrHilesNerYine Dr Miles Remedies Dr ChaTg i r p French Peas are sold by all drug- fei g n IVIIWS gists under a positive irr PJDI1 Pprrllno guarantee first bottle Pearl Hominy Rice Oat Meal Rollew benefits or money re ¬ sxmviorwm funded Book on dis¬ tteeKh Olives Capers Chow Chow Tabasco Suca eases of the heart and nerves free Address Edam Cheese N Y Cream Cheese Pineapple Cheese DR MILES MEDICAL CO Elkhart Ind NEWT MITCHELL THE POPULAR GROCER I If - Nervini 0tc L Ky Landman M Ohio Imported Macaroni Domestic Macaroni Pure Maple Syrup Pu e Buckwheat Flour Mince meat Nancamp Tomato Catsup Nancamp Pork snd Beans Choice Celery -- hogs Baltimore Oysters -- ir te Mardi Gras festivities of the most elaborate character this year at New Orleans and at Mobile The Royal is the Queen Vesti Crescent Road buled trains Cincinnati to New Orleans in 24 hours Excellent through service Only line running running Cafe Parlor and Observation cars One fare round trip for the occasion from all points on Land and a Living Crescent W C Rinear the Queen Are best and cheapest in the New South son G P A Cincinnati Land 3 to 5 an acre Easy terras Good schools and churches No Awarded blizzards No cold waves New illusHighest Honors Worlds Fair trated paper Land and a Living 3 months for 10 cents in stamps v W O Rinearson G P A Queen Crescent w Route Cincinnati I li lit h h I get ready for it justed glasses to the eyes of the best people there is no telling of Paris and Bourbon wjiat may happen County and has proven himself comChild birth is full petent thorough reliable and honest of uncertainties if You can get Landmans glasses from Nature is not given proper assistance Clays drug store between his Clark visits and when he makes his regular visit he will examine your eyes thorough - ParisKy- ly ana maice any cnange necessary to MainSt adjoining Northern Bank b the beat help you can use at this time REFERENCE8Dr8 w Fithian It is a hnimQntand when regularly ap- - Eai8 Buck Fithian Bowen and C plied several months hefore baby cornea D Cram of Paris it makes the advent easy and nearly pain- g less It relieves and prevents morning DEALER IN 50 YEARS sickness relaxes the overstrained mus ¬ EXPERIENCE Furniture Window Shades Oil ¬ cles relieves the distended feeling short Cloths Carpets Mattresses New crop currents raisins citron ens labor makes recovery rapid and cer Etc peaches prunes apricots hominy oat tain without any dangerous after effects meal rolled oats For urst class work Three first claw Mothers Friend is good for only one tt Newton Mitchell given to Undertak ¬ barbers All work done strictly first Special attention r-purpose viz to relieve motherhood of clasB Nqxt door to Bourbon Bank ing and Repairing 4uov tf Marks danger and pain Trade The Northwestern is carrying nearly Main Street - - - - Paris Ky Designs 1000000 insurance on the lives of 1 dollar per bottle at all drugstores or Bant Copyrights c f ft f i -by mail on receipt of price Bourbon Countys representative citi New Laundry Agency Anyone sending Bketch and description may Fbhb whether an nuickly ascertain our opinion freeCommuHlcju sena Call on R P Dow Jr for tion for Books containing valuable informa womeswill bMnt to anj addreia iminHnn nmtikhlT YiAtAntsble upon appllcatlom to particulars 26oc 8t I have secured the agency for th ori strictly confidential Handbook on Patents patents sent free OWet agency for securingCo recelYe Winchester Power Laundry a first TUB BRADP1BLD RErULATO C Patents taken through Munn class institution and solicit a share of eptcial notUx without oharge in the We are offering some cholea ladies the public patronage Work or orders misfee ind childrens shoes at special Clays drug store will left at Clarke Two good telephones good for tiit MOST PERFECT MADE dra receive immediate attention A handsomely illustrated weekly Largest 98 I prleeg Dont fail to take advantage of Work UnceqfSOOmilei Will sell cheap eolation o any scientific Journal Terras A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder Free t DR OALDWILLS called for and delivered promptly 1 Can be uied in the country Apply to year four months fl Sold by all newsdealers irom Ammonia Alum or any other adulterant the offer Respectfully wr ima omctiop partjciuajf Datib Thqkson ImtiG THE STANDARD tf Gus Straus of Lexington yesterday bought the Overton farm 235 acres near Lexington for 30000 Knowlton farm 807 acres was bought by F P Drake of Yarnallton for 27740 At the sale of Thos Rorers administrators Tuesday horses brought 25 to 40 1 pair mules 131 cow 28 sows 4 to 1050 shotes 4 clover seed 352 to 3 77 per bushel wheat seventy cents farm implements brought fair prices Will be at the Windsor Hotel Paris ISGRIG TURKEYS Finest Chocolate Candies month T SDAY IEB 8TH 1898 returning every second Tuesday in each ¬ ilk UMH Mixed and Stick Candies Almonds Pecans Filberts Cream Nuts Optician Landmai has been visiting this Loose Muscatel Raisins London Layer Raisins Seedless Raisins city regularly for over Figs Dates Citron five years and has ad ¬ a ¬ NEWTON MITCHELL Mothers Friend J thh3 grocer h i ¬ j iflll j GEO W BAVIS 8 Buck and Biirs Barber Shop ia CREAM BAKING V ¬ i POWDER YEARS i Telephones For Sale Scientific American OfliMt bk 46 Sv PEPSI INDUTlbN 11 N MUNNtCoHewjf8ri tr TTaMuxgtvtA ii 16p Bruce Holladat wpwm Tywvj t Vf THE THE BOURBON OCTftBON TSTEWS Fill DA - JANUARY 28 1898 NUPTIAL KNOTS J- - 5 HEWS 1881 Xaat Nights Boxing Contests Seventeenth Year Established Enieied at the Post office at Paris Ky as i ass mail matter seco TELEPHONE NO 124 3100 SUBSCRIPTION PRICES Payable in Advance S2 00 Six mouths One year you cant kven oet NEWS costs port FUOM A GUN FREE OF CHARGE a re ¬ Make all Checks Money payable to the order of Champ Orders Etc MilIiKB Thursday and Friday Febru ¬ ary 3d and 4th we will offer below original cost price our entire stock of ladies muslin underwear consisting of a large line of skirts night dresses drawers chemise and corset covers It is to your interest not to miss this sale FRANK 00 ¬ Wednesday will be ground hog day - Armours sliced star bacon at McDer mott Wm Spears Willet is acting as day watch- ¬ man at the L N passenger depot Steven Willis of this city has been granted a pension of ten dollars per month - A large crowu in which were scores of leading citizens of Paris and dele- ¬ gations from Lexington Georgetown and Millersburg saw two lively box ¬ ing contests decided at the opera house last night under the auspices of the Paris Athletic Club Tfae principal event was a ten round go between Kid LaEeber and Louis Heller of Cincinnati which referee Desha Lncas declared a draw Though Lafeber forced the fighting Heller had decidedly the best of the contest cleverly avoiding Lefebera swings and punishing Lefeber considerably fighting was The fast in the fifth sixth and eighth rounds Heller landing often on Laf ebers libs and lace and several times on his stomach Lafeber weak- ¬ ened considerably in these rounds but made a game fight throughout The preliminary contest was a swift fifteen round contest between Eddie Parker and Warren Brooks two local boxers Brooks had the advantage in weight reach and quickness but Parker made an excellent fight Louis Lafeber the referee declared the fight a draw A ludicrous contest was a free for all scrap between five colored middle weights who did much promiscuous pounding Heller and Lafeber were seconded by their brothers A Supposed Sharper PEESONAL MENTION f Announcements And Sol ¬ emnizations Of The Marriage Vows COMERS AND GOERS OBSERVED BY De Myre J Ramp son of Conductor THE NEWS MAN Ramp of the L N will be married Notes Hastily Jotted On The Streets At to Miss Eleanor H Gilrain at St Peters Sh oil l be entirely weather proof at this season It is false The Depots In The Hotel Iiohbies And Church Rutland Vermont next Tues ¬ day Elsewhere economy to wear shoes that do not keep your feet dry and comforta- ¬ ¬ McMaken Miss Stella Will and Miss Tinnie Ewalt was in Cincin ble you cant afford it AVe have just arranged a special value sale o Thomason both of Georgetown con- ¬ nati Tuesday Mrs L Grinnau is visiifng relatives fessed that they were secretly married Ladies Misses and Childrens Shoes and alco Mens and Boys EngaseBMBtg -- - YOUR SHOES In The Toils G T Fields registered at the Hotel has ac- ¬ January 10th He was ac- ¬ cepted a clerkship at the Bluegrass Fordham companied by his wife and arranged grocery for a rednced rate saying he would re crossing on Third and Main maiu several weeks No payment was The stone streetB has been replaced by a wooden made to Landlord James Connors till the 20th when a check of Robt Clark crossing Co of Cincinnati for 15 was The next meeting of the Kentucky 13 being credited on account Midland Medical Society will be held in tendered and 2 in cash given to Fields No Georgetown in April other payment was received though reWanted T6 buy three or four peated promises were made and Fields turkey hens bronze variety preferred and wife left the Fordham on the 20th 2t Apply at The News office durine the temporary absence of Mr Connors Fields was subsequently ar- ¬ Mormon elders in Harrison rested on a charge of fraudulently ob The county have so far failed to get a room obtaining lodging the first case of the in which to hold their meetings kind ever tried here A hung jury re Owuer can sulted at Wednesdays trial but yes Found A etore key have same by calling at The News office terday in Judge Webbs court a jury fined Fields 15 and paying for this advertisement Fields was then arrested on a charge The Paris Electric Light Company of larceny on a warrant sworn out by has elected the following officers Pres- ¬ Mr E M Dickson charging the theft ident D Turney Vice President R P of two valuable law books It is alleged Dow Jr Co Fields check from Robt Clark Bev A E Tadlock will preach in was in payment for the stolen books Second Presbyterian Church Sunday Mr Dickson having recovered one of morning at 1030 oclock No evening them in Cincinnati The trial was set for Monday at ten a m services An officer yesterday told The News The pikes of Scott county have been that it was thought Fields is a slick divided among the magistrates who confidence man Report alleges that will assume charge of them and have law books have been stolen in Winches them worked ter and other Central Kentucky towns late of this city by a party who gave the name of Thos Mitchell now of Cincinnati has accepted a posi- - Fields to book buyers in Cincinnati Fields visited the Paris newspaper tion as assistant book keeper for Co on Pearl and Walnut offices soon after his advent in the city Stanage and represented that his object here was Kid LaFeber has accepted Tommy to get up an elaborately illustrated Kavanaughs offer to box for a 200 purse write up or Paris He told The News Jim Marshall the well known pugilidt that he had published twenty two such wants a go with Heller Kavanaugh or write ups Lafeber Fields was in no way connected with car any Pari6 paper The hide of Owney the postal Landlord Connors has generously ten- ¬ dog that went around the world has heen stuffed and placed in the Postoffice dered Mrs Fields a temporary home Museum in Smithsonian Institute at The lady is apparently destitute of Washington money and friends Thomas Goff of North Middletown A Klondike Party Goff of Indian Old Fields and John and Sidney Crk connty have just attained their Chas ofKill of this city leave Sunday are Offutt They Georgetownwill seventy seventh birthday country afternoon for the Klondike gold fields prably thcoldest twins in the in company with a party of ten men Prof Edwin Sparks of Chicago Uni- - Irom Ohio and Kentucky The party versitv will lecture to night at the Trill be under the leadership of Goige MethodiRt Church under the auspices of Shadbourne of Indiana who has made Subject lab the Paris Literary three trips to Alaska They will go by Admission twenty Samuel Adams boat from Seattle to Dyea thence to five cents Dawson City through the Chilkoot pass doctor for a little while the shortest route They will take with You be the and make a critical examination of a them supplies for one year and expect to bundle of our laundry work and see if reach the gold fields about the 15th of jou cannot conscientiously recommend May Many friends of Messrs Hill and Offut wish them unbounded success he John Bauer of Cynthiana ¬ in Lexington A T Forsyth is in Richmond on a business trip Hon E M Dickson was in Ciucin nati Wednesday Miss Nannie Clay was a visitor in Lexington yesterday- Mrs C M Clay Jr was a visitor in LexingtonlTuesday Mr Lee Price made a business trip to Mt Sterling yesterday Miss Pink Shropshire of Harrison is visiting Miss Hattie Brock Ex Sheriff Beeding made a businesi trip to Cincinnati Wednesday Mr I L Price was in Cincinnati Wednesday on a business trip Eld H S Saxby of Ruddles Mills left Wednesday for Kansas City Mrs J M Roddy of Midway visited relatives in the city this week Editor Desha Breckinridge of the Lexington Herald was in the city yesterday Mr P Nippert goes to Louisville today to visit his daughter Mrs Percy Henry Miss Bessie Carter is here from Winchester on a visit to her father Mr O P Carter Misses Etta and MamieMcClintock will entertain the Violet Whist Club Tuesday night Mr Mike ITeeney Superintendent of the Lexington Gas Woiks was in the city Wednesday J3 Their marriage was a great surprise to Shoes at low down prices Our January invoice revealed that we their Georgetown friends have too many shoes and this fact will prove greatly to your advan- We are just as thankful for a small jtage if you will call immediately f package as a large one Each will re ceiye tne same thorough auU careful at- ¬ tention If we get the former itwill in timo grow to the latter by the satisfac- ¬ tion you will derive in wearing our laundered work on September 6th at Franklin Ind Davis Thomson Isgrig 28 AND Bourbon Steam Laundry OBITUARY Respectfully Dedicated To The Memory Of The Dad Mrs Louisa Goldstien aged seventy seven the foster mother of Mr Chas Goldstein died Monday night at St Special Sale of SometMng ON THURSDAY KTX77 29 A FRIDAY AND SATURDAY JAN 27 We make a SPECIAL SALE of Josephs Hospital in Lexington and her remains were interred at the Lexington cemetery Wednesday The deceased L had been living ajt the home of Mr Woolstein in this city and had been at These goods are not odds and ends but new freh goods the infirmary but a week She was a f embroideries we imported ou selves for this Springs trade direct most estimable woman BIRTHS NEW EMBROIDERIES INDIA LINENS NAINSOOKS TABLE LINENS aild Napkins St Gall and Herisaw Switzerland at a price 25 - ¬ ¬ New York Importers We can and will show you some rare bargains in this saleTJ The Advent Of Our Future Men And A sale of this kind has never been made before in Paris wherean Women -At Winchester fo the wifaof David entire new importation has been thrown on the market at such 16 w prices as these goods will be offered a Prewitt a aaughterJ5Jizabeth No old stock everything new and fresh Wednesday v highfcjto the wife of Ladies are invited to call and see these goods whether they buy or James Bradley an eight pound son not A female child with two well formed to 40pei cent Our from below r Mrs John D Harris of Madison her heads and three arms was born to the wife of Thomas Plummer of Lincoln county this week It lived only a few hours Try our Bromangdon the most de- ¬ licious dessert jelly ever produced arrived here yesterday to visit McDermott McDekmott Spears to- ¬ CONDONS SURPRISE To close daughter Mrs C M Clay Mrs W G Talbott and pretty little mato sauce Jr Underwoods broiled mackerel in Spears ¬ -- daughter Marie Dudley Talbott are visiting the family of Col Brent Arnold in Newport The Young Married Ladies Euchre Club will be entertained by Mrs Hugh Montgomery and Miss Emma Scott on Duncan avenue this afternoon Mrs George Alexander and little daughter Marion and Miss Edith Alex- ¬ ander are guests of Mr and Mrs Ambrose Buford in Covington this week Misses Louie Andrews and Olive Fant two very lovely young ladies of Flemingburg arrived yesterday to be the guests of Mrs George W Stuart on Mt Airy avenue Mr Joe Purnell and son Master ReynoMs PurneH who have been visit ¬ ing Judge W M Purnell and Mr and Mrs A T Forsyth returned Wednes ¬ day to Bowling Green Mo Miss Harriet Glascock passed through Paris yesterday from Mays ville en route to El Paso Texas to spend the balance of the Winter with her sister Mrs E H Fisher ¬ v If you are going to have any papering done get my prices on contract work Big stock J T Hinton tl GOSSIPY PARAGRAPHS SPECIAL SAL i Theatrical Aud Otherwise The Foyer ME Remarks in but all Winter goods during the next 30 days we will sell everything in stock at prices less than cost CLAY CLEMENT f The following notice of Mr Clay Dress Goods formerly 75c and S100 per yard at 39 Piubracing Clement who appears at the Opera fancy weaves broadcloths novelties and whipcord diagonal erges House to morrow night is from the De ¬ Table linens and napkins large variety at cost troit Tribune All our underwear at much less than cost Clay Clement opened his engagement Penangs and percales formerly 8c to close 4c por yard at the Empire in his deligbtml play Tne audieu ce The New Dominion Pee our hosiery at 10c and 15c per pair worth 2fc last night was a large one and gave en Notions oi every description less than cost thusiastic evidence of its approval by 10 4 New York mills sheeting worth 30c for lfii- laughter and applause through the play Splendid bleached and unbleached cotton 5c jcr yard and curtain calls after pach act includ ¬ ing the last an unusual compliment in Detroit Mr Clement has presented his play here beforebut it is one of those simple dainty lov 6toiies so tret from theatri ¬ TAJEHaOjRHsTC cal effects that it seems to improve on acquaintance Its highest idedls beauti ¬ ful sentiments and attractive pictures its WE HAVE RECEIVED A SPLENDID STOCK P quaint humor and delicious comeuy make it most refreshing and effective IMPORTED SUITINGS AND TROIISERIKOS In the character of Baron Franz Vic- ¬ the polished tor Von Hohen8tauffen high minded noble and ingenious young Langdons reception flakes at German who comes to this country to study botany and falls in love with a Spears McDerinott charmiig young Virginia girl Mr conOur Prices aire lower than any house in Central Kentucky when Clement has a most We remove the rough edges genial part having interesting and himself quality and style are considered written it We ask you to give us a call from collars and cuffs and mould His appearance delightful accent and elegant manners with the quiet ease and them round and smooth It is a simplicity of his acting make it a most pleasure to wear our laundered enjoyable character study FASHIONABLE - FOR FALL AND WINTER ¬ linen Bourbon Steam Laundry Dr F L Lapsley of this city J P The G- G- White Distillery is putting Ripley of Lawrenceburg a d Mayor Julian of Frankfort will be the4jndges in a patent drier bv which thpy will at the Mid Winter declamatory contest utilize the slop which was formeily run The into Stoner creek or fed to cattle a Winchester next Friday night new appliance will strain the water says Mr from the pulp and will dry the latter he Danville Advocate and Mrs Vimont Lvle will make New The dried slop stuff makes excellent York City their home Mr Lyle having feed for dairy cows Most of the dried ade a most desirable arrangement for slop will be shipped to Germany and other foreign conntries the practice of law in that city - Nevr Departure In Distilling who made application for membership in the National Society f the Children of the American Revolu- ¬ tion are requested to meet at the home f Mrs Robert C TaIdoU at two oclock to morrow Frank Ireland writes to Deputy Miinil Wallace Mitchell from Califor- ¬ nia that he has acquired an interest in a gold mine in Nevada county and hopes thave enough money to buy Paris wheji he returns to Kentucky Tie children Court Culllngs Edgar Baum of Mt Sterling is a leading member of the Eugenia Blair i Isgkig have in Company which plays in Mt Sterling Davis Thompson school childrens shoes extra good values Danville and Maysville next week Miss Blair who ia the wife of Robert for very little money Try them Downing the tragedian is appearing in Advertised Letter Iiist The New Magdalen Camille List of letters remaining unclaimed Carmen and The New East Lynne in Paries Ky postoffice Jan 28 1898 Charlotte Hughes Mrs Ellen Mrs Robert Mantell Adams Geo Jrckson Delilah Blake John Behrens is at the point of death at Bell Mihs Georgie Johnson Martha Detroit Johnson Luretia Brewer Emma Johnson Mrs Lucy Brown Lizzie Yesterdays Temperature JohnHon Mrs Lizzie Bowler Robert Long Mrs Bessie Brown Mary L The following is the temperature as Co Lucas Charles Carpenter Mary noted yesterday by A J WintersColeman Nancy Mathey M G of this city Nelson Emile Crosse Julia 28 7 a m Derby Cynthia Parker Mrs G A 28 Dunphard Mealie Potts Miss Mag 29 9 a m Reed Mrs Adelaide 10 a m Edwards W O 31 Reede Mr Fannie Finnie Sally 32 11 a m Robiuson B W Garrett N W 33 12 m Robynson Pleasie Harris Alice 86 2p m Henry Chas E Schwartz Mrs Jno o8 3 p m Winn Dennis Hixon Lewis 34 4p m Woods Calvin Hughes March 33 5pro 2 7p m Persons calling for aboye letters will please say advertised W Li DAVI8 P M BOURBON STEAMj LAUNDRY JFITJB IttJSTK TTA S fi 1 IPIGjN Cuiiei JT T4TTORS WE 5 Our 2000 and 2500 OVERCOHTS - Elegantly trimmed and made by first class tailors aad you will never pay 3000 or 300 again We make pants for 500 that are good and the best for 800 These would cost you 700 and 1200 any--¬ where else Cleaning and Pressing a Specialty LAVIN HUKILL UP TO OUR EARS IN WORK In Tude Purriells court Wednesday Bad Irvi was sentenced thirty days in jail at hard labor for stealiug Harry - Bedfordd overcoat Kitty Greevous a fifteen year oil colored girl who was arrested orsteal N car ing a peck of coal from an L Comforts and blankets at your own was lectured for her Greevous error and prices at J T Hintons tf was dismissed Fancy shirts at 75 cents to From our stable Paris Ky January close worth 1 at Price Oos 22d 1898 two aets of single buggy har They are winter styles and ness we will pay a reward of of 20 for thief recovery of goods and capture Price Co want to make room CLARK TURNEY for the Spring styles STOLEN Djyiiop NOTICE TUe Clement Engagement Cfanient engagement to morrow night artbe oper home andthe performance society event wil no doubt b quit Paris should giv the distinguished actor ind bis beaatif al plaj hearty welcome Cjbese has already been quite a grati- of tears for the Clay ing advance an hour and a half Tuesday on account FeblT T Pritchard farm stock of a landslide near Butler and furniture Feb 7 Fleischmakns compressed yeast at aolno ofi Master CbmmUiioner land Spears McDermott Feb 16 C M Thomae aduirof Geo Will not be responsible for any debts unless written order from me Thomas land stock crop cct Ousters celery freBh cakes and S BROOKS CLAY crackers new lignum molasses New Buy your carpets now J T HinfOD I York cream cheese ittntriorofPn1falicfioaas i has best and cheapettUtv Nkwton Mitchell tf Mi mi qmmsp The 750 train to Cincinnati and the 1158 train from Cincinnati were delayed Elizabeth Engagements of Auctioneer A T Toryth All pprson8 who have not paid fheir poll tax for 1897 are notified to call at the Sheriffs office and settle same and save costs 18jan 4t JOS WILLIAMS C B C thankftil jsr our condition just now but we still want more and still strive to give the same eoiinent satisfaction thai we always have in turning out your linea in irreproachable -- for which we are - COPYRIGHT stile ol vMcreRni tv The BourJbon Steam Laundry Wv M HINTON JR BKO Proprietors 1 5Celepho23 No 4 yr -- U V 6 THE BOTJEBON NEWS a few hours following- heavy rains but there are springs and water holes which the buffalo and the Indians but only a few white men knew about at the time of which I write It being July the beginning of the rainy season the springs were flowing freely and the water holes were full but Bronson knew that the showers which made the grass green and covered the prairie with flowers brought the Comanehes sure of feed for their ponies from the reser- ¬ vation seeking human prey and booty and without showing anxiety he noted every sign that might indicate their presence To Catlett with the keen joy in life that comes from health and out-of-do- or tEDAY JANUARY 28 1898 A LITTLE lie- - THE BOURBON NEWSI Seventeenth Year Established 1881 Published Every Tuesday and Friday by WALTER CHAMP 3RUCE MILT ERlfkattoWMidOinitW MUSSENTOUGHIT Ha lives in mammas basket and his name the people say Wihen daring baby fingers never tarrying to ask it To ravel worsted mysteries by baby - Is Mussentouchit Mussentouchit Mussentouchit is what t - K methods try And Mussentouchit often hides in mam- mas box of buttons Where many tempting treasures are al- ways stowed away And when blue eyes peep over and pink hands raise the cover Mussentouchit MussentouctiitJ is what v the popple say And Mussentouchit creeps away in mam- mas bureau drawers Mongst pretty rosy ribbons and laces white and fair And when the little creeper delves dimpled arms in deeper He finds would you believe it that Mussentouchits there And hes shut between the cases of papas f -- 7y N ticking oer and oer And when he reached to clutch it Mussen- tochit Mussentouchit f Cried papa as he sat the wondering baby on the floor And Mussentouchits skulking behind the big piano And hes always found on duty beside the silver vase And if babys eyes are prying into mam- mas books and spying Why the first thing he will come to will be Mussentouchits face Now who is Mussentouchit and whats his business tell me Why can we never see him If anybody knows I should really like to ask it as he sneaks from box to basket And why we always find him whereer the baby goes Maude Morrison Huey in Good House- ¬ keeping - watch now truly For last night baby heard him ticking J I f R cm i Comanches By Fotn Ss--- 3- Clarence Puller S Copyright 1898 HEN in the early 70s Edgar Cat- lett fresh from college came from his New York home to Texas for the purpose of starting a cattle ranch he was just 21 years old It was his first visit to the Lone Star state and he wise- ¬ ly waited to learn something of the w -- exercise the expedition was what he Bron- ¬ called a good deal of a picnic son in his quiet way was a very inter- ¬ esting companion Sometimes as the hunters rested at night before rolling themselves in their blankets the guide told stories drawn from his own ex- ¬ perience of Comanche and Kiowa raids and fightings but as yet they had seen no signs of Indians Bronson spoke one night about turning back toward the settlements soon but Cat- ¬ lett was eager to continue the trip So it was agreed that they should keex on their course a day or two longer and then passing round some bluffs that lay to the northward return to Venadita by another route The next da3 about the middle of the forenoon they came to a deep dry water course such as the southwestern plainsmen call leading arroj os southward from the bluffs Each bank fell sheer downward 20 feet and the wide sandy channel between was per- ¬ fectly dry Following an old buffalo trail the hunters found a crossing the only one possible for man or beast within a distance of many miles Be- ¬ fore descending into the arroyo Bron- ¬ son hesitated looking northward- to the bluffs where a dimness appeared in the sky elsewhere bright and clear Therell be water running in this channel before the sun goes down he said as a streak of lightning quivered beyond the bluffs Theres a thunder- ¬ storm gathering about the head of the arroyo They crossed the water course and continued on their way until noon when they halted They bad begun t o unsaddle their horses when a sharp from Bronson called Catletts attention and he saw the guide draw ¬ ing tight the saddle cinch he had just begun to loosen Keep the saddle on your horse and see that its well clinched Dont look around as if you suspected anything Bronson said without lifting his head I think theres some hard riding for us to do pretty quick Are you ready Get on your horse and take the back S-s-- themselves and the Indians much less JJ shake off the tireless pursuit As they rode the thunder growled lightning flashed from the dark cloud in the north and the heavy rain con- ¬ cealed the bluffs from view while the skj was clear above the stretch of prairie ou which the two men and their pursuers were riding their race for life or death The horses panted painfully and their sides were flecked with foam when at last the hunters reined them at the brink of the arroyo Down the channel which four hours before they had crossed on dry sand a muddy cur ¬ rent extending from bank to bank was pouring with a rising flood behind it They put their horses at the water already risen to their stirrups plunged through it and gained the other bank Looking up from mid stream Catlett saw the gathering flood sweeping dowii like a waterfall Ten minutes later they would have come too late to cross Keep straight on but dont force said your horses pace any more Bronson as they came up on the prai- ¬ PECULIAR FEATURE OF CITY LIFE NEGROES IN CANADA s Why Is It Dwellers in Flats Dont The Race Prejudice in the Anyone who is wedded to the theory that women cannot get along without chattering or gossiping or occupying each others households for a large fraction of the 24 hours should direct his or her observation to the modern apartment building It is one of the most remarkable things in our latter day nineteenth century urban life this custom of people not knowing each other in flats It is only necessary to consider all the reasons and induce- ¬ ments for women living in separate buildings knowing each other to be highly astonished that they so often dont or rather so rarely do When they lived in the country four miles from each other they were on terms of the most cordial and frequent intercourse But now that they are under the same roof and have to pass each others doors 20 times a day en route to their own homes their testimony even on the iden ¬ tity of their neighbors would not be ad mitted by an anti corporation jurj It is truly remarkable and must ap- ¬ pear eo to all dwellers in flats this lack of acquaintance The very air of such buildings seems to preclude familiarity and the ice that each tenant wraps him ¬ self up in is of that inexorable arctic kind that is never broken There is no etiquette of new resident calls such as obtains with all who inhabit detached houses There are nochance meetings or conversations while inspecting the growth of the vines or sewing on the side porch On the contrary- - every reg ¬ ulation every offshoot every tendency of a flat building is toward isolation The hollow of a rock in the desert is not half so good a place for av family to con ¬ ceal itself or its affairs from the world Perhaps flats are too new an institu- ¬ tion to have a settled status suited to those people who like a little of the old fashioned country wa al knowing peo- ¬ ple occasionally within a mile or two of where one lives It is certainly al- ¬ most inexplicable how people can come and go out of their homes day after day where a false step would almost NONSENSE Know Their Neighbors rie level The hunters had lost time in crossing and they were about 100 yards above the brink as the foremost Comanche got to the opposite bank Seeing the white men still running away the Indians not hesitating dashed down in the arroyo one after another Then Bronson slipped from his saddle threw the bridle rein over the horses head so that the animal should not wander about and with his repeating rifle in his hand ran back to the arroyo Follow me he called to Catlett and in half a minute more from the arroyos brink his rifle was speaking sharply to the Comanchesdown in the channel Catlett reaching the bank half a minute later saw the Indians strung in a line extending from the fur ther bankUo mid stream their ponies struggling- in the swift swelling current iow risen to their shoulders in which they could neither swim not stand A Comanche diappearing beneath the surface a red stain m the ¬ ¬ - ¬ ¬ st ripples closing above him a dead pony rolling and bumping as the current swept him down the channel two riderless ponies dashed back through the stream and two wounded warriors whom their comrades were helping toward the other bank were evidences of the deadly work already done by Bronsons weapon A Comanche on his guard is a difficult mark to hit Sitting in his sad dle at the flash of the rifle aimed at him he darts his horse swiftly to left or right and in battle he uses the ani mal as a shield swinging down from the saddle along its side discharging his rifle or arrows from beneath its neck But here with their ponies ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ throw them into their neighbors apart ¬ ments without ever knowing or culti- ¬ vating that neighbor to more than the extent of a most frigid bow It is cer- ¬ tainly one of the most marked features about apartment- buildings even the best of them It might be objected that persons living in flats do this by reason of knowing less about each other than those sheltered by brick and stone put up in other shapes But this can have no weight in places where the house- ¬ - country its people and their ways before investing He soon found out that the best ranges near the settlements were all taken up and that if he wished io secure a ranch cheaply he must push out beyond them to the westward He heard much of the staked plain a vast stretch of high prairie lying between the forks of the Brazos in Texas and the Pecos river in New Mexico and he determined to make a hunting trip out into this country where perhaps he might find a good range on which to start his ranch For this purpose he went to the little town of Venadita then on the far border bearing with him a letter of introduction to William Carter the principal merchant of the place Carter received him cordially and gave him full information as to the best routes to take and the outfit he would require and with it a warning There is danger from the Indians ¬ always ou the staked plain he said It is the ranging ground of the Co- ¬ manehes and Kiowas and if you should fall in the way of a bandof these In ¬ dians they will attack you if they can do it without too much risk But I thought these Indians were all onk reservations under guard said Catlett Oh i -- i i i But it doesnt make much difference The bucks stay on the reservation enough to draw ra i tions and get their yearly presents Theyvget passes from the agent to go out and hunt or slip away without leave and then theyre ready for any deviltrytbat offers The troops and rangers and cowboys together cant keep them from stealing horses and taking white scalps and many a lone v herder hunter and emigrant outfit is wiped out with none to tell the tale 9 Youd better see if you can get Sam Bronson to go with you Hes a good man every way and he knows the staked plain and the Comanehes as well as any man in Texas The same day the merchant intro- ¬ duced Catlett to Sam Bronson The man was of a different style from the red shirted cowboys who with wide brimmed hats leather chaperidos and flawing spurs rod into Venadita now and then for a spree and sometimes shot up the town Beside these pic ¬ turesque dashing riders silent unas ¬ suming Sam Bronson in his plain suit of California overalls stuff looked un- romantic and commonplace But when iCatlett on the next day saw Bronson with his rifle knock the spot through the ace of hearts on a playing card nailed to a tree at 50 yards away firing offhand he decided that here was the - man h wanted Two davs later thev jnade their start for the staked plain horseback driving a pack mule car ¬ rying blankets flour bacon salt cof ¬ fee and ammunition for a months trip For fresh meat they depended upon game for these were days when the buf JfaJo roamed the plains and once away from the settlements it- was seldom thatja herd of these shaggy headed beasts or a band of graceful antelope wasnot somewhere in view of the two -ir true their lodges to theyve made treaties and moved a reservation said Carter thats INDIAN AFTER INDIAN FELL FROM HIS HORSE - -- The staked plain where now the cat- fhand sheep of many ranchmen pas- ture was then an arid unpeopled The water courses which cut K prairie ihe plain lire commonly dry except for V hunters floundering in swift water the Indians less I give the word Never mind the could employ none of their customary pack mule Hell follow tactics It was only the hunters strat-¬ Catlett djd as he was told agem iu pretending to continue their he flight that could have led the Indians What have you seen Sam asked as with their horses at a walk to attempt the crossing Now finding they started back on the route they themselves entrapped the Comanehes had traveled that morning had turned their ponies and were get- ¬ Nothing much Only a Comanches ting back to the other bank as fast as head peeping over the crest of the ridge they were able Catlett lost no time were leaving behind answered the in setting to work firing wildly at first way as greenhorns do in their first fight guide in his calm matter-of-faIt was only for a moment and he was but gaining in steadiness as he shot behind a cactus plant but Ive made Some of the Indians who had gained no mistake That Indian was the scout the opposite bank fired on the hunters of some band not far away We wont but the Comanche is not a good marks push our horses in the beginning for if man at long range and their bullets the Comanehes come after is well went wild Indian after Indian fell need all the go there is in em before we from his horse to be swept away by the get away Ah there they come a current and twice as many wounded crowd of em Now set fire to your ones rode or were helped out of the horse water to be carried off by their comFor one instant following the guides rades Once dut of the arroyo the Comlook Catlett turned to see a sight that anches lost no time in getting out of he never cared to behold again the range and the last the two men saw of oncoming of a Comanche war band them they were riding northward Round the point of the ridge on leap- toward the bluffs ing ponies with bodies naked to the Edgar Catletts first Indian fight waist and faces brightly painted car been fought and the Comanehes had had rying lances bows and rifles they quit the field with the loss of several came 25 in number the most skillful warriors and ponies Even had they and daring riders of all the Indian uren inennea to loilow up the hunters tribes They were a third of a mile the arroyo which soon was running ten away but their fleet ponies were swift- ¬ feet deep with water would have held ly closing the distance them back ior 24 hours at least LeisWe must get to the arroyo ahead of urely hunting as they went the two em said Bronson and set the spurs men took their Way back hard into his horses flank Its a ten Venadita where they arrived toward a fort mile run with our lives at stake night later safe and sound Both the hunters had good horses After his experience Catlett decided and they put them to their full speed that the enterprise- of stock raising on The Indians in their first rush came the staked plain would be to too hazard within a quarter of a mile of them but ous Instead he bought a ranch withr after that the hunters managed to in a- half days ride of a schoolhouse keep this distance good If no saddle and prospered His fastening parted if neither horse Sam Br6nson who first foreman was remained with Kirn should slip or break a leg in a prairie until called to Venadita dog hole or lag from exhaustion the later to take the office of sheriff of the two might hope to get to the arroyo county s and across in advance of their pursuers But ride as they might they One twenty fifth part of the worlds could not widen he ipace between coalfields is Blitish a walk un- ¬ ct trail but dont move out of ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ -- ¬ ¬ - ¬ - ¬ ux holders are all people of means and posi- ¬ tion in the community Here the same distinguishing characteristic of flat life holds good The woman on the first floor knows all about the woman on the second her husbands business what church she goes to and everything but the lady herself There seems to be no reasonable cause for the existing state ¬ of things It is an enigma and but one been made their gratitude is universalEspecially were they of the thousand strange curious and ly sincere unfathomable things that go to make grieved when one of their number after having practiced for six months up the measureof life in a great city in the band of a city regiment and Chicago Times Herald after having been granted his uniform was refused admission when about to CHARITY IN FRANCE in and given as a reason Society Women Nurse In Hospitals be sworn might look like a black that he for Loathsome Diseases To- ¬ Ladies of the highest rank who seem horse among a lot of white ones the most engrossed by frivolous pleas- ¬ ronto Mail and Empire ures will perform heroic acts of charit jr SAGE MATRIMONIAL ADVICE in the most unexpected manner The luifirmary for Cancerous Diseases con ¬ Marry Young1 the Younser the Bet ¬ ter Says the Marrying Squire taining the most fearful and loathsome Words of wisdom on the subject of examples of that repulsive malady is regularly attended by ladies of rank matrimony are spoken by Justice who have their fixed days of duty when Ephraim Keigwin of Jefferson Ind each in turn they dress the wounds on the borders of the Ohio river Here wlhq with their own hands Duchesse is the dictum of the hoosier oracleis dUzef one of the best known leaders has united over 8000 couples and still of fashion whose splendid festivities at the business Marry young is my advice If you fill the chronicles of the leading news- ¬ papers is one of the most assiduous cannot marry young marry as young showing an adroitness in the exercise as you possibly cat and above all of her charitable functions which in ¬ marry The squire says he holds the worlds duces her care to be particularly de record as a marryer He has married sired by the patients for 20 years and people 3oung and I know of great families who when he believes that it oldthe greatest bless- ¬ is residing in their country houses have poor Ihuman nature can know regular daj s in the week when the ing that diaug hters of the family dress vounds He is certain that very few of the and sores among the surrounding peas couples whom he has married have been¬ antry The mothers h such families divorced and this goes far toward mak repress energetically any morbid sensi- ¬ ing him an optimist bility which might interfere with such to Nearly all the elopements that come me little shams the duties What will you be fit for in squire are pleasantThe young folks went on after life if you cannot command your want to inject a little innocent romance feelings I have heard said by a into the marriage and then too they venerable marquise who looked as if to escape expense and trouole she had stepped down from the frame wish weddingsthe Once of big in awhile tliiere of one of the pictures in her chateau I is a secret marriage but these are very may quote another instance of a lady am glad to say in a less high position who took in a few I When I say that people should marry wretched beggar child on a cold wintry young do not mean I that they should night performing maternal offices as wed before the young man is of age regards removingthe consequences of When people are young they can adjust his neglected condition which were so themselves to each other more easily repulsive that her physical strength Some people are born fools and remair gave war and she was taken violently so to the end of their lives You could ill in consequence Onmy praising her not make them happy a charity she exclaimed almost indig- - harem and a car load ofwith sultans They nantly What when our Lord washed dont want to be Most monej marriages are tlie feet of his disciples you would havq compromises anyway a matter of give me shrink from doing what is necessarj and take and as a whole it is better for a poor wretched child merely for a man and a woman to be married through a feeling of disgust even if they do quarrel occasionallyj I said nothing but could not help than it is to remain single Even quar ¬ thinking how many would have left reling couples will gradually adjust the care to others themselves and get more happiness out It must be acknowledged however of life than the most peaceful old maid that by the side of acts of heroic charity or bachelor Chicago Chronicle there is saving exceptions a great lack Measuring Memory of that genial kindness which shows it- ¬ Attempts have recently been made in self to equals in any trouble by many little friendly attentions in England France by Prof Alfred Binet to meas- ¬ One of the experiments and America the cup of cold water ure memorj consists in reading a series of figures of the Gospel Anna L Bicknell in to the subject at a regular speed of Century about two per second and observing Klondike Currency Statistics how many he can repeat without error What is the circulation per capita in the order in which they were given up in this part of the county asked a The faculty of voluntary attention is of new arrival of ajvlondike official course called into play iu this experi ¬ Well sir the latest statistics com ment Children from six to eight years piled this morning after breakfast in- old retain on the average five figures dicates two quarts of beans and eight children ten years old six figures and Puck 2rackers to each inhabitant adults seven figures Jacques Inaudi the lightning calculator can retain u Consistent Grief Bo you think Julia will always keep more than 40 figures Youths Com i panion on mourning forher huiband Yes she is going to marry a man common pond frogs natural Ghicago Record named Black lifetime is 12 to 15 years ¬ ¬ ¬ -r-- country in large numbers during the days of slavery but many returned when assured of their freedom Som6 remained however and of these Toronto Hamilton and Chatham come in for a good share There are possibly not more than 15 living here now of those who did not return and like their numbers their days are getting few The younger generation were mostly born in Canada The greatest misfortune they have experienced was caused by almost total cessation of employment by city hotels of colored help and since that time there have been many negroes whose employment has been more or less uncertain Of such as are employed a goodly number are in the Pullman car service possibly more are barbers four are letter car riers some are Waiters and restaurant keepers some day laborers and among those in special lines of business are a photographer an ice merchant and a coal merchant A large number do odd jobs of one sort or another and possi bly one third are without steady em- ¬ ployment The women among them do a good deal of work and they seem to have better opportunities of employ- ¬ ment than the men Quite a number are engaged as house servants others do washing and laundry work and a fewr are engaged in dressmaking and sewing at home The- have not saved much money though a few own a little property in the city It is seldom that much crowding is found among them and taking them together they must be regarded as very peaceable citizens Afew become troublesome at times but as a rule the negro is inclined to be friendly with his neighbors and congenial to those whom he meets They take earnestly to education and are fond of reading The children at tend the public schools and hold their own with other pupils The colored man has proved himself a good citizen and on this account it seems a pity that most of the young men among their number find it necessary to leave for the other side They complain that it is difficult for them to secure places here which they are desirous and capable of filling and that they have already been forced to leave In the United States their labor and ability seem to be more appreciated They hesitate before seeking places here as they claim to find the white man is almost universally favored They are none the less conscious of the efforts made by some to gain them a fair recognition and where such have ¬ The total colored population of To-¬ ronto is about 800 almost the same as the French and the Italians The older generation of negroes are escaped slaves who came here before the war and have remained since It will be re- ¬ membered that negroes came to this minion The peanut crop this year is only Nonsense our office 3000000 bushels eaten that many himself boy has Chicago Record There is one thing I like about volcanoes remarked the quiet man when they smoke they dont use cig Boston Transcript f Rrettes What is your A Charitable View Well a cynic is a idea of a cynic who has had the misfortune humorist to be born with his smile a trifle on Life one side Charming Widow And what are He Oh amus you doing nowadays ing myself looking out for No 1 And Charming Widow-- Looking out you London Figaro for No 2 Customers arc invited to call and examine goods which will be found Philadelphia North Amer ¬ still warm ican When I was your age sir I used to Yes attend strictly to business when you were my age you kept a country store and Ive heard you say you used to play checkers all day long Chicago Record Johnson Not Just as He Meant It wants to borrow some money of me Do you know anything about himI know him as well as I do you In ¬ I wouldnt let him have a cent dianapolis Journa1 How do Insulting Comparison you like that you scavenger of the seas said the cook plunging the lob ster into boiling water The lobster made no reply but it got very hot and turned red Ghicago Tribune Pat you Taking a Firm Stand complain of being out of work and yet I heard that coal dealer offer you a job to drive one of his carts not ten min ¬ Yis sor but Im dommed if utes ago freeze meself to death to keep alive Ill Cincinnati Commercial Tribune Would you be willing to live in a inquired Mrs Meek haunted house ton who had been considering the Well Henri ¬ of moving etta was the answer I must say it would be a good deal of a comfort to be able to near noises without hav- ing to get up and hunt burglars Washington Star J v K i K iik - ¬ ment Extraor Extra Inducements advertise dinary fire sale read the ¬ - ¬ - - - ¬ - 7 4 ¬ m - ¬ ¬ i ¬ ad-visabil- ¬ ¬ JOKE ON A LAWYER Called on an Elderly Spinster to See About Her Divorce Speaking of jokes brings to my mind one played on an attornej He was a gentleman who had considerable prac- ¬ tice in the divorce court and some of his friends hit upon a scheme to take him down a peg They went to a hotel and securing the name of a lady guest from the register they got one of their number who possessed a remarkable falsetto voice to telephone the lawyer to come and see this lady at the hotel on business The attorney was natu- ¬ rally a little anxious as to the nature of the business and he was informed in an indirect fashion that a divorce was wanted Enough was said to let him infer that it would be a good case wittti lots of fine advertising and best of all prospects of a good fee in the event of a successful termination of the litigation The conspirators secreted themselves near the hotel parlors at the hour set and waited developments Ahem said the attorney I called in response to 3our request What request she asked surprised the lawyer madam Im Mr Why what are you talking about he asked abruptly Its perfectly natural madam that you should wish to make no mistake called to see you about your divorce At the word divorce tlhe lady almost Divorce sprang into the air she shrieked making for the button to call for assistance The attorney began to suspect that something was wrong and he sprang to intercept her so that he could make ex- ¬ planations but this only frightened her the more and the bell at the clerks lesk could be heard making a fright ¬ ful clamor The bellboy came rusQiing up just as the lady came out of the par- ¬ lor with the angriest face an old maid Be- - ijsii Take care of him spoken contemptuoThe bellboy ran at the attor ¬ usney whose face looked blacker than a war map and seized him by the arm He shoved a dollar in the bellboys hand Slhut up and got out of the and said place in a hurry The jokers never let the attorney know who put up the job on him for if there was ever murder in a mans heart its presence was shown onhis face as he emerged from that room with the ladys roasting ringing in his ears Nebraska State Journal --- could muster She swept by with her face white with rage and the remark fl -i Temperate Little Japs The little Japs are about as free from the vice of drunkenness as any people In the world In fact it is the rarest thing in the world to see an inebriated subject of the mikado The native drink saki is used about as tea is in this country and is but little more intoxicating Men women and chil ¬ dren sup it regularly day in and day out in small cups such as we use for drinking after dinner coffee Whisky in Japan is usually of the sort that we in the United States denominate rot- ten and sells for ten cents a drink in places frequented by sailors Peoplein good position naval officers and for ¬ eigners pay 25 to 50 cents per glass for a fair article served in clubs and hotels Natives however hold aloof from the places where whisky is dispensed and do not believe there is a native saloon in the whole country The best reason for the abstinence of the Japs in the matter of whisky is in the low wages prevalent over there A workman loesnt get enough pay for a days toil o balance the cost of a singre drink of vheardenU- As long as swages- stay where they have been for- - centuries there ms no f ear-- that ryeianbourboTi vill ever become popular in the far easi -- Washington Post - iC y -- i Vfc r3 HS r 4 iffiT-Mr r - Tv - - v TEE BOURBON NEWS FRIDAY JANUARY THE FARMING WORLJ GOOD FARM CISTERN How to Builfl One at Small Expense of Money And Work As good a cistern as can be made is by walling- up with brick and then ce ¬ menting to make waver tight but when cheapness is to be considered a good cistern may be made in the following manner Dig so that it will be larger at the top than at the bottom like ait old fashioned dash churn turned bot-¬ tom side up About two and a half or three feet from the top cut a square shoulder in the side of cistern to begin laying brick oa to make the arch Ce- ¬ ment it well to the earth and biick then get a flat rock any size to suit your convenience cut a hole init large enough for an average sized man to g et through put it down in cement over the arch and you have-- a good cheap cistern The best filter that I ever saw is made in the following manner Take a good tight barrel knock one of the heads out bore an inch and a half hole in the center of the other end and put in a- plug from fhe outside this to be the bottom Put a small perforated ooden box just over this and have the pipe through which the water runs come down through the center of the carrel and terminate in this box The box to have the bottom side out the pipe to come through the top of the box Get some nice clean gravel put in a layer of gravel and then a layer of charcoal and so on till the barrel is half full or more arrange it so that he last layer will be of gravel Just above the last layer put in the pipe that runs into the cistern Cover the barrel well so that nothing can get into it from the top When it rains let the water in it will filter from bottom to lop instead of vice versa Have the barrel sitting on two sills and after the cistern is filled take out the plug from the bot- ¬ tom of the barrel and the water in rushing out will wash out all sediment bugs and insects that might have run in thus leaving the filter clean and nice and ready for the next time - 28 1898 GRY TOULOUSE GEESE AltJrotisrh of Gray Toulouse geese are named for the city in France of that name where they are extensively bred In this coun ¬ try they are bred in large numbers by farmers and are fairly well thought of for market purposes Their French Origin They Art Popular in this Country flesh is a trifle too coarse and flabby when compared with some other geese to be prized very high ¬ ly for table purposes They are termed a Christmas goose as being later in maturing than the others they are just about right at the holiday time They are fairly good lajers averaging about Washington Post 40 eggs in season Toulouse geese are more compact in The Only One I know one man said shape than qther geese and are pre- ¬ the quiet young woman who is listened to sides whenever he with respect by The speaks in congressboth He must have a lot ferred by many for this reason head is rather large and short and of influence I hope he has Hes the Washington Star they have a comparatively short bil chaplain A good way to get along with some people is to have nothing to do with them Washington Democrat v ¬ There is always a bountiful crop of stories concerning the doings of congressional wom ¬ en new congresaional women at this sea Bon of the year Most of ths tales are apochryphal but this one is perfectly true for the stationer himself told me about it The woman is the wife of a member from somewhere in the west and she had never been in Washington till a fortnight ago She Avent to a stationers to order visiting What day do you wish engraved on asked the clerk them Oh answered Mrs Congressman I ve got to have several days I cant make all my calls in one day Engrave me some cards for Monday calls and some for Tuesday and well its going to be expensive but I guess Ive got to do it Make me some for every clay in the week except Sunday She Wante ill the Days A Total Disability Claim of 1650 Paid to a Man who was Afterward Cured deed The Monitor a newspaper published at mouth sufficiently wide to take solid food Meaford Ont Canada first discovered this The doctors called the disease spinal sclero ¬ case two years ago and published it at length sis and all said he could not live For three years he lingered in this condi- ¬ which now seems owing to the cure of it to tion Then by some friend he was advised he a miracle The facts were so remarkable to take Dr Williams Pink Pills for Pale that many people doubted the truth of them People He took them and there was They said It is too remarkable it cannot a slight change The first thing noted possibly be true the paper is mistaken and was a tendency to sweat freely This showed the rnhn although he may think himself there was some life left in his helpless body cured will soon relapse into his former con- Next came a little feeling in his limbs dition etc etc The accuracy of its report This extended followed by prickling sensacalled in question the Monitor deter- ¬ tions until at last the blood began to course mined to find out definitely whether the freely naturally and vigorously through his faqts were as stated and whether the man body and the helplessness gave way to re- ¬ would really stay cured They accordingly turning strength the ability to walk re- ¬ kept a close watch on the case for two years turned and he was restored to his old time ¬ ¬ I am in even better health than when I gave you the first interview cure to - after the first article appeared and have just health Monitor Unquestionably I do was the reply Doctors had failed as had also the numer- ous remedies recommended by my friends Nothing I took had the slightest effect upon me until I began the use of Dr Williams Pink Pills To this wonderful medicine I from the living death I i owe my release have since recommended these pills to many of my friends and the verdict is ahyays in their favor I shall always bless the day I was induced to take them Such is the history of one of the most re niapkable cases of modern times Can any Do you still attribute your use of Dr Williams Pink Pills asked the the -- - THE MARKETS Cincinnati Jan 3 00 4 10 27 3 90 4 50 - CALVES Fair to good light HOGS Common Mixed packers LIVE STOCK Cattlecommon Select butchers Liirht shippers mBt GRAY TOULOUSE GOOSE SHEEP -- Choice LAMBS Good to choice FLOUR Winter family 6 50 3 15 3 75 3 70 4 00 5 15 3 55 GRAIN Wheat No 2 red Nos 3 red Corn No 2 mixed Oats No 2 Rye No 2 HAY Prime to choice PROVISION- - Mess pork Lard Prime steam BUTTER Choice dairy Prime to choice creamery APPLES- - Per bbl POTATOES -- Per bbl CHICAGO 7 25 3 75 3 85 3 85 4 40 5 70 3 85 95 91 29 M 9 25 10 25 48H 9 50 10 50 4 70 11 Willi ofgss- ZVfXW rjunre rSRfitX 3 25 2 15 4 80 97 90 27J6 9 87 4 85 4 80 21 3 50 2 25 4 90 1 00 vyjwyg- - f Oft MWUbw v i4 ¬ ¬ - fy iCiLr W Indiana Farmer THE POLE STACKER An Implement Tluit Is Very Popular in the Far West The farmers of Utah live in Jowns and have but few barns or sheds on their farms which in many instances are two or three miles away They often stack hay and grain in small fenced lots or corrals on an upland spot where an artesian well or reser- ¬ voir furnishes water and there feed horses and cattle during the severest months of the winter Numerous de- ¬ vices have been used in hay stacking some being too expensive and others being patented by unknown parties who occasionally demanded royalties for the use of their ideas The most complete and the cheapest device yet discovered is what is gener- - that is stout at the base the neck a carried well up and is of medium length They have a broad back of modern length which curves slightly from the neck to the tail their breasts are broad and deep The body of the Tou- ¬ louse goose is moderate in length broad and very deep and compact the more compact the better and in birds in good condition the belly almost touches the ground Their wings are large and strong and fold nicely against the sides and they have comparatively short tails and stout thighs and shanks In color of plumage they are a dull gray without penciling The head is dark gray and the neck of the same color which shades to a lighter gray as it approaches the back the back is of dark gray while the breast is light gray The body plumage is light gray which grows lighter and becomes white on the belly the white extends back to and around the tail covering the fluffy parts The primaries of the wings are dark gray or brown the secondaries are a shade darker than the primaries and the coverts are dark gray The tail feathers are gray and white the ends tipepd with white Their eyes are dark brown or hazel in color their bills shanks toes and webs are of deep ¬ ¬ ¬ FLOUR Winter patents GRAIN Wheat No 2 red No 2 Chicago spring CORN No 2 OATS No 2 PORK Mess 15 ViSJ LARD Steam No 2red CORN No 2 mixed J A 92 27 23 9 92ya 4 874 5 15 1 05 36 j7 jrdmu C j MuJutc rfzinci XX The above is the substance of the first article published by the Monitor Now follow some clippings taken from the same paper two years afterward and there js not the slightest shadow of a doubt in view of this testimony that Mr Petchs cure is permanent Here follows the account On being again questioned Mr Petch You see those hands the skin is now said natural and elastic Once they were hard and without sensation You could pierce them with a pin and I would not feel it and what is true of my hands is true of the rest of mv body Perhaps you have observed that I have now even ceased to use a cane and can get about my business perfectly well You may say there is absolutely no doubt as to my cure being permanent In- - fl r4ZcS7rtazrvi3urtr NEW YORK FLOUR Winter patent Aj OATS Mixed- PORK New Mess LARD Western 28 9 75 29 10 00 5 10 72 BALTIMORE FLOUR Family GRAIN Wheat No Southern Wheat 2 4 35 99J6 97 4 65 9J4 1 00 33 HOGS CATTLE First quality Western INDIANAPOLIS No Corn Mixed Oats No 2 white Rye No 2 western 33tf 29J4 4 40 4 00 30 53 4 CO 4 10 now published another article about it in which the original reports are completely verified the cure is permanent and they publish a fac simile of the check given by the Canadian Mutual Life Association for 165000 amount of total disability claim paid by them to Mr Petch The first account stated that the patient see address below had been a paralytic for five years and there was such a total lack of feeling in his limbs andbody that a pin run full length could not be felt that he could not walk or help himself at all for two years he was not dressed furthermore that he was bloated was for that reason almost unrecognizable and could not get his clothes on The paralysis was so complete as to affect the face and prevent him from opening his one say in the face of such testimony that Dr Williams Pink Pills are not entitled to the careful consideration of any suffering Is not the case in man woman or child truth a miracle of modern medicine To make the evidence complete we pub ¬ lish above a fac simile cut of the check re- ¬ ceived by M r Petch from the Canadian Mu ¬ tual Life Association being the amount due him for total disability It is unnecessary to add that this life insurance association did not pay this large amount of money to Mr Petch except after the most careful exam ¬ ination of his condition by their medical ex perts They must have regarded him as for-ever incurable Reuben Mr Petchs address is as follow Petch Griersville Ont Canada Lady in dry goods store GRAIN-Wheat-- 2 i 3 75 Corn No 2 mixed Oats No 2 mixed 92tf 27l 23 He Won My dear young friend said the employer who believes that a fatherly interest is better than a big salary do you think the salary you are drawing justifies your playing poker Justifies justifies repeated the dear young man Ive got to phiy poker to get enough money to live Indianapolis Jour¬ Mutually Unpleasant There was once an Irishman who had a face that as one of his friends Gnce remarked was an offense to the landscape Next to his homeliness his poverty was the most conspicuous thing about him Hence the unsympathetic comment of a neighbor How are ye pat he said Mightly bad was the reply sure tis starvation thats starin me in the face Sure Ts that so rejoined his friend it cant be very pleasant for ayther of yez BinghamtonN Y Leader ¬ Hose Versns Hoes FLOUR Winter patent GRAIN Wheat No 2 red Corn Mixed Oats Mixed PORK Mess LARD Steam LOUISVILLE 4 00 95 28 25 9 25 4 75 ¬ some hose please Clerk an ex hardware man Yes mad am With or without handles Chicago Evening News 5 Id like to see There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease reddisand prescribed local remedies and by conh-orange stantly failing to cure with local treatment color has proven it The standard weight of the adult gan pronounced be incurable Sciencedisease and a constitutional catarrh to der is 20 pounds adult goose 20 pounds therefore requires constitutional treatment young gander 18 pounds and young Halls Catarrh Cure manufactured by F J Co Toledo Ohio is the only goose 15 pounds Bulletin U S De- Cheney constitutional cure on the market It ia partment of Agriculture taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system They TREATMENT OF ROUP offer one hundred dollars for any case it IIow to Prevent This Dangerous and fails to cure Send for circulars and testiCo Tomonials Address F J Cheney COntiigious Disease ledo O Sold by Druggists 75c disGenuine roup is a dipihthoritic Halls Family Pills are the best There are disease and contagious ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ His Weakness She He does notseenj to be a brilliant conversationalist He No unfortunately he cant talk on any nal subject unless he Knows something about Puck it The Public Awards the Palm to Hales Honey of Horehound and Tar for coughs It must he hard to lose ones mind said Pikes Toothache Drops Cure in one minute the thoughtful boarder It ought to be Are you bruised Use St Jacobs Oil and easy if your head is cracked said the you are prepared for an emergency When You wont be long Shortest way cheerful idiot Indianapolis Journal it hardly ever arises Washington Democrat Nobody is too worthless to have some conSome people are great because they have genial associates Washington Democrat an accumulating instead of a spending Pieos Cure cured me of aThroat and sense Atchison Globe Lung trouble of three years standing E As it certainly cures it St Jacobs Oil is Cady Huntington Ind Nov 12 1894 The Master Cure for rheumatism f- To the soul in torment there is no such Some people read onty their church pathing as time Hall Caine in The Chrispers Washington Democrat tian ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ A ¬ ¬ ¬ IDEAL GRANDM0THEES Women Who Know the Laws of Nature and Obey Them May Live to Green Old Age Mrs Flnkham Says When We Violate Natures Our Punishment Is Pain If Wo Continue to Neglect the Warning We Die JLsktra m PUZZLE MAP OF THE tempers and influenzas that stow simi- ¬ ¬ Up-to-D- ate Sociology POLE STACKER ally called the pole stacker It is sim- ¬ ple in construction easily handled and is not patented Although in use but two or three years the pole has yards become a universal favorite and can be seen in many fields corrals and stock- - The material necessary for the pole stacker consists of two poles 20 and 30 feet or longer as desired three pul- ¬ leys two chains and two ropes The short pole usually a dry red pine or bal ¬ sam is set about three feet in the ground after slats have been nailed on or pins driven in auger holes every two feet which makes a ladder for getting up and down when necessarjr to fix the top chain or drop the lifting pole A short chain is fastened around the standing pole and left to drop about two feet where it hooks arourid the stacker This gives the pole plentj of plajT and enables the man on the stack or wagon to swing it around at will The long pole is chained at the butt end with a chain which regulates the height of the stack and holds the stacker in place after being swung around for the hay on the wagon The pulleys ropes and fork are handled as with other stackers Joel Shomaker in Farm and Fireside Vnriatioii in Ensilnpre It is too commonly supposed that ensi- ¬ lage made from fodder corn must be uniform in its auticitive value This is by no means tlie rfaot The ensilage put up the last few years is much bet- ¬ ter tlhan that which was made at first when a large quantity rather than quali ¬ fy was what was mainly sought for All corn ensilage requires that some supplementary food be given with it for corn ie not a well balanced ration But some corn ensilage requires more of other food as its supplement It is possible to ensilage corn wtien it has reached the earing stage cutting up the ear with the stalk This is worth rwvice or thriee as much for the same balk as corn fodder sown or drilled too ilhickly to allow it to form ears and cut as soon as it got into tassel -- lar symptoms that may not be con tagious but genuine roup with swell ing of head discharges of matter from nostrils eyes etc- - is contagious and the disease has been communicated from fowls to human beings It can be prevented by removing the one two cr three sick fowls to a hospital and either taking the entire fiook of well fowls to fresh clean comfortable quarters or by disinfecting the ed quar ters thoroughly with zenoleum or chloro naphtholeum or a weak solution of carbolic acid Saturate roosts sides floor everything It is not worth Vhile to doctor a fowl after it gets ttr tine second stage with putrid discharges Besides it is dangerous If one has the skin of hands abraded and some of the diphtheritic matter gets pn it the result might be serious The recent report of the bureau of animal indus try on infectious diseases among poultry gives numerous cases of the dis eases passing to human beings Treat- ¬ ment in the first stage is all right and often arrests the disease It consists mostly of good hygienic conditions removal of all excavations local applica ¬ tion of disinfectants comfortable well ventilated quarters etc Often the disease runs a slow chronic course and the most of the fowls recover Whore it is malignant and rapid the best plan is to kill the diseased fowls and bury deep or burn and then disinfect ¬ ¬ ¬ Papa what is meant by the classes Sprocketts Why theyre professionals and A and B amateurs the Bs really arent amateurs at all Well and what are the masses Oh theyre the folks who pay gate money to see the races I spose N Y Journal Son UNITED STATES SENT FREE TO ANY ADDRESS UPON RECEIPT OF 9 For New Names The Salzer Seed Co want suitable names for their 17 inch long corn and White Oat trodigy You can win this 400 easily Cata ogue tells all about it Seed potatoes only 500 in prizes 150 a barrel Send This Notice and 10 Cts in Stamps to John A Salzer Seed Co La Crosse Wis and get free their great seed catalogue and 11 new farm seeds including above corn and oats positively worth 10 to get a start K 5 400 ¬ ¬ ¬ The Mean Thlngr My face said the Seasoned Soubrette is mv fortune You dont say so retorted the Funny Comedian I thought it stood for what you owed And why did you think it stood for what I owed asked the Seasoned Soubrette Because explained the Funny Comedian I see you have it chalked up Indianapolis Journal A New Crazy Sect In Connecticut A lot of fanatics in the State recently immersed an old rheumatic woman bodily in the water to heal her as they said She nearly died in consequence How much better it would have been to have treated the poor old woman for her infirmity with Hos tetters Stomach Bitters which not only cures rheumatism but prevents kidney com- flaint and remedies dyspepsia constipation and nervous prostration Give it a systematic trial ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ tk nicest grocer or paint dealer and do your own kal- This material is made on scientific principles by machinery and milled in twenty four tints and is superior to any concoction of Glue and Whiting that can possibly he made by hand To be mixed with Cold Water E SEND FOR SAMPLE COLOR CARDS and if you cannot sell the late moulting hens now As It Was purchase this material from your local dealers let us know and we will Too close in breeding is one cause ol Jack So after you satisfied her father S put you in the way of obtaining it barren eggs and weakly chickens that you were a stockholder she consented NEW YORK THE MURALO CO NEW BRIGHTON Every breed of fowls has points oi to be your wife Mack Yes First he viewed mv shares ruWwvwWiWWV merit of its own and here is asuiiicient and then she shared my views N Y Jourvariety to suit every taste iViMViWiMYiY nal A hen that has become accusiumed to When Travel In e a particular house or roosting place FORBID A FOOL A THING AND cannot easily be induced to dhange quar- Whether on pleasure bent or business take THAT HE WILL DO on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs as it ters acts most pleasantly and effectually on the USE Fowls should never be connned in kidneys liver and bowels preventing fevers such close quarters that they cannot headaches and other forms of sickness For Compactness of body early maturity eale in 50 cent bottles by all leading drug- vigor and egg production are essential take sufficient exercise to promote di- ¬ ists Manufactured by the California Fig gestion yrup Co only points wanted in fowls Late hatched chickens should be well Married people laugh at things at the White fowls are liked best by poultry fed and kept growing otherwise they tueater wnicn mane girls look men because whs dressed they look will never make large fowls St Louis ington Democrat WWWWWAW ¬ One for the Lawyer A celebrated New York lawyer asked a Ohio Farmer distinguished actress in a suit AMONG THE POULTRY What is your age She held back and refuspd to answer Oh speak up If you had answered the With the exception of geese old fowls question promptly you would not be as old of any kind are unprofitable you are now N Y World Plan to hatch as many chickens ns as possible as early as possible 3Iany People Cannot Drink Geese are at their best for breediHS coffee at night It spoils their sleep You can drink Grain 0 when you please and sleep after they are three years old A pullet is not matured until she i a like a top For Grain 0 does not stimulate it nourishes cheers and feeds Yet it looks year old although she may lay and tastes like the best coffee For nervous Keep only young prolific layers and persons young people and children Grain 0 is the perfect drink Made from pure select from them to breed from crams Get a package from your grocer toIn nearly all cases it will be test to day Try it in place of coffee 15 and 25c breach-of-contract Providence has allotted us each at least seventy years in which to fulfill our mission in life and it is generally our own fault if we die prematurely Nervous exhaustion invites disease This statement is the positive truth When everything becomes a burden and you cannot walk a few blocks without excessive fatigue and you break out into perspirations easily and your face flushes and you grow excited and shaky at the least provoca-¬ tion and you cannot bear to be crossed in anything you are in dan ger your nerves have given out you need building up at once To build aip womans nervous system and re store womans health we know of no better or more inspiring medicine than Lydia E Pinkhams Vegetable Compound Your ailment taken in time can be 0 thrown off if neglected it will run on into great suffering and pain Here is an illustration Mrs Lucy Goodwin Holly W Va says I suffered with nervous prostration faintness all gone feeling and palpi ¬ tation of the heart I could not stand but a few moments at a time without having that terrible bearing down sensation When I commenced taking Lydia E Pinkhams Vegetable Compound I only weighed 108 pounds and could not sit up half a day before however I had used a whole bottle I was able to be about I took in all about three bot-¬ tles of the Compound and am entirely cured now I weigh 131 pounds and feel like a new woman stronger and better than ever in my life So it transpires that because of the virtues of Mrs Pinkhams wonderful Compound even a verj sick woman can be cured and live to a green old age rWMYmiYi Five Two Cent Stamps TO COVER f r THE COST OF MAILIHG BEST INSTRUCTOR in geography ever seem Interests the children and teaches them the geogra ¬ phy of their own country in a practical and lasting manner Not more than one sent to one ad¬ dress Write to F H LORD General Passenger and Ticket Agent Chicago Great Western Railway QUINCY BUILDING CHICAGO ILL Go to your grocer to day and get a 15c package of Grain0 Il fee at ful PAIN T WALLS CEILINGS pSfni jijBSS somining SI 1 Calcimo Fresco Tints FOR DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS the cost Made from pure grains it ib nuuiibiiiiig ana neaitn It takes the place of cof Insist that yonr grocer gives yon GRAIN O Accept no unitatiou r sw-- v I ¬ ¬ DONT I 15 tassIH gj ENDYOUR NiME ON A POSTAL r RB- - AND WE WILL SEND YOD OUR 136 RMJ OLUSTRATED CATALOGDE FREE - mad--Waah- SAPOLIO TlHCHrSIKREPttTOieARMS CO I80YINCHESTCVWE HEW HAVEN GM WHEW WRITING TO Republic mnmMMmmmmwtmxttm sent la talc paper 1693 AVEHTJSEJttl plctue state that yen ww ttoe AdverllH A N K E X f 1 t wT j- f MILLERSBURG Wewej i5Cotea THE BOUKSON NEWGenealogy Of The Bedford Family - FRIDAY JANUARY 28 L898 C OttUered la Anil Aboat The Bur J Will Clarke is ill with the grippe T M Parnell had a severe attack of colic Thursday The Masons will formally open their new hH next Friday night Misa Lelia McClintock is visiting Miss Adrain Griffith at Paynes depot Frank Viinont sold his aged premium boar to W Smith of Fleiningsburg E T Beeding is contemplating tearing-down the old Purnell building Dr W M Miller and T E Savage were in Carlisle ou business Wednesday Chas Allen of Knoxville was a guest of his brother J G Allen Mon ¬ was born December 23 1762 Came to county Ky in 1787 where The News to day reprints in part the Madison crop and moved to Bour ¬ genealogy of the Bedford family of he raised one day IP t night F attended the lodge at Paris Monday Mrs Fannie Haves returned Wednes- ¬ day from Maysville and is at the Flem- ¬ About twenty members of the I O O ing House nesday Mr Joe Purnell and son Reynolds returned to Bowling Green Mo Wed- ¬ J Robert Savage has been confined to to his bed for the past week from a serious sprain Stanley Talbott who has been attend ¬ ing school at Danville Ind has re ¬ turned home Mr Alex Miller son of Mrs Lizzie Miller has gone to Cincinnati forjmedi calltreatuient f 33 mM Hutchison Station Conways hand made Miss Annie counterpane raffled recently was drawn by Thomas Turley of Nicholas -- 55 s SPs WjThe I O O F lodge donated 1000 week for the Widows and Orphans last home provided it is located herej Ji B Quite an interesting program of exer ¬ cises has been arranged for the Teachers Association to be held here Saturday If you want anything in the housp kpeping line be sure to call on J T Hiuton He can suit you and save 3ou money tf Brt McClintock has rented the Wm Miller farm of 190 acres near Ruddles Mills Mr Miller will move to Paris or Cynthiana John Jameson Tr received his post office commission Thursday and will take charge of the Millers burg office on 8 are visiting friends and relatives at Misses Mary Smedley and Mae Turner Bourbon county This history was carefully gathered and verified by Mrs Mary Rogers Clay the famous gene- ¬ alogist who Ijas achieved wide renown by her great work in editing the Genealogical Department published every Sunday in the Louiaville Courier Journal The preparation of this ex- ¬ tended history the balance of which will appear in The News of Feb 4th involved a vast amount of painstaking research made by Mrs Clay who deserves substantial reward at the hands of the numerous connection who are justly proud of their noble lineage thus established beyond contradiction Stephen Bedford of Southam parish Cumberland county Va made his will March 25 1758 The witnesses were Robert M Laurrin Richard Ligou foseph Harris and Charles Clarke Execuors My loving wife Elizabeth probably daughter of Benjamin Mos by and sister of Littleberry Mosby Sr my friend Col George Carrington my son Thomas Bedford and my son His legatees were Stephen Bedford his children I Sarah Mosby to whom he leaves negroes and personal property II Mandlin Mosby to whom he leaves negroes and personal property III Thomas Bedford to whom he leaves negroes and lands in Lunenburgh county IV Stephen Bedford negroes and lands on Twittys creek Lunenburgh county V Benjamin Bedford negroes and lands in Cumberland county on Little Deep creek This will was probared August 20 1758 Stephen Bedford was justice of ¬ GoDchland in 1741 The will of Thomas Bedford Char ¬ lotte county was made February 3 and probated March 7 1785 Exec- ¬ utors my dear wife Drucilla my w sons Thomas and Stephen arid my 1785 son-in-la- James Hamlett Securities I February 1st t Saral Jackson who lives near the mouth of Brushy Fork lost 65 shocks of corn and 30 shocks of fodder by the high waters Sunday vValla e brooks colored who stole a horse at Carlisle last week was held over for action of the grand jury in Nicholas The horse was found last Sunday at Georgetown by Constable Plummer of this place Part of the roofs of the Kentucky Wesleiau College and thft Presbyterian Church were blown off Wednesday by the high winds January Connell of Paris replaced them Thnrsday A cart load of English sparrow nests were found on the church roof The following eleven gentlemen were H Philips entertaiued by Mr H Tuesday evening at dinner Dr W M Miller Messrs Wm Judy Sr Chas R Turner Gran Allen C M Best Jos A Miller Chas N Johnson W V Shaw James Arthur Caleb Cor rington and J L Bosley the latter of Paris The host and all the guests are married men whose term of connubial bliss aggregates 170 years but not a single chid call any of them papa During th evening an enormous cake was appci tioned to the guests each slice vAral tiny dolls and a bot ont iivr tloof pa igoro as souvenirs and lr Judy in a raffle won a babv toilet set The evening was an exceedingly pleasant one and they all agree that there is ¬ yet- - hope r Insure in the Northwestern to day tomorrow may be too late tion slok headaches Wrignts Celery Tea cures constipa 25c at druggists i A- - Northwesterns dividends t holders are unequaled and to policy procure Northwestern dividends you must carry Northwestern insurance tf -- The M H DAILEY 402 MAIN ST PARIS KY Over Deposit Bank Office hours IfUIT 8 to 12 a m 1 to 6 p m V i i i WLDOUGLAS Best in k For 14 years this shoe by alone has distanced all competitors W L Douglas S3SO 400 and 8500 shoes are the productions of skilled workmen from Hie best material possible at these prices Also SSSO and SSOO shoes for men S2GO JjaOO and S175 for boys and youths W L Douglas shoes are indorsed by ovnr lOOOUOO wearers as the best Jn style lit and durability of any I shoo ever offered at the prloes v They are made in all the latest shapes ami styles and of every varl- oty of leather Tf dealer cannot supply you write for cata ¬ logue to W L Do uglas Brockton Hass Sold by UAC 3d OnUC the World merit J P KIELY mi - James Buuldin Andrew Hannah Joseph Fuqua Jr Edward Almond and Robert Bedford His heirs were his faithful and beloved wife Drucilla to whom he leaves his mansion house and dwelling plantation and seven goons II Henry born October26 1792 slaves and a third of his personalty and half the toll of his grist mill her chair married Patsy Dawson May 31 1810 III Elizabeth born December 7 and a good jarriage horse etc The 1794 married Capt Washington Ken ¬ had i Stephen Bedford ii Elizabeth nedy June 25 1812 and bore him Julia wife of Joseph Fuqua iii Mary wife of James Hamlett iv Martha wife ol Mattie married Charles Garrard left Charles Crenshaw v Thomas Bedford issue Mary Patsy married Maj Ed ¬ wards and left issue Littleberry and vi Susanna wife of Anthony Walker vii Benjamin Bedford viii John Bed ¬ John B Julia married Samuel H ford ix Anne Bedford x Littleberry Clay son of Henry C Clay ahd Mary Grimes who were married September xi Archibald Bedford xii Jenny T 5 1816 and grandson of Samuel Clay Bedford xiii Peggy Bedford xiv Charles Wesley Bedford He left a will probated June 1810 and Nancy large estate of lands and slaves and Winn and great grandson of Dr like his father gave much the largei Llemy Clay will probated February L810 and Rachel Porail died April 27 part of it to his sons After her father 1820 and had Washington Harry death Anne Bedford married Archi bald Mosely probably son of Hillarj married Jennie Grimes Julia married Mosely The courts of Lunenburgh William Pierce Mattie married can confirm much tradition Left Lair Margaret married Robt Furgei seventy negroes and a large landed son the Rev Frank Clay of Utah estate He left his lands in the back married Mittie Grimes and has one on Samuel and Rev SamuelClay of country Kentucky to his sons Benjamin and John and directs that hu Missouri John B Kennedy a promi ¬ son Thomas shall pay to each of them nent citizen of Bourbon county has 75 current vine daughter Mrs Thompson Tarr but of his own legacy IV William born December 7 1796 money as an assistance to them in movV Littleberry horn July 30 1798 ing and settling in the back countrj Kentucky Left all his lands to hiVl tiied January 23 1886 married Sicily sons and to each an equal division ol liollins born January 30 1798 pied his slaves Thomas Bedford as a February 24 1848 They had seven member of the Committee of Safetj children Elizabeth Mrs Smith Lind ¬ for Charlotte county Va aDpointed say Mary Mrs James G Garrard of January 13 1775 hence is a Revolu- Pendleton county Caroline Mrs Sam- ¬ tionary ancestor See Va Mag Oc- ¬ uel Pryor Thomas F of Missouri William and Webster C and Little ¬ tober 1896 His three sons Benjamin Littleber- ¬ berry the latter a prominent surveyor ry and Archibald married Tabitha of Bourbon county born in February Mattie and Letty Clay three daugh- ¬ 1821 married December 241873 Fan ¬ ters of Dr Henry Clay who settled in nie Horton of Lexington Miss what is now the Clintonville precinct of continued next week ¬ Bourbon county in 1787 Their broth er Thomas Bedford married Annie Anne Robertson and moved to the vi- ¬ cinity of Nashville Tenn He was a soldier probably a captain of the Rev- ¬ olution Thos Bedford Sr was ill of some disease raging in his family and among his negroes and feared several others besides himself would die of it when he made his will Tradition says he was twice married There is n6t an item in his will to confirm the fact The records of Lunenburg Bedford Have for years4 been known as among Over 10000 are in use in Cumberland and Charlotte counties the best Cincinnati and surrounding territory might give the descendants much in-¬ formation I give the names of the These celebrated instruments are now children in the order in which they are named in his will It is claimed that Jane Margaret and Charles are the children of the wife who was a Miss As they contain recent improvements Spencer If so then his last wife was greatly enhancing their musical worth Drucilla Spencer for these are his which cannot be obtained elsewhere youngesc children aud unmarried at We are sole representatives and intend- ¬ the time of their fathers death If ing purchasers will avoid errors and mis- ¬ this be true then the first eleven chil ¬ understanding by conferring with us dren were by the first wife who was Mary Coleman The name Coleman Co descends in the Kentucky branch I 121 123 w 4th St CINCINNATI find in the record of Revolutionary Sole Steinway Representatives service of Thomas Bedford Jr who in November 25 1795 prays the Assem- ¬ bly to instruct the Auditor to issue him a duplicate of a military certificate for the sum of fifty eight pounds eight shillings and five pence which he hath accidentally lost A Thomas BecLord Office over G S Vardenllr Co was Justice or Mecklenburg county Benjamin Bedford seventh child of v Thomas and Mary Coleman Bedford Officft Hours 8 to 12a im i to o p in ¬ ¬ ¬ bon county He married Tabitha Clay born November 15 1767 daughter of Dr Henry Clay born 1736 died Jan 17 1820 and his wife Rachel Porall born 1739 died April 27- - 1820 Their children were 1 Benjamin FBedford 2 Jackson Bedford 3 4 Stephen Robert 5 Harry 6 Thomas Jeffer 8 son 7 Nancy Mrs Thornton 9 Mary Mrs Clarkson Sidney and 10 Mrs Henry Towles These names are not according to birth but is tne nest line we couia get Konert Bedford mrrried Elizabeth Bedinger daughter of Maj George M and sister of Daniel P Bedinger of Nicholas courfty Ky and left one son Rob ¬ Rogers of ert who married Nicholas county Benjamin F Bedford Sr son of Benjamin and Mary Coleman Bedford married Eleanor G Buckner January 27 1819 Ceremony B W Stone Their children were Elizabeth H Mary married Archibald M Bed for married George M Ecuioru oaran John Benjamin F born March 14 1821 married November 27 1859 Mary Ellen daughter of George and Lucy Donaldson Parker and grand daughter of Capt Thomas and Mary Taylor Parker of Snow Hill Md and left one son Sidney Bedford of Franklin coun- ¬ ty Stephen Alexander Hard- - and Capt Harry who was a soldier in the Mexican war and served gallantly as captain of cavalry in the late war He married Mary Ewalt in IVIay 1853 They have seven children Annie Pugh Mary Eleanor Buckner Benja ¬ min Thomas Elizabeth and Harry Littleberry Bedford was born in Char ¬ lotte county Va January 1 1769 and named as the tenth child in his fathers will He married Matty Clay daughter of Dr Henry and Rnchel Porall Clay who sttled in Bourbon county in 1787 She was born in Virginia September 8 1772 and died March 2 1864 To them were born thirteen children Little ¬ berry Bedford died August 7 1829 I Thomas born October 25 1790 killed in war of 1812 was a member of Capt William Garrards company Maj V Balls squadron of State Dra- ¬ TWIN BROTHERS WILL MAKE YOU - i trL HAPPY der- - 55 g Jx J want to be happy and make all your friends happy Then come to TWIN BROTHERS to make your selections of Christmas presents We have the largest grandest and prettiest stock of holiday goods ever displayed in Paris We are giving goods away you might say so low are we selling them To make room we have decided to sacrifice our immense stock of Do you MENS AND BOYS OVERCOATS CLOTHING LADIES JACKETS ND CAPES COMPORTS BLANKETS BOOTS SHOES ETC Read every line in this advestisement it will advise where to buy and save Big Bargains in Capes that were S200 now 95c 250 now 125 8 50 now 195 500 now 2 50 600 now 300 750 n w 425 900 now 500 1000 now 625 1250 now 700 1500 now 750 Jackets that were 6300 now 200 450 now 225 500 now 250 600 now 325 750 now 375 850 now 425 1050 now 525 1200 now 595 1500 now 6 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 out beautiful stock of silk handkerchiefs linen handkerchiefs initial handkercliiefs mufflers fine hosiery fine gloves fine jewelry fine garters neckwear fine shirt cuff buttons ear rings stick pin5 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 carta aleighs 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 Larsce Handsome Framed Picture when your purchase amounts to 1000 We give Cupon Tickets with everything you buy of us no matter how small Iemember the place to save mone is at BOURBONS BIG3BST BARGAIN BRINGERS 7O1 703 MAIN ST PARIS KY RAILROAD TIME CARD L N JR R J R ADAIR L C MOORE Local State m i 4 Naiionei x ARRIVAL OF TRAINS From Cincinnati 1058 a in 538 p ni 1015 p m From Lexington 439 a in 745 a m Phone 79 333 p m 627 p m From Richmond 435 a m 740 a m No 3 Broadway 328 pm From Maysville 742 a m 825 p m Office Hdu 6 to 12 a -- Drs Adair A Moore Detml Surgeons Paris Ky in WILL BE FOUND IN THE BOURRON NEWS AND THE DEPARTURE OP TRAINS 5 p m and 1 3dr tf to Oiixoiaaiati WEEKLY ENQD RER We have arranged a Clubbing Rate by which we can eive Both Papers Ons To Cincinnati To Lexington 750 a m 1105 a m 545 p m 1021 p m To Richmond 11 08 a in 5 43 p m 1025 p m To Maysville 750 a in 035 p m F B Carr Agent 340 p m 445 a m 755 a m IHTT MASTERS SAL OP Year for only 221 2H- Regular Price for Both is Blood Poison Contagious Bood Poison has been ap- ¬ propriately Galled the curse of mankind It is the one disease that physicians cannot cure their mercurial and potash remedies only bottle up the poison in the system to surely break forth in a more virulent form resulting in a total vrreck of the system Mr Frank B Mautin afprominent jeweler at 926 Pensylvania Ave Wash- ¬ Bonrbon 0 Land Bourbon Circuit Court Venia Wren Plaintiff We save you generous part of this sum Send or bring your cash with order t THE BOURBON NEWS Paris Kt JHffg Kurteman Pianos l ife- - f Better Than Ever Ernest Urchs H A SMITH Bourbon county Kentucky on the Millerabttrg Cynthiaua turnpike road on the waters of Hinkston about one mile from Millersbufg Kentucky and withstanding the bounded thus fact that they m ff at corner Beginning to ik the charged me three - vlf Lflffisf Mil tract which formerly belonged to it Hiirirfrl nnllnr yY My mouth was Kobert H Champ thence N 69 E 85 filled with eating sores my tongue was poles to the middle of said pike corner to h6me almost eaten away so that for three said pike lot thence the with middle of 72 W 39J poles months I was unable to taste any solid thence N40 W 49 poles to food My hair was coming out rapidly David Hamiltons corner in said road and I was in a horrible fix I had tried various treatments and was nearly dis- ¬ thence S 62 W Gl 51 100 poles to a stone couraged when a friend recommended in said Hamiltons line and corner to the horn thence SSS After T had taken four bottles I first mentioned poles to tractbeginning S 29 E 107 21 100 the to get better and when I had began finished eighteen bottles I was cured Said sale will be made upon credits of sound and well my skin was without a six and twelve months for equal narts blemish and I have had no return of of the purchase money and for which the disease SSSsaved me from a life the purchaser will be required to exe-¬ of misery SSS guaranteed purely cute bond with good vegetable will cure any case of blood purchase price in equalsuretv for the sums payable poison Books on thedisease 10 rne uDaersignea Master Commis- ¬ and its treat- ¬ sioner and bearing interest at six per ment mailed centper annum from the day of sale free by Swift untilpaid said bonds to ne approved by Specific Co the undersigned Commissioner Atlanta Ga of blood poison but my condition grew worse all the while not¬ 1 JEi SOfDAY FEB 7TH 1898 time under treat ment of two of the following described real estate to the best physi- ¬ wit cians of this city for a severe case A tract of 51 acres of land situated in mgtonDCsays I was for a long house in Kentucky Monthly 6500 and ex¬ penses Position steady Reference By virtue of a judgment of the Bour ¬ Enclose self addressed stamped envelope bon CSretUt Court made and entered in The Dominion Company Dppt w the abve styled cause on the 14th day Chicago 16nov 8t of Deoember 1897 1 will sell publicly at the court house door in Paris Ken ¬ tucky at about the hour of noon en John H Wren etc Defendants vs TRUSTWORTHY W ANTED gentlemen or ladies and active to travel for responsible established Hews and Opinions OF National Importance THE SUN CONTAINS BOTH Daily by mail - - Daily and Sunday by mail - t t mu f 8 i 6 - 8 a a year year The Sunday Sun is the greatest Sunday Newspaper the world in Price 5c a copy By mail 2 a year Address THE SUN New York BLDEGRASS FALL 1897 Jrees IRSEK Strak f FTrrU and Ornamental ttrape Vines Small EMMETT DICKSON Asparagus and every thing Fruits Wrights Celery Tea regulates the for liver and kidneys cures constipation Master commissioner Bourbon Circuit chard Lawn and Garden Court and sick headache 25c at all dKuggists no Aents but sell planter saving enormous direct to commis-¬ Swinford Osborne sions Catalogue on application to DR CALDWELLS McMillax Talbott J - - r m fihae i PEPSI S CURES CONSTIPATJON IV Attorneys H P HILLENMEYER Lexington Ky i If - m - i V 1 Sj r vf - afrypfrfi i iifitta wa